BBC 2025-04-20 20:09:17


Rosenberg: Is Putin’s ‘Easter truce’ cause for scepticism or chance for peace?

Steven Rosenberg

BBC Russia Editor
Reporting fromMoscow

Last month the Trump administration proposed the idea of a 30-day comprehensive ceasefire.

Ukraine agreed. Russia did not. Or rather, it came up with a long list of conditions.

Instead of 30 days, the Kremlin decided on 30 hours. On Saturday, President Vladimir Putin announced a unilateral Easter truce in Ukraine until midnight Sunday night in Moscow.

He said he was acting out of “humanitarian” considerations.

Such a claim has been met with scepticism in Ukraine more than three years into Russia’s war against the country.

On social media on Sunday morning, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky posted that “the Russian army is attempting to create the general impression of a ceasefire, while in some areas still continuing isolated attempts to advance and inflict losses on Ukraine.”

Russia’s defence ministry took a different view.

In a statement, it said that “all Russian troops in the zone of the special military operation [Russia’s term for the invasion of Ukraine” from 18:00 Moscow time on 19 April have strictly adhered to the ceasefire regime and held their current positions.”

The Russian military also accused Ukraine of violating the ceasefire.

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Is Russia’s Easter ceasefire simply PR from Vladimir Putin?

Or does it represent a genuine step towards ending the war?

The sceptical view is that a 30-hour truce is less about pushing for peace and has more to do with maintaining good relations with the Trump White House. Since Donald Trump’s return to the Oval Office, Putin has been busy trying to repair ties with Washington and pave the way for a new era of co-operation.

However, recent public comments by American officials (including Trump himself) have suggested that the US administration has been growing impatient with the lack of progress on Ukraine. Trump has threatened to walk away from attempts to broker a peace deal if an agreement is looking unlikely.

By announcing a unilateral truce – albeit a short one – the Kremlin can argue that it is Russia – not Ukraine – that is committed to peace. Moscow is already blaming Kyiv for ceasefire violations and continued fighting.

Keep in mind, this brief ceasefire was declared at very short notice. Saturday’s announcement will have given little time for either side – Russia or Ukraine – to fully prepare for it.

But there is also a more optimistic view.

The Kremlin’s “Easter truce” was a surprise. But it did not come out of nowhere.

In recent weeks there has been intense international diplomacy to try to end the fighting.

Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff has met Putin three times in two months. The Kremlin leader’s envoy Kirill Dmitriev flew to Washington recently.

A few days ago Mr Witkoff and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio were in Paris for talks on Ukraine with President Emmanuel Macron. A delegation from Ukraine was there too.

Might there be a rare window of opportunity for peace?

Despite the reports of continued fighting, could a 30-hour ceasefire somehow grow into something more substantial, more comprehensive?

Having displayed little desire for compromise or concessions up to this point, could Putin be persuaded that now is the moment to strike a deal?

It is hard to see that right now.

Then again, when it comes to diplomacy, we are not privy to all the conversations taking place behind closed doors or to the details of possible deals under discussion.

We tend to only see the tip of the iceberg – which leaves open the possibility of more unexpected announcements.

Pakistan expels tens of thousands of Afghans

Yama Bariz

BBC World Service
Reporting fromTorkham border crossing

Pakistan has deported more than 19,500 Afghans this month, among more than 80,000 who have left ahead of a 30 April deadline, according to the UN.

Pakistan has accelerated its drive to expel undocumented Afghans and those who had temporary permission to stay, saying it can no longer cope.

Between 700 and 800 families are being deported daily, Taliban officials say, with up to two million people expected to follow in the coming months.

Pakistani Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar flew to Kabul on Saturday for talks with Taliban officials. His counterpart Amir Khan Muttaqi expressed “deep concern” about deportations.

Some expelled Afghans at the border said they had been born in Pakistan after their families fled conflict.

More than 3.5 million Afghans have been living in Pakistan, according to the UN’s refugee agency, including around 700,000 people who came after the Taliban takeover in 2021. The UN estimates that half are undocumented.

Pakistan has taken in Afghans through decades of war, but the government says the high number of refugees now poses risks to national security and causes pressure on public services.

  • Pakistan orders Afghan asylum seekers out
  • Afghans hiding in Pakistan live in fear

There has been a recent spike in border clashes between the security forces of both sides. Pakistan blames them on militants based in Afghanistan, which the Taliban deny.

Pakistan’s foreign ministry said the two sides had “discussed all issues of mutual interest” in Saturday’s meeting in Kabul.

Pakistan had extended a deadline for undocumented Afghans to leave the country by a month, to 30 April.

On the Torkham border crossing, some expelled Afghans told the BBC they left Afghanistan decades ago – or had never lived there.

“I lived my whole life in Pakistan,” said Sayed Rahman, a second-generation refugee born and raised in Pakistan. “I got married there. What am I supposed to do now?”

Saleh, a father of three daughters, worried what life under Taliban rule will mean for them. His daughters attended school in Pakistan’s Punjab province, but in Afghanistan, girls over the age of 12 are barred from doing so.

“I want my children to study. I don’t want their years in school to go to waste,” he said. “Everyone has the right to an education.”

Another man told the BBC: “Our children have never seen Afghanistan and even I don’t know what it looks like anymore. It might take us a year or more to settle in and find work. We feel helpless.”

The BBC reports at the Afghanistan-Pakistan border crossing

At the border, men and women pass through separate gates, under the watch of armed Pakistani and Afghan guards. Some of those returning were elderly – one man was carried across on a stretcher, another in a bed.

Military trucks shuttled families from the border to temporary shelters. Those originally from distant provinces stay there for several days, waiting for transport to their home regions.

Families clustered under canvases to escape the 30C degree heat, as swirling dust caught in the eyes and mouth. Resources are stretched and fierce arguments often break out over access to shelter.

Returnees receive between 4,000 and 10,000 Afghanis (£41 to £104) from the Kabul authorities, according to Hedayatullah Yad Shinwari, a member of the camp’s Taliban-appointed finance committee.

The mass deportation is placing significant pressure on Afghanistan’s fragile infrastructure, with an economy in crisis and a population nearing 45 million people.

“We have resolved most issues, but the arrival of people in such large numbers naturally brings difficulties,” said Bakht Jamal Gohar, the Taliban’s head of refugee affairs at the crossing. “These people left decades ago and left all their belongings behind. Some of their homes were destroyed during 20 years of war.”

Nearly every family told the BBC that Pakistani border guards restricted what they could bring – a complaint echoed by some human rights groups.

Chaudhry said in response that Pakistan did “not have any policy that prevents Afghan refugees from taking their household items with them”.

One man, sitting on the roadside in the blistering sun, said his children had begged to stay in Pakistan, the country where they were born. They had been given temporary residency, but that expired in March.

“Now we’ll never go back. Not after how we were treated,” he said.

Police algorithm said Lina was at ‘medium’ risk. Then she was killed

Linda Pressly and Esperanza Escribano

BBC News

In January, Lina went to the police.

Her ex-partner had been threatening her at home in the Spanish seaside town of Benalmádena. That day, he’d allegedly raised his hand as if to hit her.

“There had been violent episodes – she was scared,” Lina’s cousin Daniel recalls.

When she got to the police station, she was interviewed and her case registered with VioGén, a digital tool which assesses the likelihood of a woman being attacked again by the same man.

VioGén – an algorithm-based system – asks 35 questions about the abuse and its intensity, the aggressor’s access to weapons, his mental health and whether the woman has left, or is considering leaving, the relationship.

It then records the threat to her as “negligible”, “low”, “medium”, “high” or “extreme”.

The category is used to make decisions about the allocation of police resources to protect the woman.

Lina was deemed to be at “medium” risk.

She asked for a restraining order at a specialist gender violence court in Malaga, so that her ex-partner couldn’t be in contact with her or share her living space. The request was denied.

“Lina wanted to change the locks at her home, so she could live peacefully with her children,” says her cousin.

Three weeks later, she was dead. Her partner had allegedly used his key to enter her flat and soon the house was on fire.

While her children, mother and ex-partner all escaped, Lina didn’t. Her 11-year-old son was widely reported as telling police it was his father who killed his mother.

Lina’s lifeless body was retrieved from the charred interior of her home. Her ex-partner, the father of her three youngest children, was arrested.

Now, her death is raising questions about VioGén and its ability to keep women safe in Spain.

VioGén didn’t accurately predict the threat to Lina.

As a woman designated at “medium” risk, the protocol is that she would be followed up again by a nominated police officer within 30 days.

But Lina was dead before that. If she had been “high” risk, the police follow-up would have happened within a week. Could that have made a difference to Lina?

Tools to evaluate the threat of repeat domestic violence are used in North America and across Europe. In the UK, some police forces use DARA (Domestic Abuse Risk Assessment) – essentially a checklist. And DASH (Domestic Abuse, Stalking, Harassment and Honour-based Violence Assessment) may be employed by police or others, like social workers, to assess the risk of another attack.

But only in Spain is an algorithm woven so tightly into police practice. VioGén was developed by Spanish police and academics. It’s used everywhere apart from the Basque Country and Catalonia (those regions have separate systems, although police co-operation is nationwide).

The head of the National Police’s family and women’s unit in Malaga, Ch Insp Isabel Espejo, describes VioGén as “super-important”.

“It helps us follow each victim’s case very precisely,” she says.

Her officers deal with an average of 10 reports of gender violence a day. And every month, VioGén classifies nine or 10 women as being at “extreme” risk of repeat victimisation.

The resource implications in those cases are huge: 24-hour police protection for a woman until the circumstances change and the risk decreases. Women assessed as “high” risk may also get an officer escort.

A 2014 study found that officers accepted VioGén’s evaluation of the likelihood of repeated abuse 95% of the time. Critics suggest police are abdicating decision-making about women’s safety to an algorithm.

Ch Insp Espejo says that the algorithm’s calculation of risk is usually adequate. But she recognises – even though Lina’s case wasn’t under her command – that something went wrong with Lina’s assessment.

“I’m not going to say VioGén doesn’t fail – it does. But this wasn’t the trigger that led to this woman’s murder. The only guilty party is the person who killed Lina. Total security just doesn’t exist,” she says.

But at “medium” risk, Lina was never a police priority. And did Lina’s VioGén assessment have an impact on the court’s decision to deny her a restraining order against her ex-partner?

Court authorities didn’t give us permission to meet the judge who denied Lina an injunction against her ex-partner – a woman attacked on social media after Lina’s death.

Instead, another of Malaga’s gender violence judges, Maria del Carmen Gutiérrez tells us in general terms that such an order needs two things: evidence of a crime and the threat of serious danger to the victim.

“VioGén is one element I use to assess that danger, but it’s far from the only one,” she says.

Sometimes, the judge says, she makes restraining orders in cases where VioGén has assessed a woman as at “negligible” or “low” risk. On other occasions she may conclude there’s no danger to a woman deemed at “medium” or “high” risk of repeat victimisation.

Dr Juan Jose Medina, a criminologist at the University of Seville, says Spain has a “postcode lottery” for women applying for restraining orders – some jurisdictions are much more likely to grant them than others. But we don’t know systematically how VioGén influences the courts, or the police, because studies haven’t been done.

“How are police officers and other stakeholders using this tool, and how is it informing their decision-making? We don’t have good answers,” he says.

Spain’s interior ministry hasn’t often allowed academics access to VioGén’s data. And there hasn’t been an independent audit of the algorithm.

Gemma Galdon, the founder of Eticas – an organisation working on the social and ethical impact of technology – says if you don’t audit these systems, you won’t know if they’re actually delivering police protection to the right women.

Examples of algorithmic bias elsewhere are well-documented. In the US, analysis from 2016 of a recidivism tool found black defendants were more likely than their white peers to be incorrectly judged to be at higher risk of repeat offending. At the same time, white defendants were more likely than black defendants to be wrongly flagged as low risk.

In 2018, Spain’s interior ministry didn’t give a green light to an Eticas proposal to conduct a confidential, pro-bono, internal audit. So instead, Gemma Galdon and her colleagues decided to reverse-engineer VioGén and do an external audit.

They used interviews with women survivors of domestic abuse and publicly available information – including data from the judiciary about women who, like Lina, had been killed.

They found that between 2003 and 2021, 71 women murdered by their partners or ex-partners had previously reported domestic abuse to the police. Those recorded on the VioGén system were given risk levels of “negligible” or “medium”.

“What we’d like to know is, were those error rates that cannot be mitigated in any way? Or could we have done something to improve how these systems assign risk and protect those women better?” asks Gemma Galdon.

The head of gender violence research at Spain’s interior ministry, Juan José López-Ossorio, is dismissive of the Eticas investigation: it wasn’t done with VioGén data. “If you don’t have access to the data, how can you interpret it?” he says.

And he is wary of an external audit, fearing it could compromise both the security of women whose cases are recorded and VioGén’s procedures.

“What we know is that once a woman reports a man and she’s under police protection, the probability of further violence is substantially lowered – we’ve no doubts about that,” says López-Ossorio.

VioGén has evolved since it was introduced in Spain. The questionnaire has been refined, and the “negligible” category of risk will soon be abolished. And even critics agree it makes sense to have a standardised system responding to gender violence.

In Benalmádena, Lina’s home has become a shrine.

Flowers, candles and pictures of saints were left on the step. A small poster stuck on the wall declared: Benalmádena says no to gender violence. The community fundraised for Lina’s children.

Her cousin, Daniel, says everyone’s still reeling from news of her death.

“The family it’s destroyed – especially Lina’s mother,” he says.

“She’s 82 years old. I don’t think there’s anything sadder than to have your daughter killed by an aggressor in a way that could have been avoided. The children are still in shock – they’ll need a lot of psychological help.”

India’s sword-wielding grandmother still going strong at 82

Sumitra Nair

Kerala

An 82-year-old woman who teaches the ancient Indian martial art of Kalaripayattu says she has no plans to retire.

“I’ll probably practise Kalari until the day I die,” says Meenakshi Raghavan, widely thought to be the oldest woman in the world to practise the art form.

Kalaripayattu – kalari means battleground and payattu means fight – is believed to have originated at least 3,000 years back in the southern state of Kerala and is regarded as India’s oldest martial art.

It is not solely practised for combat or fighting; it also serves to instil discipline, build strength and develop self-defence skills.

Ms Raghavan is fondly known as Meenakshi Amma – Amma means mother in the Malayalam language – in Kerala’s Vadakara, where she lives. The town is also home to other renowned exponents of the art like Unniyarcha, Aromal Chekavar and Thacholi Othenan.

Meenakshi Amma occasionally performs in other cities but mainly runs her own Kalari school, founded by her husband in 1950. Her days are busy, with classes from five in the morning to noon.

“I teach about 50 students daily. My four children were also trained [in the art form] by me and my husband. They started learning from the age of six,” she says.

Kalaripayattu has four stages and it requires patience to learn the art form.

Training begins with meypattu – an oil massage followed by exercises to condition the body.

After about two years, students progress to kolthari (stick fighting), then to angathari (weapon combat), and finally to verumkai – the highest level, involving unarmed combat. It typically takes up to five years to master Kalaripayattu.

Kung fu is believed to have adapted principles like breathing techniques and marmashastra (stimulating vital points to optimise energy flow) from Kalaripayattu, according to Vinod Kadangal, another Kalari teacher.

Legend has it that around the 6th Century, Indian Buddhist monk Bodhidharma introduced these techniques to the Shaolin monks, influencing the more famous Chinese martial art.

Meenakshi Amma still recalls the first time she stepped into a Kalari – the red-earth arena where the art is practised – 75 years ago.

“I was seven and quite good at dancing. So my guru – VP Raghavan – approached my father and suggested that I learn Kalaripayattu. Just like dance, the art form requires you to be flexible,” she says.

Hailing from Kerala’s Thiyya community, Meenakshi Amma’s guru was 15 when he and his brothers opened their own Kalaripayattu school after being denied admission elsewhere because of their low social caste.

“There was no bias when it came to girls enrolling to study Kalari – in fact, physical education was compulsory in all Kerala schools at that time. But we were expected to stop after attaining puberty,” she says.

Unlike others, Meenakshi Amma’s father encouraged her training into her late teens. At 17, she fell in love with Raghavan, and they soon married. Together, they went on to train hundreds of students, often for free.

“At the time, a lot of children came from poor families. The only money he [Raghavan] accepted was in the form of or a tribute paid to the teacher,” she says.

Donations sustained the school, while Raghavan later took a teaching job for extra income. After his death in 2007, Meenakshi Amma formally took charge.

While she has no plans to retire at the moment, she hopes to hand over the school one day to her eldest son Sanjeev.

The 62-year-old, who is also an instructor at the school, says he is lucky to have learnt from the best – his mother. But being her son earns no favours; he says she’s still his toughest opponent.

Meenakshi Amma is a local celebrity. During our interview, three politicians drop by to invite her to an awards ceremony.

“Amma, you must grace us with your presence,” one of them says with folded hands.

“Thank you for considering me, I’ll attend,” she replies.

Her students speak of “fierce admiration” for her. Many have opened their own Kalari schools across the state, a source of great pride for Meenakshi Amma.

“She’s an inspiration to women everywhere – a rare person who shows love and affection to her students, yet remains a strict disciplinarian when it comes to Kalari,” says KF Thomas, a former student.

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Designed in US, made in China: Why Apple is stuck

Annabelle Liang

Business reporter
Reporting fromSingapore

Every iPhone comes with a label which tells you it was designed in California.

While the sleek rectangle that runs many of our lives is indeed designed in the United States, it is likely to have come to life thousands of miles away in China: the country hit hardest by US President Donald Trump’s tariffs, now rising to 245% on some Chinese imports.

Apple sells more than 220 million iPhones a year and by most estimates, nine in 10 are made in China. From the glossy screens to the battery packs, it’s here that many of the components in an Apple product are made, sourced and assembled into iPhones, iPads or Macbooks. Most are shipped to the US, Apple’s largest market.

Luckily for the firm, Trump suddenly exempted smartphones, computers and some other electronic devices from his tariffs last week.

But the comfort is short-lived.

The president has since suggested that more tariffs are coming: “NOBODY is getting ‘off the hook’,” he wrote on Truth Social, as his administration investigated “semiconductors and the WHOLE ELECTRONICS SUPPLY CHAIN”.

The global supply chain that Apple has touted as a strength is now a vulnerability.

The US and China, the world’s two biggest economies, are interdependent and Trump’s staggering tariffs have upended that relationship overnight, leading to an inevitable question: who is the more dependent of the two?

How a lifeline became a threat

China has hugely benefited from hosting assembly lines for one of the world’s most valuable companies. It was a calling card to the West for quality manufacturing and has helped spur local innovation.

Apple entered China in the 1990s to sell computers through third-party suppliers.

Around 1997, when it was on the verge of bankruptcy as it struggled to compete with rivals, Apple found a lifeline in China. A young Chinese economy was opening up to foreign companies to boost manufacturing and create more jobs.

It wasn’t until 2001 though that Apple officially arrived in China, through a Shanghai-based trading company, and started making products in the country. It partnered with Foxconn, a Taiwanese electronic manufacturer operating in China, to make iPods, then iMacs and subsequently iPhones.

As Beijing began trading with the world – encouraged by the US no less – Apple grew its footprint in what was becoming the world’s factory.

Back then, China was not primed to make the iPhone. But Apple chose its own crop of suppliers and helped them grow into “manufacturing superstars,” according to supply chain expert Lin Xueping.

He cites the example of Beijing Jingdiao, now a leading manufacturer of high-speed precision machinery, which is used to make advanced components efficiently. The company, which used to cut acrylic, was not considered a machine tool-maker – but it eventually developed machinery to cut glass and became “the star of Apple’s mobile phone surface processing,” Mr Lin says.

Apple opened its first store in the country in Beijing in 2008, the year the city hosted the Olympics and China’s relationship with the West was at an all-time high. This soon snowballed to 50 stores, with customers queuing out of the door.

As Apple’s profit margins grew, so did its assembly lines in China, with Foxconn operating the world’s largest iPhone factory in Zhengzhou, which has since been termed “iPhone City”.

For a fast-growing China, Apple became a symbol of advanced Western tech – simple yet original and slick.

Today, most of Apple’s prized iPhones are manufactured by Foxconn. The advanced chips that power them are made in Taiwan, by the world’s largest chip manufacturer, TSMC. The manufacturing also requires rare earth elements which are used in audio applications and cameras.

Some 150 of Apple’s top 187 suppliers in 2024 had factories in China, according to an analysis by Nikkei Asia.

“There’s no supply chain in the world that’s more critical to us than China,” Apple’s chief executive Tim Cook said in an interview last year.

The tariff threat – fantasy or ambition?

In Trump’s first term, Apple secured exemptions on the tariffs he imposed on China.

But this time, the Trump administration has made an example of Apple before it reversed tariffs on some electronics. It believes the threat of steep taxes will encourage businesses to make products in America instead.

“The army of millions and millions of human beings screwing in little screws to make iPhones – that kind of thing is going to come to America,” Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said in an interview earlier this month.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt reiterated that last week: “President Trump has made it clear America cannot rely on China to manufacture critical technologies such as semiconductors, chips, smartphones and laptops.”

She added: “At the direction of the president, these companies are hustling to onshore their manufacturing in the United States as soon as possible.”

But many are sceptical of that.

The thought that Apple could move its assembly operation to the US is “pure fantasy,” according to Eli Friedman, who formerly sat on the firm’s academic advisory board.

He says the company has been talking about diversifying its supply chain away from China since 2013, when he joined the board – but the US was never an option.

Mr Friedman adds that Apple didn’t make much progress over the next decade but “really made an effort” after the pandemic, when China’s tightly controlled Covid lockdowns hurt manufacturing output.

“The most important new locations for assembly have been Vietnam and India. But of course the majority of Apple assembly still takes place [in China].”

Apple did not respond to the BBC’s questions but its website says its supply chain spans “thousands of businesses and more than 50 countries”.

Challenges ahead

Any change to Apple’s current supply chain status quo would be a huge blow for China, which is trying to kickstart growth post-pandemic.

Many of the reasons that the country wanted to be a manufacturing hub for Western companies in the early 2000s ring true today – it creates hundreds of thousands of jobs, and gives the country a crucial edge in global trade.

“Apple sits at the intersection of US-China tensions, and tariffs highlight the cost of that exposure,” says Jigar Dixit, a supply chain and operations consultant.

It might explain why China has not bowed to Trump’s threats, retaliating instead with 125% levies on US imports. China has also imposed export controls on a range of critical rare earth minerals and magnets it has in stores, dealing a blow to the US.

There is no doubt the US tariffs still being levied on other Chinese sectors will hurt, though.

And it’s not just Beijing facing higher tariffs – Trump has made it clear he will target countries that are part of the Chinese supply chain. For instance Vietnam, where Apple has moved AirPods production, was facing 46% tariffs before Trump hit pause for 90 days, so moving production elsewhere in Asia is not an easy way out.

“All conceivable places for the huge Foxconn assembly sites with tens or hundreds of thousands of workers are in Asia, and all of these countries are facing higher tariffs,” Mr Friedman says.

So what does Apple do now?

The company is fighting off stiff competition from Chinese firms as the government pushes for advanced tech manufacturing in a race with the US.

Now that “Apple has cultivated China’s electronic manufacturing capabilities, Huawei, Xiaomi, Oppo and others can reuse Apple’s mature supply chain,” according to Mr Lin.

Last year, Apple lost its place as China’s biggest smartphone seller to Huawei and Vivo. Chinese people are not spending enough because of a sluggish economy and with ChatGPT banned in China, Apple is also struggling to retain an edge among buyers seeking AI-powered phones. It even offered rare discounts on iPhones in January to boost sales.

And while operating under President Xi Jinping’s increasingly close grip, Apple has had to limit the use of Bluetooth and Airdrop on its devices as the Chinese Communist Party sought to censor political messages that people were sharing. It weathered a crackdown on the tech industry that even touched Alibaba founder and multi-billionaire Jack Ma.

Apple has announced a $500bn (£378bn) investment in the US, though that may not be enough to appease the Trump administration for long.

Given the several U-turns and the uncertainty around Trump’s tariffs, more surprise levies are expected – which could again leave the company with little manoeuvring room and even less time.

Mr Dixit says smartphone tariffs will not cripple Apple should they rear their head again, but regardless will add “pressure – both operationally and politically” to a supply chain that cannot be unwound quickly.

“Clearly the severity of the immediate crisis has been lessened,” Mr Friedman adds, referring to last week’s exemption for smartphones.

“But I really don’t think this means Apple can relax.”

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Pope wishes worshippers Happy Easter after serious illness

Hafsa Khalil

BBC News
Pope Francis wishes the faithful ‘happy Easter’ from Vatican city

Pope Francis has appeared at the Vatican’s St Peter’s Square to wish “Happy Easter” to thousands of worshippers.

The Pope, 88, came out in a wheelchair and waved from the balcony of St Peter’s Basilica to cheering crowds below, saying: “Dear brothers and sisters, Happy Easter.”

His traditional Easter address was delivered by a clergy member.

After the blessing, the Pope was driven around the square. As he passed through the crowds, his procession paused a number of times as babies were brought over for him to bless.

His appearance on Easter Sunday had been highly anticipated. Last month, he was discharged from hospital after five weeks of treatment for an infection that led to double pneumonia.

The Pope’s Easter blessing, delivered by a clergy member as the pontiff sat looking frail beside him, said: “There can be no peace without freedom of religion, freedom of thought, freedom of expression and respect for the views of others.”

“What a great thirst for death, for killing we see in the many conflicts raging in different parts of the world,” the Pope said in the address.

The Pope remembered the people of Gaza, in particular its Christian population, as the conflict “causes death and destruction” and creates a “deplorable humanitarian situation”.

He also called growing global antisemitism “worrisome”.

“I express my closeness to the sufferings… for all the Israeli people and the Palestinian people,” the message said. “Call a ceasefire, release the hostages and come to the aid of a starving people that aspires to a future of peace.”

The Pope also encouraged all parties involved in the Ukraine war to “pursue efforts aimed at achieving a just and lasting peace.”

Prior to Sunday’s celebrations, the Pope had been seen out twice this week.

Tens of thousands of Catholics had gathered in Rome for Easter Mass during this special jubilee year, which takes place every 25 years and sees millions of pilgrims descend on the city.

The jubilee year kicked off with the Pope opening the usually bricked-up Holy Door at St Peter’s Basilica on 24 December.

For the first time since becoming pope in 2013, he had missed the majority of Holy Week events, including Saturday’s Easter vigil at St Peter’s Basilica, where he delegated his duties to cardinals.

But, during a brief appearance inside the basilica on that day, he prayed and gave sweets to children.

When he was discharged from hospital in March, his doctors had said he would need at least two months of rest at his residence.

The pontiff had presented “two very critical episodes” where his “life was in danger” while in hospital, according to one of the doctors who took care of him.

Dr Sergio Alfieri added that the Pope was never intubated and always remained alert and oriented in hospital.

Pope Francis, who is from Argentina, has suffered a number of health issues throughout his life, including having part of one of his lungs removed at age 21, making him more prone to infections.

Also on Sunday morning, US Vice-President JD Vance – a Roman Catholic who converted as an adult – had a brief private meeting with the Pope.

Vance arrived in Rome on Friday, and on Saturday met with the Vatican’s Secretary of State and Secretary for Relations with States and International Organisation.

During “cordial talks” on Saturday, the parties expressed satisfaction with “good existing bilateral relations” and a “common commitment to protect the right to freedom of religion and conscience”, the Vatican said in a statement.

“There was an exchange of opinions on the international situation, especially regarding countries affected by war, political tensions and difficult humanitarian situations, with particular attention to migrants, refugees, and prisoners,” the statement read.

Inside the rural Texas town where Elon Musk is basing his business empire

Mike Wendling

@mwendling
Reporting fromBastrop, Texas

After fleeing Silicon Valley for political and business reasons, Elon Musk is building a corporate campus in rural Texas – but his new neighbours have mixed views.

Half an hour east of Austin, past the airport, the clogged-up traffic starts to melt away and the plains of Central Texas open up, leaving the booming city behind.

Somewhere along the main two-lane highway, a left turn takes drivers down Farm-to-Market Road 1209. It seems like an unlikely address for a high-tech hub, but that’s exactly what Elon Musk, the world’s richest man and one of President Donald Trump’s closest allies, hopes it will become.

Court filings indicate that a large metal building finished in the last few months will be the new headquarters of X, his social media platform.

A short distance away, a large logo of the Boring Company, Musk’s infrastructure company, is plastered on the side of another headquarters. And across FM 1209 is a rapidly growing SpaceX facility which manufactures Starlink satellite internet equipment.

Like most technology tycoons, Musk had long made Silicon Valley his home and headquarters. Once a supporter of the Democrats, his move to Texas is part of a larger tech world trend and also appears to reflect his own transformed ideological views.

Here the land is (relatively) cheap, skilled tech workers from nearby Austin are plentiful, and local laws are favourable to development.

Of course, there are also specific political angles to the move.

In July 2024, Musk said he was quitting California after the state passed a law prohibiting teachers from enforcing rules about notifying families when students’ gender identity changes.

Musk has an estranged transgender daughter and has spoken out against what he calls “woke mind virus” which he describes in interviews as divisive identity politics – along with anti-meritocratic and anti-free speech ideas.

And so Musk upped sticks and headed to Texas, a Republican stronghold and the fastest-growing state in the US.

In addition to the cluster of buildings near Bastrop in central Texas, he has built a SpaceX facility in Cameron County, on the southern tip of Texas near the border with Mexico. SpaceX employees there have filed a petition to create a new town called Starbase. The measure will go to a vote in May.

Locals in Bastrop have mixed feelings about the development.

“It’s almost like we have a split personality,” says Sylvia Carrillo, city manager of Bastrop, which has a growing population of more than 12,000. “Residents are happy that their children and grandchildren will have jobs in the area.

“On the other hand it can feel like we are being overwhelmed by a third party and that the development will quickly urbanise our area,” she says.

Although the Musk development is technically outside of the city’s limits, it’s close enough that Texas laws give Bastrop’s government sway over development. And, Ms Carrillo stresses, the Musk buildings are just one example of many developments springing up in a booming area.

“He’s faced a backlash that is not entirely of his own creating,” she says.

“But now that he’s here and things are changing quickly, it’s a matter of managing” issues like house and land prices and the environment, she says.

The Musk compound is still fairly bare-bones. The grandly named Hyperloop Plaza sits in the middle of the corporate buildings, and is home to the company-owned Boring Bodega, a bar, coffee shop, hairdresser and gift shop.

On a recent windy Sunday afternoon, a video game console sat unplayed in front of a couch near a display of company T-shirts, while a few children scurried back and forth to a playground outside.

The developments in Bastrop fit right into the quickening pace of activity across central Texas, where cranes perpetually loom above the Austin skyline and the housing market is a perpetual topic of conversation.

The area has gone through various industry booms and busts over the years, including lumber and coal mining, says Judy Enis, a volunteer guide at the Bastrop Museum and Visitor Center.

During World War Two, tens of thousands of soldiers – and around 10,000 German prisoners of war – poured in to Camp Swift, a US Army facility north of the town.

“That probably had more of an impact than Elon Musk,” Ms Enis notes.

Views of the tycoon are mixed, to say the least, and inseparable not only from his politics but also opinions on economic development, in what still is a predominately rural area.

Judah Ross, a local real estate agent, says the development has supercharged population growth that started as a result of the Austin boom and accelerated during the Covid pandemic.

“I’m always going to be biased because I want the growth,” Mr Ross says. “But I love it here and I want to be part of it.

“If nothing else, what’s good is the amount of jobs that this is bringing in,” he says. “In the past year, I’ve sold to people working at Boring and SpaceX.”

Alfonso Lopez, a Texan who returned to the state after working in tech in Seattle, says he initially picked Bastrop figuring he would make a quick buck on a house purchase and move on.

Instead, he quickly became enamoured with the town, its mix of local businesses and friendly people, and wants to stay.

Mr Lopez is no big fan of Musk and is critical of some of his management practices and politics, but admires the technology his companies have built and is happy to live nearby as long as the companies are good neighbours.

“As long as they don’t ruin my water or dig a tunnel beneath my house and create a sinkhole, this isn’t bad,” he says, gesturing around the metal shed housing the bodega, coffee shop and bar. “I’ll come here and watch a game.”

His concerns about water are more than theoretical. Last year The Boring Company was fined $11,876 (£8,950) by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality after being cited for water pollution violations.

The Boring Company initially planned to dump wastewater in the nearby Colorado River but, after local pressure, signed a deal to send the sludge to a Bastrop wastewater treatment plant.

The water issues appear to have delayed housebuilding, which reportedly could include more than 100 homes for Musk employees. The planned development of homes has so far failed to materialise, however. For now, the extent of living quarters is a handful of temporary trailers behind the bodega building, surrounded by a wall, acres of Texas plain and a few horses munching grass. Ms Carrillo, the city manager, says any large-scale home building is at least a year off.

In November, SpaceX applied for a free trade zone designation, which would allow it to move materials and finished products in and out of the Bastrop factory without being subject to tariffs – one of Donald Trump’s signature policies.

It’s a common practice for manufacturers, and there are hundreds of similar zones across the country.

Local officials in Texas have endorsed the proposal, saying it will boost the local economy, despite costing the county an estimated $45,000 (£34,800) in revenue this year.

The company is also getting an injection of $17.3m (£13.4m) from the Texas government to develop the site, a grant that officials say is expected to create more than 400 jobs and $280m in capital investment in Bastrop.

Few local residents wanted to directly criticise Musk when standing face-to-face with a visiting reporter. But it’s a different story online, where sharper feelings shine through.

“They will ruin everything nearby,” one resident posted on a local online forum. “Nothing good comes with him.”

The BBC contacted SpaceX, The Boring Company and X for comment.

Ms Carrillo, the city manager, says she hasn’t picked up on much personal anger on the part of locals prompted by Musk’s activities in Washington.

But to protect Bastrop, she says, the city has recently enacted laws limiting housing density and providing for public parks – measures that she says will keep the “historic nature” of the well-preserved downtown while allowing for growth on the outskirts.

Bastrop, she says, is a conservative, traditionally Republican place.

“His national stuff doesn’t really register,” she says. “His companies have been good corporate citizens, and we hope it can stay that way.”

DHL suspends high value US deliveries over tariffs

Dearbail Jordan

Business reporter, BBC News

DHL Express is suspending deliveries to the US worth more than $800 (£603) because of a “significant increase” in red tape at customs following the intruduction of Donald Trump’s new tariff regime.

The delivery giant said it will temporarily stop shipments from companies in all countries to American consumers on Monday “until further notice”.

It added that business-to-business shipments will still go ahead, “though they may also face delays”.

Previously, packages worth up to $2,500 could enter the US with minimal paperwork but due to tighter customs checks that came into force alongside Trump’s tariffs earlier this month, the threshold has been lowered.

DHL said that the change “has caused a surge in formal customs clearances, which we are handling around the clock”.

It said that while it is working to “scale up and manage this increase, shipments woth over $800, regardless of origin, may experience multi-day delays”.

The company said it will still deliver packages worth less than $800, which can be sent to the US with minimal checks.

But the White House is set to clamp down on deliveries under $800 – specifically those sent from China and Hong Kong – on 2 May when it closes a loophole allowing low-value packages to enter the US without incurring any duties.

The removal of the so-called “de minimis” rule will impact the likes of the fast-fashion firm Shein and Temu, the low-cost retail giant.

Shein and Temu have both warned that they will increase prices “due to recent changes in global trade rules and tariffs”.

The Trump administration has claimed that “many shippers” in China “hide illicit substances and conceal the true contents of shipments sent to the US through deceptive shipping practices”.

Under an excutive order, the White House said the measures were aimed at “addressing the synthetic opioid supply chain” which it said “play a significant role in the synthetic opioid crisis in the US”.

Beijing has said that the opioid fentanyl is a “US problem” and China has the strictest drug policies in the world.

Last week, Hongkong Post said it was suspending packages sent to the US by sea and, from 27 April, would stop accepting parcels destined for America.

It said: “The US is unreasonable, bullying and imposing tariffs abusively.”

Five dead as huge waves hit Australia coast

Neha Gohil

BBC News

Five people have drowned after huge waves hit parts of Australia at the start of the Easter weekend.

Two others are missing off the coasts of New South Wales and Victoria states.

On Saturday the body of a man was found in the water near Tathra in southern New South Wales. It came a day after a 58-year-old fisherman and two other men were found dead in separate incidents in the state.

Rescuers are searching for a man who was washed into the water near Sydney. Also on Friday, one woman drowned and a man is missing after their group was swept into sea in San Remo in Victoria.

“One of the women managed to make her way back to shore but the other woman and the man were unable to,” Victoria police said.

Victoria Premier Jacinta Allan said it marked a “awful start” to the Easter weekend.

“My thoughts are with the family of someone who has lost their life in such tragic circumstances, and potentially there is more difficult news to come,” she said.

Australia’s eastern states have been battered by dangerous waves.

The head of the charity Surf Life Saving Australia, Adam Weir, advised holidaymakers to visit patrolled beaches after their data showed 630 people had drowned at unpatrolled beaches in the past 10 years.

“But these coastal locations can present dangers, some that you can see and some that you can’t, which is why we have some simple advice: Stop, Look, Stay Alive.”

The mother and children trapped between two conflicts

Akisa Wandera

BBC News, Renk

When the devastating war in Sudan reached Sarah Williams’ neighbourhood in the capital Khartoum, she and her children were caught in the crossfire.

Bullets tore through their home, fires engulfed buildings, and electricity lines sparked explosions.

“We were crawling on the ground,” she recalls, holding her one-year-old son close. “It was chaos.”

Ms Williams, a 33-year-old mother of five, is from South Sudan.

She was forced to flee when civil war erupted in 2013, two years after it gained independence from Sudan, to become the world’s newest nation.

But the post-independence euphoria soon dissipated, when a power struggle between President Salva Kiir and his deputy Riek Machar triggered a civil war that claimed the lives of an estimated 400,000 people and forced 2.5 million people to flee their homes.

Ms Williams was among them. After arriving in what was then a peaceful Khartoum, she rebuilt her life, working as a housekeeper for a middle-class family.

But she was uprooted again after fighting erupted in the city in 2023 between forces loyal to military ruler Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and his then-deputy Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, better known as Hemedti.

“The conflict started among themselves,” Ms Williams says. “But later, they began killing South Sudanese also, even though we weren’t part of their fight.”

In the past two years, the conflict in Sudan has claimed more than 150,000 lives, forcing more than 12 million people from their homes, and turning large parts of Khartoum into rubble.

When her home came under attack, she packed her few belongings and headed back to South Sudan.

However, conflict has now resumed there too, with the United Nations (UN) warning that the 2018 peace agreement between Kiir and Machar is at risk of collapsing.

Ms Williams’ journey has ended, for now, in Renk. A once quiet dusty border town, it has turned into a transit hub, heaving with refugees from both Sudan and its neighbour to the south.

Stranded in Renk for about five months, Ms Williams wants to return to her hometown, Nasir, in Upper Nile State.

However, it is unsafe to travel to Nasir – a strategically important port town along the Sobat River – as it has turned into a war zone.

“There’s conflict ahead of us,” she tells the BBC, holding her four-year-old daughter while gently rocking her one-year-old son.

Her voice is steady, but her eyes are heavy – carrying the weight of war, loss, and uncertainty.

Government troops and the White Army – a militia allied with Machar during the civil war – have repeatedly clashed in Nasir, with reports of heavy shelling, ambushes, and displacement of residents.

Ms Williams has not heard from her family in the town.

“I don’t know where they ran to when the clashes started… or even if they’re alive,” she says quietly.

The fighting in South Sudan has left thousands of people like Ms Williams stranded at the Renk Transit Centre. The camp is overcrowded, accommodating more than 9,000 people – three times the number it was designed for.

Refugees are given a small amount of cash by aid agencies to buy food, but it lasts for only two weeks and they are then expected to fend for themselves.

Sarah says she and other refugees were then forced to chop down trees to sell as firewood, so that they could raise money for food

“I used to collect firewood and sell it to buy flour, but there’s nothing left in the forest now. No wood for women to collect and sell,” Ms Williams says – a reminder of the environmental degradation that war causes.

Corrugated shelters at the camp squeeze in up to 15 people per room. Others build fragile homes from sticks, cloth, and torn sacks. Overcrowding is fuelling disease, hunger and despair.

Aid agencies are scrambling to move families to safer parts of South Sudan, where people have “stronger community or family ties, livelihood opportunities, and better access to services”, says Vijaya Souri of the International Organization for Migration (IOM).

Hundreds wait under a scorching sun to board metal boats bound for Malakal. The journey takes two and a half days down the River Nile. Passengers sit on their luggage or the floor of the boat.

Among them is Mary Deng, who escaped from Wad Madani, a fierce battleground in the Sudanese conflict.

“This child was just one day old when we crossed the border,” she says. “We are 16 in total. We had no money – but we had God.”

She clutches a bundle of documents – her family’s ticket out of Renk.

Medical services are stretched to their limits. The Joda border clinic – built from iron sheets – is the only functioning health centre in the area.

“Over 600 babies have been born here since the war began,” says a health worker. “But we can only operate during the day now, there’s no funding for night shifts.”

A cholera epidemic was declared in Renk last October. It spread across most of South Sudan, including the capital Juba, causing more than 450 deaths.

Tatek Wondimu Mamecha, the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) emergency officer in South Sudan, warns of the growing risks.

“Even though the cholera outbreak is controlled, we’re not out of the woods. Right now, malaria is spiking and with the rainy season coming, it will shoot up,” he tells the BBC.

Mr Tatek adds that the ripple effects of global aid cuts by US President Donald Trump’s administration are devastating.

“Five of our partners either stopped service or reduced operations by 50%.”

Hospitals like Renk Referral have lost half their staff, including surgeons, obstetricians, paediatricians, putting an enormous strain on the remaining medics.

“The facility manages around 350 to 400 patients a day,” Mr Tatek says.

The refugee crisis in Renk brings into sharp focus the fact that tens of thousands people are trapped between two conflicts, with parts of South Sudan no longer a safe haven for people fleeing the two-year conflict in Sudan.

Tensions have escalated in South Sudan since March when Machar was put under house arrest after being accused by Kiir’s allies of supporting armed groups – a claim his party denies.

George Owino, the chair of a monitoring body set up under the 2018 peace deal to assist in its implementation, has warned that the latest clashes “threaten the foundation of the agreement.”

He tells the BBC the core problem is that political leaders continue to command rival troops, failing to integrate them into a unified national army.

“The link between politics and military power is still intact,” Mr Owino says.

“When leaders disagree, it quickly turns into armed confrontation – exactly what the agreement was supposed to prevent.”

The 2013 civil war broke out after Kiir sacked Machar as vice-president, accusing him of plotting a coup, while Machar made the counter-accusation that Kiir was a “dictator”.

The devastating civil war ended following the 2018 peace deal that saw Machar being reappointed as vice-president.

“There used to be more dialogue within the presidency. That has diminished,” Mr Owino says.

The African Union (AU) has so far failed in its efforts to get the peace process back on track, while Uganda has deployed troops to South Sudan to bolster Kiir’s position.

Machar’s party says the deployment undermines South Sudan’s sovereignty, and the 2018 peace deal.

Both Uganda and Kiir’s government defend the deployment, saying it is in accordance with a long-standing security agreement between the two nations.

Nevertheless, the deployment shows how fragile Kiir’s grip on power is, while fears grow that a full-scale civil war could resume.

And across the border in Sudan, the civil war continues to rage, with Gen Dagalo announcing the formation of a rival government.

His move comes despite the fact that his forces have lost control of Khartoum after heavy fighting. The city is now a burnt-out shell, with bombed and blackened buildings.

Ms Williams says she has no intention of going back to Khartoum, and has decided that it is best to try and rebuild her life in her home country, “even if the situation is bad”.

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Indian Premier League, Jaipur

Lucknow Super Giants 180-5 (20 overs): Markram 66 (45), Badoni 50 (34); Hasaranga 2-31

Rajasthan Royals 178-5 (20 overs): Jaiswal 74 (52); Avesh 3-37

Scorecard

Fourteen-year-old Vaibhav Suryavanshi hit his first ball for six having become the youngest player to ever feature in the Indian Premier League.

Opening the batting for Rajasthan Royals in their two-run defeat by Lucknow Super Giants, Suryavanshi lifted India international Shardul Thakur over extra cover as he made an eye-catching 34 from 20 balls.

The left-hander also hit his third ball over the ropes and struck three fours plus one further six.

Suryavanshi, who only turned 14 last month and was signed at last year’s auction for £103,789 (1.1 crore rupees), was particularly strong hitting down the ground and shared an opening stand of 85 with Yashasvi Jaiswal.

The teenager was eventually out stumped off South Africa’s Aiden Markram in the ninth over.

He took the record of spinner Prayas Rai Burman, who played one match for Royal Challengers Bengaluru in 2019, to become the youngest IPL player. Burman featured aged 16 years and 154 days.

Suryavanshi’s opening stand with Jaiswal put Rajasthan on course for victory in pursuit of 181 and Jaiswal went on to make 74 to put his side well in command.

But Jaiswal was dismissed at the start of the 18th over and Lucknow completed a dramatic turnaround as Avesh Khan defended nine from the last over.

Rajasthan needed a four from the final ball but they ended on 178-5.

Who is Vaibhav Suryavanshi?

Suryavanshi became the youngest player to be signed for the IPL when he was picked up at the auction after a bidding war last year.

He made headlines last October when he, also aged 13, scored a 58-ball century for India Under-19s in a Youth Test against Australia Under-19s in Chennai.

Suryavanshi was also part of India’s Under-19 Asia Cup squad last year. There he scored 176 runs at an average of 44.

He plays first-class cricket for Bihar, a state in eastern India where he grew up, and made his debut aged 12 last January.

He has played five Ranji Trophy matches for Bihar and has scored 100 runs with a highest score of 41.

‘Why I hesitate to tell people I’m a Gypsy’

Shola Lee

BBC News

“Are they going to think I’m going to steal stuff from here?”

That’s the question Chantelle remembers asking herself after starting a new job and wondering whether or not to share her Romany heritage.

Chantelle, 23 from Bedfordshire, says she’s proud of her background but has sometimes been “nervous” to share it because of negative portrayals of her community in the media.

“When you watch films, it’s always like, ‘Oh, these are the Gypsies, they’re the bad guys,'” she explains.

Chantelle features in Stacey Dooley’s BBC documentary Growing Up Gypsy, which follows three young Romany women as they navigate everyday life.

The show comes as the charity Friends, Families and Travellers (FFT) – an organisation working to end discrimination against the Gypsy, Roma and Traveller (GRT) community – says it regularly hears from Romany Gypsy women who feel pressure to hide their identity in professional or public spaces to avoid discrimination and hate.

Ebony, 23 from Nottinghamshire, works as a beautician and recalls a client at a previous job, who didn’t know about her heritage, telling her she didn’t want to park in a certain area because there were Gypsies living near there.

“And I was sat there, painting her nails, like: ‘Little do you know’,” she recalls thinking.

Romany Gypsies are one of the three ethnic groups within the GRT community. Some in the community prefer to refer to themselves as travellers, while others prefer to use the term Gypsy.

Presenter Dooley says she felt privileged to be invited into the community but that being with the women and their families has shown her “how unwelcome they can sometimes be made to feel”.

It’s something that as a Romany Gypsy myself, I’ve had conflicting feelings about.

Now 26, I’m incredibly proud of my heritage – it’s often one of the first things I’ll share about myself and I have incredible memories of summers spent in the cherry orchard where my family worked.

However, I didn’t always feel that way. At school, I was reluctant to tell people about my identity for fear of being called a derogatory name and when I applied for university, my parents told me not to tick the GRT ethnicity box on the entrance form in case it hurt my chances of getting in.

I filled it in anyway, and have grown more confident in talking about my heritage but the hesitation is still there and is shared by many in the community today.

“There is a lot of hate and discrimination against travellers, and people don’t get jobs because they’re travellers,” says Ebony, on why she’s hidden her heritage in the past.

A spokesperson for the FFT says prejudice against the GRT community “remains widespread” and “too often goes unchallenged”.

And in 2021, a YouGov poll organised by the FFT suggested that 22% of people surveyed would be uncomfortable employing a Gypsy or traveller.

However, Ebony also says she’s had positive interactions with her employers when she did share her heritage and loves where she currently works.

Chantelle now enjoys working as a content creator, with more than 400,000 followers on TikTok, and is more open in speaking about her culture, explaining people online were really “interested” to learn more about her heritage.

Her content includes answering followers’ questions about her community and making traditional dishes, like bacon pudding, which she learned to make from her grandmother.

However, she still sees negative comments, with some even claiming those who live in a house are not Gypsies, which Chantelle says shows a misunderstanding of how her culture works.

“It goes back in your generations and it’s in your blood,” she says.

Despite the comments, Chantelle continues to make videos and appreciates her heritage, explaining: “I know we get talked bad about and things like that, but I’m proud of it.”

Ebony, meanwhile, hopes that people watching the documentary learn more about the GRT community and aren’t so prejudiced towards them.

“I don’t look at every non-traveller like you’re a bad person,” she says, adding that the community does experience that type of prejudice.

“That’s what I would like people to sort of open their eyes to,” she adds.

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Hendrix’s guitar ended up at the tip after ‘first rock festival’

Harry Parkhill & Karl Bird

BBC News

The 1967 Monterey Pop Festival in the US is often cited as having been the first rock festival. But weeks earlier, thousands of fans crowded round a shed in Lincolnshire to watch some of music’s biggest names perform.

“What you’ve got to remember is this was a shed,” says record shop owner Alan Barnsdale, recalling the Tulip Bulb Auction Hall in Spalding, Lincolnshire.

“It was an auction house for selling off [flower] bulbs and commodities like that. No windows. There was nothing there.”

And yet, on Monday 29 May 1967, history was made when the likes of Eric Clapton, Jimi Hendrix, Pink Floyd and The Move performed there to eager fans.

By luck or foresight, Barbeque 67 set the tone for what was to come.

“[It] was the first British rock festival, really, although nobody knew it was at the time,” says Bev Bevan, the drummer from Electric Light Orchestra and The Move.

“It was groundbreaking.”

Hendrix was among the attractions, but the day did not go too well for the legendary guitarist.

“He was not happy with the sound at all,” remembers Bev. “He just couldn’t get his guitar to sound like he wanted it to.”

Local historian Doug Kendall was in the crowd that day.

“I think it was possibly the only time in history that Hendrix was heckled,” he says.

Also on the line-up was Sounds Force Five. Drummer Colin Ward remembers the young guitarist kicking his amplifiers before taking his frustration one step further.

“He set fire to his guitar with lighter fuel, which was quite funny at the time, and then he threw that off stage,” Colin recalls.

“Sadly, that guitar ended up on the council tip. Had we had the foresight of keeping it, it would be worth thousands now.”

It was a gimmick Hendrix repeated to great acclaim the following month at the Monterey Pop Festival, which is widely regarded as launching his career in the US.

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Barbeque 67: Was the Spalding event the world’s first rock festival?

Hendrix and his frustration was just one of many odd moments at this curious festival.

Pink Floyd played to only a few hundred people, because there were too few turnstiles to allow the thousands of fans inside in time to see their set.

Later, there were so many people in the auction room that punters were pushed under the stage and watched through cracks in the floorboards.

And on the night of the gig, Hendrix was reported to have attracted the attention of plenty of adoring female fans outside his hotel window.

But its quirkiness was a product of the fact that nobody had done it before.

“It was one of the best festivals I ever did and the people running that festival… had it down, man. It was fantastic,” singer Geno Washington says.

Washington and his Ram Jam Band headlined the gig and it is one he still remembers fondly.

“I can’t see why they didn’t do it again because it was huge, man,” Geno adds.

‘It was overshadowed’

It is believed the festival attracted a crowd of between 4,000 and 6,000, and there were many more outside unable to gain entry.

However, despite its popularity on the day, it didn’t make that many headlines due to the release of an iconic Beatles album the Friday before the event.

“Sgt Pepper was released and it took over the rock press,” Doug recalls.

“So, a little event in Spalding didn’t raise the same interest.

“I think that it’s something that needs publicity because not many people actually knew, even at the time, that it took place.”

The auction room was eventually demolished and the area is now occupied by Halfords and Argos.

On the streets of Spalding today, most people have never heard of Barbeque 67.

One person asks if it is a “kind of sauce”, another wonders if it is an “American barbecue” and one asks if it is a “kind of restaurant”.

Despite a Blue Plaque marking the hotel where Hendrix stayed, many people in the town have no idea of the musical heritage on their doorstep or whose guitar might be languishing at the bottom of a nearby landfill site.

Lincolnshire on BBC Sounds latest episode of Look North here.

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Found on celebrity bags and in viral videos: The toy fashionistas are loving

Annabel Rackham

Culture reporter

James’ reaction as he unboxes a rare, limited edition Labubu toy can only be described as pure, unadulterated joy.

The YouTuber delightedly holds up a brown plush monster, which has been described by collectors as “cute”, “ugly”, “creepy” and everything in between.

Labubus are furry snaggletoothed gremlins, which are designed by Hong Kong-born artist Kasing Lung and sold by Chinese toy company Pop Mart.

They’re almost always sold out online and long queues often form outside the selected shops that stock them.

Labubus are also primarily sold in the blind box format, meaning customers never know what version they’ll get until they open them – a fact collectors have said adds to their appeal.

While it’s difficult to pin their recent rise in popularity to one particular ingredient, celebrity endorsement, social media unboxing videos and their ability to stir up nostalgia are all contributing factors.

James Welsh, from Hampshire, sees his Labubu collectable as an investment, which he tells the BBC “could probably earn a fair bit of money two or three years down the line”.

He has just shy of 30 Labubus which retail at around £25 for an individual toy or £153 for a box of six.

He says he has “spent hundreds and hundreds but not quite thousands” on the dolls.

Labubu maker Pop Mart has doubled its profits in the last year and is eying up global expansion in 2025.

The company, which started 15 years ago, has been described as “elevating toy buying to an act of trendy connoisseurship” and praised for embracing non-traditional designs, which have made them a hit with collectors.

Artist Kasing Lung is behind some of their popular toys including The Monsters series and Labubu.

He credits living in The Netherlands as the inspiration behind the dolls and told Hypbeast “I liked to read storybooks and was influenced by ancient European elf legends”.

Lung added that during his childhood, “there were no game consoles or computers, so I had to draw dolls with a pen, so I had the idea of painting fairy tales since I was a child”.

He first came up with the designs in 2015 and signed a licensing agreement with Pop Mart in 2019 to make them into toys.

Labubu as a name has no specific meaning, it is a fictional character based around an elf-like creature.

James says his first thought when he saw the one of the toys was, “they’re creepy but they’re also really cute and I need as many of them as I can get, I need them in every colour”.

The 36-year-old adds, “I think they [provide] some real escapism for millennials as it’s like reverting back to your youth with these toys and collectables.”

A former stylist, he now primarily creates beauty and skincare content, but has recently gained thousands of views on his channel from Labubu unboxing videos.

He tells the BBC: “there is a strong link between these plush pendants and the fashion community as well.”

“They’re a way to express who you are, you can show that through the different characters, which add a pop of colour and fashion is fun, it’s not serious at the end of the day, it’s reflective of who you are.”

There are several iterations of Labubu – from vinyl figures to plush toys – but the keychain versions have become most popular recently.

Labubu’s ascent into mainstream culture has been steady – but was elevated last year by BLACKPINK star Lisa.

The K-pop singer was seen with a Labubu creature hanging from her handbag and also called the toys “her secret obsession” in an interview.

Rihanna was also spotted with one of the toys attached to her bag in recent weeks, which has led to fashion fans replicating her look.

But for collectors such as 22-year-old Chulie, who shares her purchases on TikTok, she says Labubu becoming a “fashion trend” misses the point of why they’re so loved.

“For me, it’s all about the nostalgia and the surprise aspect,” she tells the BBC.

One of Pop Mart’s biggest selling points for collectors is the way their toys are packaged in what’s known as blind boxes, which make the experience of getting one like a lucky dip.

You don’t know what character you are getting until you unseal the package, so it’s always a gamble for collectors.

“You know it’s fun, it’s a dopamine hit”, James says.

“It’s gambling for some of us – kind of like a happy meal, you don’t know what toy you’re getting until you open it up.”

It also makes the toy perfect for the world of social media, as creators can catch their genuine surprise on camera and share it with other fans – something James says provides comfort and “escapism from the real world”.

Chulie says, as a child, she would collect Pokemon trading cards, so collecting another surprise item “triggered memories for me”.

“When you’re having a rough time, especially for me personally, it’s a big serotonin boost to not only buy a collectable and keep it, but share the experience with other people as well,” she adds.

Others have compared Labubus to Beanie Babies, which were popular in the 1990s and 2000s, and say collecting Labubus evokes feelings of childhood nostalgia.

For some fans, just documenting the experience of getting a Labubu is a talking point, with many showing the long queues and hours of research required to find out where new collections are being stocked.

It’s prompted backlash on some social media channels, with users criticising collectors that have bought large numbers of items.

“Just because you don’t understand someone’s hobby, doesn’t mean it’s not valid in any way,” James says.

While James hasn’t spent hours and hours queuing to build his collection, he says he “has gone out of my way” to source authentic dolls online. As with any popular item, counterfeits have made their way onto the market.

“I spend a fair bit of money on my hobby, but it’s my adult money,” he jokes.

Chulie says she currently has 10 Labubus, but has sold some to other fans when she’s ended up with the same toy twice.

“When I first got exposed to them, I wasn’t sure why people were spending money on them, because in the US they start at around $21 [£16], which is minimum wage for a lot of people.

“But it’s so addictive getting one, and it’s really hard to stop buying once you start,” she adds.

The forgotten Indian explorer who uncovered an ancient civilisation

Cherylann Mollan

BBC News, Mumbai

An Indian archaeologist, whose career was marked by brilliance and controversy, made one of the world’s greatest historical discoveries. Yet he remains largely forgotten today.

In the early 1900s, Rakhaldas Banerjee (also spelled Banerji) unearthed Mohenjo-daro – meaning “mound of the dead men” in the Sindhi language – in present-day Pakistan. It was the largest city of the thriving Indus Valley (Harappan) Civilisation, which stretched from north-east Afghanistan to north-west India during the Bronze Age.

Banerjee, an intrepid explorer and talented epigraphist, worked for the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) when the country was under British colonial rule. He spent months travelling to distant corners of the subcontinent, looking for ancient artefacts, ruins and scripts.

But while his discovery of Mohenjo-daro was ground-breaking, Banerjee’s legacy is clouded by disputes. His independent streak and defiance of colonial protocols often landed him in trouble – tainting his reputation and perhaps even erasing parts of his contribution from global memory.

Interestingly, Banerjee’s reports on Mohenjo-daro were never published by the ASI. Archaeologist PK Mishra later accused then ASI chief John Marshall of suppressing Banerjee’s findings and claiming credit for the discovery himself.

“The world knows Marshall discovered the civilisation’s ruins and it is taught in institutions. Banerjee is an insignificant footnote,” Prof Mishra told the Times of India newspaper.

In her book, , historian Nayanjot Lahiri writes that Banerjee “lacked diplomacy and tact and displayed a high-handedness that ruffled feathers”. Her book also sheds light on the controversies he was embroiled in during his time at the ASI.

She notes how once, he attempted to procure inscriptions and images from a museum in north-east India without the approval or knowledge of his boss.

Another time, Banerjee attempted to relocate some stone sculptures from a museum in Bengal to the one he was stationed at without the necessary permissions.

In another instance, he purchased an antique painting for a sum without consulting his superiors who thought he’d paid more than was necessary.

“Banerjee’s many talents seemed to include being always able to rub people the wrong way,” Lahiri writes.

But Banerjee remains a prominent figure among world historians and scholars in Bengal because of his connection with Mohenjo-daro.

He was born in 1885 to a wealthy family in Bengal.

The medieval monuments that dotted Baharampur, the city he grew up in, kindled his interest in history and he pursued the subject in college. But he always had an adventurous streak.

Once, when he was tasked with writing an essay about the Scythian period of Indian history, he travelled to a museum in a neighbouring state to study first-hand sculptures and scripts from that era.

In her book, , author Yama Pande notes how Banerjee joined the ASI as an excavation assistant in 1910 and rose quickly within the ranks to become a superintending archaeologist in western India in 1917.

It was in this post that he first set eyes on Mohenjo-daro in Sindh in 1919. In the following years, he conducted a series of excavations at the site that revealed some of the most fascinating finds: ancient Buddhist stupas, coins, seals, pots and microliths.

Between 1922 and 1923, he discovered several layers of ruins that held clues about various urban settlements that had emerged in the region, but most importantly, the oldest one that had existed some 5,300 years ago – the Indus Valley Civilisation.

At that time, historians had not yet discovered the full scale of the Indus Civilisation which, we now know, covered an expanse of approximately 386,000 sq miles (999,735 sq km) along the Indus river valley.

Three seals from Banerjee’s excavation bore images and scripts similar to those from Harappa in the Punjab province in present-day Pakistan. This helped establish a link between the two sites, shedding light on the vast reach of the Indus Valley civilisation.

But by 1924, Banerjee’s funds for the project had dried up and he was also transferred to eastern India. He had no further contact with the site, nor did he participate in any excavations there, Pande writes in her book.

But Nayanjot Lahiri notes that Banerjee was transferred at his own request, after becoming entangled in questions over his spending. He had failed to account for several job-related expenses.

It was also revealed that Banerjee had used excavation grants to buy office furniture and his travel expenses were deemed excessive.

His explanations failed to convince his superiors and disciplinary action was recommended. After some negotiation, Banerjee was granted his request and transferred to another region.

Banerjee continued to work with the ASI in eastern India. He spent most of his time in Calcutta (now Kolkata) and oversaw the restoration work of many important monuments.

He resigned from the ASI in 1927, but his departure was marred by controversy. In the years prior to his departure, he became the prime suspect in a case of idol theft.

It all started in October 1925, when Banerjee had visited a revered Hindu shrine in Madhya Pradesh state that housed a stone idol of a Buddhist goddess. Banerjee was accompanied by two low-ranking assistants and two labourers, Lahiri notes in her book.

However, following their visit, the idol went missing, and Banerjee was implicated in its theft. He denied any involvement in the disappearance and an investigation was launched.

The idol was later recovered in Calcutta. Though the case against Banerjee was dismissed and the charges were found to be unsubstantiated, Marshall insisted on his resignation.

After leaving the ASI, Banerjee worked as a professor, but faced financial difficulties because of his lavish lifestyle.

Historian Tapati Guha-Thakurta told the Telegraph newspaper that Banerjee splurged on good food, horse carriages and friends. In 1928, he joined the Banaras Hindu University (BHU) as a professor. He died just two years later at the age of 45.

In pictures: Easter celebrated around the world from Greece to Iraq

Christians around the world are celebrating Easter.

All Christians, from Orthodox and Western churches, are observing the holiday on the same day this year – not often the case because the churches use different calendars.

In Greece, the sky lit up with fireworks, while worshippers in Jerusalem lit candles at the church where Jesus is said to have been crucified and buried.

Here is a look at how some have been celebrating the holiday as days of festivities culminate in Easter Sunday.

‘Why I want an IVF baby to screen out gene that made me go blind’

Beth Rose

BBC Access All

Blind content creator and TikTok star Lucy Edwards says she’s “so excited” to be on a health kick to undergo IVF, but reveals the dilemma she faced in deciding to screen out the very gene that made her blind.

“I’m so broody,” the 29-year-old tells the BBC Access All podcast.

Lucy and her husband Ollie married at Kew Gardens two years ago and are now ready to start a family – but there are complications to consider.

Lucy has the rare genetic condition Incontinentia Pigmenti (IP) and lost her sight due to this aged 17, just months after meeting Ollie.

The condition runs through the female line – Lucy’s mum has IP although isn’t blind, her Grandma did too and her great-aunt was blind in one eye.

Lucy is totally blind, but, if she had been a boy, she may not have survived.

The abnormal IP gene is located on the X chromosome. Women have two X chromosomes, while males have X and Y, meaning the appearance of the gene can be more catastrophic in male pregnancies.

“My grandma actually had nine miscarriages,” Lucy says.

This is one of the facts that played into the complicated decision Lucy and Ollie made to opt for pre-implantation genetic testing, a special type of IVF where embryos are created outside of the body and screened for the genetic condition. Only those embryos which are not affected by the condition are placed back into the womb.

Without medical intervention, Lucy says there would be four potential outcomes to any pregnancy she carried: A healthy and unaffected boy or girl, an affected boy she would likely miscarry or who would be born with severe brain damage or an affected girl.

She pauses, then laughs: “That sounds horrible, doesn’t it? That’s me.”

Blind influencer Lucy Edwards on writing and IVF

And that’s the quandary. IVF will edit out the very thing that has made Lucy who she is today – a journalist, advocate, author and broadcaster.

It is an emotive topic of debate. The most well-known conversation is around Down’s syndrome and the number of women who choose to abort a pregnancy once their baby is tested and diagnosed as having the condition. The question is around the value people place on other peoples’ lives which may not look like our own.

In 2021 campaigner Heidi Crowter, who herself has Down’s syndrome, challenged legislation allowing foetuses with the condition to be aborted up until birth. She took her case to the High Court arguing the rules were discriminatory to disabled people who could live a good life. She lost the case and the subsequent argument she made at the Court of Appeal. The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) later rejected it as well, but Heidi continues to campaign to have the law overturned.

It is something Lucy is very aware of and she and her husband have spent a long time considering.

“It’s understanding that it is removing that part of me that makes me, me,” Lucy says. “It’s such a personal decision and I know that I’m opening myself up for possible designer baby discussions, but I know I’m doing it for the right reasons.”

Lucy says first being diagnosed with IP and then losing her sight as a teenager were both traumatic events and she wants to minimise the likelihood of miscarriage to limit any future traumatic load.

She says she found it impossible to “knowingly” consider having a baby naturally once she knew the science was available to give a baby the healthiest start possible.

“If I had a baby and, unknowingly, I had a gorgeous, gorgeous baby with disabilities, I would be so thankful, so happy and amazed but knowingly having this gene? That’s why we’re having IVF.”

IP doesn’t just cause blindness, it can also cause severe epilepsy and more difficult outcomes. Lucy says having the option to ensure complications were not passed on felt like both a responsibility and a privilege previous generations did not have.

“Whether we like it or not, we have to be responsible here. Maybe a responsible issue for you, if you have IP or another genetic disorder, is to have a child naturally and we are not judging you in any shape or form, this is just our decision.”

In response to their openness around this decision comments were overwhelmingly positive from Lucy’s fans which she thinks might be because she is so “disability positive” in her everyday life – “I love being blind,” she frequently states.

But Lucy says responses have been different around the world. When she was working in Japan and her content was reaching audiences unfamiliar with her story, she faced a lot more trolling.

“I got a lot of abusive comments that go into my spam filter questioning why I would be a mother,” she says. “I know that I’m going to get a lot of abuse, but I’m just going to block them.

“I’m going to be OK. All I think about is the other mothers that have come before me who are competent, capable and resilient.”

Lucy, who is known for her How Does A Blind Girl… series of videos, is overjoyed by the prospect of IVF but she has also been frank about the fact she currently does not qualify, owing to her current weight, a sensitive element of IVF treatment that many keep to themselves.

NHS guidelines specify your Body Mass Index (BMI) must be 30 or under to qualify – a healthy BMI is considered to be between 18.5 and 24.9.

“I need to be a BMI of 30 and I’m very open that I need to lose 9kg,” Lucy says. “I’ve already lost 15kg.”

Her health journey has involved swimming, lifting weights and many runs with Ollie tethered to her as her sighted guide. She has also found a love for batch cooking nutritious meals which she posts about on all of her channels on Instagram, TikTok and YouTube and the workarounds she has developed as a blind cook.

“I wanted a positive representation of losing weight online because it’s all about this blinking jab,” she says, referring to weight loss injections. “I just wanted to lose it healthily, have lots of nice food, talk about meal prep and just smile and run.”

Once she hits the required BMI, Lucy will qualify for three rounds of IVF on the NHS.

She will contact her consultant, after which she has to “spit in a cup” and offer up her DNA for genetic testing and analysis.

Over a period of about three months, a genetics team will “make a bespoke test to find the gene within my eggs,” Lucy explains.

Meanwhile Lucy will inject herself with trigger shots to stimulate the follicles within her ovaries to increase the number of eggs produced which will be retrieved, and then made into embryos with Ollie’s sperm.

The embryos will then be tested so only ones without the IP gene will be possible candidates. Those embryos will be “shuffled about” so Lucy and Ollie don’t know which will be selected in terms of gender or other genetic qualities, and implanted into Lucy, who will carry the baby to term.

Lucy can’t wait for the moment she holds her baby in her arms.

“It will never stop being a thing within my mind that this gene is being eradicated,” she admits. “But I am very happy in my decision.”

A few days ago Lucy posted on Instagram, her cardigan tightened at the back with a hairband to make it smaller and fit.

“I’ve lost so much [weight] that my clothes are too loose now so we had to tie it up with a bobble,” she tells her followers.

“Fingers crossed [we’re] only a few weeks away from ringing the clinic.”

You can listen to Lucy Edwards on BBC Access All on BBC Sounds. Subscribe and email your thoughts to accessall@bbc.co.uk

India’s sword-wielding grandmother still going strong at 82

Sumitra Nair

Kerala

An 82-year-old woman who teaches the ancient Indian martial art of Kalaripayattu says she has no plans to retire.

“I’ll probably practise Kalari until the day I die,” says Meenakshi Raghavan, widely thought to be the oldest woman in the world to practise the art form.

Kalaripayattu – kalari means battleground and payattu means fight – is believed to have originated at least 3,000 years back in the southern state of Kerala and is regarded as India’s oldest martial art.

It is not solely practised for combat or fighting; it also serves to instil discipline, build strength and develop self-defence skills.

Ms Raghavan is fondly known as Meenakshi Amma – Amma means mother in the Malayalam language – in Kerala’s Vadakara, where she lives. The town is also home to other renowned exponents of the art like Unniyarcha, Aromal Chekavar and Thacholi Othenan.

Meenakshi Amma occasionally performs in other cities but mainly runs her own Kalari school, founded by her husband in 1950. Her days are busy, with classes from five in the morning to noon.

“I teach about 50 students daily. My four children were also trained [in the art form] by me and my husband. They started learning from the age of six,” she says.

Kalaripayattu has four stages and it requires patience to learn the art form.

Training begins with meypattu – an oil massage followed by exercises to condition the body.

After about two years, students progress to kolthari (stick fighting), then to angathari (weapon combat), and finally to verumkai – the highest level, involving unarmed combat. It typically takes up to five years to master Kalaripayattu.

Kung fu is believed to have adapted principles like breathing techniques and marmashastra (stimulating vital points to optimise energy flow) from Kalaripayattu, according to Vinod Kadangal, another Kalari teacher.

Legend has it that around the 6th Century, Indian Buddhist monk Bodhidharma introduced these techniques to the Shaolin monks, influencing the more famous Chinese martial art.

Meenakshi Amma still recalls the first time she stepped into a Kalari – the red-earth arena where the art is practised – 75 years ago.

“I was seven and quite good at dancing. So my guru – VP Raghavan – approached my father and suggested that I learn Kalaripayattu. Just like dance, the art form requires you to be flexible,” she says.

Hailing from Kerala’s Thiyya community, Meenakshi Amma’s guru was 15 when he and his brothers opened their own Kalaripayattu school after being denied admission elsewhere because of their low social caste.

“There was no bias when it came to girls enrolling to study Kalari – in fact, physical education was compulsory in all Kerala schools at that time. But we were expected to stop after attaining puberty,” she says.

Unlike others, Meenakshi Amma’s father encouraged her training into her late teens. At 17, she fell in love with Raghavan, and they soon married. Together, they went on to train hundreds of students, often for free.

“At the time, a lot of children came from poor families. The only money he [Raghavan] accepted was in the form of or a tribute paid to the teacher,” she says.

Donations sustained the school, while Raghavan later took a teaching job for extra income. After his death in 2007, Meenakshi Amma formally took charge.

While she has no plans to retire at the moment, she hopes to hand over the school one day to her eldest son Sanjeev.

The 62-year-old, who is also an instructor at the school, says he is lucky to have learnt from the best – his mother. But being her son earns no favours; he says she’s still his toughest opponent.

Meenakshi Amma is a local celebrity. During our interview, three politicians drop by to invite her to an awards ceremony.

“Amma, you must grace us with your presence,” one of them says with folded hands.

“Thank you for considering me, I’ll attend,” she replies.

Her students speak of “fierce admiration” for her. Many have opened their own Kalari schools across the state, a source of great pride for Meenakshi Amma.

“She’s an inspiration to women everywhere – a rare person who shows love and affection to her students, yet remains a strict disciplinarian when it comes to Kalari,” says KF Thomas, a former student.

Read more

Three chords and the truth: Where country’s big moment might go next

Riyah Collins

BBC Newsbeat

They say the recipe for a good country track is simple – just combine three chords and the truth.

Over the past year though, a growing number of artists have been adding their own sprinkles with pop stars including Chappell Roan and Sabrina Carpenter leaning into the genre.

Chappell’s The Giver went straight to number two in the UK charts when it was released in March, with the self-proclaimed Midwest Princess saying she wanted to give country music a new take with “a little gay yodel”.

Figures from streaming platforms suggest that cooking up a country song has also been a recipe for success, with listening time up by 25% over the past year in the UK.

British artists are hopeful that’ll act as a giddy up to the UK scene and help them replicate some of the success of their US country cousins.

“It only benefits me and other country music artists in the UK because more people listening to country music just means they’re going to take an interest – hopefully – in what we’re doing,” 20-year-old singer Neeve Zahra tells BBC Newsbeat.

Her love for country music comes from two sources: her grandad and Hannah Montana.

The Disney Channel school-girl-by-day-pop-star-by-night character played by Miley Cyrus “probably started me off”, she says.

“I can now officially say I was country before country was cool.”

Neeve, from Manchester, is already noticing a spike in people coming to gigs and hopes the hype could build to a point where British country acts can be recognised with a category at the Brit Awards.

“That’s definitely the dream.”

Izzie Walsh is currently recording her debut album and tells Newsbeat it’s important fans support country artists “at a grassroots level” to ensure it can continue to grow in the UK.

“Everyone’s been sleeping on it and now it’s become this big thing.

“There’s a lot of support for the big US artists and it can be hard to compete with that budget, the press.

“There’s a big gap between people like me and these massive artists.”

In as far as a trend can ever be attributed to one person, this resurgence in the mainstream is “100%” down to Beyoncé, according to country music podcaster Matt Clewes.

Her 2024 album Cowboy Carter “very much splits opinions with country fans”, Matt tells Newsbeat, but “it has introduced new country artists to a country audience and gives a different perspective”.

Artists and critics predicted last year Cowboy Carter could “open the floodgates” for country music fans and Spotify credits “viral tracks” from 2024 with the sudden uptick in streams.

But there’s actually been a gradual increase in listenership going back much further it says, with streams of the genre in the UK growing by 154% since 2019, the year Lil Nas X released Old Town Road with country singer-songwriter Billy Ray Cyrus.

Apple Music says it’s noticed similar trends and both streamers report its rising popularity is particularly striking in the UK, where according to Apple it’s growing five times as quickly as in the US.

‘It’s about telling our own story’

That’s reflected in some of the biggest songs of the past year.

Sabrina Carpenter’s country-pop hit Please, Please, Please, which she re-released with Dolly Parton, spent five weeks at number one in the UK and Shaboozey’s A Bar Song was a fixture of the top 10 for months.

British country music is even set to be represented on one of the world’s biggest stages next month thanks to the UK’s Eurovision entry, Remember Monday.

“Storytelling is so important to us and that is really rooted in country music,” singer Lauren Byrne tells Newsbeat about why the trio felt drawn to the genre.

“We never wanted to feel like we were trying to replicate or copy, we wanted to always make it feel our own.

“It doesn’t all have to be ‘yeehaw’.”

Matt says the next step will be to see British country artists headlining bigger festivals as the fan base continues to grow.

And as it does, he says it’ll have to embrace the different points of view feeding into it.

Country is often associated with being dominated by male artists, but the musicians driving it into the mainstream are mainly women.

Last week Lana Del Rey joined Beyoncé, Chappell and Sabrina with her country song Henry, come on, but before them it was Taylor Swift, Miley Cyrus and Shania Twain making country more popular.

“We’re in the year of women in general for music,” says Neeve. “I think now it’s time for the country women.”

As British country music grows, there are a few differences too with the traditional US scene that will also need embracing.

“We’re often seen as, ‘Why are they making country music? They don’t live the country lifestyle’,” Matt says. “We don’t all live on farms, we don’t all drive tractors.

“But country is all about storytelling and everyone wants to write their own story.

“It’s evolving all the time so we have to be open to different styles and different perspectives.”

Neeve agrees that authenticity is the key to British country.

“It’s about telling our own story,” she says.

“I can dream about Nashville and maybe write some songs about it but I’m not gonna say I’m gonna pick you up in my truck because I don’t have a truck.

“You’ve got to stay real to yourself. We try to keep it country but in our own way.”

Listen to Newsbeat live at 12:45 and 17:45 weekdays – or listen back here.

King and Queen attend Easter Sunday church service

Sofia Ferreira Santos

BBC News
Watch: The King and Queen wave to crowds as they arrive for the Easter Sunday service

King Charles III and Queen Camilla have attended a church service at St George’s Chapel in Windsor Castle as part of their Easter celebrations.

The traditional Easter Matins service was held in the 15th Century chapel in Windsor, Berkshire.

Most other members of the Royal Family, including the Duke of York, were also present for the service – apart from the Prince and Princess of Wales and their children, who spent the weekend on holiday in Norfolk.

Easter Sunday celebrations are taking place all around the world to commemorate the most important date in the Christian calendar.

  • Millions get away for Easter bank holiday weekend
  • In pictures: Easter celebrated around the world from Greece to Iraq

Prince Andrew arrived with his ex-wife Sarah, Duchess of York, in a car along with Princess Anne and her husband Sir Tim Laurence.

Andrew missed the Royal Family’s traditional Christmas gathering at Sandringham last year amid the controversy surrounding his links to an alleged Chinese spy.

Princess Anne chatted at some length with the Dean of Windsor, the Right Rev Christopher Cocksworth outside, while Prince Andrew quickly walked inside for the service.

Sisters Princess Eugenie and Princess Beatrice were joined by their husbands, while the Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh arrived alongside their son, James.

As they walked to the church in front of crowds of royal fans, it became apparent that 17-year-old James is now noticeably taller than his father, Prince Edward.

On Thursday, the King and Queen took part in the traditional Maundy Thursday service, held this year at Durham Cathedral.

The service followed the King’s Easter message, which sought to bring unity between different faiths and recognise those who provide humanitarian aid in wars and disasters.

“One of the puzzles of our humanity is how we are capable of both great cruelty and great kindness,” he said.

Meanwhile, the Easter sermon traditionally given by the Archbishop of Canterbury and seen as the Church of England’s primary religious message for the weekend, was instead delivered by the Archbishop of York at York Minster.

Justin Welby, the former Archbishop of Canterbury, resigned in November after facing increasing pressure to stand down over his failure to report prolific child abuser John Smyth. But his replacement has not yet been appointed.

The Archbishop of York, Stephen Cottrell, has also faced calls to resign over his handling of the case.

On Saturday, the leader of the Roman Catholic Church in England and Wales prayed for those caught up in “endless conflicts” and wars around the world in his Easter Vigil homily.

Archbishop of Westminster, Cardinal Vincent Nichols, said: “We pray for peace. We pray especially for those about whom it has been said, in recent times, that ‘all hell’ will be unleashed on them. May that never be so!”

Sign up here to get the latest royal stories and analysis every week with our Royal Watch newsletter. Those outside the UK can sign up here.

2025 Sony World Photography Awards: Winners revealed

The winners of the 2024 Sony World Photography Awards have been announced, with Zed Nelson named as Photographer of the Year for , a project exploring the fractured relationship between humans and the natural world.

Nelson’s project takes its name from the term Anthropocene – the current geological epoch where human activity has become the dominant force shaping the Earth’s environment.

The project explores the tension between the human desire to connect with nature and ongoing environmental degradation.

Nelson’s constructed environments highlight the growing gap between conservation efforts and ecological destruction.

The Anthropocene Illusion goes beyond a documentary, offering a thought-provoking exploration of modern human life in an era shaped by human impact.

Nelson’s work, selected from the 10 professional competition category winners, triumphed in the wildlife and nature category.

Here are the other category winners.

Architecture & Design

The Tokyo Toilet Project by Ulana Switucha (Canada)

The Tokyo Toilet Project in Shibuya-ku, Tokyo, Japan, is an urban redevelopment initiative aimed at creating modern public restrooms that encourage use.

These images are part of a larger series documenting the architectural design of these structures within their urban setting.

Creative

Rhi-Entry by Rhiannon Adam (United Kingdom)

In 2018, Japanese billionaire and art collector Yusaku Maezawa launched a global search for eight artists to join him on a week-long lunar mission aboard SpaceX’s Starship, the first civilian deep space flight.

The mission would follow a path similar to Apollo 8’s 1968 journey, which inspired astronaut Bill Anders to suggest NASA should have sent poets to capture the awe of space.

In 2021, Rhiannon Adam was chosen as the only female crew member from one million applicants and for three years she immersed herself in the space industry.

Maezawa abruptly cancelled the mission, leaving the crew to pick up the pieces of their disrupted lives – the experience informed Adam’s thought provoking project.

Documentary projects

Divided Youth of Belfast by Toby Binder (Germany)

For years, Toby Binder has been documenting the experiences of young people born after the peace agreement in Northern Ireland, capturing what it means to grow up amid the intergenerational tensions in both Protestant and Catholic neighbourhoods.

Environment

Alquimia Textil by Nicolás Garrido Huguet (Peru)

Alquimia Textil is a collaborative project by Nicolás Garrido Huguet and fashion designer María Lucía Muñoz, highlighting the natural dyeing techniques of Pumaqwasin artisans in Chinchero, Cusco, Peru.

The project seeks to raise awareness and preserve these ancestral practices, which involve hours of meticulous work often overlooked in the textile industry.

Landscape

The Strata of Time by Seido Kino (Japan)

This project invites viewers to consider what it means for a country to grow, and the advantages and disadvantages linked to that growth, by overlaying archival photographs from the 1940s-60s within current scenes.

Perspectives

The Journey Home from School by Laura Pannack (United Kingdom)

Laura Pannack’s project explores the tumultuous public lives of young people in the gang-governed Cape Flats area of Cape Town, South Africa, where their daily commute carries the risk of death.

Using handmade, lo-fi experimental techniques, this project explores how young people have to walk to and from school avoiding the daily threat of gang crossfire.

Portraiture

M’kumba by Gui Christ (Brazil)

M’kumba is an ongoing project that illustrates the resilience of Afro-Brazilian communities in the face of local religious intolerance.

Gui Christ wanted to photograph a proud, young generation representing African deities and mythological tales.

Sport

Shred the Patriarchy by Chantal Pinzi (Italy)

India, the world’s most populous country, only has a handful of female skaters.

Through the art of falling and getting back up, these women challenge stereotypes, fight marginalisation and reclaim public spaces in both urban and rural areas.

Still life

Still Waiting by Peter Franck (Germany)

Still Waiting presents collages that capture moments of pause, of waiting.

Open – motion

Tbourida La Chute by Olivier Unia

The Open competition celebrates the power and dynamism of a single photograph.

Olivier Unia was chosen for his photograph Tbourida La Chute.

Many of the photographs taken during a traditional Moroccan ‘tbourida’ show the riders firing their rifles.

With this image, the photographer wanted to share another side of the event, and show how dangerous it can be when a rider is thrown from their mount.

Student photographer of the year

The Last Day We Saw the Mountains and the Sea by Micaela Valdivia Medina (Peru)

Medina’s project explores female prison spaces across Chile, and the dynamics that shape the lives of incarcerated women and their families.

Youth photographer of the year

For the 2025 Youth competition, photographers aged 19 and under were invited to respond to an Open Call and enter their best images from the last year.

The winner, chosen from a shortlist of 11 photographers, was Daniel Dian-Ji Wu, Taiwan, 16 years old, for his image of a skateboarder doing a trick, silhouetted against a sunset in Venice Beach, Los Angeles.

Outstanding contribution to photography

The prestigious Outstanding Contribution to Photography 2025 was awarded to acclaimed documentary photographer Susan Meiselas.

For more than five decades, photographer Susan Meiselas has focused her lens on capturing compelling stories from diverse communities.

From documenting the lives of women performing striptease at rural American fairs to chronicling the Sandinista revolution in Nicaragua, her work provides an intimate portrait of resilience and humanity.

All photos courtesy of Sony World Photography Awards 2025. Exhibition at Somerset House, London, 17 April – 5 May 2025.

Pakistan expels tens of thousands of Afghans

Yama Bariz

BBC World Service
Reporting fromTorkham border crossing

Pakistan has deported more than 19,500 Afghans this month, among more than 80,000 who have left ahead of a 30 April deadline, according to the UN.

Pakistan has accelerated its drive to expel undocumented Afghans and those who had temporary permission to stay, saying it can no longer cope.

Between 700 and 800 families are being deported daily, Taliban officials say, with up to two million people expected to follow in the coming months.

Pakistani Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar flew to Kabul on Saturday for talks with Taliban officials. His counterpart Amir Khan Muttaqi expressed “deep concern” about deportations.

Some expelled Afghans at the border said they had been born in Pakistan after their families fled conflict.

More than 3.5 million Afghans have been living in Pakistan, according to the UN’s refugee agency, including around 700,000 people who came after the Taliban takeover in 2021. The UN estimates that half are undocumented.

Pakistan has taken in Afghans through decades of war, but the government says the high number of refugees now poses risks to national security and causes pressure on public services.

  • Pakistan orders Afghan asylum seekers out
  • Afghans hiding in Pakistan live in fear

There has been a recent spike in border clashes between the security forces of both sides. Pakistan blames them on militants based in Afghanistan, which the Taliban deny.

Pakistan’s foreign ministry said the two sides had “discussed all issues of mutual interest” in Saturday’s meeting in Kabul.

Pakistan had extended a deadline for undocumented Afghans to leave the country by a month, to 30 April.

On the Torkham border crossing, some expelled Afghans told the BBC they left Afghanistan decades ago – or had never lived there.

“I lived my whole life in Pakistan,” said Sayed Rahman, a second-generation refugee born and raised in Pakistan. “I got married there. What am I supposed to do now?”

Saleh, a father of three daughters, worried what life under Taliban rule will mean for them. His daughters attended school in Pakistan’s Punjab province, but in Afghanistan, girls over the age of 12 are barred from doing so.

“I want my children to study. I don’t want their years in school to go to waste,” he said. “Everyone has the right to an education.”

Another man told the BBC: “Our children have never seen Afghanistan and even I don’t know what it looks like anymore. It might take us a year or more to settle in and find work. We feel helpless.”

The BBC reports at the Afghanistan-Pakistan border crossing

At the border, men and women pass through separate gates, under the watch of armed Pakistani and Afghan guards. Some of those returning were elderly – one man was carried across on a stretcher, another in a bed.

Military trucks shuttled families from the border to temporary shelters. Those originally from distant provinces stay there for several days, waiting for transport to their home regions.

Families clustered under canvases to escape the 30C degree heat, as swirling dust caught in the eyes and mouth. Resources are stretched and fierce arguments often break out over access to shelter.

Returnees receive between 4,000 and 10,000 Afghanis (£41 to £104) from the Kabul authorities, according to Hedayatullah Yad Shinwari, a member of the camp’s Taliban-appointed finance committee.

The mass deportation is placing significant pressure on Afghanistan’s fragile infrastructure, with an economy in crisis and a population nearing 45 million people.

“We have resolved most issues, but the arrival of people in such large numbers naturally brings difficulties,” said Bakht Jamal Gohar, the Taliban’s head of refugee affairs at the crossing. “These people left decades ago and left all their belongings behind. Some of their homes were destroyed during 20 years of war.”

Nearly every family told the BBC that Pakistani border guards restricted what they could bring – a complaint echoed by some human rights groups.

Chaudhry said in response that Pakistan did “not have any policy that prevents Afghan refugees from taking their household items with them”.

One man, sitting on the roadside in the blistering sun, said his children had begged to stay in Pakistan, the country where they were born. They had been given temporary residency, but that expired in March.

“Now we’ll never go back. Not after how we were treated,” he said.

Hopes for Iran nuclear talks tempered by threats and mixed messages

Parham Ghobadi

BBC Persian

Iran and the US have held a second round of high-stakes nuclear talks in Rome – and agreed to meet again next week – even as hopes for de-escalation are tempered by mounting military threats and mixed messages.

US President Donald Trump reminds Tehran nearly every day of its options: a deal or war.

He has previously said Israel would lead a military response if the talks failed.

On Wednesday, the New York Times reported that Trump had “waved off” an Israeli plan to strike Iranian nuclear sites as early as next month.

“I wouldn’t say waved off. I’m not in a rush to do it,” Trump told reporters in response to the article on Thursday, adding that he preferred to give diplomacy a chance.

“I think that Iran has a chance to have a great country and to live happily without death… That’s my first option. If there’s a second option, I think it would be very bad for Iran.”

After both sides described the first round of talks in Oman last weekend as constructive, Trump had said he would be “making a decision on Iran very quickly”.

Why Iran returned to the table

In 2018, Trump pulled the US out of a 2015 agreement which saw Iran limit its nuclear activities and allow inspections by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in return for sanctions relief.

He said it did too little to stop Iran’s potential pathway to a nuclear weapon and reinstated US sanctions as part of a “maximum pressure” campaign to compel Iran to negotiate a new deal.

However, Iran refused and increasingly breached restrictions in retaliation. It has now stockpiled enough highly-enriched uranium to make several bombs if it chose to do so – something it says it would never do.

The threat of military action appears to have played a role in bringing Iran back to the negotiating table. Yet it insists that is not the reason.

The website of the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said Iran had agreed to talks only because the US limited its demands strictly to nuclear issues – not out of fear of US and Israeli strikes.

Even so, reaching a deal remains far from certain.

Trump’s Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff, who is leading the US negotiating team, posted on X on Tuesday: “Any final arrangement must set a framework for peace, stability, and prosperity in the Middle East – meaning that Iran must stop and eliminate its nuclear enrichment and weaponization programme.”

It came just a day after he had suggested in an interview with Fox News that Iran would be allowed to continue enriching uranium.

“They do not need to enrich past 3.67%,” he said, referring to the limit set by the 2015 nuclear deal.

“This is going to be much about verification on the enrichment programme and then ultimately verification on weaponization.”

Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, the head of the Iranian delegation, responded by noting Witkoff’s “contradictory statements” and stressing that “real positions will be made clear at the negotiating table”.

“We are ready to build trust regarding possible concerns over Iran’s enrichment, but the principle of enrichment is not negotiable,” he said.

Diplomatic flurry

Saturday’s talks in Rome come amid a flurry of diplomatic activity.

Saudi Arabia’s Defence Minister, Prince Khalid bin Salman, visited Tehran on Thursday, delivering a personal message from his father King Salman to Ayatollah Khamenei. He also met Iran’s President, Masoud Pezeshkian.

Iran has warned that any US military action would be met with retaliation against American bases in the region – many of them hosted by Iran’s Arab neighbours.

At the same time, Araghchi visited Moscow and handed a letter from Khamenei to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Iran and Russia have strengthened their military ties since the start of the war in Ukraine, with Tehran accused of supplying drones to support Moscow’s war effort.

The Russian parliament ratified a 20-year strategic partnership between Iran and Russia 10 days ago. However, the deal does not include a mutual defence clause.

Meanwhile, IAEA chief Rafael Grossi completed a two-day visit to Tehran this week, meeting Iranian nuclear officials and the foreign minister in a bid to ease tensions and restore inspection protocols.

Atmosphere of distrust

Since Trump returned to office this year, Ayatollah Khamenei has consistently denounced negotiations with Washington.

“Negotiating with this administration is not logical, not wise, nor honourable,” he said in a February speech, just two months before agreeing to the current round of talks.

The supreme leader’s distrust stems from Trump’s withdrawal from the nuclear deal, the “maximum pressure” campaign that followed, and the assassination of General Qassem Soleimani in a US strike in Iraq in 2020.

Ayatollah Khamenei expressed satisfaction with the first round of talks, saying it was “implemented well”.

But he cautioned that he was “neither overly optimistic nor overly pessimistic”.

He has also previously warned that Iran would ​retaliate in the event of strikes on its nuclear programme.

Some officials, including his adviser Ali Larijani, have even said that Iran might be “forced” to acquire a nuclear weapon if attacked.

“We are not pursuing weapons, and we have no problem with IAEA oversight – even indefinitely. But if you resort to bombing, Iran will have no choice but to reconsider. That is not in your interest,” Larijani told state TV earlier this month.

Direct or indirect?

Each side is pushing its own narrative about how the talks are being conducted.

The US says they are direct. Iran says they indirect, and that Oman is mediating by exchanging written notes.

After the first round in Muscat, Araghchi acknowledged he had a brief exchange with Witkoff “out of diplomatic courtesy” after crossing paths.

US news website Axios, citing sources, reported the two chief negotiators spoke for up to 45 minutes.

Tehran prefers secrecy. Washington seeks publicity.

After both sides put out positive statements about the first round, Iran’s currency surged by 20%.

Iran’s leadership is well aware of public discontent over the country’s harsh economic conditions – and the potential for protests it may trigger.

For the Islamic Republic, the fear is not just over bombs – it’s protests too.

Tributes to British couple killed in Naples cable car crash

Giulia Tommasi

BBC News
Reporting fromRome
Sofia Ferreira Santos

BBC News

Tributes have been paid to British couple Elaine and Graeme Winn who were among four people killed in a cable car crash near Naples.

The school Mrs Winn worked at in Market Harborough described the 58-year-old as “much-loved and highly respected”, and tributes were also left for the couple on social media.

The mountain cable car cabin plunged to the ground after one of the cables supporting it snapped on Thursday, local officials said.

The cable car operator said it had passed a safety inspection just two weeks ago and that a criminal investigation has been opened.

The two other victims include the driver of the cable car, named by authorities as 59-year-old Carmine Parlato, and an Israeli woman identified as Janan Suliman.

A fifth person in the cabin, Ms Suliman’s brother, was “extremely seriously injured” in the crash and airlifted to hospital, where he remains in a critical condition, officials said.

Authorities in Torre Annunziata have opened an investigation into the cause of the crash.

A spokesperson for Welland Park Academy said Mrs Winn worked at the Leicestershire secondary school as a business manager and that it was “deeply saddened” by her death.

“Elaine was a much-loved and highly respected member of our school community,” they said. “Her professionalism, warmth, and unwavering dedication to school life touched the lives of students, staff, and families alike.”

They added: “The care and kindness she showed to everyone in our community means her loss will be felt deeply by us all.”

Watch: Passengers rescued from Naples cable car after deadly crash

The mayor of Castellammare di Stabia – where the cable car is located – said it was believed a traction cable had snapped.

“The emergency brake downstream worked but clearly not the one on the cabin that was about to reach the top of the hill,” Luigi Vicinanza told Italian media on Thursday.

He added that there had been regular safety checks on the cable car line which runs the two miles (3km) between the town to the top of Mount Faito.

Vicinanza’s spokesman told PA news agency that 10 people were rescued from a second cabin which was also on the line near the bottom of the valley at the time of the incident. They were winched to safety.

The investigation into the incident will examine the possibility that strong winds could have been among the causes of the incident.

The cable car service had been suspended on Tuesday and Wednesday due to adverse weather conditions and had only resumed full operations on Thursday morning.

British tourist Megan Pacey was near the site of the incident on Thursday with her husband and their two young children when they saw the suspended cable car.

Ms Pacey said: “We were within a minute or two of [the incident] happening.”

“We watched the first couple of people come down in a harness, and as we left, there was a sense of urgency that had kicked in.”

She said flowers and candles had been left as tribute on the railway station steps on Friday.

A day of mourning will be held in the town, which is between Pompeii and Sorrento, and all local events for the Easter holiday have been cancelled.

The president of the region, Vincenzo De Luca, said it was a “truly tragic and painful” day.

Shortly after the crash, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, who was on a trip to Washington, expressed her “sincere condolences” to the families of the victims.

The Mount Faito cable car has been operating since 1952. A similar accident on the line in 1960 left four people dead.

Scientists claim to have discovered ‘new colour’ no one has seen before

Hafsa Khalil

BBC News

A team of scientists claim to have discovered a new colour that no human has ever seen before.

The research follows an experiment in which researchers in the US had laser pulses fired into their eyes.

By stimulating specific cells in the retina, the participants claim to have witnessed a blue-green colour that scientists have called “olo”, but some experts have said the existence of a new colour is “open to argument”.

The findings, published in the journal Science Advances on Friday, have been described by the study’s co-author, Prof Ren Ng from the University of California, as “remarkable”.

He and his colleagues believe that the results could potentially further research into colour blindness.

Prof Ng, who was one of five people to take part in the experiment, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme on Saturday that olo was “more saturated than any colour that you can see in the real world”.

“Let’s say you go around your whole life and you see only pink, baby pink, a pastel pink,” he said.

“And then one day you go to the office and someone’s wearing a shirt, and it’s the most intense baby pink you’ve ever seen, and they say it’s a new colour and we call it red.”

During the team’s experiment, researchers shone a laser beam into the pupil of one eye of each participant.

There were five participants in the study – four male and one female – who all had normal colour vision. Three of the participants – including Prof Ng – were co-authors of the research paper.

According to the research paper, the participants looked into a device called Oz which consists of mirrors, lasers and optical devices. The equipment was designed previously by some of the involved researchers – a team of scientists from UC Berkeley and the University of Washington, and updated for use in this study.

The retina is a light-sensitive layer of tissue at the back of the eye responsible for receiving and processing visual information. It converts light into electrical signals, which are then transmitted to the brain via the optic nerve, enabling us to see.

The retina includes cone cells, which are cells responsible for perceiving colour.

There are three types of cone cells in the eye – S, L and M – and each one is sensitive to different wavelengths of blue, red and green respectively.

According to the research paper, in normal vision, “any light that stimulates an M cone cell must also stimulate its neighbouring L and/or S cones”, because its function overlaps with them.

However, in the study, the laser only stimulated M cones, “which in principle would send a colour signal to the brain that never occurs in natural vision”, the paper said.

This means the colour olo could not be seen by a person’s naked eye in the real world without the help of specific stimulation.

To verify the colour observed during the experiment, each participant adjusted a controllable colour dial until it matched olo.

Some experts, however, say the new perceived colour is a “matter of interpretation”.

Prof John Barbur, a vision scientist at City St George’s, University of London, who was not involved in the study, said that while the research is a “technological feat” in stimulating selective cone cells, the discovery of a new colour is “open to argument”.

He explained that if, for example, the red cone cells (L) were stimulated in large numbers, people would “perceive a deep red”, but the perceived brightness may change depending on changes to red cone sensitivity, which is not unlike what happened in this study.

But the study’s co-author Prof Ng admitted that although olo is “certainly very technically difficult” to see, the team is studying the findings to see what it could potentially mean for colour blind people, who find it difficult to distinguish between certain colours.

US Supreme Court halts deportation of detained Venezuelans

Mallory Moench

BBC News

The US Supreme Court has ordered the Trump administration to pause the deportation of a group of alleged Venezuelan gang members.

A civil liberties group had sued to stop the removal of the men, currently in detention in Texas, saying they had not been able to contest their cases in court.

Donald Trump has sent accused Venezuelan gang members to a notorious prison in El Salvador, invoking the 1798 Alien Enemies Act, which gives the president power to detain and deport natives or citizens of “enemy” nations without usual processes. The act was previously used only three times, all during war.

The White House called challenges to using the law for mass deportations “meritless litigation”.

“We are confident in the lawfulness of the administration’s actions and in ultimately prevailing against an onslaught of meritless litigation brought by radical activists who care more about the rights of terrorist aliens than those of the American people,” White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt wrote in a post on X.

The Alien Enemies Act was last invoked in World War Two, when people of Japanese descent were imprisoned without trial and thousands sent to internment camps.

Since taking office in January, Trump’s hard-line immigration policies have encountered a number of legal hurdles.

Trump had accused Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua of “perpetrating, attempting, and threatening an invasion or predatory incursion” on US territory.

Out of 261 Venezuelans deported to El Salvador as of 8 April, 137 were removed under the Alien Enemies Act, a senior administration official told CBS News, the BBC’s US news partner.

A lower court temporarily blocked these deportations on 15 March.

The Supreme Court initially ruled on 8 April that Trump could use the Alien Enemies Act to deport alleged gang members, but deportees must be given a chance to challenge their removal.

The lawsuit that resulted in Saturday’s order said the Venezuelans detained in north Texas had been given notices about their imminent deportation in English, despite one detainee only speaking Spanish.

The challenge by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) also said the men had not been told they had a right to contest the decision in court.

“Without this Court’s intervention, dozens or hundreds of proposed class members may be removed to a possible life sentence in El Salvador with no real opportunity to contest their designation or removal,” the lawsuit read.

Supreme Court Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito dissented on Saturday.

In his second inaugural address in January, Trump pledged to “eliminate the presence of all foreign gangs and criminal networks bringing devastating crime to US soil”.

In the highest-profile case, the government admitted it mistakenly deported El Salvador national Kilmar Ábrego García, but contends he is a member of the MS-13 gang, which his lawyer and family denies. Mr Ábrego García has never been convicted of a crime.

The Supreme Court unanimously ruled that the government should facilitate bringing back Mr Ábrego García, but the Trump administration has said he will “never” live in the US again.

Senator Chris Van Hollen, a Democrat from Maryland, visited Mr Ábrego García in El Salvador and said he had been moved from the mega-jail Cecot (Terrorism Confinement Centre) to a new prison.

DHL suspends high value US deliveries over tariffs

Dearbail Jordan

Business reporter, BBC News

DHL Express is suspending deliveries to the US worth more than $800 (£603) because of a “significant increase” in red tape at customs following the intruduction of Donald Trump’s new tariff regime.

The delivery giant said it will temporarily stop shipments from companies in all countries to American consumers on Monday “until further notice”.

It added that business-to-business shipments will still go ahead, “though they may also face delays”.

Previously, packages worth up to $2,500 could enter the US with minimal paperwork but due to tighter customs checks that came into force alongside Trump’s tariffs earlier this month, the threshold has been lowered.

DHL said that the change “has caused a surge in formal customs clearances, which we are handling around the clock”.

It said that while it is working to “scale up and manage this increase, shipments woth over $800, regardless of origin, may experience multi-day delays”.

The company said it will still deliver packages worth less than $800, which can be sent to the US with minimal checks.

But the White House is set to clamp down on deliveries under $800 – specifically those sent from China and Hong Kong – on 2 May when it closes a loophole allowing low-value packages to enter the US without incurring any duties.

The removal of the so-called “de minimis” rule will impact the likes of the fast-fashion firm Shein and Temu, the low-cost retail giant.

Shein and Temu have both warned that they will increase prices “due to recent changes in global trade rules and tariffs”.

The Trump administration has claimed that “many shippers” in China “hide illicit substances and conceal the true contents of shipments sent to the US through deceptive shipping practices”.

Under an excutive order, the White House said the measures were aimed at “addressing the synthetic opioid supply chain” which it said “play a significant role in the synthetic opioid crisis in the US”.

Beijing has said that the opioid fentanyl is a “US problem” and China has the strictest drug policies in the world.

Last week, Hongkong Post said it was suspending packages sent to the US by sea and, from 27 April, would stop accepting parcels destined for America.

It said: “The US is unreasonable, bullying and imposing tariffs abusively.”

Thousands join anti-Trump protests across US

Ana Faguy

BBC News, Washington DC

Thousands took to the streets across the US on Saturday to protest over recent actions by President Donald Trump.

Known as “50501”, for “50 protests, 50 states, 1 movement”, the demonstrations were intended to coincide with the 250th anniversary of the start of the American Revolutionary War.

From outside the White House and Tesla dealerships and at the centres of many cities, protesters expressed a variety of grievances. Many called for the return of Kilmar Ábrego García, who was mistakenly deported to El Salvador.

Political protests are becoming more common in the US – the “Hands Off” demonstrations in early April drew tens of thousands in cities across the country.

The most recent polling from Gallup suggests 45% of voters approve of Trump’s performance in the first quarter of his term, which is more than the 41% who approved during the same period in his first administration.

Still, it is lower than the average first-quarter rating of 60% for all presidents elected between 1952 and 2020.

Saturday’s protests addressed a number of Trump actions, including those by the Department of Government Efficiency (Doge) – Trump’s initiative to cut US government jobs and other spending – and the administration’s unwillingness to bring about the return of Ábrego García, a citizen of El Salvador.

Gihad Elgendy told CNN he joined the protest at the White House to criticise the deportation of Ábrego García. He believes Trump “could easily pressure El Salvador to bring him back”.

The protests were generally reported as peaceful, although Representative Suhas Subramanyam, a Democrat, posted a video on X of a man holding a Trump sign and pushing through a crowd to angrily confront him.

Many demonstrators carried signs reading “No Kings,” a nod to the anniversary of the start of the country’s revolution against British rule.

During celebrations of the anniversary in Massachusetts that commemorated the battles of Lexington and Concord and the famous horse ride of Paul Revere, people held similar signs. There was also a 50501 demonstration in Boston on Saturday.

“This is a very perilous time in America for liberty,” Thomas Bassford, told the Associated Press, while in Boston with his partner, daughter and two grandsons. “I wanted the boys to learn about the origins of this country and that sometimes we have to fight for freedom.”

Trump’s popularity appears to be edging down, especially when it comes to the economy. When he took office in January, his approval rating was 47%, according to Gallup.

His approval rating in a recent Reuters/Ipsos poll similarly dipped to 43% from 47% on Inauguration Day. In the same poll, only 37% approved of his performance on the economy, compared to 42% during inauguration.

Earlier this month, hundreds of thousands of Americans gathered for the largest nationwide show of opposition since Trump returned to the White House.

Those protests – which were larger than Saturday’s – happened in 1,200 locations in all 50 US states.

Watch: Thousands rally across the US in anti-Trump protests

Rosenberg: Is Putin’s ‘Easter truce’ cause for scepticism or chance for peace?

Steven Rosenberg

BBC Russia Editor
Reporting fromMoscow

Last month the Trump administration proposed the idea of a 30-day comprehensive ceasefire.

Ukraine agreed. Russia did not. Or rather, it came up with a long list of conditions.

Instead of 30 days, the Kremlin decided on 30 hours. On Saturday, President Vladimir Putin announced a unilateral Easter truce in Ukraine until midnight Sunday night in Moscow.

He said he was acting out of “humanitarian” considerations.

Such a claim has been met with scepticism in Ukraine more than three years into Russia’s war against the country.

On social media on Sunday morning, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky posted that “the Russian army is attempting to create the general impression of a ceasefire, while in some areas still continuing isolated attempts to advance and inflict losses on Ukraine.”

Russia’s defence ministry took a different view.

In a statement, it said that “all Russian troops in the zone of the special military operation [Russia’s term for the invasion of Ukraine” from 18:00 Moscow time on 19 April have strictly adhered to the ceasefire regime and held their current positions.”

The Russian military also accused Ukraine of violating the ceasefire.

  • Follow live updates

Is Russia’s Easter ceasefire simply PR from Vladimir Putin?

Or does it represent a genuine step towards ending the war?

The sceptical view is that a 30-hour truce is less about pushing for peace and has more to do with maintaining good relations with the Trump White House. Since Donald Trump’s return to the Oval Office, Putin has been busy trying to repair ties with Washington and pave the way for a new era of co-operation.

However, recent public comments by American officials (including Trump himself) have suggested that the US administration has been growing impatient with the lack of progress on Ukraine. Trump has threatened to walk away from attempts to broker a peace deal if an agreement is looking unlikely.

By announcing a unilateral truce – albeit a short one – the Kremlin can argue that it is Russia – not Ukraine – that is committed to peace. Moscow is already blaming Kyiv for ceasefire violations and continued fighting.

Keep in mind, this brief ceasefire was declared at very short notice. Saturday’s announcement will have given little time for either side – Russia or Ukraine – to fully prepare for it.

But there is also a more optimistic view.

The Kremlin’s “Easter truce” was a surprise. But it did not come out of nowhere.

In recent weeks there has been intense international diplomacy to try to end the fighting.

Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff has met Putin three times in two months. The Kremlin leader’s envoy Kirill Dmitriev flew to Washington recently.

A few days ago Mr Witkoff and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio were in Paris for talks on Ukraine with President Emmanuel Macron. A delegation from Ukraine was there too.

Might there be a rare window of opportunity for peace?

Despite the reports of continued fighting, could a 30-hour ceasefire somehow grow into something more substantial, more comprehensive?

Having displayed little desire for compromise or concessions up to this point, could Putin be persuaded that now is the moment to strike a deal?

It is hard to see that right now.

Then again, when it comes to diplomacy, we are not privy to all the conversations taking place behind closed doors or to the details of possible deals under discussion.

We tend to only see the tip of the iceberg – which leaves open the possibility of more unexpected announcements.

Inside the rural Texas town where Elon Musk is basing his business empire

Mike Wendling

@mwendling
Reporting fromBastrop, Texas

After fleeing Silicon Valley for political and business reasons, Elon Musk is building a corporate campus in rural Texas – but his new neighbours have mixed views.

Half an hour east of Austin, past the airport, the clogged-up traffic starts to melt away and the plains of Central Texas open up, leaving the booming city behind.

Somewhere along the main two-lane highway, a left turn takes drivers down Farm-to-Market Road 1209. It seems like an unlikely address for a high-tech hub, but that’s exactly what Elon Musk, the world’s richest man and one of President Donald Trump’s closest allies, hopes it will become.

Court filings indicate that a large metal building finished in the last few months will be the new headquarters of X, his social media platform.

A short distance away, a large logo of the Boring Company, Musk’s infrastructure company, is plastered on the side of another headquarters. And across FM 1209 is a rapidly growing SpaceX facility which manufactures Starlink satellite internet equipment.

Like most technology tycoons, Musk had long made Silicon Valley his home and headquarters. Once a supporter of the Democrats, his move to Texas is part of a larger tech world trend and also appears to reflect his own transformed ideological views.

Here the land is (relatively) cheap, skilled tech workers from nearby Austin are plentiful, and local laws are favourable to development.

Of course, there are also specific political angles to the move.

In July 2024, Musk said he was quitting California after the state passed a law prohibiting teachers from enforcing rules about notifying families when students’ gender identity changes.

Musk has an estranged transgender daughter and has spoken out against what he calls “woke mind virus” which he describes in interviews as divisive identity politics – along with anti-meritocratic and anti-free speech ideas.

And so Musk upped sticks and headed to Texas, a Republican stronghold and the fastest-growing state in the US.

In addition to the cluster of buildings near Bastrop in central Texas, he has built a SpaceX facility in Cameron County, on the southern tip of Texas near the border with Mexico. SpaceX employees there have filed a petition to create a new town called Starbase. The measure will go to a vote in May.

Locals in Bastrop have mixed feelings about the development.

“It’s almost like we have a split personality,” says Sylvia Carrillo, city manager of Bastrop, which has a growing population of more than 12,000. “Residents are happy that their children and grandchildren will have jobs in the area.

“On the other hand it can feel like we are being overwhelmed by a third party and that the development will quickly urbanise our area,” she says.

Although the Musk development is technically outside of the city’s limits, it’s close enough that Texas laws give Bastrop’s government sway over development. And, Ms Carrillo stresses, the Musk buildings are just one example of many developments springing up in a booming area.

“He’s faced a backlash that is not entirely of his own creating,” she says.

“But now that he’s here and things are changing quickly, it’s a matter of managing” issues like house and land prices and the environment, she says.

The Musk compound is still fairly bare-bones. The grandly named Hyperloop Plaza sits in the middle of the corporate buildings, and is home to the company-owned Boring Bodega, a bar, coffee shop, hairdresser and gift shop.

On a recent windy Sunday afternoon, a video game console sat unplayed in front of a couch near a display of company T-shirts, while a few children scurried back and forth to a playground outside.

The developments in Bastrop fit right into the quickening pace of activity across central Texas, where cranes perpetually loom above the Austin skyline and the housing market is a perpetual topic of conversation.

The area has gone through various industry booms and busts over the years, including lumber and coal mining, says Judy Enis, a volunteer guide at the Bastrop Museum and Visitor Center.

During World War Two, tens of thousands of soldiers – and around 10,000 German prisoners of war – poured in to Camp Swift, a US Army facility north of the town.

“That probably had more of an impact than Elon Musk,” Ms Enis notes.

Views of the tycoon are mixed, to say the least, and inseparable not only from his politics but also opinions on economic development, in what still is a predominately rural area.

Judah Ross, a local real estate agent, says the development has supercharged population growth that started as a result of the Austin boom and accelerated during the Covid pandemic.

“I’m always going to be biased because I want the growth,” Mr Ross says. “But I love it here and I want to be part of it.

“If nothing else, what’s good is the amount of jobs that this is bringing in,” he says. “In the past year, I’ve sold to people working at Boring and SpaceX.”

Alfonso Lopez, a Texan who returned to the state after working in tech in Seattle, says he initially picked Bastrop figuring he would make a quick buck on a house purchase and move on.

Instead, he quickly became enamoured with the town, its mix of local businesses and friendly people, and wants to stay.

Mr Lopez is no big fan of Musk and is critical of some of his management practices and politics, but admires the technology his companies have built and is happy to live nearby as long as the companies are good neighbours.

“As long as they don’t ruin my water or dig a tunnel beneath my house and create a sinkhole, this isn’t bad,” he says, gesturing around the metal shed housing the bodega, coffee shop and bar. “I’ll come here and watch a game.”

His concerns about water are more than theoretical. Last year The Boring Company was fined $11,876 (£8,950) by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality after being cited for water pollution violations.

The Boring Company initially planned to dump wastewater in the nearby Colorado River but, after local pressure, signed a deal to send the sludge to a Bastrop wastewater treatment plant.

The water issues appear to have delayed housebuilding, which reportedly could include more than 100 homes for Musk employees. The planned development of homes has so far failed to materialise, however. For now, the extent of living quarters is a handful of temporary trailers behind the bodega building, surrounded by a wall, acres of Texas plain and a few horses munching grass. Ms Carrillo, the city manager, says any large-scale home building is at least a year off.

In November, SpaceX applied for a free trade zone designation, which would allow it to move materials and finished products in and out of the Bastrop factory without being subject to tariffs – one of Donald Trump’s signature policies.

It’s a common practice for manufacturers, and there are hundreds of similar zones across the country.

Local officials in Texas have endorsed the proposal, saying it will boost the local economy, despite costing the county an estimated $45,000 (£34,800) in revenue this year.

The company is also getting an injection of $17.3m (£13.4m) from the Texas government to develop the site, a grant that officials say is expected to create more than 400 jobs and $280m in capital investment in Bastrop.

Few local residents wanted to directly criticise Musk when standing face-to-face with a visiting reporter. But it’s a different story online, where sharper feelings shine through.

“They will ruin everything nearby,” one resident posted on a local online forum. “Nothing good comes with him.”

The BBC contacted SpaceX, The Boring Company and X for comment.

Ms Carrillo, the city manager, says she hasn’t picked up on much personal anger on the part of locals prompted by Musk’s activities in Washington.

But to protect Bastrop, she says, the city has recently enacted laws limiting housing density and providing for public parks – measures that she says will keep the “historic nature” of the well-preserved downtown while allowing for growth on the outskirts.

Bastrop, she says, is a conservative, traditionally Republican place.

“His national stuff doesn’t really register,” she says. “His companies have been good corporate citizens, and we hope it can stay that way.”

India’s sword-wielding grandmother still going strong at 82

Sumitra Nair

Kerala

An 82-year-old woman who teaches the ancient Indian martial art of Kalaripayattu says she has no plans to retire.

“I’ll probably practise Kalari until the day I die,” says Meenakshi Raghavan, widely thought to be the oldest woman in the world to practise the art form.

Kalaripayattu – kalari means battleground and payattu means fight – is believed to have originated at least 3,000 years back in the southern state of Kerala and is regarded as India’s oldest martial art.

It is not solely practised for combat or fighting; it also serves to instil discipline, build strength and develop self-defence skills.

Ms Raghavan is fondly known as Meenakshi Amma – Amma means mother in the Malayalam language – in Kerala’s Vadakara, where she lives. The town is also home to other renowned exponents of the art like Unniyarcha, Aromal Chekavar and Thacholi Othenan.

Meenakshi Amma occasionally performs in other cities but mainly runs her own Kalari school, founded by her husband in 1950. Her days are busy, with classes from five in the morning to noon.

“I teach about 50 students daily. My four children were also trained [in the art form] by me and my husband. They started learning from the age of six,” she says.

Kalaripayattu has four stages and it requires patience to learn the art form.

Training begins with meypattu – an oil massage followed by exercises to condition the body.

After about two years, students progress to kolthari (stick fighting), then to angathari (weapon combat), and finally to verumkai – the highest level, involving unarmed combat. It typically takes up to five years to master Kalaripayattu.

Kung fu is believed to have adapted principles like breathing techniques and marmashastra (stimulating vital points to optimise energy flow) from Kalaripayattu, according to Vinod Kadangal, another Kalari teacher.

Legend has it that around the 6th Century, Indian Buddhist monk Bodhidharma introduced these techniques to the Shaolin monks, influencing the more famous Chinese martial art.

Meenakshi Amma still recalls the first time she stepped into a Kalari – the red-earth arena where the art is practised – 75 years ago.

“I was seven and quite good at dancing. So my guru – VP Raghavan – approached my father and suggested that I learn Kalaripayattu. Just like dance, the art form requires you to be flexible,” she says.

Hailing from Kerala’s Thiyya community, Meenakshi Amma’s guru was 15 when he and his brothers opened their own Kalaripayattu school after being denied admission elsewhere because of their low social caste.

“There was no bias when it came to girls enrolling to study Kalari – in fact, physical education was compulsory in all Kerala schools at that time. But we were expected to stop after attaining puberty,” she says.

Unlike others, Meenakshi Amma’s father encouraged her training into her late teens. At 17, she fell in love with Raghavan, and they soon married. Together, they went on to train hundreds of students, often for free.

“At the time, a lot of children came from poor families. The only money he [Raghavan] accepted was in the form of or a tribute paid to the teacher,” she says.

Donations sustained the school, while Raghavan later took a teaching job for extra income. After his death in 2007, Meenakshi Amma formally took charge.

While she has no plans to retire at the moment, she hopes to hand over the school one day to her eldest son Sanjeev.

The 62-year-old, who is also an instructor at the school, says he is lucky to have learnt from the best – his mother. But being her son earns no favours; he says she’s still his toughest opponent.

Meenakshi Amma is a local celebrity. During our interview, three politicians drop by to invite her to an awards ceremony.

“Amma, you must grace us with your presence,” one of them says with folded hands.

“Thank you for considering me, I’ll attend,” she replies.

Her students speak of “fierce admiration” for her. Many have opened their own Kalari schools across the state, a source of great pride for Meenakshi Amma.

“She’s an inspiration to women everywhere – a rare person who shows love and affection to her students, yet remains a strict disciplinarian when it comes to Kalari,” says KF Thomas, a former student.

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Pope wishes worshippers Happy Easter after serious illness

Hafsa Khalil

BBC News
Pope Francis wishes the faithful ‘happy Easter’ from Vatican city

Pope Francis has appeared at the Vatican’s St Peter’s Square to wish “Happy Easter” to thousands of worshippers.

The Pope, 88, came out in a wheelchair and waved from the balcony of St Peter’s Basilica to cheering crowds below, saying: “Dear brothers and sisters, Happy Easter.”

His traditional Easter address was delivered by a clergy member.

After the blessing, the Pope was driven around the square. As he passed through the crowds, his procession paused a number of times as babies were brought over for him to bless.

His appearance on Easter Sunday had been highly anticipated. Last month, he was discharged from hospital after five weeks of treatment for an infection that led to double pneumonia.

The Pope’s Easter blessing, delivered by a clergy member as the pontiff sat looking frail beside him, said: “There can be no peace without freedom of religion, freedom of thought, freedom of expression and respect for the views of others.”

“What a great thirst for death, for killing we see in the many conflicts raging in different parts of the world,” the Pope said in the address.

The Pope remembered the people of Gaza, in particular its Christian population, as the conflict “causes death and destruction” and creates a “deplorable humanitarian situation”.

He also called growing global antisemitism “worrisome”.

“I express my closeness to the sufferings… for all the Israeli people and the Palestinian people,” the message said. “Call a ceasefire, release the hostages and come to the aid of a starving people that aspires to a future of peace.”

The Pope also encouraged all parties involved in the Ukraine war to “pursue efforts aimed at achieving a just and lasting peace.”

Prior to Sunday’s celebrations, the Pope had been seen out twice this week.

Tens of thousands of Catholics had gathered in Rome for Easter Mass during this special jubilee year, which takes place every 25 years and sees millions of pilgrims descend on the city.

The jubilee year kicked off with the Pope opening the usually bricked-up Holy Door at St Peter’s Basilica on 24 December.

For the first time since becoming pope in 2013, he had missed the majority of Holy Week events, including Saturday’s Easter vigil at St Peter’s Basilica, where he delegated his duties to cardinals.

But, during a brief appearance inside the basilica on that day, he prayed and gave sweets to children.

When he was discharged from hospital in March, his doctors had said he would need at least two months of rest at his residence.

The pontiff had presented “two very critical episodes” where his “life was in danger” while in hospital, according to one of the doctors who took care of him.

Dr Sergio Alfieri added that the Pope was never intubated and always remained alert and oriented in hospital.

Pope Francis, who is from Argentina, has suffered a number of health issues throughout his life, including having part of one of his lungs removed at age 21, making him more prone to infections.

Also on Sunday morning, US Vice-President JD Vance – a Roman Catholic who converted as an adult – had a brief private meeting with the Pope.

Vance arrived in Rome on Friday, and on Saturday met with the Vatican’s Secretary of State and Secretary for Relations with States and International Organisation.

During “cordial talks” on Saturday, the parties expressed satisfaction with “good existing bilateral relations” and a “common commitment to protect the right to freedom of religion and conscience”, the Vatican said in a statement.

“There was an exchange of opinions on the international situation, especially regarding countries affected by war, political tensions and difficult humanitarian situations, with particular attention to migrants, refugees, and prisoners,” the statement read.

Designed in US, made in China: Why Apple is stuck

Annabelle Liang

Business reporter
Reporting fromSingapore

Every iPhone comes with a label which tells you it was designed in California.

While the sleek rectangle that runs many of our lives is indeed designed in the United States, it is likely to have come to life thousands of miles away in China: the country hit hardest by US President Donald Trump’s tariffs, now rising to 245% on some Chinese imports.

Apple sells more than 220 million iPhones a year and by most estimates, nine in 10 are made in China. From the glossy screens to the battery packs, it’s here that many of the components in an Apple product are made, sourced and assembled into iPhones, iPads or Macbooks. Most are shipped to the US, Apple’s largest market.

Luckily for the firm, Trump suddenly exempted smartphones, computers and some other electronic devices from his tariffs last week.

But the comfort is short-lived.

The president has since suggested that more tariffs are coming: “NOBODY is getting ‘off the hook’,” he wrote on Truth Social, as his administration investigated “semiconductors and the WHOLE ELECTRONICS SUPPLY CHAIN”.

The global supply chain that Apple has touted as a strength is now a vulnerability.

The US and China, the world’s two biggest economies, are interdependent and Trump’s staggering tariffs have upended that relationship overnight, leading to an inevitable question: who is the more dependent of the two?

How a lifeline became a threat

China has hugely benefited from hosting assembly lines for one of the world’s most valuable companies. It was a calling card to the West for quality manufacturing and has helped spur local innovation.

Apple entered China in the 1990s to sell computers through third-party suppliers.

Around 1997, when it was on the verge of bankruptcy as it struggled to compete with rivals, Apple found a lifeline in China. A young Chinese economy was opening up to foreign companies to boost manufacturing and create more jobs.

It wasn’t until 2001 though that Apple officially arrived in China, through a Shanghai-based trading company, and started making products in the country. It partnered with Foxconn, a Taiwanese electronic manufacturer operating in China, to make iPods, then iMacs and subsequently iPhones.

As Beijing began trading with the world – encouraged by the US no less – Apple grew its footprint in what was becoming the world’s factory.

Back then, China was not primed to make the iPhone. But Apple chose its own crop of suppliers and helped them grow into “manufacturing superstars,” according to supply chain expert Lin Xueping.

He cites the example of Beijing Jingdiao, now a leading manufacturer of high-speed precision machinery, which is used to make advanced components efficiently. The company, which used to cut acrylic, was not considered a machine tool-maker – but it eventually developed machinery to cut glass and became “the star of Apple’s mobile phone surface processing,” Mr Lin says.

Apple opened its first store in the country in Beijing in 2008, the year the city hosted the Olympics and China’s relationship with the West was at an all-time high. This soon snowballed to 50 stores, with customers queuing out of the door.

As Apple’s profit margins grew, so did its assembly lines in China, with Foxconn operating the world’s largest iPhone factory in Zhengzhou, which has since been termed “iPhone City”.

For a fast-growing China, Apple became a symbol of advanced Western tech – simple yet original and slick.

Today, most of Apple’s prized iPhones are manufactured by Foxconn. The advanced chips that power them are made in Taiwan, by the world’s largest chip manufacturer, TSMC. The manufacturing also requires rare earth elements which are used in audio applications and cameras.

Some 150 of Apple’s top 187 suppliers in 2024 had factories in China, according to an analysis by Nikkei Asia.

“There’s no supply chain in the world that’s more critical to us than China,” Apple’s chief executive Tim Cook said in an interview last year.

The tariff threat – fantasy or ambition?

In Trump’s first term, Apple secured exemptions on the tariffs he imposed on China.

But this time, the Trump administration has made an example of Apple before it reversed tariffs on some electronics. It believes the threat of steep taxes will encourage businesses to make products in America instead.

“The army of millions and millions of human beings screwing in little screws to make iPhones – that kind of thing is going to come to America,” Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said in an interview earlier this month.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt reiterated that last week: “President Trump has made it clear America cannot rely on China to manufacture critical technologies such as semiconductors, chips, smartphones and laptops.”

She added: “At the direction of the president, these companies are hustling to onshore their manufacturing in the United States as soon as possible.”

But many are sceptical of that.

The thought that Apple could move its assembly operation to the US is “pure fantasy,” according to Eli Friedman, who formerly sat on the firm’s academic advisory board.

He says the company has been talking about diversifying its supply chain away from China since 2013, when he joined the board – but the US was never an option.

Mr Friedman adds that Apple didn’t make much progress over the next decade but “really made an effort” after the pandemic, when China’s tightly controlled Covid lockdowns hurt manufacturing output.

“The most important new locations for assembly have been Vietnam and India. But of course the majority of Apple assembly still takes place [in China].”

Apple did not respond to the BBC’s questions but its website says its supply chain spans “thousands of businesses and more than 50 countries”.

Challenges ahead

Any change to Apple’s current supply chain status quo would be a huge blow for China, which is trying to kickstart growth post-pandemic.

Many of the reasons that the country wanted to be a manufacturing hub for Western companies in the early 2000s ring true today – it creates hundreds of thousands of jobs, and gives the country a crucial edge in global trade.

“Apple sits at the intersection of US-China tensions, and tariffs highlight the cost of that exposure,” says Jigar Dixit, a supply chain and operations consultant.

It might explain why China has not bowed to Trump’s threats, retaliating instead with 125% levies on US imports. China has also imposed export controls on a range of critical rare earth minerals and magnets it has in stores, dealing a blow to the US.

There is no doubt the US tariffs still being levied on other Chinese sectors will hurt, though.

And it’s not just Beijing facing higher tariffs – Trump has made it clear he will target countries that are part of the Chinese supply chain. For instance Vietnam, where Apple has moved AirPods production, was facing 46% tariffs before Trump hit pause for 90 days, so moving production elsewhere in Asia is not an easy way out.

“All conceivable places for the huge Foxconn assembly sites with tens or hundreds of thousands of workers are in Asia, and all of these countries are facing higher tariffs,” Mr Friedman says.

So what does Apple do now?

The company is fighting off stiff competition from Chinese firms as the government pushes for advanced tech manufacturing in a race with the US.

Now that “Apple has cultivated China’s electronic manufacturing capabilities, Huawei, Xiaomi, Oppo and others can reuse Apple’s mature supply chain,” according to Mr Lin.

Last year, Apple lost its place as China’s biggest smartphone seller to Huawei and Vivo. Chinese people are not spending enough because of a sluggish economy and with ChatGPT banned in China, Apple is also struggling to retain an edge among buyers seeking AI-powered phones. It even offered rare discounts on iPhones in January to boost sales.

And while operating under President Xi Jinping’s increasingly close grip, Apple has had to limit the use of Bluetooth and Airdrop on its devices as the Chinese Communist Party sought to censor political messages that people were sharing. It weathered a crackdown on the tech industry that even touched Alibaba founder and multi-billionaire Jack Ma.

Apple has announced a $500bn (£378bn) investment in the US, though that may not be enough to appease the Trump administration for long.

Given the several U-turns and the uncertainty around Trump’s tariffs, more surprise levies are expected – which could again leave the company with little manoeuvring room and even less time.

Mr Dixit says smartphone tariffs will not cripple Apple should they rear their head again, but regardless will add “pressure – both operationally and politically” to a supply chain that cannot be unwound quickly.

“Clearly the severity of the immediate crisis has been lessened,” Mr Friedman adds, referring to last week’s exemption for smartphones.

“But I really don’t think this means Apple can relax.”

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Police algorithm said Lina was at ‘medium’ risk. Then she was killed

Linda Pressly and Esperanza Escribano

BBC News

In January, Lina went to the police.

Her ex-partner had been threatening her at home in the Spanish seaside town of Benalmádena. That day, he’d allegedly raised his hand as if to hit her.

“There had been violent episodes – she was scared,” Lina’s cousin Daniel recalls.

When she got to the police station, she was interviewed and her case registered with VioGén, a digital tool which assesses the likelihood of a woman being attacked again by the same man.

VioGén – an algorithm-based system – asks 35 questions about the abuse and its intensity, the aggressor’s access to weapons, his mental health and whether the woman has left, or is considering leaving, the relationship.

It then records the threat to her as “negligible”, “low”, “medium”, “high” or “extreme”.

The category is used to make decisions about the allocation of police resources to protect the woman.

Lina was deemed to be at “medium” risk.

She asked for a restraining order at a specialist gender violence court in Malaga, so that her ex-partner couldn’t be in contact with her or share her living space. The request was denied.

“Lina wanted to change the locks at her home, so she could live peacefully with her children,” says her cousin.

Three weeks later, she was dead. Her partner had allegedly used his key to enter her flat and soon the house was on fire.

While her children, mother and ex-partner all escaped, Lina didn’t. Her 11-year-old son was widely reported as telling police it was his father who killed his mother.

Lina’s lifeless body was retrieved from the charred interior of her home. Her ex-partner, the father of her three youngest children, was arrested.

Now, her death is raising questions about VioGén and its ability to keep women safe in Spain.

VioGén didn’t accurately predict the threat to Lina.

As a woman designated at “medium” risk, the protocol is that she would be followed up again by a nominated police officer within 30 days.

But Lina was dead before that. If she had been “high” risk, the police follow-up would have happened within a week. Could that have made a difference to Lina?

Tools to evaluate the threat of repeat domestic violence are used in North America and across Europe. In the UK, some police forces use DARA (Domestic Abuse Risk Assessment) – essentially a checklist. And DASH (Domestic Abuse, Stalking, Harassment and Honour-based Violence Assessment) may be employed by police or others, like social workers, to assess the risk of another attack.

But only in Spain is an algorithm woven so tightly into police practice. VioGén was developed by Spanish police and academics. It’s used everywhere apart from the Basque Country and Catalonia (those regions have separate systems, although police co-operation is nationwide).

The head of the National Police’s family and women’s unit in Malaga, Ch Insp Isabel Espejo, describes VioGén as “super-important”.

“It helps us follow each victim’s case very precisely,” she says.

Her officers deal with an average of 10 reports of gender violence a day. And every month, VioGén classifies nine or 10 women as being at “extreme” risk of repeat victimisation.

The resource implications in those cases are huge: 24-hour police protection for a woman until the circumstances change and the risk decreases. Women assessed as “high” risk may also get an officer escort.

A 2014 study found that officers accepted VioGén’s evaluation of the likelihood of repeated abuse 95% of the time. Critics suggest police are abdicating decision-making about women’s safety to an algorithm.

Ch Insp Espejo says that the algorithm’s calculation of risk is usually adequate. But she recognises – even though Lina’s case wasn’t under her command – that something went wrong with Lina’s assessment.

“I’m not going to say VioGén doesn’t fail – it does. But this wasn’t the trigger that led to this woman’s murder. The only guilty party is the person who killed Lina. Total security just doesn’t exist,” she says.

But at “medium” risk, Lina was never a police priority. And did Lina’s VioGén assessment have an impact on the court’s decision to deny her a restraining order against her ex-partner?

Court authorities didn’t give us permission to meet the judge who denied Lina an injunction against her ex-partner – a woman attacked on social media after Lina’s death.

Instead, another of Malaga’s gender violence judges, Maria del Carmen Gutiérrez tells us in general terms that such an order needs two things: evidence of a crime and the threat of serious danger to the victim.

“VioGén is one element I use to assess that danger, but it’s far from the only one,” she says.

Sometimes, the judge says, she makes restraining orders in cases where VioGén has assessed a woman as at “negligible” or “low” risk. On other occasions she may conclude there’s no danger to a woman deemed at “medium” or “high” risk of repeat victimisation.

Dr Juan Jose Medina, a criminologist at the University of Seville, says Spain has a “postcode lottery” for women applying for restraining orders – some jurisdictions are much more likely to grant them than others. But we don’t know systematically how VioGén influences the courts, or the police, because studies haven’t been done.

“How are police officers and other stakeholders using this tool, and how is it informing their decision-making? We don’t have good answers,” he says.

Spain’s interior ministry hasn’t often allowed academics access to VioGén’s data. And there hasn’t been an independent audit of the algorithm.

Gemma Galdon, the founder of Eticas – an organisation working on the social and ethical impact of technology – says if you don’t audit these systems, you won’t know if they’re actually delivering police protection to the right women.

Examples of algorithmic bias elsewhere are well-documented. In the US, analysis from 2016 of a recidivism tool found black defendants were more likely than their white peers to be incorrectly judged to be at higher risk of repeat offending. At the same time, white defendants were more likely than black defendants to be wrongly flagged as low risk.

In 2018, Spain’s interior ministry didn’t give a green light to an Eticas proposal to conduct a confidential, pro-bono, internal audit. So instead, Gemma Galdon and her colleagues decided to reverse-engineer VioGén and do an external audit.

They used interviews with women survivors of domestic abuse and publicly available information – including data from the judiciary about women who, like Lina, had been killed.

They found that between 2003 and 2021, 71 women murdered by their partners or ex-partners had previously reported domestic abuse to the police. Those recorded on the VioGén system were given risk levels of “negligible” or “medium”.

“What we’d like to know is, were those error rates that cannot be mitigated in any way? Or could we have done something to improve how these systems assign risk and protect those women better?” asks Gemma Galdon.

The head of gender violence research at Spain’s interior ministry, Juan José López-Ossorio, is dismissive of the Eticas investigation: it wasn’t done with VioGén data. “If you don’t have access to the data, how can you interpret it?” he says.

And he is wary of an external audit, fearing it could compromise both the security of women whose cases are recorded and VioGén’s procedures.

“What we know is that once a woman reports a man and she’s under police protection, the probability of further violence is substantially lowered – we’ve no doubts about that,” says López-Ossorio.

VioGén has evolved since it was introduced in Spain. The questionnaire has been refined, and the “negligible” category of risk will soon be abolished. And even critics agree it makes sense to have a standardised system responding to gender violence.

In Benalmádena, Lina’s home has become a shrine.

Flowers, candles and pictures of saints were left on the step. A small poster stuck on the wall declared: Benalmádena says no to gender violence. The community fundraised for Lina’s children.

Her cousin, Daniel, says everyone’s still reeling from news of her death.

“The family it’s destroyed – especially Lina’s mother,” he says.

“She’s 82 years old. I don’t think there’s anything sadder than to have your daughter killed by an aggressor in a way that could have been avoided. The children are still in shock – they’ll need a lot of psychological help.”

Scientists claim to have discovered ‘new colour’ no one has seen before

Hafsa Khalil

BBC News

A team of scientists claim to have discovered a new colour that no human has ever seen before.

The research follows an experiment in which researchers in the US had laser pulses fired into their eyes.

By stimulating specific cells in the retina, the participants claim to have witnessed a blue-green colour that scientists have called “olo”, but some experts have said the existence of a new colour is “open to argument”.

The findings, published in the journal Science Advances on Friday, have been described by the study’s co-author, Prof Ren Ng from the University of California, as “remarkable”.

He and his colleagues believe that the results could potentially further research into colour blindness.

Prof Ng, who was one of five people to take part in the experiment, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme on Saturday that olo was “more saturated than any colour that you can see in the real world”.

“Let’s say you go around your whole life and you see only pink, baby pink, a pastel pink,” he said.

“And then one day you go to the office and someone’s wearing a shirt, and it’s the most intense baby pink you’ve ever seen, and they say it’s a new colour and we call it red.”

During the team’s experiment, researchers shone a laser beam into the pupil of one eye of each participant.

There were five participants in the study – four male and one female – who all had normal colour vision. Three of the participants – including Prof Ng – were co-authors of the research paper.

According to the research paper, the participants looked into a device called Oz which consists of mirrors, lasers and optical devices. The equipment was designed previously by some of the involved researchers – a team of scientists from UC Berkeley and the University of Washington, and updated for use in this study.

The retina is a light-sensitive layer of tissue at the back of the eye responsible for receiving and processing visual information. It converts light into electrical signals, which are then transmitted to the brain via the optic nerve, enabling us to see.

The retina includes cone cells, which are cells responsible for perceiving colour.

There are three types of cone cells in the eye – S, L and M – and each one is sensitive to different wavelengths of blue, red and green respectively.

According to the research paper, in normal vision, “any light that stimulates an M cone cell must also stimulate its neighbouring L and/or S cones”, because its function overlaps with them.

However, in the study, the laser only stimulated M cones, “which in principle would send a colour signal to the brain that never occurs in natural vision”, the paper said.

This means the colour olo could not be seen by a person’s naked eye in the real world without the help of specific stimulation.

To verify the colour observed during the experiment, each participant adjusted a controllable colour dial until it matched olo.

Some experts, however, say the new perceived colour is a “matter of interpretation”.

Prof John Barbur, a vision scientist at City St George’s, University of London, who was not involved in the study, said that while the research is a “technological feat” in stimulating selective cone cells, the discovery of a new colour is “open to argument”.

He explained that if, for example, the red cone cells (L) were stimulated in large numbers, people would “perceive a deep red”, but the perceived brightness may change depending on changes to red cone sensitivity, which is not unlike what happened in this study.

But the study’s co-author Prof Ng admitted that although olo is “certainly very technically difficult” to see, the team is studying the findings to see what it could potentially mean for colour blind people, who find it difficult to distinguish between certain colours.

Pakistan expels tens of thousands of Afghans

Yama Bariz

BBC World Service
Reporting fromTorkham border crossing

Pakistan has deported more than 19,500 Afghans this month, among more than 80,000 who have left ahead of a 30 April deadline, according to the UN.

Pakistan has accelerated its drive to expel undocumented Afghans and those who had temporary permission to stay, saying it can no longer cope.

Between 700 and 800 families are being deported daily, Taliban officials say, with up to two million people expected to follow in the coming months.

Pakistani Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar flew to Kabul on Saturday for talks with Taliban officials. His counterpart Amir Khan Muttaqi expressed “deep concern” about deportations.

Some expelled Afghans at the border said they had been born in Pakistan after their families fled conflict.

More than 3.5 million Afghans have been living in Pakistan, according to the UN’s refugee agency, including around 700,000 people who came after the Taliban takeover in 2021. The UN estimates that half are undocumented.

Pakistan has taken in Afghans through decades of war, but the government says the high number of refugees now poses risks to national security and causes pressure on public services.

  • Pakistan orders Afghan asylum seekers out
  • Afghans hiding in Pakistan live in fear

There has been a recent spike in border clashes between the security forces of both sides. Pakistan blames them on militants based in Afghanistan, which the Taliban deny.

Pakistan’s foreign ministry said the two sides had “discussed all issues of mutual interest” in Saturday’s meeting in Kabul.

Pakistan had extended a deadline for undocumented Afghans to leave the country by a month, to 30 April.

On the Torkham border crossing, some expelled Afghans told the BBC they left Afghanistan decades ago – or had never lived there.

“I lived my whole life in Pakistan,” said Sayed Rahman, a second-generation refugee born and raised in Pakistan. “I got married there. What am I supposed to do now?”

Saleh, a father of three daughters, worried what life under Taliban rule will mean for them. His daughters attended school in Pakistan’s Punjab province, but in Afghanistan, girls over the age of 12 are barred from doing so.

“I want my children to study. I don’t want their years in school to go to waste,” he said. “Everyone has the right to an education.”

Another man told the BBC: “Our children have never seen Afghanistan and even I don’t know what it looks like anymore. It might take us a year or more to settle in and find work. We feel helpless.”

The BBC reports at the Afghanistan-Pakistan border crossing

At the border, men and women pass through separate gates, under the watch of armed Pakistani and Afghan guards. Some of those returning were elderly – one man was carried across on a stretcher, another in a bed.

Military trucks shuttled families from the border to temporary shelters. Those originally from distant provinces stay there for several days, waiting for transport to their home regions.

Families clustered under canvases to escape the 30C degree heat, as swirling dust caught in the eyes and mouth. Resources are stretched and fierce arguments often break out over access to shelter.

Returnees receive between 4,000 and 10,000 Afghanis (£41 to £104) from the Kabul authorities, according to Hedayatullah Yad Shinwari, a member of the camp’s Taliban-appointed finance committee.

The mass deportation is placing significant pressure on Afghanistan’s fragile infrastructure, with an economy in crisis and a population nearing 45 million people.

“We have resolved most issues, but the arrival of people in such large numbers naturally brings difficulties,” said Bakht Jamal Gohar, the Taliban’s head of refugee affairs at the crossing. “These people left decades ago and left all their belongings behind. Some of their homes were destroyed during 20 years of war.”

Nearly every family told the BBC that Pakistani border guards restricted what they could bring – a complaint echoed by some human rights groups.

Chaudhry said in response that Pakistan did “not have any policy that prevents Afghan refugees from taking their household items with them”.

One man, sitting on the roadside in the blistering sun, said his children had begged to stay in Pakistan, the country where they were born. They had been given temporary residency, but that expired in March.

“Now we’ll never go back. Not after how we were treated,” he said.

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Saudi Arabian Grand Prix

Venue: Jeddah Date: 20 April Race start: 18:00 BST

Coverage: Live radio commentary online and BBC 5 Sports Extra; live text updates on the BBC Sport website and app

Lando Norris says he has a “big job” on his hands to try to recover in the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix from his crash in qualifying.

The Briton, who leads McLaren team-mate Oscar Piastri by three points in the drivers’ championship heading into the race, starts 10th after his accident. Red Bull’s Max Verstappen is on pole position, ahead of Piastri and Mercedes’ George Russell.

Norris said: “I don’t think it’s going to be an easy one because I don’t think it’s very easy to overtake around here.

“We have a strong car but clearly not as good as we would like because Max is on pole and George is only 0.1secs behind, so it’s not like things are plain sailing at the minute.

“[I’ve got] a big job to try and do.”

McLaren showed extremely strong race pace during the practice sessions in Jeddah but Norris said he was “going to need a bit of luck” in the grand prix.

He said that to “get close” to Verstappen, Piastri and Russell was “not very realistic”.

“It’s almost impossible to overtake around here, so I’m not expecting anything magical,” Norris said.

“But we have a good car, so if we can work our way up to the top five, six, I will say I’ll be happy.”

Norris lost control on the exit of Turn Four, his car sliding on to the kerb at Turn Five and flicking into the wall on the exit.

He swore and called himself an “idiot” over the radio to his team in the immediate aftermath of the accident.

“Makes sense,” he later said of his frustration in the car. “I agree with it. I should be fighting for pole and, especially on a Q1 lap, not taking any silly risks like I seem to have done.

“We will review it but it’s not a guarantee we would have been on pole, because Red Bull were quick the whole qualifying.

“It would have been nice to be in that fight. I was doing well until then and feeling comfortable. I shunted, so I am not going to be proud, I’m not going to be happy, I’ve let myself and the team down and the guys have a big job to do to fix it.”

McLaren team principal Andrea Stella said the crash was a reflection of Norris’ struggles with the behaviour of this year’s car.

“In Q3, when Lando tries to squeeze a few more milliseconds out of the car, the car doesn’t respond as he expects,” Stella said.

“This is a behaviour that kind of surprises him. Today it surprised him. The car understeered a bit in corner four, ended up on the outside kerb, and this outside kerb can be quite unforgiving.

“It’s an episode that I think starts from some of the work that we have done on the car. It made the car faster overall, but I think it took something away from Lando in terms of predictability of the car once he pushes the car at the limit.

“So it’s the responsibility of the team to try to improve the car and to try and correct this behaviour. Because we want Lando to be confident, comfortable, that he can push the car.”

Verstappen, eight points behind Norris in the championship, said he was surprised to have been in the fight for pole after a difficult time through the practice sessions, adding that until taking pole he had been “not very confident” for the race.

“My long runs weren’t particularly great compared to Oscar or Lando,” he said. “Naturally, with how the car was reacting today, it will be a bit better. But I don’t think it’ll be enough to be super competitive.

“But the car definitely took a bit of a step forward compared to what we were testing yesterday. So I hope that will help our tyre life out as well, but difficult to say that gives an opportunity to fight.”

Verstappen’s pole was his second of the season. After his first, in Japan two weeks ago, he held off Norris and Piastri for the entire grand prix to win.

Piastri, though, said the three zones in which the drivers can use the Drag Reduction System overtaking aid might make it easier for him to have a try at passing Verstappen than in Japan.

The Australian said: “I’m feeling confident in what we’ve got. There are a lot of DRS zones around here, which is a nice difference to Suzuka. So, yes, let’s see if we can make some progress.

Russell said he and Verstappen had agreed that McLaren were still the team to beat.

“Max and I were just talking now,” Russell said. “We both recognise McLaren are the standout favourites and definitely have the pace on everybody else.

“If Oscar gets into the lead, you’ll probably see a repeat of Bahrain. If we stay in the order we qualified, I think it could be a tight race until the pit stops.”

Russell added that the decision to bring a softer range of tyres for Saudi Arabia this year could also impact the race.

“The medium tyre this year was last year’s soft, which only one driver used in the whole race.

“We saw the tyres were too hard in Japan. We’ve all pushed to have softer tyres. Hopefully, it won’t make it a slam-dunk one-stop, and there could be a couple of different strategies on the table.”

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BBC Sport outlines the promotion and relegation issues – and the race for European qualification – in England and Scotland for 2024-25.

Recent confirmed promotions, relegations, titles & qualifications

19 April – Hamilton relegated to Scottish League One

18 April – Shrewsbury relegated to League Two

18 April – AFC Fylde relegated to National League North

13 April – Liverpool secure Champions League place

12 April – BIrmingham clinch League One title

12 April – Arbroath promoted to Scottish Championship

Premier League

Leaders Liverpool have made certain of their Champions League place, and require a maximum of six points from their last six games to clinch the title.

They will become champions as soon as Sunday if lowly Ipswich beat second-placed Arsenal and Arne Slot’s team then defeat Leicester City.

The top five teams are guaranteed qualification for the league phase of the Champions League – with Arsenal’s win over Real Madrid on 8 April making certain that England will be one of the two associations with the highest Uefa coefficients for 2024-25, and clinching a fifth place in addition to the usual four.

There are also places in the league phase reserved for the winners of this season’s Champions League and Europa League, regardless of their domestic league positions.

The sixth-placed Premier League team will qualify for the league phase of the Europa League, along with the FA Cup winners. If the FA Cup winners have already qualified for the Champions League, that Europa place reverts to the league.

Newcastle United‘s victory in the Carabao Cup final means that at worst they will qualify for the Conference League play-off round. But if they qualify for Europe by their league position, that Conference League spot will revert to the league.

If Chelsea win the Conference League but fail to reach the Champions League, they will qualify for the league phase of the Europa League.

The bottom three teams will be relegated to the Championship. Southampton became the earliest team to be relegated (in terms of games) in Premier League history when they lost 3-1 at Tottenham on 6 April, and they will be joined by Leicester on Sunday if the Foxes lose to Liverpool.

Women’s Super League

The WSL champions will enter the league phase of the Champions League, with the runners-up entering at the second round and the third-placed side in the first round.

Leaders Chelsea are already assured of their Champions League place, with Arsenal and Manchester United close to joining them.

The bottom side will be relegated to the Women’s Championship.

Championship

The top two teams will be automatically promoted to the Premier League. This will be two from Leeds, Burnley and Sheffield United.

Leeds will be promoted on Monday if they win and Sheffield United fail to beat Burnley, who will themselves be promoted if they defeat the Blades.

Whoever is not automatically promoted will contest the play-offs with Sunderland and two other sides.

The bottom three teams will be relegated to League One.

League One

The top two teams will be automatically promoted to the Championship, with the next four entering a play-off.

Birmingham City became the first team in England’s top five divisions to be promoted when they won 2-1 at Peterborough on 8 April, and clinched the title without kicking a ball four days later as Wrexham drew 0-0 at Wigan.

Wycombe, Wrexham and Charlton are assured of at least a play-off place, with Stockport needing one more point to join them.

The bottom four teams will be relegated to League Two. Shrewsbury Town‘s relegation was confirmed on 18 April because of Burton’s 0-0 draw at Exeter.

League Two

The top three teams will be automatically promoted to League One, with the next four entering a play-off.

Leaders Port Vale are assured of at least a play-off place, and could be promoted as early as Monday if they win and several other results go in their favour.

The bottom two teams will be relegated to the National League. Morecambe will be relegated on Monday unless they win and Tranmere fail to win, while defeat for Carlisle would guarantee relegation for the Cumbrians if Tranmere win.

National League

The title, and the sole automatic promotion place, is between Barnet and York – with the Bees needing a maximum of six points from their last three games to clinch it.

Whoever does not win the title will contest the play-offs with Forest Green Rovers and four other teams.

The bottom four teams will be relegated to National League North or South, and will be replaced with the champions and play-off winners of those two divisions.

Ebbsfleet United became the first team in England’s top five tiers to be relegated after drawing 3-3 with Aldershot on 22 March, and AFC Fylde joined them on 18 April after losing 1-0 to Halifax.

Scottish Premiership

Celtic will win the Premiership title unless they lose their last five games and Rangers win all of theirs while making up a 42-goal swing in goal difference.

The champions will enter the Champions League play-off round, with the runners-up entering in the second qualifying round.

The Premiership now splits in half after 33 games – with each club playing the others in their ‘half’ for a fourth and final time.

Celtic, Rangers, Hibernian, Dundee United, Aberdeen and St Mirren will all be in the top half, with St Johnstone, Dundee, Ross County, Kilmarnock, Motherwell and Hearts in the bottom half.

The Scottish Cup winners will enter the Europa League at the play-off round. If the cup winners finish in the top two, that Europa place reverts to the league.

The third-placed Premiership team will enter the Europa League at the second qualifying round, with the fourth-placed team entering the Conference League at the second qualifying round.

The Premiership’s bottom club will be relegated to the Scottish Championship, while the 11th-placed team will enter a play-off with three Championship sides.

Scottish Championship

The champions – Falkirk or Livingston – will be promoted to the Scottish Premiership. Falkirk need a maximum of four points from their last two games to clinch the title.

Whoever does not win the division will enter a play-off with Ayr United, one other Championship side and the 11th-placed Premiership team.

Bottom club Hamilton Academical were deducted 15 points on 17 April for a breach of SPFL rules, and their relegation was confirmed two days later after a 0-0 draw with Queen’s Park, though the Accies could yet appeal against the deduction.

Airdrieonians look likely to finish ninth and face a relegation play-off with three League One sides, unless they win their last two games and either Queen’s Park or Dunfermline lose both of theirs, with Airdrie also needing a minimum 12-goal swing in goal difference.

Scottish League One

Arbroath were promoted to the Scottish Championship after beating Stranraer 4-0 on 12 April to clinch the title.

The next three teams will enter a play-off with the ninth-placed Championship side.

Bottom club Dumbarton are relegated to Scottish League Two. They became the first SPFL team to be relegated after drawing 0-0 with Queen of the South on 22 March.

The ninth-placed team will enter a play-off with three League Two teams.

Scottish League Two

The champions – Peterhead or East Fife – will be automatically promoted to Scottish League One. Whoever does not win the title will enter a play-off with two other League Two teams and the ninth-placed League One side.

Highland League champions Brora Rangers and Lowland League winners East Kilbride will contest a two-legged play-off on 26 April and 3 May, with the winners facing the 10th-placed League Two team (on 10 and 17 May) for the final place in League Two for 2025-26.

The 10th-placed team will be either Bonnyrigg Rose or Forfar, with the latter holding a four-point advantage with two games left.

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Halo World Championship

Venue: Crucible Theatre, Sheffield Dates: 19 April to 5 May

Coverage: Watch live on BBC TV, BBC iPlayer, BBC Sport website and app; live text coverage of selected matches; updates on BBC Radio 5 Live

Jak Jones is in danger of an early exit from the World Snooker Championship, as China’s Zhao Xintong produced a sensational scoring display to lead 7-2 in their first-round match at the Crucible Theatre.

Jones, 31, made a surprise run to last year’s final in Sheffield, losing to Kyren Wilson.

The 16th seed from Wales knocked in a 99 break to take the third frame but was punished by the 2021 UK Championship winner for costly early misses.

Zhao made a 142 clearance in frame five – the highest break of the tournament so far – and six half-centuries in the first session.

Jones took the last frame with a break of 70, but Zhao will need just three more frames for victory when they resume on Monday.

The winner will face Lei Peifan, who knocked out defending champion Wilson on Saturday, in the last 16.

Zhao, 28, is competing as an amateur at the World Championship but breezed through qualifying and is among the favourites to lift the trophy on 5 May.

Zhao was one of 10 players banned in 2023 following an investigation into match-fixing.

He did not directly throw a match but was initially suspended for two and a half years, reduced to 20 months after his early admissions and guilty plea – he accepted charges of being a party to another player fixing two matches and betting on matches himself.

Zhao completed his suspension earlier this season and his performances on the Q Tour have earned him a spot back among the professional ranks for 2025-26.

Meanwhile, China’s Xiao Guodong beat England’s Matthew Selt 10-4 to secure a second-round meeting with either John Higgins or Joe O’Connor.

Leading 7-2 overnight, the world number 14 lost the opening two frames of the concluding session but then won three in a row to reach the last 16.

From 14:30 BST, Northern Ireland’s Mark Allen begins his bid for a first world title against Fan Zhengyi as he aims to complete a full set of Triple Crown event victories, while Wales’ three-time champion Mark Williams takes a 5-4 lead into the final session of his first-round match against Wu Yize.

Schedule: Sunday, 20 April

10:00

  • Jak Jones (16) 2-7 Zhao Xintong – resumes at 10:00 BST on Monday

  • Xiao Guodong (14) 10-4 Matthew Selt

14:30

  • Mark Allen (8) v Fan Zhengyi

  • Mark Williams (6) 5-4 Wu Yize

19:00

  • Neil Robertson (9) 2-7 Chris Wakelin

  • Barry Hawkins (11) 5-4 Hossein Vafaei

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The Los Angeles Lakers slumped to a 117-95 defeat at the hands of the Minnesota Timberwolves in the opening game of their NBA Western Conference first-round play-off.

Jaden McDaniels top-scored with 25 points for the sixth-seeded Timberwolves, who were the only away team to win in the opening matches of the best-of-seven post-season series.

Naz Reid scored 23 points off the bench while Anthony Edwards added 22 points, eight rebounds and nine assists for Minnesota, who led by 27 points at one stage.

Lakers star LeBron James, who is chasing a fifth title in his 22nd NBA season, failed to score in the opening quarter for the third seeds but went on to hit 19 points.

Luka Doncic, in his first post-season game with the Lakers after arriving from the Dallas Mavericks in February’s high-profile trade, top-scored on 37.

Lakers coach JJ Redick said his team was “mentally ready” but failed to match Minnesota’s physicality.

“I thought our spirit was right,” he said. “I thought even when they made runs our huddles were great, the communication was great.

“But when they started playing with a lot of thrust and physicality, we just didn’t respond immediately to that.”

In the other Western Conference first-round game, reigning NBA Most Valuable Player Nikola Jokic scored 29 points and added nine rebounds, 12 assists and three steals as the Denver Nuggets edged past the Los Angeles Clippers 112-110 in overtime.

The Nuggets trailed by 15 points early on but Jokic, Aaron Gordon and Russell Westbrook helped them back into contention.

Elsewhere, the New York Knicks and the Indiana Pacers both went ahead in their Eastern Conference match-ups.

The Knicks scored 21 unanswered points in the final quarter to pull away for a 123-112 win over the Detroit Pistons, who are in the play-offs for the first time since 2019 and have not won a play-off game since 2008.

Jalen Brunson scored 23 of his 34 points in the second half while Karl-Anthony Towns and OG Anunoby had 23 points apiece for the Knicks, who rallied after trailing by eight going into the final period.

Two-time MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo netted 36 points but it was not enough as his Milwaukee Bucks lost out 117-98 to the Pacers.

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Aryna Sabalenka took a photograph on court of a disputed ball mark during her quarter-final victory over Elise Mertens at the Stuttgart Open.

World number one Sabalenka disagreed with an “out” call on her shot when she was break point down against Mertens.

At the changeover, with Sabalenka trailing 4-3, the Belarusian asked umpire Miriam Bley to check the mark, before walking over to see it herself.

She then took a photograph, external of the mark with a member of her team’s phone before receiving a warning for unsportsmanlike conduct from Bley.

Sabalenka did not let the incident distract her, regrouping to break back immediately and going on to win 6-4 6-1.

She shook hands with Bley at the end of the match but said in her on-court interview: “When I gave her a handshake, there was a very interesting look and a very strong handshake. Never had it before.”

Asked if she squeezed the hand back, Sabalenka said: “No, it’s OK. Why would I play this game with someone like her? It’s OK.”

Sabalenka will face Jasmine Paolini for a place in Monday’s final after the Italian beat Coco Gauff 6-4 6-3.

Earlier, Jelena Ostapenko continued her dominance over Iga Swiatek, beating the world number two 6-3 3-6 6-2 to extend her unbeaten winning streak against the Pole to six matches.

Ostapenko is the first player to beat five-time major champion Swiatek on every surface – once on grass, four times on hard courts and now once on clay.

Swiatek often struggles against Ostapenko’s powerful groundstrokes which rush her forehand and draw out the errors in her game.

The Pole came into the match with an 11-1 record in Stuttgart, having won the title in 2022 and 2023, but she could not fend off Ostapenko.

Ostapenko hit 29 winners to Swiatek’s 17, with eight double faults not helping Swiatek as Ostapenko attacked her second serve.

Ostapenko broke Swiatek’s serve three times to take the first set but was scrappier in the second, allowing Swiatek to level the match.

But Ostapenko won 12 of the first 15 point of the deciding set to take control, eventually taking the match on a long Swiatek forehand.

“She’s a great clay-court player but I won the French [Open] as well, so I can say the same thing about myself, ” the 27-year-old said.

“I have so much respect to her and her team but every time I step on the court with her, it’s a battle and I’m ready for it.”

Ostapenko will face a semi-final against Russia’s Ekaterina Alexandrova, who beat third seed Jessica Pegula 6-0 6-4.