Faisal Islam: Tariff ruling completely changes the global trade war
“Watch the courts” was the whispered message a well-connected diplomat told me in Washington DC last month, amid the previous episode of US tariff chaos.
Most eyes were on the high-profile case in California from the Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom – that President Donald Trump’s trade tariffs were illegal.
In the event, it was a separate case at the International Trade Court filed by a dozen other states and some small businesses that have pulled the rug from underneath Trump’s signature policy. (Tariffs imposed by the Trump administration that were struck down by the trade court on Wednesday will remain in place while the case makes its way through the courts.)
It raises the real question about whether the wider so-called reciprocal tariffs due in July will ever come in to effect, whether the 10% universal tariff can stick, whether nations will bother to negotiate, whether Congress will come to the president’s rescue, and of course, the eventual reaction of the Supreme Court.
Much of this can be traced back to the highly unusual dynamic underpinning the Trump’s tariff actions.
The very sight of the president proclaiming sweeping tariff rates on a variety of countries, culminating in his now infamous Rose Garden moment with the blue board, is the foundational legal problem here.
Typically, indeed constitutionally, trade policy is the domain of the US Congress. The chairs of the trade committees of the House and Senate (branches of the Ways and Means Committee) are very powerful positions.
President Trump bypassed all of that by proclaiming a variety of national emergencies. While he has some scope to act in actual emergencies, these cases contend that the sweeping use of these powers to announce permanent tariff changes was illegal and unconstitutional.
There is a fascinating assessment of the separation of powers in the US that includes reference to both former President Richard Nixon’s limited use of the same powers and the Federalist Papers of Hamilton and Madison.
In essence, the powers he has asserted to “regulate importation” are narrow in scope and do not stretch to unlimited imposition of tariffs, in particular, to remedy trade deficits.
Of course, the Trump administration rather undermined their own logic by also levying “reciprocal” tariffs on countries with which it ran a trade surplus, such as the UK.
Separately the court also found that the president’s basis for the fentanyl tariffs against Mexico, Canada, and China did not “deal with” their stated objective.
Trump’s claim that they “create leverage” to do deals is not a permissible rationale for use of the powers. This dismantles the entire notion of the “art of the deal” 4D chess manoeuvres designed to extract trade advantages.
This will now be dealt with by the Supreme Court. The case appears rather robust, and also emboldens California’s similar case.
It also totally undermines any attempt by the US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to negotiate deals with other countries.
The likes of Japan and the European Union were already holding back, after seeing the White House retreat in the face of tariff-related turbulence in US government borrowing rates.
US retailers were warning not just of tariff-related inflation, but of potential empty shelves. The rowback on the China tariffs, purportedly fentanyl-trafficking enemy, means that actual G7 allies expect better treatment from the US.
And now its own courts deem the actions illegal. The White House is currently hemmed in by its own bond markets, retailers, big business, many individual states and now its courts on this policy.
While it hit back with an immediate appeal, some in the wider administration might well be privately toasting the judges.
Could the White House get Congress onside to pass these tariffs? There has to be a very big doubt about this. In any event, other countries can now return to traditional trade tactics designed to pressurise the self interest of key senators and congressmen and women, with impacts on their local industries, whether that is motorcycles, jeans, or bourbon.
Another option might be to switch to another legal basis, such as the section 232 powers underpinning the steel and automotive tariffs. This approach would alter the dynamics of the trade war away from sweeping country-specific ones, towards industry-specific tariffs instead.
In any event, the court has surfaced rather unarguable evidence of the economic harm caused to the US by its own tariffs.
For example, Virginia-based educational manufacturer MicroKits says it will “be unable to pay its employees, will lose money and as a result may go out of business”. New York-based wine company VOS says it is paying the tariffs “upon arrival at the Port of NY” putting immediate strain on its cash flow. Terry Cycling has already paid $25,000 and projects a total of $250,000 this year.
The court concluded: “The government does not meaningfully contest the ‘economic logic’ tracing the retaliatory tariffs to the plaintiffs showing of downstream harm.”
Does the White House want a messy Congressional fight to pass these tariffs, with numerous examples of their real life impact?
For now, expect other negotiators around the world to put their feet up and wait, while the White House tries to disprove the illegality of the very basis of its global trade conflict.
Iran investigates case of ‘missing’ Indian nationals
The Iranian Embassy in India has said it is investigating the case of three Indian nationals who went missing in Tehran earlier this month.
The men, all of whom are from the northern state of Punjab, had a stopover in Iran on 1 May, and were on their way to Australia, where they were promised lucrative jobs by a local travel agent.
Their families allege that they were kidnapped upon their arrival by unknown men, who are now demanding a ransom of 5m rupees ($63,000; £47,000).
On Thursday, the Iranian Embassy said on X that it was keeping Indian authorities informed of all developments “within the judicial system” and warned about the dangers of taking illegal immigration routes.
“Given the nature of this incident, Indian citizens are strongly advised not to be deceived by the promises of unauthorised individuals or illegal Indian agencies offering travel to other countries,” it said.
The statement came a day after the Indian embassy in Iran said that it had “strongly taken up this matter with Iranian authorities” and requested that the missing Indians be “urgently traced and their safety ensured”.
Many Indians, particularly from Punjab, travel to developed countries in search of job opportunities and a better life.
Some fall victim to scams run by travel agents, who charge exorbitant fees and send them through illegal or unsafe routes, often without proper documentation.
Gurdeep Kaur recounted the events that led to her 23-year-old son Amritpal Singh going missing to BBC Punjabi.
The family had hired a travel agent in Hoshiarpur – where they live – to secure an Australian work permit for her son.
“Last month, the agent informed us that my son’s visa had been approved and asked for 1.8m rupees as payment,” she said.
“They told us they had booked a flight from Delhi to Australia on 26 April. But when my son went there, they told him that his documents were still not ready.”
The agent then told Amritpal that they had rebooked him on a flight for 29 April, but later claimed that even that ticket got cancelled.
On 1 May, the agent put Amritpal, along with the two other men, on a flight to Iran, describing it as a stopover en route to Australia, Ms Kaur said.
After landing, Amritpal called his mum to say that he had arrived safely and that a cab was on its way to take them to a hotel, before their next flight.
But an hour later, Ms Kaur said her son called again, this time to say that he had been kidnapped.
Before she could get any details, the call got cut abruptly and her son became unreachable.
Ms Kaur said that the family tried to contact the three agents in Punjab – they first gave them “vague responses” and then went missing. The next day, the family found that their homes and offices were locked.
Ms Kaur said they began receiving video calls from unknown men around the same time.
On the call, Ms Kaur alleged the kidnappers would show Amritpal and the two other men held hostage inside a room. They had injuries all over their body from being beaten up, she alleged.
At first, they demanded 20mn rupees but eventually reduced the amount, settling at 5.4m rupees, Ms Kaur said.
“But it has been more than 10 days days since we last heard from them,” said Gurdev Singh, Amritpal’s uncle. The family has not paid any ransom till now.
A police complaint has since been filed against the travel agents and an investigation is under way.
“The search for the three men is on. They are on the run, but we are conducting searches,” Gursahib Singh, an officer with Hoshiarpur police, told BBC Punjabi.
Meanwhile, around 150km (93 miles) away, in Dhuri village, the house of Husanpreet Singh, one of the other missing men, remains locked.
He lived there with his maternal grandmother, who is now busy going door-to-door to her relatives, asking them for help.
The Indian embassy in Tehran has said it was keeping the families informed of all developments.
India has recently intensified its crackdown on travel agents involved in illegal immigration, particularly after hundreds of undocumented Indians were deported from the US after President Donald Trump took office for a second term.
Images of these migrants in chains, disembarking from an American aircraft, had made headlines for weeks.
Andrew and Tristan Tate will return to UK to face charges, lawyers say
Andrew and Tristan Tate will return to the UK to face 21 criminal charges once proceedings against them in Romania have concluded, their lawyers have said.
The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said on Wednesday that it had authorised charges including rape, actual bodily harm and human trafficking against the brothers in 2024, before an extradition warrant was issued to bring them back from Romania.
Authorities in Romania are investigating the two British-Americans in a separate case, in relation to a number of charges which they deny.
In a statement on Thursday, lawyers for the Tates said that “once those proceedings are concluded in their entirety then they will return to face UK allegations”.
Previously, the brothers’ legal representatives said that UK allegations dated back to between 2012 and 2015.
At the time of an arrest warrant obtained by Bedfordshire Police in March 2024, the Tates said they “categorically reject all charges” and were “very innocent men”.
A Romanian court has already ruled that the brothers could be extradited to UK following the end of any trial there, for which there is no clear timescale currently, and the CPS said “domestic criminal matters in Romania must be settled first”.
The CPS said Andrew Tate, a 38-year-old influencer and former kickboxer, faces 10 charges connected to three alleged victims, including rape, actual bodily harm, human trafficking and controlling prostitution for gain.
Tristan Tate, 36, faces 11 charges connected to one alleged victim, including rape, actual bodily harm and human trafficking.
The CPS’s charging decision came after it received a file of evidence from Bedfordshire Police.
Responding to the allegations on the Tates’ behalf, their solicitors said there had been a “vast amount of misinformation in the media regarding the allegations faced by our clients” and that they were being subject to “a trial by media”.
A statement added: “Regardless of your views, it must be the case that everyone that is tried in England and Wales has the expectation of a fair trial.”
They added that “UK prosecutors refuse to give even the most basic information to allow our clients to understand the allegations they face”.
The BBC has been told the CPS believes it is fully complying with its role in accordance with disclosure obligations.
In recent years, Andrew, a self-described misogynist, has built a massive online presence, including more than 10 million followers on X, sharing his lifestyle of fast cars, private jets, and yachts.
The pair were both born in the US but moved to Luton in the UK with their mother after their parents divorced.
Since first being arrested in Romania by the Romanian authorities in December 2022, with Andrew accused of rape and human trafficking and Tristan suspected of human trafficking, the pair have largely been under travel restrictions in the country.
They then faced further allegations in Romania in August 2024 including sex with a minor and trafficking underage persons, all of which they deny.
Earlier this year they unexpectedly had their travel ban lifted and visited Florida in the US, before returning to Romania less than a month later in March 2025.
British authorities faced criticism for allegedly not requesting an extradition to the UK while they were in Florida, after authorities there said they would have approved it, but the BBC understands that this was to avoid subverting the UK-Romania arrangement.
Given the complexity of the proceedings in Romania, their return to the UK is unlikely to be soon.
Israel announces major expansion of settlements in occupied West Bank
Israeli ministers say 22 new Jewish settlements have been approved in the occupied West Bank – the biggest expansion in decades.
Several already exist as outposts, built without government authorisation, but will now be made legal under Israeli law. Others are completely new, according to Defence Minister Israel Katz and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich.
Settlements – which are widely seen as illegal under international law, though Israel disputes this – are one of the most contentious issues between Israel and the Palestinians.
Katz said the move “prevents the establishment of a Palestinian state that would endanger Israel”, while the Palestinian presidency called it a “dangerous escalation”.
The Israeli anti-settlement watchdog Peace Now called it “the most extensive move of its kind” in more than 30 years and warned that it would “dramatically reshape the West Bank and entrench the occupation even further”.
Israel has built about 160 settlements housing some 700,000 Jews since it occupied the West Bank and East Jerusalem – land Palestinians want, along with Gaza, for their hoped-for future state – in the 1967 Middle East war. An estimated 3.3 million Palestinians live alongside them.
Successive Israeli governments have allowed settlements to grow. However, expansion has risen sharply since Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu returned to power in late 2022 at the head of a right-wing, pro-settler coalition, as well as the start of the Gaza war, triggered by Hamas’s 7 October 2023 attack on Israel.
On Thursday, Israel Katz and Bezalel Smotrich – an ultranationalist leader and settler who has control over planning in the West Bank – officially confirmed a decision that is believed to have been taken by the government two weeks ago.
A statement said they had approved 22 new settlements, the “renewal of settlement in northern Samaria [northern West Bank], and reinforcement of the eastern axis of the State of Israel”.
It did not include information about the exact location of the new settlements, but maps being circulated suggest they will be across the length and width of the West Bank.
Katz and Smotrich did highlight what they described as the “historic return” to Homesh and Sa-Nur, two settlements deep in the northern West Bank which were evacuated at the same time as Israel withdrew its troops and settlers from Gaza in 2005.
Two years ago, a group of settlers established a Jewish religious school and an unauthorised outpost at Homesh, which Peace Now said would be among 12 made legal under Israeli law.
Nine of the settlements would be completely new, according to the watchdog. They include Mount Ebal, just to the south of Homesh and near the city of Nablus, and Beit Horon North, west of Ramallah, where it said construction had already begun in recent days.
The last of the settlements, Nofei Prat, was currently officially considered a “neighbourhood” of another settlement near East Jerusalem, Kfar Adumim, and would now be recognised as independent, Peace Now added.
Katz said the decision was a “strategic move that prevents the establishment of a Palestinian state that would endanger Israel, and serves as a buffer against our enemies.”
“This is a Zionist, security, and national response – and a clear decision on the future of the country,” he added.
Smotrich called it a “once-in-a-generation decision” and declared: “Next step sovereignty!”
But a spokesperson for Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas – who governs parts of the West Bank not under full Israeli control – called it a “dangerous escalation” and accused Israel of continuing to drag the region into a “cycle of violence and instability”.
“This extremist Israeli government is trying by all means to prevent the establishment of an independent Palestinian state,” Nabil Abu Rudeineh told Reuters news agency.
Lior Amihai, director of Peace Now, said: “The Israeli government no longer pretends otherwise: the annexation of the occupied territories and expansion of settlements is its central goal.”
Elisha Ben Kimon, an Israeli journalist with the popular Ynet news site who covers the West Bank and settlements, told the BBC’s Newshour programme that 70% to 80% of ministers wanted to declare the formal annexation of the West Bank.
“I think that Israel is a few steps from declaring this area as Israeli territory. They believe that this period will never be coming back, this is one opportunity that they don’t want to slip from their hands – that’s why they’re doing this now,” Mr Ben Kimon told the BBC’s Newshour programme.
Israel effectively annexed East Jerusalem in 1980, in a move not recognised by the vast majority of the international community.
This latest step is a blow to renewed efforts to revive momentum on a two-state solution to the decades-old Israel-Palestinian conflict – the internationally approved formula for peace that would see the creation of an independent Palestinian state alongside Israel – with a French-Saudi summit planned at the UN’s headquarters in New York next month.
Jordan’s foreign ministry condemned what it called a “flagrant violation of international law” that “undermines prospects for peace by entrenching the occupation”.
UK Foreign Office Minister Hamish Falconer said the move was “a deliberate obstacle to Palestinian statehood”.
Since taking office, the current Israeli government has decided to establish a total of 49 new settlements and begun the legalisation process for seven unauthorised outposts which will be recognised as “neighbourhoods” of existing settlements, according to Peace Now.
Last year, the UN’s top court issued an advisory opinion that said “Israel’s continued presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory is unlawful”. The International Court of Justice (ICJ) also said Israeli settlements “have been established and are being maintained in violation of international law”, and that Israel should “evacuate all settlers”.
Netanyahu said at the time that the court had made a “decision of lies” and insisted that “the Jewish people are not occupiers in their own land”.
Chinese paraglider survives accidental 8,000m-high flight
A Chinese paraglider has survived being accidentally propelled 8,500m (27,800ft) into the sky above north-west China, state media report.
Peng Yujiang, 55, was testing new equipment at 3,000m above sea level, over the Qilian mountains, when a rare updraft or air current known as a “cloud suck” pulled him about 5,000m higher into a cloud formation.
Saturday’s events were filmed on a camera that was mounted on Mr Peng’s glider and the footage has gone viral after being posted on Douyin, China’s version of TikTok.
It showed Mr Peng holding on to the glider’s controls, with his face and much of his body covered in ice crystals.
“It was terrifying… Everything was white. I couldn’t see any direction. Without the compass, I wouldn’t have known which way I was going. I thought I was flying straight, but in reality, I was spinning,” he told China Media Group.
Mr Peng narrowly survived death as oxygen is thin at that altitude – slightly lower than the 8,849m peak of Mount Everest. Temperatures can also fall to -40C.
“I wanted to come down quickly, but I just couldn’t. I was lifted higher and higher until I was inside the cloud,” he said.
Mr Peng, who has been paragliding for four and a half years, said he might have lost consciousness during his descent.
He added that the most frightening part of his ordeal was trying to regain control of the glider as it spiralled in the air.
Chinese authorities are investigating the incident and Mr Peng has been suspended for six months because the flight was unauthorised, state-run Global Times reported.
Mr Peng had no intention to fly that day and was only testing the fit and comfort of his parachute on the ground, Global Times said.
However, strong winds lifted him off the ground and grew even stronger, until he encountered the updraft that shot him up into the clouds.
Mother who sold six-year-old daughter given life term in South Africa
A South African woman convicted of kidnapping and trafficking her six-year-old daughter has been sentenced to life in prison, along with her two accomplices.
The jail terms for Racquel “Kelly” Smith, her boyfriend Jacquen Appollis and their friend Steveno van Rhyn come more than a year after Joshlin Smith mysteriously disappeared outside her home in Saldanha Bay, near Cape Town.
Despite a highly publicised search for the girl, who vanished in February 2024, she is yet to be found.
South African prosecutors say she was sold into slavery however this was not definitively proven during the trial.
It is believed that Smith, who was addicted to drugs, needed the money.
The sentencing follows an eight-week trial that captivated South Africa, with witnesses and prosecutors making a number of shocking allegations.
Judge Nathan Erasmus said he “drew no distinction” between the trio in handing down the sentences.
“On the human trafficking charge, you are sentenced to life imprisonment. On the kidnapping charge, you are sentenced to 10 years imprisonment,” he said to loud applause in the courtroom.
Judge Erasmus took over an hour to deliver the sentence and was measured as he gave a brief summary of the case and highlighted points that stood out during the trial.
He rebuked the trio, especially Van Rhyn and Smith, saying they showed no remorse for their actions.
“There is nothing that I can find that is redeeming or deserving of a lesser sentence,” he said.
He also spoke of the impact their conduct had on the community of Middelpos, where the girl lived, saying it had left residents “fractured”.
Smith, 35, and her accomplices showed no emotion as their sentences were read out in the community centre in Saldanha where the trial was held to allow residents to attend proceedings.
- Tears and heartbreak over tragic story of Joshlin Smith
- South Africa police target gang kidnapping women in shopping centres
Police said the search for the little girl would continue, even beyond South Africa’s borders.
“We will not rest until we find [out] what happened to Joshlin. We are continuing day and night looking for her,” Western Cape police commissioner Thembisile Patekile told local media.
The National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) welcomed the sentence and lauded the work of its team in proving that Joshlin was “sold [and] delivered to the intended buyer” for the purpose of “exploitation, namely slavery or practices similar to slavery”.
During the trial, the identity of the “intended buyer” was never revealed.
The BBC asked the NPA for further details, however a spokesperson was unable to provide any.
Emotions were high ahead of the sentencing, with angry community members saying the trio should get a “harsh sentence because they deserve it”.
Ahead of sentencing, Joshlin’s grandmother, Amanda Smith-Daniels, once again pleaded with her daughter to “bring my [grand]child back or tell me where she is”.
“I don’t feel that any sentence they get will bring my grandchild back,” she told local broadcaster Newzroom Afrika.
Ms Smith-Daniels said that Joshlin’s disappearance had left her family “broken”.
She urged her daughter to stop blaming others for her misfortune as she “was the person that did the deed”.
During the trial, the court heard testimonies from more than 30 witnesses, who painted a picture of the young girl’s troubled life and subsequent disappearance.
Kelly Smith and her accomplices refused to testify or call any witnesses for their defence.
The most explosive came from Lourentia Lombaard, a friend and neighbour of Smith who turned state witness.
Ms Lombaard alleged that Smith told her she had done “something silly” and sold Joshlin to a traditional healer, known in South Africa as a “sangoma”.
The “person who [allegedly took] Joshlin wanted her for her eyes and skin”, Ms Lombaard told the court.
A local pastor testified that in 2023, he had heard Smith – a mother of three – talk of selling her children for 20,000 rand ($1,100; £850) each, though she had said she was willing to accept a lower figure of $275.
Joshlin’s teacher then alleged in court that Smith had told her during the search that her daughter was already “on a ship, inside a container, and they were on the way to West Africa”.
It was the testimonies of Ms Lombard and the clergyman that were key to securing a conviction.
During sentencing hearings, Smith was described as manipulative and someone who told “bald-faced lies”. A social worker appointed to compile a report on Smith and her accomplices, went so far as to say it would not be a “stretch to conclude that [Kelly] Smith is the mastermind behind the trafficking of her own daughter”.
The court also heard powerful statements from those who knew Joshlin about the devastating effect of her disappearance on the community.
More South Africa stories from the BBC:
- Joshlin Smith’s disappearance spreads fear in South Africa’s Saldhana Bay
- ‘The selfie that revealed I was a stolen baby’
France to ban smoking on beaches, parks and near schools
France will ban smoking in all outdoor places that can be frequented by children, health and family minister Catherine Vautrin has said.
The ban will come into force on 1 July and will include beaches, parks, public gardens, outside schools, bus stops and sports venues.
“Tobacco must disappear where there are children,” Vautrin said in an interview published by Ouest-France daily.
Vautrin added that “the freedom to smoke must end where the freedom of children to breathe fresh air begins”.
The outdoor areas of cafes and bar – known as will be exempt from the ban, she said.
Vautrin explained that breaking the rules would incur a €135 (£113; $153) fine.
She said regular police would enforce the ban but also added that she was a great believer in the “self-regulation”.
Although electronic cigarettes are exempt, Vautrin said that she was working to introduce limits on the amounts of nicotine they contain.
According to the French Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction, 23.1% of the French population smokes on a daily basis – the lowest percentage ever recorded, and a fall of over five points since 2014.
France’s National Committee Against Smoking says more than 75,000 smokers die each year of tobacco-related illnesses – 13% of all deaths.
Smoking in establishments like restaurants and nightclubs has been banned in France since 2008.
Widespread measures to ban smoking on beaches, parks and other public places were meant to kick in in 2024, but the decree needed to was never adopted.
However, more than 1,500 municipalities have already voluntarily banned smoking in public places, and hundreds of beaches across France have been non-smoking for severeal years.
A recent report by France cancer association La Ligue Contre le Cancer shows almost 80% of French people are in favour of a ban on smoking in public places like woodland, beach, parks and .
Trial of Maradona’s medical team collapses
The trial of Diego Maradona’s medical staff has collapsed in Argentina after it was found that a judge involved in the case had taken part in a documentary about it.
The judge in charge of the proceedings said the trial, which began on 11 March and was expected to last until July, would have to start again.
Seven members of Maradona’s medical team were charged with negligent homicide relating to the former footballer’s death in 2020. They deny the allegations.
One of the three presiding judges, Julieta Makintach, stepped down this week.
Maradona, a former Napoli and Argentina midfielder, had been recovering at his home in Buenos Aires from brain surgery for a blood clot in November 2020 when he died of a heart attack, aged 60.
Among the medical team on trial are a neurosurgeon, a doctor and a night nurse. They claim the retired footballer refused further treatment and should have stayed at home for longer after his operation.
If convicted, they face between eight and 25 years in prison.
Earlier this week, Prosecutor Patricio Ferrari accused Makintach of behaving “like an actress and not a judge” after she took part in a documentary about the case.
As a trailer for the documentary series, called Divine Justice, was played in court, defence lawyer Rodolfo Baque shouted “trash!” at Makintach.
Maradona’s daughter Gianinna and his former partner Veronica Ojeda both cried after seeing the footage.
It is a violation of court rules for unauthorised filming to take place and the documentary was being filmed without the permission of the court.
Following criticism for taking part in the show, Makintach said she had “no choice” but to excuse herself from the case.
The trial was then adjourned pending the decision on Thursday, which ultimately was to declare a mistrial.
Since beginning, the trial had heard the testimony of almost 50 witnesses, including Maradona’s daughters.
The date for the new trial was not initially set and new judges were not nominated.
New Banksy revealed but location remains a mystery
Banksy’s latest piece of grafitti art has been revealed to the world – but where it was painted remains a mystery for now.
Images posted on the elusive artist‘s Instagram depict a lighthouse stencilled on a drab, beige wall, along with the words: “I want to be what you saw in me”.
A false shadow appears to have been drawn on the pavement from a nearby bollard, giving the illusion that the lighthouse is itself a silhouette of the mundane street furniture.
But unlike a lighthouse, the post gives little away as to the artwork’s location. A second, wider shot showing two people walking their dogs offers little more.
Geoguessers on social media have speculated that the street art may lurk in Marseille, in the south of France, while others debate how to interpret the work’s meaning.
Another image of the art circulating online shows a blurred person riding a scooter in front of the piece, with a graffiti tag seemingly reading “Yaze” further along the wall.
The tag matches that used by a Canadian graffiti artist Marco The Polo, whose Instagram account features photos of his own work but who has called Banksy an inspiration.
Banksy has kept his true identity a secret throughout his career, and it is only through the Instagram account that works are identified as genuine.
Often imbuing his works with a political message, his previous pieces have alluded to immigration, the war in Ukraine and homelessness, among other things.
The meaning of some of his works, though, is less clear – such as his motivation behind the series of animals painted in various locations across London last summer.
Prior to the lighthouse, in December, Banksy posted another piece, depicting a Madonna and child with a fixture in the wall appearing like a bullet wound in her chest.
Father-of-three charged over Liverpool parade crash
A father-of-three and former Royal Marine has been charged following the Liverpool parade crash in which 79 people were injured.
Paul Doyle, 53, from Burghill Road in West Derby, was arrested on Monday, when a car ploughed into fans attending Liverpool’s Premier League victory celebration, Merseyside Police confirmed.
A nine-year-old was among those injured when the car Mr Doyle is alleged to have been driving crashed into supporters at 18:00 BST on Water Street.
The local businessman faces multiple counts of causing, and attempting to cause unlawful and malicious grievous bodily harm with intent as well as one of dangerous driving and two counts of unlawful and malicious wounding with intent.
Assistant Chief Constable Jenny Sims, of Merseyside Police, told a news conference seven people remain in hospital after the incident.
Mr Doyle is set to appear at Liverpool Magistrates’ Court on Friday.
The BBC has spoken to the suspect’s neighbours, who said they were shocked and in “disbelief”.
They said that Burghill Road was swarming with police in the hours after the crash.
One said: “I came out late on Monday night and there’s police everywhere. Looking around all the houses, so I had a thought – imagine if it was him?”
Assistant Chief Constable Jenny Sims said detectives were reviewing a “huge volume” of CCTV and mobile phone footage.
Sarah Hammond, Chief Crown Prosecutor for Crown Prosecution Service in the Mersey-Cheshire region, said this included footage from CCTV, mobile phones, businesses and dashcams, along with witness statements.
She said the charges “will be kept under review” while the investigation progresses.
“It is important to ensure every victim gets the justice they deserve,” she added.
Mr Doyle has been charged with seven offences, which can be broken down into four groups.
The first includes two counts of wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm (GBH) – one of these is an alleged offence against one child.
The second is two counts of causing unlawful and malicious GBH with intent to cause grievous bodily harm.
According to the Sentencing Council, it relates to the nature of the injury allegedly caused.
GBH does not require an open wound to have been suffered. Wounding requires the victim’s skin to have been broken.
Mr Doyle also faces two charges of attempted unlawful and malicious GBH with intent to cause GBH, and again one of these alleged offences relates to a child.
The final count is dangerous driving.
Police confirmed the ages of those injured in the incident ranged from nine to 78.
Assistant Chief Constable Sims, said she understood many have questions about the incident, and detectives were “working tirelessly, with diligence and professionalism, to seek the answer to all of those questions”.
“When we are able to, we will provide further information,” she added.
Turkey to fine airline passengers who stand up before plane stops
Airline passengers to Turkey will be fined if they stand up before the seatbelt sign turns off after landing, regulators have said.
The Turkish civil aviation authority said it imposed the order after receiving complaints from passengers. The rules came into effect earlier this month.
Turkish media said fines are around US$70 (£50), although no amount is mentioned in the authority’s guidance.
The authority warned that there was a “serious increase” in such incidents, with many complaints about passengers grabbing overhead baggage before their plane had been parked.
The country welcomes tens of millions of tourists a year.
The aviation authority said commercial airlines must now issue an in-flight announcement and report those who do not follow orders.
Passengers must be told to keep their seatbelts locked, and refrain from standing and opening overhead lockers until the seatbelt sign is off.
Those who do not follow these rules must be reported to the authority, it says.
Turkish Airlines, the national carrier, has updated its landing announcement, according to Euronews.
“Passengers who do not comply with the rules will be reported to the Directorate General of Civil Aviation through a Disruptive Passenger Report, and an administrative fine will be imposed in accordance with the applicable legal regulations,” the airline says upon landing, according to the TV network.
The BBC has contacted the airline for comment.
Students say they ‘regret’ applying to US universities after visa changes
Students around the world are anxious and in limbo, they say, as the Trump administration makes plans to temporarily halt US student visa appointments.
An official memo seen by BBC’s US partner CBS ordered a temporary pause in appointments as the state department prepares to increase social media vetting of applicants for student and foreign exchange visas.
It is part of a wide-ranging crackdown by US President Donald Trump on some of America’s most elite universities, which he sees as overly liberal.
For students, the changes have brought widespread uncertainty, with visa appointments at US embassies now unavailable and delays that could leave scholarships up in the air.
Some students told the BBC that the confusion has even left them wishing they had applied to schools outside the US.
“I already regret it,” said a 22-year-old master’s student from Shanghai, who did not wish to be named for fear of jeopardising their visa to study at the University of Pennsylvania.
The student said they feel lucky their application was approved, but that has not eased their uncertainty.
“Even if I study in the US, I may be chased back to China without getting my degree,” they said. “That’s so scary.”
Asked about the decision to pause all student visa appointments, state department spokesperson Tammy Bruce told reporters on Tuesday: “We take very seriously the process of vetting who it is that comes into the country, and we’re going to continue to do that.”
As part of his wider crackdown on higher education, Trump has moved to ban Harvard from enrolling international students, accusing the school of not doing enough to combat antisemitism on campus.
Harvard filed a lawsuit in response, and a judge has halted Trump’s ban for now, with a hearing on the matter scheduled for 29 May.
A student from Guangzhou City, who runs a consultancy group for Chinese students wishing to study in the US, said they are not sure how to advise applicants because the rules keep changing.
The student, who also wished not to be named, added that they think there will be fewer students who see the US as a viable education option.
More than 1.1 million international students from over 210 countries were enrolled in US colleges in the 2023-24 school year, according to Open Doors, an organisation that collects data on foreign students.
Universities often charge these international students higher tuition fees – a crucial part of their operating budgets.
For Ainul Hussein, 24, from India, the visa implications are both financial and personal.
Mr Hussein said he was excited to begin the next chapter of his life in New Jersey, enrolled in a master’s of science programme in management.
He received a I-20 document from the university – a crucial piece of paper that allows him to apply for a US student visa.
But recent processing delays left him “deeply worried”, he said, with appointments at consulates now either postponed or unavailable.
Foreign students who want to study in the US usually must schedule interviews at a US embassy in their home country before approval.
He said he may be forced to book flights to the US, still unsure of the situation. He also risks losing his scholarship if he has to defer his studies.
Students in the UK are being affected, too.
Oliver Cropley, a 27-year-old from Norwich, said he was due to study abroad for a year in Kansas, but that plan is now in jeopardy.
“Currently I’ve no student visa, despite forking out £300 on the application process,” Mr Cropley said.
News of the US pausing visa applications is “a huge disappointment”.
He, too, risks losing a scholarship if he is unable to complete his study abroad in the US, and may have to find last-minute accommodation and liaise with the university to make sure it does not delay him academically.
Alfred Williamson, from Wales, told Reuters he was excited to travel after his first year at Harvard, but couldn’t wait to get back. But now, he hasn’t heard about his visa.
It’s “dehumanising”, he told Reuters.
“We’re being used like pawns in the game that we have no control of, and we’re being caught in this crossfire between the White House and Harvard,” Mr Williamson told the news agency.
Paedophile surgeon’s sentence leaves victims appalled
The victims of prolific French paedophile Joel Le Scouarnec have expressed their dismay that the former surgeon’s 20-year prison sentence does not include preventive detention – meaning he could be released from jail in the early 2030s.
The 74-year-old was found guilty on Tuesday of sexually abusing hundreds of people, most of them underage patients of his, over decades.
Over the course of the trial he had confessed to committing 111 rapes and 188 sexual assaults, and was sentenced to the maximum of 20 years in jail.
Prosecutors – who dubbed Le Scouarnec “a devil in a white coat” – had asked the court to take the extremely rare provision to hold him in a centre for treatment and supervision even after release, called preventive detention.
The judge rejected this demand, arguing Le Scouarnec’s age and his “desire to make amends” had been taken into account.
Le Scouarnec will have to serve two-thirds of his sentence before being eligible for parole.
But because he has already served seven years due to a previous conviction for the rape and sexual assault of four children, he may be eligible for parole by 2032.
His lawyer, Maxime Tessier, pointed out that saying Le Scouarnec could be released then was “inaccurate”, as parole is not tantamout a release.
Now, his victims – many of whom assiduously attended the three-month-long trial in Vannes, northern France – are lamenting the sentence.
“For a robbery you risk 30 years. But the punishment for hundreds of child rapes is lighter?” one victim told Le Monde.
The president of a child advocacy group, Solène Podevin Favre, said that she might have expected the verdict “to be less lenient” and to include a post-sentence preventive detention.
“It’s the maximum sentence, certainly,” she said. “But it’s the least we could have hoped for. Yet in six years, he could potentially be released. It’s staggering.”
Marie Grimaud, one of the lawyers representing the victims, told reporters that while she “intellectually” understood the verdict, “symbolically” she could not.
Another lawyer, Francesca Satta, said that she felt 20 years was too short a time given the number of victims in the case.
“It is time for the law to change so we can have more appropriate sentences,” she argued.
But in her judgement read out to the court, Judge Aude Burési said that, while the court had “heard perfectly the demands from the plaintiffs that Le Scouarnec should never be released from jail, it would be demagogic and fanciful to let them believe that would be possible”.
“In fact,” she added, “the rule of law does not allow for that to happen.”
One of Le Scouarnec’s victims, Amélie Lévêque, said the verdict had “shocked” her and that she would have liked preventive detention to be imposed. “How many victims would it take? A thousand?”
She argued that French law needed to change and allow for harsher sentences to take into account the serial nature of crimes.
Similar complaints were raised in the aftermath of the Pelicot trial last December, in which Dominique Pelicot was found guilty of drugging and raping his wife, Gisèle, and recruited dozens of men to abuse her over almost a decade.
Pelicot, too, was sentenced to 20 years – the maximum sentence for rape in French law – with the obligation to serve a minimum of two-thirds in jail.
His case, however, will have to be re-examined at the end of the prison sentence before the question of preventive detention can be explored.
In France, sentences are not served consecutively. Public prosecutor Stéphane Kellenberger noted last week that had Le Scouarnec been on trial in the US – where people serve one prison sentence after another – he may have faced a sentence of over 4,000 years.
But Cécile de Oliveira, one of the victims’ lawyers, praised the sentence, which she said had been “finely tailored” to Le Scouarnec’s “psychiatric condition”.
She agreed with the court’s decision not to impose preventive detention on the former surgeon, adding: “It needs to remain an entirely exceptional punishment.”
After the verdict was read out, victims, journalists and lawyers mingled outside the courthouse in Vannes. Many of the civil parties and their relatives, angered by the verdict, brought their frustration to the media.
“All that I ask for is that this man cannot offend again,” the mother of a victim told French outlets.
“If this kind of behaviour needs to entail a life sentence, so be it.”
Tears and heartbreak over tragic story of South African girl sold by her mother
A video clip of a laughing Joshlin Smith, who was six years old when she went missing more than a year ago in South Africa, left most people in the courtroom sobbing.
It was shown during a hearing in Saldanha Bay, near Cape Town, ahead of the life sentence given to Joshlin’s mother – a drug addict who is believed to have sold her for money.
Racquel Smith, also known as Kelly Smith, was convicted of kidnapping and trafficking her daughter earlier this month. The 35-year-old mother of three was convicted and sentenced along with her boyfriend Jacquen Appollis and their friend Steveno van Rhyn.
Even the court interpreter could not hold back her tears as she translated the victim impact statements into English.
A court official read out those statements first in Afrikaans, the language spoken by those in the impoverished Middelpos informal settlement of Saldanha Bay, where Joshlin had lived.
In their own words, Joshlin’s grandmother, the family friend who had wanted to adopt Joshlin and her teacher spoke of their pain and bewilderment about how she could have been sold by her mother.
One witness during the trial had alleged this was to a traditional healer, known in South Africa as a “sangoma”, who wanted Joshlin for “her eyes and skin”.
A local pastor also testified that he had once heard Smith talk of selling her children for 20,000 rand ($1,100; £850) each, but would have been willing to accept a lower figure of $275.
“How do you sleep [and] live with yourself?” a devastated Amanda Smith-Daniels, asked her daughter in her victim statement on Wednesday. She now looks after Smith’s oldest child and the youngest stays with her father.
Smith and her co-accused refused to take the stand during the eight-week trial that began in March and was held at a community centre in Saldanha to allow the wider community to attend proceedings.
But as Joshlin’s mother heard the statements on Wednesday and saw the video clip, she sobbed uncontrollably.
Joshlin’s teacher, Edna Maart, described the little girl as a quiet pupil who was “very tidy”.
She said she struggled with daily questions from Joshlin’s schoolmates about her whereabouts.
Determined not to forget her, she said the class listened to her favourite gospel song God Will Work It Out at the start of every school day. It was also played to a teary courtroom on Wednesday.
To this day no-one knows what has happened to Joshlin.
Her disappearance on 19 February 2024 caused shockwaves across the country. Bianca van Aswegen, a criminologist and national co-ordinator at Missing Children South Africa, likened it to the case of Madeleine McCann, a British girl who went missing in Portugal in 2007.
Madeleine was aged three when she vanished from a holiday apartment in Praia da Luz in the Algarve – and hers is one of the most high-profile, unsolved missing person cases in the world.
Ms Van Aswegen told the BBC that while the trio’s conviction in Joshlin’s case had given people a sense of relief, “the matter of fact is that nobody knows where Joshlin is and I think that’s the big question that South Africa is still asking”.
A picture of Joshlin’s troubled life emerged during the trial – and a better sense of her personality during this week’s hearings ahead of sentencing.
She was born in October 2017, to Smith and her former partner Jose Emke, who broke down on Wednesday and had to be carried out of the courtroom.
Their second child – she and her older brother, now 11, had both suffered from neglect, according to a social worker who testified during the trial.
Growing up, Kelly Smith had lived with her maternal grandmother and had struggled with substance abuse since she was 15 – often becoming abusive towards her and her children when she was high, social workers said.
A report prepared by a social worker for the sentencing hearing paints a stark picture of Smith’s drug addiction at the time of Joshlin’s birth.
Her grandmother had kicked Smith out of the family home because of her drug use and she had threatened to stab her own son at that time.
The judge noted that it took Smith five months to register Joshlin’s birth – by law this must be done within 30 days – and had lived intermittently at a shelter for abused women.
When she went into rehab later on, family friend Natasha Andrews stepped in to care for Joshlin – and she and her husband had wanted to adopt her.
“We could have provided for her better than her mother,” Ms Andrews said during the trial, but the plans fell apart in 2018 as the parents “wouldn’t agree” to it.
Despite this, Joshlin often visited the Andrews family for weekends and school holidays and would go on trips with them.
The clip shown in court on Wednesday of Joshlin laughing was from one of those holidays and formed part of Ms Andrews’ victim statement.
She shared this and other photos of Joshlin playing with her own daughter because “so many people… don’t know what Joshlin sounds like”, she said.
It was this and her description of her family’s pain that sparked the greatest outpouring of emotion in the courtroom.
Joshlin grew up in a corrugated iron structure located in Middelpos informal settlement with her mother, her mother’s partner, her brother and younger half-sister.
The social workers’ report described the shack as offering “little in the way of privacy due to its highly restrictive living space”.
Smith did odd jobs to support her family, including part-time domestic work for Kelly Zeegers, who lived with her family in a nearby neighbourhood and paid her with groceries instead of cash.
“This is to make sure that she and the children have a plate of food,” Ms Zeegers said during her testimony.
Some witnesses did describe Smith as a good mother; her sister told the court Joshlin was the spitting image of her mum when she was young.
The little that is known of what happened to Joshlin on the day she disappeared is thanks to Laurentia Lombaard, who turned state witness. She had been at the shack smoking drugs with Appollis and Van Rhyn at the time.
She explained that Joshlin, who had started school a few weeks before her disappearance, and her brother had stayed at home that day because they did not have clean uniforms.
The children had been mainly left in the care of Appollis as Smith was in and out during course of the day, occasionally returning to smoke.
It is not clear exactly how or when Joshlin went missing but the trial established it was some time during the afternoon – but the preoccupation of most of the adults meant the disappearance was only reported to the police at 21:00.
The social worker appointed to compile the report on the trio ahead of their sentencing described Smith as “manipulative” and someone who told “bald-faced lies”.
“It is therefore not a stretch to conclude that Smith is the mastermind behind the trafficking of her own daughter,” he said.
Ms Van Aswegen said Joshlin’s disappearance reflected a growing crisis in child trafficking.
“It is much more of a crisis than police stats actually show us due to the fact of many cases going unreported,” she told the BBC.
She said what was unusual in Joshlin’s case was that it had captured the whole nation.
“I have never really seen a case blow up like this in South Africa before [and] neither have we seen such a big search for a missing child. I think social media played a big role [and] we had political parties get involved in the case.”
According to South African news site IOL, 632 children were reported missing last year and 8,743 over the past 10 years.
Earlier this month, police spokesperson Athlenda Mathe said many children were eventually reunited with their families.
Ms Van Aswegen said this showed that one could never give up hope and the search for Joshlin would continue.
This hope was reflected most by the Andrews family during the sentencing hearing.
A poem written by Ms Andrews’ 14-year-old daughter Tayla was also read out in court. It described her pain of not knowing what had happened to Joshlin and her hope that she was safe.
“We just want to hug you again,” Ms Andrews’ said in her statement. “You are our flower, our baby and our green-eyed child.”
You may also be interested in:
- Joshlin Smith: A six-year-old’s disappearance spreads fear in South Africa’s Saldhana Bay
- ‘The selfie that revealed I was a stolen baby’
Judge blocks Trump’s effort to restrict foreign students at Harvard – for now
Harvard University won a reprieve in its fight to enrol international students, after the Trump administration appeared to walk back its initial decertification and a federal judge upheld a block on the government’s order.
The Department of Homeland Security said Thursday it would now give Harvard University 30 days to prove it meets the requirements of the Student and Exchange Visitor Programme (SEVP), which authorises universities to host academics on visas.
A letter from DHS Secretary Kristi Noem noted the agency’s “intent to withdraw” certification Harvard needs to have foreign students on campus.
“Failure to respond to this notice within the time allotted will result in the withdrawal of your school’s certification,” she wrote.
A previous notice from 22 May revoked Harvard’s certification with SEVP, prompting a swift lawsuit from the university and an equally rapid restraining order from a judge.
US District Judge Allison Burroughs indicated Thursday she would later issue a longer-term hold, known as a preliminary injunction, that would stand while the case played out in court. That development would allow international students and faculty to continue studying at Harvard during ongoing litigation.
The legal battle is being closely watched by other US universities and the thousands of foreigners who study at Harvard and around the country.
There are two main questions at play in Harvard’s lawsuit, lawyers say.
Do the government’s reasons for targeting Harvard’s participation in the student visa programme hold up under the law?
And, are those reasons legitimate, or just a pretext for punishing Harvard for constitutionally protected speech the administration dislikes?
While legal experts agree the Trump administration could lose if courts find it targeted Harvard for ideological reasons, the government has taken steps that could help it prevail – with broader, thorny implications.
Looming over the showdown is a bigger question: Can the US government dictate what universities can teach, who they can hire, and who can enrol?
“This could be the type of case that could, on a fast track-basis, flow from the district court to the First Circuit to the US Supreme Court,” said Aram Gavoor, an associate dean at George Washington University Law School and a former Department of Justice attorney.
How much power does the government have to revoke Harvard’s visa certification?
America’s academic visas on which international students, researchers and faculty rely to study in the US is overseen by the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency, a subsidiary of the Department of Homeland Security.
To participate, universities must receive certification from DHS through the Student and Exchange Visitor Programme (SEVP). The government last week revoked Harvard’s SEVP certification, gutting its ability to host international students and researchers.
“In terms of the general authority of DHS, it’s quite strong. It’s a certifying agency for this programme and there’s a variety of bases on which decertification can take place,” Mr Gavoor said. Courts tend to be deferential to the agency, as well.
“There are certain limits to it, though,” he said.
The US Constitution’s First Amendment, which guarantees free speech for individuals as well as corporations and entities like Harvard, is a powerful protection – and one that Harvard invoked again and again in its lawsuit.
If judges determine DHS’ basis for withdrawing Harvard’s certification stems from ideological differences and violates the university’s free speech rights, the court could rule against the government.
“A lot will turn on whether the courts conclude whether the First Amendment is implicated here,” Mr Gavoor said.
Free speech and antisemitism concerns
References to Harvard’s alleged ideological leanings appear throughout the Trump administration’s letters and statements – possibly problematic for the White House in court, legal experts say.
An 11 April letter ordered the university to make significant changes to its operations, including bringing in a third party “to audit the student body, faculty, staff, and leadership for viewpoint diversity.”
President Trump attacked Harvard on Truth Social for “hiring almost all woke, Radical Left, idiots and ‘birdbrains'”. A separate post called for the university to lose its tax-exempt status “if it keeps pushing political, ideological, and terrorist inspired/supporting ‘Sickness'”.
In her initial 22 May letter to Harvard about student visa eligibility, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said Harvard was “hostile to Jewish students, promotes pro-Hamas sympathies, and employs racist ‘diversity, equity, and inclusion’ policies.”
Harvard argues that the Trump administration’s actions are not about combatting antisemitism or keeping Americans safe.
Revoking visa certification is “the latest act by the government in clear retaliation for Harvard exercising its First Amendment rights to reject the government’s demands to control Harvard’s governance, curriculum, and the ‘ideology’ of its faculty and students,” the school says in its lawsuit. It also alleges the government violated Harvard’s right to due process and ignored proper procedures for taking action against it.
“The administration is making clear that they are going after Harvard on account of viewpoints it’s ascribing to Harvard students and faculty and the institution itself,” said Will Creeley, Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression legal director.
“The smoking gun is very smoky indeed, it’s right out there,” he said.
Harvard must comply with federal non-discrimination laws that bar prejudice based on race, gender, national origin, or other protected classes, but “that doesn’t mean that the federal government can dictate acceptable pedagogy in Harvard’s classrooms,” he said.
Decades of legal precedent and a critical 1957 US Supreme Court decision underpin this concept, said Mr Creeley.
Could the Trump administration win?
Despite Harvard’s argument, nuances could complicate its case.
The US historically screens prospective international students for viewpoints it deems unsafe, which could include allegedly supporting terror or totalitarian regimes. In the past, communist leanings were used to bar foreign academics from the US. Title VI of the Civil Rights Act prohibits discrimination against Jewish students.
Secretary Noem’s letter to Harvard in on 22 May invokes these concepts to justify pulling certification, meaning it could “read in a way where all that conduct is potentially unlawful” on the university’s part, Mr Gavoor said.
“The government could win here,” he said.
Even if a judge bans the visa policy, Trump may already have won by chilling international enrollment, said Simon Sandoval-Moshenberg, an immigration attorney representing Kilmar Abrego Garcia in a high-profile deportation case.
“It’s similar to self-deportation. They want people to self-unenrol,” he said.
At the White House on Wednesday, President Trump floated the idea of capping international students at 15% of Harvard’s student body.
“We have people [who] want to go to Harvard and other schools,” he said. “They can’t get in because we have foreign students there.”
How political chaos helped forge South Korea’s presidential frontrunner
Before the events of 3 December 2024, Lee Jae–myung’s path to South Korea’s presidency was littered with obstacles.
Ongoing legal cases, investigations for corruption and allegations of abusing power all looked set to derail the former opposition leader’s second presidential bid.
Then a constitutional crisis changed everything.
On that night, former president Yoon Suk Yeol’s abortive attempt to invoke martial law set in motion a series of events that appears to have cleared the path for Lee.
Now, as the Democratic Party candidate, he is the frontrunner to win South Korea’s election on 3 June.
It’s a dramatic reversal of fortunes for the 61-year-old, who at the time of Yoon’s martial law declaration stood convicted of making false statements during his last presidential campaign in 2022.
Those charges still cast a long shadow over Lee, and could yet threaten his years-long pursuit of the top job. But they are also just the latest in a string of controversies that have dogged him throughout his political career.
The outsider
A rags-to-riches origin story combined with a bullish political style has made Lee into a divisive figure in South Korea.
“Lee Jae-myung’s life has been full of ups and downs, and he often takes actions that stir controversy,” Dr Lee Jun-han, professor of political science and international studies at Incheon National University, tells the BBC.
These actions typically include attempts at progressive reform – such as a pledge, made during his 2022 presidential campaign, to implement universal basic income scheme – which challenge the existing power structure and status quo in South Korea.
“Because of this, some people strongly support him, while others distrust or dislike him,” Dr Lee says. “He is a highly controversial and unconventional figure – very much an outsider who has made a name for himself in a way that doesn’t fit traditional Democratic Party norms.”
In a recent memoir, Lee described his childhood as “miserable”. Born in 1963 in a mountain village in Andong, Gyeongbuk Province, he was the fifth of five sons and two daughters, and – due to his family’s difficult circumstances – skipped middle school to illegally enter the workforce.
As a young factory worker, Lee suffered an industrial accident where his fingers got caught in a factory power belt, and at the age of 13 suffered a permanent injury to his arm after his wrist was crushed by a press machine.
Lee later applied for and was allowed to sit entrance exams for high school and university, passing in 1978 and 1980 respectively. He went on to study law with a full scholarship, and passed the Bar Examination in 1986.
In 1992, he married his wife Kim Hye-kyung, with whom he has two children.
He worked as a human rights lawyer for almost two decades before entering politics in 2005, joining the social-liberal Uri Party, a predecessor of the Democratic Party of Korea and the ruling party at the time.
While his poor upbringing has drawn scorn from members of South Korea’s upper class, Lee’s success in building his political career from the ground up has earned him support from working-class voters and those who feel disenfranchised by the political elite.
He was elected mayor of Seongnam in 2010, rolling out a series of free welfare policies during his tenure, and in 2018 became governor of the broader Gyeonggi Province.
Lee would go on to receive acclaim for his response to the Covid-19 pandemic, during which he clashed with the central government due to his insistence on providing universal relief grants for all residents of the province.
It was also during this time that Lee became the Democratic Party’s final presidential candidate for the first time in October 2021 – losing by 0.76 percentage points. Less than a year later, in August 2022, he was elected as the party’s leader.
From that point on, Dr Lee says, Lee dialled back on the controversial, fire-and-brimstone approach for which he had become notorious – opting instead to play it safe and keep a low profile.
“After [Lee’s] term as a governor, his reformist image faded somewhat as he focused more on his presidential ambitions,” he says. “Still, on certain issues – like addressing past wrongs [during the Japanese colonial era], welfare and corruption – he has built a loyal and passionate support base by taking a firm and uncompromising stance.”
This uncompromising attitude has its detractors, with many members and supporters of the ruling People Power Party (PPP) viewing Lee as aggressive and abrasive in his approach.
Lee’s political career has also been marred by a series of scandals – including a drink driving incident in 2004, disputes with relatives in the late 2010s and allegations of an extramarital affair that emerged in 2018.
While in other parts of the world voters have shown forgiveness and even support for controversial politicians, in South Korea – a country that is still relatively conservative in what it expects of public figures – such scandals have not typically played well.
The weight of scandal
In recent years, Lee’s political ambitions have been saddled with even more pressing controversies – including the ongoing legal cases that continue to hang over him, threatening to hamstring if not scuttle his chances at election.
One of these concerns a string of high-profile charges, including corruption, bribery and breach of trust, associated with a land development project in 2023.
Another, perhaps more critical legal battle concerns allegations that Lee made a knowingly false statement during a debate in the last presidential campaign.
During the debate, which aired on South Korean television in December 2021, Lee had denied personally knowing Kim Moon-ki, a key figure in a corruption-ridden land development scandal who had taken his own life just days earlier.
Prosecutors allege that claim was false, thus violating the Public Official Election Act, and in November 2024 Lee was convicted of the false statements charge and given a one-year suspended prison sentence.
Then, in March, an appeals court cleared him of the charges – only for that ruling to be overturned by South Korea’s Supreme Court. At the time of writing, the case is still awaiting a verdict.
Other threats against Lee’s future political ambitions posed a more fatal danger.
In January 2024, while answering questions from reporters outside the construction site of a planned airport in Busan, Lee was stabbed in the neck by a man who had approached him asking for an autograph.
The injury to Lee’s jugular vein, though requiring extensive surgery, was not critical – but he now campaigns behind bulletproof glass, wearing a bulletproof vest, surrounded by agents carrying ballistic briefcases.
The assailant, who had written an eight-page manifesto and wanted to ensure that Lee never became president, was later sentenced to 15 years in prison.
The attack raised concerns about deepening political polarisation in South Korea – embodied perhaps most publicly in the bitter rivalry between Lee and Yoon, and more privately in the country’s increasingly extreme online discourse.
In December 2023, just weeks before Lee was attacked, a survey sponsored by the newspaper Hankyoreh found that more than 50% of respondents said they felt South Korea’s political divide worsening.
Some claim that, as Democratic Party leader, Lee played a major role in fuelling the problem, frequently blocking motions by Yoon’s government and effectively rendering him a lame duck president.
Such constant stonewalling by the Democratic Party only exacerbated Yoon’s leadership struggles – which also included repeated impeachment attempts against administration officials and constant opposition to his budget.
Finally, as the pressure against him mounted, the former president took the drastic step of declaring martial law.
Opportunity in crisis
Yoon’s declaration of martial law on 3 December – made in a self-proclaimed bid to eliminate “anti-state forces” and North Korea sympathisers – served as the catalyst for Lee to emerge as a leading presidential candidate.
Within hours of the declaration, Lee appealed to the public via a livestream broadcast and urged them to assemble in protest outside the National Assembly building in central Seoul.
Thousands responded, clashing with police and blocking military units as opposition lawmakers rushed into the assembly building, clambering over fences and walls in a desperate attempt to block Yoon’s order.
Lee was among them, climbing over the fence to enter the National Assembly and helping to pass the resolution to lift martial law.
The Democratic Party later decided to impeach President Yoon – a decision that was unanimously upheld by South Korea’s Constitutional Court on 4 April, 2025.
It was then that Lee began the path to a full-fledged election bid, announcing his resignation as leader of the Democratic Party on 9 April ahead of his presidential run. In the Democratic Party presidential primary held on April 27, he was selected as the general candidate with overwhelming support.
The result of Yoon’s abortive martial law attempt was a political maelstrom from which South Korea is still reeling: a constitutional crisis that ended the former president’s career and left his PPP in tatters.
But of the small few who have managed to leverage that chaos to their advantage, none have benefitted more than Lee.
Now the controversial presidential candidate awaits the verdict on his political future – not only from the South Korean people, but also the courts.
If his guilty ruling is ultimately confirmed, Lee will likely lose his seat in the National Assembly. As a candidate, that would prevent him from running for president for a period of five years.
But with the courts having now approved Lee’s request to postpone his legal hearings until after the election, another possibility has emerged: that Lee, who remains the electoral favourite, could be convicted after winning the presidency.
And that could mean that South Korea, having just endured a months-long period of political turmoil, may not be done with its leadership dramas just yet.
After decades of bloodshed, is India winning its war against Maoists?
Could India’s decades-long jungle insurgency finally be approaching its end?
Last week, the country’s most-wanted Maoist, Nambala Keshava Rao – popularly known as Basavaraju – was killed along with 26 others in a major security operation in the central state of Chhattisgarh. Home Minister Amit Shah called it “the most decisive strike” against the insurgency in three decades. One police officer also died in the encounter.
Basavaraju’s death marks more than a tactical victory – it signals a breach in the Maoists’ last line of defence in Bastar, the forested heartland where the group carved out its fiercest stronghold since the 1980s.
Maoists, also known as “Naxalites” after the 1967 uprising in Naxalbari village in West Bengal, have regrouped over the decades to carve out a “red corridor” across central and eastern India – stretching from Jharkhand in the east to Maharashtra in the west and spanning more than a third of the country’s districts. Former prime minister Manmohan Singh had described the insurgency as India’s “greatest internal security threat”.
The armed struggle for Communist rule has claimed nearly 12,000 lives since 2000, according to the South Asian Terrorism Portal. The rebels say they fight for the rights of indigenous tribes and the rural poor, citing decades of state neglect and land dispossession.
The Maoist movement – officially known as Left-Wing Extremism (LWE) – took formal shape in 2004 with the merger of key Marxist-Leninist groups into the CPI (Maoist). This party traces its ideological roots to a 1946 peasant uprising in the southern state of Telangana.
Now, with Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government pledging to end Maoism by March 2026, the battle-hardened rebellion stands at a crossroads: could this truly be the end – or just another pause in its long, bloody arc?
“There will be a lull. But Marxist-Leninist movements have transcended such challenges when the top leadership of the Naxalites were killed in the 70s and yet we are talking about Naxalism,” said N Venugopal, a journalist, social scientist and long-time observer of the movement, who is both a critic and sympathiser of the Maoists.
One of the senior-most officials in India’s home ministry who oversaw anti-Maoist operations, MA Ganapathy, holds a different view.
“At its core, the Maoist movement was an ideological struggle – but that ideology has lost traction, especially among the younger generation. Educated youth aren’t interested anymore,” says Mr Ganapathy.
“With Basavaraju neutralised, morale is low. They’re on their last leg.”
The federal home ministry’s latest report notes a 48% drop in violent incidents in Maoist-related violence – from 1,136 in 2013 to 594 in 2023 – and a 65% decline in related deaths, from 397 to 138.
However, it acknowledges a slight rise in security force casualties in 2023 compared to 2022, attributed to intensified operations in core Maoist areas.
The report says Chhattisgarh remained the worst-affected state in 2023, accounting for 63% of all Left-Wing Extremism (LWE) incidents and 66% of the related deaths.
Jharkhand followed, with 27% of the violence and 23% of the deaths. The remaining incidents were reported from Maharashtra, Odisha, Madhya Pradesh and Bihar.
The collapse of Maoism in Chhattisgarh, a stronghold of the insurgency, offers key clues to the movement’s broader decline.
A decade ago, the state’s police were seen as weak, according to Mr Ganapathy.
“Today, precise state-led strikes, backed by central paramilitary forces, have changed the game. While paramilitary held the ground, state forces gathered intelligence and launched targeted operations. It was clear role delineation and coordination,” he said.
Mr Ganapathy adds that access to mobile phones, social media, roads and connectivity have made people more aware and less inclined to support an armed underground movement.
“People have become aspirational, mobile phones and social media have become widespread and people are exposed to the outside world. Maoists also cannot operate in hiding in remote jungles while being out of sync with new social realities.
“Without mass support, no insurgency can survive,” he says.
A former Maoist sympathiser, who did not want to be named, pointed to a deeper flaw behind the movement’s collapse: a political disconnect.
“They delivered real change – social justice in Telangana, uniting tribespeople in Chhattisgarh – but failed to forge it into a cohesive political force,” he said.
At the heart of the failure, he argued, was a dated revolutionary vision: building isolated “liberated zones” beyond the state’s reach and “a theory to strike the state through a protracted people’s war”.
“These pockets work only until the state pushes back. Then the zones collapse, and thousands die. It’s time to ask – can a revolution really be led from cut-off forestlands in today’s India?”
The CPI (Maoist)’s 2007 political document clings to a Mao-era strategy: of creating a “liberated zone” and “encircling the cities from the countryside.” But the sympathiser was blunt: “That doesn’t work anymore.”
The party still retains some popular support in a few isolated pockets, primarily in the tribal regions of eastern Maharashtra, southern Chhattisgarh and parts of Odisha and Jharkhand – but without a strong military base.
Ongoing operations by state forces have significantly weakened the Maoist military infrastructure in their strongholds in southern Chhattisgarh. Cadres and leaders are now being killed regularly, reflecting the rebels’ growing inability to defend themselves.
Mr Venugopal believes the strategy needs rethinking – not abandonment.
The underground struggle has its place, he said, but “the real challenge is blending it with electoral politics”.
In contrast, Mr Ganapathy sees little hope for the Maoists to mount a meaningful fightback in the near future and argues that the time has come for a different approach – dialogue.
“It would be wise for them to go for talks now and perhaps unconditionally or even lay down the conditions and let the government consider them. This is the time to approach the government instead of unnecessarily sacrificing their own cadres, without a purpose,” he said.
Maoists enjoy support in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana from mainstream political parties. In Telangana, both the ruling Congress and the main opposition Bharat Rashtra Samithi (BRS) have backed calls for a ceasefire, along with 10 smaller Left parties – an effort widely seen as aimed at protecting the group’s remaining leaders and cadres.
The Maoist movement, rooted in past struggles against caste oppression, still carries social legitimacy in parts of these states. Civil society activists have also joined the push for a truce.
“We, along with other civil rights groups, demanded a two-step process – an immediate ceasefire followed by peace talks,” said Ranjit Sur, general secretary of the Kolkata-based group Association for Protection of Democratic Rights.
Maoist-affected states remain resilient strongholds in part because they are rich in minerals – making them sites of intense resource battles. Mr Venugopal believes this is key to the CPI (Maoist’s) enduring presence.
Chhattisgarh, for instance, is India’s sole producer of tin concentrates and moulding sand, and a leading source of coal, dolomite, bauxite and high-grade iron ore, according to the ministry of mines.
It accounts for 36% of the country’s tin, 20% iron ore, 18% coal, 11% dolomite and 4% of diamond and marble reserves. Yet, despite strong interest, mining companies – both global and national – have long struggled to access these resources.
“Multinational companies couldn’t enter because the Maoist movement, built on the slogan ‘Jal, Jangal, Jameen (Water, Forest, Land),’ asserted that forests belong to tribespeople – not corporations,” Mr Venugopal said.
But with the Maoists now weakened, at least four Chhattisgarh mines are set to go to “preferred bidders” after successful auctions in May, according to an official notification.
Mr Venugopal believes that the resistance won’t die with the death of Maoist leaders.
“Leaders may fall, but the anger remains. Wherever injustice exists, there will be movements. We may not call them Maoism anymore – but they’ll be there.”
New Banksy revealed but location remains a mystery
Banksy’s latest piece of grafitti art has been revealed to the world – but where it was painted remains a mystery for now.
Images posted on the elusive artist‘s Instagram depict a lighthouse stencilled on a drab, beige wall, along with the words: “I want to be what you saw in me”.
A false shadow appears to have been drawn on the pavement from a nearby bollard, giving the illusion that the lighthouse is itself a silhouette of the mundane street furniture.
But unlike a lighthouse, the post gives little away as to the artwork’s location. A second, wider shot showing two people walking their dogs offers little more.
Geoguessers on social media have speculated that the street art may lurk in Marseille, in the south of France, while others debate how to interpret the work’s meaning.
Another image of the art circulating online shows a blurred person riding a scooter in front of the piece, with a graffiti tag seemingly reading “Yaze” further along the wall.
The tag matches that used by a Canadian graffiti artist Marco The Polo, whose Instagram account features photos of his own work but who has called Banksy an inspiration.
Banksy has kept his true identity a secret throughout his career, and it is only through the Instagram account that works are identified as genuine.
Often imbuing his works with a political message, his previous pieces have alluded to immigration, the war in Ukraine and homelessness, among other things.
The meaning of some of his works, though, is less clear – such as his motivation behind the series of animals painted in various locations across London last summer.
Prior to the lighthouse, in December, Banksy posted another piece, depicting a Madonna and child with a fixture in the wall appearing like a bullet wound in her chest.
Australian comedian Magda Szubanski diagnosed with cancer
Australian actress and comedian Magda Szubanski has been diagnosed with a rare and aggressive cancer.
Szubanski is best known for her iconic role as Sharon Strzelecki in the Australian sitcom Kath & Kim, and for her film roles in Babe and Happy Feet.
In a video posted to social media, the 64-year-old said she had begun treatment to fight stage four Mantle Cell Lymphoma, a “fast-moving” form of blood cancer.
Calling the news “confronting”, Szubanski said she was receiving “world-class care” in Melbourne.
“I won’t sugar-coat it: it’s rough. But I’m hopeful,” she said.
“I’m being lovingly cared for by friends and family, my medical team is brilliant, and I’ve never felt more held by the people around me.”
Stars send support
Kylie Minogue was among the stars offering their support on social media.
“Sending all love,” the Australian singer replied on Instagram, along with heart emojis.
Actor Richard E Grant also sent a string of hearts and wrote: “WE ALL LOVE YOU SOOOOOO MUCH Mags.”
Jurassic Park star Sam Neill, who was diagnosed with a rare type of non-Hodgkin lymphoma in 2022, wrote to his Ride Like A Girl co-star: “Right there with you darling xx.”
Australian actress Toni Collette added: “Sending huge, healing love and hugs to you, dear Magda. You are supported and held in all our hearts.”
‘Get tested’
Szubanski said she was undergoing Nordic protocol treatment, a regimen which combines chemotherapy and immunotherapy to treat Mantle Cell Lymphoma.
The cancer was only discovered incidentally after she requested blood tests after feeling unwell for “ages”.
“So the take away is – get tested and listen to your body!” she said.
Szubanksi rose to fame playing the netball-loving Strzelecki in the early 2000s, and has been a stalwart of the comedy scene in Australia since.
She was also a prominent advocate for the legalisation of same-sex marriage in Australia.
Haribo recalls bags of sweets in Netherlands after cannabis found
Haribo is recalling packets of sweets in the Netherlands after some were found to contain traces of cannabis.
Several people, including multiple members of one family, reported feeling unwell after eating from a 1kg pack of Haribo Happy Cola F!ZZ.
A spokesperson for the food safety body in the Netherlands (NVWA) said some had reported “dizziness” after eating the sweets. The agency told Dutch broadcaster SBS6 that “samples were taken and cannabis was found in them”.
A Haribo spokesperson told the BBC it was working with police to “establish the facts around the contamination”.
NVWA said three packs were found to be contaminated, but Haribo is recalling its entire stock as a precaution.
The bags in question have a best-before date of January 2026.
It is not clear how many people have become unwell.
NVWA said police were investigating how cannabis ended up in the sweets, Dutch media report.
The agency said there were bags in circulation that “can lead to health complaints, such as dizziness, when consumed”.
“Do not eat the sweets,” the statement added.
It is not clear whether the contaminated products are genuine Haribo bags or fake.
Haribo said the safety of its consumers was its highest priority, adding that it was taking the incident “very seriously”.
The confectionery giant said the recall was only in place in the Netherlands, with other regions unaffected.
All other products are safe to consume, the company says.
Endangered snow leopard born at animal sanctuary
An animal sanctuary has announced one of its rare snow leopards has given birth to a cub after months of dedicated work.
The cub, nicknamed Little Lady, was born at The Big Cat Sanctuary in Smarden, Kent, on 10 May.
Her successful birth follows months of work by primary trainer Simon Jackaman, who built the trust necessary for mother Laila to voluntarily participate in ground-breaking ultrasound sessions.
Celebrity chef and charity ambassador Paul Hollywood said: “Laila has had a special place in my heart for many years and to see her become a mum for the fourth time is truly heartwarming.”
Little Lady weighed 630g (1.4lb) at her first health check when she was five days old.
She is the second female snow leopard to be born at the centre, after her sister Zaya in 2023.
Mother Laila has had three previous litters with breeding partner Yarko as part of the sanctuary’s breeding programme.
Snow leopards are listed as vulnerable on the International Union for Conservation of Nature red list, with an estimated 2,700 to 3,300 mature adults remaining in the wild.
They are predicted to lose 30% of their habitat because of climate change in the next 50 to 100 years and they also face threats from poaching and the illegal wildlife trade.
“This birth is a testament to our commitment to the participation in the endangered species breeding programme and the conservation of this vulnerable species,” said Cam Whitnall, managing director of The Big Cat Sanctuary.
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French MPs vote to scrap low-emission zones
France’s National Assembly has voted to abolish low-emission zones, a key measure introduced during President Emmanuel Macron’s first term to reduce city pollution.
So-called ZFEs () have been criticised for hitting those who cannot afford less-polluting vehicles the hardest.
A handful of MPs from Macron’s party joined opposition parties from the right and far right in voting 98-51 to scrap the zones, which have gradually been extended across French cities since 2019.
The motion was put forward by Pierre Meurin of the far-right National Rally, and backed by some motoring organisations.
But it was a personal victory for writer Alexandre Jardin who set up a movement called (Beggars)arguing that “ecology has turned into a sport for the rich”.
“Everyone played their part in the vote. The MPs voted either for the end of this nightmare, or they abstained,” he told Le Figaro newspaper.
“They were afraid of going back to their constituencies if they had voted against the abolition of the ZFEs.”
The low-emission zones began with 15 of France’s most polluted cities in 2019 and by the start of this year had been extended to every urban area with a population of more than 150,000, with a ban on cars registered before 1997.
Those produced after 1997 need a round “Crit’Air” sticker to drive in low-emission zones, and there are six categories that correspond to various types of vehicle.
The biggest restrictions have been applied in the most polluted cities, Paris and Lyon, as well as Montpellier and Grenoble.
They have turned into something of a lightning rod for Macron’s opponents.
Marine Le Pen condemned the ZFEs as “no-rights zones” during her presidential campaign for National Rally in 2022, and her Communist counterpart warned of a “social bomb”.
The head of the right-wing Republicans in the Assembly, Laurent Wauquiez, talked of “freeing the French from stifling, punitive ecology”, and on the far left, Clémence Guetté said green policies should not be imposed “on the backs of the working classes”.
The government tried to head off Wednesday night’s revolt by watering down the restrictions, but also preserving the zones in Paris and Lyon. This amendment was defeated by a large margin.
Agnès Pannier-Runacher, the minister for green transition, told MPs that “air pollution is behind almost 40,000 premature deaths a year… and the low-emission zones have helped bring down [that number]”.
The Greens and Socialists also voted to maintain the zones.
Green Senator Anne Souyris told BFMTV that “killing [the ZFEs] also means killing hundreds of thousands of people” and Socialist MP Gérard Leseul said the vote sent a negative signal as it did not address the reduction that had to be made to levels of air pollution.
The abolition is expected to go through the upper house, France’s Senate, but it still needs to be approved in a broader bill in the lower house in June and will have to be approved by France’s Constitutional Council, which is not guaranteed.
Gaza warehouse broken into by ‘hordes of hungry people’, says WFP
The UN’s World Food Programme (WFP) says that “hordes of hungry people” have broken into a food supply warehouse in central Gaza.
Two people are reported to have died and several others injured in the incident, the programme said, adding that it was still confirming details.
Footage showed thousands of people breaking into the Al-Ghafari warehouse in Deir Al-Balah and taking bags of flour and cartons of food as gunshots rang out. It was not immediately clear where the gunshots came from or who fired them.
In a statement, the WFP said humanitarian needs in Gaza had “spiralled out of control” after an almost three-month Israeli blockade that was eased last week.
The WFP said that food supplies had been pre-positioned at the warehouse for distribution.
The programme added: “Gaza needs an immediate scale-up of food assistance. This is the only way to reassure people that they will not starve.”
The WFP said it had “consistently warned of alarming and deteriorating conditions on the ground, and the risks imposed by limiting humanitarian aid to hungry people in desperate need of assistance”.
Israeli authorities said on Wednesday that 121 trucks belonging to the UN and the international community carrying humanitarian aid including flour and food were transferred into Gaza.
Israel began to allow a limited amount of aid into Gaza last week. However, UN Middle East envoy Sigrid Kaag told the UN Security Council this was “comparable to a lifeboat after the ship has sunk” when everyone in Gaza was facing the risk of famine.
A controversial US and Israeli-backed group – the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) – was also established as a private aid distribution system. It uses US security contractors and bypasses the UN, which said it was unworkable and unethical.
The US and Israeli governments say the GHF, which has set up four distribution centres in southern and central Gaza, is preventing aid from being stolen by Hamas, which the armed group denies doing.
Large numbers of hungry people living in tents along the coast of Gaza have been going to the GHF distribution centres for food.
The UN Humans Right Office said 47 people were injured on Tuesday after people overran one of the GHF distribution sites in the southern city of Rafah, a day after it began working there.
Another senior UN official told journalists on Wednesday that desperate crowds were looting cargo off of UN aid trucks.
Jonathan Whittall, the head of the UN’s humanitarian office for the occupied Palestinian territories, also said there was no evidence that Hamas was diverting aid coordinated through credible humanitarian channels.
He said the real theft of relief goods since the beginning of the war had been carried out by criminal gangs which the Israeli army “allowed to operate in proximity to the Kerem Shalom crossing point in Gaza”.
The UN has argued that a surge of aid like the one during the recent ceasefire between Israeli and Hamas would reduce the threat of looting by hungry people and allow it to make full use of its well-established network of distribution across the Gaza Strip.
Israel’s ambassador to the UN, Danny Danon, said the UN was behaving in a “mafia-like” way and accused it of threatening aid agencies working with the GHF.
The UN has said Israeli’s new aid distribution system in Gaza is “essentially engineered scarcity”, adding that it operates only in the south of the territory when most of the population is in the north.
British and US bestsellers hit by purge in Russian bookshops
A Russian book distributor has ordered bookshops to “return or destroy” works by the Pulitzer Prize-winner Jeffery Eugenides and the British bestseller Bridget Collins, among others, in the latest case of censorship targeting the country’s literary scene.
Trading House BMM sent a letter to shops this week, seen by the BBC, with a list of 37 titles that should immediately be removed from sale.
The list also included texts by Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Zizek, Japanese novelist Ryu Murakami, and a number of Russian writers.
The order comes amid growing Kremlin censorship since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine, which has targeted books featuring anti-war sentiment, LGBTQ themes, and criticism of Russia’s leadership.
The letter warned of “adverse consequences” if books such as Eugenides’ The Virgin Suicides and Murakami’s Ecstasy were not pulled from shelves as there were suspicions they “do not comply with Russian laws,” without providing further details.
Booksellers should “immediately cease sales and return [the titles] or destroy the remaining copies, providing writing confirmation of destruction”, the message said.
The targeted books are an eclectic mix.
Bridget Collins’ book The Binding, about an apprentice bookbinder, features, as does An Oral History of Reggae by David Katz, along with Lisi Harrison’s romance The Dirty Book Club.
The letter was signed by BMM’s chief executive Anastasia Nikitanova, who hung up when the BBC approached her for comment and did not respond to further messages.
“We checked the list and we don’t have these books in stock now,” an employee of one of the shops that had received the letter told the BBC on condition of anonymity.
They continued: “If we did, we could have tried to understand what’s wrong with them. I have no idea why the publisher chose these books… it’s a sign of the moral panic that has overtaken the market.”
The newly banned books were released in Russia by the publishing houses Ripol Classic and Dom Istorii, which are affiliated with BMM.
Sergei Makarenkov, the head of Ripol Classic, said: “I think [the list] is most likely connected to the anti-LGBT law. This needs to be clarified with BMM… I can’t clearly explain to you what has happened here.”
“Such lists appear everywhere now, it’s become completely routine,” he added. Makarenkov said he would get back to the BBC when further details were available but at the time of publication had not responded to follow-up calls.
Russia banned the promotion of “non-traditional sexual orientations” to minors in 2013 but since the start of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine has expanded the law to forbid “LGBT propaganda” being disseminated among people of any ages.
Moscow has also labelled what it calls the “international LGBT movement” an “extremist organisation,” despite no such official movement existing.
The BMM letter follows a high-profile case against the publishers behind the teen romance novel A Summer in the Red Scarf and other titles with LGBT themes.
A Summer in the Red Scarf tells the story of two teenage boys who fall for each other at a Soviet pioneer camp.
The backlash against the book prompted its two authors to leave Russia. And earlier this month, a Moscow court placed under house arrest managers from Popcorn Books and Individuum – which are part of Russia’s largest publishing group, Eksmo.
Father-of-three charged over Liverpool parade crash
A father-of-three and former Royal Marine has been charged following the Liverpool parade crash in which 79 people were injured.
Paul Doyle, 53, from Burghill Road in West Derby, was arrested on Monday, when a car ploughed into fans attending Liverpool’s Premier League victory celebration, Merseyside Police confirmed.
A nine-year-old was among those injured when the car Mr Doyle is alleged to have been driving crashed into supporters at 18:00 BST on Water Street.
The local businessman faces multiple counts of causing, and attempting to cause unlawful and malicious grievous bodily harm with intent as well as one of dangerous driving and two counts of unlawful and malicious wounding with intent.
Assistant Chief Constable Jenny Sims, of Merseyside Police, told a news conference seven people remain in hospital after the incident.
Mr Doyle is set to appear at Liverpool Magistrates’ Court on Friday.
The BBC has spoken to the suspect’s neighbours, who said they were shocked and in “disbelief”.
They said that Burghill Road was swarming with police in the hours after the crash.
One said: “I came out late on Monday night and there’s police everywhere. Looking around all the houses, so I had a thought – imagine if it was him?”
Assistant Chief Constable Jenny Sims said detectives were reviewing a “huge volume” of CCTV and mobile phone footage.
Sarah Hammond, Chief Crown Prosecutor for Crown Prosecution Service in the Mersey-Cheshire region, said this included footage from CCTV, mobile phones, businesses and dashcams, along with witness statements.
She said the charges “will be kept under review” while the investigation progresses.
“It is important to ensure every victim gets the justice they deserve,” she added.
Mr Doyle has been charged with seven offences, which can be broken down into four groups.
The first includes two counts of wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm (GBH) – one of these is an alleged offence against one child.
The second is two counts of causing unlawful and malicious GBH with intent to cause grievous bodily harm.
According to the Sentencing Council, it relates to the nature of the injury allegedly caused.
GBH does not require an open wound to have been suffered. Wounding requires the victim’s skin to have been broken.
Mr Doyle also faces two charges of attempted unlawful and malicious GBH with intent to cause GBH, and again one of these alleged offences relates to a child.
The final count is dangerous driving.
Police confirmed the ages of those injured in the incident ranged from nine to 78.
Assistant Chief Constable Sims, said she understood many have questions about the incident, and detectives were “working tirelessly, with diligence and professionalism, to seek the answer to all of those questions”.
“When we are able to, we will provide further information,” she added.
Chinese paraglider survives accidental 8,000m-high flight
A Chinese paraglider has survived being accidentally propelled 8,500m (27,800ft) into the sky above north-west China, state media report.
Peng Yujiang, 55, was testing new equipment at 3,000m above sea level, over the Qilian mountains, when a rare updraft or air current known as a “cloud suck” pulled him about 5,000m higher into a cloud formation.
Saturday’s events were filmed on a camera that was mounted on Mr Peng’s glider and the footage has gone viral after being posted on Douyin, China’s version of TikTok.
It showed Mr Peng holding on to the glider’s controls, with his face and much of his body covered in ice crystals.
“It was terrifying… Everything was white. I couldn’t see any direction. Without the compass, I wouldn’t have known which way I was going. I thought I was flying straight, but in reality, I was spinning,” he told China Media Group.
Mr Peng narrowly survived death as oxygen is thin at that altitude – slightly lower than the 8,849m peak of Mount Everest. Temperatures can also fall to -40C.
“I wanted to come down quickly, but I just couldn’t. I was lifted higher and higher until I was inside the cloud,” he said.
Mr Peng, who has been paragliding for four and a half years, said he might have lost consciousness during his descent.
He added that the most frightening part of his ordeal was trying to regain control of the glider as it spiralled in the air.
Chinese authorities are investigating the incident and Mr Peng has been suspended for six months because the flight was unauthorised, state-run Global Times reported.
Mr Peng had no intention to fly that day and was only testing the fit and comfort of his parachute on the ground, Global Times said.
However, strong winds lifted him off the ground and grew even stronger, until he encountered the updraft that shot him up into the clouds.
Faisal Islam: Tariff ruling completely changes the global trade war
“Watch the courts” was the whispered message a well-connected diplomat told me in Washington DC last month, amid the previous episode of US tariff chaos.
Most eyes were on the high-profile case in California from the Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom – that President Donald Trump’s trade tariffs were illegal.
In the event, it was a separate case at the International Trade Court filed by a dozen other states and some small businesses that have pulled the rug from underneath Trump’s signature policy. (Tariffs imposed by the Trump administration that were struck down by the trade court on Wednesday will remain in place while the case makes its way through the courts.)
It raises the real question about whether the wider so-called reciprocal tariffs due in July will ever come in to effect, whether the 10% universal tariff can stick, whether nations will bother to negotiate, whether Congress will come to the president’s rescue, and of course, the eventual reaction of the Supreme Court.
Much of this can be traced back to the highly unusual dynamic underpinning the Trump’s tariff actions.
The very sight of the president proclaiming sweeping tariff rates on a variety of countries, culminating in his now infamous Rose Garden moment with the blue board, is the foundational legal problem here.
Typically, indeed constitutionally, trade policy is the domain of the US Congress. The chairs of the trade committees of the House and Senate (branches of the Ways and Means Committee) are very powerful positions.
President Trump bypassed all of that by proclaiming a variety of national emergencies. While he has some scope to act in actual emergencies, these cases contend that the sweeping use of these powers to announce permanent tariff changes was illegal and unconstitutional.
There is a fascinating assessment of the separation of powers in the US that includes reference to both former President Richard Nixon’s limited use of the same powers and the Federalist Papers of Hamilton and Madison.
In essence, the powers he has asserted to “regulate importation” are narrow in scope and do not stretch to unlimited imposition of tariffs, in particular, to remedy trade deficits.
Of course, the Trump administration rather undermined their own logic by also levying “reciprocal” tariffs on countries with which it ran a trade surplus, such as the UK.
Separately the court also found that the president’s basis for the fentanyl tariffs against Mexico, Canada, and China did not “deal with” their stated objective.
Trump’s claim that they “create leverage” to do deals is not a permissible rationale for use of the powers. This dismantles the entire notion of the “art of the deal” 4D chess manoeuvres designed to extract trade advantages.
This will now be dealt with by the Supreme Court. The case appears rather robust, and also emboldens California’s similar case.
It also totally undermines any attempt by the US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to negotiate deals with other countries.
The likes of Japan and the European Union were already holding back, after seeing the White House retreat in the face of tariff-related turbulence in US government borrowing rates.
US retailers were warning not just of tariff-related inflation, but of potential empty shelves. The rowback on the China tariffs, purportedly fentanyl-trafficking enemy, means that actual G7 allies expect better treatment from the US.
And now its own courts deem the actions illegal. The White House is currently hemmed in by its own bond markets, retailers, big business, many individual states and now its courts on this policy.
While it hit back with an immediate appeal, some in the wider administration might well be privately toasting the judges.
Could the White House get Congress onside to pass these tariffs? There has to be a very big doubt about this. In any event, other countries can now return to traditional trade tactics designed to pressurise the self interest of key senators and congressmen and women, with impacts on their local industries, whether that is motorcycles, jeans, or bourbon.
Another option might be to switch to another legal basis, such as the section 232 powers underpinning the steel and automotive tariffs. This approach would alter the dynamics of the trade war away from sweeping country-specific ones, towards industry-specific tariffs instead.
In any event, the court has surfaced rather unarguable evidence of the economic harm caused to the US by its own tariffs.
For example, Virginia-based educational manufacturer MicroKits says it will “be unable to pay its employees, will lose money and as a result may go out of business”. New York-based wine company VOS says it is paying the tariffs “upon arrival at the Port of NY” putting immediate strain on its cash flow. Terry Cycling has already paid $25,000 and projects a total of $250,000 this year.
The court concluded: “The government does not meaningfully contest the ‘economic logic’ tracing the retaliatory tariffs to the plaintiffs showing of downstream harm.”
Does the White House want a messy Congressional fight to pass these tariffs, with numerous examples of their real life impact?
For now, expect other negotiators around the world to put their feet up and wait, while the White House tries to disprove the illegality of the very basis of its global trade conflict.
Mother who sold six-year-old daughter given life term in South Africa
A South African woman convicted of kidnapping and trafficking her six-year-old daughter has been sentenced to life in prison, along with her two accomplices.
The jail terms for Racquel “Kelly” Smith, her boyfriend Jacquen Appollis and their friend Steveno van Rhyn come more than a year after Joshlin Smith mysteriously disappeared outside her home in Saldanha Bay, near Cape Town.
Despite a highly publicised search for the girl, who vanished in February 2024, she is yet to be found.
South African prosecutors say she was sold into slavery however this was not definitively proven during the trial.
It is believed that Smith, who was addicted to drugs, needed the money.
The sentencing follows an eight-week trial that captivated South Africa, with witnesses and prosecutors making a number of shocking allegations.
Judge Nathan Erasmus said he “drew no distinction” between the trio in handing down the sentences.
“On the human trafficking charge, you are sentenced to life imprisonment. On the kidnapping charge, you are sentenced to 10 years imprisonment,” he said to loud applause in the courtroom.
Judge Erasmus took over an hour to deliver the sentence and was measured as he gave a brief summary of the case and highlighted points that stood out during the trial.
He rebuked the trio, especially Van Rhyn and Smith, saying they showed no remorse for their actions.
“There is nothing that I can find that is redeeming or deserving of a lesser sentence,” he said.
He also spoke of the impact their conduct had on the community of Middelpos, where the girl lived, saying it had left residents “fractured”.
Smith, 35, and her accomplices showed no emotion as their sentences were read out in the community centre in Saldanha where the trial was held to allow residents to attend proceedings.
- Tears and heartbreak over tragic story of Joshlin Smith
- South Africa police target gang kidnapping women in shopping centres
Police said the search for the little girl would continue, even beyond South Africa’s borders.
“We will not rest until we find [out] what happened to Joshlin. We are continuing day and night looking for her,” Western Cape police commissioner Thembisile Patekile told local media.
The National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) welcomed the sentence and lauded the work of its team in proving that Joshlin was “sold [and] delivered to the intended buyer” for the purpose of “exploitation, namely slavery or practices similar to slavery”.
During the trial, the identity of the “intended buyer” was never revealed.
The BBC asked the NPA for further details, however a spokesperson was unable to provide any.
Emotions were high ahead of the sentencing, with angry community members saying the trio should get a “harsh sentence because they deserve it”.
Ahead of sentencing, Joshlin’s grandmother, Amanda Smith-Daniels, once again pleaded with her daughter to “bring my [grand]child back or tell me where she is”.
“I don’t feel that any sentence they get will bring my grandchild back,” she told local broadcaster Newzroom Afrika.
Ms Smith-Daniels said that Joshlin’s disappearance had left her family “broken”.
She urged her daughter to stop blaming others for her misfortune as she “was the person that did the deed”.
During the trial, the court heard testimonies from more than 30 witnesses, who painted a picture of the young girl’s troubled life and subsequent disappearance.
Kelly Smith and her accomplices refused to testify or call any witnesses for their defence.
The most explosive came from Lourentia Lombaard, a friend and neighbour of Smith who turned state witness.
Ms Lombaard alleged that Smith told her she had done “something silly” and sold Joshlin to a traditional healer, known in South Africa as a “sangoma”.
The “person who [allegedly took] Joshlin wanted her for her eyes and skin”, Ms Lombaard told the court.
A local pastor testified that in 2023, he had heard Smith – a mother of three – talk of selling her children for 20,000 rand ($1,100; £850) each, though she had said she was willing to accept a lower figure of $275.
Joshlin’s teacher then alleged in court that Smith had told her during the search that her daughter was already “on a ship, inside a container, and they were on the way to West Africa”.
It was the testimonies of Ms Lombard and the clergyman that were key to securing a conviction.
During sentencing hearings, Smith was described as manipulative and someone who told “bald-faced lies”. A social worker appointed to compile a report on Smith and her accomplices, went so far as to say it would not be a “stretch to conclude that [Kelly] Smith is the mastermind behind the trafficking of her own daughter”.
The court also heard powerful statements from those who knew Joshlin about the devastating effect of her disappearance on the community.
More South Africa stories from the BBC:
- Joshlin Smith’s disappearance spreads fear in South Africa’s Saldhana Bay
- ‘The selfie that revealed I was a stolen baby’
Israel announces major expansion of settlements in occupied West Bank
Israeli ministers say 22 new Jewish settlements have been approved in the occupied West Bank – the biggest expansion in decades.
Several already exist as outposts, built without government authorisation, but will now be made legal under Israeli law. Others are completely new, according to Defence Minister Israel Katz and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich.
Settlements – which are widely seen as illegal under international law, though Israel disputes this – are one of the most contentious issues between Israel and the Palestinians.
Katz said the move “prevents the establishment of a Palestinian state that would endanger Israel”, while the Palestinian presidency called it a “dangerous escalation”.
The Israeli anti-settlement watchdog Peace Now called it “the most extensive move of its kind” in more than 30 years and warned that it would “dramatically reshape the West Bank and entrench the occupation even further”.
Israel has built about 160 settlements housing some 700,000 Jews since it occupied the West Bank and East Jerusalem – land Palestinians want, along with Gaza, for their hoped-for future state – in the 1967 Middle East war. An estimated 3.3 million Palestinians live alongside them.
Successive Israeli governments have allowed settlements to grow. However, expansion has risen sharply since Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu returned to power in late 2022 at the head of a right-wing, pro-settler coalition, as well as the start of the Gaza war, triggered by Hamas’s 7 October 2023 attack on Israel.
On Thursday, Israel Katz and Bezalel Smotrich – an ultranationalist leader and settler who has control over planning in the West Bank – officially confirmed a decision that is believed to have been taken by the government two weeks ago.
A statement said they had approved 22 new settlements, the “renewal of settlement in northern Samaria [northern West Bank], and reinforcement of the eastern axis of the State of Israel”.
It did not include information about the exact location of the new settlements, but maps being circulated suggest they will be across the length and width of the West Bank.
Katz and Smotrich did highlight what they described as the “historic return” to Homesh and Sa-Nur, two settlements deep in the northern West Bank which were evacuated at the same time as Israel withdrew its troops and settlers from Gaza in 2005.
Two years ago, a group of settlers established a Jewish religious school and an unauthorised outpost at Homesh, which Peace Now said would be among 12 made legal under Israeli law.
Nine of the settlements would be completely new, according to the watchdog. They include Mount Ebal, just to the south of Homesh and near the city of Nablus, and Beit Horon North, west of Ramallah, where it said construction had already begun in recent days.
The last of the settlements, Nofei Prat, was currently officially considered a “neighbourhood” of another settlement near East Jerusalem, Kfar Adumim, and would now be recognised as independent, Peace Now added.
Katz said the decision was a “strategic move that prevents the establishment of a Palestinian state that would endanger Israel, and serves as a buffer against our enemies.”
“This is a Zionist, security, and national response – and a clear decision on the future of the country,” he added.
Smotrich called it a “once-in-a-generation decision” and declared: “Next step sovereignty!”
But a spokesperson for Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas – who governs parts of the West Bank not under full Israeli control – called it a “dangerous escalation” and accused Israel of continuing to drag the region into a “cycle of violence and instability”.
“This extremist Israeli government is trying by all means to prevent the establishment of an independent Palestinian state,” Nabil Abu Rudeineh told Reuters news agency.
Lior Amihai, director of Peace Now, said: “The Israeli government no longer pretends otherwise: the annexation of the occupied territories and expansion of settlements is its central goal.”
Elisha Ben Kimon, an Israeli journalist with the popular Ynet news site who covers the West Bank and settlements, told the BBC’s Newshour programme that 70% to 80% of ministers wanted to declare the formal annexation of the West Bank.
“I think that Israel is a few steps from declaring this area as Israeli territory. They believe that this period will never be coming back, this is one opportunity that they don’t want to slip from their hands – that’s why they’re doing this now,” Mr Ben Kimon told the BBC’s Newshour programme.
Israel effectively annexed East Jerusalem in 1980, in a move not recognised by the vast majority of the international community.
This latest step is a blow to renewed efforts to revive momentum on a two-state solution to the decades-old Israel-Palestinian conflict – the internationally approved formula for peace that would see the creation of an independent Palestinian state alongside Israel – with a French-Saudi summit planned at the UN’s headquarters in New York next month.
Jordan’s foreign ministry condemned what it called a “flagrant violation of international law” that “undermines prospects for peace by entrenching the occupation”.
UK Foreign Office Minister Hamish Falconer said the move was “a deliberate obstacle to Palestinian statehood”.
Since taking office, the current Israeli government has decided to establish a total of 49 new settlements and begun the legalisation process for seven unauthorised outposts which will be recognised as “neighbourhoods” of existing settlements, according to Peace Now.
Last year, the UN’s top court issued an advisory opinion that said “Israel’s continued presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory is unlawful”. The International Court of Justice (ICJ) also said Israeli settlements “have been established and are being maintained in violation of international law”, and that Israel should “evacuate all settlers”.
Netanyahu said at the time that the court had made a “decision of lies” and insisted that “the Jewish people are not occupiers in their own land”.
New Banksy revealed but location remains a mystery
Banksy’s latest piece of grafitti art has been revealed to the world – but where it was painted remains a mystery for now.
Images posted on the elusive artist‘s Instagram depict a lighthouse stencilled on a drab, beige wall, along with the words: “I want to be what you saw in me”.
A false shadow appears to have been drawn on the pavement from a nearby bollard, giving the illusion that the lighthouse is itself a silhouette of the mundane street furniture.
But unlike a lighthouse, the post gives little away as to the artwork’s location. A second, wider shot showing two people walking their dogs offers little more.
Geoguessers on social media have speculated that the street art may lurk in Marseille, in the south of France, while others debate how to interpret the work’s meaning.
Another image of the art circulating online shows a blurred person riding a scooter in front of the piece, with a graffiti tag seemingly reading “Yaze” further along the wall.
The tag matches that used by a Canadian graffiti artist Marco The Polo, whose Instagram account features photos of his own work but who has called Banksy an inspiration.
Banksy has kept his true identity a secret throughout his career, and it is only through the Instagram account that works are identified as genuine.
Often imbuing his works with a political message, his previous pieces have alluded to immigration, the war in Ukraine and homelessness, among other things.
The meaning of some of his works, though, is less clear – such as his motivation behind the series of animals painted in various locations across London last summer.
Prior to the lighthouse, in December, Banksy posted another piece, depicting a Madonna and child with a fixture in the wall appearing like a bullet wound in her chest.
Trump commutes gang leader’s sentence in flurry of pardons
As part of a spree of more than two dozen clemency actions this week, US President Donald Trump on Wednesday commuted the federal prison sentence of Larry Hoover, the founder of a notorious Chicago street gang.
Hoover was the leader of the Gangster Disciples and in the 1990s was given six life sentences on conspiracy, extortion, drug and other criminal charges.
In addition to his federal sentence, Hoover still faces a 200-year jail term in the state of Illinois for murder, and is unlikely to be released soon. A president is unable to commute state-level sentences.
On Wednesday the president also granted a pardon to other convicts including Michael Grimm, a former New York City congressman.
He served seven months in prison after pleading guilty to felony tax fraud.
As well as Hoover and Grimm, at least eight others have been pardoned by the president in recent days; the New York Times reported that Trump issued a total of 25 pardons or commutations of prison sentences on Wednesday.
Department of Justice (DoJ) records indicate that during his second term Trump has pardoned more than 40 people, in addition to almost 1,600 pardons doled out to people charged or convicted in connection with the 6 January 2021 US Capitol riot.
During his first presidential term, Trump granted a total of 237 pardons and commutations, according to the Pew Research Center. Most of those occurred in the final month of his term.
- What is a presidential pardon?
Hoover, 74, built the Gangster Disciples into a nationwide street gang from its origins on Chicago’s South Side in the 1970s.
In 1973 he was convicted of ordering the execution of a rival drug dealer. Authorities allege that he continued to lead his gang from prison.
In the 1990s he formed a political organisation and claimed that he had transformed the Gangster Disciples into a community-service organisation called Growth and Development.
However, he was found guilty of a long list of federal charges in 1997.
In recent years he has advocated for criminal justice reform including the First Step Act, which Trump signed into law in 2018. Among other things, the law allows for reduced sentences for inmates who participate in programmes aimed at reducing reoffending.
Hoover has continued to publicly disavow gang life.
“I am no longer a member, leader, or even an elder statesman of the Gangster Disciples,” Hoover wrote in a letter to a court in 2022. “I want nothing to do with it now and forever.”
However, authorities have taken a different view, and prosecutors alleged in 2021 that he was still involved in promoting Gangster Disciples members while locked up in prison. They have argued that he is still effectively the leader of the group.
At a hearing last year, a judge asked one of Hoover’s lawyers: “How many other murders is he responsible for?”
After news broke of the commutation of his federal sentence, Hoover’s lawyer Justin Moore posted online: “We got Larry Hoover out of federal prison – when many said it was impossible… Illinois must send him home for good.”
Pardons for rapper and former politicians
Grimm, the former congressman, pleaded guilty to underreporting income from a restaurant that he owned.
In addition, Trump issued pardons on Wednesday for:
- Former Connecticut Governor John Rowland, who was convicted on election fraud charges and sentenced to two and a half years in prison in 2015
- Kentrell Gaulden, a rapper known as NBA YoungBoy, who has faced numerous drugs, weapons and fraud charges
- Convicted fraudster Kevin Eric Baisden
- Mark Bashaw, an army officer who was convicted in a court martial of violating Covid protection rules
- Tanner Mansell and John Moore, who were convicted of theft at sea when they released sharks they thought were being illegally fished. It turned out the sharks were being legally caught for research purposes
- Michael Harris, the co-founder of Death Row Records, who spent decades in prison on drug charges. Harris had his sentence commuted by Trump during his first term, and was issued a full pardon on Wednesday
On Tuesday, Trump also pardoned Todd and Julie Chrisley, two reality TV stars who were convicted of tax evasion and defrauding banks.
Also on Wednesday, Trump said he would “take a look at” pardoning a group of men charged with planning to kidnap Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer in 2020.
“I did watch the trial,” he said. “It looked to me like somewhat of a railroad job… It looked to me like some people said some stupid things.”
Glacier collapse buries most of Swiss village
The Swiss village of Blatten has been partially destroyed after a huge chunk of glacier crashed down into the valley.
Although the village had been evacuated some days ago because of fears the Birch glacier was disintegrating, one person has been reported missing, and many homes have been completely flattened.
Blatten’s mayor, Matthias Bellwald, said “the unimaginable has happened” but promised the village still had a future.
Local authorities have requested support from the Swiss army’s disaster relief unit and members of the Swiss government are on their way to the scene.
The disaster that has befallen Blatten is the worst nightmare for communities across the Alps.
The village’s 300 inhabitants had to leave their homes on 19 May after geologists monitoring the area warned that the glacier appeared unstable. Now many of them may never be able to return.
Appearing to fight back tears, Bellwald said: “We have lost our village, but not our heart. We will support each other and console each other. After a long night, it will be morning again.”
The Swiss government has already promised funding to make sure residents can stay, if not in the village itself, at least in the locality.
However, Raphaël Mayoraz, head of the regional office for Natural Hazards, warned that further evacuations in the areas close to Blatten might be necessary.
Climate change is causing the glaciers – frozen rivers of ice – to melt faster and faster, and the permafrost, often described as the glue that holds the high mountains together, is also thawing.
Drone footage showed a large section of the Birch glacier collapsing at about 15:30 (14:30 BST) on Wednesday. The avalanche of mud that swept over Blatten sounded like a deafening roar, as it swept down into the valley leaving an enormous cloud of dust.
Glaciologists monitoring the thaw have warned for years that some alpine towns and villages could be at risk, and Blatten is not even the first to be evacuated.
In eastern Switzerland, residents of the village of Brienz were evacuated two years ago because the mountainside above them was crumbling.
Since then, they have only been permitted to return for short periods.
In 2017, eight hikers were killed, and many homes destroyed, when the biggest landslide in over a century came down close to the village of Bondo.
The most recent report into the condition of Switzerland’s glaciers suggested they could all be gone within a century, if global temperatures could not be kept within a rise of 1.5C above pre-industrial levels, agreed ten years ago by almost 200 countries under the Paris climate accord.
Many climate scientists suggest that target has already been missed, meaning the glacier thaw will continue to accelerate, increasing the risk of flooding and landslides, and threatening more communities like Blatten.
Trial of Maradona’s medical team collapses
The trial of Diego Maradona’s medical staff has collapsed in Argentina after it was found that a judge involved in the case had taken part in a documentary about it.
The judge in charge of the proceedings said the trial, which began on 11 March and was expected to last until July, would have to start again.
Seven members of Maradona’s medical team were charged with negligent homicide relating to the former footballer’s death in 2020. They deny the allegations.
One of the three presiding judges, Julieta Makintach, stepped down this week.
Maradona, a former Napoli and Argentina midfielder, had been recovering at his home in Buenos Aires from brain surgery for a blood clot in November 2020 when he died of a heart attack, aged 60.
Among the medical team on trial are a neurosurgeon, a doctor and a night nurse. They claim the retired footballer refused further treatment and should have stayed at home for longer after his operation.
If convicted, they face between eight and 25 years in prison.
Earlier this week, Prosecutor Patricio Ferrari accused Makintach of behaving “like an actress and not a judge” after she took part in a documentary about the case.
As a trailer for the documentary series, called Divine Justice, was played in court, defence lawyer Rodolfo Baque shouted “trash!” at Makintach.
Maradona’s daughter Gianinna and his former partner Veronica Ojeda both cried after seeing the footage.
It is a violation of court rules for unauthorised filming to take place and the documentary was being filmed without the permission of the court.
Following criticism for taking part in the show, Makintach said she had “no choice” but to excuse herself from the case.
The trial was then adjourned pending the decision on Thursday, which ultimately was to declare a mistrial.
Since beginning, the trial had heard the testimony of almost 50 witnesses, including Maradona’s daughters.
The date for the new trial was not initially set and new judges were not nominated.
France to ban smoking on beaches, parks and near schools
France will ban smoking in all outdoor places that can be frequented by children, health and family minister Catherine Vautrin has said.
The ban will come into force on 1 July and will include beaches, parks, public gardens, outside schools, bus stops and sports venues.
“Tobacco must disappear where there are children,” Vautrin said in an interview published by Ouest-France daily.
Vautrin added that “the freedom to smoke must end where the freedom of children to breathe fresh air begins”.
The outdoor areas of cafes and bar – known as will be exempt from the ban, she said.
Vautrin explained that breaking the rules would incur a €135 (£113; $153) fine.
She said regular police would enforce the ban but also added that she was a great believer in the “self-regulation”.
Although electronic cigarettes are exempt, Vautrin said that she was working to introduce limits on the amounts of nicotine they contain.
According to the French Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction, 23.1% of the French population smokes on a daily basis – the lowest percentage ever recorded, and a fall of over five points since 2014.
France’s National Committee Against Smoking says more than 75,000 smokers die each year of tobacco-related illnesses – 13% of all deaths.
Smoking in establishments like restaurants and nightclubs has been banned in France since 2008.
Widespread measures to ban smoking on beaches, parks and other public places were meant to kick in in 2024, but the decree needed to was never adopted.
However, more than 1,500 municipalities have already voluntarily banned smoking in public places, and hundreds of beaches across France have been non-smoking for severeal years.
A recent report by France cancer association La Ligue Contre le Cancer shows almost 80% of French people are in favour of a ban on smoking in public places like woodland, beach, parks and .
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Published
AC Milan have sacked coach Sergio Conceicao after just six months in charge of the Serie A club.
Former manager Massimiliano Allegri – who spent four years in charge at San Siro between 2010 and 2014 – is reportedly set, external for a return.
Conceicao, 50, was handed the job last December after the the sacking of Paulo Fonseca and signed an 18-month deal.
He won won 11 trophies in six years at Porto and won the Italian Super Cup with Milan just a week after taking the job.
But they lost the Coppa Italia final to Bologna and their league form never really picked up.
Under Conceicao, they finished in eighth place – meaning no European football next season – while rivals Inter play Paris St-Germain in this weekend’s Champions League final.
Milan said:, external “The club would like to thank Sergio and his staff for their commitment, professionalism and dedication in leading the team in recent months.
“The Rossoneri family bids farewell to the coach who contributed to the conquest of the 50th trophy in Milan’s history, wishing him the best for his future.”
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England midfielder Ella Toone said she didn’t “actually grieve” after the death of her father until a period on the sidelines through injury forced her to get “mentally right”.
Nick Toone was diagnosed with prostate cancer the day after the Lionesses beat Germany to win Euro 2022, where his daughter scored the opening goal.
He passed away in September 2024, three days before his 60th birthday.
Manchester United’s Women’s Super League campaign got under way just two weeks later and Toone started every league game for them until suffering a calf injury in training in November.
Toone hadn’t scored in six games before her injury and in her own words had lost her love for the game.
“I had just lost my dad before the season started,” the 25-year-old told The Tooney & Russo Show.
“I played on after that and probably wasn’t enjoying it as much as I should have been. I would never have told myself that or admitted it because all I ever wanted to do was play football for him.
“When it actually got taken out of my hands it made me realise, ‘right, I do need this, I do need to step away from football and get myself mentally right more than anything’. I needed to have that love for the game again and miss it.”
Toone’s time away from the pitch allowed her to physically and mentally focus on herself.
She started speaking to a counsellor and spent time in Dubai with her partner Joe while undergoing rehab.
“At first I didn’t miss it,” she added. “I was doing my rehab, I was enjoying being in the gym and getting stronger. It was the best thing I could have done to get myself mentally right and actually grieve.
“I don’t think I grieved, I don’t think I thought that it was real.”
After nine weeks out, Toone was back with a bang.
She scored six goals in her first five games back for United, including a stunning hat-trick against rivals Manchester City.
“When I was back on the grass and around the girls I was like ‘I miss it’ and that’s when I knew I was ready to kick on,” Toone said.
“I came back and started playing well and scoring goals. Then my love for the game really grew and I wasn’t putting as much pressure on myself as I was before in wanting to do everything and wanting to score for dad, thinking I’m never going to score again.
“It was perfect timing and now it’s about not falling again. It’s hard in football because you are up and down all the time anyway.”
Toone is currently on international duty as England prepare to face Portugal and Spain in the Nations League.
Her former United team-mate, best friend and podcast partner Alessia Russo, who now plays for Arsenal, drove to Manchester when she heard of Nick’s passing.
“From living together to then being so far away down in London was hard anyway,” Russo said. “When something as heavy as that happens, all I wanted to do was be there.
“Whether she wanted me there or not I didn’t really care. I just wanted to be there, to sit with her, to cry with her, to eat with her, to try and make her laugh and to help with anything she needed.
“It’s so hard being away from someone at a time like that. As soon as I could I wanted to go and see her. I know Tooney would drop anything to help me if I needed her, big or small.”
Russo was one of a number of Toone’s team-mates from both club and country who rallied around her in the dark times.
“Everyone came together,” Toone added. “They have been amazing, my team-mates as well, just being normal, not pottering around me or not knowing what to say.
“When it was the funeral it was unbelievable to see the amount of people there. I had the girls coming up from London, I had Georgia [Stanway] flying over from Germany.
“I had all these people coming and I thought, ‘wow, I am so lucky to have these people’ or else what would I have done?”
A difficult season on and off the pitch for Toone ended with an impressive eight goals and four assists.
Each time she found the back of the net, she pointed to the sky to celebrate with her dad.
“It’s hard because everyone is sad that day and talks about memories and it’s done then for everyone. But for us it’s still so hard.
“I’ve been blessed with a lot of good people around me and definitely couldn’t have got through it without them. Now I just want to keep kicking on and doing things right and making him proud.”
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Injury was ‘blessing in disguise’, says Toone
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First one-day international, Edgbaston
England 400-8 (50 overs): Bethell 82 (53), Duckett 60 (48), Brook 58 (45), Root 57 (65); Seales 4-84
West Indies 162 (26.2 overs): Overton 3-22, Mahmood 3-32
Scorecard
England racked up 400 to begin Harry Brook’s reign as captain with a comprehensive 238-run defeat of West Indies in the first one-day international at Edgbaston.
Brook, Ben Duckett and Joe Root all posted half-centuries, but the most impressive contribution came from Jacob Bethell, who struck 82 from 53 balls.
England’s 400-8 after being asked to bat was the sixth time they have reached 400 in an ODI, their highest total in three years and best against a Test-playing nation since they won the World Cup in 2019.
West Indies were ordinary with the ball and would have conceded plenty more had they not taken three superb catches.
The chase was a non-event, the second half of the game little more than a procession after Saqib Mahmood ran through the West Indies top order for 3-32.
The highlight was Brydon Carse’s spectacular catch at deep square leg to hold West Indies captain Shai Hope off Mahmood. The tourists were hustled out for 162 in 26.2 overs.
The lack of spectacle will matter little to England, who were desperate for any sort of victory after a wretched 18 months in white-ball cricket.
This ended a seven-match losing streak in ODIs and the series can be sealed with victory in Cardiff on Sunday.
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Reborn in Birmingham once more
England have form for a white-ball rebirth in Birmingham. It was on this ground 10 years ago they responded to a dismal World Cup by making 400 for the first time against New Zealand, beginning the journey to glory in 2019.
It is much too early to suggest this England team are on the path to becoming world-beaters and this West Indies team are nowhere near the New Zealanders of 2015, yet it is still hugely encouraging for Brook’s tenure to begin with this kind of performance.
In lovely conditions for run-scoring, England found the batting tempo that has eluded them in recent one-dayers. It was a team effort, the first time in all ODIs each of the top seven have reached 35 and the highest total without an individual century.
West Indies were ragged. Their bowlers sprayed it and some of the field settings were baffling. At one stage an overthrow gave away five leg byes and even the numbers on the back of the tourists’ iconic maroon shirts and jumpers were a random mix of yellow and blue. Four byes from the final ball of the innings took England to 400.
England backed up their batting with disciplined bowling and excellent catching. Mahmood set the tone and the hosts were able to deal with an injury to Jamie Overton, who left the field with a dislocated finger, then returned to claim 3-22.
England eventually ended with their second-largest ODI victory in terms of runs, just behind a 242-run shellacking of Australia at Trent Bridge in 2018.
Bethell shines on homecoming
Bar someone going on to reach three figures and beyond, Brook could not have asked much more of his rejigged top seven.
Jamie Smith, dropped on one, was aggressive for 37 in his first innings as a one-day opener. Duckett, arguably the world’s premier all-format opener, made 60. Root was typically unfussy for his 57.
Brook set the example for England’s move through the gears. The captain had 13 from 19 balls, then flicked the switch with two sixes and ended with 58 off 45. Jos Buttler, freed of the captaincy, hinted at his old self with 37 off 32.
It was Bethell who stole the show. Despite not playing in the Test against Zimbabwe last week, the 21-year-old was still in the headlines. In his first international on his home ground, the boy born in Barbados climbed into the West Indies attack with Caribbean flair.
Bethell had only 11 from 19 balls when he was hit on the helmet by Alzarri Joseph. It jolted him into fast-handed pull shots and dreamy off-drives. Four of his sixes were swatted over the leg side, the other slapped over mid-off.
With Will Jacks clubbing 39, including 22 off one Matthew Forde over, England’s seventh-wicket pair added 98 from 44 balls. Bethell fell short of his first senior century. But when it comes, plenty more will follow.
Mahmood leads all-round England
Mahmood may have more than his two Test caps had he not been struck by serious back injuries in 2022 and 2023. He has rebuilt his career largely in white-ball cricket and, in his first home one-day international for four years, showed he can be a spearhead for the new-look England.
Pace bowling has been a problem area for England and they are missing a number of options through injuries. With Overton as the third seamer, they are arguably a bowler light in this side.
It mattered little with so many runs on the board and Mahmood tearing into the Windies’ batting.
Justin Greaves had already overturned being given caught behind off Mahmood when he popped the same bowler to mid-off. Carse, fit again after foot problems, had Brandon King caught behind with near-unplayable away nip.
After Overton’s injury, Mahmood switched ends to induce a miscue from Keacy Carty before Carse’s moment of magic. Hope hooked Mahmood, Carse misjudged, back-pedalled and stuck up a hand to produce a copy of Ben Stokes’s famous grab at The Oval during the 2019 World Cup.
Brook added to the smart catches, diving to his left to hold Jewel Andrew off Bethell. The captain pouched five in total, equalling a 32-year old record held by South Africa great Jonty Rhodes for the most by a fielder in a single ODI.
‘A pretty phenomenal performance’ – reaction
Player of the match, England batter Jacob Bethell: “It’s pretty special to play at Edgbaston for the first time for England and to top it off with a win and put in a good performance is special.
“I back myself that, when I’m in, I can hit a lot of balls to the boundary. Dot balls are not good for a batter’s mind. I try to hit strong shots and get singles early on.”
England captain Harry Brook: “That was a pretty phenomenal performance from the boys. Nice to get the series under way in good fashion.
“I’m not concerned [about no-one converting their runs into centuries]. We got 400 runs! That is something we can look at and we’ve been speaking about. Four of us got 50+ scores. If one of us kicks on, that’s a complete performance.”
West Indies captain Shai Hope: “We didn’t make the early inroads we were after. If you don’t you will always find yourself playing catch up.
“We pulled the game back quite nicely. We let it slip at the end. We have some work and assessing to do.”
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Published31 January
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Father-of-three charged over Liverpool parade crash
A father-of-three and former Royal Marine has been charged following the Liverpool parade crash in which 79 people were injured.
Paul Doyle, 53, from Burghill Road in West Derby, was arrested on Monday, when a car ploughed into fans attending Liverpool’s Premier League victory celebration, Merseyside Police confirmed.
A nine-year-old was among those injured when the car Mr Doyle is alleged to have been driving crashed into supporters at 18:00 BST on Water Street.
The local businessman faces multiple counts of causing, and attempting to cause unlawful and malicious grievous bodily harm with intent as well as one of dangerous driving and two counts of unlawful and malicious wounding with intent.
Assistant Chief Constable Jenny Sims, of Merseyside Police, told a news conference seven people remain in hospital after the incident.
Mr Doyle is set to appear at Liverpool Magistrates’ Court on Friday.
The BBC has spoken to the suspect’s neighbours, who said they were shocked and in “disbelief”.
They said that Burghill Road was swarming with police in the hours after the crash.
One said: “I came out late on Monday night and there’s police everywhere. Looking around all the houses, so I had a thought – imagine if it was him?”
Assistant Chief Constable Jenny Sims said detectives were reviewing a “huge volume” of CCTV and mobile phone footage.
Sarah Hammond, Chief Crown Prosecutor for Crown Prosecution Service in the Mersey-Cheshire region, said this included footage from CCTV, mobile phones, businesses and dashcams, along with witness statements.
She said the charges “will be kept under review” while the investigation progresses.
“It is important to ensure every victim gets the justice they deserve,” she added.
Mr Doyle has been charged with seven offences, which can be broken down into four groups.
The first includes two counts of wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm (GBH) – one of these is an alleged offence against one child.
The second is two counts of causing unlawful and malicious GBH with intent to cause grievous bodily harm.
According to the Sentencing Council, it relates to the nature of the injury allegedly caused.
GBH does not require an open wound to have been suffered. Wounding requires the victim’s skin to have been broken.
Mr Doyle also faces two charges of attempted unlawful and malicious GBH with intent to cause GBH, and again one of these alleged offences relates to a child.
The final count is dangerous driving.
Police confirmed the ages of those injured in the incident ranged from nine to 78.
Assistant Chief Constable Sims, said she understood many have questions about the incident, and detectives were “working tirelessly, with diligence and professionalism, to seek the answer to all of those questions”.
“When we are able to, we will provide further information,” she added.
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Published
Indian Premier League, New Chandigarh
Punjab Kings 101 (14.1 overs): S Sharma 3-17, Hazlewood 3-21
Royal Challengers Bengaluru 106-2 (10 overs): Salt 56 (27)
Scorecard
Royal Challengers Bengaluru are one match from a first Indian Premier League title after sealing a place in the final with an eight-wicket thrashing of Punjab Kings.
Kings batted dismally and were bowled out for 101 in 14.1 overs, with RCB chasing down their low target with half the innings to spare.
Spinner Suyash Sharma and seamer Josh Hazlewood took three wickets apiece, while opener Phil Salt struck an unbeaten 56 from 27 deliveries as RCB recorded the biggest win by balls remaining in the history of the IPL play-offs.
RCB will now progress directly to Tuesday’s final, their first since 2016, while Kings will play the winners of Friday’s match between Gujarat Titans and Mumbai Indians, with the victors taking the other place in the title decider.
Kings finished top of the regular season table, ahead of RCB on net run-rate, and went into bat after losing the toss in New Chandigarh.
They immediately found themselves in trouble, slipping to 38-4 inside the powerplay.
Marcus Stoinis top-scored with 26 from number six as Kings continued to steadily lose wickets, with opener Prabhsimran Singh and tail-ender Azmatullah (both 18) the only other batters to make it out of single figures.
Kings had defended 111 at this ground in April, but a repeat performance seemed like a tall order.
Kyle Jamieson had Virat Kohli caught behind for 12 in the fourth over, but from there England international Salt anchored a simple chase.
He struck six fours and three sixes in his innings, reaching 50 from 23 balls for his fastest half-century in the IPL.
However, it was Rajat Patidar who closed out the match in style, clearing the ropes from the final delivery of Musheer Khan’s 10th over to wrap up a gigantic victory.
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IPL play-offs – schedule & how to follow on the BBC
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Published31 January
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