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Trump says ‘there can be no going back’ on Greenland as private messages from Macron leaked – Europe live

De Wever also goes back to last month’s discussion on the EU’s funding for Ukraine. He says that the EU eventually reached the right decision, but says “the way in which we did it, the discussions we had, maybe are not an example of the best governance you can imagine.” He says Europe “learned the lesson the hard way” about previous mistakes and illussions catching up with it after years. On seizing Russian assets, he says: “There’s nothing like the Alibaba cave that opens and you can simply take the gold and get away with it. That was an illusion that existed for a few months at the European table, but I think we managed to put an end to it for the moment.” Croatia’s Plenković picks up on this, saying that whatever the process, the outcome was good – and that’s what matters. “Bart has managed to convince the majority of us that his arguments were fine,” he says.

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What are the Chagos Islands – and why is the UK returning them to Mauritius?

In a post on Truth Social, Donald Trump has described the UK’s plans to hand over the Chagos Islands to Mauritius as “an act of great stupidity”. He claimed that it had made it all the more important for him to take Greenland from Denmark. Kemi Badenoch and Nigel Farage, while critical of Trump over his threats of tariffs on European countries who oppose his territorial land grab, have been quick to lend Conservative and Reform support to the US president in his criticism of the UK-Mauritius treaty, which is now making its way through parliament. What are the Chagos Islands? They are an archipelago in the Indian Ocean, located about 5,800 miles south-east of the UK and 1,250 miles north-east of Mauritius. They became British territory along with Mauritius in 1814 as part of the treaty of Paris after the defeat of Napoleon. The group of islands were designated as British Indian Ocean Territory in 1965 and detached from Mauritius, which became independent in 1968. The deal then was that the islands would return to Mauritius once they were no longer needed for Britain’s defence. A joint UK-US military base was built on the largest of the islands, Diego Garcia. Displaced residents were resettled in Mauritius and Seychelles, while some were relocated to the UK in 2002. Why are they being returned to Mauritius now? Since the 1980s, Mauritius has claimed sovereignty over the islands and pursued its case through international courts and tribunals. In 2019, the international court of justice (ICJ), the principal judicial organ of the United Nations, ruled in a non-binding judgment that the process of decolonisation of Mauritius was not lawfully completed when it was granted independence in 1968 and that the UK was “under an obligation to bring to an end its administration of the archipelago as rapidly as possible”. What has happened since that ruling? Under the government led by Rishi Sunak, a Conservative prime minister, it was announced in 2022 that the UK and Mauritius had agreed to begin negotiations on the exercise of sovereignty over the Chagos archipelago. It was argued that Britain’s defence was best served by having legal certainty over the Chagos Islands due to the risk of continued challenges in international courts. It was an acknowledgment that the UK respected international law. The UK government stressed that agreement would “ensure the continued effective operation of the joint UK-US military base on Diego Garcia”. The Conservative government held 11 rounds of negotiations with the Mauritians before the general election in July 2024. After Labour won the summer election, the two governments published a joint statement on 3 October 2024 announcing that a political agreement had been reached. The treaty was formally approved and signed by Keir Starmer and his counterpart, the Mauritian prime minister, Navin Ramgoolam, on 22 May 2025. Starmer said the deal was vital as the UK would “not have a realistic prospect of success” if Mauritius pursued legal action. He explained that the UK could have faced a provisional measures order “within a matter of weeks”. The UK could just ignore such orders but without an agreement it would not have legal grounds to prevent China or other nations from establishing bases on the outer islands or conducting joint exercises near Diego Garcia, it was claimed. What was the political reaction in Britain and the US? In response to the deal, the US government issued a statement in which is said that after a “comprehensive interagency review”, it had determined that the agreement “secures the long-term, stable, and effective operation of the joint US-UK military facility at Diego Garcia”. During a meeting with the British prime minister in the Oval Office in February 2025, Trump said he was “inclined” to go along with the agreement and that he had “a feeling that it’s going to work out very well”. The Conservatives under the leadership of Badenoch criticised the deal, describing it as a “surrender” and arguing that the UK was “handing over British territory and paying upwards of £30bn to do so” to Mauritius, a country she claimed “openly cuddles up to China and Russia”. The shadow defence secretary, James Cartlidge, claimed the Conservatives had not signed an agreement while in government because they “fundamentally oppose the idea of spending billions of pounds on a surrender tax to lease back land that we currently own freehold”. What are the terms of the deal? Mauritius takes sovereignty of the islands but the UK maintains an initial 99-year lease of Diego Garcia with an option of extension. The UK will pay for that lease. The average annual cost during the initial 99-year period of the treaty is estimated by Whitehall to be £101m in 2025-26 prices. The total projected cost of the finance package using a net present value methodology is £3.4bn, although some argue it could be higher. Why has Donald Trump changed position? It may just be a coincidence but Starmer held a press conference on Monday – hours before the US president’s post on Truth Social – in which he criticised Trump for threatening to impose tariffs on the imports of European countries who had opposed his claim on Greenland, which is part of the kingdom of Denmark. The prime minister told reporters that “threatening tariffs on allies is the wrong thing to do, completely wrong”. He played down any suggestion of retaliatory action, something that is being actively considered by the EU. Starmer had followed up with a phone call to the capricious president. It appears not to have gone well.

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Afraid of dying alone? How a Chinese app exposed single people’s deepest, darkest fears

A few days before Christmas, after a short battle with illness, a woman in Shanghai called Jiang Ting died. For years, the 46-year-old had lived in a one-bedroom apartment in Hongkou, a residential neighbourhood that sits along the Huangpu River. Neighbours described her as quiet. “She rarely chats with people. We only see her when she goes to and from work, and occasionally when she comes out to pick up takeout,” said a local resident interviewed by a Chinese reporter. Her parents long deceased, Jiang had no partner or children to inherit her estate. Her lonely death sparked a debate in Chinese media about how society should handle the increasing number of people dying with no next of kin. For Xiong Sisi, also a professional in her 40s living alone in Shanghai, the news triggered uncomfortable feelings. “I truly worry that, after I die, no one will collect my body. I don’t care how I’m buried, but if I rot there, it’s bad for the house,” she says. So Xiong was intrigued when, a few weeks later, she saw an article about an app that had suddenly gone viral, called Are You Dead? She forwarded the news to a WeChat (similar to WhatsApp) group of five fellow childless friends. “I said: ‘This is actually quite practical.’” The app, which was released by a company called Moonscape Technologies last year, has surged in popularity in recent weeks, at one point becoming the most downloaded paid-for app in China. It took off after it was discovered by users on RedNote, a social media platform that is predominantly used by women. Are You Dead? describes itself as “a lightweight safety tool crafted for solo dwellers”. Its name, which in Chinese is Sileme, is a play on the name for China’s ubiquitous takeaway app, called Are You Hungry? or Eleme. Ian Lü, one of the co-founders of Moonscape Technologies, says he came up with the idea for Are You Dead? while browsing on Chinese social media. “In recent years, there has been wide and heated discussion about a hypothetical ‘are you dead’ app,” Lü says. “For example, something with features like: if you don’t check in for 48 hours, someone will come and collect your body.” Lü and his partners saw a business opportunity. The concept of Are You Dead? is simple: users must check in once a day by clicking a large green button. If a user misses two consecutive days of check-ins, the app sends an automated alert to a designated emergency contact. Part of the app’s popularity may be down to its tongue-in-cheek name, although Moonscape Technologies is now reconsidering the moniker and has invited users to suggest alternatives. But it has also tapped into an anxiety in modern China that a person could be swallowed up by one of the country’s sprawling cities and disappear without a trace. “This app makes people feel alive,” wrote one RedNote user. It is an “interesting phenomenon that reflects and combats the loneliness of young people today”. The topic of social isolation feels particularly acute in Chinese cities. Falling marriage and birthrates mean that more people are living alone well into their 20s and 30s. Intense work cultures leave little time for socialising. And many people can’t find a job at all, which itself carries stigma and shame, and can lead to reclusiveness. In 2024, just 6.1 million couples got married in China, a record low. At the same time, 2.6 million couples filed for divorce. The trend is not unique to China but it has sparked nationwide concern, particularly as the country’s birthrate is also in decline, creating demographic challenges as the population shrinks each year. By 2030, there could be as many as 200 million single-person households, according to Chinese state media. “People lack a sense of security,” says Xiong, who lives more than 500 miles away from her parents in Henan province in central China. “Most young or middle-aged people aren’t necessarily staying in their family homes – unlike previous generations, who never left their ancestral lands.” Xiong, who is 43, started to think about the consequences of living alone after a bout of illness a few years ago that forced her to stay indoors for seven days. “At the time I thought, ‘Oh my God, if I died in this room, no one would even know.’ I used to post something on WeChat Moments every day so my parents would know that I was OK,” Xiong says, referring to the app’s public feed. Now there is an app that performs a similar function. “In modern life, everyone feels lonely,” says Zhao Lu, a clinical mental health therapist based in Xi’an, a city of almost 13 million people in north-central China. “Married people, divorced people, single people.” But as an increasing number of people decide to embrace “new ways of living” and don’t automatically turn to marriage, technology is also becoming a tool to combat feelings of isolation. Zhao thinks Are You Dead? will be helpful, “because if you’re isolated or living alone, that one quick push will help you connect to other people”. It is not just singledom that makes people lonely. For decades, China’s economic growth was fuelled by people travelling far across the country to find their fortunes in the cities. But in recent years there has been a reckoning with the psychological scars this has caused. In an essay, Xiao Hai, a factory worker turned writer, described his time as a migrant in Shenzhen, China’s southern tech and manufacturing hub: “I was overcome with loneliness – an intense loneliness that submerged through to the concrete floor beneath my feet, splattered over the assembly line, glazed the unfamiliar faces of my co-workers below the fluorescent lights.” A feeling of isolation in big, anonymous cities is not unique to China. But the intensity of competition and population density in the world’s second-biggest economy means that it is possible to see the psychological effects of the urban crush “on steroids”, says George Hu, a clinical psychologist and president of the Shanghai International Mental Health Association. “There is not only isolation but anxiety, stress and a sense of helplessness,” Hu says. He points to China’s notorious “996” work culture – meaning workers toil from 9am to 9pm, six days a week – as a major stress factor, especially when coupled with the fact that the rising cost of living means that working those long hours does not necessarily guarantee the ability to buy a house or a car – markers that the older generation saw as important milestones in adulthood. One of China’s hottest buzzwords is “involution”: the feeling that people are working harder than ever, but for diminishing returns. Working long hours leaves little room for socialising or meeting a romantic partner. It’s a feeling that Lü remembers well. Now he is married with a young child and living in Hangzhou, a city in east China famed for being home to many of China’s hottest new tech talents, including AI firm DeepSeek. But a few years ago, the 29-year-old product manager was living in Shenzhen, toiling in an office job that starved him of social connection. “In Shenzhen, everyone often works overtime until very late, including weekends. You might have no plans with friends and live alone in a closed space. You feel a very strong sense of loneliness and insecurity,” says Lü. His female friends told him that sometimes they felt scared walking home alone at night. He pondered how he might come up with a solution to this problem. He says he was inspired by Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, a framework developed by the American psychologist Abraham Maslow in 1943. It proposes that after a person’s physiological needs – such as food and water – are met, the next most important need is a feeling of safety. But aside from providing reassurance, analysts believe that Lü and his all-male business team may have inadvertently tapped into another feeling that is specific to young Chinese women: dissatisfaction with the men in their lives. The country’s falling marriage rate is largely driven by women. China is still a highly conservative society, and many educated, professional women reject the idea of entering into a partnership where they are expected to be subservient to a man. Although political expressions of feminism are sensitive in China, many women express their independence through their lifestyle choices. It is “feminism with Chinese characteristics,” explains Ivy Yang, a tech analyst and founder of advisory firm Wavelet Strategy, who also dubs the trend “RedNote feminism”. Many women feel liberated by that choice, but choosing not to embrace traditional family structures can also create a gap in human connection that is now being filled by technology. Yang calls this the “loneliness economy”. She points to the rising popularity of AI companions – a global trend, but one in China that is particularly popular among women looking for the perfect “AI boyfriend”. The Japanese television series I Want to Die Alone, about a single woman in her 30s grappling with the death of her lonely aunt, was a hit among female RedNote users in China. But psychologists say that people of all ages and genders can suffer from feelings of disconnection. Hu, the psychologist, says that isolation is a factor in the psychological problems of nearly every person who comes to him for treatment. Hu welcomes the premise of the Are You Dead? app, but he would like it to include a facility for people to call for help earlier. “I wish there was a little bit more complexity to it, a way of adding a couple more layers to say something like, ‘I’m alive, but I’d like some help.’” The bluntness of the app’s original name has caused controversy, with some people describing it as inauspicious or vulgar. Hu Xijin, the former editor-in-chief of the Global Times, wrote on Weibo: “The app is truly a great idea – it could help so many elderly people who live alone. At the same time, I would suggest renaming it to Are You Alive? It would provide more psychological comfort.” Last Tuesday, the company announced it would be changing its name to Demumu, a portmanteau of “Death” and “Mumu”, a cutesy suffix that connotes another popular Chinese trend – Labubus. Then on Wednesday, there was another U-turn. In a post on Weibo, the app’s developers wrote that they would be renaming the app again, and invited followers to submit suggestions. At the time of writing, the app’s final name is undetermined, although Lü said he expects it to stick with Demumu for the time being. It has also been removed from China’s Apple App Store, and news articles about the app are being censored for reasons unclear. Lü said it was “not convenient” to discuss the app’s removal, but it may have drawn unwanted scrutiny from China’s internet regulators, who don’t like content that could be viewed as “superstitious”. On Monday, Moonscape Technologies issued a statement warning users against counterfeit versions of the app. Still, Lü has big plans for the future. He wants to develop a sister app aimed at elderly people, or find a way to use AI so that the app can alert a person’s emergency contact when the user is in a dangerous situation, such as a speeding car. “I feel what is being reflected is not just this kind of situation in China,” Lü says. “But rather that this new ‘living alone’ group is a global phenomenon. I hope the whole world can pay attention to the safety issues of people living alone.” • Additional research by Lillian Yang • Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

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Trump cites UK’s ‘stupidity’ over Chagos Islands as reason to take over Greenland

Donald Trump has suggested Britain’s decision to cede the Chagos Islands to Mauritius is among the reasons he wants to take over Greenland. The US president, who is travelling to Davos in Switzerland for the World Economic Forum, made the claim as he ramped up his rhetoric on acquiring the Arctic territory. Trump fired off a flurry of posts on his Truth Social platform overnight on Tuesday about taking over Greenland, which is a territory of Denmark, the US’s Nato ally. Writing on the website, Trump said “Shockingly, our “brilliant” Nato Ally, the United Kingdom, is currently planning to give away the Island of Diego Garcia, the site of a vital US Military Base, to Mauritius, and to do so FOR NO REASON WHATSOEVER. “There is no doubt that China and Russia have noticed this act of total weakness. These are International Powers who only recognise STRENGTH, which is why the United States of America, under my leadership, is now, after only one year, respected like never before. “The UK giving away extremely important land is an act of GREAT STUPIDITY, and is another in a very long line of National Security reasons why Greenland has to be acquired.” The move will come as a huge shock to No 10 after the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, gave his warm endorsement of the handover when it was first approved. A UK government spokesperson said: “The UK will never compromise on our national security. We acted because the base on Diego Garcia was under threat after court decisions undermined our position and would have prevented it operating as intended in future. “This deal secures the operations of the joint US-UK base on Diego Garcia for generations, with robust provisions for keeping its unique capabilities intact and our adversaries out. “It has been publicly welcomed by the US, Australia and all other Five Eyes allies, as well as key international partners including India, Japan and South Korea.” Trump’s comments will add fuel to Conservative and Reform criticisms of the move, which have cited US concerns as a reason to deny the deal with Mauritius. Immediately after the comments, the shadow foreign secretary, Priti Patel, said: “President Trump has said what we’ve said all along – Labour’s £35bn Chagos surrender is a bad deal for Britain and bad for our national security. We’ve opposed it from day one and it’s time Starmer put the security of our country first and scrap his rotten deal.” The Conservative leader, Kemi Badenoch, said: “Paying to surrender the Chagos islands is not just an act of stupidity, but of complete self sabotage. I’ve been clear, and unfortunately on this issue President Trump is right. “Keir Starmer’s plan to give away the Chagos Islands is a terrible policy that weakens UK security and hands away our sovereign territory. And to top it off, makes us and our Nato allies weaker in face of our enemies.” Badenoch said she had met Mike Johnson, the speaker of the US House of Representatives, on Monday night, where he had agreed the handover of the islands was a mistake. Nigel Farage, the Reform UK leader, said: “Thank goodness Trump has vetoed the surrender of the Chagos islands.” Darren Jones, the chief secretary to the prime minister, suggested Trump’s intervention would not have an effect on the UK’s deal with Mauritius. “We’ve done a deal with the Mauritian government, we’ve legislated for the process, we’ve agreed the terms of the treaty, which has been signed,” he told Sky News. “This is the way in which to secure that military base for the next 100 years.” Jones said Starmer was keeping calm about the criticism, as well as about the threatened tariffs on the UK over its support for Greenland. “We disagree with President Trump on Greenland, and the prime minister has been very clear about that. In the past the prime minister has shown that private, proper British diplomacy can work … he has a good track record of this,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme. “It’s noisy, I understand that, it’s challenging, it’s not normal for geopolitical discussion to be handled in this way. But British diplomacy is working.” The UK has signed a £3.4bn agreement to cede sovereignty over the Chagos Islands to Mauritius but the deal is facing significant opposition in the House of Lords. On Monday, the MP Andrew Rosindell, who defected from the Conservatives to Reform UK, cited a failure to stand up for the Chagos Islands as a major factor in leaving the party. Under the agreement, Britain cedes control over the islands to Mauritius but leases the largest island, Diego Garcia, for 99 years to continue operating a joint US-UK military base there. Downing Street has said in the past that the deal is a “legal necessity” and backed by the US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, which are part of an intelligence-sharing partnership with the UK. In 2021 a UN court gave an advisory opinion that the UK did not have rightful sovereignty over the Chagos archipelago. At the time of the agreement in May 2025, Rubio said the US “welcomed the historic agreement”. It went on: “This is a critical asset for regional and global security. President Trump expressed his support for this monumental achievement during his meeting with Prime Minister Starmer at the White House. “This milestone reflects the enduring strength of the US-UK relationship.” Critics of the handover have said the deal gives China an opening in the region because of its close relations with Mauritius. Trump has regularly cited fears of Chinese influence as a reason he intends the US to take over Greenland. Starmer is not expected to travel to Davos to meet Trump – though Trump has also posted on Truth Social what appeared to be a text from the French president, Emmanuel Macron, asking the US president to convene a summit of world leaders at Davos in order to speak about the Greenland crisis.

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More than 100 Islamic State inmates escape jail amid clashes in north-east Syria

More than 100 inmates have escaped from a Syrian jail holding Islamic State prisoners amid clashes in the north-east of the country after an agreement by the under-pressure Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces to withdraw from two key provinces. Videos released by the SDF showed what it said were IS members being broken out from a jail in Shaddadi by figures in black balaclavas. It said it had lost control of the building after what it claimed was an attack by government-affiliated fighters that killed or wounded dozens. The Syrian army confirmed the escape late on Monday and imposed a total curfew in Shaddadi, the state news agency Sana reported. It denied attacking the jail and blamed the SDF for the escapes, saying it would comb the city in search of the militants. According to Syria’s interior ministry, about 120 Islamic State detainees escaped. The Kurdish forces put the figure much higher, at 1,500. The interior ministry said security forces had recaptured 81 people after search and sweep operations in the town and surrounding areas, with efforts continuing to arrest the remaining fugitives. The clashes came less than 24 hours after Syria’s president, Ahmed al-Sharaa, said his government had agreed a ceasefire with the SDF and would move to dismantle the group’s decade-long control of the country’s north-east and consolidate his rule. The sudden defeat of the SDF in Syria’s north raises questions about its ability to retain control of prisons and camps housing tens of thousands of male and female supporters of IS. Fighting was also reported outside al-Aqtan prison in formerly SDF-held Raqqa, and two others in the city – Taameer and a juvenile detention centre – were said by Kurdish sources to have been emptied by local people. The Syrian army said it had arrived at al-Aqtan to secure it “despite the presence of SDF forces inside”. Many other IS detainees, originally from 70 countries including the UK, are held farther to the north-east in Kurdish majority areas, where many have been detained since the territorial defeat of the terrorist group in 2019. The bulk of female detainees and their families are being held in al-Hawl, which holds an estimated 26,000 people, and the smaller Roj camp, where Shamima Begum is housed. About 4,500 men are held at the Panorama or Gweiran prison. It remains unclear who freed the prisoners in Shaddadi. The SDF claimed the armed men involved were “Damascus factions” and that several of its fighters had been beheaded. It said in a statement that the US-led anti-IS coalition did not respond despite repeated appeals for assistance to a nearby coalition base. The US military’s central command did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment. Kurdish-led forces backed by the US rounded up tens of thousands of people linked to IS after the group’s defeat. Washington later left responsibility for the camps to its Kurdish allies, but as US troops scale back, pressure is growing for Syria’s new authorities to take over. According to the text of the deal between the SDF and Damascus, the administration responsible for the IS prisoners and camps, as well as the forces securing them, is to be integrated with the Syrian government, which will assume “full legal and security responsibility” for these facilities. But the plan, also part of efforts to fold the Kurdish-led SDF into a reunified national military, is fraught with mistrust as many Kurds fear the government, led by Islamist former rebels once linked to al-Qaida, could loosen controls on IS networks. Among the prisoners and detainees are an estimated 55 men, women and children from the UK, including Begum, many of whom have had their citizenship removed because of their IS links. Reprieve, a UK-based human rights campaign group, said the situation was “a reality check” for Britain’s refusal to repatriate people held in Syria. Other countries, including the US, which has repatriated 28 people, have gradually brought back many of their citizens who were otherwise held in indefinite detention. Maya Foa, the chief executive of Reprieve, said the “volatility of the current situation demands an urgent rethink”. Foa added: “The only safe thing to do is bring British nationals home and prosecute the adults where there is a case to answer.” Sharaa’s jihadist career was forged in post-invasion Iraq, where he was drawn into al-Qaida’s orbit through its Iraqi affiliate, a precursor of IS. Detained by the US in 2005, he deepened his militant ties and encountered Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who later dispatched him to Syria to set up Jabhat al-Nusra. The group rose quickly but split from Baghdadi in 2013, prompting Sharaa to first align openly with al-Qaida before severing that link in 2016 to present a more locally rooted insurgency that would ultimately become Hayat Tahrir al-Sham. Since toppling Bashar al-Assad in December 2024, Syria’s new leaders have struggled to assert full authority over the country. An agreement was reached in March that was to have merged the SDF with Damascus, but it did not gain traction as both sides accused each other of violating the deal. Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan – long hostile to the SDF – on Monday hailed the Syrian army for what he called its “careful” offensive to take over Kurdish-held areas of the country’s north-east. “The Syrian army’s careful management of this sensitive operation … is commendable. Despite provocations, the Syrian army has passed a successful test, avoiding actions that would put them in the wrong when they are in the right,” he said. Turkey sees the SDF as an extension of the Kurdish militant PKK and a major threat along the 560-mile (900km) border it shares with Syria. “The principle of one state, one army is indispensable for stability,” said Erdoğan, describing the ceasefire and the integration agreement as “a very important achievement for lasting peace and stability in Syria”. He urged that the deal be implemented as soon as possible, saying there was “no excuse for stalling or playing for time. The era of terror in our region is over. No one should miscalculate.”

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Tuesday briefing: Why efforts to tackle Britain’s long history of antisemitism have fallen short

Good morning. Antisemitism often appears to arrive in sudden shocks. A violent terror attack. A spray-painted wall. A racist assault that plunges Jewish communities into fear and forces the rest of society to pay attention. The end of 2025 brought two such horrors: the attack on a Manchester synagogue, which killed two British Jewish worshippers, and the Bondi beach attack, which killed 15 people. Together, those events hardened a sense among much of the Jewish diaspora that a hatred long woven into history is once again intensifying. The response from governments often follows a familiar playbook. Swift condemnations are issued, security is reviewed and ramped up, and promises to root out the issue are made. But at a deeper level few changes are made and the cycle repeats. The crisis in the UK is now perceived as so severe that the US is openly discussing providing amnesty to British Jews. For this First Edition, I wanted to step back and revisit the fundamentals: how do we define antisemitism, how has it operated in Britain and why have efforts to confront it fallen short? To do that, I spoke to David Feldman, a history professor and director of the Birkbeck Institute for the Study of Antisemitism (BISA). That’s after the headlines. Five big stories Greenland | Donald Trump has linked his repeated threats to seize control of Greenland to his failure to win the Nobel peace prize, as transatlantic tensions over the Arctic island escalated further and threatened to rekindle a trade war with the EU. Jeffrey Epstein | Almost all of the Epstein files are still unreleased a month after the Congress deadline, to the anger of survivors. Gaza | The Kremlin said Vladimir Putin has been invited to join Donald Trump’s “board of peace” to oversee a ceasefire in Gaza. Scotland | The country’s largest health board has admitted that contaminated water caused serious infections in child cancer patients linked to four deaths in Glasgow. Spain | Spain will begin three days of mourning on Tuesday as rescuers continue to comb through the wreckage of twisted train cars and scattered debris to locate victims after a train collision that killed at least 40 people and injured dozens. In depth: ‘My own parents were not allowed to join a golf club as late as 1973’ For many people in the UK, their understanding of British Jewish history begins and ends with the Holocaust. But to make sense of today’s crisis, David Feldman tells me it is essential to place antisemitism in a much longer national story. Britain’s relationship with its Jewish population goes back centuries – and is a far cry from the national myth of being a safe haven for Europe’s Jews during the second world war. Jews had already been in the UK for hundreds of years when they were expelled from England in the 13th century and barred for centuries after, only resettling in significant numbers in the late 1600s, Feldman explains. Even then, Britain’s identity was fundamentally Christian, embedding prejudice in law and public life. A 1753 attempt to allow foreign Jews to naturalise was abandoned after public outcry, and it was not until 1858 that a professing Jew could sit in parliament. Benjamin Disraeli, already an MP, had converted to Christianity at 12. While conditions improved over time, Feldman says it is often forgotten how widespread everyday discrimination remained in the UK, well into the late 20th century. “Until then, in the UK, private schools had quotas for the numbers of Jewish children they would take,” he says. “There were barriers to Jews advancing in the legal and medical professions. Clubs would not admit Jewish members; my own parents were not allowed to join a golf club as late as 1973.” *** How should we define antisemitism? The British Jewish community is a small minority, estimated at about 300,000 people, 0.5% of the population. Feldman stresses that it is also far from monolithic, shaped by differences of class, race, politics and religious practice, as well as by varied understandings of what it means to be Jewish in Britain today. So how do we define the hatred that impacts this community? Feldman argues there is no simple answer. “We are living through a breakdown in consensus over what antisemitism is,” he explains. “That makes the problem harder to deal with, because it makes it controversial, and it feeds into the fear and anxiety being felt by some Jewish people.” Feldman describes antisemitism as an umbrella term. “People disagree over what should be brought under that umbrella,” he says. “The sharp end of this debate arises when people disagree over whether or when anti-Zionism and denunciations of Israel are antisemitic.” This kind of disagreement is not unique to antisemitism, he adds. Similar disputes surround other abstract concepts, including racism and Islamophobia. But since the early 2000s, arguments over antisemitism have increasingly centred on Israel and Zionism. (Zionism can be defined as a Jewish national movement that sought to create a Jewish state, then to secure and sustain it.) Feldman points to the Second Intifada and the 2001 UN World Conference against Racism in South Africa, which helped revive the slogan “Zionism is racism” and triggered a sense of crisis among many Jewish Zionists worldwide. From that point on, he says, there were concerted efforts to expand the definition of antisemitism to include anti-Zionism and certain denunciations of Israel, culminating in the working definition issued in 2016 by the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA). “There are some forms of denunciation of Israel which most experts and most people on the street would agree are antisemitic,” Feldman says. “Those, for example, that use classical antisemitic stereotypes about Jewish power and Jewish bloodlust.” But he says that the IHRA definition has been understood by many as going further. “In a direct response to the charge that ‘Zionism is racism’, the definition is drafted in such a way that if you say that the state of Israel is illegitimate because it is a ‘racist endeavour’, then you might be accused of antisemitism.” At the same time, Feldman argues, campaigns against antisemitism have increasingly drifted away from broader, universal anti-racist principles – instead situating it as a unique form of hatred. That shift prompted the emergence of alternative definitions, most notably the Jerusalem Declaration on Antisemitism (JDA), which he helped draft. “What marks out the JDA are two things: it starts from a set of universal principles, [which] apply to identifying antisemitism but not only to antisemitism; and it tries to set out what is, on the face of it, antisemitic and what is not,” he tells me. The IHRA definition, however, is far more widely adopted in the UK, and has come into tension with the JDA. Feldman attributes this partly to the tone of the debate itself. “There is a lot of name-calling on both sides. Critics of the IHRA definition accuse supporters of ‘weaponising’ antisemitism, while supporters of the Jerusalem Declaration, although it was drafted by academics – people in Jewish studies, Holocaust studies, antisemitism studies – are accused of being political agitators. “What we have is a clash of values and principles: between the universal and broad anti-racist principles promoted by the JDA and by the conception of antisemitism, held by many supporters of the IHRA definition, that antisemitism is a unique hatred.” *** What does the data tell us? Recorded antisemitic incidents have risen sharply in recent years, and Jewish people report feeling significantly less safe. The largest survey of British Jews since 7 October 2023, conducted in summer 2025, found that 35% felt unsafe in Britain, up from 9% in 2023. Almost half now see antisemitism as a “very big” problem, compared with just 11% in 2012. The Community Security Trust recorded 1,521 antisemitic incidents in the UK between January and June 2025. This is the second-highest total logged for the first half of a year – the highest being the 2,019 incidents recorded between January and June 2024, in the aftermath of the 7 October Hamas attacks. CST’s chief executive, Mark Gardner, said the incidents ranged in severity from physical attacks to “racial hatred, yelled at Jewish schoolchildren – scrawled on synagogue walls and thrown at anyone who is Jewish or suspected of being Jewish”. Yet Feldman says that the evidence from surveys of people’s attitudes, in Australia and in the UK, shows that within the population as a whole, antisemitism is diminishing. That raises the question, he says, of where these dreadful events come from, and what causes them. In Manchester and Bondi (pictured above), Feldman explains, the killers were inspired by and supported Isis, a transnational Islamist organisation seeking a global caliphate. Some campaigners have linked the chants and placards at protests in support of Palestinian rights as having normalised and popularised the justifications for antisemitic terror. Feldman points out that support for Isis is distinct from support for Palestinian rights: “While some antisemitic expressions have appeared at protests in support of Palestinians during Israel’s war in Gaza, the majority of demonstrations have been peaceful and not anti-Jewish.” That hasn’t comforted those feeling under threat. In New South Wales, Australia, an inquiry is investigating banning a specific phrase: “globalise the intifada”. And in the UK, the police response, or lack of, to anti-Jewish chants at such protests has reinforced the view that antisemitism is treated differently to other forms of racism. The controversy around the banning of Maccabi Haifa fans from attending a football match in Birmingham increased the perception the police are institutionally failing the Jewish community. Figures within the Trump administration have leapt on the controversy, with reports they are discussing the possibility of granting asylum to Jewish people from the UK. Have once safe countries like the UK and Australia become places of peril for their respective Jewish communities? “As we acknowledge how terrible the toll of these events have been, especially, of course, on the victims, but also on other Jews, both nearby and far away, we shouldn’t fall into the trap of saying Australia as a whole or the UK as a whole has become a dangerous place for Jewish people,” says Feldman. *** Tackling antisemitism In much of his work, including a recent report on antisemitism he co–authored for Runnymede Trust, Feldman distinguishes between antisemites and what he and his colleagues at BISA call a “a reservoir of antisemitism”. “Antisemites are people who are ideologically motivated – people for whom a deeply hostile view of Jews and Jewish power is central to their worldview and to their politics,” he argues. “That group of people amounts to something like 5-7% of the population in Britain, according to most surveys.” But when he digs further into this survey data on antisemitic ideas in the UK and US, he found that the percentage of people who will agree with one or two negative stereotypes is much higher. For example, if asked, “Do you agree that Jews have too much power in the media?” or “Do you agree that Jewish values are not the same values as the values of other Americans or British people?”, the percentage of people who agree to one or two of these expressions of prejudice is much higher. In a survey in Britain conducted in 2017, 30% of those questioned agreed with at least one of these negative stereotypes. “This suggests that there are stereotypes, negative images and stories about Jews which circulate in the culture – this is what I and my colleagues at BISA call the reservoir of antisemitism,” he says. “We developed this distinction when we were thinking about the Labour party’s antisemitism crisis. It’s a way of thinking about those cases where a disciplinary measure seems appropriate – dealing with ‘dyed-in-the-wool’ anti-Jewish racists – versus those who slip into antisemitic ways of thinking from time to time because it seems to offer an easy answer to a problem on their mind.” Feldman gives an example. “‘Why do western governments continue to support Israel if its behaviour towards the Palestinians is so egregiously unjust?’ There are many ways to answer that question, but one false but easy reason is to say, ‘Well, it’s because of Jewish influence; it’s because of hidden Jewish power’.” The UK government’s approach, whether it’s the Conservatives or Labour in power, has been to focus on the antisemites, Feldman explains. “Keir Starmer, for example, repeatedly characterises antisemitism as a ‘hatred’. Sometimes it is that, but most often it’s not; most often it reflects assumptions and prejudices about Jewish people [that are] deeply embedded in the culture and which people draw on in casual, unsystematic ways. That’s what the data suggests. In these cases, antisemitism needs to be addressed through programmes of education: heightened security and policing is not enough.” While Feldman believes the pro-Palestinian movement in general is not antisemitic, he has noticed the use of the language of “Jewish supremacy” has leaked into parts of the movement since the war in Gaza begun, “where some people talk about ‘Jewish supremacy’ in Britain or in the United States and the ‘Pax Judaica’, which implies there is a hidden hand of Jewish power governing British policy and American policy. And this, when it arises, is very troubling,” he explains. “I think there has been a problem on the left of not recognising antisemitism. There was some antisemitism under Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership of the Labour party, but it was made much worse by the party’s inability to recognise and deal with the problem.” One of the issues the left faces is that its understanding of racism is often based on how the legacies of colonialism and enslavement create it, Feldman says. “But those legacies are not the only forms in which racism arises. There is a history of racism inside of Europe, for example, against Jewish people, against Sinti and Roma, against Irish people – basically against people who are [often] coded as white. It’s not that all these forms of racism are the same, but sometimes there is an incapacity to recognise the different ways in which racialisation and racism manifest.” He believes the failure in parts of the left to acknowledge or police antisemitism within its own ranks is, in some ways, a reflection of that. As for politicians, Feldman isn’t convinced by their promises to “root out” antisemitism. “It’s a tough task to root out something embedded for more than a thousand years. A more realistic goal is to minimise and contain antisemitism. So, on the one hand, obviously, Jewish people, Jewish places of worship and Jewish buildings need to be protected.” But that is not enough. “Security and protection needs to be allied to programmes of education, and these programmes of education, to be effective, should place anti-racist principles and values front and centre.” Given the present moment, marked by deadly attacks, persistent abuse and deep anxiety within Jewish communities, Feldman argues it is time to re-examine how antisemitism is addressed. Longstanding approaches have not kept pace with how the problem has evolved and may now be adding to it. “Racism arises in different ways for different groups, but it’s wrong and it’s abhorrent in all cases for the same reasons. Once we see this, we can see that our efforts to combat antisemitism should be allied to 360-degree anti-racism.” What else we’ve been reading Daniel Dylan Wray opens the pages of a new compendium dedicated to the golden age of crisp packet design. Packet of Space Raiders, anyone? How about Hedgehog flavour? Martin Belam, newsletters team The The ‘Pub that changed me’ series has had me smiling from ear to ear. The latest, on the Glory in east London where many iconic drag queens first cut their teeth, is a gem. Aamna Mohdin, newsletters team If you are baffled by the existence of the game Arc Raiders, which has swiftly become one of the most successful online shooters in the world since its October launch, Keith Stuart has you covered. (And do subscribe to our weekly games email, Pushing Buttons.) Martin I cannot agree more strongly with Picturehouse boss Clare Binns – a Bafta recipient for her outstanding British contribution to cinema – who argues films should shorten to get bums on seats. Martin From libido boosters to immunity enhancers, there’s now a patch for every condition. But do they actually work? Morwenna Ferrier speaks to the experts. Aamna Sport Football | The 18-year-old Charalampos Kostoulas scored a sensational overhead kick in stoppage time to earn Brighton a 1-1 draw with Bournemouth. Football | Marc Guéhi has completed his £20m move to Manchester City from Crystal Palace, signing a contract to 2031. Tennis | Maya Joint, the top-ranked local in the Australian Open women’s singles draw, crashed out after losing in straight sets to Czech teenager Tereza Valentová. The front pages “Trump links Greenland threats to Nobel snub,” is the splash on the Guardian today. “I no longer think purely about peace, says Trump,” has the Times. “British and US relationship at lowest ebb since 1956 Suez crisis,” says the i paper. “British teenagers face social media ban,” is the lead story over at the Telegraph, while the Daily Mail has: “U-turn opens door to ban on social media for under-16s.” “I’m done with my family,” has the Sun on the Beckham fallout. “Brooklyn blasts Posh & Becks,” says the Star. Finally, the Metro with “A prize idiot!” Today in Focus Why Donald Trump really wants Greenland “The thing to remember, always, with Trump is that everything is about the psychodrama,” the Guardian investigations correspondent Tom Burgis tells Helen Pidd. “Everything is who’s in his ear, what bit of his vanity or insecurity has been activated.” Tom speaks to the show about Donald Trump’s friend Ronald Lauder, a billionaire with business interests in Greenland. Cartoon of the day | Ben Jennings The Upside A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad Scientists have been forced to rethink the intelligence of cattle after an Austrian cow displayed an “extraordinary intelligence” for tool use. Veronika, a 13-year-old Brown Swiss, was seen using sticks and a broom to scratch herself, even switching ends “in a meaningful way”. Veronika favoured the bristled end of the broom to scratch the tough skin on her back, but switched to using the smooth handle for more delicate areas. “At the beginning I thought this was the result of a mistake,” Dr Antonio Osuna Mascaró from Vienna’s University of Veterinary Medicine said, but explained that they observed it as a repeated pattern in the cow’s behaviour. “We don’t believe that Veronika is the Einstein of cows,” he added. “What this tells us is that cows have the potential to innovate tool use, and we have ignored this fact for thousands of years.” 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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Antarctic penguins have radically shifted their breeding season – seemingly in response to climate change

Penguins in Antarctica have radically shifted their breeding season, apparently as a response to climate change, research has found. Dramatic shifts in behaviour were revealed by a decade-long study led by Penguin Watch at the University of Oxford and Oxford Brookes University, with some penguins’ breeding period moving forward by more than three weeks. The changes threaten to disrupt penguins’ access to food, increasing concerns for their survival. “We are very concerned because these penguins are advancing their season so much, and penguins are now breeding earlier than in any known records,” said the report’s lead author, Dr Ignacio Juarez Martínez. “The changes are happening so fast that the penguins could end up breeding at times when their prey is not available yet. This could result in a lack of food for the penguin chicks in the first weeks of their life, which could be fatal. Even if the penguins could match their prey’s behaviour, we can’t expect them to keep this pace up much longer.” The researchers examined changes in the timing of penguin breeding between 2012 and 2022, specifically their “settlement” at a colony – the first date at which penguins continuously occupied a nesting zone. Three species – Adélie (Pygoscelis adeliae), chinstrap (P antarcticus) and gentoo (P papua) – were studied, with colony sizes ranging from a dozen nests up to hundreds of thousands of nests. The scientists gathered evidence from 77 time-lapse cameras positioned around 37 colonies in Antarctica and some sub-Antarctic islands. Every time a camera took a picture, it also recorded the air temperature. The results, published on Tuesday in the Journal of Animal Ecology, show that the timing of the breeding season for all three species advanced at record rates. Gentoo penguins showed the greatest change, with an average advance of 13 days over the decade and up to 24 days in some gentoo colonies. This represents the fastest change in phenology (timing of breeding) recorded in any bird, and possibly any vertebrate, to date. Adélie and chinstrap penguins also advanced their breeding by an average of 10 days. Such drastic changes also threaten to increase competition between the region’s penguin species, with clear “winners” and “losers” expected. “Gentoos are a more temperate species and are already benefiting from the milder conditions that climate change is bringing to Antarctica,” said Juarez. “They’re already expanding their colonies throughout the peninsula and growing their numbers in colonies that were already established, while Adélies and chinstraps are both declining throughout the Antarctic peninsula. “A scenario of increased competition would only exacerbate this. With food, gentoos are foraging generalists, meaning they can switch from krill to fish, so they would be less affected in low-krill years, while the others are krill specialists.” The shifting breeding periods could also result in the penguins fighting for space and nesting sites. “Part of the reason why we see the three species living together in the Antarctic peninsula is because of their traditionally staggered reproduction, with Adélies and chinstraps breeding first and gentoos breeding slightly later,” Juarez said. The three have managed to share space and minimise competition also because of differences in hunting depths and sea-ice conditions. Increased competition for food, other resources and snow-free nesting space would make raising chicks more difficult. Juarez said: “We’ve already seen gentoos take nests that were previously occupied by Adélies or chinstraps.” It is unclear what the specific mechanism is that is moving the penguins’ breeding dates forward – they could be prompted by warmer temperatures (as many animals and plants are), by the earlier breaking of the ice, the earlier melting of the snow, the earlier phytoplankton blooms or other factors. Penguins play a key role in Antarctic food chains, including bringing nutrients from deep water up to the surface, which is vital to algae being able to complete their photosynthesis. Scientists are anxious that losing species will increase the risk of broad ecosystem collapse. “Chinstrap and Adélie colonies are, unfortunately, in clear decline throughout the area and there’s no reason to believe this is going to reverse anytime soon,” said Juarez. “Emperor penguins also breed there and also look like they are going extinct. We want to preserve penguin diversity in Antarctica at all costs. The Antarctic ecosystem is a network with very few links – losing several species of penguins before the end of the century, as models predict, could be a fatal blow to its functioning and its resilience.”

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‘I thought it was going to perish’: the remarkable revival of an endangered language in Lesotho

Tsotleho Mohale was addressing a group of people gathered on a mountainside still damp from an intense rainstorm that morning. The peaks on the other side of the steep valley were draped in cloud. Mohale was speaking in siPhuthi, a language spoken by just a few thousand people in parts of southern Lesotho and the north of South Africa’s Eastern Cape province, about the plants he used and the ailments he cured as a traditional healer. The questions came from Sheena Shah, a British linguist, and were translated into siPhuthi by Mohale’s grandson Atlehang. Shah’s German colleague Matthias Brenzinger was filming the exchange. The two academics have been travelling regularly to Daliwe, a remote valley in Lesotho about 15 miles from the nearest paved road, since 2016, working with local interpreters and activists to document siPhuthi. A view of homes in Daliwe valley in southern Lesotho Observing the encounter was a senior healer, Mathabang Hlaela. Initially she had refused to be interviewed, wary of foreigners stealing knowledge that she had been amassing since 1978. But after briefly disappearing into her corrugated iron hut, she re-emerged adorned with beads – a thick belt, headbands and multistringed necklaces – and declared that she too wanted to be interviewed in her native language. While siPhuthi remains under threat from the dominant Sesotho in Lesotho and Xhosa across the border in South Africa, it has undergone a remarkable revival. Malillo Mpapa, a shop owner, started working with Shah and Brenzinger as a paid language consultant in 2019. She recalled how receptive ebaPhuthi people were to the project. “When we made recordings, they were so impressed and they were proud and willing to help,” said Mpapa, who lives in the Sebapala valley neighbouring Daliwe. The linguists Sheena Shah and Matthias Brenzinger record the traditional healer Tsotleho Mohale speaking in siPhuthi about his work as villagers watch in Ha Sekhobe in Daliwe valley Tsotleho Mohale, a traditional healer, stands outside his home; Mathabang Hlaela, also a healer, watches a recording just made of her Mpapa, 34, expressed her own pride in having worked on the project and improved her siPhuthi. “It helped me a lot, because … I was interested in how to write and speak siPhuthi correctly,” she said. About half of the world’s 7,000 languages are spoken by fewer than 10,000 people. While intergenerational transmission is more important than absolute numbers in language survival, about half of languages are at risk of extinction by the end of the century, according to Unesco. Linguists argue that language death is a tragedy. “Languages represent thousands of natural experiments: ways of seeing, understanding and living that should form part of any meaningful account of what it is to be human,” Ross Perlin, a co-director of the non-profit Endangered Language Alliance, wrote in his book Language City. While at the University of Cape Town, Brenzinger and Shah heard about siPhuthi and realised there had been no academic research on it since the 1990s. In January 2016, they set out on a month-long trip to find out where siPhuthi was spoken and whether communities would be open to working together. Herders with their donkeys in the village of Ha Sekhobe, in Daliwe valley “We really wanted not to have any agenda before this trip, because we thought it’s also important to gain trust,” said Shah, now a researcher at the University of Hamburg. The pair hiked two days to one village and found just three siPhuthi speakers, two elderly. Many people hadn’t heard of the language or were reluctant to admit that they spoke it. The researchers heard that the “purest” siPhuthi was in the Daliwe valley, home to about 1,000 people, mostly crop and livestock farmers. There, they found children speaking it. They became members of Libadla le baPhuthi, an association campaigning for the official recognition of siPhuthi in Lesotho and political representation for the community. A river bend seen from the unpaved road that connects Daliwe valley in southern Lesotho with the rest of the country EbaPhuthi men wait for an audience with Bereng Nkuebe, the chief of Daliwe valley, outside the chief’s home in Ha Sekhobe village Since then, the researchers have worked with about 20 local people such as Mpapa to record more than 40 hours of siPhuthi video, on everything from marriages and funerals to poems, recipes and life stories. From 2019 to 2022 they hosted workshops with about six ebaPhuthi each time to decide on an orthography – an agreed way of writing siPhuthi. They plan to publish a 3,000-word dictionary next year and are conducting a census of speakers. Outside Daliwe, in the town of Alwyn’s Kop, six of the linguists trained by Shah and Brenzinger are now translating the Bible into siPhuthi, in written and audio form. The project started in 2019 with Bible stories recorded on to solar-powered audio devices and distributed among siPhuthi speakers. The group has finished translating the books of Genesis, Romans and Luke and are partway through Matthew. For the deeply Christian community, having “the word of God” in their own language is important. The translators also noted other benefits. Phuthi Mats’abisa, who grew up in Alwyn’s Kop, said: “Before the Bible, I thought [siPhuthui] was going to perish.” He added: “At first, I felt like a nobody. Now I have pride in my own identity.” Mats’eliso Tsekoa, a translator, records a portion of an oral siPhuthi Bible translation in the Bible translation group’s mobile sound booth in Alwyn’s Kop Despite the growing confidence in siPhuthi, it is still endangered outside of the Daliwe valley by Sesotho and Xhosa, said Brenzinger, a research fellow at the University of the Free State in South Africa. “There is always this notion of English being a killer language,” he said. “In most cases in Africa, it’s not English or French that are threatening other languages, it’s the dominant national languages.” SiPhuthi was given a boost in August when it was made an official language of Lesotho, alongside Xhosa and sign language. It was the culmination of decades of campaigning, said Libadla le baPhuthi’s president, Letzadzo Kometsi. “I feel like my mission is accomplished,” said Kometsi, a law lecturer at the National University of Lesotho. He acknowledged, though, that the government needed to allocate resources and effort to implement siPhuthi’s new legal status, including in schools. Translators work to translate the Bible into siPhuthi in their office in Alwyn’s Kop; Bongani Peete, a teacher at Daliwe primary school Community members said being forced to learn in English and Sesotho, the previous sole official languages, led to children struggling in school and the ebaPhuthi’s subsequent struggles to break out of poverty. Children needed to be taught in siPhuthi in the first years of school, they said, something that is backed up by research showing that mother-tongue education improves learning outcomes. Bongani Peete, a teacher at Daliwe primary, said he had to punish children he caught speaking siPhuthi, as mandated by the school’s rules. “I feel so bad,” he said, looking downcast. “I need everyone to be allowed to express his or herself in his or her language.” It was news to him that siPhuthi was now an official language. “It is very good indeed,” he said, adding that he would now no longer punish children for speaking their mother tongue.