Wel.nl

Minder lezen, Meer weten.

Eerste Nederlanders van cruiseschip Hondius gehaald

GRANADILLA DE ABONA (ANP) - De eerste Nederlandse opvarenden van de Hondius worden van het schip naar de kant gebracht, ziet ANP ter plaatse. Eerder werden alle Spaanse opvarenden al aan wal gebracht en per bus naar het vliegveld Tenerife Zuid gebracht, meldde het Spaanse ministerie van Volksgezondheid.

Naast Nederlanders zullen er op de repatriëringsvlucht ook nog opvarenden van andere nationaliteiten zijn. Hoewel onduidelijk is wie precies, zei minister van Volksgezondheid Mónica García eerder dat aan boord van het Nederlandse toestel onder meer mensen uit Duitsland, België en Griekenland zullen zitten. Ook een deel van de bemanning zal volgens haar meevliegen.

Onduidelijk is vooralsnog hoe laat de Nederlandse repatriëringsvlucht gepland staat. Het toestel is wel al op Tenerife.


Oud-wereldkampioen Martín boekt eerste zege in MotoGP sinds 2024

LE MANS (ANP) - De Spanjaard Jorge Martín heeft voor het eerst in ruim anderhalf jaar een race gewonnen in de MotoGP. De oud-wereldkampioen van Aprilia haalde op het circuit van Le Mans kort voor het einde WK-leider Marco Bezzecchi in en won zo de Grote Prijs van Frankrijk. Martín heeft nu nog maar een achterstand van 1 punt op de Italiaan, na zaterdag ook al de sprintrace te hebben gewonnen.

Martín kroonde zich in 2024 tot wereldkampioen in de hoogste raceklasse voor motoren. Hij miste een groot deel van vorig seizoen door blessureleed. Zijn laatste zege dateerde van 29 september 2024.

Regerend wereldkampioen Marc Márquez ontbrak in de GP van Frankrijk door een crash op zaterdag. Daarbij liep hij een voetbreukje op, waardoor hij volgende week ook de Grote Prijs van Catalonië mist.


Iran stuurt reactie op Amerikaans vredesvoorstel naar Pakistan

TEHERAN (ANP) - Iran heeft een reactie op het Amerikaanse voorstel om de oorlog te beëindigen naar bemiddelaar Pakistan gestuurd. Dat meldt het Iraanse persbureau IRNA. Volgens het plan zou de huidige fase van de onderhandelingen uitsluitend gericht zijn op het "beëindigen van de vijandelijkheden in de regio", aldus het persbureau.

Pakistan bemiddelde eerder het staakt-het-vuren tussen Iran en de Verenigde Staten. Onderhandelingen over een duurzaam vredesakkoord liepen tot nu toe op niets uit. Deze zouden onder meer zijn stukgelopen op langetermijnafspraken over de Iraanse nucleaire infrastructuur.


Meisje (15) overlijdt tijdens halve marathon in Leiden

Een 15-jarig meisje uit Oegstgeest is zondag overleden tijdens de halve marathon in Leiden. De organisatie van hardloopevenement Leiden Marathon meldt dat de jonge deelneemster onwel werd op de hoek van de Lage Rijndijk en de Herensingel. "Het meisje is ter plekke behandeld, maar kon niet worden gered." Waardoor ze onwel werd, is onbekend.

Tjeerd Scheffer van Leiden Marathon noemt het in een verklaring op Instagram "afschuwelijk nieuws, allereerst voor het gezin waar dit meisje deel van uitmaakte. En ook voor familie, vrienden en kennissen is dit plotselinge overlijden een enorme klap."

Ook burgemeester van Leiden Peter Heijkoop noemt het overlijden van het meisje "een ontzettend verdrietig bericht".

"Als vader, als liefhebber van het hardlopen en ook als burgemeester leef ik enorm mee", reageert Heijkoop.


VK: Voorpagina

Volkskrant.nl biedt het laatste nieuws, opinie en achtergronden

Aan de landsgrenzen laat het kabinet de onbedwingbare neiging tot symboolpolitiek weer varen

Gemeentelijke verkiezingen in Groot-Brittannië monden uit in radicale ‘reformatie’

Vrijgegeven ‘ufo-files’ bevestigen: het Pentagon neemt ufo’s serieus

Rijnmond - Nieuws

Het laatste nieuws van vandaag over Rotterdam, Feyenoord, het verkeer en het weer in de regio Rijnmond

Demonstranten blokkeren havenspoor voor de tweede keer dit weekend

Demonstranten van Geef Tegengas belemmeren het havenspoorpad bij Barendrecht. Een dag eerder blokkeerden ze het hetzelfde spoor op een andere plek een aantal kilometer verderop.

The Guardian

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

Daizen Maeda’s brilliance takes Celtic past Rangers and puts Hearts on spot

This felt a hugely significant victory in the Scottish title race. Celtic require only two more of them to successfully defend the league. For the Rangers manager, Danny Röhl, yet another second-half capitulation will only increase murmurings about his capability of delivering success at Ibrox. Rangers will end this season trophyless and third in a two-horse race – remarkably, given the tens of millions spent on assembling their squad.

Celtic have moved to within a point and three goals of Hearts. Next stop for Martin O’Neill and his players is Motherwell on Wednesday evening. With Hearts hosting Falkirk at the same time, there is the increasing possibility of the title being decided when the Edinburgh club visit Celtic Park on Saturday. Supporters of Celtic and Hearts are likely to have run out of fingernails by then.

More to follow

Continue reading...

Shirley Ballas looks back: ‘I was crying about a breakup, so Mum smacked me round the face’

The Strictly judge and her mum on Shirley’s love of dance, being a single-parent family, and the joy of living together now

Born in Wallasey (now Merseyside) in 1960, Shirley Ballas is one of the most decorated ballroom and Latin dancers in the world. She became a three-time winner of the British Professional Latin Championship (Open to the World), before retiring from competitive dancing in 1996 to become a teacher and adjudicator. In 2017, she joined the BBC’s Strictly Come Dancing as a judge. She lives in London with her mother, Audrey, who has chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Ballas supports the Breathe Equal campaign with Sanofi, to raise awareness of COPD and address stigma and inequalities in care.

Continue reading...

‘Everyone was in tears’: the tenants given eviction notices just before ban in England

Shock and fears for future, including homelessness, after landlords rushed to issue section 21 notices before 1 May

It was 2pm on 30 April when Carl Kansinde Middleton received a “no fault” eviction from his landlord in Brighton – just 10 hours before section 21 notices were officially banned under the Renters’ Right Act.

“As we were getting closer, I really thought I was safe,” he said. “It just never occurred to me that it would just come right on the last day – I truly felt blindsided.

Continue reading...

The next Voting Rights Act must outlaw gerrymandering | Jamil Smith

The supreme court has gutted one of the strongest federal tools we had against the most effective weapon in US politics

Maps can guide us home. They show us where we are, where we have been and where we might go. Electoral maps can do something even more sinister, though. They often tell us what and who is allowed to matter. They can decide, before a single ballot is cast, whether an entire voting bloc will become powerful or be buried by the design of a party that is indifferent – at best – to their needs and wants.

Memphis is the latest warning. Tennessee’s largest majority-Black city can vote, organize, turn out, remember and resist – and still be cut into pieces by politicians who fear what that city might do with power. This week, Republicans carved up the Memphis-centered congressional district, dividing its only majority-Black district into three Republican-leaning seats while weakening voter-notice requirements in the process.

Continue reading...

My fantasy solo life got off to a flying start – but degenerated in six speedy steps | Emma Beddington

When my husband went away for a week, days of blissful alone-time beckoned. Instead, I started talking to household appliances and eating ‘crone dinner’

My husband is away this week, something that used to happen regularly, but is a post-pandemic rarity. Like, I suspect, many people in long-term relationships, I look forward to a little alone-time (I’m sure he does, too – a few carefree days away from me and my dogmatic, dourly expressed opinions on everything from the correct cup for my morning coffee to radio volume). But how enjoyable is it, really? It’s day five and I realise that, yet again, I’m following my usual six-stage timeline towards total collapse.

1. The purge
Within minutes of the door closing, and without conscious thought, I find myself kneeling in front of the fridge, excavating decomposing and expired matter, tackling the jar graveyard (grey, ancient, pickled beets and luxuriantly furred pesto) and wiping shelves. Next, I move through the kitchen like a whirlwind, taking out bins, sorting recycling, spraying surfaces and putting everything in its place.

Continue reading...

I knew my writing students were using AI. Their confessions led to a powerful teaching moment | Micah Nathan

The problem wasn’t just the perfectly polished, yet mediocre prose. It’s what’s lost when we surrender the struggle to translate thought into words

I have been teaching fiction writing at MIT since 2017. Many of my students last wrote fiction in middle school, and very few have experienced a proper workshop, so at the start of every semester I offer these directions for writer and reader alike:

Read the story at least twice. Mark what works and what doesn’t – underline great sentences, flag clunky syntax, gaps in logic and unrealistic dialogue. Ask yourself: does the story work? Why or why not? What could improve it? Answer in a signed letter to the author, attached to their story. Give your honest opinions. Remember that an effective peer review demands close reading of the text accompanied by a boldness of spirit.

Continue reading...

Social documentary network ZEKE award 2026 winners – in pictures

Ginevra Bonina wins the 2026 ZEKE award for systemic change for her project Out for Blood, which highlights period poverty in India and the women and girls fighting to reclaim the body ‘as a site of struggle, resistance and liberation’. Ebrahim Alipoor wins the award for documentary photography for his long-term project, Bullets Have No Borders, which showcases the lives of border porters who carry goods across the treacherous Iran-Iraq mountains to support their families

Continue reading...

‘It’s a reset moment’: why are so many people celebrating half-birthdays?

In some places, a half-birthday allows you to learn to drive or join the army. But for others, it’s a way to embrace the midpoint of each year of life

Six months after Lorraine C Ladish turned 59, she began to get emails – from fashion stores, the supermarket, the opticians – offering her a discount. Her half-birthday was coming up, the emails said. She used one of the offers to buy a magenta leather jacket and posted her celebration on TikTok. Ladish is a digital content creator who says she makes “a living out of sharing my age online”. But what really appealed to her about marking the midpoint between birthdays was the chance to “squeeze every second, every month, out of my late 50s”.

Ladish is not alone. Half-birthdays are having a moment. Or, at least, a fraction of a moment. On TikTok there are half-cake designs, half-birthday banners, half-birthday cards – sometimes, they are whole ones brutally sheared – and half-candles. One French brand even released a comma candle for cake decorators wishing to celebrate a half-birthday decimally.

Continue reading...

Research sheds light on GI’s murder of seven-year-old girl in Northern Ireland in 1944

William Harrison, a US soldier stationed in the region, was convicted and hanged for the murder of Patsy Wylie

On the afternoon of 25 September 1944, William Harrison, a US soldier stationed in Northern Ireland, visited the cottage of the Wylie family in Killycolpy, County Tyrone, and offered to buy treats for the children.

He had visited before and was, if not a friend, at least known to the family. Mary Wylie let him take her seven-year-old daughter, Patricia, better known as Patsy, across the fields to the shops.

Continue reading...

The world must stop AI from empowering bioterrorists

The threat from new pathogens is an even graver danger than AI-backed hackers.

Sean Strickland doet het ondenkbare, wint van ongeslagen Khamzat Chimaev

Ze hadden er zin in

Social

Amerika's problematische oom Sean Strickland tegen ongeslagen Tsjetsjeense weerwolf Khamzat Chimaev. Sean won - volgens velen terecht - per split decision en daarmee blijft MMA math onbegrijpelijk. Sean verloor namelijk per split decision van Zuid-Afrikaanse witte neushoorn Dricus Du Plessis, diezelfde Dricus Du Plessis werd weer echt volledig gedomineerd door Khamzat Chimaev, en vervolgens wint Sean Strickland het van Khamzat Chimaev. Soms lijken het wel momentopnames! Waar het op neer leek te komen: de eerste ronde was totale gronddominantie door Khamzat, maar Sean had specifiek getraind om dat te kunnen overleven. Daarna kreeg Khamzats meesterlijke grondwerk steeds minder grip op Sean, die af en toe zelfs Khamzats voorheen onstuitbare single/double leg shoots wist te pareren. Een ongekende prestatie, analyse onderstaand. Hele gevecht hier, zolang-ie online staat.

Zo knap dit

Social

Analyse

Social

Ja hier had Sean een probleem, maar hij kreeg het opgelost

SocialSocial

The Register

Biting the hand that feeds IT — Enterprise Technology News and Analysis

Both Fedora and Ubuntu will get AI support – soon

Both Ubuntu and Fedora have made it official: support is coming soon for running local generative AI instances. An epic and still-growing thread in the Fedora forums states one of the goals for the next version: the Fedora AI Developer Desktop Objective. It is causing some discontent, and at least one Fedora contributor, SUSE’s Fernando Mancera, has resigned. Fedora Project Lead Jef Spaleta, who took over the role from Matthew Miller a year ago, remains resolute, saying: I have zero evidence in front of me that users are being driven away from Fedora because of AI. As far as Red Hat’s community distribution goes, while this may be controversial, this should not be a big shock. In October last year, The Register reported that the Fedora council approved a policy allowing AI-assisted contributions, and anyone following the IBM subsidiary’s movements will already know that last June’s RHEL 10 release includes access to an LLM-based online helper chatbot: we tried it out when the product was released. We also reported on the managers of Red Hat’s Global Engineering department being notably keen on the use of AI just last month. Since Red Hat has other offerings for slow-moving stable server OSes – and arguably because Debian, Ubuntu, and their many derivatives have the stable-desktop-distro space nicely covered already – Fedora has a strong focus on providing a distro for developers, and Spaleta’s announcement makes this clear. The goal is: to build a thriving community around AI technologies by focusing on three key areas: equipping developers with the necessary platforms, libraries, and frameworks; ensuring users experience painless deployment and usage of AI applications; and establishing a space to showcase the work being done on Fedora, connecting developers with a wider audience. He also spells out what it doesn’t want to do: Non-goals: The system image will not be pre-configured with applications that inspect or monitor how users interact with the system or otherwise place user privacy at risk. Tools and applications included in the AI Desktop will not be pre-configured to connect to remote AI services. AI tools will not be added to Fedora’s existing system images, Editions, etc, by the AI Desktop initiative. In other words, tools for developers, not for end-users, with a strong emphasis on models that run locally, and which preserve the user's privacy. It’s also worth pointing out that Fedora has had an AI-Assisted Contributions Policy in place for six months, and earlier this month, Fedora community architect Justin Wheeler explained in some detail Why the Fedora AI-Assisted Contributions Policy Matters for Open Source. Our impression is that the Fedora team feels that it needs to keep Fedora relevant for growing interest in LLM-bot assisted tooling, and that it can address concerns from hardcore FOSS types by ensuring that this means local models, built according to FOSS-respecting terms, deployed in privacy-respecting ways. Fedora is not alone in this, though. There are also ructions across the border in Ubuntuland. Right after the release of the Canonical’s new LTS version, Ubuntu 26.04 Resolute Raccoon, Canonical’s veep of engineering Jon Seager laid out the future of AI in Ubuntu. We interviewed Seager last year during the 25.10 Ubuntu Summit, and back in January this year, he published his views on Developing with AI on Ubuntu. Now the plans are firming up. Like Fedora, there’s a strong focus on local models and confidential, privacy-first deployments – and ensuring that the OS and the tools support GPU acceleration from the big hardware players in that space. However, unlike Red Hat, Canonical isn’t pushing its developers towards these tools. In what we see as a veiled jab, Seager’s announcement says: We are not setting shallow metrics on token usage, or percentages of code written with AI, but rather incentivising engineers to experiment and understand where AI tools add value. Initially, the focus is on users instead: AI features in Ubuntu features will come in two forms: first as a means of enhancing existing OS functionality with AI models in the background, and latterly in the form of “AI native” features and workflows for those who want them. As Fernando Marcela’s exit shows, an emphasis on what could be termed FOSS-friendly AI – open models, privacy-centric, local execution and so on – is not enough to placate those who are really strongly averse to these tools. The Reg FOSS desk counts himself firmly in this camp. Back in January, we reported on the rise, fall, and resurrection of OpenSlopware, a list of FOSS projects which contain LLM-generated code, integrate LLMs, or even show the traces of the use of LLM agents. Soon, it seems inevitable that Fedora and Ubuntu will both feature here. Resistance, though, is also rising. Stop Slopware tries to help explain why and how to avoid it, and there’s also The No-AI Software Directory for projects that have explicit LLM-free policies, whether they’re FOSS or not. Bootnote It amuses us to note that both the Ubuntu and Fedora forums use the same software, called Discourse. (It’s a sort of web forum as designed by people who have heard of mailing lists, but don’t know how to use them and find the idea of bottom-posting confusing.) Some could interpret this shared adoption as a sign of underlying similarities between the two projects. ®