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Reçu aujourd’hui — 13 septembre 2025The Guardian

Australia v Argentina: Rugby Championship 2025 – live

13 septembre 2025 à 06:17
  • Updates as Wallabies take on Pumas in Sydney

  • Kick-off at Allianz Stadium is 2pm AEST

  • Any thoughts? Get in touch with Jonathan Howcroft

After turning out last week top to toe in navy blue, Argentina revert to their traditional albiceleste (white and sky blue).

It is one of my favourite uniforms in international sport, and here’s why. The colours are beautiful, soft, and complementary. Le Coq Sportif is uber cool and carries association with shaggy haired French soccer players of the 1980s. The golden Puma is unfussy. The sponsor is top-tier and occupies the correct amount of real estate. My only criticism is the absence of a collar, recent iterations of this jersey were elevated further by a crisp white fold.

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© Photograph: Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images

© Photograph: Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images

© Photograph: Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images

Trump news at a glance: president urges death penalty in Charlie Kirk killing, as widow says: ‘we’ll never surrender’

13 septembre 2025 à 04:43

President sought to cast people on the left as sole problem of US politics, while widow of Charlie Kirk said her ‘cries will echo around the world like a battle cry’ – key stories from 12 September at a glance

Donald Trump on Friday advocated for the death penalty in the killing of his close associate Charlie Kirk, as the widow of the rightwing activist spoke publicly for the first time since the shooting.

The president told Fox & Friends in an interview – during which he also announced that a suspect was in custody – that he hopes the shooter “gets the death penalty”. He added: “Charlie Kirk was the finest person. He didn’t deserve this”.

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© Photograph: Reuters

© Photograph: Reuters

© Photograph: Reuters

France’s credit rating downgraded, with debt forecast to keep rising amid political turmoil

13 septembre 2025 à 04:02

Fitch downgrade to lowest level on record complicates new prime minister Sebastien Lecornu and President Emmanuel Macron’s efforts to control France’s finances

The Fitch agency downgraded France’s credit rating on Friday, as President Emmanuel Macron struggles with political instability and disagreements on how to put the country’s strained public finances in order.

The US rating agency, one of the top global institutions gauging the financial solidity of sovereign borrowers, downgraded France on its ability to pay back debts, from “AA-” to “A+”, the country’s lowest level on record at a major credit rating agency.

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© Photograph: Benoît Tessier/AP

© Photograph: Benoît Tessier/AP

© Photograph: Benoît Tessier/AP

As a dark chapter closes, NZ reckons with fugitive father Tom Phillips’ four years on the run

13 septembre 2025 à 03:28

Phillips’ three children were rescued from the wilderness this week as the complex case stirs emotions and questions remain over how it unfolded

In a dark, grimy dugout in the middle of the freezing New Zealand bush, the three Phillips children lived with their father. Childhood is measured in increments; birthdays, lost teeth, certificates, a felt tip on a height chart. In the version of reality Tom Phillips created and controlled for his children, it’s hard to know how time was marked. But from 9 December 2021, when their father took them from their mother and the rest of their family, it would be 1,368 sleeps before the children were rescued.

This week, after almost four years on the run, Phillips was found on his way back from a robbery with one of his children. He was shot dead after being stopped by road spikes and opening fire on police, shooting an officer in the head and shoulder. This sparked an urgent search for the two children remaining in the bush. They were found with the help of the other child just a few hours before nightfall the same day, bringing an end to a dark chapter.

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© Photograph: New Zealand Police/AP

© Photograph: New Zealand Police/AP

© Photograph: New Zealand Police/AP

From rune megaphones to the number 88: Australia’s neo-Nazis have a new look after swastikas banned

13 septembre 2025 à 02:00

The far right have co-opted ancient Norse mythology to create a grab bag of symbols that allow them to continue to signal their white supremacy

At far-right rallies in several Australian cities, neo-Nazis were photographed brandishing megaphones with unusual markings on them – ancient runic symbols, some with associations to white supremacism, while others meant “birch trees”.

Far-right extremists are continuing a Nazi tradition of co-opting ancient Norse mythology to create a grab bag of symbols, allowing them to continue to signal their white supremacy now they can no longer legally display the Hakenkreuz (swastika) or the Nazi salute.

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© Photograph: Hollie Adams/Reuters

© Photograph: Hollie Adams/Reuters

© Photograph: Hollie Adams/Reuters

Taking action to stop climate change is not an act of charity; it is a legal obligation | Cynthia Houniuhi

13 septembre 2025 à 02:00

Countries like Australia that continue to dig up, export or burn fossil fuels, must take action or be held accountable

I often talk about my childhood in the Reef Islands, a special place on the far eastern seas of Solomon Islands. It is there that I learned to fish, to plant root crops and to hunt. I came to understand how to read the weather and which plants could be used for injuries and cuts. Above all, I was taught the importance of caring for the land and the ocean.

During bedtime, the spiritual connection to the land was taught to me through kastom stories. How did this land come about, how did that island come about, why is the river shaped like this or why is there a big rock near that waterfall? These stories taught me to respect and understand the natural world.

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© Photograph: Fabien Astre/Getty Images

© Photograph: Fabien Astre/Getty Images

© Photograph: Fabien Astre/Getty Images

US environment agency could end reporting of greenhouse gas emissions

Par :Reuters
13 septembre 2025 à 00:10

The mandatory program, which required 8,000 facilities to report their release, will be ended to reduce ‘bureaucratic red tape’

The US Environmental Protection Agency proposed on Friday a rule to end a mandatory program requiring 8,000 facilities to report their greenhouse gas emissions – an effort the agency said was burdensome to business, but which leaves the public without transparency around the environmental impact of those sources.

The agency said mandatory collection of GHG emissions data was unnecessary because it is “not directly related to a potential regulation and has no material impact on improving human health and the environment”.

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© Photograph: Paul Hennessy/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

© Photograph: Paul Hennessy/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

© Photograph: Paul Hennessy/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

Arne Slot defends Isak over Newcastle strike and says it would never happen at Liverpool

12 septembre 2025 à 23:30
  • Forward refused to play to force Anfield move

  • ‘If a player wants to leave us then we would sell’

Arne Slot has defended Alexander Isak over his decision to go on strike in order to force a move away from Newcastle and insisted the same situation would never arise at Liverpool because they would sell any player who made it clear they wanted to leave the club.

Isak secured a transfer from St James’ Park to Anfield on deadline day for a British record £125m fee and could make his debut for the Premier League champions at Burnley on Sunday, albeit he is unlikely to start having missed pre-season and the first three games of the season after refusing to train while still at Newcastle, claiming promises made to him there had been “broken”.

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© Photograph: Nikki Dyer/LFC/Liverpool FC/Getty Images

© Photograph: Nikki Dyer/LFC/Liverpool FC/Getty Images

© Photograph: Nikki Dyer/LFC/Liverpool FC/Getty Images

The court artist whose Erin Patterson sketches went around the world: ‘I definitely need to get some therapy’

12 septembre 2025 à 17:00

Anita Lester’s distinctive mushroom murder trial portraits show someone she perceived to be ‘consistently sad’

The first time Anita Lester drew Erin Patterson, she made the mistake of trying to be too accurate. Lester, a courtroom artist, had just two minutes to sketch the triple murderer during her brief pre-trial hearing and spent it trying to perfectly illustrate “a little head behind a glass screen in Morwell”. What she later realised is that it’s more important to capture the mood of the accused than the exact lines of their face.

“What makes a good courtroom artist is being able to bring the public into the courtroom to witness the emotion of the person on trial,” she says. “You’re actually trying to just capture a feeling or a gesture that might resonate. It’s not about being the best artist in the world.”

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© Photograph: Charlie Kinross/The Guardian

© Photograph: Charlie Kinross/The Guardian

© Photograph: Charlie Kinross/The Guardian

Florian Wirtz is a sure bet at Liverpool but Newcastle are gambling on Nick Woltemade | Philipp Lahm

12 septembre 2025 à 12:00

Two of the summer’s biggest transfer moves from Germany to the Premier League are starkly contrasting prospects

What must a footballer who costs €80m, €100m or more be able to do and prove? He should be a promising prospect at the age of 17 to 20; occupy a clear position on the pitch; be one of the five most important players in a team; perform consistently over many years; prove himself in international competition; and be physically strong. This applies to virtually all those players in this price range: Kylian Mbappé, Neymar, Ronaldo, Erling Haaland, Jude Bellingham and Ousmane Dembélé.

Two German footballers moved to the Premier League for such a sum in the summer. One of them meets these criteria. Florian Wirtz’s career has been impressive. He caught the football’s attention as a teenager. It was only a matter of time before he made his breakthrough.

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© Composite: SPP Sport Press Photo/Alamy; Newcastle United/Getty Images

© Composite: SPP Sport Press Photo/Alamy; Newcastle United/Getty Images

© Composite: SPP Sport Press Photo/Alamy; Newcastle United/Getty Images

Records tumble as Phil Salt’s stunning ton leads England to T20 rout of South Africa

12 septembre 2025 à 23:13

England made history, and for the first time more than 300 runs, on an extraordinary night in Manchester as they buried South Africa under a mountain of runs and shredded statistics. Their highest T20 total was turbocharged by a brilliant opening stand of 126 between Phil Salt and Jos Buttler and by their highest individual score, Salt knocking himself off the top of that chart with an unbeaten 141. Within a week and against the same opponents they have set new national records for winning margins in both one-day internationals and now T20s, the final difference here an almost comic 146 runs.

Salt described his evening as “really good fun” but the experience for Shukri Conrad, South Africa’s head coach, was anything but. He described a bowling performance that – having invited England to bat first – “was way off, bereft of ideas” as England were allowed to plunder 30 fours and 18 sixes en route to a score of 304 for two, with nearly twice as many boundaries (48) across the innings as there were dot balls (25).

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© Photograph: Jason Cairnduff/Action Images/Reuters

© Photograph: Jason Cairnduff/Action Images/Reuters

© Photograph: Jason Cairnduff/Action Images/Reuters

Alessia Russo double seals victory for rampant Arsenal away to West Ham

Arsenal came from behind for the second time in two games to move top of the Women’s Super League. This time it was an own goal from goalkeeper Daphne van Domselaar that put them in trouble, before strikes by Frida Maanum, Stina Blackstenius, Caitlin Foord and two from Alessia Russo ensured the European champions maintained a 100% start to the season.

It is early in the new campaign but in a 12-team league every point matters and for a side desperate to stop Chelsea from winning a seventh consecutive title, dropping points so soon into the campaign would be bruising. This is a new Arsenal though, one fuelled by a fire lit by their phenomenal defeat of Barcelona in the Champions League final in May. They know they can beat the best, now they have to prove they can beat the best, the worst and those in between consistently.

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© Photograph: Steven Paston/PA

© Photograph: Steven Paston/PA

© Photograph: Steven Paston/PA

Truman Show echoes at Manchester United mean Amorim must be afforded missteps | Jamie Jackson

12 septembre 2025 à 22:00

Ruben Amorim inherited a mess but his position being under threat so early is simply life in football’s hottest seat

Soap opera, wall-to‑wall media coverage, a sporting Truman Show and real-life panopticon. Ruben Amorim, like those before him, blinks in the glare of the endless fascination with Manchester United’s leading man, and may wonder whether this is the impossible job.

Three games into a first full campaign the 40-year-old seemed to believe so. The desultory 12-11 Carabao Cup penalty shootout defeat at Grimsby followed a 1-0 loss to Arsenal and 1-1 draw at Fulham. Three matches, zero wins, and the executioner’s song began to wail for the Portuguese’s job security.

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© Composite: Guardian Design; Getty Images; Reuters

© Composite: Guardian Design; Getty Images; Reuters

© Composite: Guardian Design; Getty Images; Reuters

UC Berkeley shares 160 names with Trump administration in ‘McCarthy era’ move

12 septembre 2025 à 21:35

Prominent professor Judith Butler among students and faculty investigated for ‘alleged antisemitic incidents’

The University of California, Berkeley has given the Trump administration the names of 160 faculty members and students as part of an investigation into “alleged antisemitic incidents”, a move a targeted scholar likened to a “practice from the McCarthy era”.

UC Berkeley, a top-ranked public institution, sent a letter to affected members of campus last week disclosing that university lawyers had included their names in reports to the Department of Education’s office for civil rights (OCR). The education department has been targeting colleges across the country as part of Donald Trump’s aggressive crackdown on pro-Palestinian activism, international students and academic freedom.

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© Photograph: Europa Press News/Europa Press/Getty Images

© Photograph: Europa Press News/Europa Press/Getty Images

© Photograph: Europa Press News/Europa Press/Getty Images

Reçu hier — 12 septembre 2025The Guardian

US immigration officers kill man trying to flee vehicle stop near Chicago

Silverio Villegas-Gonzalez shot and killed and officer injured in incident in Franklin Park, Illinois

A man was fatally shot during a vehicle stop on the outskirts of Chicago by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) officers after attempting to flee the scene, according to officials, and another officer was injured during the altercation.

Ice released the following statement after the shooting: “This morning in Chicago, Ice officers were conducting targeted local enforcement activity during a vehicle stop, the suspect resisted and attempted to drive his vehicle into the arrest team, striking an officer and subsequently dragging him as he fled the scene, fearing for his life, the officer discharged his firearm and struck the subject. Both the officer and subject immediately received medical treatment and were transferred to a local hospital.”

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© Photograph: Scott Olson/Getty Images

© Photograph: Scott Olson/Getty Images

© Photograph: Scott Olson/Getty Images

A video, a pastor and a tense meeting: timeline of Charlie Kirk suspect’s arrest

12 septembre 2025 à 20:11

Surveillance footage of person suspected of fatally shooting the rightwing activist set in motion a rapid series of events

Fuzzy video footage of Charlie Kirk’s alleged killer racing across a rooftop at Utah Valley University, dropping to the ground and sprinting away in the moments following the conservative activist’s death on Wednesday, was taken from so far away that it could not possibly have revealed his identity.

“You started off with a clip that made him look like an ant,” Donald Trump told Fox News in a Friday morning interview as the US president discussed the killing of the rightwing activist at a campus speaking engagement attended by thousands of students.

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© Photograph: Michael Ciaglo/Getty Images

© Photograph: Michael Ciaglo/Getty Images

© Photograph: Michael Ciaglo/Getty Images

Jasper Philipsen sprints to victory on stage 19 to complete Vuelta hat-trick

Par :Reuters
12 septembre 2025 à 19:57
  • Belgian rider wins his third stage of 2025 race

  • Jonas Vingegaard adds four seconds to overall lead

Belgium’s Jasper Philipsen sprinted clear at the end of stage 19 to seal his third win at this year’s Vuelta a España on Friday while Jonas Vingegaard added four seconds to his overall advantage over Joño Almeida.

After 160km of relatively flat riding in west central Spain, Alpecin-Deceuninck’s Philipsen burst to the front near the finish and never looked like being caught. Denmark’s Mads Pedersen was the first to make his move but could not hold off Philipsen and he crossed the line in second place with Venezuela’s Orluis Aular third.

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© Photograph: Javier Lizón/EPA

© Photograph: Javier Lizón/EPA

© Photograph: Javier Lizón/EPA

Israel’s strike on Hamas leaders in Qatar shatters Gulf’s faith in US protection

12 septembre 2025 à 19:38

The attack in Doha upended a decades-old assumption – and left Arab leaders questioning how much they can still rely on Washington

On Thursday, Qatar’s emir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani, led a funeral at the state mosque. Flanked by officials in white thobes, he prayed over six caskets – one draped in a Qatari flag and five bearing Palestinian flags.

Israel’s strike on Hamas leaders in Doha on Tuesday, which also killed a Qatari officer, marked an unprecedented moment for the Gulf kingdom. The attack undercut the assumption that has underpinned Qatari foreign policy for three decades and reverberated across the Arab region: be useful to the United States, and it will protect you.

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© Photograph: Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters

© Photograph: Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters

© Photograph: Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters

The Guardian view on Bolsonaro’s coup conviction: a landmark for Brazilian democracy – but this fight isn’t over | Editorial

12 septembre 2025 à 19:30

Though the far-right former president has been held accountable for overseeing the plot, supporters at home and abroad still rally to his cause

A populist president refused to accept his defeat at the ballot box, insisting that the election had been stolen. A far-right mob stormed the country’s institutions in his support. Yet democracy prevailed. And then, on Thursday, Brazil’s supreme court sentenced the former president Jair Bolsonaro to 27 years in prison for leading a criminal conspiracy to overturn the 2022 elections and “annihilate” democracy through a coup. The sprawling plot was both modern and crudely old school – extending from an online disinformation campaign to undermine faith in the voting system, to aborted plans to assassinate the newly elected president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, known as Lula, and the supreme court justice investigating Bolsonaro. It culminated in the riots in Brasília in January 2023.

Four of the five judges on the panel found Bolsonaro guilty. Seven close allies from the military and security establishment were convicted alongside him for the same crimes – including his former defence and justice ministers, former spy chief, generals and the former navy commander. According to the prosecution, the plans for a putsch failed because the army and air force chiefs refused to take part.

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: Diego Herculano/Reuters

© Photograph: Diego Herculano/Reuters

© Photograph: Diego Herculano/Reuters

The Guardian view on fishing and nature: bottom-trawling boats don’t belong in conservation zones | Editorial

12 septembre 2025 à 19:25

Sea life needs protection, and the UK’s current system of marine management isn’t up to it

Up to 90% of the ocean floor around Britain is covered with sand and gravel, derived from the erosion of shell and rocks. Other, more unusual habitats include maerl beds, seagrass meadows and kelp forests. These biodiverse landscapes are home to 330 species of fish, as well as seals, seahorses and thousands of lesser‑known species – which share them with the offshore energy, fishing and shipping industries.

Heightened awareness of pollution from sewage and plastics means that the public knows more about marine conservation than it used to. For his 99th birthday this year, the broadcaster and naturalist Sir David Attenborough made a film, Ocean, in which he described the seas as the planet’s “greatest life support system”, and urged people to get behind efforts to protect and renew marine nature.

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: Colin Munro/Alamy

© Photograph: Colin Munro/Alamy

© Photograph: Colin Munro/Alamy

Trump ally Laura Loomer ridiculed for swinging from Charlie Kirk attacks to leading backlash against detractors

12 septembre 2025 à 18:42

Loomer accused TPUSA founder of betraying president in July but now bashes those she perceives to ‘celebrate’ his assassination

As she pushed Donald Trump to “shut down” leftist organizations in the US over Charlie Kirk’s assassination, the far-right influencer Laura Loomer was confronted with a social media post that less than two months earlier lambasted the Turning Point USA (TPUSA) executive director as a “charlatan” who had betrayed the president.

“It’s time for the Trump administration to shut down, defund & prosecute every single leftist organization,” Loomer wrote on X after Kirk was fatally shot while speaking at Utah Valley University on Wednesday. “We must shut these lunatic leftists down. Once and for all. The left is a national security threat.”

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© Photograph: The Washington Post/Getty Images

© Photograph: The Washington Post/Getty Images

© Photograph: The Washington Post/Getty Images

‘We took the gloves off’: ex-IDF chief confirms Gaza casualties over 200,000

12 septembre 2025 à 18:20

Retired general Herzi Halevi says ‘not once’ had legal advice constrained Israel’s military decisions in the strip

A former Israeli army commander, Herzi Halevi, has confirmed that more than 200,000 Palestinians have been killed or injured in the war in Gaza, and that “not once” in the course of the conflict were military operations inhibited by legal advice.

Halevi stepped down as chief of staff in March after leading the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) for the first 17 months of the war, which is now approaching its second anniversary.

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© Photograph: Israel Defense Forces/Reuters

© Photograph: Israel Defense Forces/Reuters

© Photograph: Israel Defense Forces/Reuters

Nato announces more air support to defend Poland against future Russian incursions

12 septembre 2025 à 19:13

France, Germany and Denmark to contribute fighter jets and other assets in mission also expected to involve UK

France, Germany and Denmark will contribute fighter jets and other military assets to an enhanced defence of Poland against future Russian drone incursions, Nato leaders announced at a press conference on Friday.

The UK is also expected contribute to the Eastern Sentry mission, which will gradually be expanded across from the Arctic in the north to the Black Sea and Mediterranean in the south to better tackle Russian drones and missiles.

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© Photograph: Vadim Ghirdă/AP

© Photograph: Vadim Ghirdă/AP

© Photograph: Vadim Ghirdă/AP

Former England cricketer investigated over sexual assault and spiking claims at pub owned by sports stars

12 septembre 2025 à 19:01
  • Metropolitan police questioned man in his 40s in June

  • Incident alleged to have occurred at pub in Chelsea

A former England cricketer is being investigated by police over an allegation of sexual assault and claims two women had their drinks spiked at a London pub co-owned by a group of current and former sport stars.

In a statement released to the Daily Telegraph on Friday, the Metropolitan police confirmed that officers interviewed a man in his 40s in June after it received a complaint about an alleged spiking and assault.

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© Photograph: Kai Schwörer/Getty Images

© Photograph: Kai Schwörer/Getty Images

© Photograph: Kai Schwörer/Getty Images

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