The Guardian

Latest news, sport, business, comment, analysis and reviews from the Guardian, the world's leading liberal voice

Peter Falconio murder: British expert says he has identified a ‘most likely’ burial location

UK police adviser in the early 2000s and global consultant in ‘no-body’ homicide cases says he has narrowed down the outback search area

Peter Falconio murder 25 years on: new footage shows dying Australian outback killer’s refusal to reveal body’s location

The former British government expert who consulted on the search for the remains of the murdered backpacker Peter Falconio says he has now identified a “most likely” potential burial location – an abandoned racetrack only 8km from the scene of the infamous outback attack at Barrow Creek.

In July 2001, Falconio and his partner, Joanne Lees, both from Yorkshire, were ambushed and attacked by Bradley John Murdoch as they drove along a remote stretch of road in Australia’s Northern Territory, about 300km north of Alice Springs.

Continue reading...

How has Donald Trump changed our view of reality? | Fiona Katauskas

Things are a lot less scripted now

Continue reading...

World Cup of memes: Japan fans, Beckham unbothered and a simmering bromance

A tournament with more teams and more games has been filled with euphoria, heartbreak, and these weird and wonderful viral moments

As a Japanese supporter exclaimed to a television camera, “Texas is good, everything is big”, we knew the World Cup had started. In those early euphoric moments, seeing the palpable joy when everything is still possible, it seemed Japan fans were the MVPs of memes.

They came in their thousands, dressed in sombreros and Mario outfits, tossed into the air like confetti and line dancing with the Dutch. Then the heartbreak arrived.

Continue reading...

Twelve days nursing my father in the ‘dying room’ taught me the value of planning for death

Dying is difficult, a nurse told me. It might have been even more appalling had Dad not been clear about his wishes. Yet most of us remain deeply reluctant to outline how we want the end to go

My father spent the last 12 days of his life unconscious, unresponsive, in a hospital bed on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast.

My mother sat beside him night and day, holding his hand. I massaged Dad’s legs, horribly swollen, the effects of oedema – a buildup of fluids. His mouth fell open, dried out; I swabbed it constantly in an attempt to keep it wet. Sometimes his breath was a gurgle. My brother and I took turns sleeping on a stretcher in his room – the “dying room” was what hospital staff called it.

Continue reading...

Genuine hope may have been fleeting for England. But it was still life-affirming | Max Rushden

Two minutes and 55 seconds. That’s how long I really had hope of reaching the World Cup final. And it didn’t kill me

In her book Hope in the Dark the author Rebecca Solnit examines if it is possible to have hope when you consider all of human suffering. She quotes the Bulgarian writer Maria Popova: “Critical thinking without hope is cynicism, but hope without critical thinking is naivety.” By all accounts it is a compelling argument for hope as a catalyst for social change.

Meanwhile, Graham Burrell wrote: “It is the hope that kills you” following Lincoln City’s 2-1 home defeat to Wigan in 2024. “I feel perhaps our playoff push was finally killed off yesterday.”

Continue reading...

Mother of Henry Nowak’s murderer jailed for removing knife from scene

Kiran Kaur, 53, sentenced to three years for assisting Vickrum Digwa after he stabbed student in Southampton

The mother of Vickrum Digwa, the murderer whose false claims of racism against his victim, Henry Nowak, triggered riots in Southampton, has been jailed for removing a knife from the scene of the killing.

Appearing at Southampton crown court, Kiran Kaur, 53, was jailed for three years for assisting an offender by taking the knife from where her son had murdered Nowak on 3 December 2025 back to her family home.

Continue reading...

Iran proves it can still inflict damage despite waves of US attacks

Leaked US intelligence report concluded Iran retained 70% of missiles and launchers after 38-day spring campaign

Iran and the US have been trading blows for six consecutive nights and there are no shortage of signs that the renewed fighting will worsen further. Tehran and Washington remain far apart diplomatically, and though the US retains a significant military overmatch, Iran has more than enough capability to inflict damage.

Friday’s developments are a case in point. A wave of US attacks, with missiles launched from jets, drones and warships, targeted Iranian ports and the south of the country, collapsing a tower at Chabahar, on the Gulf of Oman, and highways and bridges into the strait of Hormuz port of Bandar Abbas, perhaps in an effort to cut it off.

Continue reading...

VK: Voorpagina

Volkskrant.nl biedt het laatste nieuws, opinie en achtergronden

Niemand zal herinnerd worden om de kwartaalcijfers van Shell

Femke Halsema vindt cameratoezicht bij aanrandhotspot Sloterplas niet nodig

Nou ja knoop dit maar in uw oren als Femke Halsema straks weer een of ander jankverhaal houdt over vrouwenhaat of krokodillentranen plengt als er een vrouw kapot is aangerand. De VVD wil cameratoezicht rond de Amsterdamse Sloterplas in Nieuw-West, waar Maro... Belgische mannen het vrouwen onmogelijk maken een rondje hard te lopen of gewoon maar te chillen zonder meteen kapotgesist, geïntimideerd, betast, aangerand of zelfs verkracht te worden. Halsema, die zelf nog nooit in Nieuw-West is geweest en zéker niet alleen en zéker niet na 22.00 uur 's avonds en zéker niet met een kort rokje aan, vindt dat niet nodig: "De incidenten vinden verspreid plaats over een dusdanig groot gebied rondom de Sloterplas dat het plaatsen van camera’s volgens de politie en het stadsdeel nauwelijks effectief zou zijn", schrijft zij. Moeders houd uw dochters binnen, want Femke Halsema doet in ieder geval NIKS voor ze.

Wel.nl

Minder lezen, Meer weten.

Frankrijk en Duitsland breiden defensiesamenwerking uit

KEULEN (ANP/DPA/AFP) - Frankrijk en Duitsland gaan nog meer samenwerken op het gebied van defensie. Dat is de conclusie na topoverleg tussen de twee landen bij Keulen. Zo kondigde de Duitse bondskanselier Friedrich Merz aan dat zijn land later dit jaar mee zal doen aan een Franse nucleaire oefening.

De landen probeerden de afgelopen tijd een nieuw gevechtsvliegtuig te bouwen, ook wel het FCAS-project genoemd. Dat mislukte, omdat ze het niet eens werden over hoe het vliegtuig eruit moest komen te zien.

Merz zei in een gezamenlijke persconferentie met de Franse president Emmanuel Macron dat de landen wel doorgaan met het verder ontwikkelen van de technieken die de gevechtsvliegtuigen hadden moeten gebruiken. "Misschien zijn de cloudomgeving en het complete besturingssysteem op de lange termijn wel veel belangrijker dan een nieuw vliegtuig", aldus Merz.