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Reçu aujourd’hui — 25 juin 2025The Guardian

The Original by Nell Stevens review – queering the Victorians

25 juin 2025 à 08:00

This flamboyant tale of fakers and forgery, straddling the turn of the 20th century, is a smart and witty investigation into love and authenticity

We become ourselves by copying others, whether dutifully or audaciously, in acts of homage or appropriation. What is education if not a prolonged process of copying, and isn’t the same true, Nell Stevens asks in her latest novel, of falling in love? Suddenly besotted with another young woman, her protagonist Grace begins to wear her scarf at the side of the neck as her lover does, and to feel “clearer and more deliberate and more like myself” as she does so. “When we fall in love with a person, we fall in love with the copy of them, inexpertly done, that we carry around with us whenever they aren’t there.”

At its heart The Original has two strands of copying: both are preoccupations of the late-Victorian era the book is set in. There are the pictures made by Grace when she’s brought, penniless, to her uncle’s house aged 10 after her parents are sent to lunatic asylums (though her uncle and aunt may well be more dangerously mad than her loving parents). She copies her cousin Charles’s paintings so well that he declares her a magician – or possibly a machine – and then she makes her way to secret independence by creating clever forgeries and then successful copies of famous works of art, from Van Eyck’s Arnolfini Portrait to Velázquez’s Rokeby Venus. And there is cousin Charles himself, who is lost at sea only to return 13 years later, possibly as a brilliant fake, his jaw a little too heavy but his voice and manner so perfectly attuned to the original that his mother welcomes him delightedly back into the household. All this is playing out in a book that is at once a fake – a copy of the Victorian sensation novel – and distinctly idiosyncratic, the original the title proclaims.

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© Photograph: IanDagnall Computing/Alamy

© Photograph: IanDagnall Computing/Alamy

‘Yuck factor’: eating insects rather than meat to help the planet is failing, study finds

25 juin 2025 à 08:00

People are disgusted by the idea of eating bugs despite their lighter planetary cost compared to traditional livestock

Recent efforts to encourage people to eat insects are doomed to fail because of widespread public disgust at the idea, making it unlikely insects will help people switch from the environmentally ruinous habit of meat consumption, a new study has found.

Farming and eating insects has been touted in recent years as a greener alternative to eating traditional meat due to the heavy environmental toll of raising livestock, which is a leading driver of deforestation, responsible for more than half of global water pollution, and may cause more than a third of all greenhouse gases that can be allowed if the world is to avoid disastrous climate change, the new research finds.

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© Photograph: Patrick Aventurier/Getty Images

© Photograph: Patrick Aventurier/Getty Images

Chicken Town review – endearingly daft Fenland crime caper has a shedful of charm

25 juin 2025 à 08:00

Sparky performances lift this British crime comedy about a pair of young drug dealers who forge an unlikely alliance with a retired busybody

There are echoes of Shane Meadows and the Coen brothers in this cheerful crime comedy set in the Fens in eastern England. It’s endearingly daft and unexpectedly charming for a film about small-town drug dealers full of knob jokes – and contains no actual violence from criminals who are more crap than nasty. There are some sparky performances from the young cast, and it manages to pull off natural, easygoing laughs without the cringe that often seeps into British comedies.

Ethaniel Davy is brilliant as Jayce, who has just been released from 10 months in a young offenders’ institution – wrongly convicted for crashing a stolen car. Now that he’s out, he wants answers. What everyone except Jayce knows is that it was his best mate Lee (Ramy Ben Fredj, also terrific) behind the wheel of the car. Lee is the heir to a battery-chicken farming empire with links to organised crime. His dad, Lee Sr, has just remarried and sent him to live in a caravan at the edge of the family estate. Lee Jr is thick and spoilt, an adult man with a toddler brain, but like everything in the film, rather sweet underneath it all.

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© Photograph: Publicity image

© Photograph: Publicity image

Forget the stereotypes, Benidorm is the complete package

25 juin 2025 à 08:00

Ths resort was ahead of its time – built to handle industrial numbers of tourists while not displacing residents. And beyond the full English breakfasts and pub crawls, there’s an authentic Spanish side to it

Last year, Benidorm welcomed close to 3 million visitors. Despite its reputation as a British holiday mecca – nearly 900,000 UK travellers visited the city in 2024 – it was actually Spanish nationals who made up the largest share, with more than one million domestic visitors flocking to the Costa Blanca resort, according to Benidorm city council. I have a feeling that these visitors did not come for the stereotype of full English breakfasts and pub crawls, but for something often overlooked by international tourists: the authentic, everyday rhythm of Spanish coastal life.

In a country where tourism makes up about 15% of GDP but has also spurred a housing shortage and countermovements, Benidorm offers a contrast to cities like Barcelona and Madrid, where tourism pressures are acute. The city’s mid-20th-century reinvention as a purpose-built resort might once have been controversial, but today it looks surprisingly sustainable in the context of a national housing emergency.

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© Photograph: Europa Press News/Europa Press/Getty Images

© Photograph: Europa Press News/Europa Press/Getty Images

What to do if your tablet is lost or stolen: tips to help ease your concerns

From remotely locking it to what to do if you buy a new one, the steps you need to think about taking

Tablets are the go-to for entertainment on travels for adults and kids alike, but they contain much more than the latest episode of The Traitors, with access to the ins and outs of daily life. So when one gets lost or stolen, the cost of the slate isn’t the only thing to worry about. If yours disappears, here’s what to do.

Try to locate your tablet with Find My on Apple or Google, or Manage Content and Devices for Amazon’s Fire tablets.

Remotely lock your tablet using Find My or management settings. Here you can mark it as lost, block the use of Apple or Google Pay, make it play a sound and leave a message on the screen for anyone who finds it. You can also remotely erase your tablet if you can’t find it.

If you have mobile data on your tablet, contact your mobile broadband provider and block your sim to stop thieves running up bills.

Contact your credit card company for any cards you have stored on your phone and disable Apple or Google Pay.

Report the theft to the police on 101 and give them your phone’s IMEI number, which may be on the box, in your Amazon, Apple or Google account or Find My services.

Contact your insurance company if you have tablet cover.

Report the theft to your tablet’s manufacturer so they can flag it as stolen next time it connects to the internet.

Change your passwords for key accounts. Start with your email account so thieves can’t gain access to your other accounts through password resets.

Deregister your tablet and remove it from your various accounts and services, which will log it out and stop thieves accessing saved details.

Set a strong pin, set a short screen-lock timeout and turn on biometric fingerprint or face scanners if your tablet has them.

Turn on Find My or location tracking on your tablet in the settings, which allows you to locate it, lock it or erase it remotely via a web browser or another device.

Take a note of your tablet’s serial number, which can be found on the box or in system settings.

Use biometrics for any banking and sensitive apps that support them, to block access.

Disable access to quick settings, Alexa, Siri or Google Assistant/Gemini and notifications when your tablet is locked, which prevents thieves turning off internet access or accessing some of your data.

Back up your tablet using iCloud on an iPad, Google Drive on an Android tablet or Amazon’s Backup and Restore feature on a Fire tablet.

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© Composite: Guardian Design/Getty Images

© Composite: Guardian Design/Getty Images

A moment that changed me: I had a wild London party life – until I met a man who lived on a houseboat

25 juin 2025 à 07:55

I had my dream career in publishing, but was jumping from one emotional and romantic disaster to the next. Could I find stability and rootedness with a new life on an island?

If you’d told me when I was in my early 30s that, by the end of that decade, I would be living in a houseboat, I would never have believed you. I was a devoted Londoner, born and bred, and very wedded to my city lifestyle. I’d got a 100% mortgage and bought a tiny flat with a balcony, where I would host parties – and defy gravity – every weekend.

Romantically, I was jumping from one emotional disaster to another, falling for unsuitable people, closing my ears to those who dropped hints about biological clocks. I had my dream career in publishing and most weeknights could be found stumbling out of the Groucho Club and into a cab. In the early 00s, publishing was all about “networking” and there was always someone keen to go for “just one” – code for a late night of heavy drinking, often culminating in karaoke. I’d get out of bed at 9am the next day, get on the tube and be at my desk by 10, with my boss shaking his head knowingly at my “breakfast meeting” alibi. Then I’d do it all again.

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© Photograph: Courtesy of Georgina Moore

© Photograph: Courtesy of Georgina Moore

Zohran Mamdani offered New Yorkers a political revolution – and won | Bhaskar Sunkara

25 juin 2025 à 07:03

Now the New York mayoral candidate he needs to ensure an electoral win that translates into tangible improvements in people’s lives

Zohran Mamdani’s triumph in New York City’s Democratic primary represents more than just an electoral upset. It’s a confirmation that progressive politics, when pursued with discipline, vision, and vigor, can resonate broadly – even in a city known for its entrenched power structures.

This was no ordinary primary. Andrew Cuomo, a former governor whose political fall from grace seemed irreparable only a few years ago, had positioned himself as the overwhelming favorite. Backed by millions from corporate interests, super PACs, and billionaire donors such as Michael Bloomberg and Bill Ackman, Cuomo relied heavily on institutional inertia and top-down endorsements. Yet Tuesday night, it became clear that this alone couldn’t carry him across the finish line.

Bhaskar Sunkara is the president of The Nation, the founding editor Jacobin, and the author of The Socialist Manifesto: The Case for Radical Politics in An Era of Extreme Inequalities

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© Photograph: Julius Constantine Motal/The Guardian

© Photograph: Julius Constantine Motal/The Guardian

‘Pop music can be so scared to offend’: Ca7riel and Paco Amoroso, the Argentine duo subverting machismo

25 juin 2025 à 07:00

After going viral with their Tiny Desk concert, the impish pair are heading to Glastonbury. They explain their ‘no shame, no fear’ approach – and their ridiculous muscle suits

Over impeccable jazz-funk arrangements and Latin percussion, a man in a furry blue trapper hat raps like he’s inhaled a Benson & Hedges multipack, while his partner brings lip-curling, hair-twirling attitude to his own lyrical delivery. This is Ca7riel and Paco Amoroso’s Tiny Desk Concert, an online performance that turned the two Argentine vocalists into global sensations almost overnight after it came out last October. It has now racked up 36m views and Rolling Stone has called them “the future of music”.

Some eyebrows were raised, though, by the English translations of their lyrics: crude, daft, often hilarious tales of parties, sex and girls – even, accidentally, goes one punchline, the same one. “We’re always having fun and trying to confuse people,” Amoroso explains on a video call from Madrid, during a 53-date tour that includes London, Glastonbury and Japan’s Fuji Rock. “Yesss, confuse!” his co-pilot pipes up, impishly. “Our life is like a TV show and we change in every episode. We have our meloso [schmaltz], our punky side, our rapper side.”

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© Photograph: @totopons

© Photograph: @totopons

Trump is angry with a world that won't give him easy deals | Rafael Behr

25 juin 2025 à 07:00

In the Middle East as in Ukraine, the president is discovering that simple bullying tricks don’t resolve complex international crises

It was as close as Donald Trump might get to a lucid statement of his governing doctrine. “I may do it. I may not do it,” the president said to reporters on the White House lawn. “Nobody knows what I’m going to do.”

The question was about joining Israeli air strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities. Days later, US bombers were on their way. Some expected it to happen. Others, including Keir Starmer, had gone on record to say they didn’t. No one had known. The unpredictability doctrine wouldn’t have been violated either way.

Rafael Behr is a Guardian columnist

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© Photograph: Evan Vucci/AP

© Photograph: Evan Vucci/AP

Mango chicken schnitzel and Balinese pork rolls: Gurdeep Loyal’s recipes for mango chutney

25 juin 2025 à 07:00

There’s so much more to mango chutney than a relish for curry or a dip for pappadoms. Use up that jar in an upgraded chicken schnitzel or Balinese crispy pork rolls

A cleverly curated pantry is a home cook’s best friend, and holds within it the power to take your daily meals in countless different directions at the mere twist of a lid. The simple truth is that all you really need to create flavourful food at home is a capsule of flavourful pantry ingredients. This, for me, includes everyday staples such as toasted sesame oil, dark maple syrup and peanut butter, and bold taste-boosters such as tamarind, pecorino romano and gochujang. Another ingredient I turn to repeatedly is mango chutney, a beloved staple at the Punjabi table of my childhood upbringing in Leicester. Today, I use it in infinite different ways to enliven whatever I happen to be cooking, leaning into its characteristics as a sticky and vinegary, bustlingly tropical, flamboyantly spiced, sweet and mellow flavour hero. These recipes show you just a few ways that mango chutney, or indeed any ingredient in a thoughtfully stocked pantry, can be used when you liberate yourself to play with ingredients with creative joy.

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© Photograph: Matthew Hague/The Guardian. Food styling: Ellie Mulligan. Prop styling: Rachel Vere. Food styling assistant: Isobel Clarke.

© Photograph: Matthew Hague/The Guardian. Food styling: Ellie Mulligan. Prop styling: Rachel Vere. Food styling assistant: Isobel Clarke.

Australian police offer $500,000 reward in bid to find murdered British backpacker Peter Falconio’s remains

25 juin 2025 à 06:10

Falconio was killed while travelling in the Northern Territory with his girlfriend Joanne Lees in 2001 but his body has never been found

Northern Territory police are offering a $500,000 reward for information on the location of the remains of British backpacker Peter Falconio, whose murder in the Australian outback more than 20 years ago captured worldwide attention.

In July 2001, Falconio, then 28, was travelling Australia with his girlfriend, Joanne Lees, on a remote stretch of highway about 300km north of Alice Springs in the Northern Territory when he was pulled over by Bradley John Murdoch, who said their van might have an engine problem.

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© Photograph: AP

© Photograph: AP

Ironheart review – the small screen can barely contain the energy of this Black Panther spinoff

25 juin 2025 à 06:00

This rapid-fire new Marvel Cinematic Universe show for a younger audience is packed with cartoonish violence and flashy effects. Dominique Thorne’s reprisal of her Wakanda Forever role is stunningly charismatic

Amid the usual welter of pre-emptive criticisms, hopes, dreams, doubts and hostilities that suffuse the internet whenever a new addition to the Marvel Cinematic Universe – or any other alternative world beloved of a fandom – is announced, Ironheart (the 14th TV series in the MCU and following on from the events in 2022’s film Black Panther: Wakanda Forever) has at last arrived.

In the film, Riri Williams (Dominique Thorne, reprising the role on the small screen, which can barely contain her charisma or energy) was the genius MIT student who invented the vibranium detector that rather kicked off the whole vibranium power struggle, then the metal exoskeletal suit that aided the Wakandans in their face-off with Talokan. At the end, she returned to MIT and that is where we find her at the beginning of Ironheart, on a Tony Stark fellowship, and trying to wangle an extra year of grant money to refine the suit that could potentially transform emergency services provision. “Help would never be too late!”

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© Photograph: Marvel

© Photograph: Marvel

‘Life is brutal. Running helps’: the 17-year-old who faced despair – and ran the length of Britain

25 juin 2025 à 06:00

Marcus Skeet has dealt with a lot: diabetes, anxiety, depression, OCD and the pressures of being a young carer. A few years ago, he reached his lowest point. Then he began working towards an extraordinary goal

Day three of Marcus Skeet’s epic run from Land’s End to John o’Groats was a low point. It had been a sunny April morning when he set off. Marcus was in shorts and a T-shirt – bright yellow so he could be easily seen running beside the A30. But then, 18 miles (29km) in and just a few miles before the end of the day’s leg, it started to rain. “Absolutely bucketing down, then hailing really heavily, hailstones right into my face.”

Marcus, who had been sweating, got cold very quickly. He tried to call his friend Harry, who had gone ahead in the support car to check in to that night’s Airbnb, to get him to come back with a coat, but the phone had got wet and wasn’t working. He managed to reach a layby where there was a breakdown van. He asked the driver if he would make a call for him (Marcus didn’t know Harry’s number from memory, but he knew his mum’s, and she could ring Harry). “And he looks at me and goes: ‘Mate, I’m working, bore off.’”

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© Photograph: Courtesy of Marcus Skeet

© Photograph: Courtesy of Marcus Skeet

How Lisbon made itself irresistible to tourists – and became the least affordable city in Europe | Agustín Cocola-Gant

25 juin 2025 à 06:00

Tourists stay in short-term rentals and foreigners buy second homes, while residents of the city rent rooms, not apartments

  • In this series, writers discuss the causes of – and solutions to – the housing crisis in key European cities

Over the past decade, Lisbon has undergone a dramatic transformation – from one of the most affordable capitals in Europe to the most unaffordable.

Between 2014 and 2024, house prices in the city rose by 176%, and by more than 200% in its central historic districts. The home price to income ratio, a key indicator of housing affordability, reflects this shift with stark clarity: today, Lisbon tops Europe’s housing unaffordability rankings. This trend extends to the national level. In 2015, Portugal ranked 22nd out of 27 EU countries for housing unaffordability. Today, it ranks first. In a country where 60% of taxpayers earn less than €1,000 a month, finding a rental below that price in the Portuguese capital is only possible if you’re willing to live in 20 sq metres – or less.

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© Composite: Guardian Design/Getty Images/iStockphoto/The Observer

© Composite: Guardian Design/Getty Images/iStockphoto/The Observer

Courts pushing back on corporate carbon offsetting claims, LSE report finds

25 juin 2025 à 06:00

Scrutiny of how companies plan to meet climate commitments is growing, with many successful legal challenges

Judges across the world are proving sceptical of companies’ attempts to offset their greenhouse gas emissions by buying carbon credits, a report has found.

In an analysis of nearly 3,000 climate-related lawsuits filed around the world since 2015, the latest annual review of climate litigation by the London School of Economics found action against corporations in particular was “evolving”, with growing scrutiny of how companies plan to meet their stated climate commitments.

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© Photograph: Amanda Perobelli/Reuters

© Photograph: Amanda Perobelli/Reuters

Nairobi’s lions are almost encircled by the city. A Maasai community offers a key corridor out

25 juin 2025 à 06:00

Maasai pastoralists living by the national park in Kenya’s capital are helping wildlife with a crucial migratory route through their land – at great risk to their cherished cattle

Nairobi national park in Kenya is the only large wildlife conservation area to fall within a capital city. It is hemmed in on three sides by human development, and unfenced only on its southern boundary – this gap providing a crucial wildlife passageway, linking the park’s animals to other populations of wildlife and wider gene pools.

The gap, however, is also home to a small Maasai community, where farmers face an agonising choice between protecting livestock and making space for the predators that prey on their cattle.

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© Photograph: Baz Ratner/Reuters

© Photograph: Baz Ratner/Reuters

Liam Delap opens Chelsea account in Club World Cup win over Espérance

  • Striker starts in absence of suspended Nicolas Jackson

  • Chelsea into last 16 with composed 3-0 victory over ES Tunis

It must be tough to play free-flowing football when it feels as if the game is being staged in an airless hotel room and nobody knows how to turn off the central heating. Chelsea nonetheless managed to keep their cool in suffocating conditions in Philadelphia, securing their place in the last 16 of the Club World Cup thanks to a composed 3-0 victory over Espérance.

This was a positive night for Enzo Maresca, who encountered few problems after trusting his second string to see off the Tunisian champions. Liam Delap scored his first goal for his new club and although Chelsea finished behind Flamengo in Group D there are benefits to going through in second place. After all a date with Bayern Munich on Saturday has been swerved, albeit more by luck than judgment after Benfica took advantage of Vincent Kompany’s disastrous attempt at rotation by nabbing top spot in Group C with a shock 1-0 win over the German champions on Tuesday afternoon.

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© Photograph: Chelsea FC/Getty Images

© Photograph: Chelsea FC/Getty Images

Erin Patterson mushroom trial day 37 – as it happened

25 juin 2025 à 08:31

This blog is now closed

Beale says Fox-Henry testified that in May 2022 a user on the Cooler Master entered the term ‘iNaturalist” on the search engine Bing.

A user also visited the Korumburra Middle Pub website shortly after a visit to iNaturalist in the same month, Fox-Henry told the court.

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© Composite: Guardian Design/AAP

© Composite: Guardian Design/AAP

Zohran Mamdani declares historic victory in New York City mayoral primary after Cuomo concedes

25 juin 2025 à 06:57

‘Tonight is his night,’ says ex-governor as progressive state representative tells supporters ‘we made history’

Zohran Mamdani, the 33-year-old democratic socialist appeared to have cleared the first hurdle on his path to becoming New York’s first Muslim mayor, declaring victory in the city’s Democratic primary on Tuesday night, although it could be days before the final result is known.

In a stunning upset, Andrew Cuomo – who had been a heavy favorite until recent weeks - conceded the race, after it become clear the progressive upstart had built a substantial lead over the more experienced but scandal-scarred former governor.

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© Photograph: Julius Constantine Motal/The Guardian

© Photograph: Julius Constantine Motal/The Guardian

Brazilian hiker found dead after falling off Indonesia volcano trail

25 juin 2025 à 04:00

Juliana Marins, 26, went missing on Saturday at Mount Rinjani on Lombok island, a spot that is popular with hikers

A Brazilian tourist who fell down a ravine at an Indonesian volcano popular with hikers has been found dead, the Brazilian government and Indonesia’s rescue agency said Tuesday, after a days-long search and rescue effort.

Attempts to evacuate Juliana Marins, 26, who went missing on Saturday at Mount Rinjani on Lombok island, were hindered by challenging weather and terrain after authorities spotted her unmoving body with a drone.

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© Photograph: BASARNAS/HANDOUT HANDOUT HANDOUT/EPA

© Photograph: BASARNAS/HANDOUT HANDOUT HANDOUT/EPA

Teenager from Hull becomes second Briton ever to join a professional sumo stable

25 juin 2025 à 03:13

Sumo wrestler Nicholas Tarasenko, 15, gets rare chance to break into professional ranks after winning amateur tournaments and learning Japanese

A teenager from Hull has arrived in Japan to pursue his dream of becoming a grand champion sumo wrestler, as only the second Briton to win a place at one of the ancient sport’s professional stables.

Nicholas Tarasenko, 15, left Yorkshire for Japan straight after finishing his GCSEs, to become the first British hopeful to join a stable since Nathan Strange – a Londoner who fought under the ring name Hidenokuni – in 1989.

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© Photograph: John Gunning

© Photograph: John Gunning

Fears of unrest as Kenyans mark first anniversary of storming of parliament

25 juin 2025 à 03:00

Rights activists plan to march countrywide in honour of those killed during anti-government protests

Kenyans plan to march countrywide on Wednesday, the first anniversary of the historic storming of parliament by protesters, to honour those killed during last year’s anti-government protests, but there are fears that the march could escalate into unrest.

Rights activists, family members of killed and missing protesters, and young Kenyans, who were the main drivers of last year’s protests, have mobilised online and offline, with opposition leaders terming the day a “people’s public holiday” and the government warning against attempts to disrupt public order.

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© Photograph: Thomas Mukoya/Reuters

© Photograph: Thomas Mukoya/Reuters

US to give $30m to Gaza Humanitarian Foundation despite violent and chaotic rollout of food distribution

25 juin 2025 à 00:33

Grant makes US a direct backer of aid organization that reportedly has collaboration with Israeli government

The Trump administration has authorised a $30m grant to the controversial Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, making the US a direct backer of an aid organisation that is closely linked to private security contractors and has been accused by critics of “politicising” the distribution of humanitarian aid in Gaza.

According to a document seen by the Guardian, the state department has already disbursed $7m to GHF, a US- and Israeli-backed aid organisation that has been given preferential access to operate in Gaza because it says that it can deliver millions of meals to starving people without that food falling into the hands of Hamas.

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© Photograph: Hatem Khaled/Reuters

© Photograph: Hatem Khaled/Reuters

Women’s Euro 2025 team guides: Belgium

25 juin 2025 à 01:01

Stop Tessa Wullaert and you stop Belgium? Improving side will hope to prove they are more than a one-woman team

This article is part of the Guardian’s Euro 2025 Experts’ Network, a cooperation between some of the best media organisations from the 16 countries who qualified. theguardian.com is running previews from two teams each day in the run-up to the tournament kicking off on 2 July.

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© Photograph: Photonews/Getty Images

© Photograph: Photonews/Getty Images

Adults in Great Britain now spending more time on mobiles than watching TV

25 juin 2025 à 01:01

Daily average for watching all types of screen is now almost 7.5 hours, annual survey for IPA finds

The amount of time adults in Great Britain spend using their mobile phones has finally overtaken that spent watching TV, according to a report that calculates the daily average for watching all types of screen is now almost 7.5 hours.

For the first time a typical person aged 15 or over spends longer each day on their mobile (three hours and 21 minutes) than on watching a traditional set (three hours and 16 minutes), the annual TouchPoints survey found.

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© Photograph: LeoPatrizi/Getty Images

© Photograph: LeoPatrizi/Getty Images

UK can reach net zero by 2050, climate report finds

Climate Change Committee says current targets could be met provided country takes ‘steps forward’ to achieve them

The UK can reach its net zero targets for 2050, and its interim carbon budgets for 2030 and beyond, the government’s statutory climate advisers have reported, in an unusual vote of confidence in green policy.

But difficult decisions cannot be ducked, the Climate Change Committee (CCC) added in its annual progress report to parliament – including a pressing need to overhaul the way energy is taxed in order to make electricity much cheaper than gas.

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© Photograph: PA Images/Alamy

© Photograph: PA Images/Alamy

Club World Cup: Auckland City hold on for shock draw with Boca Juniors while Benfica top Bayern

25 juin 2025 à 00:32
  • Amateur New Zealand side lost 10-0 to open tournament

  • Bayern already assured of spot in knockout round

Boca Juniors were held to a 1-1 draw by Auckland City and failed to reach the knockout stage of the Club World Cup on Tuesday in steamy Nashville, Tennessee, where the match was suspended for nearly 50 minutes due to stormy weather.

Boca came into the game needing both a convincing win against already-eliminated Auckland City to overturn a seven-goal difference with Benfica and for the Portuguese club to lose to German champions Bayern Munich in the other Group C fixture.

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© Photograph: Alex Grimm/Getty Images

© Photograph: Alex Grimm/Getty Images

Millions of children at risk as global vaccine rates fall, study finds

25 juin 2025 à 00:30

Decline blamed on health inequalities, Covid disruption and soaring levels of misinformation and hesitancy

Millions of children worldwide are at risk of lethal diseases because vaccine coverage has stalled or reversed amid persistent health inequalities and soaring levels of misinformation and hesitancy, the largest study of its kind has found.

Major progress in rolling out jabs to billions of children in all corners of the globe over the last five decades has prevented the deaths of 154 million children, according to an analysis published in the Lancet.

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© Photograph: Carlos Sanchez/Reuters

© Photograph: Carlos Sanchez/Reuters

Gout Gout breaks his own 200m national record in latest stunning run

24 juin 2025 à 23:48
  • 17-year-old lays down time of 20.02s on senior European debut

  • Cam Myers, 19, and Peter Bol also shine on strong night for Australia

The records keep falling for Gout Gout after the 17-year-old sprint sensation announced himself on the senior international stage with a new Australian benchmark of 20.02s over 200m at the Ostrava Golden Spike meet in the Czech Republic.

Gout remains on course to go sub-20s as he bettered his own national record in a field stacked with high-quality sprinters, chasing down and then roaring past Reynier Mena over the final 20m to cross the line 0.17s ahead of the Cuban, with Briton Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake third.

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© Photograph: David W Černý/Reuters

© Photograph: David W Černý/Reuters

Scientists sound the alarm for Nullarbor’s fragile limestone caves and unique underground creatures

24 juin 2025 à 22:30

A massive renewable energy project threatens the treasures that lie beneath, including rare cave animals and a record of ancient life forms, experts warn

On the Nullarbor plain, the world’s largest hydrogen export hub is being developed, a colossal renewable energy and industrial project comprising up to 3,000 wind turbines and 60m solar modules – which, at 70GW capacity, is larger than the national grid.

Beneath it lies an internationally significant limestone cave system, a fragile home to globally unique creatures, and a time capsule of life since the Pliocene.

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© Photograph: LRTimelapse 6 5 2 (Windows)/Stefan Eberhard

© Photograph: LRTimelapse 6 5 2 (Windows)/Stefan Eberhard

England’s unlikely win a beautiful reward for approach under Ben Stokes | Andy Bull

24 juin 2025 à 21:11

By standards of their most entertaining team in decades, this was one of the more humdrum of stunning victories

Now, I know what you’re thinking. Truth is I’ve thought the same way myself. India scored five centuries, their fielders dropped six catches, and missed two other opportunities besides. Their best bowler took an important wicket off what turned out to be a no-ball; Chris Woakes, the man leading England’s attack managed one wicket in the match; Josh Tongue, their big strapping quick, only dismissed one member of the opposition’s top six, and that was when he had already scored a hundred runs, and Shoaib Bashir gave up the large part of 200 runs. Oh, and England put the opposition in, and conceded the best part of 500.

And at the end of it all, they won. And this time the No 11 didn’t even have to bat. It was a match which they might well have lost. Maybe they should have. But it was also a match which any number of England sides before them wouldn’t even have tried to win. In the first 142 years of Test cricket England scored over 300 runs in the fourth innings to win a Test exactly three times, and in the past six years of Test cricket England have scored over 300 runs in the fourth innings to win a Test exactly three times, once when Ben Stokes scored his 135 here to beat Australia, and now twice when he’s been captain.

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© Photograph: Scott Heppell/AP

© Photograph: Scott Heppell/AP

Reçu hier — 24 juin 2025The Guardian

Man wrongfully deported to El Salvador must be returned to US, court rules

24 juin 2025 à 22:59

White House must return Jordin Melgar-Salmeron, who was deported less than 30 minutes after his removal was barred

An appeals court has ordered the Trump administration to return a man wrongfully deported to El Salvador to the US and to explain how it is complying in a ruling apparently designed to break a pattern of apparent government defiance of judicial orders.

The US court of appeals for the second circuit in New York also required the government to provide a declaration of the current whereabouts and custodial status of Jordin Melgar-Salmeron, who was deported on 7 May less than half an hour after the court had expressly barred his removal.

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© Photograph: José Cabezas/Reuters

© Photograph: José Cabezas/Reuters

Man charged in bombing of Palm Springs fertility clinic dies in prison

24 juin 2025 à 22:56

Daniel Park, 32, was accused of supplying chemicals to the bomber, Guy Edward Barktus, who died in May explosion

A man charged with aiding the bomber of a fertility clinic in California has died in federal custody just weeks after his arrest, prison officials said on Tuesday.

Daniel Park, 32, was accused of supplying chemicals to the bomber, Guy Edward Bartkus of California, who died in the 17 May explosion.

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© Photograph: Gabriel Osorio/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Gabriel Osorio/AFP/Getty Images

US strikes on Iran’s nuclear sites only set back program by months, Pentagon report says

24 juin 2025 à 22:49

Findings by Defense Intelligence Agency suggest Trump’s declaration that sites were ‘obliterated’ may be overstated

An initial classified US assessment of Donald Trump’s strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities over the weekend says they did not destroy two of the sites and likely only set back the nuclear program by a few months, according to two people familiar with the report.

The report produced by the Defense Intelligence Agency – the intelligence arm of the Pentagon – concluded key components of the nuclear program, including centrifuges, were capable of being restarted within months.

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© Photograph: Maxar Technologies Handout/EPA

© Photograph: Maxar Technologies Handout/EPA

Seven-time French champions Lyon relegated to Ligue 2 over financial problems

24 juin 2025 à 22:42
  • November’s provisional relegation upheld by DNCG

  • Decision comes despite recent sales of key players

Lyon have been relegated to Ligue 2 after failing to convince authorities they have resolved their financial difficulties.

The seven-time French champions were hit with a provisional relegation in November after racking up massive debts, and although they have since sold a number of first-team players, French football watchdog the DNCG upheld the relegation following meetings on Tuesday.

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© Photograph: Mourad Allili/SIPA/Shutterstock

© Photograph: Mourad Allili/SIPA/Shutterstock

RFK Jr grilled on vaccine policies and healthcare fraud in bruising House hearing

24 juin 2025 à 22:39

US health secretary faced hours of questioning over budget cuts and accusations he lied to senators

Robert F Kennedy Jr, the US health secretary, faced a bruising day on Capitol Hill on Tuesday, including being forced to retract accusations against a Democratic congressman after claiming the lawmaker’s vaccine stance was bought by $2m in pharmaceutical contributions.

In a hearing held by the House health subcommittee, Kennedy was met with hours of contentious questioning over budget cuts, massive healthcare fraud and accusations he lied to senators to secure his confirmation.

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© Photograph: Shawn Thew/EPA

© Photograph: Shawn Thew/EPA

One in three student loan borrowers risk default as delinquency rates soar

24 juin 2025 à 22:33

Sharp rise in delinquency comes after education department resumed collections on defaulted federal loans

Nearly one in three federal student loan borrowers are at risk of defaulting on payments as early as July, as delinquency and default rates soar in the wake of pandemic-era repayment relief ending.

About 5.8 million federal student loan borrowers were 90 days or more past due on their payments as of April 2025, according to a new analysis from TransUnion. That’s roughly 31% of borrowers with a payment due, up from 20.5% in February and nearly triple the 11.7% delinquency rate reported in February 2020, just before the pandemic began. The April figure represents the highest delinquency rate ever recorded.

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© Photograph: Jim Urquhart/Reuters

© Photograph: Jim Urquhart/Reuters

Ben Stokes hits back at England critics: ‘Test matches are played over five days’

24 juin 2025 à 22:14
  • Hosts complete stunning run chase against India

  • Captain questioned over toss after first day of Test

Ben Stokes described himself as ­“simple-minded when it comes to cricket” but with England’s ­victory over India in the first Test here he ­demonstrated the extraordinary impact of his methods.

Before his appointment in 2022 no England captain had guided the team to more than two successful fourth-innings run chases of more than 250 runs. The 373 they scored to win was Stokes’s sixth, a remarkable record he said owed everything to clarity, calmness, and “turning up every session with the attitude that we could blow this match apart”.

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© Photograph: Matt West/Shutterstock

© Photograph: Matt West/Shutterstock

Bobby Sherman, 60s teen idol and singer of hit Little Woman, dies aged 81

24 juin 2025 à 22:14

The teenage heartthrob, who become an LAPD instructor, had announced he had stage 4 cancer earlier this year

Bobby Sherman, whose winsome smile and fashionable shaggy mop top helped make him into a teen idol in the 1960s and 70s with bubblegum pop hits such as Little Woman and Julie, Do Ya Love Me, has died. He was 81.

His wife, Brigitte Poublon, announced the death Tuesday and family friend John Stamos posted her message on Instagram: “Bobby left this world holding my hand — just as he held up our life with love, courage, and unwavering grace.” Sherman revealed he had stage 4 cancer earlier this year.

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© Photograph: CBS Photo Archive/CBS/Getty Images

© Photograph: CBS Photo Archive/CBS/Getty Images

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