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Updated 2025-11-09 05:17
Met police chief: it’s crazy I can’t sack ‘toxic’ officers who broke the law
Mark Rowley admits vetting procedures inadequate and says other bodies reinstated officers sacked by forceThe head of the UK’s biggest police force has said it is “crazy” that he cannot sack “toxic” officers who have broken the law.Responding to a disclosure in the Guardian that 150 officers are under investigation over allegations of sexual misconduct or racism, the Metropolitan police commissioner, Sir Mark Rowley, admitted that the force’s vetting procedures were inadequate. Continue reading...
PM signs security treaty ‘commitment’ with PNG – as it happened
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Surgeons remove unexploded grenade lodged in Ukrainian soldier’s chest
Sappers neutralised the explosive that was lodged just beneath the young man’s heart, Kyiv said
Savings: Britons urged to act soon as some interest rates pass 4%
Consumers have got used to poor returns on savings accounts, but there are now better dealsIf you are one of the millions of people whose savings are languishing in an account paying little or no interest, it might be time to act because you could be earning 4.25%, or more on your cash.Earlier this week the Coventry building society warned that Britons have a collective £268bn sitting in easy and instant access accounts paying no interest – an increase of more than £9.6bnon a year ago. Continue reading...
Cricket Australia cancels men’s one-day internationals against Afghanistan due to concern over women’s rights
Matches scheduled for March in UAE scrapped following talks with Australian governmentCricket Australia has pulled its men’s national team from the upcoming one-day international series against Afghanistan amid concerns over deteriorating women’s rights in the Taliban-ruled country.Australia were scheduled to play three ODIs against Afghanistan on neutral ground in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) in March, but after talks with the Australian government, the series has been cancelled. Continue reading...
Budget Australian airline Bonza certified to fly amid push to reduce cost of domestic travel
Civil Aviation Safety Authority issues air operator’s certificate to long-delayed budget carrier
Teachers’ pay cut by £6,600 since 2010, says Institute for Fiscal Studies
IFS says pay erosion helps explain why traditionally moderate teaching unions are considering strike actionSenior teachers in England have in effect had their pay cut by £6,600 since 2010, according to analysis by the Institute for Fiscal Studies that comes as strike action over pay is likely to close schools.The independent economics research institute calculated that long-serving and senior teachers – accounting for nearly a third of those working in England – would have earned the equivalent of £50,300 in 2010. But below-inflation wage increases over the past 12 years has meant their pay in 2022 was just £43,700. Continue reading...
Health workers in Zimbabwe dismayed as law curbing strikes is passed
Controversial bill to stop industrial action criticised as an already struggling sector fears losing more staff in a damaging brain drainZimbabwe’s health workers have criticised the government for passing contested legislation that outlaws any industrial action, saying it will worsen the sector’s already damaging brain drain.The new Health Services Bill, which came into force on Tuesday, forbids health workers who are classified as an “essential” service from striking for more than three days. Those who do not comply face a fine or imprisonment of up to six months. Continue reading...
Czechs prepare to elect president after 10 years of Miloš Zeman
Poll has become a tussle between three frontrunners whose campaigns have all hit problemsVoters in the Czech Republic go to the polls this week to elect a new president in a contest that could set the country on a renewed path of populism or bring to office a national unifier promising to heal divisions opened up by the rumbustious incumbent, Miloš Zeman.Eight candidates are vying to succeed the 78-year-old, who is constitutionally bound to step down after two successive five-year terms. Voting will be spread over Friday and Saturday and is almost certain to be followed by a second-round runoff in a fortnight’s time. Continue reading...
West losing patience with Libyan elite over aborted elections
UN special envoys to meet in Washington as figures show Libyan politicians’ salaries rose by more than 40% in 2022Western leaders are losing patience with an entrenched Libyan political elite that has collectively failed to agree on the basis of elections for more than a year but has boosted politicians’ salaries by more than 40%, according to official figures.Special envoys from the US, France, Germany, Italy and the UK are due to meet in Washington on 13 January to discuss their next steps after two rival Libyan factions last week failed to reach a final agreement in Cairo on the constitutional basis for national elections. Continue reading...
George Pell: Ballarat mass urges support for abuse victims – and forgiveness for the church
Of the small number gathered at St Patrick’s Cathedral some did not want to forgive while others remembered cardinal’s ‘legacy’
Icac delays in Gladys Berejiklian investigation a ‘black mark’ on watchdog, ex-judge says
Anthony Whealy, who was assistant commissioner at the anti-corruption body, says wait is ‘unfair’ on former premier
Australia’s credibility on human rights blighted by laws targeting climate protesters and jailing children, report says
Human Rights Watch calls on government to address its own ‘alarming deficiencies’, including detention of children under 14 and treatment of asylum seekers
Neo-Nazi Thomas Sewell avoids jail time over ‘brutal’ attack on Nine Network security guard
Sewell sentenced to an 18-month community corrections order with 150 hours of community service for affray and recklessly causing injury
‘We are inextricably linked’: Māori tribe urges Sotheby’s to return relics up for auction
New Zealand tribe says only a handful of its cultural taonga, or treasures, are left after successive waves of looting during colonial timesA Māori tribe in New Zealand is calling for the return of treasured relics listed for sale by the auction house Sotheby’s.The auctioneer is in the process of selling a number of Māori artefacts from around the 18th and 19th century – some of which local tribes say are crucial cultural taonga (treasures) and should be returned. Continue reading...
Legendary rock guitarist Jeff Beck dies aged 78
Beck rose to fame with the Yardbirds before fronting the Jeff Beck Group and making forays into the jazz-fusion sound he pioneeredJeff Beck, the celebrated guitarist who played with the Yardbirds and led the Jeff Beck Group, has died aged 78, his representative has confirmed.Beck died on Tuesday after “suddenly contracting bacterial meningitis”, the representative confirmed. “His family ask for privacy while they process this tremendous loss,” they added. Continue reading...
Russia-Ukraine war: Putin replaces general in charge of Russian forces in Ukraine – as it happened
This live blog has now closed, you can read more on this story herePolitico reports that Germany is facing pressure from France and Poland to supply Ukraine with the powerful Leopard 2 tanks.Politico reports:Supplying modern western tanks such as the Leopard 2 would be a big boost for Ukraine’s military, as Kyiv’s allies have so far only been willing to send older Soviet-era tanks that had still been in the stocks of eastern European countries, as well as other weapon systems such as howitzers and air defences.A French official told Politico that Paris is turning the screws on Germany in the hope of extracting an agreement from Berlin to send Leopard tanks to Ukraine ahead of a Franco-German summit on January 22, the 60th anniversary of the Élysée partnership treaty between the two nations. Continue reading...
100,000 UK civil servants to strike on 1 February
Public and Commercial Services union announces one-day strike over jobs, pay and conditionsMore than 100,000 civil servants will join one-day strike action on 1 February in a major escalation of action by the PCS union.The union members will take action across 124 government departments, with a further 33,000 balloting again on joining strike action from five more departments including HMRC. Continue reading...
Gwen Stefani faces backlash over ‘I’m Japanese’ comment
Singer and TV host, who is of Irish and Italian descent, made comment in interview promoting her beauty brandThe singer and TV host Gwen Stefani faced widespread backlash after claiming: “I’m Japanese.”In an interview with Allure magazine released on Tuesday, Stefani, who is of Irish and Italian descent, was promoting her GXVE beauty brand when she said: “My God, I’m Japanese and I didn’t know it.” Continue reading...
Alarm raised at decline in women’s maternity experiences in England
Fewer women feel they always got the help they needed during labour and birth, according to CQC pollA health watchdog has sounded the alarm over a “concerning decline” in women’s experiences with maternity services.Fewer women feel they always got the help they needed during labour and birth, many were disappointed at the amount of time their partners could stay with them after the delivery of their babies, and a significant number reported that they did not feel listened to when they raised concerns.Women were less likely to report that they were always able to get help during labour and birth – down to 63% in 2022 compared with 72% in 2019.There was a decline in the proportion who felt they could always get help after birth in hospital – 57% said they were “always” able to get help, down from 62% in 2019.Some 63% said they received help and advice about their baby’s health and progress – down from 71% in 2017 to 63% in 2022, although this was a slight rise on 2021 (60%).Just over two-thirds (69%) reported “definitely” having confidence and trust in the staff delivering their antenatal care.Seven in 10 reported always being given the help they needed when they contacted midwives and health visitors after their babies were born – down from 79% in 2019.There has also been a downward trend for mothers “always” being treated with kindness and understanding while in hospital after the birth, from 74% to 71% between 2017 and 2022.Some 90% said their partner or someone else could be involved as much as they wanted during labour or birth – but this is still down from 96% in 2017.But just 41% of women felt that their partners had been able to be with them as much as they waned after giving birth – prompting a charity to call for a change in policy.Some 77% said that if they raised a concern during labour and birth, they felt it was taken seriously, down from 81% in 2017.And 85% said they were always treat with respect and dignity during labour, down from 89% in the 2019 survey. Continue reading...
‘It’s made me who I am’: Johnny Vegas diagnosed with ADHD at age of 52
British actor and comedian says condition has made him disorganised but ‘chaos’ may have helped his standup performanceThe comedian and actor Johnny Vegas has revealed that he has been diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) at the age of 52.The NHS describes ADHD as a condition that affects people’s behaviour with restlessness, trouble concentrating and impulsiveness among its effects. Continue reading...
Uranium was embedded in metal bars seized at Heathrow
Officials say there is no threat to public but it is unclear whether radioactive element was deliberately concealedA discovery of metal bars embedded with uranium at Heathrow in late December has triggered an urgent counter-terrorism investigation, in an attempt to establish why it was concealed in an aeroplane shipment.Scotland Yard said on Tuesday night the amount of contaminated material was “extremely small” and posed “no threat to the public” although some reports had suggested, incorrectly, that several kilograms of uranium itself were discovered. Continue reading...
George Pell: what the five-year royal commission into child sexual abuse found
Un-redacted report released in 2020 revealed how archbishop failed to take proper steps to act on complaints about dangerous priests
‘A great day for the country’: Uganda declares an end to Ebola outbreak
Control measures including lockdowns have halted the spread of the virus after less than four monthsThe Ugandan government has declared an end to its Ebola outbreak, less than four months after cases were first reported.Since 20 September, 56 people have died from the virus, which is spread through body fluids, and there have been 142 confirmed infections. Continue reading...
Health unions step back from next year’s NHS pay talks amid current dispute
Unions say health secretary’s refusal to increase 2022-23 offer has made it ‘impossible’ to talk about next year’s dealHealth unions will not submit joint evidence to the NHS pay review body about the rise staff should get in 2023-24, in a move that threatens the system by which most health service pay is decided.Unions representing more than 1 million NHS staff announced on Wednesday that they would not share their views on what next year’s uplift should be while the dispute over this year’s uplift was still ongoing. Continue reading...
Anthony Albanese to push ‘family-first’ security treaty in address to Papua New Guinea parliament
Australian PM to call for ‘a swift conclusion to negotiations’ to treaty and say both countries should ‘work as equals with our fellow Pacific states’
Biden’s response to Israel’s far-right government: avoid confrontation
As Netanyahu takes an aggressively anti-Palestinian line, the White House will seek to avoid the humiliations heaped on ObamaThe more things change in Israel, the harder Joe Biden is working to make sure they stay the same.The new far-right government of the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, which includes openly anti-Arab racists, is already causing concern in the White House with commitments to expand illegal settlements in the occupied territories and annex Palestinian land. Continue reading...
Paris attack: knife-wielding man injures six people at Gare du Nord
Man said to have attacked passersby during early-morning rush-hour before armed police wounded and arrested himSix people have been injured by a man wielding a knife during rush-hour at the Gare du Nord station in Paris, French authorities have said.Police arrested the man at the busy station, which serves as a hub for local transport as well as trains to London and northern Europe, after they opened fire and wounded him, said a police source, who asked not to be named. Continue reading...
Tennis Australia commits to more NFTs despite mayhem in the crypto markets
Almost 2,500 NFTs to be released for the Australian Open, as Tennis Australia says it’s in for the long haul as ‘an innovative company’
Golden Globes 2023 key moments: Kevin Costner shelters in place and Tom Cruise gets a kicking
There were heroes aplenty – Jennifer Coolidge, Colin Farrell and Michelle Yeoh among them – but only one villain at this year’s star-studded Globes award ceremony“I‘m here because I’m Black,” said incoming MC Jerrod Carmichael, who addressed the Hollywood Foreign Press Association’s tarnished reputation head-on in his opening monologue. “They didn’t have a single Black member until George Floyd was killed,” he said, shrugging off much of their apparent rehabilitation efforts and saying he only took the gig for the $500,000 paycheck. Continue reading...
Shamima Begum says she understands public anger but ‘is not a bad person’
23-year-old tells story of how she joined Islamic State and life in a refugee camp in BBC podcast seriesShamima Begum, who left Britain to join Islamic State as a schoolgirl in 2015, has said she understands public anger towards her but insists she is “not this person that they think I am”.Begum, who was 15 when she left her east London home to join IS with her school friends Kadiza Sultana, 15, and Amira Abase, 16, has told the story of how she joined the terror group and life in a refugee camp in a 10-part BBC podcast, The Shamima Begum Story. Continue reading...
‘Shot two zebras. Played tennis’: Scarborough museum confronts legacy of colonial past
Discovery of stuffed animals from central Africa and recordings from ‘human zoo’ inspires exhibitionIt was when part of a Scarborough museum was being redeveloped more than a decade ago that builders found a blocked-up door. Behind it they discovered bags filled with asbestos and, under that, a collection of taxidermied animals that had been collected by a Victorian big game hunter and left to the museum.Neglected, outdated and ethically problematic, the temptation may have been to shut the artefacts away again. Instead, the Scarborough Museums and Galleries opted to do something else with the archive bequeathed by Col James Harrison – some of it much more morally challenging than stuffed antelope heads. Continue reading...
Lidl, Zara’s owner, H&M and Next ‘paid Bangladesh suppliers less than production cost’
Survey of 1,000 factories for campaign group claims many cut rates in pandemic and have not increased them sinceLidl, Zara’s owner Inditex, H&M and Next have been accused of paying garment suppliers in Bangladesh during the pandemic less than the cost of production, leaving factories struggling to pay the country’s legal minimum wage.In a survey of 1,000 factories in the country producing clothes for UK retailers, 19% of Lidl’s suppliers made the claim, as did 11% of Inditex’s, 9% of H&M’s and 8% of Next’s. Continue reading...
Swimming pool closures during Covid lockdowns may lead to more summer drownings, experts say
Federal government estimates 12m swimming lessons were missed in the 18 months to December 2021
Myanmar junta hit Indian territory during strike on rebel camp, say witnesses
Locals in Farkawan village said that two bombs were dropped on the Indian side of the border but no one was hurtThe Myanmar military launched an airstrike on a prominent training camp for pro-democracy forces close to the Indian border, with jets dropping at least two bombs inside Indian territory according to eyewitnesses.The Myanmar junta, who seized power in a coup in February 2021 and are engaged in a bloody battle to crush pro-democracy insurgents, began bombing Camp Victoria in Myanmar’s Chin state, on Tuesday afternoon, a rebel commander confirmed to the Guardian. Continue reading...
‘Absolutely buggered’: paddleboarding couple survive three days adrift off Queensland coast
Lorne Benussi says he found the pair 55km from North West Island, from where they had drifted out to sea
Tokyo lodges protest after China punishes Japanese travellers over Covid test requirements
Japan says Beijing’s decision to halt visa processing is ‘extremely regrettable’, amid uncertainty as to whether China will take action against other countriesJapan has lodged a protest with Beijing over its decision to suspend the issuance of visas to Japanese citizens in retaliation for Covid testing requirements for travellers from China.Chief cabinet secretary Hirokazu Matsuno characterised the move as an act of revenge rather than a public health measure and requested China reverse the decision. “It is regrettable that China unilaterally has taken visa suspension action for reasons other than steps for the coronavirus,” he said on Wednesday. Continue reading...
‘Cruel and cold’: man faces backlash for dousing unhoused woman with water
Amid an escalating housing and homelessness crisis, San Francisco has seen increased attacks on unhoused peopleSan Francisco is once again reckoning with its treatment of unhoused people after a video of a business owner spraying a woman with water from a garden hose spread online.Collier Gwin, the owner of Foster Gwin Gallery in downtown San Francisco, admitted to the San Francisco Chronicle that he blasted water on an unhoused woman sitting on the sidewalk in front of his business. The video, captured on Monday morning by the owner of a nearby bakery, shows Gwin spraying the woman, who was crying out in distress. In a calm voice, Gwin then tells her, “Just move,” before spraying her again. Continue reading...
Tigray rebels start handing over weapons to Ethiopian army
Surrendering weapons is a central part of the November ceasefire agreement which seeks to end a conflict that has killed thousandsTigrayan rebels have begun handing in heavy weapons, a key part of an agreement signed more than two months ago to end a deadly conflict in northern Ethiopia, a spokesperson for the rebel authorities said.The demobilisation of Tigray forces is seen as central to the 2 November ceasefire agreement, alongside the restoration of services, resumption of humanitarian aid and withdrawal of Eritrean troops, who fought alongside Ethiopia’s army but were not party to the truce. Continue reading...
Golden Globes 2023: The Banshees of Inisherin and The Fabelmans win big
The 80th annual ceremony saw a diverse slate of winners as host Jerrod Carmichael took shots at its troubled historyA year after going on mute – no red carpet, no stars, no television broadcast in 2022 – the Golden Globes returned to form at the Beverly Hilton in Los Angeles: open bottles of champagne, over time and overstretched, gesturing toward improving its longstanding diversity issues while taking shots from host Jerrod Carmichael.The night’s big winners were The Fabelmans, Steven Spielberg’s semi-autobiographical family drama that also won him best director, and Martin McDonagh’s The Banshees of Inisherin, while the network darling Abbott Elementary, HBO’s prequel House of the Dragon and The White Lotus took home the top TV awards. Continue reading...
Jobs and retail sales hold up in resilient Australian economy despite 2023 growth fears
Consumer prices rose 7.3% in the year to November, boosting the chances of another RBA interest rate rise in February
Cardinal George Pell divides opinion in death as in life
Conservative politicians remember Pell as a ‘saint’ and a ‘martyr’, while others prefer to acknowledge victims of child sexual abuse in the Catholic church
Icac warns findings from its probe into Gladys Berejiklian may be delayed until after NSW election
Then premier resigned after watchdog said it was investigating whether she broke the law
Cardinal George Pell dies aged 81 in Rome
Australian has died of heart complications after hip surgery, church leaders confirm
Russia-Ukraine war at a glance: what we know on day 322 of the invasion
Russia’s mercenary firm Wagner claims it has taken control of eastern salt mining town of Soledar Continue reading...
NSW Labor candidate Khal Asfour cleared of wrongdoing after allegations were made in parliament
Investigation finds ‘no evidence’ of corrupt or illegal behaviour by the Canterbury Bankstown mayor
Concern as proportion of children in England on antipsychotics doubles
Researchers find overall percentage increase from 0.06% in 2000 to 0.11% in 2019 although safety in children not fully establishedThe proportion of children and young people prescribed antipsychotics in England has nearly doubled in just two decades, prompting concern among some experts.The powerful drugs are often used to treat major mental illnesses, such as schizophrenia, in adults. They can be associated with serious side effects such as sexual dysfunction, infertility, and weight gain leading to diabetes. Continue reading...
Head of Russia’s Wagner group says his troops have taken control of Soledar
Yevgeny Prigozhin poses with some of his mercenaries in Ukrainian town renowned for its salt minesThe head of Russia’s Wagner mercenary group has claimed his forces have completed the takeover of the Ukrainian town of Soledar, which if confirmed would mark Moscow’s first major battlefield success since last summer.“Wagner units have taken the whole territory of Soledar under control,” said Yevgeny Prigozhin in an audio message released on his Telegram channel late on Tuesday. Continue reading...
Brazil’s attempted coup was thwarted by Lula’s decisive action, minister says
Alexandre Padilha says insurrection by Bolsonaro supporters was well-organized ‘act of terrorism’ aimed at toppling governmentThe insurrection that shook Brazil’s capital was a well-organised coup attempt that was thwarted thanks to Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s swift and firm reaction, one of the president’s top ministers has told the Guardian.Speaking at the presidential palace on Tuesday, the minister of institutional relations, Alexandre Padilha, said he believed Sunday’s far-right assault on the three branches of Brazil’s government was “an act of terrorism” designed to bring down Lula’s week-old government. Continue reading...
Last king of Greece, Constantine II, dies aged 82
Constantine was forced into exile in 1967 after clashing with military rulers, who later abolished monarchyGreece’s former King Constantine II, whose nine-year reign coincided with one of the most turbulent periods in the country’s political history, has died at a private hospital in Athens, his doctors announced late on Tuesday. He was 82.Constantine, a cousin of British monarch King Charles III, died “of a stroke”. He was admitted to an Athens hospital last week with breathing problems, Greek media reported. Continue reading...
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