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Updated 2026-04-11 08:15
Winter Olympics: threat of boycotts clouds China's 'joyful rendezvous' in the snow
Beijing is working overtime for another 2008-style showcase in 2022, but world is very different place this time around and the diplomatic gloves are offAhead of the 2022 Winter Olympics to be held in Beijing and neighbouring cities, China is working overtime to make sure the event is a success.Beijing has budgeted $3.1bn for repurposing and building new venues and spent an additional $8.2bn yuan on a high speed rail connecting Beijing with another host city Zhangjiakou. Continue reading...
Slovenia to declare a state of epidemic –as it happened
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UK archbishops urge ministers not to breach international law over Brexit
Leaders of Anglican church say internal market bill risks being a ‘disastrous precedent’The Anglican church has publicly challenged the government’s willingness to break international law over Brexit, with five archbishops from the UK’s four nations joining together to condemn what could be a “disastrous precedent”.In a rare step, the archbishops of Canterbury and York, plus their counterparts in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, have written a joint letter warning that such a step would have “enormous moral, as well as political and legal, consequences”. Continue reading...
Brexit negotiations expected to resume despite UK's tough rhetoric
Michael Gove confirms British government’s door to re-engagement with Brussels is ‘ajar’Brussels expects the Brexit negotiations to resume within days, as Michael Gove confirmed that despite Downing Street’s tough rhetoric the door remained “ajar” on re-engagement.The EU’s chief negotiator, Michel Barnier, will hold a video conference call with his British counterpart, David Frost, on Monday afternoon to discuss the structure of future talks. Continue reading...
Body thought to be asylum seeker found on beach near Calais
French authorities believe the man may have been trying to get to the Kent coast
Covid: Greater Manchester running out of hospital beds, leak reveals
NHS document shows no spare beds for patients in Salford, Stockport and Bolton
US coronavirus cases surge in most states
Man arrested over leak of Kim Darroch cables criticising Trump
Suspect believed to be civil servant at UK’s Department for International TradeA man has been arrested in connection with the leak of highly sensitive cables sent to London by the UK ambassador to Washington savaging Donald Trump’s character and leadership skills.The man, believed to be a civil servant at the Department for International Trade, was arrested on Tuesday after a 15-month inquiry appeared to have gone cold. Continue reading...
Hardliner wins Turkish Cypriot leadership runoff
Ersin Tatar, who favours even closer ties with Turkey, defeats incumbent Mustafa AkıncıA hardliner who favours even closer ties with Turkey and a tougher stance with Greek Cypriots in peace talks has defeated the leftist incumbent in the Turkish Cypriot leadership runoff.The Turkish Cypriot broadcaster BRT said Ersin Tatar secured 51.74% of the vote, compared with 48.26% for Mustafa Akıncı. Continue reading...
Covid in Europe: protests in Czech Republic, Ireland to toughen rules
Switzerland makes masks mandatory as continent struggles to contain infections
Andy Burnham calls for Commons vote to 'break impasse' on Covid rules
Greater Manchester mayor holds talks with PM’s adviser but no sign of breakthrough
Thai protest leaders play cat and mouse with police as thousands rally
Government is struggling to control unprecedented student-led pro-democracy movementWearing hard hats and dressed in black, thousands of people rallied in Bangkok on Sunday, using Hong Kong-inspired tactics to defy the authorities and demand that the prime minister resign and the power of the royal family be curbed.The government is struggling to control an unprecedented student-led movement that began on university campuses and has since spread to streets across the country. Protesters have risked long jail sentences to breach the country’s ultimate taboo and call for reforms to the monarchy, demanding that the institution be answerable to the people. They also want wider democratic reforms including a new constitution. Continue reading...
US power in Asia Pacific falls amid mishandling of Covid, Australia's Lowy Institute finds
The United States remains the top power in the region but China is on track to match it by the end of this decade, the Asia Power Index saysThe United States remains the top power in the Indo-Pacific but has suffered the biggest relative fall in its standing in the region over the past year, partly because of the loss of prestige over the mishandling of Covid-19, according to the Lowy Institute’s Asia Power Index.Releasing the latest annual results on Monday, the Australia-based foreign policy thinktank said while China’s standing had stalled, the rising power remained in second place and was believed to be on track to match the US by the end of this decade. Continue reading...
What's life like on the jobseeker rollercoaster of 2020?
Changes in welfare payments since the 1990s have led to a dramatic change in the typical jobseeker, who is now most likely to be a woman aged over 50. Those on the unemployment benefit were given a boost during the pandemic when the rate was doubled but now face an uncertain future. Luke Henriques-Gomes reports on how people are copingYou can read Luke Henriques-Gomez’s feature on how jobseeker has become a pre-pension for older women here. And you can read more of his reporting on welfare and inequality here. Continue reading...
Thousands rally across France in tribute to murdered schoolteacher
Nation mourns Samuel Paty, who was beheaded in a terrorist attack on Friday
John Sentamu peerage snub criticised as 'institutional prejudice'
Britain’s first black archbishop has not been given Lords seat though his predecessor wasThe government has been accused of “institutional prejudice” for failing to give an automatic peerage to John Sentamu, the former archbishop of York.Sentamu’s successor, Stephen Cottrell, who was enthroned as the 98th archbishop of York on Sunday, tweeted that he was “disturbed to find out today whether it be through negligence or intent my predecessor @Sentamu has not been given the peerage that has been the custom for many years. I trust this will soon be rectified.” Continue reading...
Huge cat found etched into desert among Nazca Lines in Peru
Feline geoglyph from 200-100BC emerges during work at Unesco world heritage siteThe dun sands of southern Peru, etched centuries ago with geoglyphs of a hummingbird, a monkey, an orca – and a figure some would dearly love to believe is an astronaut – have now revealed the form of an enormous cat lounging across a desert hillside.The feline Nazca line, dated to between 200BC and 100BC, emerged during work to improve access to one of the hills that provides a natural vantage point from which many of the designs can be seen. Continue reading...
'We’ve been forgotten': locked-down Leicester teeters on brink of despair
Overlooked between north and south, locals want to know when their long purgatory will come to an endMezmin Malida’s neighbours have been wondering what she’s up to for a while now. Seven days a week, several times a day, they see her load up every crevice of a BMW with mysterious bin liners and boxes until the pile looks like it might topple into the driver’s seat, and then head off into Leicester and return a few hours later having got rid of the lot. Also, they ask themselves, why do the police keep coming round?There’s nothing for them to worry about. Malida, 39, is a trustee of Rosemina’s Outreach Project, and a one-woman Deliveroo for Leicester’s most vulnerable people as they wait out a crisis that feels like it will never end. (She also does community support work with the police, which explains the visits.) Continue reading...
Iran hails lifting of 13-year UN arms embargo as 'momentous day'
Immediate shopping spree is unlikely after end to military sanctions despite US protestsIranian officials have hailed the lifting of a 13-year UN arms embargo on their military as a momentous day, claiming they were once again free to buy and sell conventional weapons in an effort to strengthen their country’s security.The embargo was lifted on Sunday morning despite US protests and was in line with the five-year timetable set out in the Iran nuclear deal, which was signed in 2015. Continue reading...
Revealed: Sheikh Khalifa’s £5bn London property empire
Documents reveal UAE president owns multibillion-pound property portfolio spanning London’s most expensive neighbourhoodsThe row of 1960s-built houses with untidy gardens on a quiet cul-de-sac near Richmond upon Thames appears to have little in common with Ecuador’s red-brick embassy in Knightsbridge, where Julian Assange spent seven years in hiding, just across the road from Harrods. Continue reading...
Samba makes tentative return in Rio de Janeiro laid low by Covid
Legendary sambista Moacyr Luz spent much of the pandemic confined to his beachside home but is resuming his weekly jam sessions as lockdown curbs easeIt has been seven months since Moacyr Luz, one of Brazil’s most celebrated sambistas, sat down before a live audience in the city his songs serenade.As Covid-19 shook Luz’s homeland, killing more than 150,000 and infecting millions, it also wreaked havoc on Rio’s signature sound, with all shows scrapped, carnival postponed until a vaccine is found and several cherished samba proponents among the dead. Continue reading...
'I don't tend to have communications with Donald Trump,' says Jacinda Ardern – video
After securing a historic election victory, the New Zealand prime minister was asked about the world leaders who sent her congratulations. 'I have had a few lovely messages. Scott Morrison ... I've had the prime minister of Denmark, Pedro Sánchez from Spain. Of course, Boris Johnson reached out as well.' When asked about whether Donald Trump had been in touch, she replied: ' I don't tend to have those direct communications with the president of the United States'
Like the 80s, Liverpool faces a tough opponent, but now it feels different
The Militant tendency emerged here amid the ravages of economic decline. A new self-confidence is helping the city face its latest testThere’s little that’s modest about Liverpool. As cities go, it’s a glorious show-off – one knockout building after another inviting you to take an admiring look.Which makes it deeply sad then, unnatural even, to walk along its handsome waterfront – mid-afternoon, late last week – and meet barely a soul to admire the view. The river walk is made for a Liverpudlian passeggiata, for the craic and the lovely thrum of city life. Instead, only the skateboarders were out – Covid-19 with its power to empty our city streets has been a boon for them, if no one else. Continue reading...
Residents evacuated at Sydney's North Head as hazard reduction burn jumps containment lines
Authorities upgraded the fire to ‘watch and act’ level, but say the blaze is under control and no homes are under threatA hazard reduction burn around North Head on Sydney’s northern beaches which jumped containment lines has prompted the evacuation of nearby residents.New South Wales police said in a statement on Saturday that commercial premises and residential properties around North Head had been evacuated. Continue reading...
Nagorno-Karabakh: Armenia and Azerbaijan accuse each other of breaking fresh truce
Casualties reported after Armenia says it was shelled twice, while Azerbaijan says mortars and artillery were used against itArmenia and Azerbaijan accused each other on Sunday of violating a new humanitarian ceasefire in fighting over the mountain enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, hours after it was agreed.The truce reached on Saturday came into force at midnight after a week-old Russian-brokered ceasefire failed to halt what has been the worst fighting in the South Caucasus since the 1990s. Continue reading...
How coronavirus 'diktats' from Downing Street tore Britain apart
Manchester is in revolt, Wales is restricting movement and Liverpool is furious … Boris Johnson’s ‘one nation’ pledge is failingAfter six days of difficult and largely fruitless discussions with Downing Street, tempers were fraying among Greater Manchester council leaders and MPs on Thursday morning.In a meeting at 9am between the region’s mayor, Andy Burnham, and local government chiefs, the leader of Rochdale Borough Council, Allen Brett told his colleagues he was so fed up with London that he wanted to make his feelings clear to Edward Lister, the prime minister’s close adviser, with whom the group was preparing to open yet another online discussion at 9.30am. Continue reading...
From Sudan to the Park Inn: the tragic story of a migrant’s killing
A mass stabbing in Glasgow in June revealed the plight of asylum seekers crammed into hotels during lockdownOn the last Friday of June, at about midday, Badreddin Abadlla Adam left his room at the Park Inn hotel in Glasgow, walked down to reception, and stabbed six people. The 28-year-old, an asylum seeker from Sudan who had been placed in the hotel as part of the UK government’s emergency response to the coronavirus pandemic, stabbed and seriously injured three other residents, two staff members and a policeman who arrived on the scene. Adam was shot dead by armed officers shortly afterwards.The incident, which took place as Scotland was still under stringent lockdown, was initially reported by some media outlets as a potential terrorist attack, although police later dismissed this explanation. It was immediately seized on by rightwing activists, to claim that the country was threatened by an influx of “illegal” immigrants. Continue reading...
What next for New Zealand's National party and its embattled leader?
New Zealand overwhelmingly embraced Jacinda Ardern’s Labour, leaving Judith Collins’ party in the wildernessJudith Collins had a spring in her step and a high-beam smile when she appeared for reporters the day after a New Zealand election that delivered a landslide victory to her opponent, Jacinda Ardern of Labour – the country’s most popular leader of modern times.“I’m feeling really good,” she said. “Woke up today, the sun was shining.” Continue reading...
’Tis the season to shop early: ‘stay safe‘ festive ad campaign
Retailers urge customers to avoid the Christmas rush, while investing in hygiene measures to keep them Covid safe
How star reporter’s Syria podcast sent New York Times into crisis
Caliphate, an insider’s story of Isis, caused a sensation. But with its credibility in doubt, questions are raised about the mediaBen Smith of the New York Times is not known for pulling his punches. The former editor-in-chief of BuzzFeed, who revealed the dossier on suspicions that the Kremlin held kompromat on Donald Trump, is on a new beat – the US media.Smith’s most recent column was a bombshell, his target the practices of his own employer as well as one of its brightest stars, Rukmini Callimachi, an award-winning correspondent who covered the rise and fall of Islamic State. Continue reading...
Top ministers urged Priti Patel to stop attacks on 'activist lawyers'
The home secretary’s rhetoric targeting the legal profession continued despite warnings that it led to violenceHome secretary Priti Patel ignored warnings from at least two senior colleagues to stop targeting immigration lawyers after a knifeman threatened to kill a solicitor last month in an attack linked to her rhetoric, the Observer can reveal.Lord chancellor Robert Buckland and attorney general Suella Braverman intervened after the attack to tell Patel that her targeting of the legal profession was already believed to have inspired an incident that might have left a solicitor dead. Continue reading...
Hong Kong protester 'Grandma Wong’: I was held in mainland China for 14 months
Sixty-four-year-old vows never to give up fighting, even as she describes forced confessions and detention without trialAn elderly woman who disappeared midway through Hong Kong’s democracy protests last year has resurfaced in the financial hub after 14 months away, saying she had been detained on the Chinese mainland.Alexandra Wong said on Saturday she was forced to renounce her activism in writing, record a video statement saying she was not tortured, and sent on a “patriotic tour” of the country’s north. Continue reading...
Rare mammoth tusk sculpture on show for first time in Arctic display
Exhibition at British Museum features newly finished Sakha sculptureAncient mammoth tusk is a seriously niche material to work in, but there is one place where the skills and carving techniques involved are still passed down the generations.A major new British Museum exhibition, Arctic: Culture and Climate, which starts this week in London, will feature an extraordinary piece of “very rare” sculpture, one that details an arcane ritual and has been completed in collaboration with the Sakha people of north-eastern Russia. Continue reading...
The freedom to offend is a priceless commodity | Kenan Malik
The murder of a Parisian teacher underlines the need to stand up for free speechThe details are still emerging, but the horror is clear – the beheading of a teacher, Samuel Paty, in Paris, apparently in response to his using Charlie Hebdo cartoons in a classroom discussion on free speech.After such attacks there are always claims that “free speech isn’t worth it”. Hardly had news begun filtering out about the 2015 Charlie Hebdo murders than there were suggestions that the cartoonists had brought it on themselves. The same will no doubt happen again. Continue reading...
Beware hypocrisy on Nagorno-Karabakh | Letters
The big players should look to their own history of occupation before they criticise smaller nations in the south CaucasusI write as an academic and Anglo-Armenian. Your coverage of the Armenian-Azerbaijani war over Nagorno-Karabakh/Artsakh gave a graphic account of the horrors on the ground (“Fresh Azerbaijani shelling shatters peace after fragile ceasefire agreed”, World, and “Putin faces grave dangers in Russia’s ‘near abroad”, editorial). This dispute pits territory (legally Azerbaijan’s) against ethnicity (the enclave of 150,000 is 90% Armenian). To spare civilians (and military personnel) from all sides, I would urge the EU and/or UN to immediately deploy peacekeepers along the line of contact (as was done in Kosovo), so that a diplomatic settlement can be worked towards.It seems to me that there is gross hypocrisy among the various stakeholders: Armenia is accused of illegally occupying land while, it says, it is protecting a persecuted minority. This is the same argument successfully deployed by Turkey (illegally occupying north Cyprus for nigh on 50 years) and the same could be argued for Britain occupying the Falklands, Russia’s annexation of Crimea and South Ossetia in Georgia and Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and Gaza. Either all of these occupations in defence of (alleged) persecuted minorities are valid and should stand or they are all invalid and all should immediately withdraw from occupied territories. The only reason why Armenia is being steered towards handing back NK/Artsakh is that this is a small (3 million population), relatively poor country with limited political clout.
Traitor review: American perfidy, from Benedict Arnold to Donald J Trump
David Rothkopf has all a good Trump reporter requires. Sixteen days out from the election, his book is a bracing readOne of the most important qualities a good reporter can have is a very low threshold for outrage. Useful, critical coverage of your subject becomes impossible once nonchalance or indifference has inured you to scandal.Related: Wide Awakes: the Lincoln-era youth movement inspiring anti-Trump protests Continue reading...
French teachers vow to ‘teach difficult subjects’ after colleague’s murder
Rallies expected across country in defiant reaction to beheading of Samuel Paty after showing pupils controversial Charlie Hebdo cartoonsShocked French teachers vowed to continue encouraging their pupils’ “critical spirit” by raising contested subjects after an Islamic terrorist beheaded a secondary school teacher who showed his students caricatures of the Prophet as part of a freedom of speech discussion.Representatives of teaching unions met the education minister Jean-Michel Blanquer and the prime minister Jean Castex on Saturday, hours after the death of 47-year-old history and geography teacher Samuel Paty. Continue reading...
Jacinda Ardern eases into second term amid relief in New Zealand at election landslide
Prime minister says she will be ready to form a government in two to three weeks as New Zealanders enjoy return to normal life
Global Covid report: Paris under curfew as Europe battles soaring caseload
Nine French cities now under month-long curfew; European cases rise 44% in a week; resistance to lockdowns in UK
New Zealand's three-week streak without local Covid case ends as port worker falls ill
Jacinda Ardern says case is an example of the system working, as Dr Ashley Bloomfield urges continued vigilance
Victoria’s Covid restrictions ease as Daniel Andrews reveals 25km travel bubble and scraps exercise time limit
Melbourne to resume real estate auctions and reopen hairdressers and outdoor sporting facilities as state records two new cases• Follow the live blog
'We made history': New Zealand Greens on the rise after voters return to the fold
Supporters jubilant after defying poor early polls and gaining first electorate win since 1999The mood at the election headquarters of New Zealand’s Green party was triumphal, almost as though the party had won the election outright. The election result was everything they hoped for and perhaps more than they expected.Just a few weeks ago, polls had the party below the 5% threshold that would trigger proportional representation and deliver it to parliament if none of its candidates won an electorate seat. Continue reading...
Immigration minister points finger at Victoria over New Zealand travellers
Alan Tudge says Victoria’s chief health officer, Brett Sutton, did not object to interstate travel when New Zealand bubble was arrangedThe acting federal immigration minister, Alan Tudge has blamed the Victorian government for not restricting interstate travel, after a group of international travellers were allowed to fly from their “travel bubble” into locked down Melbourne.A group of 17 New Zealanders flew into Sydney as part of the newly formed international travel arrangements between Aotearoa and participating Australian jurisdictions. Continue reading...
NSW Covid hotspots: list of Sydney and regional case locations
Here are the current coronavirus hotspots in New South Wales and what to do if you’ve visited them
Murderer who tackled London Bridge attacker with narwhal tusk pardoned
Steven Gallant has sentence reduced as a result of ‘exceptionally brave actions’The Queen has granted a pardon to the murderer who helped disrupt the London Bridge terror attack by confronting Usman Khan with a narwhal tusk while on day release.Steven Gallant, who was praised for risking his life to stop the attack, has been granted the royal prerogative of mercy, an extremely rare case of absolution for a convicted murderer. Continue reading...
Churches tally up their value to society – at £12.4bn
From food banks to youth clubs, the C of E hosts 35,000 projects. Now a price has been put on its contributionSixteen years ago, St Stephen’s church in Bradford was on the verge of closure. Its congregation had dwindled to half a dozen, and the building – a “big old barn of a place”, in a predominantly Muslim area – was in poor repair. “People thought it had had its day,” said the Rev Jimmy Hinton.Now, St Stephen’s is a vital hub, providing support and activities in an area of acute deprivation. The nave has been cleared of its pews, and heating has been installed. On a typical day, you might find an exercise class, a support group for asylum seekers and refugees, community meals being cooked and served, singing and stories for infants, mosaic-making, and people hunting for jobs or claiming benefits online. Continue reading...
ACT election: resurgent Greens to push for policy ‘reset’ after Labor victory
Chief minister Andrew Barr and the Greens leader Shane Rattenbury to discuss minority governmentThe ACT chief minister Andrew Barr and the Greens leader Shane Rattenbury are set for talks this week on minority government, following Saturday’s election.Labor and the Greens are set to hold talks this week on forming another minority government in the ACT, with the minor party seeking a policy “reset”. Continue reading...
Are we near to having a vaccine for Covid-19?
Even a once bullish PM is now not so optimistic but there are promising signs of a vaccine on the horizon
Jihadists kill 14 soldiers in attack on Nigerian army base
Islamic State West Africa Province fighters fired machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades, sources sayJihadists linked to the Islamic State group have killed 14 Nigerian soldiers in an attack on an army base, military sources have said.Two sources told Agence France-Presse on condition of anonymity that fighters from the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) group had attacked the base in Jakana on Friday evening, firing machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades. Continue reading...
Privilege, power, patriarchy: are these the reasons for the mess we're in?
Changes can arise out of this uneasy pause in the world right now, but whether it is bent towards greater authority or greater equality is up for grabs
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