CATEGORIES

Darknet dealing Russia's click and collect drugs industry
The Guardian

Darknet dealing Russia's click and collect drugs industry

At any one moment in towns and cities across Russia, thousands of drug packages lie buried in the ground, attached by magnets to lamp-posts or taped underneath window sills, waiting to be picked up by their intended customers.

time-read
3 mins  |
November 14, 2024
The Guardian

Naval officer accused by Kyiv of war crimes killed in Crimea car bombing

A senior Russian naval officer was killed in a car bombing in Crimea yesterday, marking the latest in a series of targeted attacks on Russian military personnel and pro-Kremlin figures in occupied Ukrainian territory and inside Russia.

time-read
1 min  |
November 14, 2024
Macron to visit Notre Dame before cathedral's reopening
The Guardian

Macron to visit Notre Dame before cathedral's reopening

As firefighters doused the embers of the blaze that threatened to destroy Notre Dame Cathedral on 16 April 2019, Emmanuel Macron promised that the church would be restored and made \"more beautiful than ever\" within five years.

time-read
1 min  |
November 14, 2024
Schools shut and people evacuated as torrential rain returns to Spain
The Guardian

Schools shut and people evacuated as torrential rain returns to Spain

Authorities in eastern and southern Spain have closed schools and begun evacuating residents as the country was hit by further torrential rains two weeks after catastrophic floods killed at least 215 people and unleashed a bitter political blame game.

time-read
3 mins  |
November 14, 2024
The Guardian

Swedish firm rebuked for using C-word in vaginal health advert

The Swedish advertising ombudsman has criticised a company for using the C-word in posters to promote vaginal nutritional supplements, saying the use of the \"gross profanity\" is offensive to consumers.

time-read
1 min  |
November 14, 2024
'I've lost everything Drought fuels hunger in southern Africa
The Guardian

'I've lost everything Drought fuels hunger in southern Africa

Emmanuel Himoonga paced his dry field, picking up stalks of maize that had been bleached almost to bone white. The 61-year-old chief of Shakumbila, a mainly agricultural community of about 7,000 people roughly 70 miles west of Zambia's capital, Lusaka, had seen droughts before. But since 2010 they have been happening once every three to four years, instead of every five years.

time-read
2 mins  |
November 14, 2024
The Guardian

Chinese ask questions over delayed reports of fatal attack

After a 63-year-old man rammed his car into a sports centre on Tuesday in Zhuhai, killing 35 people and severely injuring 43 others, questions have swirled on Chinese social media about why it took the authorities so long to reveal the details.

time-read
1 min  |
November 14, 2024
South African farms breeding tigers for sale in Asia, says report
The Guardian

South African farms breeding tigers for sale in Asia, says report

The largest tiger farms outside Asia are operating freely in South Africa, facilitating the illegal smuggling of tiger parts, according to a report by the animal welfare charity Four Paws.

time-read
1 min  |
November 14, 2024
Top Unrwa official says plan to shut agency is unrealistic and would add to suffering
The Guardian

Top Unrwa official says plan to shut agency is unrealistic and would add to suffering

Israel's plan to close the UN Palestinian relief agency, Unrwa, within three months is impossible and unrealistic without causing further untold suffering to Palestinians, its director of operations in Gaza has said.

time-read
2 mins  |
November 14, 2024
Scholz delivers plea for German unity ahead of confidence Vote
The Guardian

Scholz delivers plea for German unity ahead of confidence Vote

The German chancellor, Olaf Scholz, has defended his decision to oust his finance minister, which has led to the breakup of his government, arguing that to have kept the alliance going would have been at the expense of national stability and international security.

time-read
2 mins  |
November 14, 2024
The Guardian

Apple faces near-£3bn lawsuit over cloud storage 'monopoly'

Apple is facing a near-£3bn lawsuit over claims it breached competition law by effectively locking millions of UK customers into its cloud storage service at excessive prices.

time-read
2 mins  |
November 14, 2024
Windmill and 15th-century school added to register of at-risk sites
The Guardian

Windmill and 15th-century school added to register of at-risk sites

In April 1913, two women broke into the 15th-century Old Grammar School in Kings Norton near Birmingham with the intention of burning it to the ground in a protest for the cause of women's suffrage.

time-read
2 mins  |
November 14, 2024
The Guardian

Fayed accuser files claim in US to force brother to give evidence

A woman who claims to have been raped and trafficked while working for Mohamed Al Fayed has filed a legal claim in a US court to oblige his surviving younger brother to give evidence about his alleged knowledge of the crimes.

time-read
2 mins  |
November 14, 2024
'Put yourself in my hands' Manet is revealed as world-class mansplainer
The Guardian

'Put yourself in my hands' Manet is revealed as world-class mansplainer

Almost 140 years before a term was belatedly coined for the practice of men patronisingly setting women right on how certain things ought to be seen or done, it seems that a certain French painter had already become adept at the art of what must be called Manetsplaining.

time-read
2 mins  |
November 14, 2024
Undercover police officer set fire to Debenhams store, public inquiry told
The Guardian

Undercover police officer set fire to Debenhams store, public inquiry told

Evidence has emerged to suggest that an undercover police officer set fire to a high street department store while posing as a committed animal rights activist, causing damage worth £340,000, a public inquiry has heard.

time-read
2 mins  |
November 14, 2024
Delaying climate finance till 2035 'damaging' to poor countries - study
The Guardian

Delaying climate finance till 2035 'damaging' to poor countries - study

Poor countries need $1tn (£787bn) a year in climate finance by 2030, five years earlier than rich countries are likely to agree at ongoing UN climate talks, a new study has found.

time-read
3 mins  |
November 14, 2024
'I was so hot' Weather that ended a longed-for pregnancy
The Guardian

'I was so hot' Weather that ended a longed-for pregnancy

Mariama, not her real name, is a Burkinabe musician who lives in Ouagadougou. During the heatwaves earlier this year she went into early labour, and lost her baby.

time-read
3 mins  |
November 14, 2024
Music review Freewheelin' Dylan keeps band on alert
The Guardian

Music review Freewheelin' Dylan keeps band on alert

You could infer a lot from the way Bob Dylan's backing band arrange themselves on stage.

time-read
2 mins  |
November 14, 2024
Will written on boxes of mince pies and frozen fish is valid, court rules
The Guardian

Will written on boxes of mince pies and frozen fish is valid, court rules

A will written on the back of cardboard food packaging has been found to be valid by the high court, meaning a charity stands to inherit £180,000.

time-read
1 min  |
November 14, 2024
Exiles ask King Charles to rescind honour given to Bahrain's monarch
The Guardian

Exiles ask King Charles to rescind honour given to Bahrain's monarch

King Charles has been asked by exiles from Bahrain to rescind an honour he bestowed this week on the ruler of the Gulf kingdom.

time-read
2 mins  |
November 14, 2024
The Guardian

Number of people with diabetes has doubled in 30 years, global study says

The number of people with diabetes has doubled over the past 30 years to more than 800 million worldwide, according to an international study.

time-read
2 mins  |
November 14, 2024
Most TV ads for sweets and crisps shown before watershed
The Guardian

Most TV ads for sweets and crisps shown before watershed

Most TV adverts for sweets, crisps and chocolate shown when children are likely to be watching are made by firms who claim not to promote their products to that age group.

time-read
2 mins  |
November 14, 2024
British Museum given record £1bn collection of Chinese ceramics
The Guardian

British Museum given record £1bn collection of Chinese ceramics

The British Museum has been given a private collection of Chinese ceramics worth about £1bn, the highest value object donation in UK museum history.

time-read
2 mins  |
November 14, 2024
'Potentially powerful' What the report says on the role of four bishops
The Guardian

'Potentially powerful' What the report says on the role of four bishops

The review into abuse carried out by John Smyth suggested a number of senior Church of England figures failed to act on concerns and disclosures about sadistic abuse. This is what the report says about four serving and former C of E bishops.

time-read
4 mins  |
November 14, 2024
The Guardian

Cleric who knew of Smyth abuse may help select Welby successor

A retired clergyman who could be part of the selection process for the next archbishop of Canterbury knew about the sadistic abuse of boys and young men in the early 1980s but failed to take action, according to the report that triggered Justin Welby's resignation.

time-read
3 mins  |
November 14, 2024
Sara Sharif's father tells court he takes 'full responsibility' for daughter's death
The Guardian

Sara Sharif's father tells court he takes 'full responsibility' for daughter's death

Sara Sharif's father told a court yesterday that he took \"full responsibility\" for the 10-year-old's death and admitted striking her across the abdomen with a metal pole as she lay dying.

time-read
3 mins  |
November 14, 2024
The Guardian

'Minuscule' quantity of Salisbury novichok was enough to kill, inquiry hears

A \"minuscule\" amount of the nerve agent used in the attempted assassination of Sergei Skripal - as small as a sixth of a grain of salt - could have been enough to prove fatal, a government scientist has told an inquiry.

time-read
1 min  |
November 14, 2024
It may be early days but Kemi Kaze is the gift that keeps on giving - to the Labour party
The Guardian

It may be early days but Kemi Kaze is the gift that keeps on giving - to the Labour party

On balance, Keir Starmer can probably live with this. The first four months of his time in office may not have been quite as straightforward as he would have liked, but at least he can tick off prime minister's questions as something he doesn't have to worry much about.

time-read
2 mins  |
November 14, 2024
Pensions - Actors urge chancellor to boost green investment with overhaul
The Guardian

Pensions - Actors urge chancellor to boost green investment with overhaul

Leading British actors including Mark Rylance, Olivia Colman, and Benedict Cumberbatch have called on the chancellor to increase investment in clean energy by reforming pensions.

time-read
2 mins  |
November 14, 2024
Cost of assisted dying could force cuts to other NHS care, says Streeting
The Guardian

Cost of assisted dying could force cuts to other NHS care, says Streeting

Civil servants are looking at the extra costs that legalising assisted dying would put on the NHS, with a warning from Wes Streeting that some services may be cut to fund any expanded end-of-life care.

time-read
4 mins  |
November 14, 2024