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. 2026
Updated 2026-04-03 20:18
Two Jesuit priests and man seeking sanctuary killed in Mexican church
Incident occurred in violence-plagued remote mountainous region of Chihuahua, which has strong organized crime presenceTwo Jesuit priests have been killed inside a church after a man pursued by gunmen apparently sought refuge in a remote mountainous area of northern Mexico.Javier Campos Morales and Joaquín César Mora Salazar were killed on Monday inside the church in Cerocahui, Chihuahua. Continue reading...
Marble head of Hercules pulled up from Roman shipwreck site in Greece
Rich archaeological area 50 meters under sea off Antikythera gives up yet more treasures after boulders removedFor archaeologists, it’s the underwater find that keeps on giving. A Roman-era cargo ship, discovered by chance off the Greek island of Antikythera more than 120 years ago and regarded as the world’s richest ancient shipwreck, has yielded yet more treasures in the most recent explorations of it, including the missing head of a statue of the demigod Hercules.“In 1900, [sponge divers] pulled out the statue of Hercules [from the sea] and now in all probably we’ve found its head,” said Prof Lorenz Baumer, the classical archaeologist who is overseeing the underwater mission with the University of Geneva. Continue reading...
The small town with a big potato that inspired a global poetry win
Robertson might be tiny but for poet and schoolteacher Peter Ramm, it is the secret weapon that helped him win the UK’s biggest prize for unpublished poetry
Glastonbury morale boost as festival returns after two years
Bands, performers, celebrities and fans providing financial boost to south-west England townHannah Bennett had a bit of a moment when she drove up to the Field of Avalon. “I felt very emotional and tearful,” said Bennett, who sells hippy and fair trade clothing at her Rainbow Rebel stall. “It means so much to be back and meet the people I haven’t seen for three years. It feels normal and lovely, almost as if Covid didn’t really happen.”After being cancelled in 2020 and 2021, the Glastonbury festival is very much back on. The bands, the performers, the celebrities, the fans are on their way, providing a huge boost – both to morale and to finances – in this corner of south-west England. Continue reading...
Germany must ‘normalise’ relationship with military, says SPD co-leader
Lars Klingbeil says country should take leadership role as it relaxes pacifist stance following Ukraine warGermany needs to “normalise” its relationship with the military and learn to take a leadership role in Europe after “almost 80 years of restraint”, the co-leader of the governing Social Democratic Party (SPD) has said.In a speech marking a further point in Berlin’s slow pivot from a broadly pacifist foreign policy agenda since Russia’s 24 February invasion of Ukraine, Lars Klingbeil said it was important to recognise military force as a legitimate political measure for a government striving for peace. Continue reading...
Chinese police investigated over handling of restaurant attack
Five officials accused of ‘violating discipline’ after police took half an hour to reach scene in TangshanFive police officials in the northern Chinese city of Tangshan are being investigated over their handling of a vicious attack on a group of women at a restaurant.The provincial discipline commission of Hebei province said the five, including the district head of the Lubei police force, Ma Aijun, were accused of “seriously violating discipline and law”. Hebei province’s public security bureau announced separately on Tuesday that Ma’s deputy, surnamed Li, had been removed from post. Continue reading...
‘The most Mark E Smith thing ever’: the post-punk band whose members have learning disabilities
Improvisation is speciality of Leeds outfit Ultimate Thunder, whose debut album is released next monthThe best live bands are the most unpredictable, with every performance teetering between triumph and disaster. But even the most chaotic acts usually have some sort of set list.Not Ultimate Thunder. This seven-piece post-punk outfit from Leeds amble on stage without even the vaguest running order, nor any confidence that their vocalist, Matthew Watson, will actually sing a note. Continue reading...
Government to change rules on letting Ukrainian children into UK
Unaccompanied under-18s are expected to be allowed with written permission from parent or guardianNew rules that will allow Ukrainian children to come to Britain alone are expected to be announced this week.It follows revelations in the Guardian that more than 500 children who fled the war without their parents have been stuck waiting in limbo across Europe after applying to the Homes for Ukraine scheme. Continue reading...
Glastonbury weather: pack your sunhats and raincoats
Bright start expected to give way to heavy showers just as the main acts start to take to the festival’s stagesGlastonbury is upon us and the weather forecasts are in. There’s good news and there’s bad news.Festivalgoers will be reaching for the suncream and then the wellies as a sunny start gives way to heavy showers just as the main acts take to the stages on Friday. Continue reading...
‘We’re going to walk 25km’: London tourists bemused by rail strikes
Thousands of people visiting the capital are forced to change their plans as they struggle to get around
Ex-soldier jailed for murdering couple in Somerset after parking dispute
Collin Reeves jailed for at least 38 years for ‘brutal and savage’ attack on his neighbours Jennifer and Stephen ChappleA former soldier who murdered his nextdoor neighbours with a commando dagger after a dispute over parking has been told he will serve at least 38 years in prison before being considered for parole.Collin Reeves carried out a “deliberate and brutal” attack on Jennifer and Stephen Chapple at their home in the Somerset village of Norton Fitzwarren while their two children slept upstairs, moments after his wife had told him she wanted a trial separation. Continue reading...
Russia threatens ‘serious consequences’ as Lithuania blocks rail goods
Row escalates over Vilnius’s refusal to allow steel and iron ore to cross Russian exclave of KaliningradThe head of the Kremlin’s security council has threatened the “population of Lithuania” in an escalation of the row over Lithuanian railway’s refusal to allow some goods to cross the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad.After a meeting in the region, which is wedged between Lithuania and Poland, 800 miles from Moscow, Nikolai Patrushev upped the rhetoric by threatening “serious consequences”. Continue reading...
Raab urged to let parliament scrutinise Human Rights Act replacement
Letter from 150 organisations adds to MPs’ concern about the bill of rights bypassing pre-legislative processDominic Raab is facing demands today from 150 organisations to allow detailed parliamentary scrutiny of legislation that is expected to replace the Human Rights Act.The justice secretary has been sent a letter coordinated by the campaign group Liberty calling for the bill of rights to be subjected to “robust consideration” amid fears that it will put the government beyond the reach of the law. Continue reading...
Labour frontbenchers defy Keir Starmer and join rail strike pickets
Leaked memo said ‘Labour must show leadership’ and ‘PPSs should not be on picket lines’
London man who died after being shot with Taser was holding firelighter
Watchdog says police statement suggesting Oladeji Adeyemi Omishore was ‘armed with a screwdriver’ is incorrectA man who died after falling into the River Thames following a confrontation with police who repeatedly fired a Taser at him was carrying a firelighter, and not a screwdriver as previously claimed, the police watchdog has said.The man came face to face with police who were called to reports of a disturbance on Chelsea Bridge, London, just after 9am on 4 June. Continue reading...
Eastern Donbas ‘extremely difficult’ for Ukrainians as Russia intensifies attacks
Luhansk governor says 568 civilians are holed up in chemical plant and Lysychansk being shelled ‘en masse’
Russian mercenaries accused of deadly attacks on mines on Sudan-CAR border
Dozens of people said to have been killed in attacks allegedly involving Wagner Group fightersRussian mercenaries have mounted a series of bloody attacks on artisanal mines in the lawless border zones between Sudan and Central African Republic (CAR) in an effort to plunder the region’s valuable gold trade, witnesses and experts have said.Dozens of miners are thought to have died in at least three major attacks this year allegedly involving mercenaries working for the Wagner Group, a private military company that has been linked to the Kremlin by western officials. There are also reports of further attacks on mines in at least six other places across CAR. Continue reading...
Post Office IT scandal victims may be disqualified from compensation scheme
At least 170 wrongly accused branch managers told they may not be repaid because they missed deadlineScores of post office operators wrongly accused of embezzlement by the Post Office due to faulty accounting software, may be disqualified from a dedicated compensation scheme.At least 170 branch managers have been told that they may not be repaid money wrongly deducted from their wages in what has been described as “the biggest miscarriage of justice in UK history” because they were unaware of the scheme, which was launched for just three months during the 2020 lockdown. Continue reading...
Indian police: grenade launcher seized from suspects in rapper’s murder
Hip-hop star Sidhu Moose Wala was shot dead in his car in Punjab last monthIndian police say have arrested three men accused of murdering hip-hop star Sidhu Moose Wala and that they have seized a cache of weaponry including a grenade launcher from the suspects.Moose Wala – also known by his birth name Shubhdeep Singh Sidhu – was shot dead in his car in the northern state of Punjab last month. Continue reading...
John Barilaro received plum New York trade job after senior public servant had already been offered it
Gladys Berejiklian told Jenny West she had the job in August but that offer was later rescinded and the role readvertised
Network Rail boss denies ministers urged it to cap pay offer
RMT union believes government put pressure on Network Rail not to exceed 3% increase
Queensland budget invests in national parks but ‘does nothing’ for climate crisis, critics say
Conservationists celebrate $200m fund for expanding national park land but concerns remain over lack of spending on renewables and emissions reduction
Blockade Australia activists say police carrying out surveillance refused to identify themselves
Protesters admit they surrounded car, deflated its tyres and placed tarpaulin over it, but say they thought officers were trespassers
Britons face paying £380 a year more as supermarket inflation hits 13-year high
Shoppers turn to own-label goods as discounters Aldi and Lidl benefit from living costs crunchSupermarket inflation hit 8.3% in the past month, the highest rate in 13 years, adding £380 to annual bills as the rising cost of living weighs on families.Sales fell at all the big supermarkets as shoppers switched to discounters Aldi and Lidl and bought more own-label goods in an effort to keep a lid on spending, according to the latest data from Kantar. Continue reading...
Judith Neilson Institute head says events spiralling ‘out of control’ as independent directors quit
Resignations of four directors leaves philanthropist founder in control of the media-focused organisation
Probe into Lynette Dawson’s disappearance was suspended after reports of sighting, court hears
Former detective Paul Mayger tells Chris Dawson murder trial homicide investigation called off in 1992 after Dawson told police his wife had been spotted
Trial of Brittany Higgins accused delayed after Lisa Wilkinson’s Logies speech
ACT supreme court chief justice ‘regrettably’ postpones trial of Bruce Lehrmann after comments defence claim amount to 'contempt of court’
Visa delays leave UK families with adopted babies stranded in Pakistan
Home Office accused of leaving mothers and traumatised children stranded for months while priority is given to Ukraine refugees
‘Skinny, bendy and blonde’: women of colour challenge racism in UK yoga
Despite its roots in India, the sector is not diverse, and women report ‘wall of silence’ about studios’ lack of inclusivenessWhen Sue Forde returned to practising yoga in a studio earlier this year, for the first time since the pandemic, it was with a sense of trepidation. Because it meant she was, once again, usually the only black woman in the room.“I’ve had my body pointed to as ‘an African body’,” said Forde, from Hackney, east London. “Recently, in a class, this discussion sprang up about whether black women have a bigger tendency to a pelvic tilt. You think: ‘Oh, please don’t bring this into the yoga room.’” Continue reading...
Charities hopeful as Labor pledges to remove ‘gag clauses’ banning groups from political advocacy
Sector breaths ‘sigh of relief’ as Albanese government tries different approach to Coalition’s combative attitude
‘He’s been betrayed’: sister of Moroccan man captured in Ukraine pleads for help
Brahim Saadoun’s sister Iman says marine sentenced to death by Russian proxies has been abandoned by his own governmentThe sister of Brahim Saadoun, the Moroccan man who was captured while serving in the Ukrainian military, has said she feared he has been abandoned by his own government and has called on the international community to “claim my brother”.“I just want any authority, anybody who is willing to help, to come and help,” Iman Saadoun said in an interview with the Guardian, describing being left in limbo while seeking government support for him. Continue reading...
Shadowy Strava users spy on Israeli military with fake routes in bases
Exclusive: Personnel risk identification by running GPS ‘segments’ around top-secret sitesUnidentified operatives have been using the fitness tracking app Strava to spy on members of the Israeli military, tracking their movements across secret bases around the country and potentially observing them as they travel the world on official business.By placing fake running “segments” inside military bases, the operation – the affiliation of which has not been uncovered – was able to keep tabs on individuals who were exercising on the bases, even those who have applied the strongest possible account privacy settings. Continue reading...
NSW state budget 2022: vouchers for schoolchildren, stamp duty reform and a forecast surplus in 2024-25
NSW treasurer Matt Kean hands down pre-election 2022 state budget that invests in housing, health and early education
Father-in-law charged with murder after Australian woman Sajida Tasneem killed in Pakistan
Tasneem was allegedly killed in front of her father after being taken to northern Pakistan from Perth with her three childrenAn Australian woman has allegedly been bludgeoned to death by her father-in-law with an axe in northern Pakistan after an argument about moving back to Australia with her children.Sajida Tasneem was allegedly killed in front of her father at a home she shared with her in-laws in the city of Sargodha, 250km south of Pakistan’s capital, Islamabad, on 11 June. Continue reading...
Russia gathering its forces to storm settlements near Sievierodonetsk, says Ukraine – as it happened
This live blog is now closed, you can find our latest coverage of the Russia-Ukraine war hereIn the weeks after the Russian invasion, the Guardian spoke to five Ukrainian families who had fled the country. Nearly four months on from the invasion, the families talk about the realities of their new lives.Back in March, Liudmyla Abdo was fresh out of a war zone. Fatigued, dazed and suffering from acute stress, she sat in Paris’s Buttes-Chaumont park and recounted her experience of fleeing Kyiv in the dead of night.Russian ground and tactical air operations have remained focussed on the central Donbas sector over the weekend.In the conflict to date, Russia’s air force has underperformed. Its failure to consistently deliver air power is likely one of the most important factors behind Russia’s very limited campaign success.It cannot gain full air superiority and has operated in a risk-adverse style, rarely penetrating deep behind Ukrainian lines. Some of the underlying causes of its difficulties echo those of Russian ground forces. Continue reading...
UK needs to tax salt in the same way it does sugar, says heart charity
Ministers should bring in levy to cut heart attacks and strokes and address packaged foods’ high salt content, advises BHFMinisters should bring in a sugar tax-style new levy on the amount of salt in food to reduce heart attacks and strokes, Britain’s leading heart charity has said.The British Heart Foundation (BHF) urged the government on Tuesday to tax high levels of salt in an attempt to force food firms and outlets to stop adding such large amounts of it to their products. Continue reading...
Stonewall ‘malicious’ in legal fight against Allison Bailey, tribunal hears
Barrister involved in employment tribunal with her chambers and leading LGBTQ+ charityStonewall has been “high-handed and malicious” in its ongoing legal fight against a gender critical barrister, her lawyer has told the final day of an employment tribunal.The barrister Allison Bailey is suing her chambers, Garden Court, and the LGBTQ+ charity. She claims she was offered lower-quality work after she voiced her opposition to the nationwide Stonewall diversity champion scheme when it was announced at her chambers in December 2018. Stonewall’s programme provides advice and assessments for inclusive workplaces. Continue reading...
Boris Johnson general election victory would be ‘disaster’, says Chris Patten
Former Conservative party chair says decision by Tory MPs to keep Johnson as leader was ‘terrible weakness’It will be a “disaster” for the country if Boris Johnson wins the next general election, a former chair of the Conservative party has said as he called Tory MPs’ decision to keep him as leader a “terrible weakness”.Chris Patten said that if the prime minister remained in post, it would “hasten the breakup” of the United Kingdom and result in Scotland being more likely to pursue independence. Continue reading...
Biggest UK rail strikes in decades to go ahead after last-ditch talks fail
Most train services in Great Britain cancelled on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday in dispute over pay and conditionsThe biggest rail strikes in three decades will start on Tuesday after late talks failed to break the impasse, with the RMT union leadership warning that industrial action will “run as long as it needs to run”.Most train services in Great Britain will be cancelled on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday in a dispute over pay and conditions. Only a skeleton service will run on main lines and around urban areas. Continue reading...
Ukrainian missiles hit Black Sea gas platforms, say Russian officials
Reports of strikes come as Russian forces said to be gathering for final assault on Sievierodonetsk and Lysychansk• Russia-Ukraine war: latest updatesRussian officials have said Ukraine launched missile strikes against three gas rigs in the Black Sea south of Odesa, in an apparent escalation of Kyiv’s attempts to weaken Russia’s maritime dominance.Seven people were missing and three injured after the strikes, according to the head of occupied Crimea, Sergey Aksyonov, who said a “rescue operation with the participation of patrol ships and aviation” was under way. Continue reading...
Trains, housing and royalties: what we know about the Queensland state budget
Funding boosts in social housing, health and rail projects flagged ahead of Tuesday’s budget
Lewis Goodall joins exodus from BBC amid impartiality drive
Newsnight policy editor to join Emily Maitlis and Jon Sopel at Global as journalists react to management and government pressureAnother prominent BBC journalist has quit for a commercial rival after tiring of the public broadcaster’s impartiality drive.Lewis Goodall, the policy editor of Newsnight, will join former colleagues Emily Maitlis and Jon Sopel in making a daily podcast for media company Global, which owns radio stations including LBC. Continue reading...
No 10 confirms it asked the Times to drop Carrie Johnson story
Newspaper swiftly withdrew article alleging Boris Johnson tried to hire his future wife as chief of staffThe Times swiftly withdrew a story that made allegations about the prime minister and his wife after Downing Street intervened to complain about it, No 10 has confirmed.The piece alleged that Boris Johnson attempted to hire Carrie Symonds, who he has since married, as his taxpayer-funded chief of staff when he was foreign secretary and she was a Conservative party press chief. Continue reading...
‘Couldn’t come at a worse time’: business owners bemoan transport chaos
While London is expected to bear the brunt of the dip in trade caused by the strikes, the effects are likely to be felt across the country“People have written the week off,” says Stuart Proctor, the boss of the Stafford hotel in Mayfair, where he says this week’s transport strikes have meant tens and thousands of pounds in lost restaurant bookings.“Numerous large parties have cancelled for dinners and lunches,” says Proctor, who also oversees the Norma restaurant in Fitzrovia. Hotel bookings are holding up as most are from international visitors who are largely unaffected by the train strikes, but he says walk-in after work trade is likely to be down. “People are working from home [during the strikes] now they have got used to it,” he said. Continue reading...
Floating Hong Kong restaurant capsizes in South China Sea
Jumbo Floating Restaurant encountered ‘adverse weather’ after being towed away from territory’s harbourOne of Hong Kong’s most iconic restaurants – the Jumbo Floating Restaurant – has capsized in the South China Sea days after it was towed away from its home of 46 years in the territory’s Aberdeen harbour.Its owners said in a statement on Monday that the restaurant had encountered “adverse” weather conditions when passing the Paracel Islands – also known as the Xisha Islands – on its way to an undisclosed location. Continue reading...
Two people killed in North Yorkshire helicopter crash
Police say incident occurred near Burton in Lonsdale shortly before midday on MondayTwo people have died after a helicopter crashed into a field in North Yorkshire, police said.North Yorkshire police said the incident happened off Bentham Road near Burton in Lonsdale on the Cumbria border shortly before midday on Monday. Continue reading...
As many as 320 dead in Ethiopia gun attack, witnesses suggest
Witnesses say victims of massacre in country’s western Oromia region were ethnic Amharas – a minority in the areaThe suspected death toll in an attack by gunmen in Ethiopia’s western Oromia region has risen, with new witness testimony suggesting that between 260 and 320 civilians were killed on Saturday.Reports of the massacre surfaced on Sunday, as survivors described one of the deadliest such incidents for several years in Ethiopia. Continue reading...
‘Baggage mountain’ leads to Heathrow cancellations, as easyJet cuts schedule
Airline reduces services after Gatwick and Amsterdam caps, while Heathrow hit by luggage backlogThe chaos at UK airports intensified on Monday as easyJet cut thousands of flights over the summer to minimise the risk of disruption, while passengers at Heathrow faced cancellations caused by caused by a “baggage mountain” .Meanwhile, airports capping flights could face legal challenges from service companies to recover the costs of recruiting staff who may no longer be needed. Continue reading...
Teenager brings complaint against Met police over alleged racist stereotyping
19-year-old says he was groomed into county lines crime then was treated as drug gang member by policeA black teenager who claims he has been treated as a gang member by police rather than as a victim of county lines grooming is bringing what is thought to be the first complaint of its kind against the Metropolitan police for failing to protect him.The 19-year-old is in hiding from the gang he says kidnapped him and tried to force him to get involved in committing crimes for them. Continue reading...
‘Serious failings’ left children exposed to abuse in Oldham, finds damning review
Report singles out failings by police and council and suggests senior officials may have misled MPsVulnerable children were left exposed to sexual exploitation in Oldham because of “serious failings” by the police and council, a damning independent review has found.The report found there were multiple missed opportunities to prevent abuse stretching back to 2005, including offences committed by a council welfare officer who was later convicted of 30 rapes. Continue reading...
...929930931932933934935936937938...