Read the daily news to learn English

picture of article

UK foreign secretary criticises Israel for denying two Labour MPs entry

The UK’s foreign secretary has criticised Israeli authorities for denying two Labour MPs entry into the country and deporting them. Yuan Yang and Abtisam Mohamed were rejected because they were suspected of plans to “document the activities of security forces and spread anti-Israel hatred”, according to a statement from the Israeli immigration ministry cited by Sky News and Politics UK. Yang, who represents Earley and Woodley in Berkshire, and Mohamed, the MP for Sheffield Central, both flew into Ben Gurion airport from Luton with their aides, according to reports. The foreign secretary, David Lammy, said in a statement on Saturday: “It is unacceptable, counterproductive, and deeply concerning that two British MPs on a parliamentary delegation to Israel have been detained and refused entry by the Israeli authorities. “I have made clear to my counterparts in the Israeli government that this is no way to treat British parliamentarians, and we have been in contact with both MPs tonight to offer our support. “The UK government’s focus remains securing a return to the ceasefire and negotiations to stop the bloodshed, free the hostages and end the conflict in Gaza.” Since renewed military operations last month ended a short-lived truce in its war with Hamas, Israel has pushed to seize territory in the Gaza Strip in what it said was a strategy to force militants to free hostages still in captivity. The health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza said 1,249 people have been killed since Israel resumed intense bombing last month, bringing the overall death toll since the war began to 50,609. The 7 October 2023 attack on Israel that sparked the war resulted in 1,218 deaths, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.

picture of article

Thousands in Spain join nationwide march to protest against housing crisis

Tens of thousands of people have taken to the streets of Spain in the latest protest against housing speculation and to demand access to affordable homes. Organisers claim that up to 150,000 joined the protest in Madrid while smaller demonstrations were held in about 40 cities across the country. Protesters from Málaga on the Costa del Sol to Vigo in the Atlantic northwest chanted “end the housing racket” and “landlords are guilty, the government is responsible”. Valeria Racu, a spokesperson for the Madrid tenants’ union, called for rent strikes such as those mounted recently in some Catalan coastal towns. “This is the beginning of the end of the housing business,” Racu said. “The beginning of a better society, without landlordism and this parasitical system that devours our salaries and our resources.” The union says 1.4m Spanish households spend more than 30% of their income on housing, 200,000 families more than 10 years ago. Housing has become the number one social issue in Spain as a combination of property speculation and tourist apartments have driven the cost of rented housing beyond the reach of all but the most wealthy. Official statistics suggest there are at least 15,000 illegal tourist apartments in Madrid while in Barcelona the city council says it will not renew the existing 10,000 tourist apartment licences when they expire in 2028. What was initially a problem in areas with a high concentration of tourists, such as the Balearic and Canary Islands, as well as Barcelona, has become an issue across the country, with protests in Seville, Valencia, Santiago de Compostela, Burgos and San Sebastián, among other cities, where protesters rattled sets of keys in what has become a symbol of discontent over the lack of affordable homes. In the Balearics the average rent for a small apartment has risen by 40% in five years to about €1,400 (£1,190) a month, more than the average monthly salary of those working in the hospitality sector, the region’s main industry. The young have been hardest hit as housing costs have soared while salaries remain stagnant. A study published by the Spanish youth council showed that a lack of affordable housing meant that last year 85% of young people under 30 were still living with their parents. In Barcelona, where thousands gathered in the Plaça d’Espanya, protesters demanded a 50% reduction in rents, indefinite leases and an end to property speculation. According to the Catalan housing agency, rents in Barcelona have increased by 70% in the past 10 years. Salaries rose by 17.5% over the same period. “The housing game is rigged in favour of anyone with assets while tax incentives encourage them to acquire more and more property,” said Jaime Palomera of the Barcelona Urban Research Institute and the author of El Secuestro de la Vivienda (The Kidnapping of Housing). “The rich have got richer since the financial crash in 2008 and the Covid crisis and they have used this wealth to buy more and more property, constantly driving up prices and increasing inequality. “The fact is that property offers a better return than other investments. We have an economic model that encourages investment in assets that don’t create any value but simply use rent as a way of sucking money out of the middle classes.” The solution, Palomera says, is to tax those who own multiple properties. He cites the example of Singapore, where the state offers financial support to first-time buyers but imposes an ascending tax regime on second and subsequent homes.

picture of article

Christian missionary group accused of public shaming and rituals to ‘cure’ sexual sin

The world’s biggest youth Christian missionary organisation is facing allegations of spiritual abuse and controlling behaviour from young people who say they were left “traumatised”. An Observer investigation has revealed evidence of safeguarding failings within Youth With a Mission (YWAM), a global movement that trains young Christians to spread the gospel. A spokesperson for YWAM said the organisation was “heartbroken” by the claims and was “deeply committed to the safety and wellbeing” of everyone in its care. The allegations span two decades and include claims that young missionaries were publicly shamed, subjected to rituals to “cure” their homosexuality, and told that leaving was against God’s will. Young British adults who signed up for training schools and overseas mission trips – many during their gap years – described regular confession sessions where they were pressured to admit their “sins” in a group. These included perceived moral transgressions such as homosexual thoughts, sexual activity, abortions and watching pornography, as well as other “sins” such as disobeying a leader or having “rebellious thoughts”. Those who confessed could be questioned and made to give public apologies, according to former missionaries. They could be prayed for or could face punishment, including being removed from volunteer roles. In some cases, interventions were more extreme. Former YWAM volunteers described the use of rituals similar to exorcisms to banish demons from people who acknowledged having sex outside marriage. Another former British YWAM worship leader described a “casting out” at a base in Australia, arranged after a man revealed that he had sexual relations with other men. Leaders placed their hands on him before chanting prayers to “banish the spirit of homosexuality”, and he reportedly convulsed. The British man was himself struggling with his sexuality and said he was left feeling as though a “demon” was living inside him. Others described how people disclosed being victims of assault or sexual abuse, as well as transgressions such as speeding fines. The “repentance and forgiveness” rituals are alleged to be part of a wider picture of control at some bases, which also included restrictions on romantic relationships, clothing and when missionaries could visit family. Commands were often communicated by leaders as though they were instructions from God. “They were always changing what other people wanted to do by saying: ‘I reckon, God is saying this.’ It was used to manipulate,” one former missionary said. YWAM operates in about 180 countries and sends about 25,000 people on short-term missions each year. It was founded in 1960 by the American missionary Loren Cunningham and has key bases in the US, Australia, Switzerland and the UK, where it is a registered charity. A spokesperson for YWAM England said it was committed to “continuous improvement in safeguarding practices” and that each location was responsible for upholding standards. It said it was “strongly opposed” to forced confessions. “While confession of sin may occur, the person should never be publicly shamed or pressured to apologise.” Last year, YWAM’s base in Perth, Australia – one of the biggest in the world – faced scrutiny over its handling of alleged historic sexual misconduct, including claims that its leaders told alleged victims to apologise to their alleged attackers for “leading them on”. A YWAM base in the UK was recently closed amid claims of spiritual abuse. The allegations come as a prayer movement linked to YWAM – which aims to recruit the next generation of Christian missionaries – sweeps through Britain. The Send UK & Ireland, an initiative by a coalition of Christian groups, which is legally controlled by the YWAM branch in Harpenden, Hertfordshire, launched with a show last July at Ovo Arena Wembley. It has since held pop-ups at churches and concert halls across the UK. Its aim is to recruit 100,000 young British adults to do missionary work in the UK and abroad and reverse the trend of decline among western missions. After the Wembley event, hundreds of people signed up via QR code to serve as missionaries through YWAM and the Send’s other partner organisations. The allegations, made by former missionaries whose experiences span two decades and 18 countries, raise questions about culture and safeguarding within YWAM, which has a decentralised structure that critics say leads to insufficient oversight. The organisation defers power to leaders on bases around the world, who say they take safeguarding seriously. YWAM has underlying statements of principles and runs discipleship training schools which have a similar structure across all bases, with lectures on topics such as “sin, repentance and restitution”, “spiritual warfare” and “discipling nations”. The code of conduct for the University of the Nations, YWAM’s unaccredited Christian university, which oversees YWAM training schools, says “any moral violation”, including “sexual immorality”, is grounds for disciplinary action. Other bases list fornication and homosexuality as immoral behaviours alongside incest and bestiality. In 2020, Lynn Green, one of YWAM’s most senior leaders and the founder of YWAM England, published a blog post urging the human race to “repent for ignoring the laws of God”, blaming abortion and “the homosexual agenda” for “bringing destruction”. Felicity Davies, 34, a designer from Yorkshire who spent six years in YWAM after joining at the age of 18, said the “purity culture” and alleged controlling behaviour at a base in South Africa left her feeling “suffocated” and “not good enough”. “I constantly had to do certain things in order for God to love me or to be accepted,” she said. “People should be aware that this isn’t all happy-clappy. A lot of people get traumatised.” Lena Stary, 26, from Bristol, who joined YWAM aged 18, said her experience in Switzerland left her suffering panic attacks and had taken years to untangle. It had made it “very difficult to trust other people”. She is no longer religious. “I just found it so difficult to believe that God is a loving being if all of what I was being told was true,” she said. A YWAM spokesperson said: “Although a high number of individuals have had a positive experience in YWAM, we are aware and deeply regret that some have had harmful experiences of spiritual abuse and manipulation.” They said each base was responsible for safeguarding and was held to account by leadership teams overseeing specific regions. In England, a YWAM spokesperson said leaders had “implemented stricter oversight mechanisms” after claims of spiritual abuse at a base which has since closed. They said YWAM held “traditional Christian views on sexuality and marriage” but was reviewing how it communicated those beliefs to prevent “shame or rejection”, and that it condemned any practice that traumatised people or associated their identity with demonic influence. “We are deeply grieved to hear reports that spiritual practices intended for healing were instead used in coercive or shaming ways,” they said. Green stood by his comments on abortion and homosexuality and said he sought to approach the matters “with both grace and faithfulness”, adding that he, “like others in YWAM”, condemned any form of spiritual abuse. A YWAM Perth spokesperson said any comment that an alleged victim had “led on” their alleged attacker or must apologise to them did not reflect the views of leadership.

picture of article

‘It felt like a demon was inside me’: young Christian missionaries allege spiritual abuse

One Sunday last summer, 5,000 young people packed into the Wembley Arena for a “mass gathering of gen Z Jesus followers”. They danced to Christian rock, hugged, wept and sang. Between performances, charismatic leaders proclaimed something “huge” was afoot. “Tonight kicks something off,” said Andy Byrd, a leader of Youth With a Mission (YWAM). He told the crowd they were witnessing the start of a “spiritual awakening”. Soon, the UK would send out “thousands of missionaries” to preach the name of Jesus – and “see every tribe, tongue and nation worshipping before the throne”. The event, called The Send, was a hit. Hundreds of attenders scanned a QR code committing to devote their lives to Jesus. Some poured into London and preached to passengers on the tube. The organisers of the event say it heralds a new era for the UK. Since Wembley, pop-ups from St Albans to Sheffield have recruited more people to the cause. “What we’re seeing – [our generation] have never had this. It’s one of those history-making moments,” a Send volunteer said. For those who are no longer in the fold, its rise rings alarm bells. Daniel* from Bristol signed up with YWAM, the global organisation leading The Send UK, aged 19. He moved to Perth, Australia for a training course, later leading mission trips to countries including India, Sri Lanka, Indonesia and Mozambique. At first, it was everything he’d hoped for: fun, adventure, a shared sense of purpose. “It was an experience that not many people get to have.” But behind the scenes, there was a darker side. Back at the base, there were strict rules about morality, purity and sexuality. Daniel, who is using a pseudonym, felt closely watched by the base leaders, who were “treated like royalty” and viewed as messengers for God. There was an expectation of obedience and absolute transparency, with regular confession of “sins”. People publicly repented for perceived moral transgressions, including disobedience, negativity, masturbation and homosexual thoughts. Sometimes, they underwent “healing” to banish demons. “The reaction was ‘This is a deep sin, so we’re going to need to cast this out’,” said Daniel, who was privately questioning his own sexuality. At one point, he considered leaving. But base leaders said it wasn’t God’s plan and told him to “go away and re-pray”. He stayed for another two years. “I thought, ‘Maybe God really is saying this,’” he said. For centuries, Christian missionaries have travelled the world preaching the gospel. In the 1800s and 1900s, western missionaries helped spread Christianity in Africa, Asia and Latin America. It was “very mixed up with colonialism”, said Rev Canon Mark Oxbrow from the Oxford Centre for Mission Studies. Today, the flow of western missionaries has slowed. “In Britain and Europe, there’s been a pretty steep decline,” said Brian Stanley, professor emeritus of world Christianity at the University of Edinburgh. At the same time, YWAM (pronounced why-wam) has thrived. Founded in 1960 by American Loren Cunningham, it has bases across more than 180 countries and trains young people to spread the gospel in “the nations”, often on short-term trips. Key targets include “the Muslim world”, “the Hindu world”, “tribal peoples”, and “the poor and needy”. The Observer has spoken to 21 current and former YWAMers whose experiences span two decades and 18 countries. For each of them, their first exposure to YWAM was a discipleship training school (DTS). Costing £5,000 to £10,000, the programmes, which follow a similar structure at all YWAM bases, are a “gateway” to the movement, combining an outreach trip with lectures on topics such as “sin, repentance and restitution”, “spiritual warfare” and “discipling nations”. Afterwards, graduates can stay on as unpaid volunteers in roles ranging from mentoring new students and leading mission trips to cooking and cleaning at a base. One former missionary, Lena Stary, 26, from Bristol, signed up for a DTS at YWAM’s base in Switzerland after leaving school. She said her A-levels hadn’t gone well and she was wondering “what on earth” she would do. Growing up in a churchgoing family, missionaries had been “revered”, so she began researching YWAM. Scrolling through the website for the YWAM base in Lausanne, near Lake Geneva, Stary, then 18, was captivated by the “whimsical, Swiss adventure vibes”. She took on two jobs to save £6,000 for the programme, room and board. At the base, she shared a room with five other young women and had a schedule of lectures and prayer sessions from “when you wake up to when you go to sleep”. Outside the classroom, she recalls rules on general life, including restrictions on dating, expectations about what people would wear, and how often they could leave to visit family. Early on, there was a message drilled in that “the best thing to do with your life is be a missionary”. She claims that leaders suggested “people who had left had backslidden” and that lectures were “very shame-driven” and “heavily focused on obedience, submitting to God and laying down your rights”. On the third day, students were invited to a “testimony night”, the first of many during Stary’s 18 months there. In a room in the headquarters – a converted hotel – they sat in a circle and confessed their sins. “You’re expected to share all your secrets,” Stary says. “If you were more reserved, it’s like you weren’t really committed to giving your life to Jesus.” Ex-missionaries from bases around the world describe similar sessions – often lasting late into the night or held over several days at a time. For some, it could feel cathartic. One British woman who did a DTS and trained as an outreach leader in London in 2019 said she spoke about “classic teenage insecurities” and that the sessions could feel like “counselling”. Other times, it felt punitive. People admitted to kissing outside marriage, homosexual thoughts, masturbating, having abortions, using sex toys, illegally streaming TV programmes and speeding. They could be prayed for, made to apologise, questioned in front of the group – or face punishment. A man in his 20s who admitted to having masturbated said he was asked to step back from a leadership role. Sources across multiple bases described how people were also put under pressure to confess to sinful thoughts – such as thinking highly of themselves or disagreeing with leaders, which was seen as “having a rebellious spirit”. Anything related to sex outside marriage was particularly problematic because of the belief that it leads people to form “soul ties”, soaking up each other’s sin. In this context, some people disclosed suffering sexual abuse. One woman who said she had been raped was prayed for by the group. At a base in Brazil, two British ex-YWAMers described how a man and woman were forced to apologise to the group after they were found to have “hooked up”. The other missionaries then voted on whether they should stay. Others were subjected to “healing” rituals similar to exorcisms. At a base in South Africa, a British ex-YWAMer described rituals branded as “inner healing”, which were used for people who had sex outside marriage. “We ‘prayed off’ all the demons and sin and asked God to forgive them and make them whole again.” Daniel recalled a similar ritual in Perth, where a man who admitted sexual relations with other men was subjected to a “casting out”. Leaders laid hands on him, chanting prayers as he convulsed on the floor. “People would say it was the opposite of God in you. I saw it as the spirit of homosexuality which needed to come out.” These “repentance and forgiveness” rituals are alleged to have been part of a wider picture of control. Former YWAM volunteers described rules ranging from an alcohol ban to restrictions on what music they could play, what clothes they could wear, when they could visit relatives and who they could date. Sammy*, 24, from Sheffield, joined a DTS during her gap year in 2018 at a now-closed YWAM base in King’s Cross. At first, she loved it. But when she returned for a leadership course, she found it “quite controlling”. At one point, she was put under pressure not to attend her ill grandmother’s birthday because it clashed with a church service. When she started dating a man from a Christian dating app she says she was told it was “ungodly”. “[The leader] said, ‘It’s your choice. You do what you want to do,’ but also, ‘It’s really bad.’ I got on the train home and cried a lot. There is shame that seeps through, even if you disagree.” At other bases, women were told not to wear leggings or strappy tops to avoid “tempting men” and opening “a door to the devil”. “There was so much [pressure] on the woman not to ‘let the brothers stumble’. It just makes you feel shit to be a woman,” an ex-YWAMer said. In South Africa, a woman was reprimanded by base leaders after telling friends she was considering getting dreadlocks. In an email, she was told not to get the hairstyle because it was linked with “rebellion, false worship, mind control, witchcraft … ostracisation from society, destruction and death” and would compromise the “spiritual integrity” of the base. “We thank you in advance for your submission to this boundary,” the email said. The woman said her time in YWAM had left her feeling “very trapped” and that the email was the “cherry on top”. Since leaving, she has had to unlearn what she had been taught about sex and the way women should behave. “It’s so damaging,” she said. “You are programmed that you have to hide yourself and that sex is wrong.” Many who shared their stories caveated them by saying it was not black and white. They made friends for life in YWAM, missed the strong sense of community and said the bad experiences were mixed with good ones. But several described the intense control and insular community as feeling “cult-like”. Though everyone was technically free to leave, they said there were practical and psychological barriers. “You’re not physically restrained, but the level of thought control – and the level of influence other people had over the way that you were living your life – made it hard,” said Stary. Often, YWAMers were young, thousands of miles from home, and reliant on YWAM for their housing and visas. Many say they were discouraged from taking outside jobs and encouraged to raise donations that were paid to YWAM for living expenses. One fundraising guide advised listing the names of “everyone you know, literally everyone” to ask for support. Some say they struggled to cover their basic needs, let alone extras like plane tickets. “I’d have to sell my furniture at the end of each month and then buy it all back again,” said one YWAMer. Eudo Albornoz, 35, a Venezuelan political sciences graduate now living in Bristol, left YWAM in December 2019 after spending seven years in Switzerland, Albania, and the Dominican Republic. He did missionary work in homeless shelters and orphanages and felt like he was “doing a good thing”, but found the experience “alienating”. “You feel like you are a saint, because you’re a missionary. And you feel like the leaders hear God more directly than your family would,” he said. “You don’t know how to get back to a regular church. You start mistrusting everybody outside YWAM.” Some say they were directly put under pressure by leaders not to leave. Emily Garcés, 43, a former YWAM staff member who now runs a Facebook group for those who have left, says she was told by base leaders in Argentina in 2005 that she could not leave with their blessing. “We sat in this big circle of leaders and they said, ‘We don’t think you should be doing this. If you go, you will fall into sexual sin.’” In the mission field, meanwhile, people described having a genuine desire to help the communities they served. YWAM says it aims to address “practical and physical needs” through relief and development initiatives. But looking back, some question the impact of the work. Daniel, the former outreach leader based in Perth, said teams would often work with people in extreme poverty; during one trip to Indonesia, he preached the gospel to sex workers in a Jakarta slum and collected statistics on how many people had been saved. “We would promise them that Jesus would change their life. But then a week later it was, ‘See you later! Bye! Have a nice life!’ And they’re still living in the slums,” he said. “I really look back and think, what was the fruit of our labour?” Others recall finding themselves in risky situations with little practical training – and being praised by leaders for their devotion. One YWAMer described smuggling bibles into countries where it was banned or strictly controlled. “No one said: ‘Don’t do this.’ It was more, like, encouraged. But if you are caught with them, you can go to prison. It was putting young people in really vulnerable situations,” he said. In South Africa, a young woman described going into a red light district while posing as the partner of a man hosting a sex party. The idea was to gather data on the sex trade and share the evidence with the police, but “there were a lot of gangs … watching these places and we were going door to door, trying to find the youngest girls”. Looking back, she says there was a lack of safeguarding, with “red flags left, right and centre”. “There was also this element of, if you’re doing something that’s a bit scary and a bit dramatic, it’s seen as more radical. We were praised for it. But actually, what was radical about it? We were being so stupid.” In response, YWAM said that while many people had positive experiences, some had suffered “spiritual abuse”, which it “deeply regrets”. It said it had sought to strengthen its policies, encouraged people to speak out and took safeguarding seriously. It has a decentralised structure, which devolves responsibility for bases to local leaders. In England, a spokesperson said YWAM held “traditional Christian views on sexuality and marriage” but was actively reviewing how it taught those views to ensure it did not cause “shame or rejection”. They said the organisation “strongly opposed” pressured public confessions; that no one should be shamed or made to apologise; and that “healing prayer must be conducted only with informed consent, trauma-awareness and appropriate spiritual and pastoral oversight”. They also condemned any practice that traumatised people or associated them with demonic influence. “We are deeply grieved to hear reports that spiritual practices intended for healing were used in coercive or shaming ways,” they said. YWAM Perth said the same, adding that while it held “traditional Christian convictions” about marriage and sexuality, it recognised that “in the past, some of our methods of encouraging this have lacked grace or sensitivity”. It was “truly saddened” by any negative impacts and never aimed to “coerce or control” anyone. It said a voluntary audit of its practices by an external agency in 2021 had led to it improving its policies and reporting structures. YWAM Lausanne denied missionaries were subject to strict rules, saying they could take six weeks of holiday a year, and that “instruction on what to wear” involved advice for their protection, such as when travelling to countries with a malaria risk or playing sports. It denied suggesting people who left had “backslidden”, saying it valued “every form of engagement in society equally”. It said claims that people felt alienated from the outside world did not reflect its beliefs or practices. “We encourage relationships and good communication with family, friends and the local church,” a spokesperson said. In relation to mission trips, a YWAM England spokesperson said teams were given thorough pre-departure briefings, including training in cultural sensitivities, and dangerous trips were discouraged. Teams also had an orientation on arrival. “We understand that these briefings are consistently practised across YWAM,” they said. Ex-YWAMers said they wanted the organisation to improve its complaints processes and to strengthen central oversight of bases, to improve the safety of both young missionaries and the communities they serve. Olivia Jackson, a researcher at Durham University who worked as a human rights consultant to mission movements and spent 10 years in YWAM herself, said the current decentralised structure allowed for “plausible deniability about abuse and poor behaviour”. When people did complain, she said concerns were not always escalated. “You’re told: ‘If it’s not on a par with what Jesus suffered for your sake, then you’ve got no right to complain.’” Sammy from the London base felt her concerns about leadership had not been taken seriously. She said there had been a “clear hierarchy” if another student or volunteer was accused of wrongdoing – but not when it was a base leader. “I remember talking to my [YWAM] mentor and the response was just: ‘Our leaders aren’t perfect,’” she said. While there is a decentralised structure, YWAM is founded on principles that apply across all bases. The University of the Nations, an unaccredited university that oversees training schools, sets the direction of courses and has codes of conduct that students must follow. These say “any moral violation”, including “sexual immorality”, is grounds for disciplinary action. Individual bases are more explicit about their policies, including a US base which lists fornication and homosexuality as immoral behaviours alongside incest and bestiality, and another which says changing gender “goes against God’s will”. Leaders have also made their views clear. In 2020, Lynn Green, founder of YWAM England, published a blogpost urging the human race to repent “for ignoring the laws of God”, blaming abortion and “the homosexual agenda” for “bringing destruction”. For Daniel, who was struggling with his sexuality, knowing YWAM had strict rules on sex outside marriage meant it initially felt like a “safe space”. Any niggles he might be gay became “more and more silenced”. “It felt quite nonexistent. There was nothing going on there,” he said. Witnessing the treatment of other gay people eventually made it impossible to ignore his own sexuality. He began believing his heart was “not clean” and said he felt that “fundamentally there was something wrong” with him. He would regularly repent of his thoughts and dreams. “I felt as though this demon was inside of me and I needed to get my heart right,” he said. “It was this constant struggle to be accepted by God.” At YWAM England’s HQ – a 48-acre campus in Harpenden, Hertfordshire – The Send UK and Ireland’s director, Josh Cutting, distanced the movement from problems of the past. He emphasised safeguarding, saying The Send was working with an external organisation which had given it a “vision” of how to “help people make good decisions”, prevent spiritual abuse and “avoid the power play” that could arise. And he said The Send was open to all. “Everyone’s in. We go on the journey together of people that are willing to say yes to [Jesus].” Cutting added that while The Send was closely connected to YWAM, it works in collaboration with 60 other churches and Christian groups, including those supporting people to do missions work at home as well as abroad. “The thing we have in common is we want to follow Jesus and obey his words and share the good news,” he said. Some ex-YWAMers say that, even so, it makes them “nervous”. With slick TikTok and Instagram marketing, The Send’s website pitches it as a modern movement for those who have shunned the church as a “tradition of the past”. But behind the marketing, there is a strong link to the evangelical right, including groups opposed to same-sex marriage and abortion. The Send itself was born out of The Call, an American prayer movement whose co-founder, Lou Engle, has caused controversy with his radical views, including speaking at a rally supporting Ugandan anti-gay laws, calling for the criminalisation of abortion and saying Muslim proclamations were fuelling the “demonic realm”. Asked about The Send UK’s link to Engle, who was pictured on its website until last week, Cutting provided a written comment saying the organisation was aware of “past statements” made by Engle which “do not reflect the culture or tone we want for The Send UK & Ireland”. He said that, while Engle played a role in the movement’s “early days” in the US, its UK team operated independently, adding that it held a “traditional Christian view of marriage” but rejected “any approach that fosters fear, exclusion, or internalised shame”. When the Observer spoke to Cutting, he said The Send had “an orthodox view on the things Jesus says” and that there was an “alignment” with Engle on issues such as marriage, but that he hoped that, in practice, this would “look slightly different in the UK because of how we would do it”. “It’s less polarising; it’s more nuanced,” he said. “That’s not to take away from what we believe.” In his written statement, he said The Send did not endorse, condone or facilitate public confession, coercion, shame or forced “healing”, adding that it had clear processes for reporting concerns. He said he was aware of concerns within YWAM and supported efforts to bring the issues to light, adding that The Send UK was committed to “fostering a message of respect, service to others and love”. For Sarah*, a current volunteer with YWAM and The Send, “submitting to Jesus” has been “the most releasing thing”. The 24-year-old said she had previously been living a “lukewarm lifestyle” with one foot in her religion and one out. So she quit her job at a PR agency in London to do a DTS in Hawaii. She now runs Send events in the UK and said she felt “honoured” to be part of it. Felicity Davies, a designer from Yorkshire, said she had joined YWAM at 18 because she was passionate about her religion and “really wanted to help people”. But she said her six years at bases in New Zealand and South Africa had left her feeling “suffocated” and “not good enough”. “I constantly had to do certain things in order for God to love me,” she said. After leaving, she came out as queer. She also began questioning the version of Christianity she had been taught. “I think there’s a lot of solid good bits in the Bible, but the version I’d seen just didn’t sit right,” she said. Now 34, she said movements such as The Send made her “nervous” for the next generation – and hopes speaking out will help young people make a more informed choice. “I learned so much about generosity and community in YWAM, so it wasn’t all awful. But people should be aware that this isn’t all happy-clappy,” she said. “A lot of people get traumatised. And no one’s held to account.” *Names have been changed

picture of article

France braced as far right and leftwing parties plan rallies in wake of Le Pen decision

France’s far right is hoping for a massive public show of support tomorrow in a “people’s protest” against Marine Le Pen being barred from standing for president in 2027. The Rassemblement National (National Rally – RN) party called for a nationwide demonstration under the banner “Save Democracy” after Le Pen was found guilty in a €4m (£3.4m) embezzlement trial. Leftwing and centrist parties have also called for separate gatherings in and around the capital in support of the law being enforced – as well to back the court, and judges who have been subject to death threats requiring police protection. The prime minister, François Bayrou, has called for the rival rallies to be held in a spirit of “calm, mutual respect and a spirit of responsibility” to avoid clashes. The Ouest-France newspaper said the demonstrations would be a “battle of images”. “We might almost believe we’re in the middle of an election campaign,” it wrote. The RN called for a “peaceful popular mobilisation” after Le Pen was found guilty last Monday of embezzling European Parliament funds through a huge fake jobs scam. A 10-year investigation was followed by a nine-week trial last autumn and the three judges delivered their verdict after a three-month deliberation. Le Pen and eight other RN European Parliament members, who all denied the charges and have appealed, were judged to have been part of an organised “system” of embezzlement between 2004 and 2016 in which European funds supposed to be used to pay EU parliamentary assistants were used to pay the party’s workers in France. The court found Le Pen to be at “the heart” of this system and guilty of directly organising eight fictitious contracts and instigating a wider fake jobs scheme. Le Pen and her colleagues are not the only French politicians to have been accused of financial impropriety. In February 2024, eight members of Bayrou’s centrist party MoDem were found guilty of similarly misusing European Parliament funds. They were fined, sentenced to prison terms and banned from public office. Bayrou was cleared of embezzlement. Rightwing French MP Éric Ciotti, who supports Le Pen, and has suggested overturning the law barring her and others convicted of fraud from public office, is under investigation on allegations of misuse of public funds. In 2022, former PM and presidential hopeful François Fillon and his Welsh wife, Penelope, were convicted on appeal of embezzling public funds in a fake job scandal. Le Pen was sentenced to four years in prison, two suspended and two to be served with an electronic tag. She was also fined €100,000 and hit with an immediate ban from public office for five years. Because of the appeal against her conviction, the sentence is postponed until a retrial, but the bar from public office remains in place. French legal authorities have said they will speed up the process, which can take decades, to ensure the Court of Appeal hears the case and delivers a verdict by the summer of 2026. To take part in the presidential election she will need to be either cleared, or convicted a second time but with the ban lifted. The second option raises the prospect of a convicted fraudster entering the Elysée wearing an electronic anklet. While the RN is hoping for a show of strength this weekend, polls suggest Le Pen may not have the public support she is counting on and claims. An institute cluster poll for Le Point magazine found 61% of French people thought her conviction justified and two out of three of those quizzed said the immediate application of a bar on standing for public office was “fair”; 43% said the condemnation and punishment was “extremely justified”. Stewart Chau, director of polling at Vérian Group, said France was engaged in a “battle of opinion” and that the polls had to be viewed with caution. “If 60% of people believe this justice is impartial and think Marine Le Pen is not above the law and should be judged like anyone else, it still means 40% do not agree and think it is a political decision, which is not an insignificant number,” Chau told the Observer. He said he did not think there would be a massive mobilisation in support of the RN on Sunday. “The RN is trying to wrap this judgement against it up as a wider issue of an attack on democracy. While the political earthquake caused by last Monday’s judgement is felt by the RN’s inner circle and its supporters, I don’t think the wider dynamic is there,” he added. The French far-right has repeatedly presented itself as above the corruption and abuse of power scandals that have hit other parties. Le Pen’s father and founder of the Front National, Jean-Marie Le Pen, who died in January, adopted the slogan “clean hands and head held high” before the 1993 legislative elections. For decades, his daughter, who took over the party in 2011, has campaigned for stricter laws to tackle corruption in public life; when the ineligibility rule for public office for convicted fraudsters was debated in parliament in 2016 she called for those found guilty to be barred for life. Commentators say to beware of rallies suggesting there is widespread popular support when most of those attending are already party members or supportersbackers. “There will no doubt be a large crowd at the RN’s Paris meeting on Sunday. As in 2017 at the meeting called by François Fillon at Place du Trocadéro when he was indicted. But beware of optical illusions: every time, it’s not the ‘people’ who revolt against the judges, it’s just the supporters, the faithful who fly to the aid of their candidate,” wrote FranceInfo.

picture of article

Youth Demand pro-Palestinian protest blocks traffic in London

About 40 Youth Demand protesters were told to move on by the police during a pro-Palestinian rally in central London on Saturday. The campaigners began gathering at Lincoln’s Inn Fields on Saturday morning and made their way to King’s Cross station. The action is part of Youth Demand’s plans for demonstrations every Tuesday and Saturday in April. Some protesters held banners which read “Stop arming Israel” while others let off green flares before being moved along by the Metropolitan police. Youth Demand said its supporters divided into two groups and, at about 12.15pm, a group of 40 people blocked traffic on Euston Road near King’s Cross. The Met issued the protesters with a warning under section seven of the Public Order Act, Youth Demand said, and the group moved on after 10 minutes. No arrests were made, according to Scotland Yard. A Met spokesperson previously said: “Youth Demand have stated an intention to ‘shut down’ London over the month of April using tactics including ‘swarming’ and road blocks. “While we absolutely recognise the importance of the right to protest, we have a responsibility to intervene to prevent activity that crosses the line from protest into serious disruption and other criminality.” Last Thursday, six people from Youth Demand were arrested at a Quaker House meeting on suspicion of conspiracy to cause a public nuisance. More than 20 uniformed police, some equipped with Tasers, forced their way into the Westminster meeting house. However, Youth Demand said the publicity surrounding the raid had had the effect of increasing awareness of their activities, and has resulted in a large number of people signing up to join.

picture of article

UK woman says she was not at abortion clinic ‘to express views’ after conviction

A woman who was given a conditional discharge after being convicted of breaching a buffer zone outside an abortion clinic in Bournemouth has claimed she was “not there to express my views”. Livia Tossici-Bolt, an anti-abortion campaigner whose case has been cited by the US state department over “freedom of expression” concerns in the UK, told the BBC’s Today programme she was “really disappointed” with the conviction “because it’s nothing to do with protesting” and said she would “continue my fight for freedom of speech”. Tossici-Bolt had stood with a sign reading: “Here to talk, if you want” facing the British Pregnancy Advisory Service (BPAS) clinic, which was previously targeted by anti-abortion activists who had gathered nearby before Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole council put the order in place. The campaigner went on trial at Poole magistrates court last month accused of breaching a public spaces protection order in March 2023 near a clinic in Bournemouth. On Friday she was found guilty of two charges of breaching the order. She was given a conditional discharge and ordered not to commit any additional offences over a two-year period. She was ordered to pay costs of £20,000 towards what the judge said had been the “considerable” resources expended by the local authority, along with £26 towards a victim surcharge fee. Tossici-Bolt told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme on Saturday: “I was not there to express my views. I was there to offer free conversation, consensual conversation, to anyone who wanted to speak to me and not on the topics I want to speak. I was there to listen.” She added: “I was there not to make any woman unhappy or distressed. I was there to speak to everyone in the community that wanted to have a conversation with me. “Certainly, anyone could have approached me, including, if they wanted to, women accessing the clinic. It was up to them and I was there to listen to them, not to try and convince them at all. I was just there for everyone just to talk to me.” When asked if she was there to try to get the women to change their minds, she said: “No, absolutely not.” Tossici-Bolt’s lawyer, Jeremiah Igunnubole, said he and his team were “exploring all legal options”. “We need to look very closely at the legal decision made yesterday and also the prosecution costs of £20,000 that has been imposed on Livia,” Igunnubole told the Today programme. “This is unprecedented circumstances; never before have we seen entirely peaceful conduct criminalised for nothing other than offering a consensual conversation.” A delegation from the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor (DRL), an office within the US Department of State, met Tossici-Bolt last month during a visit to the UK. They were accompanied by a US-backed anti-abortion group, which had been supporting her case. In a post on X hours after the conviction on Friday, the DRL said: “We are disappointed with the UK court’s conviction of Livia Tossici-Bolt for violating a designated ‘buffer zone’ at an abortion clinic. Freedom of expression must be protected for all.” After the verdict, the chief executive of BPAS, Heidi Stewart, said: “The clinic in Bournemouth has been subjected to decades of anti-abortion protests which resulted in more than 500 reports of harassment before this local safe access zone was brought into force. “This case was never about global politics but about the simple ability of women to access legal healthcare free from harassment.”