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Reçu aujourd’hui — 1 juin 20256.9 📰 Infos English

French Open: Rybakina v Swiatek, Svitolina stuns Paolini on day eight – live

1 juin 2025 à 13:43
  • Live Roland Garros updates from 10am BST

  • You can email Daniel with your views

Ach, Paolini breaks again – that’s loose from Svitolina, and she’ll be raging at her behaviour. At 4-2, it’ll take some work to get back into the set and, as I type, another gorgeous drop underlines the point. Paolini has the greater variety of shots, but Svitolina is canny, meeting aggression with aggression. We’re now at 30-all while, in the other match, it’s 2-2 and already a slog. Lovely stuff!

Yes she can! She’s worked her way into this match, stepping into court and looking to attack, no “rally balls”, to borrow Chrissie’s expression. A fantastic return, inside-out on the forehand, makes 15-40, and a long forehand means we’re back on serve at 3-2 Paolini.

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© Photograph: Julian Finney/Getty Images

© Photograph: Julian Finney/Getty Images

Jubilant PSG Fans Cause Chaos in France

1 juin 2025 à 13:43
Police arrested hundreds of people overnight after Paris Saint-Germain fans celebrated a Champions League victory. Amid the celebrations, one person died in a traffic incident and another was stabbed to death.

© Abdul Saboor/Reuters

Riot police on the Champs-Élysées in Paris after Paris St.-Germain won the Champions League, on Saturday.

England v West Indies, second men’s cricket one-day international – live

1 juin 2025 à 13:42
  • Live over-by-over updates from 11am BST

  • You can email James with your thoughts

4th over: West Indies 15-1 (King 11, Carty 2) Keacy Carty is shelled by Ben Duckett! A length ball is poked to the pint sized Notts man at second slip and he chooses to go with one hand when he could haver grasped it with two. It was a decent height and very catchable – Duckett will be annoyed he didn’t take that. Brydon Carse certainly is.

Carse then slips King a yorker that misses the off stump by a gnat’s eyebrow. What a ball, late swing taking it away from an emphatic clean bowled at the very last second. Another brilliant over from the impressive Carse.

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© Photograph: Chris Fairweather/Huw Evans/Shutterstock

© Photograph: Chris Fairweather/Huw Evans/Shutterstock

Mexico’s Vote on Nearly 2,700 Judges Will Test Its Democracy

The election to overhaul Mexico’s courts could result in a justice system more beholden to the nation’s dominant party, Morena.

© Luis Antonio Rojas for The New York Times

A woman distributing pamphlets on judicial candidates in Mexico City on Wednesday. The sprawling elections are the most far-reaching judicial overhaul ever attempted by a large democracy.

Riots after Southport attack more similar to those in 1958 than in 2011, study finds

Researchers question characterisation of unrest as ‘far-right protests’ and say disorder had more in common with race riots

The riots that swept the UK last summer had more in common with race riots in the 1950s in Nottingham and in Notting Hill, west London, than they did with disorder that broke out in 2011, researchers have said.

Violence first erupted on the streets of Southport after the murder of three young girls, Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, and Bebe King, six, at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in the Merseyside town. The perpetrator, Axel Rudakubana, was later jailed for a minimum of 52 years.

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© Photograph: Getty Images

© Photograph: Getty Images

‘People think prison is for rehabilitation. It is all lies’: could community service work better than jail?

1 juin 2025 à 13:00

Colombia has seen a surge in the number of female inmates – many poor, from rural areas and convicted of drug offences. Now a radical scheme could release thousands to support their families

The baby calls out, reaching towards a metal detector security gate. “Mama, mama,” she says. A prison officer waves her through. It’s visiting time at El Buen Pastor prison, Colombia’s largest detention centre for women. Behind the black door, half a dozen women wait anxiously. Dressed in her best clothes, the mother folds herself around the child.

Inside, the prison is crumbling. Black mould creeps up the walls; broken windows have been replaced with plastic sheets. Inmates say five to six people share cells built for two.

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© Photograph: Carlos Ortega/EPA-EFE

© Photograph: Carlos Ortega/EPA-EFE

How to fight back against Trump? Look to poor people’s movements | Rev Dr Liz Theoharis and Noam Sandweiss-Back

Anti-poverty activism has provided a model for transformational power, based on four strategic principles

For tens of millions of people, Donald Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” is a grotesque nightmare. The proposed legislative cuts, including historic attacks on Medicaid and Snap, come at a time when 60% of Americans already cannot make ends meet. As justification, Maga Republicans are once again invoking the shibboleth of work requirements to demean and discredit the poor, even as they funnel billions of dollars into the war economy and lavish the wealthy with tax cuts.

As anti-poverty organizers, we’ve often used the slogan: “They say cut back, we say fight back.” It’s a catchy turn of phrase, but it reveals that for too long we’ve been on the back foot. In the world’s richest country, in which mass poverty exists beside unprecedented plenty, we’re tired of just fending off the worst attacks. Too much ground is lost when our biggest wins are simply not losing past gains. Amid Trump’s cruelty and avarice, it’s time to fight for a new social contract – one that lifts from the bottom of society so that everybody rises.

The poor must unite across their differences and assume strong leadership within grassroots movements.

These movements must operate as a politically and financially independent force in our public life.

The leaders of these movements must attend to the daily needs and aspirations of their communities by building visionary projects of survival.

These projects of survival must serve as bases of operation for broader organizing, political education, and leadership development.

The Rev Dr Liz Theoharis is the director of the Kairos Center for Religions, Rights, and Social Justice, co-chair of the Poor People’s Campaign and co-founder of the Freedom Church of the Poor. Noam Sandweiss-Back is the director of partnerships at the Kairos Center. They are co-authors of You Only Get What You’re Organized to Take: Lessons from the Movement to End Poverty (Beacon, 2025)

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© Photograph: Allison Bailey/NurPhoto/REX/Shutterstock

© Photograph: Allison Bailey/NurPhoto/REX/Shutterstock

‘Mom, am I the missing twin?’: the story of two babies separated by the Chinese state – and their emotional reunion

1 juin 2025 à 13:00

US couple Marsha and Al adopted a baby girl from China because they thought she had been abandoned. Years later they read about a girl whose sister had been illegally snatched by the authorities. Was everything they’d been told about their daughter a lie?

One night in September 2009, a widowed mother in Texas named Marsha was up late at her kitchen table, scrolling through correspondence, when she opened an email that would change her family’s life. It was from an acquaintance who was sharing a newspaper article – as it happens, an article I’d written from China – about government officials who had snatched children from impoverished families to supply the lucrative adoption market. The article featured an interview with a nine-year-old girl speaking wistfully about her identical twin who had been taken away. “A Young Girl Pines for Her Twin” was the headline.

Marsha had two daughters from China. She and her husband, Al, both employees of the defence contractor Lockheed Martin, had adopted when they were in their 50s, though they both had adult children from previous marriages and were looking forward to retirement. Their motives were largely humanitarian. Marsha, a devout Christian who’d once wanted to be a missionary, was saddened by the plight of baby girls who had been abandoned by their parents because of China’s brutally enforced one-child policy. She’d been flooded with tears after reading an article in Reader’s Digest about a man who threw his four-year-old daughter down a well so he could have a son. They had adopted their first daughter, Victoria, in 1999 and their second, Esther, in 2002.

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© Photograph: Liu Hongbing

© Photograph: Liu Hongbing

How the little-known ‘dark roof’ lobby may be making US cities hotter

1 juin 2025 à 12:55

As cities heat up, reflective roofs could lower energy bills and help the climate. But dark roofing manufacturers are waging a quiet campaign to block new rules

It began with a lobbyist’s pitch.

Tennessee representative Rusty Grills says the lobbyist proposed a simple idea: repeal the state’s requirement for reflective roofs on many commercial buildings.

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© Photograph: Ken Cavanagh/Alamy

© Photograph: Ken Cavanagh/Alamy

‘La débâcle’: Italian press turn on Inzaghi after Inter’s night of misery | Nicky Bandini

1 juin 2025 à 12:51

Writers bemoaned Inter’s ‘climax of suffering’ in Munich but saved their harshest words for Simone Inzaghi

On the front pages of Italy’s newspapers, the Champions League final was told as a “nightmare”, a “humiliation”, and a “rout”. Tuttosport at least found room for humour with a “DisIntergrated” pun. La Stampa, in deference to the victors Paris Saint-Germain, went instead with a French phrase: “La débâcle”.

Any team can lose a Champions League final but Internazionale were the first to do so by a five-goal margin. The final indignity of a season in which they aspired to repeat the treble they won under José Mourinho, only to come unstuck at the last: losing the Coppa Italia semi-final to neighbours Milan and then missing out on the Serie A title by one point.

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© Photograph: Marco Bertorello/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Marco Bertorello/AFP/Getty Images

Two people die and hundreds arrested in France after PSG Champions League victory

1 juin 2025 à 12:33

Vehicles torched in French capital as football supporters clash with police following match in Munich

Two people have died and hundreds have been arrested across France amid raucous celebrations after Paris Saint-Germain’s Champion’s League final victory.

Cars were torched as flares and fireworks were set off while supporters clashed with police in the French capital on Saturday night following the match in Munich.

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© Photograph: Christophe Petit-Tesson/EPA

© Photograph: Christophe Petit-Tesson/EPA

Raymond J. de Souza: King Charles’ throne speech was a constitutional triumph

1 juin 2025 à 12:00
The speech from the throne was a spectacular constitutional triumph, which approaches the oxymoronic, in that constitutional matters in the Westminster tradition are designed not to be spectacular. The sovereign imposes upon himself the custom of reading the speech impassively, the flat tone indicating neither approval nor disapproval of the government’s program. There is the prohibition, indicated in the instructions to all present in the chamber, to “refrain from expressions of support or dissent.” Read More

Why Trump is really going after Harvard

1 juin 2025 à 12:00

If the US’s oldest university bends the knee, the door to authoritarianism opens and democracy fades, experts warn

In mortarboards and crimson-fringed gowns, thousands of students were joined by smiling families for the centuries-old ritual of graduation day. But this year was different.

Alan Garber, the president of Harvard University, received a standing ovation and welcomed graduates “from down the street, across the country and around the world”, drawing applause for the last words: “Around the world – just as it should be.”

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© Photograph: Xinhua/Shutterstock

© Photograph: Xinhua/Shutterstock

Harvey Weinstein retrial plays out in Manhattan court – will he testify?

1 juin 2025 à 12:00

Prosecutors lay out charges against former mogul but court case has little of the fanfare that characterised first trial

In comparable terms of criminal justice, Harvey Weinstein’s sexual crimes retrial in a Manhattan criminal court has had little of the fanfare that meets the trial of Sean “Diddy” Combs playing out just steps away in federal court.

Combs’s trial, on charges of sex-trafficking conspiracy and featuring lurid testimony, has been a hub for content creators, each day lining up outside to deliver their thoughts on the day’s evidence.

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© Photograph: Spencer Platt/AP

© Photograph: Spencer Platt/AP

Brazil: outcry after funk singer arrested for allegedly inciting crime in lyrics

Artists and legal experts are outraged over MC Poze do Rodo’s detention over supposed non-violent offences

The arrest of a well-known Brazilian funk singer on charges of allegedly inciting crime in his lyrics and an alleged connection to a major criminal gang has sparked outrage among artists, intellectuals and legal experts.

MC Poze do Rodo, 26, who has 5.8 million monthly listeners on Spotify, was arrested early on Thursday at his home in a luxury condominium in Rio de Janeiro’s west zone.

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© Photograph: Twitter/X

© Photograph: Twitter/X

This is how we do it: ‘In my 50s I want to be “monogam-ish” – to have to have my cake and eat it’

With a 20-year age gap, Gavin and Jimmy aren’t always on the same page with their sexual needs. A little freedom to have sex with other people keeps things hot between them
How do you do it? Share the story of your sex life, anonymously

There was some sexual frustration in our early years together, and that led us to discover that we were both ethically non-monogamous

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© Illustration: Ryan Gillett

© Illustration: Ryan Gillett

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