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Updated 2025-11-10 04:01
Supreme court urged to authorise fresh Scottish independence referendum
UK’s highest court asked to allow Scottish parliament to resolve ‘festering issue’ without Westminster approvalThe UK’s highest court has been asked to throw out a request to settle the “festering” issue of whether Holyrood can hold a referendum on Scottish independence without Westminster’s approval.The supreme court was told that the attempt by Scottish ministers to win the court’s approval for a referendum bill was “premature” and “theoretical” by Sir James Eadie KC, a senior lawyer acting for the UK government. Continue reading...
Lviv braces for cold times as Putin seeks to weaponise winter
Mayor of western Ukrainian city urges local people to gather heaters and fire wood after Russia destroys two of its power plantsThere was scant attempt to sugarcoat the assessment. With the trams stilled, lights going down across the city and the mobile network intermittent, arguably there was little point in doing otherwise.“We have to brace ourselves for hard times,” said Andriy Sadovyi, the mayor of Lviv, as he addressed local and international journalists in a building off the western Ukrainian city’s cobbled Rynov Square. Continue reading...
King Charles III’s coronation to take place on 6 May 2023
Service will retain elements of past ceremonies but takes place on a weekend and will ‘reflect monarch’s role today’The coronation of King Charles III will take place on Saturday 6 May 2023 at Westminster Abbey, with the ceremony reflecting the modern-day role of the monarchy, it has been announced.The King and Queen Consort will be crowned in a service that will retain some historical elements of past coronations but also recognise the spirit of the times. Continue reading...
Mother walked in on nurse Lucy Letby trying to kill baby, court told
Defendant accused of murdering seven babies allegedly said ‘trust me, I’m a nurse’ when interruptedA mother of twins walked in on a nurse attempting to murder one of her baby boys who then told her: “Trust me, I’m a nurse,” a court has heard.Lucy Letby, 32, was trying to kill the five-day-old boy when his mother arrived on the neonatal ward with his milk, jurors were told. Continue reading...
Family of man who died in Israeli detention rejects claim about deal
Relatives of Palestinian Omar Abdalmajeed As’ad, 78, say no settlement has been reached with Israeli defence ministryThe family of an elderly Palestinian-American man who died after being forcibly detained by Israeli soldiers has disputed a claim from Israel’s defence ministry that the parties have reached a compensation settlement.In a rare case of compensation for a Palestinian claim of wrongdoing by Israeli forces, on Sunday the defence ministry said in a statement that it had reached a settlement with the family of 78-year-old Omar Abdalmajeed As’ad. Continue reading...
Madeleine McCann suspect charged with sexual offences by German prosecutors
Officials say new charges relate to offences allegedly committed in Portugal between 28 December 2000 and 11 June 2017German prosecutors said they have charged a 45-year-old German man, who is a suspect in the Madeleine McCann case, with several sexual offences he allegedly committed in Portugal between 28 December 2000 and 11 June 2017.Police in Germany had announced in 2020 they were investigating Christian Brückner in connection with the disappearance of Madeleine, who went missing from her family’s Portuguese holiday flat in May 2007. Continue reading...
Refugee wrongly labelled child murderer says decades of his life wasted
Mayooran Thangaratnam fled Sri Lanka for the UK in 2003 after brutal murder of his father but was refused asylum due to errorA refugee wrongly recorded as being a child murderer by the Home Office says almost two decades of his life have been wasted due to the error.Mayooran Thangaratnam, a 41-year-old Tamil from Sri Lanka, fled to the UK in 2003 at the age of 23 and claimed asylum. He provided evidence to the Home Office from media reports that his father, a journalist who passed information to the UN about the Sri Lankan government’s persecution of Tamils, was murdered by Sri Lankan forces and that his life was also in danger. Continue reading...
British police spy unlawfully operated in Germany, court finds
Undercover officer Mark Kennedy’s German deployment to infiltrate activist groups ‘objectively illegal’, says judgeA German court has decided that a British undercover police officer who spied on environmental campaigners operated unlawfully during his deployment in that country.The ruling concludes a long-running legal case that was initiated by one of the campaigners who was spied on by Mark Kennedy, the undercover officer. Continue reading...
The Scottish referendum supreme court case – what you need to know
The court has been asked whether the Scottish parliament needs Westminster consent for a vote on independenceScotland’s chief law officer, the lord advocate, Dorothy Bain, has referred to the court the question of whether the Scottish parliament requires Westminster’s consent to hold another referendum, at the request of the first minister, Nicola Sturgeon. Continue reading...
Post Office accused of withholding documents from IT scandal inquiry
Lawyers for unfairly convicted operators accuse company of ‘malevolent’ tactics in row over 30,000 documentsThe Post Office has been accused of withholding thousands of documents from the inquiry into an IT scandal that led to more 700 unsafe convictions.The Post Office IT inquiry resumed on Tuesday with a strongly worded row over the failure to disclosure more than 30,000 documents. Lawyers for the unfairly convicted operators accused the Post Office of continuing to deploy “malevolent” tactics to frustrate justice. Continue reading...
Iranian security forces intensify crackdown in Kurdistan
Reports of indiscriminate violence come as UK ambassador summoned by Tehran over sanctionsRights groups have sounded the alarm over an intensifying crackdown by Iranian security forces against protesters in the western province of Kurdistan, as Tehran summoned the British ambassador in response to UK sanctions against the morality police.Security forces in the provincial capital, Sanandaj, have used firearms and fired teargas “indiscriminately”, including into people’s homes, Amnesty International reported. Continue reading...
Ministers may face legal action over documents on Queen’s hidden wealth
BEIS has until end of October to respond to request from information commissioner or risk being taken to courtMinisters could face contempt of court proceedings unless they respond to a request for documents that could reveal how the late Queen concealed part of her private wealth from the public.Britain’s transparency watchdog, the information commissioner, has threatened legal action against the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS), which has stonewalled the request for two years. Continue reading...
UK petrol prices rise after Opec decides to cut oil production
Fuel price increase is blow to drivers amid soaring domestic energy costs and other inflationPetrol prices are climbing again for the first time in three months, after the controversial decision by the Opec oil cartel and its allies to cut oil production, putting more pressure on drivers during the cost of living crisis.Forecourt prices for petrol and diesel in the UK had been falling since early July and throughout the summer, according to motoring organisation the AA, but the trend reversed after the Opec meeting in early October. Continue reading...
Israel and Lebanon reach ‘historic’ maritime border deal
Israeli PM hails agreement that would mark significant compromise and may open way for energy explorationIsrael and Lebanon have reportedly agreed a deal in a dispute over gas fields and the two countries’ maritime border, a groundbreaking diplomatic achievement that could boost natural gas production in the Mediterranean before the European winter begins.Yair Lapid, Israel’s prime minister, said on Tuesday that months of US-brokered negotiations had resulted in a “historic agreement” between the two nations, which have technically been at war since Israel’s creation in 1948. The deal would “strengthen Israel’s security, inject billions into Israel’s economy, and ensure the stability of our northern border”, he added. Continue reading...
Keir Starmer axes chief of staff to put Labour on ‘election footing’
Restructuring includes departure of Sam White, as party leader seeks to capitalise on slump in Tory support
Almost 200,000 robodebt cases to be wiped as Albanese government condemns ‘shameful’ scheme
Amanda Rishworth cites need for a welfare system that is ‘not punitive’ as she confirms reviews will be scrapped
Prominent fascist’s remains to be removed from Spain’s Valley of the Fallen
Family of José Antonio Primo de Rivera act before new legislation designed to honour civil war and dictatorship victims takes effectThe family of José Antonio Primo de Rivera, the founder of Spain’s fascist Falange party, will exhume his remains from the Valley of the Fallen outside Madrid before they are removed under new legislation designed to honour the victims of the civil war and the Franco dictatorship.Primo de Rivera, who was executed in prison in November 1936, was eventually laid to rest in the valley’s basilica in 1959. The remains of the basilica’s most infamous occupant, Gen Francisco Franco, were removed almost three years ago to end what Spain’s prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, called “the moral insult that the public glorification of a dictator constitutes”. Continue reading...
Couple encounter famous LA mountain lion P-22: ‘True natural beauty’
Mountain lion sauntered up to Damon Ross and Cylin Busby’s driveway and had a lie in front of their home over the weekendNo matter how famous the mountain lion known as P-22 is in the Los Angeles area that is home to him, few people have gotten to see the big cat from a yard away.But Los Feliz couple Damon Ross and Cylin Busby can now make that claim after the mountain lion sauntered up to their driveway and had a lie in front of their home over the weekend. Continue reading...
Cerith Wyn Evans brings his neon-lit art home to Wales
Hepworth prize winner’s works have been shown around the world and now arrive in LlandudnoHis twisty neon installations and glittering towers of light are frequently shown in some of the world’s most exclusive galleries in New York, Mexico City, Tokyo and Shanghai.For his first major solo show in his home country of Wales, Cerith Wyn Evans’ work is on display in the traditional surroundings of a gallery built in Edwardian times in the resort of Llandudno, best known for its old-fashioned pier and seafront – and the bold goats that descended on the town during the first lockdown.The exhibition runs until 5 February 2023. Continue reading...
One in three Britons will cut holiday spending as living costs rise
Travel industry research finds strong demand after pandemic but fears over inflation and weak poundOne in three holidaymakers will cut back on spending next year due to the cost of living crisis, according to travel industry research.The travel association Abta said a strong recovery in demand for travel this year was expected to continue next year, but its own surveys suggested people would opt for cheaper trips and cut back on spending money. Continue reading...
Indonesian football fans set aside fierce rivalries after stadium disaster
After 131 lives were lost at a match, supporters have come together to offer support and seek answersIn Indonesia, football fan culture is vibrant, and its rivalries intense. Animosity between opposing teams is so strong that away fans are generally banned from attending games, as was the case at the time of the Kanjuruhan stadium disaster, when only home Arema supporters were allowed tickets.Rivalries have descended into violence in the past. Before the Kanjuruhan disaster, 78 people had died in football-related accidents over the last 28 years, according to government figures. It is common for away players to be escorted to and from matches by armoured vehicles. Continue reading...
‘Overlapping shocks’ are undoing efforts to end hunger in Africa, UN warns
Urgent aid response needed as climate crisis, Covid, local conflicts and soaring fuel prices push millions more into hungerDecades of work to reduce hunger in Africa are being reversed as the continent struggles to cope with conflict, climate crisis and the global economic downturn, the UN’s Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) has warned.About 278 million people in Africa – approximately one-fifth of the total population – went hungry in 2021, an increase of 50 million people since 2019, according to UN figures. Based on current trends, this is projected to rise to 310 million by 2030. Continue reading...
Carrie Bickmore announces on air she is leaving The Project after 13 years
Founding co-host outlasted Charlie Pickering and Dave Hughes to be longest-serving panellist on nightly current affairs show
‘Crestfallen’ Sam Tarry calls for vote audit after deselection as MP
Shadow minister and Ilford South MP demands Labour release names of those who cast electronic votes in constituencyThe former shadow minister, Sam Tarry, who was deselected as Ilford South’s MP on Monday night, has demanded the party release the names of those who cast electronic votes in his constituency.Tarry lost his re-selection battle by a significant margin to the Redbridge council leader Jas Athwal, who was the favourite to win selection in 2019. Athwal was suspended from the process at the last election because of a complaint that was subsequently dismissed – and Tarry’s selection has been the focus of bitter resentment in the constituency and among many MPs who supported Athwal. Continue reading...
Nurses will not get higher pay offer, says UK health secretary, as strikes loom
Health secretary said there is limited scope for negotiation on 3% offer and she is ‘not anticipating further changes’Thérèse Coffey has said nurses will not get a higher pay offer, as they vote on strike action for the first time in decades.The Royal College of Nursing will ballot nurses this week, asking for a higher pay award as well as action to tackle pressures caused by surging vacancies. Continue reading...
Britons buy more ‘wonky’ veg and frozen food as living costs soar
Supermarket price inflation at record high, adding £643 a year to average family’s grocery billHouseholds are turning to “wonky” vegetables and frozen food in an attempt to keep costs down as grocery prices soared by a record 13.9% last month.Inflation in supermarkets is at the highest level since at least 2008 when the market research group Kantar began collecting data, adding £643 a year to the average family’s grocery bill, which now exceeds £5,200. Continue reading...
Lidia Thorpe says she ‘will not be campaigning no’ against Indigenous voice to parliament
Tom Calma, who is helping design the voice, says the Greens are unnecessarily adding to confusion over upcoming referendum
Heathrow predicts busy Christmas but warns over future demand
Airport remained Europe’s busiest in summer though passenger numbers were below pre-Covid levelHeathrow is expecting a busy Christmas travel period but has warned that future demand for air travel remains uncertain, partly as a result of the worsening economic outlook.Almost 5.8 million passengers travelled through the airport in September, making it Europe’s busiest during the summer, as customers jetted off after the end of Covid travel restrictions. However, passenger levels remained 15% below pre-pandemic levels in 2019. Continue reading...
Pledge aid or deprive Commonwealth’s poorest in diseases fight, UK warned
Latest advances to curb Aids, tuberculosis and malaria are beyond reach without funding, says Global Fund’s executive directorSome of the poorest countries in the Commonwealth may be left unable to deploy cutting-edge UK innovations against three of the world’s deadliest diseases if Britain fails to give generously to a key international fund, the UK government has been warned.Peter Sands, the executive director of the Global Fund to Fight Aids, Tuberculosis and Malaria, said the combined death toll from the diseases could be halved in the next four years in the countries where the fund invests. Continue reading...
Tuesday briefing: After Russia retaliates, what might happen next?
In today’s newsletter: Russia responded to an attack on a military supply line with a devastating blitz on civilian targets. Peter Beaumont speaks from Kyiv about defiance, destruction and what to expect
London school uses law change to replace striking staff with agency workers
Drapers’ Pyrgo primary in Romford, where top managers were paid total of £1.49m in benefits, cut salaries or hours of 10 support staff
Thérèse Coffey to drop smoking action plan, insiders say
Officials say health secretary will not publish plan, as campaigners warn ‘smoke-free’ UK is seven years behind targetMinisters are expected to break a promise to announce an action plan to tackle smoking, in their latest controversial U-turn on public health, Whitehall insiders say.The government had committed several times to publish a tobacco control plan “later this year”. However, the health secretary, Thérèse Coffey, does not intend to honour that promise, according to officials with knowledge of her intentions. Continue reading...
Queensland government urged to create ‘landlord register’ to help keep rogue owners honest
Tenants Queensland says data could be collected about owners, their holdings and renting intentions
Scrap Troubles legacy bill, Belfast actor Ciarán Hinds urges Liz Truss
Hinds says in open letter to PM that proposed laws on unsolved murders would ‘cut off any prospect of justice’One of the stars of Kenneth Branagh’s movie Belfast has written to Liz Truss urging her to scrap controversial legislation about unsolved murders during the Northern Ireland Troubles.In an open letter to the prime minister, Belfast-born Ciarán Hinds told her the proposed laws would “permanently cut off any prospect of justice for the families and loved ones of those killed during the Troubles”. Continue reading...
Public spending watchdog to investigate ‘festival of Brexit’
NAO to examine £120m Unboxed project after MPs call it an ‘irresponsible use of public money’It was Jacob Rees-Mogg who christened it a festival of Brexit – a moniker that might well have cursed it from the beginning.Announced by Theresa May in the aftermath of Britain’s referendum on EU membership, and supposedly inspired by the 1851 Great Exhibition and 1951’s Festival of Britain, the then prime minister heralded a programme of events to be held this year to “showcase what makes our country great today”. Continue reading...
Japan opens borders to tourists as last pandemic travel restrictions eased
Japan removes strict Covid-19 travel curbs, fuelling hopes a tourist boom will reinvigorate the economyJapan has fully opened its doors to visitors after more than two years of pandemic isolation.On Tuesday, the country reinstated visa-free travel to dozens of countries, ending some of world’s strictest Covid-19 border controls. Japan has also lifted the 50,000-person entry cap and ended the requirement for tourists to travel as part of tour groups, Kyodo news agency reported. Continue reading...
Security breaches at Melbourne and Adelaide airports cause flight delays
Unrelated incidents at two airports caused major disruptions for passengers
Victorians in flood zones urged to stockpile three days of supplies amid severe weather forecast
Bureau of Meteorology predicts ‘significant rain event’, with the heaviest falls expected Thursday
NRL player Luciano Leilua will challenge domestic violence allegations, Sydney court hears
North Queensland Cowboys forward was charged after allegedly assaulting a woman known to him
Optus could face millions in fines as two new data breach investigations launched
Media regulator and privacy watchdog announce new probes into telco as ACCC reveals it is being flooded with complaints about Optus-related scams
Information commissioner spends more than $560,000 in legal fees to defend FOI delays
Former senator Rex Patrick launched federal court action last year over OAIC’s slow freedom of information request review process
Rise in UK borrowers falling behind on mortgage payments, says Santander
Boss says bank is putting aside more money for potential defaults linked to cost of living crisisThe boss of Santander UK says the bank is putting aside more money for potential defaults linked to the cost of living crisis after seeing a pickup in customers falling behind on mortgage and loan payments.Mike Regnier told the Guardian that he was keeping a close eye on the “strain and pressure” facing customers as a result of the cost of living crisis, which has made it harder for some households to keep up with rising food and energy bills and financial commitments such as home loans. Continue reading...
Profumo spy had weakness for women and drink, archives reveal
Files on Russian intelligence officer and ‘lady-killer’ Eugene Ivanov littered with reports of drunkennessEugene Ivanov, the Russian spy at the centre of the 1963 Profumo scandal, was a philandering alcoholic whose weakness for women and drink M15 hoped to exploit to get him to defect, but who ended up toppling the Macmillan government by chance, according to newly released intelligence files.He arrived at the Russian embassy in London as assistant naval attache in 1960 but M15 suspected he was an intelligence officer, partly because he didn’t seem to know much about ships and also he carried an umbrella. Continue reading...
Sam Tarry deselected as MP by Ilford South Labour members
Jas Athwal, leader of Redbridge council, wins hustings vote by 499 to 361 after constituency triggered reselectionThe former shadow minister Sam Tarry has been deselected as an MP by local Labour party members amid a bitter row in the Ilford South constituency.Tarry, a former senior trade union official who helped organise Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership campaign, lost the chance to contest the seat at the next election. Continue reading...
25-year-old man arrested after Bishopsgate triple stabbing
Man in custody after members of public stabbed while trying to stop phone robbery near Liverpool Street stationA 25-year-old man has been arrested after three people were stabbed as members of the public tried to intervene in a phone robbery in central London.The suspect was arrested by detectives investigating a number of serious offences connected with the attempted robbery and knife attack in Bishopsgate last Thursday, said temporary DCI Colin Bishop, of City of London police’s major crime team. Continue reading...
Police appeal for information after man who threw acid over Katie Piper leaves UK
Stefan Sylvestre, who was acting on orders from Piper’s ex-boyfriend, was released from prison in 2018, but has breached licence conditionsPolice are searching for a man, jailed for an acid attack on the model and campaigner Katie Piper, who is believed to have left the country.The Metropolitan police said their inquiries indicated that Stefan Sylvestre left the UK on 2 August. The force said it was notified last month that the 34-year-old had been recalled to prison after breaching his licence conditions. His last known address was in north London. Continue reading...
More sports could be free to watch on Australian TV as anti-siphoning review kicks off
Streaming services on standby as review expected to recommend changes to the number of games broadcast on free-to-air television
Russia-Ukraine war live: US and UN condemn brutality and escalation after deadly wave of missile strikes across Ukraine
Biden deplores Putin’s ‘utter brutality’ while Guterres ‘deeply shocked’ by Russia’s most widespread air strikes since start of invasion
GCHQ head: Putin making strategic errors due to unconstrained power
British spy agency director to say in rare public address that Ukraine is ‘turning the tide’ against RussiaVladimir Putin has made strategic errors in his pursuit of the war in Ukraine partly because there are so few restraints on his leadership, the head of the British spy agency GCHQ will say in a speech on Tuesday.Russia’s soldiers are running out of supplies and munitions and initial gains made by Moscow are being reversed, Jeremy Fleming is expected to add in a rare public address. Continue reading...
Rex Orange County: musician charged with six counts of sexual assault
Alexander O’Connor is alleged to have assaulted a woman over the course of two days in JuneThe musician Rex Orange County, aka Alexander O’Connor, has been charged with six counts of sexually assaulting a woman, the Sun has reported.On 1 June, the 24-year-old allegedly assaulted the woman twice in London’s West End and then four times the next day, including once in a taxi and on three instances at his home in Notting Hill. The woman is reputedly over the age of 16. Continue reading...
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