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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Robert Booth, Libby Brooks and Severin Carrell)
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Edinburgh crowd quiets to witness Queen’s coffin and King Charles
Applause follows as cortege passes by en route to service of thanksgiving in Scottish capitalGuns were fired from Edinburgh Castle as King Charles accompanied the Queen’s hearse along the Royal Mile and the crowd of thousands crammed on to the narrow pavements fell hushed.It was the first opportunity for the public to see the new king and the Queen’s coffin together on the second stage of the Queen’s journey towards her funeral in London next Monday. Continue reading...
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Aubrey Allegretti Political correspondent)
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MP watchdogs criticised for pausing work until after Queen’s funeral
Independent Complaints and Grievance Scheme and standards commissioner suspend workTwo MPs’ standards watchdogs have been criticised for winding down their operations for a week to honour the remaining “period of national mourning” for Queen Elizabeth II.Alleged victims who made complaints against their bosses in parliament were told over the weekend by the head of the Independent Complaints and Grievance Scheme (ICGS) that all investigations would be “paused”. Continue reading...
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Kate Waldegrave)
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I’m a sucker for a royal romance and there are few greater love stories than Charles and Camilla | Kate Waldegrave
Their affection for each other is obvious, and their relationship has a starring role in my collection of royal memorabilia “You can have it for half price.”I was at Collectorama, a vintage fair in Nambour, Queensland, last week when I spotted the plate bearing the youthful effigy of (now) King Charles III, issued for his first marriage. Continue reading...
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Jamie Grierson)
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Queen’s funeral poses biggest security test, says Olympics police chief
Bob Broadhurst says royal family’s desire to be close to public is an ‘absolutely frightening’ prospectDeath of the Queen and King Charles’s accession – latest updatesThe Queen’s funeral and lying-in-state presents the biggest security challenge of its kind the UK has ever faced, a former head of public order at the Metropolitan police has said.Bob Broadhurst, who served as gold commander for the wedding of Prince William and Catherine and for the London 2012 Olympics, said the authorities faced
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Andy Hunter)
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Klopp says Liverpool fans will respect minute’s silence before facing Ajax
Questions raised over whether fans will observe Queen’s tributeManager acutely aware of the grief since losing his motherJürgen Klopp has said he expects Liverpool fans will respect a minute’s silence in memory of the Queen when football resumes at Anfield on Tuesday.Liverpool have asked Uefa for permission to commemorate the late Queen before their Champions League fixture at home to Ajax. Sections of the club’s support booed the national anthem before the FA Cup and Carabao Cup finals at Wembl
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Patrick Wintour Diplomatic editor)
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Israel warns over Iran uranium capability with nuclear talks at halt
As IAEA board meets, Israel says Iran will be able to produce enough material for three warheads in weeks Tensions around a breakdown in talks between Iran and the US over Tehran’s nuclear programme escalated on Monday when Israel’s defence minister, Benny Gantz, claimed that Iran would be able to produce enough enriched uranium to make three nuclear warheads within a few weeks.Gantz also revealed a map detailing 10 facilities in Syria allegedly being used to arm Iran and its proxies, including
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Letters)
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There’s no magic bullet to solve the UK’s energy crisis | Letters
Lucy Yu says innovative thinking will be crucial to build a resilient energy system for the future. Plus letters from Lynn Fotheringham, William Bartram and Stan SalmonAs concerns about the energy crisis deepen, we hope to see inventive proposals put forward that will serve both people and the planet. The former Ofgem director, Christine Farnish, makes several interesting suggestions for market reform, including the concept of a “universal provision of energy” for essential use (I was an Ofgem d
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Letters)
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When food in Europe is a matter of taste | Letters
Daniel Monti on the variety of international cuisine available in Turin, and Diana Simmonds on eating Italian food for five weeks in a rowIn response to Adrian Chiles’s article (After three weeks travelling in Europe, I’m calling it – British food is the best, 7 September), having lived in Italy for more than 20 years I can confidently state that there is no “Italian” food. The country has a multitude of regional styles, sometimes radically different in flavour, cooking techniques and ingredient
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Bill McGuire)
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Why we should forget about the 1.5C global heating target | Bill McGuire
The goal of 1.5C by 2030 is arbitrary and now unachievable – yet working to prevent every 0.1C rise can still give us hopeBill McGuire is professor emeritus of geophysical and climate hazards at UCLKeeping the global average temperature rise (since pre-industrial times) below 1.5C is widely regarded as critical if we are to sidestep dangerous, all-pervasive climate change.This idea of a 1.5C temperature threshold is in the news again because just-published research has revealed that several cata
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Alberto Manguel)
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Javier Marías: modern literature’s great philosopher of everyday absurdity
The author of 15 novels, a perennial contender for the Nobel prize, and the most recent King of Redonda, the Spanish writer was an acute observer of the games we all play• Spanish novelist Javier Marías dies in Madrid hospital aged 70Perhaps because Javier Marías felt deeply the absurdity of everyday life and had the sense that history is a game played out with dreadful consequences, he became interested in two pursuits that echo our witless absurdity: the art of spying and the craft of writing