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Updated 2025-07-12 16:01
Nadine Dorries berates Rishi Sunak over £3,500 suit and Prada loafers
‘Puerile nature’ of Tory leadership race condemned as ex-chancellor criticised for expensive tastes
Evidence of Afghan witnesses against Ben Roberts-Smith ‘hardly neutral’, lawyer tells court
Lawyers for Ben Roberts-Smith urge court to disregard evidence of Afghan witnesses, saying the men were prejudiced against Australian soldiers
Almost half of British women do no vigorous exercise, survey finds
Nuffield Health data for past year suggests many lack motivation or got out of the habit during lockdownAlmost half of women in the UK have done no vigorous exercise in the past 12 months with most saying they lacked motivation, a survey has suggested.The percentages are lower for men, with just over a third saying they had not exercised in that period and half citing a lack of motivation, according to data from the healthcare charity Nuffield Health. Continue reading...
Aged care sector warns ADF assistance not enough to address ‘stark’ staff shortages
Unions and providers welcome one-month extension of workforce support but say tens of thousands of aged care workers unavailable
Woman with disability felt ‘blamed’ after reporting sexual assault to Queensland police, inquiry hears
Inquiry into QPS responses to domestic violence also hears police failed to assist in instances of elder abuse
James Cleverly ‘comfortable’ with Boris Johnson joining a Truss-led government
Education secretary says PM is ‘incredible’ politician but decision to put him in cabinet is not his to take
Key documents relating to John Barilaro’s appointment to a New York trade role to be released
The opposition had successfully moved to recall the upper house over the delayed release of documents
‘Voters don’t want a culture war’: Victorian Liberals raise concerns over preselections
Candidates include Evan Mulholland from the Institute of Public Affairs and Moira Deeming, who called for abortion laws to be repealed
Keating says Pelosi’s reported Taiwan trip could lead to ‘military hostilities’ – as it happened
Ryanair returns to spring profit but warns of autumn Covid risks
Airline’s chief says possibility of new coronavirus variant means it cannot forecast profit for rest of yearRyanair has made its first spring profits since before the coronavirus pandemic as passenger numbers surpassed pre-Covid-19 levels, but warned of the risk of possible new virus variants in the autumn.The Irish carrier made a profit before tax of €203m (£173m) between April and June, compared with a steep €325m loss in the equivalent period a year earlier. It said passenger numbers had risen to 45.5 million, 9% more than in 2019. Continue reading...
Bunnings and Kmart halt use of facial recognition technology in stores as privacy watchdog investigates
Office of the Australian Information Commissioner examining whether use of the technology is consistent with privacy laws
Diana Kennedy, influential guru of Mexican cuisine, dies at 99
Politicians and chefs pay tribute to the ‘Indiana Jones of food’, who helped preserve and popularise Mexican recipes in the English-speaking worldDiana Kennedy, the British-born food writer who dedicated her career to promoting the richness and diversity of Mexico’s culinary heritage and helped to popularise the national cuisine in the English-speaking world, has died aged 99.The Mexican culture ministry confirmed Kennedy’s death at her home in Michoacán and paid tribute to her legacy, saying that she, “like few others”, understood that conserving nature and its diversity was crucial to upholding the myriad culinary traditions of Mexico. Continue reading...
WA premier defends shackling of Indigenous teenagers transferred to adult prison
Mark McGowan says situation in Perth is ‘very sad … but we have to protect the staff – the staff can’t be under threat’
Ukraine claims it will recapture Kherson by September with aid of western weapons
Aide in southern region says a ‘turning point’ has been reached, heralding switch from defensive moves to long-awaited counterattackUkrainian military officials have claimed a “turning point” in the battle to retake the southern region of Kherson, saying they will use western weapons to liberate by September the first major city captured by Russian forces.Sergiy Khlan, an aide to the administrative head of the Kherson region, said in an interview with Ukrainian television on Sunday: “We can say that a turning point has occurred on the battlefield. We are switching from defensive to counteroffensive actions.” Continue reading...
Sydney airport ranked among world’s worst as delays persist: ‘Chaos doesn’t come close’
Fog and technical issues plague travellers as long queues jam domestic terminal
Disabled UK drivers told blue badges may not be accepted in EU due to Brexit
Ministers still negotiating with 11 countries, including France and Spain, over status of badgesDisabled drivers have been warned that their blue parking badges will not be recognised in some of the most popular EU destinations for British driving holidays, because of Brexit.UK travellers are also being told to check for the best phone packages to mitigate against roaming charges most mobile companies are reintroducing. Continue reading...
Bird flu outbreak on Farne Islands risks ‘unprecedented wildlife tragedy’
Thousands of bird carcasses collected from vital bird habitat as infection jumps from domestic flocks to wildlifeA bird flu outbreak on one of the UK’s most important habitats that could kill tens of thousands of seabirds has been described as an “unprecedented wildlife tragedy”.Rangers working on the Farne Islands, off the Northumberland coast, have donned protective suits and so far collected more than 3,000 dead birds for incineration. Continue reading...
Sprinklers to cool Victoria’s largest permanent flying fox colony over summer
Ranger says the $180,000 system will keep temperatures below 40C for grey-headed flying foxes
Labor pledges $4m for Aboriginal families affected by Youpla funeral fund collapse
The emergency relief package for families struggling to pay for burials includes a payout for expenses equal to the one they were promised by the disgraced insurer
John Curtin hotel’s survival hopes buoyed by Victorian heritage win
Melbourne pub with links to Bob Hawke recommended for heritage register in ‘vital step’ towards saving it from redevelopment
Parcels being checked for foot-and-mouth disease but Australian government says border should not shut
Coalition offers conflicting messages on if Indonesia border should be closed despite industry advice it would ‘do more harm than good’
Covid-19 Australia data tracker: coronavirus cases today, deaths, hospitalisations and vaccination
Guardian Australia brings together all the latest on daily new Covid-19 cases, as well as stats, charts and live state by state data from NSW, Victoria, Queensland, SA, WA, Tasmania, ACT and NT. We bring together the latest numbers on the vaccine rollout and fourth dose booster vaccination rates.
UK restaurant insolvencies jump by more than 60% in year, data shows
Closures rise to 1,406 as worker shortages and cost of living crisis put more pressure on hospitality sectorThe number of restaurants falling into insolvency has increased by more than 60% in the past year amid worker shortages and the cost of living crisis, which has forced customers to cut back on spending.New data from the accountancy firm UHY Hacker Young showed that 1,406 restaurants in the UK closed their doors in the 12 months to May, up 64% on the previous year. Continue reading...
Britain’s ‘great unretirement’: cost of living drives older people back to work
Uncertainty and fear said to be behind increase in over-50s working or looking for workSpiralling inflation, volatile financial markets and the soaring cost of living are leading to the “great unretirement”, with research suggesting retired people are returning to the workplace.There are now more people aged 50 and older in work or looking for work than since just before the pandemic, according to data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS). Continue reading...
Two in five airport workers thinking of quitting, says UK jobs site
Pay and stress levels among reasons for leaving, with only 5% blaming recent flights chaos in a pollMore than two in five airport workers are considering quitting, research suggests, which could escalate delays already seen at terminals due to low staffing numbers.A survey of 1,700 workers by the UK jobs site CV-Library found reasons for wanting to leave the industry included wanting better pay and less stress. Continue reading...
Supercar sales accelerate in the UK
Low-cost finance and a ‘you only live once’ attitude behind 19% rise in the likes of Ferraris, Lamborghinis and Maseratis, say market analystsWealthy people in the UK are splashing out on more luxury supercars than ever before, official figures show.More than 18,000 supercars – such as Ferrari, Bugatti, Aston Martin, Maserati and Koenigsegg models – were registered at UK addresses in 2021, a 19% increase on 2020. Continue reading...
Worst NHS staffing crisis in its history is putting patients at serious risk, MPs warn
Health and social care committee says workforce strategy must be top priority for new prime ministerThe NHS is facing “the greatest workforce crisis” in its history which is putting patients at serious risk of harm, an influential group of MPs warns today.In its report, the cross-party Commons health and social care select committee slams the “absence of a credible government strategy” on NHS-wide understaffing and criticises ministers for delaying a blueprint it says is urgently needed to address critical gaps in almost every area of care. Continue reading...
Bob Rafelson, Monkees co-creator and key Hollywood new wave director, dies aged 89
After working on the hit pop TV show, Rafelson went on to collaborate with Jack Nicholson on films including Head, Five Easy Pieces and The Postman Always Rings TwiceBob Rafelson, a co-creator of the Monkees who became an influential figure in the New Hollywood era of the 1970s, has died. He was 89. Rafelson died at his home in Aspen on Saturday night surrounded by his family, said his wife, Gabrielle Taurek Rafelson.Rafelson was responsible for co-creating the fictional pop music group and television series The Monkees alongside the late Bert Schneider, which won him an Emmy for outstanding comedy series in 1967. Continue reading...
Sunak to promise curbs on China as UK’s ‘biggest long-term threat’
Leadership contender says he will close 30 Mandarin teaching programmes to restrain Beijing’s soft powerChina is the biggest long-term threat to Britain, Rishi Sunak will say on Monday as he unveils plans to curb the country’s soft power by closing all of its 30 Confucius Institutes, which promote the teaching of Chinese language and culture, in the UK.He will take on Liz Truss, his rival in the Conservative leadership race, by effectively accusing the foreign secretary and western leaders of having “turned a blind eye to China’s nefarious activity and ambitions” and call for a new Nato-alliance to be set up to counter it. Continue reading...
Keir Starmer: Labour will fight next election on economic growth
Opposition leader to say ‘making the country and its people better off’ is main priority for partyThe Labour leader, Keir Starmer, will attempt to frame the next general election as a battle for the economy, declaring on Monday that a Labour government’s priorities would be “growth, growth and growth”.Echoing Tony Blair’s assertion in 1996 that his main priorities would be “education, education and education”, Starmer is expected to say in a major speech in Liverpool that there is “no task more central to my ambitions for Britain than making the country and its people better off. This is why I am clear Labour will fight the next election on economic growth.” Continue reading...
Seventeen dead after boat carrying Haitian migrants capsizes in Bahamas
Twenty five people rescued in dangerous route frequently used by migrants seeking to reach the USSeventeen people died after a boat carrying dozens of Haitian migrants capsized off the coast of the Bahamas, authorities said on Sunday, as more Haitians attempt to reach the US to flee gang violence and poverty at home.Rescue teams recovered the bodies of 17 people including an infant and 25 people were rescued, the Bahamian prime minister, Philip Davis, told reporters. Davis said authorities believe the people were on a speedboat heading for Miami. Continue reading...
Men without women: Florida attorney wins Hemingway Look-Alike crown
Jon Auvil of Dade City is alpha Papa after beating 124 rivals in annual contest held at bar the author frequentedSome came in fisherman’s sweaters. Others wore sportsmen’s attire. But it was the cream-colored sweater of the attorney Jon Auvil that caught the eye of judges who awarded him a coveted title on Saturday, for most resembling author and former Key West resident Ernest Hemingway.Auvil triumphed over 124 other contestants in the 41st annual Hemingway Look-Alike Contest at Sloppy Joe’s Bar, the Key West establishment where the author was a regular patron during his decade-long residence on the island in the 1930s. Continue reading...
Man, 28, dies after shooting in east London park
Police called to Cheney Row Park in Waltham Forest where more than 100 people had gatheredA 28-year-old man has died after a shooting at a gathering of up to 100 people in Waltham Forest, east London.Police were called to Cheney Row Park at about 12.35am on Sunday to reports of shots being fired. Shortly after the incident, two men admitted themselves to an east London hospital. Continue reading...
Pope in Canada to apologise for abuse of Indigenous children in church schools
‘This is a trip of penance,’ says Pope Francis, ahead of mass to be held during five-day tripPope Francis landed in Canada on Sunday to kick off a five-day trip that will centre around his apology on behalf of the Roman Catholic Church for the abuse that Indigenous children endured at mostly church-run residential schools.“This is a trip of penance. Let’s say that is its spirit,” the pope told reporters after his flight took off from Rome. Continue reading...
Gen Z for zero tolerance: why British youth are turning off booze
Alcohol consumption among 16- to 24-year-olds is falling. So what is behind this new temperance?It appears that young people are not drinking alcohol like they used to. And when I say “they”, I probably mean “we”. According to the alcohol education charity Drinkaware, after the surge of alcohol consumption during lockdown, there has been a general decline in drinking: older people are still most likely to drink, while those least likely to drink are aged 16 to 24, with 26% of that age group fully teetotal.This trend for British youth shunning alcohol has been bubbling away for some time, but more than a quarter of young people teetotal? While I in no way seek to glorify heavy drinking, or diminish the tragic effects of alcoholism, that is a lot of sober youth. Continue reading...
Ministers knew about UK passport helpline firm’s poor performance a year ago
French multinational was missing targets for calls and emails as far back as May 2021, documents showWarnings about the “unsatisfactory” performance of the private firm running the beleaguered Passport Office advice line were made to government ministers more than a year ago, it can be revealed.Teleperformance, a French-owned multinational, failed to meet targets for responding to calls and emails as early as May 2021, according to official documents seen by the Observer. Continue reading...
Home Office ‘mistakes and delays’ mean girl, 4, must stay trapped in Ukraine
Alika has a UK sponsor, and applied for visa in March, but is one of few children left in her Kharkiv neighbourhoodA four-year-old girl remains stranded in a block of flats on the Ukrainian frontline four months after attempts began to bring her to the UK, a delay campaigners have blamed on a series of government “blunders”.Efforts to rescue Alika Zubets from the city of Kharkiv began on 21 March when her UK sponsor applied for a visa under the Homes for Ukraine scheme and expected her to reach north Staffordshire by mid-April at the latest. Instead, she remains one of the few children left in her Kharkiv neighbourhood, with no schools or nurseries open and the constant threat of shelling from Russian forces nearby. Continue reading...
Chinese court rules against single woman who wanted to freeze eggs
Court said hospital did not violate unmarried woman Teresa Xu’s rights by refusing to freeze her eggsA Chinese court has overruled a rare legal challenge brought by an unmarried Beijing woman seeking the right to freeze her eggs.The Chaoyang intermediate people’s court in Beijing said in a judgment that the hospital did not violate the woman’s rights in denying her access to freeze her eggs. Continue reading...
US accuses Russia of deepening global food crisis – as it happened
We are now pausing our live coverage of the war in Ukraine. We will return in a few hours to bring you all the latest developments.Three people were killed as 13 Russian missiles hit a military airfield and railway infrastructure in Ukraine’s central Kirovohrad region on Saturday, the local governor said.Reuters reports that speaking on television, governor Andriy Raikovych said two security guards at an electricity substation had been killed. He also said that one Ukrainian soldier had been killed and nine more wounded.Russian forces are using artillery fire along the Ingulets River, a tributary of the Dnipro, the UK’s Ministry of Defence said.
Flooding in southern Iran kills at least 22 people
Vehicles carried away by rising waters after heavy rainfall in the largely arid countryFlooding in southern Iran has killed at least 22 people and left one person missing after heavy rainfall in the largely arid country, a local official has said.Videos posted on local and social media on Saturday showed vehicles being carried away by the rising waters of the Roodball river in the southern province of Fars. One video showed adults pulling a child from a car as it began to shift downstream. Continue reading...
Thatcher ministers turn on Liz Truss over tax cut plans
Chris Patten, Norman Lamont and Malcolm Rifkind warn former PM would never have approved borrowing to fund £30bn cutsTory grandees who served in Margaret Thatcher’s final cabinet have warned that the former prime minister would never have approved of Liz Truss’s plan to slash £30bn off taxes funded by borrowing, as Rishi Sunak denounced his opponent’s plans as “immoral”.With a bitter row over tax emerging as the defining issue in the race to succeed Boris Johnson, three members of Thatcher’s cabinet told the Observer that she would have taken a dim view of slashing taxes at a time of high inflation.This follows repeated claims that Truss has attempted to model herself on Thatcher in her attempt to win the leadership, which she has denied. Continue reading...
Olympic organisers for Paris 2024 ‘in a cold sweat’ as problems mount
Fears over financing, security and staffing threaten to take the shine off a showcase event and a national triumph for Emmanuel Macron’s presidencyTwo years almost to the day before the opening ceremony of the Paris Olympics, organisers are reportedly “in a cold sweat” over security, financial, venue and staffing concerns that could take the shine off Emmanuel Macron’s promised “national triumph”.The reformist French president, who holds a meeting with key ministers on Monday for a progress report, has personally invested in the success of the Games, having energetically backed the city’s successful bid to host them for the first time in a century as an opportunity to showcase the best of modern France. Continue reading...
Rishi Sunak says he is underdog in PM race as ‘forces that be’ want Truss
Former chancellor suggests Tory party powers hope leadership contest will be ‘a coronation’ for his rivalRishi Sunak has positioned himself as the underdog in the Conservative leadership race, claiming the “forces that be” want Liz Truss to be the next prime minister.Addressing a crowd in Grantham on Saturday, the Lincolnshire home town of Margaret Thatcher, Sunak declared “have no doubt, I am the underdog” and suggested that Conservative party powers want the race to be “a coronation” for Truss. Continue reading...
Chinese man executed for murder of former wife during live stream
Tang Lu was found guilty of killing social media star Lhamo by setting fire to her online in September 2020A Chinese man has been executed after a court found him guilty of setting his former wife on fire while she was livestreaming on social media.The Ngawa Tibetan and Qiang autonomous prefecture intermediate people’s court said in a short online statement on Saturday morning that it had carried out the execution of Tang Lu. Continue reading...
Bronze warrior Matthew Hudson-Smith outruns demons in 400m final
Peter Bol chases historic gold as first Australian to run in 800m worlds final
Javelin star Kelsey-Lee Barber joins Cathy Freeman in history with world title
‘Disgraceful’: report reveals Morrison government pressured border force to promote election day boat arrival
Labor says action by former government ‘sabotaged’ protocols for political gain and was ‘without precedent’ in Australian history
Three bodies recovered from school hit by Russian strike in eastern Ukraine – as it happened
We will be pausing our live coverage of the war in Ukraine and returning in a few hours to bring you all the latest developments. You can find a summary of where things stand here
VW boss Herbert Diess exits three years early after turbulent tenure
Porsche’s Oliver Blume will take over after difficulties managing electric transition during Diess’s four years in chargeVolkswagen’s CEO, Herbert Diess, is stepping down and will be succeeded by the current head of Porsche, Oliver Blume, Europe’s top carmaker has said, after a four-year tenure in which Diess pushed VW’s electric vehicle ambitions and clashed with its work council and board.Sources with knowledge of the matter said the Porsche and Piëch families, who own over half the voting rights and a 31.4% equity stake in Volkswagen, pressed for a change at the helm. Continue reading...
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