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Reçu aujourd’hui — 15 juin 20256.9 📰 Infos English

Diplomacy With Iran Is Damaged, Not Dead

15 juin 2025 à 14:02
The push to do a deal on the country’s nuclear program could be revived, even after the Israeli strikes scuppered the latest round of talks.

© Hassan Ammar/Associated Press

Abbas Araghchi, Iran’s Foreign Minister, in Lebanon this month. On Sunday, he said that Iran remains open to negotiations on nuclear weapons.

What to Know About the G7 Summit in Canada

15 juin 2025 à 11:01
The Group of 7 nations and allies from around the world are heading to a summit in Alberta in Western Canada on Sunday.

© Jesco Denze/German Cabinet

Then-Chancellor Angela Merkel during a meeting with President Trump and other leaders at the 2018 G7 meeting in Canada, in a photograph released by the German government.

Newsom and Bass’ riot mishandling: Letters to the Editor — June 16, 2025

15 juin 2025 à 13:32
The Issue: Gov. Gavin Newsom and LA Mayor Karen Bass’ mishandling of the anti-ICE riots. America today is a country separated into two nations: One Democratic, one Republican (“Cali’s gruesome Newsom twosome,” Douglas Murray, June 13). There is no more meeting of minds and compromises between them. I’ve been watching the sad state of affairs...

Anna Karenina review – Tolstoy’s tragedy fizzes with theatrical brilliance

15 juin 2025 à 13:17

Chichester Festival theatre
Natalie Dormer is exceptional in the title role with Phillip Breen’s clever production reflecting the full scope of the novel’s ambition

The stampede of actors making their way from screen to stage continues with Natalie Dormer’s return to the boards as the lead, tragic figure in Leo Tolstoy’s story of one aristocratic unhappy family.

She is exceptional in the part of Anna, inhabiting the boldness, insecurity and anger of the discontented wife seeking her freedom through romantic passion. But there is little chemistry in her relationship with Vronsky (Seamus Dillane) – the rakish military man for whom she leaves her loveless marriage, and he is a non-character, left uncoloured.

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© Photograph: Marc Brenner

© Photograph: Marc Brenner

British politics is in a loop and it's Farage's vision that's stuck on repeat | John Harris

15 juin 2025 à 13:09

Unlike Keir Starmer and his cabinet, Reform UK’s leader actually understands and exploits the rules of engagement in our digital age

As so often happens, what Nigel Farage said on a recent visit to south Wales deserved endless pejoratives. It was ludicrous, condescending, half-baked, opportunistic and plain stupid. Even he didn’t seem to know exactly what he wanted. At a Reform UK press conference in Port Talbot, he seemed to make the case for reopening the town’s steel-making blast furnaces, before admitting that “it might be easier to build a new one”, though he also acknowledged that it would “cost in the low billions” to do so. But he had even more dizzying visions of reopened Welsh mines. “If you offer people well-paying jobs … many will take them,” said Farage, “even though you have to accept that mining is dangerous.”

The climate crisis, predictably enough, was not worth considering. He also did not offer any opinions about coal-related issues such as slag heaps, land slips, rivers that run black, and unimaginable underground disasters. When he was asked where new pits might be located, he blithely offered the opinion that it “comes down to geology”. That is true, up to a point, but he would surely also have to think about the housing developments and business parks that often sit atop all those disused coal seams.

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© Illustration: R Fresson/The Guardian

© Illustration: R Fresson/The Guardian

Nicolas Sarkozy stripped of Legion of Honour over corruption conviction

15 juin 2025 à 13:01

Former French president loses country’s highest state award despite Emmanuel Macron’s opposition to move

The former French president Nicolas Sarkozy has been stripped of his Legion of Honour, the country’s highest distinction, after his conviction for corruption was confirmed last year, according to an official decree published on Sunday.

The conservative one-term president has been beset by legal problems since leaving office in 2012. In December France’s highest court upheld his conviction for influence peddling and corruption, ordering him to wear an electronic ankle tag for 12 months.

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© Photograph: Lafargue Raphael/ABACA/REX/Shutterstock

© Photograph: Lafargue Raphael/ABACA/REX/Shutterstock

Policymakers who think AI can help rescue flagging UK economy should take heed | Heather Stewart

15 juin 2025 à 13:00

Healthy scepticism is needed because flaw is that large language models remain prone to casually making things up

From helping consultants diagnose cancer, to aiding teachers in drawing up lesson plans – and flooding social media with derivative slop – generative artificial intelligence is being adopted across the economy at breakneck speed.

Yet a growing number of voices are starting to question how much of an asset the technology can be to the UK’s sluggish economy. Not least because there is no escaping a persistent flaw: large language models (LLMs) remain prone to casually making things up.

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© Photograph: Dado Ruvić/Reuters

© Photograph: Dado Ruvić/Reuters

‘Odd things happened when she was around’: the unnerving vision of Muriel Spark

15 juin 2025 à 13:00

From blackmail to burglary, the events of Spark’s life often uncannily echoed those of her novels – no wonder the author of The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie believed she could predict the future

“There is a supernatural process going on under the surface and within the substance of all things,” says a priest in Muriel Spark’s 1965 novel The Mandelbaum Gate. Spark believed herself wired into this process. The novelist was aware from the start of “a definite ‘something beyond myself’”, an “access to knowledge that I couldn’t possibly have gained through normal channels”.

“Somehow things happened, odd things, when Muriel was around,” recalled her friend Shirley Hazzard. “Everything that happened to Muriel,” according to her American editor Barbara Epler, “had been foreseen”, usually in her books themselves. If Spark wrote about blackmail, she too would be blackmailed; if she wrote about a burglary, she would then be burgled. Thirty years after toying with an idea for The Hothouse by the East River (1973), in which electrocution by lightning takes place down a telephone line, lightning struck Spark’s house in Italy, sending a current of electricity through the external wires and burning her upper lip.

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© Photograph: Dmitri Kasterine/CAMERA PRESS

© Photograph: Dmitri Kasterine/CAMERA PRESS

I was disappeared under Argentina’s dictatorship. I know how autocracy begins | Miriam Lewin

15 juin 2025 à 13:00

Foreigners treated as enemies, judges under attack: the signs are everywhere in the US. But there are still reasons to hope

Like so many others, I watched the video of Rümeysa Öztürk, a Turkish student at Tufts University, as she was surrounded by men dressed in black, some wearing masks. They carried guns. One grabbed her by the collar. The men surrounded her, and one handcuffed her. You can hear her short shrieks of fear.

She must have been terrified. I know I was when, as a 19-year-old student, I was kidnapped off the streets of Buenos Aires by members of an irregular taskforce. I know what it feels like and I know what it portends.

Miriam Lewin is a leading Argentine journalist and survivor of the dictatorship. She is the author of six books, including Iosi, the Remorseful Spy forthcoming in English in July 2025 (Seven Stories Press). A seven episode podcast about Miriam Lewin’s experience as a prisoner of the state and her fight for justice is titled The Burden: Avenger

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© Photograph: Anonymous/AP

© Photograph: Anonymous/AP

‘No way to invest in a career here’: US academics flee overseas to avoid Trump crackdown

15 juin 2025 à 13:00

Budding scholars pursue overseas jobs amid attacks on education and research, prompting fears of an American brain drain

Eric Schuster was over the moon when he landed a lab assistant position in a coral reef biology lab at the Scripps Institute of Oceanography (SIO). The 23-year-old had recently graduated with a bachelor’s degree in nanoengineering from the University of California, San Diego, into a fiercely competitive job market. He felt like he’d struck gold.

But the relentless cuts to scientific research and attacks on higher education by the Trump administration have turned what felt like a promising academic future into unstable ground.

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© Photograph: Nina Paz

© Photograph: Nina Paz

Why nuclear war, not the climate crisis, is humanity’s biggest threat, according to one author

15 juin 2025 à 13:00

Mark Lynas has spent decades pushing for action on climate emissions but now says nuclear war is even greater threat

Climate breakdown is usually held up as the biggest, most urgent threat humans pose to the future of the planet today.

But what if there was another, greater, human-made threat that could snuff out not only human civilisation, but practically the entire biosphere, in the blink of an eye?

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© Photograph: AP

© Photograph: AP

‘I feel like a drug dealer’: the parents using black-market melatonin to help their children sleep

15 juin 2025 à 13:00

Desperate dads meet in car parks to exchange packets; exhausted parents slip it into their kids’ drinks; families waiting months for prescriptions buy it ‘off label’. But is it worth the risk?

The first time I gave him a gummy, I thought, ‘Oh my God, have I killed him?’ He just passed out in front of the TV. That never happens.” Jen is remembering giving her son, David, six, melatonin to help him sleep.  She got them from a friend, a paediatrician who gave them to her own child. “It was sort of hilarious. She had half a tub of gummies, and her husband met my husband in a car park near a roundabout to hand them over, like some underhand black-market deal.” Her tone is light, but in fact she and her husband were becoming increasingly desperate for sleep. “They were like gold dust.”

By meeting in the car park to exchange the gummies, the husbands weren’t breaking the law, exactly, but they were stepping into a legal grey area. Melatonin is a synthetic version of the sleep hormone that occurs naturally in our bodies, rising at night in response to darkness and helping us get to sleep. It isn’t strictly illegal in the UK, but it is a prescription-only medication, and it can only be prescribed to children by a paediatrician under a specific set of circumstances, usually for children with a diagnosis of autism or ADHD. The rationale for this pathway is so that the paediatric specialist can rule out any potentially physical causes or underlying disease relating to the sleep disorder. Side-effects can include drowsiness the next day, nausea and feeling dizzy.

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© Illustration: Carl Godfrey/The Guardian

© Illustration: Carl Godfrey/The Guardian

Campaigners mount coordinated protests across Europe against ‘touristification’

15 juin 2025 à 12:41

Protesters take to streets in a dozen cities to march against an industry they say is wrecking communities

Campaigners in at least a dozen tourist hotspots across southern Europe have taken to the streets to protest against “touristification”.

It is the most widespread joint action to date against what they see as the steady reshaping of their cities to meet the needs of tourists rather than those who live and work there.

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© Photograph: Bruna Casas/Reuters

© Photograph: Bruna Casas/Reuters

Tehran accuses Israel of seeking to expand conflict after attack on gas facility

Dragging conflict into the Gulf is a strategic mistake, says Iran’s foreign minister after drone strike on coastal facility

Iran’s foreign minister has accused Israel of seeking to expand the war beyond Iran by attacking a major gas facility in Bushehr province on the Gulf coast.

Speaking to diplomats in his first public appearance since the initial Israeli strikes, Abbas Araghchi said: “Dragging the conflict into the Persian Gulf is a strategic mistake and its goal is to drag the war outside Iranian territory. Any military development in this region can affect the entire world.”

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© Photograph: AP

© Photograph: AP

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