↩ Accueil

Vue normale

Reçu aujourd’hui — 23 juillet 2025The Guardian

Want to import toxic chemicals into Britain with scant scrutiny? Labour says: go right ahead | George Monbiot

23 juillet 2025 à 07:00

Jacob Rees-Mogg’s Tory fantasy of a post-Brexit bonfire of regulations is coming true. Our bodies and ecosystems will pay the price

It’s what the extreme right of the Tory party wanted from Brexit: to tear down crucial public protections, including those that defend us from the most brutal and dangerous forms of capital. The Conservatives lost office before they were able to do their worst. But never mind, because Labour has now picked up the baton.

A month ago, so quietly that most of us missed it, the government published a consultation on deregulating chemicals. While most consultations last for 12 weeks, this one runs for eight, half of which cover the holiday period – it closes on 18 August. The intention is set out at the beginning: to reduce “costs to business”. This, as repeated statements by Keir Starmer make clear, means tearing up the rules.

George Monbiot is a Guardian columnist

Continue reading...

© Composite: Guardian Design/Getty Images

© Composite: Guardian Design/Getty Images

© Composite: Guardian Design/Getty Images

Dover asylum protests pose danger to small boat arrivals, charities say

23 juillet 2025 à 07:00

Home Office orders diversion from usual landing place to Ramsgate to avoid clashes with far right

Charities have warned of the increasing danger to asylum seekers posed by far-right protesters after small boat arrivals were moved from their usual landing place in Dover to further along the coast to avoid clashes.

The Guardian understands that Home Office officials received intelligence that some of those participating in what was billed the Great British National Protest in Dover on Saturday afternoon could have been planning to target Kent Intake Unit, where small boat arrivals are initially processed after being escorted to shore in Dover by the Border Force.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Lab Ky Mo/SOPA Images/Shutterstock

© Photograph: Lab Ky Mo/SOPA Images/Shutterstock

© Photograph: Lab Ky Mo/SOPA Images/Shutterstock

Ministers urged to help students trapped in Gaza with places at UK universities

23 juillet 2025 à 07:00

Forty people who have been offered scholarships unable to travel without biometric data they have no way of getting

Pressure is mounting on ministers to intervene on behalf of 40 students in Gaza who have been offered full scholarships to study at UK universities, but are unable to take up their places this September because of government red tape.

A high-level meeting is understood to have taken place at the Home Office on Tuesday after MPs and campaigners highlighted the students’ plight, calling on ministers to take action to help secure their safe passage to the UK. Some students are reported to have been killed while waiting, while others are said to be in constant danger.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Benjamin John/Alamy

© Photograph: Benjamin John/Alamy

© Photograph: Benjamin John/Alamy

Eurostar calls for ‘credible’ Channel rail strategy as monopoly decision looms

23 juillet 2025 à 07:00

Operator says if rivals are allowed to squeeze into existing facilities it could jeopardise its investment

Eurostar has urged the UK government to choose a “credible long-term strategy” for international rail or risk “falling behind” the rest of Europe, before a crucial decision by the regulator that could end its cross-Channel monopoly.

The high-speed train operator warned that a “premature” ruling from the Office of Rail and Road (ORR) to allow competitors to squeeze trains into existing facilities could jeopardise its planned investment and expansion.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Gareth Fuller/PA

© Photograph: Gareth Fuller/PA

© Photograph: Gareth Fuller/PA

Puff tart and brown sugar loaf – Alexina Anatole’s courgette recipes

23 juillet 2025 à 07:00

Turn this summer favourite into a savoury lunchtime tart or a warm spiced bake

Summer courgettes seem to multiply faster than we can cook them, and demand a little more of our love from June through to August. But despite their unruliness as a crop, they are mild-mannered in flavour, a culinary chameleon that partners with a wide range of tastes. From the umami punch of parmesan to the fragrant cut-through of citrus, and from the warmth of cinnamon to the char of the barbecue, these green gourds can be used in myriad ways, shining in sweet and savoury contexts alike.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Rita Platts/The Guardian. Food styling: Hanna Miller. Prop styling: Rachel Vere. Food styling assistant: Isobel Clarke.

© Photograph: Rita Platts/The Guardian. Food styling: Hanna Miller. Prop styling: Rachel Vere. Food styling assistant: Isobel Clarke.

© Photograph: Rita Platts/The Guardian. Food styling: Hanna Miller. Prop styling: Rachel Vere. Food styling assistant: Isobel Clarke.

Trump administration asks tiny Pacific nation of Palau to accept migrants deported from US

23 juillet 2025 à 06:56

Palau, a country of just 18,000, is considering a draft agreement to resettle ‘third country nationals’ from the US

The Trump administration has requested that the small Pacific nation of Palau accept asylum seekers currently residing in the US, amid a wider push from the US to deport migrants to countries they are not from.

Palau, a country of about 18,000 that lies just east of the Philippines, is considering a draft agreement to resettle “third country nationals” from the US who “may seek protection and against return to their home country”. The draft agreement does not detail how many individuals may be sent to Palau, nor what the Pacific nation would receive in return.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Hollie Adams/Reuters

© Photograph: Hollie Adams/Reuters

© Photograph: Hollie Adams/Reuters

‘Total infiltration’: How plastics industry swamped vital global treaty talks

Petrostates and well-funded lobbyists at UN-hosted talks are derailing a deal to cut plastic production and protect people and the planet

Being surrounded and yelled at about “misrepresenting reality” is not how serious United Nations-hosted negotiations are meant to proceed. But that is what happened to Prof Bethanie Carney Almroth during talks about a global treaty to slash plastic pollution in Ottawa, Canada. The employees of a large US chemicals company “formed a ring” around her, she says.

At another event in Ottawa, Carney Almroth was “harassed and intimidated” by a plastic packaging representative, who barged into the room and shouted that she was fearmongering and pushing misinformation. That meeting was an official event organised by the UN. “So I filed the harassment reports with the UN,” said Carney Almroth. “The guy had to apologise, and then he left the meeting. He was at the next meeting.”

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Timur Matahari/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Timur Matahari/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Timur Matahari/AFP/Getty Images

‘You think God didn’t make gay men?’ Comedian Leslie Jones on religion, grief and getting famous at 47

23 juillet 2025 à 06:00

She was Saturday Night Live’s oldest hire, then faced a torrent of abuse after her role in the Ghostbusters reboot. She talks about the deaths of her mum, dad and brother – and why she’s given up dating men

It’s early evening in a photography studio in west London, and the American comedian Leslie Jones is capering about, dressed in a full-length gold lamé ballgown and smoking. “Make me look skinny,” she says to the photographer’s departing back.

“I’m 6ft tall – I can’t cut my feet off,” she says, later. “I can’t stop being a scary motherfucker. This is who I am – let me work with who I am.” Yet, she is the opposite of scary. Statuesque, no question, but whatever she’s doing, whether peering into a bag of fish and chips as if it’s alive, or telling her assistant to read The Alchemist, Paulo Coelho’s trust-the-universe novel, for the 100th time, there is always somebody laughing. She brings an air of deliberate chaos, which you just have to surrender to, wherever the conversation leads, until you find yourself nodding along with the most crackpot conclusion. (The birthrate is low because men spend too much time in hot tubs, and their sperm has become lazy and complacent? “It’s funny, but it’s true. Go look that shit up – I’m not saying something that’s not factual. I hope.”)

Continue reading...

© Photograph: David Levene/The Guardian

© Photograph: David Levene/The Guardian

© Photograph: David Levene/The Guardian

Indian prime minister makes UK state visit to sign landmark trade deal

23 juillet 2025 à 06:00

Britain’s car and whisky industries set for boost while India gets visa concessions, but some sensitive issues unresolved

India’s prime minister, Narendra Modi, is visiting London to sign a landmark free trade agreement between his country and the UK, a pact viewed as a political and economic prize amid global trade tensions unleashed by the US president, Donald Trump.

For Britain, eager to score a post-Brexit win, the deal is its most economically significant trade agreement since leaving the EU. For India, it marks its first major free trade pact outside Asia. For both, analysts say, the agreement signals a long-term economic partnership.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: WPA/Getty Images

© Photograph: WPA/Getty Images

© Photograph: WPA/Getty Images

Washington Black review – the romantic bits could have been stolen from a bad pop song

23 juillet 2025 à 06:00

Atrocious dialogue, ludicrous plot, nausea-inducing love scenes: this adaptation of Esi Edugyan’s novel about the era of transatlantic slavery is highly wobbly. Luckily, it’s also highly watchable

Esi Edugyan’s 2018 novel Washington Black is an unorthodox, steampunk-infused account of the era when transatlantic slavery cast a dark shadow over much of the world. Its hero is George Washington Black – or Wash for short – a Black boy of 11, growing up on a Barbados plantation. He becomes the protege of a well-meaning white scientist, Titch (who happens to be the brother of Wash’s merciless master, Erasmus). Together they work on crafting the “Cloud Cutter”, an experimental airship that offers them an escape from the plantation when Wash is accused of murder – but which crashes over the Atlantic during a storm. Spoiler alert: the pair make it out of that episode alive, with Wash fleeing to Virginia, and later Canada.

A Guardian review described scenes from the novel as “[unfolding] with a Tarantino-esque savagery”, and the book doesn’t shy away from graphic depictions of violence and suicide, nor frequent use of the N-word. It is also described as having a “fairytale atmosphere” – something the Disney-owned Hulu homed in on above all else. As a TV series, Washington Black feels less like a grownup drama and more like the sort of quasi-historical show that teachers play to their pupils as an end-of-term treat.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Chris Reardon/AP

© Photograph: Chris Reardon/AP

© Photograph: Chris Reardon/AP

‘Long-lived and lucky’ ship wrecked off Orkney was at siege of Quebec, experts find

23 juillet 2025 à 06:00

Archaeologists and volunteers identify Sanday timbers as from 18th-century Royal Navy frigate turned whaler

When a schoolboy running on a beach on the island of Sanday in Orkney last year came across the timbers of a shipwreck that had been exposed after a storm, local people knew the ship might have an intriguing history.

Residents of the tiny island at the edge of the Scottish archipelago are familiar with ships that have come to grief in stormy seas, hundreds of shipwrecks having been recorded there over the centuries.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Paul Sharman/Orkney Islands Council/PA

© Photograph: Paul Sharman/Orkney Islands Council/PA

© Photograph: Paul Sharman/Orkney Islands Council/PA

‘War is very funny for the first couple of years’: how Russia’s invasion transformed Ukraine’s comedy scene

23 juillet 2025 à 06:00

Standup has become an escape for many as the conflict drags on, and comics see dark humour as part of their mission to ‘stop people going crazy’

Anton Tymoshenko is exhausted. Ukraine’s most famous standup comedian – Volodymyr Zelenskyy doesn’t count, since he is the president – has just returned from a gruelling European tour, involving 36 shows in 50 days. He played in Berlin, Paris and London. And Birmingham, where Tymoshenko tried unsuccessfully to buy Peaky Blinders merchandise.

His audiences were made up of Ukrainians living abroad, many refugees. The tour raised nearly half a million dollars, all of which will go to Ukraine’s armed forces.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Anastasia Vlasova/The Guardian

© Photograph: Anastasia Vlasova/The Guardian

© Photograph: Anastasia Vlasova/The Guardian

Chinese officials warn women comedians that men are no laughing matter

Par :Reuters
23 juillet 2025 à 05:50

The warning comes after a string of shows by women comedians joking about men went viral

Chinese provincial officials have warned comedians against stirring up discord between the genders, instructing them to criticise constructively rather than “for the sake of being funny”.

The warning came from authorities in eastern Zhejiang province on WeChat over the weekend after a comedian referred to her allegedly abusive marriage in a performance that went viral on Chinese social media.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Sergio Azenha/Alamy

© Photograph: Sergio Azenha/Alamy

© Photograph: Sergio Azenha/Alamy

Total recall? Campaigners employ quirk of Taiwan’s political system to turn on ‘pro-China’ candidates

23 juillet 2025 à 04:52

Activists across Taiwan are pushing for the expulsion of dozens of ‘pro-Beijing’ legislators, leading to uproar

On a steamy night deep in one of Taipei’s most conservative suburbs, a group of elderly neighbours are yelling at each other next to a garbage truck. They have just been handed a leaflet by a university student calling on them to recall – expel – their sitting legislator.

There are hundreds of these campaigners across Taiwan, targeting members of the Kuomintang (KMT) opposition who they accuse of being too pro-China. But this neighbourhood is deeply loyal to the party, and the campaigners are not welcome.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: I-Hwa Cheng/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: I-Hwa Cheng/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: I-Hwa Cheng/AFP/Getty Images

Trump announces Japan trade deal amid speculation over future of PM Ishiba

23 juillet 2025 à 02:01

Tokyo’s failure to secure a US trade deal sooner had caused political uproar and economic uncertainty in Japan, with the prime minister reportedly considering his future

Donald Trump has announced a trade deal with Japan, potentially resolving weeks of fraught negotiations between the two allies which had caused economic uncertainty in Tokyo and mounting speculation over the future of prime minister Shigeru Ishiba.

“We just completed a massive Deal with Japan,” the US president announced in a post online, adding “Japan will invest, at my direction, $550 Billion Dollars into the United States.”

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Kent Nishimura/Reuters

© Photograph: Kent Nishimura/Reuters

© Photograph: Kent Nishimura/Reuters

Obama breaks silence on Trump’s ‘outrageous’ call to prosecute him

23 juillet 2025 à 01:47

Office of ex-US president breaks precedent and warns that allegations of attempted ‘coup’ are ‘attempt at distraction’

Barack Obama has broken his silence on calls from Donald Trump for him to be prosecuted by unequivocally rejecting his successor’s accusations that he tried to engineer a “coup” following Trump’s 2016 election victory by “manufacturing” evidence of Russian interference.

Obama’s office took the unusual step of issuing an emphatic refutation after Trump told reporters that his predecessor had “[tried] to lead a coup” against him and was guilty of “treason” over intelligence assessments suggesting that Russia had intervened to help Trump defeat Hillary Clinton in the campaign.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Erin Hooley/AP

© Photograph: Erin Hooley/AP

© Photograph: Erin Hooley/AP

Lionesses stumble into final through blind luck but Agyemang offers glimpse of future | Jonathan Liew

23 juillet 2025 à 01:07

This generation of great England footballers has had its time with Wiegman’s staunch loyalty to the class of 2022 exposing limitations

Hannah Hampton is up for the corner. It’s the fourth minute of injury time in the Euro 2025 semi-final. Every England player bar Chloe Kelly is within 20 yards of Italy’s goal. And as blisteringly underwhelming as England have been all night, this is still a team with an unerring sense of their own narrative, a belief in themselves, a taste for the dramatic climax.

The noise builds to a roar. The roar builds to a scream. Kelly puts her corner straight into the side netting. Hampton hangs her head and gallops back into more familiar territory. End of the road. England are done.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Jose Breton/NurPhoto/Shutterstock

© Photograph: Jose Breton/NurPhoto/Shutterstock

© Photograph: Jose Breton/NurPhoto/Shutterstock

England 2-1 Italy: Women’s Euro 2025 semi-final player ratings | Tom Garry

23 juillet 2025 à 00:14

The substitutes Michelle Agyemang and Chloe Kelly shone as the Lionesses secured dramatic passage to the final

Hannah Hampton Looked strong aerially and made a crucial save on 86 minutes, keeping England alive. 7/10

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Denis Balibouse/Reuters

© Photograph: Denis Balibouse/Reuters

© Photograph: Denis Balibouse/Reuters

Zelenskyy defends bill stripping anti-corruption bodies’ independence amid protests

23 juillet 2025 à 06:54

Move by Ukrainian president widely opposed and may prove a setback to hopes of country one day joining the EU

Volodymyr Zelenskyy has defended his approval of a contentious bill that weakens Ukraine’s anti-corruption bodies as its passage into law triggered the first serious protests against his government.

The move on Tuesday has put the president on a collision course with civil society activists and some of Ukraine’s veterans, and is likely to dismay Ukraine’s European partners.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Alessio Mamo/The Guardian

© Photograph: Alessio Mamo/The Guardian

© Photograph: Alessio Mamo/The Guardian

Qatar wants to host Olympic and Paralympic Games in 2036

22 juillet 2025 à 19:37
  • Country in discussions with IOC over staging the Games

  • A move from event’s traditional summer slot may be required

Qatar has confirmed its interest in hosting the 2036 Olympic and Paralympic Games. The country’s Olympic committee (QOC) confirmed on Tuesday it was in “ongoing discussions” with the International Olympic Committee (IOC) over staging the Games.

The Middle East nation hosted the men’s football World Cup in 2022.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Martin Meissner/AP

© Photograph: Martin Meissner/AP

© Photograph: Martin Meissner/AP

Reçu hier — 22 juillet 2025The Guardian

OpenAI CEO tells Federal Reserve confab that entire job categories will disappear due to AI

22 juillet 2025 à 23:09

Sam Altman also said AI could already diagnose better than doctors, as his company expands into Washington

During his latest trip to Washington, OpenAI’s chief executive, Sam Altman, painted a sweeping vision of an AI-dominated future in which entire job categories disappear, presidents follow ChatGPT’s recommendations and hostile nations wield artificial intelligence as a weapon of mass destruction, all while positioning his company as the indispensable architect of humanity’s technological destiny.

Speaking at the Capital Framework for Large Banks conference at the Federal Reserve board of governors, Altman told the crowd that certain job categories would be completely eliminated by AI advancement.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Mark Schiefelbein/AP

© Photograph: Mark Schiefelbein/AP

© Photograph: Mark Schiefelbein/AP

RFK Jr strides into new controversy: hiking in sweltering Arizona … in jeans

22 juillet 2025 à 23:04

US health secretary posed for photos in sweat-drenched T-shirt while hiking up Arizona mountain on 107F day

Robert F Kennedy Jr has promoted contrarian ideas around issues such as vaccines but another, more sartorial, choice has also raised eyebrows – an insistence on wearing jeans while exercising.

On Saturday, the US health secretary took a strenuous hike up Camelback Mountain, situated near Phoenix, Arizona. Despite the temperature rising above 90F (32C) on the morning of his hike – Phoenix hit 107F (41C) later that day – Kennedy conducted the hike in dark blue jeans, posing for pictures along the way in a sweat-drenched green T-shirt.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Robert F Kennedy Jr via X

© Photograph: Robert F Kennedy Jr via X

© Photograph: Robert F Kennedy Jr via X

Atlanta reporter detained by Ice ‘punished for his journalism’, rights groups say

22 juillet 2025 à 22:10

Mario Guevera, who was arrested while covering a ‘No Kings’ protest, remains detained after charges dropped

Mario Guevara, a Salvadoran journalist imprisoned in a south Georgia immigration detention center after being arrested covering a “No Kings Day” protest in June, is being “punished for his journalism”, first amendment rights groups said.

“The charges were dropped, yet he remains detained by Ice,” said José Zamora, the regional director for the Americas at the Committee to Protect Journalists, during a press conference on Tuesday morning at the Georgia capitol with Guevara’s attorneys and family. “Let’s be clear, Mario is being punished for his journalism. He is now the only journalist in prison in the US in direct retaliation for his reporting.”

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Erik S Lesser/EPA

© Photograph: Erik S Lesser/EPA

© Photograph: Erik S Lesser/EPA

Trump claims new CBS owner will gift him $20m worth of airtime after $16m settlement

22 juillet 2025 à 22:03

President says he has been promised ads and programming days after network cancels Stephen Colbert’s show

Donald Trump has claimed that the future owner of the US TV network CBS will provide him with $20m worth of advertising and programming – days after the network canceled The Late Show With Stephen Colbert.

The US president recently reached a $16m settlement with Paramount, the parent of CBS News, over what he claimed was misleading editing of a pre-election interview with the Democratic candidate for president, Kamala Harris.

Continue reading...

© Composite: EPA, Variety via Getty Images

© Composite: EPA, Variety via Getty Images

© Composite: EPA, Variety via Getty Images

❌