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index.feed.received.today — 6 mai 2025

En direct, Proche-Orient : Donald Trump dit que les Etats-Unis vont « aider les habitants de Gaza à se procurer de la nourriture »

6 mai 2025 à 06:34
Selon le président américain, « le Hamas rend les choses impossibles parce qu’il récupère tout ce qui entre » dans le territoire palestinien. Le cabinet de sécurité israélien a, lui, approuvé une extension des opérations militaires visant à la « conquête » de l’enclave.

© EYAD BABA / AFP

Des Palestiniens font la queue pour obtenir une portion de nourriture chaude distribuée dans le camp de réfugiés de Nousseirat, dans le centre de la bande de Gaza, le 5 mai 2025.

Inde-Pakistan : l’affrontement de deux nationalismes en roue libre

6 mai 2025 à 06:30
Depuis la partition de 1947, les deux pays ne cessent de se déchirer autour de la région autonome du Cachemire, afin de récupérer la souveraineté totale sur ce territoire stratégique.

© SHAHID SAEED MIRZA / AFP

Des militants du Parti du peuple pakistanais frappent une effigie de Narendra Modi lors d’une manifestation contre l’Inde, à Multan (Pakistan), le 4 mai 2025.

Annonces des remasters d’Ecco et d’un nouveau jeu Ecco inédit

6 mai 2025 à 06:12
Annonces Des Remasters Decco Et Dun Nouveau Jeu Ecco Inedit.jpg
Ed Annunziata, le créateur d’Ecco the Dolphin, a annoncé lors d’une interview avec Xbox Wire que des remasters d’Ecco the Dolphin et d’Ecco: The Tides of Time sont en préparation. Une fois ces projets terminés, lui et l’équipe originale travailleront sur un tout nouveau troisième opus destiné aux joueurs d’aujourd’hui. Ce post sur Xbox Wire […]

Xiaomi, Oppo, Honor... les marques chinoises préparent un monde mobile sans Google.

OPPO-A80-5G

Plusieurs poids lourds chinois du smartphone, comme Xiaomi, Oppo, OnePlus ou Honor, semblent préparer activement un avenir moins dépendant de Google et de son écosystème Android. En développant leurs propres systèmes d'exploitation et en collaborant entre eux, ils élaborent un "Plan B" stratégique. Est-ce la fin annoncée de la domination de Google sur nos téléphones ?

Ukrainian drones target Moscow for second night

6 mai 2025 à 06:07

Apartment building hit and debris falls on highway, according to reports, with major airports serving Russian capital temporarily closed

Ukrainian drones targeted Moscow for the second night in a row, forcing the temporary closure of the capital’s airports, Russia’s military reported.

The consecutive attacks came ahead of Moscow marking this week the 80th anniversary of the victory of the Soviet Union and its allies over Germany in the second world war. Vladimir Putin has tried to call a three-day ceasefire for the 8-10 May anniversary; however Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, has characterised the idea as self-serving and pointless unless it lasts 30 days in line with a US proposal that Putin has ignored.

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© Photograph: Viacheslav Ratynskyi/Reuters

© Photograph: Viacheslav Ratynskyi/Reuters

What to Know About Germany’s New Government

6 mai 2025 à 06:01
The choice of ministers points to a tolerance for political risk, but it also assembles a team of loyalists around the new chancellor and vice chancellor.

© Tobias Schwarz/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Friedrich Merz, the leader of Germany’s conservative Christian Democratic Union, in Berlin on Monday.

‘We know what is happening, we cannot walk away’: how the Guardian bore witness to horror in former Yugoslavia

6 mai 2025 à 06:00

During the decade-long conflicts, the major powers dithered as Serb militias carried out their brutal campaigns of ethnic cleansing. Guardian reporters became more passionate and more outspoken in their condemnation, attracting praise and criticism

Among many courageous correspondents covering the war in the former Yugoslavia, the reporting of Ed Vulliamy and Maggie O’Kane received plaudits and numerous awards. Both were inexorably drawn to where the action was, and wrote unblinking, vivid accounts. But what made their work controversial was their refusal to be neutral. For many journalists, including some of their colleagues at the Guardian, it was vital to maintain the distinction between being a witness – a “neutral” observer – and becoming actively caught up in the conflict. Some felt they crossed a line that should not have been crossed.

The war – a series of ethnic conflicts that started in 1991 and lasted for nearly a decade – left more than 200,000 dead and 1 million displaced. During the course of their reporting, Vulliamy and O’Kane became involved partisans, in the cause of the Bosnian Muslims, in particular. For O’Kane, “There really was no parity of guilt in this”. Vulliamy, too, saw the Muslims, more than any others, as the “victim people” of the war, and his reporting became a passionate indictment of their oppressors.

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© Photograph: Sean Smith/The Guardian

© Photograph: Sean Smith/The Guardian

Many in US and western Europe think ‘third world war likely within five to 10 years’

Exclusive: Poll before 80th anniversary of VE Day finds tensions with Russia seen as most probable cause

Eighty years after the second world war, polling shows many Americans and western Europeans believe an even more devastating third global conflict could break out within a decade, with tensions with Russia seen as the most probable cause.

As Europe prepares to mark the 80th anniversary of VE Day, the YouGov polling also showed large majorities felt that events during and before the second world war were relevant today and must continue to be taught to younger generations.

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© Photograph: RomoloTavani/Getty Images/iStockphoto

© Photograph: RomoloTavani/Getty Images/iStockphoto

‘Women designing for women’: the new wave dominating UK high street

6 mai 2025 à 06:00

Whistles recruits ex-Topshop design chief, while M&S, Uniqlo and Cos thrive with women in top creative roles

The health of the British high street is a much-discussed topic in fashion. The latest secret weapon set to resuscitate the sector? A wave of female designers at much-loved brands.

Jacqui Markham, previously the design director at Topshop and Asos, was named the new creative director at Whistles last week. She joins Maddy Evans, promoted to director of womenswear at Marks & Spencer this year, and Clare Waight Keller, the former Givenchy designer who joined Uniqlo last year. Meanwhile, Cos, the fashion insiders’ current favourite, has had Karin Gustafsson at the design helm since the brand began in 2006.

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© Photograph: William Barton/Alamy

© Photograph: William Barton/Alamy

How old are we really? What a test can tell us about our biological age – podcast

Direct to consumer tests that claim to tell us our biological – as opposed to chronological – age are getting a lot of attention, but what can they really tell us about our health? Science editor Ian Sample talks to Dr Brian H Chen, an epidemiologist at the California Pacific Medical Center Research Institute, who has conducted research into a variety of these tests called epigenetic clocks. He explains what exactly they are measuring and whether, once we have the results, there are any evidence-based strategies we can adopt to lower our biological age

Real age versus biological age: the startups revealing how old we really are

Support the Guardian: theguardian.com/sciencepod

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© Photograph: Alexey Kotelnikov/Alamy

© Photograph: Alexey Kotelnikov/Alamy

‘You feel the huge weight of history’: the room where Nazi Germany surrendered

6 mai 2025 à 06:00

Military armistice ending second world war was signed in this nondescript Reims schoolhouse before VE Day

For a building that witnessed one of the pivotal moments of European history, it is oddly unremarkable: a nondescript red-brick schoolhouse on an unexceptional street on the wrong side of the railway tracks in Reims, eastern France.

In May 1945 it was the Collège Moderne et Technique. Students came and went. Passersby may have wondered, briefly, at the two US military police officers outside the doors, but Americans were everywhere – the city had been liberated in August 1944.

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© Photograph: Magali Delporte/The Guardian

© Photograph: Magali Delporte/The Guardian

Why Europe needs a common defence fund – outside the EU | Simon Nixon

6 mai 2025 à 06:00

It would be open to the UK, Norway and Switzerland, and give governments more bang for their buck as the continent rearms

Of all the shocks to have hit Europe over the past three months, none is more devastating than the realisation that the continent may no longer be able to count on a US security guarantee. Even if Donald Trump’s disdain for Europe had been telegraphed well in advance, few imagined a world in which a US president would publicly humiliate the head of state of a European ally in the Oval Office, cut off intelligence sharing in the middle of a war or cook up a one-sided peace deal with Russia over the heads of Kyiv and its European allies.

What has made the shock worse is the brutal revelation of Europe’s inability to defend its own interests. Even as European leaders plead with Trump that a peace without robust security guarantees for Ukraine is no peace at all, their position is fatally weakened by the fact that they are in no position to provide those security guarantees themselves. When JD Vance and Pete Hegseth accused Europeans of being pathetic freeloaders in a leaked chat, the barb was all the more hurtful because it was partly true. Britain and France have struggled even to put together a “coalition of the willing” that can provide a bare-bones peacekeeping force, let alone make up for the loss of critical US air defence and battlefield intelligence should America withdraw entirely.

Simon Nixon is a journalist and economics commentator

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© Photograph: Wojtek Radwański/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Wojtek Radwański/AFP/Getty Images

Eluned Morgan to set out ‘red Welsh way’ in speech criticising Starmer

Exclusive: First minister of Wales hoping to counter threats to Welsh Labour from Reform and Plaid Cymru

The Welsh first minister will criticise Keir Starmer’s welfare reforms in a major speech on Tuesday, saying she will pursue a leftwing “red Welsh way” and put a clear dividing line between Welsh Labour and the national party.

Eluned Morgan will distance herself from Starmer’s government in a speech on Tuesday billed by allies as a reset moment for Welsh Labour to counter the threats from Reform UK and Plaid Cymru.

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© Photograph: Dimitris Legakis/The Guardian

© Photograph: Dimitris Legakis/The Guardian

‘It’s the misogyny slop ecosystem!’ How Candace Owens and the American right declared war on Blake Lively

6 mai 2025 à 06:00

Remember Johnny Depp v Amber Heard? If you thought that was ugly, wait till you see Blake Lively v Justin Baldoni. As the stars of It Ends With Us swap lawsuits over claims of sexual harassment, the conservative media has picked its side – and it’s not pulling any punches

Rarely has a film been so un-presciently named as It Ends With Us. This domestic abuse drama was released in August 2024 and was a huge success, earning over $350m worldwide. But that was only the beginning. What has followed is an offscreen conflagration that is not only threatening to consume the careers of the film’s lead actors, Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni, but continues to set social media and the entertainment industry ablaze. We’ve still got a long way to go before it really ends – a trial is set for March 2026.

It’s easy to see why this case attracted so much attention initially – everyone loves a good celebrity dust-up – but having begun as just another Hollywood feud destined to be adapted into a prestige miniseries a decade hence, the Lively/Baldoni saga is morphing into something larger and possibly more ominous.

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© Composite: Frazer Harrison/Getty Images; Roy Rochlin/FilmMagic,

© Composite: Frazer Harrison/Getty Images; Roy Rochlin/FilmMagic,

Two top job openings in UK policing get one applicant each

Candidates for Merseyside chief constable and Met deputy commissioner set to be appointed without competition

Two of the most senior jobs in British policing paying more than £200,000 a year have attracted only one applicant each, the Guardian has learned.

The roles were deputy commissioner of the Metropolitan police and chief constable of Merseyside police, based in Liverpool.

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© Photograph: James Manning/PA

© Photograph: James Manning/PA

L’administration Trump s’attaque aux revues savantes

6 mai 2025 à 06:00
Plusieurs journaux américains ont reçu un courrier inquisiteur du procureur fédéral du district de Columbia, leur reprochant d’être partisans dans le débat scientifique. Deux revues financées par des fonds fédéraux ont, elles, suspendu la réception des manuscrits.

© ADRIA FRUITOS

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