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Updated 2025-07-15 07:01
Linda Burney says investigating Youpla funeral fund will be ‘top of my agenda’
Incoming Indigenous affairs minster says predicament of families affected by collapse of predatory funeral fund is ‘totally unacceptable’
Refugee children handed anti-illegal migration playing cards, Australian charity says
Cards branded with Australian government’s ‘Zero Chance’ logo and QR code to border force website distributed in Indonesia
Deaths from drug use rose in first year of pandemic to rate not seen since Australia’s late 1990s peak
There were 1,842 drug-induced deaths in 2020, equivalent to five deaths a day, report finds
Five Partygate quotes that show No 10 staff knew they were in the wrong
Gray report reveals exchanges showing how staff planned events – and, in some cases, were clearly aware that what they were doing was wrong
Vomiting and partying until 4am: Sue Gray delivers damning verdict on Boris Johnson’s No 10
PM issues partial apology for boozy culture including wine spilled over walls and drunken staff told to leave by back entrance
US saw sharp rise in ‘active shooter’ incidents in 2021, FBI data shows
The 2021 total, spread over 30 states, was 52% higher than 2020 and about double each of the three previous years, the agency saidThe United States experienced 61 “active shooter” incidents last year, the highest tally in over 20 years, according to new FBI data.The number of “active shooter” incidents marked a sharp rise in the sheer number of attacks, casualties and geographic distribution from 2020, according to the FBI. The 2021 total, spread over 30 states, was 52% higher than 2020 and about double each of the three previous years, the agency said. Continue reading...
Headteacher wanted for remote Shetland island’s four-pupil school
Can-do attitude and self-discipline essential for role at primary school on Foula, inhabited by 28 peopleIslanders on Foula, one of the UK’s most remote inhabited islands, are looking for a new headteacher to run their tiny primary school, with a register of just four pupils and another child in its nursery.Foula, an island of 4.9 sq miles with a permanent population of 28 people, lies 16 miles to the west of Shetland and vies with Fair Isle, which is 44 miles to the south, as the most isolated and exposed inhabited place in Britain. Continue reading...
Ofwat asks water firms to do more for people struggling to pay bills
Regulator publishes guidelines as Severn Trent launches £30m support package amid cost of living crisisThe regulator Ofwat has urged water companies to do more to help people across England and Wales who are struggling to pay their utility bills as the cost of living squeeze tightens.Ofwat has published a new set of guidelines for water companies designed to make it easier for households to get help with paying their bills or repaying debts. Continue reading...
Sue Gray report: full breakdown of findings about No 10 parties
Detailed summary of civil servant’s report into lockdown-breaching parties in and around Downing Street
Australia ‘louder than we should have been’ in criticising China says former Asio chief
Sharp critique from Duncan Lewis comes as Chinese foreign minister embarks on ‘extraordinary’ Pacific island nation tour
Katie Price may face jail after admitting to breach of restraining order
Court hears former model made indirect attempt to contact ex-husband’s fiancee, Michelle PenticostKatie Price has been warned she faces jail after admitting breaching a restraining order against her ex-husband’s fiancee over a message in which she accused the pair of having an affair.The 44-year-old former model sent Kieran Hayler a message on 21 January this year in which she called his new partner, Michelle Penticost, a “gutter slag”. Continue reading...
Xi Jinping defends China’s human rights record to visiting UN commissioner
Leader warns against using issue as ‘excuse to interfere in internal affairs of other countries’ as Michelle Bachelet goes to XinjiangChina’s leader, Xi Jinping, has spoken with the UN human rights chief, Michelle Bachelet, as she visited the Xinjiang region, warning against the politicisation of human rights as an “excuse to interfere in the internal affairs of other countries” and defending his government’s record.It comes amid renewed defensiveness in Beijing after the publication of a significant data leak from Xinjiang’s security apparatus, including mugshots of thousands of detained Uyghurs and internal documents outlining shoot-to-kill policies for those who try to escape. Continue reading...
Read Sue Gray’s full report into Downing Street parties
Below is the full report into illegal gatherings at Downing Street during Covid lockdowns. Compiled by senior civil servant Sue Gray, its initial publication was delayed by the Met Police inquiry which led to 126 fines being issued, including one each to the prime minister and the chancellor
China’s Pacific plan is ‘clear’ but so is Australia’s intention to be regional partner of choice, Penny Wong says
As China pursues Pacific-wide security pact, foreign minister says ‘after a lost decade we’ve got a lot of work to do to regain Australia’s position’
Biden calls for action on gun laws after Texas school shooting – as it happened
This live blog is now closed. For all the latest updates on the Texas school shooting, follow today’s live blog here
‘Guilty as charged’: senior UK officer calls on police chiefs to admit institutional racism
Met’s Neil Basu says ‘positive discrimination’ should be introduced to boost minority ethnic numbers in ranks
China is pursuing a Pacific-wide pact with 10 island nations on security, policing and data – report
Federated States of Micronesia wants deal rejected because it could spark new cold war between China and west while Penny Wong admits ‘we’ve got a lot of work to do’China will pursue a Pacific-wide deal with almost a dozen island nations covering policing, security and data communications cooperation when the foreign minister, Wang Yi, hosts a meeting in Fiji next week, documents show.A draft communique and five-year action plan sent by Beijing to 10 Pacific islands ahead of a foreign ministers meeting on 30 May has prompted pushback from at least one of the invited nations, which said it showed China’s intent to control the region and “threatens regional stability”. Continue reading...
Treasurer Jim Chalmers warns of ‘dire’ budget situation as inflation soars
Labor says deficit could blow out further while accusing the Coalition of failing to disclose budgetary pressures
Election 2022 live: Dai Le dismisses eligibility concerns; China reportedly seeking Pacific-wide security deal with island nations
Eligibility for fourth dose of Covid vaccine extended; ‘don’t think we’ve got a better choice’ for Liberal leader, Dave Sharma says of Peter Dutton; at least 41 coronavirus deaths recorded. Follow all the day’s developments
Partygate: cabinet minister says there was ‘blurring of boundary’ at No 10
George Eustice in cautious defence of PM as government awaits Sue Gray’s full report
‘Shattered’ Liberals wrangle over future direction in wake of federal election defeat
Some MPs argue against blocking Labor on climate, integrity and women’s issues as conservatives push to stay on ‘sensible centre right’
Chris Dawson did not have a ‘relationship’ with school girl but molested her, murder trial hears
Friend of the girl, who Dawson later married, tells court ‘it was molestation’ and their interactions were weird
New Zealand PM Jacinda Ardern responds to Texas school shooting
Prime minister says after 2019 Christchurch massacre, country made a ‘pragmatic’ decision to get guns off streets: ‘We saw something that wasn’t right and we acted’
North Korea fires suspected ICBM amid signs of preparation for nuclear test
South Korea calls missile launches a ‘grave provocation’ and detects an experiment conducted in preparation for possible nuclear testNorth Korea has fired a three missiles, including one believed to have long-range capabilities, into the sea off its east coast, the South Korean military has said, a day after Joe Biden ended his first to Asia as US president.Hours after the missile tests, South Korea’s presidential office said it had detected signs the North had “conducted an experiment” in preparation for a possible nuclear test, according to the Yonhap news agency. Continue reading...
Death of woman with epilepsy may be re-examined after Diane Stewart case
Exclusive: mother of Emily Whelan hopes tests that helped prove Stewart was murdered may shed light on daughter’s deathThe mother of a woman with epilepsy who died in 2016 hopes the high-profile murder of Diane Stewart could hold the key to establishing her daughter’s cause of death.Emily Whelan, 25, was found unresponsive in her bedroom in Leeds on 7 November 2016 and pronounced dead the next day at Leeds general infirmary. Continue reading...
‘They won’t accept us’: Roma refugees forced to camp at Prague train station
Humanitarian crisis grows as Ukrainian Roma families stuck at Czech train station say they are not treated like other refugeesPrague’s central railway station seems a picture of normality amid warm spring sunshine and the return of legions of tourists, who had been largely absent at the height of Covid. On the platform one weekday morning, two German sightseers gaze curiously at the statue of Sir Nicholas Winton, the British stockbroker who helped 669 mostly Jewish children escape from Nazi-occupied Czechoslovakia on the eve of the second world war.Yet just yards away, hundreds of Roma people are sheltering in the only place available to them since they joined the millions of Ukrainians fleeing the Russian invasion. Continue reading...
‘The fear still lives with me’: three years at mercy of the hostile environment
After an error on a visa application form, Sarah slipped into immigration limbo
Birmingham communities feel ‘ignored’ by Commonwealth Games bosses
Exclusive: panel says organisers have failed to engage city’s diverse groups in a meaningful wayOrganisers of the 2022 Commonwealth Games in Birmingham have left diverse communities feeling “largely ignored” and have failed to engage them in a meaningful way, according to a report.The Birmingham Race Impact Group (BRIG) commissioned a panel of race equality practitioners and consultants to assess the Games in a number of areas including legacy, community engagement and procurement. Continue reading...
Employee at collapsed Youpla funeral fund allegedly used racial slur when referring to Aboriginal clients
Staff member allegedly told colleague: ‘We aren’t here to show them respect or dignity. We are here to get money from them’
Rural News Corp paper delivers sharp rebuke to Barnaby Joyce over Nationals’ climate ‘deniers’
‘Bible of the bush’ urges party to concede global heating is real as Darren Chester compares Joyce’s boast about retaining seats to a surgeon saying an operation succeeded when ‘the patient died’
Confusion in Lagos as passenger plane is towed along highway
Rumours spread online that the aircraft had crashed, but authorities said it was simply being delivered to its new ownerA plane that was towed along the side of a busy expressway in Lagos on Tuesday night has caused widespread confusion and amusement to commuters – and rumours it had crashed – before Nigerian authorities said that it was being delivered to its new owner via the busy road.Several videos of the aircraft posted on social media showed it at various points along the side of a major road, within a mile of the international and domestic airport terminals and plane storage facilities in the Ikeja area of Lagos. Continue reading...
Six in 10 people in UK believe government ‘ignores rules’
People in the UK and Poland rated their governments worst on matters of trust and legitimacy in an EU-funded studyPeople in the UK are more likely than those in other European countries to say that their government ignores rules, according to a large six-state survey, with ‘Partygate’ probably to blame.The EU-funded study found that 62% of people in the UK think their government ignores rules and procedures, compared with an average of 44% and well above the next highest, Poland (50%), where the administration has been accused of authoritarianism. Continue reading...
Boris Johnson would throw ‘entire team under bus’ to survive Partygate, No 10 official says, amid claims over lockdown events – as it happened
Latest updates: insiders express fury to BBC that Boris Johnson escaped fine for events junior staff were penalised for attending. This blog is now closed, read our full report here.
All Australians should be offered free flu vaccines to prevent ‘disaster’, experts say
Influenza cases rise amid ongoing high Covid infections and hospital pressure sparking calls to increase vaccination rates
Cruelty of Canada’s residential schools ‘unimaginable’, governor general says
Mary Simon, first Indigenous person to hold post, attends service at Kamloops school to honor thousands of children who diedCanada’s governor general has described the country’s residential schools as places of unimaginable cruelty, in a eulogy to honour the thousands of Indigenous children who died while attending the institutions.“Today, we make ourselves heard across the country. Although it is hard, we are telling Canadians and the world about our wounds and pain,” Mary Simon, the Queen’s representative in Canada, told hundreds gathered on the grounds of the former Kamloops Indian residential school. Continue reading...
Ava White: a senseless death that shocked city of Liverpool
12-year-old went out with friends on night of Christmas lights switch-on and did not come home
Boy, 14, guilty of murder of Liverpool schoolgirl Ava White
Teenager stabbed 12-year-old in neck in Snapchat video row on night she went to see Christmas lightsA 14-year-old boy has been found guilty of murdering the 12-year-old Liverpool schoolgirl Ava White after he stabbed her in the neck in a row over a video posted on Snapchat.The boy stabbed her and then showed a “callous disregard” for his actions, seeming “rather pleased with himself, as if he feels big”, Liverpool crown court heard during a 12-day trial. Continue reading...
Atwood responds to book bans with ‘unburnable’ edition of Handmaid’s Tale
Auction of fire-resistant edition comes ahead of an expected US supreme court ruling reversing the right to abortionAmid political firestorms over books deemed by rightwingers to be unsuitable for school libraries, the author Margaret Atwood has announced an “unburnable” edition of her most famous novel, The Handmaid’s Tale.The Canadian author, 82, appeared in a short YouTube video to announce the project, attempting to flambé the one-off tome with a flame-thrower. Continue reading...
Boohoo agrees settlement in $100m US lawsuit over ‘fake promotions’
Online fashion retailer says settlement agreed ‘without admission of liability’Boohoo has reached a settlement in a $100m (£80m) US lawsuit that alleged the online fashion retailer used fake promotions to mislead shoppers.The Manchester-based company said the settlement had been agreed “without admission of liability” and within its existing provision for legal costs of £18m, a figure that included costs from other more run-of-the-mill cases such as trademark infringements or employment claims. Continue reading...
FBI seeks arrest of man claiming to be North Korea ‘special delegate’
Spaniard alleged to have conspired with cryptocurrency expert to help Pyongyang evade US sanctionsThe FBI has issued an arrest warrant for a Spanish man who claims to be a “special delegate” working for the government of North Korea, accusing him of recruiting a cryptocurrency expert in an attempt to help Pyongyang circumvent US sanctions.Alejandro Cao de Benós, a 47-year-old Spanish national who describes himself as Pyongyang’s special delegate for the committee for cultural relations with foreign countries, is alleged to have conspired with Virgil Griffith, a US cryptocurrency expert, to “illegally provide cryptocurrency and blockchain services to the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK)”. Continue reading...
KPMG fined £3.4m over ‘serious failures’ in Rolls-Royce audit
Regulator says accountants’ audit of jet engine maker failed to report payments to Indian intermediariesKPMG will pay a fine of £3.4m to the accounting regulator after accepting failures in its audit of Rolls-Royce, the British jet engine manufacturer that paid a £500m settlement after bribery allegations.The accountancy firm received a severe reprimand from the regulator, the Financial Reporting Council (FRC), and the firm will have to commission an independent review into the effectiveness of its policies. Continue reading...
Australia election: 10 lessons UK politics can learn
Labor pushed the conservative Coalition out of office for the first time in almost a decade. Here’s what it could mean for BritainAustralia’s Labor party has come to power, pushing the conservative Coalition out of office for the first time in almost a decade. Voters also delivered big wins for the Greens party and a group of independents promising action on climate change. Here are 10 takeaways for political strategists in the UK to consider.Well-crafted campaigns defeated rightwing populism … Continue reading...
Not up to black officers to solve police racism, says barrister as plan launched
Race action plan for England and Wales includes apology and history lessons on policing of black peopleBlack police officers should not be expected to solve racism in forces and must be allowed to “get on with their job”, the head of the body scrutinising a plan for England and Wales to combat racism has said.Compulsory anti-racism training will be given to all police officers alongside the targeted recruitment of black staff as part of a strategy released by the National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) and the College of Policing to tackle prejudice among forces. Continue reading...
‘I’ve never seen one in real life’: orchestra wows young audience in Great Yarmouth
BBC Concert Orchestra residency aims to inspire children and improve wellbeing in Norfolk townTen-year-old Fabian usually listens to pop and rock music at home in Great Yarmouth, but watching the BBC’s Concert Orchestra live on stage, it was the calming notes of the violin that were his favourite.Like many of the 200 pupils in the audience, it was his first experience of live orchestral music, and he was thrilled by it. From Vivaldi’s Four Seasons to Mendelssohn’s Hebrides Overture – with plenty of interactive elements thrown in – the year five pupils listened intently to over an hour of music. Continue reading...
Wayne Couzens denies indecent exposure before killing of Sarah Everard
Former police officer pleads not guilty to four counts of exposure in weeks before murderWayne Couzens, the killer of Sarah Everard, has denied indecently exposing himself in the weeks before he kidnapped her.The 49-year old made a brief court appearance by video link on Tuesday where he pleaded not guilty to four counts of exposure over alleged incidents of flashing on four occasions in 2021, while he was a police officer Continue reading...
Delayed response to drug use report due to ‘competing views’, NSW premier says
Dominic Perrottet insists government will respond shortly to the ‘complicated issues’ raised by 2018 inquiry into ice addiction
PM says ‘no change’ on Taiwan – as it happened
Prime minister confirms Australia to host Quad summit in 2023 after Tokyo meeting; 68 Covid deaths recorded. This blog is now closed
High number of invalid votes in culturally diverse seats prompts concerns after federal election
Big disparities in the informal vote across the nation spark fresh questions about compulsory preferential voting
Election day press release about asylum seeker boats ‘a disgrace’, Richard Marles says
Acting prime minister says information released by Liberal party about Sri Lankan boats being intercepted should not have been made public
What is the dispute on UK railways and could strikes be biggest in modern history?
The RMT has balloted about 40,000 members for industrial action over pay and cutsAs the biggest rail union, the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers (RMT), ballots its members over a strike that could bring the railways to a standstill, we explain what the dispute is all about – and whether the government can stop it. Continue reading...
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