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Airstrike Al Jazeera journalist's family killed in camp
The entire immediate family of a correspondent with the broadcaster Al Jazeera has been killed in an Israeli airstrike in Gaza.
Pulped fiction: 6,000 copies of Da Vinci Code turned into new edition of Orwell novel
Six years after an Oxfam shop amusingly, but seriously, pleaded for no more copies of The Da Vinci Code, the artist David Shrigley has completed a project to collect 6,000 copies of the novel and recycle them into a new edition of George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four.
Study suggests 1.7m people could have dementia by 2040
Dementia poses an \"enormous threat\" to healthcare systems and the general public in England and Wales, experts have warned, as data suggests 1.7 million people will have the condition by 2040.
MP Blunt arrested over rape and drug allegations
A senior Conservative MP has been arrested on suspicion of rape and possession of drugs.
Israel stages raid into Gaza as new phase of war begins
Israeli forces entered a new phase of their war against Hamas in Gaza yesterday, launching a substantial but limited raid into the coastal strip, in what was described as a probing action in preparation for a more sustained ground offensive.
Ukraine 'Ready To Strike Back' If Russia Targets Power Grid As Winter Draws In
Volodymyr Zelenskiy has said Ukraine is preparing for renewed Russian attacks on its energy infrastructure before the second winter of Vladimir Putin's full-scale invasion of the country - and that it was ready to counterattack if targeted.
Sunak Backs Gaza Pauses To Let In Aid But Stops Short Of Backing Ceasefire
Rishi Sunak has called for pauses to the fighting in Gaza to allow humanitarian aid to safely reach those without food, water or medicine.
Study Warns Of Risk To Humans' Ability To Cope With Disaster
Humanity is moving dangerously close to irreversible tipping points that would drastically damage our ability to cope with disasters, UN researchers have warned, including the withdrawal of home insurance from flood-hit areas and the drying up of the groundwater that is vital for ensuring food supplies.
Labour Starmer Facing Pressure From Muslim MPs To Call For Halt To Fighting
Keir Starmer has conceded to Labour Muslim MPs that his visit to a south Wales mosque could have been handled better, the Guardian understands, as he faces Aletha Adu mounting pressure from all wings of the party to call for a ceasefire in Gaza.
Fears Of Worsening Humanitarian Disaster In Gaza As Fuel Runs Short
UN agency warns relief lifeline’ will halt unless fresh supplies arrive
Nmecha brings Newcastle back down to earth
Eddie Howe had never attended a Champions League match until last month but anyone who expected Newcastle's manager to display a novice's grasp of elite European tactical intricacies was soon disabused as Newcastle raced to the top of Group F.
US House elects new speaker after three weeks of gridlock
Republican Mike Johnson of Louisiana was elected speaker of the House yesterday, winning the top job in a party-line vote and ending a standoff that had stretched on for more than three weeks.
Paedophile jailed for life over web abuse of 200 girls while in the police
A predatory paedophile who incited more than 200 girls as young as 10 to send him explicit images and videos of themselves while he was a serving police officer has been jailed for life with a minimum term of 12 years.
Labour aims to force byelection after Bone bullying suspension
A former Conservative minister has been suspended from parliament for six weeks, triggering a campaign by Labour to force another byelection.
Peake to come out of retirement for UK's first crewed space mission
Tim Peake, the last British astronaut to travel into space, is to come out of retirement to lead Britain's first astronaut mission.
Hologram Stones extravaganza 'bound to happen', says Richards
Keith Richards has reflected on the likelihood of a hologram performance by the Rolling Stones, saying it is \"bound to happen\".
Two Met officers sacked for lying in stop and search of black athletes
The athlete whose struggle for justice has won a landmark ruling that led to two Metropolitan police officers being sacked, has revealed he has been left \"traumatised\" after suffering more than 20 stop and searches.
University students left with 50p a week after soaring rents
University students in England are left with about 50p a week to live on from their loans after paying for accommodation, the cost of which has soared by nearly 15% over the past two years, research has found.
'Utter chaos' Hospital staff suffering unimaginable conditions, Red Cross warns
Experts from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) on Tuesday visited two of the main medical centres in Gaza, the al-Quds and al-Shifa hospitals, and experienced the intense bombardment of residential areas.
Guterres locked in row with Israel as it withdraws visas for UN officials
António Guterres, the UN secretary general, was locked in a bitter row with Israel yesterday and said he was shocked that the Israeli government had misrepresented remarks he had made to suggest he had justified the Hamas attacks of 7 October.
A treat without a trick? Eat a cake and save a soul in purgatory
It's trick or treat with a twist: no tricks, just the possible release of souls from their purgatory accompanied by a tasty oat-based biscuit.
'Extinguished too soon' Hundreds mourn for British-Israelis
A mid the pomegranate groves of Kfar HaRif, a collective farm in southern Israel, hundreds of people gathered as the sun began to set for the funerals of Lianne Sharabi, a British-Israeli woman, and her teenage daughters, Noiya and Yahel.
Martinelli and Jesus turn the tables on Sevilla to deliver crucial win for Arsenal
They were made to resist, but Arsenal are back on top. Just as the clock turned 90 in the Ramón SánchezPizjuán, Youssef En-Nesyri leapt to head, Sevilla still coming at the visitors in search of the equaliser that would change everything.
Turn down the Céline Dion, plead residents worn out by 'siren kings'
A small city in New Zealand plagued by \"siren battles\" - cars decked out in loudspeakers commonly used in emergency warning systems and often blaring Céline Dion hits - is calling on authorities to end the noise.
Criminal gangs burn 35 buses in Rio after police kill militia leader
Rio de Janeiro's state governor, Cláudio Castro, has vowed to strike back against organised crime after gangsters attacked Rio's public transport system, torching vehicles in what he called \"terrorist acts\".
Trump's former ally Cohen takes stand as fraud trial's star witness
Donald Trump dismissed his former fixer as a \"proven liar\" yesterday as the star witness in his fraud trial pledged to hold the former president accountable for alleged crimes.
Iceland's PM calls for gender parity and joins thousands for full-day women's strike
The prime minister of Iceland yesterday said she wanted her country to achieve full gender equality by 2030 as she joined an estimated 100,000 women and non-binary people in an all-day strike, the first of its kind in 48 years.
One dead and four missing after British cargo ship sinks
One person has died and four are missing after the sinking of a British cargo ship off the coast of Germany in a collision in the North Sea.
The great debate How fears and hopes for its future are dividing pioneers of the technology
Demis Hassabis says he is not pessimistic about artificial intelligence. But that did not stop the chief executive of Google DeepMind signing a statement in May warning that the threat of extinction from AI should be treated as a societal risk comparable to pandemics or nuclear weapons.
Treat risks of AI as seriously as climate crisis, urges senior executive at Google
The world must treat the risks from artificial intelligence as seriously as the climate crisis and cannot afford to delay its response, one of the technology's leading figures has warned.