Read the daily news to learn English

picture of article

Islamic State claims attack on international airport and airbase in Niger

The Islamic State in the Sahel has claimed responsibility for an audacious assault at the international airport and adjacent air force base in Niamey, the capital of Niger, according to the SITE Intelligence Group, which tracks jihadist activity and communications worldwide. The attack, which began shortly after midnight on Thursday, reportedly involved motorcycle-riding militants who launched a “surprise and coordinated” strike using heavy weaponry and drones, according to statements released via the IS in the Sahel’s propaganda arm, Amaq News Agency. The regional IS affiliate has been linked to high-profile attacks in Niger in recent months, killing over 120 people in strikes targeting the Tillaberi region in September, and abducting an American pilot in October. The gunfire and explosions in the airport, which is about 10km (six miles) from the presidential palace and Base Aérienne 101, a military base previously used by US and then Russian troops, hit at least three planes: one belonging to Ivorian carrier Air Côte d’Ivoire and two belonging to Togolese airline Asky. A source at Asky told the Guardian that the airline staff were in their hotel away from the scene and remain in the city, with their passports still in the custody of the authorities. Niger, which has been led by a junta since the deposition of democratically elected Mohamed Bazoum in July 2023, has previously blamed the chaos on its neighbours Benin and Côte d’Ivoire, as well as former colonial ruler France, without presenting any backing evidence. “We have heard them bark, they should be ready to hear us roar,” the head of the junta, Gen Abdourahmane Tchiani, said on national television on Thursday. The statement is expected to further strain the relationships between Niger and its neighbours in the regional Economic Community of West African States and its former ally France, which have soured since the 2023 coup. Since the coup, Niger has exited Ecowas, joining ranks with fellow junta-run states Burkina Faso and Mali to form the Association of Sahel States (AES), which has issued its own passports and set up a regional development institution, the Confederal Bank for Investment and Development. AES sees some of its Ecowas neighbours as French proxies scheming along with Paris to derail development in the Sahel states as they grapple with jihadist activity. In its statement on Thursday, Nigerien authorities said the attackers arrived on motorcycles, and security forces quickly repelled their advance, killing 20 of the attackers and arresting 11 others. A stash of ammunition also caught fire, the government said. The Niamey attack happened about the same time as an attack using drones by jihadists in neighbouring Nigeria. The attack by the Islamic State West Africa Province in the early hours of Thursday at the Sabon Gari army base in the north-east state of Borno left at least nine soldiers dead and several others wounded.

picture of article

Hungary doubles down on opposition to Ukraine’s EU accession as Zelenskyy aims for 2027 – as it happened

… and on that note, it’s a wrap for today! Hungary’s prime minister Viktor Orbán has stepped up his opposition to Ukraine joining the European Union, claiming the bloc was looking to admit the wartorn country in 2027 to help it benefit from the next seven-year financial budget (13:26). His comments come after Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelenskyy repeated his target to join the EU in 2027, despite some scepticism in the bloc about the accelerated process that would be required (9:58). Orbán’s comments will likely be seen as part of an increasingly fierce campaign ahead of this April’s critical parliamentary election in Hungary, which could see him ousted after 16 years in office (13:55). Separately, Ukraine’s Zelenskyy has said there were no Russian strikes on energy infrastructure overnight, after US president Donald Trump claimed he discussed a form of brief ceasefire with the Russian president, Vladimir Putin (10:37, 12:13). The Kremlin confirmed that Putin received a “personal request” from Trump on this issue, without clarifying what his answer was (11:26). The exchange comes as there is a growing question mark over whether this weekend’s trilateral talks between Ukraine, Russia and the US will even take place amid growing tensions between the US and Iran (10:11). And that’s all from me, Jakub Krupa, for today. If you have any tips, comments or suggestions, email me at jakub.krupa@theguardian.com. I am also on Bluesky at @jakubkrupa.bsky.social and on X at @jakubkrupa.

picture of article

‘Deeply ideological’: the rationale behind Iran’s insistence on uranium enrichment

A desperate effort to avert war between the US and Iran is once again under way, but trying to locate common ground between the two countries over Tehran’s nuclear programme has been made more difficult by escalating US demands, and by Iran’s ideological, deeply nationalist attachment to the right to enrich uranium. Iran’s ambitions to run its own nuclear programme pre-date the arrival of the theocratic state in 1979, and can be traced back to the mid-1970s when the shah announced plans to build 20 civil nuclear power stations. This prompted an undignified scramble among western nations to be part of the action, with the UK energy secretary at the time, Tony Benn, having more than a walk-on part. At the heart of the programme was a desire for national sovereignty and power, symbolised by the ability to enrich uranium. But the exorbitant price Iran has paid to exercise that right subsequently in terms of US sanctions, economic misery and now political instability raises questions as to Iran’s true motives. Asked by the Guardian in November in Tehran what cost benefit analysis could possibly conclude that the nuclear programme was a worthwhile project, the foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, referred to Iran’s sovereign right under the nuclear non-proliferation treaty, the medical benefits, and the blood of previously assassinated Iranian nuclear scientists. He suggested a compromise whereby a consortium including possibly the US could enrich uranium in Iran, but insisted the principle that uranium would be enriched inside Iran remained sacrosanct. So seeking a rationale is difficult. Indeed, Ali Ansari, a professor of modern history at St Andrews University, says: “Those people looking for a rational explanation for Iran’s attachment to nuclear enrichment are not going to find it. It is deeply ideological, almost an obsession with national prestige. It is about making a point and riding the crest of an ultra-nationalist wave. “It also serves a political purpose, including highlighting the unfairness of the west and so nursing a grievance. But the refusal to compromise means that the Iranian economy is being run into the ground for no practical purpose. “The government tries to argue that what is being pursued is a national right, but this is incongruous because it is being pursued at the expense of other civil and human rights that Iranians could enjoy, including better schools and hospitals.” Iran first became seriously embroiled in nuclear power in 1974 when a steep rise in oil prices turned it into a wealthy nation, and the shah drew up plans for 24,000MW of electrical energy to be supplied by 20 nuclear power plants by 1994. With oil expected to decline by the mid-1990s, energy self-sufficiency was the goal, both in terms of the supply of energy, but also technical ability. That meant Iran leaned towards Europe, and not the US or Russia, for investment. The shah’s nuclear experts proposed that Britain and Iran set up a joint nuclear company combining Iranian capital with British technical expertise to oversee the development of the nuclear industry in Iran and the UK. Benn, as energy secretary, became a great fan of the idea, as did Sir William Marshall, the chief scientist at the energy department. As part of the plan, in which both sides would be treated as equals, the UK recognised it would have to help Iran to master the full enrichment cycle, something Henry Kissinger, the US secretary of state, was to come to regret. Ever since Iran started to enrich uranium in 2006, Iran’s relations with the west have turned on the nuclear programme and what was its ultimate purpose, and the conditions with which Iran could be entitled to enrich uranium, including determining the purity levels and stockpile size. There have been moments of breakthrough. In 2013, Iran suspended the right to enrich. And there have been periods of confrontation. Between 2005 and 2013, the Iranian president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, spoke of Iran’s inalienable right to “industrial-scale enrichment under the NPT”. He denounced the west’s hypocrisy in trying to hold Iran back. “That means you [the west] have to climb down from your ivory towers and put aside your arrogance,” he used to say. By the time of the 2015 nuclear deal, Iran’s mastery of civil nuclear technology, including the enrichment of uranium on Iranian soil, had been elevated to “the absolute right of Iran”, according to Iran’s foreign minister at the time, Javad Zarif. Iran’s then president, Hassan Rouhani, declared domestic enrichment to be a “red line”. Ansari says: “Iran’s civil nuclear power is still being projected as a symbol of Iran’s modernity, but the nuclear programme is largely inherited from the shah in the 1970s and is not that modern. Even with full investment by the west, it is 10 years away, so it is not going to contribute greatly to Iran’s energy needs. Instead Iran is sitting on a massive alternative energy source in the form of solar.” He adds: “It leads one to conclude there are some that want the option of a nuclear weapon, but that the option is there for diplomatic leverage – to be able to say we warrant another meeting, and if they are given another meeting they can say we are still relevant and legitimate.” But matters have been made more intractable by the US apparently adding fresh demands, including restrictions on the range of Iran’s missile programme and an end to support for proxy groups in the region, such as the Houthis. Missiles have always been the backbone of Iranian defence. Any commitments by Iran not to arm the Houthis look inherently unenforceable. It is true that Hashemi Rafsanjani, a former president and reformist, once said: “Tomorrow’s world is the world of dialogue not missiles.” But for that he was immediately rebuked by the supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, who said: “In this jungle-like world, if the Islamic Republic seeks negotiations, trade and even technology and science, but has no defence power, won’t even small countries dare threaten Iran? Our enemies are constantly enhancing their military and missile capabilities, and given this, how can we say the age of missiles has passed?” That remains the dominant ideology within which Araghchi is working.

picture of article

Syrian government and Kurdish forces reach deal on permanent truce

The Syrian government and Kurdish-led forces have reached an agreement to extend a fragile ceasefire into a permanent truce, laying a framework for integrating Kurdish forces into the state and ending nearly a month of fighting. The agreement on Friday appeared to resolve escalating tensions between the two sides over the question of Kurdish autonomy in north-east Syria and paved a way for the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) to join Syria’s new army through negotiations, rather than battle. It also was a milestone for Damascus, which has sought to extend its control over the entirety of Syria’s territory, which for 14-years was carved up by competing militias and powers. The SDF had previously controlled about a quarter of the country and all of its main oilfields, constituting a significant challenge to the fledgling state’s rule. It came after Syrian government forces swept through north-east Syria, aided by the Arab and tribal elements, shrinking the territory controlled by the SDF by about 80%. The SDF chose mainly to withdraw from Arab-majority areas but were preparing to defend Kurdish-majority cities from government forces, when the deal was struck on Friday. Under the agreement, both sides would pull their fighters back from frontlines in north-east Syria and government security forces would enter the cities of Hasakah and Qamishli, the strongholds of the Kurdish authority.The SDF would integrate into the army, and the Syrian state would absorb the civilian institutions of the Kurdish authority. A new military brigade in the Syrian army would be formed, which would include three SDF brigades, as well as placing SDF fighters under government command in Aleppo. The Kurdish authority has operated as a de-facto autonomous zone for about a decade, with its own governing institutions and armed forces. Under Friday’s agreement, the scope of its autonomy shrinks significantly and would be replaced by unitary rule from Damascus. In a bid to reassure Kurds, one of Syria’s largest ethnic minorities, the deal also included “civil and educational rights for the Kurdish people, and guaranteeing the return of the displaced to their areas”. The agreement read: “The agreement aims to unify the Syrian territories and achieve the full integration process in the region by enhancing cooperation between the concerned parties and unifying efforts to rebuild the country.” The deal was praised by Tom Barrack, the US special envoy to Syria, who had been intensely mediating between the two sides over the last two weeks to stave off a full-scale war. He called it a “profound and historic milestone”. Barrack said in a post on X on Friday: “This carefully negotiated step, building on earlier frameworks and recent efforts to de-escalate tensions, reflects a shared commitment to inclusion, mutual respect and the collective dignity of all Syrian communities.” Friday’s agreement was more favorable to the Kurdish authority than previous ceasefire deals, and appears to have resulted from intensive diplomacy from the US and France, both of which maintain good relations from both sides. It also spelled a virtual end to the Kurdish-autonomous project of north-east Syria, but with relatively little bloodshed.

picture of article

South Africa expels top Israeli diplomat over ‘insulting attacks’ on president

South Africa and Israel have engaged in a tit-for-tat expulsion of senior diplomats, after South Africa ordered Israel’s chargé d’affaires to leave within 72 hours, citing “insulting attacks” on South Africa’s president, Cyril Ramaphosa, on social media. Ariel Seidman, the chargé d’affaires at Israel’s embassy in Pretoria, was declared persona non grata by South Africa’s department for international relations and cooperation (DIRCO) in a statement on its website on Friday afternoon. “This decisive measure follows a series of unacceptable violations of diplomatic norms and practice which pose a direct challenge to South Africa’s sovereignty,” the statement said. “These violations include the repeated use of official Israeli social media platforms to launch insulting attacks against His Excellency President Cyril Ramaphosa, and a deliberate failure to inform DIRCO of purported visits by senior Israeli officials.” Within hours, Israel had hit back, expelling Shaun Edward Byneveldt, who is South Africa’s representative to Palestine, based in Ramallah in the West Bank. Israel’s foreign ministry posted on X: “Following South Africa’s false attacks against Israel in the international arena and the unilateral, baseless step taken against the Chargé d’Affaires of Israel in South Africa – that South Africa’s senior diplomatic representative, Minister Shaun Edward Byneveldt, is persona non grata and must leave Israel within 72 hours.” South Africa’s relationship with Israel deteriorated in December 2023, when South Africa launched a case at the international court of justice (ICJ) accusing Israel of committing genocide against Palestinians in Gaza. In January 2024, the ICJ ruled that the claim of genocide was “plausible”. However, the case has since slowed and experts do not expect a judgment before the end of 2027. Israel has rejected accusations of genocide as “outrageous and false”. South Africa and Israel have long been at odds, due to the staunch support of the Palestinian cause by South Africa’s government. Soon after his release from prison in 1990, Nelson Mandela embraced the Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat. In 1997, Mandela, by then president of South Africa, said: “Our freedom is incomplete without the freedom of the Palestinians.” Many South Africans see strong similarities between apartheid white minority rule and Israel’s grip over the occupied Palestinian territories, a comparison Israel refutes. Israel’s embassy in South Africa has regularly attacked the government on social media. “The South African government has thrown away R100 million [£4.6m] attacking Israel at the ICJ – with another R500 million to be wasted next year. 0% of value for South Africans, 100% political theatre,” it posted on X in November. Later that month, Ramaphosa said “boycott politics don’t work” in response to Donald Trump’s refusal to attend the G20 summit in South Africa. Israel’s embassy posted: “A rare moment of wisdom and diplomatic clarity from President Ramaphosa.” South African officials were angered earlier this week when Israeli diplomats met the Thembu king, Buyelekhaya Dalindyebo, in the Eastern Cape province to discuss Israel providing agriculture, water and health aid, without first informing the government. Dalindyebo is pro-Israel and visited the country in December, where he was welcomed by the Israeli foreign minister, Gideon Sa’ar. Eastern Cape’s premier, Lubabalo Oscar Mabuyane, said in a statement that he “rejects the sinister deal between the king and Israel, and views these actions as an attempt by the Israeli government to undermine the sovereign right of the Republic of South Africa to manage its international affairs.” DIRCO said in its Friday statement: “Such actions represent a gross abuse of diplomatic privilege and a fundamental breach of the Vienna convention.” Israel’s embassy posted videos of Dalindyebo welcoming the offers of aid on X. “These are the videos the South African media didn’t want you to see,” it said. Mandela was also part of the Thembu clan, whose historic kingdom is now home to more than 400,000 people.

picture of article

Killing Khamenei? Hitting military sites? It is unclear what a US attack on Iran would achieve | Dan Sabbagh

A fortnight ago, when Donald Trump first threatened Iran’s regime, telling protesters in the country that “help is coming”, there were not enough US military assets in the Middle East to back up the rhetoric. That has now changed, although plenty of questions remain about what an attack on Iran could achieve. An aircraft carrier, the USS Abraham Lincoln, has arrived in the Indian Ocean, dispatched from the South China Sea alongside three destroyers equipped with Tomahawk cruise missiles. Its eight-squadron air wing includes F-35C and F/A-18 jets and, critically, EA-18G Growlers to suppress anything that is left of Iran’s air defences after last year’s war with Israel. Open-source monitors have spotted transport planes bringing what they believe to be US air defence systems to the Gulf. That is in line with reports that Patriot and Thaad antimissile batteries would be deployed to protect US bases from any Iranian drone and missile counterattack against military sites in the region. On top of that, squadrons of F-15 fighters – an estimated 35 planes – have been redeployed from RAF Lakenheath in Suffolk to Muwaffaq Salti airbase in Jordan. It had been intended for the F-15s to be flown back to the US, but now they have been deployed as extra defensive cover for Israel, Jordan, Iraq and the region if the conflict escalates. Michael Carpenter, a former member of the US national security council, under Joe Biden, believes that the most plausible military option would be to go after Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, a capture-or-kill operation modelled on the seizure of Venezuela’s former president Nicolás Maduro. Targeting other key Iranian military sites would not obviously degrade the country’s regime significantly, he added. “I find it unlikely, dubious, that these would have the strategic effects sought,” he said. Targeting Khamenei, Carpenter argues, would be “a very fraught operation with a dubious outcome”. The success of the seizure of Maduro relied, partly, on “exquisite intelligence from the inside”, he said, built up over five months of preparation by the CIA and sources within Maduro’s government, but it was unclear how far that existed in the case of Iran, even allowing for possible Israeli help. Israel was chillingly successful in assassinating Iranian leaders during last June’s 12-day war, though afterwards Israeli sources revealed a key method for tracing their locations was tracking the bodyguards’ mobile phones. Procedures ought to have been tightened up. And as the Israeli foreign minister, Israel Katz, acknowledged, Khamenei’s security precautions kept him out of their sights that summer. Iran is not likely to have much air defence to protect itself from Tomahawks or incoming jets. Last June, Israeli jets were quickly able to fly over large parts of the country, without suffering losses, paving the way for the US bombing of the nuclear enrichment site under the mountain at Fordow. This month, the US was able to suppress Venezuela’s air defence within a couple of hours. However, a capture operation would have to range over considerable distance (Tehran is about 1,000 miles from the Indian Ocean), which could tip the crude military thinking towards an assassination attempt. That in turn would represent an extraordinary escalation: an attempt by the US to kill the leader of another country with which it is not at war, and from which it faces no immediate threat. A western analyst, who asked not to be named, said they believed a US attempt to try and kill Iran’s supreme leader “is more likely than a capture attempt – and also less risky if it were to involve a standoff munition” – though it would also “depend heavily on the intelligence and the number of people who’ve been co-opted (if any have been) from his protective detail”. The question then is what would follow. Iran’s regime has been cohesive enough to violently suppress demonstrators, killing perhaps 30,000. If Khamenei were to be killed it is not obvious that any successor would suddenly shift policy in whatever direction the White House seeks. Though Khamenei has shortlisted three potential successors, there may be a struggle for power the US simply cannot control. What is more certain is there would be an immediate military response. On Sunday, Iran’s president, Masoud Pezeshkian, warned that any attack on Khamenei would amount to a declaration of war. Iran’s most potent available form of defence is attack, particularly from high-speed ballistic missiles (whose stock is estimated at 2,000) stored in “missile cities” deep below ground. The most obvious target for a missile attack, combined with drones, would be the Abraham Lincoln and its allied warships. But Matthew Savill of the Royal United Services Institute argues that Iran “may not be able to fix its position” with available surveillance because it will be sailing out in the Indian Ocean. “The US knows the closer to the Persian Gulf it goes, the more visible it is to the Iranians,” he added. An alternative counterstrike would be to target US military bases in the Gulf, such as al-Udeid airbase in Qatar, headquarters to US Central Command. This month the base was reinforced by new Patriot air defence systems according to Chinese satellite imagery, but a consideration for the US is that last June 14% of Iranian ballistic missiles got past sophisticated Israeli and US air defences. This, though, would risk international escalation, bringing Gulf states and their allies automatically into the conflict. The UK has already forward deployed the RAF’s 12 Squadron, a joint UK-Qatari unit at al-Udeid, to deter a possible attack and help the Qataris act in self defence. Another alternative for Iran could be to try and mine the strait of Hormuz, closing it to merchant shipping, though that would rely on submarines that the US will be closely monitoring underwater. Iran’s military options may be limited, but so too are the White House’s prospects of achieving an instant knockout.

picture of article

Zelenskyy cautious on Russian bombing pause during extreme cold weather

Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said he was waiting to see whether Russia would observe a proposed pause in strikes on Ukrainian cities and energy infrastructure, as Kyiv endures a spell of bitter winter cold. Donald Trump on Thursday claimed that Vladimir Putin had agreed to halt strikes on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure for a week after he issued a personal appeal to the Russian leader due to the extreme weather in Ukraine. Speaking on Friday, Zelenskyy said there was no formal ceasefire agreement on energy targets between Ukraine and Russia, but added that Kyiv would halt such strikes if Moscow did the same. It remained unclear when any pause was meant to take effect. The Kremlin said on Friday that Putin had received a personal request from Trump to halt strikes on Kyiv until 1 February, but declined to say whether the Russian president had agreed to the request or issued any corresponding order. But there was a noticeable reduction in attacks by both sides overnight after Trump’s announcement. Ukraine’s air force said in a social media post that Russian forces launched 111 strike drones and one ballistic missile at Ukraine between Thursday night and Friday morning. Russian pro-war military bloggers also reported that Moscow had largely limited its attacks to the frontline. Zelenskyy said US officials first proposed the ceasefire during trilateral talks in Abu Dhabi last week, as part of a broader effort to “create more space for diplomacy”. Both sides agreed last spring to a 30-day ceasefire on energy infrastructure, which was not upheld and soon collapsed. Senior Ukrainian and Russian officials are due to meet in Abu Dhabi this weekend for another round of talks, though rising tensions over possible US strikes on Iran have injected fresh uncertainty into the plans. “The date or the location may change,” Zelenskyy said. “From our point of view, something is happening in the situation between the United States and Iran, and those developments could affect the timing.” Trump has repeatedly spoken over the past year of progress towards ending Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, but a viable path to peace remains elusive, with Moscow continuing to press maximalist territorial demands. The Kremlin has insisted that any settlement must involve Ukraine ceding the entire eastern Donbas region, including areas still under Ukrainian control. Kyiv has rejected those terms, though Zelenskyy has said he is willing to consider alternative arrangements, including the withdrawal of Ukrainian troops from parts of the east and the creation of a demilitarised zone. “We will not give up the Donbas without a fight,” Zelenskyy said, adding that “for now, we have been unable to find a compromise on territorial issues.”

picture of article

Saudi dissident awarded £3m damages threatens enforcement action if he is not paid

A London-based Saudi dissident who a judge decided should receive more than £3m in damages from the kingdom for assault and the hacking of his phone has insisted that it must pay up or face enforcement action. Mr Justice Saini ruled that the Saudi government infected the phone of Ghanem al-Masarir with Pegasus spyware and, while surveillance was continuing, in 2018, its agents attacked him outside Harrods in central London. It was a landmark judgment, holding to account a regime that has faced numerous allegations of human rights abuses but has consistently managed to avoid legal responsibility for abuses. However, with the Saudi government having long refused to participate in the case after failing to have it thrown out on the grounds of “state immunity”, the big question is whether it will comply with the order to pay al-Masarir damages. In an interview with the Guardian, the 45-year-old satirist and human rights activist said: “I hope they will comply and pay the debt as soon as possible. If they don’t pay it, we won’t have any other alternative but to take enforcement action to recover the money from Saudi assets abroad, it doesn’t have to be the UK.” The bulk of the damages – about £2.5m – was for loss of earnings as he had previously had, in Saini’s words, a “thriving and lucrative” career, creating content critical of the Saudi government. However, al-Masarir continues to experience severe depression as a result of being targeted, leaving him unable to work. The Saudis have made no comment on Monday’s judgment nor indicated whether they will pay the compensation. Nevertheless, al-Masarir, who was granted asylum in the UK in 2018 and citizenship last month, described Monday’s high court judgment as an “amazing thing, them being liable in a court of law. This judgment sent a signal they should not intervene inside the UK and it will not be tolerated.” Referring to attempts by Prince Mohammed to get the then foreign minister, David Cameron, to intervene in the case, revealed by the Guardian last year, al-Masarir said: “They think they can hide behind state immunity and force the UK to interfere in the legal system. That happily didn’t work and justice has been served. In Saudi they can interfere with their legal system but not here. It is an independent legal system.” The Citizen Lab, at the University of Toronto, which tracks digital attacks against civil society, established in 2018 that al-Masarir’s phone had been infected as well as other critics of Saudi Arabia, including his friend the Canadian-based dissident Omar Abdulaziz, who was also friends with their fellow dissident Jamal Khashoggi. Among previous legal actions against the Saudis that have floundered were a US lawsuit accusing Mohammed bin Salman of conspiring to kill Khashoggi, which was dismissed on the basis that the Saudi crown prince was entitled to sovereign immunity, despite the judge finding “credible allegations” that he was involved in the murder. Saini ruled that there was “effectively criminal conduct” by the Saudis against al-Masarir, albeit proven on the balance of probabilities, which is the lower standard of proof in civil cases. “I thought I would be safe in the centre of London [but] they were able to locate me and send their agent to attack me,” said al-Masarir. “We all know what happened to Jamal Kashoggi, how far they are willing to go and, in my case, how they were willing to send their agent to attack me in the streets of London and to hack my phones, even though it’s an independent and sovereign country. So I don’t know if they will stop, I hope this will deter them and hold them accountable and I hope they will not do it any more to anybody.” The court heard that al-Masarir had suffered “catastrophic personal consequences”, rarely leaves the house and cannot carry out many basic day-to-day activities. “I suffered a lot and what they have done to me has ruined my life,” he said. “I’m not the same person I was 10 years ago, I am a different person, I can’t do my work. I haven’t visited the same place I was attacked [since] – that is seven years. It’s too painful to see.” He has little faith in the much-trumpeted political reforms in Saudi Arabia, referring disparagingly to last year’s controversial comedy festival in the kingdom featuring the likes of Louis CK, Dave Chappelle and Jimmy Carr. “At the same time they have attacked me – I’m a comedian as well,” he said. “It shows you how hypocritical they are.” He said that, whether they paid up or not, the Saudis had got what they wanted, stopping him from creating the satirical shows that have clocked up almost 350m views on YouTube: “It’s a win for them because they silenced me and I’m not able to do my work any more.”