NT police will not lay charges against officers over Kumanjayi Whiteâs death while being restrained at Coles
Police commissioner acknowledges outcome causes âsignificant distressâ for 24-year-old Warlpiri manâs family and wider communityWarning: This article contains references to Indigenous Australians who have diedNorthern Territory police will not lay any charges against officers after an Indigenous man died while being restrained in an Alice Springs supermarket in 2025.Kumanjayi White, a 24âyearâold Warlpiri man who lived with cognitive disabilities, died on 27 May last year during a confrontation with police in a Coles supermarket. Continue reading...
Sources & Citations
1 sourceMore Stories
Iran-U.S. talks regain momentum amid oil pressure and economic strain
⢠Diplomacy between Tehran and Washington has accelerated after weeks of escalation, with regional mediators helping drive a new round of Iran-U.S. talks. ⢠The reporting says the confrontation follows more than six weeks of disruption tied to Iranâs pressure on shipping through the Strait of Hormuz and a U.S.-enforced naval blockade.
Read original ¡ iranintl.comCSIS previews Trump-Xi summit as Taiwan and arms sales loom large
⢠The Center for Strategic and International Studies hosted a press briefing previewing the upcoming summit between President Trump and Xi Jinping, with Taiwan expected to be a central issue. ⢠CSIS said Xi highlighted Taiwan as the most important issue in U.S.-China relations during a February 2026 phone call and urged Washington not to provide arms to Taiwan.
Read original ¡ csis.org
CSISMother of boy who may have died in TikTok challenge urges No 10 to ban social media
Ellen Roome, whose son, Jools Sweeney, was 14 when he died, wants a ban put in place for under-16sThe mother of a teenager who believes he died in a TikTok challenge gone wrong has said that Downing Street has been too slow to move towards a social media ban for under-16s, and accused the government of âkicking it down the roadâ.Ellen Roome, the mother of Jools Sweeney, 14, is among the families who will meet Keir Starmer on Tuesday as a consultation into the social media ban closes this week. Continue reading...
Read original ¡ theguardian.comWes Streeting says Starmer âbehind the curveâ on under-16s social media ban â UK politics live
Former health secretary says he unsuccessfully argued for tougher action when in cabinetGood morning. The government has been consulting on whether to follow Australia and impose a ban on social media for under-16s, or whether to opt for other restrictions, and the consultation ends at 11.59pm tonight. Keir Starmer is expected to announce the governmentâs response soon afterwards. He has already said that there will be action of some sort. Last year ministers were sceptical about following the Australian example, but this is an issue where opinion â both in government, and in society more broadly â has been shifting very quickly.This morning Wes Streeting, the former health secretary who is running what is in effect a leadership campaign, has intervened. As the Guardian reports, he has said that a social media ban for under-16s âmust be the start, not the endâ and he has compared the sector to the tobacco industry.Streeting restated his claim that social media is like the tobacco industry and suggested that, just as tobacco bosses did in the mid-20th century, social media executives have been suppressing evidence about the full extent of the harm caused by their products. He said:What weâve seen from Big Tech is behaviour akin to Big Tobacco ⌠We know from whistleblowers that in the tech industry, among those who are responsible for designing technology, including social media platforms, that are changing every aspect of our lives, they know that the product theyâre designing is addictive, they know that it is harmful, and the business model is orientated towards getting kids while theyâre young, addicting them with the design features that are designed for addiction, to grab your attention and keep you on their platform for as long as possible.He said there was a âgrowing body of evidenceâ about the ways in which social media is harmful.And then we see the consequences beginning to emerge through the growing body of evidence about the impact of this technology on childhood, whether that is sleep, concentration, learning, health, wellbeing, including mental health.The harms are evident.He claimed governmments around the world had been âasleep at the wheelâ on this issue. âFrankly, legislators, regulators, have been asleep at the wheel on this,â he said.He suggested that Keir Starmer had been âbehind the curveâ on this issue. While he was not overly criticial of the PM on this issue, suggesting that governments around the world have been slow to confront social media companies on this issue, he made it clear that he thought the Starmer government could have acted more quickly. He said that he was speaking out now because he was âliberated from the obligations of collective responsibilityâ. He said the arguments he was making in public today were the ones he was making privately in government, âin a number of cabinet committees and meetingsâ, and that he âpushed as hard as I couldâ. He said the government was now moving to a âbetter positionâ, but he suggested Starmer could have acted more quickly.To be fair to Liz Kendall, the science and technology secretary, she came into office [in September last year], sheâs gripped this, sheâs chosen to run a rapid consultation with the principle of how to implement restrictions, rather than whether. Thatâs all positive. And I trust Liz Kendall to act quickly following the closure of the consultation today.And we must, because, as I say, weâre behind the curve. Continue reading...
Read original ¡ theguardian.comNext boss warns over âdramatic fallâ in UK entry-level jobs
Peerâs comments come as Milburn report is likely to find government has failed to tackle youth unemploymentBusiness live â latest updatesThe boss of Next has sounded the alarm about a âdramatic fallâ in the number of entry-level jobs in the UK and its impact on youth unemployment, saying the retailer now receives twice as many applicants for each role than two years ago.Lord Wolfson said the clothing and homeware chain, where he has been chief executive since 2001, typically received 10 applications for every job in its shops in 2024 but that number has now risen to 19. Continue reading...
Read original ¡ theguardian.comHeavy rain and storms expected in Australiaâs south-east as severe weather warning issued for Tasmania
Bureau of Meteorology says thunderstorms could bring widespread rainfalls and flash flooding while there are âsigns of El NiĂąo developmentâFollow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastSevere thunderstorms could bring heavy rainfall and flash flooding to eastern and south-eastern Australia in coming days, according to the weather bureau.On Tuesday afternoon, the Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) said a low-pressure system over South Australia combined with moisture being pushed down the eastern seaboard from the tropics, would bring widespread rainfalls. Continue reading...
Read original ¡ theguardian.comRubio repeats call that Ukraine war âneeds to endâ after call with Russiaâs Lavrov â Europe live
US secretary of state appears to downplay warnings from Russian counterpart to move diplomats out of KyivUS secretary of state Marco Rubio said that the war in Ukraine âneeds to come to an end,â after his conversation with his Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov.Responding to the strikes on Kyiv over the weekend and repeated warnings about more attacks planned in the coming days, Rubio said:âLook, every time you see these big strikes from one side or the other, itâs a reminder of why this is a terrible war thatâs now gone on longer than the second world war, and it needs to come to an end.ââThey sent a notice to all the embassies, and I think he was just calling me personally to tell me â they told all the embassies to â Kyivâs going to be a very dangerous place â Kyivâs been a very dangerous place now for a number of years.ââLook, the danger in all of these wars as they continue and then they go on is that they always have the threat of escalation, of spreading into something new.â Continue reading...
Read original ¡ theguardian.comGreen party announce new candidate for Makerfield byelection
Sarah Wakefield, a councillor on Manchester city council, will stand for the party after its initial candidate withdrewThe Greens have announced their new candidate in the Makerfield byelection.Sarah Wakefield, a councillor on Manchester city council, will stand for the party after its initial candidate withdrew from the race. Continue reading...
Read original ¡ theguardian.comUK experiences âtropical nightâ after hottest ever May day
Temperatures did not fall below 21.3C on Monday night at Kenley airfield in south LondonThe UK experienced a âtropical nightâ on Monday as the record for highest daily minimum temperature in May was broken for the second consecutive day.Temperatures did not fall below 21.3C on Monday at Kenley airfield in south London after the UK recorded its hottest May day since Met Office data began, the forecaster said. Continue reading...
Read original ¡ theguardian.comMillions of salmon deaths at Scottish farms disclosed after watchdogâs ruling
Animal and Plant Health Agency forced to release reports showing scale and cause of deaths on some fish farmsMillions of fish deaths caused by accidental poisoning and suffocation on Scottish salmon farms have been revealed after the inspection agency was forced to share its reports.The UK governmentâs Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA) had refused to release inspection reports, claiming it would cause âsignificant detrimentâ to companies, including to their reputations. Continue reading...
Read original ¡ theguardian.comGroup of 19 women and children linked to Islamic State due to arrive in Australia
Cohort of 12 children and seven women who were held in a Syrian camp expected to fly into Sydney and Melbourne on TuesdayFollow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastA group of 19 Australian women and held in Syria since the defeat of Islamic State will return to Melbourne and Sydney on Tuesday afternoon, bringing an end to seven years of detention while thrusting themselves into a heated political debate about their future.The cohort of 12 children and seven women left a Syrian detention camp last week before boarding flights home. Most either left Australia more than a decade ago, or were born in Syria or Iraq after their parents travelled to the so-called caliphate. Continue reading...
Read original ¡ theguardian.com