by Suzanne Wrack on (#67BB6)
World news | The Guardian
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Updated | 2025-07-05 09:16 |
by Shaun Walker, Kari Paul and Dan Milmo on (#67AEJ)
Former kickboxer and reality TV star put in pre-trial detention alongside his brother and two other suspectsThe controversial online influencer and misogynist Andrew Tate has been put in pre-trial detention in Romania following his arrest on charges of human trafficking, rape and forming an organised crime group.The former kickboxer and reality TV star, who has been banned from a number of social media platforms for misogynistic comments and hate speech, was arrested alongside his brother and two other suspects. Continue reading...
by Samira Asma-Sadeque and agencies on (#67B85)
Bob Jordan says ‘I am extremely sorry’ as airline gets back towards normal after more than 15,000 flights canceledThe chief executive of Southwest Airlines has apologized for holiday period disruptions that saw more than 15,000 flights canceled across the US, stranding passengers and leaving many scrambling to find their luggage.“I am extremely sorry,” Bob Jordan told ABC News on Friday morning. “There’s just no way to almost apologize enough.” Continue reading...
by Reuters in Washington on (#67B5D)
US aircraft forced to take evasive maneuvers during latest incident over contested shipping, fishing and gas field-rich regionA Chinese military plane came within 10ft (three meters) of a US air force aircraft over the contested South China Sea last week and forced it to take evasive maneuvers to avoid a collision in international airspace, the US military said.The close encounter followed what the US called a recent trend of increasingly dangerous behavior by Chinese military aircraft. Continue reading...
by Andrew Downie in São Paulo on (#67B1Q)
Huge crowds expected for funeral of footballing great as well as the inauguration of Luiz Inácio Lula da SilvaBrazil has been gearing up for one of the most monumental new years in its history as the South America nation prepared to both welcome a new president and say goodbye to one of its most famous sons.Huge crowds are expected in Brasilia on 1 January to see Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva inaugurated for a four-year term, while a day later football fans will gather in Santos to bid farewell to Pelé, the football legend who died on Thursday. Continue reading...
by Haroon Janjua in Islamabad on (#67AXJ)
Dawlat Khan had received a life sentence for the rape of a young deaf woman but a council of elders intervened to offer a compromiseA court in Pakistan has caused outrage after it freed a convicted rapist when he agreed to marry his victim.Dawlat Khan, 25, had been sentenced to life imprisonment in May by the district court of Buner, in north-western Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, for the rape of a young deaf woman. Continue reading...
by Henry Belot on (#67AXP)
Acma calls for more power to restrict advertisements on Facebook, YouTube and Google
by Angela Giuffrida in Rome on (#67AT2)
NGOs say measures including requirement to request port after first rescue could result in thousands of deathsSea rescue charities are rebelling against tough new anti-immigration measures imposed by the Italian government, arguing that they could result in thousands of deaths.Ship captains risk fines of €50,000 and having their vessels impounded if they break the rules, which include a requirement to request a port and sail to it immediately after undertaking one rescue instead of remaining at sea to rescue people from other boats in difficulty. Continue reading...
by Dan Milmo Global technology editor on (#67AT3)
Authority says it is holding digital assets until they can be returned to creditors and former customersThe Bahamas securities regulator has said it has seized assets worth $3.5bn (£2.9bn) from the failed cryptocurrency exchange FTX and plans to return them to creditors and former customers.The Securities Commission of the Bahamas said it had transferred all digital assets under the custody or control of FTX Digital Markets, a Bahamas subsidiary of the FTX operation, to its own digital wallets for “safekeeping”. Continue reading...
by Faye Hulton (Metdesk) on (#67AT4)
Storms followed months of heavy rain on the North Island, while temperatures in France and Spain rose to almost 20COver the Christmas period, the upper North Island of New Zealand experienced stormy conditions, grounding flights and flooding roads. Thunderstorms broke out on 22 December, leading to heavy rainfall and an incredible 4,500 lightning strikes in just two hours. Unfortunately, one of these lightning strikes set a property alight in the town of Waitōtara in the south of the island. Although no injuries were reported, the property and surrounding farmlands were mostly destroyed. Furthermore, a small tornado was spotted in the Southland region of the South Island, though thankfully, no damage was caused.Although there were long sunny spells on Christmas Day, thunderstorms arose once more on Boxing Day. Between 2pm and 7pm local time, about 25-40mm fell over the upper North Island, although one rain gauge in the Auckland suburb of Ōtāhuhu recorded 50mm in just one hour. Parts of the motorway close to Mount Wellington were consequently closed, and several flights grounded. This excessive rainfall comes after several months of above average precipitation for the area, which exacerbated the risk of ground flooding and landslides. Continue reading...
by Helen Pidd North of England editor on (#67ARJ)
Move, applicable for 28 days, comes after police criticism of security at the Crane as ‘ineffective’A Birmingham nightclub where a man was stabbed to death on Boxing Day has had its licence suspended for 28 days after police said security was “ineffective”.Officers arriving at the Crane nightclub found a scene of “chaos and evidence of drug use”, West Midlands police said in its application for the licence suspension. Continue reading...
by Julia Kollewe on (#67ANQ)
Annual growth rate cools in December and average price of property drops to £262,068, says NationwideProperty prices in the UK fell for the fourth month in a row in December, the longest run of declines since 2008, according to Nationwide.Annual house price growth also slowed sharply as the year drew to a close, to the lowest rate since mid-2020, with all regions of the country affected, according to the building society’s monthly survey. Continue reading...
by Australian Associated Press on (#67AMR)
One man believed to have been involved in the clash left Australia shortly after the match, Victoria police say
by Caroline Davies and Ben Quinn on (#67AKT)
National Archives documents show concerns raised over Scottish National Portrait Gallery’s proposalDowning Street feared that a group portrait of Tony Blair’s cabinet that the Scottish National Portrait Gallery wanted to commission to mark New Labour’s 1997 election victory would look “triumphalist” and be unlikely to win votes in Scotland, newly released documents reveal.The gallery proposed a portrait by Peter Howson, a distinguished member of the new wave of expressionist artists who emerged from the Glasgow School of Art in the 80s, and was willing to pay. With the fee likely to be “substantial”, Downing Street aides were also concerned about negative coverage if any public funds were used, the documents released by the National Archives show. Continue reading...
by Guardian staff and agencies on (#67AGX)
Infectious disease experts believe strategy more effective in slowing virus spread than new travel restrictions, as health data firm says thousands are likely dying daily in ChinaThe United States is considering sampling wastewater taken from international aircraft to track any emerging new Covid-19 variants as infections surge in China, as UK-based health experts estimate about 9,000 people a days are now dying of the disease in China.The proposed of testing wastewater by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would provide a better solution to tracking the virus and slowing its entry into the US than new travel restrictions announced this week, three infectious disease experts said. Continue reading...
by Andrew Downie in São Paulo on (#67AET)
A retired businessman recalls the time when, in 1958, the then-17-year-old World Cup footballer practised at his school
by Edward Helmore on (#67ADX)
Admirers of Pelé gather in Times Square and eulogize the three-time world champion and New York Cosmos crowd-pleaserFans of Pelé gathered at the store dedicated to him in New York’s Times Square on Thursday, to memorialize and celebrate a soccer player who electrified the city when he signed with the New York Cosmos in 1975 on a three-year, $7m (£5.8m) contract, a deal that made the 34‐year‐old player the highest‐paid team athlete in the world.“I grew up hearing about Pelé,” said Larisa Belyansky in front of a wall celebrating the king of football. “The style of his play was so different, the way he moved.” “We remember him as the greatest player”, said her husband, Alex, “because he was the only one to win three World Cups.” Continue reading...
by Ben Quinn and Caroline Davies on (#67ADZ)
Archives reveal PM’s early attempts to establish personal relationship with president after 2000 US electionTony Blair moved swiftly to place his relationship with George W Bush on a personal footing after the Republican won the 2000 US presidential election, asking him “early on” in their first telephone call if he could call him by his first name.“Bush warmly assented (but stuck himself with addressing the prime minister as ‘Sir’),” according to a note of their call, which is among government files released to the National Archives. Blair was the first foreign leader to call to congratulate the president-elect. Michael Tatham, a British diplomat, noted that the eight-minute conversation had established “as good a rapport as one could hope for” from such a short call. Continue reading...
by Ben Quinn and Caroline Davies on (#67ADY)
Files show PM favoured allowing Putin ‘a position on the top table’ and encouraging him to integrate with westTony Blair was told by officials that he would be presenting Vladimir Putin with a new set of silver cufflinks from 10 Downing Street as he took up the Russian leader’s invitation to join him on his birthday during a prime ministerial visit to Moscow.The president would be the first leader to receive the special No 10 cufflinks, the prime minister was told in a memo before the October 2001 trip to Moscow, which has been released by the National Archives. Continue reading...
by Rachel Hall (now); Martin Belam and Helen Sullivan on (#679H9)
This live blog has now closed, you can read more on this story hereMissiles are being launched at Ukraine from ships on the Black Sea, according to Oleksandr Vilkul, head of the Ukrainian military administration of Kryvyi Rih, on Telegram.As we get the first reports of the sound of blasts in Kyiv, Presidential office adviser Oleksiy Arestovych has written on Facebook that over 100 missiles were incoming in several waves and air raid alarms could be heard across the country. Continue reading...
by Peter Walker Political correspondent on (#67A4H)
Alleged victim says end of suspension is ‘slap in face to anyone who has experienced sexual harassment’The SNP has restored the party whip to a senior MP who has sat as an independent since June after an independent parliamentary inquiry found he made an unwanted sexual advance towards a teenage party worker.Patrick Grady quit the SNP group at Westminster after a two-day suspension from parliament, imposed after the independent parliamentary standards commissioner found he had made the advances to the then 19-year-old man in 2016. The man to whom he made the advances said the end of Grady’s suspension was “a slap in the face to anyone who has experienced sexual harassment”. Continue reading...
by Kiran Stacey, Nicola Davis and Peter Walker on (#679Z2)
Politicians and experts call for border testing to be introduced, but others question usefulness of moveMinisters are coming under pressure to screen arrivals from China as the number of Covid-19 cases there continues to surge after Beijing’s abrupt decision to end most of its strict pandemic restrictions.The US became the latest country to impose controls on travellers entering the country from China on Wednesday, demanding that all such arrivals show proof of a negative Covid test. Continue reading...
by Philip Oltermann in Berlin on (#679WM)
Italy urges action at European level as more than 50% of recent arrivals from China test positive at Milan airportMember states of the European Union have resisted pressure from Italy to immediately impose mandatory anti-Covid checks on travellers entering the borderless Schengen area from China, with health officials in Brussels saying they would instead continue to monitor the consequences of Beijing’s rapid rollback of its previously stringent hygiene restrictions.In recent days more than 50% of passengers from China at Milan’s Malpensa airport have tested positive for the virus, and on Wednesday Italy brought back mandatory coronavirus tests for everyone arriving from China, after reports of rising infection rates in the world’s most populous country. Continue reading...
by Emily Dugan on (#679Z1)
Interviews follow raid on VK Garment factory, the subject of a UK lawsuit against the supermarket from 130 ex-workersThai police and civil servants have begun screening more than 100 former workers at a factory that supplied Tesco to determine if they were victims of forced labour.The Guardian revealed last week that Burmese workers who produced F&F jeans for Tesco in Thailand had reported being trapped in their work, enduring 99-hour weeks for illegally low pay in appalling conditions. Continue reading...
by Rebecca Root in Bangkok on (#679WK)
Effort to reduce new year collisions has been criticised for encouraging drivers to film others or stage violationsThai police are taking an alternative approach to their annual road safety campaign by offering cash prizes of 10,000 baht (£240) for the best – or worst – videos of traffic violations.About 22,000 people die each year in Thailand in road traffic accidents, one of the worst death rates in the world. The week over the new year, known locally as the “seven dangerous days”, has the biggest spike as people speed around the country. Continue reading...
by Dan Sabbagh Defence and security editor on (#679V0)
Jeremy Fleming says war in Ukraine prompted new public outreach effort by intelligence community
by PA Media on (#679QC)
Suspect arrested in London over death of Fisher, who was stabbed to death in a Birmingham nightclub on Boxing DayA third man has been arrested on suspicion of the murder of Cody Fisher, the semi-professional footballer stabbed to death in a Birmingham nightclub on Boxing Day.
by Samantha Lock and agencies on (#679J9)
At least 19 people now known to have died but figure could rise as rescue teams have not reached all areasA fire that lasted more than 12 hours in a Cambodian hotel casino killed at least 19 people and injured scores more, with an official warning that other people could be missing.“There are 19 dead so far as we see bodies and bones,” said Sek Sokhom, the director of the Banteay Meanchey provincial information department, warning “the dead figure could be higher” as rescue teams have not reached many parts of the complex. Continue reading...
by Jamie Grierson on (#679PG)
Shadow justice secretary says party will put prevention at the heart of its approach to crimeLabour would overhaul the approach to antisocial behaviour with plans to allow victims to choose how offenders are punished, it has been reported.The shadow justice secretary, Steve Reed, has said he will update Tony Blair’s “tough on crime, tough on the causes of crime” slogan and put prevention at the heart of their approach, the Times reported. Continue reading...
by Rebecca Ratcliffe in Manila on (#679NQ)
Mystery surrounds the alleged involvement of top officials in the murder of the high-profile Philippine journalistIt was just past 8pm on 3 October and the veteran broadcaster Percy Mabasa was on his way to record his nightly radio show. Every weekday evening, tens of thousands of Filipinos, many living abroad, would tune in to listen to his news commentary and sharp humour.But on this evening, as Mabasa drove up to the entrance of his gated community where his studio is located in Las Piñas, Metro Manila, a motorbike began to trail him. Footage taken by a camera on the back of his car, and since released by police, shows two figures on the bike pulling up alongside him. Then gunshots can be heard. There’s a bang as Mabasa’s car slams into the vehicle in front. The motorbike turns and drives away. Mabasa was killed instantly. Continue reading...
by Josh Halliday North of England correspondent on (#679NS)
Police say 31-year-old man from Tranmere held on suspicion of conspiracy to murder over Christmas Eve shootingA third person has been arrested over the death of Elle Edwards, who was shot dead at a pub on Christmas Eve.Merseyside police said a 31-year-old man from Tranmere had been arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to murder. He is in custody, where he will be questioned by detectives. Continue reading...
by Martin Belam on (#679DG)
Evacuation calls in Kherson amid barrage of Russian artillery attacks; Zelenskiy says of Bakhmut ‘there is no place that is not covered with blood’
by Australian Associated Press on (#679MN)
World men’s tennis No 5 says return proves he is ready to move on from his deportation and begin quest for 10th Australian Open titleNovak Djokovic says there are no hard feelings on his return to Australia, but can’t guarantee he will ever completely move past the saga that torpedoed his 2022 Australian Open hopes and thrust him into the centre of a media frenzy.Djokovic was deported from Australia almost 12 months ago after arriving unvaccinated against Covid at a time when the country was still subject to strict biosecurity regulations. Such regulations have now been lifted and in November the Australian government overturned the three-year ban that came with Djokovic’s deportation and granted him a visa to return for the summer of tennis. Continue reading...
by Adeshola Ore on (#679MP)
Ukrainian embassy in Australia says the number of enquiries about volunteering in the country has dropped off
by Cait Kelly and Mostafa Rachwani (earlier) on (#6798G)
This blog is now closed
by Diane Taylor on (#679KS)
Appeal for UK authorities to bring over mother who was left in France after smugglers departed shore with her three childrenThe Home Office is under pressure to reunite a family of Eritrean asylum seekers after smugglers forced three children, the youngest aged just five, to cross the Channel on a small boat before their mother could get on board with them.The woman, 31, who was staying in northern France hoping to reach the UK, paid smugglers for places on a dinghy for herself and her three children, a boy aged 14 and two girls aged nine and five, to cross the Channel on 16 December. She said she believed the UK was the place where she would find safety and a respect for the human rights of her family. Continue reading...
by Hannah Devlin on (#679KR)
Centre in London says record number born on site is a result of fewer people being able to afford cost of neuteringParsnip, Cranberry and Sprouts. Not your Christmas dinner, but a festive trio of fluffy black and white kittens, newly arrived at Battersea Dogs & Cats Home. Down the corridor in the cattery, another three newborns have just been taken in, along with their parents, in something approaching a feline nativity scene.The new arrivals are, according to Bridie Williams, Battersea’s cattery manager, “ridiculously cute”. And they come at the end of a year during which 133 kittens were born on site – considerably more than any year in the past decade. Continue reading...
by Pippa Crerar and Larry Elliott on (#679JZ)
Paul Nowak says party can ‘set a very clear direction of travel’ for public services if it wins next electionLabour will not be able “turn the taps on from day one” on public spending if it wins the next election, the new leader of the TUC has acknowledged, suggesting the party’s attempts to manage expectations are working.The incoming general secretary, Paul Nowak, said a Labour government would not be able to fix the Conservatives’ “neglect” straight after coming to power but suggested it could still “set a very clear direction of travel” for public services. Continue reading...
by Rory Carroll Ireland correspondent on (#679K2)
British government urged Washington embassy to lobby incoming president, declassified documents showThe election of Bill Clinton as US president in 1992 prompted the British government to brace for “turbulence” because of his views on Northern Ireland.The Northern Ireland Office (NIO) said the incoming president’s views on the region were unwelcome and urged the British embassy in Washington to confront him, according to an official document declassified this week. Continue reading...
by Pamela Duncan and Matthew Weaver on (#679K3)
Across country last month, almost 14,000 people were ready to be discharged but could not be sent home or into careMore people could be spending the time between Christmas and new year in hospital in parts of England this year than at any time in the past decade, as NHS trusts struggle to find social care places for patients medically fit for discharge.The latest figures for December to date show an average of 94,200 patients were in hospitals across England, more than 93,000 of them in acute settings, the highest in seven winters. Continue reading...
by Henry Belot on (#679K4)
Five-year-old girl credited for helping siblings survive 55 hours in 30-degree heat in car wreckage with dead parentsTrapped inside the wreckage of a car after an accident that killed her parents, a five-year-old girl has been credited for an “absolute miracle” feat of survival.Inside an upturned Land Rover, hidden from view beside a remote Western Australian road, the young girl managed to undo her one-year-old brother’s seatbelt, freeing him. Continue reading...
by Reuters on (#679ES)
Santa Cruz governor and former presidential candidate flown to La Paz after what his supporters called a ‘kidnapping’Bolivian police have detained prominent opposition leader Luis Fernando Camacho on charges of “terrorism” in a move that significantly escalates tensions between the national government and Camacho’s Santa Cruz base.Bolivia’s state attorney’s office confirmed the detention on Wednesday of 43-year-old Camacho, the governor of Santa Cruz who unsuccessfully ran for president in 2020. Continue reading...
by Australian Associated Press on (#679HA)
Victorian treasurer says plagued myki payment system will be reviewed with current contract due to expire late next year
by Reuters on (#679HB)
Poorly resourced regional hospitals brace for flood of cases during upcoming lunar new year holiday as infections soarChina’s sprawling and thinly resourced countryside was racing to beef up its medical facilities amid a surging Covid-19 wave as hundreds of millions of migrant factory workers prepare to return to their families for the lunar new year.Each year, hundreds of millions of people, mostly working in factories near the southern and eastern coasts, return to the countryside for the lunar new year festivities, due to start on 22 January next year. Continue reading...
by Australian Associated Press on (#679HC)
Homicide investigation launched after deaths of Todd Mooney and 10-year-old Kirra at BiggendenA shed fire that killed Queensland man Todd Mooney and his 10-year-old daughter Kirra was deliberately lit, police believe.Remains believed to be the 54-year-old man and the girl were found after the blaze at Biggenden, south-east of Bundaberg, on 20 December. Continue reading...
by Patrick Wintour with agencies on (#679GM)
Many humanitarian activities ‘paused’ as Taliban decision to bar women NGO workers prevents vital services across the countryThe United Nations said that some “time-critical” programs in Afghanistan have temporarily stopped and warned many other activities will also likely need to be paused because of a ban by the Taliban-led administration on women aid workers.UN aid chief Martin Griffiths, the heads of UN agencies and several aid groups said in a joint statement on Wednesday that women’s “participation in aid delivery is not negotiable and must continue”, calling on authorities to reverse the decision. Continue reading...
by Elias Visontay on (#679FP)
Chief medical officer does not rule out future border restrictions but says community has high immunity to current variants
by Royce Kurmelovs on (#679FQ)
Emma Lovell died after being stabbed in the chest in an alleged home invasion north of Brisbane on Boxing Day
by Reuters on (#679FR)
Castillo is appealing against his detention earlier in December over an attempt to illegally dissolve CongressThe former Peruvian president Pedro Castillo, who is being held in pretrial detention after attempting to illegally dissolve Congress, said he was a victim of “political revenge” by his adversaries.Castillo, speaking at a hearing on Wednesday to appeal against the detention, said he had not committed the crimes of rebellion and conspiracy for which he is under investigation. Continue reading...
by Rebecca Root in Bangkok on (#679ER)
Exiled National Unity Government says figure is a rise of 78% on last year, following February 2021 coupMyanmar’s military junta killed 165 children in 2022, according to the country’s exiled opposition National Unity Government (NUG). According to their data, 78% more children died at the hands of the occupying military in 2022 compared with 2021.“The NUG figure appears credible,” says Thomas Kean, a senior consultant on Myanmar for the International Crisis Group, explaining that reports are often accompanied by evidence. Continue reading...