Read the daily news to learn English

picture of article

US envoy Steve Witkoff set to meet Netanyahu in Israel after Rafah border crossing to Gaza reopens – latest updates

The UK’s foreign secretary, Yvette Cooper, has welcomed the limited reopening of the Rafah border crossing between the Gaza Strip and Egypt, but stressed that much more still needed to be done. In a post on X, she wrote: I welcome Rafah reopening for people to cross both ways on foot, allowing some in desperate need to access medical care in Egypt. But much more still needs to be done. Aid must flow in, restrictions on essential supplies must ease, & aid workers must be allowed to operate. Cooper became foreign secretary in September 2025 after twelve months as home secretary. The UK government has been criticised for its failure to publish its legal response to the advisory opinion of the international court of justice (ICJ) in July 2024 that ordered Israel to end its unlawful occupation of Palestine, for allowing the export of F-35 fighter jet components to Israel, and for not taking a tougher stance against Israel during the course of the war, which caused a catastrophic humanitarian crisis and has seen an extremely high civilian death toll caused by Israeli attacks. As the Guardian’s diplomatic editor, Patrick Wintour, notes in this story, Mark Smith, a diplomat who quit his Foreign Office job over the UK’s refusal to stop selling arms to Israel in August 2024, has said civil servants who challenged the IDF’s methods were routinely pressed to tone down their findings “so it sounded less bad”. “Thousands of conversations within the walls of the Foreign Office on the most controversial aspects of our arms sales policy will never be seen by the public [and] never be put to a court because they were held in person,” he said. The UK, which has funded aid and supported airdrops and evacuations, has criticised delays in aid being allowed into Gaza.

picture of article

Talks between Ukraine and Russia to restart on Wednesday, Kremlin says – latest news

Separately, balloons used to smuggle cigarettes from Belarus have been reported crossing into Polish airspace for a third night in a row, AP reported. Polish authorities on Monday said the “hybrid incidents” were part of the threat to the country’s eastern border posed by Russia’s ally Belarus. “The Belarusian side made another attempt at reconnaissance and checking the reaction of the Polish air defense systems,” the Operational Command of the Polish Armed Forces wrote in a report on X into the incidents from 31 January to 1 February. AP noted that Poland’s military said the recent incidents posed “no threat to the security of the Polish airspace”. However, temporary restrictions for civil aviation were imposed on part of the airspace over the Podlaskie region bordering Belarus. In December, Lithuania declared a national emergency over security risks posed by meteorological balloons sent from Belarus that had violated its airspace. The balloons had forced Lithuania to repeatedly shut down its main airport in Vilnius, stranding thousands of people.

picture of article

‘A violation of our history’: Palestinian uproar over Israel’s plan to seize historic West Bank site

The Byzantine-era church lies half hidden in the shade. Roman columns rise from among the olive trees, even older ruins linked to Israelite kings are overgrown. To the west, the Mediterranean is just visible on the horizon. To the north and south are the hills of the occupied West Bank. In the small town of Sebastia, a hundred metres or less east of the ruins, everyone is very worried. In November, Mahmud Azem, the mayor of Sebastia, received a notice from Israeli authorities announcing the seizure of the whole of the sprawling hilltop archaeological site next to the town. Though there have been reports of an Israeli government project to develop the site for several years, the notice came as a shock. Most of the 3,500 Palestinian residents depend on either tourism at the site or their olive trees for their livelihoods. The current plans for development of the site involve a visitors’ centre, a car park, and a fence that will separate the ruins from the rest of the town, cutting residents off from the ruins and any olive orchards that survive. “Unfortunately Sebastia has gone into a dark tunnel,” said Azem, 50. “It is an aggression against Palestinian landowners, against olive trees, against tourist sites and it is a violation of the history and the heritage of Palestine.” The expropriation of 182 hectares (450 acres) at Sebastia is the largest ever seizure of land for an archaeological project since Israel occupied the West Bank after its victory against Syria, Egypt and their Arab allies in 1967. Supporters of the project in Israel say the site has been undeveloped for decades. They say too that Sebastia has been identified as the capital of a northern Israelite kingdom known as Samaria between the 9th and 8th centuries BC. Critics say the heritage project is part of a surge of expansion of Jewish settlements across the West Bank that has been forcefully promoted in recent years by Israel’s ruling coalition government, and any historical significance is merely a pretext for a massive land grab. Much of the area marked for expropriation by Israeli authorities is privately owned, setting another new and dangerous precedent, according to campaigners. Alon Arad of Emek Shaveh, an Israeli NGO that aims to maintain ancient sites “as public assets that belong to members of all communities, faiths and peoples”, said archaeology was being “weaponised”. “What is planned for Sebastia is … really unprecedented in its scale. And it is very cynical … It is not about history, it is really just about land and annexation,” Arad said. The multimillion-dollar project to redevelop Sebastia is being driven by members of the far-right ultranationalist Otzma Yehudit party, which is part of Israel’s coalition government, the most rightwing the country has ever had. A new access road to the site will bypass Sebastia entirely, allowing tourists to arrive directly from Israel, with expansion of a large Jewish settlement just a kilometre or so from the site expected too. Amichai Eliyahu, the Israeli minister of heritage, is a member of Otzma Yehudit, lives in a settlement in the West Bank and is an outspoken advocate of annexation of the entire territory. “Sebastia is one of the most important sites in our national and historical heritage … Our desire is to breathe new life into the site and make it an attraction for hundreds of thousands of visitors a year, which will strengthen the connection between the people, their heritage, and their country,” Eliyahu said in a statement last year. The complex and multilayered past of Sebastia revealed by excavations over the last century has allowed partisans on both sides to selectively emphasise the significance of the sites’ history. Leaders of the settlement movement in Israel have accused the Palestinian Authority, which exercises partial authority over parts of the West Bank, and local representatives in Sebastia of seeking to erase the site’s biblical significance, and its connection to Jewish history. Israel now refers to the occupied West Bank by the names of the two iron age kingdoms that ruled over its approximate extent: Judaea in the south and Samaria, or Shomron in Hebrew, in the north. The new site in Sebastia is to be known as the Shomron national park, according to plans. Wala’a Ghazal, the curator of a small museum set in the courtyard of a 13th-century mosque in the town, said that to emphasise just one moment in Sebastia’s complex story was wrong. The mosque, rebuilt by the Ottomans, was once a Crusader cathedral which itself was originally a Byzantine church. It houses the tomb of John the Baptist. “There has been continual habitation … It is not right just to focus on one or other period. Samaria happened in the iron age but there were people living here before then,” she said. The kingdom of Samaria was destroyed when the Assyrians invaded in 722BCE, archaeologists believe. Later, Alexander the Great destroyed another settlement there, which was then rebuilt by King Herod and renamed in honour of Emperor Augustus. Over subsequent centuries, Sebastia came under Byzantine, Islamic, Crusader, Ottoman and British rule. Other Israeli government-backed archaeological projects elsewhere in the West Bank and in East Jerusalem have also been criticised as motivated more by ideology than a search for knowledge. One major dig in a Palestinian neighbourhood in Jerusalem very close to the holy sites of the Old City is managed by the City of David Foundation, an Israeli government-funded archaeological park in Jerusalem. It is run by Elad, an Israeli settler group accused of displacing Palestinian families from Jerusalem by buying Palestinian houses and using controversial laws that let the state take over Palestinian property. An EU report in 2018 said Elad’s projects in parts of East Jerusalem were being used “as a political tool to modify the historical narrative and to support, legitimise and expand settlements”. International law prohibits an occupying force from developing or otherwise interfering with archaeological locations. Sebastia has been inscribed since 2012 on Unesco’s tentative list of world heritage sites for the State of Palestine. Few tourists have visited Sebastia since the war in Gaza broke out in October 2023 but residents have been hoping for a return of the hundreds who came daily before. Mahmud Ghazal lives adjacent to the remains of the Roman-era basilica and forum. His home, gift shop and restaurant straddle the line that is set to be the new, uncrossable fence around the site, overlooking the tumbled columns and marble ruins. The 63-year-old is pessimistic. “This [development plan] will destroy Sebastia. They will take everything from us,” Ghazal said.

picture of article

Dalai Lama expresses ‘gratitude and humility’ at first Grammy win

His trophy cabinet already contains a Nobel peace prize, a presidential medal of freedom and the Gandhi peace prize. And the superstar status of the Dalai Lama, the 90-year-old Buddhist spiritual leader, was given a further boost on Sunday night as he took home his first Grammy award. The Dalai Lama, who lives in exile in India, was announced as the winner for the narration and storytelling category for his spoken word album, Meditations: The Reflections of His Holiness the Dalai Lama. “I receive this recognition with gratitude and humility,” he said in a social media post after the awards. “I don’t see it as something personal, but as a recognition of our shared universal responsibility.” The Dalai Lama is the most revered figure in Tibetan Buddhism and a tireless advocate for the rights of Tibetans since the region was annexed by China. Tibetan Buddhists believe he is the 14th reincarnation of a spiritual leader first born in 1391. His Meditations audiobook featured recordings of him speaking on peace, compassion and mindfulness and was set to a score by the Indian classical musician Amjad Ali Khan and his sons. “I truly believe that peace, compassion, care for our environment, and an understanding of the oneness of humanity are essential for the collective wellbeing of all 8 billion human beings,” said the Dalai Lama, in his statement after receiving his Grammy. The audiobook also features artists such as Maggie Rogers and Rufus Wainwright, who accepted the award on behalf of the Dalai Lama at the ceremony in Los Angeles. The Dalai Lama was 23 when he fled the Tibetan capital, Lhasa, in fear for his life after Chinese troops crushed an uprising in 1959. He has never been able to return, and in the years since he set up home in the Indian city of Dharamshala alongside fellow Tibetan exiles. Over the decades, the Dalai Lama has become a globally revered figure with his messages of peace, harmony and non-violence garnering millions of devotees. Though 90, he insists he has many more years to live. However, many Tibetans fear his death will trigger a tense succession battle between the Tibetan community and the Chinese government, which for decades has sought to control the institution of the Dalai Lama to secure their influence over Tibet. The Chinese have accused the Dalai Lama of being a separatist dissident and a “wolf in monk’s clothing”. After his 90th birthday last year, the Dalai Lama pushed back at attempted Chinese interference in the Tibetan institution. He affirmed that, as per centuries of tradition, he would be reincarnated after his death but only his inner circle – a trust of closely allied monks – would have the “sole authority” to locate his successor.

picture of article

Co-writer of Oscar-nominated film It Was Just an Accident arrested in Iran

A co-writer of Oscar-nominated film It Was Just an Accident has been arrested in Tehran just weeks before the Academy Awards, after signing a statement condemning Iran’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, for recent bloodshed in the country. The human rights campaigner Mehdi Mahmoudian was detained on Saturday after adding his name to a statement declaring that “the primary responsibility for these atrocities lies with Ali Khamenei, the leader of the Islamic Republic, and the repressive structure of the regime”. Two more of the 17 signatories, Vida Rabbani and Abdullah Momeni, have also been arrested. Authorities have so released no information about the charges against those detained. It Was Just an Accident, which won the Palme d’Or at the Cannes film festival in 2025, is a contender for best international feature film and best screenplay at the Oscars on 15 March. The film follows a group of Iranian former political prisoners grappling with whether to exact revenge on a man they believe tortured them in prison. Mahmoudian is primarily known as a journalist and human rights activist. He met the film’s director, the veteran auteur Jafar Panahi, in prison. In a statement shared with the Guardian, Panahi praised Mahmoudian’s “calm demeanor”, “kind conduct”, and “rare sense of responsibility toward others”. “Whenever a new prisoner arrived, Mehdi would try to provide them with basic necessities and, more importantly, offer reassurance,” Panahi said. “He became a quiet pillar inside the prison – someone inmates of all beliefs and backgrounds trusted and confided in.” After Mahmoudian’s release, Panahi invited him to refine the screenplay’s dialogue, drawing on his nine-year experience behind bars. “Mehdi Mahmoudian is not just a human rights activist and a prisoner of conscience,” Panahi said. “He is a witness, a listener, and a rare moral presence … whose absence is immediately felt, both inside prison walls and beyond them.” Large protests against the regime’s handling of Iran’s deepening economic crisis erupted across the country in late December. The regime responded with an internet blackout and severe crackdowns. Iran’s official death toll, released by the Martyrs Foundation, is 3,117, including members of the security services. However, networks of medical professionals inside and outside the country estimate the actual number could exceed 30,000.

picture of article

Monday briefing: The community solidarity driving the fightback against ICE in Minneapolis

Good morning. The world’s attention has been fixed on Minneapolis for weeks now. The small midwestern US city has been under siege since Donald Trump’s administration launched its latest immigration crackdown in December. Public outrage has reached fever pitch across the US after the killing of two US citizens, Renee Good and Alex Pretti. Though the White House has softened its rhetoric in relation to the killings, there is little indication of any meaningful shift in tactics on the ground. But, amid the justified focus on state violence, another story is unfolding. It is a story of parents patrolling schools, neighbours shopping for families sheltering at home; and alarms rippling through communities when ICE vans are spotted. It is a story of a community fighting back. To understand how this response took shape, I spoke to Sarah Jaffe, a labour journalist and author of From the Ashes: Grief and Revolution in a World on Fire, who has been reporting from Minneapolis for more than a decade, about what this moment reveals about power and solidarity. First, the headlines. Five big stories Epstein files | Peter Mandelson says he has resigned his membership of the Labour party to avoid causing it “further embarrassment” after more revelations about his friendship with Jeffrey Epstein. Iran | Donald Trump has said Iran is talking to the US, hinting at a deal that would avoid the use of military strikes. Ukraine | A Russian drone attack on a bus carrying mine workers in Ukraine’s central-eastern Dnipropetrovsk region has killed at least 12 people, officials said. Cuba | The United States has said it will ensure there will be no more fuel shipments to the beleaguered island, “Cuba will be failing pretty soon,” Donald Trump said earlier in the week. Grammy awards | Bad Bunny and Kendrick Lamar took home major Grammy awards during a night that saw musicians hit back at Donald Trump’s ICE occupation. In depth: ‘My neighbours are important and I will take risks to protect them’ Renee Good, a mother of three, writer and poet, dropped off her six-year-old son at school on 7 January, before encountering Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents nearby, who she stopped to ask what was going on, according to her family’s lawyer. She was killed by an ICE agent minutes later. Weeks later, on 24 January, Alex Pretti, an intensive care nurse, asked a woman who had been tackled to the ground and pepper-sprayed by nearby ICE agents: “Are you OK?” Those were the last words he spoke before he was killed. Sarah Jaffe tells me that what we’re seeing in Minneapolis is a powerful repudiation of Margaret Thatcher’s old assertion that “there is no such thing as society”. “We don’t experience the world in our own little world,” Jaffe tells me. “People are saying my neighbours are important – as important as my family – and I will take risks to protect them, even though I don’t know them and they’re complete strangers.” She is not surprised that the resistance to Trump has mobilised most effectively in Minneapolis. “Minneapolis has led the country in rebellion before, and it will probably do so yet again.” *** Sticking a wrench in the gears of ICE The ramping up of ICE enforcement activity in the Twin Cities, which refers to the Minneapolis and St Paul metropolitan area, began in December. In response, community defence networks were mobilised almost immediately and have only grown in strength since. The ways this defence has played out have been varied and creative, Jaffe says. Small business owners have been central to the response. A restaurant called Modern Times announced it would give food away to the local community and survive on donations, declaring, “Until the occupation is over, we are Post Modern Times.” A sex shop, Smitten Kitten, has transformed into a mutual aid hub, while a romance bookstore has been asking for recommendations for accessible books about labour and social movement history so they can stock them, she adds. The hospitality industry has been at the forefront. “An extraordinarily large number of the restaurant cooks in the US are undocumented or of some sort of precarious legal status,” Jaffe says. “So they’re putting up signs on kitchens that say ‘this is a private area for employees only, you can only come here with a warrant’.” For the outside world, the most visible organising has been around schools, where videos of parents patrolling drop-off and pick-up have gone viral online. Jaffe says parent groups began doing this after realising ICE agents were waiting at bus stops to detain parents collecting their children. Jaffe has reported ICE throwing teargas outside school buildings, with teachers trying to protect their students. Mutual aid groups first built during the pandemic have been reactivated to provide essentials to families sheltering in place. “People who are doing grocery runs are being told to not put any of the details in their phones, not to use GPS, to write the number and the address down on a piece of paper, and if they get stopped by ICE to eat it,” she says. Coordination has come through the Minnesota Democracy Defense Table, a coalition of about 80 organisations working on rapid-response teams and recruitment. But even seasoned activists have been shocked by the violence. “They smash your car window, cut your seatbelts, and just yank you out of it,” Jaffe says. “They’re grabbing anyone at this point and asking questions later.” There have even been cases of children left behind in car seats. Clergy have staged sit-ins at airports, and protesters have occupied corporate offices including Target and D R Horton, demanding companies refuse cooperation with ICE and protect workers. At every stage, Jaffe says, people are asking: “How do you stick a wrench in the gears of what ICE is doing?” Union organising has been at the heart of this struggle. On 23 January, it culminated in a “no work, no school, no shopping” general strike, hoping to hurt the economy in solidarity against the federal ICE deployment. Hundreds of businesses closed, and hundreds of thousands of residents took to the streets in temperatures of –23C. Calls are now growing for a nationwide general strike against ICE activity. *** A history of resistance This level of community mobilisation is not an eruption of spontaneous anger, Jaffe explains, but the result of more than a decade of organising coming into alignment. Jaffe first began reporting on the city’s social movements in 2012, focusing on the Occupy Homes movement, a spin-off from Occupy Wall Street. “Folks in the Twin Cities didn’t want to fight to occupy a park all winter long because you’ll be under 6 feet of snow. So, they moved really quickly to keep people in their homes who are about to lose them,” she says. She explains how the long history of police violence has forged together a community of protesters, from teachers, to labour organisers, to those who grew out of the Occupy movement. When Philando Castile, a school cafeteria worker, was killed by the police, “that really helped radicalise the teachers’ unions, particularly in St Paul, because he was one of them,” Jaffe says. Each police killing became a flashpoint, radicalising new layers of people. Where George Floyd was killed was a block away from the offices of Centro de Trabajadores Unidos en la Lucha, which supports Latino workers, she explains. These organisations provided spaces where people could gather, wash their face from teargas, and connect with experienced organisers, she adds. And from this ecosystem, new leadership emerged. Marcia Howard, a teacher for 20 years who coordinated the sustained occupation of George Floyd Square as a semi-autonomous zone and protest space after his death, is now vice-president of the Minneapolis Federation of Teachers. “Her student was the young woman who filmed George Floyd’s killing,” Jaffe says. What looks like separate crises – policing, education, housing, immigration – overlap in daily life. “As my dear departed friend Jane McAlevey would say, people don’t live single-issue lives,” Jaffe says. *** Cracks in the coalition The Trump administration has hit Minneapolis, and previously Los Angeles and Chicago, with such force in the hope of making an example of them, Jaffe says. “These are places that are the centre of the resistance camp, and he would love to break them. But news flash: he can’t. He couldn’t break LA, he couldn’t break Chicago, and now he’s trying really hard to break the Twin Cities,” she says. “I guess because it’s smaller he thought that it would be easier, but they have had more agents for longer in the Twin Cities and have had less success.” Few stories illustrate this dynamic more clearly than the targeting of Somali workers in the Twin Cities – who, with a long history of community organising and bargaining in the city in a radical and powerful way, have long been a thorn in the side of government. “They famously became the first organisation in the US to get Amazon to the bargaining table, although Amazon denies it bargained,” Jaffe says (the company says it was doing community outreach). It is for this reason, Jaffe argues, that Trump has targeted the Somali American community in Minneapolis, particularly its leftwing leaders. These include Ilhan Omar, who was attacked last week with what the FBI said was a mixture of vinegar and water, while calling for the abolition of ICE, and Omar Fateh, who led legislation in the state legislature to regulate Uber and other ride-hailing companies. But while Trump’s rhetoric remains loud, actions on the ground suggest a quiet reassessment of the situation amid the backlash in Minneapolis. Federal authorities have reshuffled leadership in Minneapolis, including pulling back Gregory Bovino, the controversial lead of the enforcement activities. After the fatal shooting of Pretti, Bovino drew further criticism for publicly claiming, without evidence, that the ICU nurse intended to “massacre law enforcement”. In his place, Trump has dispatched his “border czar”, Tom Homan. Homan sits higher in the hierarchy and reports directly to the president. Jaffe sees his arrival as an attempt to stabilise the narrative that the administration is losing. “The way people have been framing it on the ground is ‘we forced cracks in their coalition and that’s great, but it’s not over’,” she explains. Nationally, pressure is mounting. Senator Bill Cassidy of Louisiana has said the “credibility of ICE and DHS [Department of Homeland Security] are at stake”, while a prominent Republican candidate and attorney, Chris Madel, has withdrawn from Minnesota’s gubernatorial race. Recent polling shows a plurality of Americans now support abolishing ICE. *** An attempted whitewash “I would expect that they will quietly scale down in Minneapolis while trying not to admit defeat,” Jaffe says, “and that they will go after softer targets.” One of those targets, she adds, is New Orleans, where she is heading next. “But,” she notes, “New Orleans has also been doing ICE watch patrols and buying groceries for people who are sheltering in place and donating to support restaurants that are immigrant-owned that have had to close down.” Jaffe describes the immigration raids as not only racist, but also part of a wider push to make America more white. Stephen Miller, a key White House senior adviser, denies this, and said questions about whether the administration’s tactics were racist were “dumb”. A long read on Miller, viewed as the ideologue behind Trump’s immigration policies, quotes allies who say he wants to reverse America’s post-1960s immigration boom, taking in migrants from Nordic Europe, while severely restricting those from the global south, in a bid to reshape America’s ethnic and political landscape. But, Jaffe adds, “what they’re actually doing right now is turning more white people that they assume are their base into Renee Goods and Alex Prettis.” What else we’ve been reading I was gutted about the recent death of the gifted actor Catherine O’Hara, but I found consolation in this piece by Jesse Hassenger about O’Hara’s heartfelt comedic roles. Katy Vans, newsletters team Why has the internet torn the left apart, but united the right? The academic Robert Topinka provides some interesting answers. Aamna Concerns about the rise of Reform UK are understandable, but the recent gains for Plaid Cymru in Wales give hope that there are alternatives to the status quo. Katy A proposal by a French rail operator to have childfree carriages sparked a backlash. Emma Beddington makes powerful arguments on children’s right to access public space. Aamna The floods last week in the UK were devastating to many of us, and our wildlife has also been hit hard. But we can adapt so that nature protects humans and creatures alike. Katy Sport Football | In the Premier League, Spurs came back from 2-0 down to draw at home against Man City, putting a dent in City’s title hopes. Despite being down to 10 men, Brentford managed to beat Aston Villa 1-0 at Villa Park, keeping Villa out of the top spot in the table. Elsewhere, Man Utd won 3-2 at home to Fulham, their win has them sitting pretty in fourth place. In the WSL, Man City trounced Chelsea 5-1 putting them 11 points clear at the top of the league. Tennis | Carlos Alcaraz has beaten Novak Djokovic in the Australian Open final. Aged just 22, he is the youngest man in history to complete the career grand slam. Boxing | Jarrell “Big Baby” Miller was involved in one of the more unusual moments in recent boxing history on when his hairpiece was dislodged during his heavyweight victory over Kingsley Ibeh at Madison Square Garden. The front pages The Jeffrey Epstein files feature in various forms today. The Guardian reported on Peter Mandelson, who has since resigned from the Labour party, with: “Mandelson under fire as file appear to show Epstein sent him $75,000”. The Telegraph says “Mandelson faces order for Epstein evidence”. “Epstein flew me to Andrew at Royal Lodge,” says the Mirror, in relation to a second woman who has come forward. The Times reports: “New Epstein victim: I was sent for sex with Andrew”. The Mail says: “Andrew in new Epstein legal threat”. The FT reports: “JPMorgan should ‘threaten’ UK over bankers’ tax, Mandelson told Epstein”. “Bring justice for Epstein victims, Andrew and Mandelson told,” reports the i. The Express reports: “PM wants to ‘rewind’ freedom Brexit gave us”. The Sun says Lewis Hamilton is dating Kim Kardashian. Today in Focus Fatima Bhutto on secrets, lies and surviving coercive control The Pakistani writer on enduring an abusive relationship in the public eye, and how she broke free. Cartoon of the day | Tom Gauld The Upside A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad Rejection triggers the same brain regions as physical pain, which explains why it feels so intense and memorable. Social exclusion once threatened survival, so humans remain highly sensitive to it. Yet avoiding rejection can shrink our lives, making us more fearful and less willing to take risks. Embracing rejection instead, writes Farrah Jarral, can build resilience, confidence and social ease. Jia Jiang’s “100 days of rejection” experiment showed how repeated exposure reduces fear and expands possibility. History also shows that rejection can fuel creativity, from artistic movements to individual innovation. Since rejection is universal, it allows us to grow, stay open and move through the world with greater freedom and playfulness. 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

picture of article

Trump says Iran talking to US and hints at deal to avoid military strikes

Donald Trump has said Iran is talking to the US, hinting at a deal that would avoid the use of military strikes, as Iran’s supreme leader warned that any attack by the US would spark a regional war. The US president’s comments came as Washington deployed a naval battle group led by the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln off Iran’s shores, after Trump’s threats to intervene in Iran’s deadly crackdown on anti-government protests. “The plan is that [Iran is] talking to us, and we’ll see if we can do something. Otherwise, we’ll see what happens … We have a big fleet heading out there,” Trump told Fox News. “They are negotiating, so we’ll see what happens.” He said US allies in the region were not being told of plans for reasons of security. “Well, we can’t tell them the plan. If I told them the plan, it would be almost as bad as telling you the plan – it could be worse, actually,” he said. Later on Saturday, Trump declined to say whether he had decided on a course of action regarding US intervention in Iran. He sidestepped a question about whether Tehran would be emboldened if the US backed away from launching strikes, telling reporters: “Some people think that. Some people don’t.” He said Iran should negotiate a “satisfactory” deal to prevent the country from getting any nuclear weapons, but said: “I don’t know that they will. But they are talking to us. Seriously talking to us.” The arrival of the flotilla has raised fears of a direct confrontation with Iran, which has warned it would respond with missile strikes on US bases, ships and allies – notably Israel – in the event of an attack. On Sunday, Iranian state television reported that Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, had warned that any attack by the Americans would have far-reaching consequences. “The Americans should know that if they start a war, this time it will be a regional war,” Khamenei was quoted as saying. “We are not the instigators and we do not seek to attack any country. But the Iranian nation will deliver a firm blow to anyone who attacks or harasses it.” Asked about the warning, Trump told reporters on Sunday: “Of course he is going to say that. “Hopefully we’ll make a deal. If we don’t make a deal, then we’ll find out whether or not he was right,” he said. A day earlier, Iran’s president, Masoud Pezeshkian, had downplayed Tehran’s interest in the conflict. “The Islamic republic of Iran has never sought, and in no way seeks, war and it is firmly convinced that a war would be in the interest of neither Iran nor the United States nor the region,” he said in a call with his Egyptian counterpart, Abdel Fatah al-Sisi, according to the Iranian presidency. Qatar said its prime minister, Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani, visited Tehran on Saturday and met Ali Larijani, the head of Iran’s supreme national security council, regarding “efforts to de-escalate tensions in the region”. Trump has previously said he believes Iran would rather make a deal over its nuclear and missile programmes than face US military action, and Tehran has said it is ready for nuclear talks as long as its missiles and defence capabilities are not on the agenda. “Contrary to the hype of the contrived media war, structural arrangements for negotiations are progressing,” Larijani said, one day after the Kremlin said he had held talks in Moscow with Vladimir Putin. The commander-in-chief of Iran’s army, Amir Hatami, had earlier warned the US and Israel against any attack, saying his forces were “at full defensive and military readiness” to respond. “If the enemy makes a mistake, without a doubt it will endanger its own security, the security of the region and the security of the Zionist regime,” Hatami said, according to the official news agency IRNA. He said Iran’s nuclear technology and expertise “cannot be eliminated”. Iranian authorities rushed to deny that several incidents on Saturday were linked to any attack or sabotage, including an explosion in the southern Iranian port city of Bandar Abbas that local firefighters said was caused by a gas leak. Iran has told ships it will conduct a live-fire drill on Sunday and Monday in the strait of Hormuz, a key transit hub for global energy supplies. An Iranian official denied on Sunday that such a drill would take place, saying initial reports had been incorrect. “There was no plan for the Guards to hold military exercises there, and there was no official announcement about it. Only media reports which were wrong,” they told Reuters. The US Central Command had warned Tehran against “any unsafe and unprofessional behaviour near US forces”. The statement drew criticism from Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, who wrote on social media: “Operating off our shores, the US military is now attempting to dictate how our Powerful Armed Forces should conduct target practice in their own turf.” The US designated Iran’s Revolutionary Guards as a terrorist organisation in 2019, and the EU did the same on Thursday. In response, the speaker of Iran’s parliament, Mohammad – Baqer Qalibaf, said on Sunday that Tehran would now consider all EU militaries to be terrorist groups. “By trying to hit the Revolutionary Guards … the Europeans actually shot themselves in the foot and once again made a decision against the interests of their people by blindly obeying the Americans,” Qalibaf said. He said the national security parliamentary commission would deliberate on the expulsion of EU countries’ military attaches and follow up with the foreign ministry. On Sunday, Khamenei compared the countrywide protests to a “coup”, suggesting the government’s position had hardened, as calls grew in Iran for an independent inquiry into the number of people killed during the unrest.

picture of article

Ukraine war briefing: Kyiv reschedules peace talks as battered power grid strains in -15C

A Russian drone strike on a bus carrying miners killed at least 12 people, Ukrainian officials said on Sunday, hours after President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced new peace talks amid uncertainty over a Russian suspension of attacks on energy infrastructure. First deputy prime minister Denys Shmyhal said the strike in the south-eastern Dnipropetrovsk region was a “cynical and targeted” attack on energy workers. The bus was driving about 65km (40 miles) from the frontline, police said. A second round of talks between Russian, Ukrainian and US officials on a US-drafted plan to end the war did not go ahead on Sunday in Abu Dhabi as scheduled and Zelenskyy said it would instead take place this Wednesday and Thursday. Ukraine was ready for “substantive” talks, he said. He did not give a reason for the delay, and neither Moscow nor the US confirmed the new dates. Russia has continued attacking Ukraine throughout the negotiating process. An earlier drone attack in the region overnight killed a man and a woman in the central city of Dnipro, regional military administration head Oleksandr Ganzha said in a post on Telegram. A drone also struck a maternity hospital in the southern Zaporizhzhia region on Sunday, wounding at least seven people including two women receiving a medical examination. The Kremlin said on Friday it had agreed to halt strikes on energy infrastructure until Sunday at the request of Donald Trump, and Kyiv said it would reciprocate. Ukraine said the suspension was supposed to last until the following Friday. The countries have not reported major strikes on their energy systems in recent days, though Zelenskyy said on Sunday that Russia was attacking railway infrastructure and other logistics. He also said its forces had attacked the power grid in two cities across the Dnipro river from the front line, but did not explicitly accuse Russia of breaking the energy ceasefire. Ukraine faced a new cold snap on Sunday with temperatures hovering around minus 15C (5F) and expected to drop even further on Monday to well below -20C in Kyiv. Grid operator Ukrenergo said late on Saturday that planned outages would be in force throughout the entire country. Ukraine’s defence minister thanked Elon Musk after the world’s richest person said efforts to stop Russia from using Starlink satellites for drone attacks seemed to have worked. “The first steps are already delivering real results ... Thank you for standing with us,” defence minister Mykhailo Fedorov said on Sunday. “You are a true champion of freedom and a true friend of the Ukrainian people.” Russian forces gained control over the village of Zelene in Ukraine’s Kharkiv region and the settlement of Sukhetske in the Donetsk region, the Russian defence ministry said on Sunday. The Russian state Tass news agency also quoted it as saying Russian forces hit facilities of transport infrastructure used in the interests of the Ukrainian army. Tens of thousands of Czechs rallied in Prague on Sunday to support the country’s pro-Ukrainian president, who is locked in a dispute with the government’s nationalist billionaire leader Andrej Babis. Organisers from the independent Million Moments for Democracy movement claim up to 90,000 people attended the demonstration, where some participants waved Czech, European and Ukrainian flags.