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Updated 2026-04-01 02:30
‘Mistrusted’ Johnson feels full force of EU fury as Brexit wrecks G7 summit
European leaders made their feelings about the Northern Ireland protocol known to a PM desperate to score a PR victory
How did a £120 painting become a £320m Leonardo … then vanish?
A film about the disputed Salvator Mundi blames the National Gallery for its role in giving credibility to the claim that it was the artist’s lost workThe National Gallery is facing controversy over its role in the tangled story of how the world’s most expensive painting emerged from obscurity before being sold for a staggering £320m, only to vanish again from the public eye.The gallery exhibited the Salvator Mundi in its Leonardo da Vinci exhibition a decade ago when it was an unknown work with doubts about its attribution, restoration and ownership. Continue reading...
At least 130,000 households in England made homeless in pandemic
While ban on evictions protected some people, domestic abuse and loss of temporary accommodation were common triggers for homelessness
Factory workers making goods for the west bear brunt of virus surge in south-east Asia
Migrant labourers tell of being forced to isolate in brutal conditions as Covid wave grips region
Moria fire: Greek court jails four Afghan asylum seekers for 10 years
Men were charged with arson over blaze that destroyed what was Europe’s largest migrant campFour Afghan asylum seekers have been sentenced to 10 years in prison in Greece for their part in a fire that destroyed the Moria migrant camp in 2020.The men, charged with arson with risk to human life over the fire on the island of Lesbos last September, were found guilty after a court rejected a request by lawyers for three of them to be tried by a juvenile court because they were under 18 at the time. Continue reading...
‘This has gone on too long’: more Coalition MPs call for Biloela family to be freed from detention
Liberal MP Katie Allen joins MPs Trent Zimmerman and Ken O’Dowd in calling for family to be returned to mainland from Christmas Island
Azerbaijan swaps 15 Armenian PoWs for map of landmines
2020 war over Nagorno-Karabakh region left minefields that have continued to inflict casualties, including three recent deathsAzerbaijan says it has handed over 15 Armenian prisoners in exchange for a map detailing the location of landmines in Agdam, a region relinquished by ethnic Armenian forces as a part of a deal to end their short war of 2020.Prisoners of war are a key issue for Armenia, while landmines continue to inflict casualties in Azerbaijan. Two journalists and a local official were killed on 4 June when a landmine exploded in Azerbaijan’s Kalbajar district on territory that was vacated by ethnic Armenian forces in November. Continue reading...
Covid live news: UK records a further 7,738 cases as Johnson cautious over lockdown easing; Vietnam approves Pfizer vaccine for emergency use
Honours for key UK figures in vaccine drive; MPs say Covid passports are discriminatory and should be scrapped
Universities promise to ramp up face-to-face learning as student frustrations grow
Students have been able to go to pubs and clubs this year, but not lectures. Now universities are saying next semester will be radically differentAustralian universities say campuses will look “radically” different next semester as students return to more in-person learning, although most large lectures will still be delivered online.As many students yearn for a return to the classroom, universities say they are planning to offer in-person learning for up to 90% of courses next semester. Continue reading...
New Zealand’s campaign finance laws are broken. That can have enormous consequences | Pete McKenzie
An increased appetite for political donations strengthens the political influence of the wealthiest New ZealandersThe spokesperson for Aotearoa New Zealand’s Green party was genuinely surprised. She had called after I informed them that a major donor to their 2020 election campaign had subsequently pleaded guilty to animal neglect. The spokesperson said the Greens had not known about the neglect when they took her money.They nevertheless refused to donate it onwards. They argued the Incorporated Societies Act required them to hold on to it. As I later found out, that’s not quite true: returning the donation, or donating it to an organisation like the SPCA, seems to be possible according to their party’s charter. Continue reading...
Denmark 0-1 Finland: Christian Eriksen awake after collapse – as it happened
Finland took the points at the end of a match delayed following the first-half collapse and subsequent resuscitation of Denmark’s Christian Eriksen
Finland’s win against Denmark overshadowed by Eriksen collapse
It was a game that felt simultaneously extraordinarily trivial and hugely significant. When Christian Eriksen collapsed four minutes before half-time, needing CPR on the pitch, it seemed inconceivable – unthinkable – that it could continue. As he lay, limp, surrounded by protective and clearly distressed teammates, there seemed a possibility the tournament might be cancelled.And yet, an hour and 45 minutes later, they were back. The sight of Mathias Jensen coming on for Eriksen was hugely poignant, a mundane act lent profundity by context. The assumption, even as news came through that Eriksen was awake in hospital, was that this game at least would have to be postponed. Yet the players and coaches, after being consulted in the dressing room, agreed to play on. Continue reading...
Delay ending lockdown: majority of public back Boris Johnson
Observer poll reveals most people believe prime minister should wait past proposed 21 June date
Brexit bust-up torpedoes Johnson’s bid to showcase ‘global Britain’
Northern Ireland border row hits G7 summit in Cornwall as prime minister tells other leaders UK is ‘a single country’Boris Johnson was embroiled in an extraordinary public spat with EU leaders over Northern Ireland yesterday as tensions over Brexit boiled over at the G7 summit in Cornwall.After a series of tense bilateral meetings at which the French president Emmanuel Macron, the German chancellor Angela Merkel and the European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen, told their summit host the UK must implement the Brexit deal in full, an unrepentant Johnson said he had urged his EU colleagues to “get it into their heads” that the UK is “a single country”. Continue reading...
‘Americans are heaven for us’: the surge in US visitors throwing Greece a lifeline
Country confounds post-Covid predictions as transatlantic holidaymakers flood in ready to spend
Four charged with murder after teenager stabbed in south London
Metropolitan police have now made 11 arrests in connection with the incident in StreathamFour people have been charged with murder following the fatal stabbing of a teenager in south London.The Metropolitan police has made a total of 11 arrests in connection with the incident in Streatham, which happened on Thursday. Continue reading...
New Israeli coalition government seeks to put an end to the Netanyahu era
The opposition-led administration will be sworn in on Sunday if it can prevail in a confidence vote in the KnessetBenjamin Netanyahu is due to be ousted from office on Sunday by a new Israeli government formed with the primary aim of dethroning the country’s longest-serving leader.A motley grouping of politicians, including former Netanyahu allies turned foes, have set aside bitter differences to put an end to the prime minister’s historic run in power. If successful, it will also break a political stalemate that has seen four snap elections in the country since 2019. Continue reading...
Brandon Taylor: ‘I grew up reading my aunt’s nursing-home manuals and bodice-rippers’
The Booker-shortlisted novelist on teaching himself to read, critics who say he’s not nice enough to white people, and why the Bible still haunts himBrandon Taylor, 32, grew up in Alabama and studied at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. He was shortlisted for last year’s Booker prize with his debut, Real Life, a campus novel about a gay black biochemist. His new book, Filthy Animals, is a series of linked stories loosely centred on the sexual tension between Lionel, a black maths postgraduate, and two white dance students, Charles and Sophie. The writer Paul Mendez has called Taylor “a phenomenon… the laureate of young, expensively educated people... pleasuring and harming themselves and each other”. He spoke to me over Zoom from his home in Iowa City.
15-year-old boy charged with murder of teenager stabbed in west London
Jalan Woods-Bell, also 15, died from his injuries in Hayes on Friday morningA 15-year-old boy appeared in court on Saturday charged with the murder of a teenager, named for the first time as Jalan Woods-Bell, who died after being stabbed in west London during the Friday morning school run.Police were called to reports of a fight on Blyth Road in Hayes just before 8.35am. Woods-Bell, also 15, was found with stab injuries and died at the scene. Continue reading...
G7 summit protests – in pictures
Protesters turn out in support of a range of causes as the leaders of Group of Seven nations meet for the forum’s 47th summit in Cornwall Continue reading...
Should England open up on 21 June? The factors Johnson must consider
The prime minister has a host of problems to weigh up before deciding to remove all legal restrictions on social contact
Barbora Krejcikova beats Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova to win French Open
Barbora Krejcikova v Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova: French Open final goes to final set – live!
Wales 1-1 Switzerland: Euro 2020 – as it happened
Kieffer Moore’s second-half header earned a point for Wales in their opener in Baku4.03pm BSTKieffer Moore speaks to the BBC. “It’s great personally, but it’s a good start for us. We would have liked to have won, but a draw from the first game puts us in a good position. It’s never good going a goal down, but to get one back and see the game out is a big positive for us. It was tough in the heat, but it’s what we expect in a hot climate, and we’re used to it. I’m enjoying it. It’s a big occasion and I’m loving every second of it!”4.00pm BSTWales look much the happier side after this draw. Kieffer Moore is understandably all smiles, receiving the congratulations of his team-mates. The Swiss are more subdued, having dominated the game and created the majority of the chances. But Wales dug in and got their reward for a determined response to going behind. They form a big huddle as Gareth Bale delivers a post-match pep-talk. A big game against Turkey coming up. The Swiss face an even bigger one against Italy, and may reflect that taking off Xherdan Shaqiri wasn’t the greatest idea. Continue reading...
Clamour for wealth tax grows after revelations about super-rich’s affairs
Data leak published by ProPublica fuels calls to tighten up system which sees ultra-wealthy pay little or no taxThe revelation last week that the 25 richest US billionaires have paid very little tax even as their fortunes have soared has reignited demands for wealth taxes on both sides of the Atlantic.An unprecedented leak of “a vast trove” of 15 years of Internal Revenue Service (IRS) data to the investigative news site ProPublica has provided a staggering insight into the legal strategies the very rich deploy to avoid tax. Continue reading...
Ignored, bullied, patronised: why loyalists in Northern Ireland say no to Brexit ‘betrayal’
As the often volatile marching season approaches, bitter tensions over the EU protocol grow, along with a belief that NI is being cast adrift by a duplicitous British governmentThey gathered in their thousands at the top of the Shankill Road with banners and drums to send a message to the far side of the Irish Sea, where a treacherous prime minister played his charade in a kingdom no longer fully theirs.Some waved union jack flags, others had union jack masks, one had a union jack balaclava, and they tramped behind marching bands with drums, flutes and cymbals, a percussive shockwave in the Belfast dusk. Continue reading...
Thousands march in support of Muslim family killed in Canada truck attack – video
Thousands of people have marched in Canada in support of a Muslim family run over and killed by a man driving a pickup truck. Police have described the incident last Sunday as a premeditated attack motivated by Islamophobia. Crowds in London, Ontario, marched five miles on Friday from the spot where the family was killed to a nearby mosque, the site close to where police arrested the attacker. Candlelight vigils were also held to honour the victims and protest against hatred
G7 backs Biden infrastructure plan to rival China’s belt and road initiative
Scheme is part of wider push for G7 leaders to question China on human rights, Taiwan and Covid-19The Group of Seven rich nations have agreed plans to set up an alternative to China’s belt and road initiative as part of a wide push back against China covering human rights, supply chains, support for Taiwan and demands for Beijing to reveal more about the origins of the Covid-19 pandemic.But Biden is being urged by other G7 leaders, including the Italian prime minister Mario Draghi, the current chair of the G20, not to push competition with China to the extent that it prevents Chinese cooperation over other critical issues such as the climate crisis. Continue reading...
True to nature: Robert Macfarlane, Helen Macdonald and more on the children’s books that inspired them
From Watership Down to The Animals of Farthing Wood, leading nature writers discuss the children’s classics that made them want to write about the natural world
Man held in Italy over UK Vietnamese migrant deaths
Stefan Damian Dragos, 28-year-old Romanian citizen, is accused of providing truck in people-smuggling caseItalian police have arrested a man wanted by the UK in connection with a people-smuggling plot that led to the death of 39 Vietnamese migrants in the back of a lorry.Stefan Damian Dragos, a 28-year-old Romanian citizen, is accused of having provided the truck that transported the migrants to England, according to a police statement. Continue reading...
Covid live: UK reports 8,125 daily cases, most since February – as it happened
UK also reports 17 deaths as infection rate rises; British Medical Association calls for delay to easing of remaining lockdown restrictions
‘This is how it should be’: replanting the Daintree rainforest
Australia’s world-heritage listed Daintree rainforest teems with unique flora and fauna, including one of the rarest and most primitive flowering plants in the world. It spans 120sq km and is estimated to be 180 million years old, but in recent years logging and sugarcane fields have threatened this natural wonder. Now an ambitious ‘buy back’ scheme is set to bring the rainforest back to lifeAs Andrew Solomon looks up at the rainforest canopy on Kuku Yalanji land near Cape Tribulation, his eyes start to water.“When I first came back, I felt someone was following me. I could feel a presence. I wasn’t wearing any shoes and all of a sudden I felt a bolt of electricity come up through me from the ground. It was country speaking to me, it was welcoming me back.” Continue reading...
‘Raring to go’: Australia’s ski resorts prepare for a post-pandemic comeback like no other
After a muted 2020 ski season, alpine towns are hoping heavy snowfall will bring back travellers and revive businesses
Hello possum: the New Zealanders who keep wild marsupials as pets
The animals have a bad reputation in Aotearoa, where they are regarded as pests – but some say they are scapegoated for human failuresMaurice likes to stay up all night. When he finally settles down at 5am, he makes sure everyone knows he’s there – then he curls up and sleeps all day.“When he’s ready to go to bed, he gives us a good face wash to say ‘hi,’” Jo Little* says, laughing. “He’s got really, really cold feet, and he puts them all over your head. He licks every area of your face!” Continue reading...
‘My dream was buried’: the children of India orphaned by Covid
Officials and NGOs say orphans now face the double threat of neglect and being vulnerable to exploitation
Peru on edge as electoral board reviews result of disputed presidential election
Rightwing candidate Keiko Fujimori alleged fraud after losing to leftist Pedro Castillo by about 60,000 votesPeru was on a knife-edge on Friday as its electoral board reviewed ballots cast in the presidential election, after a challenge to the tally by the losing candidate Keiko Fujimori.The final tally gave the leftist teacher Pedro Castillo a razor-thin 50.17% to 49.83% advantage over his rightwing rival Fujimori, which amounts to about 60,000 votes. Continue reading...
Lifting restrictions in England on 21 June: what are the alternatives?
As doubt grows that government will end Covid controls on planned date, we look at the other options
Party’s over: Amsterdam plans to keep tourists ‘in penis outfits’ away
As Dutch capital reopens post-Covid, city is taking ‘extra measures’ to discourage excessAmsterdam has said it will not allow a return to the “nuisance and massive crowds” the city endured before the pandemic, sending a blunt warning that visitors “whose intention is to booze and misbehave, dressed like a penis” should go elsewhere.As much of the EU prepares to open up to tourists who are vaccinated, have recovered from the coronavirus or can provide a negative test from 1 July, the Dutch capital’s city hall said in a statement it was taking “extra measures” to discourage excesses. Continue reading...
G7 leaders in Cornwall – in pictures
G7 leaders have opened their first in-person talks in nearly two years. Welcomed by Boris Johnson to the beachside summit venue in Carbis Bay, Cornwall, the leaders posed for a photograph before opening their first session of talks Continue reading...
Boy, 15, dies after stabbing during school run in Hayes, west London
Met police say suspect has been detained after death on Blyth Road in Hayes on Friday morningA 15-year-old boy has died after being stabbed in west London during the morning school run.Officers were called to reports of a fight on Blyth Road in Hayes shortly before 8.35am and found the victim with multiple stab wounds. He died at the scene, close to Global Academy, a college for students aged 14 to 19. Continue reading...
Keir Starmer accuses Boris Johnson of failure of leadership in anti-racism row
Buddhist monastery in Scotland calls for firearms exclusion zone
Petition asks for protection from shooting ranges around Samye Ling and other places of peaceWhen the gunfire starts it is like a thunderclap, the monks and nuns explain, and the sound reverberates up the valley. During the game shooting season, it is not unusual for avian casualties to land within the grounds of Samye Ling, the largest Tibetan Buddhist temple in western Europe. Tame ducks who have sought refuge from the hunters now waddle and strut between the golden statues, and peck at the monastics’ brick red robes.This secluded spiritual community now finds itself in a confounding position, standing with the local community of Eskdalemuir against the development of shooting ranges that threaten their “pocket of peace”. Continue reading...
Police find ammunition stash in hunt for far-right Belgian soldier
Cpl Jürgen Conings disappeared more than three weeks ago and threatened to kill a top scientistPolice searching a nature reserve for a heavily armed Belgian soldier who has threatened to kill one of the country’s top scientists have found a backpack full of ammunition, raising fears the fugitive has even more weapons than suspected.Cpl Jürgen Conings, 46, a specialist marksman, has not been seen since he disappeared on 17 May after taking four anti-tank missile launchers, a sub-machine gun and a bullet proof vest from his barracks. Continue reading...
Pitcher perfect: 10 thirst-quenching jug-based cocktails from top bartenders
Take the edge off the summer heat with these delicious cocktails to share – from a boozy take on iced tea to a dark rum crowd-pleaser
Geoffrey Edelsten, high profile former doctor and one-time Sydney Swans owner, dies at 78
Edelsten was known for his flashy lifestyle, young wives and a series of brushes with the legal system that included a stint in jailGeoffrey Edelsten, who made a name for himself as a flashy doctor, helped save AFL team the Sydney Swans from extinction and had a string of young wives, has died aged 78.Edelsten died on Friday at his home in Melbourne, the ABC and local media reported. Continue reading...
‘Nightmare’: Ben Roberts-Smith says reports he murdered unarmed civilian are ‘outright malicious’
Victoria Cross recipient tells court man killed in Afghanistan was a ‘spotter’ and legitimate target within rules of warAccused soldier Ben Roberts-Smith has denied outright the most dramatic murder alleged against him – that he kicked an unarmed, handcuffed Afghan civilian off a cliff before ordering him shot – telling a court the accusation was false and “outright malicious”.“It feels like you’re in a bloody nightmare,” he told the court during an excoriating day of evidence. “Every time they write it I wonder: ‘how am I in this position?’” Continue reading...
Coronavirus Australia live: more than 100,000 Victorians without power; 50,000 Covid disaster payment claims made
Victoria and Queensland record no new Covid cases; court approves robodebt settlement. Follow live
Rome ready for Euro 2020 kick-off but fans struggle to get in mood
Games will not boost local trade by as much as was hoped but there is optimism over Italy’s chancesThe rescheduled European football championships kick off in Rome on Friday in what the city’s mayor, Virginia Raggi, has billed as a symbol of a new beginning.Andrea Bocelli will sing Nessun Dorma before the opening match between Italy and Turkey at the Olympic stadium, and a football village will open at Piazza del Popolo in the centre of Rome. Continue reading...
Ben Roberts-Smith tells defamation trial that Victoria Cross ‘put a target on my back’
The former SAS soldier says attitudes of other soldiers changed after he received his military honour and he was ‘white-anted’The Victoria Cross was a cross to bear, Ben Roberts-Smith has told his defamation trial, saying it “put a target on his back” for other soldiers jealous of his medal.In the witness box for a second straight day, the former corporal detailed at length his missions in Afghanistan, and the tensions within SAS as soldiers were sent back for repeated deployments in a long, grinding and costly war. Continue reading...
China rushes through law to counter US and EU sanctions
Foreigners could be placed on an anti-sanctions list and denied entry into China or expelled from the countryChina has passed a law to counter foreign sanctions in response to US and EU pressure over trade, technology, Hong Kong and Xinjiang.Individuals or entities involved in making or implementing discriminatory measures against Chinese citizens or entities could be put on an anti-sanctions list and may be denied entry into China or be expelled from the country. Their assets within China may be seized or frozen and they could be restricted from doing business there. Continue reading...
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