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Updated 2026-04-04 01:32
US Southern Baptist churches facing ‘apocalypse’ over sexual abuse scandal
A report named hundreds of church leaders accused or found guilty of abusing children and says survivors were mistreatedAmerica’s largest Protestant and second-largest Christian denomination is being roiled by a sexual abuse scandal that casts a harsh light on one of the most politically powerful religious groups in the country as well as renewing a focus on its racist past.The Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) is a collection of loosely affiliated member churches, boasting just under 15 million members, and is dominated by white members, who are usually deeply socially conservative. The convention has often been a powerful tool for rightwing organizing in recent years, especially on issues around abortion. Continue reading...
Faces in a London crowd: museum’s appeal to identify Windrush arrivals
Railway Museum in quest to tell stories of the West Indian passengers caught on camera at Waterloo station as they began a new life in BritainSurrounded by luggage and fellow passengers, they were photographed arriving in smart clothes, high heels and fedoras, their faces tired and unsmiling as the underwhelming start of their new lives in the motherland is captured on camera.Now a museum is appealing to the public to identify the West Indians portrayed in the pictures, taken by Howard Grey at Waterloo station in London, which document the last boatload of Windrush generation arrivals to Britain in spring 1962 before a crackdown on the open-door policy for Commonwealth immigrants. Continue reading...
Test for press freedom as verdict due in Arron Banks libel case against Carole Cadwalladr
Judgment in the action against the Observer and Guardian’s Carole Cadwalladr will have huge implications for UK journalistsThe highly anticipated judgment in the libel action brought by multimillionaire Brexit backer Arron Banks against the Observer and Guardian journalist Carole Cadwalladr will be handed down this week. The landmark verdict will potentially have huge ramifications for press freedom and investigative reporting.Mrs Justice Steyn will deliver her judgment by email on Monday morning. The decision will be the culmination of an often rancorous three-year legal battle and could send a chilling effect throughout British journalism. Continue reading...
France votes in parliament elections with fate of Macron’s ideas at stake
President’s centrists face challenge from historic leftwing alliance, while far right aims for greater visibilityFrance has begun voting in the first round of parliament elections key to Emmanuel Macron’s second term, determining his capacity to deliver domestic policy such as raising the retirement age and overhauling the benefits system.Macron, who was re-elected president in April against the far right’s Marine Le Pen, needs a majority for his centrist grouping in the lower house of parliament to have a free hand for his proposals to cut taxes and make changes to the welfare system. Continue reading...
‘Callous’ Home Office warns torture victims they face deportation
After home secretary Priti Patel overcame a high court legal challenge, ‘vulnerable and at risk’ asylum seekers are among those who could be on the first flight to Rwanda this weekTorture victims who have been officially recognised by doctors as “vulnerable and at risk” are being told by the Home Office that they face being deported to Rwanda, the Observer can reveal.At least one asylum seeker who has been informed by the Home Office they may be on the first flight to the east African country, scheduled to depart this Tuesday, has been assessed as likely to have been a victim of torture. Continue reading...
Grant Shapps says law change could allow agency workers to break strikes
Transport secretary also says workers could be banned from overtime, as rail industrial action loomsThe government is considering legal changes to allow agency workers to fill in for striking staff, to reduce disruption to services.It is understood the transport secretary, Grant Shapps, has not ruled out the option, with travellers facing chaos on the railways and London tube due to widespread industrial action. Continue reading...
Defence minister rubbishes Coalition claims on France compensation deal – as it happened
Marles brushes off suggestions former Coalition government was close to signing compensation deal with France; nation records at least 24 Covid deaths. This blog is now closed
Tory donors and polarised party losing faith in Johnson ‘cult’
Hotelier Rocco Forte demands PM changes course as Commons battle looms over tensions with EUA big Tory donor has said he cannot support Boris Johnson, after accusing him of overseeing an un-Conservative government, delivering a “pathetic” tax-cutting pledge and refusing to heed calls to change the course of his premiership.With the prime minister facing a split over Brexit within days and a mounting revolt among party backers after last week’s humiliating confidence vote, the hotelier Sir Rocco Forte said that he “will not put up” with the direction Johnson is taking the party. Continue reading...
Questions over use of ‘psychological experts’ in parental alienation cases
Parents – more often mothers – are losing access to their children on the advice of unregulated therapists, an Observer investigation reveals
Radical left threatens to hamstring Emmanuel Macron in French election
Analysis: The president could be forced to cohabit with his most fervent opponent, Jean-Luc MélenchonWeeks after Emmanuel Macron entered the Elysée for a second five-year term of office, French voters could decide to hamstring their newly re-elected leader by forcing him into a political “cohabitation” that would paralyse the country.The first round of legislative elections opens on Sunday to decide who will fill the 577 seats in the Assemblée Nationale. Continue reading...
Richard Marles’s ‘full and frank’ meeting with China ends Australia’s diplomatic freeze
Defence minister says the controversial interception of an Australian aircraft by a Chinese jet last month was discussed, as well as broader issues in the Pacific
Brothers of Italy: once-fringe far-right party plots local elections success
Giorgia Meloni’s party hopes to gain ground as Italians go to polls to elect mayors and councillorsJust five years ago, Brothers of Italy, a party with neofascist origins, barely scraped 4% of the vote. It now leads in opinion polls, and its leader Giorgia Meloni’s rabble-rousing speeches have filled squares up and down Italy before local elections beginning on Sunday.Italians will elect mayors and councillors in roughly 1,000 towns and cities, including Genoa, Palermo, Verona, Parma and a host of provincial capitals, in a vote that will test the strength of political parties before national elections next year. Continue reading...
Hikers rescued with hypothermia in Tasmania as extreme cold front sweeps Australia’s east
Eight people became trapped on Mt Wellington’s summit, and another is missing, as blizzard-like weather causes ‘deadly’ conditions
‘China’s Taiwan’: Beijing’s defence minister rails against ‘smearing and interfering’ US
Wei Fenghe says ties are at critical juncture and puts onus on United States to improve bilateral relationshipChina will “fight to the very end” to stop Taiwan from declaring independence, the country’s defence minister has vowed in a speech amid his counterparts from other countries including the United States.“We will fight at all cost and we will fight to the very end. This is the only choice for China,” Wei Fenghe told the Shangri-La Dialogue security summit in Singapore, where he called Taiwan “first and foremost China’s Taiwan”. Continue reading...
Australia’s monthly flu cases more than doubled previous record in May
Experts say the world will be watching as the country becomes one of the first to experience Covid and a simultaneous influenza season spike
Hong Kong NETs – foreign teachers of English – forced to take allegiance oath
Authoritarian measures are widened to meet Chinese loyalty requirements, despite fears it will worsen teacher shortagesForeign English-language teachers working in Hong Kong government schools will need to swear allegiance to the city, officials have ordered, as fears grow about the territory’s ability to retain educators in the face of increasing restrictions.Hong Kong’s education bureau said on Saturday that native-speaking English teachers (NETs) and advisers working in government-run schools must sign a declaration by 21 June in order to continue working. Continue reading...
Scholz, Macron and Draghi to visit Kyiv – as it happened
This blog is closed. Live coverage will resume later
Family pays tribute to Ceredigion father who died saving children from rip tide
‘Selfless’ Hywel Morgan, 47, recovered from sea at Poppit Sands after helping rescue group of children but could not be savedTributes have been paid to a father who died after rescuing a group of children caught in a rip tide.Hywel Morgan, 47, had helped save the children who had got into difficulty in the sea at Poppit Sands, St Dogmaels, Ceredigion. Continue reading...
Warning over Centrelink call centres as Services Australia slashes contracts
Exclusive: Agency says decision to cut outsourced workload by 30% is due to reduced demand as unions warn of longer wait times
Australian defamation law never needed Morrison’s ‘anti-trolling’ legislation
Experts say rulings in actions involving John Barilaro and PRGuy17 demonstrate existing law already achieves aims of former government’s proposed changes
What will the teal wave mean for Victorian and NSW state elections?
Swings at federal election hint at shifts that could be replicated in state polls due in November and March
Poll says Keir Starmer worse choice for PM than Boris Johnson
Labour ahead of Tories by two points, but Labour’s leader failing to make a personal breakthroughBoris Johnson makes a better prime minister than Keir Starmer would despite Partygate, the cost of living crisis and the confidence vote in Johnson held by his MPs, according to the latest Observer poll.The Opinium figures, which will raise further concerns within Labour over the party leader’s performance, shows that the prime minister has a two-point lead over his opponent. It also reveals that Starmer’s party holds a narrow two-point lead, compared with a three-point lead in the last poll a fortnight ago. Labour are on 36% of the vote, with the Tories up one point on 34%. The Lib Dems are on 13% with the Greens on 6%. Continue reading...
Cristiano Ronaldo: US judge dismisses $25m lawsuit over rape allegations
A US district judge in Las Vegas said the victim’s lawyer acted in ‘bad faith’ for use of leaked and stolen confidential documentsA Nevada woman has lost her bid in a US court to force the Manchester United star Cristiano Ronaldo to pay millions of dollars more than $375,000 in hush money she received after claiming he raped her in Las Vegas in 2009.A US district judge in Las Vegas, Jennifer Dorsey, kicked the case out of court on Friday to punish the woman’s attorney, Leslie Mark Stovall, for “bad-faith conduct” and the use of leaked and stolen documents detailing discussions between Ronaldo and his lawyers. Continue reading...
200 protesters block immigration officers’ van during Peckham arrest
Met police called to help enforcement officers get past crowd of demonstrators after Nigerian man detained for overstaying visaA man arrested for immigration offences was released on bail after protesters gathered in south-east London on Saturday for hours to block a van he was being transported in from leaving.
15-year-old boy stabbed to death in Manchester named by police
Jakub Szymanski was attacked during a domestic incident in Miles Platting, reportedly as he attempted to protect his motherA 15-year-old boy who died after he was stabbed in Miles Platting has been named by Greater Manchester police as Jakub Szymanski.A 44-year-old man was arrested in Kent on Friday night on suspicion of murder after the teenage boy was stabbed to death and his mother was injured at a Manchester home, police confirmed. Continue reading...
US warns of ‘stark’ stakes in Taiwan Strait if status quo unilaterally altered
Defence secretary says US does not support Taiwan independence, which China says would prompt it to take island backThe US has warned of “especially stark” stakes in the Taiwan Strait if the status quo was unilaterally altered, as China reiterated its resolve to take the island back if it declares independence.Speaking at the annual Shangri-La Dialogue security summit in Singapore on Saturday, US defence secretary Lloyd Austin said Washington does not support Taiwan independence, and the Joe Biden administration “categorically” opposes any change of the status quo. Continue reading...
Commons will be a ‘menopause-friendly’ employer, says Speaker
Sir Lindsay Hoyle unveils plans to ‘break the taboo’, and agrees to sign the Menopause Workplace PledgeThe House of Commons is to become a “menopause-friendly” employer, with Sir Lindsay Hoyle unveiling plans to “break the taboo” and offer practical adjustments for those affected.The Commons Speaker will sign the Wellbeing of Women charity’s Menopause Workplace Pledge, which will commit the House of Commons Service to supporting employees going through the menopause. Continue reading...
UK rail unions dismiss claim that usage is in decline and cuts are needed
Transport secretary says Covid has ‘changed travel habits’ but Aslef cites data showing use above 90% of pre-pandemic levelsRail unions have dismissed the government’s claim that big savings are needed because of a permanent decline in use since the pandemic, citing official data that showed demand creeping above 90% of pre-pandemic levels during some days late last month.Aslef, the train drivers’ union, is demanding a meeting with transport secretary Grant Shapps to discuss the future of the industry, stating that ministers are opting for “grandstanding” over an acceptable, gradual plan to modernising the railways. Continue reading...
Boris Johnson warned NI protocol ‘rule-breaking’ will repeat mistakes of Partygate
Tory tensions high over risk of illegality in imminent bill to improve trade between Northern Ireland and rest of UKBoris Johnson is being warned that he will repeat the mistakes of Partygate by backing “rule-breaking over the rule of law”, when he publishes plans on Monday that are expected to prompt a new Tory rebellion over Brexit.Frantic legal and political negotiations have been taking place this week among Johnson, his cabinet and MPs in advance of the government’s bill designed to improve trade between Northern Ireland and the rest of the UK. The legislation will be published on Monday. Continue reading...
Greek pilot jailed for murdering British wife ‘fears contract killing’
Babis Anagnostopoulos claims he is living in fear from those he initially blamed for Caroline Crouch’s deathThe Greek helicopter pilot given a life sentence for the brutal murder of his British wife in Athens last year claims to be living in fear of those he initially blamed for the crime.Weeks after being found guilty of suffocating Caroline Crouch, Babis Anagnostopoulos has said his own life is in danger because he has become the target of a “contract killing”. Continue reading...
EU will likely grant Ukraine candidate status to join bloc, says Ursula von der Leyen
Volodymyr Zelenskiy has been pushing for rapid admission, and says the decision will determine the future of Europe
Indigenous leaders express frustration at military in search for two men in Brazil
Bruno Pereira and Dom Phillips went missing in the western Amazon, but the search has been called inefficientIndigenous leaders in the area where a British journalist and Brazilian explorer went missing last Sunday have expressed increasing frustration at the lack of coordination in the search for the two men.Indigenous expert Bruno Pereira and Dom Phillips, a longtime contributor to the Guardian, were last seen on Sunday morning while traveling by boat on the Itaquaí River in the western Amazon. Continue reading...
Leaked food strategy for English schools is paltry, experts say
Campaigners decry failure to extend free meals and budget of £250 per state school to teach healthy eatingThe government’s new food strategy offers a “paltry” budget of £250 for each English state school to teach healthy eating, and ignores most of Henry Dimbleby’s plans to improve child nutrition, campaigners say.They say that with children being fed microwaved and cold meals by schools struggling with the cost of living crisis, a stronger response is needed. Continue reading...
Family of UK man sentenced to death by Russia call for cooperation
Shaun Pinner’s loved ones ‘devastated’ after he received verdict alongside Aiden Aslin in what UK calls a ‘sham’ sentence
Freddie Mercury’s ‘priceless’ stamp collection to be celebrated
Postal Museum show celebrates the Queen singer’s youthful passion for philatelyAll Queen fans know how much Freddie Mercury liked to ride his bicycle but fewer are aware of the flamboyant frontman’s other great childhood hobby: collecting stamps.Now, for the first time, the Postal Museum is to put one of Mercury’s “priceless” collector’s albums on show – its value enhanced by the fact that it is one of the late rock star’s rare personal possessions in museum ownership. Continue reading...
Barristers to be balloted on possible walkouts in row over legal aid rates
More than 2,400 barristers in England and Wales to be balloted amid warnings of crisis in justice systemBarristers are to be balloted this weekend on escalating industrial action over legal aid rates as figures reveal the number of crown court cases adjourned because of a shortage of lawyers has increased nearly fivefold over the decade.The Criminal Bar Association (CBA) is balloting more than 2,400 criminal barristers in England and Wales on options for action, including refusing new defence instructions and possible walkouts. A vote for further action is likely to increase the backlog of 58,271 cases in the crown courts. Continue reading...
Record UK petrol price risks a mass exodus of essential workers
Community health workers, cab drivers, couriers and van drivers are ‘paying to go to work’The record increase in fuel prices could spark a mass exodus of staff who rely on their vehicles for work, trade unions and drivers have warned.On Thursday, the price of a litre of unleaded petrol hit 182.31p, meaning the cost of filling an average family car hit £100 for the first time. Some employees who need to drive for their jobs are spending as much as £350 a week on fuel and others are “paying to go to work”. Continue reading...
Blacklist Dubai over failure to crack down on Russian oligarchs, say campaigners
UAE has become haven for superyachts, private jets and ‘dirty money’ since invasion of Ukraine, but has taken no actionCampaigners and politicians are calling for the United Arab Emirates to be blacklisted over its failures to combat the flow of “dirty money” and to enforce sanctions imposed on Russian oligarchs.The Gulf state has emerged as a key refuge for the Russian super-rich fleeing the impact of global sanctions, with private jets and superyachts linked to oligarchs heading to the UAE after the invasion of Ukraine. Continue reading...
Pub co-owned by England cricketer Stuart Broad severely damaged in fire
Tap & Run in Nottinghamshire, of which Broad is a co-owner, has closed after damage to the roofA pub part-owned by the England cricketer Stuart Broad has had to close after being badly damaged by a “significant fire”.Firefighters were called to the award-winning Tap & Run country pub in Upper Broughton, halfway between Nottingham and Melton Mowbray, at about 3.20am on Saturday. The blaze left the first floor and roof of the pub, co-owned by Broad and former cricketer Harry Gurney, destroyed. Continue reading...
Fine airlines that break UK compensation rules, demand passengers
After the half-term travel chaos, stranded families are refused redress while many online applications are left unresolvedSome of the thousands of people whose flights were cancelled or delayed during the half-term travel chaos have been told they will receive no compensation, leading to calls for a change to the way passengers are reimbursed ahead of what looks to be a chaotic summer for airlines.Others have spoken of claims being lost and having to resubmit forms as many as seven times, while passengers caught up in earlier disruption said they have waited months for airlines to talk to them. Continue reading...
Flights diverted at East Midlands airport after drone sightings
One runway closed after ‘operational disruption’ on Friday afternoon and evening, but has now reopenedFlights at East Midlands airport were diverted and a runaway was closed on Friday night after drones were sighted nearby.Eight services were diverted on Friday evening, after disruption earlier that day as passenger flights were rerouted to other airports. Drones had previously been spotted on Friday afternoon near Donington Park in Leicestershire, about one mile (1.6km) from the airport, where the three-day Download festival is taking place. Continue reading...
Zelenskiy ‘didn’t want to hear’ warnings of Russia invasion, says Biden
US president says there was ‘no doubt’ Putin was planning to ‘go in’, while former British army head says leaders have no long-term plan
Blackpool council leader criticises Tory minister’s ‘ignorant’ comments
Heather Wheeler reportedly said she had been ‘at a conference in Blackpool or Birmingham or somewhere godawful’A Tory minister has been forced to apologise for describing Birmingham and Blackpool as “godawful”.Speaking at the launch of the government’s new digital strategy on Thursday, Heather Wheeler, a junior minister in the Cabinet Office, was reported to have said: “I was just at a conference in Blackpool or Birmingham or somewhere godawful.” Continue reading...
NHS ‘doesn’t need any more money’, says Sajid Javid as waiting lists rise
Health secretary says service has enough resources but admits waiting lists will grow before they shrinkThe NHS needs reform rather than more money, the health secretary has said, while admitting that record-high waiting lists will continue to rise before they fall.Sajid Javid said the health service already had the resources it needed and did not require more to care for patients effectively. “The NHS now has locked in the resources it needs. It doesn’t need any more money. What it needs to deliver for more people is not money. It needs reform,” he said. Continue reading...
Student loan interest rate to be capped at 7.3% in autumn, says DfE
Ministers intervene to stop interest rate in England and Wales reaching 12% with inflation by SeptemberMinisters have intervened to reduce a sharp rise in interest rates charged on student loans, after the recent increase in inflation which meant rates would treble for many graduates by the autumn.The Department for Education said the maximum rate from September is to be fixed at 7.3% rather than the 12% it would have reached by September, based on earlier inflation figures plus 3%. Continue reading...
Not full of confidence: Labour frets over Starmer’s response to Tory chaos
Many in the opposition fear their leader is not sufficiently punishing the government’s weaknessAt Tuesday’s shadow cabinet meeting, less than 24 hours after Boris Johnson’s humiliating confidence vote, Keir Starmer gave his troops what one called “a bit of cold reality” about how much work remains to be done in developing Labour’s policies and message in the months ahead.Many could not agree more. Conversations with shadow cabinet members, party aides and other senior Labour figures this week revealed deep disquiet about whether Starmer and his team are ready to capitalise on the Tories’ weakness. Continue reading...
Chinese police arrest eight after group of women attacked at restaurant
Footage shows man striking and dragging woman outside after she pushes him awayEight people have been arrested over a vicious attack on a group of women at a restaurant in China, police said on Saturday, in a case that has prompted outrage over predatory sexual behaviour.Footage of the incident widely circulated online shows a man placing his hand on a woman’s back as she shares a meal with two companions at a barbecue restaurant in northern China’s Hebei province. Continue reading...
Biloela family welcomed home; Albanese announces $830m submarine penalty – as it happened
French defence minister welcomes Australia’s payment to Naval Group over submarine cancellation; 70 Covid deaths across the country. This blog is now closed
First post-Covid school leavers face fight for fewer university places
Parents and teachers say some students predicted to gain A* grades are being rejected after a surge in applicationsThe first post-Covid cohort of school leavers face a summer of uncertainty that “threatens to hold back a generation”, as students compete for fewer places on popular university courses.After A-level grade inflation during the pandemic forced universities to take on more students, institutions are now retrenching in popular subjects despite a surge in applications. Continue reading...
‘It isn’t about politics – it’s about money’: will Hollywood take Johnny Depp back?
The actor has been coy about returning to movies after his blockbuster defamation case – but PR moves are being madeJohnny Depp can probably thank his lawyers and PR for suddenly having a shot at a dramatic public image resurrection, but the question remains whether Hollywood will soon restore him to the big screen he used to dominate.In the wake of his dramatic win in the defamation case against his ex-wife and fellow star Amber Heard – though Heard herself also won on one count against her former husband’s agent – speculation is now rife that Depp may go back to movies, despite his own claims that he has no interest in returning to the franchise blockbusters that supplied his fortune. Continue reading...
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