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Updated 2025-11-08 11:47
Family warns of railway dangers after girl’s death in Dorset
Family of Roxy Phillips, who was found dead next to tracks in Weymouth, says her death was ‘tragic accident’A family has warned about the dangers of railway lines after a teenage girl was found dead near tracks in Dorset.Officers were called to train lines in Weymouth at 2.25am on Thursday, where they found 15-year-old Roxy Phillips unresponsive. Continue reading...
From prison to refuge: fight to turn Oscar Wilde’s Reading gaol into arts hub
Campaigners hope bid to develop site of prison where famous poem was composed may finally succeedThe site of Reading’s former prison has a highly desirable location in the town’s centre and a celebrated history, not least as the setting of Oscar Wilde’s most famous poem, the Ballad of Reading Gaol.But almost a decade after HMP Reading was closed, the historic building where Wilde was incarcerated for homosexual acts remains locked and inaccessible, while its owners, the Ministry of Justice, have been unable to find a commercial buyer for the site. Continue reading...
Northern beaches seat of Wakehurst falls to independent, but Liberals hold on in Manly and Lane Cove
Northern Beaches mayor Michael Regan secures a 27.5% swing to end decades of Liberal dominance
King Charles France visit could have had echoes of 1789, says ex-ambassador
Grandeur of royal couple’s state visit amid protests would have been ‘bad idea’ and it was right to postpone it, Lord Ricketts saysKing Charles’ state visit to France and a banquet at the Palace of Versailles could have had “echoes” of the French Revolution, according to former British ambassador to France.Lord Ricketts, who was Britain’s man in France from 2012 to 2016, said that the dinner would have been poorly timed during widespread protests against the French president, Emmanuel Macron’s, plans to reform pensions and raise the retirement age from 62 to 64. Continue reading...
India’s Rahul Gandhi vows to ‘defend democracy’ after being stripped of seat
Top opposition figure expelled from parliament after being convicted of defamation over Modi remarkThe top Indian opposition figure Rahul Gandhi has said he will keep fighting for democracy after blaming his expulsion from parliament on his demands for an investigation into a key business ally of the prime minister, Narendra Modi.Gandhi was stripped of his parliamentary seat on Friday, a day after he was convicted of defamation in Modi’s home state of Gujarat for a 2019 campaign-trail remark seen as an insult to the prime minister. Continue reading...
Berlin welcomes topless female swimmers in victory for activists
Gender equality campaigners celebrate rule change, which affects indoor and outdoor poolsWhen a lifeguard asked police to remove Lotte Mies for bathing topless at her local indoor swimming pool in Berlin it was a move that would inadvertently trigger a rule change allowing all women, including visiting female tourists, the freedom to go topless while swimming in the city.The decision to change clothing rules around swimming in the German capital was made after two women, including Mies, filed complaints about being thrown out or barred from the city’s pools for refusing to cover up, and demanded the same rights as their male counterparts when bathing “oben-ohne” (topless) at the city’s public pools. Continue reading...
Ukrainian top brass stirs the pot with talk of Bakhmut counterattack
As Russian observers hunt for clues of a spring offensive, Ukraine’s land forces chief suggests an unlikely strategySpring has arrived in Ukraine – with late March temperatures an unreasonably high 17C along much of the frontline in the east. It means it is possible to declare, definitively, that the Russian campaign to knock out Ukraine’s power grid has failed, and whatever happens next in the war, its people will not be frozen out of their homes, as was once feared when the cynical bombing campaign began on 10 October.The reality, of course, was the missile strikes on key infrastructure had been largely abandoned at the end of January, with Russian missile stocks at 10-15% of prewar levels, according to Ukrainian estimates. Moscow’s tactics are changing: Vadym Skibitsky, deputy head of Kyiv’s military intelligence, said in a TV interview that it appeared military fuel and “logistics systems” were now being targeted. Continue reading...
Five care chains thought to make £150m a year for low-rated homes in England
Council are paying large sums for elderly care homes that are inadequate, need improving and not safe, finds Guardian researchFive of the largest private care chains are taking £150m a year in taxpayers’ money for places in English elderly care homes rated inadequate or requiring improvement, including some that are “not safe”, the Guardian has estimated.The leading earner from public funds is HC-One, a chain of 285 care homes majority-owned by a US private equity company, according to analysis of council spending records. Continue reading...
BBC’s Race Across the World stirs Canadian hopes of UK tourist boom
British viewers are showing an interest in travelling to Canada after launch of reality show’s third seriesCanada’s tourism industry this week expressed hopes for a rise in UK visitors after the third series of BBC’s Race Across the World launched in the UK to rave reviews.The reality show, in which five couples travel 10,000 miles (16,000km) from one side of Canada to another on a shoestring and without flying, could be a boon to the country’s recovering tourism sector. Arrivals were down 40% in 2022 from their high in 2019, but there are hopes for an increase with UK viewers inspired by the epic scenery and charmed by helpful Canadians. Continue reading...
First global water conference in 50 years yields hundreds of pledges, zero checks
Non-binding commitments, paucity of scientific data and poor representation of global south left a lot to be desired at summitThe first global water conference in almost half a century has concluded with the creation of a new UN envoy for water and hundreds of non-binding pledges that if fulfilled would edge the world towards universal access to clean water and sanitation.The three-day summit in New York spurred almost 700 commitments from local and national governments, non-profits and some businesses to a new Water Action Agenda, and progress on the hotchpotch of voluntary pledges will be monitored at future UN gatherings. A new scientific panel on water will also be created by the UN. Continue reading...
Australian banks predict another interest rate rise despite hopeful investor outlook
Big four banks believe RBA will lift cash rate by at least another 25 basis points though many predict rises are close to a peak
UK public warned not to eat Baronet semi-soft cheeses after listeria death
Contamination found at high levels in some of firm’s products but authorities have not confirmed source of fatal infectionOne person in the UK has died in a listeria outbreak, public health bodies have revealed, as they warned consumers not to eat Baronet semi-soft cheeses because of contamination discovered at exceptionally high levels in some products.An alert from the Food Standards Agency (FSA), updated on Monday, said the Old Cheese Room, a Wiltshire-based manufacturer, had extended its recall of Baronet, Baby Baronet and Mini Baronet soft cheeses because listeria had been found in some batches. These include pack sizes of 1kg, 270g and 200g, with best before dates of 21 and 22 March, and 4, 10, 11, 12, 16 and 18 April. Continue reading...
Trudeau to announce US-Canada asylum deal after Biden talks
Move following meetings in Ottawa with the US president will in effect close a controversial border crossingJustin Trudeau’s government has announced a major shift in how Canada and the US handle asylum claims, a move that effectively closes a controversial border crossing, after meetings in Ottawa on Friday with Joe Biden.Under the deal, which Canadian officials hope will temper the increase in irregular border crossings in recent months, Canada will bring in 15,000 more South and Central American migrants to Canada. The prime minister’s office said in a statement the agreement would ensure more “fairness” in migration between the two countries. Continue reading...
Liz Truss requests peerages for some of her closest Tory supporters
Former prime minister understood to have submitted list despite government lasting only seven weeksLiz Truss has requested peerages for some of her closest Tory supporters despite her government lasting only seven weeks after a disastrous budget.The former prime minister is understood to have submitted a list of peerages, while No 10 is also still considering whether to grant a long list of honours requested by Boris Johnson as well. Continue reading...
Rishi Sunak bans media from Conservatives’ spring conference
Press and public barred from attending, with party claiming it is an ‘internal event closed to media’
Do not expect privacy if charged with a crime, says police standards body
College of Policing statement comes after ICO proposes forces across England and Wales no longer ‘should’ name those chargedPeople charged with a crime should have no reasonable expectation of privacy, the national policing standards body has said.The statement from the College of Policing came after media organisations raised concerns over proposed changes to the college’s guidance that stated forces across England and Wales no longer “should” name those charged with crimes including indecent exposure, domestic violence or child sexual abuse, instead advising that individuals “can be named”. Continue reading...
Rishi Sunak could face major rebellion by his MPs over illegal migration bill
At least 60 Tories likely to support attempt to limit judges’ powers to stop deportations, and Labour also wants a number of changesRishi Sunak is braced for what could be the biggest rebellion of this parliament over his illegal migration bill, with many Conservative MPs calling for it to be “toughened up”.At least 60 Tories are expected to back an amendment that will block judges from granting injunctions to stop migrants being deported, which they believe is the only way the prime minister will meet his mission of actually “stopping the boats”. Continue reading...
Russia-Ukraine war: UN reports dozens of summary executions of PoWs; Nordic nations agree joint air defence plan – as it happened
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BBC Singers: decision to scrap choir reversed after public outcry
Chamber choir to resume place in Proms programme after plans to shut it down met fierce oppositionThe BBC has U-turned on its decision to scrap the BBC Singers chamber choir after pressure from musicians, the public and politicians.The decision to close the BBC Singers, announced in March, was expected to result in the loss of 20 posts but was met with fierce opposition from conductors, choirmasters and senior members of government and the opposition. Continue reading...
Met police Safer Schools officer jailed over child sexual abuse
PC Hussain Chehab had admitted sexual activity with a girl and offences linked to indecent images of childrenA Metropolitan police Safer Schools officer has been jailed for five years over a string of child sexual abuse offences.PC Hussain Chehab was sentenced at Wood Green crown court on Friday after admitting four counts of sexual activity with a girl aged 13 to 15 and offences linked to indecent images of children. Continue reading...
Germany faces EU backlash over U-turn on phasing out combustion engine
Row a further signal of tensions over the green deal landmark proposals to tackle climate crisisGermany is facing a growing backlash inside the EU over its U-turn on a law to phase out the combustion engine in new cars by 2035, despite signs of an end to the standoff with Brussels.The row comes amid growing concerns over France’s push to include nuclear across a swathe of laws on green technologies, a further signal of tensions over the EU green deal, landmark proposals to tackle the climate crisis. Continue reading...
Brexit: UK and EU formally agree Windsor framework for Northern Ireland – as it happened
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US strikes Iran-backed group in Syria after deadly attack on coalition base
Airstrikes in retaliation to attack on base in north-east by suspected Iranian-made drone that killed US contractorThe US military has carried out airstrikes against Iran-backed forces in retaliation for an attack that killed an American contractor and wounded five US troops.A day after the deadly attack on US personnel in Syria, which Washington blamed on a drone of Iranian origin, sources said a US base in Syria’s north-east was targeted in a new missile attack. US officials said there were no US casualties in the incident on Friday. Continue reading...
Haiti faces ‘hunger emergency’ amid escalating gang violence and surging inflation
Acute hunger is affecting 4.9 million Haitians, according to a UN report, which outlines the increased need for humanitarian aidHaitians are increasingly desperate for humanitarian aid as gang violence engulfing the country has left nearly half the population regularly going hungry, a World Food Programme (WFP) report has found.“These are the worst conditions on record,” said Jean-Martin Bauer, WFP’s Haiti director. “Food insecurity in Haiti has been going downhill and Haiti is sliding into a hunger emergency.” Continue reading...
Sunak stresses need to uphold democracy at Netanyahu No 10 talks
Israeli prime minister greeted by hundreds of protesters during London visit to discuss securityRishi Sunak emphasised the need to uphold democratic values when he met Benjamin Netanyahu for talks on Friday, the British prime minister’s office has said, in a reference to the Israeli government’s attempt to overhaul the judiciary.Sunak has faced calls to do more to distance the UK from his Israeli counterpart and the extremism of Netanyahu’s rightwing coalition government, which has faced mass protests over its attempts to increase politicians’ power over the courts. Continue reading...
King Charles’s visit to France postponed amid protests
Emmanuel Macron says it would not have been ‘serious or good sense’ for next week’s visit to go aheadEmmanuel Macron has defended the last-minute postponement of King Charles’s state visit to France next week, saying it would not have been “serious or good sense” for it to go ahead as it clashed with another national day of mass strikes and social unrest.The king had been scheduled to arrive in France on Sunday on his first state visit as monarch. He was due to visit Paris and Bordeaux before heading to Germany on Wednesday. Continue reading...
Rishi Sunak’s Brexit deal for Northern Ireland formally signed off with EU
Joint statement hails ‘positive approach’ as Windsor framework adopted after Tory rebellion fails
Stephen Lawrence’s father says lack of change in Met disrespects family’s loss
Dr Neville Lawrence says he does not believe force will reform, even after Casey report found it guilty of institutional racismThe father of Stephen Lawrence has said the Metropolitan police’s failure to change over the last 30 years disrespects his family’s sacrifice and loss of their son.Dr Neville Lawrence told the Guardian he did not believe Britain’s biggest force would reform, even after a blistering report this week by Louise Casey found it guilty of institutional racism, misogyny and homophobia. Continue reading...
The Moira Deeming question: Victorian Liberals are at war, but leader John Pesutto knows the party must change
Pesutto’s firm stance on the expulsion of the backbencher will cost him the leadership, some say, while others say it will be the making of him – and the partyWhen Moira Deeming was preselected to represent the Liberal party in Victoria’s upper house, the then crossbencher Fiona Patten dubbed her “Bernie Finn in a skirt”.Finn had spent almost four decades coasting through controversies until he was finally expelled from the parliamentary Liberal party in May last year after he called for abortion to be banned in Victoria, even for victims of rape, despite repeated warnings from the leadership over his social media posts.Sign up for a weekly email featuring our best reads Continue reading...
London theatres may lock up audiences’ phones after illicit James Norton photos
Outrage over naked images of actor published in MailOnline could prompt move to curb cameraphonesTheatre audiences in London’s West End could be made to lock up their phones to prevent illicit images of actors being taken during performances.The suggestion comes after naked photos of James Norton on stage in A Little Life were published in MailOnline. Continue reading...
Indian opposition leader expelled from parliament after defamation conviction
Rahul Gandhi of Congress party had asked why ‘all thieves have Modi as [their] common surname’The Indian opposition leader, Rahul Gandhi, has been expelled from parliament 24 hours after he was convicted of defamation for a remark implying the country’s prime minister, Narendra Modi, was a criminal.Senior members of Gandhi’s Congress party met on Friday morning to discuss the conviction and his two-year jail sentence when they received news of his expulsion. Continue reading...
Network Rail warns of Easter disruption due to engineering works
Train passengers advised to plan ahead over holiday weekend with west coast main line services hitRail passengers have been advised to plan ahead for Easter, with engineering works expected to close the west coast main line between some of Britain’s biggest cities.No trains will run between London Euston and Milton Keynes throughout the four-day holiday weekend from Good Friday on 7 April, until Easter Monday, on 10 April, meaning replacement buses or alternative routes will be needed to travel between the capital and towns and cities including Birmingham, Manchester and Liverpool. Continue reading...
Florence Pugh releases first songs as singer-songwriter
The Best Part and I Hate Myself are performed by her character in A Good Person, written and directed by Zach BraffFlorence Pugh has released her first performances as a singer-songwriter, which are included on the soundtrack to her new film A Good Person.The British actor has written and performed two songs: the slow ambient ballad The Best Part, and the self-lacerating piano-driven number I Hate Myself. Each are presented in the film as being sung by her character, Allison, a promising musician whose career is set back by personal tragedy. Continue reading...
Seemingly ambitious Defra hedgerow targets actually due to typo
Thérèse Coffey reveals proposals for England far less ambitious than those set out in first draft of environment document
Joni Mitchell teams up with Cameron Crowe to script her biopic
Legendary folk star is reportedly offering input into screenplay for drama film about her lifeCameron Crowe, the director of Almost Famous and Jerry Maguire, is developing a new drama film with Joni Mitchell about her life.According to a story on the entertainment site Above the Line – which was subsequently reposted on Mitchell’s own website – the project is not a documentary and Mitchell has been collaborating with Crowe on the script for the past two years. Continue reading...
‘Tours are no longer fun’: Neil Young lambasts Ticketmaster for ripping off fans
Singer-songwriter says ‘the old days are gone’ amid wider consternation at ticketing company’s pricing policiesNeil Young has lambasted Ticketmaster over its concert ticketing policies, saying “concert tours are no longer fun” due to what he sees as exploitative pricing.Young wrote on his website:It’s over. The old days are gone. I get letters blaming me for $3,000 tickets for a benefit I am doing. That money does not go to me or the benefit. Artists have to worry about ripped off fans blaming them for Ticketmaster add-ons and scalpers. Concert tours are no longer fun. Concert tours not what they were. Continue reading...
Albanese hits hustings ahead of NSW election day – as it happened
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Indigenous voice a ‘safe and sensible’ legal option that will not impede parliament, experts say
Change of wording to constitutional amendment increases parliament’s power over the advisory body amid concerns about its authority
‘Historic moment’ as El Salvador abortion case fuels hopes for expanded access across Latin America
Human rights court hears seriously ill woman denied procedure as advocates call for change in region with world’s most restrictive abortion lawsHuman rights activists in Latin America hope that a historic court hearing over the case of a Salvadoran woman who was denied an abortion despite her high-risk pregnancy could open the way for El Salvador to decriminalize abortions – and set an important precedent across the region.The inter-American court of human rights (IACHR) this week considered the historic case of the woman, known as Beatriz, who was prohibited from having an abortion in 2013, even though she was seriously ill and the foetus she was carrying would not have survived outside the uterus. Continue reading...
‘We are refugees now, even our cat’: a Kherson mother’s UK diary
Olha fled the Ukrainian city a year ago this week and has faced many challenges, including enrolling her children in school
The Greens face one of the biggest decisions of their political lives as Labor’s climate policy hangs in the balance
Some Greens want to pass the safeguard mechanism changes and keep fighting on fossil fuels while others want to attack it as a Coalition creation that can’t be redeemed
Daughter of Danish-Bahraini rights activist offers to take his place in prison
Maryam al-Khawaja says she fears her father Abdulhadi’s health is deteriorating and condemns Denmark for inactionHuman rights activist Abdulhadi al-Khawaja’s health has suffered so much inside a Bahraini prison that his daughter Maryam has offered to trade places with him. She fears that without urgent action, her father will slowly die behind bars without being able to see his family.“I don’t know how much longer my dad has. I spend every day dreading each time the phone rings, as it might be someone calling me to let me know my dad is no longer around,” said Maryam. “I know he has serious health issues and the authorities are using [lack of] access to proper treatment as a method of punishment. I don’t want to wait around for my dad to be released to us in a coffin. I can’t do that.” Continue reading...
Authorities raid Beijing offices of US Mintz Group detaining five Chinese staff
Company offering corporate due diligence services says it received no legal notice of a case against itChinese authorities have raided the office of a US firm in Beijing, shutting down its operations and detaining five Chinese staff, the company has said.Mintz Group, which has offices in 18 cities around the world and offers corporate analysis and due diligence services, said it received no legal notice about the reasons for the unannounced raid. Continue reading...
Schools’ Stem diversity problem needs systemic solution, say MPs
Report finds students from black Caribbean backgrounds in England ‘acutely’ underrepresented in StemChildren and young people from black Caribbean backgrounds are “acutely” underrepresented in the study of maths, science and technology in England at all levels of education, according to a report by MPs.Fewer black Caribbean students studied triple science than students of any other background, the report said. It also highlighted the lack of diversity in the teaching workforce, pointing out that an additional 15,655 black teachers would be needed in order to bring teacher diversity in line with that of pupils. Continue reading...
A team of vets, four ‘kumki’ and one tranquilliser dart: the plan to capture Kerala’s marauding elephant
Known as ‘Rice Tusker’ for his insatiable hunger, the 30-year-old pachyderm has been terrorising the Indian region for yearsThe trail of destruction left by an elephant in Kerala could finally come to an end on Sunday as a crack team of experts plan to capture him.The team of 71 vets, forest officers and field workers have identified a specific spot among the wooded hills in Idukki district where Arikompan – which means the Rice Tusker, because of his love for rice – comes every couple of days to cool off in water. Continue reading...
Chris Dawson to face trial over allegations he had sexual relationship with high school student
Former Newtown Jets rugby league player was a sports teacher at public high school in Sydney’s northern beaches in the 1980s
Gillian Keegan urged to not let culture wars weaken sex education
Organisations write to education secretary before review, saying England’s schools have vital role in tackling misogyny and abuseDozens of organisations and charities have written to the education secretary, amid fears that sex education in England may become a casualty of the culture wars.More than 50 organisations concerned with education and tackling violence against women and girls (VAWG) have written to Gillian Keegan to urge her to resist the “politicisation” of sex education, following a row in which Conservative backbench MPs claimed that children were being taught “graphic lessons on oral sex, how to choke your partner safely, and 72 genders”. Continue reading...
Bordeaux city hall set on fire amid nationwide protests against French pension changes
Largely peaceful protests are marred by outbreaks of violence as unions claim 3.5 million turned out, while authorities put number at just over 1 millionEmmanuel Macron felt the full force of French anger on Thursday as protesters gathered across the country to demonstrate their opposition to the pension age being raised from 62 to 64.Unions claimed 3.5 million people turned out across the country, while the authorities suggested the figure was much lower, at just under 1.1 million. Continue reading...
Vertigo: remake of Hitchcock thriller set to star Robert Downey Jr
Actor in talks to take on role made famous by James Stewart in remake written by Peaky Blinders creator Steven KnightA remake of Alfred Hitchcock’s 1958 thriller Vertigo is in the works with Robert Downey Jr “eyeing” the lead role.According to Deadline, Paramount Pictures has given the film the go-ahead with the Iron Man star producing and potentially taking on the role of the obsessive detective made famous by James Stewart. Continue reading...
Ten construction firms fined a total of £60m for ‘illegally colluding’ on contract bids
CMA found companies had acted as a cartel over 19 private and public sector contracts worth £150mTen construction firms have been fined a combined £60m by the competition regulator for “illegally colluding” to rig bids for lucrative contracts for projects including Bow Street magistrates court and Selfridges department store.The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) found that the companies had acted as a cartel over 19 private and public sector contracts that were worth £150m. Continue reading...
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