- Germany finalises plans for military service and larger army Financial Times
- German coalition government agrees new military service plan DW
- Germany decides against conscription to replenish post-cold war military The Guardian
- Germany inches closer to bringing back mandatory military service Euronews.com
- Germany’s ruling parties strike new military-service deal politico.eu
France remembers Bataclan attacks but knows enemy has not gone away
US lawmakers demand answers from Trump administration over Chinese chemical shipments to Iran following CNN reporting – Yahoo
Mexico takes action to combat sexual abuse after president publicly groped
Secretary for women presents plan, including prison sentences, after Claudia Sheinbaum was groped on street
The shocking public groping of Mexico’s president, Claudia Sheinbaum, has prompted rapid political action to tackle sexual abuse, as well as public debate on how best to address the problem, which is widespread across the country.
Citlalli Hernández, Mexico’s secretary for women, presented a presidential plan to confront the issue, which would include actions such as ensuring prison sentences for sexual abuse across Mexico, encouraging women to report incidents, and training prosecutors and other officials on how to handle the matter.
Continue reading...U.S. faith levels plummet to lowest on record – Axios
Israel deported Palestinian prisoners to Egypt. Some Israelis question the practice – NPR
- Israel deported Palestinian prisoners to Egypt. Some Israelis question the practice NPR
- Israel bars families of deported Palestinian prisoners from travelling Siasat.com
- Israel tightens restrictions on families of exiled Palestinian prisoners in Egypt ABNA English
- Israel bans families of deported Palestinian prisoners from travelling National Herald
- Israel blocks families of deported Palestinian prisoners from leaving West Bank Daijiworld
US government reopens after shutdown with House to vote on Epstein files next week – politics live
Even if bill passes the House, it will still need to get through the Senate before files can be released
After 42-day standoff, government is back open – and the minority party won no concessions from the party in power, writes Guardian US’ senior politics reporter Chris Stein in this analysis piece:
The US House of Representatives voted to pass the funding bill to end the longest government shutdown in US history. You can see how lawmakers voted via this interactive:
Continue reading...If No 10 briefer is found Keir Starmer will sack them, Miliband says
Cabinet minister says PM would not have backed attacks on Wes Streeting but briefing is ‘longstanding aspect of politics’
Ed Miliband has said he was certain Keir Starmer would sack whoever had briefed against Wes Streeting, after a chaotic 48 hours in which No 10 launched an operation to shore up the prime minister against an anticipated leadership challenge.
The prime minister apologised to the health secretary in a phone call with him late on Wednesday. Starmer is facing mounting calls to sack his chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, over the row.
Continue reading...Ed Miliband urges Labour to move on after Starmer apologises to Streeting for hostile briefings from No 10 – UK politics live
Fallout from extraordinary briefing operation against Wes Streeting continues as calls grow for Starmer to sack his chief of staff Morgan McSweeney
Haroon Siddique is the Guardian’s legal affairs correspondent.
Five UN experts have written to ministers criticising the ban on Palestine Action as something that would be expected in an authoritarian regime rather than a liberal democracy.
In the work of UN experts in monitoring counter-terrorism laws globally, abuse of laws to proscribe organisations as terrorist that are not genuinely so has more commonly occurred in states that are authoritarian and lack legal and political cultures of respect for human rights, legality, due process and independent judicial safeguards, in order to target civil society organisations, human rights defenders, political dissidents and minorities.
It is deeply concerning that such practices appear to have spread to a number of liberal democracies. Organisations must never be listed as terrorist for engaging in protected speech or legitimate activities in defence of human rights.
We are concerned that proscription and its consequences result in unnecessary and disproportionate restrictions on the rights to freedom of expression, peaceful assembly and association, and the rights to take part in public affairs and to liberty.
The Scottish government’s tax decisions enable us to deliver higher investment in the NHS and policies like free tuition not available anywhere else in the UK.
Continue reading...Latest Epstein emails cast further doubt on Andrew’s claim of cutting ties
Messages sent months after former prince said he ended relations and also appear to confirm Virginia Giuffre photo
Newly released Jeffrey Epstein emails have cast further doubt on Andrew Mountbatten Windsor’s account of when he cut ties with the child sex offender and his denials about meeting his accuser Virginia Giuffre.
In March 2011, four months after he later claimed to have ended his relationship with Epstein, the former prince told him and the convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell “I can’t take any more of this” in response to allegations put forward by the Mail on Sunday.
Continue reading...Thai king Maha Vajiralongkorn becomes country’s first monarch to visit China – BBC
- Thai king Maha Vajiralongkorn becomes country's first monarch to visit China BBC
- Thai King Maha Vajiralongkorn arrives in Beijing for state visit news.cgtn.com
- His Majesty the King and Her Majesty the Queen pay an official visit to the People’s Republic of China Nation Thailand
- Xi Jinping Leverages Royal Diplomacy to Counter Western Scrutiny 조선일보
- Thai king's historic state visit to China signals closer ties Reuters
China’s ‘Wolf Warrior’ Diplomacy Returns With Threat Against Japan’s Leader – The New York Times
- China’s ‘Wolf Warrior’ Diplomacy Returns With Threat Against Japan’s Leader The New York Times
- China Threatens US Ally With ‘Severe Blow’ Newsweek
- Sanae Takaichi: How Japan’s new prime minister has brought China’s ‘wolf warriors’ back out CNN
- China urges Japan PM to retract 'egregious' remarks on Taiwan Reuters
- Japan and China spar over Taiwan as Donald Trump tilts global ‘chessboard’ Financial Times
Housing secretary tells Labour MPs to vote down planning bill amendment
Amendment restricts protection for animals to allow faster house building
Housing secretary Steve Reed has told Labour MPs to vote down an amendment to the new planning bill intended to protect British wildlife and its habitats from destruction.
The amendment, which was passed with a large majority in the House of Lords, restricts the most controversial part of the draft bill by removing protected animals such as dormice, badgers, hedgehogs, otters and nightingales, and rare habitats such as wetlands and ancient woodlands, from new rules which allow developers to sidestep environmental laws to speed up house building.
Continue reading...Von der Leyen lays out alternatives to reparations loan for Ukraine as time runs out – Euronews.com
- Von der Leyen lays out alternatives to reparations loan for Ukraine as time runs out Euronews.com
- EU finance ministers agree using frozen Russian assets most effective way to fund Ukraine Reuters
- Zelenskiy Says Ukraine’s Survival Rests on Funds From Allies Bloomberg.com
- Von der Leyen pitches EU joint debt as backup plan to finance Ukraine politico.eu
- Reparation loan ‘most effective’ way to support Ukraine, says von der Leyen Euractiv
China issues wanted notice for two Taiwanese influencers for ‘separatism’ – Reuters
- China issues wanted notice for two Taiwanese influencers for 'separatism' Reuters
- Chinese police offer cash reward for arrest of Taiwanese influencers Australian Broadcasting Corporation
- Beijing Puts $35,000 Bounty On Taiwanese Influencers Over 'Anti-China' Posts NDTV
- Mainland police offer cash rewards for tips on Taiwan’s ‘terrible’ influencers South China Morning Post
- Update: Police seek clues on illegal activities of Taiwan secessionist social media influencers Xinhua
A truck hits pedestrians at a market in South Korea, killing 2 and injuring 18 – AP News
- A truck hits pedestrians at a market in South Korea, killing 2 and injuring 18 AP News
- Two dead, 18 hurt in South Korea after truck crashes into market, media reports say Reuters
- South Korea: Truck plows into pedestrians, killing 2 DW
- Truck plows into Bucheon market, killing at least 2 The Korea Herald
- Police request pretrial detention warrant for man who drove truck into traditional market Korea JoongAng Daily
Explosions in Russia’s Oryol Oblast following reported Ukrainian missile and drone attacks – The Kyiv Independent
- Explosions in Russia's Oryol Oblast following reported Ukrainian missile and drone attacks The Kyiv Independent
- Ukraine-Russia war latest: Kyiv fires long-range Flamingo missiles at Russian oil facilities in fresh wave of strikes The Independent
- Ukrainian forces launch Flamingo missile strikes overnight, hitting Russian military and oil facilities – vid Українська правда
- Ukraine Confirms Strike on Crimea With New Flamingo and Bars Missiles UNITED24 Media
- Ukraine Claims New Strike on Russia’s Saratov Refinery Bloomberg.com
Neo-Nazi leader Thomas Sewell abused by protesters after getting bail over alleged Camp Sovereignty attack
Sewell, 32, must not be in Melbourne’s CBD or talk to alleged camp attack co-accused as part of bail conditions
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A neo-Nazi who allegedly led a violent group attack on a First Nations protest camp in Melbourne has been greeted by protesters shouting “Nazi scum, off our streets” after being released on bail.
Thomas Sewell, 32, hired a top barrister to successfully argue in the supreme court that he should be released, after failing in a previous application for bail two months ago.
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