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Reçu aujourd’hui — 21 juillet 2025The Guardian

‘Papa Jake’ Larson, D-day veteran and TikTok star, dies aged 102

21 juillet 2025 à 05:04

Larson, who survived Normandy landings, gained 1.2 million followers on social media platform by sharing second world war stories

D-day veteran ″Papa Jake″ Larson, who survived German gunfire on Normandy’s beaches in 1944 and then garnered 1.2 million followers on TikTok late in life by sharing stories to commemorate the second world war and his fallen comrades, has died aged 102.

An animated speaker who charmed strangers young and old with his quick smile and generous hugs, the self-described country boy from Minnesota was “cracking jokes til the end,’’ his granddaughter wrote in announcing his death.

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© Photograph: Thomas Padilla/AP

© Photograph: Thomas Padilla/AP

© Photograph: Thomas Padilla/AP

Woman speared in head airlifted to hospital as NT police search for alleged attacker

21 juillet 2025 à 04:03

The 18-year-old is in a serious but stable condition at Royal Darwin hospital

A woman with a spear embedded in her head has been airlifted to hospital from a remote Northern Territory community, with police searching for her alleged attacker.

On Sunday police received a report alleging that an 18-year-old woman had been stabbed in the head by a male known to her at Angurugu on the west coast of Groote Eylandt, an island in the Gulf of Carpentaria.

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© Photograph: Darren England/AAP

© Photograph: Darren England/AAP

© Photograph: Darren England/AAP

Trump news at a glance: president goes on offensive over NFL and MLB team names

21 juillet 2025 à 02:35

Donald Trump calls on Commanders and Guardians to revert to names that were abandoned due to being racially insensitive – key US politics stories from Sunday 20 July at a glance

Donald Trump has weighed into a new fight – this time with two sports teams. The president wants Washington’s football franchise the Commanders and Cleveland baseball team the Guardians to revert to their former names, which were abandoned in recent years due to being racially insensitive to Native Americans.

Trump said on Sunday on Truth Social that: “The Washington ‘Whatever’s’ should IMMEDIATELY change their name back to the Washington Redskins Football Team …. Likewise, the Cleveland Indians, one of the six original baseball teams, with a storied past.”

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© Photograph: Patrick Semansky/AP

© Photograph: Patrick Semansky/AP

© Photograph: Patrick Semansky/AP

The Narrow Road to the Deep North review – immensely powerful TV

20 juillet 2025 à 23:00

This adaptation of the Booker prize-winning novel spanning three timelines is a visceral, passionate drama starring Ciarán Hinds and Jacob Elordi. What bracingly confident television

There is an overwhelming darkness to The Narrow Road to the Deep North, Justin Kurzel’s adaptation of Richard Flanagan’s Booker prize-winning novel. Thematically, this is to be expected: it is about a group of Australian prisoners of war constructing the Burma railway in the mid-1940s, at the tail end of the second world war. It is about the lasting trauma of conflict and imprisonment. It spans half a century, and though it tempers its darkness with a rich love story, it is largely violent, fatalistic and sorrowful. But visually, too, you may find yourself fiddling with the contrast and brightness settings. This very much matches its mood to its palette.

Jacob Elordi is perfectly handsome and haunted as the younger Dorrigo, a poetry-loving doctor who is about to be married to the well-to-do and socially connected Ella (Olivia DeJonge). The show covers three timelines, two of which follow closely on from one another. Elordi takes the main shift, Dorrigo as a young man. It opens in the thick heat of battle, going straight into the action. Young soldiers trade barbs with gallows humour, as they joke and tease, and place bets on how long they think they are going to live. Their banter is interrupted by exploding mines, the casualties already considerable, just a few moments in. The survivors are captured and put to work on the railway. It is hellish from the off, a vivid nightmare of torture and a tale of impossible endurance.

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© Photograph: PHOTOGRAPHER:/CREDIT LINE:BBC/Curio Pictures/Sony Pictures Television

© Photograph: PHOTOGRAPHER:/CREDIT LINE:BBC/Curio Pictures/Sony Pictures Television

© Photograph: PHOTOGRAPHER:/CREDIT LINE:BBC/Curio Pictures/Sony Pictures Television

14 ways to keep your houseplants alive while you’re on holiday (and how to revive them when you get back)

20 juillet 2025 à 17:00

Heading off for summer? From self-watering pots to plant straws, these expert hacks will keep your plants hydrated and happy

Beat the heat: expert tips for keeping cool in hot weather

Summer holidays are a joy for us, but not always such a thrill for our houseplants. Few things are worse than returning home to discover a horticultural graveyard. Plants can survive unsupervised during the winter, but heatwaves, a lack of ventilation, and no one around to water mean summer holidays are a recipe for disaster.

But fear not. A bit of planning and the right kit can make all the difference between a happy homecoming and a shrivelled mess. Whether you go full-tech or just trust in a good soak and a friend, there’s a holiday plant-care method for every budget and plant. Regardless of how long you’re going away for, here are some of the best tips and tricks to keep your houseplants alive, hydrated and happy in your absence.

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© Photograph: ronstik/Getty Images/iStockphoto

© Photograph: ronstik/Getty Images/iStockphoto

© Photograph: ronstik/Getty Images/iStockphoto

The Idaho Four review – a disturbing, necessary portrait of a killer and his victims

20 juillet 2025 à 17:00

James Patterson and Vicky Ward offer a definitive, and sadly true, account of Kohberger and the Idaho student murders

In the early hours of 13 November 2022 in an off-campus apartment in Moscow, Idaho, a masked assailant murdered four students. The dead, who would come to be known as the Idaho Four, were Kaylee Goncalves, Ethan Chapin, Xana Kernodle and Madison Mogen. Each was stabbed multiple times. The killer left a gruesome scene and the motive was not readily apparent.

Videos, cellphone records and solid detective work led law enforcement to Bryan Kohberger, a doctoral candidate at Washington State University. Arrested at his parents’ home in Albrightsville, Pennsylvania, in late December, he was extradited back west.

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© Photograph: Lindsey Wasson/Reuters

© Photograph: Lindsey Wasson/Reuters

© Photograph: Lindsey Wasson/Reuters

Smart, sharp and nonstop dance: how Twyla Tharp is bossing the Venice Dance Biennale in her 80s

20 juillet 2025 à 14:55

Tharp picked up a Golden Lion award for her experimental and accessible choreography, while Carolina Bianchi won a Silver Lion for her fearless exploration of sexual assault

‘Do you know how much I could deadlift in my 50s? Guess!” Twyla Tharp implored Wayne McGregor, in a post-show interview at the Venice Dance Biennale. McGregor, the festival’s artistic director, didn’t dare venture a figure. “Two-hundred and twenty-seven pounds!” she told us all, delightedly.

Never underestimate Twyla. The slight, white-haired 84-year-old is as sharp as ever, and a force in the dance world. She’s been choreographing for 60 years, for ballet companies and Broadway, dance both experimental and accessible, art and pop. And she is honoured this year with the biennale’s Golden Lion for lifetime achievement.

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© Photograph: STUDIO AURA-Laura Sukowatey/25.1.26 Twyla Tharp Dance SLACKTIDE at Northrop. Photo © STUDIO AURA

© Photograph: STUDIO AURA-Laura Sukowatey/25.1.26 Twyla Tharp Dance SLACKTIDE at Northrop. Photo © STUDIO AURA

© Photograph: STUDIO AURA-Laura Sukowatey/25.1.26 Twyla Tharp Dance SLACKTIDE at Northrop. Photo © STUDIO AURA

Why many Black Americans are boycotting big-box retail stores: ‘using my money to resist’

20 juillet 2025 à 13:00

People are shutting their wallets to firms such as Target and Amazon, who followed in Trump’s footsteps to undo DEI

Rebecca Renard-Wilson has stopped shopping at Target and all things Amazon including Whole Foods and Amazon Fresh. These days, the mother of two shops for the things she needs at farmer’s markets, small mom-and-pop stores or she goes directly to the websites of products she wants to purchase.

“I have options of where I put my money,” Renard-Wilson, 49, said. “Yes, Target’s convenient. Yes, Amazon Fresh is on my drive to my kids’ school. The options that I have discovered have opened up new relationships. I feel more connected to my community because I’m not shopping at those big-box places. I’m able to now use my money not only to resist places that don’t align with my values, but I’m able to now support places that do align with my values. To me, that’s a win-win.”

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© Photograph: The Washington Post/Getty Images

© Photograph: The Washington Post/Getty Images

© Photograph: The Washington Post/Getty Images

Caught between a fossil fuel past and a green future, China’s coal miners chart an uncertain path

21 juillet 2025 à 02:26

As the world’s largest greenhouse gas emitter shifts to cleaner energy, some families fear being left behind

Gazing over the remains of his home, Wang Bingbing surveys a decades-old jujube tree flowering through the rubble, and the yard where he and his wife once raised pigs, now a pile of crumbled brick.

In the valley below, a sprawling coalmine is the source of their dislocation: years of digging heightened the risk of landslides, forcing Wang and his family out. To prevent the family from returning, local authorities later demolished their home.

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© Photograph: Ding Gang/The Guardian

© Photograph: Ding Gang/The Guardian

© Photograph: Ding Gang/The Guardian

Ukraine war briefing: Russia insists on sticking to its war demands amid Trump sanctions threat

21 juillet 2025 à 02:25

Kremlin says ‘our goals are clear’ over conditions Ukraine and its allies have rejected as Russian strikes on Kyiv leave one dead and set buildings alight. What we know on day 1,244

Russia has said it is open to peace with Ukraine but insists achieving its goals remains a priority, days after Donald Trump gave Moscow a 50-day deadline to agree to a ceasefire or face tougher sanctions. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov reiterated Russia’s demands on Sunday, including Ukraine withdrawing from Russia-annexed regions and abandoning its Nato aspirations – terms that Kyiv and its allies have rejected. “The main thing for us is to achieve our goals,” Peskov told state TV. “Our goals are clear.”

Ukrainian officials proposed a new round of peace talks this week, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on Saturday, while Russian state media said on Sunday that no date had yet been set for the negotiations but Istanbul would probably remain the host city. A week ago Trump, the US president, threatened Russia with “severe tariffs” unless a peace deal was reached within 50 days and announced a rejuvenated pipeline for US weapons to reach Ukraine amid his frustration at unsuccessful talks to end the war.

Russian strikes on Ukraine’s capital on Monday killed at least one person and left a shop and a school on fire, city officials said. Four districts of Kyiv were attacked, with reports of burning residential buildings, a kiosk and a kindergarten, mayor Vitali Klitschko said on Telegram. The entrance to the Lukyanivska metro station was also damaged, he added.

Russia’s biggest oil producer Rosneft has condemned European Union sanctions on India’s Nayara Energy refinery as unjustified and illegal, saying the restrictions directly threatened India’s energy security. The EU’s 18th package of sanctions against Russia over Ukraine was approved on Friday and is aimed at further hitting Russia’s oil and energy industry. Rosneft said on Sunday it held less than 50% in Nayara – one of the targeted companies – and called the EU’s justification for the sanctions “far-fetched and false in context”. The EU foreign policy chief, Kaja Kallas, has said the sanctions package is one of the strongest yet against Russia and “we will keep raising the costs, so stopping the aggression becomes the only path forward for Moscow”.

Two women were injured in southern Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia region when a drone struck their house on Sunday, according to the regional military administration. Two more civilians were injured in the north-eastern Kharkiv province after a drone slammed into a residential building, local Ukrainian officials said.

Drones struck a leafy square in the centre of Sumy later on Sunday, wounding a woman and her seven-year-old son, officials said. The strike also damaged a power line, leaving about 100 households without electricity, according to Serhii Krivosheienko of the municipal military administration.

Ukraine’s air force said it shot down 18 of 57 Shahed-type and decoy drones launched by Russia overnight into Sunday, with seven more disappearing from radar. Russia’s defence ministry said its forces shot down 93 Ukrainian drones targeting Russian territory overnight, including at least 15 that appeared to head for Moscow.

Ten more Ukrainian drones were downed on the approach to the Russian capital on Sunday, according to mayor Sergei Sobyanin. He said one drone struck a residential building in Zelenograd, on Moscow’s outskirts, damaging an apartment but causing no casualties.

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© Photograph: Mikhail Metzel/AP

© Photograph: Mikhail Metzel/AP

© Photograph: Mikhail Metzel/AP

Four arrested under Terrorism Act during Liverpool pro-Palestine protest

21 juillet 2025 à 01:28

Merseyside police says material in support of Palestine Action was reportedly seen in possession of protesters

Four people were arrested on suspicion of terrorism offences during a pro-Palestine protest in Liverpool city centre on Sunday afternoon, police said.

Merseyside police said material in support of campaign group Palestine Action was reportedly seen in the possession of a small number of protesters at the regular march for Liverpool Friends of Palestine.

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© Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

© Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

© Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

Children of elderly UK couple jailed by Taliban call for release before they ‘die in custody’

20 juillet 2025 à 23:37

Barbie Reynolds, 76, and husband Peter, 80, have been held for five-and-a-half months without charge

The children of an elderly couple imprisoned by the Taliban in Afghanistan have urged the group to release the pair before they “die in custody”.

They said the UN would be making a statement on Monday calling for the immediate release of Barbie Reynolds, 76, and her husband Peter, 80, who were arrested as they travelled to their home in Bamyan province, central Afghanistan, in February.

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© Photograph: BBC

© Photograph: BBC

© Photograph: BBC

Reçu hier — 20 juillet 2025The Guardian

‘Coupledom is very oppressing’: Swedish author Gun-Britt Sundström on the revival of her cult anti-marriage novel

20 juillet 2025 à 21:00

As her million-selling 70s novel, Engagement, is translated into English for the first time, the Swedish author talks about life at 80, finding the ideal love, and why her generation were freer than today’s young people

At a glance, Engagement, Gun-Britt Sundström’s classic novel of the 1970s, looks like a conventional story of young student love floundering in the face of ambivalence. The 79-year-old author, who is speaking via video call while cat-sitting for her son at his house outside Stockholm, has been taken aback by the novel’s return to favour. For a long time, Sundström tried to distance herself from Engagement, as writers will of their most famous book. But readers wouldn’t let her forget, and now, with publication of the first English translation, the million-plus-selling novelist and translator is enjoying a resurgence. Recently, says Sundström, “a young woman – in her 50s, which is young to me nowadays! – told me she had been given the book as a present from her father at 16 and it had changed her life. It had made her feel seen.” Sundström shrugs as if to say: this is nuts, but what can you do?

Engagement is not, after all, a traditional love story, but a study of a young woman’s fierce resistance to what she feels is the oppressive effect of being loved by a man. Martina and Gustav meet at college. Gustav wants their relationship to progress along traditional lines, an ambition that, Martina feels, risks leading her like a sleepwalker into a tedious, conventional life. At the casual level the pair’s relationship is loving and stable, but, observes Martina caustically, “Gustav is building so many structures on top of it that it’s shaking underneath them”. She wants to be loved but she also wants to be alone. She wants Gustav to stop repeating himself. When he asks her what’s wrong, she muses, “you can’t answer something like that. You can’t tell someone who wants to be with you always that he should be reasonable and ration himself out a little – if I saw you half as often, I would like you four times as much – no, you can’t say that.”

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© Photograph: PR

© Photograph: PR

© Photograph: PR

Government launches Orgreave inquiry, 40 years after clashes at miners’ strike

Move follows decades of campaigning over violent policing and collapsed prosecutions at South Yorkshire coking plant

More than four decades after the violent policing at Orgreave during the miners’ strike and a failed prosecution criticised as a police “frame up”, the government has established a statutory inquiry into the scandal.

The home secretary, Yvette Cooper, announced the inquiry having informed campaigners last Thursday at the site in South Yorkshire where the Orgreave coking plant was located.

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© Photograph: PA/PA Archive/Press Association Ima

© Photograph: PA/PA Archive/Press Association Ima

© Photograph: PA/PA Archive/Press Association Ima

Scottie Scheffler claims Open Championship with majestic four-shot win

20 juillet 2025 à 20:38
  • American world No 1 ends on 17 under at Royal Portrush

  • Rory McIlroy finishes at 10 under after final round of 69

Never in doubt. Never remotely in doubt. It was Scottie Scheffler: why on earth would it be?

Anybody hoping for a keenly contested Open Sunday was to be sorely disappointed. Make that 10 times Scheffler has held a 54-hole lead and 10 times he has converted.

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© Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian

© Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian

© Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian

Euros continue to serve up goal fest as playing styles collide to dazzling effect | Jonathan Liew

20 juillet 2025 à 20:00

With three matches to go, the tournament in Switzerland is clear of the 2022 edition in goals per game, but what’s behind all the extra scoring?

And frankly, have you not been entertained? If, of course, we are willing to stretch our definition of “entertainment” to include some of the other popular sensations. Suspense. Terror. Existential despair. Cold sweating. Temporary breakdown of the nervous system. Loud screaming at inanimate items of electrical equipment.

But as we approach the final week of this operatic Women’s European Championship, this tournament has a fair claim to be one of the most thrilling in recent memory. And not just on the more intangible metrics: noise, penalty drama, side-eye, flying saves, players singing unprompted into pitch-side microphones, quality of fan walks. With three matches remaining, Euro 2025 has surpassed Euro 2022 in terms of goals, averaging a staggering half a goal more (3.57 against 3.06).

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© Photograph: Harry Langer/DeFodi Images/Shutterstock

© Photograph: Harry Langer/DeFodi Images/Shutterstock

© Photograph: Harry Langer/DeFodi Images/Shutterstock

Ice chief says he will continue to allow agents to wear masks during arrest raids

20 juillet 2025 à 19:26

Legal advocates and attorneys general argue practice poses accountability issues and contributes to a climate of fear

The head of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) said on Sunday that he will continue allowing the controversial practice of his officers wearing masks over their faces during their arrest raids.

As Donald Trump has ramped up his unprecedented effort to deport immigrants around the country, Ice officers have become notorious for wearing masks to approach and detain people, often with force. Legal advocates and attorneys general have argued that it poses accountability issues and contributes to a climate of fear.

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© Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

© Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

© Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

Tour de France: Alaphilippe celebrates on stage 15 … but discovers Wellens won long before him

20 juillet 2025 à 19:16
  • Radio damage meant Alaphilippe unaware of Belgian’s win

  • Wellens had crossed line over a minute before Frenchman

French stage wins in the Tour de France are increasingly rare, so when they do happen, there are wild cele­brations. Julian Alaphilippe, the former world road race champion, raised his arms in triumph in Carcassonne, thinking he had won, only to be told seconds later that he had in fact ­finished third behind two Belgians.

Ahead of the crestfallen Alaphilippe, Tadej ­Pogacar’s Emirates-XRG teammate Tim Wellens took a solo win on stage 15 of the Tour, well ahead of compatriot Victor Campanaerts, a teammate to Jonas Vingegaard.

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© Photograph: Christophe Petit-Tesson/EPA

© Photograph: Christophe Petit-Tesson/EPA

© Photograph: Christophe Petit-Tesson/EPA

Trump demands Guardians and Commanders revert to previous names out of respect for Native Americans

20 juillet 2025 à 19:02
  • NFL’s Commanders changed name in 2020

  • MLB’s Guardians switched in 2022

Donald Trump demanded in a Truth Social post on Sunday that the NFL’s Washington Commanders and MLB’s Cleveland Guardians revert to their old names, both of which were abandoned in recent years due to being racially insensitive to Native Americans.

“The Washington ‘Whatever’s’ [sic] should IMMEDIATELY change their name back,” the post read in part. “There is a big clamoring for this … Our great Indian people, in massive numbers, want this to happen. Their heritage and prestige is systematically being taken away from them. Times are different now than they were three or four years ago.”

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© Photograph: Scott Taetsch/Getty Images

© Photograph: Scott Taetsch/Getty Images

© Photograph: Scott Taetsch/Getty Images

Superbugs could kill millions more and cost $2tn a year by 2050, models show

Exclusive: Research on burden of antibiotic resistance for 122 countries predicts dire economic and health outcomes

Superbugs could cause millions more people to die worldwide and cost the global economy just under $2tn a year by 2050, modelling shows.

A UK government-funded study shows that without concerted action, increased rates of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) could lead to global annual GDP losses of $1.7tn over the next quarter of a century.

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© Photograph: Fabrizio Bensch/Reuters

© Photograph: Fabrizio Bensch/Reuters

© Photograph: Fabrizio Bensch/Reuters

Two seriously injured as car crashes into barn roof in Germany

20 juillet 2025 à 18:31

Vehicle veered off road in Bohmte, hit a boy on a trampoline then catapulted into the air, police say

Police in northwestern Germany said on Sunday that several people were injured when a car veered off a road, hit a seven-year-old boy on a trampoline and crashed into a barn roof on its side.

Police said that the car first collided with a parked vehicle in the town of Bohmte, broke through a hedge and drove into a garden where it hit the boy.

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© Photograph: Torben Kipp/AP

© Photograph: Torben Kipp/AP

© Photograph: Torben Kipp/AP

The Guardian view on Europe’s failing economic orthodoxy: social contracts cannot be renewed through cuts | Editorial

20 juillet 2025 à 18:30

The French prime minister, François Bayrou, has become the latest leader to target the less well-off in order to balance the books

As European politicians begin to pack their suitcases and head to the beach, they do so against a domestic backdrop that begins to look distinctly ominous. In Britain and France, nationalist populist parties consistently lead in the polls. In Germany, the particularly extreme Alternative für Deutschland is neck and neck with the conservative CDU. Specific dynamics might vary but the unsettling pattern is the same – large swaths of voters increasingly identify with authoritarian and often xenophobic political forces.

Prolonged post-industrial malaise, wage stagnation and austerity have precipitated this wave of disaffection with the mainstream, especially among the less well-off. Yet in London, Paris and Berlin, governments of the centre-left and centre-right seem intent on alienating disillusioned electorates still further. During his visit to London last week, the German chancellor, Friedrich Merz, heralded a new strategic partnership for changed times between Germany, Britain and France. But a much-needed economic reset, which dismantles failed fiscal orthodoxies, seems as far away as ever.

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© Photograph: Raphaël Lafargue/ABACA/Shutterstock

© Photograph: Raphaël Lafargue/ABACA/Shutterstock

© Photograph: Raphaël Lafargue/ABACA/Shutterstock

The Guardian view on mitochondrial donation: IVF innovation leads to a cautious genetic triumph | Editorial

20 juillet 2025 à 18:25

UK research has brought real hope to families suffering from one of the most common inherited disorders, with a breakthrough that’s been years in the making

Eight babies have been born free of a disease that can lead to terrible suffering and early death, thanks to pioneering scientists in the UK employing a form of genetic engineering that is banned in some countries, including the US and France. Ten years ago, when the government and regulators were considering whether to allow mitochondrial transfer technology, critics warned of “Frankenstein meddling” that would lead to three-parent children. It’s hard now to justify such hostility in the face of the painstaking work carried out by the scientific and medical teams at Newcastle, resulting in these healthy babies and ecstatic families.

Mitochondria, like tiny battery packs, supply energy to every cell of the body. Their DNA is handed down in the egg from mother to child. In rare instances, there are genetic mutations, which means the baby may develop mitochondrial disease. About one in 5,000 people is affected by it, making it one of the most common inherited disorders. As the cell batteries fail in various organs, the child can experience a range of symptoms, from muscle weakness to epilepsy, encephalopathy, blindness, hearing loss and diabetes. In severe cases, they die young.

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

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© Photograph: Newcastle University/PA

© Photograph: Newcastle University/PA

© Photograph: Newcastle University/PA

What the culture war over Superman gets wrong | Noel Ransome

20 juillet 2025 à 18:00

Rightwing commentators are furious over the superhero’s positioning as an immigrant. But his story was crafted to cushion unease

We’ve entered the era of the superhero movie as sermon. No longer content with saving the world, spandex saviors are now being used to explain, moralize and therapize it. And a being from Krypton has shown up once again in a debate about real life; about borders, race and who gets to belong.

Superman. Of all symbols.

I’ve read reactionary thinkpieces, rage-filled quote tweets and screeds about the legal status of a fictional alien – enough to lose count. This particular episode of American Fragility kicked off because James Gunn had the audacity to call Superman “the story of America”. An immigrant, by definition, as he was always meant to be.

Noel Ransome is a Toronto-based freelance writer

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© Photograph: Everett Collection Inc/Alamy

© Photograph: Everett Collection Inc/Alamy

© Photograph: Everett Collection Inc/Alamy

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