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Updated 2025-07-13 23:31
Murdered British journalist Dom Phillips laid to rest in Brazil
My brother was killed because he tried to tell the world what was happening to the rainforest, says Sian PhillipsThe British journalist Dom Phillips has been laid to rest in Brazil, exactly three weeks after he was gunned down while journeying through the Amazon with the Indigenous expert Bruno Pereira.Pereira and Phillips, a longtime Guardian contributor, disappeared while travelling on the Itaquaí River on Sunday 5 June. Continue reading...
Prince Charles: calls for investigations into ‘cash in bags’ controversy
Government and Charity Commission urged to examine claims Qatari sheikh donated €3mPrince Charles faced fresh controversy over the funding of his charities on Sunday, with calls for the government and the Charity Commission to investigate claims he accepted€3m in cash from a billionaire Qatari sheikh.Claims in the Sunday Times that Charles accepted three donations between 2011 and 2015 from former Qatari prime minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber al-Thani – known as “HBJ” – were described as “shocking” by critics. One donation, totalling €1m, was reportedly handed over in a small suitcase and another was stuffed in a carrier bag from upmarket department store Fortnum & Mason. Continue reading...
British Muslim travel agencies in uproar over Saudi hajj changes
Saudi Arabia tells pilgrims to use new online system and to seek refunds from any agencies they have already paidBritish Muslim travel companies have said they face going out of business, with travellers potentially losing thousands of pounds, after Saudi Arabia launched a new system for applying for the hajj pilgrimage.The Saudi government announced this month that pilgrims from Europe, the US and Australia could no longer book through travel agencies and would instead have to apply through a lottery system. Continue reading...
Charles’s Prince’s Foundation is no stranger to controversy
Analysis: reports that the prince accepted €3m from a former Qatari prime minister throws a spotlight on his charities• Prince Charles given €3m by Qatari politician, according to reportClaims by the Sunday Times of alleged cash donations given to Prince Charles by a former Qatari prime minister are the latest to throw a spotlight on fundraising for the heir to the throne’s charities.Billionaire Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber al Thani, who was Qatar’s prime minister and foreign minister between 2007 and 2013, is a contentious figure. Continue reading...
Johnson backs plans to close ticket offices as fresh rail strike talks loom
RMT mulls future dates for industrial action as prime minister says it can’t be ‘business as usual’ on the railwaysTalks were set to resume on Monday between the RMT and rail bosses, with the union’s national executive committee mulling further strike dates as the prime minister backed plans to close ticket offices.Services started returning to normal after a later start on Sunday due to the last of three 24-hour national strikes by workers at Network Rail and 13 train operating companies on Saturday. Continue reading...
MP Patrick Grady quits SNP after being accused of sexual assault
Met police say they are investigating allegations former chief whip assaulted party worker at London pubA senior Scottish National party MP accused of sexual assault has quit the party and will sit as an independent after the Metropolitan police said they were investigating the allegations.The Met said it had received a complaint from a third party about Patrick Grady’s alleged sexual assault of a 19-year-old party worker at the Water Poet pub on Folgate Street, London, in October 2016. Continue reading...
Russia-Ukraine war: what we know on day 123 of the invasion
Kyiv under attack as G7 leaders meet in Germany; focus of Russia’s campaign shifts to Lysychansk
Calls for investigation over deaths in Moroccan-Spanish border crossing
NGOs say toll could be as high as 37 after hundreds of people break into border control area in attempt to reach Melilla enclaveHuman rights campaigners in Spain and Morocco have called for investigations to be launched in both countries after a mass attempt to scale the border fence between Morocco and the Spanish enclave of Melilla left at least 23 people dead.Spanish officials said about 2,000 Africans made their way to the iron fence at dawn on Friday, with more than 500 managing to slip into a border control area after cutting an opening with shears. Continue reading...
Boris Johnson warns of risk of fatigue in west’s support for Ukraine
At G7 summit, PM pushes for renewed sanctions and says he would welcome a visit to UK by Volodymyr ZelenskiyBoris Johnson has warned about the likelihood of “fatigue” among western nations over continued support for Ukraine, as he began talks at the G7 summit in Germany, where he hopes to push for renewed sanctions against Russia.Before the first day of the annual gathering of political leaders, held amid ultra-tight security in the Bavarian countryside, Johnson also hailed a new international ban on importing Russia gold. Continue reading...
G7 grapples with packed agenda of world turned upside down
Analysis: A price cap on Russian oil and potential famine in Africa are among issues pressing for attention
Sajid Javid tells of heartache over brother’s suicide
Health secretary urges men to discuss mental health and to ‘seek help’ when they need toSajid Javid has urged men to speak out about their mental health as he spoke publicly for the first time about the loss of his brother, who took his own life.The health secretary said he still wonders if he could have acted to prevent his brother’s death, and spoke of his “deeply personal” mission to prevent suicides. Javid’s brother, Tariq, 51, took his own life in a hotel in Horsham, West Sussex, in July 2018.In the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on 116 123, or email jo@samaritans.org or jo@samaritans.ie. In the US, the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is 1-800-273-8255. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other international helplines can be found at befrienders.org. Continue reading...
Paul McCartney’s Glastonbury show hailed as ‘phenomenal’
Ex-Beatle’s gig seen by many in huge festival crowd as ‘something to tell your grandkids about’Paul McCartney’s history-making Glastonbury set was hailed as one of the greatest headline performances of this generation as a crowd of more than 100,000 people gathered at the festival’s famous Pyramid stage to watch him play.He was joined on stage by Bruce Springsteen and Foo Fighters’ Dave Grohl – and even sang a duet with his old bandmate John Lennon, using special effects pioneered by the Lord of the Rings director Peter Jackson. Continue reading...
Nathan Cleary stars as NSW rout Queensland to level State of Origin series
Russian missiles strike Kyiv for first time in three weeks
Residential buildings and a kindergarten hit in centre of Ukrainian capital before planned Nato summit on Tuesday
Seventeen people found dead in South African nightclub
Police in southern city of East London launch investigation and rule out stampedeAt least 17 young people were found dead at a nightclub in a township in South Africa’s southern city of East London on Sunday, police said.“We got a report about 17 (people) that died in a local tavern in Scenery Park which is based in East London,” said Thembinkosi Kinana, a provincial police spokesperson brigadier. “We are still investigating the circumstances surrounding the incident.” Continue reading...
Tory donor and Vladimir Putin associate facing forgery charges in Luxembourg
Former Formula One team boss Gérard Lopez, who gave £400,000 to Conservatives, has been charged after investigationA Tory donor who has been described as a friend of Vladimir Putin, and who donated £400,000 to the party before the Brexit referendum, is facing charges of forgery in Luxembourg.Gérard Lopez, 50, who chaired the Lotus Formula One team in the UK, donated to the Tories in April 2016, two months before the referendum. He has denied the charges. Continue reading...
That’s entertainment! Musicals lift spirits on London West End’s stages
Shows with a feelgood factor are boosting box-office takings“I simply remember my favourite things and then I don’t feel so bad,” sang Maria among the mountains in The Sound of Music, introducing to the world one of the most memorable musical lines of all time. Uplifting sentiments like these now seem to have set sales of tickets to musicals in the West End of London soaring to new heights, with pundits suggesting two years of misery have left people desperate to lift their spirits.Box-office figures from the Society of London Theatre (Solt) reveal that, since the beginning of the year, West End musicals outperformed their 2019 equivalents in 20 out of 22 weeks for attendance and 19 out of 22 for revenue. There are fewer plays than in 2019, which might partly explain the strong sales, but people in the industry think it’s more than that. Continue reading...
‘I wouldn’t have the money to pay a lawyer’: tenants left without means to sue rogue landlords
New rules on fixed recoverable legal costs mean solicitors will no longer be able to afford to take on housing casesPoor and vulnerable tenants who are evicted from their homes or living in dangerous conditions will lose the chance to take their landlords to court when new government rules on legal costs come into force next year, experts are warning.The rules, designed to deter “ambulance chaser” personal injury claims, mean claimants awarded damages of less than £100,000 will only be able to seek “fixed recoverable costs” (FRCs) to cover legal expenses. Continue reading...
UK is failing fostered children with mental health problems, warns charity
Report suggests half of all foster carers are looking after a child with complex needsFoster care in Britain is facing a “mental health crisis” because the government is failing to meet the needs of mentally ill children in care.That is the damning verdict of the latest report from the Fostering Network, a charity representing foster carers. The report, shared with the Observer, suggests half of all foster carers are looking after a child with complex mental health issues, such as anxiety, depression and attachment and eating disorders. Continue reading...
The Observer/Anthony Burgess prize for arts journalism 2023
The annual competition to discover outstanding new arts reviewers has now opened for submissions“Lear Alone offers us a vision of theatre in the post-pandemic age. Yes, that’s partly about its demonstration of innovative ways to film and stream theatrical content – taking the action outdoors, making dramatic the objects and sounds of street life. But it’s also about its engagement with live political issues.”So wrote Calum Jacobs, the winner of the Observer/ Anthony Burgess prize for arts journalism 2022, in his review of Lear Alone, a web film series in which actor Edmund Dehn wanders London’s lockdown streets performing only the lines of King Lear from Shakespeare’s tragedy. It’s the perfect Burgess prize subject, a piece of art that engages with a particular moment in time and subtly reframes its form. Continue reading...
Australian politicians respond to US abortion decision – as it happened
Sussan Ley and Jason Clare react to US supreme court decision on abortion rights; Australia to send $1m earthquake relief to Afghanistan; nation records 26 Covid deaths. This blog is now closed
University staff who can’t afford to eat ask for campus food banks
Young academics and support workers at Leeds University are on the breadline as the cost of living crisis bitesStaff are asking universities to set up food banks because they are struggling with rising bills and say they cannot afford to eat properly.As food and energy prices rise, the University and College Union says young academics teaching on casual contracts and low-paid support workers such as porters and cleaners are finding themselves on the breadline. Continue reading...
Tory donor John Booth handed leading role in choosing arts and media honours
Move to install venture capital investor as chair of committee comes after series of Conservative donors given positions on cultural boardsA Tory donor has been handed a prominent role at the heart of the UK’s honours system, the Observer can reveal.In a move that provoked immediate claims of political interference, John Booth, a venture capital investor who has given the party more than £200,000, has been made the “independent chair” of the committee that oversees honours in the arts and media. The role means he will also sit on the main honours committee, which considers all awards. Continue reading...
Peter Dutton says NSW Liberal party preselection delays were ‘completely unacceptable’
Nine candidates were preselected just days before the 2022 federal election amid bitter recriminations in the NSW branch
Conservatives’ alarm grows over threat of tactical voting in safe seats
Last week’s byelection losses saw huge swings to the best-placed Tory opponent – without any formal electoral pactOn one of the final days of campaigning in Honiton last week, a Liberal Democrat canvasser found himself on the horns of a dilemma as he scrambled for every vote.“I saw this house and there was a huge Labour poster on the railings outside. I was thinking ‘do I or don’t I?’ If I try, she’s just going to say: ‘Can’t you see? Can’t you read?’” Continue reading...
Education system ‘run by Marxists’: Jason Clare takes aim at Liberal senator over comments on teachers
Hollie Hughes told a Sydney Institute forum parents need to ‘turn the internet off’ as she gave reasons for the party’s election defeat
Revealed: scandal of England’s ‘inadequate’ private children’s homes
Private equity links and the pursuit of profit come with risks for children in the care sector, say expertsMore than 100 privately run children’s homes in England with serious failings have been branded inadequate by inspectors, with several found to have links to private equity firms, an Observer investigation has found.Poorly trained staff, chaotic management and a series of incidents that left children’s safety in danger were cited in official reports by Ofsted, which inspects children’s homes, as it concluded they were providing inadequate care. Several have closed since inspectors raised concerns. Continue reading...
US bans Juul but young vapers are already switching to newer products
Analysis: Juul is only the fourth most popular e-cigarette with adolescents, who are opting for disposable alternativesThis week, the US effectively banned Juul after the Food and Drug Administration ordered the e-cigarette maker to remove its popular products from the marketplace.Experts have hailed the move as significant. But they are also concerned that such efforts are failing to keep up with a fast-moving vaping industry – one where young people leap quickly from one product to another. Continue reading...
Sri Lanka almost out of fuel, with no fresh supplies in sight
Bankrupt nation’s energy minister apologises to motorists but unable to say when petrol and diesel imports will be restoredSri Lanka has increased the price of fuel by up to 22%% after the energy minister warned it had virtually run out of petrol and diesel after several expected shipments were delayed.Kanchana Wijesekera apologised to motorists as he said on Saturday that oil cargoes that were due last week did not turn up, while those scheduled to arrive next week will also not reach Sri Lanka due to “banking” reasons. Continue reading...
We will take back all our cities, vows Zelenskiy – as it happened
Ukrainian president says Ukrainian forces will win back all the cities it has lost to Russia, including Sievierodonetsk
Victoria says rising Omicron subvariant is on track to be the state’s major Covid strain
Chief health officer Brett Sutton warns BA.4/BA.5 strain traces have risen in recent weeks, and has greater ability to evade vaccine immunity
Prince Charles is said to have been given €3m in Qatari cash
Money was passed immediately to one of the prince’s charities, says Clarence HouseThe Prince of Wales accepted bags containing millions of euros in cash during meetings with a senior Qatari politician, according to a report.Prince Charles was said to have been given a total of €3m (£2.6m) during meetings with Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber Al-Thani, the former prime minister of Qatar. Continue reading...
Melilla: death toll from mass incursion on Spanish enclave rises to 23
Crowd of more than 500 enter border control area after cutting fence in attempt to cross from MoroccoThe death toll from the mass attempt to cross from Morocco into Spain’s enclave of Melilla has risen to 23, according to Moroccan state TV.About 2,000 people approached Melilla at dawn on Friday and more than 500 managed to enter a border control area after cutting a fence with shears, the Spanish government’s local delegation said in a statement. Continue reading...
Australian Taxation Office crackdown on family trust rorts causes alarm among tax advisers
ATO gives example of child being given $180,000 then repaying it to parents for cost of bringing them up as going against community expectations
‘Things aren’t going back’: Australia braces for step-up in China’s Pacific push
Despite initial relief over island nations’ rejection of security and economic pact, senior government figure says reprieve could be only temporary
Double defeat points to unwinding of Conservative Brexit coalition
Defeat for the Tories in two key byelections shows that tactical voting could put safe seats in play if replicated at a general electionWakefield and Tiverton and Honiton are at opposite ends of the country geographically, socially and politically. But they have two features in common: both voted Leave heavily in 2016, and both turned against the Conservatives last week. Defeats on the same day in a northern “red wall” seat and a southern rural stronghold suggest that, six years on from the EU referendum, the Conservative majority Boris Johnson stitched together with a promise to “get Brexit done” is beginning to unravel.For both opposition parties, the byelections have a distinctly 1990s flavour, with the return of a pattern from the Major years that has been largely absent in the past decade of Conservative government – voters in both seats seemed determined to eject Tory incumbents and flocked to the local opposition candidate seen as best placed to do so. Tactical coordination among Labour and Liberal Democrats voters is back, and if replicated at a general election, it could put a lot of seemingly safe Conservative seats in play. Continue reading...
Plea after ‘irreplaceable’ records accidentally sold at Derbyshire car boot sale
Relative mistakenly sold ‘shocked and horrified’ Buxton woman’s inherited vinyls for less than £1 eachA woman has told of her devastation after a relative mistakenly sold her collection of irreplaceable vinyl records for less than £1 each at a car boot sale.Rohan Mellor, 26, inherited the 16 pieces of vinyl from her late uncle to whom she was very close. Continue reading...
Campaigners welcome Sharon Stone’s decision to talk about her miscarriages
Actor’s comments described as ‘a gift’ that will help other womenCampaigners have welcomed Sharon Stone’s decision to open up about her nine miscarriages, which they said will help other women.The actor said it was “no small thing, physically nor emotionally” and that women who miscarry are made to feel a “sense of failure”. Continue reading...
Taliban say they will not interfere with Afghanistan earthquake aid
Aid organisations complain the group in the past has tried to divert aid to supporters of their insurgencyAfghanistan’s Taliban rulers have pledged not to interfere with international efforts to distribute aid to tens of thousands of people affected by this week’s deadly earthquake.Even before Wednesday’s quake the country was in the grip of a humanitarian crisis, with aid flows and financial assistance severely curtailed since the Taliban’s return to power. Continue reading...
BBC’s Amol Rajan criticised for using phrase ‘pro-life’ in Roe v Wade interview
Pro-choice campaigners say hearing the term, seen as partisan, on Today programme was ‘disappointing’One of the BBC’s most high-profile presenters has been criticised for using the term “pro-life” to describe anti-abortion campaigners in a discussion about the US supreme court’s overturning of Roe v Wade.The term, which is considered partisan, was used twice by Amol Rajan during Saturday morning’s Today programme on Radio 4, in segments about the landmark ruling ending Americans’ constitutional right to abortion. Continue reading...
UK Armed Forces Day pays tribute to personnel past and present
Duchess of Cambridge tweets thanks to ‘all the brave men and women’ who ‘keep us safe’The UK celebrated Armed Forces Day on Saturday, as public figures paid tribute to those currently serving, or who have served, in the military.In a statement posted on Twitter, the Duchess of Cambridge paid tribute to “all the brave men and women” who “keep us safe”. Continue reading...
Iran and US ready to restart talks on nuclear deal
EU foreign affairs chief says stalemate broken after meeting with Iranian foreign minister in TehranJosep Borrell, the EU foreign affairs chief, has said talks will restart on the Iran nuclear deal, averting a complete collapse in the agreement which could spark a nuclear arms race across the Middle East.After a meeting with the Iranian foreign minister, Hossein Amir-Abdollahian, in Tehran, Borrell said he had broken the stalemate which had led to talks on the revival of the nuclear deal being stalled since March. Borrell gave no detail about the exact date of the resumption of talks or the precise format, but said the process had the agreement of Iran and the US. He also met Iran’s national security chief Ali Shamkhani. Continue reading...
Russia pushes to block off city of Lysychansk, says Ukraine
Moscow launches massive artillery bombardments and airstrikes on eastern city, after Sievierodonetsk destroyed
Andy Burnham says Labour must ‘seize moment’ and back proportional representation
Writing in the Observer, mayor of Manchester says Tory byelection defeats should open the way for consensus and radical reformLabour should back proportional representation for Westminster elections to allow more cooperation between political parties on a programme of urgently needed social reform, says Andy Burnham.Writing for the Observer in the aftermath of two byelection defeats for the Tories, brought about in part by tactical voting by Labour and Liberal Democrat supporters, the mayor of Greater Manchester says PR should be at the heart of an entirely new approach to politics and policymaking. Continue reading...
Ecuador at standstill after two weeks of protests over cost of living crisis
During demonstrations, started by an Indigenous federation, roads were blocked and vehicles torched, and police fired teargasEcuador has been brought to a near standstill after two weeks of tumultuous protests over a spike in fuel and food prices as global inflation inflames discontent over widening inequality across Latin America.At least five people have died after demonstrators blocked roads, torched vehicles and hurled stones, while police responded with teargas during several days of clashes. Ecuador’s health ministry has said two people died in ambulances delayed by road blockades. Twelve police officers are reported injured. Continue reading...
French lawmakers propose bill to inscribe abortion rights in constitution
Constitutional law would cement abortion rights for future generations, says member of parliamentA group of lawmakers from the French president’s party will propose a bill to inscribe abortion rights into the country’s constitution, according to a statement by two members of parliament on Saturday.The move comes after the US supreme court overturned a 50-year-old ruling and stripped women’s constitutional protections for abortion. Continue reading...
Boris Johnson says change to his character ‘not going to happen’ as pressure mounts over byelection defeats – UK politics live
This live blog has now closed, you can find our latest political coverage hereHusain asks how it’s fair or right that the top civil servant in the country, Simon Case, asked about job opportunities for Carrie Johnson.“I think that the worst thing I could possibly do is get into conversations about my family, my private life. Continue reading...
‘It’s a horror show’: defiant Kharkiv residents return home despite new Russian offensive
No running water, gas or electricity and apartment blocks destroyed at random… Now civilians in Ukraine’s second biggest city are facing a new Russian offensive
European politicians duped into deepfake video calls with mayor of Kyiv
Person who sounds and looks like Vitali Klitschko has spoken with mayors of Berlin, Madrid and ViennaThe mayors of several European capitals have been duped into holding video calls with a deepfake of their counterpart in Kyiv, Vitali Klitschko.The mayor of Berlin, Franziska Giffey, took part in a scheduled call on the Webex video conferencing platform on Friday with a person she said looked and sounded like Klitschko. Continue reading...
Striking RMT union’s Mick Lynch tells Grant Shapps to ‘get on with his job’
Union boss says transport secretary should ‘tone down the rhetoric’ and make effort to solve rail strikes
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