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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Larry Elliott and Richard Partington)
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Recession threat looms as UK grinds to a halt to mourn Queen
Bank holiday for state funeral could send productivity plummeting at a time when country is struggling for growthBritain’s fragile economy was already teetering on the edge of recession even before the death of Queen Elizabeth II last week. That prospect now looms a lot larger, as businesses cancel events amid the period of national mourning culminating in the bank holiday for the late monarch’s funeral.Economists say high street shops closing their doors or operating reduced hours on Monday, al
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Martin Pengelly in New York)
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Trump feared assassination by Iran as revenge for Suleimani death, book says
Revelation about former president’s concern reported in new book The Divider by Peter Baker and Susan GlasserIn December 2020, Donald Trump told friends he was afraid Iran would try to assassinate him in revenge for the death of Qassem Suleimani, an Iranian general killed in a US drone strike nearly a year before.The startling news is reported in a new book by Peter Baker and Susan Glasser, a husband-and-wife team who write for the New York Times and the New Yorker. Continue reading...
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Stephen Moss)
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Birdwatch: little grebes reach for their muted winter wardrobe
Tiny waterbirds that hardly ever come to land are moulting now that breeding season is overFrom the depths of the reedbed comes a sound like a whinnying horse. This is no aquatic equestrian, however, but our smallest waterbird: the aptly named little grebe.Their small size and habit of skulking around the edge of ponds and lakes means these birds are easy to miss. That’s especially true here on the Avalon Marshes, home to a host of large, showy waterbirds including a trio of egrets. Yet the litt
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Harriet Sherwood Arts and culture correspondent)
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Lowry’s Going to the Match expected to fetch £8m at auction
Painting done in 1953 of crowds outside Burnden Park being sold to raise money for footballers’ charitable foundationThey stream towards the turnstiles, stick-like figures instantly familiar to anyone who has looked at a painting by LS Lowry.In the foreground, their coats and hats are distinct. In the background, beneath the tall chimneys of a long-gone heavy industry, the people are a blur. But all of them have a common purpose: going to the match. Continue reading...
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Rebecca Nicholson)
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Heartbreak High review – the 90s Aussie drama meets Mean Girls, but with more sex
Rack off, Drazic! Netflix takes us back to Hartley High with the next generation of big-hearted teens. If you love Sex Education, try this immediatelyRack off, Drazic! The streaming gods have spent some time rifling around in the nostalgia bin again, and this time they pulled out old Australian teen drama Heartbreak High (Netflix). The series, which defined post-teatime television for a generation of 90s kids, has been re-suited and rebooted for the digital age. We’re back at Hartley High, only
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Andrew Lawrence)
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Uju Anya on the Queen, Jeff Bezos, and the family history behind her tweet
The professor sparked outrage when she wished the queen a painful death. She tells the Guardian about the UK’s role in the ‘slaughter’ her mother fled Seven years after Nigeria won independence from the UK – and 15 years into the reign of Queen Elizabeth II – civil war broke out in the former British colony. On one side was the Nigerian government, desperate to preserve the multi-ethnic state that had been cobbled together by Britain’s colonial administration. On the other were the Biafra separa
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Jess Cartner-Morley)
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Bring on the colour! Autumn fashion to keep you warm, cheer you up and wear for ever
As the summer fades, lift your mood with Barbie pink, vibrant greens, warm chocolates and bold heathersI know what you’re thinking. Why should you care about fashion at a time like this? The country is in mourning. We are heading into a grim winter with an untested prime minister. Autumn’s water-cooler chat will be about energy bills, not hemlines. No one in their right mind has any bandwidth for worrying about trends.But let me put it another way. Could you do with cheering up? Might you need t
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Senay Boztas)
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‘Unstoppable’ bird flu epidemic causes growing alarm among Dutch farmers
With millions of chickens and ducks culled, farmers say only a vaccine can save the poultry sector from the ‘invisible enemy’Warning bells are ringing across the continent over an unstoppable wave of avian flu that farmers fear could lead to poultry farm bans in vulnerable wetland areas.In the Netherlands, more than 3.7 million chickens, ducks and turkeys have been culled in the most serious outbreak ever. Continue reading...
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Arthur Neslen)
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Health groups call for global fossil fuel non-proliferation treaty
WHO and almost 200 other health associations urge governments around world to halt ‘environmental vandalism’The World Health Organization (WHO) and almost 200 other health associations have made an unprecedented call for a global fossil fuel non-proliferation treaty.A call to action published on Wednesday, urges governments to agree a legally binding plan to phase out fossil fuel exploration and production, similar to the framework convention on tobacco, which was negotiated under the WHO’s ausp
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Chris Humphrey in Hanoi)
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Vietnam urged to free green activist Nguy Thi Khanh as it bids to join UN rights body
Goldman laureates raise concerns over Vietnam’s record on suppressing environmental protestMore than 50 Goldman environmental prize laureates from 41 countries have written to the UN human rights council as it considers admitting Vietnam as a new member.In the letter, which comes as the council meets for its 51st session (12 September – 7 October), the prize winners raise concerns over Vietnam’s human rights record, in particular the sentencing in June of Nguy Thi Khanh, a fellow Goldman prize w