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€16.4bn in funds unlocked for Hungary as part of deal with EU, Magyar says – Europe live

Meanwhile, Bulgaria said it would terminate at the end of next month the authorisation for US military refuelling planes to be based at Sofia airport amid a visa dispute between the Nato allies. Bulgarians are among the last European Union nationals not to have visa-free entry for tourist visits to the United States, AFP noted. US KC-135 Stratotanker jets have been based at Sofia since mid-February, just ahead of the US-Israeli attacks on Iran, and in mid-May six were still present at the Bulgarian capital’s airport. Radev was asked today whether he had raised the visa issue with Trump and said “I don’t have a positive response at this stage”. We can only speculate that the issue may have come up during Radev’s meeting with Nato’s secretary general Mark Rutte in Brussels yesterday, as Trump will no doubt not like this decision and it could further deepen his frustration with Nato allies in Europe.

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First of trapped men rescued from flooded Laos cave

The first of seven men who have been trapped in a flooded cave in Laos for more than a week has been brought to safety by divers, in a perilous rescue mission that has required teams to crawl through narrow, deluged tunnels, navigating sharp rocks and collapse hazards. Four men remain inside a chamber about 300 metres (980ft) from the cave entrance, where they were found crouched and huddled together on a rocky ledge by rescuers on Wednesday. Two men are yet to be located. “The first one is out. Safe and sound!!!” wrote Manat Artmongkron, a rescue technician for Saithan Saphanboon Foundation, a Thai rescue group, in a Facebook post. Video posted on social media showed a man covered in mud clambering out of the cave to safety. He was met with some cheers and wrapped in an emergency blanket. International diving teams, including some who worked on the dramatic rescue of a young Thai football team in 2018, have battled for days to retrieve the men. Reaching them required skilled divers to crawl and twist through incredibly narrow passageways, moving through muddy water with poor visibility. Rescuers have been racing against time to pump water out from the cave, fearing that rains could soon begin again, further inundating the tunnels. Josh Richards, an Australian cave diver who joined the team on Friday, said rescuers planned to attempt to bring the four other men out tomorrow. He said the conditions the team were battling against, including unstable clay and mud walls, which affected the water, meant “you’re essentially diving in coffee. You’re not going to be seeing anything through it.” As sections of the tunnel between the miners and the surface were completely flooded, the team on the ground was trying to pump out as much water as possible in a two-pronged approach, Richards said. The plan had been that if they were not able to pump the water out then they would use scuba equipment to rescue the men, he added. Additional divers from Australia, Japan, France, Indonesia and Thailand were expected to arrive on Friday, while a Malaysian cave diver joined the efforts on Thursday. Kengkard Bongkawong, the head of operations for Metta Tham Rescue, another Thai group, said on Facebook: “One person has been brought out of the cave safely. Four others remain, awaiting assessment. The search for the remaining two will continue tomorrow.” Earlier, he warned that the search for the two missing men would be especially challenging, requiring teams to dive through a 25-metre-long narrow tunnel. “Diving in the narrow passage that has no space to make a U-turn, this is really dangerous so we need to evaluate the safety measures, principles, routes and expertise in the cave area,” he told local media. Heavy machinery is being used to clear a route to the cave site so that equipment can be transported more easily. The cave is in a remote area of central Laos’s Xaysomboun province, and reaching it involves a 3-mile (5km) hike up mountainous terrain. The group of seven men had been trapped inside the cave since last Wednesday, when they reportedly entered to search for gold ore and to hunt. Heavy rains inundated the cave, carrying in sand and gravel that blocked a crucial exit.

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EU to release €16bn to Hungary previously frozen under Orbán

The EU is to release more than €16bn to Hungary that had been frozen under the rule of Viktor Orbán, with Ursula von der Leyen hailing the “winds of change” in the country since the election of Péter Magyar last month. The decision, described as a “historic breakthrough” by the new prime minister, comes as police in Hungary have said they will allow next month’s Pride parade in Budapest to take place. Last year they sought to block the event on the orders of the government of the rightwing Orbán. Last year’s march made headlines around the world after Orbán’s Fidesz party backed legislation – the first of its kind in the EU’s recent history – that created a legal basis for Pride events to be banned, citing a widely criticised need to protect children. Since Magyar was elected in a landslide victory, setting off celebrations across the country as Hungarians marked the end of Orbán’s 16 years in power, the new leader has repeatedly voiced support for equality and freedom of assembly. He has not, however, made any mention of Pride events, nor has his recently formed government moved to reverse Orbán’s legislation barring such events, leaving questions over the fate of this year’s events. Von der Leyen said he had already convinced the European Commission that the country was “turning the page”, and the money was being released for housing, transport, energy and small and medium enterprises, as well as societal supports under cohesion funds. “We can already feel a strong wind of change across Hungary,” the president of the commission told a press conference. “In only a few weeks, you have driven forward long overdue reforms,” she told the conservative leader. Magyar told reporters in Brussels that he agreed with Von der Leyen on all the steps that allow the funds to be released, and that Hungary would be able to pass all the laws needed. This infers that any compromising of the rights of LGBTQ people will be corrected by Magyar. About €2.2bn of the funds being released are contingent on “academic freedom” being restored in Hungary’s universities. The organisers of Budapest Pride notified police this week of their intention to hold the 31st edition of the march on 27 June. They said they had little doubt that the event would go ahead, particularly after the EU’s top court ruled that Orbán’s 2021 anti-LGBTQ+ law – which was amended last year to serve as a basis for banning Pride – was discriminatory, stigmatising and in breach of the bloc’s rules. “After the extraordinary year of 2025, we trust in the cooperation of the authorities and their acceptance of the gathering,” Budapest Pride organisers said in a statement this week. “We warmly welcome everyone in June who took part in last year’s demonstration, as well as those who continue to believe in equal rights and a democratic Hungary and those who would like to once again celebrate the transition to democracy.” Police said they had given the march the green light to go ahead. In a statement to the news agency AFP, they said: “During the notification process for the 2026 Pride parade and the subsequent in-person consultation with the organisers, no grounds for prohibiting the assembly arose.” The statement said police had issued “prescriptive-restrictive decisions regarding three counter-demonstrations”, suggesting that those gatherings would also be allowed to take place but at a distance from the Pride parade. Despite the ban, last year’s march was attended by a record 200,000 people, according to its organisers, transforming the event into a potent symbol of defiance of Orbán and his government’s steady rollback of rights. Orbán’s government had threatened to use facial recognition software to identify and potentially fine participants up to €500, but police later confirmed they would not take action against attenders. Key to last year’s march was the progressive mayor of Budapest, Gergely Karácsony, who stepped in as a co-organiser, rebranding the event as a municipal cultural event in an attempt to sidestep Orbán’s legislation. Months later, he was charged with organising the banned parade, with prosecutors seeking to fine him. Géza Buzás-Hábel, a Roma rights campaigner in Pécs, home to the only Pride march in Hungary outside the capital, also faces a fine for organising the fifth edition of the city’s parade last year.

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US designates Brazil’s two largest gangs as terrorist organizations

The United States has designated Brazil’s two largest criminal gangs, the First Capital Command (PCC) and the Red Command, as foreign terrorist organisations. The announcement, made by Marco Rubio, the secretary of state, on Thursday, is being widely seen in Brazil as a setback for Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, the president who had strongly opposed the designation – and a boost for Lula’s main challenger in October’s presidential election, the far-right senator Flávio Bolsonaro. Chosen to run in place of his father, Jair Bolsonaro – the former president who is barred from running because he is in house arrest after being convicted of attempting a coup – Flávio spent this week in the US, where he met with Donald Trump and Rubio. The senator was at his lowest point in the campaign, after revelations that he had been caught on tape asking a banker accused of corruption for $26.8m (£20m) to fund a film about his father caused a significant drop in his poll numbers. Announcing the designation, Rubio wrote that the groups are “two of the most violent criminal organizations in Brazil. Their reach extends throughout our region and into our country”. Both groups emerged inside Brazilian prisons, originally as a response to torture and abuse. They are now among the largest criminal organisations in Latin America, exporting cocaine produced in neighbouring Colombia, Peru and Bolivia primarily to the US and Europe, while expanding into other parts of the world. The Red Command is the older of the two, emerging in the 1970s from interactions between political prisoners jailed by the military dictatorship and common criminals in a prison in Rio de Janeiro. The PCC was founded in the 1990s in a São Paulo prison, months after 111 prisoners were killed when police crushed a rebellion at another prison. The two groups compete for control of drug distribution and trafficking routes, but operate in distinct ways: while the Red Command has a more decentralised leadership structure and resembles the more overtly violent and conspicuous crime factions of Mexico and Colombia, the PCC functions almost like a corporation, with well-defined hierarchies and a low-profile, businesslike approach. Lula had opposed the US proposal to classify the groups as terrorist organisations, describing the move as an affront to Brazilian sovereignty and arguing that the country already actively combats them. Just hours before the US announcement, Brazil’s federal police launched a new operation targeting PCC infiltration into the country’s financial sector. The president has not yet commented on the US decision. Flávio Bolsonaro immediately celebrated it. “On a trip as a presidential candidate, we did more for Brazil and for the security of Brazilians than Lula,” he said. Months earlier, commenting on US attacks against boats in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific that have killed 196 people, he said he felt “jealous” of those countries and suggested the US could do something similar in Rio’s Guanabara Bay. “Wouldn’t you like to spend a few months here helping us combat these terrorist organisations?” he wrote to Pete Hegseth, the US secretary of defence. The US decision to classify the organisations as terrorist groups – following similar designations of organisations in Colombia, Mexico and Venezuela – had been widely anticipated for months, but was not mentioned during Trump’s meeting with Lula at the White House three weeks ago. Flávio’s visit to the White House last Tuesday was not listed on the president’s public schedule and, unlike Trump’s meeting with Lula – during which the US president even praised the Brazilian leftist – was not mentioned by Trump even in a social media post. There is still little clarity about the practical consequences of the designation. Analysts fear it could have financial repercussions even for innocent Brazilians, but the move is already being widely interpreted as another example of the growing pressure exerted by the White House across the region as part of its so-called “war on drugs”. A report published this week by the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project found that US pressure drove an 18% increase in clashes between security forces and armed groups across Latin America and the Caribbean in 2025.

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WHO puts Ebola outbreak death rate at ‘huge’ 30-50% as chief arrives in DRC

The death rate of the Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo is between 30% and 50%, the World Health Organization has said, as its head arrived in the country to support efforts to contain the disease. Anaïs Legand, from the WHO’s high threat pathogens team, said the revised death rate estimate is based on confirmed cases. “It’s huge. It means that up to five out of 10 people are likely to die,” Legand told reporters in Geneva. She also said that a patient had recovered from Ebola and was discharged from a health centre in the DRC on 27 May after two negative tests, the first recovery to have been confirmed in the outbreak. The WHO has recorded 10 confirmed and 223 suspected Ebola deaths in the DRC since the outbreak was declared on 15 May, among more than 1,000 confirmed and suspected cases. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the organisation’s director general, arrived in Kinshasa on Thursday and was due to travel to the centre of the outbreak, in the north-east Ituri province, on Friday. “That thing can be stopped,” Tedros told reporters, adding that the WHO did not support travel bans because they “don’t help much”. “Together, we will overcome this outbreak,” he said in a separate message to Congolese citizens, promising to do “everything in my power to help”. The true scale of the outbreak may be significantly larger, the WHO said, because the virus is believed to have circulated undetected for some time. The outbreak is the 17th recorded Ebola epidemic in the vast central African country, which has a population of more than 100 million. The disease was first identified there in 1976 and its death rate has averaged 50% across all outbreaks, according to the WHO. Complicating relief efforts, the outbreak is centred on a mineral-rich region fought over by armed groups. “Conflict and displacement make everything harder,” Tedros said. “I am making a direct appeal to all warring parties in this region: please declare a ceasefire. No cause, no conflict, no grievance is worth condemning innocent people to death from a preventable disease.” More than 245,000 people have fled eastern DRC to neighbouring countries since January 2025, according to the UN refugee agency. Armed groups operating in the area include the Rwanda-backed M23, which controls large parts of the North and South Kivu provinces south of Ituri. Early symptoms of Ebola include fever, exhaustion, muscle pain, headaches and a sore throat. These can progress to vomiting, diarrhoea, abdominal pain, rash and impaired kidney and liver function. The disease spreads through direct contact with the blood or body fluids of an infected person or someone who has died from Ebola. There is no approved treatment for the Bundibugyo strain of Ebola, responsible for the current outbreak. However, the WHO said on Thursday that its advisory groups had recommended clinical trials of vaccines and treatments. The head of the African Union’s health agency, Jean Kaseya, said a vaccine could be ready by the end of the year. Neighbouring Uganda, which has recorded one Ebola death and eight additional cases, announced on Wednesday it would immediately close its border with the DRC. The WHO warned that border closures could drive up informal crossings and make it harder to monitor and contain the disease. Meanwhile, Kenya’s high court temporarily suspended plans to establish a quarantine and treatment facility for affected US citizens in Kenya. The US had said it would deny entry to its territory to anyone infected with the disease. The judge, Patricia Nyaundi, ruled that Kenya was not allowed to admit anyone exposed to or infected by Ebola under the proposed deal with the US until a challenge to the deal brought by the Kenyan rights group Katiba Institute was heard. The group’s lawsuit said the plan “raises grave constitutional concerns regarding the rights to life, health, fair administrative action, public participation and parliamentary oversight”. Health officials had said the proposal could place additional strain on Kenya’s already stretched healthcare system. The country’s main medical union threatened on Thursday to take strike action unless the terms of the agreement with the US were released within 48 hours. US officials had said the 50-bed facility at an air force base would become operational on Friday. More than 30 staff from the US Public Health Service, a uniformed branch of the Department of Health and Human Services, left the US for Kenya on Wednesday after receiving three days’ training in Washington DC. Marco Rubio, the US secretary of state, said on Thursday that the US government planned “to commit $13.5m [£10m] toward Kenya’s Ebola preparedness efforts”, adding that it had already pledged $112m to the regional response to the outbreak. “The United States’s highest priority remains protecting the health and security of the American people by working to prevent the Ebola outbreak from reaching our shores,” he said. Ebola has killed more than 15,000 people in Africa over the past 50 years. The deadliest outbreak in the DRC killed nearly 2,300 patients from 3,500 cases between 2018 and 2020. The WHO said it had received 4.6 tonnes of aid at the airport in Bunia, the capital of Ituri. Unicef, the UN children’s agency, said it would send 100 tonnes of aid. With Agence France-Presse and Reuters

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‘Essentially diving in coffee’: Australian diver among team rushing to rescue people trapped in flooded Laos cave

An Australian cave diver is part of an international team that has been flown into Laos from around the world to rescue seven people stuck in a remote, flooded cave. The group entered the cave in Xaysomboun province, central Laos, to hunt wildlife and search for gold more than a week ago, but heavy rain blocked the cave entrance. Five of them were found alive this week, but two remain unaccounted for – and the rescuers, some of whom were involved in the rescue of a young Thai football team in 2018, still need to extract the survivors from the inundated passageways. Kengkard Bongkawong, the head of operations for Metta Tham Rescue, a Thai group, said on social media that searching for the two missing men would be even more challenging, requiring teams to dive through a 30m narrow tunnel, checking along the way for any intersections. “The next mission will be harder,” he wrote. Extracting the five survivors will also be challenging, due to low oxygen supplies, more rain and a lack of dive experience among the people who are trapped. Sign up for the Breaking News Australia email Divers with a specialised skill set to handle the extremely narrow conditions in the cave were flown in from around the world on Friday. They will be taken by a military helicopter to the remote and hostile jungle terrain where the men are stuck. Australian cave diver Josh Richards, who leads a cave exploration team in Australia called the Soggy Wombats, a marsupial known for its burrowing, flew in on Friday to help with the rescue operation. “It’s pretty awful, by the looks of things,” Richards said. “We’re predominantly dealing with clay and mud walls, which are particularly unstable and unpleasant. That mud and clay also [affects] the water; you’re essentially diving in coffee. You’re not going to be seeing anything through it. “It’s all being done by touch and feel, following the lines that have been laid through the mine.” Richards said he was not a “physically large guy”. He said his fellow international divers, who had been asked to support the rescue team, were “all fairly small, we’re all fairly light, and we’ve all spent a fair bit of time underground, squeezing into small places”. “I’m very comfortable underwater with a regulator in my mouth, twisting and turning and doing all those bits and pieces, contorting myself around in order to get into particularly nasty places,” he said. “And unfortunately, this mine sounds like it’s one of them.” Other diving specialists are reportedly arriving from Japan, Indonesia, Thailand and France. A diver from Malaysia joined the mission on Thursday. Richards said the rescue plan was now being developed among the divers, “that will be as safe as possible for everyone involved. There’s a lot of different ideas being thrown around”. As sections of the tunnel between the miners and the surface are completely flooded, the team on the ground was also trying to pump out as much water as possible in a two-pronged approach, Richards said. “If they’re not able to pump all that water out, and there are sections that are completely flooded, that’s … why we need to be there to potentially get these folks through short sections, where they’ll be using scuba equipment,” he said, “and they almost certainly have never used scuba equipment before in their lives.” For people who are familiar with the 2018 Tham Luang cave rescue in Thailand, Richards said there were similarities but also “glaring differences”. The Laos cave is a “considerably” smaller site in terms of length and the physical size of the tunnel itself. The Tham Luang cave is kilometres long, with numerous air chambers where rescuers could set up base stations. Thai rescuers could pump out huge amounts of water, but were also dealing with much more water. “This site is about 350m long. It is much, much smaller, but at the same time, the actual tunnels that we’re trying to squeeze down into are considerably smaller again,” Richards said. “So, there’s similarities in that you’ve got a group of folks who are not trained cave divers, but are stuck in a cave, and flooding is a concern, but it is a radically different environment that we’re dealing with, and also not dealing with kids is another factor.” Heavy machinery is being used to clear a route to the cave site, so that equipment can be transported more easily. Additional reporting by Rebecca Ratcliffe

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Friday briefing: ​What do the cuts in aid mean for the fight against Ebola in the DRC?

Ebola is spreading rapidly in parts of east Africa. The deadly disease, which kills around half of those it infects, is suspected to have claimed the lives of at least 240 people since the outbreak began in Ituri province in the Democratic Republic of the Congo earlier this month. Public health officials are scrambling to contain the virus in one of the toughest environments: Ituri province, the centre of the crisis, is a mining hub where thousands of people work in close proximity every day, and a conflict zone, with ongoing fighting between rebel groups. Medical facilities are modest, while waves of displaced people are being forced into overcrowded camps to escape fighting, making it even harder to control transmission. The virus has already spread to other regions in eastern DRC and the Ugandan capital Kampala. It is also the first major Ebola outbreak since the US, UK and other western countries made brutal cuts to humanitarian aid, which began with Donald Trump and Elon Musk’s gutting of USAID. The rapid response infrastructure from previous Ebola outbreaks has been stripped back so much of it is barely fit for purpose, hampering efforts to save lives, warn experts. For today on First Edition, I spoke with Dr Papys Lame, the Ebola outbreak response coordinator in Ituri for the NGO Alima, and Selena Victor, senior director of policy and advocacy for Mercy Corps about efforts to contain the outbreak. But first, the headlines. Five big stories UK news | Britain risks a financial hit worth £125bn a year after a rise in the number of young people not in employment or education to more than 1 million. US-Israel-Iran | Donald Trump has circulated a draft peace agreement for the war with Iran among allies including Israel as both sides try to prevent fresh breaches of the ceasefire escalating out of control. UK politics | Andy Burnham has rolled back from his previous calls for ministers to scrap a restriction on immigrants claiming benefits as the Makerfield byelection places greater scrutiny on him. Ukraine | A Russian drone that was part of an overnight attack on Ukraine crashed into an apartment building in eastern Romania, injuring two people, authorities said, in what an official statement condemned as an “irresponsible escalation” by Moscow. Climate crisis | Abandoning net zero and drilling for more oil and gas would be a massive setback for the UK and would not help the economy, leading experts have said in response to Tony Blair. In depth: ‘You must be brave if you work in this environment’ There is no current vaccine for Ebola. The virus, which is caught from wild animals and passed between humans through body fluids, was discovered in 1976 and is largely found in rainforest regions of western, central and eastern Africa. Between 2014 and 2016, the deadliest known outbreak killed 11,325 people in Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia. Frontline workers are desperately trying to prevent a repeat in eastern DRC and Uganda. Lame says that Ebola was likely passing through the community for some time in and around Bunia, the capital of Ituri province, before the outbreak was formally declared on 15 May. Symptoms are similar to common illnesses like malaria and typhoid: fever, muscle pain, vomiting and diarrhoea. While Ebola is not spread as easily as a respiratory illness like Covid-19 or influenza, the lack of lab facilities for testing has made it hard to monitor. Many more cases are suspected than the official WHO figures, he says. “We don’t have a specific treatment for Ebola right now but we can save people if they come very early. Then, their chance of being cured is higher. But if people come late, the case fatality rate is high,” says Lame, who is from Senegal. “Patients are afraid because they know that Ebola does not have a cure. Many have lost a member of their family or a colleague. And it also impacts frontline workers, too, who have lost colleagues.” At least five doctors and nurses have died after treating patients at Bunia Evangelical medical centre, including 30-year-old Dr Vladimir Maduali who died on Sunday, and Dr Tibenderana Katho Blaise who died two days later. Other colleagues are believed to have contracted the virus. “We have preventive measures that we are putting into place to protect our colleagues. They are working with some confidence because some have experienced previous Ebola outbreaks. You must be brave if you work in this environment,” says Lame. *** Conspiracy abounds Despite the immense bravery of medical staff, there is a fragile relationship with the local community, which is hampering the response. Some in Ituri province think that the virus does not exist or it has been brought in by humanitarian workers, fearing that they will die if they go to hospital, says Dr Lame. There have also been attacks on healthcare facilities. The Ebola virus can spread from contact with cadavers, and authorities have implemented strict rules around burials which has sometimes angered families. In one case, a group of young men carried out an arson attack on an Ebola centre in the Rwampara region to try to retrieve a friend’s body. Speaking about the attack on Alima facilities, Lame explains how the conditions around containment can exacerbate the sense of loss and anger: “The death of a young footballer from suspected Ebola shocked the community and his family. Young people came to ask for his body without treatment. Because it was a suspected Ebola death, we had to organise a safe burial so people got angry,” says Lame. “For us, this is not an attack against the organisation. It is anger and frustration against the loss of an important person in the community.” *** USAID cuts dismantled the system Maintaining cooperation with the community is vital to ending the outbreak as quickly as possible, say public health officials. On Wednesday, World Health Organization chief, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, appealed for a ceasefire in Ituri between rebel groups to help contain the outbreak. But the effort to end the Ebola outbreak will probably take several months. The 2014 Ebola outbreak in west Africa took more than two years to end, and there was a major international effort to protect people from the disease. Enormous western cuts to humanitarian aid appear to have made the response much slower this time. US foreign assistance to the DRC has fallen from $1.4bn in 2024 to $21m so far this year, with health officials warning that the US appears to be doing little to stop the outbreak this time. “Ebola is one of those truly terrifying, upsetting, horrific things that does happen intermittently. Since the 2014 outbreak, we had gotten much better at identifying it and responding to the virus. There was a major effort to train local epidemiologists and health workers. The USAID cuts were obviously devastating. The system took a long time to build but didn’t take very long to dismantle,” says Selena Victor, senior director of policy and advocacy for Mercy Corps. Some countries, including the US, are providing more funding to help. But the amount is dwarfed by the resources used to contain previous Ebola outbreaks – and officials are warning that basic PPE supplies were already a concern. The world must do all it can to make sure medical staff have the resources to respond this time, she said. “I’m blown away by people’s willingness and commitment to help in these situations. Please, let’s not have a situation where they don’t have gloves, masks and gowns. The very least we can do is make sure that they have everything they need to stay safe,” she says. *** A global problem Last week, University of Oxford scientists said they are working on an Ebola vaccine that could be ready for clinical trials within two months, as part of the effort to contain the virus. The WHO is treating the outbreak as a public health emergency of international concern. But in the era of extreme political polarisation, governments are not responding as they have done to previous outbreaks. The US has banned people from entering the country who have been in the DRC, South Sudan and Uganda in the previous 21 days. The Trump administration is also building a quarantine and treatment centre in Kenya for Americans affected by the Ebola outbreak, instead of bringing them home, attracting widespread criticism. Lame said it was vital that his team get the resources they needed to help save lives – adding that more resources are still needed from abroad. “The community response against Ebola is critical, and we need many resources for this. International staff who can come and help with community engagement, human resources, logistics, water sanitation. Hopefully we will have enough to do our work.” What else we’ve been reading Argentina has a problematic self-image as “European” at the expense of African-Argentinian and Indigenous communities, as Tiago Rogero looks at what a recent spate of racist incidents says about race relations on the continent. Yassin El-Moudden, newsletters team Laura Barton has a great interview with Paul McCartney about his early life and the inspiration for his new album. Patrick Is Jamaica on the verge of becoming the region’s newest fossil-fuel producing state? Sarah Johnson takes stock of the debate triggered by news of a potential oil discovery. Yassin Steven Morris has a brilliant report on volunteers rechalking the enormous Cerne Giant in Dorset this year. Patrick Students in France are now able to say bon appétit over a three-course meal for no more than €1. Kim Willsher breaks bread with some of the beneficiaries of a student-led campaign that has borne fruit. Yassin Sport Tennis | Jannik Sinner’s bid for a maiden French Open title and career grand slam went up in smoke as he wilted in his second-round match against Juan Manuel Cerúndolo. Cycling | Paul Magnier of Soudal Quick-Step completed a hat-trick of victories in this Giro d’Italia by winning a bunch sprint on stage 18 in Pieve di Soligo. Athletics | Keely Hodgkinson has dangled the intriguing possibility that July’s London Diamond League meeting could be the day where she takes down Jarmila Kratochvilova’s 42-year-old 800m world record. The front pages “Labour plans welfare shake-up as scale of youth jobs crisis revealed”, is the Guardian’s front page today. The Times leads with “Burnham backs state control in blast at Blair” and the i Paper says “Burnham hits back at Blair and Starmer as he outlines plan to run Britain”. The Telegraph says “Prostate screening set to be rationed” and the Mail, on the same topic, writes “Decision that will ‘condemn thousands’ to death”. The FT’s splash is “Manifold clashed with BP’s company secretary before ousting over conduct”. The Express says “Jewish people don’t feel safe on British streets”. In the Mirror “Flags group ‘founder’ charged with murder” is the top story. The Sun goes with “It’s all kicking off” and finally Metro, on a drug gang who “loved the high life”, splashes “Behind spas!”. Something for the weekend Our critics’ roundup of the best things to watch, read, play and listen to right now Film Backrooms | ★★★★★ YouTuber Kane Parsons makes his feature directing debut with this icily brilliant and genuinely disturbing conceptual horror film based on his web series, and scripted by Will Soodik. There is something here of J-horror, the V/H/S found footage franchise, Dan Erickson’s Severance and Nathan Fielder’s The Rehearsal. It’s about people walled up in their own memories, imprisoned in endlessly remembered scenes from their past, or miserably perceived versions of their present existences in which they have become caricatures of themselves, gargoyle stars of their paralysed inner world of failure. Or perhaps the action of the film is not metaphorical in this or any other sense, and the “backrooms” of the title simply exist. Peter Bradshaw Music Iceage: For Love of Grace & the Hereafter | ★★★★★ Their sixth album, is billed as a return to punky first principles. It’s certainly less epic than its predecessor – but the barely contained chaos that Iceage once dealt in is conspicuously absent. Instead, the new album feels powerful, but streamlined in every sense, and the songwriting is extraordinarily tight and punchily melodic throughout. The songs have a sparkle to them: a curiously effective backing for Rønnenfelt’s lyrics, which still tend to the pugilistic, visceral and bleak, and make love sound like mortal combat. The result leaves you thinking that while the band’s constant development and diversity is striking, their consistency is more striking still. Alexis Petridis TV Spider-Noir | ★★★★☆ As the title suggests, Spider-Noir has been conceived as a homage to the hard-boiled films and fictions of the 1940s. The show is gloriously full of shadows and cigarette smoke, sassy secretaries and shady dames, as well as superheroes and supervillains. Plot twists are served up – and if none is brilliantly innovative, the whole is fast and fun enough to get away with it. Everything is shot with style and confidence, while the script contains just enough sharp dialogue and witty banter to keep it aligned with the templates of the past. And Nicolas Cage fans, of course, will have his turn as Ben Reilly to keep them going. Lucy Mangan Theatre Redcliffe, Southwark Playhouse Borough, London | ★★★★☆ Queer history is made up of bad news. The official documents record the raids, the arrests, the executions. The rest – all the raging love and snatches of joy – is largely left for us to imagine. In Jordan Luke Gage’s impressive Redcliffe, the writer-performer fills in the gaps of the lives of William Critchard and Richard Arnold, two men who collided in mid-18th-century Bristol. Inspired by true events romanticised into a musical, this is an open-hearted production. Kate Wyver Today in Focus Why are our homes and cities all so hot? In the week when the hottest May days were recorded, the Guardian’s environment editor, Fiona Harvey, examines a new Climate Change Committee report on how the UK can better withstand extreme heat. Cartoon of the day | Ben Jennings The Upside A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad “That felt bonkers to me: they were creating the exact material we needed next to our site” says Joel de Mowbray, of the experience of watching trees felled near where he was working while he was having to source timber from miles away. He has now helped set up Tipping Point East, a hub set on a 20,000 sq metre industrial site in Newham, London, which promotes circular construction, where materials are reused instead of discarded. “We’re creating a regenerative supply chain for the city we love,” says De Mowbray. “Turning things that would otherwise go to waste into objects that have cultural potential”. The materials yard is full of neatly stacked glass panes, sinks and pipes that would otherwise have been thrown away which have now been certified to be re-used and donated to community builds or sold at very reasonable prices. 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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JD Vance says US ‘not there yet’ on an Iran deal – as it happened

This live blog is now closed. Here’s a wrap of the latest major events across the Middle East. US vice-president JD Vance on Thursday told reporters Washington was “not there yet” with Iran but he said the parties were close, adding that the US was in a position where it could substantially set back Tehran’s nuclear program. He said were a couple of sticking points in talks with Tehran about its enriched uranium stockpile and the question of enrichment. Earlier, Iran’s Tasnim news agency, citing a source close to the negotiating team, said the text of a potential memorandum of understanding (MOU) between the two countries had not yet been finalised or confirmed. Donald Trump has circulated a draft peace agreement for the war with Iran among allies including Israel as both sides try to prevent fresh breaches of the ceasefire escalating out of control and scuppering any deal. A US official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, told Reuters that no US aircraft were shot down near Bushehr in Iran, contradicting earlier reports from Iran that its air defences had intercepted and destroyed a “hostile aircraft” in Iran’s southern Bushehr province in the past hour, state media reports. The latest report from the UN documenting sexual violence in wars around the world said in 2025 the UN was able to document “patterns of sexual violence” against Palestinians detained in Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories, and verified multiple incidents of conflict-related sexual violence. Israel said it is breaking all contact with UN chief António Guterres because of its inclusion in the report. Benjamin Netanyahu said he has given orders to the Israeli army to seize control of 70% of the Gaza Strip in a move that threatens to torpedo an already fragile ceasefire and create catastrophic humanitarian conditions in the already devastated territory. Lebanon’s prime minister said “nothing can justify” Israel’s ongoing assault on the south of his country, and reissued his calls for an immediate ceasefire. Nawaf Salam said Israel’s continued bombardment amounts to collective punishment condemned by all international norms and laws. US treasury secretary Bessent said he had spoken with the Omani ambassador, who “assured” him that there are no plans to toll the strait of Hormuz. Bessent told reporters at the White House briefing that Donald Trump “wanted to punctuate freedom of navigation in the strait” when he threatened to “blow up” US ally Oman on Wednesday.