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Updated 2025-11-10 05:47
Sunakites to culture warriors: the five Tory tribes at Birmingham conference
Party has fractured into intersecting groups whose members are united on issues such as low tax or ‘woke’ students
Greggs reports sales boost off the back of hot food meal deals
Shares jump 10% after trading update from retailer despite cost inflation forcing it to put up pricesHot food meal deals are helping to fuel sales growth at the high street baker Greggs, which raised the price of its popular sausage roll on Monday for a second time this year.The grab-and-go retailer said it was trading well in “an environment where cost pressures are significant”, and added it expected its full-year profits to be in line with previous forecasts, despite the economic uncertainty. Its value offer appealed to cost-conscious customers, pushing up total sales by nearly 15% in the 13 weeks to 1 October. Continue reading...
Mexico: reporters and activists hacked with NSO spyware despite assurances
Country’s current government had sworn it would no longer use the hacking softwareJournalists and human rights defenders in Mexico were hacked using spyware made by Israel’s NSO Group as recently as 2021, even after the country’s current government swore it was no longer going to use the hacking software, new research has found.The alleged victims of the spyware include two journalists who report on issues related to official corruption and a prominent human rights defenders, according to digital rights researchers at R3D (Red en Defensa de los Derechos Digitales) and The Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto, which tracks such infections. Continue reading...
David Fuller: double murderer charged with more mortuary sexual abuse
Ex-hospital electrician who filmed himself abusing corpses charged with 16 more offencesA double murderer who sexually abused dead bodies in hospital mortuaries has been charged with 16 further offences.David Fuller, 68, beat and strangled Wendy Knell, 25, and Caroline Pierce, 20, to death before sexually assaulting them in two separate attacks in Tunbridge Wells, Kent, in 1987. Continue reading...
National Book Awards 2022: Gayl Jones, Sharon Olds, Imani Perry among finalists
The winners of the prestigious US awards, in five categories, will be announced in a ceremony in NovemberGayl Jones, Imani Perry and Sharon Olds are among the finalists for the 2022 National Book Awards, to be held in November in New York.The finalists, announced by the New York Times on Tuesday morning, include 25 writers across the categories of fiction, nonfiction, poetry, translated literature and young people’s literature. Continue reading...
Taiwan’s military recruitment pool shrinking due to low birthrate
Number of new conscripts at lowest level in a decade as country tries to build defences amid threat of Chinese invasionThe declining birthrate in Taiwan could cause “major challenges” to the island’s military recruitment capabilities, at a time when Taiwan is building its defences to ward off potential Chinese invasion, its government has been told.Like much of east Asia, Taiwan is facing a demographic crisis, with fewer people having children each year as the population ages. The issue has social and economic effects on countries but in Taiwan there is also concern over its impact on military personnel levels. Continue reading...
What would a real-terms benefits cut mean for UK claimants?
Liz Truss’s refusal to commit to a rise in line with inflation has triggered unrest among ToriesDowning Street has signalled it must cut billions in public spending to pay for its remaining proposed tax cuts. It has so far refused to rule out making savings from the welfare bill. The possibility of a real-terms cut to benefits – by raising them in line with earnings, rather than inflation – has triggered unrest among Conservative backbenchers and anti-poverty campaigners alike. Continue reading...
Denmark’s Queen says sorry for family upset caused by taking away titles
Queen Margrethe refuses to back down on stripping four grandchildren of royal titles but says she ‘underestimated’ effectDenmark’s Queen Margrethe has apologised for upsetting members of her family with her decision to strip four of her grandchildren of their royal titles, but has refused to change her mind.The palace last week announced the four children of Margrethe’s youngest son, Prince Joachim, would no longer be called prince or princess but instead Count or Countess of Monpezat – the birth title of her late husband, the French-born Prince Henrik. Continue reading...
Teenagers held after boy, 14, stabbed to death in Gateshead
Boy, 14, and 13-year-old girl arrested after teenager found on Springwell estate dies in hospitalPolice have launched a murder investigation after a 14-year-old boy was fatally stabbed in Gateshead.Northumbria police said another 14-year-old boy had been arrested on suspicion of murder. Continue reading...
King Charles allowed to vet proposed Scottish rent freeze law
King may have lobbied ministers on emergency plan to help tenants as it could affect his Balmoral estateKing Charles has been allowed to vet and potentially lobby for changes to emergency legislation to freeze rents in Scotland because the measures could affect tenants on his private Highland estate at Balmoral.A bill to stop landlords unjustifiably raising rents for the next six months because of the cost of living crisis is being rushed through the Scottish parliament this week. Continue reading...
Chris Kaba was followed by police before being fatally shot, hears inquest
Kaba, killed by single shot to head fired by officer, was not a suspect but car he was driving had been flaggedChris Kaba was followed but not chased by police and was not a suspect before he was shot dead by a firearms officer, an inquest into his death has been told.The unarmed father-to-be was killed by a single shot to the head fired by an officer referred to only as NX121, in a residential road in Streatham on 5 September, Southwark coroner’s court heard on Tuesday morning. Continue reading...
UK mortgages: average rate on a two-year fixed deal soars to nearly 6%
Government’s 45p tax U-turn and calmer stock markets do not result in cheaper new mortgage dealsThe average rate on a two-year fixed mortgage has jumped to just under 6%, according to data released on Tuesday, dashing hopes that government efforts to calm the financial markets might ease the cost of home loans.Amid warnings from brokers that 95% mortgages could be the next casualty of the financial uncertainty triggered by Kwasi Kwarteng’s mini-budget, research firm Moneyfacts said the average new two-year fixed rate jumped to 5.97% on Tuesday, having already risen to 5.75% on Monday. Continue reading...
Shell chief: governments may need to tax energy firms more to help the poor
Ben van Beurden also warns against EU moves to cap price of gas and electricity to protect consumersThe chief executive of Shell has said governments may need to tax energy companies further to fund efforts to protect the “poorest” people from soaring bills.Ben van Beurden, the outgoing boss of the oil and gas company, told an energy conference in London: “One way or another there needs to be government intervention. Protecting the poorest, that probably may then mean that governments need to tax people in this room to pay for it. Continue reading...
Iran arrests musician as anthem for protests goes viral
The lyrics to Baraye by Shervin Hajipour are taken from ordinary Iranians voicing their anger in the wake of Mahsa Amini’s deathAs demonstrations against the death of Mahsa Amini enter their third week in Iran, a protest song by one of Iran’s most popular musicians has become the soundtrack to the biggest civil uprising for decades, channelling the rage of Iranians at home and abroad.The lyrics to Baraye by Shervin Hajipour are taken entirely from messages that Iranians have posted online about why they are protesting. Each begins with the word Baraye – meaning “For …” or “Because of …” in Farsi. Continue reading...
Failure to extend Yemen ceasefire leaves millions at risk, say charities
International organisations cite 60% fall in civilian casualties over six months, but critics say benefits of truce have been exaggeratedThe expiry of a six-month ceasefire in Yemen has thrust the country back into war after limited improvements in humanitarian conditions, according to analysts.Charities have criticised the failure to extend beyond Sunday the truce that was first agreed in April, and which they said had created hope for Yemenis. Although critics have said it created only a temporary stop in fighting that allowed the Houthi rebels to strengthen. Continue reading...
Monster 2,554lb pumpkin breaks US record
‘Every time she’s thirsty you gotta go give her a drink’: details of gourd’s diet and battles against ‘animals and critters’ in top bidHe set out to squash rivals’ dreams and he succeeded. Retired commercial farmer Scott Andrusz spent sleepless nights tending to a giant gourd in his field and finally came up with a new US record – a plump pumpkin weighing in at 2,554 pounds.The latest record holder for heaviest pumpkin grown in the US tended his prize pie filling in upstate New York and pureed the previous record holder, a grower in New Hampshire whose 2,528 monster set the national standard in 2018, but in the end wasn’t a patch on Andrusz’s. Continue reading...
North Korea fires missile over Japan prompting warnings for residents to shelter
Launch is the first time the North has apparently sent a missile over Japanese territory since 2017North Korea has launched a intermediate-range ballistic missile over northern Japan for the first time in five years, prompting the government to urge people to shelter from falling debris, in an apparent escalation of recent weapons tests by Kim Jong-un’s regime.Japan’s government had activated its J-Alert system on Tuesday morning for residents in the northernmost main island of Hokkaido and the country’s north-eastern Aomori prefecture. Train services were temporarily halted in the region. Continue reading...
Worldwide fertiliser shortage prompts Peru to turn to bird poo
The Russian invasion of Ukraine has made the South American country’s deposits of bird poo more valuableAs countries around the world wrestle with shortages of imported fertiliser as a result of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Peru has turned to a tried and tested alternative: bird poo.In the 19th century, fortunes were made and lost on guano, the potent excrement of fish-eating seabirds which was harvested by enslaved people from Africa and indentured Indigenous and Chinese labourers. Continue reading...
Paris Métro paper ticket reaches end of the line after more than 120 years
Iconic ticket on one-way trip to transport history as city opts for payment by travelcards and mobilesIt has inspired French film-makers and songwriters, proven useful to cannabis smokers and aestheticians and served as an emergency bookmark or jotter – but now the Paris Métro ticket has reached the end of the line.The city’s public transport authority is phasing out the rectangular pieces of cardboard that have kept the capital’s travellers on the move for the past 120 years. Continue reading...
C of E must welcome gay people or face questions in parliament, says MP
Labour’s Ben Bradshaw says church is ‘actively pursuing a campaign of discrimination’ against lesbian and gay people
Russia no longer has full control of any of four ‘annexed’ Ukrainian provinces
Kyiv’s troops advanced in southern Kherson province and made additional gains in east
Image of Bruce Saunders’ legs in woodchipper kept murder accused awake at night, court hears
Gregory Lee Roser denies feeding friend into chipper and told police in 2018 it wasn’t in his nature ‘to be nasty to people’
‘Shocked and saddened’: Queensland attorney general concerned by police failure to investigate alleged gang rape
Shannon Fentiman says she will meet with Karen Iles after raising the matter with the police minister
Banks raise interest rates in response to RBA – as it happened
Australian dollar drops and shares bounce higher on reserve bank’s dovish move. This blog is now closed
Liz Truss refuses to rule out real-terms benefits cuts
PM facing fresh battle with MPs as she declines to commit to raising benefits in line with inflation
Emmanuel Macron’s top adviser charged with conflict of interest
French president’s ‘right-hand man’ allegedly failed to reveal family ties to public investment agencyThe top official in Emmanuel Macron’s office has been charged with a conflict of interest.The move against Alexis Kohler, who holds one of France’s most powerful jobs as Élysée secretary general, came hours after another ally of the French president, the justice minister, Éric Dupond-Moretti, was ordered to stand trial in a separate case, also over a conflict of interest. Continue reading...
Dominic Perrottet denies teal threat is behind NSW ministers’ bid to move to lower house
Pollster and federal independent both say the Liberal government should be concerned about shift towards teals
Jim Chalmers says he will make the ‘right decisions’ on stage-three tax cuts
Treasurer says while the government’s policy has not yet changed ‘any responsible government’ would be looking at global economic pressures
The Onion defends right to parody in very real supreme court brief supporting local satirist
Long-running satirical publication files legal document relating to case of man who was arrested for making fun of policeThe clarion call of justice is sounding across America once again, thanks to the tireless efforts of its finest purveyor of made-up news.The Onion, the long-running satirical publication, has filed a very real legal document with the US supreme court, urging it to take on a case centered on the right to parody. And in order to make a serious legal point, the filing does what the Onion does best, offering a big helping of total nonsense. Continue reading...
Queensland lab could have tested more DNA samples from crime scenes for less than $1m, inquiry hears
Health official given ‘disingenuous’ representation of impact of changing thresholds, forensic testing inquiry hears
Pakistan’s PM says rival Imran Khan is ‘biggest liar on earth’
As economic turmoil continues, Shehbaz Sharif accuses predecessor of leaving the country in ruinsPakistan’s prime minister, Shehbaz Sharif, has accused the former premier Imran Khan of being the “the biggest liar on the face of the earth” and injecting poison into society to “dangerously polarise the electorate” after he was toppled from power earlier this year.Speaking in his first interview from Pakistan since he took over as prime minister in April, Sharif, 70, spoke unsparingly of the “damage” that Khan, the former cricket superstar who ruled Pakistan from 2018, had done to the country in both domestic and foreign affairs. Continue reading...
Linda Reynolds and Michaelia Cash among 52 potential witnesses in Bruce Lehrmann trial
Trial of Lehrmann, who denies allegations he sexually assaulted Brittany Higgins in 2019, begins in ACT supreme court
British shoppers likely to spend £4.4bn less on non-essentials during Christmas period
The cost of living crisis means almost 60% of shoppers expect to cut back in retail’s ‘golden quarter’British shoppers are expected to spend £4.4bn less on non-essentials – a fall of 22% – in the run-up to Christmas as a surge in the cost of living puts a squeeze on their spare cash.Almost 60% of shoppers expect to cut back on non-food spending in the so-called “golden quarter”, or last three months of the year when most retailers book the majority of profits, according to research by Retail Economics with retail technology firm Metapack. Continue reading...
Biden pledges $60m to stormproof Puerto Rico during visit
The US territory has been frequently battered by hurricanes but is often overlooked by the federal government when it comes to aidJoe Biden announced on Monday that his administration will allocate $60m in funding for Puerto Rico specifically to help coastal areas become more storm-resilient, as he admitted, following the hit from Hurricane Fiona last month, that the island territory had faced much in the last five years and had not received enough timely assistance.The US president said the new funding would go toward strengthening flood walls, creating a new flood warning system and other projects. Continue reading...
Woman in 60s attacked and killed by dogs in Liverpool
Victim pronounced dead at scene after paramedics reported incident at 4.25pm on MondayA woman in her 60s has died after being attacked by dogs at a property in central Liverpool.Merseyside police said North West ambulance service paramedics reported the attack at St Brigids Crescent in Kirkdale at about 4.25pm on Monday. The woman was pronounced dead at the scene and her relatives have been told. Continue reading...
Tories accuse police of failing to protect conference delegates from protesters
West Midlands police blame shortchanging by Home Office as party officials report abuse and assaults on delegatesSenior Conservative officials have accused West Midlands police of failing to do enough to keep protesters away from delegates at the party conference, a leaked letter reveals.The disclosure comes just hours after the police were forced to lock down the conference in central Birmingham for several hours after a security scare. Police say they have been shortchanged by over £500,000 on the costs of keeping the conference in Birmingham secure. Continue reading...
Hurricane Orlene strikes Mexico’s Pacific coast with 80mph winds
Nearby ports are closed and emergency shelters open as 10in of rain and dangerous surf are expectedHurricane Orlene has made landfall on Mexico’s Pacific coast near the tourist town of Mazatlán, with winds of more than 80mph (130km/h).Electrical cables swayed and sent off showers of sparks in the town of El Rosario, about 40 miles (65km) south of Mazatlán, close to where the hurricane hit. Continue reading...
South Wales police inspector accused of assaulting ‘vulnerable’ boy
Dean Gittoes denies using excessive force to detain 16-year-old filming outside Merthyr Tydfil police stationA police inspector accused of assaulting a “vulnerable” boy who was filming outside a police station told colleagues he was tired of “internet freaks”, a court has heard.Insp Dean Gittoes, 49, of South Wales police, is accused of beating the 16-year-old outside Merthyr Tydfil police station. Continue reading...
Cost of insuring against Credit Suisse defaulting reaches record high
Investors rush to buy credit default swaps as worries grow over solidity of bank’s balance sheetThe cost of buying insurance against Credit Suisse defaulting on its debt soared to a record high on Monday, amid fears on markets about the solidity of the balance sheet at the globally significant Swiss bank.There was a sell-off in the bank’s shares and bonds while investors rushed instead to buy credit default swaps (CDS) – insurance against the bank failing to meet its debts. Continue reading...
One-year-old boy accidentally drowned in hot tub, inquest finds
Jetson Maffia-Kerbey fell into family friend’s hot tub in Folkestone, Kent in June 2022The death of a one-year-old boy who drowned in a hot tub in a family friend’s garden was a tragic accident, an inquest has concluded.Jetson Maffia-Kerbey was 21 months old when he died on 13 June 2022. The inquest at Maidstone county hall heard that on the day of Jetson’s death, his father, Nigel Kerbey, took him to spend the day with family friend Graham Morgan and his three-year-old daughter at their home in Folkestone, Kent. Continue reading...
Man, 36, dies after collapsing during the London Marathon
Unnamed man from south-east England collapsed in late stages of race and died in hospitalA 36-year-old man who collapsed while running the London Marathon on Sunday has died, organisers have announced.The man, who has not been named and was from south-east England, collapsed between mile 23 and mile 24 of the race. Continue reading...
Chris Philp said UC claimants should be forced to ‘work for dole’
Treasury minister in charge of welfare changes made comments in 2013
Tory party chair Jake Berry rapidly alienating fellow MPs – and voters
One former minister calls him the ‘worst performing cabinet minister so far’ in Liz Truss’s government
‘Empty’: media view on Kwarteng’s conference speech following U-turn
Media commentators weigh in on chancellor’s speech following his decision to scrap his tax cut for high earners
Burkina Faso coup fuels fears of growing Russian mercenary presence in Sahel
North Africa analysts believe new leader Ibrahim Traoré may seek help from Moscow in fight against Islamic extremistsRussian mercenaries may be poised for further expansion in Africa’s strategically important Sahel region after the latest coup d’etat in the region, western officials and analysts fear.Ibrahim Traoré, a 34-year-old army captain, took power in Burkina Faso on Friday, overthrowing Lt Col Paul-Henri Sandaogo Damiba, who he accused of failing to effectively counter rising violence by Islamic extremists in the unstable and poverty-stricken country. Continue reading...
Why did the Brazil election pollsters get Bolsonaro’s vote so wrong?
One expert says many surveys overrepresented poor voters, and far-right supporters may just not respondNot for the first time, the pollsters got it wrong. Far from being a sweeping win for the left, the first round of Brazil’s presidential elections was much closer than expected, with the country’s far-right president significantly outperforming predictions.With almost all votes counted on Monday, Jair Bolsonaro’s veteran leftist rival, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, had secured 48.3%, while the populist incumbent was just five percentage points behind on 43.3%, a much narrower margin than most pre-election estimates. Continue reading...
‘Unspeakable trauma’: police in Queensland and NSW failed to investigate alleged gang rape of 14-year-old girl, records show
Exclusive: A senior officer told Karen Iles they believed her statement, including names, photos, maps and diary excerpts, had been destroyed
Bruce Lehrmann’s trial for alleged rape of Brittany Higgins to begin in Canberra
Chief justice Lucy McCallum to preside over two-month trial in ACT supreme court which had been delayed due to pretrial publicity
Australians’ confidence in government integrity has increased since election, study finds
Swinburne University research also shows boost in public perceptions of leadership and competence since Labor took power
Indonesia football stadium disaster: police chief sacked as investigation launched
Officers investigated after teargas fired and at least 125 people, including 32 children, killed in crushAn Indonesian police chief and nine elite officers were removed from their posts and 18 others were being investigated for responsibility in the firing of teargas inside a soccer stadium that led to a crush, killing at least 125 people, officials said.Indonesian police are facing increasing pressure over their management of crowds during the Kanjuruhan stadium disaster. Continue reading...
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