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Middle East crisis live: Trump insists ceasefire is intact after Iran and US exchange fire in Hormuz

The Pakistani foreign minister, Ishaq Dar, said he spoke with his Iranian and Singaporean counterparts about repatriating crew members on ships seized by the US. He asked the Singaporean foreign minister Vivian Balakrishnan for help repatriating “11 Pakistani and 20 Iranian seafarers, aboard vessels seized by US authorities and currently near Singaporean waters”, Dar wrote in a post on X, without specifying which ships the crew were on. He said he also spoke to Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, and that they “remain in close coordination on the matter”. “Pakistan also stands ready to facilitate the safe repatriation of Iranian nationals to Iran via Pakistan,” he added. US special forces boarded a stateless oil tanker in the Indian Ocean last month, which the Pentagon claimed was carrying Iranian crude oil.

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Ukraine and Russia accuse each other of breaking proposed ceasefires ahead of Victory Day parade in Moscow – Europe live

Back to Moscow’s preparations for the Victory Parade, Reuters is now reporting that, in the latest signal of concern about the event, there is “a limit put on the number of foreign journalists cover it” as a result of “the change format of the parade.” The Kremlin also responded to a report in the Financial Times newspaper (£) that EU leaders were preparing for potential talks with Moscow, insisting that Putin “is ready to negotiate with anyone” – but will not initiate the process.

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Hong Kong dissident Nathan Law on China spies in UK: ‘We’re not surprised’

Nathan Law, an exiled leader of the Hong Kong student protest who lives with a £100,000 bounty on his head from the Chinese authorities, was not surprised to discover a spy ring had photographed him entering the Oxford Union for an evening debate in November 2023. The conviction at the Old Bailey of Chi Leung “Peter” Wai, 38, and Chung Biu “Bill” Yuen, 65, for assisting a foreign intelligence service, was a sobering first – no Chinese spies had been convicted in British criminal history before Thursday – but the details that came out in the nine-week trial mainly served to confirm his suspicions. Law, 32, was already aware he was a target and had taken his usual precautions before and after the debate, at which he had been arguing in favour of the case that China’s rise was a risk. He was, as he always is, studious in checking who was around him. He was picked up in a car to get home. “There is no public information that anything sensitive about my whereabouts has been compromised,” he said of that day. It was also unsurprising to him that Yuen, the older of the two men convicted, who was said to have orchestrated the spying, worked as a senior manager at the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office (HKETO) in Bedford Square, Bloomsbury, central London. As the official overseas representation of the Hong Kong government, the HKETO’s role is to promote trade, investment and cultural ties. But every arm of the Hong Kong special administrative region back home had been politicised and used to enforce so-called national security since pro-democracy protests erupted across the territory in 2019, Law said. “In Hong Kong ‘national security’ means like you disagree with the government,” he said. “And that extends to the role of HKETO; it is also used to punish people who disagree with the government. Having a new function, which is like doing espionage work, surveilling dissidents, I don’t think we are that surprised.” But there was one rather key aspect of the trial that did cause Law some sharp concern: the access that Wai, the younger of the two men, had as a consequence of his role as a UK Border Force official and volunteer special constable with the City of London police. In a message in which Wai used a derogatory term for pro-democracy protesters, the court heard that the dual British-Chinese national had boasted he was able to tally up monthly totals of “cockroaches” entering the UK. “He had access to the system that contains information on us,” said Law. “I think there’s a part of the evidence showing that he used those systems to search for addresses or any other sensitive personal information for me. “I can only do so much to protect myself. I can try to spot anyone following me and take different routes and do different things to sort of like get rid of them. I can hide my digital footprints. But I can’t not give details to the [British] government, and if their databases are so accessible and there are no safeguards to protect people like us, who are obviously targets of intelligence and secret operations from hostile governments, then that is a worry.” In evidence given last year by Hong Kong Aid (HKA), an NGO that assists asylum seekers in the UK, to parliament’s joint committee on human rights, the threat the Chinese authorities pose to dissidents in the UK when armed with such data stood out. In 2024, they reported, the addresses of Hongkongers in Britain had been exposed online and anti-immigration protesters were urged to “visit” them. HKA wrote: “The messages from an anonymous user incite anti- immigration activists and groups to physically approach the addresses and potentially create riots, creating a serious security concern,” HKA wrote. The NGO’s helpline had been receiving suspicious phone calls from Hong Kong three times a day, consistently, since 2022, it said. It later found that the number from which the calls were coming was associated with the Hong Kong police. There had been threats made by the Hong Kong national security police to family members of UK-based individuals advocating for democracy. In 2022, the dragging of a Hong Kong pro-democracy protester into the Chinese consulate in Manchester where he was beaten was said to highlight “the People’s Republic of China’s willingness to extend repression on to UK soil”. In January, the UK government approved plans for a new, large Chinese embassy at Royal Mint Court in London, ending years of fraught debate over the security risks it would pose. For Law and others, the risks are just as real right now. “The Hong Kong diaspora in the UK has become increasingly fearful,” the HKA wrote in its submission. “Many avoid political engagement, stop attending community events, and self-censor to avoid repercussions.” That rang true for Law. He takes no risks, he offers the Chinese authorities few opportunities, and the outcome of the trial will not change that: “I am cautious about things.”

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Third Briton has suspected hantavirus linked to cruise ship outbreak

A third British national has been diagnosed with suspected hantavirus linked to a cruise ship outbreak, health officials have said. The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) had already confirmed two cases among British nationals, who are in hospitals in the Netherlands and South Africa. It said a third had been reported on the south Atlantic island of Tristan da Cunha, where the patient remains. The outbreak linked to the cruise ship MV Hondius has killed three people and the World Health Organization has warned more hantavirus cases could emerge, though officials said they expected the outbreak to be limited if precautions were taken. The fate of the Hondius has prompted international alarm and a scramble to trace the outbreak of the potentially deadly human-to-human strain. The UKHSA said none of the British citizens still onboard the ship, which is travelling to Tenerife, were reporting symptoms, but they are being closely monitored. The islands of St Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha all lie in the south Atlantic Ocean, midway between Africa and South America. A total of 29 people left the Hondius – including seven Britons – when it docked in St Helena on 24 April, including a Dutch woman who became unwell during onward travel and died. The ship is expected to dock in Tenerife on Sunday, according to the latest updates from the Spanish health ministry. The UKHSA said: “UK government staff will be on the ground ready to support the British nationals disembarking. British passengers and ship crew not displaying any symptoms of hantavirus will be escorted by UK government staff to an airport and given free passage back to the UK.” It said Foreign Office officials and UKHSA teams would continue to support passengers, with a dedicated repatriation flight being organised for them and crew. The organisation added: “UKHSA is working with partners to ensure the flight operates under strict infection control measures. Public health and infectious disease specialists from UKHSA and the NHS will be onboard to monitor British nationals whilst on the flight, to ensure that preventative measures are in place and to provide any care in the unlikely event that any passengers become unwell on the flight.” All British passengers and crew from the ship are being asked to isolate for 45 days after returning to the UK, with close monitoring by health officials. The UKHSA said: “Follow-up is already under way for individuals who may have been in contact with cases and have since returned to the UK or are in UK overseas territories.”

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‘It’s David and Goliath’: how UK campaigners feel silenced by Slapps

Verity Nevitt was just 21, a student living away from home for the first time, when she learned she and her twin sister, Lucy, were going to be sued in the high court. Someone knocked on the door of her London house share with a big bundle of papers and asked her to sign for them. A year earlier, the sisters had reported a man to the police, accusing him of sexually assaulting Verity and then, after she had left the house, raping Lucy. When the case was dropped by police, they decided to name him on social media, in order to warn others. The man responded by suing them for misuse of private information, harassment and eventually defamation. Their world was turned upside down: they had been the alleged victims but now they were the ones having to defend themselves. “I didn’t want to engage with it,” Verity says. “The biggest difficulty for me was knowing he was abusing this process, I didn’t want it to be entertained. It was so audacious.” The sisters eventually reached an out-of-court agreement. Having waived their right to anonymity they could talk about the case in the media and share many of the details, but could not name the man. Since then they have campaigned on behalf of victims of sexual violence through their own nonprofit, the Gemini Project. One of their main objectives is to end the use of legal threats and vexatious lawsuits against those who speak out. The practice is known as strategic litigation against public participation, or Slapp. The government defines Slapps as “an abuse of the legal process, where the primary objective is to harass, intimidate and financially and psychologically exhaust one’s opponent via improper means”. Industry watchdog the Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) says most cases often do not even reach court, because a letter from a solicitor can be enough to make the person receiving it fall silent. If a case reaches trial, the legal bill can be as much as £1m for each party. Damages are on top, and the loser can end up paying the other side’s costs. Only the wealthy can afford to hire lawyers to bring such cases, or defend them. Months after being elected prime minister, Keir Starmer promised action. He described abuse of the courts by the rich and powerful as “intolerable”, saying his government would “tackle the use of Slapps”. The justice minister, Sarah Sackman, has drafted measures to be enacted during the next parliament. But that plan is thought to have been shelved. It seems unlikely there will be anti-Slapp legislation announced in the king’s speech scheduled for 13 May. Labour is focused on reducing the courts’ backlog by cutting the number of jury trials, a proposal that has set it on a collision course with many lawyers and its own MPs. Wary of fighting on separate fronts, Downing Street seems to have decided to prioritise jury overhauls over Slapps. In a statement, a Ministry of Justice spokesperson said it would set out its programme “in the usual way” in the king’s speech, adding: “We are continuing to engage with stakeholders as we consider further action to clamp down on Slapps in other areas.” It is understood ministers do not want to legislate in haste, and any decision will take time. But the pressure for action is growing. Last month, 111 members of the House of Lords signed a letter calling for legislation. The group was cross party, and included eight former cabinet ministers, two former BBC chiefs and senior lawyers. Resistance has come from a small but influential group of law firms that specialise in defamation and privacy cases. In 2023, they formed a lobby, the Society of Media Lawyers. The members’ page on its website lists solicitors from firms such as Carter-Ruck, Simkins, Harbottle & Lewis and Mishcon de Reya – and a number of barristers, including one who acted in the case against the Nevitts. Setting out their position in a letter to the Law Society, the group claimed to have been unfairly singled out for criticism and underlined the importance of their role in “providing access to justice for victims of unlawful misreporting and press intrusion”. However, this is not just a battle between the media and the legal profession. Many of those targeted by Slapps are not journalists but grassroots campaigners, academics, whistleblowers and, all too often, victims of sexual violence. The pensioner Jeff Thomson and his wife were getting ready to celebrate their wedding anniversary when the bombshell landed. A hand-delivered letter to their home in Penrith, from the owner of a factory on the outskirts of town, accusing him of defamation, harassment and malicious communications. Thomson, 75, had been running a campaign to try to tackle what local people call the Penrith Pong. The problem goes back decades. Some days the smell – which Thomson describes as “nauseating” – is so bad residents have to shut their windows. They cannot sit in the garden, or hang washing outside. Drivers on the M6 have reported bad odours wafting across the motorway. The letter delivered to Thomson was from solicitors acting for Leo Group, the owner of Omega Proteins, which operates a rendering plant less than a mile from Thomson’s home processing waste from abattoirs into oils for cosmetics and feed for animals. The letter demanded the removal of posts on Thomson’s Fresh Air for Penrith Facebook page, along with an apology, and the company has asked him to pay legal costs and £20,000 in damages. For Thomson, that first letter in February 2023 was a body blow. “It was devastating. I had no experience of anything of that scale. How could I defend myself against this? It’s a classic David and Goliath situation.” He and his wife headed for the pub, where, instead of celebrating, they spent the evening working out how to respond. The next day, Thomson started ringing round looking for a solicitor to represent him. “I got absolutely nowhere. They wouldn’t even speak to me, and I couldn’t afford to pay anybody”. A former press officer at the Central Office of Information, Thomson moved from Manchester to the edge of the Lake District seven years ago, and lives in a rented retirement apartment. He says he has no assets with which to pay the damages, should he lose the case. For now, his legal fees are taken care of. He came across the UK Anti-Slapp Coalition, a group backed by charities including Amnesty International and Index on Censorship, and media groups including the Guardian. They put him in touch with a firm of solicitors, RPC, which waived its fee, taking on the case pro-bono. “I don’t know where I’d be if it wasn’t for them,” says Thomson. Leo Group, a company whose founding family is estimated to be worth £300m, recently offered to drop the case and pay his legal costs if he agreed not to mention any settlement. He refused, because he did not want to be prevented from discussing the outcome. “I’ve just said no. They would have won.” Nonetheless, the legal threats have already had a chilling effect. Thomson does not mention the company online any more, and he is careful in interviews and at public meetings. He says he only feels comfortable talking about the company in the context of the threatened lawsuit. “It was just an attempt to stop me from continuing my campaign. Which is to have the source of the odour identified, acknowledged and action taken to stop it.” Leo Group claims to have spent £100m over a decade on odour control technology, and that the pong comes from “various sources”. In a statement, the company says: “Over the years, Mr Thomson has made various baseless defamatory comments via his posts on Facebook and he has complained to various authorities in England and Wales against Leo Group. However, Leo Group has not in any way acted contrary to any anti-Slapp legislation.” Thomson believes the air quality has improved since he began making a noise. With his training as a press officer, he had run an effective campaign, attracting BBC coverage, support from his local MPs and the attention of the Environment Agency. After a peak in 2024, there have been fewer bad smell days of late. But he fears things could go backwards if he takes his foot off the pedal. “The pressure has to be kept up.” The shopper “It was written in such vicious, aggressive terms,” says Isabel Tucker, of the legal letter she received in March 2024. Tucker had written an article that January for her local news site, complaining about what she saw as the gradual decline in the number of stalls and variety of goods on sale at Gloucester Green outdoor market in central Oxford. The 13-page letter was from solicitors acting for a company called LSD Promotions, which had operated the market under contract with the council since 2013. They accused her of “a false and malicious campaign of defamation”, which was causing serious harm to LSD’s reputation. Unless she agreed to take down her article, and retract “all defamatory statements made whether online, to third parties or anywhere else”, they said they would go to the high court with a claim of libel and harassment. The letter also alleged she had posted criticism on Facebook under a false name. But Tucker, a freelance copy editor, says she is wary of social media in general and does not have an account on Facebook. “It really is a clampdown on freedom of speech,” she says. “They claim it’s a campaign of malicious defamation. To my mind, it’s just a campaign. You’re allowed to criticise things!” She began raising concerns with the council in 2022, after the pandemic, when traders told her about increases in pitch fees. She found out the contract was due to be renewed, and using a freedom of information request secured a copy of the old contract. She spoke at a council meeting, and the council took steps to supervise LSD’s work more closely under the new contract. When the letter threatening legal action arrived in March, a friend put her in touch with a solicitor, who for no charge helped her draft a response. Since then, she has had to reply to a second letter, this time with help from RPC, after contacting the UK Anti-Slapp Coalition. In September, the coalition wrote to the council, warning it the threats made by LSD “bore the hallmarks of a Slapp”. Nik Williams, the coalition’s co-chair, believes people like Tucker should be encouraged, not muzzled: “It’s the sort of active citizenship that you should be wanting to foster. Someone who uses a service and is taking steps to improve it.” In a statement, LSD said it had made repeated attempts to meet Tucker to discuss her concerns and seek resolution, but that she had declined. It said the legal correspondence was a “last resort”, and that no legal proceedings were issued once the matter “de-escalated”. “LSD Promotions rejects any suggestion that its actions were intended to suppress legitimate public scrutiny or freedom of expression. We believe our response was proportionate, lawful and consistent with the legitimate protection of our business interests.” Tucker says people who criticise businesses are under no obligation to meet them, and this should not be a trigger for legal threats. She believes her work has made a difference. “The market is getting slightly better actually and I take some credit for that,” she says. But fear of being sued has made her less vocal. For example, she no longer sets out a stall at community fairs to publicise her campaign. “I’ve been very careful since then. I’ve felt quite cautious about what I say about the market”. The sisters Six years on from the legal attack against her, Verity Nevitt is back at university, determined to get the education she had to abandon. This time, she is studying law instead of politics. But she also has a day job, working for a national charity, and has to fit homework into evenings and weekends. “It’s a clear reminder that the case is still affecting me now.” For most of the high court case, they had no lawyers. Lucy was going to the high court to file documents during her lunch breaks. She too was forced to pause her studies, although she returned to them eventually and completed a master’s in psychology and neuroscience. The sisters eventually found solicitors willing to work for a reduced fee, and a barrister who took on their case on a no-win, no-fee basis. In court, they waived their right to anonymity so they could talk about what had happened, and set up their campaign group. Through their work at Gemini, the twins have supported other women. They noticed an increase in those coming to them about legal threats in the wake of Depp v Heard, a case that made headlines around the world when the actor Johnny Depp accused his former wife Amber Heard of defamation. The London barrister Jennifer Robinson, who represented Heard during Depp’s UK libel case against the Sun, has written of how the courts became weaponised in the wake of the #MeToo movement by those determined “to silence women and maintain the status quo”. Depp won his US case against Heard but lost the British one against the Sun. Nevitt, who is engaged to be married, plans to take her husband’s name so that she can recover some privacy. She turns 30 next year, and had been planning to wind down the campaigning, going out on the high of having secured more legal safeguards. Downing Street’s decision has forced a rethink. “My hope has always been that my 30s will be for me. But I’m not sure I can stop until a piece of anti-Slapp legislation is passed because it might feel like everything was for nothing.”

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Meeting ‘Madyar’: the Ukrainian drones boss raining on Putin’s parade

Vladimir Putin has told Russians that victory against Ukraine is inevitable. But on Saturday no tanks or missiles will rumble over the cobbles of Moscow’s Red Square. For the first time in almost 20 years the annual celebration of the allies’ victory over Nazi Germany will take place without military hardware. The reason: the Kremlin is afraid of a Ukrainian attack. The man who has arguably done more to spook the Putin regime this weekend than anyone else is Robert Brovdi, the head of a Ukrainian military drone unit, Madyar’s Birds, named after his call sign. In recent months it has carried out a series of long-range strikes against targets deep within Russia, including ports, oil refineries and missile factories. Brovdi acknowledges that a “symbolic” attack on Red Square would generate headlines around the world but says Ukraine will probably deliver a “slap in the face” where Russia’s air defences are weaker. “Why waste drones on the ‘great wall’,” he said, referring to the enhanced security around Moscow. “If you hit the energy sector or military that’s the best strike, on the periphery.” Crippling attacks from Brovdi’s elite 414th brigade have presented a huge challenge to the Kremlin’s war. The unit’s long-range drones have been knocking out enemy air defence systems more quickly than Moscow can rebuild them and, suddenly, everywhere within a 1,250 mile (2,000km) radius of Brovdi’s bunker looks vulnerable, including Putin’s palaces. Ukrainian drones last month hit the Black Sea oil terminal at Tuapse four times in two weeks. “Practically everything there has burned,” Brovdi says. There were similar hits on the Baltic ports of Primorsk and Ust-Luga. Drones even flew to the Urals, hitting an oil refinery in Perm and fighter jets in Chelyabinsk, 1,050 miles from the frontline. Smouldering infrastructure and dark oil-drenched clouds point the way to a Ukrainian victory, Brovdi suggests, by crashing Russia’s economy so it can no longer fund its costly war. Putin spends 40% of his $530bn annual budget on the military and Brovdi estimates that 100m tonnes of Russian oil, worth $100bn (£73.4bn), is exported each year from ports within range of his drones. Brovdi also points to the Russian military’s casualties from drones; Ukraine claims that for the fifth month in a row the Kremlin has lost more soldiers than it can recruit, putting deaths at 30,000 to 34,000 a month. “This affects the combat capability of the Russian army, reducing its offensive potential. That is a fact,” he says. Meeting Brovdi, a former grain trader who last year became head of Ukraine’s newly formed Unmanned Systems Forces, involves elaborate security protocols and a mystery ride in a car with blacked-out windows. After Volodymyr Zelenskyy, he is Russia’s top assassination target. His operations centre is deep underground. A corridor lined with sleeping pods leads to a room filled with computer screens and live video feeds. Drones hang from the ceiling. There is a library, a painting of a Ukrainian flag by the artist Anatolii Kryvolap, and contemporary sculpture. Video loops show the final moments of Russian soldiers and the grisly aftermath of explosions. Each death is filmed and verified, some of which are compiled into a reel for social media. (The clips, which might strike some as distasteful, are popular online and humiliating for Russia’s military.) An electronic table itemises enemy losses – personnel, armoured vehicles, radar systems – in real time. Brovdi sits on a sofa in a small private office, smoking and offering cups of tea. Next to him, goldfish wriggle in a tank. Once clean shaven and dressed in a suit, he wears a green military uniform and sports a long, priest-like beard. He speaks in Ukrainian, reeling off statistics at high speed. An accounting system means he has a record of every drone sortie, going back to the first day of Russia’s full-scale invasion in early 2022. Several factors appear to explain Russia’s recent panic, and the growing mood of optimism within Ukraine’s armed forces. One is the latter’s new status as a drone superpower. Its counter-drone technology is being exported to Gulf states, who came under attack from Iran in response to US-Israeli strikes. Another is big data. A situational awareness system, Delta, logs every mission, including failures. Brovdi says he receives 12-15 terabytes of raw video footage every day. Ukraine is also making tactical gains. Earlier this year it staged a small counteroffensive, taking back 12 villages in Zaporizhzhia and Dnipropetrovsk oblasts. In April, Russian forces lost more territory than they gained, for the first time since 2024, according to the Institute for the Study of War. “Our troops are advancing and liberating our territories. The enemy suffers heavy losses. They are not doing very well in replenishing them,” says Capt Oleg Kopan, the deputy commander of the artillery reconnaissance division of the 148th brigade. The brigade’s battlefield drone pilots live in a dugout hidden beneath a tree line. Inside are computers, camp beds and supplies of food and water. Every few hours they emerge to launch a Leleka reconnaissance drone, flung into the air with a catapult. Its camera offers a panoramic view of shell-pitted yellow fields and Russian trenches. There are periodic grey puffs of smoke from Ukrainian artillery strikes. Kopan says Ukraine’s recent advances are “100%” down to rapidly evolving unmanned technology. “Drones allow us to inflict precise damage with fewer personnel casualties and greater efficiency,” he says. The Russians were also adapting. “They’re very good at observing what we’re doing, copying it from us and scaling it up quickly. They have factories and people,” he adds. In Brovdi’s view, Ukraine has pioneered a “new doctrine of war”. Drones are responsible for 80% of destruction, he says, supplanting assault rifles and armour. “A blitzkrieg is now impossible. If Russia had a million tanks and tried to seize Kyiv again, it would be the biggest bloodbath in world history,” he says. “Two million drones would swarm over these tanks and burn them mercilessly.” He adds that Nato countries have not yet fully grasped that they need to overhaul their armies. The generals in charge received their military training when “nobody gave a shit about drones”, he says. They need to emulate Ukraine’s example by setting up an ecosystem that marries video footage, photographs, coordinates and confirmed kills, he says. “Russia won’t stop. Neither we nor you have time.” But despite successes, Ukraine is “a long way from victory”, he admits. “I’m under no illusions whatsoever an end to the war is possible in the near future. If anything, we’re talking about a pause linked to some sort of agreement, or to geopolitical circumstances.” “The pause will merely give Putin the chance to regroup. He is afflicted with an incurable disease of power and the desire to build a dictatorship. He’s a sick man.”

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Friday briefing: What the local election results tell us so far

Good morning. If yesterday had been a general election, then by now, thanks to thousands of people beavering through the night counting votes, we’d have a very clear picture of where the country was headed. But it wasn’t, and so despite millions of people casting their ballots in Scotland, Wales, and many parts of England, we aren’t that much the wiser. Counting will start in earnest in most places today, and what we do know you can see on our results interactive guide. The early indications, from a smattering of councils dotted around England, show a surge for Reform and heavy losses for Labour, but there is still a lot to play for. For today’s newsletter I worked with Jacqui Housden, who has recently joined our Sydney office as an assistant editor on the newsletter team, and will be making regular contributions to First Edition in the future. After the headlines, what we know about the election results so far. Five big stories Iran conflict | The United States and Iran exchanged fire in the strait of Hormuz, in the most serious test yet of their month-long ceasefire. UK news | UK schools should remove pictures of pupils’ faces from their websites and social media accounts because blackmailers are using them to create sexually explicit images, experts have said. World news | Authorities around the world are racing to trace dozens of passengers who disembarked from the cruise ship at the centre of a deadly hantavirus outbreak before isolation measures were implemented. UK news | A man has been charged after allegedly threatening Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor near his new home on the Sandringham estate. World news | Three women linked to Islamic State have been charged over alleged actions in Syria after returning to Australia. In depth: ‘The fracturing of British politics is underlined by these results’ When I went to vote in person in London on Thursday afternoon, the staff handing out the ballot papers said it had been “steady” and a “bit busier than expected”. The lone teller outside – those hardy party volunteers who gather your polling number in the hope of gleaning whether the people who said they would vote for them have come out and actually voted – said she had spent the morning at a different station where she had been surprised by how busy it was. For local elections in England much of the analysis of early trends relies on this – anecdotes and hunches. *** What have results in England told us so far? This has been a humiliating night for Keir Starmer, even if it was expected, and one for Reform to gloat over. Notably, Labour has lost seats in its traditional northern heartlands, and has lost control of seven councils, including Tameside, in Angela Rayner’s constituency – a council it had run for 47 years. Reform had gained more than 200 seats before dawn broke, prompting Nigel Farage to declare a “historic change in British politics,” to which “there is no more left-right”. Polling guru John Curtice, speaking in the early hours, said Reform has had “substantial success”, taking more than half the seats declared so far, while Labour had lost four in five. However, he noted “none of the parties are very big, let’s make that clear. Even Reform are probably not quite at 30% of the vote, so the fracturing of British politics is underlined by these results and confirmed by them.” The Conservatives have had a bruising night so far, while the Lib Dems may not quite have fared as well as hoped, despite deputy leader Daisy Cooper hailing results as “stonking”. Numbers for the Green Party have been edging up – but it is still too early to gain a proper picture of how Zack Polanski’s party is faring overall. Curtice said they were getting “far too many creditable second and third places” to convert votes into seats. *** What has early political reaction been? Fury from within Labour has been spilling out. Rebecca Long-Bailey, Labour MP for Salford in Greater Manchester, called it a “soul-destroying night”. Before the polls had even closed, The Times reported Ed Miliband had “private words” with the prime minister to set out a timeline for him to go. In Hartlepool, where Reform took all 12 seats up for grabs, Labour MP Jonathan Brash said “the very best thing the prime minister could do now is address the nation tomorrow and set out a timetable for his departure”. His comments came as his wife Pamela Hargreaves, leader of Hartlepool council, lost her seat. Other political leaders are seizing the moment. Zack Polanski said Starmer should “listen to the people and go”. But not everyone is jumping on the bandwagon, David Lammy said although the elections had been “tough” it wasn’t time for Starmer to depart. “You don’t change the pilot during the flight. You carry on, and you recognise too that governments sometimes - particularly incumbent governments - have it hard,” he told the BBC. And, not surprisingly, Nigel Farage has used the early gains to suggest Reform is on course for general election victory, comparing the party’s wins to clearing Becher’s Brook, so it can “go on to win the Grand National”. Veteran MP John McDonnell urged some caution, saying results in Wales and Scotland may be more influential, but a potential leadership change must be “on the agenda” if Labour has “nightmare” elections there too. *** What happens now? Most parts of England, Wales and Scotland will begin their counts in the next few hours, with results expected to begin trickling through during the afternoon. Hamish Mackay has been at the helm of our live coverage overnight, passing the baton to the incomparable Andrew Sparrow who will take you through the day as it unfolds. Interestingly, Andy Burnham – seen by many in Labour as the most viable alternative prime minister if only he was an MP – has pulled out of speaking at a Children’s Commissioner event in Manchester early today. That is unlikely to dampen speculation about what is going on behind the scenes. From noon watch out for Sheffield and Manchester to see if there are signs of a “progressive protest” vote shifting toward the Greens or Independents away from Labour. Between 3pm to 6pm we expect results from Essex and Norfolk – key Reform battlegrounds. This will be the busiest period of the day, with most Welsh declarations also expected to come in. Watch Sunderland and Barnsley too, which are important for Labour because they represent the kind of working-class areas Reform believes it can penetrate. London also becomes politically volatile during this time slot, with Hackney, Harrow, Barnet and Barking and Dagenham each representing different forms of pressure. And once the results are in? The first session of the seventh, and newly expanded, Senedd, is expected on Wednesday 13 May. The Scottish parliament is required to hold its first meeting within seven days of the election, and to nominate a first minister within 28 days of an election. In Westminster, parliament prorogued on Wednesday 29 April and will meet again on Wednesday 13 May for the state opening of parliament, a moment where Starmer will hope King Charles reading out Labour’s next legislative agenda will act as a mini-reset for the government – assuming he remains at the helm. What else we’ve been reading With the size of vehicles growing across Europe, Ajit Niranjan explores what could halt the adoption of US-style car culture. Patrick Aisha Down’s coverage of developments in the AI world is always worth reading – here she is looking at research that suggests an AI has been able to replicate itself. Martin You be the judge is a zinger this week. “Should my flatmate stop using my details to sign up for free trials?” is the big question. Patrick If I had to pick just one band who had been most influential on the music I made myself, it would be Cabaret Voltaire. Spin has them giving an oral history of how they got started. Martin I have loved Sam Wollaston’s series on abandoned buildings in the UK. This time, he is telling the tale of a derelict Cumbrian pub. Patrick Sport Football | Aston Villa sailed into their first European final since 1982 after Emi Buendía set up the first and scored the second goals before John McGinn’s quickfire double beat Nottingham Forest. Crystal Palace eased past Shakhtar to reach the Conference League final. Premier League | Ten things to look out for this weekend, including a game to suit departing John Stones, and West Ham’s Pablo under scrutiny against Arsenal. Rugby union | Exeter’s members have voted in favour of selling the club to the American owners of AFC Bournemouth. The front pages The Guardian leads with “Criminals using photos on school websites to create abuse imagery”. The Daily Mail says “Home Office immigration official exposed as Chinese spy” while the Telegraph’s take is “China exploited WFH to spy on UK”. On the political front, the Times writes “PM urged by Miliband to set timeline for leaving” while the i paper says “Secret meeting hits Rayner hope of becoming prime minister”. The FT leads with “Record low number of stocks driving Wall St bounce raises ‘fragility’ fears”. The Mirror has “Andrew in masked man terror” and the Star says on the same topic: “Andrew ‘chased by man in balaclava’”. Metro splashes “I touched the hand that used to be my daughter’s”. And finally, the Sun leads with the news: “Kim’s boobs sprayed by car shop in Kent”. Something for the weekend Our critics’ roundup of the best things to watch, read, play and listen to right now TV Amandaland | ★★★★☆ At first she was Motherland’s resident antagonist: a smug, slinky blonde securely installed at the top of the school mum food chain. In her own show, now back for series two, Amanda Hughes (Lucy Punch) is even more pitiful and sympathetic, fruitlessly pursuing a social media following via a series of desperate collabs and stunts. Rachel Aroesti Game Mixtape, PS5, Xbox, PC, Switch 2 | ★★★☆☆ Mixtape follows the exploits of tenacious trio Rockford, Slater and Cassandra as they head to a legendary party on their last day of high school. With Rockford about to leave her friends to move to the big city, she wants to immortalise the gang’s time together in musical form. The game is a beautiful and inventively silly series of playable musical vignettes – much like an evening spent scrolling through classic music videos on YouTube, there’s a simple, nostalgic joy to be found. Tom Regan Music Aldous Harding: Train on the Island | ★★★★☆ Harding cuts a divisive figure in the world of alt-rock. To her devotees, she is a strange and endlessly fascinating figure; her lyrics are mysteries to be unpicked for deeper meaning, like dreams awaiting analysis. That said, at the heart of this album lurks stuff that’s rather less complicated than you might expect. A melodically gifted singer-songwriter, music that’s subtle but never bland; these are disarmingly straightforward pleasures that all the strangeness – mannered or otherwise – can’t obscure. Alexis Petridis Film Kokuho | ★★★★☆ Lee Sang-il’s heartfelt, muscular epic (whose title means “national treasure”) was a box-office smash on its Japanese home turf, winning a host of festival awards and an Oscar nomination. It’s a mighty Cain-and-Abel drama spanning five decades, set in the rarefied world of kabuki theatre where some of the most exotically prized performers are the onnagata, the men who have mastered the rigorously observed discipline of playing women in classical kabuki roles. The film’s focus is on commitment in the service of art, a vocational self-immolation in which the transformation of pain into beauty is the whole point. Peter Bradshaw Today in Focus The AI jailbreakers – podcast All the major AI chatbots have things they should and shouldn’t say. Journalist Jamie Bartlett meets the people deliberately trying to get the technology to say the things it shouldn’t … for the safety of us all. Cartoon of the day | Ben Jennings The Upside A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad Today, Sir David Attenborough celebrates his 100th birthday. Through his adventures around the world, he has brought some of the most spectacular life on Earth to our living rooms. Stuart Heritage has listed 100 of his gripping on-screen moments for us all to relive. To mark the moment, the Natural History Museum has named a parasitic wasp in Attenborough’s honour, adding the creature to the list of lizards, bats, frogs and insects that already share his name. 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