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Updated 2026-04-04 08:18
India bans all wheat exports over food security risk
Move imposed with immediate effect in attempt to control prices after heatwave damages cropsIndia, the world’s second largest producer of wheat, has banned all exports with immediate effect after a heatwave affected the crop.A notice in the government gazette by the directorate of foreign trade, dated Friday, said a rise in global prices for wheat was threatening the food security of India and neighbouring and vulnerable countries. Continue reading...
Only 7% of 5-11s in England have had Covid jab as parents hesitate
Six weeks after start of vaccine rollout, fraction of young children have had first dose as parents question usefulnessOnly 7% of primary schoolchildren in England have received a first dose of Covid vaccine six weeks after it was rolled out to all 5- to 11-year-olds, as parents grapple with the decision about whether to take up the offer.That rate compares with 24% of 12- to 15-year-olds who had received a first dose in the first six weeks after they became eligible in September 2021. Continue reading...
Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan becomes UAE president
Speed of transition, one day after death of Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan, appears designed to show unityRulers in the United Arab Emirates have unanimously appointed Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan as the president of the hereditarily ruled nation on the Arabian peninsula.The state-run WAM news agency said the rulers of the country’s seven sheikhdoms made the decision at a meeting held in Al Mushrif Palace in Abu Dhabi. Continue reading...
Working from home: HMRC’s £125 tax break now harder to claim
As Covid crisis eases, official guidance says people cannot obtain relief if they choose to avoid officeA popular tax break for working from home that gave many people’s finances a small boost during the pandemic has become harder to claim, and most employees will no longer be eligible.With millions of people back in the office for at least part of the week, experts say you can now claim tax relief for working from home only if you meet strict conditions. Continue reading...
‘We kept our beards’: Oberammergau’s passion play emerges from pandemic
In 1633 the Bavarian village vowed to stage its play every 10 years if it survived the plague. It did then and has againFrom his perch in the orchestra pit of the Oberammergau stage, Christian Stückl nods and points to his players above, trying to offer them helpful instructions as their dress rehearsal to a half-full house of mainly local people gets under way.“It is hard to believe we’ve got this far. I keep waiting for something to go wrong, but apart from a couple of older men forgetting their lines there’s really nothing to complain about,” the director says at the end of the five-and-a-half-hour show. Continue reading...
India: 27 people killed after fire rips through Delhi office block
Dozens injured as official says building had no fire exit and most died ‘due to asphyxiation’At least 27 people have died and dozens more were injured in a huge fire in a commercial building in India’s capital, Delhi.The large fire broke out at the four-storey building near a railway station in the western suburb of Mundka in the late afternoon on Friday, but its cause was not immediately clear. Continue reading...
‘Giving hope’: UK universities twin with struggling Ukraine counterparts
From sourcing window glass to sharing online lectures, British institutions are helping war-torn campuses to survive
Funeral plans: government urged to set up fund for victims of failed providers
Recent collapse of funeral company Safe Hands left 46,000 customers facing lossesThe government has been urged to set up an emergency fund to help victims of failed funeral companies, after a recent collapse of a firm left 46,000 people facing losses.In March, Safe Hands collapsed into administration, in a blow for customers who had used it to cover their funeral costs. Continue reading...
Ukraine has won the battle of Kharkiv, analysts say, as Kyiv warns of ‘long phase of war’
US-based thinktank claims Russian troops are being pushed back eastwards from Ukraine’s second city, and aiming to use mercenaries
Russia-Ukraine war: Joe Biden expresses support for right of Finland and Sweden to join Nato– as it happened
This live blog is now closed, you can find our latest coverage of the Russia-Ukraine war in our new live blogHere are some of the latest images we have been sent over the newswires showing the impact of the conflict in Ukraine and beyond.British foreign secretary Liz Truss said it was vital to keep up the pressure on Russia by supplying more weapons to Ukraine and imposing further sanctions.
Queensland floods: rain easing but major flood warnings remain
Authorities are urging Queenslanders to monitor alerts and avoid flooded roads as rivers expected to peak
Britain forecast to bask in sunshine with temperature as high as 27C
Warm weekend weather could lead to heavy rain in parts but more fine days are expected in the next weekMost of Britain can expect to be bathed in sunshine in the coming week as temperatures climb to a possible high of 27C in what would make the warmest spell of the year.Saturday could be “16-19C widely – with 24C the possible high in the south-east”, according to Met Office meteorologist Aidan McGivern. Continue reading...
North Korea: Kim Jong-un declares Covid outbreak a ‘great disaster’
Pyongyang reports 21 more deaths as it scrambles to slow spread of the virus across unvaccinated populationNorth Korea’s leader, Kim Jong-un, has declared the country’s first Covid-19 outbreak a “great disaster” as it reported 21 more deaths.State media said 174,440 people were newly found with fever symptoms on Friday alone as the country scrambles to slow the spread of Covid-19 across its unvaccinated population. Continue reading...
UK government suspends engagement with NUS over antisemitism allegations
The education secretary, Nadhim Zahawi, said he was ‘seriously concerned’ by reports of alleged antisemitism within the organisationMinisters have banned official contact with the National Union of Students over long-running allegations of antisemitism within the organisation, despite the NUS’s pledge to work with Jewish students in an internal investigation.The allegations have become a focus for the government since the election of Shaima Dallali as the next NUS president, with groups including the Union of Jewish Students (UJS) raising concerns after alleged historic comments resurfaced. Continue reading...
Archie Battersbee: judge backs test to establish if 12-year-old boy is dead
Parents want life support to continue for Archie, who has been unconscious since he suffered ‘catastrophic’ brain damageSpecialists should use a brain-stem test to try to establish whether a 12-year-old boy who has not regained consciousness since suffering “catastrophic” brain damage is dead, a high court judge has ruled.Mrs Justice Arbuthnot concluded that the test would be in Archie Battersbee’s best interests at a hearing in the family division of the high court in London on Friday. Continue reading...
Election preferences: do you need to think strategically before voting in the lower house?
With prominent independents creating unusual contests in some seats, voters may be confused about how to allocate preferences. But there is a simple solution
Marist Brothers appointed known child abuser as principal of Melbourne school in 1980, court told
In lawsuit brought by victims, Catholic order disputes extent of its knowledge of Gregory Vincent Coffey prior to his appointment
Breakaway region of Georgia to hold referendum on joining Russia
South Ossetia, focal point of Russia-Georgia war of 2008, will decide whether to subsume itself into larger neighbour in JulyGeorgia’s breakaway region of South Ossetia will hold a referendum on joining Russia on 17 July, the region’s leader announced on Friday.“Anatoly Bibilov signed a decree on holding a referendum in the Republic of South Ossetia,” his office said in a statement, citing his people’s “historic aspiration” to join Russia. Continue reading...
Intoxication can be violent crime defense, Canada supreme court rules
People accused of violent crimes such as homicide and sexual assault can use self-induced extreme intoxication as a defenseCanada’s supreme court has ruled that defendants accused of violent crimes such as homicide and sexual assault can use self-induced extreme intoxication as a defense, striking down a federal law supported by women’s advocacy groups.The supreme court said on Friday a law passed by parliament in 1995 that prohibits the defense was unconstitutional and violates the country’s Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Continue reading...
‘Wagatha Christie’ case: Coleen Rooney says leaks added to marriage issues
Rebekah Vardy’s lawyer tells trial there was not ‘a shred of evidence’ she leaked Rooney’s private Instagram stories to the SunColeen Rooney has been told she cannot provide “one shred of evidence” that Rebekah Vardy leaked stories from a private Instagram account to the Sun – but insisted she has strong reason to “believe” Vardy was responsible based on circumstantial clues.Rooney told the “Wagatha Christie” libel trial that leaks from her private Instagram account to the Sun caused issues when she was dealing with difficulties in her marriage to former footballer Wayne Rooney. She said one private Instagram post in 2017 made its way to the tabloid at a time she and Rooney were “trying to figure out our relationship” and were spending time apart, after he crashed his car while drink-driving with another woman in the vehicle. Continue reading...
Civil service union warns of strike over Boris Johnson’s plan to cut 91,000 jobs
PCS leader says members have reached ‘tipping point’ after PM’s combative moveThe biggest civil service union has warned of strike action over Boris Johnson’s “P&O-style” approach to cutting 91,000 Whitehall jobs, with ministers also seeking to reduce staff redundancy terms by up to a third.The plan to cut one in five civil service jobs caused alarm and dismay across government departments, after Johnson told his cabinet to spend the next month finding ways to cut the civil service back to pre-Brexit levels within three years. He claimed it was necessary to shrink the size of central government to tackle the cost of living crisis. Continue reading...
Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe tells Johnson she ‘lived in shadow’ of his wrong comments for years – as it happened
This live blog is now closed, you can find read our full report on Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe’s meeting with the PM hereJacob Rees-Mogg has become the second minister to distance himself from the comments connecting food bank usage with an inability to cook made on Wednesday by Lee Anderson in the House of Commons.
Ministers accused of cutting corners on childcare staffing ratios
Government may allow one adult to look after five two-year-olds in England, in effort to reduce costsMinisters have been accused of cutting corners and endangering children after the government confirmed it would consult on cutting childcare staffing ratios so that one adult can look after five two-year-olds.The education minister Will Quince announced that the government would consult on what he called “mirroring the Scottish model”, which allows a maximum of five two-year-olds, instead of four in England, to be cared for by one adult. Continue reading...
Cornish pub will not change name despite letter from Vogue owner
Landlords of Star Inn at Vogue says it ‘wouldn’t have taken five minutes’ to find out pub is named after hamletStanding seven storeys tall in Mayfair’s Hanover Square – a short walk from Savile Row, Oxford Street and Michelin-starred restaurants – there is little mistaking Vogue House for what it is: the home of the fashion bible’s British edition.However, a six-hour drive away, a pub in the Cornish countryside has become a site for concern for bosses at the fashion giant. Despite the pub having stood for hundreds of years, the landlords have been asked to rename it. Continue reading...
UK delays ban on supermarket junk food deals and pre-watershed ads
PM accused of ‘playing politics’ with children’s health after measures postponed due to cost of living crisisThe government is to delay a ban on “buy one get one free” deals on junk food and a pre-9pm watershed for TV advertising, as Boris Johnson puts the cost of living crisis before a promise to tackle the UK’s growing obesity problem.The prime minister is understood to have decided to delay the implementation of the policies by at least a year – and potentially scrap them altogether – after chairing a ministerial meeting seeking ideas to help alleviate the cost of living crisis on Wednesday. Continue reading...
In ageing gas masks, medics in Ukraine rush towards choking troops
Volunteers in Sloviansk – like the troops they support – make do with limited equipment as terrors of war draw closerThe call came at about midday on Wednesday. There had been “chemical poisoning” after a blast and patients needed collecting.Fears of a Russian chemical weapons attack have haunted Ukraine almost since the war began, and as the volunteer medics in Sloviansk pulled on the ageing gas masks and plastic overalls that were their only protection, they wondered if this was it. Continue reading...
Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe tells PM she ‘lived in the shadow’ of his mistake
Zaghari-Ratcliffe recalled ‘training journalists’ comment in meeting with Boris Johnson, says Tulip SiddiqNazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe has told Boris Johnson that for four years she lived in the shadow of his mistaken statement as foreign secretary that she had been in Iran to train journalists.Zaghari-Ratcliffe, released by Iran just over a month ago, told Johnson in a face-to-face meeting in Downing Street that his remarks had had a big impact on her life, according to Tulip Siddiq, her MP and close ally. Continue reading...
UK visa delays cause J Balvin to cancel Ed Sheeran sessions
Colombian reggaeton star is latest to be hit by backlog in immigration system, made worse by Ukraine warThe hit Colombian singer J Balvin had to abandon recording sessions and filming in London with Ed Sheeran last month because his visa never arrived.The reggaeton star, who has sold 35m records worldwide, is the latest musician to be caught out by long delays at UK visas and immigration. Continue reading...
Some UK public swimming pools forced to close over national chlorine shortage
Factors from Brexit to lower production in China to war in Ukraine linked to issues with securing supplies of pool chemicalsA shortage of chlorine is forcing some public swimming pools to close, with operators blaming factors ranging from a production fall in China to Brexit and the war in Ukraine.Saxon Pool in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, has been closed to general swimmers since 6 May, with the operator and Central Bedfordshire council cancelling almost all sessions, apart from swimming lessons and a swimathon event. Continue reading...
Tesco criticised as chief pockets £4.75m amid soaring prices
Ken Murphy is awarded the highest annual bonus by the supermarket since 2016 amid bumper profitsTesco has been criticised for paying its chief executive £4.75m last year, including the highest annual bonus awarded by the supermarket since 2016, as families struggle with rising food costs.Ken Murphy’s package included a £3.21m bonus while the finance director, Imran Nawaz, earned a £1.24m bonus – taking his total to £5.4m for the year including a £3.5m “golden hello” relating to bonuses he lost out on leaving his former employer, Tate & Lyle. Continue reading...
Boris Johnson’s civil service job cuts are ambitious – and ideological
Analysis: policy aims to save money, but also chimes with government’s suspicion of a public sector stuffed with pettifogging remainers
UK airlines and airports scramble to hire staff as travel takes off again
Lengthy background checks and a tight labour market are hampering the replacement of thousands of workers axed during CovidAre you unfazed by heights, able to swim, not visibly tattooed, either taller than 5 ft 2in or possessed of extraordinarily long arms, and able to survive on £16k basic a year? Then there is a pretty good chance an airline needs you.Cabin crew are just a few of the roles the aviation sector has been desperately trying to fill after the bounceback from Covid. Employees were axed en masse as the pandemic hit and flights were grounded, with British Airways alone shedding 10,000 people. Continue reading...
Erdoğan: Turkey not feeling positive about Sweden and Finland joining Nato
Turkish president says he is ‘following developments’ as two Nordic nations plan applicationsThe Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, has cast doubt on Finnish and Swedish membership of Nato, saying he does not have a positive opinion on the two Nordic nations joining the military alliance after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.His remarks came as a Swedish parliamentary security review said membership would reduce the risk of conflict in northern Europe and a day after neighbouring Finland said it aimed to join the alliance. Continue reading...
Russia-Ukraine war: what we know on day 79 of the invasion
UK says failed Russian crossing of river shows pressure on troops; first war crimes trial begins in Kyiv
Now he’s got ‘a foot in the door’ can Keir Starmer keep going?
Analysis: Labour did well in local elections and providing the leader avoids that FPN there may be opportunities aheadHours after he stepped off stage with his political future in the balance, Keir Starmer decompressed with some of his closest friends and advisers for beers and prosecco in the garden of his former chief of staff, Jenny Chapman.“He looked better than he had in ages,” one said. “Sometimes you just have to let go.” Continue reading...
MPs attack ministers’ ‘nonsensical’ refusal to make firms reveal race pay gap
Tory chair of Commons committee says government lacks will to foster fairer societyA group of MPs has accused the government of lacking the “will or care” to create a fairer and more equal society, after it rejected calls to force companies to reveal the pay gap between white employees and others.On Friday the government stated its intention to instead accept the recommendation of its controversial report on racial disparity, which was widely condemned by MPs, unions and equality campaigners as “divisive” and a missed opportunity for systematic change when it was published in March. Continue reading...
‘Lost’ Picasso spotted in Imelda Marcos’s home after son’s election win
Artwork’s appearance fuels fears family will use return to power to further stifle efforts to recover ill-gotten wealthThe glimpse of a possible Picasso in the home of Imelda Marcos filmed during a visit by her son, Ferdinand Jr, after his election win has set off a flurry of speculation in the Philippines, where the family that once plundered billions is set to return to power.Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr, the son and namesake of the late dictator, won a landslide victory in Monday’s presidential election, an outcome that has appalled those who survived his father’s regime. Continue reading...
Israeli police attack funeral procession for shot journalist Shireen Abu Aqleh
TV images show Al Jazeera reporter Shireen Abu Aqleh’s coffin falling as police grab Palestinian flags from crowdIsraeli forces have attacked a funeral procession for a Palestinian American journalist shot dead this week, kicking and hitting people with batons and causing mourners carrying her coffin to lose balance and drop it to the ground.Police said mourners were “disrupting public order”. Footage showed the coffin of Al Jazeera reporter Shireen Abu Aqleh on mourners’ shoulders outside St Joseph’s hospital in Israeli-annexed East Jerusalem as police rushed in and attacked people, several of whom held Palestinian flags. The sound of a stun grenade could be heard. Continue reading...
WNBA star Brittney Griner to be detained another month in Russia on cannabis charge
Lawyer for the Phoenix Mercury center expects the case will be tried soon as the extension is relatively shortThe lawyer for American basketball star Brittney Griner said on Friday that her pre-trial detention in Russia has been extended by one month.Griner’s lawyer, Alexander Boikov, told the Associated Press he believed the relatively short extension of the detention indicated the case would come to trial soon. Continue reading...
UK sanctions target Putin’s financial network including rumoured girlfriend
Liz Truss says move is aimed at exposing ‘shady network propping up Putin’s luxury lifestyle’
It’s unprecedented for Dutton to label a Chinese spy ship sailing outside Australia’s territory an ‘act of aggression’ | Daniel Hurst
International law experts say ‘this is not an act of aggression and is in fact fairly standard activity for navies’The defence minister, Peter Dutton, has called the presence of a Chinese spy ship off the coast of Western Australia “an aggressive act” but his department was far more sober in its assessment and international law experts have poured cold water on the claim.It is not the first time such Chinese vessels have been in Australia’s exclusive economic zone. So, given we are a week out from an election and the Coalition wants the narrative refocused through a “we live in uncertain times” lens, let’s put the politics aside and step through the facts. Continue reading...
‘Cultural inspiration’: contemporary artists mark Queen’s jubilee
Mixing classical and urban styles, works reflect 70 years of Queen Elizabeth II’s cultural influenceCorgis and horses are out; tattoos and shades are in. Portraits of the Queen by 52 contemporary artists to mark her platinum jubilee depict the monarch in ways rarely seen since the days of the Sex Pistols.Among the works are Queen of the Hood, by ballpoint artist James Mylne, which shows a “majestic and stunning” young Elizabeth in regal Order of the Garter robes accessorised with designer sunglasses. Continue reading...
Wakefield Labour executive resigns accusing Starmer of byelection stitch-up
Members quit en masse over ‘arrogant’ handling of candidate selection processThe 16-strong executive of Wakefield constituency Labour party (CLP) has resigned en masse, accusing Keir Starmer of stitching up the selection of a candidate for the forthcoming byelection.Party members in Wakefield claim the leader’s office has failed to abide by Labour rules, by allowing the local party only one seat of five on the panels for longlisting and then shortlisting candidates. Continue reading...
Rishi Sunak says technical problems stopped him raising benefits more
Chancellor blames DWP computers that allow uplift only once a year, in claims labelled ‘pathetic’ by Jonathan AshworthRishi Sunak has claimed he was prevented from raising benefits more at the spring statement because of the old computer system used by the Department for Work and Pensions.Acknowledging that technical problems “sounds like an excuse”, the UK chancellor told Bloomberg he had discussed a higher rise than the 3.1% given across the board but was told there could be an uplift only once a year for people on some benefits. Continue reading...
Rebekah Vardy says News of the World made up quotes about Peter Andre
Vardy tells ‘Wagatha Christie’ libel trial that paper fabricated elements of 2004 story about one-night standRebekah Vardy has claimed that quotes attributed to her by the News of the World in an interview about Peter Andre were made up by the tabloid newspaper.Vardy told the “Wagatha Christie” libel trial that the now defunct news outlet fabricated and exaggerated unspecified elements of her conversation. “There’s a lot of things that didn’t come out of my mouth, that were misrepresented,” she said. Continue reading...
First Russian soldier goes on trial in Ukraine for war crimes
Vadim Shysimarin accused of killing civilian on 28 February while fighting in Sumy region in north-east UkraineA Russian soldier has appeared in the dock at the start of the first war crime trial since Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine.The defendant, who arrived at Kyiv’s small district court No 3 in a grey tracksuit and handcuffs, is Vadim Shysimarin, a 21-year-old commander of the Kantemirovskaya tank division charged with murdering a 62-year-old man. He is being held in Ukrainian custody. Continue reading...
‘Incredible cruelty’: gang battles leave 150 dead in Haitian capital
Scores wounded as violence paralyses Port-au-Prince forcing thousands to flee their homesNearly 150 people have been killed and scores wounded during gunfights between warring gangs in Haiti, as the latest surge of violence has paralysed much of the sprawling capital, Port-au-Prince.Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) said on Thursday that it had treated more than 96 people with gunshot wounds in its medical facilities in Port-au-Prince since 24 April. Continue reading...
UK should not fear EU trade war, says Frost as he backs ripping up protocol
Former Brexit minister says UK ‘cannot be defeated’ by Brussels in provocative Telegraph column
Craig McLachlan allegedly threw tantrums and threatened Rocky Horror Show cast members, court told
Defence barrister tells defamation trial McLachlan had ‘tendency to get angry easily’
French mayor reignites burkini row with pool rule proposal
Grenoble mayor wants swimmers to dress ‘how they like’, including topless or in full-body suitsThe burkini, or full-body swimsuit, is once again at the centre of a political row in France as Grenoble’s town council prepares to debate loosening rules on swimwear at open-air pools.Rules on swimwear are strict at the majority of French public pools. For example, men must wear tight-fitting racing trunks and cannot wear longer board-shorts. Currently, in Grenoble municipal pools, UV-protective tops are banned, except short-sleeved tops for children under ten, or for adults who present a medical note from their doctor. Continue reading...
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