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Updated 2026-03-28 11:45
Victorian Greens say 30% of homes in new developments should be cheaper for first-time buyers
Party to announce election policy to build 200,000 affordable and public homes and reintroduce social housing levy on developers
Is Liz Truss right to say no one will get an energy bill over £2,500?
Prime minister risks leading households to believe that they do not need to limit energy usage
Currys raises pay for third time in 13 months amid staff shortage
Electrical goods retailer keen to attract and retain workers as cost of living increasesCurrys has raised pay for the third time in 13 months to attract and retain workers amid a labour shortage and rise in the cost of living.The electrical goods retailer said that from 30 October it was increasing rates by 3.5% to a minimum of £10.35 an hour (£11.43 in London), only a month after a previous rise came into effect. Continue reading...
Canada’s Robert Munsch marathon aims to honour much-loved children’s author
Actor M John Kennedy will read all 75 books in a single day during Toronto’s Nuit Blanche art festivalChildren’s author Robert Munsch has sold more than 82m copies of his books and entertained generations of readers with his tender and sharp sense of humour.His stories have been translated into 45 languages, including 20 Indigenous languages and dialects. He still receives about 10,000 fan letters a year, and has two public schools named after him. Continue reading...
Australia’s CMO warns further Covid waves ‘highly likely’ – as it happened
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‘A really dangerous machine’: woodchipper murder trial played audio from night police called to scene
Queensland officers were told Gregory Lee Roser tried to save Bruce Saunders when he discovered friend’s legs dangling out of woodchipper in late 2017
Wife of Australian economist imprisoned in Myanmar says family is heartbroken by three-year sentence
Ha Vu pleads for Prof Sean Turnell’s release after secret trial which Australian diplomats and journalists were banned from
Thumbs down to ‘middle finger’ health campaign in New Zealand
Hepatitis C awareness ads that feature smiling actors raising their middle fingers are deemed too offensive to be airedA New Zealand health campaign designed to help curb hepatitis C has hit a stumbling block after one of its advertisements showing people raising the middle finger was deemed too offensive to air.The associate health minister, Ayesha Verrall, launched the “Stick it to Hep C” campaign in July, to raise awareness over the virus, which kills roughly 200 New Zealanders a year. Continue reading...
Putin signs decrees paving way for annexing Ukraine territories of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia
Kremlin says decrees recognise two regions as independent, ahead of Friday’s expected speech on annexation of four regions of UkraineVladimir Putin has signed decrees paving the way for the occupied Ukrainian regions of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia to be formally annexed into Russia.On Friday, the Russian president is expected to sign into law the annexations of four Ukrainian regions – Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, Donetsk and Luhansk – where Russia held fake referendums over the last week in order to claim a mandate for the territorial claims. Continue reading...
Zimbabwean author Tsitsi Dangarembga found guilty of inciting violence
Novelist given suspended sentence after staging peaceful protest calling for political reformRenowned Zimbabwean author Tsitsi Dangarembga has been given a suspended prison sentence after being found guilty of inciting violence by staging a peaceful protest calling for political reform.Dangarembga and co-accused Julie Barnes were convicted of participating in a public gathering with intent to incite public violence at Harare magistrates court on Thursday. The pair were also each fined 70,000 Zimbabwe dollars (£200). Continue reading...
Olivia Pratt-Korbel: man, 34, arrested on suspicion of nine-year-old’s murder
Merseyside detectives questioning man over shooting of girl in Liverpool last monthDetectives have arrested a 34-year-old man on suspicion of the murder of nine-year-old Olivia Pratt-Korbel in Liverpool in August, Merseyside police have said.Olivia was shot in the chest at her home in Dovecot in the city on 22 August. Continue reading...
US charges Russian billionaire Oleg Deripaska with violating sanctions
Deripaska, 54, accused of several crimes including plotting to bring pregnant girlfriend to US so child would be American citizenOleg Deripaska, one of Russia’s most powerful oligarchs, who previously had deep links to British establishment figures, has been indicted by the US Department of Justice for criminal sanctions violations.The indictment detailed a number of alleged crimes by the man who was long considered Vladimir Putin’s favourite industrialist, including an elaborate and failed attempt by Deripaska and his associates to shuttle his pregnant girlfriend to the US so that she could give birth there and secure American citizenship for their second child. Continue reading...
Buy-to-let landlords facing financial cliff edge after mini-budget
Mortgage market meltdown has left many amateur landlords facing a stark choice: to raise rents or sell upBritain’s amateur landlords have benefited from years of runaway house price inflation, while intense competition among tenants has sent rents soaring. Now, thanks to the meltdown in the mortgage market triggered by last week’s disastrous mini-budget, many face a financial cliff edge.Figures shared with the Guardian show that the number of new buy-to-let mortgage deals available has plummeted by 55% in less than a week as lenders frantically pulled products and in many cases increased prices. Continue reading...
Germany unveils €200bn help for consumers and says it won’t follow UK’s route
Finance minister announces €200bn fund to protect citizens from rising gas prices driven by Russia’s war in UkraineGermany’s finance minister has vowed that he will not follow the UK “down the path of an expansionary fiscal policy” as his government announced a €200bn (£177bn) fund designed to protect consumers and businesses from rising gas prices driven by Russia’s war in Ukraine.Europe’s largest economy will reactivate an economic stabilising fund previously used during the global financial crisis and the coronavirus pandemic, said the chancellor, Olaf Scholz, at a joint press conference with the finance minister, Christian Lindner, and the economic minister, Robert Habeck, on Thursday afternoon. Continue reading...
Russia-Ukraine war live: UN chief warns Putin that annexing Ukraine territory is a ‘dangerous escalation’ with ‘no legal value’
António Guterres warns Putin against annexation of Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia before expected announcement on Friday
Man guilty of murdering secret lover and their son near Inverness in 1976
Circumstantial evidence enough to convict William MacDowell, now 80, of killing Renee and Andrew MacRaeAn 80-year-old man has been found guilty of murdering his secret lover and their three-year-old son almost half a century after the pair vanished without trace from a layby on the A9 near Inverness, concluding one of Scotland’s most extensive and longest-running missing persons investigations.Although the bodies of Renee MacRae, who was 36 when she disappeared in 1976, and her younger son, Andrew, have never been found, William MacDowell, now 80, was convicted by a “compelling and classic case of circumstantial evidence”, as the prosecutor Alex Prentice KC described it in his closing speech to the jury. Continue reading...
Behaviour adviser urges English schools to crack down on pupils’ vaping
Headteachers say more children are using vapes, forcing them into measures to tackle the problemThe government’s school behaviour adviser has called on headteachers to crack down on vaping among pupils, calling it “a huge health hazard” and an “enormous distraction”, amid reports that more children are using the devices, including some of primary age.Tom Bennett said vaping was now as big an issue in schools as cigarettes once were, with children becoming “addicted to the practice and the chemicals involved”. He called on school leaders to confiscate prohibited items, set clear sanctions and follow them through with zero exceptions. Continue reading...
Labor says time is coming for republic debate as monarchists claim it’s giving itself a ‘head start’
Albanese government says Indigenous voice is its priority and any move away from monarchy is not going to come quicklyGet our free news app, morning email briefing or daily news podcastThe Albanese government has told a leading monarchist group that “the time is coming” for Australia to discuss becoming a republic, angering supporters of the British crown who claim Labor is giving itself a head start on a future referendum campaign.But the government has also conceded that any move away from the monarchy is not going to come quickly, instead inviting monarchist groups to join the current campaign for an Indigenous voice to parliament.Sign up to receive an email with the top stories from Guardian Australia every morning Continue reading...
King Charles III’s first royal runner beaten comfortably at Salisbury
NHS 111 failures led to early Covid deaths, investigation finds
Inquiry says phone service misjudged levels of illness and failed to advise some to seek urgent helpMultiple failures by the NHS 111 telephone advice service early in the pandemic left Covid patients struggling to get care and led directly to some people dying, an investigation has found.The Healthcare Safety Investigation Branch (HSIB) looked into the help that NHS 111 gave people with Covid in the weeks before and after the UK entered its first lockdown on 23 March 2020.The CRS algorithm did not allow for the assessment of any life-threatening illness a caller had – such as obesity, cancer or lung disease – to establish if they should undergo a clinical assessment.When “many” callers reached the core 111 service, there was no way to divert them as intended to the CRS, which was operationally independent of 111.Although patients who had symptoms of Covid-19 as well underlying health conditions, including diabetes, were meant to be assessed when they spoke to the core 111 service, “some” were not.The number of extra calls to 111 in March 2020 meant only half were answered. Continue reading...
Tax cuts funded on backs of poor ‘morally indefensible’, say campaigners
Government could seek to reduce welfare benefits spending in wake of recent mini-budgetPoverty campaigners have said it would be “morally indefensible” for ministers to fund tax cuts for the richest on the backs of the poor, amid speculation ministers may reduce welfare benefits in the wake of last week’s ill-received fiscal statement.Friday’s mini-budget announced billions of tax cuts benefiting high earners, but the subsequent market fallout plunged the UK’s finances to near crisis. The government is expected to have to make tens of billions of pounds of public spending cuts later this year to try to put the UK’s finances on a sound footing. Continue reading...
‘I will defend the country’: while some Russians flee draft, others head to war
Men are accepting their military call-ups, with poll showing support for conflict still at 72% after mobilisation
England’s A-level and GCSE grades to fall to pre-Covid levels in 2023
Some warn about impact on disadvantaged students, who suffered greatest learning loss during pandemicA-level and GCSE grades awarded in 2023 will be lower on average than this summer, the Department for Education has announced, as it confirmed plans to return grades to pre-pandemic levels.While the DfE and Ofqual, the exam regulator for England, said some help would stay in place for those whose learning was disrupted, school leaders and experts warned that those student most badly affected by Covid were most likely to suffer from the downward adjustment. Continue reading...
Russia-Ukraine war latest: what we know on day 218 of the invasion
Putin to sign decree to annex Ukraine regions Friday after ‘referendums’; EU plans fresh sanctions on Russia to ‘make the Kremlin pay’ for escalating war with Ukraine
Companies using carbon credits to ‘cover their tracks’, says iron ore billionaire
Andrew Forrest urges businesses to aim for ‘real zero’ to reduce environmental impactCarbon offsets are questionable, dangerous and far from a good investment for companies hoping to reduce their environmental impact, Australia’s richest man has said.Andrew Forrest, a billionaire turned philanthropist who made his fortune in mining and minerals, is turning his vast iron ore extraction operation, Fortescue Metals Group, into a zero carbon business. Continue reading...
Narendra Modi’s BJP bans Indian Islamic group for ‘terrorist’ links
Popular Front of India, which says it works for ‘socio-economic empowerment of downtrodden people’ disbands following banAn Islamic organisation that says it fights discrimination against minorities in India has disbanded after the government declared it and its affiliates unlawful, accusing them of involvement in terrorism.The government of Narendra Modi’s Hindu-nationalist Bharatiya Janata party (BJP) accused the Popular Front of India (PFI) group of having been involved in “terrorism” and “anti-national activities”. Continue reading...
UK government faces court challenge in Nigerian rendition case
Family of Nnamdi Kanu granted judicial review over failure of Britain to intervene after arrest last yearThe family of a British citizen who was allegedly taken to Nigeria in an act of extraordinary rendition has been granted a court hearing to challenge the UK government for not intervening in his case.Nnamdi Kanu, the leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (Ipob), a prominent separatist movement proscribed in Nigeria, was arrested in Kenya in June last year before being transported against his will to Nigeria, where he has been held ever since. Continue reading...
Almost half of children in England have seen harmful content online – survey
Children’s commissioner raises fears of another tragedy like that of Molly Russell after poll findingsThe children’s commissioner for England has said she fears there could be a repeat of the Molly Russell tragedy, after research showed almost half of children have seen harmful content online, including material promoting self-harm and suicide.The research published on Thursday by Dame Rachel de Souza found that 45% of children aged eight to 17 have come across material they felt was inappropriate or made them worried or upset, though half of them did not report it.In the UK, the youth suicide charity Papyrus can be contacted on 0800 068 4141 or email pat@papyrus-uk.org, and in the UK and Ireland Samaritans can be contacted on freephone 116 123, or email jo@samaritans.org or jo@samaritans.ie. In the US, the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is at 800-273-8255 or chat for support. You can also text HOME to 741741 to connect with a crisis text line counsellor. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other international helplines can be found at befrienders.org. Continue reading...
Disastrous Liz Truss interviews show BBC local radio still packs a punch
Analysis: PM’s eight short interviews produced more news than a typical slot on Radio 4’s Today programme
French teachers and transport workers strike over pay and pension age
Unions push for wage rises amid cost of living crisis and ditching of plans to raise retirement ageStreet demonstrations have been held across France as schools and transport services were disrupted by the first major strike since President Emmanuel Macron won re-election in April.Primary school teachers stopped work on Thursday, as did train and bus drivers on certain regional services and nuclear power industry workers, in what was seen as a test for trade unions’ ability to mobilise support. Continue reading...
‘Brutal’: media deride Liz Truss’s local radio interviews
Media commentators across political spectrum deride PM’s appearance on local radio to defend economic policy
Sweden reports fourth Nord Stream pipeline leak
Reports say largest rupture causing circle of bubbles at Baltic Sea surface of about 900 metres in diameter
Kamala Harris hits out at North Korea’s ‘provocative nuclear rhetoric’ on DMZ visit
Pyongyang fired ballistic missiles into the sea just hours before US vice-president arrived in SeoulThe US vice-president, Kamala Harris, has condemned North Korea’s “provocative nuclear rhetoric” during a trip to South Korea that included a visit to the heavily armed border dividing the peninsula.Harris arrived in Seoul on Thursday, hours after North Korea fired two short-range ballistic missiles into the sea, in a move that underlines Washington’s struggle to rein in the regime’s weapons programme. Continue reading...
‘A life cut entirely too short’: stars pay tribute to Coolio after death at 59
Michelle Pfeiffer, who starred in 1995 film that featured hit single Gangsta’s Paradise, among those to pay respectsTributes have been paid to the Grammy award-winning musician Coolio, who died at the age of 59 on Wednesday.The death of the rapper, whose real name is Artis Leon Ivey Jr, was confirmed by his manager, Sheila Finegan, who in a statement said: “We are saddened by the loss of our dear friend and client, Coolio, who passed away this afternoon. Continue reading...
Michael Koletti denies he deliberately delayed reporting wife Melissa Caddick missing
Asked if he smoked a joint the night before he went to police, Koletti tells Sydney inquest: ‘Let’s just say I did, what’s your point?’
Mental health policies for drug users not being followed in Scotland, say experts
Health services not using correct procedures to help those with drug and alcohol problems, commission findsScotland’s health services are failing to tackle a mental health crisis affecting thousands of people with drug or alcohol problems because the right policies are not being followed, an expert body has found.The Mental Welfare Commission for Scotland, a statutory body founded to protect the human rights of people with mental illness, said only a minority of health professionals were using the correct strategies and plans for at-risk patients.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...
Review of UK seasonal worker visas to increase risk of slavery, experts warn
Exclusive: labour rights experts say Liz Truss’s proposals to tackle shortages will put workers at riskMore people will be at risk of modern slavery on British farms if a cap on seasonal worker visas is lifted, labour rights experts have warned.Liz Truss has signalled that she intends to lift the cap on foreign workers in seasonal agriculture as part of a review of visas to tackle labour shortages. Continue reading...
Coolio, US west coast rapper of Gangsta’s Paradise fame, dies aged 59
The Grammy-winning musician passed away at friend’s house in Los Angeles, manager saysThe rapper Coolio died at the age of 59 in Los Angeles, his manager has confirmed.The artist, whose real name is Artis Leon Ivey Jr, passed away at a friend’s house, his longtime manager, Jarez Posey, told the Associated Press and other outlets including TMZ, Rolling Stone and Variety. Continue reading...
Australian academic Sean Turnell sentenced to three years after secret trial in Myanmar
Economic adviser to ousted leader Aung San Suu Kyi was by accused by military leaders of having confidential papersAung San Suu Kyi and the Australian academic Sean Turnell who served as her advisor have been sentenced to three years in prison after a closed trial in Myanmar, according to reports.Turnell, an economist at Sydney’s Macquarie University, was first detained last year on 6 February, a few days after the military ousted Myanmar’s elected government, plunging the country into chaos. Continue reading...
Hong Kong pro-democracy figure Ted Hui sentenced to jail over 2019 protests
Former legislator, who fled to Australia last year, said earlier that any sentence would not harm his reputation or lobbying workA Hong Kong court has sentenced pro-democracy figure in exile Ted Hui to three-and-a-half years in jail over charges related to the 2019 protest movement.The ruling in Hong Kong’s high court on Thursday, reported by local media, is the first time someone has been sentenced in absentia over the protests. Continue reading...
Italy’s Giorgia Meloni denies she is anti-women as credentials questioned
Far-right leader posted sexualised clip of herself during election campaign, favours curbs on abortion and is against ‘pink quotas’On election day, Giorgia Meloni appeared to have found a way to flout rules demanding candidates stop all campaigning. The Italian far-right leader posted a video of herself on social media holding two melons in front of her chest while winking into the camera and saying: “25 September [voting day], I’ve said everything”. Meloni in Italian means melons, and it is also slang for breasts.For those who found the clip distasteful, the sexualised image was a further indication that Meloni would not be carrying the torch for feminists as prime minister. Others were surprised by the sudden turn in style by the Brothers of Italy chief, who had made being a woman and mother central to her campaign, but nonetheless acknowledged that it was a clever way of showing voters she knows how to have a laugh, even if the humour hailed from a more masculine culture. Continue reading...
Companies could be forced to delete customer data used to prove ID, Labor suggests
Albanese government considering sweeping overhaul of data retention and privacy laws following massive Optus cyber hack
Australian War Memorial promises ‘much broader, deeper’ depiction of frontier wars
Move comes after AWM faced criticism for sparse presentation of atrocities against Indigenous Australians during colonisation
Jayne Jagot appointed to Australia’s high court, creating first majority-female bench
Jagot will be the seventh woman appointed to the court, replacing Patrick Keane once he reaches mandatory retirement age
Defence officials call for ‘deep reform’ to counter perceptions of inaction on Brereton inquiry
Exclusive: Despite war crimes inquiry saying commanders ‘must bear’ responsibility for what happened on their watch, the previous government suspended punishment against them
New Zealand bans live animal exports from April 2023
Animal welfare law passes two years after sinking of Gulf Livestock 1 in a typhoon killed crew and 6,000 cattleNew Zealand will ban live animal exports from next April, two years after storms sank a livestock ship, killing 41 crew members and 6,000 cattle.The death of two New Zealanders among the crew of the Gulf Livestock 1, which sank in a September 2020 typhoon, helped galvanise the movement to ban exports of live sheep and cattle. Continue reading...
US pledges to boost aid and diplomacy in Pacific as historic summit begins
Antony Blinken opens landmark meeting a day after leaked documents showed discord among some Pacific leaders over US proposalsJoe Biden’s administration has welcomed Pacific Island leaders for a landmark summit in Washington with promises of greater aid and diplomatic presence, as it attempts to counter China’s rising influence in a region historically linked to the US.In a first-of-a-kind summit in Washington, leaders from across the remote but strategic islands will meet Biden and the rest of the top US leadership on issues from maritime security to pandemic recovery to climate change, which threatens to devastate many of the low-lying islands. Continue reading...
Denmark’s Queen Margrethe strips four grandchildren of royal titles
Official reason to allow children ‘to shape their own existence’ while mother of two princes losing titles ‘shocked’ by decisionDenmark’s Queen Margrethe, Europe’s only reigning queen and the continent’s longest serving monarch, has stripped four of her eight grandchildren of their titles, the palace announced.The official reason was to allow the four children of her youngest son, Prince Joachim, to live more normal lives, and follows similar moves by other royal families in Europe to slim down their monarchies, the palace said. Continue reading...
English district councils warn support services for poorest face axe
Services such as debt advice and hardship funds under threat amid £400m bill caused by inflationA network of councils in England is warning support services for families hit hardest by the cost of living crisis face being axed amid an unexpected £400m bill caused by soaring inflation.Services that district councils have no legal obligation to provide – such as debt and benefits advice, hardship funds for families, homelessness prevention projects and help hubs for people facing poverty – are under threat. Continue reading...
Ukraine calls for Russia to be declared ‘terrorist state’ after damning report
Exclusive: Zelenskiy’s chief of staff says sanctions should go further as international group concludes Russia’s actions pass terrorism thresholdThe head of the Office of the Ukrainian Presidency has called for sweeping American and European sanctions targeting Moscow after an official report drawn up by an international working group concluded Russia should now be declared a “state sponsor of terrorism”.The call from Andriy Yermak, the second most powerful Ukrainian government official after president Volodymyr Zelenskiy, came after Ukraine accused Russia of sabotage of the Nord Stream pipelines, an accusation that adds to its claim that Russia has shown all the characteristics of a terrorist state under US and international law. Continue reading...
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