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Munich Security Conference: Rubio flies in amid testing times for US-Europe ties – live

Guardian staff: The US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, has said he will have a chance to meet Volodymyr Zelenskyy at this week’s Munich Security Conference. A year after the vice-president, JD Vance, stunned assembled dignitaries with a verbal assault on many of the US’s closest allies in Europe, Rubio plans to take a less contentious but philosophically similar approach when he addresses the annual gathering on Saturday, US officials say. Before boarding his flight on Thursday evening, Rubio used reassuring words as he described Europe as important for Americans. “We’re very tightly linked together with Europe,” he told reporters. But he also made clear it wouldn’t be business as usual, saying: “We live in a new era in geopolitics, and it’s going to require all of us to reexamine what that looks like.”

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These charts show how Trump is isolating the US on the world stage

Donald Trump’s return to the White House has accelerated a profound shift in the global order, according to new analysis. A report from Focal Data, which analyses UN voting records, reveals how Washington’s “America First” agenda has started to redraw the geopolitical map in favour of China. In 2026, the world is now diplomatically closer to Beijing than it has been in recent memory, with significant shifts in alignments taking place during the start of Trump’s second presidential term. Focal Data’s analysis used UN general assembly votes act as a proxy for geopolitical alignment: countries that consistently vote the same way on contested resolutions tend to have common interests. By measuring how closely each country’s voting record correlates with those of the US or China, researchers have been able to map how the geopolitical centre of gravity is further away from Washington and closer to Beijing than at any other point this century. The total number of countries strongly aligned with the US has crashed under Trump, in contrast to China, which has maintained its allies. When comparing all of Trump’s years in the White House, including his first term, with those of his immediate predecessors – Barack Obama and Joe Biden – the number of countries strongly aligned with the US has collapsed, from 46 to just seven. The number of countries closely in China’s orbit has remained broadly constant. Though most of the countries that have been solidly in the US camp still vote with Washington, they have recently done so with far less regularity. Some of the biggest movements have been among traditional US allies in Europe, North America and Asia, who now find themselves voting with Washington less frequently. Canada, South Korea, Japan, Germany and the UK dramatically deviated from the US in terms of UN voting patterns in 2025. The research gives each country’s voting record a score, from +1, meaning always voting with China in the UN, to -1, meaning always voting with the US. A key flashpoint has been Ukraine. In February 2025, the US sided with Russia, Belarus and North Korea to vote against a resolution condemning Russia for the Ukraine war. Another strain has been Israel’s war in Gaza. In June 2025, the US voted against a resolution that called for the protection of civilians and upholding of legal and humanitarian obligations in Gaza. The US sided with Israel against the resolution, while the vast majority of western countries supported the passing of the resolution. China also voted in favour. The US vetoed a securty council resolution for an unconditional ceasefire, disagreeing with Russia, China, France and the UK. There have also been resolutions on issues such as the environment, health and migration, which China and most western countries supported, but the US opposed. As a result, Nato and European states, once the backbone of American global influence, are now voting less reliably with the US. The shift is largely because of the US taking increasingly controversial stances on the world stage that isolates it from its longstanding allies. Meanwhile, China has continued to preserve close relationships with its allies, and has begun cultivating new alliances. This year has brought foreign visits by the Canadian and British prime ministers for the first time in eight years. On a regional level, Asia, Africa and South America tend to be more aligned with China – though the latter began to move more towards the US during Trump’s first term. This shift has happened less because of increasing pro-China sentiment in Europe, and more due to the US and Europe voting together less frequently. The report says that the UK’s alignment with the US in UN votes is at its lowest level since records began, with a steep drop in the past year. This has coincided with hopes that the UK can thaw icy relations between London and Beijing. The report highlighted that only Argentina and Israel were aligned with the Trump White House in 2025. At the same time, China’s voting bloc of 73 countries has broadly stayed intact. The combined economic power of Chinese-aligned countries is higher than that of US-aligned countries under Trump – in contrast to the Obama and Biden years, when the combined economic power of the US’s western allies was superior. Patrick Flynn, a data journalist and author of the report, said: “Our report uncovered not only how quickly the global order is shifting, but also the structure of influence between the two major poles of the US and China. “We liken China’s network to a beehive, diffuse and unlikely to collapse from individual rifts. In contrast, US influence is more like a Jenga tower, heavily reliant on a solid bloc of European countries that are quickly moving away from their transatlantic allies.” This shift is likely to continue. When countries are plotted by projected economic growth, the fastest-growing economies cluster closer to Beijing than Washington. These are often located in Asia, Africa and Latin America. Flynn said: “Weighting our axis by historic GDP levels, we see that the centre of gravity has been slowly moving towards China over the last 30 years. “With China’s outsized influence among the fastest-growing economies, the global centre of gravity could well move into Chinese territory for the first time in the late 2030s.”

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Israeli journalists fear for press freedom if UK billionaire sells TV channel stake

Israeli journalists have appealed to a British billionaire not to proceed with the sale of a stake in an Israeli television channel, which they warn would represent a severe blow to the independence of the country’s media. Sir Leonard Blavatnik, listed by the Sunday Times as the UK’s third richest person, is selling a nearly 15% share in Channel 13, a commercial channel that has run critical news coverage of Benjamin Netanyahu’s government in recent years, including investigations into the prime minister’s financial dealings. Blavatnik is selling to a telecoms tycoon, Patrick Drahi, who has French, Portuguese and Israeli nationalities. Drahi already owns a cable television company and a news channel in Israel that generally runs far less critical coverage of Netanyahu. The rest of Drahi’s business empire is heavily in debt and he is embroiled in a legal battle with his creditors in the US. The Union of Journalists in Israel issued a statement calling the sale an “unlawful deal, which is likely to further erode press freedom in the country” and described it as part of the Netanyahu government’s “master plan to capture the media” before this year’s scheduled elections. “The Union of Journalists is confident that Sir Blavatnik, who is known for his generous philanthropy, will not support any move that will undermine press freedom in Israel,” the statement said. Blavatnik is selling just under a 15% stake in Channel 13, the maximum share allowed to be sold to a competitor with an existing media asset under Israel’s competition laws, but critics argue that as the sole investor in the channel (Blavatnik is reportedly unwilling to invest further after years of heavy losses), Drahi will have real control of the outlet. “While Patrick Drahi is only buying 15%, our fear is that by buying 15%, he gets 100% hold of the policy of the channel,” said Anat Saragusti, who oversees freedom of the press for the Union of Journalists. “Because if he’s the only one that can pour money into the channel and make it sustainable, then it is completely dependent on him.” “It’s a lose-lose for the Israeli public, in terms of freedom of speech and diversity of opinions,” Saragusti added. Drahi’s company, Altice, Netanyahu’s office and Israel’s ministry of communications were all approached for comment but did not respond. Ayala Panievsky, a presidential fellow in journalism at City St George’s, University of London, compared the struggle over Channel 13 to the fate of the Washington Post under the US billionaire Jeff Bezos, who steered it closer to Donald Trump and last week axed nearly a third of its workforce, firing hundreds of journalists. Panievsky last year published a book, The New Censorship: How the War on the Media is Taking Us Down, on the siege on the free press mounted by the populist right around the world. She views the Washington Post and Channel 13 cases as “part of the escalating war on independent and critical journalism, launched by the alliance of populist authoritarians and the broligarchy’s enablers”. She said: “Media owners should be facing heat because they are in influential positions and are collaborating with governments to harm press freedom.” Israeli journalists fear a Drahi takeover would lead to similar mass job losses as those suffered by their Washington Post colleagues. A consortium of liberal Israeli tech entrepreneurs had made a rival bid for 74% of Channel 13. A source close to the group said it was prepared to invest considerably more – $80m to $120m (£59m to £88m) over three years – in the modernisation of the channel than Drahi and had put the offer on paper, though the negotiations had not been finalised. A spokesperson for Blavatnik’s main company, Access Industries, denied there had been any political pressure to sell to Drahi. “Any suggestion that the preferred offer has been selected for political reasons is entirely false,” the spokesperson said. “Following negotiations with two separate groups, Patrick Drahi’s proposal was selected because it represented the better deal for [Channel] 13.” The spokesperson added: “His offer enables the urgent injection of funds into the channel to support [Channel] 13’s stability, expand its reach, and allow its investment in high-quality content, innovation, and digital transformation, so it can continue delivering value to its audiences. Of the two proposals, it was the higher confirmed sum, and ultimately the stronger, faster option prevailed.” The company denied Israeli reports that the Netanyahu government had signalled to Blavatnik that a purchase of the channel by the liberal tech consortium would not gain official approval. “Sir Leonard Blavatnik, nor anyone on behalf of Access, has spoken with any government official regarding [Channel] 13,” the spokesperson said. Netanyahu and his ministers have mounted a concerted campaign to reshape Israel’s media landscape before this year’s elections. One set of corruption charges the prime minister is now on trial for involves the alleged offer of favourable financial treatment in return for positive coverage. Last month a government minister sued an investigative journalist on the only other major independent news channel, Channel 12, for record damages of 12m shekels (£2.86m). The government has imposed financial sanctions on the independent newspaper Haaretz, which it accuses of “support for the enemy” over its criticism of the Gaza war. The tech consortium is expected to continue to argue its case for buying Channel 13, and the Union of Journalists said it expected Israel’s antitrust authorities or its supreme court to block the Drahi bid. Meanwhile, the reporters are hoping Blavatnik changes his mind. “If Channel 13 falls, this would be the end of the free press in Israel, because the rest will fall after that. It’s the tipping point,” Saragusti said. “I think Blavatnik doesn’t really understand that this is not merely an economic issue but a milestone in Israeli democracy.”

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Friday briefing: ​Will Westminster ever clean up its act over lobbying?

Good morning. The fallout from the revelations about Peter Mandelson’s relationship with convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein has already claimed several high-profile scalps, including Keir Starmer’s chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney. As attention turns to whether Starmer can steady his premiership, it is vital not to lose sight of something else that this episode has laid bare: Westminster’s enduring relationship with corporate lobbyists. The files sent a shock wave when they showed Mandelson forwarding highly sensitive emails to Epstein within seconds of receiving them. Far less examined were questions about his former firm, Global Counsel, and its links to Palantir, the US tech company which now boasts major UK government contracts, including with the NHS. Wes Streeting’s decision to publish his WhatsApp messages with Mandelson was intended to draw a line. Instead, it illustrated how seamlessly political and corporate networks overlap. One exchange showed Streeting circulating a US politics briefing that came to him via Jim Murphy, the former Labour cabinet minister who now runs the lobbying firm Arden Strategies. That same firm is under scrutiny for offering corporate clients, including arms companies, access to senior officials for fees reportedly as high as £30,000. To understand why these connections matter, and why lobbying reform so often stalls despite cross-party promises, I spoke to Henry Dyer, the Guardian’s investigations correspondent. That’s after the headlines. Five big stories UK politics | Keir Starmer’s attempt to shake up his top team after the disastrous Peter Mandelson scandal began on Thursday, when he forced out his most senior civil servant with a view to replacing him with Antonia Romeo. UK news | Parents of one of the victims of Vincent Chan have said they live in “constant fear” of the long-term damage the trauma will have on their child, as the paedophile nursery worker was sentenced to 18 years in prison. Epstein files | A top lawyer at Goldman Sachs and former White House counsel to Barack Obama has resigned in the wake of emails showing a close relationship between her and Jeffrey Epstein, whom she referred to as “Uncle Jeffrey”. Education | Primary school-age children who question their gender could be allowed to use different pronouns under long-awaited government guidance to schools on the subject. Media | President Trump’s multibillion dollar lawsuit against the BBC over the editing of one of his speeches has been set for a year’s time. In depth: ‘What’s infuriating is knowing it’s an issue and doing nothing’ Concerns about lobbying are not new. In early 2010, in the aftermath of the MPs’ expenses scandal, David Cameron, then opposition leader, warned that “secret corporate lobbying” would be the “next big scandal”. In his speech, he said: “We all know how it works. The lunches, the hospitality, the quiet word in your ear, the ex-ministers and ex-advisers for hire, helping big business find the right way to get its way.” The irony, Henry Dyer tells me, is that a decade later Cameron himself would face scrutiny after lobbying ministers and senior officials 56 times at the height of the pandemic in what critics described as an increasingly desperate effort to secure government support for Greensill Capital, the finance firm he advised and held shares in. “What it shows is that Westminster has been fully aware that the access of outside private interests [sometimes to] MPs and Lords, but sometimes through MPs and Lords to government and ministers, is there,” Henry explains. “Everyone knows it’s happening.” It is an issue that reaches both chambers of parliament, with Henry having reported doggedly on lobbying and standards in the House of Lords. My colleague Peter Walker produced a comprehensive rundown in 2021 of the lobbying scandals that have plagued Westminster. It is telling that, only five years on, it already feels outdated. Yet, Henry adds, “None of the successive governments of different parties have taken the action necessary to deal with it.”. *** How does lobbying work? Before we delve into the scandals at the heart of government, I asked Henry to explain how lobbying works. “If you and I worked in a company making widgets and wanted regulation changed, we could try to get a meeting with a minister and lobby directly,” he says. The public record may simply note that a meeting occurred, he adds, but it doesn’t have to state that lobbying took place. Lobbying can also be outsourced. “We could hire a consultant lobbyist, perhaps someone with links to the minister. Under the regulations, they would have to declare that we were their client and that they had lobbied on our behalf. There’s slightly more transparency, but it’s not radical transparency,” Henry says. Ministers also routinely accept tickets, travel and event access. These are all declared, but rarely prevented. This was one of the first scandals to dog Labour months after their landslide elections in the summer of 2024, known helpfully, as freebiegate. The Guardian’s political correspondent Pippa Crerar has an excellent run down of how the scandal unfolded and the impact it had on Labour. “Before the Qatar World Cup, more MPs took an interest in Qatar and joined All-Party Parliamentary Groups (APPGs), likely knowing it could mean tickets and travel,” Henry says. “Those are gifts worth thousands of pounds. They are declared, but nothing stops them.” That point is worth emphasising: in many cases there is little evidence that parliamentary rules were technically broken, even when it is clear that ethical lines have been blurred. That gap is precisely why campaigners have long argued for tougher, clearer rules. *** What have Labour done? There has been piecemeal reform on lobbying since 2010. Under the coalition government there was the Lobbying Act, for example, which introduced a threadbare set of regulations on consultant lobbying. When Labour was in opposition, it made a series of promises on lobbying and standards, Henry says, largely in response to the PPE procurement scandal. During the pandemic, nearly £4.1bn of public money went to suppliers with political connections, many through so-called “VIP” or “high priority” lanes that fast-tracked firms referred by ministers and MPs, often without adequate due diligence. Readers may recall figures such as Michelle Mone, whose company supplied unusable PPE and who has been ordered by a court to repay £122m, and Owen Paterson, whom a parliamentary watchdog found had made 14 lobbying approaches in an “egregious” breach of the rules that brought parliament into disrepute. Labour was vocal in opposition, but what have they managed to do while in government? There have been some notable tweaks. The government has a register of lobbyists it interacts with that used to be published quarterly, which Labour described as ridiculous in opposition. “In power, they changed it to monthly declarations on gifts and hospitality, but not meetings,” Henry says. A 2024 parliamentary committee report called for contact made via WhatsApp and other instant messaging platforms to be included in the lobbying register. The messages published by Wes Streeting show exactly why that matters, yet there has been little sign of movement on implementing the change. The government also announced that they would restrict payments for ministers leaving office following a serious breach of the ministerial code. And last October, Labour created the Ethics and Integrity Commission, which was central to Starmer’s promised robust new approach to government and to any ministerial misdeeds. The commission took over the previous committee, which was described by critics as fundamentally toothless. Will this make a difference? Henry isn’t convinced. “It’s effectively the Committee on Standards in Public Life with a new title,” he says. “It has no new powers. It can make recommendations, but the government can ignore them.” He adds that the government introduced the Representation of the People Bill yesterday, which proposes a limit on foreign gifts of £2,230. “That’s a very high threshold. If you or I accepted a £2,230 gift related to our work, there would be serious questions. For MPs, it’s still seen as fine. That speaks to a culture that hasn’t changed.” There are individual MPs who go further, Henry says, pointing to Sian Berry who publishes a list of everyone she meets and more frequently than the government does. Other MPs refuse gifts. “But the culture in Westminster remains that accepting gifts worth more than £2,000 is fine and electors won’t think it’s an issue,” he says. Earlier this week, Darren Jones, the chief secretary to the prime minister, delivered a speech on reviewing standards in public life, arguing that “Peter Mandelson’s disgraceful behaviour” raised questions about whether the current system is robust enough to catch those who seek to break the rules. Henry listened closely. There were warm words about reform, he says, but little in the way of concrete change. *** Why has there been so little change? Lobbying as an issue in politics has been cropping up since the first world war. So why have successive parties been unable to fix it? “Because politicians find it useful to be given briefings,” Henry says. A report by Rowena Mason, the Guardian’s Whitehall editor, published during the 2024 general election illustrates this point. More than a dozen private-sector lobbyists and consultants were embedded in Labour’s shadow cabinet teams after the party sought business help to shape policy, particularly in complex areas such as AI. Faculty AI told staff, in a leaked memo, that it had amended its ethics policy to allow an employee to work with Labour one to two days a week. What politicians are failing to grasp, Henry says, is that “repeated failures to clean up politics are more damaging than the individual scandals,” adding that people accept there will be politicians who break the rules. “What’s infuriating is knowing it’s an issue and doing nothing.” The reports on the possible impact of lobbyists in the heart of government continue to come out in drips. A big area now is AI, Henry explains, which the government is keen to be seen embracing. “One big company is Palantir,” Henry says, which has tremendous access to the British state. Since 2023, Palantir has secured more than £500m in contracts with the NHS and the Ministry of Defence (MoD). “Starmer visited its offices in the US while Mandelson was ambassador,” Henry says. “Palantir was a client of Global Counsel, Mandelson’s lobbying firm. He still held shares.” He pointed to a recent report in the Times reporting a party hosted by Palantir to celebrate a large contract with the MoD. The invite list included MoD employees, journalists and others in the defence industry. “That is the gifts and hospitality culture Cameron warned about in 2010 happening again,” Henry says. What else we’ve been reading Italy are having a cracking Winter Olympics, with 13 medals through the first five days of the contest. Is it as simple as homefield advantage, or is there more to it? Beau Dure digs in. Charlie Lindlar, newsletters team I love Alexis Petridis’s list of the best songs inspired by literature. There are so many I didn’t know about! Aamna Peter Walker digs into Keir Starmer’s unpopularity in this analysis. Is it the man himself, deepening disapproval in all politicians … or both? “People relate better to politicians who look like they enjoy the job, and they react quite badly to politicians that look pained by it,” one pollster chips in. Charlie Labour’s earned settlement proposals have sparked a major furore. Union leader Andrea Egan explains why so many across the labour movement are mobilising against it. Aamna As someone who sticks their fingers in their eyes every day putting contacts in, I found great value in Sarah Phillips’s ultimate experts guide to taking care of your eyes. (Turns out its leafy greens you need, not carrots). Charlie Sport Winter Olympics | Vladyslav Heraskevych has accused the International Olympic Committee of doing Russia’s propaganda for them after he was barred from racing in the Winter Games because he wanted to wear a “helmet of memory” in honour of Ukraine’s war dead. Football | Arsenal’s lead over Manchester City at the top of the Premier League stands at just four points after Mikel Arteta’s title-chasing side were held to a 1-1 draw at Brentford. Meanwhile, Manchester United took a big step towards the quarter-finals of the Women’s Champions League by sealing a comfortable lead in the first leg of their playoff against Atlético Madrid. Football | Thomas Tuchel has signed an extension to his England contract that will keep him in charge of the national team until after Euro 2028. Tuchel will remain manager regardless of England’s fate at the World Cup this summer. Something for the weekend Our critics’ roundup of the best things to watch, read, play and listen to right now Film It’s Never Over, Jeff Buckley | ★★★★☆ Amy Berg’s arresting documentary about the exquisitely beautiful and prodigiously talented 90s singer-songwriter, Jeff Buckley, explains how he and his mother were abandoned when he was an infant by his father, Tim Buckley, a singer and counterculture figure who was to die of a heroin overdose in his late 20s. Jeff died at 30, in an accidental drowning in Wolf River Harbor, Memphis, Tennessee, in 1997. Berg uses extensive interviews with his mum, Mary Guibert – the film’s executive producer – and two of his girlfriends, Rebecca Moore and Joan Wasser, as well as Jeff’s answering machine messages and archive 90s material to tell a very sad story with sympathy and urgency. Peter Bradshaw TV How to Get to Heaven from Belfast | ★★★★☆ In this new sitcom from Derry Girls creator, Lisa McGee, Dara (Caoilfhionn Dunne), Saoirse (Roisin Gallagher) and Robyn (Sinead Keenan) are old school friends who reunite to attend the funeral of Greta (Natasha O’Keeffe), who completed their teenage gang of four. According to the local grapevine, Greta was killed by a fall down the stairs but Saoirse immediately suspects foul play, and the friends are soon investigating. It’s written with McGee’s customary wit, brutality and sensitivity, and the actors keep the whole thing together and emotionally credible, though the preposterousness of the plot increases at a geometric rate. Buckle up, and enjoy. Lucy Mangan Music Fabiano Do Nascimento & Vittor Santos Orquestra: Vila | ★★★★☆ Over the past decade, Brazilian guitarist Fabiano do Nascimento has honed a sound so expansive it may make you think the prolific soloist and collaborator had four hands playing his instrument. On Vila, he features alongside the 16-piece Vittor Santos Orquestra, showcasing his ability to weave seamlessly through the orchestra’s dynamic range rather than playing a single role. It’s imaginative mood music that never quite reaches its full dramatic and explosive potential. Instead, the album luxuriates in gentle, sweeping viola and violin lines, and alternates between metallic picking and warm strumming on the guitar. Ammar Kalia Book Super Nintendo by Keza MacDonald The Guardian’s video games editor delivers a winsomely enthusiastic biography of Nintendo, the company that had become an eponym for electronic entertainment long before anyone had heard the words “PlayStation” or “Xbox”. MacDonald’s conversations with all the gifted (and often eccentric) creative people who actually make the games are full of wholesome insights, as are her own superb analyses of favourite games, and of the general vibe of Nintendo: its “toymaker philosophy” is an antidote, she argues, to the increasingly baleful role that technology plays in all our lives. Steven Poole The front pages “PM ousts top civil servant in shake-up of No 10 team” is top story at the Guardian. The i paper has “Cull at No 10 as Starmer tries to relaunch his leadership” and the Telegraph says “Rayner turns on Starmer over pubs”. The Times leads on “Pupils able to change their gender at school” while splash at the Mail says “Labour opens door to trans children in primary schools”. The Independent headlines on “Ratcliffe’s own goal over ‘apology’ for UK migrants slur”, while the FT splashes with “City champion Schroders agrees to £9.9bn takeover by US rival Nuveen”. The Mirror says “Unmasked”, in reference to the murderer of 12-year-old schoolboy Leo Ross. Today in Focus Wes Streeting: the UK’s next prime minister? Keir Starmer was on the brink of a leadership contest this week, but he pulled it back. That does not mean his rivals have gone away. Nosheen Iqbal speaks to Kiran Stacey about one of the most hotly tipped contenders: Wes Streeting Cartoon of the day | Ben Jennings The Upside A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad Watching the sun set over Bolivian salt flats. Living without screens. Having no sense of what time or day it was. Since April 2022, Andreas Graf has lived a life of freedom. After building a career in engineering, the then 31-year-old Norwegian got too “hungry for adventure” he decided to literally get on his bike. Four years later, he’s been cycling around the world, visiting everywhere from Turkmenistan to Nepal and Australia to Ecuador (with the help of a few ferries and flights, of course). Now back home, Graf tells Rachel Dixon he worries slightly about readjusting to what most of us call normality. “I haven’t looked into a computer screen in almost four years, so it just feels so wrong,” he says. “I want to go out and look at a tree! On the weekend, I’m going to take my tent and disappear in the forest for a little while.” 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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‘Everything is frozen’: bitter winter drags on for Kyiv residents as Russia wipes out power

Natalya Pavlovna watched her two-year-old son, Danylo, play with Lego. “We are taking a break from the cold,” she said as children made drawings inside a warm tent. Adults sipped tea and chatted while their phones charged. The emergency facility is located in Kyiv’s Troieshchina district, on the left bank of the Dnipro River. Outside it was -18C. There was bright sunshine and snow. “Russia is trying to break us. It’s deliberate genocide against the Ukrainian people. Putin wants us to capitulate so we give up the Donbas region,” Natalya said. “Kyiv didn’t use to feel like a frontline city. Now it does. People are dying of cold in their homes in the 21st century. The idea is to make us leave and to create a new refugee crisis for Europe.” Natalia and Danylo near the ‘resilience point’ in Troyeshchyna district Her apartment is in one of 2,600 buildings in the Ukrainian capital currently without power or heating. The Kremlin has been bombing the country’s energy infrastructure since the start of its full-scale invasion nearly four years ago, targeting substations, thermal power plants and rescue workers battling to save the electricity network from multiple attacks. In recent weeks Russia has overwhelmed Kyiv’s air defences and inflicted further damage, coinciding with one of the coldest, bitterest winters for decades. Ballistic missiles flattened the Darnytska combined heat and power plant that supplied much of the left bank of the Dnipro. There have been frequent capital-wide blackouts restricting electricity supply to three or four hours a day. Two-year-old Danylo drawing at the resilience point Natalya said the impact of Vladimir Putin’s aerial campaign was reminiscent of the 1932-33 famine in the Soviet Ukraine, engineered by Stalin, in which millions perished. The words in Ukrainian are similar – holodomor (extermination by starvation) and kholodomor (death by cold). “Putin wants to do to Kyiv what he did to Mariupol,” she said, adding that many of those shivering in the capital had fled fighting elsewhere. “There has been a massive impact on families and people with children,” said Toby Fricker, a spokesperson for Unicef, which had donated the warming tent. In Kyiv, 45% of schools are closed because of a lack of central heating. “Education has been disrupted. Kids and teenagers experience social isolation. They are missing out on normal life,” Fricker said. Some mums have swapped tips in chat groups about cheap accommodation abroad, in Bulgaria, Egypt and Greece. Others have decided to stay put. Yuliia, a mother of six-year-old twins, said: “I see reasons to leave and to remain. At the moment we are together with my parents. If I left I would lose them,.” She added: “We don’t know how long this situation will last. It’s cold. We sleep in our hats.” Residents have used ingenious hacks to try to make their homes a bit warmer. They have bought power banks, camping gear, gas cylinders and generators, a rumbling presence outside offices and shops on Kyiv’s icy streets. Some people heat bricks and rocks over gas stoves. Others have erected tents inside living rooms. Cafes are a popular refugee. Ukraine’s state emergency service has set up shelters with beds. Julia Po, an artist, showed her seventh-floor home in Kyiv’s Dniprovskyi neighbourhood. She led the way with a torch up a dark staircase. With no electricity, the lights and lift do not work; frozen water pipes burst two weeks ago, causing a flood; a chill wind whipped through slatted panels. “The building dates from the 70s and the Soviet era. It’s badly designed and can’t cope,” she said. Julia Po with her cat, Thom Yorke Po has been using bubble wrap to insulate her door and protect her plants. It is 9C in the kitchen Po had insulated her front door with bubble wrap. Walls, windows and a ficus house plant had also been wrapped, in order to reduce drafts. She sleeps under two blankets, wearing thermal underwear and a hoodie. “Underneath, from the ground, it’s just cold. When you wake up in the morning you can feel your kidneys. My electric kettle cracked. I didn’t wash my hair for two weeks,” she said. Her cat – named after the Radiohead singer Thom Yorke – sleeps under a blanket in a cupboard. Po, originally from Russian-occupied Crimea, said she felt she had been dispossessed. “It’s as if someone has stolen my home. There is the same vibe as 2022. I’ve been through several stages, from depression-aggression to acceptance and a degree of irony. It’s not pleasant, but what can you do? There is a war in our country, unfortunately. This is our reality.” Po showing the gas burner she uses during blackouts The artist, who has a gas stove and a boiler, acknowledged she was better off than some of her neighbours. The blackouts have badly hit pensioners, who are often too hard-up to buy extra equipment. Some are trapped in their flats. At least 10 people have died from hypothermia and 1,469 have been hospitalised. Russian attacks on power facilities have all the while continued, with strikes on Thursday in Kyiv and the battered southern city of Odesa. Maksym Timchenko, the head of the energy provider DTEK, said Moscow had wiped out 80% of Ukraine’s power generation capacity. “We are not talking about an energy crisis. It’s a humanitarian and national crisis. As a country we are in survival mode,” he said. Only one out of five company power plants was currently connected to the electricity grid, he added, with repairs difficult because “everything is frozen”. Tymchenko said Ukraine needed urgent international help. He said it required additional air defences, ammunition and an energy ceasefire – something Moscow briefly agreed to at Donald Trump’s request, before resuming bombing after a matter of days. “Kyiv has become the main target. We have lost all sources of power generation in the city. We are doing everything we can to keep the economy alive,” Tymchenko said. Oleh Yaruta, a DTEK engineer, who is fixing an underground power cable Oleh Yaruta, a DTEK engineer, said the capital’s power grid was overloaded. It has suffered burnouts as people used electric heaters and boilers to stay warm. He was repairing an underground power cable. Hopping out from a hole, he produced an iPad. On it was a long list of pending repair jobs caused by outages across the capital. What did he think of Russians? “They are devils and orcs. They are bombing because they can’t conquer us,” he replied. Earlier this week electricity returned to some left bank buildings, with lights flickering on again for a few hours. Natasha Naboka said she had shared a bed in January with her 10-year-old daughter, Sofiia, and their yorkshire terrier, Bonya. “We were together under one blanket. Bonya wore a jacket. I woke up and my nose was frozen. It was 4-5C inside the flat.” She added: “Sofiia’s school was closed. For her it was an adventure.” Naboka in her kitchen during a blackout Naboka and her daughter, Sofiia, in the kitchen With no working fridge, Naboka has been leaving food out on her fifth-floor balcony. She washed clothes by hand and took them in a rucksack to dry in her workplace, a beauty parlour in central Kyiv, where the power situation is better. During air raids she and Sofiia moved to the corridor, she said, hiding between two walls. Her husband, a soldier, is based in Kharkiv oblast, another region badly affected by power breakdowns. Some Kyiv residents have criticised the city authorities for failing to protect infrastructure. Volodymyr Zelenskyy has pointed the finger at the city’s mayor, Vitali Klitschko, accusing him of doing too little. Naboka, however, said Russians were to blame. “They thought they could seize Ukraine very quickly. They failed. So instead Putin is trying to destroy us.” She added: “This is all about the jealousy and unhealthy ambition of one man.”

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‘The tears just keep flowing’: child victims of Tumbler Ridge shooting remembered as Carney heads to join vigil

Canadian prime minister Mark Carney is to join mourners in Tumbler Ridge on Friday, as authorities and relatives released details of the six children and assistant teacher killed by a shooter in the remote mining town’s high school. Carney will attend a vigil in Tumbler Ridge in memory of the victims, and he invited leaders from all political parties to join him in the town, the site of the country’s deadliest mass shooting in years. Among the dead was 12-year-old Kylie Smith, whose family remembered her as “the light in our family”. “She loved her family, friends, and going to school,” her family said in a statement. “She was a talented artist and had dreams of going to art school in the big city of Toronto. Rest in paradise, sweet girl, our family will never be the same without you.” Kylie’s father, Lance Younge, recounted how he spent six hours walking around the local recreation center where students were reuniting with their families trying to learn what happened to his daughter. Younge told CTV News: “I went home not knowing where my daughter was until a high school kid … came here and told us her story about trying to save my daughter’s life,” he said. The family of 12-year-old victim Zoey Benoit described her as “resilient, vibrant, smart, caring and the strongest little girl you could meet”. Peter Schofield, whose grandson, 13-year-old Ezekiel Schofield, was killed, shared his grief in a Facebook post, saying: “Everything feels so surreal. The tears just keep flowing.” Abel Mwansa Sr, the father of 12-year-old Abel Mwansa Jr wrote on Facebook that he was “broken” seeing his son’s body “lifeless”. He added: “Seeing you leaving the house with that beautiful smile while going to Tumbler Ridge high school was so refreshing … I saw a bright future, a leader, an engineer, also a scientist in you.” Sarah Lampert, whose 12-year-old daughter Ticaria was among those killed, told reporters: “She just wanted to bring sunshine to everything and everyone she ever touched. “I now have to figure out how to live life without her.” Authorities on Thursday identified the remaining victim as assistant teacher Shannda Aviugana-Durand, 39. The suspect’s mother – 39-year-old mother, Jennifer Jacobs, also known as Jennifer Strang – and 11-year-old stepbrother Emmett Jacobs were found dead at the family home nearby, while the suspected shooter – identified as Jesse Van Rootselaar – was found at the school with a self-inflicted gunshot wound. Police have said they were called on multiple occasions to the home of the teenage suspect behind one of Canada’s deadliest school shootings after concerns were raised regarding mental health problems and weapons. Dwayne McDonald, a deputy commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP): “Police had attended that residence on multiple occasions over the past several years dealing with concerns of mental health with respect to our suspect,” McDonald said. On different occasions the suspect had been apprehended under the country’s mental health act for assessment and follow-up, he added. McDonald also said that at least one of the interactions with police related to weapons. “Police have attended that residence in the past, approximately a couple of years ago, where firearms were seized under the criminal code,” he said. “At a later point in time, the lawful owner of those firearms petitioned for those firearms to be returned and they were.” The suspect had a firearms licence that had expired in 2024 and did not have any firearms registered in her name, he said. Trent Ernst, publisher of Tumbler RidgeLines, the town’s biweekly newspaper, said one of the biggest frustrations in the community was the lack of medical support and in particular mental health services, in the town which lies more than 1,000km (600 miles) northeast of Vancouver “The majority of people that I’ve talked to are sad more at the fact that Tumbler Ridge doesn’t have the level of support for mental health and health services in general,” he said. “Right now, there are five mental health nurses in town. But this is the exception, and it’s an exceptional situation. There are times where we’ll go months, if not years, without having anybody in mental health services in town,” he said. Mourners braved frigid cold on Wednesday night to honour the victims, with Mayor Darryl Krakowka telling them, “It’s OK to cry.” Krakowka described the town as “one big family,” and encouraged people to reach out and support each other, especially the families of those who died in the attack. The community must support victims’ families “forever,” not only in the days and weeks to come, he said. With Associated Press and Agence France-Presse

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Japan seizes Chinese fishing boat inside its economic waters amid rift with Beijing

Authorities in Japan have seized a Chinese fishing boat and arrested its captain in a move that is likely to inflame an ongoing diplomatic row between Tokyo and Beijing. The seizure, which occurred on Thursday about 170km from the south-western port city of Nagasaki, came after the skipper refused an order to stop for an onboard inspection, according to media reports. A Japanese fisheries agency vessel intercepted the Chinese boat and its 11 crew after spotting it in Japan’s exclusive economic zone – an area within 200 nautical miles (370km) of its coastline. It is the first time the agency has seized a Chinese fishing boat since 2022, and the first incident of its kind involving any foreign fishing vessel this year. In 2025 it inspected a Taiwanese and South Korean vessel as part of a crackdown on illegal fishing. The Chinese boat’s 47-year-old skipper was arrested on suspicion of attempting to evade an onboard inspection by a Japanese fisheries control officer. The Nikkei business newspaper said the vessel appeared to have been fishing for mackerel. “The vessel’s captain was ordered to stop for an inspection by a fisheries inspector, but [it] failed to comply and fled,” the agency said in a statement. “Consequently, the captain was arrested.” Japan’s chief cabinet secretary, Minoru Kihara, told reporters on Friday: “We will continue to take resolute action in our enforcement activities to prevent and deter illegal fishing operations by foreign vessels.” China’s foreign ministry has yet to comment on the incident, which comes at a tense time for bilateral ties, weeks after Japan’s prime minister, Sanae Takaichi, sparked a furious row over the future of Taiwan. Speaking to MPs in November, Takaichi said Japan could become militarily involved in the event of an attempted Chinese invasion of Taiwan. Takaichi, who is regarded as a China hawk, said her country’s self-defence forces could deployed if a crisis in the Taiwan Strait created a “survival-threatening situation” for Japan. The remarks, which she has refused to withdraw, prompted Beijing to call on Chinese nationals not to travel to Japan as tourists or students, and led to the cancellation of cultural events. The dispute is also thought to be behind the decision not to send giant pandas to Japan – a goodwill gesture in place since the countries normalised diplomatic ties in 1972 – after the departure of two of the animals from a Tokyo zoo last month. China and Japan are also embroiled in a longstanding territorial dispute that has been exacerbated by the actions of fishers. In 2010, the arrest of the captain of a Chinese boat near the disputed Senkaku islands triggered a major diplomatic row. The captain, whose boat had collided with a Japanese inspection vessel, was later released without charge. Recent media reports claimed that the government in Tokyo had privately urged Japanese fishers to steer clear of the Senkakus to avoid provoking China. The uninhabited islands, which are surrounded by rich fishing grounds, are administered by Japan but claimed by China, where they are known as the Diaoyu. Officials in Japan, whose westernmost island Yonaguni lies just 110km from Taiwan, believe a crisis surrounding the self-governed democracy could quickly threaten Japanese security. China insists that Taiwan is part of its territory and has not ruled out force to achieve “reunification”. The Taiwanese president, Lai Ching-te, warned this week that other parts of the region would be targeted by China if it succeeded in seizing Taiwan. Beijing would become “more aggressive, undermining peace and stability in the Indo-Pacific and the rules-based international order”, he said in an interview with Agence France-Presse. “The next countries under threat would be Japan, the Philippines and others in the Indo-Pacific region, with repercussions eventually reaching the Americas and Europe.” In response to Takaichi’s comments, Beijing conducted joint air drills with Russia, and in December jets from China’s Liaoning aircraft carrier twice locked radar on Japanese aircraft in international waters near the nawa. Takaichi, whose Liberal Democratic party won last week’s lower house elections by a landslide – partly on the back of strong public support for her stance on China – said this week she was “open to dialogue” with Beijing. China’s foreign ministry said talks could not take place as long as Takaichi continued to choose “confrontation”. “If Japan truly wants to develop a strategic and mutually beneficial relationship with China, it’s very easy and clear: withdraw Takaichi’s erroneous remarks about Taiwan,” ministry spokesperson Lin Jian said. With Agence France-Presse

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Bangladesh election: BNP claims win in historic first election since overthrow of Hasina

The Bangladesh Nationalist party (BNP) led by Tarique Rahman has claimed a sweeping victory in the country’s first election since a gen-Z uprising toppled the autocratic regime of Sheikh Hasina. By Friday morning, results had shown a clear win for the BNP, returning them to power after 20 years. The vote had been seen as the first free and fair election held in Bangladesh for almost two decades and came after a period of significant political upheaval in the country. “This victory was expected,” said Salahuddin Ahmed, a leading BNP committee member. “It is not surprising that the people of Bangladesh have placed their trust in a party … capable of realising the dreams that our youth envisioned during the uprising.” Ahmed acknowledged a difficult task lay ahead for the new BNP government, which has pledged a new era of democracy and zero tolerance towards corruption. “This is not a time for celebration, as we will face mounting challenges in building a country free from discrimination,” he said. By about midday local time, the BNP had won 208 seats while their rival, the Islamist party Jamaat-e-Islami, had claimed 69 seats. India was among the first countries to congratulate the BNP. Relations between the two neighbours had plummeted since the fall of Hasina and the message from Indian prime minister, congratulating the BNP on their “decisive” win, was seen to extend an olive branch to the new government. “India will continue to stand in support of a democratic, progressive and inclusive Bangladesh,” said Modi, adding that he was looking forward to working with Rahman. The US and Pakistan also congratulated the BNP on their election victory. Rahman, who returned to Bangladesh in December after 17 years of exile in London, is now poised to become the country’s next prime minister. He comes from one of the country’s most powerful political dynasties; the son of former prime minister Khaleda Zia and former president Ziaur Rahman, who was assassinated in 1981. Shafiqur Rahman, the head Jamaat-e-Islami, conceded defeat. Rahman said Jamaat would not engage in the “politics of opposition” for the sake of it. “We will do positive politics,” he told reporters. In a statement on Friday morning, Jamaat-e-Islami alleged some irregularities in vote counting in constituencies where their candidates suffered narrow losses, which they said “raises serious questions about the integrity of the results process”. Nonetheless the results, claiming almost 70 seats, are a historic showing for the Islamist party, which had previously never held more than 18 seats in parliament, and their alliance likely to be a formidable opposition to the BNP. Their campaign had attracted controversy, particularly among female voters, over regressive comments made by Shafiqur Rahman on women’s rights and employment. The election was the first truly competitive vote in years. As documented for years by human rights groups and the UN, Hasina’s regime routinely suppressed dissent of its critics and political opponents, thousands who were disappeared, tortured and killed in secret jails. Many emerged only after Hasina was toppled. The past three elections under Hasina were marred by widespread allegations of vote-rigging. Following the bloody uprising that led to her downfall, many viewed the election as a crucial test of Bangladesh’s ability to restore trust in democracy and transition from public protest into tangible political reform and stability. Hasina’s Awami League party was barred from contesting and its supporters said they would boycott the vote. The largely peaceful nature of polling day was seen as a huge step forward for the country. Across the capital, police officers stood watch on horses wearing blankets that bore the message: “Police are here, vote without fear.” Voters at polling stations in the capital Dhaka expressed their jubilation as being able to cast their vote freely and without fear for the first time in years. “Last time I voted was in 2008,” said Mohammad Shah Hossain, 46, who said he was supporting the BNP. “After that it got very difficult to come out and vote. Every time I went to the polling station, somebody had already cast my ballot.” According to the election commission, preliminary figures showed nationwide voter turnout at 59.4%, exceeding the 42% seen in the last elections. This was also the first election that had given the overseas diaspora an opportunity to vote. Postal votes, which also included officials in the country who could not return home to cast their ballot, saw an 80.11% participation rate. The student-led uprising that toppled Hasina’s 15-year regime in August 2024 had been prompted by mounting anger over widespread corruption, human rights abuses and an economic slump. The uprising, and Hasina’s brutal crackdown on anti-government protesters, left an estimated 1,400 people dead, according to the UN. For the past 18 months, the country has been run by an interim government under Bangladesh’s only Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus, who was tasked with readying the country for free and fair elections. Speaking after casting his vote in Dhaka, Yunus said that the country had “ended the nightmare and begun a new dream.” The newly elected government now faces an uphill task of restoring democracy, law and order and economic growth to the country. To some, the return of the BNP – a dynastic party whose previous regime was riddled with rampant corruption – did not represent the spirit of reform and hunger for change that had driven the student-led uprising against Hasina. “More than anything, I’m hoping this BNP government remembers why people risked their lives to vote — we wanted an end to fear, not just a change of faces,” said Sadia Chowdhury, 25, a masters student at Jahangirnagar University. “If they can give us jobs based on merit, reign in political violence and prove that the law applies to everyone, then maybe we’ll finally feel this country belongs to us again.” Alongside the election, a referendum was held on a set of constitutional reforms championed by Yunus, known as the July Charter, which is designed to prevent any autocratic regimes taking power in the future by strengthening judicial independence and introducing a two-term limit for the prime minister. Early results suggested it had passed with more 65% voting yes. As the election unfolded, Hasina remained in exile in India after a war crimes tribunal sentenced her to death for crimes against humanity, committed during the final throes of her regime. Her escape, and the refusal by India to send her back, has been a key issue in the frayed ties between Dhaka and New Delhi. In a statement sent after polling stations closed, Hasina denounced the election as a “carefully planned farce” and called for the results to be cancelled. Redwan Ahmed contributed reporting