TAGGED IN

World news

  1. ‘Rather fraught’: how Starmer’s team laid groundwork for positive Trump talks

    President’s warmth towards PM was apparent – but will No 10’s strategy prove successful longer-term? “We’re feeling good, we’re very well prepared,” one senior UK official declared on the eve of Keir Starmer’s highly anticipated first meeting with Donald Trump at the White House. The prime minister had just landed in Washington DC and been driven straight to a glitzy reception at the UK ambassador’s opulent Edwin Lutyens-designed residence. Under the sparkling crystal chandeliers and among the grand marble columns, his euphoric host, Peter Mandelson, introduced Starmer to guests including the new FBI director, Kush Patel. The Republican senator Lindsey Graham and the New York-based editor Tina Brown were also present. Continue reading...

  2. Starmer to hold talks with Zelenskyy and Meloni before Ukraine defence summit

    Prime minister will host more than a dozen countries over weekend as Europe tries to secure deal to end war Europe live – latest updates Keir Starmer will hold talks with Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Italy’s Giorgia Meloni in Downing Street on Sunday before a major London defence summit aimed at securing “lasting and enforced” peace in Ukraine. Fresh from his trip to see Donald Trump in the White House on Thursday, Starmer has headed back to London to host the defence summit, where more than a dozen world leaders will gather to discuss Ukraine. Continue reading...

  3. Labour’s aid cuts are morally wrong. Here’s why they make no economic sense either | Larry Elliott

    Aid was soft power but also good for business: as countries get richer, they buy exports. Strategically, this is very short-sighted Get right down to it and there are two reasons for thinking that cuts to Britain’s aid budget to pay for defence are a seriously bad idea. The first is that people will die as a result. There will be less money to respond to humanitarian crises and less money for vaccination programmes and hospitals. Realpolitik is being blamed for the decision, but realpolitik doesn’t make it right. But there are also economic arguments for rich countries providing financial support to less well-off nations, which were summed up succinctly in last year’s Labour party manifesto. This document could not have been clearer. International assistance, it said, helps make “the world a safer, more prosperous place”. Larry Elliott is a Guardian columnist Continue reading...

  4. Police search for answers after Gene Hackman and wife found dead at home

    Sheriffs search home in New Mexico after bodies discovered but say no sign of struggle, foul play or evidence of gas leak Investigators in Santa Fe, New Mexico, are continuing to search for answers after Gene Hackman, an Oscar winner who graced the silver screen for more than 60 years, and his wife, the classical pianist Betsy Arakawa, were found dead at their home under suspicious circumstances. A maintenance worker found the couple’s bodies at their home on Wednesday, along with one of their three dogs, who was also found dead. The front door was open, although the Santa Fe county sheriff’s office has said there were no signs of foul play, and no obvious evidence of a gas leak or carbon monoxide poisoning. But the scene was strange enough that the sheriff’s office sought a search warrant on Wednesday evening. Continue reading...

  5. The UK has a history of coddling authoritarian leaders – now it’s happening again | Andy Beckett

    British politicians think they exercise a moderating force on strongmen. In practice, ‘diplomacy’ and ‘pragmatism’ only ease their path Why is Westminster, supposedly one of the world’s great centres of democratic moderation, so welcoming to far-right foreign governments? For more than a century, since the dictatorship of Benito Mussolini, authoritarians have often found allies, apologists or a deliberate absence of criticism in the Commons, despite our parliament’s self-image as a historic enemy of fascism. One reason for this forgiving attitude is that foreign policy is a pragmatic business, and Britain has increasingly become a country that can’t afford to make enemies. The Starmer government’s determination to see no evil in the Trump administration can be partly explained in those terms. Andy Beckett is a Guardian columnist Continue reading...

  6. ‘Green roofs deliver for biodiversity’: how Basel put nature on top

    For decades, the Swiss city has been transforming its skyline, and now boasts some of the greenest rooftops in Europe Susanne Hablützel breaks up her work day by staring out the window at a rooftop garden. The view is not spectacular: a pile of dead wood sits atop an untidy plot that houses chicory, toadflax, thistle and moss. But Hablützel, a biologist in charge of nature projects in Basel, is enthralled by the plants and creatures the roof has brought in. “Tree fungi have settled in the trunks, and they are great to see – I love mushrooms. You can also see birds now – that wasn’t the case before.” Continue reading...

  7. Saudi border forces accused of killing ‘hundreds of Ethiopian migrants’

    Witnesses making the crossing from Yemen report coming under machine-gun fire and seeing rotting bodies Saudi Arabia’s forces are accused of using indiscriminate force against migrants on their borders, with reports of deaths and injuries and multiple accounts of women being raped.t. Ethiopian migrants attempting to cross from neighbouring Yemen between 2019 and 2024 have given accounts to the Guardian of coming under machine gun fire and of seeing bodies rotting in the border area. Continue reading...

  8. Planetary parade: Mercury falls into line for rare seven-planet alignment

    The seven will appear to form a straight line in the night sky in display that won’t be seen again until 2040 Seven planets will appear to align in the night sky on the last day of February in what is known as a planetary parade. These planetary hangouts happen when several planets appear to line up in the night sky at once. “A planetary parade is a moment when multiple planets are visible in the sky at the same time,” said Dr Greg Brown, an astronomer at the Royal Observatory Greenwich, told PA Media. “How impressive a parade it is will depend on how many planets are in it and how visible they are.” Continue reading...

  9. A journey through the hyper-political world of microchips

    From the raw materials required to the machines that make them, every part of the chip supply chain is fiercely contested in the global race for tech supremacy A small town in the Netherlands hosts the only factory that produces the only chip-making machines that generate a type of light found nowhere naturally on Earth: extreme ultraviolet, a light emitted by young stars in outer space. This light, known as EUV, is the only way to make one of the world’s most valuable and important technologies at scale: cutting-edge semiconductor chips. The factory is forbidden from selling its EUV machines to China. Continue reading...

  10. Ukraine war briefing: Trump panders to Russia by shutting Kyiv out of Nato, says Kaja Kallas

    EU foreign secretary says US wouldn’t have sat down with Bin Laden to ask what he wanted after 9/11; strikes on Kharkiv energy targets. What we know on day 1,101 Kaja Kallas, the EU foreign minister, has accused Donald Trump of falling for a Russian narrative by closing the door on Nato membership for Ukraine. “Why are we in Nato? It is because we are afraid of Russia. And the only thing that really works – the only security guarantee that works – is Nato’s umbrella,” she said. Trump said last week of the war that Ukraine potentially joining Nato was “probably the reason the whole thing started”. In an interview published on Thursday by Agence France-Presse, Kallas said: “These accusations are totally untrue. That is the Russian narrative that we should not buy.” Kallas – a former prime minister of Estonia, which borders Russia – said Nato countries had never attacked Russia which instead was “afraid of democracy”. Interviewed in Washington, the EU high representative for foreign affairs, said of Trump’s approach: “My question is, why we should give Russia what they want on top of what they have already done – attacking Ukraine, annexing territory, occupying territory, and now offering something on top of it? … Consider here in America that after 9/11 you would have sat down with Osama bin Laden and said ‘OK, what else do you want?’ I mean, it’s unimaginable.” Trump, meeting with the British prime minister, Keir Starmer, on Thursday appeared to distance himself from previous remarks in which he falsely called Volodymyr Zelenskyy a dictator. “Did I say that? I can’t believe I said that,” he said, before admitting that his relationship with the Ukrainian president had got a “little testy” over financial support but was now on firmer ground. Trump once again had to be corrected by a European leader when he falsely claimed Europe was getting back the money it had given for Ukraine’s defence. Starmer said: “We’re not getting all of ours. I mean, quite a bit of ours was gifted. It was given. There were some loans, but mainly it was gifted actually.” Emmauel Macron, the French president, interjected on the same point when he met with Trump on Monday. Russian forces staged mass strikes late on Thursday on energy targets in the Kharkiv region of north-eastern Ukraine, the regional governor said. Oleh Syniehubov said one man was injured in a Russian attack on the town of Balakliia, south-east of Kharkiv. Ukraine’s air force reported threats of attacks by glide bombs and drones in the region. North Korea has sent more soldiers to Russia and redeployed several to the frontline in Kursk, the South Korean spy agency told Agence France-Presse on Thursday. “The exact scale is still being assessed,” an official said. Ukrainian foreign ministry spokesperson Georgiy Tykhy said: “This is, I think, a wake-up call for everyone globally to understand that the security of Europe and the Indo-Pacific has never been more directly linked than it is today. We don’t think that the reaction of the international community has been sufficient.” Nato allies to Ukraine are preparing billions more in aid and contributions to security guarantees, the Nato secretary general, Mark Rutte, said on Thursday, adding he had had a great talk with Donald Trump. The US treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, has insisted there will be no more negotiations over a critical minerals and resources deal that the Trump administration is expecting Volodymyr Zelenskyy to sign when he arrives in Washington on Friday. Bessent said the deal was complete. Two researchers at France’s main state research agency were sentenced on Thursday to eight months in prison for throwing improvised explosive devices at the Russian consulate in Marseille in protest at Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine. Georges Sitja, 59, and Vasile Heresanu, 48, are expected to serve their sentences out of jail by wearing electronic tags. Continue reading...

Add a blog to Bloglovin’
Enter the full blog address (e.g. https://www.fashionsquad.com)
We're working on your request. This will take just a minute...