Feed wwwtheguardiancom World news | The Guardian

Favorite IconWorld news | The Guardian

Link https://www.theguardian.com/world
Feed http://www.theguardian.com/world/rss
Copyright Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. 2025
Updated 2025-07-02 03:17
Housebuilder Vistry loses more than £1bn in value after profit warning
FTSE 100 company says profits will lower for the next three years because it underestimated building costs
‘A slap in the face to victims of abuse’: UN urged to reject Saudi Arabia’s bid to join Human Rights Council
Riyadh accused of killing hundreds of Ethiopian migrants, jailing women's rights advocates and murdering criticsSaudi Arabia is on the brink of being elected on to the United Nation's Human Rights Council, warn campaigners, in a move they say would undermine its ability to demand justice for rights violations and would feel like a slap in the face" to the many victims of the Saudi regime.While the Saudi Arabian government has attempted to present itself as a reformed country that has made progress on gender equality and human rights, its record on both has been fiercely criticised by activists. Continue reading...
Madeleine McCann suspect acquitted in separate rape and abuse trial
Christian Bruckner found not guilty in Germany of three charges of aggravated rape and two of sexual abuseThe main suspect in the disappearance of the British toddler Madeleine McCann has been found not guilty of all charges in a separate rape and sexual abuse case.Christian Bruckner was acquitted by the district court in Braunschweig, northern Germany, of three charges of aggravated rape and two of sexual abuse of children in Portugal between 2000 and 2017. The 47-year-old could not be convicted of the acts he is accused of", the presiding judge, Uta Engemann, said. Continue reading...
UK may approve bee-killing pesticide despite election promise to ban it
Exclusive: Environment groups urge government to stick to its promises and refuse pesticide applicationUK ministers are considering allowing the use of a bee-killing pesticide next year despite promising during the election to ban it.Neonicotinoids are banned in the EU because they are toxic to bees, but have been authorised for use every year in the UK since 2021. Continue reading...
Boris Johnson hits out at ‘greedy’ Keir Starmer over freebies
Ex-PM criticises Starmer's decision to accept gifts, while defending award of PPE contracts during CovidKeir Starmer's decision to accept clothing freebies looks greedy", according to Boris Johnson.The former prime minister criticised his Labour successor's decision to accept gifts of clothing and glasses, saying Starmer must be worth a bob or two" as a result of his legal career. Continue reading...
Australia news live: chief medical officer Paul Kelly to retire; concerns for Margaret River couple last heard from eight days ago
Follow today's news live
Family of deceased tenant refused entry to property containing life’s work
Cambridge council says Glen Hutchinson's daughters cannot access flat until they have been granted probateThe family of a social housing tenant who has recently died fear losing his life's work because bureaucratic red tape has barred them from entering his flat.Glen Hutchinson, a performance poet, was found dead in his home in August but Cambridge city council has refused to allow his two daughters to access the property until it has been granted probate. Continue reading...
Special needs funding claims in English schools ‘increasingly being refused’
Financial pressures mean many councils are reluctant to issue top-up funding from high-needs budgets, say expertsPupils with special educational needs in mainstream schools are increasingly being refused additional funding from councils in England unless they have legal documents supporting their claims.Experts say that increasing financial pressures have made many councils reluctant to make top-up funding available from high-needs budgets - creating a vicious cycle" between parents and councils over who gets support. Continue reading...
Students moved to rented office building in response to overcrowding at Melbourne public school
Victorian government defends temporary' campus for University High year 9 pupils amid increase in enrolments
David Crisafulli announces ‘reset camps’ for youth ‘at risk’ of criminal behaviour
Youth advocates condemn $50m election pledge, likened to former Newman government's failed bootcamps, as overreach of power'
‘Shows how small he is’: Dutton’s refusal to support 7 October motion condemned by Labor and crossbench
Zoe Daniel votes for motion condemning Hamas attacks and mourning Palestinians killed, saying the pain of more than one group can coexist'
Tuesday briefing: Why Sue Gray was ousted – and what it means for No 10
In today's newsletter: Gray was supposed to help Starmer govern in a structured way. Three months into power and she is already out - what happened? Sign up here for our daily newsletter, First EditionGood morning.Keir Starmer promised to usher in a new era of stability and moderation" when Labour won the election, after years of Conservative failure, chaos and division". His grownups are in charge' leadership style was supposed to mark the end of the psychodrama that dominated previous governments. Instead, in the first 100 days of Starmer's administration, the prime minister has had to contend with leaks, infighting and scandals about gifts from donors.Middle East | Israel launched an intense wave of air raids on southern Lebanon on Monday, with 100 aircraft targeting about 120 sites in the space of an hour, according to the Israeli military.US election | Kamala Harris in a 60 Minutes interview has defended her economic plans, refused to call the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, a close ally and said she would not meet with the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, for peace talks if Ukraine was not also represented.Environment | The destruction of global forests increased in 2023 and is higher than when 140 countries promised three years ago to halt deforestation by the end of the decade, an analysis shows.Economy | Ticket sales for the Oasis reunion tour helped to increase non-essential spending by British consumers to the highest level this year in September, alongside a bumper month for retailers.Transport | Building HS2 all the way to London Euston and Crewe could save the government money by enabling it to lease the line out for much more, rail industry leaders have told ministers, as the Treasury weighs up whether to fund tunnels to central London. Continue reading...
Man extradited from Queensland after allegedly murdering woman in a NSW home
Woman, 58, died in hospital nearly a week after being found at a Coffs Harbour property with severe facial injuries
Wellington’s false teeth and wolf bones: English Heritage needs help to record vast collection
Charity launches fundraising appeal to care for and document eclectic store of more than 1m artefactsAnimal bones found in the ruins of a North Yorkshire monastery that could, thrillingly, be the remains of England's last known wolf are part of the collection. As are a celebrated Vermeer masterpiece, the Duke of Wellington's false teeth, more than 60,000 coins and almost 300 dessert plates.It is eclectic," said Kevin Booth, English Heritage's head collections curator of the more than 1m objects in the charity's care. It is a slightly random collection and is just so intriguing. It is such a broad spectrum of material that has, in some ways, been accumulated, unlike a classic collection where there might be an element of selection." Continue reading...
Oasis ticket sales push UK non-essential spending to highest level this year
Retail sales show strongest growth in six months as shoppers buy clothes and computers for new academic yearTicket sales for the Oasis reunion tour helped to increase non-essential spending by British consumers to the highest level this year in September, amid a bumper month for retailers.In a sign of resilience despite a pre-budget hit to consumer confidence, industry figures show retail sales and discretionary spending on entertainment, meals out and little luxuries rose sharply last month. Continue reading...
Sally Field recalls her ‘hideous’ illegal abortion at 17 as she urges voters to back Kamala Harris
Oscar-winning actor speaks about the life-altering' operation she underwent in Mexico with no anaesthetic in 1964: How you can go back to that?'Sally Field has spoken about the hideous" and traumatic" illegal abortion she underwent as a 17-year-old in 1964, as she called on voters to get behind Kamala Harris in the upcoming US presidential election.The Oscar-winning actor first revealed her abortion in her 2018 memoir In Pieces, but wrote in the caption of her video, shared on Instagram, that she had been so hesitant to do this, to tell my horrific story". Continue reading...
‘Contrite’ Qantas to pay $120m for selling already cancelled flights as landmark settlement confirmed
Airline to pay 86,000 customers between $225 and $450 each, on top of previous refunds, as part of remediation
NSW premier says police should be able to ban pro-Palestine protests because they are too expensive
Critics of Chris Minns say singling out protests as a financial burden completely flies in the face of government obligations under human rights laws'
Curious koala survives close call at Sydney train station
Marsupial caught on camera at Casula in city's south-west, where urban development threatens wildlife
Former police officer Beau Lamarre-Condon will lodge plea to murder charges soon, court hears
Lamarre-Condon is charged with the domestic violence-related murders of former TV presenter Jesse Baird and his partner Luke Davies in Sydney
Beer can artwork accidentally thrown in bin by staff member at Dutch museum
A mechanic working at the LAM museum in Lisse assumed the artwork, entitled All The Good Times We Spent Together, was rubbishA Dutch museum has recovered an artwork that looks like two empty beer cans after a staff member accidentally threw it in the rubbish bin thinking it was trash.The work, entitled All The Good Times We Spent Together by French artist Alexandre Lavet, appears on first glance to be two discarded and dented beer tins. Continue reading...
Rachel Reeves to decide by Wednesday whether to change fiscal rules
Move could unlock up to 57bn in additional spending on infrastructure in October's budgetRachel Reeves must decide by Wednesday whether to change the government's fiscal rules to potentially unlock up to 57bn in additional spending on infrastructure at this month's budget.Sources close to the Treasury said the chancellor would need to make a decision before submitting the major measures" for her tax and spending event on 30 October to the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR). Continue reading...
Investigation launched after boy, 17, dies after police chase in Harrow
Two other male occupants of Ford Fiesta pursued by police driver remain in hospital after crashAn investigation has been launched after a 17-year-old boy died after a police chase.The teenage passenger was one of three males taken to hospital after the crash outside Central Middlesex hospital in Harrow, north-west London, at about 5.25am on Monday, the Metropolitan police said. Continue reading...
Key Labour thinktank recommends major new powers for elected mayors
Plans would put mayors at forefront of delivering public sector improvements in areas such as health and educationMayors should be given major new powers, according to a report by the Starmerite thinktank Labour Together, which comes as officials put the finishing touches to a devolution paper due in the coming weeks.The report recommends using city and regional mayors to road-test new public sector schemes before they are rolled out nationally, and giving them more control over their budgets and allowing them to commission more local public services. Continue reading...
Oasis expand reunion tour to Australia
Band will play Melbourne and Sydney in October and November 2025Oasis have expanded their phenomenally successful reunion tour to Australia, with a pair of gigs in Melbourne and Sydney.The band will play Melbourne's Marvel Stadium on 31 October 2025, followed by Sydney's Accor Stadium on 7 November. Tickets go on sale on Tuesday 15 October, with hopeful fans now able to register for presale access. Continue reading...
Tunisia’s president wins landslide second term after cracking down on opponents
Kais Saied secured 90.7% of the vote in election on a turnout of just 27.7%, after detaining rival Ayachi ZammelTunisia's president, Kais Saied, has secured a second five-year term with a landslide victory, although the election had one of the lowest turnouts in the north African country's history.The Independent High Authority for Elections (ISIE) declared on Monday evening that Saied had won 90.7% of the vote in Sunday's election, on a turnout of 27.7%. Continue reading...
‘No evidence of third-party involvement’ in Victoria Taylor disappearance, police say
New sighting of 34-year-old revealed in CCTV footage from Malton bus station, as officers focus on River Derwent areaPolice searching for Victoria Taylor have said there is no information to suggest any form of third-party involvement" in her disappearance, as they revealed a new sighting of the 34-year-old on the day she went missing.Taylor disappeared from her home in Malton, North Yorkshire, on Monday 30 September, and a number of her personal possessions were found close to the River Derwent in the town. Continue reading...
Vet reprimanded for home care of ‘happy’ cat she was told to euthanise
Janine Parody billed surprised owner 500 for treatment of eight-month-old cat she could not bear to put downAn experienced vet has been reprimanded for taking home a patient's cat that she was told to euthanise and charging nearly 500 for the animal's care in Suffolk.Janine Parody decided against putting down the ill eight-month-old feline named Shadow in 2021 and, contrary to the owner's wishes, treated him. Continue reading...
Cissy Houston, Grammy winner and mother of Whitney Houston, dies at 91
Acclaimed gospel singer who performed with Aretha Franklin and Elvis Presley dies in New Jersey hospice careCissy Houston, the mother of the late Whitney Houston and a two-time Grammy winner who performed alongside superstar musicians such as Elvis Presley and Aretha Franklin, has died. She was 91.Houston died on Monday morning in her New Jersey home while under hospice care for Alzheimer's disease, her daughter-in-law, Pat Houston, told the Associated Press. The acclaimed gospel singer was surrounded by her family. Continue reading...
Germans decry influence of English as ‘idiot’s apostrophe’ gets official approval
Linguistic body has relaxed rules on use of apostrophe to show possession, not traditionally correct in GermanA relaxation of official rules around the correct use of apostrophes in German has not only irritated grammar sticklers but triggered existential fears around the pervasive influence of English.Establishments that feature their owners' names, with signs like Rosi's Bar" or Kati's Kiosk" are a common sight around German towns and cities, but strictly speaking they are wrong: unlike English, German does not traditionally use apostrophes to indicate the genitive case or possession. The correct spelling, therefore, would be Rosis Bar", Katis Kiosk", or, as in the title of a recent viral hit, Barbaras Rhabarberbar. Continue reading...
Starmer’s new chief of staff to make ‘radical changes’ to No 10 operations
Sources say Morgan McSweeney plans slew of changes as PM attempts to shore up top team after months of rowsKeir Starmer's new chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, is preparing to make radical changes" to the Downing Street operation as the prime minister attempts to shrug off internal rows and put a tumultuous period behind him.No 10 sources said that nothing was off the table" when it came to ensuring the machinery of government was fit for purpose, heralding a slew of changes that could reshape the Downing Street organisation. Continue reading...
Suddenly, all MPs know where the Chagos Islands are and what’s best for them | John Crace
Many who last week couldn't have got within 500 miles of Mauritius on a map now can't bear it taking the archipelagoWhat a difference a week makes. Just last Wednesday, you could have put money on most MPs being totally clueless about the exact location of the Chagos Islands. Give them a map and many would have better luck being blindfolded.Even a hint wouldn't have made much difference. Are they east, west, south or north of Mauritius? To be in with a shout, you have to know where Mauritius is. And most MPs wouldn't get within 500 miles. The Indian Ocean is bigger than you think. And don't get them started on Diego Garcia. Surely he's the younger brother of the titular character in the 1974 Sam Peckinpah film Bring me the Head of Alfredo Garcia. Continue reading...
Doctor secured Lucy Letby hospital placement while she was suspected of murder
Registrar who exchanged more than 1,000 messages with nurse tells public inquiry he believes he was misledA doctor who exchanged more than 1,000 inappropriate" and frivolous" Facebook messages with Lucy Letby secured her a placement at another hospital while she was suspected of murdering babies, a public inquiry has heard.The registrar, who can only be named as Dr U, said he had supported the nurse because she was struggling with her mental health" but that he now believed he had been misled and maybe manipulated". Continue reading...
Campaigners call for tobacco windfall tax and yearly surcharges on ‘lethal trade’
Rachel Reeves urged to levy double whammy' on firms' 1bn annual profits to fund measures to end smokingDoctors and health charities have urged Rachel Reeves to hit tobacco firms with a financial double whammy, including a windfall tax in the budget, to help fund Labour's drive to eradicate smoking.They are suggesting a one-off 74m surcharge and a new 700m-a-year permanent levy on the industry's obscene" profits from selling its lethal products. Continue reading...
Four people taken to hospital as Northern Ireland school bus overturns
Most of those hurt were well enough to be discharged at the scene, according to the ambulance serviceFour people have been taken to hospital after a school bus carrying 44 people overturned in a field in County Down.Pictures on social media showed children in uniform walking from the blue doubledecker bus, which had shattered windscreens. Continue reading...
Starmer urges all sides in Middle East to ‘step back from the brink’
UK prime minister tells parliament first anniversary of 7 October Hamas attack is a day of grief' for region
No 10 denies Starmer has a problem working with women following Sue Gray’s exit – UK politics live
Spokesperson fails to address questions over whether Gray resigned or was sacked as chief of staff or specify her salary for her new roleSophie Linden, London's deputy mayor for policing and crime, is stepping down after eight years working with Sadiq Khan to take a job as an adviser to Shabana Mahmood, the justice secretary, Khan has announced. In a statement Linden claimed that policing in the capital was far more diverse, transparent and accountable" than when she started.Matt Chorley from Radio 5 Live posted this on social media yesterday to provide some context about the departure of Sue Gray. Continue reading...
Rebekah Vardy challenges Coleen Rooney’s £1.8m legal costs for libel trial
Wife of Leicester City footballer Jamie Vardy lost Wagatha Christie' case in July 2022 after suing Rooney for libelRebekah Vardy has challenged the sheer magnitude" of Coleen Rooney's 1.8m legal costs from the Wagatha Christie" libel trial, which include her lawyer's stay at the Nobu Hotel and minibar bill, the high court has been told.Vardy, the wife of the Leicester City footballer Jamie Vardy, lost the high-profile case in July 2022 after she sued Rooney for libel. Continue reading...
Telegraph takeover: ‘concern’ in newsroom over Dovid Efune talks
New York Sun owner's hardline stance about Middle East prompts fears over editorial independenceConcern is mounting across the Telegraph newsroom over the threat to editorial impartiality and influence, as the New York Sun owner, Dovid Efune, is poised to enter exclusive talks to buy the Daily and Sunday Telegraph.British-born Efune regularly posts hardline views about the situation in the Middle East, sparking alarm among staff as it looks increasingly likely that he will become their new proprietor, having tabled a 550m bid. Continue reading...
Farage backtracks on claim he was advised not to hold constituency surgeries
Reform leader also says he and other MPs have sent letter to home secretary over Manchester airport incident
Girl who stabbed teachers and pupil carried knives from age of seven, jury hears
Pupil, who was 13 at time of attacks, tells Swansea court she carried weapon as she self-harmed and was bulliedA girl who stabbed two teachers and a fellow pupil in a playground has told a jury that she had taken knives into school since she was seven or eight.The girl, who was 13 at the time of the attacks, said she carried blades every day because she used them to self-harm and she was frightened of being bullied and didn't trust the system to protect her. Continue reading...
GP admits attempted murder of mother’s partner with fake Covid jab
Thomas Kwan changes plea after court told how he disguised himself as nurse to poison Patrick O'Hara in NewcastleA GP has admitted trying to kill his mother's long-term partner by disguising himself as a community nurse and poisoning him with a flesh-eating toxin disguised as a Covid jab.Thomas Kwan, 53, injected his victim with the life-threatening chemical after what prosecutors described as one of the most elaborate criminal plots in recent memory." The Hong Kong-born doctor had wanted to kill Patrick O'Hara, 72, so he could inherit his mother's estate when she died, Newcastle crown court was told. Continue reading...
John Lewis Partnership axes chief executive role under new chair
Nish Kankiwala to return to board in non-executive position as Jason Tarry accelerates turnaround plan
Australian health worker in Gaza says conditions ‘worse than you can imagine’ a year into war
Sally Stevenson, who is on assignment with MSF, tells of appalling living conditions', with no water or sewerage system and loss of hope'
‘Huge environmental win’: Australia to protect 52% of its oceans, more than any other country, Plibersek says
Sub-Antarctic marine park expansion welcomed but scientists say some areas important to penguins and seals missed out on sanctuary-level protection
Salmon numbers in England and Wales last year were lowest on record
Total declared salmon catch estimated at 5,399 fish, down from 6,952 in 2022 - and 20,000 in years up to 2017Salmon numbers in England and Wales last year were the lowest on record, figures show, as pollution and climate breakdown are killing off the endangered fish.A report from the Environment Agency and Cefas shows Atlantic salmon stocks in England and Wales have dropped to their lowest level since records began in 1997. Continue reading...
Pakistan bans Pashtun group as government cracks down on dissent
Protests have been broken up with violence and opposition politicians from Imran Khan's party arrestedPakistani authorities have unleashed a draconian crackdown on dissent, breaking up opposition protests with violence and mass arrests and banning a movement to promote the rights of the ethnic Pashtun community under terrorism laws.Hundreds of riot police fired teargas and charged with batons as supporters of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), the party of the incarcerated former prime minister Imran Khan, gathered to protest over the weekend in the cities of Islamabad and Lahore. Continue reading...
First Thing: One year after the 7 October attacks
As Israel mourns those killed one year ago today, attacks on Lebanon and Gaza continue. Plus: the aftermath of Hurricane Helene
How an ultra-right majority in California’s far north picked a novice to run its elections
Shasta county has made its name as a hotbed of the election-denial movement - and the snubbing of a well-respected election clerk has caused alarmThis is the first of three stories about the run-up to the 2024 US presidential election in Shasta county, a region of 180,000 people in northern California that has emerged as a center of the election-denial movement and a hotbed for far-right politics.When Shasta county had to search for a new official to oversee its elections earlier this year, there was an obvious candidate. Continue reading...
Israel marks 7 October with memorials and protests, as attacks on Lebanon and Gaza continue
Israeli military says it struck Hezbollah intelligence and weapons storage, as rocket hits Haifa injuring at least 5 people
...178179180181182183184185186187...