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Reçu aujourd’hui — 15 juillet 2025The Guardian

Australian journalists confronted by Chinese security guards during Albanese’s Beijing trip

Guards demand camera crews from ABC, SBS, Nine, Seven and Sky News hand over footage despite having permission to film

Security guards tried to stop Australian journalists covering Anthony Albanese’s visit to China from leaving a popular Beijing tourist destination, just hours before the prime minister’s talks with Xi Jinping on Tuesday.

Albanese is on a six-day visit to China and is due to meet Xi, the country’s president, and its premier, Li Qiang, in Beijing on Tuesday afternoon.

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© Photograph: Lukas Coch/AP

© Photograph: Lukas Coch/AP

© Photograph: Lukas Coch/AP

Diljit Dosanjh is one of the biggest Asian stars in the world. So why can’t Indian cinemagoers see his latest film?

15 juillet 2025 à 07:00

Sardaar Ji 3 is breaking box office records despite not being released to its most famous actor’s home audience

He is number one in the UK list of top 50 Asian celebrities in the world, has headlined arenas in the UK, US and across Europe as part of his sold-out Dil-Luminati world tour, and recently strutted the Met Gala carpet in an ivory-toned turban.

But despite Diljit Dosanjh’s stellar status, the Punjabi actor-singer has been caught in a cultural and political row that has halted the Indian release of his latest movie, Sardaar Ji 3.

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© Photograph: White Hill Studios

© Photograph: White Hill Studios

© Photograph: White Hill Studios

Fear of being ordered back to office affecting UK staff wellbeing, poll finds

15 juillet 2025 à 07:00

Exclusive: More than a third of employees surveyed say stories about firms hardening stance have had impact

A fear of being ordered back to the office is having an impact on workers’ wellbeing, according to a poll, after a string of companies issued return-to-office mandates.

More than a third (38%) of workers surveyed said recent news stories about companies hardening their stance on office attendance had negatively affected their wellbeing, highlighting the tug-of-war between employers and their employees.

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© Photograph: Gary John Norman/Getty Images/Image Source

© Photograph: Gary John Norman/Getty Images/Image Source

© Photograph: Gary John Norman/Getty Images/Image Source

Georgina Hayden’s recipe for red curry chicken and courgette burgers

15 juillet 2025 à 07:00

This might just be summer’s winning recipe – ridiculously easy and delicious flavours for barbecue season

I present to you my new favourite summer burger, which has been on our menu at home ever since its arrival in my kitchen. It’s one of those recipes where the ease is almost embarrassing. How can something so delicious be so straightforward? The burgers themselves are a simple food processor job; if you don’t have one, use chicken mince and make sure you really mix in the curry paste and courgette by hand. The accompaniments are also key: the lime-pickled shallots, the abundance of herbs and the creaminess of the mayo all work so well together. Turn up to a barbecue with a tray of these and I guarantee you’ll be dishing out the recipe in no time.

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© Photograph: Matthew Hague/The Guardian. Food and prop styling: Lucy Turnbull. Food assistant: Georgia Rudd.

© Photograph: Matthew Hague/The Guardian. Food and prop styling: Lucy Turnbull. Food assistant: Georgia Rudd.

© Photograph: Matthew Hague/The Guardian. Food and prop styling: Lucy Turnbull. Food assistant: Georgia Rudd.

Disabled people want to live a full life. Instead, we’re forced to scrap over our right to food and a wash | Frances Ryan

15 juillet 2025 à 07:00

Britain’s political and media class advocate policies that leave disabled people hungry and dirty. Why are we expected to settle for this?

There is a longstanding practice in UK politics and media to force disabled people to fight for their basic rights – a kind of gladiatorial scrap in which the Colosseum is replaced by the set of Good Morning Britain.

With the government’s welfare reform bill just passed by MPs, this has felt all the more stark. In the last week alone, the leader of the opposition, Kemi Badenoch, has used a speech to declare she does not “believe” that one in four people are disabled, as if the Equality Act were based on vibes. “Twenty-eight million people in Britain are working to pay the wages and benefits of 28 million others,” she went on. “The rider is as big as the horse.”

Frances Ryan is a Guardian columnist. She is the author of Who Wants Normal? The Disabled Girls’ Guide to Life

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© Illustration: Sébastien Thibault

© Illustration: Sébastien Thibault

© Illustration: Sébastien Thibault

Andrea Gibson, poet and subject of documentary Come See Me in the Good Light, dies aged 49

15 juillet 2025 à 06:56

Gibson, who was Colorado’s poet laureate and diagnosed with terminal ovarian cancer, died at their home on Monday

Andrea Gibson, a celebrated poet and performance artist who through their verse explored gender identity, politics and their four-year battle with terminal ovarian cancer, has died aged 49.

Gibson’s death was announced on social media by their wife, Megan Falley.

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© Photograph: Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP

© Photograph: Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP

© Photograph: Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP

Additional 800 children to be tested for STIs as police investigate accused Melbourne childcare paedophile Joshua Dale Brown

Four more childcare centres added to list of Brown’s workplaces and additional employment dates added for 10 other centres

More than 800 additional children are being recommended for testing for sexually transmitted infections after four more childcare centres were added to a list of known workplaces of alleged paedophile Joshua Dale Brown.

More dates have also been added for 10 other childcare centres, with police citing incomplete records from the providers for the discrepancies.

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Kids Academy Waratah Estate in Mickleham on 29 August 2024

Milestones Early Learning Tarneit on 10 September 2024 and 13 September 2024

Milestones Early Learning Braybrook on 4 December 2024 and 6 December 2024

Milestones Early Learning Greensborough on 5 December 2024, 31 January 2025 and 27 February 2025

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© Photograph: Facebook

© Photograph: Facebook

© Photograph: Facebook

The shining: my trip to the G7 summit with Emmanuel Macron | Emmanuel Carrère

15 juillet 2025 à 06:00

Deeply unpopular in France, President Macron relishes the international stage, where he projects himself as the leader best placed to handle Trump. Seven years after our last encounter, I joined him as he prepared for battle

Nuuk, the capital of Greenland, is a small jumble of orange prefab buildings and low grey apartment blocks nestled on a stony outcrop on the edge of the ocean. There are no trees, but there’s a hill topped by the statue of Hans Egede, the Danish-Norwegian missionary who evangelised the world’s biggest island in the 18th century and which, as such, is threatened with removal by Inuit anti-colonialists. It was at his feet that I awaited the helicopters bringing back the Greenlandic prime minister, Jens-Frederik Nielsen, the Danish prime minister, Mette Frederiksen, and the French president, Emmanuel Macron – referred to throughout this trip as “PR”, short for président de la république – from their excursion on the ice.

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© Photograph: Alessandro Serranò/REX/Shutterstock

© Photograph: Alessandro Serranò/REX/Shutterstock

© Photograph: Alessandro Serranò/REX/Shutterstock

‘I needed to be locked up’: how Kavana went from 90s pop stardom to smoking crack in a skip – and bounced back

15 juillet 2025 à 06:00

He was a teen singer with his dream career. But then his life fell apart. Anthony Kavanagh talks about sex work, addiction and the years he spent being forced to hide his sexuality

Nobody could say that Anthony Kavanagh does not know how to laugh at himself. The day he was fired from his record label, he trudged across London in the rain, walking and walking, as the realisation sank in that he was no longer a pop star. Soaked, he went into a pub and the woman behind the bar offered him a grubby tea towel to dry off. Washed-up indeed, he thought.

His memoir, Pop Scars, is sprinkled with darkly comic takes on what his life had become after 90s pop stardom. Known as Kavana, he had a Top 10 hit in 1997 with his cover of Shalamar’s I Can Make You Feel Good. “I’ve always somehow been able to find the humour, even at some of the darker times,” he says.

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© Photograph: David Levene/The Guardian

© Photograph: David Levene/The Guardian

© Photograph: David Levene/The Guardian

Women born in East Germany have lived between two worlds. That’s why we’re shaking up art and politics | Carolin Würfel

15 juillet 2025 à 06:00

The stories of curator Kathleen Reinhardt and provenance expert Lynn Rother show how exclusion can be turned to powerful insight

In February 1990, the German news magazine Der Spiegel ran the headline “Why are they still coming?”, adding: “In West Germany, hatred for immigrants from the GDR could soon reach boiling point.” That year, resentment towards so-called newcomers from the east erupted without restraint. East Germans were insulted in the streets, shelters were attacked and children from the former GDR were bullied at school. There was a widespread fear that the weekly influx of thousands of people would overwhelm the welfare system and crash the housing and job markets. The public consensus? It needed to stop.

That same year, Kathleen Reinhardt and her parents moved from Thuringia in the former GDR to Bavaria. She was in primary school, and her new classmates greeted her with lines such as: “You people come here and take our jobs. You don’t even know how to work properly.”

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© Photograph: Enric Duch/Georg Kolbe Museum

© Photograph: Enric Duch/Georg Kolbe Museum

© Photograph: Enric Duch/Georg Kolbe Museum

France signals willingness to discuss reparations for colonial massacres in Niger

15 juillet 2025 à 06:00

Exclusive: French government says it is open to dialogue but does not acknowledge responsibility in letter seen by the Guardian

More than a century after its troops burned villages and looted cultural artefacts in the quest to include Niger in its west African colonial portfolio, France has signalled willingness over possible restitution, but is yet to acknowledge responsibility.

France remains open to bilateral dialogue with the Nigerien authorities, as well as to any collaboration concerning provenance research or patrimonial cooperation,” the office of France’s permanent representative to the UN wrote in a document seen by the Guardian.

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© Composite: Alamy

© Composite: Alamy

© Composite: Alamy

‘I would go-go dance in a shower then work on sonnets!’ Ncuti Gatwa’s sexy new Shakespearean drama

15 juillet 2025 à 06:00

After surviving the whirlwind of Doctor Who, the actor returns to the stage in ‘horny Elizabethan drama’ Born With Teeth. He and co-star Edward Bluemel discuss bust lips, hot pants and queering the Bard’s story

‘I think of it as a very sexy, dangerous game of Elizabethan cat and mouse.” Ncuti Gatwa is describing his new project with the Royal Shakespeare Company, a two-hander about William Shakespeare and fellow playwright Christopher “Kit” Marlowe. In Born With Teeth, Will and Kit collaborate on a play about Henry VI – for “collaborate”, read flirt, fight and ruminate betrayal.

Gatwa plays Marlowe and Shakespeare is Edward Bluemel; the pair last worked together on TV’s Sex Education. Bluemel followed that series about horny teens with playing a vampire (A Discovery of Witches), an MI6 agent (Killing Eve) and a brooding lord (My Lady Jane), while Gatwa was cast as one of the Kens in the Barbie movie and starred in a little thing called Doctor Who.

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© Photograph: Felicity McCabe

© Photograph: Felicity McCabe

© Photograph: Felicity McCabe

David Kaff, Spinal Tap keyboardist and musician, dies aged 79

15 juillet 2025 à 04:24

The British musician and actor, who played Viv Savage in Rob Reiner’s mockumentary, died in his sleep

David Kaff, the British actor and musician known for playing keyboardist Viv Savage in Rob Reiner’s 1984 mockumentary This Is Spinal Tap, has died aged 79.

His bandmates in Mutual of Alameda’s Wild Kingdom confirmed the news on their Facebook page, writing that the musician had “passed away peacefully in his sleep” on Friday.

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© Photograph: Paul Natkin/WireImage

© Photograph: Paul Natkin/WireImage

© Photograph: Paul Natkin/WireImage

Four astronauts depart international space station in return flight home

Par :Reuters
15 juillet 2025 à 04:11

Crew Dragon capsule will parachute into the Pacific Ocean off the coast of California on Tuesday

Nasa retiree turned private astronaut Peggy Whitson and three crew mates from India, Poland and Hungary departed the International Space Station early on Monday and embarked on their return flight to Earth.

A Crew Dragon capsule carrying the quartet undocked from the orbital laboratory at 7.15am ET, ending the latest ISS visit organized by Texas-based startup Axiom Space in partnership with Elon Musk’s California-headquartered rocket venture SpaceX.

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© Photograph: AP

© Photograph: AP

© Photograph: AP

Brutal Mitchell Starc spell one to remember amid Australia batters’ tour to forget | Geoff Lemon

15 juillet 2025 à 04:00

The left-arm fast bowler claimed a record-breaking six-wicket haul in the third Test against the West Indies to celebrate his milestone match in style

Modern sport reporting casually reaches for words like “brutality” and “carnage” where their usage even as metaphor is overblown. The end of the third Test in Kingston, though, warranted both. Australia’s fast bowlers destroyed West Indies for 27, a single run higher than the lowest innings score in Test history.

The batting lasted 14.3 overs, the third-shortest innings on record. Mitchell Starc, curling the pink Dukes ball, took 6 for 9. Scott Boland’s 3 for 2 came in the form of a hat-trick. It was a sporting annihilation, the lowest West Indies total ever by 20 runs, worse than any time during the struggles of their earliest years or their recent decades. Australia swept the series 3-0.

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© Photograph: Randy Brooks/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Randy Brooks/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Randy Brooks/AFP/Getty Images

Could giving this pod of dolphins the same legal rights as humans help keep them safe?

15 juillet 2025 à 04:00

With a bottlenose population threatened by fishing gear, boats and pollution, campaigners on South Korea’s Jeju island are lobbying to extend legal status to the vulnerable cetaceans

It is a beautiful sunny day on the island of Jeju in South Korea and as the boat cuts through the water all seems calm and clear. Then they start to appear – one telltale fin and then another. Soon, a pod of eight or nine dolphins can be seen moving through the sea, seemingly following the path of the boat.

But as they start to jump and dive, fins cutting through the air, it becomes apparent that one dolphin is missing the appendage, his body breaking the surface but without the telltale profile of his companions. His name, given to him by a local environmental group, is Orae, which literally translates as “long”, but in this context means “wishing him a long life”.

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© Photograph: Newscom/Alamy

© Photograph: Newscom/Alamy

© Photograph: Newscom/Alamy

‘I couldn’t watch the forests vanish’: the man restoring Solomon Islands’ vital mangroves

Crucial for coastal communities, mangroves are threatened by land clearing, development and rising seas

As the morning light hits Oibola village in Solomon Islands, the receding tide drains water through a maze of tangled mangrove roots.

Dressed in muddy jeans and a worn T-shirt, Ben Waleilia moves carefully through the thick mangrove forest, searching for seedlings. Rows of young mangrove shoots stand high as Waleilia gently drops seedlings into a small plastic bucket.

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© Photograph: Paul Jones/The Guardian

© Photograph: Paul Jones/The Guardian

© Photograph: Paul Jones/The Guardian

Sudan paramilitary forces kill almost 300 in village raids, say lawyers

Par :Reuters
15 juillet 2025 à 02:39

Rapid Support Forces accused of targeting villages ‘completely empty of any military objectives’ in North Kordofan state as civil war rages

Sudan’s paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) killed nearly 300 people in attacks in North Kordofan state that began on Saturday, according to Sudanese activists.

The RSF has been fighting the Sudanese army in that area, one of the key frontlines of a civil war in Sudan that has raged since April 2023.

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© Photograph: Guy Peterson/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Guy Peterson/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Guy Peterson/AFP/Getty Images

Falling vaccination rates leave millions of children at risk, experts warn

More than 30m children worldwide not fully immunised for MMR and UK ranks worst in G7, WHO and Unicef say

Millions of children worldwide are at growing risk of serious illness and death due to declining infant vaccination rates, experts have warned, while the UK ranks worst of major western economies for MMR immunisation.

Figures released by the World Health Organization and Unicef show that more than 30 million children worldwide are not fully immunised against measles, mumps and rubella and 14.3 million children have not received a single routine infant vaccination.

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© Photograph: Lindsey Wasson/Reuters

© Photograph: Lindsey Wasson/Reuters

© Photograph: Lindsey Wasson/Reuters

From Tammy to Tamagotchi: Hamleys releases list of 100 top toys of all time

15 juillet 2025 à 01:00

Retailer marks 265th anniversary by choosing children’s favourite toys since its founding

It’s a list that will take you back to your childhood, whenever that was: train sets, Tonka Trucks, Top Trumps and Tamagotchis have all been named among the top 100 toys of all time.

Drawn up by buyers at the retailer Hamleys to mark its 265th anniversary, the selection includes both hardy perennials and passing playground crazes, all of which have appeared on the toy shop’s shelves, and children’s Christmas lists, over that time.

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© Photograph: Alain Le Garsmeur London 1972/Alamy

© Photograph: Alain Le Garsmeur London 1972/Alamy

© Photograph: Alain Le Garsmeur London 1972/Alamy

US supreme court allows Trump to resume gutting education department

Par :Reuters
14 juillet 2025 à 22:48

Justices lift federal judge’s order that reinstated nearly 1,400 workers affected by mass layoffs in win for president

The US supreme court on Monday cleared the way for Donald Trump’s administration to resume dismantling the Department of Education as part of his bid to shrink the federal government’s role in education in favor of more control by the states.

In the latest high court win for the president, the justices lifted a federal judge’s order that had reinstated nearly 1,400 workers affected by mass layoffs at the department and blocked the administration from transferring key functions to other federal agencies. A legal challenge is continuing to play out in lower courts.

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© Composite: Reuters, Getty Images

© Composite: Reuters, Getty Images

© Composite: Reuters, Getty Images

A bite-sized Cherry Bar? The artist creating miniatures of beloved Melbourne music venues

14 juillet 2025 à 17:00

David Hourigan has made tiny versions of the Tote, the Espy and many more down to the cigarette butts and band posters, wanting to ‘preserve these before they disappear’

It’s a tiny subject, but a big question: why are humans innately drawn to miniatures? Is it something about rediscovering the power we felt as children playing with toys, little gods in charge of our own dominions? Is it because these small worlds feel reassuringly contained among all the chaos of our own? Is it sheer appreciation for the delicacy and patience required to make them? Or is it simply because watching someone cook tiny meals over a tealight (86m views and counting) is really, really cute?

If, like me, you are mad for small things, you will appreciate the work of David Hourigan, whose new exhibition is dedicated to his models of beloved music venues around Melbourne. His intricate miniatures are so realistic that it can be hard to tell whether you are looking at a photo of the Espy or the Tote – until Hourigan’s big hands loom into view, popping a matchstick down to reveal the scale of his painstaking work. It is very soothing to watch him construct a perfect CCTV camera out of a Carlsberg can, or piece together colonial windows with tweezers.

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© Photograph: Asanka Brendon Ratnayake/Asanka Brendon Ratnayake for The Guardian Australia

© Photograph: Asanka Brendon Ratnayake/Asanka Brendon Ratnayake for The Guardian Australia

© Photograph: Asanka Brendon Ratnayake/Asanka Brendon Ratnayake for The Guardian Australia

Reeves to say cuts to City red tape will bring trickle-down benefits to households

Chancellor to announce raft of deregulation changes as City regulators move to pare back transparency rules

Rachel Reeves will claim that cutting red tape for City firms will have trickle-down benefits for households across Britain, as she tries to drum up support for a new financial services strategy.

A raft of regulatory reforms are due to be announced by the chancellor on Tuesday, in what the Treasury says will be the “biggest financial regulation reforms in a decade”. It will come before her Mansion House address to City bosses during a dinner at Guildhall in London on Tuesday evening.

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© Photograph: Andy Rain/EPA

© Photograph: Andy Rain/EPA

© Photograph: Andy Rain/EPA

Full-body scans of 100,000 people could change way diseases are detected and treated

15 juillet 2025 à 01:01

UK Biobank project to share 1bn images of organs, blood vessels and bones to help study ageing and ill health

Scientists expect to gain unprecedented insights into human ageing and the earliest signs of disease after scanning 100,000 people from head to toe in the world’s largest whole body imaging project.

The completion of the decade-long task means qualifying researchers worldwide will have access to 1bn de-identified images of the hearts, brains, abdomens, blood vessels, bones and joints of volunteers alongside medical histories and rich data on their genetic makeup, health and lifestyle.

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© Photograph: Dave Guttridge/UK Biobank

© Photograph: Dave Guttridge/UK Biobank

© Photograph: Dave Guttridge/UK Biobank

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