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      Oasis ‘shocked and saddened’ after fan dies in fall at Wembley concert

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 3 days ago - 17:47

    Man understood to have been sitting in London stadium’s upper tier was pronounced dead at the scene

    Oasis have said they are “shocked and saddened” after a man fell to his death at Wembley Stadium during the band’s Saturday concert.

    The man was understood to be sitting in the upper tier of the 90,000-seat stadium – the highest stands of which are 50 metres above the ground – as the Gallagher brothers performed as part of their reunion tour.

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      White House officials rush to defend Trump after shaky economic week

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 3 days ago - 17:26

    US trade representative says ‘the president is the president’ after firing of labor statistics chief amid slow job growth

    Donald Trump administration officials fanned out on Sunday’s US political shows to defend the president’s policies after a bruising week of poor economic, trade and employment numbers that culminated with the firing of labor statistics chief Erika McEntarfer.

    US trade representative Jamieson Greer said Trump has “real concerns” about the jobs numbers that extend beyond Friday’s report that showed the national economy added 73,000 jobs in July, far below expectations. Job growth numbers were revised down by 285,000 for the two previous months as well.

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      Israeli forces kill at least 27 at food site while minister’s al-Aqsa visit causes outrage

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 3 days ago - 17:23

    Six more people die from malnutrition, while Itamar Ben-Gvir is first minister to publicly pray at sensitive site

    At least 27 people were killed by Israeli forces while trying to get food and six others died from starvation or malnutrition in Gaza on Sunday, Palestinian officials said, amid a regional outcry over an Israeli minister’s visit to Jerusalem’s most sensitive holy site.

    Witnesses said Israeli forces fired on hungry crowds who were attempting to get food aid from a distribution site run by the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) in the south of the territory, with some describing the fire as indiscriminate.

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      Woman arrested after travelling with two-year-old in suitcase in New Zealand

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 3 days ago - 17:21

    Police say 27-year-old charged with ill treatment and neglect of a child after bus driver spotted a bag moving

    A New Zealand woman was arrested on Sunday after travelling on a bus with a two-year-old girl trapped in her luggage.

    DI Simon Harrison said the 27-year-old woman had been charged with ill treatment and neglect of a child.

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      The Guardian view on car finance scandal redress: mis-sold loans demand action, not excuses or spin | Editorial

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 3 days ago - 16:52 • 1 minute

    Millions were overcharged on car loans they didn’t fully understand. The courts said this was unfair. It’s time for regulators and ministers to deliver redress

    With its ruling in the car finance case, the UK supreme court sent a clear message: some motorists purchased vehicles with deals that were indeed unfair, but it’s not the judiciary’s job to redraw the boundaries of consumer protection law. That burden, the justices suggested, rests with regulators and elected governments. This reasoning is in line with a major speech in June by the court’s president, Lord Reed, who argued that judges aren’t policymakers – and shouldn’t be. He led a bench that nonetheless upheld a finding of unfairness in the case of the factory supervisor Marcus Johnson. The court flagged the danger, defined the threshold – but stopped short of imposing redress itself.

    Now, the baton has been passed. Millions could get payouts if the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) follows the court ruling with its proposed redress scheme, now out for consultation. The regulator admits what courts and campaigners have long suggested: that hidden commissions and opaque contracts were endemic, and that consumers were misled on a large scale. It may be 2025, but the roots of this scandal stretch back decades. More than 90% of new car purchases are financed, and for years, buyers weren’t offered the best deal – just the one that earned the broker the biggest cut.

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      The Guardian view on an EU army: leadership and unity remain elusive | Editorial

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 3 days ago - 16:51

    Calls for a European fighting force grow louder, but decades-old divisions, political hesitancy and reliance on the US persist

    The Spanish prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, called for the creation of a European army earlier this year, suggesting that, this time, the continent might finally be serious. Defence budgets are rising. Threats are mounting. The US is distracted. Surely now is the moment. Except, of course, it isn’t.

    For all the political soundbites that rattle sabres with increasing confidence, Europe is probably no closer to fielding a unified military force than it was when the French rejected the European Defence Community in 1954. The problem is not one of capacity. Europe, including the UK, collectively boasts about 1.5m active military personnel , and some of the world’s most successful defence firms. The problem, as ever, is politics. Or more precisely: who leads?

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      UK pornography taskforce to propose banning ‘barely legal’ content after Channel 4 documentary airs

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 3 days ago - 16:34

    Programme about performer Bonnie Blue condemned for ‘glamorising and normalising’ extreme pornography

    The new pornography taskforce will propose legislation this autumn aimed at banning a type of “barely legal” content produced by porn star Bonnie Blue, the Guardian has learned.

    The proposed action by the independent pornography taskforce , launched last month by Conservative peer Baroness Gabby Bertin, comes in response to the broadcast of the Channel 4 documentary 1000 Men and Me: The Bonnie Blue Story. The programme followed the performer as she filmed herself having sex with 1,057 clients over the course of 12 hours.

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      Like Clement Attlee, Keir Starmer must rise to the occasion | Letters

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 3 days ago - 16:30 • 1 minute

    Readers respond to Martin Kettle’s piece contrasting the premierships of Labour leaders past and present

    Martin Kettle rightly says Aneurin Bevan is the one politician other than Clement Attlee whom Labour leaders regularly invoke ( Critics say Starmer is no Attlee – and they’re right. Labour must look to the future, not the past, 31 July ). Keir Starmer has drawn on Harold Wilson for inspiration, but more pertinent to Kettle’s argument is David Lammy claiming a role model in Ernest Bevin. Made minister of labour in 1940 and foreign secretary in 1945, Ernie Bevin dominated the decade. Bevin sought a continued US military presence in Europe but had no illusions about the “special relationship”. The 1956 Suez crisis was a calamitous reality check, confirming the White House’s prioritising of US self-interest above any presumed obligation to an ally, however close.

    Larry Elliott’s pessimism over Trump’s trade deal with Europe is understandable ( This trade deal is the EU’s Suez moment – its subservience to Trump is on show for all to see, 31 July ), but the EU can take heart from how France responded to the United States torpedoing its joint effort with the UK to regain control of the Suez canal: a renewed commitment to pan-European economic collaboration saw the swift confirmation of a six-nation common market, and a determination that French foreign policy would never again be subject to transatlantic pressure saw the Fourth and then the Fifth Republic develop its own advanced weaponry, both conventional and nuclear. Had Attlee, not Eden, been prime minister in 1956, we can be certain that he would never have sanctioned collusion with France and Israel to invade Egypt, and then repeatedly denied having done so. Attlee’s greatest quality wasn’t succinctness – it was integrity.
    Adrian Smith
    Emeritus professor of modern history, University of Southampton

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      A fair price to the public for water nationalisation | Letter

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 3 days ago - 16:29

    The government is wrong on the cost of bringing water back into public ownership, write Prof Becky Malby, Dr Kate Bayliss, Prof Frances Cleaver and Prof Ewan McGaughey

    The environment secretary, Steve Reed, claims that water cannot be put into public ownership because it would cost £100bn, and that the government would have to raid the NHS budget to fund it ( ‘Broken’ water industry in England and Wales faces tighter controls under new watchdog, 21 July ).

    This is inaccurate. The People’s Commission on the Water Sector has investigated the £100bn figure in detail and found that the costs are based on biased evidence and have no basis in law. We have also found that any temporary funds needed to refinance the water sector would be through ringfenced bonds and would not affect the NHS budget. The environment secretary should not use figures that are clearly misleading and have no bearing on the actual costs of public ownership.

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