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Gaza ceasefire could lead to more Israeli alliances in Middle East, Vance says at Netanyahu meeting – live

Israelis were set on Wednesday to bid farewell to a Thai farm worker whose body will be repatriated to his native Thailand later in the day, the Associated Press (AP) reports. Sonthaya Oakkharasri was killed during the 7 October 2023 Hamas attack on Israel, and his body was held in Gaza until it was returned last weekend. A statement by the Families’ Headquarters for the Return of the Abductees said a gathering will be held at Ben Gurion airport in Tel Aviv to pay last respects to Oakkharasri, calling him a “devoted father and farmer who dreamed of establishing his own farm.” In the 2023 attack on Israel that started the war, Hamas-led militants killed about 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducted 251 people as hostages. The Israel-Hamas war has killed more than 68,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which does not distinguish between civilians and combatants in its count. The ministry maintains detailed casualty records that are seen as generally reliable by UN agencies and independent experts. Israel has disputed them without providing its own toll.

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Children among six killed in Kyiv after Russian missile and drone attack

Russian drones and missiles have pounded the Ukrainian capital and other cities, hours after the cancellation of a meeting between Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump, killing six people including a six-month-old baby, a 12-year-old girl and a woman, and damaging key energy facilities and several high-rise residential buildings. The attacks, involving over 400 drones and 28 missiles, lasted most of Tuesday night and into Wednesday morning as Kyiv was hit by at least four ballistic missiles. A drone strike on Kharkiv hit a kindergarten, killing one man and injuring seven others. A series of loud explosions were audible across Kyiv on Wednesday and towards dawn and beginning of the morning rush-hour, air defences targeting Russian drones could be heard above the sound of traffic. The Russian drone strike on the Kharkiv kindergarten came later on Wednesday morning. Footage from the immediate aftermath of the attack showed desperate parents and rescue workers carrying crying children to safety from the building. “There was a direct hit on a private kindergarten in the Kholodnoyarkiy district of Kharkiv. A fire started,” Kharkiv’s mayor, Ihor Terekhov, said in a statement. The Ukrainian president, Volodomyr Zelenskyy, posted on X: “There is no justification for a drone strike on a kindergarten, nor can there ever be. Clearly, Russia is growing more brazen. These strikes are Russia’s spit in the face to everyone who insists on a peaceful resolution. Thugs and terrorists can only be put in their place by force.” The latest strikes came a day after efforts to settle the nearly four-year war hit another impasse with the cancellation of a planned meeting in Budapest between the US presidentand his Russian counterpart. Zelenskyy said on Tuesday that he feared Russia was preparing to escalate it attacks as the US retreated from hints it might supply Tomahawk long-range cruise missiles. The strikes on Ukraine came as it was reported that Kyiv had launched a substantial attack on a major chemical plant in Bryansk, in south-western Russia, with Storm Shadow missiles, which are supplied by Britain and France. Ukrainian drones also hit Russia’s Mordovia region. The first explosions could be heard across Kyiv shortly after 1am and then more about half an hour later. Blasts were also reported in Zaporizhzhia, Poltava and Dnipro with strikes and air raid alerts continuing into the morning. Emergency services rescued 10 people after a fire caused by drone wreckage hit the sixth floor of a 16-storey residential building, while the strikes also blew out windows of a medical facility and debris was found at another residential building, Kyiv’s mayor, Vitali Klitschko, reported on his Telegram channel. In the Darnytskyi district of the capital, emergency services were responding after drone debris hit a 17-storey residential building causing a fire on five floors. In the Desnianskyi district, 20 people were rescued after the facade of a 10-storey building was damaged and a gas pipe caught fire. Strikes in Ukraine’s eastern Poltava region damaged oil and gas facilities, said the local governor, Volodymyr Kohut, while the city of Dnipro reported heavy strikes. The strikes also targeted the country’s energy infrastructure, leaving thousands without heating and electricity across Ukraine, according to the energy ministry. “Due to a massive missile and drone attack on the energy infrastructure, emergency power outages have been introduced in most regions of Ukraine,” it said in a statement. Russia has increased sharply the number and intensity of attacks on the Ukrainian energy system in recent weeks, targeting power plants and gas facilities. The latest attack came as Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, was due in Sweden on Wednesday for talks with the country’s prime minister, Ulf Kristersson, at the beginning of an intense period of European diplomacy. A meeting of the “coalition of the willing” is due to take place on Friday in London to shore up support for Ukraine in the face of the latest backsliding by Trump. “The prime minister andpresident Zelenskyy will hold a joint press conference to present news regarding defence exports,” the Swedish government said. In connection with the meeting, the leaders will also visit a company, it added. The latest airstrikes underlined the failure of the most recent efforts by Trump to persuade the Russian president to agree to a ceasefire even as the US president tried to strong-arm Zelenskyy into giving up the key eastern Donbas region at an acrimonious meeting last week. While Zelenskyy had flown to Washington hopeful of securing long-range Tomahawk cruise missiles, a two-hour phone conversation between Trump and Putin beforehand led to an abrupt U-turn, with Trump reportedly warning Zelenskyy that Putin would “destroy” Ukraine if he did not agree to Russia’s terms. In remarks at the White House on Tuesday, Trump suggested that Moscow’s refusal to cease fighting along the current frontline remained a key sticking point. Earlier, a White House official had said there were “no plans” for a Trump-Putin meeting “in the immediate future”.

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Trump’s call to freeze Ukraine conflict at current frontlines is ‘good compromise’, says Zelenskyy – Europe live

Russia’s defence ministry said on Wednesday that its forces had captured the village of Pavlivka in Ukraine’s southeastern Zaporizhzhia region, as well as Ivanivka village in neighbouring Dnipropetrovsk region, reports Reuters. The ministry also said, in a statement on Telegram, that it had struck Ukrainian energy infrastructure in what it said was a response to Ukrainian attacks on Russian civilian targets. Ukrainian authorities earlier said that six people had been killed in Russian strikes overnight (see 8.30am BST).

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Jewish figures across the globe call on UN and world leaders to sanction Israel

Prominent Jewish figures around the world are calling on the United Nations and world leaders to impose sanctions on Israel over what they describe as “unconscionable” actions amounting to genocide in Gaza. 460 signatories, including former Israeli officials, Oscar winners, authors and intellectuals have signed an open letter demanding accountability over Israel’s conduct in Gaza, the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem. The letter’s release comes as EU leaders meet in Brussels on Thursday amid reports they plan to shelve proposals for sanctions over human rights violations. “We do not forget that so many of the laws, charters, and conventions established to safeguard and protect all human life were created in response to the Holocaust,” the signatories write. “Those safeguards have been relentlessly violated by Israel.” Signatories include former speaker of the Israeli Knesset Avraham Burg, former Israeli peace negotiator Daniel Levy, British author Michael Rosen, Canadian author Naomi Klein, Oscar-winning film-maker Jonathan Glazer, US actor Wallace Shawn, Emmy winners Ilana Glazer and Hannah Einbinder, and Pulitzer prize winner Benjamin Moser. The signatories urge world leaders to uphold international court of justice (ICJ) and international criminal court rulings, avoid complicity in international law violations by halting arms transfers and imposing targeted sanctions, ensure adequate humanitarian aid to Gaza, and reject false claims of antisemitism against those advocating for peace and justice. “We bow our heads in immeasurable sorrow as the evidence accumulates that Israel’s actions will be judged to have met the legal definition of genocide,” the letter reads. The appeal follows a sharp shift in public opinion for US Jews and the wider electorate over the last few years. A Washington Post poll found that 61% of US Jews believe Israel has committed war crimes in Gaza, and 39% say it is committing genocide. Among the broader American public, 45% told the Brookings Institution they believe Israel is committing genocide, while a Quinnipiac survey in August found half of US voters share that view, including 77% of Democrats. Other signatories to the letter include the Israeli conductor Ilan Volkov, playwright V (formerly known as Eve Ensler), American comedian Eric André, South African novelist Damon Galgut, Oscar-winning journalist and documentarian Yuval Abraham, Tony award winner Toby Marlow and Israeli philosopher Omri Boehm. “Our solidarity with Palestinians is not a betrayal of Judaism, but a fulfillment of it,” the signatories write. “When our sages taught that to destroy one life is to destroy an entire world, they did not carve exceptions for Palestinians. We shall not rest until this ceasefire carries forward into an end of occupation and apartheid.” Since 7 October 2023, at least 65,000 Palestinians have been killed and more than 167,000 injured, according to Gaza’s health ministry, while the UN estimates that roughly 90% of the population is internally displaced. Two US Democratic senators, Chris Van Hollen and Jeff Merkley, concluded after a fact-finding mission to the region in September that Israel was implementing “a systematic plan to destroy and ethnically cleanse Palestinians from Gaza”, with the US complicit in these actions. Their report detailed the near-total destruction of civilian infrastructure, the weaponization of food and systematic obstacles to humanitarian aid delivery. The 10 October ceasefire has been shaken by repeated violations. The Palestinian news agency said Israel had violated the ceasefire 80 times and killed at least 80 Palestinians in the past 11 days. The Israeli military accused Hamas of violating the agreement, killing two Israeli soldiers in Rafah and delaying the return of hostages’ bodies. The public letter says that the truce makes no reference to the West Bank, where settler violence continues, and the underlying conditions of occupation remain unaddressed. More than 3,200 Palestinians have been injured in attacks in the West Bank this year, according to the latest UN humanitarian office report, and the UN documented 71 settler assaults during a single week in October. In one incident this week, a 55-year-old woman was hospitalized after being clubbed by a masked settler while picking olives, an attack captured on video. The Israeli civil rights group Yesh Din has found that just 3% of investigations into settler violence between 2005 and 2024 led to convictions. Shortly after taking office, Donald Trump lifted the limited sanctions Joe Biden had imposed on dozens of violent settlers and settler groups. The ICJ is expected to issue a new ruling this week clarifying Israel’s obligations in the occupied territories, following its July 2024 non-binding advisory opinion declaring the occupation unlawful. Yet EU foreign ministers are reportedly backing away from sanctions, despite findings by the bloc’s diplomatic service that there were “indications” Israel was breaching its human rights obligations under the EU-Israel association agreement.

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Wednesday briefing: Making sense of the Maccabi Tel Aviv saga, where law and disorder fumbled with fandom

Good morning. In the end, the decision that capped the controversy over the ban on Maccabi Tel Aviv fans attending their away match against Aston Villa was taken not in Birmingham, or even Westminster – but Tel Aviv. On Monday night, a statement on the team’s website said the club would be declining any allocation even if the ban was reversed. Because of “hate-filled falsehoods”, it added, “a toxic atmosphere has been created, which makes the safety of our fans wishing to attend very much in doubt”. That means that the government’s efforts to make their attendance possible are now academic. But it also heads off a potential nightmare scenario for those in the UK who have decried the ban: Maccabi fans being allowed to attend, and serious disorder breaking out as a result. With a few exceptions, there was a broad consensus in British politics that the local authority’s decision was wrong. But much of the discussion has ignored the rational case for that decision – which was taken in response to some of the worst football-related violence of recent years. Today’s newsletter attempts to unpick a tortuous political saga where fandom and antisemitism once again became a political football. Here are the headlines. Five big stories UK news | Family courts will no longer work on the presumption that having contact with both parents is in the best interests of a child, in a landmark change that domestic abuse campaigners have said “will save so many children’s lives”. Ukraine | Plans to hold a summit between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin in Budapest have been put on hold as Ukraine and its European allies rallied in pushing for a ceasefire without territorial concessions from Kyiv. Last night, Russian drones and missiles killed two people in Kyiv and damaged key energy facilities. Covid inquiry | Boris Johnson has rejected claims that his government failed to prepare for school closures at the outbreak of the pandemic, telling the Covid-19 inquiry that it would be “amazing” if the Department for Education (DfE) had not realised that plans were needed. Environment | Coal use hit a record high around the world last year despite efforts to switch to clean energy, imperilling the world’s attempts to rein in global heating, according to the annual State of Climate Action report published on Wednesday. Business | Almost half a million workers are to receive a pay boost after it was announced that the real living wage paid voluntarily by 16,000 UK companies will rise to £13.45 an hour in April. In depth: The mixed messages and repercussions of a controversy where all is not as it seems The Maccabi statement did not identify what finally led the club to decline any offer of tickets that might be forthcoming. But one plausible claim reported yesterday underlines what a toxic mess the situation has become: according to Jewish News, the final straw was Tommy Robinson’s promise to attend the match. A source said: “With Robinson’s supporters potentially posing as Maccabi fans on the streets of Birmingham, we concluded that the risk had become unacceptable.” In other words, even Maccabi recognised that an extremist intervention could put innocent fans at risk. Views will vary on whether that is the fault of those who ordered a ban in the first place, or those who sought to reverse a decision taken by those closest to the risk. We can, at least, try to make sense of how we got here. *** Why was the ban put in place? The decision was taken by Birmingham’s safety advisory group, which is responsible for issuing safety certificates for football matches, with the support of West Midlands police and the UK football policing unit. After the UK-wide body provided West Mids police with access to details of a previous outbreak of trouble in Amsterdam involving Maccabi fans (pictured above), the local force classified the fixture as high risk. Primarily on the basis of that evidence, the safety advisory group – which includes police representatives, event organisers, local authority officials and emergency planners – decided to ban Maccabi fans from attending. Vikram Dodd has a detailed report on the basis of the decision, which makes clear that it was largely the result of concerns about Maccabi fans – but also failed to consider that it might be interpreted as a surrender to antisemitism. Every English Westminster party other than the Greens opposed the decision, and the government, without directly overruling the safety advisory group, said it was working to make resources available to reverse it. Keir Starmer called the decision wrong and said “the role of the police is to ensure all football fans can enjoy the game”. That drew criticism from some with experience of similar issues, with Professor Lucy Easthope, an expert in emergency planning, warning of the appearance of interference, and saying that the prime minister had shown “terrible instincts”. Nazir Afzal, former chief executive of the Association of Police and Crime Commissioners, said: “When it comes to football related violence, the police – not politicians, not armchair pundits – know what’s safe and what isn’t.” *** Whose safety was at issue? One claim made repeatedly in the days since the decision was announced is the idea that Jewish Maccabi fans have been banned for their own safety. In the Spectator, Brendan O’Neill characterised the decision as “punishment of Maccabi fans to ‘save them’ from Brits who hate the Jewish homeland”. Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch said that it “sends a horrendous and shameful message: there are parts of Britain where Jews simply cannot go”. In parliament, the Labour MP Graham Stringer said: “It would be a disgrace and a shame if this country could not guarantee the security of a group of Jewish fans, coming from Israel, walking down our streets.” But those arguments seriously oversimplify the apparent basis of the ban. The trouble in Amsterdam, which has a large Muslim population, was initially characterised as an unprovoked antisemitic attack on Israeli fans. But the full picture that emerged suggested that the trouble had involved Maccabi fans attacking Muslims in the city, chanting things like “Why is there no school in Gaza? There are no children left there,” and instigating some of the earliest confrontations. There were also plainly antisemitic elements on the other side, including a call for a “Jew hunt” and what the mayor described as “antisemitic hit-and-run assaults” that drew no distinction between hooligans and ordinary fans. (We covered this at length in the newsletter last November.) Taken as a whole, the picture presented by this and other past incidents suggests that ordinary Jewish fans of Maccabi could be at risk should trouble arise in Birmingham, an obviously intolerable outcome – but that Maccabi’s hooligan element have a history of instigating disorder, and that nearby residents and fans, including members of Birmingham’s large Muslim community, would plausibly be at risk from them. *** What else do we know about Maccabi’s ‘Fanatic’ element? In that First Edition from last year, James Montague – an expert on football hooliganism – provided a useful explanation of the history of the “Fanatics”, the subset of Maccabi’s organised “Ultra” support who are violent. Traditionally, he said, “you have a very highly developed, very political culture” among Israeli club fanbases. Maccabi once fell in the middle of that spectrum, but that has shifted in recent years. Montague went on: You have to understand that as the politics of Israel changes, so do the politics of the Ultras. They are organised young men, many of whom have been in the IDF [Israel Defense Forces] because of conscription, and what they say and chant tracks where the country is.’ As a result, he said, there is a much stronger ultra-nationalist element within the Maccabi fanbase today. ‘That isn’t something about the club, per se. It’s something about how Israel is changing.’ In recent years, evidence has mounted of that shift. In Athens last year, Maccabi fans beat a man carrying a Palestinian flag ahead of their match against Olympiacos. They fought local residents in Cyprus in 2023 before a match against AEK Larnaca. A match against Turkish side Beşiktaş was relocated to Hungary, where it was played behind closed doors, because of fears of disorder. And there is an extensive history of racist chanting against Arabs. The chaos in Amsterdam was the most extreme example of that tendency. The Tel Aviv derby between Hapoel and Maccabi was called off on Sunday because of rioting and what Israeli police described as “risks to human life”. Ironically, there is good evidence that rather than being violence instigated by either fanbase, that disorder was the product of a growing tendency among Israeli police to target fans. This excellent Middle East Eye report has more on that. *** Were there other factors in the outcry over the ban? In a statement to the House of Commons, the culture secretary, Lisa Nandy, sought to put the government’s opposition to the decision in a broader context. The government’s stance, she said, was “set against a backdrop of rising antisemitism in this country and across the world, and of an attack on a synagogue in Manchester in which two innocent men were killed”. Supporters of that argument say that if the issue is whether the local police force has sufficient resources, they should be provided by central government, which Nandy said would be made available. Some have also argued that this is an attempt to introduce by the back door a ban on Israeli teams playing internationally: a petition promoted by the independent local MP Ayoub Khan before the decision was made said that “hosting such teams sends a message of normalisation and indifference to mass atrocities”. Councillors Waseem Zaffar and Mumtaz Hussain, who sit on the safety advisory group, have made the same argument. Fifa has come under pressure to institute such a ban given that some Israeli teams appear to be in breach of its rules against professional sides playing on occupied territory. Meanwhile, the Guardian’s Jonathan Liew noted the dizzying contortions that have led to “choosing to stand with the far-right foreign football hooligan against the local police force” – but also raised the “increasingly sinister securitisation of football fans at matches”. But as his piece suggests, it is possible to recognise that pattern and view the Maccabi decision as being based on a specific threat assessment, rather than evidence of a local authority cowed by antisemitism. *** Is there a precedent for this decision? Another claim repeated a lot in recent days – including from Nandy herself – is that this is an unprecedented step. But while such decisions are fairly unusual, it isn’t really accurate to say this is a unique case. Across the continent, there are numerous recent cases of away fans being banned from European fixtures. Feyenoord fans were banned from a game against Roma in Rome last year; Galatasaray fans were banned from Leverkusen in February; Benfica fans were banned from Marseille in April; Eintracht Frankfurt fans have been banned from attending next month’s match against Napoli. There are other examples besides. In England, Uefa banned Eintracht Frankfurt fans from Arsenal in 2019, and Red Star Belgrade fans from Tottenham in the same year. And in 2023, after violent clashes before Legia Warsaw’s match with Aston Villa, West Midlands police denied entry to all away supporters. What is true is that the Legia Warsaw case is the only recent example of a UK local authority banning away fans because of the risk of violence – and was a decision taken live, rather than pre-emptively. But it doesn’t follow that the Maccabi decision is evidence of a different analysis. Partly, it’s because such serious threats are relatively rare; and partly, it’s because where Uefa has made a decision, there is no reason for the local authority to act. What else we’ve been reading This moving and intimate photo essay about the “hidden victims” of the opioid crisis – those who lived after overdosing, such as JB Jarrett, above – will stay with me for a long time. Aamna This interactive offers a compelling, and utterly bleak, insight into the influence of the manosphere. One striking detail: misogynistic messages are the most dangerous result, but the thing that draws boys and young men in are the descriptions of financial success. Archie Sanae Takaichi has made history by becoming Japan’s first female prime minister. What plans does she have for a country whose population is ageing and shrinking faster than predicted? The answer apparently lies with Margaret Thatcher. Aamna Would you like a “Tamagotchi with a soul”? Alarming as this sounds, it’s also the basis of the Friend, a wearable AI device that’s meant to be a companion in lonely moments. Madeleine Agger spent a week with one, and it’s a relief to learn it often seemed like “the most boring person at a party”. Archie Is Instagram a safe place for teens? The app has introduced new safety features, but culture journalist Tayo Bero is, rightly, unconvinced. Aamna Sport Football | Two goals for Viktor Gyökeres added a gloss to Arsenal’s victory over Atlético Madrid, helping the Gunners to a 4-0 win. In the night’s other Champions League fixtures, Manchester City beat Villarreal 2-0 and Newcastle beat Benfica 3-0. Rugby | England’s Emily Scarratt has announced her retirement from rugby after a 17-year international career. The two-time World Cup winner said in a statement the “time feels right to step away”. Basketball | Looking forward to the return of the NBA, which tipped off last night? Check out this handy Guardian guide to the players, teams and narratives to watch as the season unfolds. The front pages The Guardian’s page one splash is “Family law shift hailed as victory for children facing domestic abuse”. The Times has “Chancellor plans £2bn tax raid on middle class” and the i paper runs with “Benefits set to rise by 4% as problems pile up for Reeves”. “Grooming gangs inquiry in chaos” – that’s the Mail while the Telegraph covers (the lack of) Ukraine developments: “Putin defies Trump as peace talks collapse”. “Boris: Our lockdowns failed kids” – that’s former PM Johnson at the Covid inquiry, in the Metro. The Mirror promotes its Pride of Britain awards under the headline “Britain isn’t broken, you are all amazing”. Keir Starmer is shown with recipients. “Help ensure Sasha’s evil killer stays inside prison” – that’s the Daily Express wanting the deadline scrapped for appeals against lenient sentences. “Bailey hears ‘alarm bells’ over private credit after big US corporate failures” – read that one in the Financial Times. Today in Focus AI slop: Is the internet about to get even worse? Tech journalist Chris Stokel-Walker analyses the rise and rise of AI-generated video, and what it will mean for the internet and beyond. Cartoon of the day | Ella Baron The Upside A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad Toad patrol groups are popping up across the UK to protect the beloved stalwart of the British countryside. The population has almost halved since 1985, but thanks to 274 dedicated patrol groups, their fortunes may slowly start to turn around. This decline is in part due to traffic: toads travel a fair distance from where they have been hibernating (often woodland ) towards a large pond to mate. This often means travelling across country roads, but many don’t make it. It is estimated several hundred thousand toads are killed on UK roads every year. Enter toad patrol groups, who carry toads across roads in buckets, as well as counting the number (dead and alive) they find. These groups also lobby for other protection measures, such as road closures and underground wildlife tunnels. 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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‘They can’t dismiss Leo so easily’: how the pope has confounded conservatives

When King Charles meets Pope Leo XIV at the Vatican this week, the two leaders are likely to discuss pressing global issues as well as sharing a historic moment of prayer. In the face of volatility and rising nationalism, Leo, the first North American chosen to lead the Roman Catholic church, has begun to outline the contours of his papacy after a low-key start to his five-month-old papacy. For conservative Catholics who hoped he would represent a break with the policies and priorities of his immediate predecessor, Pope Francis, the signs are not good. “It’s been made quite clear in recent weeks that Leo, substantively, is of the same mould as Francis,” said Christopher White, the author of Pope Leo XIV: Inside the Conclave and the Dawn of a New Papacy and a senior fellow at Georgetown University in Washington DC. “They have very different styles. Francis was unscripted, spontaneous. Leo is cautious and careful in the way he speaks and acts. But I think they both view the church as what Francis described as a field hospital that has to tend to the most marginalised, particularly the poor in society.” After his unexpected election at the conclave of cardinals in May, Leo spoke from the balcony of St Peter’s Basilica in Rome of the need to build bridges. He delighted conservatives by wearing a red mozzetta, a traditional papal garment spurned by Francis. Leo moved into the papal apartment in the Apostolic Palace in contrast to Francis’s living quarters in the modest Santa Marta guesthouse, and retired for several weeks over the summer to Castel Gandolfo, a papal bolthole also largely shunned by the Argentinian pope. He held private meetings with Raymond Burke, a prominent conservative US cardinal, and Robert Sarah, a prelate from Guinea, both of whom were outspoken critics of Francis. Leo allowed Burke celebrate a Latin mass in St Peter’s Basilica, which Francis had refused. He also seemed less inclined than his predecessor to make off-the-cuff controversial comments or to criticise the penchant of some cardinals and Vatican officials for luxuries and deference. It seemed to signal a different approach, and some hoped it meant a break with Francis. The last few weeks suggest they were mistaken. Earlier this month, Leo received a group of US bishops recently at the Vatican. They shared with him dozens of letters from immigrants to the US that described raids on their communities and their fears of deportation under Donald Trump’s hardline policies. In the meeting, the pontiff made his views clear. “He expressed his desire that the [US bishops] speak strongly on this issue,” Mark Seitz, the bishop of El Paso in Texas, told Reuters. “It means a lot to all of us to know of his personal desire that we continue to speak out.” Three days before Leo met the group of US bishops, he spoke about migration at holy mass attended by more than 10,000 people in St Peter’s Square. “In long-established Christian communities, like those in the west, the arrival of many brothers and sisters from the global south should be embraced as a chance,” he said, his remarks in sharp contrast to Trump’s statements. A few days before that, Leo told reporters: “Someone who says: ‘I am against abortion but I am in agreement with the inhuman treatment of immigrants in the United States,’ I don’t know if that’s pro-life.” He has endorsed Francis’s focus on the climate crisis, telling a conference that some world leaders have chosen to “deride the evident signs of climate change, to ridicule those who speak of global warming and even to blame the poor for the very thing that affects them most”. Leo published his first apostolic exhortation, on “love for the poor”. Dilexi te, which was initiated by Francis before his death, says Christians “must not let our guard down when it comes to poverty” and must “continue to denounce the ‘dictatorship of an economy that kills’”. With strong echoes of Francis’s criticism of inequality, the document says: “In a world where the poor are increasingly numerous, we paradoxically see the growth of a wealthy elite, living in a bubble of comfort and luxury, almost in another world compared to ordinary people. This means that a culture still persists – sometimes well disguised – that discards others without even realising it and tolerates with indifference that millions of people die of hunger or survive in conditions unfit for human beings.” Last week, Leo condemned the use of hunger as a weapon of war, without naming any specific conflicts or countries. Global hunger was a “clear sign of a prevailing insensitivity, of a soulless economy … and of an unjust and unsustainable system of resource distribution”, he told a UN conference. These interventions have “seen Leo’s papacy really take off”, according to Christopher Lamb, CNN’s Vatican correspondent and author of a forthcoming book on the US pope. “Although he has a more reserved personality than Pope Francis, he comes across as a determined character, and he’s shown he’s taking up the baton from his predecessor on key issues. “Leo is also now facing criticism from the same conservative quarters as Francis.” Some conservative commentators are calling Leo the “woke pope”. He should “return to his previous silence”, according to the conservative Catholic blog Rorate Caeli. White told the Guardian: “There are certain American conservative Catholics that hoped to see a course correction with the new pope, and many of those would be the sort of American Catholics who are more aligned with Maga. “A pope who happens to be an American and who is suspicious and critical of unbridled free market capitalism is probably a disappointment to them. Francis was often dismissed by his conservative critics in the US who would say he just doesn’t understand our country. They can’t dismiss Leo so easily.” Leo, he added, was “not temperamentally someone that is looking for a fight. But I think he also realises the responsibility on his shoulders to use the megaphone he’s been given on behalf of those who are without a voice. His instinct is to build bridges. But he believes you can’t do that while sacrificing your integrity and certain causes that require you to speak out.”

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Ukraine war briefing: Storm Shadow missiles ‘hit gunpowder plant in Russia’

Storm Shadow missiles struck a Russian chemical plant making gunpowder, explosives and rocket fuel in the Bryansk region, Ukraine’s military said late on Tuesday. The French-British missiles are also known as Scalp. “A massive combined missile and airstrike was carried out, including with air-launched Storm Shadow missiles that penetrated Russia’s air defence system,” said Ukraine’s armed forces general staff. Alexander Bogomaz, the governor of Bryansk region, said on Tuesday afternoon that Ukraine attacked the region with drones and missiles. The Russian defence ministry also confirmed an attack. Russian strikes on Kyiv killed at least two people, the head of the city’s military administration, Tymur Tkachenko, said on Wednesday. The attacks sparked fires and shattered windows in several districts, mayor Vitali Klitschko said. Other city officials reported a large drone attack followed the strikes. Other areas being hit included Zaporizhzhia, Dnipro, and the city of Izmail, a port on the Danube river. Plans for a summit between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin in Budapest have been shelved, Dan Sabbagh reports, after an apparently unproductive phone call between Marco Rubio and Sergei Lavrov. Their call also led to the cancellation of a meeting planned in Hungary’s capital for this Thursday between Rubio, Donald Trump’s secretary of state, and Lavrov, Vladimir Putin’s foreign minister. A senior European diplomat told Reuters the Russians “haven’t at all changed” their maximalist position of Ukraine giving up the entire Donbas region. “And I assume Lavrov gave the same spiel, and Rubio was like: ‘See you later’.” Another European diplomat thought that “it became evident for the Americans that there will be no deal for Trump in Budapest”. Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Russia “almost automatically became less interested in diplomacy” once US Tomahawk missiles for Ukraine were no longer an immediate prospect. The Ukrainian president continued: “The greater the Ukrainian long-range capability, the greater the Russian willingness to end the war … As soon as the issue of long-range [capability] became a little further away for us – for Ukraine – Russia almost automatically became less interested in diplomacy.” The diplomatic efforts centred around Trump were “going in circles” and felt as if they were being dragged out, a senior Ukrainian official told Agence France-Presse. While varying from day to day, Trump’s most recent stance is that the war should be halted along the current frontline without Ukraine making territorial concessions. European diplomats meanwhile said countries were working with Ukraine on a new proposal for a ceasefire along current battle lines. One told Reuters the proposal included a reference to a peace board that would be chaired by Trump, while another said it would be modelled on the US 20-point plan on Gaza. Some 35 allies of Ukraine will meet on Friday in London for a summit among countries willing to provide long-term support to Kyiv. The European work on a peace proposal seems at least partly calculated to simply keep Washington engaged with helping Ukraine by giving Trump and the US an important role, rather than produce a deal both sides would actually accept. For example, a proposal to siphon off some of Russia’s frozen assets to fund a portion of reparations payments to Ukraine “would be a non-starter for Russia”, one diplomat said. Russian attacks killed four people and left hundreds of thousands without power and many without water in Ukraine’s Chernihiv region on Tuesday. The energy ministry said the regional capital, Chernihiv city, and the northern part of the province lost all electricity supply after strikes on power facilities. By the afternoon, Reuters reporters in Chernihiv saw that power supply was back in some places. A daytime attack by about 20 Russian kamikaze drones killed four civilians and wounded at least seven more including a 10-year-old child in the town of Novhorod-Siverskyi, local officials said.