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India v England: men’s T20 World Cup semi-final – live

5 mars 2026 à 14:03

T20 World Cup updates from Mumbai; 1.30pm GMT start
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Time for the toss, and Ravi Shastri presents it like a boxing promoter. Brook calls heads, heads it is, and he opts to chase.

Pre-match reading: Simon Burnton’s preview from Mumbai. It contains the best line ever to pop out of Harry Brook’s mouth.

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© Photograph: Bikas Das/AP

© Photograph: Bikas Das/AP

© Photograph: Bikas Das/AP

Matildas into quarter-finals but may come to rue lack of second half goals

5 mars 2026 à 14:02

Australia were frustrated as Iran kept it at 4-0 and now face South Korea in a decider to top Asian Cup group

The goals flowed quickly, easily, and then – when the hosts needed just one more – not at all. Their 4-0 victory over a brave Iran side leaves the Matildas facing an uncertain path to Asian Cup glory, even if they have now booked a place in the quarter-finals.

It was a night that began with fireworks but dissolved in the Gold Coast rain to a turgid trial. Initially there was promise for Matildas fans, but then tiring frustration, made worse by a pair of horror head impacts for substitute Hayley Raso.

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© Photograph: Albert Perez/Getty Images

© Photograph: Albert Perez/Getty Images

© Photograph: Albert Perez/Getty Images

Marsupials previously thought extinct for millennia discovered in New Guinea

5 mars 2026 à 14:01

The chances of finding one mammal species thought to be lost was ‘almost zero’ and finding two is ‘unprecedented’, biologist Tim Flannery says

Researchers led by the Australian scientist Tim Flannery have made a once-in-a-lifetime discovery: that two charismatic marsupial species that had been thought extinct for 6,000 years are alive in rainforest in remote West Papua.

The pair are rare examples of “Lazarus taxa” – species that disappeared from fossil records in the distant past that are later found to have survived.

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© Photograph: Australian Museum

© Photograph: Australian Museum

© Photograph: Australian Museum

Trump administration is failing to address spread of measles, experts say

5 mars 2026 à 14:00

As number of cases climbs past 1,000, experts say CDC is not taking obvious steps amid funding cuts

Experts say that the Trump administration has failed to take obvious steps to contain the spread of measles, which is continuing to accelerate in the United States as the number of cases has climbed past 1,000.

The administration has revealed a relaxed attitude toward the highly contagious virus both in terms of messaging and funding allocation, experts said.

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© Photograph: Juan Diego Reyes for The Washington Post via Getty Images

© Photograph: Juan Diego Reyes for The Washington Post via Getty Images

© Photograph: Juan Diego Reyes for The Washington Post via Getty Images

Kamala Harris might run for president again in 2028. Please, no | Arwa Mahdawi

5 mars 2026 à 14:00

Harris’s 2024 campaign lacked authenticity and conviction. We can’t afford to repeat the mistakes of the past

I’ve got some good news and some bad news for you today. The bad news is, well, everything. As you may have noticed, the world is on fire. The good news, however, is that a savior may be at hand. Kamala Harris, a politician who has never won a presidential primary and lost the popular vote to Donald Trump in 2024, hasn’t ruled out running for president again.

Harris has kept a fairly low profile since November 2024, focusing most of her energy on promoting 107 Days, her account of her truncated presidential run, and appearing as the guest of honour at the 2025 Australian Real Estate Conference. But she has also made it clear that she still has an eye on the White House: in an interview with the BBC last October, Harris said she was “not done” with politics and strongly suggested she might run for president again. Harris echoed these sentiments in a conversation with the podcaster Sharon McMahon last week. “I might,” she said when asked if she will run again.

Arwa Mahdawi is a Guardian columnist

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© Photograph: Evan Vucci/AP

© Photograph: Evan Vucci/AP

© Photograph: Evan Vucci/AP

Chic couture, bio-terror and a whole load of Mike Leigh: Lesley Manville’s finest films – ranked!

5 mars 2026 à 14:00

With her 70th birthday around the corner, we assess the greatest screen outings by the indisputable doyenne of dour British drama – and plenty more asides

Among the bold choices in Luca Guadagnino’s feverish film of William S Burroughs’ novel are the late 20th-century pop and alternative soundtrack (Nirvana, Prince, New Order) for a 1950s story, and the casting of an unrecognisable, orc-like Manville in a trumped-up cameo as the shaman Dr Cotter, who was male in the original book.

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© Photograph: Album/Alamy

© Photograph: Album/Alamy

© Photograph: Album/Alamy

Women ​built​, and still shape, our culinary culture every day

Across home kitchens and professional restaurants, women have long carried the stories and skills that define ​t​he world of food. Their impact deserves more recognition

Sign up here for our weekly food newsletter, Feast

On 8 March each year, the calendar lights up: dinners celebrating women, panel talks, articles and online events amplifying female voices. The mood on International Women’s Day is joyful, the conversations energised and it feels as if the world is finally paying attention. But then 9 March arrives. Do the celebrations stop? Do we tuck away the banners with the last of the desserts? When the events conclude, are women no longer worth celebrating? The sad truth is that many International Women’s Day events can feel like lip service.

Less so in the food world – or at least in our corner of it. For generations, cooking has been predominantly a women’s realm, and the knowledge and wisdom that sustained humanity has been passed through the female line. So the culinary world is one of the few in the professional sphere where women have an edge.

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© Photograph: Sophia Evans/The Observer

© Photograph: Sophia Evans/The Observer

© Photograph: Sophia Evans/The Observer

German foreign minister says ‘we will not allow ourselves to be divided’ after Trump-Spain spat – Europe live

5 mars 2026 à 13:54

The US president previously threatened to stop all trade with Spain after it said it didn’t back the US-Israeli military operation against Iran

Meanwhile, France has allowed US aircraft on some of its bases in the Middle East during the conflict opposing the United States and Israel with Iran, the French military said.

“As part of our relations with the United States, the presence of their aircraft has been temporarily authorised on our bases” in the region, a spokeswoman for the military general staff told AFP.

“These aircraft contribute to the protection of our partners in the Gulf.”

“The frigate Cristóbal Colón joined the Charles de Gaulle Naval Group on 3 March to carry out escort, protection, and advanced training duties in the Baltic Sea. The group will now head to the Mediterranean, arriving off the coast of Crete around 10 March.

The supply ship Cantabria will also briefly put to sea to provide fuel and logistical support during the Naval Group’s transit through the Gulf of Cádiz.

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© Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

© Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

© Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

‘A subversion of the justice system’: DoJ shifts into Trump’s ‘political wing’ as criminal investigations accelerate

5 mars 2026 à 13:00

President has ‘succeeded in completely politicizing’ justice department, experts say, using it to punish his enemies

Donald Trump’s Department of Justice (DoJ) has increasingly become his administration’s “political wing” with criminal investigations of economic and political foes and an FBI raid of a Georgia election office seeking evidence for Trump’s debunked claim that his 2020 election loss was rigged, say ex-prosecutors.

The shifts at the DoJ have been especially marked since the start of 2026 and the growing politicization of the department – headed by Trump’s loyalist attorney general, Pam Bondi – was symbolized on 19 February , when a large banner with Trump’s picture was unfurled over the door of the DoJ headquarters.

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© Photograph: Roberto Schmidt/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Roberto Schmidt/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Roberto Schmidt/AFP/Getty Images

Americans are finally taking a critical approach to Israel. We can do that without sliding into antisemitism | Joel Swanson

5 mars 2026 à 13:00

Israel’s role in drawing the US into a war on Iran is attracting healthy scrutiny. It’s also creating a permission structure for antisemitism

The joint US-Israel military strikes on Iran have forced a reckoning that American political culture has been approaching for years, but has perhaps never had to face as head-on as it does right now. It is a reckoning that contains two urgent, legitimate, and partially contradictory imperatives – and neither should be abandoned.

Let us start with one simple truth. Israel’s role in drawing the United States into military action against Iran warrants serious scrutiny. Whatever one believes about the strategic logic of the strikes, the process by which the United States came to participate in them raises profound questions about the relationship between the two countries. The US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, has claimed that the US struck Iran partly because it knew Israel was going to act unilaterally and feared the blowback. In other words, Israeli strategic priorities shaped American military timing, and by extension, American casualties.

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© Photograph: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters

© Photograph: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters

© Photograph: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters

The Paramount-Warner Bros mega-merger still has a few hurdles to get over

5 mars 2026 à 13:00

The $110bn deal will require approval from regulatory authorities in the US, the EU and the UK

Champagne reportedly flowed at Paramount Skydance headquarters late last week after the media conglomerate edged out Netflix to acquire the entirety of Warner Bros Discovery for a cool $110bn.

And on a call with analysts and investors on Monday morning, David Ellison, Paramount Skydance’s chief executive, said the company was “absolutely confident” that the merger will expeditiously pass regulatory muster both in the US and abroad.

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© Composite: The Hollywood Reporter via Getty Images, Zuffa LLC

© Composite: The Hollywood Reporter via Getty Images, Zuffa LLC

© Composite: The Hollywood Reporter via Getty Images, Zuffa LLC

Jennifer Shahade: ‘There’s a long and embedded history of abuse in chess’

5 mars 2026 à 13:00

The former US women’s champion changed her life and her sport when she made allegations against a grandmaster. Now she’s turned her hand to writing and poker

On 15 February 2023, Jennifer Shahade took a deep breath and wrote “Time’s up” above a long message about allegations of sexual abuse in the cloistered world of professional chess. Shahade knew her words would have an impact but she didn’t expect the social media post to go viral and change her life.

A two-time US women’s chess champion, Shahade chose her words carefully as she made serious allegations against Alejandro Ramirez, a then 34-year-old grandmaster from Costa Rica who was based in America and coached the St Louis University chess team: “Currently there are multiple investigations [into] Alejandro Ramirez and sexual misconduct, including a series of alleged incidents involving a minor. I was assaulted by him twice, nine and 10 years ago. I’d moved on until the past couple of years when multiple women, independent of each other, and with no knowledge of my own experience, approached me with their own stories of alleged abuse. These accounts were from much younger alleged victims.”

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© Photograph: David Levene/The Guardian

© Photograph: David Levene/The Guardian

© Photograph: David Levene/The Guardian

‘The steroids made me feel alone’: Southampton’s Amy Goddard on being diagnosed with Bell’s palsy

5 mars 2026 à 12:33

Centre-back opens up on the ‘petrifying’ time in 2021 when the left side of her face suddenly dropped as she wants to help others who are affected

One day, in February 2021, Amy Goddard woke up and went for a run. On her return home she took a shower and then looked in the mirror before brushing her teeth. That is when she realised the left side of her face had dropped.

Goddard, who was playing for Crystal Palace semi-professionally in the Championship at the time, went to the hospital and was diagnosed with Bell’s palsy. The illness, which she had not heard of until her diagnosis, causes sudden and typically temporary weakness or paralysis of the muscles on one side of the face. The condition affects one in 70 people in their lifetime in the UK.

Goddard, who is now at WSL 2 side Southampton, says it was a “petrifying” time for her and that it not only affected her physically and mentally but also her football career.

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© Photograph: Andrea Southam/WSL/The FA/Getty Images

© Photograph: Andrea Southam/WSL/The FA/Getty Images

© Photograph: Andrea Southam/WSL/The FA/Getty Images

Crypto investor based in Thailand donates further £3m to Reform

5 mars 2026 à 12:25

Christopher Harborne’s gift is latest to party’s election war chest and comes amid calls for cap on political donations

Christopher Harborne has donated another £3m to Reform UK on top of his record £9m last summer.

Nigel Farage’s party, which has been topping the polls for more than a year, brought in £5.5m in the last quarter of 2025. It also included a £200,000 donation from JC Bamford Excavators – traditionally a Conservative donor – which gave the same sum to the Tories that quarter.

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© Photograph: George Cracknell Wright/LNP

© Photograph: George Cracknell Wright/LNP

© Photograph: George Cracknell Wright/LNP

Vanuatu moves forward with UN climate resolution despite Trump opposition

5 mars 2026 à 12:00

Pacific island says the US weakened its proposal to advance a key climate ruling but vows to hold major polluters accountable

The Trump administration’s attempt to sink a UN resolution demanding countries act on the climate crisis has caused cuts to the proposal but hasn’t entirely killed it, according to the tiny Pacific island country spearheading the effort.

The US has demanded that Vanuatu, an archipelago in the south Pacific, drop its UN draft resolution that calls on the world to implement a landmark international court of justice (ICJ) ruling from last year that countries could face paying reparations if they fail to stem the climate crisis.

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© Photograph: John Thys/AFP via Getty Images

© Photograph: John Thys/AFP via Getty Images

© Photograph: John Thys/AFP via Getty Images

From a 19-time world champ to Monster Mike: US athletes to watch at the 2026 Winter Paralympics

Par : Beau Dure
5 mars 2026 à 12:00

The Americans finished fifth in the medal table in 2022. A strong team will be looking to improve that record in Italy in the coming days

The first-time Paralympian only turned 19 at the start of March, but she has been in the news for her skiing prowess since she was a second-grader. She’s also going to Italy on a roll, having reached the podium in two World Cup downhill races in early February. In the 2024-25 season, she had two World Cup podium finishes in giant slalom, and she took bronze in giant slalom and fifth in slalom at the world championships, where the other three events were canceled. Though she was born without her lower right arm, she was still an honorable mention All-State softball player in Colorado.

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© Photograph: Elsa/Getty Images

© Photograph: Elsa/Getty Images

© Photograph: Elsa/Getty Images

Soul to Soul review – joyous 1971 concert film captures Black American stars’ emotional return to Ghana

5 mars 2026 à 12:00

Restored documentary records a historic independence day show in Accra, with electrifying performances from Tina Turner, Wilson Pickett and more

This exuberant, distinctively high-minded documentary, now restored, comes from the Oscar-winning though now somewhat overlooked film-maker Denis Sanders, made just one year after his renowned 1970 film Elvis: That’s the Way It Is, about Elvis Presley in Las Vegas. Soul to Soul is a record of an epic independence day concert in Accra, Ghana, in 1971, given by American and Ghanaian musicians. Ghana was chosen as it was the first sub-Saharan African nation to gain independence from Britain. Among the US contingent were Tina Turner, Wilson Pickett, Santana, the Staple Singers and the Voices of East Harlem.

The concert and film can be seen now as part of the American Black consciousness debate of the time, which specifically prized the concept of the African motherland and the spiritual importance of returning to the wellspring of Black American inspiration. With its shots of the musicians aboard the plane to Ghana, and the rich and teeming ambient material showing Accra’s street life, you might find yourself reminded of Leon Gast’s When We Were Kings, about the Ali/Foreman fight in what was then Zaire, although without the talking-head perspective. There are richly enjoyable performances, and the extreme closeup shots of Tina Turner are where its energy is at its most visceral.

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© Photograph: © 2025 Reelin' In The Years Productions, LLC and Sky Blue Works, Inc.

© Photograph: © 2025 Reelin' In The Years Productions, LLC and Sky Blue Works, Inc.

© Photograph: © 2025 Reelin' In The Years Productions, LLC and Sky Blue Works, Inc.

‘Everyone’s calling’: demand for private jets from UK firm soars by up to 300% amid Iran war

5 mars 2026 à 12:00

Insider says demand is far outstripping supply and calls for creation of air bridges to evacuate people from Middle East

Planes are always urgently sought out when a crisis strikes somewhere in the world. Since the US-Israel war against Iran started on Saturday, demand has outstripped supply with thousands of people stranded in the Middle East frantically searching for an exit route.

While many are reliant on governments to dispatch aircraft to evacuate them, those with the financial means can look at a more expensive and much speedier option – a private jet. Matt Purton, the director of aviation services at UK-based global company Air Charter Service, is the man some of them have on speed dial.

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© Photograph: Raghed Waked/Reuters

© Photograph: Raghed Waked/Reuters

© Photograph: Raghed Waked/Reuters

$700 Erewhon hauls, 21-hour shifts: celebrity assistants go public with their grueling, fabulous work

5 mars 2026 à 12:00

Staff for the rich and famous are influencerizing their day-to-day lives, giving followers access to luxury while creating financial safety nets for themselves

Victoria Hiegel, personal assistant to a celebrity client she cannot name because of a nondisclosure agreement, spent 13 February ferrying Valentine’s Day cookies across Manhattan. Her boss “doesn’t love chocolate,” so Hiegel had to hunt for a bakery that could swap the batch’s chocolate chunks for sour hearts. She posted part of her search to TikTok, where she received thousands of views from people keen to watch her cater to the whims of the rich and famous.

Hiegel, 26, is a microcelebrity in her own right. Wearing her blond hair in carefully styled waves and speaking with a practised ease, she has obvious star appeal. But it is her career that fascinates her 1m followers.

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© Photograph: Courtesy of Dafne Meija

© Photograph: Courtesy of Dafne Meija

© Photograph: Courtesy of Dafne Meija

In a Trump war, with great power comes no responsibility | Jamil Smith

5 mars 2026 à 12:00

When presidents ask the country to support a war, honesty is not optional

The bombs fell in our name before any of us knew. Then the president saw fit to inform us.

Legal scholars and politicians alike began debating whether they were constitutional. Markets responded within hours. Cities across the United States moved to heightened alert amid fears of retaliation.

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© Photograph: Majid Asgaripour/Reuters

© Photograph: Majid Asgaripour/Reuters

© Photograph: Majid Asgaripour/Reuters

Emma Raducanu hopes to rediscover ‘natural’ style that has been ‘coached out of me’

5 mars 2026 à 11:51
  • British No 1 being aided by Mark Petchey at Indian Wells

  • ‘I am definitely going to tap into a few people’

Emma Raducanu says she is determined to wrest back control of her “natural” tennis style, with the British No 1 eager not to be bound by the diktats of a single coach.

“I want to come back to my natural way of playing. That takes time to relearn because that’s something that has been coached out of me a little bit,” Raducanu told BBC Sport. “I have had a lot of people telling me what to do, how to play, and it hasn’t necessarily fit. I don’t necessarily want to have one coach in the role because anyone I bring in is straight away going to be scrutinised – even if it’s a trial.

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© Photograph: Robert Prange/Getty Images

© Photograph: Robert Prange/Getty Images

© Photograph: Robert Prange/Getty Images

Husband of Labour MP released on bail after arrest on suspicion of spying for China

5 mars 2026 à 12:27

David Taylor and two other former Labour advisers who were arrested on Wednesday freed on bail until May

Three former Labour advisers, including the husband of an MP, have been released on bail after being arrested on suspicion of spying for China.

David Taylor, who is married to the Scottish Labour MP Joani Reid, is accused of assisting a foreign intelligence service.

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© Photograph: Asia House

© Photograph: Asia House

© Photograph: Asia House

Oil price continues to rise amid Middle East crisis but stock markets rebound across Asia

5 mars 2026 à 11:01

Reports of attack on US registered tanker in Gulf lifts crude by 3% to $84 a barrel as gas price also starts to climb

Stock markets have rebounded in Asia after days of heavy losses driven by the war in the Middle East, but oil and gas prices have continued to climb amid disruption to supplies.

South Korea’s KOSPI, which posted its biggest ever fall on Tuesday of 12%, soared almost 10% on Thursday, while Japan’s Nikkei climbed by 1.9%. MSCI’s Asia-Pacific index excluding Japan jumped by 2.7%.

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© Photograph: Christopher Neundorf/EPA

© Photograph: Christopher Neundorf/EPA

© Photograph: Christopher Neundorf/EPA

‘There is no shame in being vain’: the relentless rise of impossible male beauty standards

5 mars 2026 à 11:00

Men’s faces are under scrutiny as never before, with more opting for cosmetic procedures than ever. What is behind this sudden and significant shift?

The images are familiar: square-jawed white men, faces set hard, barking the language of strength and command. Over the past week, as the United States has pressed its military campaign in the Middle East, the face of defense secretary Pete Hegseth has appeared on screen after screen delivering the rhetoric of the warrior-patriarch. It is a face already known for other performances: posing in the gym alongside Robert F Kennedy Jr for the Department of War YouTube channel; lecturing the military about “fat generals”; hosting a weekend show on Fox News.

But here, borrowing the glory of the troops, Hegseth presented the general’s mask – the jutting jaw, the unflinching gaze – albeit without, some critics would suggest, the military experience or strategic judgment it usually signifies. Donald Trump, too, has offered his own version of the strongman face; the commanding presence, white and unyielding, though recently people have been rather more distracted by the new rash on his neck.

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© Composite: Guardian Design; PHAS;Universal Images Group/Getty Images

© Composite: Guardian Design; PHAS;Universal Images Group/Getty Images

© Composite: Guardian Design; PHAS;Universal Images Group/Getty Images

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