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Sep 05, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Rajeev Syal and Diane Taylor)
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Deported UK asylum seekers’ human rights at risk in Rwanda, court told
Legal challenge claims ministers ignored evidence of violations including torture in east African countryThe UK’s plan to deport people seeking asylum to Rwanda has been challenged in the high court, with claims that ministers deliberately ignored evidence that the east African country had violated human rights, including the right to live free from torture.Rwanda was put back on to a list of potential destinations for a “migration partnership” after previously being ruled out by civil servants,
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Sep 05, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Reuters in Stockholm)
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Film-makers found guilty of disturbing 1994 MS Estonia ferry wreck
Peace of burial ground for 852 killed passengers outweighs freedom of speech, rules Swedish courtTwo film-makers have been found guilty by a Swedish court of disturbing the wreck of the ferry Estonia, which sank in the Baltic Sea in 1994 with the loss of 852 lives.The roll-on, roll-off ferry, carrying 803 passengers and 186 crew, sank in international waters during stormy weather on its way to Stockholm from Tallinn, and has since been protected as a grave site. Continue reading...
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Sep 05, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Miranda Bryant)
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Family of man who died in Thames during attempted arrest demand answers
Liam Allen’s body found in the water two hours after he swam away from police in south-west LondonThe family of a man who died after entering the River Thames while being arrested in south-west London have called for answers from the police, saying: “We just want closure.”Liam Allen, 23, entered the river by Kingston Bridge at about 10.30pm on 26 August and started swimming away after he was told he was being arrested, the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) said. Continue reading...
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Sep 05, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Guardian community team)
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Share your reaction to Liz Truss becoming UK prime minister
We’re keen to hear what people in the UK think of Liz Truss having won the Tory leadership contestWe’d like to hear what people in Britain think about Liz Truss becoming prime minister after having won the Conservative party leadership contest.We’re interested to hear what people’s hopes and fears are regarding her premiership, and which issue people feel Truss should be tackling first. Continue reading...
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Sep 05, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Amelia Hill and Pippa Crerar)
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Pizza nights and sleepovers? How Liz Truss’s children may cope with life at No 10
Prime ministers have taken very different approaches to blending home and work life at Downing StreetSamantha Cameron once admitted that she was glad her children had left Downing Street before they became adolescents. It was easy to protect her children from the “weirdness” of life inside Downing Street when they were little, she said, but as they hit their teenage years, their lives would inevitably have become more difficult.“The flat is very private but you’re living above the shop. All the
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Sep 05, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Simon Jenkins)
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The first thing Prime Minister Liz Truss needs to do? U-turn on everything she believes in | Simon Jenkins
She’s a small-state ideologue, but all that matters is that she carries the UK through this economic crisisLiz Truss enters Downing Street tomorrow to face an economic emergency that is unprecedented in peacetime. She will meet it, we are told, with £100bn of public money, significantly more than what her predecessor, Boris Johnson, spent on furlough during the Covid crisis. This will require a blatant U-turn for a prime minister who spent the summer campaigning for office on a pledge of no more
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Sep 05, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Carlo Rovelli)
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The big idea: why relationships are the key to existence
From subatomic particles to human beings, interaction is what shapes realityQuantum theory is perhaps the most successful scientific idea ever. So far, it has never been proved wrong. It is stupendously predictive, it has clarified the structure of the periodic table, the functioning of the sun, the colour of the sky, the nature of chemical bonds, the formation of galaxies and much more. The technologies we have been able to build as a result range from computers to lasers to medical instruments
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Sep 05, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Giles Richards)
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Lewis Hamilton insists a win is near after coming close at F1 Dutch GP
‘We’re going to be fighting for a win and that’s amazing’Hamilton sorry for angry response to team after coming fourthLewis Hamilton has insisted he can still fight for a win this season after his performance at the Dutch Grand Prix, despite his anger and frustration at his Mercedes team’s strategy call that cost him a shot at victory in Zandvoort.The seven-time champion delivered several expletive-heavy messages to his team as his race in the Netherlands fell apart, dropping him from the lead t
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Sep 05, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Guy Lane)
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Rock in Rio and a parched Yangtze: Monday’s best photos
The Guardian’s picture editors select photo highlights from around the world Continue reading...
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Sep 05, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Greta Thunberg and others)
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Burning forests for energy isn't 'renewable' – now the EU must admit it | Greta Thunberg and others
The EU’s classification of wood fuels is accelerating the climate crisis. Next week, a key vote can change thatNext week the future of many of the world’s forests will be decided when members of the European parliament vote on a revised EU renewable energy directive. If the parliament fails to change the EU’s discredited and harmful renewables policy, European citizens’ tax money will continue to pay for forests around the globe to literally go up in smoke every day.Europe’s directly elected rep