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Updated 2025-01-21 12:47
Jair Bolsonaro applies for six-month tourist visa to stay in US
Ex-Brazil president who has been in Florida since 30 December is being investigated for attempt to topple country’s governmentBrazil’s former president Jair Bolsonaro, who is facing investigation as part of an inquiry into alleged attempt to topple the country’s government, has filed a request for a six-month visitor visa to stay in the US.The former leader is understood to have entered the US on an A-1 visa reserved for sitting heads of state, which would expire on Tuesday, 30 days from the end of his presidential term. Continue reading...
Police launch appeal after foetus left in box outside London hospital
Met urges mother to come forward over concerns for her welfare after discovery in BarnetPolice have launched an appeal after a foetus was left in a box outside a north London hospital.The foetus is thought to have been aged about 16 weeks old, according to the Metropolitan police, who are treating the matter as unexplained. The mother has been urged to come forward due to concerns for her welfare. Continue reading...
Marilyn Manson faces more sex abuse allegations
Lawsuit filed in New York accuses musician of ‘childhood and adult sexual abuse’, among other allegations, in mid-1990sIn a lawsuit filed on Long Island, New York, on Monday, the singer Marilyn Manson was accused of “childhood and adult sexual abuse, sexual battery, assault and molestation”.The suit, which alleged Manson first targeted the unnamed plaintiff when she was 16 in 1995, came less than a week after the singer, whose real name is Brian Warner, reached a settlement with the actor Esmé Bianco, who sued him in April 2021, alleging rape and sexual battery.In the US, the domestic violence hotline is 1-800-799-SAFE (7233). In the UK, call the national domestic abuse helpline on 0808 2000 247, or visit the Men’s Advice Line or Women’s Aid. In Australia, the national family violence counselling service is on 1800 737 732. Other international helplines may be found via www.befrienders.org. Continue reading...
Rishi Sunak rejects claims Nadhim Zahawi was unfairly treated
PM says his sacking of Zahawi shows he will take ‘whatever steps are necessary’ to restore integrity to politicsRishi Sunak has dismissed claims that Nadhim Zahawi was unfairly treated after he was sacked for breaking the ministerial code in a row over his tax affairs, saying his government was committed to integrity.Senior MPs have privately suggested that Sunak’s action against Zahawi meant there could be no way back for the deputy prime minister, Dominic Raab – the subject of 24 bullying complaints. Continue reading...
Russia-Ukraine war live: Kremlin warns west that sending more weapons to Kyiv will lead to ‘significant escalation’ – as it happened
Kremlin spokesperson says supply of arms to Kyiv from west has led to Nato becoming more directly involved in the conflict
UK dementia care agency’s half-hour home visits ‘lasted as little as three minutes’
Staff filed records claiming far more care was given, evidence suggestsA dementia home care agency spent as little as three and a half minutes on taxpayer-funded care visits and filed records claiming far more care was given, according to evidence seen by the Guardian.The hasty care was exposed by Susan Beswick’s family, who called it “totally inadequate”. They say they had been told visits to 78-year-old Beswick, who has Alzheimer’s disease, were supposed to last 30 or 45 minutes. Continue reading...
Gareth Thomas settles case with ex over HIV transmission accusation
Former Wales rugby captain agrees to pay £75,000 plus costs to Ian Baum but says he has not admitted any liabilityGareth Thomas has settled a court case with an ex-partner who accused the former Wales rugby captain of “deceptively” transmitting HIV to him.Ian Baum sued Thomas in the high court for allegedly hiding his HIV status and “failing to take reasonable care” not to pass the virus on. Continue reading...
Plymouth shooting: firearms inquiry officer had no formal training, jury told
Inquest hears from police staff member who processed Jake Davison’s application for shotgun certificateA police staff member who recommended the Plymouth gunman Jake Davison be granted a shotgun certificate had not received any formal training but rather had to learn “on the job”, an inquest has heard.David Rees knew Davison had carried out violent assaults on teachers but told the inquest in Exeter this did not concern him as it had been dealt with internally and he had apologised. Continue reading...
Head of watchdog recuses himself from BBC chair inquiry
Commissioner for public appointments William Shawcross admits he has met Richard Sharp several timesThe head of an investigation into Richard Sharp’s appointment as the BBC chair has recused himself from the process, admitting the pair have met several times.William Shawcross, the commissioner for public appointments, said an independent person would be selected by his office to look at Sharp’s hiring, and said he would “play no part in this particular investigation”. Continue reading...
Australia and France agree arms deal for Ukraine as talks seek to bury Aukus debacle
The countries will jointly supply thousands of artillery shells to Kyiv to kickstart ‘new cooperation between defence industries’
Adani claims US investment firm’s fraud allegations are an ‘attack on India’
Conglomerate responds to Hindenburg Research report that claimed it was the ‘biggest con in corporate history’
Teachers’ strike in England and Wales to go ahead after talks fail
Union accuses education secretary of ‘squandering opportunity’ to avert planned action on Wednesday
Many ate food past use-by date in Xmas run-up, UK survey reveals
Latest ONS data shows that people who ran out of food also struggled to keep warm as prices rose furtherMany people in the UK ate food past its use-by date and struggled to keep warm in the run-up to Christmas as prices rose further, official data shows.About one in five adults (18%) reported eating smaller portions and food past its use-by date, which can make people sick, according to the latest Office for National Statistics monthly data release on winter pressures. The rates are even higher among those with depression, diabetes or dependent children. Continue reading...
UK firefighters and control room staff vote to strike over pay
Fire Brigades Union announces result of strike ballotFirefighters across the UK have voted for strike action, with 88% voting in favour on a 73% turnout, the union has said.Two separate simultaneous ballots, in Northern Ireland and among control room staff in the north-west of England, also delivered strong results. Continue reading...
Palestinian man killed at West Bank checkpoint as Blinken begins Middle East trip
US secretary of state to meet Israeli PM and Palestinian Authority president after spate of deadly attacksA Palestinian man has died after an altercation with Israeli troops, as violence in the region continued to spiral before the arrival of the US secretary of state, Antony Blinken.Nassim Nayef Salman Abu Fouda, 26, was shot in the head at a checkpoint in the restive city of Hebron in the occupied West Bank, the Palestinian health ministry said on Monday. The Israeli army said Abu Fouda had driven his car into a soldier, and crashed it after shots were fired and he attempted to drive off. Continue reading...
Ukrainian man goes on trial in France over theft of £1.3m painting found in Kyiv
Paul Signac’s Le Port de La Rochelle was lifted from a museum in 2018 and found a year later by Kviv police in an unconnected raidA Ukrainian man has gone on trial in France accused of masterminding the theft of a €1.5m (£1.3m) painting discovered in a house in Kyiv a year after it disappeared from a museum in Nancy.The work by Paul Signac, Le Port de La Rochelle, went missing from the Musée de Beaux-Arts in Nancy, north-east France, in 2018. Continue reading...
‘Doppelganger murder’: German prosecutors claim woman killed lookalike to fake death
Ingolstadt body identified by family as 23-year-old German-Iraqi woman was later found to be Algerian bloggerA 23-year-old German-Iraqi woman sought out a lookalike on Instagram and murdered her with a friend in order to fake her own death, prosecutors in Bavaria believe.When the blood-covered body of a young woman was found last August in a parked Mercedes in Ingolstadt, southern Germany, reports initially identified the victim as Sharaban K, a Munich-based 23-year-old beautician with Iraqi roots. Continue reading...
Phone of woman missing in Lancashire found on a bench, police say
Officers ‘extremely concerned’ for Nicola Bulley, 45, who has been missing since FridayThe mystery surrounding the whereabouts of a woman who went missing four days ago has deepened after police revealed her phone was found on a bench near where she was last seen.Police said they were “extremely concerned” for Nicola Bulley, 45, who went missing shortly after taking her two daughters to school near a quiet Lancashire village on Friday morning. Continue reading...
Lidia Thorpe welcomes sovereignty assurances over voice but remains undecided
Assistant minister for Indigenous Australians, Malarndirri McCarthy, tells ABC’s QandA that position of Greens senator is a ‘misnomer’
Holly Newton: family pays tribute to ‘much-loved’ girl killed in stabbing
Holly Newton, 15, was a talented dancer who had ‘whole life ahead of her’ before death last Friday in HexhamA family has paid tribute to a 15-year-girl stabbed to death in Northumberland, calling her “much-loved, bright and bubbly” and someone who was passionate about her family and many friends.Relatives of Holly Newton said she had been a talented dancer who took part in competitions up and down the country. Continue reading...
Oil prices fuel doubling of profits from global commodities trading, report finds
Companies such as Vitol and Trafigura in spotlight over profits after Ukraine invasionProfits from global commodities trading for companies including Vitol and Trafigura have nearly doubled to more than $50bn (£30bn) in recent years, driven by volatile oil prices, fresh analysis has shown.Global commodities trading profits ballooned to about $52bn of profits in 2021, up from $27bn in 2018, and are expected to continue to grow, according to a report by consultancy McKinsey & Company. Continue reading...
Barrett Strong, singer, songwriter and Motown’s first star, dies aged 81
Strong sang on the label’s first hit Money in 1960 and went on to co-write landmark songs including Heard It Through the Grapevine and WarBarrett Strong, a singer and songwriter who rose to fame as the vocalist on Motown’s first hit single Money (That’s What I Want), has died, aged 81. The news was confirmed on Monday by the Motown Museum; no cause of death was given.Born in Mississippi in 1941 but raised in Detroit, Strong was one of the first artists to be signed by the future Motown maven Berry Gordy. He began recording for Gordy’s label, Tamla Records, in the late 1950s, and in 1960 his recording of the Gordy-penned Money (That’s What I Want) became the first hit for either artist. Peaking at No 2 on the R&B singles chart and No 23 on the Hot 100, Money came to define the early years of Motown, and was later recorded by the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. Continue reading...
Tory peer accused of ‘racially charged’ attack on BBC Modi documentary
Exclusive: Rami Ranger faces criticism over ‘deplorable’ comments about Pakistani journalists at the corporationA Conservative peer has been accused of using “deplorable” and “racially charged language” in a scathing attack on the BBC’s recent documentary about the Indian prime minister, Narendra Modi.Rami Ranger, who is already under investigation by the standards commissioners in the Lords, was criticised for comments made about Pakistani journalists at the corporation. Continue reading...
Rishi Sunak vows to ‘restore integrity’ after sacking Nadhim Zahawi
Prime minister says he acted decisively to dismiss Tory party chair for breaches of ministerial code
Venezuela NGOs fear new bill will put stranglehold on civil society
Legislation would force organisations to provide financial records to government with threat of bans for political or security reasonsNew legislation proposed by the Venezuelan government to regulate civil society groups would kill the last functioning remnant of the country’s democracy and take it a step closer to a police state, leading NGOs have warned.The bill passed its first reading in the country’s legislature on Tuesday and, if approved in a second reading, will obligate NGOs to provide the government with all their financial records so that their political agendas and funding can be scrutinised. Continue reading...
Legal & General chief executive Nigel Wilson to retire
Asset manager and insurance group’s shares fall after news, making it the worst performer on the FTSE 100The chief executive of Legal & General, Nigel Wilson, is to retire after more than a decade leading Britain’s largest asset manager and insurance group.L&G, which manages £1.3tn worth of assets for clients including workplace pension schemes, is now on the hunt for a successor. Continue reading...
Flash flooding traps Sydney drivers in their cars after torrential rain hits city
SES called into action 19 times to free people from their vehicles and trains between Bankstown and the centre cancelled
Iranian protesters sentenced to death were tortured, says Amnesty report
Two teenagers and 31-year-old man were subjected to torture including rape and beatings and denied fair trial, says groupThe alleged torture of three young Iranian men facing the death penalty has been detailed in a report by Amnesty International that raises deep concerns about the country’s judicial system.One of the men, Mehdi Mohammadifard, was raped by prison guards and severely beaten, the rights group said. Amnesty said it had learned that Mohammadifard suffered anal injuries and rectal bleeding that required treatment in a hospital outside the prison where he was being held. Continue reading...
UK business groups call for more foreign-language teaching in colleges
Exclusive: Report reveals postcode lottery as barely half FE institutions offer some form of language teachingBusiness groups and language experts are calling on ministers to make linguistic skills a core part of vocational training, after research found young people are unable to study languages at large numbers of further education colleges.A report by the British Academy published on Monday, shows that despite the importance of linguistic skills in many jobs, the ability to learn French, German or Spanish, let alone less common languages, has become a postcode lottery. Continue reading...
Ryanair reports bumper profits amid pent-up demand
Airline says customers are keen to book Easter and summer flights as people want to escape ‘bad news’Ryanair made record third-quarter profits as the budget airline benefited from pent-up travel demand from cost-conscious customers.The budget airline increased its full-year profit guidance after the strong performance, as profit after tax surged to €211m (£185m) between October and December. That is compared with a loss of €96m during the same period in 2021 and more than double its €88m profit in the same three months in 2019, before the pandemic. Continue reading...
Inaccuracy of robodebt scheme ‘known issue’ but was ‘only way’ to do more reviews, commission told
Former top lawyer for the Department of Human Services said she relied on another department’s position that income averaging scheme was lawful
Prevent strategy review hit by defamation action before publication
Critics fear still-unpublished review into anti-radicalisation strategy could link it to extremismAn organisation that monitors Prevent, the UK government’s controversial programme to stop people getting drawn into terrorism, has warned of a defamation action against the Home Office before a review into the strategy.Prevent Watch, which has supported 600 individuals it says have wrongly been affected by Prevent, sent a formal letter to the department threatening legal action. Continue reading...
Tory mayor Andy Street says levelling up policy should trust local people more
West Midlands mayor believes it shouldn’t only be up to civil servants in London to make project funding decisionsThe Conservative mayor of the West Midlands has criticised the government’s levelling up policy for being too centralised, and said he chose to “put place before party” when he spoke out on the issue.Last week Andy Street broke ranks with his party as he labelled the government’s levelling up plans as a “broken begging bowl culture”, and said he was disappointed more funding hadn’t been allocated to the West Midlands. Continue reading...
Teal MP Monique Ryan taken to court by staffer Sally Rugg over alleged workplace law breach
Rugg is suing the Kooyong independent in federal court in relation to Fair Work Act’s ‘general protections’ provisions
Peru’s president renews call for elections this year to bring end to protests
Dina Boluarte threatens constitutional reform if lawmakers fail to bring forward national votePeru’s president, Dina Boluarte, has made a renewed appeal for congress to hold early elections as a way to end weeks of deadly protests, warning that otherwise she would seek constitutional reform to make a vote happen.The South American country has been embroiled in a political crisis with near-daily protests since 7 December, when then-president Pedro Castillo was arrested after attempting to dissolve congress and rule by decree. Continue reading...
Belgium: family say death of Belgian-Tunisian woman in custody not suicide
Death of Sourour Abouda casts spotlight on treatment of minority ethnic citizens by Belgium’s policeThe death of a Belgian-Tunisian woman in police custody earlier this month has been rejected by her family as a case of suicide, while casting a spotlight on the treatment of minority ethnic citizens by Belgium’s police.Sourour Abouda, a 46-year-old NGO worker, was found dead in a police cell early in the morning of 12 January, after being arrested several hours before. She had been found drunk in the fashionable district of Place Châtelain in Brussels and taken to a police station in the city centre, according to local media reports that have not been officially confirmed. Continue reading...
‘We’re fighting for a free future’: the Chechen battalions siding with Kyiv
Fighters of Dzhokhar Dudayev battalion oppose Putin and his strongman Ramzan Kadyrov as they battle with Ukrainian prejudiceFor all their efforts fighting for Ukraine in the eastern city of Bakhmut, if the Chechen volunteers’ Dzhokhar Dudayev battalion was a football club it would be Millwall. Nobody likes us, their fans sing, and “we don’t care”, says Tor, 38, with a laugh.“Once I heard from one Ukrainian: ‘You can do what do you want here in Ukraine, but you will still in our opinion be terrorists and gangsters,’” says the Chechen private, who asked to be identified only by his call sign. “And I said: ‘You know what [is] the difference between me and you, or my nation and yours? We don’t care what Ukrainians think about us, we don’t care what Americans, Russians or British think of us. In truth, we do not care what the Chechens think of us.’ Yeah. We have to do what we have to do, you know.” Continue reading...
‘The government has listened’: Australia’s peak bodies praise $300m federal arts policy
Launched by Anthony Albanese at Melbourne live music pub the Espy, the policy offers welcome support for the beleaguered industry
Arrernte traditional owners urge PM to ‘come back and talk to the elders’ amid Alice Springs crisis
Strong Grandmothers of the Central Desert group wants Anthony Albanese and other politicians to hear concerns at grassroots level
Tunisian election records 11% turnout in rejection of president’s reforms
Tunisians expressed their dismay at president Kais Saied’s seizure of powers by failing to turn up to voteA mere 11% of the electorate voted in Tunisia’s parliamentary runoffs, with critics of president Kais Saied saying the empty polling stations were evidence of public disdain for his agenda and seizure of powers.Sunday’s runoff vote was however higher than December’s first round, which had a participation rate of 8.8%. Continue reading...
Australian Catholic groups push for progressive church reforms in wake of George Pell’s death
Reformists say timing of gathering on day of Pell’s funeral a coincidence but does set up an ‘interesting contrast’
Rishi Sunak set to unveil emergency care plan to slash NHS waiting times
Experts warn plan does not address staff vacancies and £1bn fund pledged is not new moneyRishi Sunak will vow to rapidly slash long waiting times for urgent NHS care with a promise of thousands more beds, 800 new ambulances and an expansion of community care backed by a dedicated fund of £1bn.The health service is engulfed in its worst-ever crisis, with urgent and emergency care in particular under unprecedented pressure in recent months. The prime minister will describe his blueprint for resolving the problems as “ambitious and credible”. Continue reading...
Ex-royal aide says trying to reopen deal with Virginia Giuffre won’t help Prince Andrew
Former courtier says the King would still keep Duke of York at arm’s length as Charles prepares for coronationAny attempt by Prince Andrew to try to row back an out-of-court deal with a woman with whom he is accused of having sex when she was a teenager is unlikely to rehabilitate him in the royal family, a former senior royal aide has warned.The Duke of York was at the weekend urged to challenge his legal settlement with Virginia Giuffre by Alan Dershowitz, an American lawyer who himself was previously accused by her of sexual abuse. Continue reading...
Rishi Sunak under pressure after sacking Nadhim Zahawi over tax storm
PM’s judgment in question as Zahawi fails to apologise after inquiry finds breaches of ministerial code
Revealed: Cressida Dick sought £500,000 to quit as Met chief
Exclusive: documents show tense exchanges between senior aide and London mayor’s office over oustingCressida Dick sought £500,000 to stand down as Metropolitan police commissioner after the mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, ousted her over a litany of scandals, documents reveal.Her tenure has been under renewed scrutiny in recent weeks with the revelation that the serial rapist David Carrick was kept on duty under her leadership despite being arrested on suspicion of rape. Continue reading...
Scotland says transgender prisoners with violent pasts will not go to women’s jails
Justice secretary pauses transfer of all transgender prisoners after outrage about rapist Isla Bryson being sent to all-female prisonNo transgender prisoner with a history of violence against women will be accommodated in a women’s prison, Scotland’s justice secretary has announced, as the country’s prison service announced an urgent review of all transgender inmates.It comes two days after Nicola Sturgeon said she did not favour “a blanket approach” to transgender prisoners, and amid growing pressure on her government after reports that another violent transgender prisoner had been approved for transfer into the female prison estate. Continue reading...
Hongkongers in UK ask Suella Braverman to ditch ‘repressive’ anti-protest bill
Exclusive: Letter to home secretary says bill echoes ‘dangerously broad laws’ that result in jailing of protestersHongkongers in Britain have called on Suella Braverman to reconsider controversial measures in her public order bill, which they likened to the repressive measures used to crack down on democratic opposition in their home city.In a letter to the UK home secretary, aspects of the bill were described as “repressive measures that threaten to paralyse entire social movement” and posed a threat to their right to protest in Britain, including against Chinese communist repression in Hong Kong. Continue reading...
Nadhim Zahawi saga is blow to Rishi Sunak’s bid to rebuild trust
PM acted swiftly after receiving adviser’s report but there was little in it he could not have found out a fortnight agoRishi Sunak was in his sprawling constituency home in North Yorkshire when just after 7am on Sunday he received the report by Sir Laurie Magnus, his new ethics adviser, on whether Nadhim Zahawi had broken the ministerial code over his tax affairs.The four-page document was damning, finding that the Tory party chair had breached the code on seven occasions, including by failing to declare the HMRC investigation into his finances and subsequent £5m settlement including a penalty, even though they could have given rise to conflicts of interests. Continue reading...
Drones target Iranian weapons factory in central city of Isfahan
Attack appears to fit a pattern of strikes against strategic sites that have been attributed to IsraelA series of powerful explosions have damaged an Iranian government weapons factory in the central city of Isfahan, according to witnesses and footage from the scene, in what officials said was a coordinated drone attack.The overnight strikes left flames billowing from a military industrial complex thought to be a production hub for drones and missiles that have been used across the Middle East and by Russian forces in Ukraine. Continue reading...
‘Fire-breathing demon’: shelter opts for honesty in adoption ad for ‘full-jerk’ dog
A no-kill shelter in Niagara Falls, New York, takes unconventional approach to finding new owners for French bulldogMaybe he’s born with it, maybe he really is a “full jerk”, “fire-breathing demon” and equally adorable 26lb dog with boundary issues.Meet Ralphie, a 14-month-old French bulldog whose owners surrendered him at the Niagara SPCA, a no-kill shelter in Niagara Falls, New York earlier this month where a very unconventional approach is being taken to finding him new owners. Continue reading...
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