Notice issued to Rajasthan state government demanding police inquiry into ‘abominable’ practiceYoung girls in the northern Indian state of Rajasthan are being sold as “repayment” for loans their parents cannot afford, the national body that protects human rights has said.The National Human Rights Commission has issued a notice to the state government demanding a police inquiry and answers within a month to what it called an “abominable” practice. Continue reading...
Rough gas storage facility in North Sea operational again as energy suppliers try to meet demandThe UK’s biggest gas storage site has been brought back online in time for what could be one of the tightest winters for years for energy suppliers trying to meet demand.Centrica said it had brought the Rough gas storage facility in the North Sea back to 20% of its previous capacity. Even at only one-fifth capacity, it will be the UK’s largest single gas storage site and will add about 50% to the amount of gas that the UK can store at a given time. Continue reading...
Thérèse Coffey blames parties for failure to form executive, but DUP says Westminster protocol delay at fault• UK politics live – latest news updatesA Northern Ireland assembly election will “definitely happen” after a deadline to restore devolved government at Stormont was missed, a cabinet minister has said.The environment secretary, Thérèse Coffey said “clearly” there was not “sufficient agreement” between Stormont parties to avoid a fresh election. Continue reading...
Bank says there has been a slowdown in customers trying to get new mortgages in recent weeksPre-tax profits at NatWest Group remained flat between July and September at £1.1bn, amid a worsening economic outlook and a cost of living squeeze on its customers, as the bank predicted UK house prices would fall by 7% next year.Its profits, boosted by higher interest rates increasing its margin between what it charged for loans and paid out to savers, were slightly higher than the £1bn made in the same period a year earlier but lower than analysts’ forecasts. Continue reading...
by Gwyn Topham Transport correspondent on (#6571X)
Five metro mayors issue statement calling for government action after thousands of late cancellationsMetro mayors have called on the government to act urgently to address the “serious damage” caused by failing train operators in the north.The call came as official figures showed complaints about TransPennine Express (TPE) services trebling this year, and Avanti West Coast continuing to lead the way for dissatisfaction among big operators. Continue reading...
How About McCarthyism? was originally published in France in 1954 and its warning of ‘the taking of power by a self-interested group’ has now been translatedAn article by John Steinbeck about American democracy, written 70 years ago, will be published in English for the first time this week.The piece, titled How About McCarthyism? was originally published in 1954 in French in Le Figaro Littéraire, although Steinbeck wrote it in English. The piece is being published in English in the Strand Magazine, a US-based print magazine that publishes short fiction, articles and interviews. Continue reading...
Purchase likely to prove controversial, as Tokyo seeks to counter growing regional threatsJapan is looking into buying US-developed Tomahawk cruise missiles as it seeks to counter growing regional threats, including from North Korea, the government has said.Any purchase would probably prove to be controversial, in a nation whose military is not officially recognised under its post-second world war constitution. Continue reading...
Consumers move quickly to prepare for unaffordable energy bills despite mild autumn, finds market researchSales of air fryers, slow cookers, microwaves and electric blankets are soaring as households faced with unaffordable energy bills look for ways to reduce their power use.Air fryers – a small countertop convection oven that uses less electricity than a conventional cooker – are in huge demand, with the number sold in September four times higher than in the same month last year, according to the market research firm GfK. So are electric cooking pots such as pressure cookers, rice cookers, slow cookers or multifunctional pots that can do all three things, with sales up 80%. Continue reading...
by Martin Chulov, Middle East correspondent on (#656WB)
Maj Amjad Yousef, identified on videos as killer of dozens of people, accused of directing more mass killingsThe Syrian intelligence officer at the centre of one of the most shocking acts of the civil war – the Tadamon massacre – is still working on a military base outside Damascus and has since been accused by colleagues of directing up to a dozen more mass killings.Amjad Yousef, a major in one of Syria’s most feared intelligence units, is operating from the Kafr Sousa base, where he has been for most of the past six months since the Guardian revealed his role in shooting dead dozens of people across a death pit in Tadamon, a suburb of the Syrian capital in 2013. Continue reading...
Incident has split China watchers with some saying former leader was unwell and others it was political purge by Xi JinpingAfter eight days of China’s most important political meeting, in which the autocratic leader Xi Jinping’s precedent-breaking third term was confirmed, belligerent foreign policy reaffirmed, and the leader of the world’s largest population and second-largest economy announced through the next five years, one question was on everyone’s lips: what on earth happened to Hu Jintao and where is he now?The drama happened on Saturday morning. In a short window between foreign media being allowed into Beijing’s Great Hall and the start of the final public meeting of the 20th party congress, the former Chinese leader Hu was physically removed from his seat next to his successor, Xi, and out of the Great Hall of the People. Continue reading...
by Presented by Michael Safi with Ben Doherty; produc on (#656T7)
Ben Roberts-Smith, Australia’s most decorated living soldier, is seeking to defend his reputation against reports in three newspapers that he says falsely accuse him of being a war criminal. Ben Doherty reportsIn his closing submissions in Australia’s federal court in Sydney, the barrister of the country’s most decorated living soldier argued: “This trial, which has lasted over 100 days, has been called a great many things: the trial of the century, a proxy war crimes trial, and an attack on the freedom of the press. It is none of these. It is a case which has been brought because the respondents chose to defame Mr Roberts-Smith.”Ben Roberts-Smith is suing three Australian media companies for defamation, over reports he alleges wrongly portray him as a war criminal and murderer. The case has contained shocking details and extraordinary allegations. Continue reading...
The man who has denied he raped Brittany Higgins is facing the prospect of another trial after a juror brought academic papers on sexual assault into the jury room
DUP blocks attempt to restore government, citing mandate to boycott assembly over post-Brexit borderNorthern Ireland is on course for a snap election after a recall of the Stormont assembly failed to elect a speaker and break political deadlock.The Democratic Unionist party (DUP) blocked an attempt to revive the assembly and executive on Thursday, perpetuating paralysis and running down the clock to a midnight deadline to restore devolved government. The deadline passed without any resolution. Continue reading...
by Aina J Khan Community affairs correspondent on (#656QQ)
Pioneering leader receives Powerlist award, with other names listed including Michaela Coel and StormzyDame Sharon White, the first ever female chair of John Lewis Partnership, has been named the UK’s most influential black person.White topped the 2023 Powerlist, an annual list that aims to provide professional role models for young people of African and African Caribbean heritage. Other prominent black Britons on this year’s list include the actor, writer and creator of I May Destroy You, Michaela Coel, the actor and writer Sir Lenny Henry, and the rapper Stormzy. Continue reading...
Draft deal includes targets and staff bonuses for tackling the number of asylum seekers in the UKRishi Sunak is aiming to reach an agreement with France to address the unprecedented number of Channel crossings by asylum seekers which could include new targets and bonuses, according to reports.Ministers and officials are expected to review a draft deal that was previously close to being signed with France, which encompasses targets for how many boats are stopped from reaching the UK and a minimum number of French officers patrolling the beaches at any one time, sources told the Times. Continue reading...
Picture of dictator along with text exalting in his seizure of power 100 years ago reportedly placed by far-right militantsNeofascist militants have hung a banner from a bridge near the Colosseum in the Italian capital to celebrate Friday’s 100th anniversary of Benito Mussolini’s march on Rome.The banner, which features a large picture of the fascist dictator wearing military uniform alongside the words “100 years after, the march continues”, appeared on the Ponte degli Annibaldi, a small elevated bridge close to Italy’s most visited cultural monument, on Thursday night. Continue reading...
Prime minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani leads new government, vowing to reform economy and fight corruptionIraqi lawmakers have approved a new government, ending more than a year of deadlock, but the country still faces many challenges.Prime minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, 52, who previously served as Iraq’s human rights minister as well as minister of labour and social affairs, will head the new government. Continue reading...
Royal College of Midwives will soon ballot English and Welsh members after below-inflation offer is rejected in ScotlandMidwives in Scotland have voted overwhelmingly in favour of industrial action over what they described as an “insulting” pay offer.More than 88% of midwives and maternity support workers (MSWs) in Scotland, who are part of the Royal College of Midwives (RCM), voted to strike in a turnout of 61% of eligible voters. Continue reading...
British Transport Police are hunting a man who assaulted one man at a tube station and then pushed another on to the tracks at a different stopBritish Transport Police are hunting a suspect who assaulted one man at a tube station and then pushed another on to the tracks at a different stop.At 11.50am on Thursday, the first victim was assaulted by the man at Baker Street station. Continue reading...
One minister resigned to vote against making it easier for transgender people in Scotland to change their legal sexThe Scottish National party suffered its largest backbench revolt in its 15 years in power over the vote on its bill making it easier for transgender people to change their legal sex, with one minister resigning in order to vote against the plans.The community safety minister, Ash Regan, quit, prompting Nicola Sturgeon, the first minister, to accuse her of failing to raise her concerns with colleagues. Seven SNP members voted against the party whip and two abstained. Continue reading...
Comedian and campaigner tells planning inquiry retailer is failing to use landmark building imaginativelyThe comedian Griff Rhys Jones is the latest high-profile name to weigh in against Marks & Spencer’s plan to raze and redevelop its main London store, accusing the retailer of not making the most of its landmark building.Jones, who presented the BBC TV series Restoration in the 2000s, which identified significant buildings in need of repair, told an inquiry into the development of the store on Oxford Street near Marble Arch that, having shopped there, he “would venture that M&S are not using the space in a very imaginative way compared to the possibilities old buildings offer. I wonder if the ‘unsuitability’ has more to do with the desire to create a much bigger floor space and offices.” Continue reading...
Prime minister is told hundreds of staff needed to review legislationRishi Sunak is considering deprioritising Jacob Rees Mogg’s controversial bill to switch off 2,400 retained EU laws covering everything from holiday pay rights to environmental protections and aircraft safety.The new prime minister has been told it would take 400 staff in the business department alone to review 300 pieces of legislation that resulted from directives, decisions and EU rules over the past 50 years, the Financial Times reported. Continue reading...
Claim of ‘greatest electoral fraud ever seen’ raises concern that far-right president is echoing Donald Trump’s playbookFears are growing that Jair Bolsonaro could refuse to accept defeat in Brazil’s crunch election this Sunday after his politician son claimed Brazil’s far-right president was the victim of “the greatest electoral fraud ever seen” amid unproven allegations of foul play.The assertion from the president’s senator son, Flávio Bolsonaro, was almost identical to language used by Donald Trump – Bolsonaro’s most prominent international backer – after he lost the 2020 US election to Joe Biden. Continue reading...
Parents notified school is closed for remainder of the school year ‘at the discretion of our founder’ in email from principalKanye West’s non-accredited private school in California will close with immediate effect, it told parents Wednesday, as controversy continues to boil following the rapper’s antisemitic comments.Parents were notified that Donda Academy would close for the remainder of the 2022-23 school year. Continue reading...
Government considering proposals so that officials could ‘quickly’ remove migrants from country if they are unsuccessfulAlbanians could be given a “bespoke route” to have their immigration cases heard upon arrival in Britain so officials can “quickly” remove them from the country if they are unsuccessful, MPs have been told.Government figures circulated earlier this year claimed about 60% of migrants making Channel crossings every day were from Albania, although officials noted the numbers fluctuate. Continue reading...
by Jessica Elgot Deputy political editor on (#656AF)
Shadow health secretary says NHS is struggling due to underinvestment, as he commits to workforce expansionThe shadow health secretary, Wes Streeting, has said he will be brutally honest about the challenges in the NHS, and added it “isn’t true” that the NHS is the “envy of the world”.The Labour MP said the NHS was currently struggling enormously due to years of underinvestment and said that was reflected in the deteriorating quality of care. Continue reading...
Posters depicting King Charles signal restart of campaigning by Republic group after the death of the queenAnti-monarchy billboards are going up around England and Scotland this week in the first major push since the death of Queen Elizabeth II by activists campaigning for a republic.The launch of the billboards – each one featuring a #NotMyKing hashtag alongside a picture of King Charles – coincides with a crowdfunding appeal by the pressure group Republic, which is planning to ramp up its activities before the coronation next year. Continue reading...
RCMP looking into ‘reports of criminal activity’ surrounding facilities allegedly used to pressure Chinese nationals abroadCanada’s federal police force is investigating reports that clandestine Chinese “police stations” are operating in Toronto amid reports of a global network used to target overseas dissidents.The Royal Canada Mounted Police said it was investigating “reports of criminal activity in relation to the so-called ‘police’ stations” but did not specify the location of the sites. Continue reading...
Publishing simultaneously in 16 different languages, the book is billed as ‘full of insight, revelation, self-examination, and hard-won wisdom’Prince Harry’s highly anticipated memoir, titled Spare, is to be published in January.The book was originally due to be released in late 2022, and when it was announced Harry promised it would be a “firsthand account of my life that’s accurate and wholly truthful”. Continue reading...
Shake-up aims to draw line under series of scandals and new £3.5bn loss at Swiss bankCredit Suisse has disclosed sweeping plans to cut 9,000 jobs and to raise billions of pounds from investors, including from the Saudi National Bank, as part of a company-wide overhaul meant to draw a line under a series of scandals and help it recover from a £3.5bn loss.The announcement follows months of speculation over the scale of change scheduled under its new boss, Ulrich Körner, who has been tasked with scaling back the investment bank and slashing more than 2.5bn Swiss francs (£2.18bn) in costs. Continue reading...
Disagreements have opened up about strategy when China is also seen as an existential threatWestern powers in the G7 group of nations are failing to coordinate their China strategies, senior western officials admit, adding that the need to do so has been given sharp impetus by Xi Jinping’s consolidation of power at this month’s Communist party congress.The G7’s poor coordination reflects a deep disagreement, also reflected within the EU, about whether dialogue and trade with China have a future if Beijing is seen as an existential threat that requires strict strategic controls on economic ties. Continue reading...