- Manchester synagogue volunteer describes confronting attacker BBC
- Footage shows Jihad Al-Shamie before attack BBC
- I didn’t realise how much I loved my home town until a terrorist attacked it. I pray unity prevails there | Simon Hattenstone The Guardian
- Neighbour ‘warned police four years ago’ about Manchester attacker The Times
- Synagogue Attack Increases Pressure on Starmer in the U.K. The New York Times
Eswatini accepts 10 US deportees despite legal challenge
The Electoral Revenge of Czech ‘Pork-Eaters’ – Center for European Policy Analysis (CEPA)
- The Electoral Revenge of Czech ‘Pork-Eaters’ Center for European Policy Analysis (CEPA)
- Ex-Prime Minister Set to Return to Power in Czech Republic The New York Times
- The Czech Trump wins an election, again The Economist
- Ukraine war briefing: Snag for EU’s support of Kyiv after aid opponent wins Czech election The Guardian
- Populist party of billionaire Andrej Babiš wins big in Czech parliamentary election PBS
Man convicted in Gisèle Pelicot case says he ‘never intended’ to rape her – The Guardian
- Man convicted in Gisèle Pelicot case says he ‘never intended’ to rape her The Guardian
- Appeal Trial Opens in Gisèle Pelicot Rape Case The New York Times
- French appeals court revisits shocking Gisele Pelicot rape case CNN
- Gisèle Pelicot to face one of her rapists in court as French women fear nothing has changed BBC
- Gisele Pelicot returns to court for appeal trial in mass rape case Yahoo
What are the key sticking points in Trump’s Gaza peace plan?
Tanzania issues social media warning after video calls for military ‘action’
Balloons used to smuggle cigarettes shut Lithuanian airport
Balloons used to smuggle cigarettes shut Lithuanian airport
‘First job bonus’ worth £5k planned for young people, Stride tells Tory conference – UK politics live
Shadow chancellor sets out spending plans as party conference continues in Manchester
Mel Stride, the shadow chancellor, was doing an interview round for the Conservatives this morning, and Miatta Fahnbulleh, the faith and communities minister, was on the air on behalf of the government. They were both asked about the latest development in the flag phenomenon – the former footballer turned property developer Gary Neville saying that he took down a union flag flying at one of his building sites because he felt it was being used in a “negative fashion”.
Asked if Neville (a Labour supporter) had a point, Fahnbulleh told ITV’s Good Morning Britain:
I think he’s really right, that there are people who are trying to divide us at the moment …
I spent a lot of time going around our communities, talking to people. People are ground down. We’ve had a decade-and-a-half in which living standards haven’t budged and people have seen their communities held down. And you will get people trying to stoke division, trying to blame others, trying to stoke tension.
I think people that put up flags, the vast majority of people that do, do so for perfectly reasonable patriotic reasons. And I think reclaiming our flag as a flag of unity and decency and tolerance, which is the way most people see our flag, is a very positive thing.
So I’m afraid I really cannot agree with the comments that he’s made.
Continue reading...‘I was lucky to get out’: Everest hikers battle hypothermia as blizzard rescue continues
Judge blocks Trump’s bid to deploy national guard to Oregon – US politics live
Ruling by US District Judge Karin Immergut blocks any deployment to Portland for two weeks as legal wrangling continues
The Republican House speaker, Mike Johnson, accused Democrats of being “not serious” in negotiations to end the federal government shutdown, while the Democratic leader accused Republicans of driving the shutdown, now on its fifth day and expected to last at least through next week.
Talks between the opposing political parties stalled over the weekend, with no votes anticipated to end the standoff. A CBS poll found just 28% of Democratic voters and 23% of Republicans consider their party’s positions worth shutting down the government.
How could bringing in federalised national guard from California not be in direct contravention of the [decision] I issued yesterday?
At the direction of the president, approximately 200 federalized members of the California national guard are being reassigned from duty in the greater Los Angeles area to Portland, Oregon to support US Immigration and Customs Enforcement and other federal personnel performing official duties, including the enforcement of federal law, and to protect federal property.
Continue reading...Lecornu bemoans lack of compromise across political spectrum as he resigns as French PM – Europe live
Departure after less than a month follows fierce criticism of Macron’s new cabinet
Lecornu’s resignation means that Macron has three possible courses of action and all of them are hazardous, notes Mujtaba Rahman, the managing director for Europe at the Eurasia Group.
In an analyst note, Rahman writes:
He can appoint a new prime minister, possibly a senior non-political figure or technocrat, to try to push through a budget for next year to cut France’s ballooning budget deficit.
He can call a new parliamentary election.
Continue reading...Gaza ceasefire talks live: Israeli airstrikes continue with negotiations due to begin in Egypt
Negotiators from the US, Israel and Hamas are set to begin talks, as the US president said the first phase should be completed this week
The UN commission of inquiry, several human rights groups and the world’s leading association of genocide scholars have concluded that Israel has committed genocide in Gaza.
Despite the evidence, Israel denies the accusation and says it has only acted in self-defence.
Continue reading...Fianna Fáil’s Jim Gavin withdraws from Irish presidential race
Election becomes unpredictable two-horse contest after political novice quits over debt revelations
One of the three main candidates in Ireland’s presidential election has quit the race in a bombshell announcement that has upended the contest.
Fianna Fáil’s Jim Gavin withdrew on Sunday night after revelations about an unpaid debt to a former tenant, turning the election into an unpredictable two-horse race between a centre-right former government minister and an independent leftwing member of parliament.
Continue reading...Eswatini confirms arrival of 10 more people as part of US deportation deal
African kingdom receives second group of third-country nationals in what NGOs and lawyers say is violation of human rights
Ten people deported by the US have arrived in Eswatini, its government said, the second group of third-country deportees to be sent to the southern African kingdom by the Trump administration in what lawyers and NGOs have described as violations of their human rights.
A statement by the Eswatini government posted on social media before their arrival on Monday said: “The individuals will be kept in a secured area separate from the public, while arrangements are made for their return to their countries of origin.”
Continue reading...Eswatini confirms arrival of 10 more people as part of US deportation deal – The Guardian
- Eswatini confirms arrival of 10 more people as part of US deportation deal The Guardian
- Eswatini receives 10 third-country deportees from US CNN
- Trump administration sends another third-country deportation flight to Eswatini Reuters
- 10 more deportees from the US arrive in the African nation of Eswatini ABC News - Breaking News, Latest News and Videos
- US deports 10 more migrants to Eswatini The Hill
Asahi restarts beer production after cyber-attack
US supreme court begins new term with nation’s democratic governance at stake
Scrutiny on the nine justices is about to reach a new level of intensity as Trump aggressively asserts executive power
Context may be everything in the precedent-shattering era of the current US supreme court.
For several years – since conservatives, gained a six-three majority on the bench thanks to Donald Trump’s nominations during his first presidency – the court has been delivering transformative rulings that have reverberated across the social and political landscape.
Continue reading...France in fresh political crisis as PM Lecornu quits after 26 days
Nobel prize in medicine awarded to scientists for immune system research
Mary E Brunkow, Fred Ramsdell and Shimon Sakaguchi worked on how the immune system can be prevented from harming the body
The Nobel prize in physiology or medicine 2025 has been awarded to three scientists for their work on how the immune system is kept in check and prevented from attacking our own body.
Mary E Brunkow, Fred Ramsdell and Shimon Sakaguchi have been awarded the prize “for their discoveries concerning peripheral immune tolerance”.
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