Donald Trump sexually abused a journalist at a Manhattan department store in the 1990s, a US civil court has found. The former president, who was cleared of a separate charge of rape, has been ordered to pay $5m in damages to E Jean Carroll. Trump has branded the guilty verdict "a disgrace" and says he will appeal. Imran Khan, the former cricketer and Pakistani prime minister, has been arrested in Islamabad on corruption charges. The decision, which sparked nationwide protests, could lead to the 70-year-old being disqualified from standing for election again. A baby has been born using three people's DNA for the first time in the UK, says BBC News. Most of the child's genetic material came from the two parents, with around 0.1% from a third, donor woman to prevent the mother passing on "devastating mitochondrial diseases". |
Ed Davey: openly anti-Tory. Finnbarr Webster/Getty |
What's the point of the Liberal Democrats? |
Nothing demonstrates the "pointlessness" of the Liberal Democrats more than their recent success, says Daniel Finkelstein in The Times. After an outstanding performance in last week's local elections, there's every chance the next general election will see their parliamentary party swell. But it's all for nothing, because leader Ed Davey has surrendered the one thing that gives Lib Dems leverage: the sense that they might go either way in a hung parliament. Since Davey is openly anti-Tory, if nobody wins a majority he will simply have to "let Sir Keir Starmer become prime minister", without being able to extract any concessions in return. |
Of course, that assumes he has any concessions he actually wants. Today, the Lib Dems could quite happily merge with Labour "without anyone in either party having to abandon their position on anything". So why not just do it? One big centre-left party has a far better chance of ousting Rishi Sunak's Conservatives than two smaller ones. Sure, some former Tory voters might be unwilling to support Labour but willing to back the Lib Dems. But that "doesn't remotely compensate" for the harm done by having the centre-left vote split between two parties. By continuing to exist, the best the Lib Dems can achieve is to "make the first centre-left government in 15 years seem weak and unstable". Is this really what they've pounded all those pavements to achieve? |
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The greatest horses in racing are "destined to have short careers", says The New York Times. Why? Because they can earn far more sowing their seed back on the stud farm than they can running around a racetrack. Flightline (pictured), a champion American Thoroughbred stabled in Kentucky, took two years and six undefeated races to earn $4.5m in prize money. After retiring last year, and "doing what came naturally twice a day in the breeding shed", he matched that total in just 11 days. With 155 mares in his "date book", he should make around $31m by July. |
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Baby names have never been more important, says Vox – on TikTok, at least. Influencers have attracted tens of thousands of followers by discussing all aspects of newborn nomenclature: from names that are currently in vogue, to predicting – "sometimes with terrifying accuracy" – which names will soon be everywhere. Viral videos have lists of "old money" names (Caroline, Elizabeth, Charlotte), "main character" names (Blaze, Arrow, Falcon) and "aesthetic" names (Rowan, Wren, Atlas). Many of the top baby name TikTokers offer paid consultancy services where they help indecisive parents-to-be choose what to call their child. |
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Methane plumes east of Hazar, Turkmenistan. Nasa/JPL-Caltech/AFP/Getty |
New satellite images have revealed that methane leaks from Turkmenistan's two main fossil fuel fields caused more global warming in 2022 than the entire carbon emissions of the UK. Previously, a technique known as flaring was used to burn off the unwanted greenhouse gas. But that method is easy to spot – it's literally a vertical plume of flames – and has been "increasingly frowned upon in recent years", says The Guardian. Instead, it seems the Central Asian country has been "venting" methane – simply releasing it into the atmosphere – which until the advent of recent satellite tech was virtually impossible to detect. |
Hadi Khorsandi: subject of a "killing order" in 1980 |
The Ayatollah's assassins in London | The Iranian regime is trying to silence its overseas enemies "with the blunt-force instrument of murder", says Paul Caruana Galizia in Tortoise. Since January 2022, the police and MI5 have foiled more than 15 Iranian plots "to assassinate or abduct individuals" in Britain. Persian-language media is a big target, in particular journalists who have reported on the huge anti-government protests that took place in the country last year. Aliasghar Ramezanpour, executive editor of Iran International TV, has been warned about multiple credible threats to his life; he now "moves around with a personal security guard", and his staff have had to vacate their southwest London office. Journalists at BBC Persian and Manoto TV have had police warnings too, "including one about the possibility of children being kidnapped from their school". |
This so-called "hostile state activity" isn't new. Iran began targeting individuals in the UK right after the 1979 Islamic revolution. In 1980, Ayatollah Khomeini issued a "killing order" against satirist Hadi Khorsandi after he made a joke about Mohammed – almost a decade before the Supreme Leader's fatwa against Salman Rushdie made international headlines. When the Metropolitan Police visited Khorsandi to warn him of the threat, their best advice was never to be on time for an appointment. "A half-hour delay is one Iranian tradition I always observe," Khorsandi replied. One officer shook his head and said: "Then God help you, because your killers are Iranian, too." |
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In 2012, a group of TV studios decided to crash a Boeing 727 into a Mexican desert, to see which seats had the best chance of survival. A flight crew of three, accompanied by three professional sky divers, got the plane into the air and on course before parachuting to safety. Three minutes later, the jet slammed into the ground at 140mph, breaking up into several sections. The conclusion of the experiment: always sit at the back. Whereas passengers seated at the front and middle of the plane would have suffered serious injuries, those at the rear would likely have walked away largely unscathed. |
One of the fiercest internal battles in the White House is over Joe Biden's diet, says Axios. His wife Jill is trying to get him to "eat more fish and veggies". But the president prefers kids' food: "peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, BLTs, pizza, cookies, spaghetti with butter and red sauce, and ice cream that he occasionally makes into a full sundae". Given Donald Trump's penchant for KFC and Big Macs, the 2024 election "could bring a rematch of 80ish-year-olds who eat like eight-year-olds". |
It's an optical illusion that has been causing a stir online, says The Daily Telegraph, leaving some "unable to believe it's real". The snap, captured by Japanese photographer Kenichi Ohno, shows an egret wading in the water in front of a concrete wall, which is casting a golden reflection on the lake. Click here for a picture that shows the scene in context. |
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"A happy childhood has spoiled many a promising life." Canadian author Robertson Davies |
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