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Middle East crisis live: Israel tells residents of Lebanese city of Tyre to leave as Trump claims Iran deal close

At least eight people have been killed after an Israeli airstrike on a popular housing area in the southern Lebanese city of Tyre, the civil defence in southern Lebanon has told Al Jazeera Arabic. We have not been able to independently verify this report. The IDF earlier issued a forced evacuation order for Tyre, warning residents to flee before an attack was launched (see post at 08.32 for more details).

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‘We are familiar faces’: are local peacemakers the answer to Nigeria’s bandit crisis?

In the 1980s, Dayyabu Abba-Kurfi’s striking prowess for his high school football club in north-west Nigeria earned him the unlikely nickname Doncaster, after the English third-tier side more than 3,800 miles away. More than four decades later, in August last year, he scored perhaps his most important goal, brokering a peace pact between his neighbours in Kurfi, in Katsina state, and the bandit gangs terrorising communities there. “For months now, we have experienced relative calm … our people are rebuilding their livelihoods,” the 60-year-old civil servant and local politician said. In the decades since Nigeria gained independence from Britain in 1960, a population boom and the climate crisis have led to the shrinking of old grazing routes used by herders. Youths in nomadic Fulani communities, who felt marginalised by the majority Hausa ethnic group, banded into vigilante groups. More recently, those groups morphed into motorcycle-riding criminal gangs, known locally as bandits, who run illegal mining operations and a billion-naira kidnapping industry. “Because of their nomadic nature, a lot of them are denied land ownership,” said Malik Samuel, an Abuja-based senior researcher at the thinktank Good Governance Africa. “And whenever there are issues between herders and farmers, they [feel] farmers get more sympathy or support from the authorities … The problem is some take advantage of these legitimate grievances to perpetrate violence.” As many as 15,000 kidnapping incidents were recorded in Nigeria between 2019 and 2025, according to the Lagos-based risk analysis firm SBM Intelligence. Most of them were in the north-west. Kidnappers collected 2.57bn naira (£1.4m) in ransoms between July 2024 and June 2025 alone, another SBM report said. Eleven of Katsina’s 34 local government areas (LGAs) have found themselves on the frontline of banditry attacks. Villagers were displaced to towns where they had to adjust to new, costlier lifestyles. On their abandoned farms, bandits led cows to forage on young and mature crops. Across the affected areas of Katsina, families would eat dinner as early as 5pm and enter the forest to hide before nightfall, fearing raids. To prevent mass slaughter of entire families, fathers would flee with some children in one direction while mothers took others and bolted in the opposite direction. In the confusion, children would sometimes be forgotten at home or in the bush, where they risked being bitten by snakes. In Kurfi, one family dared to stay back during a raid. Bandits raped the mother while the father hid under their matrimonial bed, afraid for his life. Nigeria has struggled to contain the bandit groups. Military operations often lead to gangs simply relocating to neighbouring areas. Where violence has failed, the government has tried financial incentives, making amnesty payments to militants willing to surrender their weapons. Critics argue that these payouts in effect signal to criminal elements that violence has a high return on investment. Desperate for survival, some communities have bypassed the state to sign peace deals that sometimes allow bandit factions to collect protection taxes in return for halting raids. *** According to elders in Kurfi, after one such deal in a neighbouring LGA, a bandit leader was keen to reach a similar truce with Abba-Kurfi. Community members pleaded with the state government to allow them negotiate directly with the bandits. “The state government’s position was that it does not support peace deals with criminals and instead relies on security operations,” Abba-Kurfi said. “However, community members felt that military offensives sometimes worsened their situation, as retaliatory attacks could occur in nearby villages, sometimes leading to mass casualties.” Abba-Kurfi, the third of 30 children of a polygamous textile worker, husband to two wives, with 15 children and grandchildren, had long been accustomed to resolving fights in his household and workplace disputes in the civil service. So when Katsina state authorities eventually approved the start of talks, Abba-Kurfi was nominated to lead a team that also included the district head, community elders and clerics from the influential Izala sect. The bandits, numbering more than 80, sent word that they trusted Abba-Kurfi to be the mediator. “Most of them grew up here before joining [gangs in the bush and] some of their parents are even government officials … so we are familiar faces with each other,” he said. Firm conditions were presented to the bandits: there would be no amnesty payments and no guns would be allowed into the communities. In return, bandits would get free movement within the community and their demands would be met: access to markets and Islamic schools, and basic social amenities such as potable water for themselves and for their cattle to boost their milk production. “We want our children to be knowledgable,” said a bandit called Bello just outside the nearby goldmining town of Nahuta. Villagers say mediators dealt transparently with the bandits, leading to mutual respect and a level of trust. Less than a year on, life seems to be back to normal. The bandits returned more than 70 cows and allowed farmers to return to their farms. More than 1,000 abducted people were freed, and no deaths at the hands of bandits have been reported in recent months. “[They were] released without ransom, I swear with my holy Qur’an,” Abba-Kurfi said. The council reportedly established Islamic teaching programmes to encourage repentance for those involved in violence and to get bandits to “show greater respect for human life over cattle unlike before.” In one instance where a gang came from far away to steal cows, bandits who had accepted the Kurfi deal confronted them and helped recover stolen cattle, one elder said. “We now take off our clothes to sleep at night,” said Abubakar Gadawa, a 46-year-old farmer and herder in Kurfi. Not every deal has stood the test of time: on 3 February, a six-month pact in the Doma community in Katsina collapsed when one gang slaughtered 21 residents in a door-to-door attack. On Sunday, bandits abducted dozens of villagers whom they had invited to a meeting about potential peace negotiations. According to local police, 39 people were seized during a meeting in the forest near Magamin Diddi village in the Maradun municipality of north-west Zamfara state. In Kurfi however, there is cautious optimism. So far, the bandits have kept to their word, but they say the state government has not fulfilled its end of the bargain. While they do not carry their weapons into public spaces, they have refused to surrender their guns, afraid of possible reprisals by unforgiving vigilantes or attacks from distant gangs. That has led to concerns that the deal could fall apart. “From what I understand, the failure [of previous deals] occurred because of lack of communication and unkept promises,” said Abba-Kurfi, who has kept an open line to the bandits and their relatives. Samuel, who attended some peace deals last year, agreed, saying previous attempts were government-led and shortsighted. “The government is more interested in procuring peace than actually the process that will lead to permanent peace,” Samuel said. “The government would rather prefer to pay tens or hundreds of millions of naira to bandits in exchange for their weapons than fulfilling those promises. How much does it cost to build a school? How much does it cost to build a borehole?”

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Israel puts Palestinian doctor in solitary confinement after 17 months held without charge

The son of a prominent Palestinian doctor who was detained by Israeli forces in Gaza in late 2024 and held for more than 500 days without formal charges has spoken of his deep concern for his father’s wellbeing after he was transferred without explanation to solitary confinement in a maximum-security prison. Dr Hussam Abu Safiya, the director of Kamal Adwan hospital in northern Gaza, was detained at work on 27 December 2024. Physicians for Human Rights Israel said last week it had received information indicating that the 53-year-old had been transferred from Ketziot prison to Ramon prison, part of the Ganot prison complex, where he had been put in solitary confinement. PHRI said it had not been told the reasons for the transfer. During a visit by a PHRI lawyer last month, Abu Safiya described harsh detention conditions, untreated medical problems and severe food shortages. His son Elyas Abu Safiya, who is also a doctor, said his father required surgery to remove shrapnel that had become lodged in his left thigh when he was detained, and that he continued to suffer persistent pain and swelling at the site of the wound. “What we know [about his time in detention] shows severe suffering,” Elyas said. “During the first months of his detention, he was not allowed to change his clothes, and he developed skin diseases without receiving proper treatment. “We were told that he is [now being] held in an extremely small solitary cell, no larger than one metre by one metre, a space barely enough to move or sit properly,” he added. According to Elyas, at the time of his detention his father was wearing a white medical coat that he had refused to wash since his son Ibrahim was killed by a drone strike at the hospital entrance in October 2024. Abu Safiya had kept the hospital running through more than 80 days of siege and attacks by Israeli forces amid an intensive military operation in the surrounding refugee camp. More than 525 days after his arrest, Israeli authorities have yet to bring any formal charges against him. He was classified as an “unlawful combatant”, along with more than 375 medical workers – a designation Israel has frequently used to justify prolonged detention without trial. Since his detention, the family has not been able to communicate with him directly. “The only accusation is his refusal to obey the Israeli army’s orders to evacuate the hospital and leave the patients to their fate,” Elyas said. PHRI learned of Abu Safiya’s solitary confinement during a visit on 4 June by a PHRI lawyer to see five other Palestinian doctors from Gaza in Ketziot prison. Four of the doctors reported that several days before the visit, security personnel had entered the wing where Abu Safiya was being held, handcuffed him and removed him without explanation. PHRI later learned that he had reportedly been transferred to solitary confinement in Ganot prison. Solitary confinement is widely regarded as one of the harshest forms of detention. Under the United Nations Mandela Rules, prolonged solitary confinement exceeding 14 days may amount to torture. Abu Safiya’s lawyer, Nasser Odeh, said he had filed an appeal on Thursday seeking his release. “The Israeli officials replied saying the doctor is being held under the unlawful combatants law and that, under this law, all legal proceedings concerning the detainee are subject to a gag order and are held behind closed doors,” Odeh said. In March, a group of UN experts said Israel must immediately release Abu Safiya and ensure he was granted access to medical examination and treatment. He is one of 14 Palestinian doctors from Gaza currently held by Israel without charge. In April, PHRI filed a petition with the Israeli high court of justice seeking their release, and it is awaiting the court’s decision regarding the next stage of the proceedings. The five doctors visited on 4 June, all of whom have been detained for more than two years without charge, reported a deterioration in detention conditions over the past two months. According to their accounts, prison guards forced them to sit or lie on metal beds or the floor for most of the day. One of the doctors reported frequent use of teargas, while two others said they had not appeared before a judge since December, when their detention was extended indefinitely. The Israel Prison Service said that “due to privacy obligations, it does not provide information regarding the detention status of specific prisoners”, adding that “the allegations described do not reflect IPS practice”. The IDF did not respond to a request for comment about Abu Safiya’s detention without formal charges.

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Air passengers ‘risking lives by grabbing bags and filming in emergencies’

Air passengers are increasingly putting lives at risk by filming emergencies and retrieving bags instead of evacuating planes, industry experts have said, with some suggesting fines could be needed. Passenger aircraft are designed to be fully evacuated in 90 seconds in an emergency – but people reaching for hand luggage can significantly increase that time, blocking exits and aisles as well as damaging slides or causing injury. The global airlines body Iata has launched a safety campaign urging customers to “save a life, not a bag”after a number of evacuations filmed by passengers have appeared on social media, some showing people carrying luggage from burning planes. Nick Careen, the Iata senior vice-president for operations and security, said the first priority was to educate passengers that it was “most important to leave hand baggage behind. We need to drive the message home.” Research on travellers in the UK, US, Singapore and UAE found that only 61% were aware of the rules. “Four in 10 passengers don’t even realise it’s an expectation to leave their shit behind,” Careen said, speaking at the Iata annual meeting in Rio de Janeiro. Asked if he favoured fines, Careen said: “Yes, if we could implement them. It could progress because there are regulators who favour it.” He said airlines and manufacturers were not yet considering potential technical fixes such as automatically locking luggage bins. But Careen said: “Let’s start with education – then we’ll have to be a little bit more draconian, whether it be penalties or a lock on the overhead bin.” The US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said it was seeing an increasing number of passengers not following flight crew instructions during emergencies. Bryan Bedford, an FAA administrator, said: “In those moments, compliance is critical. Passengers must act quickly, follow instructions without hesitation, and leave all belongings behind.” Evacuations are rare in aviation, with only an estimated 30 annually. Last year at least two-UK bound flights were evacuated on the asphalt before departure after suspicions of fire, with 18 passengers sustaining minor injuries leaving a Ryanair plane at Palma airport last July. Passengers described the evacuation as “utter carnage”. Videos of similar events have provoked consternation, both at those stopping to film potentially disastrous events on smartphones and those seen carrying luggage off emergency slides. Some aviation safety experts, however, suggested the response was understandable. Brett Molesworth, a professor of human factors and aviation safety at the University of New South Wales, said unfamiliar emergencies led to a “fight or flight” stress response when only a minority of people acted rationally. For about 75% of people, he said, “their ability to process information is restricted. In those circumstances if they’ve got their bag in the overhead lockers they want to take it with them.” Dr Levi Breeding, a senior auditor at United Airlines, said that while there may be “some disbelief and disconnection from the situation” in an emergency, too many in the TikTok generation “had an instinct to pull the phone out”, some potentially looking to make money from footage of a newsworthy event. He said: “Every day is a struggle getting the message across … Our passengers don’t live in aviation safety every day like we do.” Rachel Loudermilk, the managing director of inflight safety at Southwest Airlines, said cabin crew were having to learn to make passengers comply. She said: “Getting that mindset shift to flip the switch and now yell at them very directly in their face is tough, but that’s what we’re working on.” She added: “There’s an inherent risk in aircraft – but nobody thinks that will happen to them. Or they think that they’ll be OK, even if they take a bag.” Molesworth said Iata’s campaign featuring cartoon animals might struggle to cut through, as research showed that only about half of passengers who watched safety videos took the information in. Loudermilk concurred but said: “We can’t lose customers, so we’ve got to figure out a way to show them reality without showing dead bodies.” Willie Walsh, the outgoing director general of Iata, said he did not favour fines. But he said he still vividly remembered the Manchester airport disaster in 1985, when 55 people died, mainly of toxic smoke inhalation, after a botched evacuation. He said: “We don’t take decisions to evacuate aircraft lightly – so if does happen, get off,” he said. Flights to the Iata summit were provided by Iata and Latam airline

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‘We are cheering on five teams’: how Rotterdam will turn more than orange for World Cup

Three hours before their team’s opening World Cup match on 14 June, about 4,000 football fans are expected to pack into a giant former concrete grain store in Rotterdam that is one of the Dutch city’s best-known nightclub venues. However, the flags will be blue, not orange, and the aroma of arros moro will fill the air as the room pulsates to the beat of conga drums and ritmo kombina. The Maassilo has been booked to host the watch party for Curaçao, the least populous country to qualify for the World Cup and a constituent nation of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. Many Dutch supporters will be cheering along with them. All but two of Curaçao’s squad were born in the Netherlands; 12 of them play for clubs in the Eredivisie or the second-tier Keuken Kampioen Divisie. The team are managed by the longtime Dutch coach Dick Advocaat. The Dutch king and queen are planning to attend at least one of the Blue Wave’s group matches. “It’s not just historic for Curaçao: it’s historic for the Netherlands,” said Sontje Davelaar, 41, a DJ for the community radio station Fortius, which is organising the watch party. “Curaçao is a son of the Netherlands. For the first time we’re going to the World Cup together as a family.” Dutch football fans are renowned for turning stadiums and host cities into a sea of orange wherever they go. But in Rotterdam, a city where one in three residents were born abroad and 60% have a non-Dutch background, the picture is more varied. Cape Verde, an archipelago off the north-west coast of Africa, is another nation making its World Cup debut. Six of its squad were born in Rotterdam, a city nicknamed “the 11th island” by Cape Verdeans because of its 20,000-strong emigrant population. “This place will be packed,” says Alexander Soares Silva, an administrator at FC Maense, a community football club founded by Cape Verdeans 48 years ago. Sitting in the basement of the São Nicolau cultural centre, he describes how he had to watch Cape Verde’s historic final qualifying match on his phone outside the door because there was no room inside. Cape Verdeans started arriving in Rotterdam in the 1950s, during the struggle for independence from Portugal, to work on Dutch ships. “We’re known as the silent migrants,” Soares Silva, 43, says. “We’ve been here three generations but the rest of Rotterdam doesn’t know us. Now people see us on ESPN, they know who we are and we can be proud of our roots.” The mayor of Rotterdam, Carola Schouten, hopes the tournament will bring the city’s communities together. The council has relaxed its licensing hours during the World Cup so that as many games as possible can be shown on outdoor screens, including Curaçao and Cape Verde’s matches against Germany and Spain respectively. “We are cheering on five teams during this World Cup,” she said. “I think it’s great that there are so many places where people can watch together and support each other’s teams.” Morocco and Turkey have qualified and will each be cheered on by 50,000 Rotterdammers. When Morocco beat Portugal to reach the semi-finals in Qatar four years ago with a team featuring several players born and raised in the Netherlands such as the then Chelsea player Hakim Ziyech, hundreds of fans converged in the city centre, flying red and green flags and setting off fireworks. There are three Dutch-born players in the Morocco squad this time, including the Manchester United defender Noussair Mazraoui. Dutch Moroccans do not tend to opt for the country of their birth: the last to wear the famous orange jersey was Ibrahim Afellay a decade ago. “It’s become a loyalty issue,” said Lotfi El Hamidi, a Rotterdam-born journalist who wrote a book, Generation 9/11, about the experience of Muslims growing up in Europe in the 21st century. It reflects a wider sense among Dutch Moroccans they are only ever “provisional” members of society, a feeling that has sharpened with the rise of far-right parties such as Geert Wilders’ Party for Freedom (PVV) in the last 30 years, he added. “They’re expected to choose the Netherlands because they have Dutch passports,” El Hamidi says. “But when they do, they notice they’re under a magnifying glass. If things go badly, they’re the ones who get singled out for criticism. Whereas if they play for their parents’ country, they get the red carpet treatment.” The debate is likely to intensify if Morocco meet the Netherlands on the pitch, which could happen as early as the second round. “Some Moroccans won’t care either way, but there is a section who will be hoping Morocco wins, so they can say: we’re not inferior to you,” El Hamidi says. Yet for many fans in Rotterdam, loyalties are shared, not divided. “We start out supporting different teams, but as the other countries drop out we all follow Oranje [the Dutch national team],” El Hamidi says. “It’s just that not everybody does it with the same intensity.” “Rotterdam is a very multicultural city,” adds Soares Silva. “I have Turkish neighbours and Antillean friends. I was so proud when Morocco became the first African nation to get to the semi-finals. When Curaçao qualified I actually set my alarm for their final game. I was so happy when they made it.”

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Tuesday briefing: Is a social media ban in the UK enough to help protect young people?

Good morning. Keir Starmer’s expected speech next week about young people’s access to social media will be analysed as much for how it benefits the outcome of a certain byelection, as its safeguarding of children’s synapses. After issuing an ultimatum to tech firms yesterday to block children’s phones from sharing nude images, the government is expected to make another major announcement about social media within days. Briefings suggest it will stop short of a blanket ban on under-16s accessing social media. But it will still amount to radical regulation, with Downing Street insisting that Starmer is up for a fight with big tech. For anyone who worries about the impact of unfettered algorithms and endless scrolling on brains of any age – by which I mean almost everyone – whether or not Starmer secures his legacy by saving young minds from digital takeover is incidental. The stakes are so much higher, as Starmer himself knows, having sat across the table from parents who have said their children died as a result of social media use. And there are other stories at play: the halting pace of law-making that cannot match the exponential speed of emerging online harms, and a growing inter-generational consensus that urgent action is required, as young people tell adults with increasing specificity the frameworks they need to navigate a “digital-first” world. So, not much to discuss with our global technology editor Dan Milmo, who was at London Tech Week, where Starmer had just finished his address. First, the headlines. Five big stories UK politics | Volodymyr Zelenskyy has revealed that he plans to invite King Charles on a state visit to Ukraine as early as this year, which would make him the most senior royal to travel to Kyiv since Russia’s full-scale invasion. Middle East | Fears of a return to a full-scale regional war in the Middle East eased on Monday as Israel and Iran said they had halted attacks on each other after an appeal from Donald Trump to “immediately stop shooting”. UK news | A report has found “widespread and concerning evidence” of bias and victim-blaming in the family courts – primarily disadvantaging women. US news | Donald Trump was loudly booed when he was shown on the video screens at Madison Square Garden on Monday night at the NBA finals. Unemployment | A government-funded pilot of “hyperlocal” job support in 10 neighbourhoods across England has shown “promising early signs of effectiveness”, including for young people, and could be scalable nationwide, a new evaluation has shown. In depth: A seatbelt for the social media age The Online Safety Act, the UK government’s first attempt to regulate young people’s online access – which Dan describes as a “seatbelt moment” – has only been in place for 11 months. There’s “a steady drumbeat of opinion among influential campaigners and parents, that what we have now is not enough, and we need more”. That piece of legislation, the result of uphill efforts from campaigners pressing the previous Tory government whose instincts were to prioritise the commercial imperatives of tech companies, forces social media platforms and large search engines to prevent children from accessing harmful content, including pornography and material that promotes self-harm and eating disorders. That legislation is yet to be fully bedded in, says Dan, and further challenges are on the horizon – the consultation on young people’s social media use, which only closed a few weeks ago, included the use of AI chatbots for the first time. Ofcom’s long-running research study, Children’s Media Lives, which has tracked the same group of young people from eight to 18 since 2014, notes that this year for the first time AI moved from “barely a footnote” to wholesale adoption. At the same time, says Dan, we’re at an early stage of understanding how children’s cognitive and social development is affected by use of technology. For parents, policymakers and politicians, it feels like a moving target that is travelling at warp speed. *** Can we expect ‘a radical safety overhaul’? Over the past two years, I’ve spoken regularly to Ros and Mark Dowey, whose 16-year-old son Murray who took his own life after he fell victim to a sextortion gang on Instagram. They are now suing Meta for the alleged wrongful death of their son, in the first UK case of its kind. The Doweys have always been sceptical about banning social media outright, recognising that a gradual on-ramp is better than a cliff-edge that doesn’t equip youngsters with the skills and confidence they need to navigate online spaces – and that a government ban fails to place responsibility squarely with social media companies. There’s a growing consensus among online safety campaigners that, rather than implementing an Australia-style lock out, the UK government should instead block under-16s from accessing risky features such as infinite scrolling, disappearing messages and push notifications. This tallies with the “layered approach” Dan anticipates from Starmer, “but it’s also clear the prime minister is going to demand a radical safety overhaul”. He expects to see a full ban for apps that are deemed unsafe; further restrictions to access features deemed unsafe, such as scrolling; action on game platforms like the hugely popular Roblox that allow adults and children to interact; and, potentially, age restrictions on who can use chatbots and the content of their discussions. This comes as Starmer’s government introduces a legal ban on smartphones in schools in England, with the Scottish government planning similar legislation. Research on effectiveness is mixed: studies have shown a ban can improve classroom focus and discipline, but doesn’t by itself result in higher grades or happier teens, suggesting proposed school restrictions should be part of a wider strategy to lower phone use. While most primary schools already press home the message that not everyone online is who they say they are, plans are now well under way to address the spread of online misinformation with older children. *** Lessons from Australia Deciding how and what to ban is the easy part, Dan tells me. Critics of Australia’s policy – which banned all under-16s from using social media last December and is being closely scrutinised – have highlighted that, six months later, the eSafety commissioner’s own data suggests two-thirds of people under 16 have remained on social media. Five companies – Snapchat, TikTok, YouTube, Instagram and Facebook – are under investigation for non-compliance with the ban. Experts have also warned that those able to circumvent the ban are accessing sites without the restrictions those platforms have put in place for teens. But this instant rush to judge the ban’s effectiveness ignores the incremental nature of regulation, says Dan. “You need to put the regulation in place and get it going in order to test it, then improve it, make it more efficient. Whatever happens in the UK will probably have a rocky start, too.” It’s also a technologically complex issue. Age verification, for example, is a nascent industry – although Dan notes that the UK already has a “fairly robust” verification procedure for over-18s seeking to access pornography, so “there is a framework there that could be deployed to under-16s”. *** What do young people want? As well as the burning recognition from adults that young people deserve protection from online harm, there’s an accompanying acknowledgment that young people need to be involved in any conversation about what a youth-friendlier internet might look like. The Ada Lovelace Institute recently interviewed a cohort of 14- to 24-year-olds about growing up online. Overall they voiced the strong opinion that future young people should not be able to access social media and technology in the way they did. They talked about their frustration with being warned of dependency on technology, while living in a digital-first society where many daily tasks – from school homework to job applications – have to be done online. The Children’s Media Lives study has also identified a significant shift over the past two years in the way young people talk about short-form content – “brain rot” – recognising that endless passive consumption of content with no connecting thread is neither satisfying nor healthy. Young people also challenge adults to improve their own digital literacy. When I interviewed Scottish teens about online harm – in that case sextortion – some were concerned their parents simply wouldn’t have the technical skills to help them. They were also blunt about the need for educators to speak their language – youngsters talk about “nudes” and “scuds”, not “intimate images”. Naturally, young people mirror the smartphone behaviours they see in adults around them. To address that, Sweden’s public health agency recently called on parents to declare parts of the home phone-free to help create healthy screen habits for the whole family. With the very things we know to be harmful to young people – mindless scrolling, short-form videos, ease of messaging strangers – also being vital to how social media companies monetise attention, the goal of creating a child-friendly social media environment can often seen an unrealistic one given the business imperative. Self-regulation has certainly failed, that much is obvious as we read the evidence from Meta whistleblowers, now being used in a number of court cases against the tech company, which indicate that big tech has been well aware of the harm their products can cause. But the Online Safety Act, which carried a sanction of up to 10% of the global revenue or £18m of a company, has already shown that government is “willing to wield a big cudgel”, and Dan expects more of the same with Starmer’s proposals. Another lesson from that law, Dan adds, is that UK tech firms are unwilling to defy government outright. “And because these firms like to have a uniform presentation across the world, there’s even the possibility that how they deal with the coming changes from the UK government could set a global precedent.” • In the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on freephone 116 123. In the US, you can call or text the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline at 988 or chat at 988lifeline.org. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other international helplines can be found at befrienders.org. What else we’ve been reading I still can’t seem to escape AI slop, but this entertaining read about the artists making “anti-slop” to combat the onslaught of AI-generated advertising offered reassurance that a more authentic, janky form of creativity will still continue to exist. Sinéad Campbell, newsletters team The New Yorker’s long read (£) on how Andrew Tate and his brother built an empire on exploitation is a terrifyingly thorough exposé on the pioneers of the manosphere. Toby Moses, head of newsletters Alexis Petridis’s interview with the techno producer Ibrahim Alfa Jr had me hooked from start to finish. It’s a fascinating story of isolation, illness and unabashed creativity. Sinéad Our TV desk has run down the best shows of 2026 so far – from Heated Rivalry’s gloriously steamy ice hockey romance to an Attenbrough retrospective, there’s bound to be something on there that piques your interest. Toby This great read about the changing attitudes towards the dog meat industry in Nigeria caught my attention, particularly the joyous photos of “dog mom” Jackie Idimogu and her canine friends. Sinéad Sport Cricket | Ben Stokes’ future as the England Test captain has been thrown into doubt after the England and Wales Cricket Board launched an investigation into “a breach of team protocol” related to an incident involving Stokes and Gus Atkinson that took place in a London nightclub in the early hours of Monday morning. Tennis | Tatjana Maria, the reigning Queen’s Club women’s champion, has revealed her shock at not receiving a wildcard to defend her title this week, suggesting winning last year’s tournament should command greater respect. Football | Scotland’s return to the World Cup after a 28-year absence has been immediately overshadowed by a war of words with Norway. The front pages The Guardian’s splash today is “Zelensky takes aim at Reform UK’s ‘mistake’ on Ukraine flags”. The FT says “Israel and Iran halt exchange of blows as US pushes to extend ceasefire deal” and the Independent has “Trump’s desperate plea on ceasefire: ‘Stop shooting’”. The Times leads with “West Ham owner ‘abused power to prey on women’”, the Mirror and the Sun also lead with the allegations and run the same headline of “‘Predator’”. The i Paper runs “UK spying fears after secret camera found in Whitehall ceiling panel”, the Telegraph says “Billions in aid cash handed to terrorists” and the Mail asks “Is university a waste of money?” Today in Focus: The Latest Israel and Iran trade strikes: what does this mean for peace deal? Israel and Iran have exchanged direct strikes for the first time since a ceasefire was reached in April, raising fears of a return to a full-scale regional war. In this episode, Nosheen Iqbal speaks to the Guardian’s senior international correspondent Julian Borger – watch on YouTube. Cartoon of the day | Ben Jennings The Upside A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad Stuck in a rut, or feel as if life could do with some extra sparkle? Author and artist Austin Kleon might just have you covered – and he has his two kids to thank. “Everything in the culture [of art] says kids are the antithesis of creative work,” he says. Actually, Kleon realised, “they can be a great catalyst, an energy source that you can plug into”. It’s all about embracing your inner child. This worked wonders for Elle Hunt, who put Kleon’s advice into practice: make time for fun, find what you love, be your own parent, learn from scratch and create with your hands. It’s all about “making stuff, messing around and following your nose”, says Kleon. “Play is not a frivolous thing: you need it, this is how you keep your spirit alive.” Sign up here for a weekly roundup of The Upside, sent to you every Sunday Bored at work? And finally, the Guardian’s puzzles are here to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow. Quick crossword Cryptic crossword Wordiply

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World’s first wind-powered underwater datacentre starts operating in China

The world’s first wind-powered underwater datacentre has started operations off the coast of Shanghai, as China presses forwards with solutions for energy challenges created by the country’s artificial intelligence boom. The Shanghai Lingang undersea datacentre demonstration project, which launched in May, has a capacity of 24 megawatts. It is a joint effort between HiCloud Technology and China Communications Construction, a state-owned company. Located more than 6 miles (10km) off the coast of Shanghai, the datacentre is submerged 10 metres below the surface of the water and is powered by a nearby offshore windfarm. According to the Chinese government, the datacentre reduces power consumption by more than one-fifth compared with land-based datacentres. That is because as well as being powered by renewable energy, its overall energy demands are less because of the natural cooling effect that comes from being submerged in seawater. In a traditional, land-based datacentre, anywhere between 25% and 40% of the total electricity demand comes from the need to pipe chilled water around the servers to prevent them from overheating. Traditional datacentres, known as the physical backbone of AI, have also come under scrutiny because of how much water they use. Having datacentres in the sea reduces the need for freshwater supplies. This week the United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health warned that the water footprint of datacentres could reach 9.3tn litres by 2030 – enough to service the annual domestic water needs of all 1.3 billion residents of sub-Saharan Africa. HiCloud launched the world’s first commercial underwater datacentre in Hainan, a tropical island in southern China, in 2023. But the Shanghai launch is the first project to be powered by offshore wind. The farm is just about visible off the coast of Lingang, a hi-tech, free-trade zone in eastern Shanghai that is also home to a Tesla gigafactory. China was not the first country to experiment with building datacentres underwater to make them more efficient. In 2018, Microsoft launched a pilot in the waters around Orkney in Scotland. Two years later, the company reported promising results but progress has since stalled. “Microsoft was earlier in proving the concept, while China moved further on commercial deployment because it was able to bring together market demand, industrial capability, marine engineering and policy support more quickly into a commercial project,” said Dr Hanjiang Dong of Hong Kong Polytechnic University. China has made support for AI a central pillar of its economic and development strategy. Last year, it released an AI action plan that called for the acceleration of datacentre construction. The government has also pledged that clean energy supplies for AI infrastructure will be “significantly increased” by 2030. The Shanghai Lingang datacentre received 1.6bn yuan of investment (£177m), according to the Chinese government. Underwater datacentres also create some risks for marine ecosystems, such as by disturbing sediments or heating the seawater. Experts said these risks were most likely manageable but would require further monitoring. Prof Rick Stafford, a marine biologist at Bournemouth University, said: “An underwater datacentre is likely a good idea. While the cooling using seawater will result in some localised elevated temperatures, these will not be far reaching.” Additional research by Yu-chen Li