Imane Khelif fires off punchy message after Olympic boss vows to 'ensure fairness' in women's category
The first round matches continue on day two at SW19
Paul, yet to settle, hands Monday two break points … which he hands straight back. From there, the hold is quickly secured.
Thinking of Paul more generally, though, he’s in the same section of the draw as Sinner. There’s not loads else there, so he’ll be wondering if, finally, he can beat someone better than him on the biggest stage.
Continue reading...© Photograph: John Walton/PA
© Photograph: John Walton/PA
Ryland Headley likely to spend rest of life in prison after what is thought to be oldest cold case solved in modern English policing history
A 92-year-old man has been jailed for life with a minimum of 20 years after being convicted of the rape and murder of a woman in Bristol 58 years ago.
Ryland Headley will almost certainly spend the rest of his life in prison for killing Louisa Dunne at her home in 1967.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Avon and Somerset Police/PA
© Photograph: Avon and Somerset Police/PA
Massive tax-and-spending bill is critical to US president’s agenda but faces division and splits
The senate has adopted an amendment offered by Republican senator Joni Ernst – who represents Iowa - to prevent jobless millionaires from claiming unemployment compensation.
Lawmakers voted 99-1 to strike the AI regulation ban from the bill by adopting an amendment offered by Republican senator Marsha Blackburn.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Nathan Howard/Reuters
© Photograph: Nathan Howard/Reuters
Public health warnings as heatwave raises concerns about impact of climate change
The French prime minister François Bayrou, who attended a government crisis meeting over the heatwave, was asked about the great difficulty of French schools to handle the heatwave.
More than 1,350 schools across France were fully or partially closed on Tuesday as classrooms proved dangerously hot for children and teachers, amid anger from teaching unions.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Thibaud Moritz/AFP/Getty Images
© Photograph: Thibaud Moritz/AFP/Getty Images
Would Britpop have happened? Would bands still dream as big? As Oasis prepare for their return gig on Friday, it’s worth asking what their cultural impact has been
In the peculiar counterfactual 2019 romcom Yesterday, the Beatles suddenly and mysteriously vanish from history, remembered by just one man. In the interests of a cheap joke, writer Richard Curtis improbably suggests that every band in the world would still exist in the Beatles’ absence, bar one: Oasis.
But what about a world without Oasis? As the Gallaghers themselves would admit, they weren’t innovators like the Beatles, whose every move changed the course of popular music. If Noel had never joined Liam’s band at the end of 1991, Creation Records might well have gone bust, Manchester City would have had less pop cachet, and The Royle Family would have needed a different theme tune, but music wouldn’t have sounded significantly different. Today, new bands are more likely to cite the spiky intelligence of Radiohead or the Smiths than Oasis’s broad strokes, and very few younger than Arctic Monkeys expects to fill stadiums.
Continue reading...© Photograph: TCD/Prod.DB/Alamy
© Photograph: TCD/Prod.DB/Alamy
For two years, we’ve waited for a final ceasefire that has never come. Peace will be delayed as long as our lives are considered disposable
Last Tuesday night, Donald Trump announced on social media that Iran and Israel had agreed to a ceasefire, ending what he called a “12-day war”. It was the second war this year, after India and Pakistan’s four-day conflict, to start and end under Trump’s watch. They followed another, earlier conflict between Lebanon and Israel during President Joe Biden’s term.
Here in Gaza, all eyes were fixed on the Iran-Israel conflict. Even cut off from the internet, people found ways to follow the news – on the radio, or by catching weak phone signals by climbing to high rooftops or walking near the sea, or just by staying up all night watching the sky, where some of the missiles launched from Iran could be seen from Gaza. Many wondered if Trump, the man who once promised to stop “endless wars”, would seize the moment to stop not only war on Iran but also the genocide in Gaza.
Hassan Abo Qamar is a Palestinian writer and journalist based in Gaza
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Continue reading...© Photograph: AFP/Getty Images
© Photograph: AFP/Getty Images
The three, who have not been named, arrested as part of inquiry into the actions of leaders at Countess of Chester hospital
Three bosses at the hospital where Lucy Letby worked have been arrested on suspicion of gross negligence manslaughter, police said.
The three, who have not been named, were arrested on Monday as part of the investigation into the actions of leaders at the Countess of Chester hospital in north-west England.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Brian Hickey/Alamy
© Photograph: Brian Hickey/Alamy
© Maansi Srivastava for The New York Times
The lessons of Zohran’s victory are hopeful for the left and the Democrats – if the party takes them to heart
In a lifetime of activism, I have canvassed and phone-banked, raised money, and twisted arms for dozens of political candidates. Zohran Mamdani, the 33-year-old Indian-Ugandan democratic socialist and presumptive winner of the New York City Democratic mayoral primary, is the only one I’ve both supported without reservation and believed could win.
Volunteering for a campaign always teaches you something. Often, it’s discouraging – like the moment my partner and I saw Hillary Clinton’s team selling lawn signs for $25 instead of blanketing Philadelphia by distributing them free, and predicted she’d lose. But the lessons of Zohran’s victory are hopeful for the left and the Democrats – if the party takes them to heart.
Judith Levine is a Brooklyn journalist and essayist, a contributing writer to the Intercept and the author of five books
Continue reading...© Photograph: Kyle Stevens/Shutterstock
© Photograph: Kyle Stevens/Shutterstock
We lock eyes while shepherding unruly, ungrateful teens in and out of changing rooms but don’t speak a word. This needs to change
If there is a solidarity on Earth tighter than “bored middle-aged mothers in a clothes shop”, I don’t know what it is. Whether in Primark, Urban Outfitters or H&M, the crowd is always the same: some teens are in gangs and they are having a fine old time; others, sometimes in sibling pairs, are with their mum, presumably because they have yet to find a way to detach her from her credit card. It’s like that bit in an action movie where you need a guy’s fingerprint to open a vault, so you cut off his arm, except, regrettably, in this case, they have to take the entire body.
Some of us are too hot; others are too embarrassing to be believed and have been told that multiple times between each clothes rack. But the main thing we have in common is that we are all incredibly bored. It’s one of those things about youth that I don’t miss at all, along with paralysing social anxiety and blackheads: the ability to parse the difference between one T-shirt and another for hours; to look at the same pair of jeans for 15 minutes straight, your imagination running riot over what they might look like across every jumper combination and landscape. This is not a spectator sport, yet spectate you must, because ultimately you will have to give a view, so that, whatever you say, they can do the opposite.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Posed by model; Drazen Zigic/Getty Images/iStockphoto
© Photograph: Posed by model; Drazen Zigic/Getty Images/iStockphoto
© Jason Henry for The New York Times
© Todd Heisler/The New York Times
Exclusive: Green groups furious at plans to let member states buy controversial carbon offsets from abroad
EU member states may be allowed to count controversial carbon credits from developing countries towards their climate targets, the European climate commissioner has said as states meet for a crucial decision on the issue.
The EU will discuss on Wednesday its target for slashing carbon dioxide by 2040, with an expected cut of 90% compared with 1990 levels, in line with the bloc’s overarching target of reaching net zero by mid-century.
Continue reading...© Photograph: PhotoSpirit/Alamy
© Photograph: PhotoSpirit/Alamy
Women, children and elderly people among at least 24 killed by attack that turned beach spot into scene of carnage
Witnesses have described the bloody aftermath of an Israeli strike on a crowded seaside cafe in Gaza, which left at least 24 dead and many more injured on Tuesday.
Al-Baqa cafe, close to the harbour in Gaza City, was almost full in the early afternoon when it was hit by a missile, immediately transforming a scene of relative calm amid the biggest urban centre in Gaza into one of carnage.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Omar Al-Qattaa/AFP/Getty Images
© Photograph: Omar Al-Qattaa/AFP/Getty Images
Using clever tactics and Messi clickbait, Egyptian creators racked up 14m views with highlights posted before kickoff. YouTube didn’t catch on until it was too late
This story was reported by Indicator, a publication that investigates digital deception, and co-published with the Guardian.
It was Thursday morning in America and something didn’t look right in the highlights of the Club World Cup match between Manchester City and Juventus.
Suzi Ragheb provided research support and translation of one of the videos in Arabic.
Continue reading...© Illustration: Indicator
© Illustration: Indicator
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Continue reading...© Illustration: David Squires/The Guardian
© Illustration: David Squires/The Guardian