↩ Accueil

Vue lecture

Under Fire From Trump’s Tariffs, Ammo Makers in a Balkan Valley Hunker Down

Companies that make ammunition in the Bosnian city of Gorazde fear they may not survive the tariffs imposed on the goods that they send to their biggest market — the United States.

© Vladimir Zivojinovic for The New York Times

Workers producing ammunition parts last month for Ginex and Pobjeda Technology, in Gorazde, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
  •  

AP PHOTOS: Las Vegas Gym Shooting Photo Gallery

A shooting inside a Las Vegas athletic club has killed two people including the suspect with at least four injured. Officials say that gunfire erupted Friday afternoon inside the gym and three people who were injured were transported to local hospitals, with one in critical condition. A spokesperson with the police department said in a press conference there is no longer a threat to the public.

© Las Vegas Sun

  •  

Judge dismisses jury in Canadian hockey sexual assault case after complaint about defense behavior

  • Jury discharged in Hockey Canada proceedings
  • Judge alone will determine outcome of trial

The judge handling the trial of five Canadian hockey players accused of sexual assault dismissed the jury Friday after a complaint that defense attorneys were laughing at some of the jurors.

Ontario superior court Justice Maria Carroccia will now handle the high-profile case on her own.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Eliot J Schechter/NHLI/Getty Images

© Photograph: Eliot J Schechter/NHLI/Getty Images

  •  

‘I started seeing robots’: what happens when you run nearly nonstop for three days

When Craig Jeffrey heard about a 200-mile foot race through Western Australia he thought it sounded ‘brilliant’. But after a while, things got odd

During a 100 mile (160km) race around Mount Kosciuszko last year, I was caught in a lightning storm. I got talking to a fellow runner who was sheltering with me. She told me that there was an even longer race, out in Western Australia. “You must do it!” she said. “The food is incredible, and people share disgusting pictures of their toes afterwards.”

It sounded brilliant. The race is called Delirious West, a 200 mile run completed in a single push.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Astrid Volzke/The Delirious WEST

© Photograph: Astrid Volzke/The Delirious WEST

  •  

Government records show emergency killings of thousands of livestock after transport to Australian export abattoirs

Euthanasia is most common response to welfare incidents in sheep, pigs and cattle with about 4% of animals experiencing serious incidents, research finds

Thousands of sheep, pigs and cattle are being subjected to emergency killings after transport to Australian export abattoirs, an analysis of internal government records shows.

Curtin University researchers have also found it is taking almost 11 hours, on average, to inspect animals for injury and sickness after they arrive at abattoir facilities – delays that “significantly increase the likelihood of animals requiring emergency euthanasia”.

Sign up for Guardian Australia’s breaking news email

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian

© Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian

  •  

Everyone agreed Joel Cauchi was psychotic when he murdered six people at Bondi Junction. Until his psychiatrist didn’t

The third week of a coronial inquest into the death of Cauchi and the six people he killed gave the fullest picture of his illness yet

One point that has never been in dispute over the course of the coronial inquest into a mass stabbing in Sydney last year was that schizophrenic man Joel Cauchi was psychotic when he wielded a 30cm Ka-Bar knife, attacking 16 people and killing six.

The expert psychiatric evidence was “clear and unanimous” about Cauchi, 40, being “floridly psychotic” on 13 April 2024, the senior counsel assisting, Dr Peggy Dwyer SC, told the New South Wales coroner’s court in her opening remarks almost three weeks ago.

Sign up for a weekly email featuring our best reads

Continue reading...

© Composite: X/Saigon Noodle

© Composite: X/Saigon Noodle

  •  

Where should Nigella Lawson eat while she’s in Sydney?

The British food icon visits Australia often, sharing her favourite meals along the way. Guardian Australia’s team has recommendations for where to dine next on her current trip

Nigella Lawson loves Australia. She often visits, and when she does she tends to post about her favourite places to eat on Instagram. “Walking through the doors after a year away just felt like coming home,” the British cook and food writer wrote about her return to the Potts Point restaurant Fratelli Paradiso in early May.

She’s since dined at another longtime favourite, Sean’s Panorama in Bondi, where she says the roast chook “epitomises the perfect Sydney Sunday”. We also know she’ll make a beeline for Small’s Deli in Potts Point for a meatball sandwich, a place she dreams of as soon as her plane ticket is booked.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Hanna Lassen/Getty Images

© Photograph: Hanna Lassen/Getty Images

  •