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Updated 2026-03-25 16:18
Turkish forces kill Islamic State chief in Syria raid, says Erdoğan
Turkish president says Abu Hussein al-Qurashi was killed after long pursuit while northern Syria residents report clashes and large explosionTurkish intelligence forces have killed Islamic State’s leader, Abu Hussein al-Qurashi, in Syria, Turkey’s president has said.“This individual was neutralised as part of an operation by the Turkish national intelligence organisation in Syria yesterday,” Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said in an interview with the broadcaster TRT Türk on Sunday. Continue reading...
Failure to defrock Peter Hollingworth undermines Anglican church’s credibility, abuse prevention groups say
Organisations say decision on former governor general and archbishop, who is not accused of abuse, fails to reflect harm done to survivors
Man charged over alleged attack on referee at amateur Sydney football game
NSW sports minister condemns ‘disgusting and cowardly attack’ after referee allegedly punched and kicked in Padstow
RCN and train drivers’ union dispute ministers’ claims about their strikes
Nurses union head clashes with Steve Barclay over plans to protect patients and RMT rows with Mark Harper about striking on eve of Eurovision finalThe Royal College of Nursing has clashed with the government over whether sufficient exemptions have been made to protect patient safety during the nurses’ strike in England that started on Sunday evening.The clash came as a row erupted between the leader of the train drivers’ union and the transport secretary, who had criticised a planned strike on the eve of the Eurovision song contest final for its impact on Ukraine. Continue reading...
Stricken dinghy was not rescued after it entered UK waters, maritime logs reveal
Boat with 38 people onboard got into difficulty in Channel and left to drift back towards France, FOI request showsA boat carrying 38 people, including children, that got into difficulty crossing the Channel was not rescued when it reached UK waters but was instead allowed to drift back towards France, according to internal maritime logs.Ministry of Defence officials, who were managing small boats in the Channel at the time, told the Guardian in January that they disputed that the stricken dinghy had entered UK waters. Continue reading...
Legal Aid lawyers kept in the dark over ‘damning’ report on terror risk assessment tool
Report which cast doubt over use of VERA-2R tool in detaining terror suspects post-sentencing was not shared with state governments or legal aid
Tunisian cemeteries fill up as hundreds of dead refugees wash up on coast
Hospitals, morgues and burial grounds under pressure, with more than 300 bodies found this year in just one regionAuthorities in Tunisia are considering building new cemeteries, as the country runs out of space to bury the dozens of refugees washing up every day on its shores.The first three months of 2023 were the deadliest for people attempting to cross the central Mediterranean since 2017, according to the UN, with an increasing number of boats carrying asylum seekers wrecked at sea. Continue reading...
Five Tory councillors suspended for alleged racism standing in local elections
Conservative candidates in this week’s polls include several who were reinstated after accusations of racism and IslamophobiaFive Conservative councillors standing for the party in this week’s local elections in England, have been suspended for alleged racism and Islamophobia in recent years – including one who suggested banning mosques and another who accused Muslims of being on a “quest to turn the world Muslim”.They are among 13 councillors identified by the Observer, drawing on research by the anti-fascist group Hope Not Hate, who have been suspended over racist comments and social media posts in the past four years before being reinstated. Continue reading...
Piano fever sweeps UK as online lessons and street instruments fuel take-up
Outdoor pianos, celebrity names and free tuition videos combine to get Britons tickling the ivories once moreFor years, it seemed like the piano was disappearing from British public life. The bulky instruments were cast out of homes and schools and offered for free online.But now – despite all the digital entertainment alternatives and conductor Simon Rattle’s stark warning last week that UK classical music was fighting for its life amid funding cuts – the piano seems to be making a 21st-century comeback in homes, on streets and online. Continue reading...
Australian man charged for allegedly spitting in Indonesian imam’s face
Brenton Craig Abbas Abdullah McArthur faces up to 14 months in prison if convicted
Stella Creasy says police ‘green lighting’ trolls to target politicians’ children
MP questions police response that troll who tried to have her children removed was ‘entitled’ to call her an ‘extremist’The Labour MP Stella Creasy believes police have given online trolls “the green light to target the children of politicians” after she was subject to a baseless complaint to social services.Creasy was investigated by her local council after it received a report from a troll who was trying to have her children taken away from her. Continue reading...
‘Horror beyond words’: how Channel distress calls were ‘ignored’ 19 times before 2021 disaster
Investigation reveals that understaffed Dover control room was overwhelmed by calls from people in trouble before 27 died at sea• Read more: UK coastguard ‘left Channel migrants adrift’On the afternoon of 3 November 2021, a woman called Hampshire police. Her brother was crossing the Channel in a small boat that day, she said via a translator. But something awful had just happened. Twenty minutes earlier he’d texted to say that smugglers had begun shoving passengers overboard. “Loads had been kicked off and were in the water”, fighting for their lives in the treacherous currents of the world’s busiest shipping lane.Police passed the details to HM Coastguard and at 4.57pm an operator flagged the incident, according to internal logs obtained by the Observer and Liberty Investigates. Continue reading...
US health authorities reportedly plan to stop tracking Covid on community level
Instead of using colour-coded system focusing on spread of virus by county the CDC will track hospitalisation ratesThe US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reportedly plans to stop tracking the spread of Covid-19 on the community level across the country, signalling what could be the federal government’s readiness to reconsider priorities in its approach to the pandemic despite the World Health Organization’s declaration that it is still ongoing.Instead of using its colour-coded Covid-19 tracking system that focuses on the spread of the virus by counties, the CDC will pivot its tracking focus mostly to hospitalisation rates, CNN first reported on Friday. Continue reading...
Blaze at Russian fuel depot in Crimea put out after suspected drone strike
Fire at facility in port of Sevastopol caused no casualties and will not hinder supplies, authorities say
Japan approves abortion pill for the first time
Health ministry gives green light for two-step treatment to end pregnancies up to nine weeksThe abortion pill is to become available in Japan for the first time after the health ministry approved a drug used to terminate early-stage pregnancies.Abortion is legal in Japan up to 22 weeks, but consent is usually required from a spouse or partner, and until now a surgical procedure had been the only option. Continue reading...
Nurses’ union makes apparent U-turn over staffing exemptions during strike
Two trusts and one children’s hospital to receive emergency nursing staff after RCN had said there would be no derogationsThe Royal College of Nurses appears to have U-turned on its decision to allow no exemptions to hospitals during this weekend’s strike action, with nurses now due to work in an emergency capacity in dozens of hospitals across England.Nurses will be working across several NHS trusts – including Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS foundation trust, in London, and University Hospitals Birmingham NHS foundation trust – in wards including intensive care and A&E. This is despite the RCN vowing when strike action was announced that exemptions would not be made for any hospitals. Continue reading...
Ministers set to impose NHS pay deal on staff despite opposition of unions
Move is apparently designed to isolate the Royal College of Nursing, which is due to begin another strikeMinisters plan to impose a pay deal on NHS workers even as nurses continue to reject it, the Observer understands, as health service unions prepare to hold crunch talks on the package this week.Both the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) and the Unite unions continue to oppose the deal offered to NHS workers, after protracted negotiations that have led to strikes and hampered attempts to shorten waiting lists. All 12 unions involved in the talks will gather on Tuesday to vote on whether to accept an improved deal covering the last two years. Continue reading...
NHS leader asks union to let striking nurses go back to work for emergencies
Health service bosses say patient safety could be at risk when nurses in England stage 28-hour stoppage from Sunday eveningAn NHS leader has urged the Royal College of Nursing to let striking nurses leave picket lines and go back to work in their hospital if emergencies occur during their strike this weekend.Matthew Taylor made the appeal as the NHS braced itself for renewed disruption to services as a result of the first strike by nurses since they rejected the government’s improved pay offer. Continue reading...
Sister of Ruth Perry urges headteachers to resist Ofsted ‘culture of fear’
Julia Waters criticises ‘fatally destructive’ inspections and calls on school leaders to refuse to cooperate with watchdogHeadteachers should undermine Ofsted’s “culture of fear” by refusing to cooperate with the schools inspectorate or work as inspectors, the sister of headteacher Ruth Perry has told a conference of school leaders.Prof Julia Waters said her sister had been “destroyed” by Ofsted’s critical inspection of her school late last year, which downgraded it from outstanding to inadequate, and that her family had been left with an “intense, painful, overwhelming” sense of loss after her death. Continue reading...
NHS medics and UK nationals face risky route to Sudan evacuation point
Hundreds of people told to make own way through ongoing fighting to airbase north of KhartoumNHS doctors and British nationals are facing a treacherous route to reach an airbase north of Khartoum before a deadline for evacuations, amid ongoing airstrikes and artillery fire in the Sudanese capital.Hundreds of people were told to find their own way to an evacuation centre at the Wadi Seidna airbase, about 14 miles (20km) north of Khartoum and its twin city, Omdurman. They had to navigate ongoing fighting as the Sudanese Armed Forces continued to attack positions across the two cities, while members of the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces hid among civilian buildings. Continue reading...
Deadline for British nationals to reach evacuation airfield in Sudan passes
Deputy PM to chair Cobra meeting on security situation in Khartoum as UK government prepares to end flightsThe deadline for British nationals to reach the evacuation airfield in Sudan has passed as the government prepares to cease flights out of the country within hours.The deputy prime minister, Oliver Dowden, will chair a Cobra meeting on Saturday afternoon to discuss the security situation in Khartoum in advance of the final flight taking off at 6pm UK time. Continue reading...
BBC needs new rules for appointing chair in wake of Richard Sharp affair, says David Dimbleby
Current system gives too much power to prime ministers says broadcaster – but rules himself out of runningThe veteran broadcaster David Dimbleby has said a cross-party public commission should appoint the BBC chair, in the wake of Richard Sharp’s resignation after breaking rules over dealings with Boris Johnson – but ruled himself out of the running for the job.Sharp resigned after being found to have breached public appointment rules for failing to declare a connection to a secret £800,000 loan for the UK’s former prime minister. Continue reading...
Cost of visit to Hampton Court gardens goes from free to as much as £29
Dismayed locals and Liberal Democrat MP Munira Wilson are calling on palace to reconsider large feesFor those living in south London, a stroll next to the colourful flowerbeds in the grounds of Hampton Court Palace was until recently a free weekend activity all could enjoy.But 18 months ago, locals were horrified to find the gates shut, as they were told they would have to pay up to £29 to visit the gardens in future. Continue reading...
Bank holiday weather forecast to be warm and sunny, but wet for some
Temperatures may reach 21C but heavy showers expected in Northern Ireland, Wales and central EnglandWarmer weather and sunshine are forecast across much of the UK for the bank holiday weekend, but the threat of rain remains in parts of the country.The Met Office said many people would experience dry, bright and warm conditions, with temperatures reaching 21C in southern areas. Continue reading...
Giant blaze destroys 60 vehicles at Pickles auction yard in Perth
Western Australian police, fire and emergency services were on the scene investigating cause of fire
Australian man arrested in Indonesia says he felt ‘almost possessed’ during naked rampage
Bodhi Mani Risby-Jones faces up to five years in jail after he allegedly assaulted a fisherman who required 50 stitches for his injuries
‘I was in tears’: Briton with valid passport barred from flight over Brexit rules
Experts say it is vital to check you meet EU requirements, or you could risk losing your holidayTravellers who have not used their passport for a while were this week being urged to dig it out and check it conforms to the post-Brexit rules for entering the EU – because if it doesn’t, you will almost certainly be denied boarding this summer.Despite previous warnings in Guardian Money and some other publicity, UK travellers trying to enter the Schengen zone are being turned away on a daily basis by airline staff at boarding gates – in most cases because their UK passport was issued more than 10 years ago. Continue reading...
Jack Monroe serves up budget take on king’s coronation quiche
Food writer is backing the Big Help Out and says volunteering saved her in the past – see her quiche recipe hereRoyalists and republicans alike can enjoy a cut-price coronation quiche as the food writer and campaigner Jack Monroe has revealed her own twist on the official recipe served up by Buckingham Palace chefs.Monroe, the Boot Strap Cook, famous for her low-budget and store cupboard dishes, has dived into the Big Help Out, which is encouraging people to sign up for volunteering opportunities over the coronation weekend, to inspire the next generation of food bank, surplus food and community kitchen volunteers. Continue reading...
Fit for a king? Free holidays and coffees if your name is Charles or Camilla
Brands jump on the coronation bandwagon to shower those who share a name with the royal couple with host of freebies and dealsWhat’s in a name? Well, if you’re called Charles or Camilla and you live in the UK, maybe a lot of tedious one-liners and questions about whether your parents were royalists.But with the official ascension of your namesakes to the role of king and queen comes some long overdue benefits, which may make up for the arched eyebrows when your present your ID. The boon is thanks to the opportunistic cynicism of marketing bigwigs who are trying everything in their power to cash in on next weekend’s festivities by doling out a string of freebies and deals to anyone who shares a name with the royal couple. Continue reading...
North Korea: Kim Jong-un sister says Joe Biden is ‘in his dotage’ as she criticises nuclear pact
Kim Yo-jong’s broadside came after US and South Korea enhance nuclear cooperation and Biden warns Pyongyang an attack would end the regimeThe powerful sister of North Korea’s leader has said her country will stage more displays of military might in response to a new US-South Korean nuclear deterrence agreement and compared Joe Biden’s comments about it as a “nonsensical remark from the person in his dotage”.Kim Yo-jong’s broadside came after Biden attended a summit with the South Korean president, Yoon Suk-yeol, on Wednesday. The US president said later that any North Korean nuclear attack on the US or its allies would “result in the end of whatever regime” took such action. Continue reading...
Sensitive files about Royal Navy submarine reportedly found in pub toilet
Navy investigating after report emerges that documents about the workings of HMS Anson were found in a Wetherspoons pub in CumbriaThe Royal Navy is set to investigate after official documents about one of its £1.3bn “hunter killer” submarines were reportedly found in the toilets of a Wetherspoons pub.Files carrying details about the HMS Anson were left in the Furness Railway in Cumbria, the Sun reported. The documents showed the inner workings of the nuclear-powered submarine and were used by submariners learning how to isolate and depressurise elements of its system. Continue reading...
Aboriginal legal services frozen or at risk of shutting in 17 communities across NSW and Queensland
Advocates call for federal government to provide urgent funding for culturally safe legal services to prevent worsening Indigenous incarceration crisis
As Liddell bites the dust, can NSW supply enough power for a looming El Niño summer peak?
As coal-fired plants continuing their demise, the largest source of new power every year for the past five has been rooftop solar
Unseen Gabriel García Márquez novel to be published next year
Colombian author’s En Agosto Now Vemos (We’ll See Each Other in August) had been just a rumour but now fans will get to read itRumours had long circulated that an entire literary masterpiece, never seen by the public, could still be lying in a dusty safe held by the late author’s family or under lock and key at his archive at the University of Texas.On Friday Penguin Random House confirmed that an unpublished Gabriel García Márquez novel – titled En Agosto Nos Vemos, (We’ll See Each Other in August) – not only exists, but will be on shelves across Latin America in 2024. Continue reading...
Anointing screen to be used in King Charles coronation revealed
Tree design includes names of Commonwealth nations, and poles are made from tree from Windsor estateThe king and the queen consort will be anointed behind a specially created screen of fine embroidery, held by poles hewn from an ancient windblown Windsor oak and mounted with eagles cast in bronze and gilded in gold leaf, Buckingham Palace has announced.The anointing screen has been blessed at a special service at the Chapel Royal at St James’s Palace, and will be used at what historically has been viewed as the most sacred moment of the coronation. Continue reading...
Prayer time, a lawsuit or the C-word? Tucker Carlson’s exit remains a mystery
Different reports fly around while Fox News declines to comment on the cancellation of top TV host’s showThe exact reason behind the rightwing TV host Tucker Carlson’s abrupt firing from Fox News remains unclear, days after the star’s show was suddenly cancelled.The New York Times and Wall Street Journal reported Carlson was fired after executives discovered vulgar text messages, including one in which he called a top executive the C-word. There were also concerns among Fox management that Carlson was acting as if he was above the network, the Journal reported. Continue reading...
Federal workers tell Trudeau to step in to pay and work-from-home dispute
Largest strike in decades enters 10th day with workers enjoying public support despite disruption to government servicesStriking federal workers in Canada are calling for the prime minister, Justin Trudeau, to get involved in stalled negotiations, as the largest job action in decades enters its 10th day and key government services grind to a halt.More than 100,000 employees with Canada’s largest public sector union have been on strike since last week in a battle over wages and the ability to work remotely. Continue reading...
Russia-Ukraine war live: death toll rises in Uman and Dnipro after intense Russian strikes – as it happened
More than 20 people confirmed dead in wake of Russian aerial bombing of Ukrainian cities on Friday morning
Britons in Sudan have until midday on Saturday to fly out, ministers say
Government announces end to airlifts amid calls for NHS doctors without UK passports to be rescuedBritish nationals trapped in Sudan have until midday on Saturday local time to get on a flight before they stop, ministers have announced, as a doctors’ union called for NHS medics without UK passports to also be airlifted.Oliver Dowden, the deputy prime minister, said on Friday night more than 1,500 people had been flown out, and there had been a “significant decline in British nationals coming forward”, meaning it was time to end the operation. Continue reading...
Sharp’s resignation as BBC chair is a problem and opportunity for Sunak
PM has been accused of defending his former boss, but affair offers chance to put his own stamp on the corporation
Sunak under pressure to stop choosing Tories for BBC jobs after Sharp row
Conservative party accused of undermining broadcaster by flooding it with cronies after chair’s resignationRishi Sunak is under pressure to stop appointing Conservatives to key positions at the BBC after Richard Sharp’s resignation prompted criticism the party had undermined the broadcaster by flooding it with cronies.Sharp quit as BBC chair on Friday morning after an investigation concluded he had failed to disclose key information about his relationship with the former prime minister Boris Johnson when applying for the job in 2021. Sharp helped facilitate an £800,000 loan guarantee for Johnson when he was in the running to take over the broadcaster but did not tell the appointments panel. Continue reading...
Baillie Gifford winner of winners James Shapiro: ‘I draw a very sharp line between fiction and nonfiction’
The 1599 author on the difference between historians and novelists, looking at Shakespeare differently and hitchhiking to the Edinburgh festival to immerse himself in the bard’s work• James Shapiro wins Baillie Gifford anniversary prize with ‘extraordinary’ Shakespeare biography 1599Serendipity dictated that the American writer and academic James Shapiro received the Baillie Gifford prize for nonfiction’s Winner of Winners award, given to celebrate its 25th year, at a ceremony in Edinburgh. In his teens and early 20s, Shapiro tells me as we talk over Zoom the morning after his victory, he would often hitchhike from London to the Edinburgh festival as part of his immersion in the plays of Shakespeare. This period in his life sowed the ground for his acclaimed book, 1599: A Year in the Life of William Shakespeare, first published in 2006. He was, he explains, recovering from the “awful experience” of studying the playwright in middle school; every summer for several years, he would save up enough money to come to the UK on a Freddie Laker plane, “where you could fly from New York to London for $100 round trip and sleep in church basements and for 50p see spectacular productions”.In London, Stratford and Edinburgh, he’d see 25 plays in as many days, “and they’re all tattooed inside my skull to this day. The greatest one I saw was Richard Eyre’s Hamlet at the Royal Court in 1980 or so. Richard wrote me a note this morning, and it was so moving to me because that’s where it came from, seeing productions like his.” Continue reading...
Appeal over ‘unduly lenient’ community sentence for man who raped girl, 13
Decision welcomed by victim after judge decided not to jail Sean Hogg from South Lanarkshire for the offenceA man who was given a 270-hour community payback sentence for raping a 13-year-old girl in a park is to have his sentence appealed on the grounds it was “unduly lenient”, Scotland’s lord advocate has decided.There was widespread outrage expressed by campaigners and politicians when Sean Hogg was not given a jail sentence when he appeared at the high court in Glasgow earlier this month. Continue reading...
Sudan street battles threaten fragile ceasefire as Turkish plane shot
Concerns truce agreement may not hold despite three-day extension as unrest continues
Calls for Boris Johnson’s role in Richard Sharp’s BBC appointment to be examined – UK politics live
Former commissioner for public appointments says ex-PM ‘was conflicted’ in the processHere’s Sharp’s full resignation statement:I would like to thank Adam Heppinstall and his team for the diligence and professionalism they have shown in compiling today’s report.Mr Heppinstall’s view is that while I did breach the governance code for public appointments, he states that a breach does not necessarily invalidate an appointment.The British people won’t stand for any more of this. Everything Conservative politicians touch turns into a mess. They are not fit to govern our great country.Boris Johnson should never have been allowed to appoint Richard Sharp in the first place and what’s worse is Rishi Sunak didn’t show leadership by sacking him. Continue reading...
Far-right extremist who set off ‘fireball’ in his kitchen convicted of terrorism offences
Vaughn Dolphin, from Walsall, West Midlands, had spoken of his desire for ethnic minorities to be shotA far-right extremist who accidentally set off a “fireball” in his own kitchen while experimenting with explosives has been convicted of terrorism offences.Vaughn Dolphin, who had spoken of his desire for ethnic minorities to be shot, was found guilty on a series of charges after a jury viewed videos and incriminating conversations on social media. Continue reading...
Mother who starved son, three, to death found not guilty due to insanity
Olabisi Abubakar was suffering from paranoid schizophrenia and mind was ‘thrown off balance’ during Covid lockdownA mother who starved her three-year-old son to death by causing him to join her in a religious fast when she was suffering from paranoid schizophrenia has been found not guilty of manslaughter and child cruelty by reason of insanity.Olabisi Abubakar’s mind was “thrown off balance” by the Covid lockdown and concerns about her immigration status and she began denying herself and her child, Taiwo, food, hoping fasting and prayers would save the world from coronavirus. Continue reading...
GMB union votes to accept pay offer for NHS staff in England
Vote by members could lead to split among unions over whether to continue striking for better dealA major health union has accepted the government’s improved pay offer for NHS staff, in a move that could split unions over whether to keep on striking for more money.GMB members working in the NHS in England have voted by 56% to 44% to accept the deal that all 12 health unions hammered out last month with the health secretary, Steve Barclay. Continue reading...
Conservatives will not devolve more powers to Scotland, Rishi Sunak says
PM tells Scottish Tory conference that Holyrood should instead be ‘held to account’ for not using existing powers enoughRishi Sunak has ruled out any further devolution of powers for Scotland after telling Conservative activists that Holyrood should be “held to account” more for underusing its existing powers.The prime minister claimed Holyrood already had significant powers, including over income tax rates, telling delegates at the Scottish Conservatives’ annual conference in Glasgow there was therefore no case for adding to them. Continue reading...
A three-year-old killed and her family ripped apart in Ukraine missile strikes
Young Veronika’s neighbours stunned at brutal arrival of Russia’s invasion in the suburb to where she fled to avoid the missiles
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