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Polish independence ‘under threat’ if EU cannot come to decision on giving Russian assets to Ukraine, says Poland’s Tusk – Europe live

Ukraine’s Zelenskyy is now also briefing the journalists. Zelenskyy tells journalists that he doesn’t know how the talks will end today, but it is getting increasingly urgent for Ukraine to secures fresh funding, as it faces a €45-50bn deficit for next year. He warns that Ukraine would need to cut its drone production if it doesn’t receive more money by spring. He says Ukraine is doing everything it can to end the war, but there is no guarantee that this process will succeed, particularly given less than conciliatory comments from the Kremlin. He says Ukraine must be in a position to remain strong and continue to be able to fight. He says he had a good conversation with Belgium’s de Wever, and they understand each other’s position, but as Ukraine is at war, it faces even greater risks.

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UN distances itself from International Women’s Day website winning corporate partnerships

Nobody owns International Women’s Day, but if you asked the 193 countries, countless businesses and NGOs that mark it each year, they would probably agree it has been popularised, defined and formalised by the United Nations. The owner of the website “internationalwomensday.com”, a London-based marketing firm, disagrees. By selling merchandise, promoting a £160 lunch to awaken attenders’ “inner goddess” and creating a series of corporate partnerships, it has also seeded its annual themes with British brands and institutions that appear to have mistaken the site for the UN, the Guardian can reveal. Organisations including Sainsbury’s, Barclays and University College London have all drawn on themes provided by internationalwomensday.com. When contacted by the Guardian, the UN distanced itself from the website, run by a company owned by Glenda Slingsby, a marketing executive. The internationalwomensday.com site, owned by IWD Support Ltd, formerly Aurora Ventures (Europe) Ltd, has been running for more than two decades. During that time, language that identified the site as the product of a London marketing firm has been largely removed and it appears vague about its ownership and connection with UN-led efforts to celebrate International Women’s Day. Its homepage says: “Today IWD belongs to all groups collectively everywhere. IWD is not country, group or organization specific.” Elsewhere on the site, it says: “All IWD activity is valid. IWD is a movement. It belongs to all groups, everywhere.” UN Women, the entity dedicated to the empowerment of women and girls, which organises an annual international observance of International Women’s Day, told the Guardian it had nothing to do with internationalwomensday.com. In an email, a spokesperson said: “Your inquiry provides an important opportunity to clarify that UN Women and the United Nations are not affiliated with the website referenced.” In response to questions from the Guardian, a spokesperson for IWD Support said the website was launched as a not-for-profit in 2001 to promote “the advancement of women’s equality worldwide”. They said the site launched “at a time when IWD had low awareness and since then it has successfully driven engagement by providing free resources and creating a community for women”. The website sells International Women’s Day merchandise packs that include purple tablecloths, purple “gratitude cards” and purple wristbands for £184 each, and hosts directories for speakers and charities. Each year for the past decade the site has chosen a theme for International Women’s Day, among them Make it Happen for 2015, Accelerate Action for 2025, and Give to Gain for 2026. UK organisations have used these themes in marketing campaigns related to International Women’s Day, including Sainsbury’s, Barclays, the University of Warwick and UCL’s School of Management. In 2025, the BBC cited the website as if it operated in an official capacity, saying: “Purple, green and white are the colours of IWD, according to the International Women’s Day website … Purple signifies justice and dignity. Green symbolises hope. White represents purity, albeit a controversial concept.” The Evening Standard similarly cited the website’s 2025 theme, Accelerate Action, as if it was the UN theme. A spokesperson for UN Women confirmed that these themes had nothing to do with UN-selected themes, which in 2025 were: “For ALL women and girls: Rights. Equality. Empowerment.” The spokesperson added: “Each year, a group of global experts determines the official theme for International Women’s Day, which is subsequently communicated through our official channels at the beginning of the year. We encourage all partners to adopt the United Nations theme.” The UN Women spokesperson also said purple, green and white were not UN-selected colours for the campaign. In response to queries from the Guardian, the University of Warwick removed a blog post referencing internationalwomensday.com’s 2025 theme. A spokesperson for the university said: “We were not aware of this PR firm or the unofficial capacity of its website. We have inadvertently used its theme Accelerate Action for one of our MBA blogs. This is unfortunate and we have taken down the blog to avoid any further confusion.” UCL’s school of management also removed a blogpost referencing Accelerate Action in response to a Guardian query, but did not comment. A Sainsbury’s spokesperson said the company had no relationship with Aurora Ventures. Internationalwomensday.com lists a series of high-profile corporate partnerships, including with the London Eye, the insurance firm MetLife, British Petroleum and the accounting firm Ernst & Young, which was a campaign sponsor for the company in 2017. The London Eye, MetLife, Ernst & Young and British Petroleum did not respond to queries from the Guardian about these partnerships. Aurora Ventures, internationalwomensday.com’s corporate owner, appears just twice on its website in its “privacy” and “terms of use” pages. It says the website is provided “as a not-for-profit philanthropic service by Aurora Ventures (Europe) Limited”. Aurora Ventures is a private company based in London that lists its business activities as “web portals”. It had assets of about £940,000 in 2024 and 2023, and director’s expenses totalling £30,731 in 2024 and £15,182 in 2023. It has listed no charitable contributions on its accounts for the past 10 years. Slingsby, the majority owner of Aurora Ventures, is from Australia and has worked in London since at least 2000 when she founded Aurora Ventures, then called Busygirl Limited. The spokesperson for IWD Support said: “The website is one of many groups that now mark the day worldwide. IWD is not owned by one body. The IWD website explains the history of this day and the many groups who are involved, including UN Women, which was established in 2010, nearly a decade after the IWD website was launched.”

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Guggenheim scraps Basque Country expansion plan after local protests

Environmental groups and local campaigners in the Basque Country have welcomed the scrapping of a project to build an outpost of Bilbao’s Guggenheim Museum on a Unesco biosphere reserve that is a vital habitat for local wildlife and migrating birds. The scheme’s backers, which include the Guggenheim Foundation, the Basque government and local and regional authorities, had claimed the museum’s twin sites – one in the Basque town of Guernica and one in the nearby Urdaibai reserve – would help revitalise the area, attract investment and create jobs. But opponents said the scheme was being pushed through without proper consultation and would wreck Urdaibai, a 22,068-hectare site that was declared a biosphere reserve by Unesco in 1984. In a statement earlier this week, the foundation announced that the project had been abandoned “in light of the territorial, urban planning and environmental constraints and limitations”. It added: “New alternatives will be explored in order to face the challenge of elaborating a proposal that responds to the museum’s objective of growing in order to remain a leading cultural institution internationally and a driving force in the Basque Country’s cultural, economic and social scene.” The Bilbao museum, which opened in 1997 despite considerable opposition, is credited with helping to reverse the city’s post-industrial decline and put it on the tourist map. But local people and ecologists argued that Urdaibai’s cliffs and estuarine salt marshes were hardly comparable with the polluted, urban site on which the Guggenheim was built. Campaign groups and environmental NGOs, such as Greenpeace, WWF, Ecologists in Action, Friends of the Earth and SEO/BirdLife, had called for the project to be scrapped. News of the foundation’s decision was received enthusiastically. The Guggenheim Urdaibai Stop platform said in a statement: “The authorities told us unanimously that they were going to build this museum ‘no matter what’. “They didn’t care about the opinion of society; they didn’t care about the debate generated among citizens. Now, however, we are here celebrating the decision that these same leaders and institutions have had to make, unable to ignore a reality revealed by science, the law and society.” SEO/BirdLife said “citizen mobilisation” had been key to saving “this threatened natural heritage”, while Greenpeace Spain said: “Social mobilisation works and, together with countless local groups, we have managed to stop the extension of the Guggenheim Museum that threatened to destroy this unique natural space. Urdaibai is already a monument and it will continue to be one.”

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Saudi-backed forces gather on Yemen border as separatists face pressure to pull back

As many as 20,000 Saudi-backed forces are gathering on the border of Yemen as the separatist Southern Transitional Council comes under pressure to withdraw from the huge territorial gains it has made in the last month in the vast, oil-rich governorate on Hadramaut in eastern Yemen. The STC is using its advance to raise its demand for Yemen to revert to two states, north and south, as it had been until 1990. The STC, which is backed by the United Arab Emirates, has been warned there is a possibility of direct airstrikes by Saudi forces, a development that would threaten key STC positions. Well-paid troops, mainly drawn from a Saudi-funded militia called the National Shield, have been gathering in the al-Wadeeah and al-Abr areas close to the Saudi border. The STC has been reassured it retains the support of the UAE, raising the prospect of future clashes between troops loyal either to Saudi Arabia or the UAE. The UN secretary general, António Guterres, predicted a full-scale resumption of fighting in Yemen could have consequences across the Red Sea, the Gulf of Aden and the Horn of Africa. He urged all parties in Yemen, including external actors that “unilateral actions will not clear a path to peace, but only deepen divisions, raise the risk of wider escalation and cause further fragmentation”. “The sovereignty and territorial integrity of Yemen must be preserved,” he said on Wednesday, adding that nearly 5 million Yemenis had been forced to flee their homes owing to a lengthy civil war between the Houthis in the north and the now badly fracturing forces in the south. The STC, in talks in the stronghold of Aden last Friday, said it would not obey a Saudi demand to withdraw its forces, which first entered Hadramaut a fortnight ago and then moved into the neighbouring governorate of al-Mahra, bordering Oman. It has also tightened its grip by sending troops into a third governorate, Abyan. The sudden and unexpected STC advance stunned Riyadh, which had previously been the dominant player in Yemen. The UK, along with most of the international community, favours retaining Yemen as one country, but this requires the Houthis that dominate in the north coming to an agreement to share power with the south in a federal government. The STC is proposing that an independent south could become an anti-extremist bulwark protecting the Red Sea shipping lanes from Houthi and al-Qaida terrorism. The STC’s difficulty is that by no means all southern groups want Yemen to divide, but it will have to see if it can form a coherent government. Farea al-Muslimi, a research fellow on the Middle East programme at the Chatham House thinktank, said: “So far Saudi Arabia has tried strategic patience, but I do not think that will last. It does not mean it will necessarily go into a direct war with the UAE in Yemen. But Yemen is a poor country with too many young fighters and too many proxies. Both sides are putting all their cards on the table. “While much of what that has happened is not surprising for Yemen observers, the optics is too humiliating for Saudi Arabia. This is playing out on its borders, not those of the UAE.” With the capture of the two governorates, the STC can claim it controls all the land that made up the old southern state of Yemen. Hadramaut spans 36% of Yemen’s territory, possesses the country’s largest oil reserves and includes key ports such as Mukalla, al-Shihr and the oil terminal at al-Dhabba. The leadership of the Islah party, the largest political party in Yemen and which is opposed to secession by the South, told the Guardian it believed the calls from within Hadramaut for the STC to withdraw may soon become overwhelming. On a visit to London, Islah’s acting secretary general, Abdulrazak al-Hijri, said: “We hope this can be resolved peacefully, but what happened in Hadramaut is a dangerous development and negatively impacts on the legitimate state institutions. Irregular forces not under state control have invaded stable and secure governorates throwing everything into chaos”. He said Hadramaut had a long history of independence and all the major political and tribal leaders in the governorate wanted the STC to leave. He added widespread reports were circulating of STC human rights abuses, including theft of property and mass arrests. “Saudi Arabia is determined that these forces must leave and return to their own places. The legitimate government is being fragmented and the only beneficiary of these intensified divisions will be the Houthis,” he added. Hijri claimed the Houthis “do not see Yemenis as a people, but rather see them as a group of slaves over whom they are the masters”. Islah says it is a civilian party and has no connection with the Muslim Brotherhood, contrary to UAE claims. Since 2022 the STC had been uneasily sharing power on a Saudi-organised presidential leadership council with a variety of other groups, including the Islah party.

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French court finds ‘twisted’ anaesthetist guilty of killing 12 patients

A French anaesthetist described by prosecutors as “Dr Death” has been found guilty of intentionally poisoning 30 patients and killing 12 over almost a decade as a top medic. Frédéric Péchier, 53, once seen by colleagues as a “star anaesthetist”, was sentenced to life in prison on Thursday after state prosecutors said he was “one of the biggest criminals in the history of the French legal system”. The state prosecutor Christine de Curraize said Péchier was a “serial killer” who was “highly twisted” and had tampered with colleagues’ paracetamol bags or anaesthesia pouches to poison patients, triggering heart attacks. Another state prosecutor, Thérèse Brunisso, said Péchier was not a doctor “but a criminal who used medicine to kill”. The victims were aged between four and 89. The three-month trial had attempted to unpick Péchier’s reasons for poisoning patients during his work in private clinics in Besançon, in the east of France. Curraize and Brunisso said the reasons were varied. In some cases, they said, Péchier intervened to resuscitate patients he had poisoned not because he wanted to save them, but to cover his tracks. He wanted to show he was “all powerful” in contrast to his fellow doctors’ distress, they said. The court heard he had acted to damage and discredit co-workers with whom he was in competition or conflict, targeting their patients to make them look incompetent. Curraize said Péchier had a “need for power”. The court heard he poisoned patients to deal with his own feelings of inadequacy and frustration. Killing had become “a way of life”, she said. Brunisso said Péchier’s crimes had two aims: “the physical death of the patient” and “the slow and insidious psychological attack on his colleagues”. Péchier, who has 10 days to appeal, denied any wrongdoing throughout the trial, telling the court: “I have never poisoned anyone … I am not a poisoner.” He was described by lawyers for the victims as emotionless and lacking empathy in court. Péchier, whose father was an anaesthetist, was described as having had a privileged upbringing. He lived in a large house with his cardiologist wife and three children before they divorced. He had worked at two private clinics where patients went into cardiac arrest in suspicious circumstances between 2008 and 2017. Twelve patients could not be resuscitated and died. Over the course of the inquiry, investigators examined more than 70 reports of “serious adverse events”, medical terminology for unexpected complications or deaths among patients. Péchier’s youngest victim, a four-year-old identified as Tedy, survived two cardiac arrests during a routine tonsil operation in 2016. Tedy’s father, Hervé Hoerter Tarby, told the court: “What happened to us is a nightmare. We trusted medicine and we feel betrayed.” He said his son spent two days in a coma with his mother kneeling by his bed and praying. The family told the court their son was used by Péchier as an object to “settle scores” between doctors, suggesting Péchier had poisoned the child to harm his colleagues’ reputations. “It’s inhuman, it’s vile,” Tarby said. Tedy, now 14, did not want to give evidence or stand near Péchier in court, but his father read a written statement in which the boy described his “great suffering”. Tedy wrote: “I understand that, when I was only four, someone used me and my life to create problems. I need 10 minutes more than my classmates to write. I’m afraid that traces of the poisoning will stay with me all my life.” Sandra Simard was 36 in 2017 when she had a routine back operation. Her heart stopped during the operation after an anaesthesia pouch was tampered with. She was in a coma for several days and told the court she lived with lifelong consequences. “My whole body is in pain. It’s as if I live in the body of an old person,” she said, using a walking stick in court. She said the end of the day was always worse and winter caused great suffering. “But I can’t complain, because at least I’m alive,” she said. Morgane Richard, a lawyer for several victims, told the court Péchier used patients as “cannon-fodder, as weapons” to attack and discredit his fellow doctors who were left shocked by their patients’ unexplained adverse events. “No one among you can imagine being intentionally killed by a doctor,” she told the jury.

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Thursday briefing: How pay erosion and job shortages pushed doctors to strike again amid winter flu surge

Good morning. The “moment of crisis” for the NHS that led Keir Starmer to warn resident doctors not to strike this week is already upon us as a winter flu epidemic sweeps the country, having started weeks earlier than usual. Yet, despite the warnings, Tuesday’s last ditch talks between the government and the British Medical Association, representing 55,000 of 70,000 resident doctors in England, failed to reach agreement over pay and jobs. Early on Wednesday morning, thousands of resident, formerly known as junior, doctors went on strike, after voting overwhelmingly to do so. The five day action will be the 14th strike since 2023. Fears within the NHS that, short of dramatic intervention, the deadlocked dispute could drag on through 2026 has led to NHS bosses urging the two parties to agree to independent mediation in order to bridge the gap between them. Both sides say that patients are suffering as a result of the other side. Starmer warned the strikes were “reckless” and placed patients and the NHS in “grave danger”. The BMA say, in some regions, some life-saving treatment is restricted to office hours due to a dearth of specialists, while A&E doctors are being turned away due to a lack of training places in emergency medicine. For today’s newsletter, I spoke to Denis Campbell, the Guardian’s health policy editor, to understand what’s really going on. First, the headlines. Five big stories UK news | Police in London and Manchester have pledged a further crackdown on pro-Palestinian demonstrations on anyone chanting the words “globalise the intifada” or holding a placard with the phrase on it. Trade policy | Ministers and senior MPs have warned that the UK’s agreements with Donald Trump are “built on sand” after the Guardian established that the deal to avoid drug tariffs has no underlying text beyond limited headline terms. Ukraine | The UK has given its final warning to Roman Abramovich to release £2.5bn from his sale of Chelsea FC to give to Ukraine, telling the billionaire to release the funds or face court action. US news | Nick Reiner, who has been charged with two counts of first-degree murder in the killing of his parents, acclaimed actor and director Rob Reiner and photographer Michele Singer Reiner, made his first appearance in court on Wednesday. Sextortion | The parents of a 16-year-old who took his own life after he fell victim to a sextortion gang on Instagram are suing Meta for the alleged wrongful death of their son, in the first UK case of its kind. In depth: ‘They intend to keep on striking until they get the money they want’ The dispute has been rumbling on for 33 months now, says Denis, but it has ramped up in recent days into an “increasingly bitter and public” battle with Starmer and Streeting on one side and Dr Jack Fletcher, the chair of the BMA resident doctors committee on the other. There are two main issues in play. First, the resident doctors, who Denis describes as the “workhorses of the NHS”, have had a pay rise of 28.9% over the past three years, but they argue that their pay is worse now, in real terms, than it was in 2008/2009, due to austerity and multiple below inflation pay rises. Another element to the dispute has been introduced recently. Now it’s also about jobs, Denis says, following a “particular problem which has emerged in the last couple of years.” “For young, early career doctors looking to progress their careers by moving into specialist training, as a surgeon, an A&E doctor, a psychiatrist, whatever it might be, the opportunities to do so are far fewer than the number of doctors looking to move their careers on.” This has been an established career path for generations. The issue has created a “really serious bottleneck” of many thousands of doctors who cannot progress their careers, he said, with some doctors left “literally unemployed”. “This, understandably, is a source of huge frustration.” This year, it is estimated that nearly 40,000 doctors will apply for about 10,000 specialty training places which the BMA’s Jack Fletcher warns is causing many doctors to leave the NHS altogether. *** Are the doctors asking for too much? Resident doctors are among public sector workers across the UK who have suffered a “serious erosion” in real terms value of their pay since 2008/9, due to austerity measures introduced by Conservative governments. “It’s easy to understand why those doctors are feeling very frustrated”, says Denis, at a time when inflation has been rampant, the affordability gap for people trying to buy a home has widened and they are seeing a massive cost of living pressure that everyone faces.” However, he notes, they are the only group of public sector workers who are demanding, holding out for and repeatedly striking for pay restoration. “Teachers aren’t doing that. Prison officers aren’t doing that. Social workers aren’t doing that. Bin men aren’t doing that. Firefighters aren’t doing that, GPs and consultant doctors aren’t doing that either.” Perhaps unsurprisingly, public support for the pay and jobs dispute has dwindled. The latest YouGov poll shows a significant majority, 58%, of the public thinks the doctors strikes are wrong and only 33% believed they are right. *** What is Wes Streeting’s role in all this? When Streeting became health secretary, he very quickly gave resident doctors 22.3% extra pay over two years, believing he had fixed the problem, according to Denis. But the BMA was set on a larger sum. The trouble for the health secretary is there is no easy lever to pull to resolve the dispute, says Denis. Streeting has attempted to solve the jobs issue by pledging to create more training places – which he has raised from 1000, to 2000 to 4000, in recent weeks to try to break the deadlock. The latest offer, while creating training places, would not have increased their pay this current financial year. Resident doctors, who make up about half of all NHS doctors, overwhelmingly rejected the offer in a BMA survey last week, with 83% voting against it, on a 65% turnout. NHS finances are “very tight” particularly this year when NHS England was initially forecast to end up with a deficit with an overspend of £6.6bn, with serious steps taken to reduce that to a more manageable figure. Rachel Reeves could always ease her fiscal rules and decide to free up money for the NHS – but Streeting is reluctant to give a further big pay rise to resident doctors, especially because of the risk of prompting other public sector workers to demand the same. *** How has the flu crisis played out in the dispute? Denis is quite keen to emphasise that the flu crisis happening in hospitals in England right now is a matter of fact: with more people seriously unwell because of the flu. However, he does believe that the health secretary in particular and also the prime minister have sought to “weaponise” the earlier than usual winter flu crisis as part of their public campaign to try to isolate resident doctors and get them to agree to the latest government offer. Fletcher has criticised the health secretary’s rhetoric in recent weeks. “The very professionals whose union he accused of “juvenile delinquency” will be holding overstretched services together at the peak of this flu season.” Fletcher said in his comment piece on Monday that resident doctors will be “caring for patients” over Christmas. On Wednesday, he said it was “well past the time” for ministers to come up with a long term plan on pay and jobs and that doctors going on strike were “making clear that they are willing to stand up for their profession against a totally avoidable jobs crisis”. *** How long is this likely to drag on? After nearly three years Denis still sees no end in sight for the ongoing crisis. The BMA’s legal mandate to strike runs out on the 6 January but it is balloting to seek a fresh legal mandate to strike for a further six months. If they get a yes vote they intend to embark on more strikes in February. “They intend to keep on striking until they get the money they want,” says Denis. Increasingly in the NHS, senior people who run big hospitals, are “really worried that this is just going to drag on and on” through 2026 unless something dramatic pops up. “This is not a normal industrial dispute” says Denis. “There is no compromise that I can see available. I wish it were different, for the sake of the public as patients, for the sake of the NHS which picks up the pieces, and just for sake of the public good.” What else we’ve been reading It’s behind you! Well 2025 nearly is, and December isn’t December without a trip to a pantomime. Georgie Wyatt has some tales of panto mishap direct from the (pantomime) horse’s mouth. Martin I was humoured by Stuart Heritage’s story on Susan Boyle, of Britain’s Got Talent, having the most unexpected celebrity superfan – actor Timothée Chalamet. Sundus Abdi, newsletters team There aren’t many sports where I would actually have to put weight on in order to have a fighting chance, but sumo is one of them. Robyn Vinter explores its growing popularity in the UK. Martin I enjoyed this story about Jack Chadwick rescuing an injured pigeon and discovering a hidden network of people devoted to caring for Manchester’s birds. Sundus Toni Basil is best known in the UK for smash hit Mickey, but, now 82, there is so much more to her life than that, as Steve Rose discovers in an interview that name checks Bowie, Sinatra, Elvis and more. Martin Sport Cricket | England are considering a formal complaint over the Snicko technology being used in this Ashes series after Alex Carey received a lifeline en route to a telling century on the opening day of the third Test. Football | The Macclesfield forward Ethan McLeod has died in a car accident. The 21-year-old was driving back from the club’s National League North match against Bedford on Tuesday night when the incident occurred on the M1. Boxing | Undefeated world super middleweight champion Terence Crawford announced his retirement from boxing, hanging up his gloves three months after a career-defining victory over Canelo Álvarez. The front pages “Russia targeting European finance bosses and politicians over assets,” is the splash on the Guardian on Thursday. “UK peacekeepers getting ready to deploy to Ukraine,” says the i paper. “NHS RACE AGAINST TIME,” says the Mirror. “Stand up to the unions ...ban doctors strike,” is the lead story at the Express. “Budget strikes again,” is the highlight at the Sun. “£6BN COST OF STARMER’S NEW BID TO SUCK UP TO BRUSSELS,” writes the Mail, while the Telegraph runs with: “£8 billion cost of EU student exchange.” “Police vow to stamp out chants for ‘intifada’” is the splash at the Times. “Starmer in £2.5bn Chelsea transfer demand,” says the Metro. Finally the FT with: “Warner Bros board scorns ‘illusory’ bid by Paramount.” Today in Focus The Pinochet fan with a Nazi dad: meet Chile’s next president Chile’s next president José Antonio Kast was once way out on Chile’s political fringes – considered too extreme, too rightwing, and far too conservative on issues such as contraception and abortion. Yet on Sunday, Kast won by a landslide. Santiago-based journalist John Bartlett charts his rise. Cartoon of the day | Ben Jennings The Upside A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad Growing up, Amelia Gentleman’s father, the artist David Gentleman, rarely gave advice. If his children wanted to draw, he handed them pencils and left them to it. Now at 95, after an eight-decade career spanning book covers, murals, stamps and protest art, he has distilled what he has learned into a book of lessons for young artists – a move that surprised even his family. Amelia reflects on the principles she absorbed simply by watching him work: build a life around what you love, don’t wait for inspiration, stay curious and organised, and find beauty in the overlooked. Above all, she writes, he taught her to keep experimenting and not be disheartened by mistakes – lessons that extend far beyond art. Sign up here for a weekly roundup of The Upside, sent to you every Sunday Bored at work? And finally, the Guardian’s puzzles are here to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow. Martin Belam’s Thursday news quiz Quick crossword Cryptic crossword Wordiply

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‘Pretty birds and silly moos’: the women behind the Sex Discrimination Act

Celia Brayfield was at her desk in the Femail section of the Daily Mail’s Fleet Street office when an editor called her over. It was July and Wimbledon had started. “He said: ‘We want you to go down and get into the women’s changing rooms and report on lesbian behaviour.’ One didn’t normally swear at that time but I declined. That was the attitude then,” she told me. From the late 1960s until the early 70s, Brayfield was one of a small group of female journalists working on women’s pages in newspapers. “We were dealing with everyday sexism on an unbelievable scale,” she said. “You learned to wear trousers or take the lift because if you took the stairs someone would try to look up your skirt. But then you couldn’t go to a lot of press conference venues in trousers. In the Savoy, for example, women in trousers weren’t allowed.” Today, Brayfield is an author and lecturer living in Dorset. She started aged 19, as an assistant to Shirley Conran – then women’s editor of the Observer. When Conran moved to the Daily Mail, Brayfield went, too. “The Daily Mail was a very sexist organisation,” she told me. “I can’t tell you how awful women’s pages were, except for Mary Stott’s at the Guardian. All the news of the women’s movement in America was flooding across the Atlantic, but editors were profoundly uninterested. I always thought you couldn’t mention anything to do with equality before the fifth paragraph. You were radicalised by your workplace.” Brayfield found her own way of reporting on developments in the women’s liberation movement (WLM), as the resurgent feminism of those years was known. She would set up interviews with the movement’s big hitters and then, when editors rejected them, offer them to the underground press instead. A piece on the radical feminist author Kate Millett was published by Frendz magazine, which Rosie Boycott co-edited before launching the women’s movement journal Spare Rib. Along with Conran, Brayfield also joined Women in Media, a pressure group set up in 1970 to challenge sexism in the industry and beyond. Its activities have been largely forgotten, and many of those involved have died. But it played a key role in the campaign to outlaw sex discrimination and enforce equal pay – as well as lobbying bosses for equal opportunities at work. One policy that especially riled them, and became a focus, was the broadcasters’ refusal to let women read the news. The public would find this “unnatural”, the BBC executive Robin Scott told the Daily Mirror in 1972. “There’s always bad news about and it’s much easier for a man to deal with that.” Fifty years on, such brazen sexism appears comically old-fashioned. But the women’s libbers who confronted it have also often been the butt of jokes. While achievements such as equal pay and the establishment of women’s refuges are recognised, the movement that fought for them has uncertain status. Second-wave feminists, as this generation is known, have been derided as man-hating harridans but also as entitled princesses – with their unrealistic demand for 24-hour nurseries and insufficiently intersectional politics. Their suffragette grandmothers, by contrast, are held up as courageous heroines. There had been a women’s movement pressing for employment rights since the 19th century, when pioneering female trade unionists campaigned for safer conditions and higher wages in shops and factories, and middle-class women fought for access to the professions. But even after the second world war, during which millions of women took on roles previously reserved for men, sexism was baked into workplaces. It was standard practice for women to be paid around four-fifths of what men earned for the same job, and sexist attitudes meant that women were routinely refused promotion. Senior and leadership positions were largely off-limits. Powerful politicians, employers and some trade unionists were determined that it should stay that way. When the House of Commons supported an amendment calling for equal pay for female teachers in 1944, Winston Churchill, the prime minister, was so determined to block it that he made the next vote on the issue a vote of confidence in the wartime government – effectively threatening to resign if it became law. That same year a woman called Jean Winder became the first female Hansard reporter, taking shorthand notes in parliament for the official record. Winder was a widow whose husband had been killed on active service, and a trained secretary. But her salary was less than that of her male colleagues, and in 1951 she complained. A Conservative MP, Irene Ward, became Winder’s champion and in 1954 they prevailed. But Ward and colleagues including Labour’s Barbara Castle, and feminist lobby groups including the Fawcett Society, argued that such discrimination must be made illegal across the board – not a matter for an employer’s discretion. A decade later, 187 sewing machinists at Ford’s Dagenham plant forced the issue. Their 1968 strike for equal pay has become legendary due to the role played by Castle, the first female employment secretary, who met the women and negotiated with them directly, bringing an end to the four-week strike. But the pay rise they accepted (92% of the male wage instead of 85%) was not the “sex equality” they had demanded. The Equal Pay Act that went through parliament two years later was a compromise, too, with a five-year gap before implementation and equal pay only for employees doing work deemed to be “the same or broadly the same” or of “equal value” under the terms of a job evaluation process. Women inside and outside parliament wanted to go further, faster. * * * On 7 March 1968, the Labour backbencher Joyce Butler challenged the prime minister, Harold Wilson, directly in the House of Commons: “Is my right honourable friend aware that women are fed up with being exploited as pretty birds when they are young, and as silly moos when they get older?” She wanted to know if he planned to mark the 50th anniversary of the 1918 women’s suffrage bill with a law against sex discrimination. Wilson had been PM when the Race Relations Act, outlawing discrimination on grounds of colour, race and nation origins, had passed three years before. As the MP for Wood Green, Butler had received letters including one from a bus conductor who had been denied training because she was a woman. Between 1968 and 1971, Butler tried four times to introduce an anti-discrimination bill that would make it illegal for employers to treat male and female workers differently. William Hamilton, a Labour MP from Scotland, made a similar attempt in February 1972 while Nancy Seear, a Liberal peer who was also president of the Fawcett Society, put her name to a bill in the House of Lords. Women’s liberation activists were also mobilising. Newsletters from the time report on efforts to gather half a million signatures on a petition demanding a sex discrimination bill (a target that later grew to 1 million), alongside initiatives including abortion rights, self-defence classes and a campaign to ensure that family allowances (child benefit paid to mothers) would not be replaced by tax credits paid to fathers. Lobbying MPs was not everyone’s cup of tea. For the radicals in the movement, tinkering with the statute book was a paltry distraction from their ambition to reorder public and private life along feminist lines. An article in Spare Rib expressed fears that the broader aims of women’s liberation could be obscured by an anti-discrimination bill, in the same way suffrage activism was sidelined during the 1920s, after some women had won the vote, but not all. But Women in Media – which drew in young journalists like Brayfield and Mary Kenny, as well as an older generation including Mary Stott, who was Guardian women’s editor from 1957-72 – was determined to push a bill through. The group’s anti-discrimination bill action group (shortened to Adbag) became its centre of operations and pursued the issue energetically. Shirley Conran used a “Laura Ashley voice” with politicians, to avoid putting them off, and came up with the idea of decorating letters with red, heart-shaped fabric cut-outs. Brayfield was not convinced by this ploy, and some MPs were annoyed rather than charmed by letters warning them that lists were being kept of those for and against the bill. Replies to Women in Media complained of “press threats” and even “blackmail”. There were differences of opinion about publicity, too. In her memoir, Conran sounds more amused than outraged by the advice of Joyce Hopkirk, women’s editor at the Sun, that they needed a woman “in chains and a flesh-coloured bikini” to get coverage in the tabloids. Despite disagreements, Brayfield says the group “had some very dynamic people and we did understand how to manipulate our profession”. When Hamilton’s bill was debated in the Commons in February 1973, 700 women gathered in the grand Caxton Hall in Westminster, in what they called a Women’s parliament – an idea borrowed from the suffragettes – with speakers including May Hobbs of the Cleaners’ Action Group, and a creche. Jill Tweedie, a Guardian women’s page columnist, brought a car boot full of wax torches that were sold for £1 each when the women processed to Downing Street. The next day of action fell on 28 June, when Stott took charge of delivering the petition to the queen at Buckingham Palace. With her was Alexandra Clark, the head girl of St Paul’s girls’ school. By this point a large coalition of supporting organisations had been assembled, ranging from the National Federation of Women’s Institutes to the Bakers’ union, British Women Pilots’ Association and Brides magazine. Dozens of letters were sent to the PM and deputations gathered for a “Day of Protest” in Westminster. Original suffrage movement banners were carried by Fawcett Society members and a wreath laid at the Emmeline Pankhurst statue in Victoria Tower Gardens by Dame Marjorie Corbett-Ashby, a 92-year-old former suffragette. This show of strength did not produce instant results and a few weeks later a Women in Media report declared – with capital letters for emphasis – that “If nothing emerges we will be justified in asking women to vote only for those MPs in favour of a sound Anti-Discrimination [Bill] MINDLESS OF PARTY LINES”. In August, the group secured a meeting with Margaret Thatcher, then the secretary of state for education and science. Susanne Puddefoot, who had been the Times women’s editor, went along and noted drily that Thatcher’s “considerable hostility” was “to say the least, a problem”. But persistence and publicity were paying off. While Thatcher was opposed, others in her party were more sympathetic and Janet Fookes, then the Conservative MP for Plymouth and now an 89-year-old member of the House of Lords, was one. She was not a feminist, she told me in a phone call, and did not personally experience sex discrimination in parliament. “But I was always quite independent-minded, and I don’t remember it causing any difficulties – a bill seemed a perfectly obvious thing to do.” * * * Not everyone was enamoured of Women in Media’s self-appointed role. There was a cross exchange of letters with WLM organisers, and in 1974 Dodie Wheppler wrote to the Guardian on behalf of the Socialist Woman journal to complain about “the Women in Media group going from bad to unbelievable. A group of women sitting in a flat in Connaught Square (average freehold price, £45,000)”. While Wheppler’s objections were specific, they were also symptomatic of wider divisions at the time between those who were committed to reconciling feminism with socialism and those, such as Janet Fookes, who supported women’s rights but not leftwing politics. Twelve days before the first of 1974’s two general elections, on 16 February, another influential organisation upped its involvement and raised the political stakes. The National Council for Civil Liberties (NCCL) had recently set up a women’s rights committee with Patricia Hewitt, the future cabinet minister, as its first women’s officer. Its conference on women’s employment, held in the headquarters of the Trades Union Congress in London, brought a new formality and status to an issue that had until that point mostly been pushed by feminist lobby groups. Hewitt belonged to a women’s consciousness-raising group as well, she told me. But unlike the leaderless WLM, the NCCL had a formal structure and affiliates. “So we were drawing on the energy of women’s liberation but also the energy of the trade unionists who had started the modern campaign for equal pay with the Ford Dagenham strike – the two threads came together at the Congress Hall.” There were still tensions. Many trade unionists were late or reluctant converts to equal pay, while some employers were implacably opposed. Hewitt also recalls awkward relations between women who had lived through the war, overcoming barriers of sexism to reach positions of influence, and radical baby boomers like her and Harriet Harman, an NCCL colleague. “My emotional recollection of that period is that there was an older generation of women, of whom Barbara Castle and Shirley Williams were two of the standouts, but there were a lot of women who had been battling misogyny in politics for a very long time. And they were a bit ambivalent about this new generation of stroppy women making demands,” she recalled. Feminists had reams of data thanks in part to a book by Audrey Hunt, A Survey of Women’s Employment. They put lists of examples on their leaflets and petitions: “Engineers and scientists: 7% women; trade union officials: only 25 women out of 1,400 paid officials; draughtsmen: only 1% are women (50% in Sweden).” Unwilling to wait for the law to change, one group launched a volunteer-run, prototype anti-discrimination board to gather evidence of unfair treatment. Women wrote in to report sexist pay structures in workplaces from advertising agencies to public swimming pools. One complaint came from a window-dresser at Harrods. In March 1974, Women in Media wrote to the prime minister, Harold Wilson, to say that a sex discrimination bill “must, in justice, be considered an urgent priority in any socialist programme” (the vaguer-sounding name of anti-discrimination bill was dropped in 1973). But with just 23 female MPs, they had limited backing in parliament. Shirley Summerskill, a minister in the Home Office, was one key ally. But Castle was busy trying to reform women’s pensions and, as Patricia Hewitt explains: “Labour women in those days were very careful about women’s issues because of getting typecast – some of them strongly supported the act but there was no organised force within the party.” * * * In the summer of 1974, Women in Media decided to increase the pressure on Wilson by putting up its own candidate in the next election – expected to be soon as Labour did not have a majority. The woman chosen was Una Kroll, a 48-year-old deaconess and GP in south London, with a remarkable family history which included growing up partly in the Soviet Union where both her parents were spies. A campaigner for the ordination of women, she described herself as having been radicalised by a patient who had died from cervical cancer, aged 29, after doctors refused to take her symptoms seriously. Since Women in Media was not a suitable name for a political party, the Women’s Rights Campaign was established on 6 September. In a bizarre coincidence – or what some feminists hoped was a panicked reaction to their bold move – the Home Office launched a white paper, Equality for Women, on the same day. Three days later it was announced that the election would be on 10 October. In the Guardian, Stott paid tribute to Kroll as a “top-class brain” and claimed that her candidacy in Sutton and Cheam was “the first time in this country that a woman has stood for parliament as a women’s rights candidate”. This was wrong – Christabel Pankhurst had been the sole candidate for a Women’s party in 1918, and lost by 775 votes. But while this disappointing coda to the suffrage movement was forgotten, Kroll’s supporters decked themselves in the suffragette colours of purple, white and green, and celebrity supporters including the actor Glenda Jackson donned sashes for photos. The manifesto was a checklist of issues including contraception, childcare and pensions as well as pay. In electoral terms, the Woman’s Rights Campaign was a flop. Kroll won just 298 votes. Records of the campaign in the Women’s Library suggest that its activists fell down on canvassing. Most volunteers worked full-time and evening door-knocking sessions turned into chaotic late nights. In obituaries of Kroll, who died in 2017, her candidacy is referred to only briefly. But while the campaign did not succeed, it was an audacious stunt. It would be more than 40 years before the Women’s Equality party would try something similar on a larger scale. And in publicity terms, it had an effect. Newspapers reported on the Women’s Rights Campaign with interest and when Labour won a majority, it quickly announced that sex discrimination would be outlawed. The NCCL produced a draft bill and the details were argued over in and outside parliament. Under the Conservatives, proposed exceptions to a ban on employment discrimination had included the clergy, prisons, police, armed forces and “foster-mothering”. Labour agreed with feminist lobby groups that this list should be shorter. Another issue was how far beyond the world of work the act would apply. Feminists wanted sex discrimination outlawed in one fell swoop. A motion from the WLM conference in Manchester in April 1975 was headed “WE ARE STILL ANGRY” and declared: “The movement severely condemns obvious fundamental omissions of discrimination such as pensions, taxation, social security, etc.” While education and services were included in Labour’s bill, with some exceptions, ministers resolved that financial matters would be dealt with separately. One debate was about the powers of the new equality board. Feminists argued that inspectors ought to be able to check up on employers, and ensure that the law was being obeyed. If it was left to individual women to raise complaints, they feared that nothing would change. Feminists did not win all the arguments. The equal opportunities commission (as the board was named) gained the power to investigate but only “with the agreement of the secretary of state”. Women in Media described the bill as “timid tinkering with a problem that needs all-out assault” and criticised the exemption for small employers and partnerships including solicitors: “We notice that the law, as usual, has protected its own bastions.” But the inclusion of indirect as well as direct discrimination was a victory. And members were happy enough that when the bill passed one of its stages in October, they threw a party. * * * The Sex Discrimination and Equal Pay Acts both came into force on 29 December 1975, on the same day that the equal opportunities commission (EOC) was established in Manchester. Early in 1976 its first chair, Betty Lockwood, sent out invitations to a meeting. Hewitt remembers that “Harriet [Harman] had a car that could face the distance so we all squashed in and drove up and were quite vociferous.” With sex discrimination outlawed, it would now be up to the commission and judges to oversee enforcement. Hewitt and Harman were immediately on the lookout for women with complaints strong enough to take to tribunals – “test cases” that would set precedents. One soon emerged, when a woman called Belinda Price approached the commission about the civil service. Price had been barred from applying for a role in the Foreign Office on grounds of an age limit of 29 that she believed was indirect sex discrimination – since women were far more likely than men to have taken time off to have children, and therefore to miss out. When the commission declined to pursue Price’s complaint, the NCCL took it up instead, and won. In 1977, Women in Media published a book about sexism in radio, television and so on, intended for use on the new women’s studies courses that were springing up in universities. Adbag had turned into Flag (the Feminist Legislation Action Group), signalling broader aims than “anti-discrimination”, and kept on lobbying. It wanted the EOC to develop proposals aimed at eliminating stereotypes. In the House of Commons and outside, Labour MPs including Maureen Colquhoun and Jo Richardson championed further feminist legislation. In 1983, the Equal Pay Act was amended to apply to “work of equal value”. Women in Media was absorbed by the Fawcett Society. In 2006, New Labour legislated to dissolve the EOC. Its replacement, the Equality and Human Rights Commission, came into existence the following year, fulfilling the ambition first voiced in the 1970s for one body monitoring discrimination across different characteristics. In 2010, earlier anti-discrimination laws were combined in the Equality Act. Feminists of the 1970s were later criticised for a too-narrow focus and demographic, and Women in Media could be seen as an exemplar. Mary Kenny remembers finding meetings “a bit bourgeois”. Conran surely had in mind the long-running comic strip The Four Marys, in the girls’ comic Bunty, when she recalled that the bill campaign included three Shirleys, all of whom had attended St Paul’s – herself, Shirley Williams and Shirley Summerskill (the adventures of the Four Marys took place at the fictional St Elmo’s). But the movement is too easily caricatured. Many of those who lobbied for the sex discrimination bill were active in other campaigns, including one against the deportation of a group of Irish women who had been caught stealing. Their proposals included a clause updating nationality laws so that women would gain the same entitlement as men to bring foreign spouses to Britain – highly topical in the context of Idi Amin’s expulsion of Ugandan Asians. Concerns about whether working-class women in low-paid jobs would be able to afford to take employers to tribunal were raised repeatedly. There were also efforts to add sexual orientation to the bill, so that gay men and lesbians would also gain protection. One women’s group proposed a civil rights appeals board, in place of employment tribunals, to adjudicate in cases dealing with race as well as sex. “These things are always a compromise,” says Patricia Hewitt. “By 1980 we were saying ‘there’s not enough in this act’, but I think in 1975 we felt we’d done pretty well.” “What I remember most is the sense that we actually achieved something,” says Brayfield. “We were dealing with an enormous social injustice and an extremely resistant patriarchy or power structure that didn’t want to change. We really did set out to change our society and to make life better for our daughters but it’s a fight you have to keep winning. There’s never any sitting back and saying ‘we’ve won’ because you never have.” • Listen to our podcasts here and sign up to the long read weekly email here.

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EU leaders urged to use frozen Russian assets to fund Ukraine’s defence

European leaders are being urged to decide whether to use Russia’s frozen assets to fund Ukraine’s defence at a time of unprecedented pressure from the US. At a critical summit in Brussels on Thursday, EU leaders will be asked to make good on a promise to find urgently needed cash for Ukraine, with Kyiv under pressure to cede territory as Russia ekes out advances on the battlefield. Arriving at the summit, Poland’s prime minister, Donald Tusk, said Europe had a choice between “money today or blood tomorrow”. He said he was “not talking about Ukraine only, I am talking about Europe. And this is our decision to make and only ours. I think all European leaders have to finally rise to this occasion.” Belgium’s prime minister, Bart De Wever, who is pushing back against a proposed “reparations loan” for Ukraine secured on Russian frozen assets, told reporters his country absolutely needed protection against any counteraction from Moscow. De Wever said the “most probable” option to fund Ukraine was joint EU borrowing backed against unallocated funds in the EU budget. Many other member states say this is a non-starter because Hungary has already said it would veto such a plan. The German chancellor, Friedrich Merz, a strong advocate of the frozen assets plan, said he believed the EU could find an agreement. “I understand the concerns by some member states, particularly by the Belgian government, but I hope that we can address them together.” The European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, said she would not leave the summit without a solution. “I totally support Belgium,” she added. Speaking to European lawmakers on Wednesday, she said: “There is no more important act of European defence than supporting Ukraine’s defence.” She added that “the next days will be crucial in securing this”. Von der Leyen said Europe must take responsibility for its own security in a world she described as “dangerous and transactional”, adding: “This is no longer an option. It is a must.” Earlier this month, von der Leyen proposed two options to fund Ukraine’s urgent defence and civilian needs in 2026 and 2027: joint EU borrowing or a so-called “reparations loan” secured against Russia’s frozen assets in the bloc. Belgium, which hosts most of the €210bn (£185bn) immobilised Russian assets in the EU, says it lacks sufficient guarantees that member states would come to its aid if the scheme were to fail, leaving Brussels with a multibillion-euro bill. The Russian central bank announced this week that it was seeking $230bn (£202bn) in damages against Euroclear, the Brussels-based securities depository that holds most of Russia’s sovereign wealth in the EU. Belgium also fears courts in countries allied to Russia will move to seize western assets to enforce claims against Euroclear. Italy has emerged as an important ally. The prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, said using Russia’s assets frozen in Europe to help Ukraine without a solid legal basis would hand Moscow “the first victory since the start of the war”. Like Belgium, Italy argues that joint EU borrowing would be a safer way of funding Ukraine. “Italy, of course, considers sacred the principle that Russia should primarily pay for the reconstruction of the nation it attacked, but this result must be achieved with a solid legal basis,” Meloni told Italian politicians. Merz said this week he would continue fighting to make up to €90bn (£79bn) in Russian assets “usable for Ukraine’s defence”. He put the odds of winning an agreement at “50/50” in an interview with public television on Tuesday. Merz told lawmakers the sum would finance the Ukrainian army for “at least another two years”, while its use would send a clear signal to the Russian president, Vladimir Putin. He said he took Belgium’s concerns seriously. “That is why I am trying with our partners to alleviate them,” Merz said – arguing the commission’s plan was “in perfect compliance with international law and international obligations”. Under the scheme, the EU would provide Kyiv with a €90bn loan funded through borrowing from Euroclear. The loan would be repaid only if and when Moscow paid reparations to Ukraine. EU officials say Russia’s claim on the assets at Euroclear, frozen soon after the full-scale invasion in 2022, would not be affected. Moscow, however, argues the move amounts to theft and has vowed to retaliate. EU officials involved in preparing the summit have suggested the reparations loan is the only real option, as use of the EU budget would require unanimity. Hungary’s government, which is hostile to Ukraine, has promised to veto any attempt to use the EU budget as collateral for a loan for Kyiv. By contrast, the reparations loan would require only a majority of EU member states, although some diplomats say it would be unthinkable to isolate Belgium. “A very large majority of member states favour the reparations loan,” one senior EU official said. “Any solution that would require unanimity, I don’t think is realistic so we are back into the reparations loan.” The EU last week used emergency powers to indefinitely freeze €210bn of Russian assets in the bloc, averting the risk of losing control of the funds if Hungary or any other Kremlin-friendly government vetoed the renewal of sanctions, which have to be renewed every six months. Belgium has suggested that such emergency powers could also be used to generate an EU loan for Ukraine secured against the budget, circumventing the need for unanimity. But other countries say that would be a legal twist too far. “This is a non-starter,” said one senior EU diplomat, who nevertheless expressed sympathy for Belgium’s position. Additional reporting by Deborah Cole in Berlin