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Donald Trump threatens to annihilate Iran after crossfire over Hormuz – Middle East crisis live

Hassan Fadlallah, a Hezbollah lawmaker, has warned about “internal conflict” within Lebanon over the country’s agreement with Israel, which the Iran-backed militant group rejects – and further stated that he does not believe that the deal will actually be implemented. Lebanon and Israel signed a 14-point framework agreement in Washington on Friday designed to work towards an end to fighting between Israel and Hezbollah. Included in the deal is plans to disarm Hezbollah. Now, Fadlallah’s comments come after Lebanese president Joseph Aoun told US president Donald Trump in a phone call that the Lebanese state “will assume its responsibilities” in implementing the framework agreement. Hezbollah’s leader Naim Qassem had said on Saturday that the group would treat the deal as “null and void” and described it as “a surrender of sovereignty”. Lebanon’s national human rights commission said in a statement that no agreement should prevent victims from seeking justice. “The commission emphasises that prosecuting perpetrators of war crimes, crimes against humanity and torture does not constitute an act of hostility or a political stance, but rather a legitimate exercise of the rights to justice,” the statement said.

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‘Tech firms are losing the public’: social media age bans near tipping point

Arturo Béjar, a former employee turned whistleblower at Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta, has talked to parents around the world. He says they share the same perspective: they dread the day their children are old enough to go online. Governments appear to be listening too. This month the UK became the latest country to state that it would set a minimum age of 16 for accessing major social media platforms. Social media bans are becoming a legislative trend after the precedent set by Australia last year, when it imposed an age limit on platforms including Meta’s Instagram and Facebook, Google’s YouTube, Elon Musk’s X, TikTok and Snapchat. “I’ve spoken to parents from several countries, and I have yet to meet a parent of young kids who is not dreading when they’re old enough to go online. Or a young person who has not experienced something awful and preventable,” Béjar said. Béjar, 55, was a senior engineer and consultant at Meta. He was a witness at recent trials in the US that ruled Meta was liable for deliberately designing addictive products and had misled consumers about the safety of its platforms. The trial in California in particular received coverage that will not have dissuaded politicians around the world from taking action. “They [social media platforms] keep showing the world why we can’t trust them,” he said. Meta said it disagreed with the verdicts and would appeal, and said the “profoundly complex” issue of teenagers’ mental health could not be reduced to a single cause, adding that it remained committed to building “safe, supportive environments for young people”. People’s lack of trust is manifesting itself in action. Indonesia and Malaysia have introduced bans for under-16s on certain platforms, while Austria, France and Norway are also looking at age restrictions. Brazil has introduced a blanket mobile phone ban in schools, and children under the age of 16 are allowed to access social media only if it is linked to a parent’s account. The UK plans to have a ban in place by spring 2027, while Canada is also going to bar under-16s from platforms unless those apps implement adequate safeguards. In the US, the home of the big powers in social media and of the first amendment, there is no prospect of a federal-level ban. But the US aside, it seems the debate over whether social media causes harm, and what should be done about it, has swung decisively. The UK government had appointed an independent academic expert panel to look at the effect of social media on teenagers and, so far, its findings are “nuanced”. Nonetheless, Keir Starmer chose to take action. A source at one tech company affected by the UK ban expressed frustration that some rivals had worked harder on safety than others, making what they viewed as rushed and disproportionately heavy regulation more likely. “It’s hard to sell your safety measures to politicians when there is not enough consistency among your peers,” said the source, adding that the end result was a situation such as the ban in Australia, which they said did not encourage safer platform design and had high levels of circumvention. “You’re throwing the baby out with the bathwater.” Meanwhile, a tech industry flush with cash continues to lobby against restrictions. In the European Union, big tech companies spent approximately €150m (£130m) on lobbying last year, an increase of a third in just two years, with social media high on the agenda – although AI was the biggest focus for tech meetings with the European Commission. Meta was the biggest spender at €10m, according to the campaign groups Corporate Europe Observatory and LobbyControl. One EU lawmaker said tech companies were “bombarding” Brussels with messages challenging social media age bans. In the US, tech companies have been lobbying against the Kids Online Safety Act (Kosa), which is under consideration in the Senate and would require ⁠social media platforms to put in place measures to prevent certain harms to children, such as from compulsive use of their platforms. Meta is the highest spending tech lobbyist in the US, according to the campaign group Issue One, and has one lobbyist for every six members of Congress. Between 2020 and 2024 big tech companies spent a combined $260m on federal lobbying. Commenting on its lobbying for a change to Kosa that would reportedly give tech companies immunity from certain lawsuits alleging child harm, Meta said it wanted “uniform national standards for online youth safety”. Donald Trump’s White House has been consistently critical of tech regulation abroad, including the prospect of a “disproportionate” social media age ban in the UK. A ban seems extremely unlikely on big tech’s home turf, given the combination of political gridlock, the legal barrier of the first amendment and big tech’s status as part of the US economic establishment. Darrell West, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, a US thinktank, said state bans were “not likely on a widespread basis” and at a federal level the possibility was low “because too many legislators oppose government regulation of technology”. Theo Bertram, the director of the Social Market Foundation thinktank and a former TikTok executive, as well as a former adviser to two former UK prime ministers, said tech companies should view the UK announcement as a global “tipping point”. “The history of legislation is you have one or two outliers. And then when you start to get countries that have a regulatory influence in the world, like the UK, joining countries like Australia – then it becomes a tipping point.” The normal pattern with legislation, said Bertram, was that you have a cycle of calls for change, followed by careful consultation and then a law being implemented. And that’s it for five to 10 years. Populism had not only sped up the process, he said, but it had made the cycle seemingly endless. “In an age of populism these companies are suffering criticism as well, not just mainstream politicians. Tech companies are losing public opinion and politicians are going to move on that.” He added: “A fundamental worry that tech companies have is that tech regulation is becoming a topic that’s driven by public sentiment rather than expert and evidence-led policymaking.” Summarising the work so far of its expert panel, the UK government said there were “known harms” from social media, particularly to “high-risk” individuals, but there were also benefits. Nonetheless, it is not the only country that has decided the risks outweigh the benefits for under-16s. “Young people deserve online spaces that are designed for them,” said Béjar. But patience is running out. Increasingly, there is one policy of choice for dealing with social media platforms and teenagers: closure.

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Shadow war: how use of proxy forces by Iran, Israel and US is driving Middle East instability

As Marco Rubio ended his brief visit to the Middle East on Friday, he sought to cast in the best possible light his discussions with leaders of the Gulf states. Those leaders are deeply anxious that the deal agreed earlier this month between Iran and the US fails to address their worries about continued Iranian efforts to project power and influence throughout the region. “They’ve shared with us some very concrete concerns,” the US secretary of state admitted, and insisted that any definitive agreement will require Tehran to not only restrict its nuclear programme but also halt its support of Hamas in Gaza, Hezbollah in Lebanon, militia in Iraq and the Houthis in Yemen. But analysts and western security officials believe Iran is likely to increase its support for such groups after the conflict, which confirmed much of Tehran’s existing strategic thinking. The activities of irregular fighters funded and armed by Israel and, to a lesser extent, the US too, is also likely to intensify, they say. Hezbollah remains the mainstay of Iran’s coalition of allied groups and proxies around the Middle East, despite suffering badly in prolonged clashes with Israel in 2024 and 2025. The militant Islamist organisation also manifestly failed in its primary strategic role for Iran: to deter an Israeli direct strike. But Tehran remains committed to Hezbollah, which was founded in Lebanon with the support of the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps more than 40 years ago. “The Iranians see this as a temporary bad phase and believe Hezbollah will regenerate … It is absolutely vital for the Revolutionary Guards to rebuild their proxies around the region and to control their decisions,” said Hanin Ghaddar, senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. By making the ceasefire between Iran and the US dependent on an end to fighting in Lebanon too, Iran has caused significant tensions between Israel, which wants to push forward with its offensive against Hezbollah, and Washington. The Houthis in Yemen, which also have close ties to Tehran, only joined the recent conflict in its last days but demonstrated their ability to target Israel – though do little harm – and to threaten international shipping through the Red Sea. They remain more independent of their main sponsors, however. “The [Houthis] are very hardcore and were useful during the war but … have their own decision-making processes that don’t involve the Iranians,” said Ghaddar. In Iraq too, Shia militia nurtured and supported by Iran for more than two decades, flexed muscles during the conflict but never deployed their full offensive arsenal. Groups claimed responsibility for dozens of drone and rocket attacks against US assets in the country and targeted Kuwait, but did not mobilise en masse. Lethal retaliatory airstrikes and complex domestic Iraqi politics worked to make leaders of many factions wary of escalating any conflict with the US. “They are more risk-averse than perhaps the Iranians would like,” said Michael Knights, an expert in Iraqi militias at Horizon Engage, a global political risk consultancy. The Shia militia in Iraq were also used by Iran to target Kurdish groups to dissuade them from actively joining the war. In reality, the Kurds had their own reasons for steering clear of any commitment. At the very beginning of the conflict with Iran in January, US and Israel had sought to mobilise armed groups among Iran’s ethnic minorities, including among Arabs from south-west Iran and among the Baloch in Iran’s south-east. The efforts proved abortive. “There were general contacts [with these communities] but they did not develop,” said Michael Milshtein, a former intelligence officer who is now an analyst at Tel Aviv University. Likewise, neither was the US-Israeli strategy with Kurdish factions based in northern Iraq successful despite their historical ties with both countries. Former senior Kurdish and US military officials said that a longstanding US plan in the event of war called for several thousands of lightly armed Kurdish fighters to cross into north-west Iran accompanied by US special forces. Protected by US and Israeli air power, these fighters would then advance as far and as fast as possible, aiming to destabilise the regime in Tehran and spark uprisings elsewhere. Iran’s conventional military and paramilitary forces were expected to defend against the advancing Kurds, which would expose them to devastating air raids. Those with direct knowledge of the plan, which they described as being “on the shelf” for more than 20 years, differ on its chances of success. One former US special forces adviser with long experience in the region said a Kurdish force with embedded US special forces could have “gone through Iran like a buzz saw” but another said progress beyond Kurdish-dominated regions in the north-west would have been difficult, if not impossible. In the event, there were only “a few hundred” fighters available for immediate deployment and Kurdish leaders were wary of the US after what they saw as a “betrayal” in Syria just weeks earlier when Washington backed an imposed deal which brought Kurdish civilian and military authorities under central government control. The US and Kurdish former officials both said the plan called for a 12 to 24-month preparation period to get enough fighters trained, distribute weapons and create a unified command among the Kurds – whereas the White House appeared to think it could be implemented in days. A final factor was strong personal opposition from Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan which persuaded Donald Trump to reconsider after several days during which Israeli warplanes attacked Iranian police stations, barracks and border posts to allow the Kurdish groups to launch an invasion. In addition to their ties with the Kurds, Israeli intelligence services have reportedly supplied cash, intelligence and arms to a new Druze militia in Syria. The Military Council has been created to protect the beleaguered religious minority, Israeli military officials said last week, though experts point out it will also resist the consolidation of the new Syrian government’s authority in their regions, which serves Israel’s interests. In Gaza, Israel has built up a series of Palestinian militia to fight Hamas, which has re-established its authority over the 2.3 million Palestinians who live outside the 60% or more of territory occupied by Israel. These have launched raids against Hamas and undertaken other “very limited” tactical tasks but with very mixed results. “They will in no way change the strategic situation in Gaza … They have zero popular support and … absolutely cannot be an alternative to Hamas,” said Milshtein. Across the region there is a push to disarm militia and reinforce state authority to offset growing instability, but the temptation to use proxies remains despite the obvious risks. Recent and continuing conflicts in Syria, Libya, Sudan and elsewhere have all seen their extensive use. “You can’t rely on proxies. They are not just useless,” said Milshtein. “They cause damage.”

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Venezuela earthquakes: death toll rises again to more than 1,400

The ⁠death toll ⁠in ⁠the twin earthquakes that struck ⁠Venezuela earlier ⁠this week ‌has ‌risen to ‌1,430, according to one of the country’s top politicians, Jorge Rodríguez. Another 3,200 people were injured ⁠and 3,100 left homeless by the disaster, the National Assembly president added, speaking on state television. Rescuers are still searching for survivors after the 7.2 and 7.5 magnitude quakes struck within a minute of each other on Wednesday evening, flattening buildings in the north of the country. At least 68,900 people have been reported unaccounted for by their families. Many civilians in La Guaira, one of the hardest-hit areas, have been using shovels and their bare hands to dig through the debris of collapsed buildings. An 11-year-old boy was rescued from the rubble in the coastal city of Caraballeda, said interim president Delcy Rodriguez on Saturday. “A few minutes ago an 11-year-old boy was rescued alive in Caraballeda. At this moment, every life is a source of hope for Venezuela,” she said in a post on X, accompanied by a video of the rescue. On Saturday, the UN estimated that the quakes caused $6.7bn in damage, equivalent to 6% of Venezuela’s GDP. The preliminary assessment accounts for losses to assets including housing but does not cover wider economic disruption, the UN Development Programme said in a statement. The South American country’s acting president, Delcy Rodríguez, said on state television that more than 14,000 members of the military and police were patrolling affected areas, where access has been blocked and special permits are required to enter. Further rescue teams sent by governments from across the world, including Mexico, the US, Brazil, El Salvador and France, arrived in Venezuela on Saturday. It comes after teams from countries including the Netherlands, Turkey and the UK were deployed to aid the search and rescue effort. But a specialist team of British crisis-response volunteers, from the charity Serve On, that was heading to Caracas was stuck in Madrid airport for more than 24 hours. The disruption came after Simón Bolívar International airport, the only international airport that serves Venezuela’s capital, was badly damaged by the earthquakes. Their team leader, Vernon Young, told the Press Association: “These things are always time critical. We’re a light team and can move quickly. The sooner you get there, the more chance you have of saving lives.” He added: “We’re a technical rescue team and can potentially find deeply entombed victims just by their movement. We still believe we will make a decent contribution if we get there in the next day or two.” Because there are no direct flights from the UK to Venezuela, the team has been at Madrid airport since 9pm on Friday after connecting flights from Istanbul were cancelled. Flights from Madrid have also been cancelled, leaving the volunteers stranded due to their reliance on civilian transport. Jeremy Lewin, a US state department official, said the US military would help coordinate flights to bring in rescue workers, mobile hospitals and supplies. He said two 80-person search teams had been deployed and a US navy transport ship was docked off the coast of Venezuela, ready to receive airlifted survivors in need of medical attention. Lewin said it was a “race against the clock” to find people injured in the quakes. He added: “People are trapped under rubble, and the priority is to get the search and rescue teams and the medical professionals and others to them as quickly as possible to save lives.” Loyce Pace, the International Red Cross’s regional director for the Americas, said: “People are still terrified to re-enter what were their homes.” Foreign nationals have been confirmed among the dead, reportedly including 15 of Portuguese nationality or descent, seven Chinese, two Brazilians, five Spaniards and an Italian-Venezuelan.

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Ukraine war briefing: Kyiv hit with ballistic missiles, as civilians killed by drone strikes in Russia

A Russian ballistic missile attack on Kyiv early Sunday has wounded at least two people, the city’s administration said not long after it had warned residents to take shelter.“Air defence forces are operating in the capital. Remain in shelters!”, the capital’s mayor Vitali Klitschko said on Telegram. Explosions and several flashes in the sky have been reported. “As of now, the number of wounded in the overnight attack has risen to two,” head of the local military administration, Tymur Tkachenko said in a post on Telegram. Several fires broke out in the Darnytsky district as a result of the attack, Tkachenko said earlier. The attack follows civilian deaths on both sides of the Russia-Ukraine border on Saturday. Russian strikes in Dnipropetrovsk in central-eastern Ukraine and the northern Sumy region killed two people, while Ukraine launched attacks on Volgograd and Belgorod in Russia’s southwest, and Horlivka, in the Donetsk region of Ukraine, which is controlled by Moscow. Three people were killed in the attacks, regional authorities said. In the Russian border region of Bryansk, ⁠a Ukrainian drone strike on Saturday killed two people in their car in a village near the border, ⁠the region’s acting governor Yegor Kovalchuk said on Telegram. Russia’s defence ministry, quoted by Russian ‌news agencies, said ‌124 Ukrainian drones had been downed over Russian regions over ‌a period extending from 8 am to 8pm. A “massive” Ukrainian drone strike reportedly also hit in the Krasnodar region in southern Russia, killing one person, wounding another and causing a fire in an oil refinery. Krasnodar regional governor Veniamin Kondratyev said on Sunday that several houses were also damaged by falling debris. “Krasnodar region came under a massive enemy drone attack... Sadly, one person was killed,” Kondratyev said in a post on Telegram, adding that “one person was wounded and received the necessary assistance on site”. He said a “fire also broke out at an oil refinery in the city, and a power line and gas pipe were damaged”. More than 40 drone strikes and artillery fire had killed one person and injured one near Nikopol, according to the governor of the southeastern Dnipropetrovsk region in Ukraine, Oleksandr Ganzha. The town, lying ⁠on the opposite bank of the Dnipro River from the Russian-held Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, is a frequent Russian target. Serbian president Aleksandar Vucic said on Saturday he would resign within weeks and the country would hold early presidential and parliamentary elections, after 18 months of anti-government protests about government corruption and media censorship. Serbia is a candidate to join the European Union but it is under pressure from the West to align with EU sanctions on Russia, a step Belgrade has so far declined to take. It must also improve its rule of law, including conditions for fair elections, and root out corruption and organised crime. Russian president Vladimir Putin and Belarusian president Alexander Lukashenko held talks on Friday, according to the Kremlin, and discussions were expected to have focused on the war in Ukraine. Meeting at Putin’s Valdai residence in northwestern Russia, the two leaders addressed trade and economic cooperation, the implementation of joint projects and issues of ‌regional security. The meeting follows a warning earlier this month from Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy to Lukashenko to remove equipment from Belarus used by Russia in its attacks on Ukraine.

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The last continent: how deadly bird flu travelled the world before landing on a remote Australian beach

It was a rough five-day sail from the Falkland Islands and, as the science expedition approached the South Georgia coast, they found fur seal carcasses floating on the water. “There were these moments when it would hit us,” says Dr Jane Younger, remembering the expedition to the British subantarctic territory six months ago. Younger, an ecologist at the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies at the University of Tasmania, was with scientists from the United States, France, South Africa and the Falklands to check on the spread of the H5N1 variant of bird flu. The disease has cut a devastating and traumatising swathe across the planet, killing millions of birds and mammals since it took hold in Europe in 2020. More than 200 million poultry birds in the United States have been culled and tens of thousands of seals in South America have died. The H5N1 strain was detected in migrating seabirds in the subantarctic in late 2023 and in South Georgia’s seal population in early 2024. “We were hoping because this was the third year, we might not have seen so many dead animals. But that wasn’t the case. The smell was overwhelming,” says Younger. From one cove to the next, Younger saw hundreds of giant petrels – a scavenging seabird with a two-metre wingspan – feasting on the densely packed bodies of dead fur and elephant seals. “We saw an adult female fur seal. It had freshly died and the pup was still trying to suckle. The male was still trying to defend her,” she says. “It was this little family unit … that was upsetting.” While Younger was in South Georgia, another team of scientists, led by Australia’s Antarctic program, were 6,500km (4,000 miles) east on Heard Island, discovering 13,000 dead elephant seal pups alongside hundreds of other dead seals and birds, including penguins. Disease tests were positive. Younger and the Antarctic program scientists are all back in Australia, but it appears the virus has followed them to its final frontier. Now it has Australia’s unique wildlife in its sights. A potential tragedy for the world Giant petrels and brown skuas migrate from their Antarctic breeding grounds to waters off Australia in the southern winter. They rarely come ashore unless they see a chance to scavenge or are sick. Three petrels and a skua were found dead or sick on beaches along the country’s vast southern shoreline earlier this month. This week, tests confirmed they had the deadly strain, with two more suspect cases. H5N1 has now reached every continent on the planet. Risk to humans from the disease is low. Since 1997 there have been about 500 deaths in 25 countries, mostly among people working in commercial poultry. For context, about 1,700 people died in Australia last year from influenza. Sea and waterbirds migrate south to Australia during the southern hemisphere spring, but also north from Antarctica in the winter. The continent is surrounded by the disease. Now national and state governments, conservationists and scientists are anxiously waiting to see if this wave of incursions will spread into Australia’s native wildlife. The variant presents unique challenges and risks for Australia. About half of the country’s bird species are endemic – that is, they exist nowhere else on the planet. Endemism levels are even higher in land-based mammals, at about 87%. Losing a species to extinction in Australia means the species disappears from the planet. The high number of unique species also means little is known about how they might react to the disease. “We’re not exactly sure what the impacts will be, but we’re very clear there will be impacts,” says Dr Fiona Fraser, Australia’s threatened species commissioner. “These endemic species are highly valued by Australians and have enormous cultural value to our First Nations people. Any loss of these species is a tragedy for the world.” Watching the carnage overseas, Australia established a national response plan to bird flu in 2024 and has been funding projects to reduce the risk of spread. About 100 response plans have been drawn up for both species and locations at risk. Prof John Woinarski, an ecologist at Charles Darwin University, has spent decades documenting the decline of Australia’s threatened species to habitat loss and invasive species such as cats, foxes and pigs. About 18 months ago he started work with the government and BirdLife Australia to analyse the bird flu risk to the country’s mammals and birds. “Sixty-odd million years of isolation has meant Australian fauna is ecologically distinctive. It’s hard to predict what might happen just from looking at mammals overseas,” he says. More than 150 bird species are considered at “very high risk” of extinction or major population declines if they catch the disease, according to the risk analysis. More than 10 mammals are also deemed high-risk, including the unique Australian sea lion, the Tasmanian devil, the platypus and the rakali (water rat). “It is turbocharging the pathway to extinction, and that’s why [the government] has tried to prioritise those at risk,” he says. “The potential for spread within Australia is likely to be very high and very rapid.” Decades of effort to build back threatened mammal and bird populations are likely to be undone, Woinarski says. “It’s going to be a major setback.” Like many experts the Guardian spoke to, Woinarski says if the bird flu arrivals of recent weeks do not spread into native animal populations now, it will happen sooner or later. “It is likely to be highly confronting for most people,” he says. “People will see corpses of their favourite birds in all sorts of places. “And it is a gruesome death. The birds lose their coordination and make these jerky movements and have a tortured death. It is not a pleasant sight.” “It will spread across almost all of Australia in the next six to 12 months and will be recurring for three to five years. Maybe after that it will stabilise and become just another threat. But there are a lot of unknowns.” Prof Brendan Wintle is a conservation biologist at the University of Melbourne’s The Biodiversity Council, a not-for-profit expert group. He says before the disease has a chance to spread, the government should be creating captive populations of some threatened species which could quickly become extinct if infected. “We need insurance policies,” he says. “There has been such low funding for risk assessments and management of conservation that we are quite poorly prepared in terms of people on the ground to secure species. That needs redressing.” More than 1,700 species and unique habitats are considered threatened in Australia. “We have so many threatened species and so little funding,” says Wintle. ‘We’ve been on the lookout’ For 40 years, University of New South Wales ecologist Prof Richard Kingsford has been climbing into a plane every October to spend six weeks flying across a third of the country to monitor waterbirds. On each trip he flies 38,000km (24,000 miles) – a distance that would almost circumnavigate the planet. He has already seen a decline in numbers of about 70% since the 1980s. “The surveys give us a chance to see if there are any mass deaths. We’ve been on the lookout for [the disease] ever since it got into Asia and Antarctica,” he says. Wetlands and watercourses are natural reservoirs for disease and also attract dense groups of birds, creating ideal conditions for spread. Kingsford says individual waterbirds can fly huge distances, spanning the continent, meaning they could spread the disease far and wide. Right now, good rains have seen waterbirds flocking to the country’s interior. But an El Niño climate pattern is expected to dry out the inland in the coming months, pushing birds towards the coasts, where they will more easily come into contact with infected migrating birds. “I worry about our waterbirds because they have been declining for years. There could be a massive whammy coming their way,” Kingsford says. “The big question is how and when will it get into the waterbird community? Then, the pathways [for spreading the disease] are many and varied.”

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Bahrain condemns Iranian tit-for-tat drone attack as ‘flagrant threat’

Bahrain has said it was attacked by Iran with drones on Saturday, apparently in response to overnight US strikes on Iran. A ship in the strait of Hormuz was also attacked. Bahrain’s foreign ministry said a “number of drones” were launched at the country, though there were no immediate reports of damage. It condemned the attack and described it as a “flagrant threat to the security of citizens and residents”. No damage or casualties were reported in the attack on a tanker in the strait of Hormuz. No one claimed responsibility for the attack, but Iran was suspected to be behind it. Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said earlier on Saturday that it had targeted several sites of the “US terrorist army in the region”, without specifying where. Bahrain is home to the US navy’s fifth fleet. The strikes came after the US military said it struck Iranian missile and drone locations overnight, as well as coastal radar sites, in what it said was a response to an Iranian drone attack on a ship in the strait of Hormuz. The tit-for-tat strikes marked the first incident of violence between the US and Iran since a memorandum of understanding (MOU) was signed between the two countries last week. The MOU – the first of its kind signed by the US and Iran since the latter’s 1979 Islamic revolution – extended a fragile ceasefire and set a 60-day window for talks to achieve a lasting peace. Many gaps remain between the two sides, and one of the chief obstacles is the strait of Hormuz, which the US president, Donald Trump, is keen to make operational again, with energy prices remaining high and the US midterm elections a few months away. The strait was in effect closed by Iran during the war and its status is still being worked out by Iran, Oman and other regional mediators, who are trying to create a postwar framework to govern the waterway. A multinational maritime body supervised by the US navy said on Saturday it would expand a route near Oman in thestrait of Hormuz to increase inbound and outbound traffic. This would threaten a main source of leverage for Tehran, which has used its control over the strait and surrounding shipping as a card in negotiations with the US. The International Maritime Organisation stopped its efforts to evacuate stranded ships from the strait on Friday, and said it would not resume until there were guarantees that ships would not be attacked. The organisation said it had been able to evacuate about 115 ships in recent days, while other tankers remained stuck, some stranded for months. Iran has said that ships must follow its orders and has threatened to start charging tolls for ships trying to move through the waterway. Despite the threats and attacks, ships have been trying to leave the strait in recent days. The US and Gulf states have rejected Iran’s attempts to control the strait, as it is considered an international waterway. The US vice-president, JD Vance, who has played a central role in negotiations with Iran, said on Friday night that Iran should “pick up the phone” in the event of disagreements, warning that “violence will be met with violence”. Meanwhile, in Lebanon, Hezbollah rejected a framework agreement reached on Friday in Washington between Israel and the Lebanese government. Hezbollah is not participating in the talks, despite the war being between Hezbollah and Israel. Hezbollah’s leader, Naim Qassem, described the 14-point-agreement as a surrender to Israel, and said it was “null and void”. He accused the Lebanese government of making needless concessions to Israel that undermined the country’s sovereignty. The document laid out a phased withdrawal of Israeli troops from south Lebanon, replacing them with Lebanese army soldiers who would be tasked with ensuring no members of Hezbollah returned to the area, as well as dismantling the armed group’s infrastructure there. Israel occupies more than 600 sq km of south Lebanon, an area it says it will not leave. Israeli forces have demolished dozens of villages in occupied areas and have displaced more than a million residents, primarily from south Lebanon. Under the terms of the framework agreement, the disarmament of Hezbollah is a prerequisite for the withdrawal of Israeli forces. Hezbollah criticised the attempt to disarm the group, with Qassem saying such an eventuality would legitimise Israel’s presence in south Lebanon. Despite the disagreements, a ceasefire brokered by the US between Hezbollah and Israel last week has mostly held, with some exceptions. The Israeli military carried out a drone strike on Saturday in the Nabatieh area. Lebanon’s health ministry said one person was killed. Israel said it targeted an individual who “posed a threat to its forces”, without providing any evidence for the claim. Iran has repeatedly linked the durability of the Lebanon ceasefire and the withdrawal of Israeli troops from Lebanon to the success of peace talks with the US – something that Israel and the US have resisted.

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Europe heatwave: drought fears in Italy as records tumble around Europe – as it happened

Germany has recorded a new temperature record today, just a day after recording its hottest day ever. The German Weather Service recorded 41.5C in Drewitz, in Saxony-Anhalt state, this afternoon, according to AFP. That beats the record of 41.3C that was set just a day before in Saarbrücken. Police in Berlin have resorted to deploying water cannons to help people cool down in the German capital amid the heatwave. Berlin police are patrolling the city with two water cannons, which are normally used for riot control and dispersing crowds, to provide some relief from the heat, the German newspaper Der Tagesspiegel reported. Berlin broke its temperature record, with 39.2C recorded at a weather station in Tempelhof on Saturday afternoon. A teenager and two men have died after getting into difficulty swimming in open water, bringing the total number of drownings during the recent heatwave to five in the UK. Experts have warned that the heatwave sweeping across Europe could cause Swiss glaciers to lose vast amounts of ice, AFP reports. The snow and ice that accumulated on Switzerland’s glaciers over the winter is expected to have completely melted by Monday, marking the second-earliest arrival on record of the annual tipping point known as glacier loss day. The Danish Meteorological Institute has reported a 37C reading north of the city of Aarhus on Saturday, the highest on record since measurements began in 1874. Romania is the latest country to issue a red alert, putting out a warning that almost the entire country would face extreme heat from Monday to Wednesday. Slovakia has issued a similar warning and confirmed that Friday night was the warmest on record with temperatures not dropping below 26.3C. The Czech Republic, Hungary and Moldova were also on the highest alert for the weekend, with Balkan countries also bracing for a tough few days. More than 700 flights were delayed at London Heathrow and Gatwick airports, with some attributed to thunderstorms brought by the record-breaking heatwave.