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Monday briefing: the community solidarity driving the fightback against ICE in Minneapolis

Good morning. The world’s attention has been fixed on Minneapolis for weeks now. The small midwestern US city has been under siege since Donald Trump’s administration launched its latest immigration crackdown in December. Public outrage has reached fever pitch across the US after the killing of two US citizens, Renee Good and Alex Pretti. Though the White House has softened its rhetoric in relation to the killings, there is little indication of any meaningful shift in tactics on the ground. But, amid the justified focus on state violence, another story is unfolding. It is a story of parents patrolling schools, neighbours shopping for families sheltering at home; and alarms rippling through communities when ICE vans are spotted. It is a story of a community fighting back. To understand how this response took shape, I spoke to Sarah Jaffe, a labour journalist and author of From the Ashes: Grief and Revolution in a World on Fire, who has been reporting from Minneapolis for more than a decade, about what this moment reveals about power and solidarity. First, the headlines. Five big stories Epstein files | Peter Mandelson says he has resigned his membership of the Labour party to avoid causing it “further embarrassment” after more revelations about his friendship with Jeffrey Epstein. Iran | Donald Trump has said Iran is talking to the US, hinting at a deal that would avoid the use of military strikes. Ukraine | A Russian drone attack on a bus carrying mine workers in Ukraine’s central-eastern Dnipropetrovsk region has killed at least 12 people, officials said. Cuba | The United States has said it will ensure there will be no more fuel shipments to the beleaguered island, “Cuba will be failing pretty soon,” Donald Trump said earlier in the week. Grammy awards | Bad Bunny and Kendrick Lamar took home major Grammy awards during a night that saw musicians hit back at Donald Trump’s ICE occupation. In depth: ‘My neighbours are important and I will take risks to protect them’ Renee Good, a mother of three, writer and poet, dropped off her six-year-old son at school on 7 January, before encountering Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents nearby, who she stopped to ask what was going on, according to her family’s lawyer. She was killed by an ICE agent minutes later. Weeks later, on 24 January, Alex Pretti, an intensive care nurse, asked a woman who had been tackled to the ground and pepper-sprayed by nearby ICE agents: “Are you OK?” Those were the last words he spoke before he was killed. Sarah Jaffe tells me that what we’re seeing in Minneapolis is a powerful repudiation of Margaret Thatcher’s old assertion that “there is no such thing as society”. “We don’t experience the world in our own little world,” Jaffe tells me. “People are saying my neighbours are important – as important as my family – and I will take risks to protect them, even though I don’t know them and they’re complete strangers.” She is not surprised that the resistance to Trump has mobilised most effectively in Minneapolis. “Minneapolis has led the country in rebellion before, and it will probably do so yet again.” *** Sticking a wrench in the gears of ICE The ramping up of ICE enforcement activity in the Twin Cities, which refers to the Minneapolis and St Paul metropolitan area, began in December. In response, community defence networks were mobilised almost immediately and have only grown in strength since. The ways this defence has played out have been varied and creative, Jaffe says. Small business owners have been central to the response. A restaurant called Modern Times announced it would give food away to the local community and survive on donations, declaring, “Until the occupation is over, we are Post Modern Times.” A sex shop, Smitten Kitten, has transformed into a mutual aid hub, while a romance bookstore has been asking for recommendations for accessible books about labour and social movement history so they can stock them, she adds. The hospitality industry has been at the forefront. “An extraordinarily large number of the restaurant cooks in the US are undocumented or of some sort of precarious legal status,” Jaffe says. “So they’re putting up signs on kitchens that say ‘this is a private area for employees only, you can only come here with a warrant’.” For the outside world, the most visible organising has been around schools, where videos of parents patrolling drop-off and pick-up have gone viral online. Jaffe says parent groups began doing this after realising ICE agents were waiting at bus stops to detain parents collecting their children. Jaffe has reported ICE throwing teargas outside school buildings, with teachers trying to protect their students. Mutual aid groups first built during the pandemic have been reactivated to provide essentials to families sheltering in place. “People who are doing grocery runs are being told to not put any of the details in their phones, not to use GPS, to write the number and the address down on a piece of paper, and if they get stopped by ICE to eat it,” she says. Coordination has come through the Minnesota Democracy Defense Table, a coalition of about 80 organisations working on rapid-response teams and recruitment. But even seasoned activists have been shocked by the violence. “They smash your car window, cut your seatbelts, and just yank you out of it,” Jaffe says. “They’re grabbing anyone at this point and asking questions later.” There have even been cases of children left behind in car seats. Clergy have staged sit-ins at airports, and protesters have occupied corporate offices including Target and D R Horton, demanding companies refuse cooperation with ICE and protect workers. At every stage, Jaffe says, people are asking: “How do you stick a wrench in the gears of what ICE is doing?” Union organising has been at the heart of this struggle. On 23 January, it culminated in a “no work, no school, no shopping” general strike, hoping to hurt the economy in solidarity against the federal ICE deployment. Hundreds of businesses closed, and hundreds of thousands of residents took to the streets in temperatures of –23C. Calls are now growing for a nationwide general strike against ICE activity. *** A history of resistance This level of community mobilisation is not an eruption of spontaneous anger, Jaffe explains, but the result of more than a decade of organising coming into alignment. Jaffe first began reporting on the city’s social movements in 2012, focusing on the Occupy Homes movement, a spin-off from Occupy Wall Street. “Folks in the Twin Cities didn’t want to fight to occupy a park all winter long because you’ll be under 6 feet of snow. So, they moved really quickly to keep people in their homes who are about to lose them,” she says. She explains how the long history of police violence has forged together a community of protesters, from teachers, to labour organisers, to those who grew out of the Occupy movement. When Philando Castile, a school cafeteria worker, was killed by the police, “that really helped radicalise the teachers’ unions, particularly in St Paul, because he was one of them,” Jaffe says. Each police killing became a flashpoint, radicalising new layers of people. Where George Floyd was killed was a block away from the offices of Centro de Trabajadores Unidos en la Lucha, which supports Latino workers, she explains. These organisations provided spaces where people could gather, wash their face from teargas, and connect with experienced organisers, she adds. And from this ecosystem, new leadership emerged. Marcia Howard, a teacher for 20 years who coordinated the sustained occupation of George Floyd Square as a semi-autonomous zone and protest space after his death, is now vice-president of the Minneapolis Federation of Teachers. “Her student was the young woman who filmed George Floyd’s killing,” Jaffe says. What looks like separate crises – policing, education, housing, immigration – overlap in daily life. “As my dear departed friend Jane McAlevey would say, people don’t live single-issue lives,” Jaffe says. *** Cracks in the coalition The Trump administration has hit Minneapolis, and previously Los Angeles and Chicago, with such force in the hope of making an example of them, Jaffe says. “These are places that are the centre of the resistance camp, and he would love to break them. But news flash: he can’t. He couldn’t break LA, he couldn’t break Chicago, and now he’s trying really hard to break the Twin Cities,” she says. “I guess because it’s smaller he thought that it would be easier, but they have had more agents for longer in the Twin Cities and have had less success.” Few stories illustrate this dynamic more clearly than the targeting of Somali workers in the Twin Cities – who, with a long history of community organising and bargaining in the city in a radical and powerful way, have long been a thorn in the side of government. “They famously became the first organisation in the US to get Amazon to the bargaining table, although Amazon denies it bargained,” Jaffe says (the company says it was doing community outreach). It is for this reason, Jaffe argues, that Trump has targeted the Somali American community in Minneapolis, particularly its leftwing leaders. These include Ilhan Omar, who was attacked last week with what the FBI said was a mixture of vinegar and water, while calling for the abolition of ICE, and Omar Fateh, who led legislation in the state legislature to regulate Uber and other ride-hailing companies. But while Trump’s rhetoric remains loud, actions on the ground suggest a quiet reassessment of the situation amid the backlash in Minneapolis. Federal authorities have reshuffled leadership in Minneapolis, including pulling back Gregory Bovino, the controversial lead of the enforcement activities. After the fatal shooting of Pretti, Bovino drew further criticism for publicly claiming, without evidence, that the ICU nurse intended to “massacre law enforcement”. In his place, Trump has dispatched his “border czar”, Tom Homan. Homan sits higher in the hierarchy and reports directly to the president. Jaffe sees his arrival as an attempt to stabilise the narrative that the administration is losing. “The way people have been framing it on the ground is ‘we forced cracks in their coalition and that’s great, but it’s not over’,” she explains. Nationally, pressure is mounting. Senator Bill Cassidy of Louisiana has said the “credibility of ICE and DHS [Department of Homeland Security] are at stake”, while a prominent Republican candidate and attorney, Chris Madel, has withdrawn from Minnesota’s gubernatorial race. Recent polling shows a plurality of Americans now support abolishing ICE. *** An attempted whitewash “I would expect that they will quietly scale down in Minneapolis while trying not to admit defeat,” Jaffe says, “and that they will go after softer targets.” One of those targets, she adds, is New Orleans, where she is heading next. “But,” she notes, “New Orleans has also been doing ICE watch patrols and buying groceries for people who are sheltering in place and donating to support restaurants that are immigrant-owned that have had to close down.” Jaffe describes the immigration raids as not only racist, but also part of a wider push to make America more white. Stephen Miller, a key White House senior adviser, denies this, and said questions about whether the administration’s tactics were racist were “dumb”. A long read on Miller, viewed as the ideologue behind Trump’s immigration policies, quotes allies who say he wants to reverse America’s post-1960s immigration boom, taking in migrants from Nordic Europe, while severely restricting those from the global south, in a bid to reshape America’s ethnic and political landscape. But, Jaffe adds, “what they’re actually doing right now is turning more white people that they assume are their base into Renee Goods and Alex Prettis.” What else we’ve been reading I was gutted about the recent death of the gifted actor Catherine O’Hara, but I found consolation in this piece by Jesse Hassenger about O’Hara’s heartfelt comedic roles. Katy Vans, newsletters team Why has the internet torn the left apart, but united the right? The academic Robert Topinka provides some interesting answers. Aamna Concerns about the rise of Reform UK are understandable, but the recent gains for Plaid Cymru in Wales give hope that there are alternatives to the status quo. Katy A proposal by a French rail operator to have childfree carriages sparked a backlash. Emma Beddington makes powerful arguments on children’s right to access public space. Aamna The floods last week in the UK were devastating to many of us, and our wildlife has also been hit hard. But we can adapt so that nature protects humans and creatures alike. Katy Sport Football | In the Premier League, Spurs came back from 2-0 down to draw at home against Man City, putting a dent in City’s title hopes. Despite being down to 10 men, Brentford managed to beat Aston Villa 1-0 at Villa Park, keeping Villa out of the top spot in the table. Elsewhere, Man Utd won 3-2 at home to Fulham, their win has them sitting pretty in fourth place. In the WSL, Man City trounced Chelsea 5-1 putting them 11 points clear at the top of the league. Tennis | Carlos Alcaraz has beaten Novak Djokovic in the Australian Open final. Aged just 22, he is the youngest man in history to complete the career grand slam. Boxing | Jarrell “Big Baby” Miller was involved in one of the more unusual moments in recent boxing history on when his hairpiece was dislodged during his heavyweight victory over Kingsley Ibeh at Madison Square Garden. The front pages The Jeffrey Epstein files feature in various forms today. The Guardian reported on Peter Mandelson, who has since resigned from the Labour party, with: “Mandelson under fire as file appear to show Epstein sent him $75,000”. The Telegraph says “Mandelson faces order for Epstein evidence”. “Epstein flew me to Andrew at Royal Lodge,” says the Mirror, in relation to a second woman who has come forward. The Times reports: “New Epstein victim: I was sent for sex with Andrew”. The Mail says: “Andrew in new Epstein legal threat”. The FT reports: “JPMorgan should ‘threaten’ UK over bankers’ tax, Mandelson told Epstein”. “Bring justice for Epstein victims, Andrew and Mandelson told,” reports the i. The Express reports: “PM wants to ‘rewind’ freedom Brexit gave us”. The Sun says Lewis Hamilton is dating Kim Kardashian. Today in Focus Fatima Bhutto on secrets, lies and surviving coercive control The Pakistani writer on enduring an abusive relationship in the public eye, and how she broke free. Cartoon of the day | Tom Gauld The Upside A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad Rejection triggers the same brain regions as physical pain, which explains why it feels so intense and memorable. Social exclusion once threatened survival, so humans remain highly sensitive to it. Yet avoiding rejection can shrink our lives, making us more fearful and less willing to take risks. Embracing rejection instead, writes Farrah Jarral, can build resilience, confidence and social ease. Jia Jiang’s “100 days of rejection” experiment showed how repeated exposure reduces fear and expands possibility. History also shows that rejection can fuel creativity, from artistic movements to individual innovation. Since rejection is universal, it allows us to grow, stay open and move through the world with greater freedom and playfulness. 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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Trump says Iran talking to US and hints at deal to avoid military strikes

Donald Trump has said Iran is talking to the US, hinting at a deal that would avoid the use of military strikes, as Iran’s supreme leader warned that any attack by the US would spark a regional war. The US president’s comments came as Washington deployed a naval battle group led by the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln off Iran’s shores, after Trump’s threats to intervene in Iran’s deadly crackdown on anti-government protests. “The plan is that [Iran is] talking to us, and we’ll see if we can do something. Otherwise, we’ll see what happens … We have a big fleet heading out there,” Trump told Fox News. “They are negotiating, so we’ll see what happens.” He said US allies in the region were not being told of plans for reasons of security. “Well, we can’t tell them the plan. If I told them the plan, it would be almost as bad as telling you the plan – it could be worse, actually,” he said. Later on Saturday, Trump declined to say whether he had decided on a course of action regarding US intervention in Iran. He sidestepped a question about whether Tehran would be emboldened if the US backed away from launching strikes, telling reporters: “Some people think that. Some people don’t.” He said Iran should negotiate a “satisfactory” deal to prevent the country from getting any nuclear weapons, but said: “I don’t know that they will. But they are talking to us. Seriously talking to us.” The arrival of the flotilla has raised fears of a direct confrontation with Iran, which has warned it would respond with missile strikes on US bases, ships and allies – notably Israel – in the event of an attack. On Sunday, Iranian state television reported that Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, had warned that any attack by the Americans would have far-reaching consequences. “The Americans should know that if they start a war, this time it will be a regional war,” Khamenei was quoted as saying. “We are not the instigators and we do not seek to attack any country. But the Iranian nation will deliver a firm blow to anyone who attacks or harasses it.” Asked about the warning, Trump told reporters on Sunday: “Of course he is going to say that. “Hopefully we’ll make a deal. If we don’t make a deal, then we’ll find out whether or not he was right,” he said. A day earlier, Iran’s president, Masoud Pezeshkian, had downplayed Tehran’s interest in the conflict. “The Islamic republic of Iran has never sought, and in no way seeks, war and it is firmly convinced that a war would be in the interest of neither Iran nor the United States nor the region,” he said in a call with his Egyptian counterpart, Abdel Fatah al-Sisi, according to the Iranian presidency. Qatar said its prime minister, Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani, visited Tehran on Saturday and met Ali Larijani, the head of Iran’s supreme national security council, regarding “efforts to de-escalate tensions in the region”. Trump has previously said he believes Iran would rather make a deal over its nuclear and missile programmes than face US military action, and Tehran has said it is ready for nuclear talks as long as its missiles and defence capabilities are not on the agenda. “Contrary to the hype of the contrived media war, structural arrangements for negotiations are progressing,” Larijani said, one day after the Kremlin said he had held talks in Moscow with Vladimir Putin. The commander-in-chief of Iran’s army, Amir Hatami, had earlier warned the US and Israel against any attack, saying his forces were “at full defensive and military readiness” to respond. “If the enemy makes a mistake, without a doubt it will endanger its own security, the security of the region and the security of the Zionist regime,” Hatami said, according to the official news agency IRNA. He said Iran’s nuclear technology and expertise “cannot be eliminated”. Iranian authorities rushed to deny that several incidents on Saturday were linked to any attack or sabotage, including an explosion in the southern Iranian port city of Bandar Abbas that local firefighters said was caused by a gas leak. Iran has told ships it will conduct a live-fire drill on Sunday and Monday in the strait of Hormuz, a key transit hub for global energy supplies. An Iranian official denied on Sunday that such a drill would take place, saying initial reports had been incorrect. “There was no plan for the Guards to hold military exercises there, and there was no official announcement about it. Only media reports which were wrong,” they told Reuters. The US Central Command had warned Tehran against “any unsafe and unprofessional behaviour near US forces”. The statement drew criticism from Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, who wrote on social media: “Operating off our shores, the US military is now attempting to dictate how our Powerful Armed Forces should conduct target practice in their own turf.” The US designated Iran’s Revolutionary Guards as a terrorist organisation in 2019, and the EU did the same on Thursday. In response, the speaker of Iran’s parliament, Mohammad – Baqer Qalibaf, said on Sunday that Tehran would now consider all EU militaries to be terrorist groups. “By trying to hit the Revolutionary Guards … the Europeans actually shot themselves in the foot and once again made a decision against the interests of their people by blindly obeying the Americans,” Qalibaf said. He said the national security parliamentary commission would deliberate on the expulsion of EU countries’ military attaches and follow up with the foreign ministry. On Sunday, Khamenei compared the countrywide protests to a “coup”, suggesting the government’s position had hardened, as calls grew in Iran for an independent inquiry into the number of people killed during the unrest.

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Ukraine war briefing: Kyiv reschedules peace talks as battered power grid strains in -15C

A Russian drone strike on a bus carrying miners killed at least 12 people, Ukrainian officials said on Sunday, hours after President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced new peace talks amid uncertainty over a Russian suspension of attacks on energy infrastructure. First deputy prime minister Denys Shmyhal said the strike in the south-eastern Dnipropetrovsk region was a “cynical and targeted” attack on energy workers. The bus was driving about 65km (40 miles) from the frontline, police said. A second round of talks between Russian, Ukrainian and US officials on a US-drafted plan to end the war did not go ahead on Sunday in Abu Dhabi as scheduled and Zelenskyy said it would instead take place this Wednesday and Thursday. Ukraine was ready for “substantive” talks, he said. He did not give a reason for the delay, and neither Moscow nor the US confirmed the new dates. Russia has continued attacking Ukraine throughout the negotiating process. An earlier drone attack in the region overnight killed a man and a woman in the central city of Dnipro, regional military administration head Oleksandr Ganzha said in a post on Telegram. A drone also struck a maternity hospital in the southern Zaporizhzhia region on Sunday, wounding at least seven people including two women receiving a medical examination. The Kremlin said on Friday it had agreed to halt strikes on energy infrastructure until Sunday at the request of Donald Trump, and Kyiv said it would reciprocate. Ukraine said the suspension was supposed to last until the following Friday. The countries have not reported major strikes on their energy systems in recent days, though Zelenskyy said on Sunday that Russia was attacking railway infrastructure and other logistics. He also said its forces had attacked the power grid in two cities across the Dnipro river from the front line, but did not explicitly accuse Russia of breaking the energy ceasefire. Ukraine faced a new cold snap on Sunday with temperatures hovering around minus 15C (5F) and expected to drop even further on Monday to well below -20C in Kyiv. Grid operator Ukrenergo said late on Saturday that planned outages would be in force throughout the entire country. Ukraine’s defence minister thanked Elon Musk after the world’s richest person said efforts to stop Russia from using Starlink satellites for drone attacks seemed to have worked. “The first steps are already delivering real results ... Thank you for standing with us,” defence minister Mykhailo Fedorov said on Sunday. “You are a true champion of freedom and a true friend of the Ukrainian people.” Russian forces gained control over the village of Zelene in Ukraine’s Kharkiv region and the settlement of Sukhetske in the Donetsk region, the Russian defence ministry said on Sunday. The Russian state Tass news agency also quoted it as saying Russian forces hit facilities of transport infrastructure used in the interests of the Ukrainian army. Tens of thousands of Czechs rallied in Prague on Sunday to support the country’s pro-Ukrainian president, who is locked in a dispute with the government’s nationalist billionaire leader Andrej Babis. Organisers from the independent Million Moments for Democracy movement claim up to 90,000 people attended the demonstration, where some participants waved Czech, European and Ukrainian flags.

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Norway’s crown princess had years of contact with Epstein, files suggest

Norway’s crown princess has become embroiled in another scandal after newly unsealed files appeared to show her years of extensive contact with the late child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The latest tranche of Epstein files, released on Friday by the US justice department, appear to include nearly 1,000 mentions of the crown princess, Mette-Marit. The files include scores of emails traded between the two, suggesting they were in contact from 2011 to 2014, the Norwegian daily VG reported. Mette-Marit married the future king of Norway in 2001. The revelations come at a sensitive time for the royal family. The trial of Mette-Marit’s son, Marius Borg Høiby for rape is due to begin on Tuesday. He was born from a relationship before she married Crown Prince Haakon Høiby is facing 38 charges, including the alleged rape of four women as well as alleged assault and drug offences. If convicted he could face up to 16 years in prison. Høiby has denied the most serious charges, including those of sexual abuse. On Saturday, Mette-Marit addressed her relationship with Epstein, who killed himself in jail in 2019 as he awaited trial for sex crimes against minors. “I showed poor judgment and I deeply regret having had any contact with Epstein. It is simply embarrassing,” she said in a statement issued by the royal palace. The Norwegian media’s attention was this weekend focused on the many emails that the princess exchanged with Epstein, years after he pleaded guilty to charges that included soliciting prostitution from a minor in Florida. The emails contained in the files suggested the two were close, with Mette-Marit telling Epstein that “you tickle my brain” in one message and calling him “soft hearted” and “such a sweetheart” in others. In 2012, Mette-Marit told Epstein he was “very charming” and asked if it was “inappropriate for a mother to suggest two naked women carrying a surfboard for my 15 yr old sons wallpaper?” Weeks earlier she and Epstein had traded emails about him being on a “wife hunt” in Paris. She replied that the French capital was “good for adultery” and added that “Scandis (are) better wife material”. In another, she thanked Epstein for flowers he had sent when she was feeling unwell, signing off with “Love, Mm.” The exchanges regularly made mention of plans to get together, while files indicate she also stayed at his house in Palm Beach, Florida, for four days in 2013 when Epstein was not there. Inclusion in the files does not imply wrongdoing. In her statement on Saturday, Mette-Marit, 52, expressed her “deep sympathy and solidarity” with Epstein’s victims and said she was responsible “for not having checked Epstein’s background more closely and not understanding quickly enough what kind of person he was”. The files, however, include a 2011 exchange in which Mette-Marit told Epstein that she had “Googled” him, adding “it didn’t look too good” along with a smiling emoji. The email did not specify what she had found during her online search. The palace said Mette-Marit had ended written contact with Epstein in 2014 as she felt he was “trying to use his relationship with the crown princess as leverage with other people”. As the seven-week trial of her son gets under way in Oslo, the royal couple are not expected to attend. Haakon has told reporters that Mette-Marit would be away on a private trip during that period. Høiby does not have a royal title and is outside the line of royal succession. Earlier this year, the Norwegian royal court addressed the trial in a statement, saying: “It is for the courts to consider this matter and reach a decision. We have no further comment.”

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Britain must uphold its obligations to protect Palestinians | Letter

Having returned from another visit to Palestine, we are incredulous that the UK government has still not published its legal response to the international court of justice’s advisory opinion in July 2024. This inaction has contributed to a culture of impunity that the Israeli government has used to accelerate its de facto annexation of the West Bank. Its instruments are administrative changes, continuous settlement expansion and growth, intensifying violence by Israeli troops and settler militia, the localised system of road closures, house demolitions, tightening access to water and electricity, deepening legal segregation and an unequal system of governance. While world leaders met in Davos to debate futuristic plans for the reconstruction of Gaza, which are largely disconnected from reality, we visited and listened to Palestinian Christian communities across the West Bank on their lived experience. Once more, we have heard from families living in fear and torment – an unending nightmare where they are denied even minimal dignity. The violence has robbed them of the ability to earn a living and provide for their families. Terrorised to the point of fearing for their lives, there is no one to protect them. Faced with such abandonment, and denied any agency as to their future, many now feel they have no choice but to leave or to die standing. This seems to be the Israeli government’s intentional strategy. The international community must uphold its obligations under international law to protect Palestinians. The only way is to uphold the ICJ advisory opinion. Having formally recognised the state of Palestine, the British government must publish its response and take all necessary measures “not to render aid or assistance in maintaining the situation created by Israel’s illegal presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory”, as the court stipulated. The situation in the West Bank is a tragedy foretold. We must stand up and do the right thing before it’s too late. The Rt Rev Dr Guli Francis-Dehqani Bishop of Chelmsford; The Rt Rev Rachel Treweek Bishop of Gloucester; The Rt Rev Graham Usher Bishop of Norwich • Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.

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C of E bishops criticise UK inaction over Israel’s ‘West Bank de facto annexation’

Three prominent Church of England bishops have accused the UK government of contributing to a “culture of impunity” in which Israel has accelerated its de facto annexation of the West Bank. Guli Francis-Dehqani, the bishop of Chelmsford, Rachel Treweek, the bishop of Gloucester, and Graham Usher, the bishop of Norwich, visited Palestinian Christian communities in the occupied West Bank last week. In a letter to the Guardian, they say they heard from people who felt they “have no other choice but to leave [their homes] or to die standing”. They also say they are “incredulous” at the UK government’s failure to publish its legal response to the advisory opinion of the international court of justice (ICJ) in July 2024 that ordered Israel to end its unlawful occupation of Palestine. “This inaction has contributed to a culture of impunity which the Israeli government has used to accelerate its de facto annexation of the West Bank,” the bishops say. “Its instruments are administrative changes, continuous settlement expansion and growth, intensifying violence by Israeli troops and settler militia, the localised system of road closures, house demolitions, tightening access to water and electricity, deepening legal segregation and an unequal system of governance.” Since October 2023, violent attacks by rightwing settlers on Palestinian communities in the West Bank have accelerated. A UN report last month found that settlers killed people, destroyed property and livelihoods, forced Palestinians from their homes and ripped communities apart. Israel’s laws, policies and practices had an “asphyxiating impact”, it said. In their letter, the bishops say: “While world leaders met in Davos to debate futuristic plans for the reconstruction of Gaza, which are largely disconnected from reality, we visited and listened to Palestinian Christian communities across the West Bank as to their lived reality.” They spoke to families “living in fear and torment – an unending nightmare where they are denied any possibility of living with even minimal dignity. The violence has robbed them of the ability to earn a living and provide for their families. Terrorised to the point of fearing for their lives, there is no one to protect them. “Faced with such abandonment, and denied any agency as to their future, many now feel they have no other choice but to leave or to die standing. This seems to be the Israeli government’s intentional strategy.” The bishops call on the international community to “uphold its obligations under international law to protect Palestinians”. The British government must publish its response to the ICJ ruling and take necessary measures “not to render aid or assistance in maintaining the situation created by Israel’s illegal presence in the occupied Palestinian territory”, as stipulated by the court. The bishops say: “The situation in the West Bank is a tragedy foretold. Before it is too late, we must stand up and do the right thing.”

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The death of medical care for Afghan women | Letter

Your article on contraception in Afghanistan (Taliban birth control ban: women ‘broken’ by lethal pregnancies and untreated miscarriages, 29 January), while being tragically accurate, omits a few damning facts. First of all, because of spiralling poverty, girls are increasingly married off from the age of 12 or lower for the simple reason that their father receives a dowry in what amounts to a financial transaction: the younger the girl, the higher the sum her father receives. Second, and this is even more important, the Taliban have forbidden any form of study or work for girls and women after at best paltry primary schooling. This means universities and medical schools only train men. So after the demise of the present generation of female doctors, midwives, surgeons and nurses who are still permitted to work, women will receive no medical aid whatsoever, especially as they are not allowed to consult male practitioners. Even more than a gender apartheid, we are witnessing the rise of a truly genocidal policy against women, unique in its kind. But the world remains silent. Dr Carol Mann President, Femaid, Paris • Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.

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Likeness of restored angel to Giorgia Meloni triggers investigations in Rome

Italy’s culture minister and the diocese of Rome have launched investigations after claims were made that an angel in a landmark church in Rome was restored in the likeness of the Italian prime minister, Giorgia Meloni. The resemblance was first flagged by the newspaper La Repubblica, which noted that one of the two angels flanking a marble bust of Italy’s last king in the Basilica of St Lawrence in Lucina now had “a familiar, astonishingly contemporary face”. It added: “Before the restoration, there was a generic cherub. Today, it is the face of the most powerful woman in the country.” The front-page story set off a flurry of reactions. The culture ministry said technicians had been dispatched to carry out an inspection of the winged figure. They had been told to “establish the nature of the work carried out”, it said in a statement, and would “decide what action to take”. As before-and-after photos made the rounds on social media, Meloni weighed in, seemingly poking fun at the curious controversy. On Instagram, she posted a picture of the restored angel, adding: “No, I definitely do not look like an angel,” alongside a laughing emoji. Reporters rushed to the basilica, whose roots trace back to the fourth century, to get a sense of what exactly had transpired. “There is indeed a certain resemblance, but you would have to ask the restorer why it was done that way,” the parish priest of the basilica, Daniele Micheletti, told the news agency Ansa. “I asked for the chapel to be restored exactly as it was, I don’t know.” He said the restoration had been needed after the chapel containing the painting sustained water damage. The original painting dated back to the year 2000, meaning it was not under any sort of heritage protection, he added. He defended the sacristan who had carried out the restoration. “He’s not a house painter; he’s very good,” he said. Opposition politicians were swift to take aim. “What has emerged is unacceptable,” Irene Manzi, of the centre-left Partito Democratico, said in a statement that called for an investigation into whether the restoration breached heritage regulations. Members of the Five Star Movement pointed to the wider implications. “We cannot allow art and culture to risk becoming a tool for propaganda or anything else, regardless of whether the face depicted is that of the prime minister,” the party said. The Diocese of Rome said its vicar general, Baldassare Reina, had expressed “disappointment” over what had happened and would “immediately initiate the necessary investigations” to determine who was responsible. “It is firmly reiterated that images of sacred art and Christian tradition cannot be misused or exploited, as they are intended exclusively to support liturgical life and personal and communal prayer,” it said. As images of the restoration fuelled debate across the country, reporters lined up to speak with the octogenarian pensioner behind the revamp. “They asked me to fix it and I did,” said Bruno Valentinetti. “I worked on it for two years and finished the work a year ago.” He said he had simply restored the paintings to their original state. “Many things had disappeared. In restoration, you strip away the layers and the original design reappears. I traced it and put the colour back in. The design was ruined, but I managed to recover the outline and traced it,” he said. Valentinetti said he carried out the work with the blessing of the parish priest. “I live here. I’m a craftsman. I volunteered to show gratitude to the priest for hosting me,” he said. He denied reports of being linked to rightwing politics in the past, saying he couldn’t remember how long it had been since he had voted, and he repeatedly shot down any suggestion of a likeness to the prime minister. “It’s not Meloni,” he said. “I restored the faces to how they were 25 years ago.” In an interview with La Repubblica, Valentinetti noted that the swirling debate over the painting had come with an upside: “In the past years we’ve never seen so many people in this church.”