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Latvia prime minister resigns days after ‘stray’ drone incursion – Europe live

Slovakia has joined Hungary in condemning the Russian air attacks on the neighbouring region. Slovak foreign minister Juraj Blanár said in a post on Facebook that the strikes undermine prospects for ending the Russian aggression on Ukraine and “limit the space for peace dialogue.” Similarly to the Hungarian authorities, the Slovak stresses that the Zakarpattia region is home to many ethnic Slovaks. The political criticism comes a day after the intensity of the attacks prompted the Slovak authorities to temporarily close its border crossings with Ukraine (Europe live yesterday).

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Benjamin Netanyahu says he made secret trip to UAE at height of Iran war

Benjamin Netanyahu has claimed he made a secret trip to the United Arab Emirates at the height of the Iran war to meet the president, Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan. “This visit has led to a historic breakthrough in relations between Israel and the UAE,” the Israeli prime minister’s office said on Wednesday night. The two leaders met for several hours in Al Ain, an oasis city by the Oman border, on 26 March, Reuters reported. A source told the news agency that the Mossad director, David Barnea, made at least two visits to the UAE during the war with Iran to coordinate military actions. The intelligence chief’s visit was first reported by the Wall Street Journal. The supposed visit would be the latest milestone in a rapidly developing Middle East alliance. On Tuesday, the US ambassador to Israel, Mike Huckabee, disclosed that Israel had shared its air defence system with the UAE, sending Iron Dome batteries and military specialists to operate them over the course of the war. “There’s an extraordinary relationship between the UAE and Israel,” Huckabee said. But the United Arab Emirates’ foreign ministry denied the reports of Netanyahu’s visit to the country, saying such claims were “baseless”. It was also reported that the UAE had secretly carried out its own strikes on Iran, including an attack on a refinery on Lavan island in early April, in retaliation for Iranian attacks on its oil facilities, according to the Wall Street Journal. Reuters news agency has reported that Saudi Arabia also carried out retaliatory airstrikes against Iran and Iranian-backed Shia militias in Iraq in the early weeks of the war, which would be the first time that Riyadh has struck Iranian territory. In 2020, the UAE was the first Islamic country to agree to normalising relations with Israel, and was followed by three other Islamic countries: Bahrain, Morocco and Sudan, in what were described as the “Abraham accords”. The UAE has gone much further than the other members in tightening the relationship into a de facto alliance. The Emirati rulers have increasingly sought to chart an independent foreign policy course from their larger neighbour, Saudi Arabia. At the beginning of the month, the UAE left the Saudi-led oil cartel, Opec, severely weakening the organisation’s clout in global markets. Israel and the UAE have close relationships with the Trump administration, which have been deepened by their involvement in the Iran war. But they are vulnerable to a change of administration and policy direction in Washington. Both are under intense scrutiny for their alleged involvement in war crimes. Israel has been accused of genocide in Gaza, and arrest warrants have been issued by the international criminal court for Netanyahu and his former defence minister, Yoav Gallant. The UAE is widely believed to be arming and funding the Rapid Support Forces, which have been accused of mass atrocities in Sudan. Its government has denied the allegations, despite considerable evidence underpinning them.

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Australians from hantavirus cruise ship fly out of Netherlands in full PPE after plane and crew secured

Four Australian citizens who were aboard the MV Hondius, the cruise ship at the centre of the hantavirus outbreak, will soon be home after the government secured a suitable aircraft and crew for the journey. The health minister, Mark Butler, said the citizens, along with a permanent resident and a New Zealand citizen, were due to take off from the Netherlands on Thursday and land in Perth on Friday local time. Guardian Australia has been told the flight departed the Netherlands and was due to arrive at RAAF Base Pearce in Perth at around 11am local time on Friday, before passengers were transported to the WA Centre for National Resilience in Bullsbrook. “Six passengers are still in good health, they have all tested negative for hantavirus and are showing no symptoms as well,” Butler said. Sign up for the Breaking News Australia email “Passengers and crew members will travel this flight for its duration in full PPE. There are very strict conditions about the flight, the landing, and the quarantine arrangements.” The passengers will be subject to a quarantine order, remaining at Western Australia’s Bullsbrook quarantine facility for at least three weeks. The flight crew bringing them home will also be required to quarantine, either in Australia or in another country. The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade had scrambled to find an aircraft and crew who were able to complete quarantine, after a 48-hour deadline was imposed on their international transfer through the Netherlands by Dutch authorities. The outbreak now includes 11 reported cases, with nine officially confirmed. Three people have died. The MV Hondius, which is registered in the Netherlands, is on its way to Rotterdam, with 25 crew members and two medical staff on board. It is expected to arrive on Monday. After disembarking, the crew will enter quarantine and the ship will undergo what its operator calls a “thorough cleaning and disinfection process”. “The operation to bring all those on board home in the safest possible way was highly complex. It required intensive cooperation with national and international partners,” the Dutch government said in a statement on Tuesday. “The Dutch government thanks all those involved, including the shipping company, and expresses its gratitude and appreciation for the cooperation with Spain.” The Australian government has been working around the clock to bring the group home. “This is a difficult arrangement to make,” Butler told ABC News on Tuesday, adding the travellers were in “good health and relatively good spirits” at the time. “You’ve got to have crew that are willing to isolate at the end of the flight, you’ve got to have a flight that has some refuelling arrangements put in place between the Netherlands and Australia,” Butler said. “And it’s important that we’ve put those quarantine arrangements in place, ready to go when they do land in Australia.” Butler said the hantavirus had been listed under Australia’s Biosecurity Act, which allows the government to make quarantine orders. Hantavirus, a group of viruses found around the world, is generally spread via infected rodents to humans through faeces, urine or saliva. Human-to-human transmission is very uncommon, but can occur through close and prolonged contact, the Australian Centre for Disease Control says. Still, infection can be serious, resulting in critical illness or death. Three people have died from the outbreak, and a French woman is currently being treated after falling critically ill, with life-threatening heart and lung problems. The World Health Organization maintains that the threat to the general public remains low, but officials have urged caution. “At the moment, there is no sign that we are seeing the start of a larger outbreak,” Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the WHO director general, told reporters on Tuesday. “But of course the situation could change, and given the long incubation period of the virus, it’s possible we might see more cases in the coming weeks.” Butler said this week Australia’s quarantine protocols would be among the most stringent in the world. • This story was amended on 14 May 2026. An earlier version stated the plane would arrive in Perth on Friday afternoon. It was due to arrive in Perth on Friday morning.

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Philippine politician wanted by ICC flees senate after days holed up in building

A Philippine lawmaker wanted by the international criminal court for his alleged role enforcing Rodrigo Duterte’s bloody anti-drugs crackdown has secretly fled the senate, after spending days holed up in the building to avoid arrest. The senate president, Alan Peter Cayetano, confirmed to media that senator Ronald dela Rosa was “no longer in the building”, after reports that he had slipped out of the heavily guarded building before dawn. “I’m waiting for a complete incident report on what time he left,” Cayetano said. Dela Rosa avoided arrest earlier this week after he dramatically outran government agents who chased him through the hallways and staircases of the senate, and was offered protective custody by allies in the senate chamber. He had remained in the building for days, but further chaos erupted on Wednesday night when gunshots were fired in the senate, forcing journalists to scramble for cover. Dela Rosa had earlier said his arrest was imminent and called for supporters to gather outside the senate to protect him. Conflicting accounts of events on Wednesday night have been given. The Philippines president, Ferdinand Marcos Jr, later said no government personnel had been involved in the shooting incident in the senate and there were no instructions to arrest Dela Rosa. He questioned whether the event was an attempt to “destabilise the government or trigger chaos”. An investigation into the shooting is ongoing. Police said on Thursday they had detained a person in connection with the incident. Philippine police spokesperson Brig Gen Randulf Tuano said the man was apprehended on the second floor of the senate building. The interior secretary, Juanito Victor Remulla, had said senate security fired “warning shots” at several unknown armed men who had gone up the senate stairway. Dela Rosa was head of the Philippine national police during Duterte’s administration and was a chief enforcer of anti-drugs crackdowns in which thousands of people were killed. He is one of eight co-perpetrators named by the ICC in their case against Duterte, who is now detained at The Hague. An arrest warrant accuses him of “authorising, condoning and promoting” drug war killings, providing weapons, promising impunity and rewarding perpetrators, according to an ICC arrest warrant that was unsealed on Monday. He did not respond to a request for comment, but has denied wrongdoing. Earlier on Thursday, while entering the senate, Dela Rosa’s lawyer Jimmy Bondoc said he spoke to him during the night and believed he was inside. “I asked him if you have plans to leave, he said none,” Bondoc told reporters. With Reuters and Agence France-Presse

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UN members prepare for pivotal vote on landmark ICJ climate justice ruling

The UN’s willingness to tackle the climate crisis in a fair and legal way will be tested next week during a critical vote of the UN general assembly in New York. Every member state is being asked to back a series of landmark findings on climate justice from the international court of justice (ICJ) as part of a new political resolution. If passed, it will mean governments recognise they have a legal responsibility to cut their greenhouse gas emissions, including tackling fossil fuels. The ICJ’s advisory opinion, published last year following a series of hearings in the Hague, had been requested by an unprecedented 132 states without opposition in 2023. It was hailed as a “historic win” for small island states. The Pacific island nation of Vanuatu has since been leading a group of states to draft a resolution that welcomes the opinion and tries to help it make a difference on the ground. Ahead of the UN vote on 20 May, it is seeking support from as many other nations as possible. At a UN briefing earlier this month, the Vanuatu climate minister, Ralph Regenvanu, described the UN’s initial resolution as “a collective act of multilateral confidence that law can help steer us through the climate crisis” that the court answered unanimously. “That unanimity is a gift to the membership. It gives us legal clarity and it gives us something precious in the UN; a common reference point.” Regenvanu wants the resolution to get the “broadest possible support”, at least matching the 132 co-sponsors of the previous one. The text of the resolution has changed significantly since an initial draft circulated in February. Calls for a “rapid, just and quantified phase‑out of fossil fuel production and use”, for example, were replaced with an urge to transition away. An original aim to set up an international register of damage, loss or injury was dropped altogether. Some major changes were the result of pressure from the US, which has lobbied to drop the resolution altogether. But Vanuatu’s climate justice envoy, Lee-Ann Sackett, who led the negotiations, said many states raised concerns or had comments, so significant effort was made to keep the text both “meaningful and unifying”. “Where delegations asked for reassurance we made it explicit,” she said. “Where delegations asked for restraint, we built in safeguards.” The final text, published at the start of the month, now clearly states that the UNFCCC and the Paris agreement are the primary international intergovernmental forums for negotiating a global response to climate change. Regenvanu stressed that it does not adjudicate disputes or attribute responsibility to any particular state. Nor does it create new obligations or prejudice legal positions. Despite the changes, Regenvanu said it was “not a resolution that simply files the opinion away. It calls on all states to comply with their existing obligations as established by the court.” It is also intended to help member states think through how to implement these obligations. The court’s advisory opinion is already being used in climate litigation around the world and judges are starting to reference it in their climate-related rulings. But it has proved more intractable as a diplomatic lever. It failed to make a mark at last year’s UNFCCC climate talks in Belem; Saudi Arabia called its inclusion in final texts a “red, red line”. The opinion was more evident at the inaugural fossil fuel conference in Santa Marta, Colombia, where Regenvanu told state delegates that they were “frontrunners” in doing what is both legally and scientifically required. “That is why theICJ’s landmark advisory opinion on climate change considers international cooperation indispensable.” More broadly, the resolution is being seen as a key test for the credibility of the international legal system. Sackett said there was close engagement from state delegations that do not usually intervene on climate texts “because they recognise that this is also about the authority of the court, the integrity of the UN system and how we translate legal clarification into multilateral cooperation”. Tania Romualdo, the permanent representative of Cape Verde to the UN representing the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS), said the importance of the resolution extends beyond the text itself. For small island developing states, she said, “this is about the affirmation and protection of our territories, sovereignty and fundamental rights of our populations. This process has not been easy. There have been many sacrifices along the way. These are not easy compromises but they reflect the reality of negotiation.”

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Scepticism and tight security as Trump is welcomed by Xi to Beijing

Yaoji Chaogan, a no-frills canteen next to Beijing’s historic Drum and Bell towers, once proudly displayed photographs of Joe Biden, who visited the restaurant when he was US vice-president in 2011. Biden’s visit went viral in China, with media praising his “noodle diplomacy” (one of the dishes that Biden ordered was zhajiang mian, a traditional style of Beijing noodles with bean paste). But evidence of Biden’s visit was removed when the restaurant was redecorated a few years ago. A visit from a US leader is no longer something to boast about. “If US politicians were really smart, they wouldn’t try to hold China back,” said Liu Cheng, 47, at the restaurant on Wednesday as he tucked into a lunch of steamed baozi and tofu skin salad. Donald Trump arrived in Beijing on Wednesday to a China that has grown in confidence in the nine years since his last state visit in 2017. Although the economy is struggling and wage growth has slowed – to less than 2% in real terms in Beijing last year – a bullish nationalism is on the rise. It is fanned by state propaganda and by the US’s apparent decline into chaos and dysfunction, including the fact that the country managed to elect a leader as unconventional and unpredictable as Trump. Trump’s recent foreign policy gambles, from kidnapping the president of Venezuela to launching a war with Iran, have only served to reinforce the view among ordinary Chinese people that the US is a troublemaker. The US president has lost his novelty value in China. Where he was once seen as an entertainer, he is now seen as a leader who could pose a real threat to Chinese interests, despite him having described Xi Jinping, China’s leader, as a “tremendous guy”. Liu said whoever was US president, “it’s more or less the same for ordinary people like us. Before they take office, US presidents may say very extreme things, but once they are in office, they have no choice but to face the reality of China’s existence.” He said the US was struggling to accept the fact of China’s rise. The US “sees China has a threat … I think it will probably take about 10 years for the US to accept it.” Liu Chunlei, a 36-year-old taxi driver, said the issue of Taiwanese independence was driving a wedge between the two superpowers. China claims Taiwan as part of its territory and is expected to push the US to soften its support for the self-governing island when Xi and Trump meet this week. Still, Liu welcomed the fact Trump was willing to visit Beijing. “It will definitely help ease China-US relations a little … it shows that his attitude towards China is not hostile,” the driver said. On the streets of Beijing there is heightened security to ensure everything runs as smoothly as possible. The Temple of Heaven, a religious complex dating from the Ming dynasty in the 15th century, has been closed to visitors since Tuesday before Trump’s planned tour on Thursday afternoon. The temple is a significant monument in the history of Beijing and Washington. Henry Kissinger visited it on a secret visit to China in 1971, a trip that paved the way for the US and China to establish formal diplomatic relations. On Thursday morning, Xi welcomed Trump outside the Great Hall of the People, an imposing building on Tiananmen Square that houses China’s legislature. Cannons boomed a welcome salute, and a band played the Star-Spangled Banner and China’s national anthem. Tiananmen Square was cleared for the ceremony with only officials and press present, as well as military personnel who paraded in after Trump arrived. The hall featured giant, red-carpeted steps and huge expanses of marble, where soldiers hung large American and Chinese flags. Hundreds of primary school children wearing bright colours offered a welcome routine, jumping up and down as the girls waved flowers and the boys hoisted American and Chinese flags as the two leaders walked past them. One Chinese scholar in Beijing said this week Trump wanted to be seen, like Kissinger, as a trailblazer in US-China relations. But some ordinary Chinese were sceptical. On the social media platform Weibo, one user wrote: “There’s no point discussing anything with Trump. He’ll change his mind once he gets back. What he says in the morning can also change by the afternoon.” Additional reporting by Associated Press and research by Yu-chen Li

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Thursday briefing: ​Is this Starmer’s last stand?

Good morning. Going into yesterday, Keir Starmer’s to-do list might have looked rather simple: “Listen to king announce all my new policies. Draw a line under leadership nonsense. Keep calm, and carry on”. As-yet-still health secretary Wes Streeting appears to have had very different ideas, at least according to sources close to him. Streeting’s aides spent the day briefing that their man had the backing of enough MPs to launch a leadership bid, and that he was preparing his ministerial resignation. In the last couple of hours another plot twist emerged, as the Guardian revealed Angela Rayner has been cleared by HMRC over her tax affairs, clearing the way for a potential leadership bid. While it seems Starmer’s eventual departure from Downing Street is now all but certain, far less clear to most Westminster-watchers is by what mechanism the PM could actually be replaced. For today’s newsletter I asked Dr Richard Johnson, senior lecturer at Queen Mary University of London, about the constitutional nuts and bolts of what happens now, and the challenges this situation, unprecedented for Labour, creates. First though, the headlines. Five big stories UK news | Keir Starmer has laid out long-promised changes to education, health and the courts in the king’s speech, which maps out the government’s agenda for the next year. UK politics | Nigel Farage is facing a formal investigation by the parliamentary standards watchdog over a £5m gift from the crypto billionaire Christopher Harborne. US news | Donald Trump has said the growing financial pressure inflicted on Americans by the war on Iran is “not even a little bit” motivating him to make a peace deal with Tehran. Ukraine | Russia targeted Ukraine with more than 200 drones in a large-scale daytime assault on Wednesday, hours after a previous barrage of civilian areas had killed at least eight people. Europe news | French authorities have confined more than 1,700 passengers and crew members to a cruise ship docked in Bordeaux after a suspected norovirus outbreak, officials have said. In depth: A constitutional conundrum with ‘very badly written rules’ The last time the parliamentary Labour party tried to remove a leader by force was in 2016, when Owen Smith challenged an incumbent Jeremy Corbyn. First came the flurry of ministerial resignations, then a vote of no confidence by Labour MPs, which Corbyn lost resoundingly. Eventually came a fully fledged leadership election contested by Owen Smith. The Labour membership backed Corbyn with a thumping majority. A decade on, a significant chunk of Labour’s current crop feel it’s Keir Starmer’s turn. Only there is one vital difference. Starmer is prime minister, which makes attempting to topple him a far more complex constitutional conundrum. A sitting Labour prime minister has never faced an official challenge of leadership from their MPs. And, as Johnson informs me, the rules governing any contest are “very badly written” and contain a lot of ambiguity. *** How do Labour leadership elections work? Here’s what we know: Labour’s leadership elections are governed by section 4 of the Labour party rulebook. Any attempt to oust Starmer will require a challenger to secure written public nominations from 20% of Labour MPs – that is currently a total of 81 backers. The prime minister would automatically qualify for the ballot, and would continue as PM throughout the election process. Labour’s national executive committee (NEC) holds all the cards on timing, with the final stage being a choice put to party members and affiliated union supporters who rank candidates via the alternative vote system. If nobody secures a majority upfront, the bottom candidate is eliminated and their votes are redistributed to their supporters’ next preferences, until a winner emerges with more than 50% of the total. That much is clear. But if Starmer were to resign, the rules around the contest would become more complicated and create a more drawn-out process. When a Labour leader resigns, leaving a vacancy at the top, leadership candidates are expected to also gather the support of 5% of either constituency Labour parties (CLPs) or affiliated trade unions in order to reach the ballot. “The rules are the product of multiple attempts to tidy up past rules,” Johnson says, “in a way that has only added confusion.” “I’ve spoken to supporters of Streeting who believe he still needs to go and secure those union and CLP nominations.” Others are not convinced that’s the case. “If that is, it makes a truncated, high-speed election impossible. Every CLP in the country would need to have a meeting. The sheer infrastructure of the Labour party makes it very difficult to move at the speed a government in crisis requires.” *** Would it result in a general election? Like many of the British governmental customs, while what happens is understood, there is no formal written constitutional process. If Starmer were to resign, the cabinet and Labour’s NEC could simply consult to appoint a new leader from within their ranks and recommend them to the monarch as prime minister. This scenario could play out if only one real contender emerged, removing the need for a contest. This would not be an “interim” or “caretaker” prime minister, but the real deal, as long as she or he retained the confidence of the Commons, a task (on paper, at least) made considerably easier by Labour’s large majority. There would be no need for a general election. But the Labour rulebook appears to make its own additional stipulations. “In opposition,” Johnson explains, “if a Labour leader resigns, the deputy automatically becomes acting leader. But in government, the rules say the cabinet – in consultation with the NEC – selects an acting leader from among their own ranks.” That last bit could prove important. It appears to open up the possibility of a scenario in which Streeting resigns from cabinet, Starmer immediately steps down as leader, and Streeting is at that point ineligible to become prime minister – because he is no longer at the top table. Again, there is little clarity. *** What precedents do we have? As the saying goes, “all political careers end in failure”, and we have plenty of precedent for that in living memory. In recent years, only Rishi Sunak, Gordon Brown and John Major have handed over the keys to Downing Street after losing an election. Everybody else since Margaret Thatcher has ceremonially fallen on their sword after being ousted from No 10 by their party. Johnson reminds me that when Tony Benn challenged Neil Kinnock’s leadership of Labour in 1988, Kinnock went out and collected nominations from his MPs, even though he didn’t need to. Starmer could well do the same. “It’s a way of pinning people down. You go to your ministers and say: ‘If you want to stay in this government, you sign this paper now.’ It stops people from peeling away.” Starmer, Johnson says, has one other potential route to garner support from Labour MPs and members who might be unenthused at the prospect of a Streeting premiership. “He could appeal to the soft left. He could frame himself as a proxy for Andy Burnham – promising the membership that he will create a path for Greater Manchester’s mayor to return to parliament in exchange for their support now in stopping Streeting.” *** How long can this go on for? How long is a piece of string? Even if Streeting’s challenge doesn’t materialise today, or in the next few days, the prime minister’s days are surely numbered. His authority has been severely eroded. If Streeting does decide to go for it, it isn’t entirely clear that he can win the support of the party at large, even if he convinces his Westminster colleagues. As Aletha Adu noted in this piece looking at his prospects, just before Labour’s 7 May election disaster, a Compass survey of more than 1,000 members found that given a free choice, 42% would pick Andy Burnham to succeed Starmer – with just 11% opting for Streeting. So far, Rayner – who had more favourable results than Streeting in that survey – has ruled out launching a coup, but has suggested she could enter any leadership contest, saying she wanted to “play my part”. “I don’t think it’s a case of each person for themselves, but I do think it’s a case of people seeing how they can pull the party together and have the vision to take us forward,” she told Pippa Crerar. In the meantime, the work of the government trudges on. Long-promised changes to education, health and the courts were mapped out in the king’s speech. Alexandra Topping sums up the key announcements here. There’s another oft-quoted political truism – “Events, dear boy, events” – attributed to Harold Macmillan. Starmer’s king’s speech, and his entire premiership, seem very like to survive or fall in the next few days on exactly that – events. We’ll be covering all of them. What else we’ve been reading Satirist Rosie Holt has written a play about Rachel Reeves’ ill-fated attempt to get the urinal removed from her office. She is very funny telling Brian Logan about the idea. Patrick We can all hang on to thinking too much about an ex, but photographer Diana Markosian has turned it into art – hiring an actor to replicate and document past intimate moments. Martin Stefanie O’Connell has written about the rise in home ownership among single women in the US – and how badly some men are reacting to it. Patrick Erasure have never been critical darlings, but this essay by John Freeman looking at their flawed but adorably awkward debut album sent me right back to buying their early 12” singles in the 80s. Martin Former supermarket worker Jools Lebron became a social media star after her posts when viral. She speaks to Kirsty Major about the challenges of online fame. Patrick Sport Scottish premiership | Hearts beat Falkirk 3-0 but were made to wait for their first Scottish league title since 1960 as Celtic’s late winner at Motherwell set up a last-day showdown. Football | EFL clubs will vote on Friday on significant changes to their financial regulations that would widen the gap in spending power between the Championship and League One. Cycling | Portugal’s Afonso Eulálio seized the overall lead in the Giro d’Italia despite having victory snatched away by Spain’s Igor Arrieta in the final metres of a rain-drenched stage five on Wednesday. The front pages “Streeting on manoeuvres ready to launch leadership challenge today” is the Guardian’s front page headline. The FT says “Starmer rallies Labour loyalists in move to see off Streeting challenge” and the Mail writes “Streeting to ignite day of Labour anarchy”. The Times leads with “Streeting prepares to quit ahead of No 10 challenge”; similarly the i Paper says “Streeting set to resign and will challenge PM”, while the Telegraph splashes “Miliband to fight Streeting for No 10”. The Sun goes with “Street fighter”. The Express leads with “Finally, a move to bring down zombie Keir?”. Metro says “Wes, prime minister?” And on a different note the Mirror leads with “Farage in £5m sleaze probe”. Today in Focus Trump, Hegseth, Musk: Maga lands in Beijing Senior China correspondent Amy Hawkins talks through the high-stakes meeting in Beijing between presidents Trump and Xi, including the likely trade-offs on tariffs, Taiwan and the war in Iran. Cartoon of the day | Rebecca Hendin The Upside A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad There are vanishingly few uncontacted tribes left on Earth. Those who remain often face persecution, particularly Indigenous groups who live in rainforests and other vital ecosystems. So, this week’s news that the territory of one of the Amazon’s most vulnerable nomadic hunter-gatherer communities has been demarcated is big news. The 410,000-hectare area in north-west Brazil has gained greater protection – and is on the path to national recognition that will keep the community safe. 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. Martin Belam’s Thursday news quiz Quick crossword Cryptic crossword Wordiply