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Many Nato countries not spending enough to support Ukraine, says Rutte – Europe live

Meanwhile we’re getting an update from Latvia, with the drone alert now called off. The Latvian army added its usual disclaimer that “as long as Russia’s aggression in Ukraine continues, a recurrence of such incidents, when a foreign unmanned aerial vehicle enters or approaches Latvia’s airspace, is possible.” One drone was confirmed to have crossed into Latvia from Belarus but its current whereabouts were not known, a military spokesperson told broadcaster Latvian Television.

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Record 274 climbers summit Everest from Nepalese side in single day

A record 274 climbers have reached the summit of Mount Everest from the Nepalese side in a single day after a spring season that started late because of the threat of ice fall on the normal tourist route. The climbers took advantage of the clear weather on Wednesday, said Rishi Ram Bhandari, of the Expedition Operators Association Nepal. “This is the highest number of climbers in a single day so far,” Bhandari told Reuters, referring to the Nepali record, adding that the number could rise as some climbers who had summited might not have informed the base camp yet. All but one of the climbers reached the summit assisted by Sherpa guides and using supplementary bottled oxygen. The Ecuadorian climber Marcelo Segovia summited while climbing independently and without oxygen. Mountaineering experts often criticise Nepal for allowing large numbers of climbers on the mountain, which sometimes leads to risky jams or long queues in the “death zone” area below the summit, where the level of natural oxygen is below what is required for human survival. The large convergence on a single day appears to have occurred as climbers who had been waiting in higher camps for better wind conditions were joined by climbers from lower camps, with some reporting queues and a slow pace of ascent. The 8,849-metre (29,032ft) peak can be scaled from either the southern side in Nepal or the northern face in China’s Tibet. On 22 May 2019, Nepal’s side had 223 and the Chinese side had 113 climbers on the summit. Chinese authorities, however, have closed the route this year. This week, the veteran mountain guide Kami Rita Sherpa scaled the peak for the 32nd time, breaking his own record for the most summits of Everest. His closest rival, Pasang Dawa Sherpa, scaled the peak for the 30th time this week. Also, Lhakpa Sherpa scaled Everest for the 11th time, topping her own record for the most summits by a female climber. This year’s Everest climbing season began late because of the risk from a huge serac, glacial ice cliff, hanging over the key route to the summit. There are 494 climbers and an equal number of Sherpa guides expected to attempt to scale the mountain by the end of May, when the climbing season on the peak ends. Thousands of people have climbed Everest since it was first scaled on 29 May 1953 by Sherpa Tenzing Norgay and the New Zealander Edmund Hillary. A Department of Tourism official, Himal Gautam, said he had ‌received preliminary ⁠information that more than 250 people climbed the peak on Wednesday. “We wait for climbers to return, give us photographs and other evidence to prove their ascents and provide them with climbing certificates,” Gautam told Reuters. “Only then we will be able to confirm the numbers.” Nepal has issued 494 permits to climb Everest this year, each costing $15,000. Reuters and AP contributed to this article

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Colombia’s climate crossroads: Trumpism casts shadow over presidential battle

Several hours after dark in a quiet Caribbean neighbourhood, a cluster of environmental activists gather on plastic chairs between a mango tree and a courtyard wall emblazoned with the words “Colombia, respira!” (Breathe, Colombia). So many people have turned up that some have to stand. That is because tonight’s speaker is Susana Muhamad, one of the most admired socio-environmental campaigners in the world, and this is a moment of profound historical significance. This month’s presidential election will decide whether Colombia remains a global leader on the climate and exemplar of “popular environmentalism”, or whether it switches to the side of fracking, mining and other forms of fossil fuel extractivism. In other words, whether it will change from green to grey. The movement is braced for a struggle. President Gustavo Petro, of Pacto Historico, is constitutionally barred from serving a consecutive second term, so the party has selected Iván Cepeda to run for president and continue his policies. The far-right candidate, Abelardo de la Espriella, and the centre-right candidate, Paloma Valencia, are both enthusiastic about reopening the oil spigot and fracking. US interference is a big concern, with Donald Trump, talking of military intervention in Colombia. Muhamad, a former environment minister, tells the attenders: “We must win in the first round because the future of Colombia will be decided here, in this very complicated international context. If we don’t win, our country will be another in Latin America aligned with Donald Trump. We have to win. Otherwise, everything we’re talking about will be completely suspended for four years. Goodbye.” Muhamad speaks of the progress Colombia has made in declaring its part of the Amazon rainforest a fossil fuel-free zone, how Petro has tried to curtail mining, protect people from pollution and realise the country’s potential as a “great power for life”. She contrasts this to what is happening in Bolivia, where the pro-business government has sold off tracts of the Junín River basin to a lithium mining company, and to Ecuador, where the far-right president, Daniel Noboa, is trying to weaken Indigenous land defenders and open up protected lands for mineral exploitation and to allow a US military base on the Galápagos Islands. Colombia plays an outsized role in the push for climate justice. In recent years, Muhamad has become a familiar face on the international stage, notably as a leading advocate for the transition away from fossil fuels at the Cop29 climate conference in Dubai, and then as president of the biodiversity Cop16 in Cali, Colombia. Muhamad is by no means a lone voice for the environment in the Pacto Historico government. Francia Márquez, the vice-president of Colombia, won the Goldman environmental prize for her campaign to halt illegal goldmining in her ancestral community of La Toma. The environment minister, Irene Vélez Torres, has just co-chaired the world’s first conference on transitioning away from fossil fuels, involving an alliance of countries that want to accelerate the energy transition rather than be held back by the consensus-based UN system and the vetoes of big oil producers. Petro demonstrated his commitment at that conference in Santa Marta with a call for Colombia to set an example of how to mobilise the population to overcome the “suicidal” economics and “fascistic” politics of the fossil fuel industry. The leadership demonstrated by Petro’s government has moved the phaseout of oil, gas and coal from the margins into the centre of global diplomacy, according to Tzeporah Berman, the founder and chair of the Fossil Fuel Treaty Initiative. As a result, she said, this month’s presidential ballot will make international waves. “The implications of this election reach far beyond Colombia. At a moment of escalating climate disasters and geopolitical instability, the world is watching whether this leadership continues, or whether political pressure from the fossil fuel industry succeeds in pushing countries backward.” Environmentalists in Colombia believe the national commitment draws its force from grassroots activists. Colombia is one of the world’s deadliest countries for environmental defenders. As Juan David Amaya, a 19-year-old climate activist and founder of the pan-Latin American youth organisation Life of Pachamama, put it, the main difference between activists in Colombia and those in Europe is that “there, they don’t kill you”. After a campaign against oil palm plantations in his home region of San Carlos de Guaroa, Amaya has received numerous death threats. “In Colombia, doing this is an act of rebellion born from hope, born from love. But it also comes at a very high cost,” he said. “Colombia has made significant progress over the last four years in political discourse and action, which has mobilised many governments around the world. Today, governments like Panama, Mexico, Brazil and Colombia stand out for their ambition, their political leadership, and once again for telling the world: we must take action.” Paula Andrea Hernández, a Pacto Historico campaign manager, says: “We call it popular environmentalism because it comes from peasants and fishermen. We have suffered severe extractivism, often arm in arm with illegal militias, for so long that people realise the fight for territory and environment needs to be about power.” Domestically, climate and environment are rarely mentioned directly in campaign debates but shape the context of hot-button issues such as security and health: drug trafficking often overlaps with illegal mining and forest clearance, and shortcomings in medical provision are shown up by water contamination, rising temperatures and floods. “The environment has become a central issue,” observed Leon Valencia, a political analyst. It is not straightforwardly binary: “There are sectors on the left that favour oil exploitation, and sectors on the right that defend conservation and green markets. What both sides have agreed upon is that the relationship with nature has become a strong political identity … Colombia is experiencing a progressive environmentalisation of public opinion.” Some campaigners complain that the Petro government’s rhetoric is not always matched by actions. Deforestation of the Amazon has slowed since the Pacto Historico came to power but it continues and illegal gold mining is widespread. Many parts of Colombia are virtually ungovernable because they are controlled by armed groups. There has been political opposition in Bogotá, the world’s third highest capital city, where the business lobby in Congress has blocked the government’s most ambitious moves to restrict mining. Rightwing commentators said Colombia’s first leftwing government would be an economic disaster, especially when Petro promised to replace fossil fuels with avocados. In fact, GDP growth has remained positive for the past four years. Julia Miranda, a lower house deputy from the New Liberal party and an advocate for nature, insisted the Petro administration had proved ineffective domestically despite talk in the international arena of Colombian environmental leadership. “It is a false discourse – mere rhetoric while their environmental policies have been a failure,” she said. Miranda supports Valencia, but on the question of phasing out fossil fuels she sees room for compromise. “Colombia needs to work with complete seriousness and consistency on the energy transition, but in the meantime we need to use our resources, for example gas.” That would be a setback for the transition and could mean Colombia pulls out of or weakens its commitment to the global “coalition of the willing” that it helped to form in Santa Marta last month. But those goals are still to be fought for. With 10 days until the election on 31 May, the outcome remains unclear. Polls suggest Cepeda, Petro’s successor as the Pacto Historico candidate, will lead in the first round but fall short of the 50% needed for an outright victory. If there is a runoff, either one of his two rightwing challengers would be favourite. “That would be an abysmal setback” said Renzo García, a biologist and congressman. “A victory by Paloma Valencia or Abelardo de la Espriella would mark a return to an extractivist model, where we hand the country over to the economic interests of the world’s elites and serve as a pantry for minerals, oil and agribusiness without taking into account the rights of nature.”

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Girl, two, dies after being left in car as extreme heat sweeps Spain

A two-year-old girl has died of heatstroke in north-west Spain after being accidentally left in her father’s car during an unseasonably hot spell that could push temperatures in some areas to 38C (100F). The child, who has not been named, went into cardiac arrest on Wednesday afternoon after spending several hours inside the vehicle in the Galician town of Brión after her father forgot to take her to nursery. According to media reports, the man had driven his older child to school that morning and had intended to drop the toddler at nursery when he was distracted by a phone call. Instead of heading to the nursery, he went to work, leaving the child in the car. The alarm was raised that afternoon when the girl’s mother went to pick her up from the nursery at 3pm and was told she had not been dropped off that morning. Realising what had happened, the parents called the emergency services and the girl was taken to a health centre in the nearby town of Bertamiráns, where she was pronounced dead. Police are investigating the incident and the family is receiving psychological support. Brión town council declared two days of official morning for the girl and said a minute’s silence would be held in her memory on Friday. “We would like to offer our deepest condolences and all our support to the family of the little girl who lost her life in Brión yesterday, as well as to all her friends, while we make all the municipal resources they need available to them in these difficult times,” the council said. “May she rest in peace.” Spain has been bracing for the kind of heat more commonly associated with midsummer. The state meteorological office, Aemet, said the “exceptionally high temperatures” could reach 36-38C in some southern parts of the country. “Throughout May, we have recorded a prolonged period of below-normal temperatures,” it said. “Now comes the complete opposite: a period of very high temperatures for this time of year across most of the country. In fact, some days could break heat records.” Aemet said the hot spell, which does not meet the technical criteria to be declared a heatwave, would probably last until the middle of next week. Spain, one of the European countries most exposed to the effects of the climate emergency, has experienced a growing number of heatwaves and a sharp increase in large forest fires in recent years. A 2022 Aemet study found that the arrival of 30C temperatures across Spain and the Balearic islands had come, on average, 20-40 days earlier over the previous 71 years. “The summer is eating up the spring,” Rubén del Campo, an Aemet spokesperson, told El País at the time. “What’s happening fits perfectly with a situation where you have a warmer planet,” he said, adding that rising temperatures were a “direct and palpable [consequence] of climate change … The climate in Spain isn’t the one we used to know. It’s got more extreme.” Spain recorded its highest ever temperature in August 2021, when the mercury in the Andalucían town of La Rambla, near Córdoba, reached 47.6C.

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US is ‘simply choosing not to stop’ Ebola outbreak after massive public health cuts, experts say

A previously undetected outbreak of Ebola is coursing through parts of central Africa, and the US appears to be doing little to help stop it, after massive cuts to global and domestic public health efforts. There is no cure and no vaccine for the rare Bundibugyo variant of Ebola, which has caused two outbreaks in recent decades. Health leaders and scientists are now racing to understand where the virus is spreading and attempting to stop it – but the US is notably absent in these efforts. In the past year, the US Agency for International Development (USAID) has been dismantled, thousands of staff at US health agencies were laid off, communications stalled and key scientific research canceled. There are 482 suspected cases and about 116 deaths reported since April in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), with two cases and one death in Uganda and potential spread to neighboring South Sudan. The outbreak “might have been going on for a few months”, said Kristian Andersen, a professor of immunology and microbiology at Scripps Research. The outbreak was immediately declared a public health emergency of international concern (PHEIC) by Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the director general of the World Health Organization (WHO), before even convening the committee that usually makes that determination. Officials say it may last for months. “The DRC is one of the most vulnerable health systems in the world, and was the second-biggest recipient of USAID funding,” said Matthew Kavanagh, director of the Center for Global Health Policy and Politics at Georgetown University. The US withdrawal of funding with “zero notice” has been “disruptive to the country’s basic activities”, he said. US foreign assistance to the DRC dropped from $1.4bn in 2024 to $431m in 2025 and only $21m so far this year. Assistance to Uganda dropped from $674m to $377m in 2025 and a negative $1.2m so far in 2026. “It was pennies compared to what you get in return,” Andersen said of global health investments. It is far cheaper and easier to prevent and contain outbreaks than it is to respond to them, he said. With the US cutting off the first option, the second scenario will become increasingly common. The US also announced it would leave the WHO and end $130m in funding, which resulted in 2,371 lost jobs at the organization, Kavanagh said, calling the cuts a “self-inflicted wound that the administration has really brought on us”. This outbreak and response was “deeply foreseeable when you gut public health surveillance and you gut public health capacity”, Kavanagh added. “It’s not just that we’re leaving the table, we are completely cutting ourselves out of the conversation,” Andersen said. “We are upending the table.” The CDC has “always been the premier agency” when it comes to country-level leadership and played a key role as a partner “you could turn to”, Andersen said. But under the second Trump administration, Ebola response teams were suspended, and health centers and medical supplies – particularly crucial with a virus spread through touch, with supportive care the only treatment – were dramatically cut back. A world-class Ebola lab in Frederick, Maryland, with the National Institutes of Health (NIH) was designed for exactly this scenario. The lab would normally be swinging into action, following up on research indicating monoclonal antibodies and a vaccine might be effective against this strain, possibly testing those treatments and vaccines, performing in-depth sequencing work on the samples shared during the outbreak. But that lab was shuttered last year, with staff laid off abruptly and their work – key for preventing and responding to outbreaks – ended with no notice. The website for the lab is still closed, indicating it has not been revived during this outbreak. Satish Pillai, an incident manager for the CDC’s Ebola response, said he “can’t speak” to the NIH lab when the Guardian asked about it in a press conference on Monday. Instead, Pillai said that the US is able to test for Ebola through its laboratory network, a comment unrelated to the Guardian’s questions. Because of layoffs, terminations and high-profile departures, key confirmed positions at US health agencies are vacant. Currently, the CDC has no director; there’s no US surgeon general; there’s no commissioner at the FDA. Officials say there are now between 25 and 30 staff in the DRC country office. The CDC is sending one more person, Pillai said, and other experts are available remotely. The DRC office suffered massive and sudden cuts when USAID was unexpectedly dissolved last year. Former employees sued the US government after they were abandoned and lost everything, with no jobs or options to evacuate from DRC, they said. “When those USAID stop-work orders came out, there was a whole series of people who were actively looking for spillover in the DRC and in Uganda,” Kavanagh said. “There were hundreds of health workers doing surveillance activities, and then, of course, you had the bigger picture, which is the thousands of health workers who were doing HIV, TB, malaria, maternal and child health – all of these things funded through US funding from USAID and also some from CDC to be doing global health activities – who were the frontlines of detection.” Patients don’t usually come to the clinic suspecting they have Ebola, he pointed out; they usually come in with a fever or other symptoms, and “those frontline community health workers … are always the ones that detect outbreaks early”. That work ended abruptly and is now being replaced with country-by-country agreements, some of which appear to be predicated on resource-sharing agreements. The US government is “essentially holding hostage” the countries that have built health systems around US guidance, “and then from one day to the next you just cut it”, Andersen said. In the past, the US had ensured that “many, many potential global outbreaks didn’t become global”, but now it’s stepping back, Kavanagh said, adding: “This outbreak should have been detected weeks ago, and exactly how and why will be figured out as we go, but it certainly says that the United States has stopped playing the role.” Instead, the US is announcing travel bans for noncitizens who have recently traveled to the region, which is “public health theater” that essentially punishes the countries and doesn’t actually stop cases, Kavanagh said. The Africa CDC called for countries to refrain from “fear-driven” travel bans. “The fastest path to protecting all countries in the world is to aggressively support outbreak control at the source,” Dr Jean Kaseya, director general of the Africa CDC, said in a statement. “At this point, this is an out-of-control epidemic that has now crossed borders, and this is really bad for the region, and will result in lots more deaths, and could be a real crisis,” Kavanagh said. Health leaders in the DRC are among the smartest, most experienced Ebola responders – but now they’re confronting an outbreak “with hundreds of millions of dollars cut from the global capacity to help them respond”. Andersen noted “these countries are way more competent than we are in responding to something like Ebola” and that African scientists have done “remarkable” work already sequencing the virus, which demonstrates a new spillover event and could offer clues to where the outbreak originated. “But that doesn’t mean that we should just completely cut ourselves out of the picture,” he said. Outbreaks like these have economic, geopolitical and global stability implications, Kavanagh said. But they also matter because allowing anyone to die “needlessly of a disease that can be stopped is immoral, and we are living in a world where we don’t have to allow infectious diseases to spread unchecked”, he said. “Ebola can be stopped, and if we don’t mobilize the dollars and the public health efforts, then we are simply choosing not to stop the outbreak. Because it can be stopped. The question is, will it be? And when?”

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Lyme disease cases in England rise by more than 20% in a year

Cases of Lyme disease have risen more than 20% in England in the past year, public health experts have revealed, as pharmaceutical companies work to create new vaccines and drugs to tackle the tick-borne illness. According to data from the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA), published as part of its One Health vector-borne disease surveillance report, there were 1,168 laboratory-confirmed cases of Lyme disease in 2025, up from 959 in 2024 – an increase of 22%. However, the figure is similar to that recorded in 2023, when there were 1,151 confirmed cases. Two probable cases of tick-borne encephalitis complex were also identified in 2025, bringing the total number of locally acquired cases to six since 2019, when the virus was first identified in the UK. Dr Claire Gordon, the head of the rare and imported pathogens laboratory at UKHSA, said: “While the number of laboratory-confirmed acute cases of Lyme disease in 2025 is an increase on numbers reported in 2024, we expect overall case rates to vary year to year depending on awareness, testing rates and factors that impact outdoor activities such as weather. Broader trends in 2025 remain consistent.” Lyme disease is caused by a type of bacteria called Borrelia burgdorferi, which lives in the gut of ticks – tiny spider-like creatures found in grassy and wooded areas that feed on the blood of birds and mammals, including humans. “In recent years, we have seen an increasing geographical distribution of ticks across the UK,” Gordon said. “But tick numbers continue to vary due to changes in weather conditions, climate trends, habitat changes and shifting host populations.” Symptoms of Lyme can include a bullseye-like rash, fever, muscle and joint pain, and lethargy. Left untreated, the condition can become chronic and, even among those who receive antibiotics, some report ongoing symptoms. Not all ticks carry Lyme bacteria, and it is thought rapid removal of ticks reduces the risk of infection after a bite. But while there are various medications available to protect pets from Lyme disease – including monthly oral tablets and vaccinations – advice for humans centres on prevention, such as using repellants, covering exposed skin outdoors and wearing light-coloured clothing to make ticks easier to spot. Linden Hu, a professor of immunology at Tufts medical school, said there were a number of reasons veterinary and human approaches differed, noting that pet owners were often more willing to medicate their dogs than themselves or family members, while clinical trials in humans were harder to conduct. “It’s easier to do studies in animals because you can control the situation. You can put infected ticks on them to test if it’s going to work, which you really can’t do with humans,” he said, adding real-world studies, or “field trials”, were expensive and risky, given that it was unclear how many cases of Lyme would occur. A vaccine against Lyme for humans, known as LYMErix, was previously available in the US, with trials suggesting it had an efficacy of 76% after a third dose. However, it was withdrawn from the market in 2002 after poor uptake. “There were a couple of things that coalesced to cause the low sales,” Hu said, noting this included the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommending it only for people at high risk of Lyme disease. There were also concerns the vaccine may be linked to arthritis. While evidence remained lacking, the negative media coverage and lack of trust in the vaccine contributed to low demand. Several new treatments are in the works, including an mRNA vaccine from Moderna – a jab Hu has worked on that is in phase 2 of its clinical development – as well as a different vaccine from Pfizer and Valneva. Crucially, Hu said, both approaches aimed to avoid activating the immune pathway some researchers suspected caused arthritis in certain recipients of LYMErix. Not that it has been plain sailing. In the case of the Pfizer/Valneva vaccine, there were fewer than expected cases of Lyme among participants in a phase 3 trial, meaning that while the vaccine appeared to have an efficacy of more than 70%, the results were not as statistically robust as hoped. Despite this, the vaccine is to be submitted to regulatory authorities. Other approaches are also being explored. Among them is monoclonal antibody from Tonix Pharmaceuticals, which could be given before exposure to ticks, while Hu is working on a drug with Tarsus Pharmaceuticals that is already used to protect dogs and cats. Unlike the vaccines, this drug – known as lotilaner – kills the ticks, rather than the bacteria they carry. According to Hu, lotilaner works rapidly by killing the ticks before they have a chance to transmit Lyme or, potentially, other diseases. Julia Knight, of the charity Lyme Disease UK, said it was unclear whether a vaccine would be adopted in the UK, given that figures for Lyme disease appeared to be low, although were likely higher – not least because they do not include the roughly 70% of people with Lyme who develop the telltale rash, as these patients are treated immediately without laboratory tests, and Lyme disease can be missed or misdiagnosed. “Obviously any advances in science that prevents Lyme disease is always welcome, but whether people will welcome a vaccine or not in the current climate of vaccine hesitancy remains to be seen,” she said.

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Dublin gangland figure brings extremist views to Irish mainstream on campaign trail

Elaine Roe, 61, a cafe worker, has no doubt what is the most important issue in this week’s byelection for Dublin’s north inner city. “The government is wrecking our country, they’re bringing in rapists and murderers and kidnappers. It’s a shame. I might vote Hutch, he seems a normal person.” That would be Gerry “the monk” Hutch, a prominent gangland figure who is running as an independent in an election that is far from normal. The 63-year-old – who was jailed for robbery convictions in his youth – is a celebrity candidate in a contest for a parliamentary seat that has been dominated by xenophobia and immigration. Voters in the Dublin Central constituency will cast ballots on Friday, with results on Saturday, but one outcome is already clear: hostility to newcomers, especially Black immigrants and Muslims, has entered Ireland’s political mainstream. Hutch has called for “illegal immigrants” to be detained in camps. “They should be all interned,” he said, and singled out east Africans. “The ones that are Somalians and them type of people, no way. Interned.” When the Guardian accompanied Hutch on a recent canvas, soundtracked by a flatbed truck blasting pop songs, he said 99% of Irish people wanted stronger rules on immigration. “But you’re not allowed to say that. Even when people have nowhere to live, because of the housing disaster, you can’t say that,” he said. In fact, what was once a fringe view – that immigrants are to blame for crime and a housing shortage – has in some areas become a refrain. Residents in Dublin Central, which spans working-class neighbourhoods, hostels, asylum shelters and wealthy districts, had urged him to run, Hutch said. “I’m gonna use the platform to help the people who voted me in and they’ll tell me what to do.” People in the street and on doorsteps requested selfies with Hutch. “You’re my number one, pal. I love everything you’ve done,” said one man. Hutch handed him a flyer that promised “leadership” and “honesty” to shake up the status quo. “We need change and I’m your man,” it said. Hutch has been a notorious figure for decades. A court named him as the leader of an organised crime group and he has admitted to committing crimes. “Some of them I got away with,” he told RTÉ in 2008. He shocked the political establishment by almost winning a seat in the 2024 general election and is now running to fill the vacancy left by Paschal Donohoe, a finance minister with the ruling Fine Gael party, who quit the Dáil for a World Bank job. An opinion poll ranked Hutch third, with 14% of first preference votes, which gives him a slender chance of prevailing against 13 other candidates in an election that will be decided on transfers from eliminated candidates. Opinion polls also say the most important issue for voters is the cost of living (33%), followed by house prices (24%) and immigration (12%). Yet for many voters the issues are linked. “I’m not racist but we should be looking after our own instead of bringing people in,” said John Clarke, 45, a butcher. “I have two kids – both had to go to Sydney because they couldn’t afford to buy homes here. I’m especially against Muslims coming in, they want to take over.” Mainstream parties all disavow racism but have toughened rhetoric on immigration and asylum. Mary Lou McDonald, the leader of Sinn Féin, a progressive opposition party, sidestepped responding to Hutch’s call for internment. “We can’t comment on other people’s comments,” she said. Sinn Féin’s candidate, Janice Boylan, leads the field but analysts say she will need transfers, including from Hutch voters, to fend off Daniel Ennis of the Social Democrats. Bertie Ahern, a former taoiseach and leader of the ruling Fianna Fáil party, was secretly recorded telling a voter: “The ones I worry about are the Africans. We can’t be taking in people from the Congo and all these places.” He also expressed concern about the next generation of Muslims. The current taoiseach, Micheál Martin, said the comments were “not appropriate” and did not reflect the views of Fianna Fáil. Ahern later said he had no problem with people entering through visa and asylum systems. The death of a Congolese man in the city centre on 15 May has put added scrutiny on race relations. Yves Sakila, 35, died after being restrained by security guards who suspected him of shoplifting. Police are investigating. With coffers swelled by corporate tax revenues, the centrist Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael coalition has ramped up public spending, but rising prices and a housing shortage have created a sour mood. “The country is falling to bits. There’s no jobs, no housing. If you do have a job the wages are crap. My son is 36 and still living at home,” said a charity shop worker, who withheld her name. Jimmy McDaid, 77, said he would vote for Hutch to clean up drug dealing. Asked about Hutch’s criminal record, McDaid said that was in the past. “Everyone is entitled to a second chance. Look at the government – they’re the gangsters, saying one thing and doing another.” However, in a byelection in Galway – to fill a Dáil seat vacated by the president, Catherine Connolly – the Fine Gael candidate, Seán Kyne, narrowly leads opinion polls. His main rivals are Noel Thomas, an independent who has condemned Ireland’s “reckless open border policies”, and Labour’s Helen Ogbu, who was born in Nigeria and in 2024 became the first person of colour to be elected to Galway city council.

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Thursday briefing: How ​English football ​is ​pricing ​out ​its ​own ​supporters

Good morning. The men’s football season is reaching the sharp end. This week, Arsenal were crowned Premier League champions and last night Aston Villa won the Uefa Europa League. The men’s Fifa World Cup is just around the corner. But fans in England are also at the sharp end: rising prices inside and outside grounds, kick-off times being altered on the whim of TV channels, and a creeping sense that some clubs are desperate to replace the “legacy fan” with a premium-paying “high-yield customer”. For today’s newsletter, I spoke to our football reporter, Jacob Steinberg, about the “remorseless commercialisation” of the game and whether football is pricing out once and for all the very people who give the beautiful game its soul. First, the headlines: Five big stories UK politics | Andy Burnham is backing Shabana Mahmood’s controversial changes to the immigration system, his allies have said, in a blow to those in Labour who hope to soften them. AI | The Electoral Commission has called for new legal controls over misinformation from AI chatbots, after a thinktank found they had made serious mistakes during the recent Scottish election. Ebola | Doses of a potential vaccine against the Bundibugyo virus that is causing an Ebola outbreak in central Africa will not be available for six to nine months, the World Health Organization said. Middle East | Israel’s far-right national security minister has sparked a diplomatic crisis by publishing footage of Israeli security forces abusing international activists who were detained as they tried to sail to Gaza with aid. UK news | Rainwater harvesting, the use of grey water in homes and an urgent campaign to reduce water usage across society are vital to prevent water shortages of 5bn litres a day by 2055, the government has been told. In depth: ‘Premier League clubs are squeezing their core supporters’ Whether it is paying to get on a season ticket waiting list, shelling out for multiple pricey streaming services to follow a single season, or finding out your junior concession has been scrapped, the cost of being a men’s football fan is reaching a breaking point. While the “product” has never been more popular globally, the local match-going experience is being treated as an inconvenient relic of a by-gone era. “It feels like fans are being price-gouged left, right, and centre,” Jacob says. “Clubs have to be really careful. Part of the Premier League’s attraction is the atmosphere of the English crowd, and you risk losing that by chasing the one-match-a-season transactional fan.” *** What price loyalty? The Football Supporters’ Association (FSA) has launched the #StopExploitingLoyalty campaign to combat what it describes as a coordinated attack on match-going fans. Premier League clubs are increasingly squeezing their core supporters through price hikes, with 19 out of 20 teams raising season ticket prices this summer. You can spend as much as £2,367 for a seat at Tottenham’s stadium, and at the time of writing it isn’t even guaranteed they will be in the Premier League come August. Liverpool’s ticket prices have risen by more than 800% since 1990. Most controversially, the FSA highlights moves to scrap or drastically reduce concessions for children and senior citizens, effectively pricing out the next generation and the most loyal long-term fans in favour of more affluent, one-off visitors. And it isn’t just the Premier League. I paid £408 for one adult and one U18 season ticket at Leyton Orient for the 2023/24 season. In 2026/27 that will be £551, a one-third rise in the price in the space of a couple of campaigns. Jacob says the “expanded and quite bloated 2026 World Cup” will see the worst of this. “Tickets for the final are going for about $10,000. People who normally follow England to every tournament are thinking this might be too far; it’s hard to justify that level of expense,” Jacob says. It isn’t just the matches themselves. Host cities have been setting exorbitant fees for public transportation to stadiums, in huge contrast with events like Euro2016 in France, where a matchday ticket included free public transport. *** The beautiful game? The weekly match-going experience for supporters also feels like it is being degraded. The practice of having to pay for a place on the waiting list for season tickets became widespread in the 2010s, as did becoming “a member” (for a fee) to have even a chance of going to a match. The days of just rocking up to a top flight game and paying cash at the turnstiles are long gone. Jacob says there is a feeling among fans that some clubs would quite like to have fewer “legacy supporters” in their stands. “These are local people who have been going for years,” Jacob says. “They have their routine: they go to the pub with mates, they go to the game, then they go home.” No on-site refreshment purchases pre-game. “They don’t spend loads in the club shop because it’s not an ‘event’. There’s a definite feeling that clubs would quite like to squeeze them out, impose dynamic pricing, and attract more ‘transactional’ fans who spend big once a year”. 1,100 supporters at Manchester United’s Old Trafford are being shifted from their longstanding seats near the dugout so that they can be converted to be part of higher-priced hospitality packages. Matches are moved all the time for television schedule purposes with little regard for whether away fans will have trains available to get home afterwards. *** Supporting from the sofa “If I look back 30 years – and I’m probably showing my age – people’s first live football experience was often turning on Channel 4 on a Sunday afternoon for Football Italia. That was a way for people to connect easily without paying”, Jacob says. “The Champions League on ITV allowed for that connection. Now you have to pay, and the competition is so drawn out that I wouldn’t be surprised if people only properly connect with it during the latter stages.” That is, if they can afford it. A symbolic low point came this week: it was announced that for the first time in the competition’s storied history, the men’s Uefa Champions League final – this year featuring Arsenal – will not be free-to-air. If you don’t have the correct TNT Sports subscription (between £20 and £27 per month depending on your provider), you don’t see it. It is a far cry from the days when the biggest games could be a shared national moment, rather than a premium add-on. “It feels like things are being chipped away,” Jacob says. One consequence of competition law preventing football authorities selling rights packages to a single broadcaster means armchair fans now have to outlay on a spread of channels, with the Premier League, for example, broadcast across Sky Sports, TNT Sports and Amazon Prime. It may have driven up competition between broadcasters, but it has hit consumers in the pocket. Fans are paying almost 60% more than they were five years ago. *** One rule for some The EFL made waves this week when they kicked Southampton out of the Championship playoff final for allegedly spying on semi-final opponents. It was strange to see a football authority move so swiftly and decisively, it is not what we are used to. While the EFL acts with a heavy hand, the Premier League’s biggest cases continue to drift. Manchester City’s charges remain a permanent shadow over the league’s integrity and Chelsea’s transition from the Abramovich era appeared to result in a financial hit rather than a sporting one. Fans of Everton and Nottingham Forest have watched their clubs be docked points for financial breaches, while the “big six” seemingly operate under a different gravity. You could be forgiven for thinking the scales are permanently weighted. There are even moves to allow leagues to stage lucrative competitive fixtures abroad, potentially locking out dedicated domestic fans from one of their team’s home competitive matches. *** An opportunity elsewhere? Can non-league and women’s football grow and fill that gap? As the top flight in England tries to become a “global entertainment product” for tourists, perhaps the future of the community-driven, affordable match-day lies further down the pyramid. Cash-on-the-door matches at levels like the Isthmian League or Northern Premier League are all over the country every Saturday afternoon. There is also an opportunity for the WSL, where the connection between the pitch and the terrace hasn’t yet been commodified out of existence, and matches are widely available on free-to-air streaming platforms. It needn’t be like this. The FA is working with Uefa to ensure that tickets for Euro2028 include 40% of tickets in two categories: one costing less than £30, the other under £60. In Germany, clubs must have a fan-owned element as the majority shareholder. The cheapest season tickets at major clubs can be reasonably priced – a season ticket at Juventus in 2025 was about £280, for Atlético Madrid £242 and for Bayern Munich about £150. The cheapest Premier League season ticket was £345, and you got punished for that by having to watch West Ham. The clubs and broadcasters know they have a captive audience. Football is unique in its “stickiness”; you don’t simply switch your allegiance to a cheaper rival because the price of a pie at the ground or a TV subscription has gone up by 20%. It is that deep-rooted loyalty that is being weaponised against the fans. But as the “concessionary ladder” is pulled up and the stadium experience is hollowed out by technology and exorbitant travel costs, football is testing the limits of that devotion. At some point, the “global product” risks becoming a sterile show performed in front of half-empty stands or silent tourists, having finally priced out the people who provided the noise in the first place. In the weeks leading up to the World Cup, soccer writer Jonathan Wilson will explain how the tournament became a global phenomenon with cultural, social and political weight that extends far beyond each game. Sign up for the newsletter here. What else we’ve enjoyed “London Records in the 90s? COCAINE.” That’s just one of the many brilliant responses Daniel Dylan Wray got when he asked former artists and staff what it was really like at the eclectically rostered, hard-partying record label behind Goldie and Bananarama. Lucinda Everett, newsletters team Guardian Australia’s Carly Earl and Matilda Boseley make for a fun duo in this video investigation at who is better at spotting AI images – a picture editor or an internet addict. Martin Palm-flanked pools and political plotting. Tom Phillips visits the five-star JW Marriott hotel in Caracas, where US officials, diplomats and spies have holed up to decide the fate of Venezuela. Lucinda Would you take your film recommendations from Charli xcx? Cassidy Sollazzo has a look at celebrities acting as public taste-setters on the social platforms. Martin I enjoyed George Monbiot’s excellent column about the electorate’s failure to punish Nigel Farage and how leaders often profit from the chaos they sow. Lucinda Sport Football | Aston Villa won their first European trophy for 44 years with goals from Youri Tielemans, Emi Buendía and Morgan Rogers sealing an emphatic 3-0 victory. Tennis | The world’s top tennis players are planning to protest over prize money by reducing their media appearances at the French Open as their public battle with the grand slams intensifies. Cycling | Ecuador’s Jhonatan Narváez edged out the Spaniard Enric Mas at the end of Wednesday’s stage 11 to win his third stage of this year’s Giro d’Italia as Afonso Eulálio retained the leader’s pink jersey. The front pages “Burnham ‘backs Mahmood’s plans to tighten rules on immigration’” is the Guardian’s front page today. The Telegraph says “Don’t cap food prices, Bank warns Reeves”, while the Times’ headline is “Bank chief joins attack on freezing food prices” and the i Paper writes “Food price cap retreat after backlash from supermarkets”. Similarly, the FT runs with “Supermarket backlash forces Reeves into U-turn over grocery price caps”. The Mirror’s take is “Labour’s happy shoppers”. The Daily Mail splashes on “Putin jets menace RAF place with ‘crazy Ivan stunt”’” and the Sun, on the same topic, says “20ft from World War 3”. The Daily Express front page is “No thank you to another PM who does not back women” and Metro says “Burnham rival’s rants revealed”. Today in Focus Competing in the pro-doping Enhanced Games The Olympian Max McCusker tells Nosheen Iqbal about his decision to sign up for the Las Vegas games where performance-enhancing drugs are encouraged. Cartoon of the day | Martin Rowson The Upside A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad Punk songs about pensions, unaffordable care home fees and the frustrations of recycling may sound like a story arc from Riot Women, Sally Wainwright’s BBC show about a menopausal rock band, but the NaNaz are the real-life group of women in their 50s and 60s booked solid at clubs and festivals. The Newport-based musicians worked as nurses, foster carers and ice-cream van drivers, and were inspired by earlier generations of female punk artists such as X-Ray Spex and the Slits. “We like to write and perform songs that tell the truth about things we feel really strongly about,” says bassist and vocalist, Anne-Marie Bollen. The band members’ spontaneity and fun has also attracted younger audiences to their shows. 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. Martin Belam’s Thursday news quiz Quick crossword Cryptic crossword Wordiply