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G7 threatens more sanctions for Iran amid ’high level of reported deaths and injuries’ - live

A local Red Crescent staff member was killed and five others were injured while on duty in Iran, which is gripped by widespread protests, the global Red Cross federation said on Thursday, reports Agence France-Presse (AFP). The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) said the incident happened in north-western Iran on 10 January and voiced deep concern about the impact of the ongoing unrest. The federation said in a statement from its Geneva headquarters: The IFRC is deeply saddened by the killing of Amir Ali Latifi... and the wounding of five other IRCS colleagues, who were all in the line of duty in Gilan province, on January 10. An IFRC spokesman told AFP that at this stage, “we don’t know the full picture of what exactly happened”, including whether the deaths and the injuries were part of the same incident. Rights groups say the crackdown by the Iranian authorities, who exercise zero tolerance for dissent, has left at least 3,428 people dead. They also accuse the country’s theocratic leaders of using an internet blackout to cover up the brutality of the crackdown. The IFRC is the world’s largest humanitarian network, with more than 17 million volunteers in more than 191 countries. The federation said: The Iranian Red Crescent Society is a humanitarian organisation... operating in accordance with the fundamental principles of humanity, neutrality, impartiality and independence. We stand in solidarity with the Iranian Red Crescent Society and all medical and humanitarian workers providing life-saving assistance during this difficult time. Humanitarian workers must be protected. It said respect for the Red Crescent emblem was essential to ensure the continued delivery of life-saving assistance to people in need.

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Danish PM says US ‘ambition to take over Greenland’ is intact after Washington meeting – Europe live

The Danish parliament has just announced it would fly the Greenlandic flag, Erfalasorput, on Friday to mark its support for the people of the semi-autonomous territory ahead of planned meetings between Danish, Greenlandic and US parliamentarians. In a statement on its website, the parliament said the gesture is meant to “support the Greenlanders’ right to Greenland and show the Danish support given political pressure from the US.” “This is a new reality … and this meeting is a special occassion,” the speaker, Søren Gade, said.

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Abortions at record high in England and Wales ‘driven by cost of living’

The rising cost of living and a lack of access to contraception have driven another rise in abortion rates in England and Wales, providers and doctors said. Government statistics released on Thursday showed that abortions increased by 11% in 2023 compared with the previous year. The age-standardised abortion rate for women was 23.0 abortions per 1,000 residents, the highest rate since the Abortion Act was introduced in 1967. “These figures reflect the first full year of abortion care during the cost of living crisis, which is essential context for understanding the rise in abortion rates,” said Katie Saxon, the chief strategic communications officer at BPAS, one of the country’s largest abortion providers. “No woman should have to end a pregnancy she would otherwise have continued purely for financial reasons. Equally, no woman should become pregnant because she is unable to access the contraception she wants, when she needs it.” She added: “There is no right number of abortions, but there is much more that the government can do to ensure women are able to make the choice that is right for themselves and for their families. “Women continue to tell us about long waits for contraceptive appointments, difficulties securing repeat prescriptions, and limited choice in the methods available to them. Emergency contraception also remains an important but underutilised backup option.” Dr Alison Wright, the president of the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, said: “This new data highlights how access to high-quality abortion care is essential for women’s health and reproductive autonomy. “There is likely to be a range of factors behind the rise in abortion rates over recent years. Economic pressure and the rising cost of living are shaping women’s reproductive choices, with many choosing to delay or have smaller families. “At the same time, overstretched GP and sexual health services are making it harder for many women – particularly in more deprived communities – to access contraception when they need it, increasing the risk of unplanned pregnancy.” The data showed the abortion rate for women aged 35 and over had continued to increase, from 7.1 per 1,000 women in 2013 to 12.3 per 1,000 women in 2023. The lowest rate was among under-18s, at 7.8, and abortions were most common among those aged between 20 and 24. Over the past decade, the percentage of abortions performed at the lowest gestation, of up to nine weeks, increased from 79% to 89%, while there was a downward trend in terminations carried out between 10 and 19 weeks. The number of abortions carried out beyond 20 weeks, for which strict conditions must be met, such as a fatal foetal abnormality or a risk to the mother’s life, remained stable at between 1% and 2%. Since the Covid pandemic, when legislation was introduced to allow abortion medication to be dispatched by post, at-home abortions made up 72% of all terminations in 2023. Over the same period, the number of abortions for all other methods generally decreased, with the two required pills taken in a clinic now the least common method of termination. “This data also provides further evidence of the positive impact of at‑home early medical abortion, which has enabled women to end pregnancies at the earliest possible gestation,” Saxon said. “One in three women will have an abortion in their lifetime, and services must continue to evolve in line with best clinical practice.” Wright added: “Taking both medications at home remains the most common method of abortion, indicating that the telemedicine pathway is working as intended by enabling women to access safe, regulated care earlier. “Telemedicine removes practical barriers for women who may otherwise struggle to attend in-person appointments, including those in rural areas, women with disabilities, and those experiencing coercion or abuse.”

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‘Bigger and lower’: bull in Dutch painting once had much larger testicles

The Bull by Paulus Potter is one of the star paintings at the Mauritshuis in The Hague, a bucolic image of animals and a farmer. But new research suggests the painting has unexpected hidden depths: conservators restoring the artwork say the bull’s testicles were originally much larger, and appeared to have been halved in size by the artist to respect 17th-century sensibilities. “We found that Potter made lots of changes as he worked,” said Abbie Vandivere, a paintings conservator at the museum. “[The bull’s] balls were bigger and lower, his whole back end was shifted – but, indeed, the balls are the biggest change.” The surprise emerged when a team of conservators, who have been working for 18 months to restore the painting, made X-rays to understand how Potter created his composition of farming life. Looking at his preparatory sketches of cattle and consulting cattle experts, they found there were indeed contemporary breeds with “giant, pendulous testicles”. While Potter may have made the changes to portray a younger bull, the working theory is that the naked truth was considered unfit for polite society in 1647. Another of his works, an etching now in the Rijksmuseum entitled Pissing Cow and commissioned for the mantelpiece of a Princess of Orange at around the same time, was rejected for being too smutty. “He had an etching of a pissing cow that created a bit of a controversy,” said Jolijn Schilder, a paintings conservator. “It is assumed that he got the order from Amalia van Solms, Princess of Orange, and he was supposed to create a piece for one of the palaces. It was turned down by her because she thought it was too filthy a subject to show a pissing cow above her mantelpiece.” The research on The Bull is part of a broader effort to find out more about Potter, who died in 1654 at just 28 from tuberculosis. When the Netherlands became a vassal state of France in the late 18th century and William V fled to England, 192 of his artworks were looted by Napoleonic troops, with The Bull considered one of the gems. “It was taken to Paris and was immediately very popular, because it’s extraordinary that Potter, a 17th-century artist from the Netherlands, painted a cow on a lifesize scale, which was normally only for kings, emperors, biblical and historical scenes,” said Schilder. “The fact that the Dutch did a simple cow, without any further meaning to it, really struck the French. They loved it.” According to research by a Mauritshuis senior curator, Quentin Buvelot, after Napoleon’s defeat at the Battle of Waterloo, the Dutch demanded the return of paintings including The Bull – but when troops turned up at the Louvre in 1815, “the French tried to prevent this by removing all the higher ladders”. The 236cm x 339cm (93in x 133in) masterpiece was eventually returned in triumphal procession and Potter’s farmer character for years featured in Dutch phonics teaching material for schoolchildren. The Mauritshuis has a display on the completed restoration process, which was conducted behind a glass box in a public gallery. But although the scans of the first bull are on display, his full glory is modestly hidden under Potter’s final layer of paint.

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Spain’s meteorologists subjected to ‘alarming’ rise in hate speech, minister warns

Spain’s environment minister has written to prosecutors to warn of “an alarming increase” in hate speech and social media attacks directed against climate science communicators, meteorologists and researchers. In a letter sent to hate crimes prosecutors on Wednesday, Sara Aagesen said a number of recent reports examined by the ministry had detected a “significant increase” in the hostile language that climate experts are subjected to on digital platforms. The minister said one study had found that 17.6% of those hostile messages posted on the social media network X included “hate speech, personal attacks and denigration directed at professionals who work to share correct and verified scientific information”. Aagesen, who is also one of Spain’s three deputy prime ministers, said the research revealed “a surge in the intensity, frequency and violence of the attacks, which affect both meteorologists and other scientific communication professionals”. Aagesen said she was drawing the matter to prosecutors’ attention because of the “socially important role that these professionals play in the fight against climate disinformation”. One study into the hate speech directed at Spain’s state meteorological office, Aemet, found that such attacks affected public perceptions of meteorology and had a direct impact on scientific work. “Social pressure and smear campaigns can discourage scientists from interacting with the public or even communicating their research openly,” said the researchers. “This chilling effect can limit the advance of scientific knowledge and restrict public access to accurate and high‐quality information. In addition, the spread of conspiracy theories about climate control and weather manipulation directly affects the perception of the current climate alert. Denial that extreme weather events are a result of global warming finds support in these theories, undermining global efforts to mitigate and respond to climate change.” Another study from 2024 found that climate emergency denialism was especially prevalent on X, with denialism identified in 49.1% of posts and climate-related hate speech in 17.6% of posts. Rubén del Campo, a spokesperson for Aemet, told El País: “Although I know that my job means I get a lot of exposure, when you see messages attacking you and using your photo – often for made-up stuff you’ve never said – you feel bad.” At the end of her letter, Aagesen told prosecutors that the ministry was prepared to “help them in any way they may deem appropriate”. X was approached for comment.

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Greenland’s defence is ‘common concern’ for Nato, Danish PM says as European troops fly in

The Danish prime minister, Mette Frederiksen, said Greenland’s defence was a “common concern” for the whole of Nato, as troops started arriving from across Europe as a result of Donald Trump’s threats to take the Arctic island by force. Troops from France, Germany, Norway and Sweden, among others, were on their way to Greenland, a largely autonomous territory of the kingdom of Denmark, on Thursday. Denmark also announced it would be increasing its military presence. It comes after a difficult meeting in Washington on Wednesday between the foreign ministers of Greenland and Denmark, Vivian Motzfeldt and Lars Løkke Rasmussen, and the US vice-president, JD Vance, and secretary of state, Marco Rubio. The visit was intended to smooth relations between Denmark and Greenland and the US, but it did not appear to have had the desired effect. Afterwards, Trump reiterated his previous comments that the US “needs” Greenland for national security, adding that Denmark could not be relied on to protect the island and that “something will work out”. In a statement released on Thursday, Frederiksen said it was “not an easy meeting” and that a working group was now being set up to discuss how Arctic security could be improved. “However, that does not change the fact that there is a fundamental disagreement because the American ambition to take over Greenland is intact,” she added. “This is obviously serious and therefore we continue our efforts to prevent that scenario from becoming a reality.” There was, she said, agreement within Nato that “a strengthened presence in the Arctic is crucial for European and North American security”. She added that Denmark had “invested significantly in new Arctic capabilities”, while “a number of allies” were taking part in joint exercises “in and around” Greenland. “The defence and protection of Greenland is a common concern for the entire Nato alliance,” she said. The French president, Emmanuel Macron, announced on Wednesday that the first members of the French military were “already en route” and that “others will follow”. About 15 French soldiers from the mountain infantry unit were already in Nuuk, Greenland’s capital, for a military exercise, French authorities said. Meanwhile, Germany on Thursday said it would deploy a reconnaissance team of 13 personnel to Greenland. The Danish defence minister, Troels Lund Poulsen, said on Thursday that he planned to establish “a more permanent military presence” on Greenland “with a larger Danish contribution”. Military personnel from multiple Nato countries would be in Greenland on a rotation system, he said. After the high-stakes meeting in Washington, Løkke Rasmussen said there continued to be a “fundamental disagreement” over Greenland, adding that it remained “clear that the president has this wish of conquering over Greenland”. Trump said: “We really need it.” He added: “If we don’t go in, Russia is going to go in and China is going to go in. And there’s not a thing Denmark can do about it, but we can do everything about it.”

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Greenland: new shipping routes, hidden minerals – and a frontline between the US and Russia?

Lying between the US and Russia, Greenland has become a critical frontline as the Arctic opens up because of global heating. Its importance has been underscored by Donald Trump openly considering the US taking the island from its Nato partner Denmark, either by buying it, or by force. The climate crisis is shrinking Greenland’s ice sheet, along with the wider Arctic sea ice, opening new sea routes and exposing valuable resources. Trump’s threats, previously dismissed as bluster, are now being seen as an early signal of how melting ice is turning Greenland into a valuable geopolitical flashpoint. The maps below show how this is developing. Sea ice is melting The average extent of sea ice in the Arctic over the last five years was 4.6m sq km. This is roughly equivalent to the size of the EU. But this is a 27% drop compared with the average of 6.4m sq km between 1981 and 2010, according to data from the National Snow and Ice Data Center. The sea ice lost is roughly equivalent to the size of Libya. The shrinking Arctic ice means that, in the summer, the ice cap no longer reaches the Russian and Canadian coasts. And because there is no land beneath the north pole it is exposing seas that were once inaccessible. Arctic shipping routes are becoming more viable This is opening up new shipping routes. As the polar seas become navigable for longer periods, routes once limited to icebreakers have become commercial corridors. The most developed is the northern sea route, which overlaps the north-east passage and runs along Russia’s Arctic coast from Europe to Asia. It is central to Moscow’s ambitions. Further west, the north-west passage cuts through Canada’s Arctic archipelago, while a central Arctic route across the north pole is also emerging in long-term planning. This is redrawing the global trade map, adding routes that could provide alternatives to the Suez canal and cut the journey from western Europe to east Asia by almost half. In 2025, the container ship Istanbul Bridge became the first liner vessel to travel from China to Europe via the northern sea route, also known as the “Polar Silk Road” shortcut. The ship travelled from Ningbo, China, to Felixstowe, UK, in about 20 days. Data from the Marine Exchange of Alaska, a maritime monitoring organisation, showed there were 665 transits through the Bering trait, which separates Russia from the US, in 2024, a 175% rise from 242 in 2010. These routes are not without risks, which affect their commercial viability. Serafima Andreeva, a researcher at the Norway-based Fridtjof Nansen Institute, says Moscow is aiming for “year-round” use of the north-east passage from Europe to Asia and is investing heavily in nuclear icebreakers. But ships are still getting stuck in the ice, Andreeva says, adding: “Even now there are occasional issues with use of the route even in the ‘summer’.” Rising tensions around the Arctic Several Arctic nations have claims in the Arctic: Canada, Denmark, Norway, Russia and the US. The UN’s Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf (CLCS) makes recommendations to coastal states on these claims. The US already has a military presence in the Arctic and in Greenland specifically. The remote Pituffik base in north-west Greenland hosts missile warning, missile defence and space operations for the US and Nato. Russia has opened several military bases in the last decade, as well as restoring old Soviet infrastructure and airfields. In 2018, China declared itself a “near-Arctic state” in an effort to gain more influence in the region. Andreeva says: “There has been an increased military interest in the Arctic over the last 10 to 15 years, and the landscape has changed significantly since 2022 [when Russia invaded Ukraine].” She adds that Finland and Sweden’s recent accession to Nato has reshaped the security landscape, increasing the focus on the Nordics as a collective. This has entrenched Russia’s desire to assert control over areas such as the Kola peninsula and the Barents bastion. Even though Russia’s focus has been on Ukraine since 2022, it has maintained its presence in the Arctic. Nato countries have been reinforcing their Arctic naval presence and there have been announcements on increased icebreaker building. With Nato’s Nordic expansion, Denmark’s air force has become more integrated with Finland, Norway and Sweden. In 2024, China deployed three icebreaking vessels to the Arctic. Interest in Greenland’s critical minerals Greenland is also important in the global race for critical minerals. The island ranks eighth in the world for rare earth reserves, estimated at 1.5 million tonnes by the US Geological Survey. It hosts two of the largest known deposits, at Kvanefjeld and Tanbreez. Foreign interest in these is growing. China’s Shenghe Resources is the largest shareholder in the Kvanefjeld project, holding a 12.5% stake, according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies. No rare earth mining has taken place as yet because of inaccessibility. Only about 20% of Greenland is ice-free, and much of the island is inaccessible for large parts of the year. But as with the shipping lanes becoming more viable, global heating is also beginning to alter this equation, and retreating ice is exposing new mineral resources.

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Voting in Uganda’s general election delayed by technical and logistical issues

Voting in Uganda’s general election has been delayed in many parts of the country because of technical and logistical issues, against the backdrop of an internet shutdown and crackdown on the opposition. Some polling stations in the capital, Kampala, and the eastern city of Jinja remained closed nearly two hours after voting was supposed to start on Thursday. According to local reports, in some instance ballot papers had not been delivered and biometric machines used to check voters’ identities were not working. Anxious crowds at polling stations spoke of their concerns about the delay. The election is expected to result in the east African country’s authoritarian president, Yoweri Museveni, extending his nearly four-decade grip on power after a campaign beset by violence. Security forces – over which Museveni has total control – frequently clamped down on supporters of his main opponent, Bobi Wine, by teargassing and shooting bullets at events and detaining people. Authorities arrested civil society members and suspended rights groups. On Tuesday, they shut down internet access and limited mobile phone services countrywide. Observers say the heightened repression could indicate that the ruling National Resistance Movement (NRM) was concerned about waning support. It has also prompted fears of a violent crackdown on dissent in the aftermath of the vote, as was seen in neighbouring Tanzania after its election in October. Museveni is seeking his seventh term, and most Ugandans have not lived under another president. Younger people in particular have connected with Wine, a 43-year-old singer turned politician, and say they are concerned about their futures. Museveni became Uganda’s ninth president in 1986 after leading rebels in a five-year civil war. He led the country to economic growth and democratic change after years of political decay by autocratic governments. But hopes of enduring change dwindled amid accusations of corruption, authoritarianism, repression and curtailment of judicial independence. Critics have also condemned his extended stay in office, achieved by using tactics to lengthen his term indefinitely, including by twice changing the constitution. “[Wine’s] challenge has brought to the surface the character of the regime in terms of tolerating political alternatives or dissent,” said Mwambutsya Ndebesa, a political historian. “The political class is getting more and more politically polarised. And that threatens the stability of the country because Uganda is prone to political instability.” In the run-up to the election, police and the military frequently broke up Wine’s campaign events using teargas and gunshots and by bludgeoning his supporters. At least one person was killed and hundreds were arrested. In December, police detained Sarah Bireete, a rights activist and government critic who had raised concerns about discrepancies in the registry of voters. On Tuesday, the government ordered several rights groups that had denounced violations during the campaign period to stop their work. A report by the UN human rights office last week accused Ugandan authorities of using laws enacted or amended since 2021 to entrench repression and restrict rights before the election, which it said would take place in an environment marked by widespread repression and intimidation. The government has said the actions of the security forces are in response to what it termed lawless conduct by opposition supporters. In a televised address on New Year’s Eve, Museveni advised security forces to use more teargas to break up the crowds of “the criminal opposition”. Eron Kiiza, a human rights lawyer, said at a briefing on the election last week: “Everything is done to frustrate and annoy,” referring to disruption of opposition events by security agencies. Kiiza was allegedly tortured and detained without trial last year while representing the jailed opposition politician Kizza Besigye, who has been in prison for 14 months over what critics say are politically motivated charges, and Besigye’s aide Hajj Obeid Lutale. Museveni, 81, often credits NRM with bringing peace and development to Uganda. Under the slogan “protecting the gains”, he is promising wealth and job creation and to grow the economy partly through value addition for agricultural exports and oil production, which is expected to start this year. Festus Kezire, an NRM supporter in Serere district in eastern Uganda, said Museveni’s introduction of free primary and secondary education was one of the reasons he would vote for him. He said: “He has restored peace and stability in Uganda and this has helped end many years of civil strife.” Museveni is campaigning against seven opposition candidates, the main challenger being Wine, whose real name is Robert Kyagulanyi, of the National Unity Platform (NUP). The two faced off in the last election in 2021, with Museveni winning with 58.38% of the vote and Wine garnering 35.08%. Wine’s manifesto promises “a complete reset of Uganda”, including by upholding human rights and ending corruption. Florence Naluyiba, an NUP supporter in Wakiso district in central Uganda, said she would vote for Wine because “Uganda needs change”. “Our dream is to have a president who will prioritise social service delivery. Bobi Wine has taken the risk to stand up for Ugandans at the expense of his freedom,” she said. Ndebesa, the historian, said the incumbent’s stranglehold on state power, resources and infrastructure gave him organisational advantages over Wine. “The winning [of Museveni] in Uganda is almost a given,” he said. However, observers are keen to see what the election will say about Museveni’s eventual succession. He has long been thought to be grooming his son, Gen Muhoozi Kainerugaba, as his successor, although he has denied this. Across Uganda, 21.6 million people have registered to vote. Additional reporting by Samuel Okiror and Agence France-Presse