Feed wwwtheguardiancom World news | The Guardian

Favorite IconWorld news | The Guardian

Link https://www.theguardian.com/world
Feed http://www.theguardian.com/world/rss
Copyright Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. 2025
Updated 2025-11-11 02:17
Charity Commission opens compliance case into donor to the Prince’s Trust
Move to examine the Barrowman Foundation comes amid mounting scrutiny of Charles’s charityThe Charity Commission has opened a compliance case into one of the key donors to Prince Charles’s charity after it emerged it had been funded by unsecured loans.The Barrowman Foundation, a platinum donor to the Prince’s Trust, has not recorded any donations in its published accounts since it was set up and is funded by borrowings from its founder, the businessman Doug Barrowman. Continue reading...
‘They beat girls just for smiling’: life in Afghanistan one year after the Taliban’s return
Despite their promises of peace and stability, the country is on its knees, and its people are desperateMaryam* is near the top of her sixth grade class in Kabul, which under Taliban rule means that her education should be ending in a few months.But the 10-year-old, whose name we have changed to protect her identity, has a strategy to stay in school for another year, and her eyes dance with satisfaction as she explains her plan. “I will make sure I don’t answer too many questions right. I have decided to fail, so I can study sixth grade again.” Continue reading...
Pelosi’s ‘reckless’ Taiwan visit deepens US-China rupture – why did she go?
The speaker insisted she was promoting democracy but critics suggest a last hurrah before she loses the gavel in NovemberRoy Blunt lived up his surname when he said this week: “So I’m about to use four words in a row that I haven’t used in this way before, and those four words are: ‘Speaker Pelosi was right.’”The Republican senator was praising Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan, the first by a speaker of the US House of Representatives in a quarter of a century. Continue reading...
‘Zombie government’: more than half of departments delay key decisions
As an economic crisis looms in the UK, legislation shelved and deadlines missed on energy, online safety and gambling lawsMining along the west coast of Cumbria goes back to at least the 1600s, and this summer the local community awaited a crucial government decision on whether a new deep coalmine operation would be given the go-ahead.While proponents of the £165m deep coalmine near Whitehaven say it would create jobs and help power the UK’s steel industry, environmental campaigners say it would undermine the government’s commitment to meeting climate targets. Continue reading...
Millions living in areas where police not trained in handling domestic violence
Only one force in England and Wales says all its officers have received the recommended training and nine forces have not trained anyMillions of people in England and Wales are living in areas where police have received no specialist training in responding to domestic violence.Data released under freedom of information laws reveals that nine police forces had not given any officers specialist domestic abuse training by the end of 2021, and that those which had, in most cases, had only trained small numbers. Continue reading...
‘When I see kids vaping, I warn them: that’s what killed my daughter’
The mother of a teenager who died after her lungs collapsed believes e-cigarettes were the cause and is calling for tougher legislationTeenager Rosey Christoffersen loved football from an early age, with her enthusiasm matched by a talent for scoring goals. She attended regular training sessions and played weekly fixtures with a local club, but became alarmed one season over her rapidly declining fitness.“I’m gassed,” she would tell her coach at Wallasey Wanderers in Wirral as she struggled with exhaustion, asking to be pulled off at half-time. She was also complaining to her family of pains in her chest. Continue reading...
‘Shameful’: Afghans who helped UK abandoned to a life of fear under the Taliban
Home Office accused of failing to ensure safety of thousands including teachers and translatorsThousands of Afghans who worked for the UK have been abandoned and remain at risk from the Taliban a year after the evacuation from Kabul, a coalition of human rights groups has said.In a parliamentary briefing, nine expert groups on Afghanistan criticised the British government’s resettlement schemes as “unjustifiably restrictive”. They said it was deeply concerning that the government is currently not offering a safe route for many Afghan women and girls or to oppressed minority groups. Continue reading...
More than a third of parents fail to contribute towards child maintenance payments
Ineffective government-run scheme risks creating a poverty trap for families owed money, MPs warnNearly 40% of parents who are supposed to contribute towards the upkeep of their children through the government-run child maintenance system are failing to make any payments.Most parents owing maintenance arrange their own payments, but the Child Maintenance Service (CMS) created a scheme called Collect and Pay, which calculates how much maintenance is due and takes in the funds. It is often used by low-income parents who struggle to make payments. Continue reading...
NSW Liberals pass preselection reforms to prevent repeat of election fiasco
Senator Andrew Bragg praises party for ‘modernising its mechanics’ after the state branch adopted his motion• Get our free news app, morning email briefing and daily news podcastSenator Andrew Bragg has heralded the passage of reforms by the New South Wales Liberal party as important to avoid a repeat of its preselection fiasco before the 2022 election.The state party’s annual general meeting on Saturday adopted the NSW senator’s proposed reforms requiring the party to publish and follow a timetable for preselections within 12 months of an election.Sign up to receive an email with the top stories from Guardian Australia every morning Continue reading...
Unbreakable Nick Kyrgios thunders into Citi Open final after defeating Mikael Ymer
The US, Australia and Japan urge China to cease military exercises around Taiwan – as it happened
This blog is now closed. Read our latest live news coverage of China’s military drills around Taiwan hereHere’s a summary of the latest developments as it passes 2pm in Taipei.
Opposition calls for Australia to develop missiles, warning ‘lucky country’ era is over
Shadow defence minister Andrew Hastie warns of ‘bleak’ outlook in region as Chinese embassy condemns Australia’s ‘finger-pointing’• Get our free news app, morning email briefing and daily news podcastThe shadow defence minister, Andrew Hastie, has called for Australia to develop and operate its own missiles, warning the era of the “lucky country” is over.On Sunday, Hastie argued Australia needs greater deterrents given the “very bleak” strategic outlook, with a “rising China” displaying “revisionist and expansionist ambitions”.Sign up to receive an email with the top stories from Guardian Australia every morning Continue reading...
Labor to advocate for ‘significant’ pay rise for Australia’s aged care sector, Anika Wells says
Albanese government says it is committed to pay for any increase ordered by Fair Work Commission, with unions calling for 25%
Rishi Sunak vows to end low-earning degrees in post-16 education shake-up
Candidate for PM proposes to raise prestige of vocational education and mandate sixth-form maths and English with a British baccalaureateRishi Sunak has vowed to phase out university degrees that do not improve students’ “earning potential”, create a Russell Group of world-class technical colleges and introduce a British baccalaureate that would prevent 16-year-olds from dropping maths and English.The Tory leadership hopeful said his plans to reform post-16 education marked “a significant stride towards parity of esteem between vocational and academic education”. Continue reading...
11-year-old girl dies after going missing in lake at Windsor water park
Public and rescue services searched lake for an hour after girl disappeared under water and ‘didn’t come back up’An 11-year-old girl has died in hospital after getting into difficulties at a water park in Windsor, police said.The youngster, who has yet to be formally identified, had gone missing after getting into a lake at Liquid Leisure near Datchet in Berkshire on Saturday afternoon. Continue reading...
Gold medals flow again for Australia as Kurtis Marschall defends pole vault title
‘A historic wrong’: Government set to announce compensation for victims of contaminated blood scandal
Ministers expected to accept recommendations that payments should be no less than £100,000A scheme handing payments to those affected by the contaminated blood scandal will be announced this week, as ministers scramble to help those harmed by the “historic wrong”.Whitehall sources confirmed that a programme handing interim payments will be confirmed in the coming days, once officials have ironed out issues to ensure that victims are not taxed on the payments or have their benefits affected by them. It is thought that ministers accept recent recommendations that infected people and bereaved partners should get “payments of no less than £100,000”. Continue reading...
Raging fire in Cuban oil depot leaves 80 injured and 17 firefighters missing
800 people evacuated as smoke billows towards Havana after lightning strikes oil tank in Matanzas supertanker baseA fire set off by a lightning strike at an oil storage facility raged uncontrolled on Saturday in the city of Matanzas, where four explosions and flames injured nearly 80 people and left 17 firefighters missing, Cuban authorities said.Firefighters and other specialists were still trying to quell the blaze at the Matanzas supertanker base, where the fire began during a thunderstorm on Friday night, the ministry of energy and mines tweeted. The government said later that it had asked for help from international experts in “friendly countries” with experience in the oil sector. Continue reading...
Tory party’s lurch to right ‘painful’ to watch, says Rory Stewart
Former minister also argues Britain should move beyond first-past-post political system at Edinburgh festival fringeFormer Foreign Office minister Rory Stewart has said he has found it “painful” to watch the Conservative party “lurch to the right”, arguing that electoral reform is the only way to plug a “gaping hole in the middle of British politics”.
Uganda’s suspension of LGBT charity a ‘clear witch-hunt’, say campaigners
Country’s government says Sexual Minorities Uganda ‘operating illegally’ in east African nationThe Ugandan government has suspended the country’s leading gay rights organisation, accusing it of operating illegally in the east African nation, in a move campaigners condemned as “a clear witch-hunt”.The National Bureau for Non-Governmental Organizations (NGO) – part of the internal affairs ministry – announced on Friday that it had suspended Sexual Minorities Uganda (Smug) for not registering with the authorities. Continue reading...
Russia-Ukraine war ‘about to enter new phase’ as Russian forces gather in the south, UK intelligence warns – as it happened
UK’s Ministry of Defence says troop build-up could be in anticipation of Ukrainian counter-offensive or for a new assaultHere are some of the latest images from photographers on the ground in Ukraine:Concerns are growing for the safety of Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant after an attack by Russian anti-aircraft missiles on 5 August. Continue reading...
How TikTok bombards young men with misogynistic videos
Observer investigation shows how online platform’s algorithm pushed Andrew Tate posts to an imaginary teenagerAn Observer investigation has revealed how TikTok is promoting misogynistic content to young people despite claiming to ban it.
Israel bombs Gaza Strip for second day in ‘pre-emptive operation’
Health authorities in Palestinian enclave report 15 dead in Israeli attacks targeting Islamic JihadResidents of the Gaza Strip were bracing for the possibility of a new round of war on Saturday after two days of “pre-emptive” Israeli airstrikes against a Palestinian militant group.Israeli warplanes hit several sites in the blockaded territory on Friday, part of a surprise operation named “Breaking Dawn” that the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) said thwarted alleged planned rocket attacks by Palestinian Islamic Jihad. Continue reading...
Lionesses’ legacy at risk as school PE fails girls, experts warn
In the past 10 years alone, 42,000 hours of PE lessons have been lost in UK secondary schools – and girls are the worst hitTwelve years of Tory government have had a disastrous impact on girls’ sport in schools, experts have said, warning that last weekend’s women’s Euro victory will be squandered unless drastic action is taken.In the past 10 years, 42,000 hours of PE lessons have been lost in secondaries – with girls the most affected – and the situation is getting worse, according to the Youth Sport Trust. Continue reading...
Ministers coordinate response after cyber-attack hits NHS 111
Outage that affected services across system may not be fully resolved until next week, says IT providerMinisters are working to coordinate a “resilience response” after a cyber-attack caused a significant outage across the NHS computer system.The outage affected services across the system such as patient referrals, ambulances being dispatched, out-of-hours appointment bookings, and emergency prescriptions. Continue reading...
Discoveries in Pompeii reveal lives of lower and middle classes
Archaeologists are enriching our knowledge about those who were ‘vulnerable class during political crises and food shortages’A trunk with its lid left open, a wooden dishware closet and a three-legged accent table topped by decorative bowls. These are among the latest discoveries by archaeologists that are enriching knowledge about middle-class lives in Pompeii before Mount Vesuvius’s furious eruption buried the ancient Roman city in volcanic debris.Pompeii’s archaeological park, one of Italy’s top tourist attractions, announced the recent finds on Saturday. Continue reading...
Thousands celebrate Pride in Brighton after two-year hiatus
One of UK’s biggest LGBTQ+ parades returns to mark 30th anniversary after Covid cancellationsThousands of people were expected to fill the streets of Brighton on Saturday to celebrate the return of one of the UK’s biggest Pride events.The parade and concerts, headlined by Christina Aguilera to a sold-out audience on Saturday and Paloma Faith on Sunday, mark the return of the LGBTQ+ celebration for the first time in three years after the last two were cancelled due to Covid. Continue reading...
British farmers face paying for border checkpoints in EU after Brexit halts exports
Pedigree livestock breeders in Britain could be forced to spend millions of pounds to build facilities in France for ‘red tape’ checks by vets so their animals are allowed to enter the single marketBritish farmers are trying to set up red tape and border checks in France costing millions of pounds – and may even pay for it themselves.Breeders in Britain are unable to export their pedigree cattle, sheep and pigs to the EU because no one has built any border control posts where vets can check the animals before they enter the single market. Continue reading...
Taiwan says China making simulated attack on main island
Reports of further incursions over median line in military drills, as US and allies condemn use of missiles
Archie Battersbee dies after parents lose legal battle over life support
Mother says 12-year-old ‘fought until the end’ following withdrawal of treatment at Royal London hospitalArchie Battersbee, the 12-year-old boy whose parents fought a long-running legal battle to prevent his life support treatment from being removed, has died, his mother has said.Speaking outside the Royal London hospital, Hollie Dance said he had “fought right until the very end”. Continue reading...
Afghanistan: bomb in Kabul shopping street injures at least 22 people
The explosion happened in a western district where the minority Shia Muslim community regularly meetA bomb exploded in a busy shopping street in Afghanistan’s capital Kabul on Saturday injuring at least 22 people, hospital officials and witnesses said.The blast occurred in a western district of the city where members of the minority Shia Muslim community regularly meet. Continue reading...
The 23-year-old fashion designer dressing Colombia’s first black female vice-president
When Francia Márquez became the South American country’s VP elect, she chose the unknown Esteban Sinisterra Paz to create her outfitsEsteban Sinisterra Paz, a 23-year-old fashion designer from Colombia’s conflict-ridden and impoverished Pacific region, had not long started his career when he received a call from a history-making client.Francia Márquez – the renowned environmental activist and Colombia’s first black female vice-president-elect – was on the line, and she wanted two outfits made. Continue reading...
Six arrested after man dies in altercation at holiday park in Sussex
Incident at Parkdean Resorts in Camber Sands on Friday involved ‘a group of people’, police saySix people have been arrested after an altercation at a holiday park in Sussex in which a man died.The incident happened at Parkdean Resorts in Camber Sands, East Sussex, just before 11pm on Friday and involved “a group of people”, police said. Continue reading...
Footage appears to show fresh atrocity against Ukrainian PoW
Russians accused of barbaric behaviour apparently seen in videos and photos from captured city of Popasna
Rishi Sunak’s speech on funding urban areas ‘misunderstood’, says Tory ex-minister
Leadership candidate sparked outrage in Tunbridge Wells saying he helped redirect money to more prosperous townsFormer minister Andrew Mitchell has defended Rishi Sunak, claiming his comments on taking money from deprived urban areas and redirecting it towards more prosperous towns such as Tunbridge Wells were “misunderstood”.The former chancellor sparked outrage after he made the admission while speaking to Conservative party members in the affluent Kent town on Friday. Continue reading...
National Indigenous Music awards 2022: stars pay tribute to Archie Roach in emotional ceremony
Incredible lineup of First Nations acts perform at the Amphitheater in Darwin’s botanic gardens
‘Hive of inactivity’: Boris Johnson under fire for approach to final weeks as PM
Leading author accuses Tory leader of going ‘missing in action’ as his premiership winds downFor most prime ministers, the certain knowledge that their premiership is coming to an end sparks a frenetic final effort to complete as much of their policy agendas as possible and secure a legacy. Yet Boris Johnson’s decision to spend his last months thanking supporters at Chequers, holding a wedding party and taking a holiday weeks before his time in Downing St expires is an “enigmatic end for an enigmatic premiership”, according to one of the country’s best-known contemporary historians.Sir Anthony Seldon, who has written books on the Blair, Brown, Cameron and May premierships and studied the impossible job prime ministers face, said Johnson’s approach contrasted sharply with that of his predecessors who had the luxury of planning their final weeks. Continue reading...
Monkeypox showing signs of plateauing in UK, say health officials
Health Security Agency warns against complacency despite figures suggesting outbreak has slowedThe monkeypox outbreak in the UK is showing signs of plateauing, the UK Health Security Agency has said.The organisation said there had been 2,859 confirmed and highly probable cases of the viral disease as of 4 August, the majority of which are transmitted between men who have sex with men. Continue reading...
Bus crash in Croatia kills 12 Polish pilgrims travelling to shrine
Eighteen of 30 people injured are in serious condition, say authorities, after vehicle veered off motorwayTwelve Polish nationals have died and 30 others were injured when a bus bound for Zagreb veered off a motorway in northern Croatia.The injured were taken to hospitals in the area and 18 were in a serious condition, said Maja Grba Bujević, head of Croatia’s emergency services. Continue reading...
Cyclists in UK who kill pedestrians could be prosecuted same as motorists
Grant Shapps says the proposed law will be the ‘cycling equivalent of death by dangerous driving’ and aims to tackle a ‘selfish minority’Cyclists who kill pedestrians could be prosecuted in the same way as motorists under a proposed government crackdown.The transport secretary, Grant Shapps, said the law is needed to “impress on cyclists the real harm they can cause when speed is combined with lack of care”. Continue reading...
Third member of Cardiff family dies from ‘poisoning’ in Bangladesh
Death of Samira Islam, 20, follows deaths of Rafiqul, 51, and Mahiqul, 16, during holidayA woman has become the latest family member of a British family of five on holiday in Bangladesh to die from a suspected poisoning.Samira Islam, 20, died on Friday after she was discovered unconscious in a locked room by police officers on 26 July. Her father, Rafiqul Islam, 51, a taxi driver, and his 16-year-old son, Mahiqul, also died in the rented flat in the eastern city of Sylhet. Continue reading...
Almost 35,000 Britons in limbo as Portugal fails to issue post-Brexit ID cards
British nationals living in country are unable to access healthcare, change jobs or travel in and outBritish nationals living in Portugal are unable to access healthcare, change jobs, or travel in and out of the country as its ministers have not issued them with post-Brexit residency cards, it has emerged.The UK government has raised the issue at ministerial level and urged Portugal to implement fully the withdrawal agreement and protect the rights of the 34,500 Britons who made the country their home before Brexit. Continue reading...
Rail passengers warned of disruption in next strike by Aslef drivers
Industrial action by Aslef members at nine companies is scheduled to take place on Saturday 13 AugustRail passengers are being warned of fresh disruption to services because of a planned strike by train drivers at nine companies in the long-running row over pay and conditions.Industry leaders said the 24-hour strike by members of the Aslef union next Saturday, 13 August, coincides with another busy weekend of football, with Premier League games in Manchester, London, Birmingham and Brighton likely to be affected. Continue reading...
Judith Durham, Australian singer and vocalist of The Seekers, dies at 79
Melbourne-born entertainer rocketed to international fame in the 1960s with hits including The Carnival is Over, A World of Our Own and Georgy Girl
Archie Battersbee: mother says she has done all she can after family told life support to end
Family were told treatment to be withdrawn after attempt to have 12-year-old moved to a hospice failsThe mother of Archie Battersbee has said she has done everything she promised her son she would do as the family prepares for his life support to be withdrawn on Saturday morning.Archie’s parents, Hollie Dance and Paul Battersbee, made an unsuccessful last-ditch plea to the European court of human rights on Friday night to intervene after their attempt to appeal against a high court ruling that he must remain at the Royal London hospital was rejected by the court of appeal. Continue reading...
Dara Ó Briain takes aim at rightwing critics and ‘terrible idea’ of Brexit
Mock the Week host also says people ‘should fight to protect the BBC’ as series draws to a close after 17 years
Singer Judith Durham dies; Penny Wong calls for restraint on China’s exercises; 89 Covid deaths – as it happened
Independent review recommends home buybacks for NSW flood victims. This blog is now closed
Electoral reform group seeks £1m to back MPs who can beat Tories
Win as One hopes to raise money to support candidates from progressive parties who are in favour of changeA grassroots campaign is hoping to raise £1m to bring more supporters of electoral reform to the Commons at the next general election.The group, called Win as One, will work with candidates from progressive parties who are well-placed to beat the Tories and are in support of proportional representation (PR). Continue reading...
Taiwan: China staging mock invasion and breaching demarcation line
Condemnation as Beijing pulls out of climate change co-operation with US, while military exercises in Taiwan Strait continueTaiwan has accused the Chinese army of simulating an attack on its main island, as Beijing continued retaliation for Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taipei.Beijing on Saturday continued some of its largest-ever military drills around Taiwan – exercises seen as practice for a blockade and ultimate invasion of the island. Continue reading...
No 46 to Le Manoir: Raymond Blanc funds local bus service to restaurant
Hourly bus serves local villages and brings staff – and sometimes customers – to Michelin-starred restaurantWith rural buses in long-term decline and a funding crisis putting more routes in peril, a surprising service has appeared on the English transport menu: the No 46 bus to Le Manoir aux Quat’Saisons.Raymond Blanc’s celebrated restaurant and hotel in the heart of the Oxfordshire countryside may not appear classic bus territory. The Michelin-starred establishment’s seven-course dinner with matching wines starts at £350 a head, rising to just over £1,000 if you want to drink the good stuff. Continue reading...
...795796797798799800801802803804...