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Reçu aujourd’hui — 29 décembre 2025 The Guardian

No 10 defends campaign to release Abd el-Fattah despite his ‘abhorrent’ tweets

29 décembre 2025 à 15:17

MPs reject calls to strip British-Egyptian activist of UK nationality over social media posts from a decade ago

Downing Street has defended its campaign for the release of a British-Egyptian activist and its decision to welcome him to the UK despite his “abhorrent” tweets a decade ago.

Alaa Abd el-Fattah, who arrived in London on Boxing Day after the British government successfully negotiated his release, said he apologised “unequivocally” for his posts after opposition parties called for him to be deported and his citizenship revoked.

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© Photograph: Mohamed Abd El Ghany/Reuters

© Photograph: Mohamed Abd El Ghany/Reuters

© Photograph: Mohamed Abd El Ghany/Reuters

Kosovo prime minister wins snap election to end political deadlock

Par :Reuters
29 décembre 2025 à 15:12

Albin Kurti’s emphatic victory strengthens mandate for domestic reforms including welfare expansion

Kosovo’s prime minister, Albin Kurti has won an emphatic election victory, marking a resurgence for the nationalist leader and ending a political deadlock in Europe’s youngest state.

The win in Sunday’s snap election strengthens Kurti’s mandate to push through domestic reforms, including welfare expansion and higher salaries for public workers, although he faces significant problems including tensions with Serbia and health and education systems that lag behind Kosovo’s Balkan neighbours.

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© Photograph: Georgi Licovski/EPA

© Photograph: Georgi Licovski/EPA

© Photograph: Georgi Licovski/EPA

The very next day, you gave it away … how to get rid of an unwanted Christmas gift without getting caught| Eleanor Limprecht

29 décembre 2025 à 15:00

When a friend found out the painting she’d given me had made its way to a charity store, I wanted to dig a hole in the earth

As the recipient of an unwanted gift, is it necessary to pretend you like it? This is what most of us are trained to do as children; for some it was our first experience of being instructed to lie.

Thank you,” I might have said to my grandmother, “for this frilly, itchy lace-trimmed dress identical to the one you gave my sister. I love it.”

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© Photograph: RTimages/Alamy

© Photograph: RTimages/Alamy

© Photograph: RTimages/Alamy

The Ashes inspiration, overpreparation and bold tactics: a history of Australia v England two-day Tests | Geoff Lemon

29 décembre 2025 à 15:00

The old rivals have clashed in eight of the 27 Tests to finish inside two days – these are the tales behind the six matches played before the current series

To put in context the surprise that greeted the two-day Boxing Day Test just gone, consider the rarity by arithmetic. The match in Melbourne was Test number 2,615, and was two-day Test number 27. You don’t need a calculator to see that’s roughly 1%. And yet we’ve had two such matches in the current Ashes series, plus another in Australia three years earlier. We’ve had half a dozen two-day Tests worldwide since 2021. What gives?

Nine two-day Tests – fully one-third of the total – happened in the 1800s, when pitches could become swamps or shooting galleries. The next few mostly involved weak teams in their early years of development. Australia and England each dished one out to South Africa in the tri-series of 1912, and the South African team was little stronger when ripped up by Clarrie Grimmett and Bill O’Reilly in 1936. Australia also bashed up a new West Indies team in 1932 and New Zealand in 1946.

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© Photograph: Central Press/Getty Images

© Photograph: Central Press/Getty Images

© Photograph: Central Press/Getty Images

Stingless bees from the Amazon granted legal rights in world first

29 décembre 2025 à 15:00

Planet’s oldest bee species and primary pollinators were under threat from deforestation and competition from ‘killer bees’

Stingless bees from the Amazon have become the first insects to be granted legal rights anywhere in the world, in a breakthrough supporters hope will be a catalyst for similar moves to protect bees elsewhere.

It means that across a broad swathe of the Peruvian Amazon, the rainforest’s long-overlooked native bees – which, unlike their cousins the European honeybees, have no sting – now have the right to exist and to flourish.

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© Photograph: see caption

© Photograph: see caption

© Photograph: see caption

‘A gift that cannot be sold’: the Palestinian family fighting to save their West Bank farm

For more than three decades, the Nassars have battled Israeli efforts to reclassify their property as ‘state land’

In 1916, Daher Nassar, a Christian Palestinian farmer living south of Bethlehem, made a move considered more than unusual at the time. He bought a 42-hectare stretch of farmland on the slopes and valleys of Wadi Salem, and formally registered the purchase with the Ottoman authorities, who then ruled the region.

A few years later, after transferring the title to his son, Nassar did something even more extraordinary. He re-registered the deed under each successive administration – the British mandate, then the Jordanian government, and finally, after 1967, under Israeli occupation.

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© Photograph: Alessio Mamo/The Guardian

© Photograph: Alessio Mamo/The Guardian

© Photograph: Alessio Mamo/The Guardian

‘It’s like you’re sitting in front of an oven’: surviving the summer in one of Australia’s hottest towns

When the hot winds hit Roebourne, as many as 16 people pile into Yindjibarndi elder Lyn Cheedy’s home – one of the few with air conditioning

Few places are more exposed to extreme weather than Roebourne, a tiny cyclone-prone town on the Western Australian coast, where public housing residents endure 50C heat without air conditioning.

Lyn Cheedy, a Yindjibarndi elder, takes her grandson to the pool most afternoons.

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© Photograph: Ngarluma Yindjibarndi Foundation Ltd

© Photograph: Ngarluma Yindjibarndi Foundation Ltd

© Photograph: Ngarluma Yindjibarndi Foundation Ltd

Packing a punch: the true story behind the first Zimbabwean film to qualify for Oscars

29 décembre 2025 à 15:00

A small boxing academy helping street children in Victoria Falls has inspired an award-winning short featuring Hollywood actor Tongayi Chirisa

Tobias Mupfuti was eight years old when he found himself homeless and living on the streets of Victoria Falls after his father had rejected him and his mother was too poor to feed or clothe him or send him to school. He survived on food handouts from tourists shopping in the Zimbabwean resort town.

Four years later, sick of being bullied and threatened, he asked a boxing coach to teach him the sport for self-defence – a decision that changed his life for ever.

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© Photograph: Jacques Naudé/RISE

© Photograph: Jacques Naudé/RISE

© Photograph: Jacques Naudé/RISE

Anthony Joshua injured in car crash in Nigeria that killed two people

29 décembre 2025 à 14:52
  • British former boxing champion sustained minor injuries

  • Two people killed in collision, say police in Ogun State

The British former heavyweight boxing champion Anthony Joshua has been involved in a car accident in Nigeria’s Ogun State that killed two people, local police said on Monday.

Joshua, 36, sustained minor injuries when his vehicle collided with another car, Ogun State Police Command said.

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© Photograph: Bradley Collyer/PA

© Photograph: Bradley Collyer/PA

© Photograph: Bradley Collyer/PA

‘Why should we pay these criminals?’: the hidden world of ransomware negotiations

29 décembre 2025 à 14:38

Cybersecurity experts reveal what they do for high-profile clients targeted by hackers such as Scattered Spider

They call it “stopping the bleeding”: the vital window to prevent an entire database from being ransacked by criminals or a production line grinding to a halt.

When a call comes into the cybersecurity firm S-RM, headquartered on Whitechapel High Street in east London, a hacked business or institution may have just minutes to protect themselves.

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© Photograph: solarseven/Getty Images/iStockphoto

© Photograph: solarseven/Getty Images/iStockphoto

© Photograph: solarseven/Getty Images/iStockphoto

Is claim Ukraine deal is ‘95% done’ just another empty assertion from Trump?

29 décembre 2025 à 14:38

A sober observer assessing the US president’s claim may react the same way as Zelenskyy – with shock and disbelief

A deal to end the war between Russia and Ukraine was “95% done”, Donald Trump claimed after his meeting over the weekend with Volodymyr Zelenskyy at Mar-a-Lago.

Unfortunately, the 5% still remaining includes the small matter of getting Vladimir Putin to agree to a deal – and there are precious few indicators that that is any closer. Instead, Trump’s claim seems to be the latest in a long line of overoptimistic statements anticipating a swift end to the conflict, starting with his campaign promise that he would end the war in 24 hours.

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© Photograph: Alex Brandon/AP

© Photograph: Alex Brandon/AP

© Photograph: Alex Brandon/AP

Copper price on track for biggest rise in 15 years amid global shortage fears

29 décembre 2025 à 14:27

Metal that underpins the renewable energy industry joins silver and gold as a safe haven asset for investors

Copper, the metal that underpins the fast-growing renewable energy industry, is on course for its biggest annual price rise in more than 15 years as traders react to fears of global shortages.

As one of the main beneficiaries of the “electrification of everything”, copper has soared by more than 35% in value this year, spurred by US tariff uncertainty and concerns about mining disasters that could restrict supply.

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© Photograph: Maxim Shemetov/Reuters

© Photograph: Maxim Shemetov/Reuters

© Photograph: Maxim Shemetov/Reuters

Zelenskyy says US has agreed to offer Ukraine ‘strong’ 15-year security guarantees

29 décembre 2025 à 14:02

Future of Donbas region remains unresolved after Ukrainian president’s talks with Donald Trump in Florida

Volodymyr Zelenskyy says the US has agreed to offer “strong” security guarantees to Ukraine for 15 years, but acknowledged that the future of the country’s eastern Donbas region was unresolved after his two-hour meeting on Sunday with Donald Trump in Florida.

Speaking on his way back to Europe, Zelenskyy said the US Congress and Ukraine’s parliament would jointly vote on American pledges. These were a key part of a 20-point peace plan discussed with the US president at his Mar-a-Lago residence, he said.

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© Photograph: Ukrainian Presidential Press Service/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Ukrainian Presidential Press Service/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Ukrainian Presidential Press Service/AFP/Getty Images

ChatGPT, cooking and Christopher Walken: how parents got their kids to love reading in 2025

29 décembre 2025 à 14:00

Fewer children are reading for fun - but parents are trying everything from AI to dramatic voices to keep them engaged

It’s been a tough year for our brains. Merriam-Webster dictionary editors chose “slop” as 2025’s word of the year. New York Magazine recently dropped its “Stupid Issue”, with a cover story exploring America’s collective “cognitive decline”. There are big problems in the humanities: reading test scores are down for students nationwide, and undergraduates cannot read full books any more.

Even storytime – a comfy couch, a cardboard book, a kid’s rapt attention as their parent reads them a story – is an endangered activity. According to an April report from HarperCollins UK, parents have lost the love of reading to their children, with fewer than half of gen Z parents calling the activity “fun for me”. According to the survey of 1,596 parents of children aged zero to 13, almost one in three found reading “more a subject to learn” than an experience to enjoy. Only a third of kids aged five to 10 frequently read for fun, compared with over half in 2012.

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© Photograph: Catherine Falls Commercial/Getty Images

© Photograph: Catherine Falls Commercial/Getty Images

© Photograph: Catherine Falls Commercial/Getty Images

Drinks ideas to get your NYE party fuelled

29 décembre 2025 à 14:00

Stop stressing about 31 December, keep things simple and go with a flow of prosecco, lambrusco or maybe even a Korean soju …

Oh, you thought it was all over? After all the carolling, gifting and tree-ing (not to mention the eating and drinking) of the actual Christmassy bit, it feels almost cruel to have to do it all again, and on – in my opinion – one of the most stressful nights of the year: New Year’s Eve.

If you’re not paying over the odds and going out, with long queues and stressed-out staff, you’re the stressed-out one yourself. “Is everyone good for drinks?” “When was the last time anyone saw [insert child’s name here]?” And then there’s the clean glass matrix, where no one can remember whose is whose and you’re caught in an endless cycle of washing-up. The antidote to all of the above is, for me, just to stay in with your immediates and a bottle of something nice. Five guests maximum. I don’t like going into the New Year already tense – what hope will I have for 2026 if I’m going into it with high blood pressure and flat wine in a warm glass?

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© Photograph: Yuliya Taba/Getty Images

© Photograph: Yuliya Taba/Getty Images

© Photograph: Yuliya Taba/Getty Images

My big night out: I woke up on a llama farm in Germany – hungover and lying beside a naked punk

29 décembre 2025 à 14:00

At 20, I went on a European road trip for the summer, where a chance encounter in Cologne taught me the importance of friendship

The clock that ticks at 6am on a Saturday morning at a llama farm in rural Germany, when you wake up hungover next to a naked punk, ticks much more loudly than any other clock. In this case, it was a proper rustic European clock – none of your chrome or plastic nonsense – wooden and ancient, with little figurines which bustled around inside it, on the hour, every hour.

I was 20, on a European road trip, chugging around in an older man’s van in 2014, perpetually hungover.

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© Illustration: Mark Long/The Guardian

© Illustration: Mark Long/The Guardian

© Illustration: Mark Long/The Guardian

‘The most culturally Iranian of all Iranians died so far from Iran’: the towering legacy of Bahram Beyzaie

29 décembre 2025 à 13:54

Beyzaie, who has died aged 87, wove myth, folklore and classical Persian literature into stories that defend against a regime which sought to obliterate them

One of the last messages I sent to the great Iranian stage and screen writer-director Bahram Beyzaie was a recent photograph, taken by a friend, of the interior ruins of Tehran’s oldest cinema, Cinema Iran. There, on one of the walls, hung posters of Beyzaie’s 1988 film Maybe Some Other Time, positioned above and below the torn portraits of the supreme leaders of the theocratic regime.

The symbolism – the ideological ruin; cinema and the future – was too striking for something so accidental, particularly given that Beyzaie’s theatre and cinema are intricate mazes of carefully constructed and overlapping allegorical moments.

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© Photograph: Bahram Beyzaie

© Photograph: Bahram Beyzaie

© Photograph: Bahram Beyzaie

‘He has come back from the dead’: Chevy Chase spent eight days in a coma during Covid pandemic

29 décembre 2025 à 13:09

In documentary I’m Chevy Chase and You’re Not, the actor and his family revealed that doctors told them to ‘prepare yourselves for the worst’

Chevy Chase suffered “near fatal” heart failure which led to him being placed in an induced coma during the pandemic in 2021, according to a new film about the American actor and comedian.

As documented in I’m Chevy Chase and You’re Not, the star of films such as Caddyshack and the National Lampoon movies, who hosted the Oscars twice, spent a total of five weeks in hospital.

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© Photograph: Buttermilk West/PA

© Photograph: Buttermilk West/PA

© Photograph: Buttermilk West/PA

Ukraine war live: US has offered 15 years of security guarantees, says Zelenskyy

29 décembre 2025 à 13:08

Ukrainian leader had sought up to 50 years of security guarantees at Florida meeting with Trump

The Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told journalists this morning that Moscow agreed with Donald Trump’s assessment that talks to end the war were in their final stage.

As a reminder, Trump said a draft agreement to end the war was nearly “95% done”. “I really think we are closer than ever with both sides,” he said, though he added that “one or two very thorny issues” remain.

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© Photograph: Alex Brandon/AP

© Photograph: Alex Brandon/AP

© Photograph: Alex Brandon/AP

Arteta wants every team to ‘suffer’ at Arsenal with revenge on mind against Villa

29 décembre 2025 à 13:00
  • Aston Villa snatched last-gasp win earlier in December

  • Arteta: ‘It was quite cruel, the way we lost it’

Mikel Arteta has said he wants every visiting team to suffer at the Emirates Stadium, as Arsenal host Aston Villa on Tuesday night bidding to avenge their “cruel” defeat from the reverse fixture earlier this month.

Arteta’s league leaders lost 2-1 at Villa Park three weeks ago, when Emi Buendía scored a 95th-minute winner with the last kick of the game.

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© Photograph: Dylan Martinez/Reuters

© Photograph: Dylan Martinez/Reuters

© Photograph: Dylan Martinez/Reuters

‘A total knockout!’ The best television you never watched in 2025

From the most beautiful show Netflix has ever made to a thriller about a menopausal hitwoman and a dazzling documentary set in outer space, here are some TV gems that may have passed you by this year

In a bizarre move, Netflix released this series by Japanese master Hirokazu Kore-eda – the Palme d’Or winner renowned for movies such as Shoplifters and Nobody Knows – with absolutely no fanfare this year. But Asura was a total knockout – a rich and sumptuously shot drama about four sisters in the 70s who discover that their dad has been having a lifelong affair. It was so good, in fact, that it might even be the most beautiful show they’ve ever released. Talk about selling yourself short. Watch it on Netflix.

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© Photograph: Netflix

© Photograph: Netflix

© Photograph: Netflix

‘Cities need nature to be happy’: David Attenborough seeks out London’s hidden wildlife

29 décembre 2025 à 13:00

Attenborough, 99, enthuses about tube-riding pigeons, foxes, parakeets and others in Wild London for the BBC

Filming the wildlife of London requires an intrepid, agile presenter, willing to lie on damp grass after dark to encounter hedgehogs, scale heights to hold a peregrine falcon chick, and stake out a Tottenham allotment to get within touching distance of wary wild foxes.

Step forward Sir David Attenborough, who spent his 100th summer seeking out the hidden nature of his home city for an unusually personal and intimate BBC documentary.

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© Photograph: PHOTOGRAPHER:/CREDIT LINE:BBC/Passion Planet Ltd/Gavin Thurston

© Photograph: PHOTOGRAPHER:/CREDIT LINE:BBC/Passion Planet Ltd/Gavin Thurston

© Photograph: PHOTOGRAPHER:/CREDIT LINE:BBC/Passion Planet Ltd/Gavin Thurston

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