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The guilty From soldier to nurse, the men who assaulted a woman lying unconscious
Fifty men went on trial alongside Dominique Pelicot in connection with the drugging, rape and assault of Gisèle Pelicot.
'A taboo has been broken' Politicians' praise for giving voice to victims
Politicians from France and beyond have hailed Gisèle Pelicot's bravery and called the trial of the men who raped and abused her historic, while feminist groups have stressed there is still a long way to go and demanded fundamental changes to France's sexual abuse laws.
Day of the verdicts Inside, men wept as they were convicted. Outside, the crowd roared with relief
Inside, men wept as they were convicted. Outside, the crowd roared with relief
Cold cases Investigations into murder and sexual assaults in 90s reopened
Dominique Pelicot, who has been jailed for 20 years for drugging his then wife, Gisele Pelicot, and inviting men to rape her, faces a further investigation for the rape and murder of an estate agent in Paris in 1991, and an attempted rape in 1999, amid questions over whether he could have been a serial offender for decades.
Theatre review Space opera puts Sigourney Weaver in alien territory
Sigourney Weaver, the latest in the line of high-status screen stars to be wooed to the stage by the director Jamie Lloyd, may forever be known as Ellen Ripley to fans of her defining science-fiction role on film. She is certainly in alien territory here, and plays Prospero with the steely-voiced conviction of a commander giving urgent instruction to an interstellar space crew at imminent risk of attack.
Och AI: algorithm able to sniff out aromas of US and Scottish whiskies
Notch up another win for artificial intelligence. Researchers have used the technology to predict the major notes that waft off whisky and determine whether a dram was made in the US or Scotland.
Mandelson set to be named UK's new ambassador to US
Peter Mandelson is set to become Britain's next ambassador to the US, the first time a politician has been appointed to the role for almost half a century.
Gisèle Pelicot: 'I wanted all of society to be a witness'
Fifty one men found guilty in rape trial that shocked the world | Leaders and public honour the woman who refused to be shamed
Postecoglou claims coach's life is harder than being PM
A Premier League manager has a tougher job than the prime minister, according to Ange Postecoglou.
Rashford rebuked Players must talk to manager not media - Amorim
Ruben Amorim has said when he was a player he would have spoken to his manager about being dropped rather than react in the media, as Marcus Rashford has done.
Tonali double puts rampant Newcastle into last four
A sticking plaster for Newcastle's internal tensions or a potential long-term cure for their problems? Whatever the reality Eddie Howe's inconsistent team are a two-leg semi-final away from a potentially transformative Wembley showpiece after two stellar first-half goals from Sandro Tonali and another from Fabian Schär undid an immensely disappointing Brentford on Tyneside.
Jesus hat-trick delivers early Christmas gift as Arsenal topple Palace
It seems fitting that Gabriel Jesus should have chosen this time of year to end his goalscoring drought.
Elliott the difference as Rusk's Southampton put up late fight
It was a night that Simon Rusk will never forget, the one when he took charge of Southampton for the first time in the wake of Russell Martin's sacking and carried the fight to Arne Slot and Liverpool.
United circus has derailed Rashford but fresh start is no guarantee of success
It was two years ago yesterday that Argentina won the World Cup. England had gone out to France in the quarterfinals and, beyond the usual kneejerk attacks on Gareth Southgate, there was a sense of general optimism.
Maresca still 'trusts' Mudryk after failed drugs test
Enzo Maresca has thrown his support behind Mykhailo Mudryk, saying he believes the Chelsea winger's insistence that he is innocent of taking a banned substance.
Caldentey's late spot-kick secures first place for Arsenal
A late Mariona Caldentey penalty powered Arsenal to the top of Group C in the Champions League at Bayern Munich's expense after a Magda Eriksson double looked to have secured a draw for the visitors.
Taylor 'desperate' for a break as brilliant Barça take top spot from City
Manchester City's head coach, Gareth Taylor, says his team desperately need the upcoming winter break to bolster their squad, after they were comprehensively outplayed by a Barcelona side who reminded everybody why they are the reigning European champions with an emphatic win.
Freddie calls up Flintoff as teen makes the grade for Lions tour
Rocky Flintoff has been called up to his father's Lions squad for next month's tour of Australia, with England using the trip to give young bowlers who are already in contention for a place in the senior Test squad experience of local conditions before next winter's Ashes.
Ruthless McCullum shakes up England before defining year
Influx of young talents such as Bethell and Atkinson gives head coach a revived team but harder selection choices
Saudi incognito Usyk and Fury's titanic tussle flies under the radar in surreal Riyadh
Fight week in Riyadh, at least to an outsider, is an often ghostly experience.
Blacklisted Chinese firms got access to UK tech crucial to AI weapons, say ex-insiders
Chinese engineers developing chips for artificial intelligence that can be used in \"advanced weapons systems\" have access to cutting-edge UK technology, the Guardian can reveal.
ShoeZone says budget tax rises led to decision to close stores
The low-cost footwear retailer Shoe Zone has blamed extra costs resulting from changes to wages and national insurance contributions (NICs) in October's budget and weakening confidence for its decision to close stores.
Nissan is relying on cost-cutting, not innovation, to catch up in China's electric car fast lane
Until recently, the plan at crisis-hit Nissan was to muddle through somehow.
Still miles to go before people feel the effect of recovery
Keir Starmer's latest \"milestone\" for the economy is growth that can be \"felt in people's pockets\".
Energy firms to spend £77bn to rewire British electricity grid for clean power
Energy companies have promised to spend up to £77bn over five years to help rewire Great Britain's electricity infrastructure in the global race to shift from fossil fuels to clean electricity.
Bank likely to hold interest rates as inflation hits 2.6%
UK inflation has risen to its highest level in eight months, adding to pressure on the Bank of England to keep interest rates unchanged today despite a slowdown in the British economy.
Injured caver lifted out after four days stuck underground
An injured woman trapped in a cave in northern Italy was lifted to safety early yesterday, ending her four-day ordeal.
The fast and the festive: police stop car decorated for Christmas
It was a vehicle so festive it could have almost been Santa's sleigh. There was just one problem: it wasn't legal.
'Living hero': death row survivor welcomed back to Philippines
After 14 years on death row in Indonesia, Mary Jane Veloso arrived in Manila yesterday to the tight embrace of her family.
Sarkozy must wear electronic tag for a year, French appeals court confirms
France's highest appeals court has confirmed a verdict against the former president Nicolas Sarkozy for corruption and influence peddling, ordering him to wear an electronic tag for a year – a first for a former head of state.