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France deploys 70,000 security personnel across country for Bastille Day, World Cup semifinal events – Europe live

in Madrid The brother of Spain’s prime minister has been banned from holding public office for nine years after being found guilty of administrative misconduct relating to his hiring by a socialist-led council in the south-western region of Extremadura nine years ago. Corruption allegations involving Pedro Sánchez’s family, his government and his Spanish Socialist Workers’ party (PSOE) have triggered repeated opposition calls for a snap general election. All the accused have denied wrongdoing. David Sánchez, a composer and orchestra conductor, was one of 11 people who went on trial in May accused of influence peddling and misuse of office. The case originated with a complaint brought by Manos Limpias (Clean Hands), a self-styled trade union with far-right links that has a long history of using the courts to pursue those it deems to pose a threat to Spain’s democratic interests. According to the complaint, David Sánchez was handed a bespoke job as coordinator of public music schools by the socialist-led council of the south-western province of Badajoz in July 2017, when his brother was the national leader of the PSOE but not yet prime minister. Sánchez, who had denied the charges, was found guilty of administrative misconduct but cleared of influence peddling by a court in Badajoz on Tuesday.

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Church of England votes against plan to rewild 30% of its land by 2030

The Church of England has voted against plans to restore 30% of its land for nature, with campaigners criticising its failure to show moral leadership. The C of E owns about 425,000 hectares (105,000 acres) of land, making it one of England’s biggest landowners. Currently just 3.5% of its land is used for nature restoration. The Rev Canon Val Plumb, an area dean in Oxford, introduced a private motion to the General Synod calling for it to rewild 30% of its land by 2030. The UK, along with more than 100 other countries, has made an international commitment to restore 30% of its land for nature by 2030, a target which is considered the minimum needed to halt and reverse the global decline in nature. Plumb’s motion was blocked on Tuesday, with the church’s national assembly instead passing a separate amendment that does not include any measurable rewilding targets. This amendment, which was put forward by the Right Rev Graham Usher, the lead bishop for the environment, lists six steps that will be taken as an alternative to committing to the “30by30” target. This includes “where appropriate, continue to support nature restoration projects” and “engage and collaborate with tenants about sustainable farming”. In the run-up to the vote, William Nye, the secretary general of the archbishops’ council, said Plumb’s motion was inconsistent with the church’s legal obligations and responsibility to ensure “long-term capital growth”. Claire Rogers, a campaigner at Wild Card, a citizens’ movement campaigning for the UK’s biggest landowners to rewild their land, said the church had missed an opportunity to show moral leadership by failing to support the 30by30 motion. “At a time when wildlife is collapsing in our countryside, we need much greater action than has been committed to today. Over 190 countries, including our own, committed to 30by30 for a reason – they can’t all be wrong,” she said. Other large landowners have set measurable targets to protect nature. For example, the crown estate has committed to manage 36% of its land for nature by 2030. On Monday the government published its strategy to reach its own 30by30 target. The plan was condemned as “pathetic” and “completely insufficient” in the face of the spiralling environmental crisis. Currently just 7% of land in England meets the 30by30 criteria. The Church commissioners said they welcomed the amended motion that was passed and were “pleased that Synod has embraced a collaborative approach that balances further support for nature with our legal and fiduciary obligations. “Because around 90% of our farmland portfolio is productive or highly productive agricultural land, our focus lies on integrating nature recovery into working landscapes, supporting food production, and fostering the resilience of rural UK businesses.”

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Explosions heard across Iran, state media reports, after UAE oil tankers hit in Hormuz strait – Middle East crisis live

Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, has said Isreal will strike powerfully against Iran if Tehran carried out an attack on his country. “I will say it to the leaders of Iran: Do not count on things remaining quiet if you attack us,” Netanyahu said at a conference. “The days are over when someone strikes us and we don’t hit back with a decisive blow.”

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Spanish PM’s brother banned from public office after misconduct trial

The brother of Spain’s prime minister has been banned from holding public office for nine years after being found guilty of administrative misconduct relating to his hiring by a socialist-led council in the south-western region of Extremadura nine years ago. Corruption allegations involving Pedro Sánchez’s family, his government and his Spanish Socialist Workers’ party (PSOE) have triggered repeated opposition calls for a snap general election. All the accused have denied wrongdoing. David Sánchez, a composer and orchestra conductor, was one of 11 people who went on trial in May accused of influence peddling and misuse of office. The case originated with a complaint brought by Manos Limpias (Clean Hands), a self-styled trade union with far-right links that has a long history of using the courts to pursue those it deems to pose a threat to Spain’s democratic interests. According to the complaint, David Sánchez was handed a bespoke job as coordinator of public music schools by the socialist-led council of the south-western province of Badajoz in July 2017, when his brother was the national leader of the PSOE but not yet prime minister. Sánchez, who had denied the charges, was found guilty of administrative misconduct but cleared of influence peddling by a court in Badajoz on Tuesday. In its ruling, the court said the creation of the job to which he had been appointed had not been “necessary or urgent”, adding that it had been developed “in the particular interest of its assignee and not in the general interest”. But it also ruled that it had not been proved that “anyone had exerted pressure or influence … [nor that] anyone had taken advantage of the exercise of the powers of a position or any other situation derived from a personal or hierarchical relationship”. Had Sánchez been found guilty of influence peddling, he could have faced a three-year prison sentence. Nine of his co-defendants were also found guilty of administrative misconduct and handed nine-year bans from public office, while Miguel Ángel Gallardo, the PSOE’s former leader in Extremadura, was banned from holding public office for 18 years after being found guilty of two counts of misconduct. The verdicts can be appealed. Pedro Sánchez has previously accused his political and media enemies of launching a “harassment and bullying operation” against his family. His wife, Begoña Gómez, has been accused of using her influence as the wife of the prime minister to secure and manage a post at Madrid’s Complutense University, and of using public resources and personal connections to further her private interests. She faces trial after a judge charged her with embezzlement, influence peddling, corruption in business dealings and misappropriation of funds at the end of a two-year investigation. The prime minister has maintained that his wife and brother are the victims of politically motivated smear campaigns, and has said: “The truth will come out in the end. My brother and my wife are innocent.” He has also openly questioned the independence of some members of Spain’s judiciary. “There’s no doubt that there are judges doing politics and there are politicians trying to do justice,” he said in a TV interview last September. Alberto Núñez Feijóo, the leader of Spain’s conservative People’s party (PP), said it was the third case in which a member of the prime minister’s circle had been convicted. In November last year, Spain’s attorney general, Álvaro García Ortiz, was banned from his post for two years after being found guilty of leaking confidential information about a tax case involving a businessman who is the boyfriend of a prominent rightwing politician. At the end of June, the former PSOE transport minister José Luis Ábalos was jailed for 24 years for taking bribes on public contracts for sanitary equipment such as ‌face masks during the Covid pandemic. “It speaks well of our rule of law that no one is above the law, no matter which family they belong to,” said Feijóo. “That should comfort Spaniards.” Santiago Abascal, the leader of the far-right Vox party, greeted news of David Sánchez’s conviction by once again labelling the PSOE a “mafia”. The government’s outspoken transport minister, Óscar Puente, hit back, suggesting the socialists’ opponents were using the courts to achieve what they could not manage in polling stations. “The period will be studied in history books as a time when the seams of our most important institutions were strained with the sole purpose of bringing down a government because some people couldn’t do it at the ballot box,” he said. The government’s spokesperson, Elma Saiz, told reporters that the Sánchez administration believed that justice would eventually be done. “We trust in justice and think that David Sánchez’s innocence – in which we believe – will be established by higher courts,” she told reporters on Tuesday.

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Iran targets Bahrain and Jordan in retaliation as US strikes continue

The US launched strikes on Iran for a third day and Iran retaliated with strikes on US allies and tankers, hours after Donald Trump said the US would take control of the strait of Hormuz and charge a toll to ships for safe passage. The US military said its five-hour operation early on Tuesday hit targets across Iran, including in the port cities of Bushehr and Bandar Abbas. It shared videos of strikes that it said were meant to “degrade Iran’s ability to attack commercial shipping”. More explosions were heard around noon on Tuesday west of Bandar Abbas, as well as in Bushehr and Choghadak, according to Iranian state TV, though no party had yet claimed responsibility. Iran targeted Bahrain, which houses the US Navy’s fifth fleet; Jordan, which hosts US air force assets; and two tankers associated with the United Arab Emirates in the strait of Hormuz. Bahrain said it had intercepted several of the attacks and accused Iran of targeting civilians, after explosions were heard in its capital, Manama. Jordan said it intercepted four missiles from Iran. The attacks threaten a return to all-out war and are a significant block to efforts to reopen the strait of Hormuz. Iran in effect closed the strait during the four-month war with the US, and the US imposed a naval blockade of Iranian ships in response. A memorandum of understanding (MoU) between the two countries was supposed to reopen the strait but flares in violence and breakdowns in negotiations have hindered free navigation in the waterway. On Monday, Trump said the US would control the strait and charge ships up to a 20% toll for safe passage, a reversal of the previous US position that no country was allowed to charge tolls through the international waterway under the rules of freedom of navigation. The US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, had strongly objected to Iran’s plan to impose fees. The two countries are now almost halfway through the 60-day period set out by the MoU that was supposed to give room for negotiations to reach a final truce. The sides have made little progress on key matters such as the strait, Iran’s disputed nuclear programme and regional issues. The US has threatened to reopen the strait by force, which analysts have said would require a military campaign involving tens of thousands of US troops. US attacks on Iran have killed at least 28 people since last week, according to a tally by Agence France-Presse. The Indian foreign ministry said it was lodging a strong protest with Iran and summoned its deputy ambassador after one Indian seafarer was killed and 10 other Indians were seriously wounded by Iranian attacks on two tankers. The UAE threatened to retaliate against Iran for the attacks. Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) claimed the attack, saying the vessels “ignored repeated warnings”. Iran called on Jordan to disband US bases in the kingdom. Addressing Jordan, the IRGC said in a statement: “Not only do we not have any enmity with your country, but we also love you.” The EU’s Aviation Safety Agency issued a warning for airlines on Tuesday, telling them to avoid flying over the airspace of Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, the UAE and above the Gulf of Oman. It said “unpredictable military developments” created a risk to civil flights. The US threat to impose tolls on ships transiting the strait, which Trump described as a protection fee, risks upsetting global norms on shipping and hundreds of years of US support for freedom of navigation. Trump suggested the US would charge ships 20% of the value of their cargo to help cover “any and all costs necessary to do to the job of providing safety and security”. Iran has insisted the US will have no role in the strait. Its foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, said Tehran would be the guardian of the strait “for ever”. On Trump’s threat, Araghchi said on X: “20% is of course too much. We will be fair.” The price of crude oil rose to a four-week high of more than $86 a barrel on Tuesday but prices are still below their peak during the war, when they hit nearly $120 a barrel. Lebanese and Israeli delegations were due to meet in Rome on Tuesday to continue US-mediated negotiations. Lebanon is seeking an Israeli withdrawal from the more than 600 sq km of the country that it occupies, though hopes for a swift withdrawal were low. Last month Lebanon and Israel announced they had reached a “framework agreement” under which Israeli troops would withdraw from “pilot areas” in south Lebanon. The Lebanese army would then enter those areas, with the promise that they would prevent Hezbollah from returning and continue to dismantle the armed group’s infrastructure there. Israel’s foreign minister, Gideon Saar, told reporters in Tel Aviv on Tuesday that it was ready to move forward in implementing two pilot zones, and that the framework agreement was “the only way forward”. The office of the Lebanese president, Joseph Aoun, said in a statement on Monday that he had tasked the Lebanese delegation to demand the immediate start of Israeli withdrawal from the two pilot zones before any other discussions were held. A US military delegation was in Lebanon over the weekend to discuss the pilot zone plan in detail, according to Reuters. The negotiations are between the Lebanese government and Israel. Hezbollah is not a party to the talks. Hezbollah has repeatedly called on the government to stop the talks, framing the direct negotiations as a surrender. It is unclear how agreements from the talks would be implemented on the ground without Hezbollah’s cooperation.

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British man, 86, injured during running of the bulls festival in Pamplona

An 86-year-old British man is among 57 people injured while taking part in the running of the bulls festival in the northern Spanish city of Pamplona. The man, from Halesowen in the West Midlands, was taken to hospital on Tuesday – the last morning of the eight-day annual event – after suffering injuries to his right hand, left elbow and right eyebrow. A spokesperson for the festival said the man, who has not been named, was being assessed by doctors but not thought to be badly hurt. The annual festival, which draws participants from all over the world, offers humans a chance to test their mettle by racing through the narrow streets of Pamplona ahead of a pack of bulls. Each run, or encierro, begins at 8am when participants dressed in white with red neckerchiefs sprint ahead of six bulls over the 848.6-metre course that leads from a holding pen to the city’s bullring. Two Spaniards were gored on the final day of the festival, which is known in Spain as Sanfermines after Saint Fermin, the co-patron saint of the Navarra region where the festivities take place. An 18-year-old local man was gored in the left thigh, while a 46-year-old man from Guadalajara in central Spain suffered a horn to the chest. Neither was gravely hurt. While trampling injuries and gorings are more common, at least 16 deaths have occurred during runs over the past 116 years. The last person to die at the festival was Daniel Jimeno Romero, a 27-old participant from Alcalá de Henares, near Madrid, who was fatally gored in the neck and lung in 2009. The festival was immortalised in Ernest Hemingway’s 1926 novel The Sun Also Rises, which tells the story of a boozy bunch of American and British expats who come to Pamplona for the festival and think it fine and beautiful and good.

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Bangkok bar fire: death toll reaches 30 as police say negligence is ‘primary theory’

The Bangkok pub that became the scene of the city’s deadliest blaze in 17 years has said it will cooperate with an investigation into alleged negligence, as the death toll rose to 30. The local district office said on Tuesday that three more people had died after the devastating fire that broke out in the early hours of Monday. An initial assessment by disaster officials found an electrical short ‌circuit in an air conditioner located in the ‌ceiling had caused the fire. Authorities have confirmed the identities of 27 victims, with three yet to be identified. Most are believed to be Thai nationals. Of the injured, 24 are in a critical condition, 15 have moderate injuries, and 36 sustained minor injuries and have returned home. The national police chief, Kitrat Phanphet, told reporters on Monday: “At this time, police have established negligence as the primary theory guiding their investigation.” In a statement released on Monday evening on social media, the Rong Beer Na Ladprao pub offered its “deepest apologies for this tragic incident” and extended its condolences to the families of the deceased. The pub, located in the city’s north, also pledged its full support to the investigation and “transparent fact-finding process”, as officials have flagged inquiries into whether exits were accessible. Most of the victims were found trapped in windowless bathrooms near one of the rear exits, Kitrat said. That exit was not used, and people may have been blocked from reaching it by a table set up to sell candy, or because it was too dark to find the way out, he said. Access to another exit near the kitchen might also have been narrowed by shelving units and lockers, according to the police chief who visited the scene on Monday. There were signs that at least some of the exit doors might have been locked, he added. In a video shared by the office of the prime minister, Anutin Charnvirakul, during an inspection of the scene, the leader was told a door that was once an exit was bolted, with the proprietor afraid that customers would slip out without paying their bills. The door had a sign that said “staff only” and could open to the outside, but an official told Anutin customers would not have been aware. “If they had run this ⁠way, it would have been fine,” Anutin responded. Investigators were also assessing the ceiling above a performance stage, Kitrat said. Police will examine whether flammable materials were used in decorative elements and how electrical wiring was installed across the ceiling. Video posted on social media showed people fleeing as flames shot out of the single-storey building and black smoke billowed into the sky. Those who managed to escape through the front doors ran through the flames, sustaining life-altering injuries. The boyfriend of a 31-year-old woman who ran out of the building while on fire told the local outlet Khaosod that bystanders helped her extinguish the flames. When they were reunited, he said she told him: “I can’t take it any more. I’m in so much pain. Am I still beautiful?” The injured have been taken to 17 different hospitals across the city in order to coordinate the necessary specialised care and ICU treatment required for victims suffering from burn injuries and smoke inhalation. At Rajavithi hospital, a spokesperson said most of the 11 patients had sustained burn injuries, with four men and two women in a critical condition requiring close medical supervision. Many who survived unscathed only did so by luck, such as Kaewudon Pongpanee, 24, a pub employee who had been using a bathroom outside when the fire began. He saw people running away from the flames and began shouting for his brother but “the heat was unbearable, I couldn’t get back in”, he said. His younger brother Pongpaset Pongpanee, also a worker at the pub, was inside at the time. The brothers were migrant workers from neighbouring Laos. Pongpanee came to the police hospital morgue on Monday in order to identify the body of his brother. “I want to bring him home to my parents. My parents are waiting for their kids to come back together, but now one is gone,” he said. Outside the cordoned-off pub on Tuesday, the acrid smell of smoke had diminished, replaced by the scent of white chrysanthemums and garlands of marigolds, some bearing notes to the deceased. Spiritual offerings of cake, rice and soda had also been placed at the site. Those who knew the victims came throughout the day, as did strangers paying their respects, such as Ratchada Tangprasert, who said a silent prayer before leaving a floral garland. Tangprasert, who lives around the corner from the pub, said she felt heartsick imagining the last moments of the victims. “I don’t know anyone but I feel so sad.” She said she hoped it would be a lesson for the Thai government and the country as a whole about improving safety. Another woman came with her mother and brothers to remember her relative Saengdao Senaphak, who had died. She said they placed offerings “to call the spirits of the deceased back home”. With Associated Press and Reuters