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Les Mills, New Zealand Olympian behind global gym chain, dies aged 91

Les Mills, the New Zealand Olympian and former Auckland mayor whose name is synonymous with his global fitness chain, has died aged 91. In a statement released on Monday, Phillip Mills said his father had achieved a huge amount in his life and the common thread throughout was his desire to help others. “Dad was immensely strong, driven and always cared deeply for the less advantaged,” Phillip said. “He left a lasting impression on everyone he met, and his spirit lives on in gym workouts around the world, continuing to help people fall in love with fitness.” Phillip later told the New Zealand Herald his father had died peacefully at 3.30am on Monday, surrounded by family. Mills was born in Auckland in 1934 and turned to fitness after losing his father aged 11. His athleticism propelled him towards the Olympics, where he competed four times in discus and shot put. He won gold, silver and bronze medals at the Commonwealth Games. The New Zealand Olympic committee said Mills was one of the most respected figures in athletics. “Les Mills set a standard for what it takes to represent New Zealand at the Olympic and Commonwealth games,” said Nicki Nicol, the committee’s chief executive. “His place in New Zealand’s Olympic history is firmly established and no doubt his legacy will continue to inspire.” In 1968 Mills and his wife, Colleen, opened the first Les Mills gym in Auckland, which eventually grew into a global chain of gyms. His family went on to build Les Mills International and ushered in group workout programmes – including BodyPump, BodyAttack and BodyCombat – now taught in more than 22,000 fitness clubs and gyms in more than 100 countries. During this time, Mills also turned his attention to politics and in 1990 was elected mayor of Auckland. He served three consecutive terms. As mayor, he “really cared about all the communities in Auckland”, Phillip told the NZ Herald. “He worked very hard with them to make life better for everybody.” After politics, Mills continued to coach and mentor athletes and support charities. He was made a Member of the Order of the British Empire for services to sport in 1973, and a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit in 2002. In 2022 Mills, his son Phillip and daughter-in-law Jackie were inducted into the New Zealand business hall of fame.

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A US champion of ‘freebirthing’ always claimed there had been no maternal deaths linked to the movement. Is Stacey Warnecke the first?

During her time at the helm of a multimillion-dollar organisation linked to baby deaths around the world, Emilee Saldaya has always avowed one thing: she’s never heard of a woman dying after a freebirth. “I’ve never heard of a mother dying in childbirth in the sovereign birth world,” the Free Birth Society founder said in a December 2024 appearance on The Way Forward podcast, adding: “In the sovereign birth world we aren’t losing mothers.” Ten months after this interview, a 30-year-old nutritionist, wellness influencer and first-time mother, Stacey Warnecke, died from complications of a massive postpartum haemorrhage after a freebirth attended by one of Saldaya’s students and friends, the Melbourne-based unlicensed birth attendant Emily Lal. An inquest heard this month that Warnecke had paid Lal A$6,000 to attend her birth as “a birth keeper”, a term promoted by the Free Birth Society. In 2025, a year-long Guardian investigation identified 48 cases of late-term stillbirths or neonatal deaths or other forms of serious harm involving mothers or birth attendants who appeared to be linked to FBS. The cases spanned the world, from the US to Canada, Switzerland, France, South Africa, India, Australia and the UK. Now, for the first time, the Guardian can reveal the full extent of Lal’s ties to FBS. A former insurance industry worker with no medical qualifications, she was personally trained by Saldaya and her business partner, Yolande Norris-Clark, through their Radical Birth Keeper School. In her five years as a birth keeper, Lal would be named in inquests into two deaths, that of Warnecke and of a newborn baby in 2022. Through Lal, Australia’s most prominent FBS-trained birthkeeper, Saldaya and Norris-Clark would export their extreme, anti-scientific views to a continent thousands of miles away. In so doing, FBS would be connected to what Saldaya had always said she had never heard of in the freebirth world: a maternal death. *** Before she entered the birth world, Lal worked for the insurance company QBE. In 2020 she enrolled in FBS’s online programme, which pledged to train a generation of “authentic midwives”, according to emails seen by the Guardian and the recollections of fellow students and ex-FBS members. They recall Lal waking up at early hours of the morning to dial into calls, along with the handful of other Australian women who enrolled in the course. Through the Radical Birth Keeper School, Saldaya and Norris-Clark claim to have trained 850 RBKs to attend births around the world. Many of these women, like Lal, had no medical experience. They began attending births after completing the course, which is three months long and taught via Zoom. Replete with scientific inaccuracies and dangerous misinformation, the programme has a strong focus on brand-building via social media. Saldaya and Norris-Clark have taught their students that neonatal resuscitation can be a form of “sabotage”, questioned the fact that bacteria causes infection and dismissed life-threatening pregnancy complications as “variations of normal”. Norris-Clark and Saldaya have also, respectively, questioned the existence of gravity and whether the Earth is round. FBS provides some basic advice to trainee RBKs on dealing with emergencies. Experts who have reviewed this advice say it contains inaccurate, misleading and dangerous information. But in podcast interviews recorded before Warnecke died, Lal appeared to suggest that she had the life-saving skills necessary to assist in emergency situations, including a haemorrhage. “If there was excessive bleeding,” she said in a 2021 interview on the Matresence podcast, “or something out of the ordinary occurred that we’d consider to be a variation of normal, I’ve got the skills behind me to help the woman to birth her baby if, if she wants my help.” After completing her training, Lal remained in touch with Saldaya, appearing on the FBS podcast in 2021, when Saldaya described her as a “friend”. Lal quickly became successful, telling the Positive Birth Australia podcast in 2023 that she attended three to four births a month. “My book’s full,” she said. She did not appear unduly concerned about the risk of situations she couldn’t manage. On the Matresence podcast, she said there was “no better training than just learning on the job, really.” Her philosophy on birth, Lal said, was that “birth is as safe as life gets. And if we leave it alone, it unfolds beautifully, [the] majority of the time.” *** In court, Lal appeared calm, her voice breaking slightly only when she read from her statement for the coroner, describing her arrival at Warnecke’s home the night she gave birth and finding her client “happy and smiling”. “I kissed her on the forehead to greet her,” Lal told the court, before pausing, composing herself and continuing. Having previously refused to give a statement to police after Warnecke’s death, Lal agreed to testify in exchange for a guarantee that her evidence wouldn’t later be used against her. She told the coroner that she had never claimed to be a health worker. Instead, she said, a birth keeper was “essentially a doula”, a non-medical person who supports a woman during birth. But Lal had formerly denied being a doula. “Legally,” she said, in her 2021 Matresence appearance, “obviously, we can’t refer to ourselves as midwives. I don’t consider myself to be a doula because I do have the knowledge behind me that if there are complications that arise I can assist.” The term “radical birth keeper” was invented by Saldaya as a way to help her students skirt laws that ban practising midwifery without a licence. “To manoeuvre around these unjust laws,” Saldaya taught FBS students, “I made up the term radical birth keeper … to be crystal clear, a radical birth keeper is, in practice, [an] authentic midwife.” She encouraged these “authentic midwives” not to sign contracts with clients, only to accept gifts after successful births, and to avoid the sort of women who might blame them if something went wrong. “I only ever operate as a non-professional friend,” Norris-Clark said in a 2024 FBS teaching module titled “navigating birth culture legalities”, advising students against signing contracts, because “you’re just there at the birth as a friend”. Giving evidence, Lal used the word “friend” eight times. “That’s the agreement that I have with the families that I’m supporting, is if I came to your birth, I’m there as a friend,” she told the inquest. Services covered by her $6,000 fee – advertised on her now taken-down website – included prenatal support, birth planning, education, herbs, tinctures and kits to support pregnancy, labour and birth. Warnecke, Lal said repeatedly, had hired her to be a “supportive friend”. It also emerged through Lal’s evidence that Warnecke appeared to have engaged with FBS materials. On her birth plan, she had a section entitled “variations of normal”, the phrase used by FBS to downplay often-serious pregnancy and labour complications. As part of her package, Lal had provided Warnecke with educational materials about them. Lal told the court Warnecke had probably taken the details for her birth plan from “a couple of different sources” and she had not given her client a template. When Warnecke became unwell after her son’s birth, Lal appears to have followed her FBS training. A fundamental pillar is the principle that women have the right to refuse medical attention, even if this choice leads to their death or the death of their child. “Autonomy,” Saldaya and Norris-Clark teach their students, “is an essential pillar of authentic midwifery.” As Warnecke began to bleed out, the inquest heard, Lal asked her twice if she wanted an ambulance. When she said no, Lal did not call one. Her commitment to this ideological approach was examined by the counsel assisting the coroner, Rachel Ellyard. Lal insisted that she would not call an ambulance against her client’s wishes, even if the woman was unconscious and dying. “If she’s like, ‘I, under no circumstances, do I want you to call an ambulance without my express permission,’ that’s what I will do,” Lal told the court. “Even if she’s literally unconscious,” replied Ellyard, “and you don’t know whether she wants one or not?” “If I’ve had that conversation with her previously, I’m going to honour her wishes,” Lal said. She explained that “autonomy was very important” to Warnecke: “There was no way I was gonna call an ambulance against her wishes.” This is an extreme view promoted by senior FBS leaders. “The idea that any of you would call 911 before the mother says to is like a ludicrous idea,” Saldaya taught RBK students in 2023, adding: “Oh, that makes me want to throw up. That is so horrible.” It was only on the third time that Lal asked that Warnecke agreed to having an ambulance called. By then, she’d been bleeding for about half an hour. At Melbourne’s Frankston hospital, staff exhausted their entire supply of Warnecke’s blood type trying to save her and performed a hysterectomy, along with a procedure to drain fluid from her heart, which was experiencing trauma from repeated cardiac arrests and CPR. She died after suffering a further cardiac arrest post-surgery. Every medical expert who gave evidence at the inquest described her condition – a huge post-partum haemorrhage – as treatable and preventable, had Warnecke access to swift medical care. *** On the day Warnecke died, a senior doctor at the hospital went to Frankston police station to report his concerns about Lal, something he’d never done before. Giving evidence at the inquest, he explained that the staff who’d tried to save Warnecke’s life were sceptical that Lal really was just her “friend” because she’d used medical terminology in conversations they witnessed. When police arrived at Warnecke’s home, they found that Lal had cleaned it so thoroughly they couldn’t even determine the layout of the room she’d given birth in. Lal had even taken home the blood-stained carpet, she told the inquest, so Warnecke’s husband wouldn’t be confronted by the scene, and because it would not fit in their bin. She refused to make a statement to police, explaining that, as she was not legally required to do so, she chose not to. Ellyard put to her: “You knew that someone who was your friend had just passed away and you were an eyewitness to some of the events. Why wouldn’t you want to make a statement to describe what you had seen?” Lal repeated that she had no legal obligation to do so. “I don’t want to over-egg it,” Ellyard continued, “but if you were present at Stacey’s house as a friend, and you witnessed effectively the events that led to her death, why wouldn’t you?” Throughout her evidence, Lal had appeared calm but it was here that she grew agitated. “Because the last time I did [give a statement to a police],” she said, “it was a birth that had absolutely nothing to do with me, and somehow it ends up with every media report saying that the baby’s death was my fault.” She was referring to the death of a newborn girl, Baby E, hours after her birth in December 2022. Baby E’s mother is believed to have listened to the Free Birth Society podcast. In an interview with the Australian free birth podcast The Renegade Mama after Baby E’s death, she recalled a comment she believed Yolande Norris-Clark had made on the podcast, citing it as influential in her decision to freebirth. “She said, ‘When you’re sick, what is it that you want? Do you want somebody to nurture you and bring you things … or do you want to be completely left alone? … that’s a good indication of how you’re going to be in birth,’” Baby E’s mother recalled. After reflecting, she decided that “I don’t even want someone to talk to me when I’m sick at all”, so freebirth seemed like the best option for her. She rented a birth pool from Lal. A 2025 inquest by the coroner’s court of Victoria into Baby E’s death concluded that her cause of death was pneumonia, meconium aspiration and chorioamnionitis, after a prolonged labour in the birthing pool. There is no suggestion that Lal was present at the mother’s birth or the baby’s death; the mother told the inquest she had “sought no other service or advice” from Lal. Baby E was born about 10.30pm on 28 December 2022. The next morning the mother realised that her baby was not well. The coroner’s court heard evidence that the woman had texted Lal about 8am to say “we can’t wake her, we aren’t sure if she’s breathing” and sent a photograph of their daughter, whose face was blue, according to a record of a conversation between Lal and a staffer at Mercy hospital for women. According to this record, Lal told the hospital worker that she had not seen the message for 25 minutes, at which point she had FaceTimed the parents, who showed her the baby. She believed her to be dead and told them to call an ambulance. This version of events broadly correlates with the information she gave police at the home, according to the coronial inquest. Baby E was declared dead at the scene. Police who attended and spoke to the father and Lal determined there were no suspicious circumstances. But Lal told the inquest she had only spoken to Baby E’s mother to arrange the pool hire and when she visited the home after emergency services arrived, having previously been asked by the mother of Baby E to come and visit her and the baby. In August the coroner Catherine Fitzgerald determined that “the death of baby E was preventable”. She made no findings against Lal personally. In a 2023 Positive Birth Australia interview, Lal said Baby E’s death “shook” her and made her recontend with, and ultimately accept, the “possibility of death” at a time when she was also pregnant. She said she had analysed her choices and decided that freebirth remained, for her, “the safest option”. Lal continued attending births, taking on Warnecke as a client nearly three years later. The inquest into Warnecke’s death remains open pending forensic analysis of her phone. It is expected to determine why she chose to reject medical care. After the death, the Victorian health complaints commissioner suspended Lal from providing or advertising health services while it investigated concerns about her services. That investigation is ongoing. Lal, Saldaya and Norris-Clark did not respond to requests for comment. In response to previous Guardian reporting, Saldaya said in one email that “some of these allegations are false or defamatory”. She has previously responded to criticism by saying she does not care if women freebirth but wants them to have the choice. She has also described past Guardian reporting on the Free Birth Society as “propaganda” based on “lies”. On her Substack in June, Norris-Clark responded to Guardian reporting by stating that “my supposed crime was ‘endangering’ others with my ideas, but the real offence was spreading the insurrectionary gospel of self-responsibility, and illustrating (never instructing, never telling, but embodying) the possibility of reclaiming birth outside of the system”. In her five short years as a birth keeper, Lal would be connected to two avoidable tragedies. It is a future she could never have predicted for herself when she decided to sign up for an online school to explore her passion for birth. Through her, the radical ideology of the Free Birth Society spread through the Australian birth world. But her birthwork career is now over, with Lal telling the court that after Warnecke’s death she had stopped attending births. “It was really traumatic watching someone that you love die,” she said. “It was horrible. I don’t think I would be able to be in a birth space without bringing that in me.”

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Sydney to get parking zones for shared ebikes in bid to stop ‘wild west scenes’ of blocked footpaths

Shared ebikes cluttering Sydney footpaths will be kicked to the kerb in the coming months under funding to establish marked parking bays, the New South Wales government says. On Tuesday, the state government announced $6.6m in funding for Sydney local councils to nominate and paint dedicated parking areas. Each council will be given up to $200,000. Operators are paying for the Sharing Scheme Grant Program through a 60 cent fee on each shared ebike trip. When the program was first announced last year, operators including Lime suggested the levy would probably be integrated into existing management fees for ebike users. The number of shared ebikes in Australia has quadrupled in less than two years, with the vast majority in Sydney. The city’s ebike fleet has surged from 13,000 in January to more than 20,000 in May, according to Transport for NSW. Sign up for the Breaking News Australia email The NSW transport secretary, Josh Murray, said on Tuesday more than one million NSW residents now used a shared ebike each month, roughly twice as many as in October. The NSW transport minister, John Graham, said while the growth of shared schemes was a positive development, “we are not willing to stand around and let the wild west scenes … go on any longer”. “Pedestrians have been crying out for order and for their footpaths back.” The government says the funding is for the 16 councils that now host shared ebike schemes, to deliver marked bays on streets and kerbside zones “in the areas of most conflict and complaint”. The scheme was announced last year alongside expanded powers for LGAs, which Graham said would be rolled out progressively in the coming months. Councils can create “no-go’” and “go-slow” zones for shared and private ebikes, and penalise shared ebike operators if parking areas aren’t used, with a maximum penalty of $55,000 plus $5,500 for each day the offence continues. Graham said councils would set the parking zones and operators would enforce compliance by geo-tracking the bikes and requiring customers to send photos of correctly parked bikes. The government was moving towards requiring ebike riders to park in a bay or be unable to end their trips, which would leave their meter running, Graham said. Thirteen NSW councils now host sharebike schemes and somehave already piloted shared parking schemes, including the City of Sydney, North Sydney and Waverley. Transport for NSW has trialled parking zones at nine train and metro stations around Sydney, with space for about 190 ebikes. Murray said the agency was accelerating its own rollout of bays at other transport hubs and stations. “We’re aiming to have 250 bays available by late this year, with 62 already in delivery,” he said. The government said its trial pointed to marked bays reducing kicked-over bikes and blocked footpaths by half. Graham said the government expected councils to install thousands of additional parking spots by the end of the year. “We’ve got to change the culture,” Graham said. “We will see an improvement here.” The changes are part of a safety crackdown on shared and private ebikes amid a surge in injuries. The government has given authorities powers to seize and crush private ebikes operating at speeds more than 25km/h but has yet to decide on a minimum age to ride an ebike.

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Monaco explosion injures three and triggers police hunt

An explosion in Monaco has triggered a police hunt for a man suspected of detonating a makeshift bomb that injured three people. The blast occurred on Monday evening in the semi-enclave famous for casinos and superyachts, French media reported. The French newspaper Le Figaro said video surveillance images showed a man dropping a backpack at the entrance of a residential building shortly before the explosion. The Monaco public prosecutor general, Thibault Stéphane, told the outlet that two of the victims were in a critical condition. The paper also reported the victims were Ukrainian. Éric Ciotti, the rightwing mayor of nearby Nice, across the border in France, said on X: “The attack committed this evening is a tragedy for Monaco.” BFM TV, a French national news TV channel, described the explosive device as a “parcel bomb”, citing the principality’s prosecutor general. Police investigating reportedly said the suspect was caught on CCTV cameras putting a backpack down before fleeing the scene on foot, heading towards the French border. Monaco is a tax-free microstate on the French Riviera known as a haven for billionaires and their luxury yachts. The blast at a residential building was “very likely an attack”, the minister of state, Christophe Mirmand, told AFP. The explosion struck about 9:00 pm local time (8pm BST) in a residential building on a street along the border with France. Thibault said a suspect had left a bag or package in the building’s lobby before leaving. Nothing appeared for the moment to indicate why the building may have been targeted, he added. A couple in their 50s or 60s, injured in the blast, were in life-threatening conditions, while a 13-year-old who was “very likely related to the couple” suffered less serious injuries, Mirmand said, without disclosing their nationality. The explosive device apparently contained bolts and buckshot, Mirmand said, adding that police were investigating the incident. “This is the first time in history, to my knowledge, that such an act has taken place in the principality,” he said.

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Trump claims Iran has agreed to hold peace talks in Doha after recent clashes

Donald Trump has claimed that Iran has agreed to hold talks in Doha after the US and Tehran traded fire in the strait of Hormuz this weekend, threatening the collapse of a ceasefire meant to keep the strait open and pave the way for peace talks. In a terse post on Truth Social, the US president claimed the meetings would take place in the Qatari capital, as US media reported that the two sides had agreed to halt strikes after tit-for-tat attacks that once again cut off shipping through the crucial waterway. Trump wrote: “IRAN HAS REQUESTED A MEETING. IT WILL TAKE PLACE TOMORROW IN DOHA! President DJT.” But on Monday night, Iran’s foreign ministry spokesperson, Esmail Baghaei, said US officials’ trip to Doha had nothing to do with the Iranian delegation visiting the city, adding: “We have not yet entered the stage of negotiating a final agreement … Over the coming days, we will not have any negotiation meetings with the US side at any level.” Trump’s announcement came after Iran on Saturday targeted a cargo ship in the strait in a drone attack, leading US Central Command (Centcom) to launch retaliatory strikes against Iranian “military surveillance infrastructure, communication systems, air defense sites, drone storage facilities and minelayer capabilities”. Iran’s Islamic ⁠Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) then said on Sunday it ⁠had launched a joint missile and drone ⁠operation targeting eight US military ‌sites in ‌Kuwait and Bahrain. With the deal faltering, the White House stepped in to seek an off-ramp from the resuming hostilities, even as the specifics of who will hold control over the strait and whether Iran can charge fees for passage in the future remains unclear. Agence France-Presse reported that commercial ships had virtually ceased using the Omani southern corridor through the strait after civilian ships were struck on Thursday and then again on Saturday. Iran has warned ships transiting through the waterway that they must receive approval from Tehran. Ships have continued travelling through the Iranian-approved northern corridor. The Omani foreign minister, Badr al-Busaidi, said on Monday that Oman was in discussions with Iran on charging service fees for transiting the strait, including safety measures and navigation assistance, but would not explicitly charge tolls for using the waterway. The White House press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, told Fox News that a US delegation to Doha would include Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff and his son-in-law Jared Kushner. The US vice-president, JD Vance, last week credited new high-level contacts with the Iranian government with preventing a new outbreak of violence in the region. A US official told Axios that the US had “decided to stop all the kinetic activity”, meaning strikes against Iran, in advance of the talks. The Iranian president, Masoud Pezeshkian, also told state media on Monday that Qatar would release $6bn (£4.52bn) of nearly $12bn in Iranian frozen assets. The interim deal signed by the US and Iran stipulated that the release of frozen Iranian assets would be connected to the implementation of a new nuclear deal. US officials have said that no frozen Iranian assets had been released. The Lebanese president, Joseph Aoun, has said his country will deploy troops along its entire southern border as part of a framework agreement signed with Israel on Friday. That deal calls for Hezbollah, an Iranian-backed militia in Lebanon, to be disarmed before Israel withdraws its troops from southern Lebanon. The Israeli defence minister, Israel Katz, has said its military would not withdraw “a millimetre” from southern Lebanon, where it is occupying a swath of land, until Hezbollah was disarmed. Israel would pull out of two locations as a “pilot programme” in which Lebanese forces would replace them. But otherwise, he said, “people should not hold their breath wondering where the next place will be from which Israel will withdraw in Lebanon, because it will not happen until Hezbollah is disarmed”. Katz also claimed he had received backing from the US Centcom chief, Adm Brad Cooper, who he said agreed that “the [Israel Defense Forces] will not withdraw from the three security zones – in Lebanon, Syria, and Gaza”. A senior Hezbollah official, Mahmoud Qmati, said on Monday the accord was “effectively dead” already but said Hezbollah would mainly rely on Iran to represent its interests during upcoming negotiations with the US. Hezbollah “will hold on to our weapons”, he said in an interview with the New Arab website. “We will continue to rely on the Islamabad and Switzerland track and the pressure from Iran, which possesses leverage to pressure the Americans so that they, in turn, pressure the Israelis to withdraw from our land.”

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EU sets up three months of talks with China over €360bn trade deficit

The EU and China have agreed to enter three months of talks to try to avoid a trade war over the bloc’s €360bn (£310bn) annual import/export imbalance. In their first joint statement in seven years, the two sides agreed in Brussels to open a formal trade consultation after weeks of threats and recriminations from China if the EU imposed any measures to stop the flood of goods and components into the bloc. The EU’s trade commissioner, Maroš Šefčovič, said he hoped the “dialogue would bring tangible results” before the next meeting in Beijing in October. He met his Chinese counterpart, the commerce minister, Wang Wentao, for talks on Monday as part of a diplomatic offensive. They said in a joint statement: “The EU and China as key trade partners, agree that the main objective of the TIC [trade and investment consultations] is to strengthen dialogue at ministerial level on trade and investment policies with the view to stabilise and make our bilateral relationship more balanced.” EU leaders met two weeks ago to discuss concerns over what is now widely being described as China Shock 2.0 – a threat to European industries and jobs that extends far beyond electric vehicles and green energy. Eurostat, the EU’s statistics agency, said on 15 June that Chinese exports to the EU outweighed imports from the bloc by €1bn a day. “We simply cannot afford to continue in the unsustainable growth of the trade deficit from the European perspective,” said Šefčovič. “We just didn’t want to wait too long. You hear it from European leaders, you heard it from the president of the European Commission, that what is very important for us is engagement, it’s dialogue. But it has to bring tangible results, and we believe that we can achieve them by October.” Industry groups including the European Chambers of Commerce in China say the level of exports going to Europe is threatening to “cannibalise” EU factories heavily reliant on components from China. The two sides have agreed to enter into consultation on four areas: the rebalancing of trade and investment; export controls including those on rare earths; intellectual property rights and World Trade Organization reforms. They have also agreed to a joint monitoring mechanism going beyond the headline figures recorded by Eurostat and GACC, the Chinese customs database. This will enable both sides to identify sudden surges in exports or imports with “political” discussions triggered should either side go into an “amber or red” danger zone, said Šefčovič. It is understood the European Commission has been mapping in fine detail the imports and exports data for the past year, suggesting that the three months of talks will focus on political dialogue. The EU has adopted a cautious approach after its 2024 imposition of tariffs failed to curb imports of EVs, with sources saying quotas on hybrids and chemicals could be mooted for the autumn.

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Strong aftershock terrifies Venezuelans days after devastating twin quakes

A strong aftershock has rattled northern Venezuela, sending terrified residents racing on to the streets five days after the twin earthquakes that killed 1,719 people, left tens of thousands missing and triggered a growing humanitarian emergency. The aftershock early on Monday – which the US Geological Survey measured at a magnitude of 4.6 – shook the capital, Caracas, and the devastated port city of La Guaira, where rescue crews are still hoping to pull as many survivors as possible from the rubble. Colombia’s geological survey put the aftershock’s magnitude at 5.1. Although Jorge Rodríguez, the leader of the Venezuelan national assembly, said there were no immediate reports of new damage, the trembling earth and sounding of quake sirens brought fresh panic to Caracas and La Guaira. “I was asleep when the shaking woke me up. It felt almost as strong as Wednesday’s earthquake, even though I hadn’t felt the other aftershocks,” said Amarelis Mendoza, a resident of El Hatillo in Caracas. In the hardest-hit areas of the capital – including Altamira and San Bernardino – people poured on to the streets from the makeshift shelters where they had been staying. Many have been sleeping outside apartment buildings or in tents pitched along sidewalks, fearing further collapses. Several lines of the Caracas metro were shut down again over concerns that additional aftershocks could further damage already weakened infrastructure. In San Bernardino, search operations at the 22-unit Rita apartment building, which collapsed completely during last week’s earthquake, were suspended for about an hour and a half following Monday’s tremor. As the new week began, some businesses across the capital started to reopen. But the number of people seeking refuge in parks and public squares continues to grow as the humanitarian crisis deepens. The United Nations, fearing more deaths from twin earthquakes, said it would provide authorities with 10,000 body bags – though it hopes the eventual toll will not be that high. Gianluca Rampolla del Tindaro, UN coordinator for Venezuela, declined to speculate beyond official figures, but said “we are definitely looking at a number that is higher than the one already reported.” “It’s very sad, and we truly hope that actually the number is going to be smaller than that [10,000 figure],” he said. Rampolla del Tindaro also praised the international response, saying 27 countries have deployed more than 2,000 rescuers and personnel, with over 160 search dogs. US Marines have now completed repairs to one of Venezuela’s two main ports to allow delivery of further supplies and equipment. The port of La Guaira “is now operational, and the USS Fort Lauderdale is using the port to deliver critically needed supplies and equipment,” a US military statement said, referring to a US warship dispatched to assist with aid efforts. Hundreds of displaced families from Caracas and beyond have been camping out in Parque del Este, a 200-acre park in the east of the capital. “Life is worth more than anything else,” said 35-year-old Katiuska Asuaje, who fled her home in the La Cruz sector of Bello Campo in Caracas with four children. “We weren’t going to wait for the house to collapse on top of us because one of the concrete roof slabs had already come loose.” Maryuri Pérez, 36, and Jaime Blanco, 40, had nowhere to go back to after their shack in west Caracas collapsed. “What we need most is a tent or at least a mattress to sleep on,” said Pérez. “Thank God the neighbours have been bringing us food, but we have nowhere to sleep.” The aftershock came as local people and Venezuelan and international search teams continued to comb the rubble for survivors of last Wednesday’s back-to-back quakes, which measured magnitude 7.2 and 7.5. The rescue of a man and his teenage son who were pulled alive from the rubble in La Guaira state on Sunday offered a brief moment of optimism. “Today we have rescued people who are still alive and therefore these efforts will not be suspended,” said Venezuela’s interim president, Delcy Rodríguez. But the chances of similar rescues are dwindling. A Salvadoran rescue worker, who declined to give his name, told Agence France-Presse: “At this point, they are probably dead bodies. Thanks to God maybe we can find people still alive.” According to the government, which has been criticised for its slow response and lack of preparation for the disaster, 5,034 people were injured and almost 800 buildings were badly damaged when the quakes hit. Tens of thousands of people are still missing well after the closure of the critical 72-hour window for rescuing trapped victims following a natural disaster, while millions more lack sanitation and other basic necessities. Even as rescue efforts continued, outbreaks of looting hit La Guaira, which is near the country’s main international airport. Much of the city now lies in rubble after last week’s disaster. Pharmacies, supermarkets and other businesses were ransacked, said residents, some of whom complained of the slow and meagre post-quake aid coming from authorities. The authorities have barred international journalists from entering the collapse zones in La Guaira for 48 hours, saying the restriction had been imposed for security reasons. Exasperation has boiled over in some areas where people claim that authorities have not done enough to rescue earthquake victims. “The country needs you. Put down your weapon,” one man shouted to soldiers in the Tanaguarena area of La Guaira state, urging them to swap their guns for picks and shovels. Twenty-four nations have so far sent 521 tonnes of supplies, 86 units with dogs trained to locate people trapped beneath the rubble and more than 2,700 search-and-rescue personnel, she said. The UN migration agency said that up to 6.76 million people could be affected by the disasters, and would require shelter, water, sanitation, healthcare and essential relief items. Venezuela’s worst earthquakes in more than a century have come after the oil-rich country endured more than a decade of economic collapse. The crisis has hollowed out hospitals and public services, driving millions to leave the country. The UN has put the bill for physical repairs at $6.7bn (£5bn) – equivalent to 6% of Venezuela’s GDP. On Monday, the US announced it was doubling its aid package from $150m to $300m. “These funds will provide emergency medical care, food assistance, water and sanitation, shelter, protection, and logistics,” the state department said. The Venezuelan opposition figure María Corina Machado, who is in exile, announced she would return “very soon” to her homeland. “The time has come,” she told the US broadcaster Fox News on Sunday. “We need to be together, to embrace, to grieve and mourn together, but also to give each other strength at this difficult time.” Agence France-Presse, the Associated Press and Reuters contributed reporting

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Venezuela earthquakes aftershock hits near capital city as man rescued from rubble after being trapped for 106 hours – as it happened

The United States has pledged more than $300m in funding to aid earthquake-hit Venezuela, the state department said today, up from a previous commitment of $150m. “These funds will provide emergency medical care, food assistance, water and sanitation, shelter, protection, and logistics,” the department said in a statement. Venezuela’s acting president Delcy Rodríguez has posted footage of the rescuing of Aaron Levi Cantillo Vargas, 21, who she says was trapped under rubble in the town of Caraballeda for 106 hours before being pulled out to safety earlier today The president of Venezuela’s National Assembly has warned time is running out to rescue survivors trapped under the rubble. The death toll from the earthquakes has risen to at least 1,450 people, with 3,150 injured and 12,721 others displaced, Jorge Rodríguez said yesterday in a televised address. A 4.6-magnitude aftershock centred ⁠at ⁠a depth of 10km (six ⁠miles) hit north of the Venezuelan ⁠capital Caracas early ‌on ‌Monday, according to ‌the US Geological Survey. No damage was immediately reported from the ‌aftershock. US Marines are working to repair the Venezuelan port of La Guaira, a senior administration official said Monday, as Washington boosted its financial commitment for the earthquake-hit country to $300m. A “specialised team of Marines” are “working around the clock to repair that port and allow the delivery of critical supplies by sea,” the US official told journalists on condition of anonymity, adding that the USS Fort Lauderdale – an amphibious transport dock warship – had also docked there. Dilan Yeşilgöz-Zegerius, the Netherlands defence minister and deputy prime minister, said last night that the patrol vessel HNLMS Groningen was heading from the Caribbean to Venezuela to provide assistance to Venezuela following the earthquakes. In a post on X, she said the ship, which will deliver relief supplies, can provide and produce drinking water to affected areas in the country. The wife and two children of Argentine footballer Lucas Trejo have died after the powerful twin earthquakes struck Venezuela last week, his team said on Sunday. Trejo, who plays for Club Sport Maritimo La Guaira, a second-division team in Venezuela, had searched for his wife Yanina and children Aarón and Ainhoa in the rubble for three days before rescue workers recovered their bodies, CNN reported. China says it will send 100 million yuan ($14.7m; £11.1m) in disaster relief aid to Venezuela. The Chinese government will provide Venezuela with “emergency free relief supplies... to support earthquake relief and post-disaster reconstruction”, foreign ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun told reporters this morning. All schools in Venezuela will remain closed until at least 6 June due to the extensive damage caused by the earthquakes that struck last week, the country’s education ministry has said. The government has urged families to follow official channels to keep informed about the latest developments.