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Reçu aujourd’hui — 27 juillet 20256.9 📰 Infos English

Israel Says It Has Paused Some Military Activity in Gaza as Anger Grows Over Hunger

27 juillet 2025 à 13:13
Operations in three parts of the enclave were temporarily halted on Sunday to allow more aid to enter the territory, the Israeli military said. It was unclear if the decision would relieve the hunger crisis in Gaza.

© Saher Alghorra for The New York Times

Palestinians waiting for food at a charity kitchen in Gaza last week. Aid agencies and many countries say Israel is responsible for a hunger crisis in the territory.

Tour de France Femmes 2025: stage two updates on hilly run to Quimper – live

27 juillet 2025 à 13:04

It’s worth flagging that this is a particularly early start for the riders, after a relatively late finish (6.38pm BST) yesterday. That is a tight turnaround, for the riders and the support staff to get their meals, massage and rest in, especially as the finish in Plumelec is over 200km from today’s start in Brest.

Stage two, though, is the second shortest stage of this year’s race, clocking in at 110km.

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© Photograph: Szymon Gruchalski/Getty Images

© Photograph: Szymon Gruchalski/Getty Images

© Photograph: Szymon Gruchalski/Getty Images

England v India: fourth men’s cricket Test, day five – live

As the players skip out, there’s a decent enough crowd but still spaces if you’ve got a spare day and £26 in your pocket (£6 for juniors).

As the punters settle into their seats, climb the skeleton steps to the party stand, what is your OBO hunch? I love these final days.

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© Photograph: Martin Rickett/PA

© Photograph: Martin Rickett/PA

© Photograph: Martin Rickett/PA

‘How can I find meaning from the ruins of my life?’: the little magazine with a life-changing impact

27 juillet 2025 à 13:00

After struggles with mental health and addiction, Max Wallis launched a poetry magazine – and it has transformed his life

One morning in February last year, I received an urgent call from the journalist Paul Burston, alerting me to alarming recent social media posts by a mutual friend, the poet and former model Max Wallis.

It seemed he had left his London flat in deep distress and was headed to a bridge. Our best guess was the Millennium footbridge by St Paul’s Cathedral. Then we heard that Max might have taken refuge inside the cathedral. While I scanned gaggles of tourists in the nave, he was intercepted and removed by ambulance. I was relieved to get a message later that evening that he was safe.

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© Photograph: Ryan Davies

© Photograph: Ryan Davies

© Photograph: Ryan Davies

Has the Epstein affair strained Trump’s cozy relationship with the Murdoch media empire?

27 juillet 2025 à 13:00

While the Wall Street Journal cast a stone against the president, Fox News is more than making up for it

In the wake of new revelations regarding the friendship of Donald Trump and disgraced and deceased billionaire financier Jeffrey Epstein, Rupert Murdoch’s media empire has both poured gasoline on to the story and come to Trump’s loyal defense. Experts say that, much like the broader Maga movement, the Epstein affair is testing Trump and Murdoch’s mostly chummy relationship.

To think, only months ago, at Jimmy Carter’s funeral, Barack Obama and Donald Trump were laughing together in the pews.

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© Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

Nadine Kessler: ‘More teams can reach a Euros but we don’t plan to expand yet’

27 juillet 2025 à 13:00

Uefa’s director of women’s football says 16-team Euro 2025 has been a success even without making a profit

“It really makes me emotional, it’s just something we didn’t have in my time,” says Nadine Kessler as she surveys the popularity and sheer scale of a sport whose future she now helps shape. Uefa’s director of women’s football was a brilliant player before retiring nine years ago after 11 surgeries on a knee; she was world footballer of the year in 2014 and, having won the European Championship with Germany a year previously, knows what it takes to dominate a continent.

Staging an entire tournament is a different matter, although one she has become accustomed to since joining the governing body in 2017. “I need to throw my to-do list out of the window,” she says before sitting down at Uefa’s designated hotel in Basel to survey the reverberations of a record-breaking Euro 2025 before the final. “It’s like my craziest match-day,” she says. “But it’s incredible.”

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© Photograph: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images

We do not comply: how do we disrupt the momentum of Trump’s cruelty? | V (formerly Eve Ensler)

27 juillet 2025 à 13:00

Every day brings more devastation. But daily forms of rebellion can restore our sense of purpose

The exterminating force of Project 2025 is plowing through the culture, the government and people’s hearts and bodies like a drunk on a violent tear. We wake each morning, holding our breath to bear witness to the new devastation: PBS and NPR defunded, cuts to the fight against human trafficking, Medicaid gone for millions, Ice working to surveil critics, tons of food for the poor ordered burned and wasted.

The momentum of cruelty always feels inevitable. Cruelty is by definition “a callous indifference to or pleasure in causing pain”. For those of us who have suffered physical, political, racial and emotional abuse, it feels like a familiar steamroller of violence. We only have to witness the cries of parents being separated from their children, men screaming out for “libertad” from cages in Everglades detention center (AKA Alligator Alcatraz), non-violent protesters beaten for trying to stop a genocide, to be frozen in that same incapacitating dread and fear.

V (formerly Eve Ensler) is a playwright and activist and the founder of V-Day, a global movement to end violence against women and girls

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© Photograph: Olga Fedorova/EPA

© Photograph: Olga Fedorova/EPA

© Photograph: Olga Fedorova/EPA

‘The American Dream is a farce’: US readers on the financial stress delaying milestones

27 juillet 2025 à 13:00

Jobs, homes, kids, retirement – some say instability worsened under Trump is forcing them to postpone it all

Americans are getting married, having kids, buying a home, and retiring years later than what once was the norm. Many don’t ever reach these milestones.

While there is a complex web of factors that go into decisions like having kids or buying a house, a person’s financial situation often plays an major role. In a May Harris/Guardian poll, six out of 10 Americans said that the economy had affected at least one of their major life goals, because of either a lack of affordability or anxiety about where the economy is heading.

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© Illustration: The Guardian

© Illustration: The Guardian

© Illustration: The Guardian

‘Let’s get your story straight’ – the words that made my mum an ally, and a human | Emily Watkins

27 juillet 2025 à 13:00

I thought my life was over when I was caught shoplifting from Boots. Instead, a wise act of kindness changed my understanding of my parents, and myself

When my parents told me they were splitting up, I was 15 and furious. It was an abstract, all-consuming kind of anger, alien to the hitherto conscientious, happy kid I had been. With the upset turbocharged by adolescent angst, I resolved to behave as badly as I could: if they were going to tear my life apart, well, I’d muck in.

In hindsight, my rebellions were pretty gentle – probably testament to how safe and stable things remained, even if I felt adrift. Nonetheless, I bravely cycled through teen cliches, beginning by escalating my casual smoking to the compulsive level of someone who had been promised a reward for every dog-end. That’ll show ’em!

Emily Watkins is a freelance writer based in London

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© Composite: Guardian Design/Getty Images/Alamy

© Composite: Guardian Design/Getty Images/Alamy

© Composite: Guardian Design/Getty Images/Alamy

Daughter of woman murdered by man who US deported speaks out: ‘He was denied due process’

27 juillet 2025 à 13:00

Thongxay Nilakout, who shot Birte Pfleger’s parents in 1994, is among eight convicted criminals who were deported

The daughter of a woman murdered by a man from Laos who is among those controversially deported from the US to South Sudan has spoken out about her family’s pain but also to decry the lack of rights afforded to those who were expelled to countries other than their own.

Birte Pfleger lives in Los Angeles and was a history student at Cal State University in Long Beach when her parents came to visit her from their native Germany in 1994 and ended up shot by Thongxay Nilakout during a robbery while on a sightseeing trip. Pfleger’s mother, Gisela, was killed and her father, Klaus, wounded.

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© Photograph: Reed Saxon/AP

© Photograph: Reed Saxon/AP

© Photograph: Reed Saxon/AP

'There's an arrogance to the way they move around the city': is it time for digital nomads like me to leave Lisbon?

27 juillet 2025 à 13:00

Like so many others, I moved from London to Portugal’s capital for the sun, lifestyle – and the tax break. But as tensions rise with struggling locals, many of us are beginning to wonder whether we’re doing more harm than good …

For the past five years, I’ve lived in a flat in a four-storey apartment building standing atop a hill in the pastel-hued district of Lapa, Lisbon. I work from my desk at home, with a view of palm fronds outside the window as I dial into Zooms with London advertising agencies, for which I’m paid in pounds into a UK bank account. Upstairs, one of my neighbours makes money from France, and downstairs another offers financial coaching to a range of international clients.

In the flat just across the hallway, three Scandinavian digital creatives work remotely for clients in their own home countries. All the school-age children attend international private schools. The building, clad in weathered Portuguese tiles, is owned by a single Portuguese family. The remote workers live among four siblings, aged 60-plus, who each live on one of the floors. The building tells a typical story of the demographic of the local area: Portuguese who have benefited from inherited wealth and foreigners earning foreign incomes.

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© Photograph: Luis Ferraz/The Guardian

© Photograph: Luis Ferraz/The Guardian

© Photograph: Luis Ferraz/The Guardian

Spanish discovery suggests Roman era ‘church’ may have been a synagogue

27 juillet 2025 à 12:21

Oil lamp fragments point to presence of previously unknown Jewish population in Ibero-Roman town of Cástulo

Seventeen centuries after they last burned, a handful of broken oil lamps could shed light on a small and long-vanished Jewish community that lived in southern Spain in the late Roman era as the old gods were being snuffed out by Christianity.

Archaeologists excavating the Ibero-Roman town of Cástulo, whose ruins lie near the present-day Andalucían town of Linares, have uncovered evidence of an apparent Jewish presence there in the late fourth or early fifth century AD.

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© Photograph: c/o Bautista Ceprián

© Photograph: c/o Bautista Ceprián

© Photograph: c/o Bautista Ceprián

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