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Updated 2026-05-15 10:03
Musician Michael Milosh, AKA Rhye, accused of sexual abuse and grooming
Canadian artist denies allegations by ex-wife, actor Alexa Nicholas, calling them ‘outrageously false’Musician Michael Milosh, AKA Rhye, has been accused by his ex-wife of grooming and sexually abusing her.Milosh has denied the allegations, calling them “absurd and outrageous false claims”. Continue reading...
‘I’ll cherish these moments’: how Covid has swelled the boomerang generation
Millions of adults have moved back in with their parents – including two-thirds of 20- to 34-year-olds without children. How have they fared in lockdown?With its stay-at-home orders and restrictions on movements, with rush hours slowed, pollution lowered and shopping habits turned on their head, the pandemic quickly earned itself a nickname: the great pause. This pause, it was argued in the early days, would give us space to think, to reassess our lives and priorities as a society – and perhaps to emerge with fresh perspective.But, for many families, things did not grind to a halt immediately. Instead, what took place was a nationwide reshuffle: thousands packed their bags to move into new “bubbles”, households and living situations where they hoped to weather the storm more successfully. For many people, that meant moving in with their parents. Continue reading...
Thirty-year sentence for man who raped and murdered international student inadequate, Melbourne court hears
Codey Herrmann’s sentence for brutal killing of Aiia Maasarwe failed to consider risk to community on release, prosecution saysA man sentenced to at least 30 years’ jail for the rape and murder of an international student should face more time behind bars because of the risk to the community upon his release, a Melbourne court has heard.The Victorian office of public prosecutions is appealing the maximum 36-year prison term handed down to Codey Herrmann for the rape and murder of Aiia Maasarwe. Continue reading...
Tanzania's Covid-denying president, John Magufuli, dies aged 61
Leader’s death follows two-week absence from public life that prompted rumours he had virusTanzania’s president, John Magufuli, one of Africa’s most prominent Covid-19 deniers, has died after a two-week absence from public life that prompted speculation that he had contracted the disease.Related: Tanzania’s missing president is in Kenya with Covid, says opposition leader Continue reading...
‘We clap if none die’: Covid forces hard choices in Sierra Leone
With medical resources diverted to the pandemic, years of progress in children’s healthcare are under threat
Melbourne terrorism accused allegedly bought knife for attack
Aran Sherani, one of two brothers arrested in counter-terror raids, is accused of being a member of Islamic StateOne of two brothers arrested in terror raids in Melbourne’s north allegedly purchased a knife this week in preparation for a terrorist attack, police say.Aran Sherani, 19, and his 20-year-old brother, Ari Sherani, faced Melbourne magistrates court on Thursday after being arrested by counter-terror officers on Wednesday. Continue reading...
Twitter told to delete Russian opposition's online news content
Ban on Khodorkovsky-founded outlet follows Kremlin threat to block entire social networkRussia’s media watchdog has told Twitter to delete the account of an opposition news outlet following threats from Moscow to block the social network entirely if it did not remove “banned content” within a month.The moves are part of a wider crackdown on social media and the opposition after protests supporting the jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny, which were organised via online platforms. Continue reading...
Kovrig and Spavor: China set to begin trial of two Canadians
Canada criticises pair’s detention as ‘arbitrary’ as Beijing says trial will begin on FridayChina has announced it will begin trials for the two Canadians it detained in apparent retaliation for Canada’s arrest of a telecoms executive.Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor were detained in December 2018, days after Canada arrested Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou at the request of the United States. Continue reading...
Critics ridicule NSW police commissioner's idea for sexual consent app
Mick Fuller floats idea of recording ­consent before sex, but critics say technology would protect men, not womenThe New South Wales police commissioner Mick Fuller has floated the idea of using an app to record ­consent before sex.In an opinion piece in Sydney’s Daily Telegraph on Thursday, Fuller raised the idea of an app which would record consent, comparing it with Covidsafe records introduced for pubs and restaurants during the pandemic. Continue reading...
What will the delay mean for England's Covid vaccine programme?
NHS England is adjusting to ‘a significant reduction’ in weekly supplies of Covid-19 doses available from the week beginning 29 MarchIn an unexpected move NHS England revealed on Wednesday that there would be a big reduction in the amount of Covid vaccines available from 29 March. The impending shortage means that no one under 50 in England will get a first dose until 1 May. Only people aged 50 or over, those who are clinically vulnerable, and those awaiting their second dose, will be able to get a vaccination at present.Related: Covid vaccines for England's under-50s delayed due to shortage Continue reading...
Morning mail: vaccine website 'rushed', Atlanta shootings, Hamilton opening night
Thursday: Industry sources say the government’s botched vaccine website launch was due to shifting timeline. Plus: Hamilton’s creator on why the Australian launch gives him hopeGood morning. The bungled Covid vaccine booking system launch continues to create headaches for the health minister, Greg Hunt; the Coalition faces scrutiny over an underperforming job scheme; while internationally, news of a series of shootings in Georgia, in the US, has dominated the morning headlines.The federal government is facing claims it “rushed” the launch of the Covid vaccine booking system, with industry sources suggesting Wednesday’s rollout was brought forward a week at short notice. Speaking on the condition of anonymity, an insider told Guardian Australia the government had left it “way too late” to subcontract the company HealthEngine to manage the portal, effectively “erod[ing] patients’ trust in online bookings in one day”. The peak body for GPs and the Australian Medical Association previously criticised the launch of the system, but a health department spokesperson defended the process to Guardian Australia, saying a glitch had affected about 2% of eligible patients. Continue reading...
Woman rebuts claims Nicola Sturgeon's aide 'interfered' with Salmond complaint
Woman involved in sexual harassment complaints says allegation against chief of staff is untrueAllegations that Nicola Sturgeon’s chief of staff “interfered” with the handling of sexual harassment complaints against Alex Salmond are “fundamentally untrue”, according to the woman involved.On Tuesday evening, Conservative MP David Davis, used parliamentary privilege to criticise the Scottish government’s handling of sexual harassment allegations against Alex Salmond. Continue reading...
Metro life in post-Soviet countries – in pictures
Photographer Tomer Ifrah travelled between six post-Soviet countries: Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Russia, Belarus, Georgia and Armenia documenting city life on the metro, beginning in Moscow in 2012 and continuing until 2019. The images reveal personal stories of everyday life, intimate portraits, and a background of grandiose architecture Continue reading...
Canada: top female soldier quits over military's failures on sexual misconduct
Lt Col Eleanor Taylor says in resignation letter: ‘On the issue of addressing harmful sexual behaviour, we have lost all credibility’One of the most senior female soldiers in Canada has resigned after a string of allegations of sexual misconduct among top brass, saying she was “sickened” by the military’s repeated failures to tackle the abuse.In a letter sent to her superiors, Lt Col Eleanor Taylor announced her resignation late on Tuesday, in the latestblow to an institution already in crisis. Continue reading...
Policing bill is a grave threat to our right to protest | Letters
Guardian readers on the police, crime, sentencing and courts bill and the threat it poses to civil libertiesYour leader (The Guardian view on policing dissent: Johnson plays politics with protest, 15 March) rightly notes: “Whatever pieties the government cloaks its proposals in, a partisan systematic reduction in civil liberties is a very dangerous thing for democracies.” Indeed, the words used by the home secretary and government spokesperson in defence of the police, crime, sentencing and courts bill, and of police action at the vigil, come straight from the PR coaching manual used by President Putin and his like in Hungary, Hong Kong, Myanmar and far too many places round the world.
European countries at the start of a third wave of Covid, experts warn
Decision to pause use of AstraZeneca jab could lead to more deaths as new variant cases increase rapidly
Denmark plans to limit 'non-western' residents in disadvantaged areas
Interior ministry’s proposed limit of 30% part of bill to crack down further on poor neighbourhoodsDenmark has announced plans to crack down further on disadvantaged neighbourhoods by reducing the number of “non-western” residents, scrapping the controversial term “ghetto” in its proposed legislation.In the bill – a review of existing legislation on combatting “parallel societies” – the interior ministry proposed that the share of residents of “non-western” origin in each neighbourhood be limited to a maximum of 30% within 10 years. Continue reading...
Psst! Did you hear about the star who took her dog for a walk?!
Forget sex and drugs: today’s hottest celebrity stories are far more humdrum. Here’s how gossip was replaced by anti-gossipName: Anti-gossip.Age: New. Continue reading...
Dominic Raab accuses EU of trying to erect Irish Sea border
UK foreign secretary tells US audience that EU is doing most to damage Good Friday agreementThe British foreign secretary, Dominic Raab, has accused the EU of trying to erect a border down the Irish Sea as he told a US audience that it was the EU that had been doing most to threaten the Northern Ireland protocol and damage the Good Friday agreement.His remarks came at the end of a setpiece speech at the Aspen Forum in which he extolled Britain as a force for good determined to build a broader caucus of nations ranged against a dangerous minority determined to ransack the international system. Continue reading...
Two notorious Colombian warlords to face off in truth commission hearing
Rodrigo Londoño led the leftwing Farc guerrillas, while Salvatore Mancuso was head of a rightwing death squad during the civil warTwo of Colombia’s most notorious warlords will appear together before a truth commission on Thursday, in the latest move to shed light on crimes committed during decades of bloody civil war.Rodrigo Londoño, better known by his wartime alias Timochenko, once led the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc), in a bloody struggle against the Colombian state that left 260,000 dead. Continue reading...
Third of remand prisoners in England being held beyond legal time limit for trials
Pandemic has wreaked havoc on legal process says campaign group Fair TrialsMore than 3,600 people – almost a third of England’s remand prison population – have been held beyond the legal time limit awaiting trials as the pandemic wreaks havoc on the legal process.The scale of the human backlog was revealed as some prisoners have been pleading guilty purely to avoid lengthy pre-trial detention and prompted calls for more remand prisoners to be immediately released. Continue reading...
Welsh goat population rockets after Covid cancels contraception drive
Goats of Great Orme venturing even further into town, sparking fears for their safety as lockdown eased
Former health secretary Norman Fowler: ‘Some said those with HIV should be in isolation. Perpetually’
His public health campaign at the height of the crisis saved countless lives. As a new generation learns about those dark days from It’s a Sin, the politician considers his legacyIn late 1985, Norman Fowler, who was then the health secretary in Margaret Thatcher’s government, sent a letter to the prime minister. He said that there had been 275 people with Aids in the UK that year. Of these, 144 had died. Without action, he added, a further 20,000 people would be infected with HIV by 1988. The UK was on the precipice of a public health emergency. Fowler encountered a lot of scepticism.“People at the time said that I was entirely taken over by the subject, and that I overexaggerated,” says Lord Fowler, now 83 and speaking via Zoom from his home in Fulham, south-west London. He looks composed, and every bit the lord in recess, wearing a pastel pink shirt underneath a green jumper. Behind him sits a glass cabinet stuffed with weighty texts and political memoirs. Continue reading...
Yangon becomes battle zone as Myanmar junta enforces martial law
Traumatised residents flee area as security forces fire at unarmed anti-coup protestersPart of Myanmar’s biggest city has turned into a battle zone, with burning barricades and security forces firing at unarmed anti-coup protesters.Traumatised residents have fled Hlaing Tharyar, an industrial neighbourhood in Yangon that has become one of the flashpoint sites in a nationwide uprising against the military’s coup nearly seven weeks ago. Continue reading...
'It was avoidable': families bereaved in second wave call for Covid inquiry
Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice group now numbers more than 2,800 as relatives seek answers over UK response
Foreign Office defends Raab remarks on trade with rights abusers
Foreign secretary has said deals should not be limited to countries with European-level standards of rightsDominic Raab has tried to fend off claims he told Foreign Office staff the UK intended to trade with countries with poor human rights records.In a leaked recording of a briefing by the foreign secretary, passed to HuffPost, he reportedly said: “I squarely believe we ought to be trading liberally around the world. If we restrict it to countries with European convention on human rights-level standards of human rights, we’re not going to do many trade deals with the growth markets of the future.” Continue reading...
Smooth operator: 17 dreamy recipes with Guinness
Irish stout adds a delicious, dark richness to dishes from traditional stews and hearty pies to chocolate cakes and heady cocktails – St Patrick’s Day never tasted betterIt has been a whole 12 months: St Patrick’s Day 2020 was one of the first celebrations to be widely cancelled because of Covid, leaving a lot of people with surplus Guinness and no one to drink it with. Who imagined we would be in the same situation a year on?Clearly some people only drink Guinness on St Patrick’s Day. Pre-pandemic, an estimated average of 13m pints of the stuff were poured worldwide each year on 17 March. But if you once again find yourself with more Guinness than you know what to do with – and first and foremost, I suggest that you try simply drinking it – there are a number of recipes that employ the good Irish stout as a key ingredient. Here are 17 of the best for this 17 March. Continue reading...
Health authorities reassure Australians AstraZeneca vaccine safe after five allergic reactions
The jabs will continue to be administered but the drug regulator will review the reports of anaphylaxisAustralia’s drug regulator is reviewing reports of anaphylaxis related to the AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine after five people experienced an allergic reaction after taking the drug.Queensland health authorities reported that four people over the past two days potentially experienced anaphylactic reactions within 30 minutes of receiving the first dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine. Another case of allergic reaction was reported in Western Australia. Continue reading...
Man arrested over Stuart Lubbock death at Michael Barrymore's home
Essex police say 50-year-old man being held in connection with death in 2001Police have arrested a 50-year-old man in connection with the indecent assault and murder of Stuart Lubbock, who died at the home of the entertainer Michael Barrymore 20 years ago.Essex police said the man, who has not been named, was arrested in Cheshire and remains in custody where is being questioned. Continue reading...
Mood killer killed off: NSW punters allowed to resume 'vertical drinking' in pubs and clubs
People have stood at bars once again – but there remains a fine line between standing and dancing, which is still bannedNew South Wales residents are now allowed to stand with their drinks in bars, following the latest easing of Covid-19 restrictions.“This is what life is all about,” the New South Wales treasurer, Dominic Perrottet, said while holding a Guinness on Wednesday. Continue reading...
Asio boss says spy agency will dump terms 'rightwing extremism' and 'Islamic extremism'
Mike Burgess says labels are ‘no longer fit for purpose’ as he reveals Asio removed ‘a nest of spies’ from Australia in 2020Australian spy agency Asio is overhauling the language it uses to talk about terrorism, dumping terms like rightwing extremism and Islamic extremism, arguing such labels are “no longer fit for purpose”.Mike Burgess, the director general of security, announced the changes as he revealed the average age of “ideological extremists” investigated by Asio was 25 and they were overwhelmingly male. He said a terrorist attack by such individuals in Australia “remains plausible”. Continue reading...
'Two boys snogging was revolutionary': the greatest gay moments in cinema
From Gus Van Sant to Maryam Keshavarz, Terence Davies to Andrew Haigh, film-makers and writers recall the charged scenes that moved and inspired them – and even helped nudge them out of the closetGus Van Sant, director of My Own Private Idaho, Good Will Hunting, To Die For, Milk Continue reading...
Blind asylum seeker suicidal after Home Office inaction on claim
Sanaz Derikvandi fled Iran with her mother but has not been interviewed about her case for 19 monthsA blind asylum seeker says she has been left suicidal after the Home Office has failed to interview her about her case since she arrived in the UK 19 months ago.Sanaz Derikvandi, 33, was studying for a PhD in English literature in her home country of Iran when she says she had to flee because she converted to Christianity. Continue reading...
Monkeys and eggplants: how do men and women use emojis differently?
Studies have pointed to a gender gap and dating coaches agree – but researchers’ findings don’t always match stereotypesIt’s 2021, and despite some great advances in space exploration, we are no closer to really knowing whether men are from Mars and women are from Venus. In fact, the growing consensus is that we’re all from Earth, and people are more complex than we usually give them credit for.But what if there were a way of unlocking some of the hidden trends that exist among men and women, which reveal how they think, see themselves and communicate? And what if it were ... emojis? Continue reading...
P&O to restart UK cruises this summer - but only for vaccinated passengers
Short-sailings around UK with dining and entertainment to restart but ships will not call at portsCruise operator P&O is to restart domestic holidays this summer, but only for UK residents who have been fully vaccinated against Covid-19.After its fleet has been grounded for over a year, P&O is dipping its toes back in the water by offering passengers short sailings on two of its ships around the UK coastline. Coronavirus restrictions mean the ships will not call at any ports, although there will be the usual onboard dining and entertainment programme. Continue reading...
Public support for Covid inquiry more than twice as high as opposition – poll
Exclusive: Guardian poll reveals 47% of people support formal independent investigation while only 18% oppose
US warns North Korea could be planning ICBM test 'in near future' in test for Biden
Comments come as US secretary of state and defence secretary begin visit to Japan and South Korea to discuss securityNorth Korea could be planning to flight test an upgraded inter-continental ballistic missile [ICBM] “in the near future,” a senior US military official has warned, in what would be the regime’s first serious policy challenge for Joe Biden.The warning, by Air Force Gen. Glen VanHerck, who as head of the Northern Command is in charge of defending the continental US, appeared to be based on North Korea’s unveiling at a parade in October of what would be its largest ICBM yet, and not on specific intelligence about an imminent launch. Continue reading...
Why home-produced Covid vaccine hasn't helped India, Russia and China rollouts
Challenge of reaching vast, far-flung populations is combined with a lack of public interest
Prince Charles criticises anti-vaxxers, saying Covid vaccines can 'protect and liberate'
In a wide-ranging article for the Future Healthcare Journal, the prince advocates for bringing conventional and complementary medicine togetherPrince Charles has criticised those lobbying against coronavirus vaccines, saying the jabs can “protect and liberate” some of society’s most vulnerable members.In a wide-ranging article for the Future Healthcare Journal in which he called for an integrated approach to healthcare, the heir to the throne also denounced those speaking out against Covid-19 shots. Continue reading...
Ally or no, New Zealand must stand up to Australia over 501 deportees | Golriz Ghahraman
Aotearoa has a proud history of protesting human rights abuses on the world stage. Now that means pushing back against our traditional trade partnerToday a 15-year-old waits alone in a New Zealand quarantine facility, facing an uncertain future. Deported from Australia pursuant to the notorious 501 immigration policy, he is not ordinarily resident here, and government agencies normally engaged for child protection are making plans for his care. Although Australia was his home, he was not Australian enough to be simply sanctioned in that nation for whatever infraction he is deemed to have committed.This dehumanising treatment is what passes for necessary hard-line immigration policy in Australia. In its very high human cost, failure of binding child rights standards, and international criticism, it is very much in line with Australia’s longstanding approach to migrants, refugees and asylum seekers. Australia has been thought of as outside human rights norms and any moral standard of fairness for some time. In fact, our neighbour has been repeatedly found to be enforcing policy that amounts to literal torture on its offshore prison islands. Continue reading...
Berlin Volksbühne theatre director resigns over harassment claims
Klaus Dörr steps down with immediate effect after accusations including humiliating older actorsThe director of Berlin’s Volksbühne theatre has resigned after allegations of sexual harassment and the humiliating treatment of older female actors.The theatre said that Klaus Dörr would give up his post with immediate effect, after the intervention of Berlin’s culture senator, Klaus Lederer, whose office also confirmed the decision. Continue reading...
Motorcycle gunmen kill at least 58 civilians on market day in Niger
No claim of responsibility has been made, though Islamic State extremists are active where the attack took placeGunmen on motorcycles have attacked a group of civilians returning from market day in a volatile corner of Niger, leaving at least 58 people dead, and then burning granaries to the ground.There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the massacres, though extremists belonging to the Islamic State in the Greater Sahara group are known to be active in the Tillaberi region where the villages were attacked. Continue reading...
Brazilian politician's cunning plan to fight Covid: spray hand gel from planes
A local councillor has been roundly mocked for advocating aerial deployment of sanitizer as coronavirus wreaks deadly havocA Brazilian politician has suggested using helicopters and planes to spray his town with hand sanitizer in a desperate and futile bid to obliterate the coronavirus from above.The mystifying proposal was floated in the southern state of Rio Grande do Sul on Monday, as Brazil wrestles with the deadliest phase of its 13-month outbreak and the country’s Covid death toll rose to nearly 280,000. Continue reading...
Morning mail: anti-racism plan needed, water buyback's $13m premium, fungi foraging
Wednesday: Australia needs plan to tackle a ‘resurgence in racism’, says discrimination commissioner. Plus: new Dead Sea scroll discoveryGood morning. We’re halfway through the working week on Wednesday 17 March and today we have news about calls for Australia to tackle a resurgence in racism. The attorney general has delegated duties to avoid conflicts of interest, while Tanya Plibersek is urging Labor staffers to report sexual harassment. Continue reading...
Signal: China appears to have blocked encrypted messaging app
Move to silence the app comes as China expands controls to shape public opinion and limit private discourseThe encrypted messaging app Signal appears to have been blocked in mainland China, the latest foreign social media service to cease working in a country where the government tightly controls the flow of information.As of Tuesday, users of the app within China had to connect to a virtual private network (VPN) that allows them to circumvent China’s so-called Great Firewall, a censorship system that blocks websites, services and apps deemed inappropriate by the Chinese government. Continue reading...
UN calls for inquiry into fatal fire at Yemen detention facility
Dozens of Ethiopian migrants died after Houthi rebels fired missiles into the centre in the capital Sana’aThe UN has called for an independent inquiry into a horrific fire at a detention facility in Yemen’s capital Sana’a that left dozens of Ethiopian migrants dead and more than 170 injured.Human Rights Watch said on Tuesday that the fire on 7 March occurred after Houthi rebels fired missiles into the detention centre where the migrants were protesting over their cramped conditions. Continue reading...
Zoom Escaper: new app allows you to leave meetings by creating fake sounds
Tool will play sounds so unbearable on your Zoom call that other people will want you to sign offCan’t stand being in another Zoom meeting? Fed up of staring at your stupid face? Wondering why so many things that used to be handled by, say, a phone call, or an email, now suddenly require everyone’s floating head to sit in a virtual room and nod for an hour?Well, someone clearly had these exact same frustrations. As originally reported by the Verge, a developer has now created the Zoom Escaper, a tool that will play sounds so unbearable on your Zoom call that other people will want you to get off the line. Continue reading...
Prince Charles 'thrilled' that Duke of Edinburgh has left hospital – video
Prince Charles said he was 'thrilled' that the Duke of Edinburgh had been discharged from hospital four weeks after he was admitted. Prince Philip was initially admitted to King Edward VII's hospital in London, before he was transferred to St Bartholomew's for a heart procedure.Charles made the remarks while visiting a vaccination centre at Finsbury Park Mosque in north London
Mallorca braces for influx of German tourists after removal from risk list
Germans warned that Covid restrictions still apply as locals express frustration at Berlin’s move
Benefits of Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine 'firmly outweigh any risk', says EMA director – video
The EMA is conducting an investigation into the safety of AstraZeneca’s Covid-19 vaccine after Germany, France, Italy and other EU countries suspended its use over isolated cases of bleeding, blood clots and low platelet counts.Director Emer Cooke stated the EMA is "still firmly convinced the benefits of the AstraZeneca vaccine … outweigh the risk of these side effects." The investigative panel will meet again on Thursday when they will publish their findings to the public.
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