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Updated 2025-07-12 16:01
Australian restaurants on a knife edge as inflation bites and food costs soar
Hospitality businesses adapt menus and cut staff hours amid cost-of-living pressures
Man who killed his wife in ‘act of love’ calls for assisted dying law
Graham Mansfield, sentenced this week for killing terminally ill Dyanne, says if he had to do the ‘horrible act’ again, he wouldA man who cut his terminally ill wife’s throat in an “act of love” said he would do the same again to give her peace, as he called for a change in the law to allow assisted dying.Graham Mansfield, 73, was cleared of murder by a jury this week. They found the retired baggage handler guilty of the lesser charge of manslaughter after hearing how he and his wife, Dyanne, 71, agreed to die together after the pain of her terminal cancer became too much to bear. Continue reading...
Kenyan police officers found guilty of murder of three including human rights lawyer
Four found guilty by a Nairobi court six years after murders of Willie Kimani, Josephat Mwenda and Joseph Muiruri prompted protests in KenyaThree police officers in Kenya have been found guilty of murdering three men, including human rights lawyer Willie Kimani, six years after their bodies were found in a river.Justice Jessie Lessit found police officers Fredrick Leliman, Stephen Cheburet and Sylvia Wanjiku as well as police informer Peter Ngugi guilty of murdering Kimani, his client Josephat Mwenda and taxi driver Joseph Muiruri on 23 June 2016. Continue reading...
‘Park in sky’ to open in former Grade II-listed Manchester viaduct
National Trust garden at Castlefield Viaduct is inspired by New York public park and features 3,000 plant speciesA “park in the sky” at a former viaduct in Manchester is to open at the end of the month, the National Trust has announced.Situated along the Grade II-listed Castlefield Viaduct, the 330-metre temporary park is inspired by New York’s High Line public park, and features 3,000 plant species in gardens created by architects and community groups. Continue reading...
Genocide case against Myanmar over Rohingya atrocities cleared to proceed
UN’s international court of justice rejects arguments advanced by military junta over crackdowns against Muslim minority groupThe United Nations’ highest court has rejected Myanmar’s attempts to halt a case accusing it of genocide against the country’s Rohingya minority, paving the way for evidence of atrocities to be heard.The international court of justice rejected all preliminary objections raised by Myanmar, which is now ruled by a military junta, at a hearing on Friday. Continue reading...
Drunk driver jailed for killing man, 75, in Nottingham ‘catalogue of carnage’
James Gill, 39, fractured Neil Robinson’s skull and threatened to set fire to another motorist’s car in five-hour road rage rampageA drunk driver who killed a 75-year-old man by pushing him over in an act of road rage has been jailed for 10 years and nine months.James Gill, 39, fractured Neil Robinson’s skull in an unprovoked and random attack after accusing him of “walking on the wrong side of the road” on 16 December last year. He also threatened to set fire to another motorist’s car in what the judge described as a five-hour “catalogue of carnage”. Continue reading...
German tourists told to take colourful luggage to avoid airport delays
Advice to holidaymakers to ditch black bags to make it easier to find them met with mockery in mediaGerman holidaymakers are being advised to ditch black suitcases and kit themselves out with more colourful and eye-catching luggage instead to make locating them easier at airports suffering from baggage handling chaos.Stefan Schulte, the head of Frankfurt airport, has said the predominance of black suitcases used by passengers has contributed to the difficulties faced by airlines and baggage handlers in recent weeks, because he said it was “hard to distinguish them from each another”. Continue reading...
Russian airstrike on rebel-held region in Syria kills seven people
Four siblings under 10 among those to die in assault on Jisr al-Shughur in Idlib, with others still trapped under rubbleA Russian airstrike killed seven people, four of them children, in Syria’s rebel-held Idlib region, a war monitor has said.The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the deaths “including four children who are siblings, two men and an unidentified person … as a result of Russian airstrikes”, in the Jisr al-Shughur countryside of northern Syria. Continue reading...
Euthanasia and assisted suicide: what is the law in the UK ?
As Graham Mansfield is found not guilty of murder for killing his terminally ill wife, Dyanne, we look at key assisted-dying debatesGraham Mansfield was found not guilty of murder after cutting his wife’s throat “in an act of love” before trying to kill himself, after a judge accepted the couple had made a suicide pact.It took just 90 minutes for a jury to clear Mansfield, 73, from Hale in Greater Manchester, of the charge after he gave an emotional testimony of how he had killed his wife, Dyanne, because she was in such pain with terminal cancer.An assisted-dying law would imply it was something everyone elderly, seriously ill or disabled “ought” to consider.No safeguard could ensure decisions are truly voluntary.Society should instead ensure palliative care is available to all.A doctor’s role is not to deliberately bring about a patient’s death.Palliative care can’t relieve all pain and distress.Physician-assisted dying is legal for more than 150 million people around the world, with eligibility criteria, safeguards and regulation in place.End-of-life practices are legal in the UK. The same safeguards could be used in assisted-dying legislation.The current law is not working, with UK citizens travelling to facilities such as Dignitas in Switzerland. But they need to be well enough to travel, meaning they often end their lives sooner than they would have wished. Continue reading...
Russian forces dig in as bloody Ukrainian counterattack anticipated in south
Strikes indicate ‘huge battle’ may be on way that will be a key test of Kyiv troops’ ability to push Russia back
King Kong statue returns to Birmingham for Commonwealth Games
Statue is recreation of pop art installation by Nicholas Munro displayed in city centre in 1970sWhen the British pop artist Nicholas Monro was asked to make a public sculpture for Birmingham in the 1970s, he raised a few eyebrows when he produced an 18ft fibreglass statue of King Kong.“It was really just a finger up to the system. They wanted something typical and boring, so he gave them a massive gorilla,” said Monro’s son Claude. “I think there was a certain amount of ‘Is this art? What is this?’” added Joe, Claude’s elder brother. Continue reading...
‘Every part is useful’: the man who wants Afghanistan to swap opium for hemp
Oil from the versatile plant makes cannabis medicine CBD and its fibre has a range of uses but the Taliban need convincingThe smell seemed unmistakable, the dried buds looked familiar and the Taliban checkpoint guards, who had never heard of CBD, a non-psychoactive cannabis compound, were disgusted by the pungent cargo of Amin Karim’s truck.“They said to me: ‘Aren’t you ashamed of yourself, Haji?’” using an honorific for an older man, as they poked through the piles of hemp headed for Kabul last October. Continue reading...
Saudi citizen arrested after non-Muslim journalist sneaks into Mecca
Gil Tamary of Israel’s Channel 13 sparked online fury after he filmed himself in Islam’s holiest city despite a ban on non-MuslimsA Saudi citizen who allegedly helped a non-Muslim enter the holy city of Mecca has been arrested, police in the kingdom said, after an online backlash against a journalist working for Israeli television.The journalist, Gil Tamary of Israel’s Channel 13, posted on Twitter a video of himself sneaking into Mecca, Islam’s holiest city, in defiance of a ban on non-Muslims. Continue reading...
Green Man festival owners accused of endangering protected habitats
Welsh government under pressure over £4.25m purchase of land for Green Man to use as base for expansionGreen Man festival, which rises up each August from the parkland and rolling countryside of the Usk Valley in mid-Wales, is facing accusations that its plans for a sustainable future will threaten some of the most vulnerable and protected wildlife and habitats in the country.The Welsh government is under pressure over its decision to spend £4.25m of public money to buy a farm in Talybont-on-Usk for the Green Man owners to use as a base for its expansion. Continue reading...
Kennedy Center Honors 2022: George Clooney, U2 and Gladys Knight among honourees
Christian pop singer Amy Grant and Cuban-American composer Tania León also recognised for prestigious yearly awardThe recipients of one of the United States’ most prestigious cultural awards, the Kennedy Center Honors, have been announced for 2022.George Clooney, U2, Gladys Knight, Tania León and Amy Grant are being given the yearly awards, which were founded in 1978 and last year recognised Joni Mitchell and Berry Gordy among others. Continue reading...
Rishi Sunak vows to press ahead with Channel 4 privatisation
Tory leadership candidate’s backing for privatisation clears way for sale of broadcaster next year
Prince Harry’s case against Home Office can proceed, high court judge rules
Judge grants permission for part of claim over duke’s security arrangements to have judicial reviewThe Duke of Sussex has won a bid to bring part of his high court claim against the Home Office over his security arrangements while in the UK.Harry is bringing legal action over a decision not to allow him to pay for police protection for himself and his family when they are in the UK. Continue reading...
Plan for Shinzo Abe state funeral faces growing opposition
Cabinet has approved event for 27 September but critics question cost and possible political exploitationOpposition is mounting to plans to hold a state funeral for the former Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe, who was shot dead earlier this month.The cabinet on Friday approved arrangements for the funeral – only the second of its kind for a former Japanese leader in the postwar period – on 27 September. Continue reading...
Tata ‘needs £1.5bn in subsidies’ to keep Port Talbot steelworks open
South Wales plant’s owner reportedly wants government to help it move to greener production methodsThe owner of the UK’s largest steelworks has reportedly said it needs the government to agree to provide £1.5bn in subsidies in the next year to help it transition to greener production methods or it will have to look at site closures.India’s Tata group owns the vast Port Talbot steelworks in south Wales, which employs about 3,500 people and is one of only two in Britain capable of turning iron ore and coal into molten iron and steel. Overall, the group’s subsidiary Tata Steel UK (TSUK), which earlier this week reported its first annual profit since 2009, employs about 8,000 staff in the UK. Continue reading...
Japan urges ‘highest level of vigilance’ as Omicron subvariant drives record Covid surge
People in Okinawa asked to avoid non-essential outings amid new wave of infections driven by highly transmissible BA.5Japan’s government has urged people to exercise the “highest level of vigilance” after the country reported a record number of new Covid-19 cases in a new wave of infections driven by the highly transmissible BA.5 subvariant.More than 186,000 cases were recorded nationwide on Thursday, while Tokyo easily beat its existing daily record with 31,878 cases. The capital, along with Osaka and Fukuoka, were among 30 of the country’s 47 prefectures to report record highs this week. Continue reading...
‘Growing pains’: researchers question if diagnosis is at all useful
Co-author of new analysis finds no clear consensus on definition, says term is a catch-all for ‘we don’t really know what’s wrong’
Foot-and-mouth disease: ‘biosecurity response zones’ could be set up at airports in Australian first
Agriculture minister says powers to require travellers to comply with biosecurity rules could be used as early as Friday
Sri Lanka security forces raid protest camp as Ranil Wickremesinghe flexes muscles
Arrests as hundreds of demonstrators evicted from camp blocking presidential office, hours before they were due to vacate areaSri Lankan security forces have carried out a violent early morning raid on the main anti-government protest camp in Colombo, beating protesters, destroying tents and arresting nine people.Friday’s raid saw thousands of police and troops armed with riot gear descend on the camp, known as Gota Go Gama, where hundreds of people have been living for over three months. More than 50 people were injured and three people were sent to hospital in the attack, according to St John Ambulance volunteers at the scene. Continue reading...
Japan sees increasing threat to Taiwan amid Russia’s invasion of Ukraine
Defence ministry also sounds alarm at prospect of Beijing-Moscow ties deepening amid expectations Tokyo will boost defence spendingJapan’s defence ministry has said it is alarmed at fresh threats from Russia and has growing worries about Taiwan, in an annual report that comes as Tokyo considers significantly increasing military spending.The document includes a chapter on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which it says risks sending the message “that an attempt to unilaterally change the status quo by force is acceptable”. Continue reading...
Splendour in the Grass chaos: first day of music festival cancelled amid wild weather
Performances at four main stages have been called off, as attendees of the Byron Bay festival report long queues, flooded campsites and people sleeping in cars due to the downpour
Dominic Perrottet says he’ll face questions on John Barilaro’s appointment to NY trade job next month
NSW premier says he told upper house inquiry he was waiting for information from a seperate independent review
Pope Francis to visit Canada in ‘pilgrimage of penance’ over church-run schools
Pope will meet Indigenous leaders and residential school survivors, thousands of whom were taken from familiesPope Francis will spend the next week on a “pilgrimage of penance” in Canada, meeting with Indigenous leaders and residential school survivors as he looks to atone for the church’s grim legacy in the country.For the first papal visit to Canada in two decades, the pontiff plans to visit First Nations, Métis and Inuit communities as he travels from Alberta to Quebec, ending his visit in the Arctic territory of Nunavut. Continue reading...
Swimmer Isaac Cooper breaks silence after being sent home from Commonwealth Games camp
Elvis actor Shonka Dukureh dies one month after big screen debut
The 44-year-old singer, who portrayed Big Mama Thornton in Baz Luhrmann’s latest film, was found unresponsive in her Nashville homeThe actor Shonka Dukureh, who recently made her big screen debut as Big Mama Thornton in Baz Luhrmann’s new film Elvis, had died at the age of 44.Dukureh was found dead on Thursday in a bedroom at her home in Nashville, which she shared with her two young children, the Metro Nashville Police Department said. Continue reading...
Pence Secret Service detail feared for their lives during Capitol riot
January 6 committee plays White House national security official saying agents made ‘calls to say goodbye to family members’In chilling new testimony about the January 6 attack on the US Capitol, the investigating House committee showed that members of the Secret Service detail for the vice-president, Mike Pence, so feared for his and their safety that they “screamed” that other officials should say goodbye to their families.A White House national security official whose identity and voice was obscured described the calls in testimony played by the January 6 committee in a public hearing on Thursday night. Continue reading...
Hadley’s art prize 2022: Tuppy Ngintja Goodwin wins Australia’s richest landscape prize
The senior Pitjantjatjara artist is the first woman to win the $100,000 award since its inception in 2017
Almost half of young women in Australia report mental health disorder, study finds
Deputy chief medical officer for mental health says level of distress in young people, happening worldwide, predates Covid
Russia ‘about to run out of steam’, head of UK intelligence says – as it happened
This live blog is now closed, you can find our latest coverage of the Russia-Ukraine war here
‘Not bad’: Tahlia McGrath’s average hits 247 after latest Australia T20 win
Nasa images show extreme withering of Lake Mead over 22 years
The pictures from 2000, 2021 and 2022 offer a new view into its dramatically low water levels, now at just 27% capacityStark images of the “bathtub ring” around Lake Mead have come to symbolize the devastating effects of drought at America’s largest reservoir. Now, newly released satellite pictures from Nasa offer a new view of how dramatically water levels have declined over the past 22 years.The images, which cover the years 2000, 2021 and 2022, show once-full tributaries transformed into dry crevasses. The lake, which supplies water to roughly 25 million people across the American west, is currently at its lowest levels since it was filled in 1937. As of July 18, it stands at just 27% of its capacity. Continue reading...
Unvaccinated young adult becomes first US polio case in nearly a decade
The New York patient appeared to have a vaccine-derived strain of the virus, although they hadn’t traveled outside the countryAn unvaccinated young adult from New York recently contracted polio, the first US case in nearly a decade, health officials said Thursday.Officials said the patient, who lives in Rockland county, had developed paralysis. The person developed symptoms a month ago and did not recently travel outside the country, county health officials said. Continue reading...
Top barrister accuses Labour of ‘spin’ over NDAs gagging ex-staff
Mark Stephens says party’s denials over sexual harassment claims undermine credibility of female former employeesOne of the UK’s most high-profile freedom of expression lawyers has accused Labour of “spin and dissembling” for denying it attempted to stop two female ex-staffers from speaking about sexual harassment.In a highly unusual intervention, Mark Stephens, who represented Georgie Robertson and Laura Murray, said there were “high public interests at play” and said the party was “undermining their credibility” by issuing statements denying it had tried to offer them non-disclosure agreements. Continue reading...
Rishi Sunak steps up attack on Truss tax cuts as poll puts his rival well ahead
Former chancellor says opponent’s economic policies risk stoking inflation and pushing up interest ratesRishi Sunak has launched his strongest attack yet on his rival Liz Truss’s economic policies, claiming her £30bn plans for unfunded tax cuts risk stoking inflation and pushing up interest rates.His attack came as a new poll of Tory party members gave Truss a commanding lead in the race to become prime minister. Continue reading...
Sheila Seleoane: hard to grasp how body was not found for years, says coroner
Medical secretary’s body lay in her London flat for more than two years despite neighbours raising the alarmIt is “difficult to comprehend” that a model tenant could have died and lain undisturbed in her flat for more than two and half years despite not paying her rent and neighbours raising the alarm, an inquest into the death of Sheila Seleoane has heard.The coroner Julian Morris said it was “clear something went wrong” when Seleoane’s repeated failure to engage with her landlord, gas engineers or the police failed to flag up concerns or trigger any suspicions. Continue reading...
Grenfell fire inquiry ends with shocking reminder of the human cost
The final evidence sessions have heard unflinching accounts of how victims died, panicking and desperate in horrific conditionsThe public inquiry into the Grenfell Tower disaster is ending as it began: with a shocking reminder of the human cost. It opened in May 2018 with elegies to the 72 victims. Its final evidence sessions have been unflinching accounts of the violence of their final moments.The hearings sought to satisfy the fact-finding requirements of the coroner but swung the spotlight of an often highly technical inquiry back to the sheer barbarity wrought upon a community that still awaits justice. Continue reading...
MPs claim Foreign Office ‘inaction’ on sanctioning Iranians for hostage-taking
Officials involved in arrest and intimidation of Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe named in Commons
Ukraine calls for international tribunal to bring Putin to justice more quickly
Trying top Russians for act of aggression could bring indictments ‘within three months’, says official
Serious Fraud Office chief found to have made errors over major corruption trial
Independent review criticises Lisa Osofsky personally after two businessmen’s convictions were overturnedBritain’s most senior anti-bribery prosecutor has been personally criticised in an independent review that examined flaws in a major corruption trial.Lisa Osofsky, the director of the Serious Fraud Office (SFO), was judged to have made a “number of mistakes and misjudgments” in her handling of a prosecution which has ultimately resulted in the convictions of two businessmen being overturned. Continue reading...
Irish people adopted abroad as children to get full access to their records
Campaign launched to reach those sent overseas during years of hostility towards unmarried mothersIrish people who were sent to Britain, the US and elsewhere for adoption when they were children as a result of decades-long Catholic hostility towards unmarried mothers will be entitled to unrestricted access to their birth certificates and other official records in Ireland for the first time thanks to a new law.The Adoption Authority of Ireland, which has been charged with managing the scheme, has launched a campaign to reach adults who were adopted, formally or informally, overseas. It believes about 100,000 people will be affected by the new Birth Information and Tracing Act. The new law relates to all those born to parents within Ireland and adopted at home or abroad since the foundation of the state 100 years ago. Continue reading...
Half of Russian spies in Europe expelled since Ukraine invasion, says MI6 chief
Richard Moore says 400 intelligence officers operating under diplomatic cover have been expelled
Ten UK sex offenders travelled to Poland after Ukraine invasion, says NCA
Ten said they were providing aid, did not inform police of their intent to travel and were asked to leaveTen British sex offenders travelled to Poland after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, under the guise of humanitarian aid, according to British police.In the six weeks after the outbreak of war, the individuals, all of whom had convictions for sex offences, travelled to Poland. The offenders were supposed to inform British police of their intent to travel, a spokesperson for the National Crime Agency said, and declare any convictions upon arrival. Continue reading...
National Crime Agency calls for more funding to tackle Russian kleptocracy
UK’s organised crime-fighting force complains it only has a third of the money per officer received by the FBIThe UK’s serious and organised crime-fighting force has complained it is struggling to tackle Russian kleptocracy and sanctions evasion because it is given only a third of the funding per officer handed to the FBI.The National Crime Agency (NCA) said the UK had been slower to seize sanctioned Russian oligarchs’ assets than the US because it could not rely on the same “substantial level of investment” that Washington has poured into tackling international corruption and sanctions busting. Continue reading...
Jobseeker asked to choose between work and job agency appointments under Workforce Australia system
Multiple complaints of baffling and unrealistic requirements have been reported as being set by employment agencies under the new program
Rushed consultation for NSW coercive control laws could result in flawed legislation, experts say
Domestic violence advocates warn drafted laws could be discriminatory if pushed through by government
Medicare reforms are essential for creating fairer national abortion system, say advocates
Health experts are calling for Medicare item numbers for abortions and pregnancy counselling ahead of women’s safety ministers’ meeting
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