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Updated 2025-07-18 04:01
‘He hasn’t killed anyone’: Germans react to Boris Becker’s imprisonment
Compatriots remember the tennis player’s iconic momentsThe imprisonment in a London jail of tennis legend Boris Becker for bankruptcy offences has triggered an outpouring of shock and disappointment in his native Germany, where he was once hailed as a national hero.One former fan spoke for many when he said: “He made mistakes for which he’s rightly being punished. But maybe he’ll get up again one day, just like Becker, the tennis player, so often did.” Continue reading...
Naomi Judd: Country Music Hall of Fame induction goes ahead after death
The Judds and Ray Charles among inductees in Nashville a day after singer dies at 76The Country Music Hall of Fame was set to induct The Judds on Sunday night, despite the death of Naomi Judd on Saturday.The hall said it would continue with the ceremony at the request of Judd’s family, but would do so with “heavy hearts and weighted minds”, according to its chief executive, Kyle Young. Continue reading...
‘Dental deserts’ form in England as dentists quit NHS, experts warn
Patients struggle to get treatment as report says health service has lowest number of dentists for a decade“Dental deserts” are emerging across England after more than 2,000 dentists quit the NHS last year, leaving millions of people struggling to get checkups or have toothaches fixed, a new report reveals.The exodus is exacerbating a crisis that has seen patients battle to get dental treatment because so few dental surgeries will see them as NHS patients. Continue reading...
Katie Kenyon: body in Lancashire forest confirmed to be missing 33-year-old
Officers found body in Forest of Bowland on Friday night and determined head injuries as cause of deathA body found in a Lancashire forest has been identified as missing 33-year-old Katie Kenyon, police have confirmed.Lancashire constabulary said a postmortem examination found that she had died as a result of head injuries. Continue reading...
Russia’s trolling on Ukraine gets ‘incredible traction’ on TikTok
US social media researcher says authentic-seeming accounts have hundreds of thousands of followers
Judge in Afghanistan ‘backstabbed’ by UK government’s refusal of sanctuary
Officials say man in hiding who helped prosecute terrorists does not meet relocation criteria, despite high court ruling in his favourA senior judge who prosecuted terrorists and is now in hiding in Afghanistan feels “heartbroken, abandoned and backstabbed” by the British government for refusing to bring him to safety despite a high court ruling in his favour.The high-profile judge, whom the Guardian is not naming for his safety, also received strong support from two former independent reviewers of terrorism legislation. Continue reading...
Kwarteng and Sunak at odds over windfall tax on oil and gas profits
Government sources play down idea of cabinet split as business secretary quashes idea recently mooted by chancellorGovernment sources have played down the idea of a cabinet split over a possible windfall tax on energy companies as the business secretary, Kwasi Kwarteng, firmly quashed the idea, days after it was mooted by the chancellor.In a search for solutions to a crisis over energy prices, and the cost of living more widely, Rishi Sunak said a windfall tax, as advocated by Labour, was possible if energy companies did not properly reinvest bumper profits. Continue reading...
Pressure grows on Foreign Office to help free Briton facing death penalty in Iraq
More than 95,000 sign petition urging the release of geologist Jim Fitton, detained over artefact smuggling allegationsMinisters are under increasing pressure to help free a retired British geologist at risk of facing the death penalty in Iraq over smuggling allegations.A petition urging the release of father-of-two Jim Fitton, 66, has received more than 95,000 signatures in the three days since it was launched. Continue reading...
Jason Donovan and Kylie Minogue reunite for Neighbours finale
The TV couple are to appear in Australia’s long-running soap opera as production ends after 37 yearsThey were one of television’s most popular couples, and now they’re getting back together, especially for you – or at least for viewers of Neighbours. Scott and Charlene, played by Jason Donovan and Kylie Minogue, will return after more than 30 years for the show’s finale.Jason Herbison, executive producer of the Australian soap, said the pair were “the ultimate Neighbours couple and it would not feel right to end the show without them”. Continue reading...
Vulnerable Australians missing out on healthcare as insufficient Medicare rebate drives GP shortage
Fee-for-service funding model cannot keep up with cost of complex primary care needs, community organisations say
NSW flood victims kicked out of caravan parks to make way for tourists
More than a month after homes were destroyed by the deluge, thousands of northern rivers’ residents still struggle to find secure accommodationFlood victims in New South Wales’ northern rivers say they are still struggling to find accommodation, as some are kicked out of caravan parks to make way for tourists.Linda Barney, 69, and her husband, Bob, lost everything in the floods. Their house in Coraki is destroyed and they are not sure when they will be able to return to it. Continue reading...
LNP preferences could be ‘deciding factor’ for One Nation in Queensland
Opponents say preference decision is a strategic move that could alienate moderate voters within the party
Hostile foreign states pose ‘real risk’ of influencing MPs’ cross-party groups
Standards committee report calls for reforms to all-party parliamentary groups to avert ‘next great parliamentary scandal’Hostile foreign states and others pose a “real risk” of gaining access and wielding influence through all-party parliamentary groups (APPGs), the Commons standards committee has warned.Calling for reforms to avert what it described as the “next great parliamentary scandal”, the committee also voiced concerns that a dramatic rise in the number of the informal cross-party groups also risks “inappropriate influence and access” because they are so difficult to monitor. Continue reading...
Russia-Ukraine war: catch up on this week’s must-read news and analysis
Russia turns off the gas, fears Moldova could be pulled into the war, and on the ground in Zaporizhzhia
Victoria’s government quietly prepares an election budget while attention is diverted
Analysis: In the days before last year’s budget, $4.2bn in commitments were announced. Just $277m has been announced ahead of Tuesday’s
‘They were tiny’: the Indonesians still fighting their conviction as adults in Australia
Anto and Samsul Bahar were 15 when they were jailed in a maximum security facility in Western Australia
UK to impose direct rule over British Virgin Islands after inquiry finds rampant corruption
In a further twist the islands’ premier has been arrested in a Miami sting operation on suspicion of drug traffickingBritain is poised to impose a form of direct rule over the British Virgin Islands after the Caribbean territory’s premier was arrested in Miami on suspicion of drug running, and a UK-appointed commission of inquiry found rampant failings in governance.Andrew Fahie was due to appear in court in Miami on Friday, a day after he was arrested by the US Drug Enforcement Agency in an elaborate sting operation that also snared the chief executive of the BVI port authority and her son. Continue reading...
Tories tried to ‘cover up’ porn MP scandal by not naming Parish earlier, says Labour – as it happened
This live blog is now closed, you can read more about Neil Parish and the investigation into whether he watched pornography in the Commons hereStudents of newspaper hyperbole will be reading with admiration today the Daily Mail’s “damning six-page dossier” about Labour and lockdown breaches. For obvious reasons, the Conservatives are keen to suggest that Boris Johnson was not the only senior politician to have broken Covid rules (although he and Rishi Sunak are the only ones to have been fined by the police) and today the Mail has gone in all guns blazing with a report implying Keir Starmer’s attacks on Boris Johnson over Partygate have been hypocritical.The main story focuses on the incident where Starmer was photographed drinking beer in an office with Labour staffers when they were campaigning in the run-up to the Hartlepool byelection in April 2021. Starmer says they were just having a meal break, the Durham police has said no Covid rules were broken.Keir Starmer was in the workplace, meeting a local MP in her constituency office and participating in an online Labour party event. They paused for food as the meeting was during the evening. No rules were broken.There is simply no comparison between standing in a kitchen having something to eat between meetings, with multiple, flagrant rule-breaking drinks parties at the heart of government, dismissed by lies at the despatch box and resulting in an apology to the Queen.There is little credibility in any argument that the UK government either did not anticipate the implications of what it had agreed, or was constrained and unable to choose any other option.The facts and choices had been spelt out clearly over the whole period from 2016 onwards and the detail of the provisions (notably most of the applicable EU law contained in annex 2 to the protocol) were known at latest in autumn 2018. Continue reading...
Frasers Group delays release of annual results for third time in four years
Group controlled by Mike Ashley blames logjam in audit industry but expects pre-tax profits between £300m and £350mFrasers Group, the owner of Sports Direct, House of Fraser and Flannels, has delayed publication of its full annual results for the third time in four years, blaming a logjam in the audit industry.The group, which is controlled by Mike Ashley, said full results would be delayed by at least a month as “the timing of the acquisition and resource constraints within the audit industry as a whole”, meant it could not include figures for its newly acquired business, Studio Retail, until September. Continue reading...
Ukraine accuses Russian forces of seizing 2,000 artworks in Mariupol
City council is reportedly preparing materials to initiate criminal proceedings over mass cultural looting
NatWest reports 40% profit jump as bank refers customers to debt experts
Strong first-quarter results come as group warns of ‘uncertain’ economy because of cost of living crisisNatWest has reported a 40% jump in first-quarter profits but warned about the UK’s “uncertain” economy amid the cost of living crisis, saying it had referred more than 2,000 customers to debt experts at Citizens Advice.The banking group – formerly known as Royal Bank of Scotland – beat expectations after reporting a jump in pre-tax profits to £1.2bn compared with £885m a year earlier. That was compared with analyst forecasts of a 15% drop in profits to £755m. Continue reading...
Rebekah Vardy has suggested agent may have leaked Coleen Rooney stories to Sun, court hears
Development comes on eve of libel trial over information from Rooney’s private Instagram accountRebekah Vardy has suggested her agent may have leaked stories about Coleen Rooney to the Sun, the high court has heard, in a last-minute change of approach on the eve of the “Wagatha Christie” libel trial.The two women are locked in an expensive and increasingly messy libel battle over accusations Vardy passed information from Rooney’s private Instagram account to the tabloid. Continue reading...
Russia’s push into eastern Ukraine comes amid fears of a protracted war
Analysis: The Kremlin’s mounting offensive comes as Boris Johnson and Jens Stoltenburg warn war could last for years
Deutsche Bank HQ in Frankfurt raided over suspected money laundering
Officers from financial regulator, federal police and public prosecutor raid Germany’s largest lenderGerman authorities have raided Deutsche Bank’s headquarters in Frankfurt over suspected money laundering at the country’s largest lender.Officers from the financial regulator BaFin, the federal police, and the Frankfurt public prosecutor’s office launched a raid on the bank’s glass-panelled offices – known locally as the “twin towers” – on Friday morning after securing a search warrant from the local court. Continue reading...
Constable painting of Waterloo Bridge ‘transformed’ by conservation work
National Trust puts artist’s largest work on display at Anglesey Abbey in Cambridgeshire after removal of yellowed varnishLayers of yellowed varnish have been painstakingly removed from a John Constable painting of Waterloo Bridge to reveal new detail of the early 19th-century Thames skyline and a bright blue sky.The painting – the largest created by Constable – “has been dramatically transformed by the conservation treatment”, said Sarah Maisey, senior remedial conservator for paintings at the National Trust, which undertook the work. Continue reading...
Barrister was discriminated against for gender-critical views, tribunal hears
Allison Bailey says Garden Court chambers and Stonewall wrongly treated her gender-critical views as transphobicA barrister was unlawfully discriminated against by her chambers, which, encouraged by Stonewall, wrongly treated her gender-critical views as transphobic and bigoted, an employment tribunal has been told.Allison Bailey is suing Garden Court chambers and Stonewall after she was asked by her chambers to delete two tweets criticising the LGBTQ+ charity’s position on trans rights and which Stonewall had complained about. Continue reading...
‘Head coach wants to play’: the US drug sting that led to BVI premier’s arrest
Andrew Fahie is due in court on drug charges in Miami after arrest following months-long DEA operationIn mid-October, as Sir Gary Hickinbottom’s commission of inquiry into the government of British Virgin Islands led by the premier, Andrew Fahie, was taking laborious public oral evidence for a 44th day, a US Drug Enforcement Administration informant was, according to court papers, meeting some self-proclaimed Lebanese Hezbollah operatives on the BVI island of Tortola to discuss how to shift cocaine through the territory en route to Puerto Rico, Miami and New York.Hickinbottom was taking mind-numbingly dull evidence on how to apply for BVI citizenship, and whether the process was open to manipulation. Continue reading...
Mark Rylance calls out Tory arts cuts in new Jerusalem programme
The actor, who is reprising his role in Jez Butterworth’s celebrated play, points out that leading politicians’ school Eton has extensive theatre facilitiesIt is the part of the theatre programme where the cast usually list their biggest roles, awards and assorted appearances on The Bill and Casualty. But in the programme for the new West End run of the hit play Jerusalem, Mark Rylance has also used his actor biography to criticise cuts to arts education.“If, in modern day England, an institution like Eton deems drama important enough to have two theatres, why are we allowing our government to cut arts education from the life of the rest of our young people and our hard-pressed teachers,” he writes, in a biography that points up his schoolteacher parents’ devotion to amateur dramatics and his grandfather’s experience of acting in a prisoner of war camp. Continue reading...
Airbnb embraces home working with location-blind equal pay model
Firm to pay staff in US, UK and other countries flat rates regardless of their region’s living costsAirbnb staff will be able to work from almost anywhere they want, the company has announced, and they won’t see their pay docked if they move outside metropolitan areas.The new model will apply to staff in the US, but also those in the UK and other countries. To make it work, the company said it would focus in-person collaboration on roughly quarterly get-togethers and aim to bundle work together into two product releases a year, its chief executive and co-founder, Brian Chesky, said. Continue reading...
US army replaces cake it stole from Italian girl 77 years ago
Meri Mion, 90, was 13 when soldiers took her birthday cake as it cooled on windowsill in San PietroRepentant American soldiers have presented an Italian woman with a birthday cake to make up for the one their predecessors stole from her as it cooled on a windowsill 77 years ago.It was the eve of Meri Mion’s 13th birthday when US troops arrived in her village of San Pietro, near Vicenza in northern Italy, to fight against German soldiers. Continue reading...
Michelle Mone’s home raided as PPE firm linked to Tory peer investigated
NCA launches investigation into PPE Medpro, which secured £200m in Covid contractsThe National Crime Agency has launched a potential fraud investigation into a PPE company linked to Michelle Mone and searched the Tory peer’s shared home.The NCA investigation is into PPE Medpro, a company that secured more than £200m in government contracts near the start of the pandemic without public tender. Continue reading...
Russia-Ukraine war: what we know on day 65 of the invasion
Ukrainian capital was rocked by Russian missile strikes while UN secretary general visited
Scott Morrison suggests ‘remarkable similarity’ between China and Solomon Islands rhetoric – as it happened
Prime minister responds after Solomon Islands PM says he heard about Aukus pact through media; Labor leader heads to Perth after week in Covid isolation as deputy Richard Marles tests positive; at least 26 coronavirus deaths recorded. This blog is now closed
Independent MP drops threat to withdraw supply to Perrottet’s minority government
Sydney MP Alex Greenwich says he will continue work with NSW government after meeting with premier and transgender advocates
South Africa may be entering fifth Covid wave earlier than expected
Rise in infections appears to be driven by Omicron sub-variants, say health officialsSouth Africa may be entering a fifth Covid wave earlier than expected after a sustained rise in infections over the past 14 days that seems to be driven by the BA.4 and BA.5 Omicron sub-variants, health officials and scientists have said.The country that has recorded the most coronavirus cases and deaths on the African continent only exited a fourth wave around January and had predicted a fifth wave could start in May or June, early in the southern hemisphere winter. Continue reading...
Israeli police and Palestinians clash at al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem
Red Crescent says at least 42 injured at site revered by Muslims and Jews as police fire rubber bullets at youths throwing rocksIsraeli police have fired rubber bullets and stun grenades towards Palestinian youths throwing rocks in the latest outbreak of violence at Jerusalem’s al-Aqsa mosque, a site revered by Muslims and Jews.At least 42 Palestinians were injured in the early morning clashes on Friday at Islam’s third-holiest site, the Palestine Red Crescent said. Continue reading...
UK house price growth slows as cost of living crisis starts to hit market
Average price of property in April rises to £267,620, the ninth straight month of growth, says NationwideHouse prices continued to climb in April but the rate of growth is slowing as soaring inflation and the cost of living crisis starts to affect the market, figures show.The average amount paid for a home in the UK climbed 0.3% to £267,620 in April, Nationwide found, the ninth consecutive month of growth. Continue reading...
Man accused of raping Brittany Higgins loses bid to delay Canberra trial
Bruce Lehrmann, who is pleading not guilty, wanted a temporary or permanent stay on proceedings but the trial is scheduled for JuneThe man accused of raping Brittany Higgins has lost his bid to delay the ACT supreme court trial.On Friday, chief justice Lucy McCallum rejected an application by Bruce Lehrmann for a temporary or permanent stay, along with his bid to have media articles about the alleged sexual assault taken down. Continue reading...
Anthony Fauci says the US is not in a ‘pandemic phase’. What does that mean?
With funds for anti-virals and other measure dwindling, some experts are concerned the US is too sanguine about future surgesThe US has left the “pandemic phase” at least for now, chief medical adviser Anthony Fauci said this week, at the same time that the White House presses for urgently needed Covid-19 funding. But as cases continue mounting around the globe, the pandemic shows no signs of ending yet – and conflicting pictures offered by top health officials may hamper the renewal of critical Covid funds and efforts like vaccination campaigns.In an interview on Tuesday, Fauci painted an optimistic, if mixed, picture. “We are certainly, right now in this country, out of the pandemic phase,” he said, before adding, “Pandemic means a widespread, throughout the world, infection that spreads rapidly among people.” Continue reading...
Victorian Covid-19 lockdowns saw jump in people seeking mental health help, inquiry told
BeyondBlue chief executive tells Victorian Covid inquiry lockdown led to more demand for services ‘regardless of where it was’
‘I am taking this personally’: Victorian crossbencher Fiona Patten bemused by federal Labor preference deal
Reason party leader to reconsider her support for state government after being put below Derryn Hinch’s Justice party on how-to-vote cards
China says Nato has ‘messed up Europe’ and warns over role in Asia-Pacific
In response to British foreign secretary’s warning that Beijing must ‘play by the rules’, ministry of foreign affairs says Nato is stirring conflict
Witness called by Ben Roberts-Smith in defamation trial investigated for alleged war crime, court hears
Soldier has told court allegation he unlawfully killed a man on SAS raid on Darwan village ‘is a lie’
Solomon Islands PM suggests Australia’s reaction to China security deal is hysterical and hypocritical
Manasseh Sogavare says he wasn’t told about Aukus pact until it was public while Scott Morrison accuses counterpart of parroting China’s lines
‘They’re so sneaky’: New Zealand homeowners battle plague of smelly cluster flies
Changing climate means infestations of pesky insects could become more common, experts sayThey smell like sweet meat, destroy vacuum cleaners and are wreaking havoc across rural New Zealand.An unusually wet summer has brought joy to farmers and grief to residents, as a plague of cluster flies descends on homes in the Canterbury and Wairarapa regions. Continue reading...
Nato says it is ready to maintain its support for Ukraine in the war against Russia for years – as it happened
This blog has now closed. You can find our latest coverage of the Russia-Ukraine war in our new live blogMore than 8,500 alleged war crimes committed by Russian troops in Ukraine are under investigation, Ukraine’s prosecutor’s office has said.A total of 8,653 cases have been reported and 217 children have been confirmed to have been killed, the office added.Unfortunately this is the type of step, the type of almost weaponising energy supplies that we had predicted that Russia could take in this conflict.
Bottlenose dolphins being caught and killed in WA trawl nets at ‘unsustainable’ levels
Between 11 and 17 dolphins killed each year, government says, though independent observers put rate as high as 50 a year
Russian forces reportedly came close to capturing Zelenskiy during first hours of invasion
Interview with Time magazine reveals that Russian troops made two attempts to storm the presidential compound while Zelenskiy and his family were inside
Australian Open to make golf history with equal billing and prize money for men and women
One Nation candidate accused of running for two parties on opposite sides of country
Australian Electoral Commission refers Malcolm Heffernan to federal police for nominating in NSW and WA electorates
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