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Updated 2025-07-05 11:01
People evacuated as burst water main floods homes in north London
Firefighters lead about 20 people to safety after being called to overnight incident in Belsize Road, CamdenPeople have been forced to evacuate from their homes because of a burst water main in a north London street.The water main in Belsize Road, Camden, burst at 2.50am, causing flooding of up to half a metre in depth “across an area of roughly 800 metres”, London fire brigade (LFB) said. Continue reading...
Grant Shapps launches campaign advising people how to save money this winter
The £18m initiative, blocked by Liz Truss, claims people could save £230 a year through ‘simple measures’Grant Shapps has launched a public information campaign advising people how to make financial savings this winter – months after the former prime minister Liz Truss blocked it.The £18m campaign, called It Adds Up, claims people could save £230 a year by implementing what is says are simple measures.Turning your combi boiler flow temperature down to 60C could save you up to £100 a year.Turning down radiators in rooms you aren’t using or use less could save you up to £70 a year.Finding and fixing draughts could save you up to £60 a year.Insulating your hot water cylinder could save you up to £70 a year.Switching to energy saving lightbulbs could save you up to £55 a year. Continue reading...
‘I don’t think lessons have been learned’: asylum policies fall short after more Channel deaths
Following another tragedy at sea and a ruling due on the Rwanda deal, is Britain complacent at home and complicit in refugee abuse abroad?At 9.46am on Wednesday, the Home Office cancelled a background briefing on the latest in a long line of policy announcements that have so far made no impact whatsoever in tackling small boat numbers.This time it concerned the finer details surrounding its new small boats operational command (SBOC); an “ongoing incident in UK waters” was cited as the cause of cancellation. Continue reading...
Harry and Meghan invited to Charles’s coronation, report suggests
Invitation comes despite continued fallout from Duke and Duchess of Sussex’s Netflix documentaryThe Duke and Duchess of Sussex will have a place at the king’s coronation should they wish to attend, despite the continued fallout from their Netflix documentary, it has been reported.Harry and Meghan will be invited to Charles’s ceremony on 6 May, with all family members expected to feature on a guest list still to be drawn up, according to a report. Continue reading...
UK weather: cold and ice warnings as blizzards expected across north
Met Office issues yellow warnings of ice for much of Scotland and the north-west of England for SaturdayWeather warnings of severe cold, ice and snowy conditions are in place for the weekend before blizzards are expected to sweep across the north of the country.The Met Office has issued yellow warnings of ice for much of Scotland, the north-west of England and Wales for Saturday, with this extending to snow for the north and ice for most of the rest of England on Sunday. Continue reading...
Shanghai schools ordered to hold classes online to stem Covid infections
City’s kindergartens and childcare centres also to stop in-person lessons as cases rise across China after easing of restrictionsShanghai’s education bureau has told schools to hold classes online from Monday as rising numbers of Covid infections hit cities across China.On Saturday the bureau also instructed kindergartens and childcare centres in the city to shut all in-person classes, according to an online statement. Continue reading...
Braverman acting unlawfully over asylum seeker support, high court finds
Decision follows legal challenge over amount of financial support given to asylum seekers during cost of living crisisThe home secretary is acting unlawfully in failing to ensure the rate of support for more than 50,000 asylum seekers is adequate by not implementing an increase of almost £5 a week recommended by officials, the high court has found.In a case brought in the high court in Manchester by an asylum seeker known only as CB, the amount of financial support given to asylum seekers during the cost of living crisis was challenged. Internal Home Office advice to ministers was disclosed, which revealed that officials told ministers the current rate of £40.85 a week was no longer sufficient to meet basic needs because of the cost of living crisis. Continue reading...
Warnings issued as people spotted walking on frozen lakes
Emergency services respond to several incidents in days following deaths of four children who fell through ice in SolihullEmergency services across England have issued warnings to the public after people were spotted walking on frozen lakes days after four children died in Solihull after falling through ice.Brothers Finlay, 8, and Samuel Butler, 6, their cousin Thomas Stewart, 11, and Jack Johnson, 10, died after falling into water at Babbs Mill Park near Solihull. The children were in cardiac arrest when they were pulled from the water and died in hospital. Continue reading...
When’s best to travel by car or train in the UK this Christmas?
With industrial action expected to hit the railways and the roads, a guide to when might be a good time to travelIt is that time of year when millions of people will travel to see friends and family, take a well-earned break, or make a last-minute dash to the shops to pick up a Christmas present.The festive getaway could be trickier than usual this year as Britain has been hit by wide-ranging industrial action across the transport network.M25M5 between Bristol and Weston-super-MareM6 around BirminghamStretches of the M1 smart motorway from Luton northwardsM60 and M62 in north-west EnglandM4 and M27 in Hampshire. Continue reading...
NHS announces Covid booster jab teams have visited every care home in England
Teams visited 15,019 care homes, also offering flu jabs, and boosted 88.6% of eligible residentsNHS vaccination teams have visited every care home across the country to offer Covid boosters and flu jabs.A total of 15,019 care homes have been visited by vaccination teams – with 88.6% of eligible residents boosted, NHS England said. Continue reading...
David Frost handed £26,000 after quitting as UK’s Brexit negotiator
Frost, who quit last December, received taxpayer-funded payout for ‘loss of office’ after nine months as ministerBoris Johnson’s chief Brexit negotiator got a more than £26,000 taxpayer-funded payout for stepping down from the government having served as a minister for just nine months, the Guardian can reveal.David Frost, who quit last December citing concerns about the “direction of travel” of future relations with the EU and making the most of post-Brexit “opportunities”, was given the compensation for “loss of office”. Continue reading...
US asks Australia for extradition of former Marines pilot Daniel Duggan
Lawyer says Duggan maintains his innocence after US accused him of training Chinese military pilots to land on aircraft carriers
‘Several hundred’ UFO reports received by Pentagon’s new tracking office
All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office was set up to track unidentified objects in the sky, underwater or in spaceA new Pentagon office set up to track reports of unidentified flying objects has received “several hundred” new reports, but no evidence so far of alien life, the agency’s leadership has told reporters.The All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) was set up in July and is responsible for not only tracking unidentified objects in the sky, but also underwater or in space – or potentially an object that has the ability to move from one domain to the next. Continue reading...
Family pay tribute to British man who died in incident on Qatar oil rig
A second Briton was injured and treated in hospital, while a third was detained following the ‘non-work related incident’The family of a 38-year-old man who died after a “non-work related incident” involving three Britons onboard an oil rig in Qatar have paid tribute to a “one-of-a-kind, beautiful soul”.Robert Robson, of Tyne and Wear, was working on the Seafox Burj oil rig off the coast of Qatar when he died after an incident in the early hours of Monday. Continue reading...
Mexico news anchor survives shooting amid surge in violence against journalists
Ciro Gómez Leyva was unharmed when an attacker fired at his car, but 42 journalists have been killed during Amlo’s termOne of Mexico’s most prominent news anchors has survived an apparent assassination attempt near his home in the capital, in one of the most brazen attacks against a journalist the country has seen in recent decades.Ciro Gómez Leyva, a news anchor for the national news network, Grupo Imagen, was driving a bulletproof SUV when the pillion rider on a motorcycle opened fire on him late on Thursday. Continue reading...
Weather tracker: cyclone drags pollution towards Sri Lanka
Particulate matter, which is hazardous to lungs, has been pulled in from India by Cyclone MandousIn Sri Lanka, schools were forced to close on Friday last week owing to high levels of pollution pulled in from India via Cyclone Mandous. The cyclone was situated in the Bay of Bengal, with winds blowing anti-clockwise around the central low pressure, sweeping the polluted air from India across the Palk strait into Sri Lanka. Subsequently, this merged with Sri Lanka’s local air pollution, leading to unhealthy pollutant concentrations that created a haze across parts of the country, including the capital, Colombo.Most people are aware of air pollutants, such as carbon dioxide and methane, and the impacts they have in contributing to global warming. However, other air pollutants pose a more immediate threat to human health. Particulate matter refers to tiny particles or droplets in the air, and is split into two categories depending on diameter; up to 2.5 microns (0.0025mm, PM2.5) or up to 10 microns (0.01mm, PM10). Continue reading...
Ministers warned cancer survival rates could fall due to NHS staff and pay crises
Exclusive: Head of Cancer Research UK says waiting lists for care could get even longer unless health service’s problems are fixedMinisters risk cutting the survival chances of cancer patients and undoing two decades of progress in lowering death rates unless they tackle the NHS workforce crisis and resolve the pay row, the head of Britain’s biggest cancer charity has warned.Although efforts have been made to prioritise cancer patients, Michelle Mitchell, the chief executive of Cancer Research UK, said the impact of next week’s planned strikes by nurses and ambulance workers would be cumulative and the NHS would find it “harder and harder” to prevent cancer patients dying early. Continue reading...
JD Sports agrees £47.5m sale of 15 brands to Frasers Group
The deal will see Mike Ashley add Liam Gallagher’s fashion label Pretty Green to his retail empireMike Ashley’s Frasers Group has snapped up a basket of 15 brands including former Oasis frontman Liam Gallagher’s Pretty Green and 1980s brand Tessuti in a £47.5m cash deal with JD Sports.JD, which owns Size?, Finish Line in the US and Spain’s Sprinter as well as its main retail chain, said the sale of the “non-core” brands would allow it to focus on other priorities, particularly the “international and digital expansion of the group’s core premium sports fashion” retail brands. Continue reading...
Nasal flu vaccine may help protect children against strep A, study shows
UKHSA pilot scheme shows strep A infections lower in areas where nasal vaccine offered to all young childrenGiving children the nasal flu vaccine may help protect them against strep A, according to analysis by the UK Health Security Agency.UKHSA data shows at least 19 children have now died as a result of strep A across the UK, while there are 7,750 cases of scarlet fever so far this season. This is more than treble the 2,538 cases reported during the same period over the last comparably high season – the winter of 2017-18. Continue reading...
Russia carries out more mass strikes on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure
Power outages reported after barrage of rockets fired at several regions in second such attack in days
Traces of suspected cocaine found after parties in Liz Truss’s grace-and-favour house, say staff
Exclusive: White powder residue found after events held at Chevening and Downing Street, say sourcesTraces of a suspected class A drug were found at a government grace-and-favour home after parties attended by political allies of Liz Truss, the Guardian has been told.The white powder was discovered at the Chevening estate last summer in the days before Truss won the Tory leadership contest and became prime minister, according to sources. Continue reading...
Apartment fire in Lyon kills 10 including five children
French prosecutors are investigating the source of blaze at seven-storey residential building in suburb of cityFrench prosecutors are investigating the source of a pre-dawn blaze that killed 10 people, including five children, in a dilapidated seven-storey block of flats in a Lyon suburb.The country’s interior minister, Gérald Darmanin, said at the scene of the fire on an estate in Vaulx-en-Velin that it was too early to draw conclusions about the cause, but acknowledged the building housed a squat and was a known drug dealers’ hangout. Continue reading...
Man jailed for killing sister, 15, in ‘extremely unusual and sad’ Welsh case
Matthew Selby, who is autistic, pleaded guilty to manslaughter with diminished responsibilityAn man has been jailed for choking his 15-year-old sister to death on a family holiday in what a judge described as an “extremely unusual and sad case”.Matthew Selby, 20, admitted fatally attacking his younger sister, Amanda Selby, following an argument at their caravan in north Wales. Continue reading...
UK may ban sandeel fishing in move to save threatened seabirds
Exclusive: government hopes ban in UK waters will protect birds, including puffins, that feed on small fishSandeel fishing in UK waters could be banned next year under “gamechanging” government plans to protect puffin and kittiwake numbers, the Guardian can reveal.The sandeel is a small fish that is critical to marine food webs in the UK, and is an important part of many seabird diets. For example, the kittiwake – which is particularly sandeel-dependent – has seen its UK numbers fall by half since the 1960s, with diminishing availability of prey during the breeding season thought to be mainly responsible. Continue reading...
HS2 protesters who occupied tunnel near Euston station to face retrial
High court overturns acquittal of six activists who were charged with aggravated trespass at London siteSix environmental activists who occupied a tunnel close to Euston station in protest against the HS2 rail project last year face a retrial after their acquittal was overturned in the high court.Charges against the protesters in connection with the occupation in London were dismissed by a judge in October last year. Continue reading...
Australia urged to offer asylum to Afghan women in ‘grave danger’ from Taliban
Women facing deportation as Pakistan moves to expel refugees will be targeted by Taliban, crossbencher Rebekha Sharkie says
I can’t believe it’s not … cheaper than 50 quid: the UK’s poshest butter
Even among the soaring cost of spreads, one offering stands out, priced at £55 – or £105 with a dishIt has long been a kitchen staple in Britain but with prices soaring, butter is fast becoming a luxury item.Now an unsavoury milestone has been passed, with a 150g block arriving on shop shelves with a price tag of more than £50. Continue reading...
Police name woman and two children in Kettering murder case
Nurse Anju Asok, 35, and her young children Jeeva and Janvi Saju were found with fatal injuries on ThursdayA woman and two children who died in a suspected murder in Northamptonshire have been named by police as 35-year-old Anju Asok, six-year-old Jeeva Saju and Janvi Saju, four.In a statement on the triple murder inquiry launched on Thursday in Kettering, police said the victims were thought to be Asok, a NHS staff nurse, and her two children. Continue reading...
Ross McCullam jailed for life for murder of Megan Newborough
Lab technician to serve minimum of 23 years for killing colleague at his parents’ home in LeicestershireRoss McCullam has been jailed for life with a minimum term of 23 years for the murder of his colleague Megan Newborough.The 30-year-old lab technician strangled Newborough, 23, and cut her throat at his parents’ house in Leicstershire before dumping her in nearby woodland. Later, he left a voicemail on her phone professing his love for her to try to cover his tracks. Continue reading...
Japan approves biggest military buildup since second world war amid China fears
US welcomes doubling of military spending but critics express unease over abandoning seven decades of pacifismJapan has approved its biggest military buildup since the second world war, warning that China poses the “greatest strategic challenge ever” and outlining plans to develop a counterstrike capability funded by record defence spending.The plans, announced by the government on Friday, reflect growing alarm over a more assertive Chinese military and a North Korean regime that continues to improve its nuclear and ballistic missile capabilities. Continue reading...
‘Absolutely shameless’: Ken Loach says BBC helped ‘destroy’ Jeremy Corbyn
Director says media has ‘rewritten history’ to expunge ex-Labour leader and attacks Starmer regime for ‘manipulating the rules’The film director Ken Loach has attacked the BBC for its “absolutely shameless role” in what he describes as “the destruction of Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership” of the Labour party.In an interview with Equal Times, Loach said that the BBC “played a prime role” in the departure of the former Labour leader and Corbyn’s “whole political project, that nearly became the government three years ago, has been wiped out of the public discourse.” Continue reading...
UK house prices expected to fall by 8% next year, says Halifax
Lender says market rebalancing after years of growth, as mortgage rates and cost of living push prices downRising mortgage costs and the broader cost of living crisis will push house prices down by about 8% next year, according to a forecast by the lender Halifax.Halifax, which in November reported the largest monthly fall in house prices in 14 years, said the market was now rebalancing after years of conditions that have resulted in some of the biggest rises in house prices ever recorded. Continue reading...
Shetland residents still without power as engineers battle snow
Hundreds face waiting until next week for power after Monday’s blackout, amid amber weather warning for ScotlandHundreds of homes on Shetland face being without power until early next week as engineers battle with tough road and weather conditions, five days after last Monday’s widespread blackout.Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks, which has shipped in 125 emergency engineers, convoys of 4x4s and mobile generators to Shetland this week, said it could take until at least Monday to restore supplies to about 800 homes and businesses in West Mainland. Continue reading...
NSW Liberals expel senior members, refer themselves to election watchdog after branch-stacking inquiry
‘Elaborate and complex’ operation allegedly included more than 100 members and involved people being signed up and given fake email addresses
Retail sales in Great Britain fall despite Black Friday and World Cup
Discounts and football fail to get shoppers spending in November as households cut budgetsRetail sales unexpectedly fell in November as Black Friday discount deals and football’s World Cup failed to boost spending, with the cost of living crisis forcing households to cut budgets.Sales in Great Britain dropped by 0.4% in November, against a forecast of a 0.3% rise by industry analysts, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS). Continue reading...
Three camels cause traffic chaos in Brisbane after escaping nativity scene
Animals returned unharmed after apparently walking out of a display at Bridgeman Downs church in the early morning
US religious conspiracist linked to Queensland police killers Gareth and Stacey Train
Australian couple behind Wieambilla attack were in regular contact with man with a similar fundamentalist theology
NSW Liberals members suspended for ‘elaborate’ branch-stacking scheme – as it happened
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Tunisia election set to deliver male-dominated parliament and erosion of women’s rights
As the country goes to the polls, reforms introduced by hardline president Kais Saied have led to the exclusion of female candidatesTunisians will vote on Saturday in an election that will lead to a weakened parliament “almost exclusively dominated by men”, as activists warn of a stark deterioration of women’s rights under an increasingly authoritarian president.The controversial elections, boycotted by all the main parties, mark the final piece of the constitutional jigsaw President Kais Saied began assembling in July 2021, when he suspended the legislature in what critics called a power grab. Continue reading...
Calls for tougher regulations as Queensland records highest rate of land clearing in country
Conservation groups warn not enough is being done to protect ecosystems as state government data shows more than 400,000ha of land was cleared in 2019-20
‘I went cross-eyed’: Australia’s former deputy PM taken to hospital after drinking entire bowl of kava
Michael McCormack paid a high price for downing, not sipping, the sakau during a Pacific tour, later stating: ‘I was trying to be respectful’Former Australian deputy prime minister Michael McCormack has learned the hard way that being polite can be hazardous to your health.The Nationals MP suffered the consequences of drinking an entire shell of sakau – a traditional Micronesian kava – in one hit, thinking it was similar to South Pacific kava. Continue reading...
Malaysia landslide: at least 12 killed and 22 missing at campsite near Kuala Lumpur
Fifty-nine people people have been rescued after a landslide hit about 3am north of the capitalA landslide killed at least 12 people while they slept at a Malaysian campsite near Kuala Lumpur early on Friday, officials said, as search teams scoured thick mud and downed trees for more than 20 people still missing.A child and a woman were found among the dead, authorities said, while one of the eight people taken to hospital was pregnant. Others had injuries ranging from minor cuts to a suspected spinal injury. Continue reading...
Tax dodging and non-compliance during pandemic cost UK £9bn – NAO
HMRC moved 1,350 compliance staff due to Covid, National Audit Office says, and losses are expected to growTax dodging and non-compliance during the pandemic cost the government £9bn, Whitehall’s spending watchdog has found.The loss to the public purse came as HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) moved thousands of tax compliance staff to Covid support schemes, reducing its capacity to investigate people and businesses not paying the right amount, according to the National Audit Office. Continue reading...
Nobel prize winner criticises western ‘neglect’ and urges action over DRC violence
Denis Mukwege has demanded sanctions be imposed on Rwanda to ease the crisis in eastern Democratic Republic of the CongoThe west must ditch its “double standards” and act decisively against the violence worsening in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Dr Denis Mukwege, the Nobel prize-winning surgeon, has said.In a stinging criticism of the international community’s “negligence”, Mukwege urged Britain and its allies to impose sanctions on neighbouring Rwanda to help ease the growing crisis in the east of the country. Continue reading...
Messi business: how ‘sportswashing’ could land Saudi Arabia the 2030 World Cup
Qatar has written the playbook on how to further geopolitical aims by hosting a Fifa event. Riyadh is taking notesIf Lionel Messi lifts the World Cup trophy it will not only represent a victory for Argentina’s diminutive captain but his unlikely new benefactor: Saudi Arabia. The team may have inflicted a shock, humiliating defeat upon Argentina in their opening game of the tournament, but Messi, paid to be an ambassador for Saudi under a reported £25m contract, could deliver a long-term prize worth far more – a chance to emulate Qatar and host the 2030 World Cup.After the tiny gas-rich emirate won the right to host the World Cup in December 2010, in circumstances mired in controversy, Qatar wrote the playbook on using the soft power of the world’s biggest sporting event to further its aims – from the big spending western brands which come with the tournament to the attempts to improve its image on human rights. Continue reading...
Administrative Appeals Tribunal axed with Labor declaring it ‘irreversibly damaged’ by Coalition
Attorney general Mark Dreyfus says review body was stacked with Liberals in ‘disgraceful exhibition of cronyism’
Chips are down, down: Coles imposes frozen chip limit amid potato shortage
Australian farmers blame a cold and wet winter for shortfall in potatoes, with shortages likely to persist until January
‘Surreal spectacle’: US botched 35% of execution attempts this year
Annual review reveals that seven of the 20 execution attempts carried out this year were visibly problematicAs 2022 draws to a close, a new grim distinction can be attached to it: in America it was the year of the botched execution.In its annual review of US capital punishment, the Death Penalty Information Center (DPIC) reveals the astonishing statistic that 35% of the 20 execution attempts carried out this year were visibly problematic. Continue reading...
European MPs seek to publicise plight of jailed Iranian protesters
Politicians particularly in Germany taking responsibility for lobbying for the safety of individual prisonersPoliticians across Europe have begun sponsoring jailed Iranian protesters in the hope that by highlighting individual cases of injustice, the authorities will be forced to step back from handing down lengthy jail sentences or carrying out executions.The executions of two demonstrators and threats to kill others suggest Tehran is set on the use of repression and fear to quell the protests. Continue reading...
Train strikes to resume despite hopes of breakthrough
Second strike of week begins after TSSA union accepts pay deal with Network RailTrain services around Britain will be severely disrupted once more as national strikes resume on Friday, despite another union accepting Network Rail’s pay deal.Passengers have been advised to only attempt to travel by train if necessary as this week’s second 48-hour strike by members of the RMT union begins, with three more weeks of disruption to follow. Continue reading...
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