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US strikes on Iran reportedly hit airport and bridges – Middle East crisis live

The Iranian health ministry said 38 people have been killed in Iran in recent US attacks, with more than 400 others injured. Reporting the figures on X, Hossein Kermanpour, head of public relations for Iran’s ministry of health, said 22 women and nine children were among the injured. Iran’s state-run IRNA news agency reported that last night’s US strikes on infrastructure killed eight people and wounded 20 others. IRNA’s report says six bridges were targeted in the southern province of Hormozgan, which borders the strait of Hormuz. The interim ceasefire that was agreed last month fell apart on 8 July, with both sides engaged in back-and-forth attacks as they battle for control of the strait of Hormuz, which remains effectively shut to shipping traffic.

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Friday briefing: ​Is violence against politicians reshaping democracy in the UK?

Good morning. When Andy Burnham returned to Westminster as an MP last month after a decade away, what shocked him – some of his colleagues have said – was the security. In recent years, particularly since the 2017 Houses of Parliament terrorist attack in which five people were killed, security around Westminster has visibly tightened, with armed police patrolling the estate, and vehicle barriers and heavy exterior fencing erected. Meanwhile, violence, abuse and intimidation towards MPs, their staff, families and many others in public life is growing exponentially: rape and death threats are counted in their hundreds and, with increasing regularity, politicians face offline aggression. It is little wonder that the killing of Reform UK spokesperson and former Conservative MP Ann Widdecombe at her home in Devon last week has resonated so strongly with those in public life. For today’s newsletter, I spoke to Dr Hannah Phillips from the Jo Cox Foundation, about why our response must extend beyond physical security if we are to change this toxic culture. But first the headlines. Five big stories Gaza | The Gaza recovery plan being pursued by Donald Trump’s Board of Peace (BoP) has shrunk dramatically to a small pilot project in the south of the strip. UK politics | Sadiq Khan has been given a peerage by Keir Starmer just days before the prime minister stands down. US news | Donald Trump accused China of interfering with the 2020 election in a primetime televised address, which opponents warned was a smokescreen for him to meddle in the forthcoming congressional midterms. Middle East | American forces boarded a ship in the Gulf of Oman on Thursday as part of the renewed blockade of Iran’s ports that began earlier this week, the US military said. UK news | Labour’s foreign aid cuts mean reductions of as much as 90% in the bilateral support the UK will give to some African countries, Foreign Office figures show. In depth: ‘We are doing a job supporting people who are targets’ When the news alert came through to his phone saying Ann Widdecombe’s death was being investigated by counter-terror police, long-serving Commons staffer Tom Fairweather commenced a sadly familiar routine. “You see the news something has happened again. I check in with my team and make sure that they’re OK. You can’t help dwell on the fact that we are doing a job supporting people who are targets.” As the office manager for an Essex-based MP, Fairweather often sat in meetings with Sir David Amess, the MP for Southend West, who was murdered by Islamic State sympathiser, Ali Harbi Ali, in 2021. And as co-convener of the cross-party Wellness Working Group for Commons staff, he has witnessed the development of Operation Bridger, the police protective security programme for MPs and their staff that expanded in 2016 after the murder of Labour MP, Jo Cox, who was killed by the far-right extremist Thomas Mair weeks before the Brexit referendum. Commons speaker, Lindsay Hoyle, has said that MPs’ safety “keeps me awake at night”. Fairweather believes security provision for members and staff has greatly improved in recent years, with dedicated police contacts and support, monitoring for online threats to life, constituency offices undergoing expert security reviews and having panic buttons installed in workplaces and homes. But he stresses the extent of the challenge. Parliament is “a very atypical environment – effectively 650 microbusinesses with a satellite office in every constituency in the country. It’s a nightmare for the security teams.” Phillips characterises the situation thus: “More and more people in public life, MPs, councillors, staff, even families of politicians, activists, are saying experiencing some form of violence, abuse or intimidation is expected. And that normalisation is something we’re really concerned about.” *** The reality Evidence of the worsening threat level is all around us. A substantial report from the Electoral Commission on the 2024 general election found that over a quarter of candidates had experienced harassment, intimidation or abuse at least four times, with women and those from ethnic minority backgrounds more likely to report serious abuse. MPs receive so many rape and death threats they have to remind themselves not to be blase, Labour MP Jess Phillips told the Guardian earlier this week, while former Conservative MP Dame Penny Mordaunt, who lost her seat in 2024, revealed that since then: “I haven’t had a day when I haven’t had a live police investigation [into rape or death threats] or court case going on”. On Wednesday, a man was arrested over an alleged threat to shoot the Reform UK leader, Nigel Farage, who has estimated he receives 300 threats every month. And increasingly, the threat is moving offline. MPs’ staff describe “horrendous” in-person threats of violence, being doxed and followed as well as what a recent staff welfare report described as a rising number of “mentally and emotionally unstable constituents” who require sensitive management. In recent years, tensions over Labour’s stance of Gaza led to angry protests outside constituency offices and vandalism, climate activists and anti-abortion protesters targeted MPs’ family homes, while two Russian-linked arsonists attacked property connected to Keir Starmer. *** The impact More evidence is emerging that all this is having an effect on the way people are participating in politics, says Phillips, who has worked at the Jo Cox Foundation for three years. When a tranche of women MSPs stepped down from Holyrood at May’s Scottish parliament election, many referenced on and offline harassment as part of their rationale for not seeking reelection; Phillips says elected politicians are self-censoring, not having as many in-person meetings nor engaging with members of the public online. The Electoral Commission research also discovered that some candidates didn’t participate in hustings because they were fearful of abuse. “That seems to have been a change in recent years,” says Phillips, whereby candidates modify their behaviour not through direct experience but expectation. “That’s really concerning for our democracy.” Then there’s the pipeline effect: in 2023, Girl Guiding UK revealed that more than a third of girls are deterred from specific careers, including politics, because of the abuse meted out to high-profile women. *** The solutions Andy Burnham has said a serious review is needed into MP security following Widdecombe’s death, and improvements are ongoing: Operation Ford is a new scheme extending Bridger-style resources nationwide to local politicians and candidates. Other parliaments across the UK have also increased their provision. The Scottish parliament has offered an online threat monitoring service for all MSPs since 2024, removing the burden from individual offices and providing early notice to police. Jess Phillips told the Guardian that the threat to MPs must be tackled at source, amidst an ongoing refusal by social media platforms to take responsibility for what’s published on their platforms: “Everybody who’s ever attacked me has read a load of untrue stuff online that they had been fed by their algorithm.” And the Jo Cox Foundation is supporting a campaign for an elections code of practice aimed at social media companies, with a particular emphasis on risk assessments around the spreading of disinformation. “But in order to address this complex problem, we need broader political and societal change,” says Hannah Phillips. And this is the Jo Cox Foundation’s primary purpose: connecting across difference, improving community cohesion and generating more respectful politics. Research they commissioned for the tenth anniversary of Cox’s death found that, while many of us feel that our communities have become more divided and that our ties to our neighbours have weakened, a third remain committed to improving those connections. *** The community The barriers to improved connection that the study identified are worth digesting: those who are financially comfortable feel more connected to their community; younger people said anxiety, lack of confidence and digital fatigue stopped them reaching out; older generations were more likely to build on “micro-moments’ of connection – a chat with a neighbour or giving directions to a stranger. The research also discovered that people who feel well connected to their local community are the most likely to report having meaningful interaction with people of different political viewpoints. And that challenge is met at grassroots level by the kind of community-building facilitated by the Jo Cox Foundation along with other groups like Who is Your Neighbour? and Hope Unlimited that were generously supported by Guardian readers in last year’s Christmas appeal. We reported on the Salaam Shalom kitchen, a joint Muslim-Jewish venture in Nottingham that tackles interfaith bigotry at the “chop and chat” table, Back on the Map’s work to revitalise a Sunderland neighbourhood after far-right riots in 2024, and The Linking Network’s programme uniting Bradford primary schoolchildren from different faiths and backgrounds. “Social connection is not just nice to have”, Phillips tells me, “it’s a bedrock of safe, resilient, cohesive society.” We want to hear from you What would you do if you were in Andy Burnham’s cabinet? We’d like to hear from readers with experience of the NHS, education, defence and so forth about what you think new ministers should prioritise. To get in touch hit reply or email first.edition@theguardian.com What else we’ve been enjoying From lewd propositions to drunken brawls, cabin crew face it all (and worse) at 30,000 feet. Zoe Williams hears some horror stories from the sky – and now I’m planning a staycation. Michael Chris Nolan’s film adaptation of The Odyssey promises to be inescapable this summer, so I appreciated this – very smart – idiot’s guide to reading Homer’s classic – which was likely not even written by Homer, it transpires. Libby I couldn’t tell you the first thing about how Dungeons and Dragons works, but reading how players of the (magic?) table top game raised over $5m for progressive causes has piqued my interest. Michael World Cup 2026 Argentina | The Guardian’s rugby union correspondent Robert Kitson writes after watching England’s semi-final defeat in Buenos Aires, surrounded by celebrating fans. “Tell them you’re Scottish,” was one friend’s advice. Climate crisis | Guardian analysis has found one in five World Cup games reached heat levels a players’ union has said should trigger delays or postponements. Golden boot | Ahead of this Sunday’s final (and Saturday’s England v France “bronze” playoff), bookmark the Guardian’s Golden Boot tracker to see if it’s Messi, Mbappé – or even Bellingham or Kane – who top the list of competition goal-scorers. Sport Golf | Once-talkative Bryson DeChambeau had little to say except to respond to Nick Faldo’s ‘zero strategy’ jibe as Jackson Suber set the pace at the 154th Open Championship. Cycling | Soudal-Quick-Step rider Tim Merlier pipped Olav Kooij and Jasper Philipsen on the line but further back, Tadej Pogacar safely retained the yellow jersey. Cricket | Joe Root steered England to a four-wicket victory in Cardiff with an unbeaten 99, sharing a 72-run stand with Will Jacks, to level the ODI series with India. Something for the weekend Our critics’ roundup of the best things to watch, read, play and listen to right now Film The Odyssey | ★★★★★ Christopher Nolan reinvents the Homeric legend as a colossal origin-myth story of postwar disillusion, an epic ordeal of anguish witnessed by the dead and presided over by capricious deities who participate on almost equal terms with the humans. It speaks to the generational pain of PTSD. The invisible odyssey of anguish is punctuated by flashback episodes, hallucinations, confrontations with the arbitrary gods of dysfunction. And all the time the spouses and children cannot move on with their lives. This is a film with thrilling ambition, boldness, seriousness, generosity and flair. It has gasp-inducing, Imax-sized landscapes of loneliness – and full-tilt battle sequences and fight scenes accompanied by the throbbing and thrumming of drums. Peter Bradshaw TV Evolution | ★★★★★ With this new, five-part BBC nature documentary, the presenter Chris Packham is effectively crowned the successor to David Attenborough. Packham has all the great man’s passion for his subject and the willingness and ability to share his knowledge as accessibly as possible. He treads the line between assuming nothing and not infantilising his audience as nimbly as Attenborough does. Evolution takes one animal an episode and delves into a particular aspect of it and the evolutionary journey it represents. And Packham is never afraid to express a sense of wonder at the miraculous-seeming nature of it all. Lucy Mangan Games D-topia | ★★★☆☆ In the far future, on a planet that is not Earth, AI is in charge. Manifesting most visibly as cute droids, the technology is pervasive, and the so-called Optimization System has but one responsibility: ensuring the greatest happiness for the greatest number of people. In less skilled hands this game might have felt like an undergraduate seminar on the limits of utilitarianism. But Japanese studio Marumittu Games elegantly marries its philosophical concerns with smart design choices. You play as a young, unnamed Facilitator tasked with tending to both the city’s bots and its human residents. Nothing is too taxing, but there’s enough to keep you engaged. This is a deceptively simple game, artfully told. Lewis Gordon Books Up All Night by Imogen Willetts In this fabulous alternative history of the modern world, the academic and “party historian” Imogen Willetts looks at the last 500 years of civilisation through the sometimes blurry lenses of its after-dark scenes, with fascinating results. She begins by trying to capture what it feels like to go on a big night out, focusing on a phenomenon that, in 1912, the sociologist Émile Durkheim labelled “collective effervescence”. In one passage, she explains this by referencing dancing as part of ancient tribal hunting rituals, listening to Charli xcx’s 365, or singing along to Sweet Caroline with tens of thousands of other people in a stadium. This is no dry academic study, and its mix of historical research, critical theory and conversational references to pop culture makes for a bright and compelling read. Rebecca Nicholson The front pages “Trump’s Board of Peace drops ambitious plan to rebuild Gaza”, is the Guardian’s front page today. On UK politics, the Times has “Burnham set for left-wing revolt over Mahmood”, the Telegraph says “IMF issues spending warning to Burnham”, and the i Paper writes “Andy Burnham prime minister in 72 hours”. The Mail runs with “Foreign aid farce over Rochdale grooming gang boss”. Elsewhere, the FT splashes “China start-up Moonshot set to cut US lead in frontier AI”. On the World Cup, the Mirror calls Argentina’s flag-waving a “Final insult”, the Express says “It’s a ‘childish and petulant’ insult to UK”, the Sun goes with “Only 693 till the Euros” and Metro’s take is “It’s getting very Messi”. The Latest What went wrong for England in World Cup clash against Argentina? England have again suffered World Cup heartache, conceding two late goals that gave Argentina a dramatic 2-1 comeback win and a place in the final against Spain on Sunday. Many have blamed manager Thomas Tuchel’s substitution decisions for the defeat. So did his tactics ultimately backfire? Annie Kelly speaks to sports columnist, Jonathan Liew. Cartoon of the day | Ben Jennings The Upside A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad A sauna might not be top of anyone’s agenda in London right now, given the interminable heatwave that the climate crisis has wrought upon the capital city, but the work of R-Urban Poplar raises a sweat without destroying the planet. The world’s first “community powered” sauna, it uses the food waste from the local housing estate in Tower Hamlets, to power the hot room. Food waste from the Teviot estate is processed in a local scale anaerobic digester to produce methane gas and power the sauna. “Nine years ago, the site was an unused car park and empty garages,” writes our reporter, Damien Gayle. “Now, butterflies flutter around leaves and flowers in raised, no-dig beds.” Elle McAll from the Women’s Environmental Network, which has helped fund R-Urban, says: “The whole thing really has been about how can we reimagine our local food system so it really does genuinely benefit local communities.” Sign up here for a weekly roundup of The Upside, sent to you every Sunday Bored at work? And finally, the Guardian’s puzzles are here to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow. Quick crossword Cryptic crossword Wordiply

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EU border chaos feared at Dover crossing as busiest summer weekend looms

The start of the peak summer season is set to bring millions of drivers on to British roads, with concerns of traffic chaos as the port of Dover faces its biggest test yet of new EU border controls. The semi-functioning entry-exit system (EES) is credited, along with the heatwaves and fears about flights after the war in Iran, with helping push British domestic holidays to its highest levels since Covid halted international travel. Motoring organisations expect this Friday to kick-off the busiest summer weekend for domestic leisure trips. The port of Dover is bracing for long tailbacks as thousands of holidaymakers join lorries at Britain’s main Channel ferry crossing from 6am. French border police, situated at Dover, will manually register non-EU travellers for EES. The new £40m automated facility built to speed through passengers is unable to operate due to software problems in the technology in France. Even though the French police aux frontières (PAF) will not be able to carry out the biometric registration required by EES – photographing and fingerprinting – the additional time needed to create a file for each visitor could still lead to long queues at the border, the port fears. About 7,500 cars travelling to France are expected at Dover on Friday, and 10,000 on Saturday, as peak summer season begins. The port has urged holidaymakers to use only main roads when driving to the port, and arrive no more than two hours before their booked sailing. Eurotunnel, operator of LeShuttle, which takes vehicles through the Channel tunnel, said that it did not anticipate delays as summer traffic built up. As at Dover, border police will still not be registering biometric information from its car passengers for EES this summer. Eurotunnel has likewise spent millions of pounds on automated processing kiosks which cannot yet be brought into service. Elsewhere, the RAC and Inrix expect the worst of the traffic on Friday in areas of the M25 around Greater London linking to the M3 to the southwest, as more than 14 million drivers make a getaway this weekend. With most schools in England and Wales closing this weekend for the summer, most leisure journeys will take place on Saturday, the RAC said, as part of the biggest domestic getaway since 2022. Spokesperson Harriet Hernando said: “The great British summer staycation is about to get off to a flying start, with many opting to stay in the UK instead of travelling abroad. This could be down to people having more confidence in the weather, as well as concerns over cancelled flights, higher air fares and EU border delays, which are no fun with a family in tow.” But she warned that the June heatwave had seen a spike in breakdowns and urged drivers to be prepared for what the RAC called a “Saturday summer scramble”, adding: “People should prepare for delays and getting stuck in a jam in potentially very hot weather.” The AA meanwhile said its surveys showed about one in five drivers would be setting off on a leisure journey of 100 miles or more in the next week, the busiest week of the summer for road trips, with more potentially drawn to the coast if hot weather persists. London Heathrow airport said this weekend would see the start of its peak summer season, with Friday likely to be the busiest day. Travel association Abta expects the main getaway for Britons going abroad to follow next weekend. Passengers flying into the Schengen area of 29 EU countries will undertake EES formalities at the airport on landing and departure. Europe’s biggest carrier, Ryanair, warned again this week that UK passengers could be “the testing ground for unfinished border infrastructure”, and told customers to prepare for long possible queues. It identified a number of popular holiday airports including Lisbon, Tenerife South, Alicante, Malaga and Milan Bergamo as “recurring hotspots” for EES-related delays.

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As the UK and Europe battle deadly wildfires, what lessons can Australia offer?

The violent hot red flames of deadly wildfires across the UK and Europe and scenes of panicked communities fleeing homes could not, at least geographically, be further away for Jan Harris. But sitting in her new home at Reedy Swamp in rural New South Wales in Australia, the 67-year-old has found herself in tears. “It is so heartbreaking for people,” she says. “They have such a hard road in front of them.” For someone who lost her home to a wildfire, she knows this as well as anyone. In the UK, experts have this week described the worst outbreak of wildfires ever recorded in the country. In north Wales, residents had to be evacuated from their homes. Wildfires have swept through parts of Spain, Portugal and France. About 4o miles outside Paris, about 900 homes were evacuated as firefighters battled a blaze of “exceptional” scale in a Unesco-listed forest. Arson is suspected. In Spain’s Andalucía fires, seven Britons were among the 13 dead. Major fires are burning in the US and Canada and, like in Europe, they coincide with extreme heatwaves. It’s a picture becoming all too familiar as the climate crisis extends and worsens fire seasons around the planet. Prepare before the fire arrives Harris can recall tiny details from Sunday 18 March 2018: how the clock on the TV news showed 12.34pm, the “unbelievable winds” and how her husband, John, not usually a man to insist on anything, said “we’re getting in the car … we just have to go babe” as a wall of flames and smoke charged towards their house. It was 38C (100F) that day. The Harris home wasn’t assessed for its ability to withstand fire, but they had done the usual things to prepare for fire. Gutters were cleared of debris so flying embers were less likely to start fires on the roof; firefighting hoses were checked and working; an extra water tank was full and ready. But the speed of the fire’s approach dismissed any thoughts of defending their home. “It went from just a whiff of smoke to a wall in less than two minutes,” she says. In hindsight, she says she should have had all of life’s important documents – birth and marriage certificates and passports – in one place. After deciding to leave, Harris only dashed into one room of the house, the kitchen, and only to get her diabetic son Evan’s insulin supply. Jan, John and Evan drove across a four-wheel drive track to the safety of a pub in town. “We could see this chimney of black smoke. That was our house,” she says. The house, and everything in it, was lost, as were 64 other homes and buildings later that day. Two years later, while living in a rental property nearby, the Harrises evacuated twice during what became known as the black summer fires that claimed 33 lives, more than 3,000 homes and burned an area almost twice the size of England. Almost 3 billion native animals were killed or displaced. Bushfires have always been a part of the Australian landscape. Aboriginal Australians used fire for thousands of years to manage the landscape. Living with the threat of wildfires is routine, especially for people in rural areas. Permanent road signs show that day’s fire risk, households have “bushfire survival plans” and public radio broadcasts alerts. In the months before fire seasons, there are reminders to clear gutters of debris, prune overhanging branches, clear the space around the home of anything flammable and to check there’s a reliable water supply if the home has to be defended. “Australia has some of the most bushfire-prone land in the world,” says Ben Shepherd, a superintendent at Fire and Rescue New South Wales. “We have always pushed the view that this is about shared responsibilities. The public has to understand the risk and what they can do to alleviate it.” That means, Shepherd said, preparing bushfire plans and discussing with the household at what stage will they decide to leave. Daily bushfire warnings range from “no rating” to “catastrophic” – on those days, fire services say people should leave the area, preferably the night before. Australia’s expertise and experience in bushfires has meant its fire services have in recent years regularly shared personnel and equipment with the United States and Canada, and vice versa. One of Australia’s large air tankers has been on the US west coast helping fight fires in recent weeks, and will be followed by almost 70 personnel next week. “Around the world we are seeing conditions we haven’t seen before,” says Shepherd. “The more we all learn from each other, the better it is for us all around the globe.” ‘This has been predicted for decades’ Greg Mullins has been a firefighter for almost 40 years and spent 14 years as the commissioner of Fire and Rescue New South Wales. He has been speaking on and off to European fire chiefs for more than two decades about the rising risk of wildfires and is “not surprised” at the scenes from the UK and Europe. In 2004, he spoke to a fire science conference in Dublin about the need “for fire services in Europe to gear up for bushfires because of the impacts of climate change”. “I was a bit of a lone voice at the time,” he says. “But everything was drying out. This is what has been predicted for decades. Heatwaves are priming the landscape for fire. “Where they were used to seeing fires on the heathlands, they were starting to get forest fires. But all the equipment was aimed at fighting fires in structures.” Fighting a fire in a forest or on hills is different to fighting a fire in an urban setting. A fire in a building will typically have a road for the fire truck and “there will be ready access to water”, Mullins says. “On the moors and in a forest, that’s not the case. In a town, you know where the fire is – it’s at number 16 – but it can take hours to find a fire in a forest and by then it can be out of control.” Routines and conventions learned over a century or more in Australia are being tested by hotter and more frequent fires. Climate change has lengthened Australia’s fire season and has already seen an increase in the number of days where the risk of fire is high. It’s a familiar narrative around the world. Dr Grant Williamson, a wildfire expert at the University of Tasmania, says there is “strong evidence that fire weather is increasing, globally, under human-driven climate change”. “Fires are and will continue to burn hotter and this effect is particularly pronounced in temperate and Mediterranean climate zones,” he says. “In terms of disastrous wildfires, fire disaster risk is greatest in affluent, heavily populated areas that include the western US, Australia and Mediterranean Europe, with a particularly sharp increase in the occurrence and impact of disasters after 2015 – 43% of the 200 most damaging wildfires occurred in the last decade.” ‘Another 10 minutes and we wouldn’t be alive’ Back in Reedy Swamp, the Harrises rebuilt on their plot of land with their insurance money. Unlike their last home, this one is bushfire rated. There is 50 metres of cleared area all around; there’s an extra water tank; no wood on the exterior of the home; gutters with guards to stop debris buildup; a firefighting pump and a wide passing area on their 500 metre drive. “I would just leave though,” says Harris. “If we’d stayed another 10 minutes last time, we wouldn’t be alive.” Harris has her own advice for people being threatened, perhaps for the first time, by wildfires. “We often don’t spend enough time just sitting with what’s happened,” she says. “It’s frightening and it’s heartbreaking. Yes it was financially difficult for us but we could navigate through that, but at huge emotional cost. “If there’s psychological help, I would say take it. People say what you have lost are just things and that’s true – but they were my things. “When an authority asks you to evacuate then, if we choose not to, are we then asking them to come and save us? That’s a really big ask. “As much as I am mournful for what we have lost, I am pretty happy to be here.”

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‘Even Politburo members can be touched’: what the latest purge says about Xi Jinping’s China

On Tuesday, China expelled Ma Xingrui, one of the ruling party’s most senior officials, making him the third politburo member to be purged since 2022 as Xi Jinping deepens his years-long anti-corruption campaign. Ma, a former Communist party secretary for China’s north-western region of Xinjiang, was accused of corruption, abuse of power and trading political favours for sex. The announcement came after Ma was placed under investigation in April for suspected “serious violations of discipline and the law”. He has not responded to the claims against him and has not been seen since the announcement. It is notable that Ma is the first civilian official in the elite political body to fall in this latest purge. Zhang Youxia, who was expelled in January, and He Weidong, who was removed in October last year, were both military officials. “This is the only civilian [within the politburo] that’s been purged,” said Joseph Torigian, an associate professor at American University and a historian of Chinese elite politics. “I certainly haven’t seen something like that since the purge of the Gang of Four.” Torigian was referring to a 1976 incident in which four politburo members were arrested after the death of Mao Zedong. They were later accused of attempting to seize power, marking one of the most significant reshuffles of the top leadership of the Chinese Communist party (CCP) in its history. “One of the signals [of what] Xi Jinping is hoping to get out of this purge is that even politburo members, no matter who you are, can be touched by this kind of crackdown,” Torigian said. China’s Central Commission for Discipline Inspection accused Ma of seeking benefits for others in official appointments, improperly accepting gifts and bribes, helping relatives and associates profit from his position, and presiding over what it described as “family corruption”. Christopher Nye, a non-resident fellow at the Jamestown Foundation, said the official announcement about Ma contained very little of the politically charged language that is usually seen, such as “two-faced person”, “inflated political ambition” or “disloyalty”. Yet Ma was still removed from office. “This suggests that Xi Jinping’s political tolerance has diminished. In the past, it seemed that you had to be seen as opposing Xi before the leadership would use the judicial system to remove you. Now, even without any obvious signs of political opposition, corruption allegations alone appear to be enough to justify such severe punishment,” Nye said. The announcement alleged Ma’s behaviour was “extremely serious” and accused him of failing to “restrain himself” after the CCP’s 18th National Congress in 2012. Experts said the reference was notable because it explicitly tied Ma’s alleged misconduct to the period when Xi was leader. “Before that, Xi wasn’t interested. But anything that happened after that can now become grounds for a purge,” Nye said. Ma, 67, was once one of the country’s most promising political figures, rising through the ranks after establishing himself as an aerospace engineer and technocrat. Once the youngest doctoral supervisor at the Harbin Institute of Technology, he spent more than a decade at the state-owned China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation, where he oversaw major satellite launches and led key programmes including China’s crewed spaceflight and lunar exploration projects. It earned him the nickname “the young marshal of the aerospace industry”. His political career accelerated in 2013, the year Xi Jinping took office. He was transferred to Guangdong, a province closely associated with the political legacy of Xi’s father, serving as deputy provincial party secretary and later governor of the province. In 2021, Ma was appointed Communist party secretary of Xinjiang, where Beijing has been accused of arbitrarily detaining more than a million Uyghurs and other Muslim minorities in “re-education” camps. During his tenure, Ma publicly maintained a hardline stance on security and “counter-terrorism”, demonstrating to Xi that he could manage one of China’s most politically sensitive regions. Xi’s purge may not end with Ma. Several officials who previously worked under him have also come under scrutiny. Last year, Zhang Jianhua, a former subordinate from the State Administration of Science, Technology and Industry for National Defence, was investigated and expelled from the Communist party for corruption charges. In March, Guo Yonghang, who worked under Ma during his time in Shenzhen, was also expelled from the party. Additional research by Yu-chen Li

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Political crisis and protests in Ukraine as Zelenskyy defends sacking defence minister

Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, has defended his decision to dismiss the country’s popular defence minister, Mykhailo Fedorov, and confirmed reports that relations had broken down between the ministry and the country’s top army leadership. Speaking at a press conference in Kyiv with the British prime minister, Keir Starmer, Zelenskyy said there had been a “challenging dialogue” between Fedorov – widely seen as a reformist and moderniser – and the military’s commander in chief, Col Gen Oleksandr Syrskyi. “I would very much like to see unity. The sides have not found it. And the problem lies not only with the sides, but with me as well,” Zelenskyy said. “But things are as they are. And in such a situation, you have a choice: either one side or the other.” He has appointed the acting head of Ukraine’s security service, Yevhenii Khmara, as acting defence minister and asked parliament to approve him in the position. Zelenskyy’s decision to back Syrskyi has outraged civil society and dismayed Ukraine’s foreign partners. More than 1,000 protesters gathered outside the presidential office in Kyiv on Thursday, carrying placards in support of Fedorov. One read: “For what?”. Another said: “Is your head screwed on?” There were loud chants of “Syrskyi out”. It was only the second time since Vladimir Putin’s 2022 invasion that large numbers of people have taken to the streets in anti-government protests. A year ago, Zelenskyy’s decision – later reversed – to close two anti-corruption agencies provoked a similar backlash. The growing domestic political crisis overshadowed Starmer’s farewell visit to Kyiv, ahead of his departure on Monday from Downing Street. The two leaders laid wreaths at the Wall of Remembrance before holding one-on-one talks in the garden of the presidential palace, sitting together in a shady corner. At a joint press conference, Zelenskyy awarded Starmer the Order of Freedom, Ukraine’s highest foreign honour. Starmer, who appeared to be close to tears, gave Zelenskyy a framed Ukrainian flag that had hung above Downing Street in February 2022 as Russian tanks rolled towards Kyiv. Starmer said he would soon depart the political stage but “the support of the United Kingdom for this course will never change”. He added: “It is in our bones. The flags are flying in churches and town halls across the country, as they have throughout the duration of this conflict. Your fight is our fight.” The UK prime minister said Ukrainian drone strikes on long-range targets inside Russia had shifted the war’s momentum. Putin was “losing”, he said. He described the more optimistic mood in Ukraine over the last six or seven months as significant. “It’s down to hard work, guts, resolve and courage,” he said. Zelenskyy praised Starmer for leading the coalition of the willing, alongside France, and thanked ordinary Britons for their backing. Asked if the frequent turnover of British prime ministers was a problem for Ukraine, Zelenskyy said “strong relations” with the UK would continue. Without mentioning Andy Burnham by name, he said he hoped to meet Starmer’s successor “as soon as possible”. Starmer and Zelenskyy then embraced warmly, patting each other on the arm, and walked back into the neoclassical, turquoise-painted palace for an official lunch. Meanwhile, Fedorov addressed his own press conference, accusing Ukraine’s top brass of obstructing reforms and using Soviet-style methods. He said decisions on which military brigades to support – including with drones – were made on the basis of “loyalty” rather than data. “It’s impossible to develop the system on this basis,” he said. He said Ukraine’s general staff had opposed his plans to create centres of excellence and change the army’s organisational structure. Instead, it had blocked initiatives and engaged in “bureaucratic wrangling”. Fedorov said he had proposed replacing Syrskyi – a suggestion that appears to have led to his own dismissal on Wednesday. “This sort of culture needs to be eradicated, because otherwise we won’t be able to defeat an enemy whose system is plagued by the very same issues,” he said. “We have no other choice if we want to defeat Russia asymmetrically, with minimal losses.” Fedorov said he had turned down an offer from Zelenskyy to stay on as a government adviser. On Wednesday, Ukraine’s parliament accepted the resignation of the prime minister, Yulia Svyrydenko, after Zelenskyy said his government needed a reboot. Her replacement is likely to be Serhiy Koretskyi, the head of the energy company Naftogaz. Fedorov’s scathing comments suggest the political row over the president’s reshuffle is likely to grow. Fedorov paid tribute to Syrskyi for thwarting Russia’s plans to seize Kyiv. But he said the commander in chief refused to talk openly about disagreements. Instead, he “weaved intrigues” which “divide the country”. During Fedorov’s six months in office, Ukraine’s battlefield position dramatically improved. Kyiv has repeatedly pummelled Russian oil refineries, embarrassing the Kremlin and creating nationwide fuel shortages. It has also destroyed important land and sea routes, hitting tankers and ferries, as part of a strategy to isolate occupied Crimea. Demonstrators who had gathered outside Kyiv’s Ivan Franko theatre speculated that the charismatic and digitally savvy Fedorov, 35, was removed because he was seen as a future presidential rival. In 2024, Zelenskyy dismissed the popular head of the army, Gen Valerii Zaluzhnyi, and exiled him to London as Ukraine’s ambassador. One protester, Andrii Dligach, said Fedorov stood for a new kind of politics based on openness, transparency and modernisation. He said: “Syrskyi is an old-fashioned general. Some of the people around him are allegedly corrupt and have their own drone projects. The problem is that Zelenskyy opposes anybody who shows political ambition.” Dligach added: “Only a few people can influence the president’s thinking. Most are against Fedorov. They prefer an old-fashioned management style, similar to the one in Russia, with a tsar.”

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Iran reports fresh strikes near Qeshm Island and accuses US over ‘barbaric’ hospital attack – as it happened

We’re pausing our live coverage now, here is a summary of the day’s main developments: Iranian news agencies have reported that the United States has launched strikes around Iran’s Gulf island of Qeshm near the strait of Hormuz, as renewed hostilities flared between Washington and Tehran. Fars news agency reported an “American missile strike in the vicinity of Qeshm”, citing local authorities, while Tasnim news agency said one of its correspondents reported locations around Qeshm “were struck by projectiles from the American enemy”. Iran has accused the US of launching a “barbaric attack” near a children’s cancer hospital in Ahvaz south-west of the country. The Iranian foreign ministry spokesperson, Esmail Baghaei, said the hospital was forced to evacuate, causing “severe suffering and anxiety” for the children being treated there. The Kuwaiti army said it was responding to renewed drone attacks from Iran after facing strikes overnight. “Kuwaiti air defences are currently engaging hostile drone attacks following the Iranian aggression,” the army said in a statement. Yemen’s Houthi leader ⁠Abdul Malik al-Houthi said on Thursday ⁠that ⁠all Saudi oil and other vital facilities ⁠would be targets for the group’s ⁠missiles and drones if Riyadh ‌involved itself ‌in what he ‌described as “comprehensive aggression” against Yemen and moved toward escalation. The Houthis fired missiles at ‌Saudi Arabia after they accused the kingdom of bombing an airport under their control on Monday, ⁠breaking a four-year truce in the conflict between the two sides. AFP and Reuters have reported a drone struck a ship located off the port in Iraq’s southern province of Basra. Citing oil and security sources, the news agencies said the ship, which was “carrying American-branded cars”, had arrived from the UAE today and was hit near an oil terminal. Crude oil ⁠loading has been suspended at all Iraqi terminals ⁠as a result of the incident. The Gaza recovery plan being pursued by Donald Trump’s Board of Peace (BoP) has shrunk dramatically from an ambitious blueprint for the reconstruction of the whole territory to a small pilot project in the south of the strip. Even the envisaged pilot scheme – involving a temporary camp for a tiny fraction of Gaza’s 2 million displaced people, with a Palestinian administration, police and a small international security force – is not expected to take shape before the end of the year. Iraqi prime minister Ali al-Zaidi has ordered an inquiry into a foiled attempt to smuggle weapons to Hezbollah in Lebanon via its border. Iraqi authorities will “coordinate” with Syria on the matter, the Iraqi government’s security media cell said in a statement, after its neighbour said it had seized a shipment that included missiles at the border. Oil prices are up by about 1% amid growing US-Iran tensions over the strait of Hormuz and other key shipping channels in the Gulf. Brent crude, the international benchmark for oil prices, is up by 1% to $85.85 a barrel. The Lebanese foreign minister, Youssef Raggi, said Lebanon has made a decision to “end Hezbollah’s military presence” and that decisions on war and foreign policy are the “exclusive prerogative of the Lebanese state”. The Lebanese government is pushing to disarm Hezbollah, one of the most heavily armed militias in the Middle East, and it has become a central component of the US-brokered talks between Lebanon and Israel. Reuters has reported that Benjamin Netanyahu will not travel to the US next ⁠week because the ‌funeral ‌of Republican Senator Lindsey Graham has been ‌postponed until the end of the month, the Israeli prime minister’s office said. Earlier Israeli reports suggested Netanyahu had been set to fly to Washington on Saturday to attend memorial events for Graham, who died on Saturday, and potentially meet Donald Trump. India’s government has ordered shipowners not to deploy Indian crew members on vessels that require passing through the strait of Hormuz as violence escalates in the Middle East. “No deployment of Indian seafarers on vessels undertaking voyages ⁠involving passage through the strait of Hormuz until further orders,” India’s directorate general ‌of shipping said ‌in an order issued last night. Iran’s army spokesperson Mohammad Akraminia said Tehran did not want to confront its regional neighbours, despite an earlier statement by another military official threatening to “crush” infrastructure across the Middle East. “Iran has no conflict with the neighbouring and Islamic countries of the region and has always emphasised the development of cooperation and brotherly relations with the countries of the region,” he said, according to Iran’s semi-official Fars news agency. Pakistan has called on the US and Iran to end the violence and resume negotiations as stipulated in the memorandum of understanding (MoU) signed in June with Islamabad’s mediation. “While the implementation of the MoU is facing challenges, Pakistan will continue to encourage all sides to end the violence and resume technical level talks in accordance with the MoU,” Tahir Andrabi, spokesperson for the Pakistani foreign ministry, said at a press briefing today.

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Tell us: have you been affected by the spread of wildfire smoke in the US and Canada?

The smoke from more than 100 active wildfires northern Ontario has spread to cities across the north-east US, including New York. Environment Canada issued health warnings on Wednesday after the sky over Toronto turned yellow with smoke and was ranked the worst in the world, according to IQAir. We would like to hear about the impact of the smoke spreading in the US and Canada. How have you been affected? Do you have any concerns? If you’re having trouble using the form click here. Read terms of service here and privacy policy here.