"Faire bouillir un crustacé vivant est inacceptable": au Royaume-Uni, un projet de loi veut interdire de plonger les homards dans l'eau bouillante

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Great to see that Nottingham Forest owner Evangelos Marinakis plans to rename one of the stands at the City Ground in John Robertson’s honour. The Scot passed away on Christmas Day at the age of 72. I’m just about old enough to remember Robertson in his Forest heyday. I have a simple memory: no-one could get the ball off him. Most wingers are hit and miss in possession but with Robertson it always seemed to be this: receive ball, glue it to foot, slow full-back down, shuffle down wing, short five-yard burst, cross. Time after time after time. And no-one could stop him doing it. “That lad is a bloody genius,” said Brian Clough. He wasn’t wrong.
Here’s Ewan Murray’s tribute.
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© Photograph: Stuart MacFarlane/Arsenal FC/Getty Images

© Photograph: Stuart MacFarlane/Arsenal FC/Getty Images

© Photograph: Stuart MacFarlane/Arsenal FC/Getty Images

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An initiative linking people across race, class and faith offers an antidote to silence, hate and growing division
As a black woman in Northern Ireland, Maureen Hamblin knows that racism comes in many forms. “It’s not just the smashing in of shop windows,” she says. “It can be quiet, it can be silent.”
Bystanders who hear racist remarks and remain mute, as if oblivious, amplify the hurt and leave victims feeling alone and isolated, a recurring experience that left Hamblin drained. “There was a time when I’d lost a lot of faith in white people, in white men.”
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© Photograph: Paul McErlane/The Guardian

© Photograph: Paul McErlane/The Guardian

© Photograph: Paul McErlane/The Guardian
From Jackson Lamb’s mac in Slow Horses to the queen-bee wardrobe of Wild Cherry, Guardian writers choose the outfits that shaped storylines and revealed personalities in 2025
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Never mind the catwalk shows, the viral glossy advertising campaigns and the endless red carpets. This year, TV was where the best fashion was at. Here, nine Guardian writers pick their favourite looks from the shows that had us hooked over the past 12 months.
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© Composite: Netflix/HBO/Jack English/Apple TV

© Composite: Netflix/HBO/Jack English/Apple TV

© Composite: Netflix/HBO/Jack English/Apple TV
From merrily dismissing climate science, to promoting irresponsible health claims, the podcast was an unintentional warning for our times
Looking back on this crazy year, one event, right at the start, seems to me to encapsulate the whole. In January, recording his podcast in a studio in Austin, Texas, the host, Joe Rogan, and the actor Mel Gibson merrily dissed climate science. At the same time, about 1,200 miles away in California, Gibson’s $14m home was being incinerated in the Palisades wildfire. In this and other respects, their discussion could be seen as prefiguring the entire 12 months.
The loss of his house hadn’t been confirmed at the time of the interview, but Gibson said his son had just sent him “a video of my neighbourhood, and it’s in flames. It looks like an inferno.” According to World Weather Attribution, January’s fires in California were made significantly more likely by climate breakdown. Factors such as the extreme lack of rainfall and stronger winds made such fires both more likely to happen and more intense than they would have been without human-caused global heating.
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© Photograph: Josh Edelson/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Josh Edelson/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Josh Edelson/AFP/Getty Images
Mamady Doumbouya accused of betraying his promise to be the restorer of democracy after leading 2021 coup
In September 2021, a tall, young colonel in the Guinean army announced that he and his comrades had forcibly seized power and toppled the longtime leader Alpha Condé.
“The will of the strongest has always supplanted the law,” Mamady Doumbouya said in a speech, stressing that the soldiers were acting to restore the will of the people.
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© Photograph: Luc Gnago/Reuters

© Photograph: Luc Gnago/Reuters

© Photograph: Luc Gnago/Reuters
Country pulled out of hosting 2015 tournament but has since become central figure within world football
It is hard to conceive that Morocco, now the nerve centre for staging Africa’s marquee football events, was a continental pariah 10 years ago.
Abruptly pulling out of hosting the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations, over fears it would lead to the spread of the Ebola virus in the kingdom, forced the Confederation of African Football to move the tournament to Equatorial Guinea, with less than 90 days to prepare for its staging.
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© Photograph: Paul Ellis/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Paul Ellis/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Paul Ellis/AFP/Getty Images