Feed world-news-the-guardian

Link http://feeds.theguardian.com/
Feed http://feeds.theguardian.com/theguardian/world/rss
Updated 2026-04-11 08:15
Revealed: fewer than one in 200 complaints against Met unit upheld
Figures raise questions about accountability of division that includes Territorial Support GroupFewer than one in 200 complaints made against the division of the Metropolitan police responsible for public order policing over the last decade have been upheld, figures obtained by the Guardian suggest.The data obtained from a freedom of information request raises questions about the accountability of the Met’s MO7 taskforce, which includes the Territorial Support Group (TSG) and allied specialist units. Continue reading...
Italian police seize 4,000 bottles of counterfeit 'super Tuscan' wine
Fakes imitate one of Italy’s top wines, Bolgheri Sassicaia, which costs up to £320 a bottleItalian police have seized more than 4,000 counterfeit bottles of a prestigious “super Tuscan” wine that can fetch up to €360 (£325) a bottle.The operation, called Bad Tuscan, led to the arrests of two people with 11 others under investigation for allegedly counterfeiting one of the storied red wine, Bolgheri Sassicaia by Tenuta San Guido. Continue reading...
Matt Hancock raises Covid alert level for parts of England including London – video
The health secretary, Matt Hancock, told the Commons that several areas of England were being moved to the high-risk, tier 2 coronavirus restrictions. The new rules will come into force at one minute past midnight on Saturday, for an undetermined amount of time, in areas including London, Essex, York and north-east Derbyshire
Quino obituary
Argentinian creator of Mafalda, Latin America’s most famous strip cartoon characterShe is a stumpy six-year old girl with a mop of black hair, innocent-looking saucer eyes and a broad smile. Like little girls everywhere, she asks awkward questions. Of her mother, busy doing the washing: “What would you be if you had a life?” Of her father: “How come in the family of man everyone wants to be the father?” The little girl is Mafalda, the creation of the Argentinian cartoonist Joaquín Salvador Lavado Tejón, universally known by his pen name of Quino, who has died aged 88.Mafalda began life as a strip cartoon character in the early 1960s as part of an advertising campaign for domestic appliances. The campaign came to nothing but Mafalda was soon taken up by magazines and newspapers across the country. By the time Quino drew his last Mafalda strip in 1973, she had become a household name across Latin America. Continue reading...
Jacinda Ardern saves best for last in New Zealand election TV debate | Steve Braunias
Judith Collins has the look of a defeated woman as Labour heads to likely victoryLong time no see. Jacinda Ardern left it late, but turned up at last night’s fourth and final debate of the election campaign as the prime minister. Ghostly versions of herself made weird, kind of shifty appearances in the previous three debates. God she was terrible, an anxious mess, uptight, easily thrown, unable to say anything memorable or with much conviction. She got better or at least less terrible as the debates dragged on and last night, back at the TVNZ studios where the series began, she was in the ascendant. She looked like she knew what she was doing. She looked like herself.Who was the person sitting beside her in the mauve lights of the studio, though? Someone who only had a faint resemblance to the National leader, Judith Collins, someone who looked like she had the fight taken out of her and had nothing left to give. God, it was sad to witness. It’s a lie that it’s lonely at the top. It’s a lot lonelier at the bottom, and that’s where Collins seems right now at the end of a campaign that has turned into a nightmare, with the prospect of a sound thrashing on Saturday. Continue reading...
Kyrgyzstan’s president steps down amid political unrest
Sooronbay Jeenbekov announces resignation as fallout from disputed election continuesKyrgyzstan’s president, Sooronbay Jeenbekov, has resigned after violent protests erupted over parliamentary election results, saying he had no desire to go down in history as a man who brought bloodshed to his country.The central Asian country has been in crisis since the start of the month when parties loyal to Jeenbekov won a parliamentary election that the opposition said was tainted by vote-buying. Continue reading...
Why horror keeps creeping into black drama - video
Shows such as I May Destroy You, Atlanta and Insecure depict a wide spectrum of black life, from hilarity to mundanity – but all these shows, at times, also have an impending sense of doom. This feeling of horror, this looming sense of dread, is intentional, but it plays on the common tropes we've been conditioned to expect. Josh Toussaint-Strauss discusses why audiences expect bad things to happen to black characters and explores how a new generation of black creators are using horror to subvert these negative tropes Continue reading...
EU sanctions Kremlin chiefs over Alexei Navalny poisoning
Bloc targeting six Russians, including FSB chief, over ‘assassination attempt’ on opposition figureThe EU has announced sanctions against members of Vladimir Putin’s inner circle, including the head of Russia’s domestic spy agency, over the poisoning of opposition figure Alexei Navalny.The EU said it had agreed sanctions against six people believed to have been involved in the “assassination attempt” against Putin’s most vocal critic. Continue reading...
National cabinet meeting to discuss Darwin quarantine postponed due to 'problem' with PM's plane
Scott Morrison, who is temporarily stuck in Queensland, expects overseas arrival numbers to rise within weeksA national cabinet meeting due to discuss a plan to bring back thousands of additional Australians stranded overseas has been postponed, after the prime minister himself became stranded in Queensland with “technical problems” grounding his RAAF plane.Scott Morrison, speaking in Cairns on Thursday, confirmed that more citizens stuck overseas due to Covid flight caps would soon be able to return home with increased repatriation flights and use of the Howard Springs quarantine facility near Darwin. Continue reading...
Flying bullets put spotlight on Toronto's short-term rental 'ghost hotels'
A shooting this week was just the most dramatic disturbance associated with short lets by companies including AirbnbThe first bang, which woke Lucas Timmons up, sounded like a slamming door. The second, followed by shattering of glass, got him out of bed.Blearily inspecting his Toronto condo, Timmons found broken glass. A hole was punched through a framed photo across the room. On the ground was a bullet, splayed open on impact. Continue reading...
Over the Moon review – Netflix family animation is more Disney than Disney
The voices of Cathy Ang, John Cho and Sandra Oh star in this K-poppy, trippy fantasy about a girl who builds a rocket and flies to the moonWatch your back, Disney; here comes Netflix in Hollywood studio mode, flexing its ambition with an animated family fantasy adventure about a sunny, 13-year-old girl called Fei Fei who flies to the moon in a homemade rocket. It’s a film for the globalised 21st century (and presumably Netflix’s global audience): a Chinese story directed by an American – the veteran Disney animator Glen Keane – and voiced in English by actors of (mostly) east Asian heritage.Cathy Ang is Fei Fei, who is horrified when her dad (John Cho) brings home a new girlfriend (Sandra Oh) four years after her mum’s death. Fei Fei is a true believer in the mythical goddess Chang’e, who is said to languish on the moon, pining for her mortal lover. Our heroine reasons that if she can prove Chang’e and eternal love really do exist, her dad will have to chuck his girlfriend and devote himself to the memory of her mumThus, as a science whizz, she builds a spaceship. It’s a contrived plot but Keane’s character design is beautifully expressive, adding real emotional force – Fei Fei’s face scrunched in anguish when she realises her dad plans to remarry is very touching. Continue reading...
Blood and tears as Israeli police storm wedding during lockdown
Police say bride’s brother threw oil and slipped on it; interior minister demands investigationAn Israeli wedding in a settlement outside Jerusalem ended with a bloody fight and sobbing guests after police stormed in to break it up, accusing the family of breaking coronavirus lockdown rules.Footage of police dragging the bride’s brother out a house, blood streaming down his face as he is escorted past a white cloth table set with flowers, has led to outrage in the government, and an investigation has been opened. Continue reading...
Gladys Berejiklian angrily rejects Labor charge she is a 'sounding board for corruption'
NSW premier calls allegation ‘extremely offensive’ and dares Labor to repeat it outside parliament, as Icac continues to grill her former lover Daryl Maguire
Welsh government insists police can enforce Covid travel ban
Police say they lack resources to prevent people travelling from hotspots elsewhere in UK
Jacinda Ardern prevails in final debate before New Zealand election
Leader says she will resign if not re-elected but polls show Labour 15 points aheadJacinda Ardern has dominated the final leaders’ debate before New Zealand goes to the polls on Saturday, appearing confident and prime ministerial as she took on a subdued Judith Collins.In a surprise admission, Ardern said if she was not re-elected, she would resign as Labour leader. Continue reading...
New Brexit law will allow vulnerable EU citizens to apply late to stay in UK
Those with ‘reasonable excuse’, such as children in care, will face no time limit, says Home OfficeThe government is to fast-track legislation it believes will stop vulnerable EU citizens becoming Windrush-type victims of Brexit, it has emerged.Under new secondary legislation, vulnerable citizens already lawfully living in the country, such as children in care and homeless people, may be able to apply for settled status years after the 30 June 2021 deadline. Continue reading...
Private interview transcripts reveal details of Daryl Maguire's relationship with NSW premier – as it happened
Former NSW Liberal MP appears in Icac hearing that could decide the premier’s future. This blog is now closed
'How can the people of NSW trust you?': Gladys Berejiklian cops question time barrage – video
It’s been a torrid question time for the New South Wales premier, Gladys Berejiklian, with Labor’s Jodi McKay asking if the electorate could continue to trust Berejiklian as premier. McKay questioned Berejiklian’s inconsistent claims, but Berejiklian refused to address the specifics of the question, simply replying that she had not done anything wrong. “I never have and I never will,” she said
'My ticket out': the Indian village where every family has an engineer
Students from a small community traditionally known for weaving are beating the odds to gain coveted university places
Former MP Daryl Maguire tells Icac he sought Gladys Berejiklian's guidance on his debts
Maguire grilled about ‘on again off again’ relationship with NSW premier on second day of evidence to corruption commission hearingFormer Wagga Wagga MP Daryl Maguire sought “guidance” from Gladys Berejiklian over the $1.5m personal debt he was seeking to pay off through a number of business deals now at the centre of a corruption investigation.But Maguire told the independent commission against corruption he couldn’t recall how much he told the New South Wales premier, with whom he had been in a secret “on again off again” relationship for several years, other than confirming the couple had discussed “general problems I was having in life”. Continue reading...
‘Machines set loose to slaughter’: the dangerous rise of military AI
Autonomous machines capable of deadly force are increasingly prevalent in modern warfare, despite numerous ethical concerns. Is there anything we can do to halt the advance of the killer robots?The video is stark. Two menacing men stand next to a white van in a field, holding remote controls. They open the van’s back doors, and the whining sound of quadcopter drones crescendos. They flip a switch, and the drones swarm out like bats from a cave. In a few seconds, we cut to a college classroom. The killer robots flood in through windows and vents. The students scream in terror, trapped inside, as the drones attack with deadly force. The lesson that the film, Slaughterbots, is trying to impart is clear: tiny killer robots are either here or a small technological advance away. Terrorists could easily deploy them. And existing defences are weak or nonexistent.Some military experts argued that Slaughterbots – which was made by the Future of Life Institute, an organisation researching existential threats to humanity – sensationalised a serious problem, stoking fear where calm reflection was required. But when it comes to the future of war, the line between science fiction and industrial fact is often blurry. The US air force has predicted a future in which “Swat teams will send mechanical insects equipped with video cameras to creep inside a building during a hostage standoff”. One “microsystems collaborative” has already released Octoroach, an “extremely small robot with a camera and radio transmitter that can cover up to 100 metres on the ground”. It is only one of many “biomimetic”, or nature-imitating, weapons that are on the horizon. Continue reading...
MPs' 'loose talk' drives Australia's relationship with China to very low point, former defence chief warns
Angus Houston calls for a ‘circuit breaker’ as Australian coal reportedly becomes the latest target of Chinese authoritiesChina is Australia’s partner, not an enemy, the former Australian defence chief Angus Houston has declared, as he accused some politicians of engaging in “loose talk” that had helped drive the relationship between Canberra and Beijing to “a very low point”.As BHP revealed some Chinese customers had recently deferred coal purchases from the mining giant, Houston warned of the impact of ill-disciplined public comments and called for a “reset” of the relationship. Continue reading...
'Sorry sunshine, wrong place': New Zealand deputy PM tells off Covid conspiracy theorist – video
Winston Peters has rebuked a coronavirus sceptic at an election campaign event in Tauranga. New Zealand’s deputy prime minister was answering questions from an audience on Tuesday when the unidentified man asked: ‘Where is your evidence that there is a virus that causes this disease?’‘Here’s someone who gets up and says “the Earth is flat”,’ Peters responded. ‘Sorry sunshine, wrong place.’ New Zealanders go to the polls on Saturday 17 October
Deer in Sydney captured and put down at Taronga Zoo after roaming streets
Veterinarian says the deer was suffering multiple injuries and could not be savedA second wild deer, which has likely roamed around the Sydney CBD for more than a week, has been euthanised after sustaining injuries while dodging traffic and running through the city on Thursday morning.Commuters in central Sydney were warned to watch out for a deer running across the inbound lanes on the Anzac Bridge in Pyrmont about 5.25am. Police attempted to capture the animal but it escaped, and reinforcements from the RSPCA were called in. Continue reading...
'Poor cousin': New Zealand opposition leader insults Tasmania in off-script remarks
Judith Collins says she would not want New Zealand to emulate Tasmania economically and says it was ‘much nicer before the Green party took over’New Zealand opposition leader Judith Collins has taken aim at Tasmania, calling it Australia’s “poor cousin” during a penultimate day of election campaigning.In another off-script moment in her struggling campaign, the leader of the centre-right National party sledged Australia’s smallest state on Thursday, saying she wouldn’t want New Zealand to be like it. Continue reading...
K-Pop band BTS scores huge hit on South Korea stock market in management firm's IPO
Investors scramble to buy shares in Big Hit Entertainment amid speculation that the boy band members could be allowed to defer military serviceThe management company behind the popular South Korean boy band BTS has scored a huge hit on the country’s stock market after its shares doubled on their first day of trading.Investors scrambled to buy into the success story of Big Hit Entertainment amid speculation that the South Korean government could allow K-pop and other celebrities to defer their military service, citing their huge contribution to the country’s economy and international reputation. Continue reading...
Coalition blasted after blaming Covid for delay in creating federal anti-corruption body
‘What have they got to hide?’ asks Labor after government accidentally releases talking points on Commonwealth Integrity CommissionThe Morrison government had legislation to create a federal anti-corruption body ready before the Covid-19 pandemic but has still failed to introduce it to parliament.Talking points from the prime minister’s office, released on Thursday, instruct Coalition MPs to recommit to create a Commonwealth Integrity Commission and to promise it will come “as soon as possible” after Covid-19 recovery efforts. Continue reading...
Study reveals world’s most walkable cities
Walking improves health and cuts pollution but most cities still dominated by cars, says reportThe world’s most walkable cities include London, Paris, Bogotá and Hong Kong, according to a report. The UK capital outranks almost 1,000 cities around the world on citizens’ proximity to car-free spaces, schools and healthcare, and the overall shortness of journeys.Researchers at the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy (ITDP) said making cities walkable was vital to improve health, cut climate-heating transport emissions and build stronger local communities and economies. However, they said very few cities overall gave pedestrians priority and were dominated by cars. The report found US cities ranked particularly low for walkability due to urban sprawl. Continue reading...
Historic England takes London 'birthplace of feminism' off at-risk list
Church that was hotbed of 18th century radicals is one of 181 sites no longer endangeredA once damp and leaky meeting house known as the “birthplace of feminism” is one of 181 historic sites facing a brighter future after being taken off England’s 2020 Heritage at Risk Register.The building in Newington Green, London, has been a remarkable hotbed of dissent for more than 300 years and counted Mary Wollstonecraft, who wrote A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792), as a member of its congregation. Continue reading...
Foreign veto laws: Labor warns of ‘unprecedented power’ and lack of oversight
Exclusive: Penny Wong hints Labor will seek amendments as universities fear the laws would have a chilling effect on research collaborationLabor has fired a warning shot to the Morrison government over its planned foreign veto laws, accusing the Coalition of trying to give “unprecedented power” to the foreign affairs minister without adequate oversight.In a toughening of the opposition’s position on the proposed powers to scrap certain international agreements, Labor’s Senate leader, Penny Wong, told Guardian Australia the government had rushed out the proposal “to grab a headline” without planning for how the law would work in practice. Continue reading...
Coronavirus Australia live updates: Victoria reports six new cases and no deaths
Police investigate damage to Daniel Andrews’ electorate office overnight as NSW authorities issue warning about south-west Sydney cluster. Follow liveFollow our global coronavirus live blogFull Australian Covid stats; Covid restrictions state by stateNSW cases map; Vic cases mapNSW hotspots list; Vic hotspots listSign up for Guardian Australia’s coronavirus email11.05pm BSTSenior NSW ministers are circling the wagons around premier Gladys Berejiklian.NSW transport minister, Andrew Constance, was on Channel Nine’s Today Show this morning and said Berejiklian was in for another “tough day”.Today is a tough day. There is no denial of that and we will move on from there. But she is a great person, a great leader.I am not nervous because I know Glad has done nothing wrong. She is an incredible leader.She has been dragged into this. Not of her making. Very innocently, I mean, she was in a close personal relationship with him. She didn’t know the extent of his activities like we all didn’t.She is the best premier in Australia. We have seen a one-in-100-year Covid pandemic. She has handled that magnificently.This Icac investigation is into Daryl Maguire, it’s not into Gladys Berejiklian. She is not a person of interest. There is no allegation made by Icac against her, that she has breached any statute or any ministerial code.10.53pm BSTDid you know that today is global handwashing day? It’s true. It’s not just one day of 2020: global handwashing year.Says ChildFund Australia’s chief executive, Margaret Sheehan:While we await the development of a safe vaccine, washing our hands with soap and water is one of the most important tools we have at our disposal to keep ourselves safe from Covid-19. Continue reading...
European roundup: French cities given curfew; Italy breaks March record
Germany among others bringing in new restrictions, and daily records set in Poland and Croatia
France: Macron announces 9pm curfew for Paris and eight other cities – video
France will impose a nightly curfew on almost one-third of the country's 67 million people to tackle a resurgence in coronavirus cases, but a new national lockdown is not envisaged, Emmanuel Macron said on Wednesday. The French president announced the curfew, which will take effect from Saturday and run each night from 9pm to 6am the following morning, shortly after the government declared a new public health state of emergency.
Morning mail: Berejiklian hangs on, France adopts curfews, wine lovers' Adelaide
Thursday: NSW premier survives no-confidence vote as corruption inquiry hears former MP tried to ‘monetise’ his position. Plus: how to cover South Australia’s most famous wine regions in four daysGood morning, this is Richard Parkin bringing you the main stories and must-reads on Thursday 15 October. Continue reading...
Ministers and north of England leaders clash over further Covid restrictions
Decision expected on whether to extend tier 3 rules to Greater Manchester and Lancashire
New Zealand euthanasia vote: polls point to 'yes' amid campaign of fear and doubt
The ‘yes’ campaign has Jacinda Ardern’s support but opponents say they believe New Zealand’s most vulnerable will be at riskOn Saturday, New Zealanders will be asked to vote yes or no on whether Kiwis enduring “unbearable suffering that cannot be eased” have a legal right to end their life.For Matt Vickers, the former husband of lawyer and euthanasia campaigner Lecretia Seales, the vote can’t come soon enough. Continue reading...
John Leslie tells sexual assault trial claims are 'ludicrous'
Former Blue Peter presenter says tabloid press had made him out to be an ‘aggressive, sexual monster’The former Blue Peter presenter John Leslie told a court that claims he had grabbed a woman’s breasts at a Christmas party were “crazy” and “ludicrous”.Giving evidence at his trial at Southwark crown court, Leslie said in the years preceding the alleged incident he had been made out as an “aggressive, sexual monster” by the tabloid media. Continue reading...
Thai pro-democracy protesters confront royal visit to Bangkok
People call for reforms to monarchy and resignation of prime minister during king’s visitThai pro-democracy protesters chanted “my taxes” and raised a symbolic three-finger salute at a passing royal motorcade in a historic show of defiance against the country’s monarchy.Thousands of people took to the streets of Bangkok on Wednesday to call for democratic reforms, including curbs on the power and wealth of the monarchy. Royalist supporters mounted counterprotests, saying they had assembled to welcome King Maha Vajiralongkorn, who is attending a ceremony in Bangkok to mark the end of Buddhist Lent. Continue reading...
Elton John and ex-wife Renate Blauel settle legal dispute
Blauel filed case against singer after details of their marriage featured in his memoir and Rocketman biopicSir Elton John and his ex-wife, Renate Blauel, have settled a legal case brought after details of the marriage were featured in the singer’s memoir and biopic.Blauel had sued John for allegedly breaching an agreement the pair signed after their divorce in 1988 which, her lawyers said, prevented either of them discussing the marriage or reasons for their separation. Continue reading...
Mafia Inc review – old-school gangster pic based on real Canadian milieu
Montreal’s underworld is the focus for this meaty flick about a crime boss aiming to set up a money-spinning project in the old countryThis unexpectedly absorbing gangster movie is based on a non-fiction book of the same name by André Cédilot and André Noël that delved into Montreal’s organised crime world. Set in the 1990s but with flashbacks to the 80s, the film revolves around Francesco “Frank” Paterno (a silky Sergio Castellitto), an affable local godfather whose great ambition is to build a bridge back in the old country between Sicily and the Italian mainland, and thoroughly skim off all the money such a massive project will produce. To bankroll it, he has all sorts of funds squirrelled away in offshore accounts, but slippery accountants are skimming off the top, and there’s major trouble brewing between his son and chosen successor Giaco (Donny Falsetti) and upcoming capo Vince Gamache (Marc-André Grondin). The son of a tailor (Gilbert Sicotte) who has served the Paterno family for years, Vince tries to raise his stature in the organisation by importing drugs from Venezuela via a most horrific method. Meanwhile, Giaco’s brother Pat (Michael Ricci) gets engaged to Vince’s savvy sister Sofie (Mylène Mackay), a steel-nerved character in her own right underneath all that blow-dried hair and huge gold hoop earrings. Continue reading...
Windrush report author attacks Home Office's response
Priti Patel’s department must swiftly prove its commitment to reform, says Wendy WilliamsThe Home Office has failed to make adequate progress in reviewing its hostile environment policies and must swiftly prove that it is not merely paying “lip service” to the idea of reform, the author of a damning report into the Windrush scandal has told MPs.Wendy Williams, whose Lessons Learned review into the causes of the immigration scandal was published earlier this year, said the department risked losing a once-in-a-generation opportunity for change. She also voiced surprise that only 168 people had received compensation two and a half years after the government first apologised for mistakenly misclassifying thousands of legal British residents as illegal immigrants. Continue reading...
Sicilian businessman's secret film leads to arrest of alleged mafiosi
Giuseppe Piraino and 12 others give testimony against 20 alleged extortionistsA Sicilian businessman secretly filmed an alleged extortionist and resisted his requests for money by showing him a photo of two anti-mafia heroes killed by Cosa Nostra.The businessman, a building contractor named Giuseppe Piraino, is one of 13 alleged mafia racket victims who has spoken out to report alleged mafia extortionists. Continue reading...
Ugandan security forces raid campaign office of opposition leader Bobi Wine
Reggae star and presidential hopeful says soldiers and police seized cash and election materialsSecurity forces in Uganda have raided the offices of Bobi Wine, the reggae star and prominent opposition leader, as tensions rise in the east African country months ahead of presidential elections in January.Soldiers and police officers invaded the headquarters of the National Unity Platform (NUP) in Kamwokya, a suburb of the Kampala, the capital, in the late morning on Wednesday. They seized cash, posters, banners and quantities of red berets, Wine’s signature headgear and a “symbol of resistance” which the government says is illegal. Continue reading...
Australians on cashless welfare card express 'hopelessness' after Coalition's plan to cement scheme
Controversial scheme which quarantines up to 80% of a welfare recipient’s payments will become permanent across four trial sitesWelfare recipients on the cashless debit card say they feel a sense of “hopelessness” after the federal government announced plans to make the scheme permanent across four trial sites.The decision in this month’s federal budget comes as the most recent figures show a provision to allow cardholders to exit the scheme has only approved one in four applications. Continue reading...
UK coronavirus live: 19,724 new cases recorded, a daily rise of nearly 2,500
UK records 137 Covid deaths with more than 4,000 patients in hospital; people from high-Covid areas of England to be banned from going to Wales; Northern Ireland tightens restrictions
EU deal still possible, PM to be told, as potential fisheries plan emerges
UK negotiator to tell Boris Johnson that two more weeks of talks could lead to breakthroughBoris Johnson will be advised by his chief negotiator that a trade deal with the EU is still possible should the prime minister ditch his deadline and continue to negotiate with Brussels as tentative signs of a compromise on fisheries emerged.David Frost, who has been in talks with the EU team led by Michel Barnier this week, will inform the prime minister that a further two weeks, at least, of daily talks could result in the remaining gaps being bridged. Continue reading...
China's main stock markets hit combined record high of $10.08tn
Rebound comes as Chinese economy recovers from effects of Covid-19 lockdown measures
Dutch government backs euthanasia for under-12s
Dutch heath minister says change is needed to help terminally ill childrenThe Dutch government will permit doctors to euthanise terminally ill children aged between one and 12 after months of debate within the ruling coalition.The country’s health minister, Hugo de Jonge, said a change in regulations was necessary to help “a small group of terminally ill children who agonise with no hope, and unbearable suffering”. Continue reading...
Israel's pact with the UAE is not about peace. It's a business deal | Sami Abu Shehadeh
Palestinian homes are still being demolished and illegal settlements expanded. That’s why tomorrow I’ll be voting against the agreement in the KnessetTomorrow, the Israeli parliament will be voting on the agreement to normalise relations with the United Arab Emirates. A large majority will approve a hugely favourable step towards the Israeli government’s goals: perpetuating its systematic violations of international law and of the Palestinian people’s inalienable rights. Those parliamentarians who believe in justice and equality are going to vote against this agreement. I’m afraid, though, that we are a tiny minority.This week, we were given copies of the agreement, which I read in the three languages (Arabic, Hebrew and English) and figured out a few things. First of all, those who wrote it in different languages tailored it to their audiences. While in English and Hebrew, they repeated the word “normalisation” several times, it is not even mentioned in Arabic. This is a business deal that merely establishes diplomatic relations, and not a peace agreement. The word “annexation” (of occupied Palestinian territory) is not even mentioned. Continue reading...
MI5 boss says Russian and Chinese threats to UK 'growing in severity'
Ken McCullum also singles out Iran, and says threat from far right is ‘sadly rising’MI5’s new boss has said the spy threats posed by China and Russia to the UK are “growing in severity and complexity” while the terror threat from Isis and the far right “persists at scale”.Giving his first speech as the domestic spy agency’s director general, Ken McCullum focused on risks from hostile states, including undermining “the integrity of UK research” on a coronavirus vaccine. Continue reading...
...880881882883884885886887888889...