Read the daily news to learn English

picture of article

Russia can keep fighting Ukraine war throughout 2026, says military thinktank

Russia will be able to sustain its invasion of Ukraine throughout 2026 even allowing for emerging economic and manpower pressures, while its missile and drone threat to Europe is growing, according to a leading military thinktank. Bastian Giegerich, the director general of the International Institute for Strategic Studies, said there was “little indication” that “Russia’s ability to continue its war against Ukraine for a fifth year is diminished”. The thinktank reported that the Kremlin spent at least $186bn (£138bn) on defence in 2025, an increase of 3% in real terms, amounting to 7.3% of the country’s GDP – more than double the proportion spent by the US and about three times the level of the UK. Fenella McGerty, a defence finance expert with the thinktank, said that while Russia’s economy was slowing, which could lead to “a potential decline” in real-terms military spending in 2026, it had to be set against several years of sharp growth. Military spending “had doubled in real terms since 2021”, she emphasised, allowing Russia to spend more heavily on military equipment and recruitment to sustain relentless ground and air attacks against Ukraine in the immediate future. Four years ago, Vladimir Putin launched the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Though Russia’s smaller neighbour did not collapse, the Kremlin reoriented to a war economy, and continued to fight with high intensity despite sustaining more than 1.2 millions casualties killed and wounded. “Despite western conversations about a sustainable ceasefire agreement, Russia intensifies its attacks on Ukraine’s critical infrastructure and population centres with a mix of cruise and ballistic missiles and one-way attack UAVs [drones],” Giegerich added. Nigel Gould Davies, a Russia expert at the thinktank, said there were “growing signs that Russia’s rate of recruitment has begun to fall short of its monthly losses” on the battlefield, though Moscow has the ability to cut its casualty rate by reducing the tempo of its offensives across the Ukrainian frontline. Gould Davies, a former UK ambassador to Belarus, said if that trend were to be continued it could eventually force the Kremlin to “a moment of truth” where it would have to risk a second enforced mobilisation and risk the scale of social unrest seen during the enlistment of September 2022. Russia recruits an estimated 30,000 to 35,000 people a month, though Gould Davies said he believed its forces’ quality was dropping because recruiters were having to turn to “the alcoholics and the drug addicted, and the frankly sick”. Estimates of Russian casualties are variable. Figures released by the UK MoD earlier this month suggested Russia incurred 35,030 casualties in December and 31,713 in January, somewhat lower than the “nearly 40,000 a month” cited by western officials in a briefing on Monday. Moscow is also using the war to develop new battle tactics, missiles and attack drones, the thinktank said, including a modernised Shahed-136 that could strike targets across Europe to a range of 2,000km, as part an overall military modernisation. Giegerich said that underscored the need for Nato “to increase investments in missile defence and anti-drone systems”, the need for which was demonstrated when 21 Russian drones crossed into Poland last September, closing several airports and forcing people in three regions to be told to shelter indoors. European Nato allies and Canada promised to increased defence budgets to 3.5% by 2035 last summer in response to the growing Russian threat, and demands from the Trump administration that the continent takes primary responsibility for its own security. But the IISS, in its annual review, The Military Balance, cautioned that this would require “sustained and significant investments” that many Nato allies would find hard to reach, given it could require spending cuts and trade off elsewhere. Europe would also take “well into the 2030s” to reduce its military dependance on the US, Giegerich said, because it remained dependent on an unpredictable White House for military intelligence, cloud computing and space assets. Improving air defence was also a priority, he added.

picture of article

Italian ministers accused of ‘serious blunder’ as police officer arrested for murder

The arrest of an Italian police officer on suspicion of murder over the fatal shooting of a Moroccan man has prompted a row after the opposition accused Giorgia Meloni’s far-right government of exploiting the case for political ends. Abderrahim Mansouri, 28, was shot in the head by Carmelo Cinturrino, assistant chief of Mecenate police station, during a police drugs patrol in the Rogoredo area of Milan in late January. Cinturrino originally said he had acted in self-defence after Mansouri pulled a gun on him. The case was cited by the government as an example of why a proposed law aimed at giving more protection to police officers using weapons in self-defence should be swiftly passed. But prosecutors in Milan said Cinturrino’s version of events had been contradicted by witnesses, who said Mansouri had not been holding any weapon during the incident and had been shot as he tried to escape. Prosecutors allege that a gun found at the scene – which fired only blanks – was planted there by Cinturrino to support his story. They say that further investigations had indicated that Mansouri had feared the police officer and wanted to report him for allegedly demanding drugs and protection money. Speaking to reporters on Monday, Milan’s chief prosecutor, Marcello Viola, said: “It is with a sense of sadness that I participate at this press conference, when a member of the state, in this case the police officer, is involved in a matter of such gravity and sensitivity.” Prosecutors said the determining factor in Cinturrino’s arrest on Monday was evidence, including video surveillance, showing that “the victim was not holding a weapon when he was attacked” and that the weapon “was brought and placed next to the body at a later stage”. Speaking via his lawyer, Cinturrino apologised on Tuesday. “I was supposed to be the one enforcing the law, but I made a mistake,” he said, adding that he had betrayed the trust of his fellow officers. His lawyer, Piero Porciani, said he had fired out of fear, adding: “We all know that what he did afterwards was a mistake.” His client had never taken money from anyone, he added. Cinturrino’s statement followed one on Monday night from Meloni, who said that if the allegations were confirmed “then we would be faced with a very serious crime, a betrayal of the nation and the dignity and honour of our law enforcement officers”. Immediately after Mansouri’s killing, members of Meloni’s coalition, especially the deputy prime minister, Matteo Salvini, sided with the officer and criticised magistrates for starting a criminal investigation. A measure in the government’s latest security bill, approved in early February but which still needs to be officially enacted, exempts police officers or any other citizen from being automatically registered as a suspect by prosecutors if they used a weapon or force in self-defence. Elly Schlein, the leader of the centre-left Democratic party, accused the government of using the Rogoredo case for “political speculation”, while Giuseppe Conte, who leads the Five Star Movement, said the government had made a “serious blunder”. Conte added: “It’s a very serious matter, because they want to pass sentences that suit their politics, increase support and promote propaganda.” The case comes amid heated debate over an upcoming referendum on the overhaul of the justice system, which detractors argue is a way for the Meloni government to weaken the judiciary and exert political influence.

picture of article

Russia opens criminal case into Telegram founder Pavel Durov

Russia has launched a criminal investigation into the Telegram founder, Pavel Durov, on suspicion of “abetting terrorist activities”, further escalating the Kremlin’s standoff with the widely used messaging app. The state newspaper Rossiyskaya Gazeta reported on Tuesday that a case had been opened “based on materials from Russia’s federal security service”, which accused the app of being compromised by western and Ukrainian intelligence. Earlier this month, Moscow announced it would slow down Telegram’s traffic because of what it said were multiple violations, as the Kremlin attempts to steer tens of millions of Russian users towards a state-controlled alternative, known as MAX. The strategy forms part of the Kremlin’s push to build a “sovereign internet”, an online space tightly controlled by the state. Asked about the investigation into Durov, who lives abroad, the Kremlin spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, said authorities had identified quantities of material on Telegram that could “potentially pose a threat” to Russia. “A large number of violations and the unwillingness of Telegram’s administration to cooperate with our authorities have been recorded,” Peskov said. “Our relevant authorities are taking the measures they deem appropriate.” Rossiyskaya Gazeta, quoting officials, claimed Telegram had been used in 13 alleged Ukrainian plots targeting senior Russian military officers, as well as in tens of thousands of bombings, arson attacks and killings since the start of the war. Despite the pressure, Moscow has stopped short of blocking Telegram outright because of its widespread use among civilians and officials, and its role as a key communication tool on the frontline. Russian officials have indicated they would be willing to allow Telegram to continue operating if it complied with Russian law, which human rights campaigners say would mean granting access to private chats and purging opposition channels. The app’s ultra-libertarian founder has long had a complicated relationship with the Kremlin. Durov, 42, left Russia in 2014 after selling his first company, VK, often described as a Russian version of Facebook, following pressure from the authorities. He established Telegram in Dubai, where he now lives. He holds Emirati and French citizenship. Russian authorities tried but failed to block Telegram in 2018, after which an uneasy accommodation appeared to emerge with Durov. But Moscow’s renewed crackdown on media and online platforms it does not control has once again put Telegram in its sights. Separately, Russia has blocked WhatsApp, Facebook and YouTube, prompting a surge in VPN downloads among Russian users. Durov has not commented on the investigation. Earlier this month he publicly criticised measures taken by Moscow, comparing them to attempts by Iran to curb the platform. The tech billionaire has also faced scrutiny from western authorities, who have criticised what they said was weak moderation on the app. Last August, he was detained and held for three days in France during an investigation into crimes linked to Telegram, including the circulation of child sexual abuse material, drug trafficking and fraudulent transactions.

picture of article

New edition of Ferrara bible shows how persecuted Jews kept faith alive in Spanish

In 1553, a community of exiled Spanish and Portuguese Jews who had found refuge and patronage in the northern Italian city of Ferrara did something that would have been unthinkable, and very possibly fatal, in their former homelands. They printed their own Hebrew bible in Spanish. The Ferrara bible, as the volume came to be known, was needed for reasons both practical and symbolic. A large number of the Sephardic Jews living in Ferrara had ostensibly converted to Roman Catholicism in an attempt to avoid expulsion by King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella in 1492. But many of the converts, or conversos, had tried to keep their ancestral faith alive by practising it in secret. Despite their best efforts, however, time, displacement and the prohibition on Judaism soon eroded their knowledge. “The Ferrara community was formed not so much by those expelled in 1492, but primarily by Portuguese and Spanish converts who had remained crypto-Jews, that is, they had secretly maintained Jewish religious practice and preservation within their families in Spain or Portugal, passing it down from parents to children,” said Paloma Díaz-Mas, a Spanish writer and scholar who has written an introduction to a new edition of the Ferrara bible. “But of course, they didn’t have synagogues, they didn’t have rabbis, they didn’t have Hebrew books because they were persecuted. And possessing a book in Hebrew could lead to an inquisitorial trial.” But once under the protection of Ercole II d’Este, the duke of Ferrara – the son of Lucrezia Borgia and the grandson of Pope Alexander VI – the community could set about relearning its lost rituals. The only problem was that few of the Jews in Ferrara could speak or read Hebrew, which is how the Ferrara bible came to be the first complete, printed edition of the entire Hebrew bible in their common language: Spanish. Others in the Sephardic Jewish diaspora were also trying to reclaim their faith, said Díaz-Mas. “They wanted to preserve Judaism, but they knew less and less about it. When these people were able to found Jewish communities in other countries – in Italy or in Amsterdam – the problem was that they didn’t know enough about Judaism and they didn’t have access to Hebrew texts because they didn’t know Hebrew. Communities like the one in Amsterdam, for example, imported rabbis from the Ottoman empire or from north Africa to serve as their spiritual guides.” Although the creators of the Ferrara bible prided themselves on producing “a bible in the Spanish language translated, word-for-word, from the true Hebrew by excellent scholars”, they also acknowledged that the literal translation, which follows Hebrew syntax, “may seem rough and strange and very different to the polished words we employ these days”. Regardless of its linguistic eccentricities, however, the Ferrara bible has earned its place in history as the first complete, printed edition of the Hebrew bible in Spanish to be produced at a time when the Council of Trent had just reaffirmed the Latin Vulgate as the canonical text of the Roman Catholic bible. The Tanakh, or Hebrew Bible, comprises the Torah (the Five Books of Moses), Nevi’im (Prophets), and Ketuvim (Writings). The Roman Catholic bible, meanwhile, is made up of an Old Testament of 46 books and a New Testament of 27 books. Díaz-Mas believes the new edition of the bible – published by José Antonio de Castro Foundation, which works to safeguard Spain’s literary heritage – will help consolidate the book’s “enduring relevance and its cultural importance”. But, as its cover engraving of a storm-tossed, broken-masted ship alone and at the mercy of the seas shows, the Ferrara bible is much more than a mere translation: it is also a document of survival and resilience. “The ship, despite everything, keeps moving forward, and there’s a dolphin in the water,” said Díaz-Mas. “And the dolphin is a benevolent, protective symbol because it was believed that dolphins guided ships to safe harbour. So, this has been interpreted – and I think quite accurately – as a kind of symbol of the life trajectory of many of these Jewish converts, like those who founded the community of Ferrara.” The engraving reflects both the mercantile background of many of the Sephardic Jews whom the Duke of Ferrara was keen to welcome to his lands and the fact of their exile. The ship, added the academic, speaks for itself: “‘We’ve been battered by storms – the storm of the expedition, of the Inquisition, of the forced conversions in Portugal. We’ve had to leave our lands; we’ve had to find our way of life elsewhere, but we keep going and we keep sailing’ … that’s a portrait of their life, of their lives, and of their future as a community.”

picture of article

France blocks US ambassador’s access to officials after he fails to attend meeting

Donald Trump’s envoy to Paris will not be permitted to carry out his diplomatic duties until he has explained his refusal to comply with a foreign ministry summons over US comments about the killing of a far-right activist, France’s top diplomat has said. Charles Kushner “needs to be able to have this discussion with us, with [the foreign ministry], so that he can resume the normal exercise of his duties as ambassador in France”, the French foreign minister, Jean-Noël Barrot, said on Tuesday. Kushner, whose son Jared is married to the US president’s daughter Ivanka, did not show up for a meeting at the ministry at 7pm on Monday to which he had been summoned after the US embassy in Paris reposted state department comments about the case. In response, the ministry said on Monday night it had requested that the US ambassador be denied direct access to French government ministers, although he would continue to be allowed to talk to foreign ministry officials. Barrot suggested on Tuesday, however, that Kushner would now also be blocked from talking to government officials until he explained his refusal to respect what the minister called the “basic” rules of conduct and behaviour of foreign diplomats. “When you have the honour of representing your country, the United States of America, in France as ambassador, you abide by the most basic customs of diplomacy and you respond to summonses from the foreign ministry,” he told France Info radio. “I believe all French people share the same feeling,” Barrot added. “We do not accept that foreign countries can come and interfere in, then insert themselves into, our national political debate, whatever the circumstances.” Barrot said the incident would “in no way affect the relationship between France and the United States”, which he said had “weathered other storms”, but would “naturally affect [Kushner’s] ability to carry out his mission in our country”. The foreign minister said the conversation “needs to be had”, noting that Paris also wanted to raise the issue of US sanctions against European figures such as the French former European commissioner Thierry Breton, who have been barred from the US. Diplomatic sources told French media that Kushner, a real-estate magnate with an estimated net worth of $3.2bn (£2.4bn), cited personal commitments as his reason for not attending the Monday meeting, instead sending a senior embassy official. The no-show was Kushner’s second since his appointment to the Paris embassy last May. He also failed to attend after a summons to the ministry in August, after writing an open letter to Emmanuel Macron criticising what he described as a lack of government action to tackle the “dramatic rise of antisemitism in France”. Quentin Deranque, a far-right activist, died from head injuries after clashes between radical left and far-right supporters on the sidelines of a protest against a politician from the leftwing France Unbowed (LFI) party in Lyon on 12 February. Six men suspected of involvement in Deranque’s death have been charged over the killing, and a parliamentary assistant to an LFI MP has been charged with complicity. The US state department’s Bureau of Counterterrorism said it was monitoring the case, adding that “violent radical leftism” was on the rise and should be treated as a public safety threat. “We expect to see the perpetrators of violence brought to justice,” it said. The US embassy in France posted a French translation of the comments. Deranque’s killing has also caused a diplomatic feud between France and Italy, whose rightwing prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, called the death “a wound for all of Europe”. Macron criticised her for speaking about French domestic affairs. Barrot on Sunday denounced any attempts to exploit the killing. “We reject any instrumentalisation of this tragedy, which has plunged a French family into mourning, for political ends,” he said. “We have no lessons to learn, particularly on the issue of violence, from the international reactionary movement.” The spat follows a row between the Belgian government and the US ambassador to Brussels, Bill White, who has demanded Belgium drop a “ridiculous” and “antisemitic” investigation into three Jewish men suspected of performing illegal circumcisions. White called Belgium’s health minister “very rude” in a social media post. Belgium’s foreign minister, Maxime Prévot, said it was “false, offensive and unacceptable” to suggest Belgium was antisemitic, and accused White of violating diplomatic norms. White has since announced that another Belgian socialist politician, Conner Rousseau, has been barred from the US. In 2005, Charles Kushner pleaded guilty to 16 counts of tax evasion, making false statements and witness tampering – including hiring a sex worker to seduce his brother-in-law who was testifying against him. He spent 14 months in prison before being pardoned by Trump in 2020. Three years later he donated $1m to Trump’s Make America Great Again Inc Super Pac.

picture of article

Tuesday briefing: The long and winding road of war in Ukraine, as the human cost mounts

Good morning. Today marks four years since Russian tanks first rolled towards Kyiv as Vladimir Putin launched the full-scale invasion of Ukraine – a war he insisted on calling a “special military operation”. The initial assault was repelled, almost certainly to his surprise, and Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s government remained intact to marshal the nation’s defences. What followed has been widely perceived as a grinding war of attrition. While Russia has made incremental advances across territory it had already destabilised through Moscow-backed separatist republics, Ukraine has been subjected to a relentless aerial assault on its infrastructure – one that western support, from sanctions to air-defence systems and fighter jets, has not been able to halt. Peace initiatives – with varying degrees of sincerity – have come and gone. For today’s newsletter, I spoke to Francis Farrell, a Ukraine-based reporter with the Kyiv Independent and co-author of its War Notes newsletter, about how the war looks from inside Ukraine four years on – and what he believes the west’s audience and leaders still misunderstand. First, this morning’s headlines. Five big stories Peter Mandelson| Peter Mandelson has been arrested and released on bail by detectives investigating claims he committed misconduct in public office during his friendship with Jeffrey Epstein. Education | Hundreds of thousands fewer children with special educational needs and disabilities (Send) will be given education, health and care plans (EHCPs) as a result of long-awaited changes announced by the education secretary. UK politics | Reform UK’s plan to create an ICE-style deportation agency has been condemned as “sadistic”, after the party’s home affairs spokesperson vowed to face down “progressive outrage”. Media | The BBC has issued a new apology for its handling of an incident at the Bafta film awards which saw the N-word broadcast during BBC One coverage of the ceremony and remain overnight on BBC iPlayer. Iran | Donald Trump’s decision to order airstrikes against Iran will hinge in part on the judgment of Trump’s special envoys, Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner. In depth: ‘This war is being fought as a struggle for democratic values’ Four years into the war, there is a sense of permanent exhaustion in Ukraine – but also a continued determination to push on, because there is no alternative, Francis Farrell tells me. The experience of war, he says, varies widely across the country, and even within the same city. Recent waves of attacks on energy infrastructure have left residents in Kyiv with only two or three hours of electricity a day. Which floor you live on in an apartment block can determine whether you have water, heating or access to an elevator. “What is frustrating for Ukrainians of all stripes,” he says, speaking by phone from Vienna, where he is attending a screening of his documentary about the war, “is that it seems sometimes like western partners and audiences and leaders are almost more tired of the war than they are”. Francis reports for the Kyiv Independent, one of Ukraine’s most prominent English-language outlets. Founded weeks before the full-scale invasion as a staff-owned breakaway from the Kyiv Post, the site has grown rapidly and says it now has more than 25,000 members. Its editor, Olga Rudenko, told the Guardian last year that journalism in wartime Ukraine was a moral duty: “If they are dying, we should be using those rights.” *** How do Ukrainians feel about Trump and US support? The US president’s return to the White House initially prompted cautious optimism in some quarters, Farrell says. There was a belief Donald Trump might be willing to apply more direct pressure on Moscow, and that he was someone Vladimir Putin might take seriously – or at least more seriously than the ailing Joe Biden. That optimism has largely curdled into distrust. “There is a very clear understanding that this war is being fought as a struggle for democratic values,” Farrell says. “When Ukrainians see the leader in Washington displaying contempt for those values and for Europe, and warmth towards dictators, that quickly turns into distrust.” There is weariness, he says, about Kyiv having to engage in what he calls diplomatic “theatre” in order to avoid a worst-case scenario of being cut off from US support. The realpolitik of the relationship between the US and Ukraine was laid bare in the astonishing public spat this time last year in the Oval Office, as Trump told Zelenskyy “You’re not in a good position. You don’t have the cards right now,” and the Ukrainian replied: “I’m not playing cards. I’m very serious, Mr President. I’m the president in a war.” *** What is Zelenskyy’s standing now in Ukraine? Zelenskyy’s approval ratings have fluctuated over the four years, dipping amid corruption scandals and public anger at officials perceived to be profiting during wartime. But Farrell says most Ukrainians separate such scandals from the president personally. He says that Zelenskyy’s – albeit delayed – decision to let go of chief of staff Andrei Yermak (pictured above right) over corruption allegations showed Zelenskyy put “the importance of the mission and his duty to country higher than loyalty to his friends”. It would, Farrell says, be “stupidly dangerous or dangerously stupid to hold elections right now, with Russia attacking on all sides,” and he says polling earlier this year showed less than one in 10 Ukrainians are in favour of holding them. Ironically, Trump’s dressing down of the president boosted Zelenskyy’s standing with many. Farrell tells me that if they distrust Trump, Ukrainians also don’t place to much stock in the decisiveness or bravery of European leaders. For better or worse, it appears, for many “Zelenskyy is the leader that continues to guide Ukraine through the war, despite his flaws”. *** What is happening on the frontline? Farrell, 28, who grew up in Sydney and was finishing postgraduate studies in post-Soviet geopolitics when the full-scale invasion began, is keen to correct what he sees as a western misconception about the battlefield. The fog of war and increasingly difficult conditions at the front have reduced the ability and willingness for some outlets to report directly. He says some of this can be attributed to the increased danger from drones. More journalists are being killed near the front and Russia is able to target media workers 20km away from the front using drones if, as Farrell puts it, “they stay out in the open too long”. He says western audiences are left with the impression that the war is “bogged down”. It is not a war of manoeuvre, he says, but an attritional war of position. Russia is throwing resources at degrading Ukraine’s ability to defend a long frontline, often with what are euphemistically termed “single-use infantry”. That is cannon fodder to you and me. He says the idea of a stable, static frontline should not be taken for granted. It leads to the assumption that continued aid alone guarantees stability. “The frontline is not held by a constant pipeline of international aid,” he says. “It is held by humans, who are in limited quantity and have a limited enduring strength.” The human cost mounts. A report by the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) earlier this year estimated Russia has incurred about 1.2 million casualties, including as many as 325,000 deaths, while close to 600,000 Ukrainian troops have been killed, wounded or gone missing. Official sources are more coy: in February, Zelenskyy conceded 55,000 Ukrainian service personnel have been killed in the war – Russia has disputed the CSIS figures and says only the Russian defence ministry has the authority to release them. *** What does an endgame look like in 2026? Farrell is sceptical of recurring talk of imminent peace deals. “It is important for people to understand that the peace talks are not peace talks,” he says. In his view, they are largely diplomatic theatre designed to influence Washington and other partners. Russia’s core demand, he argues, remains Ukraine’s political and military capitulation. “The full-scale invasion began with an attack on Kyiv,” he tells me. “It wasn’t about limited objectives. And that hasn’t fundamentally changed.” Four years after an invasion many thought would last weeks at most, the war remains grinding and unresolved, with huge numbers of casualties. For Farrell, the defining question is not whether Ukraine can endure – but whether Europe is prepared to act according to the reality of Russia’s ambitions rather than the hope of a negotiated shortcut. “The sooner Europe acts according to that reality,” he says, “rather than hoping for a magical solution, the better.” What else we’ve been reading I felt sick to my stomach reading this first-person account of the harrowing sexism teenage girls face in their daily lives, both online and off. Aamna Our film editor Catherine Shoard asks the simple question – if the Baftas film awards organisers had time to cut out political comments about Donald Trump and Palestine, how could they simply not see that a racial slur should be edited, too? Martin Zoe Williams’s interview with royal biographer Andrew Lownie is a fascinating read from start to finish, leaving you wondering how the former prince Andrew was able to operate so openly for so long. Aamna Jonn Elledge rather eloquently puts together how I feel about artificial intelligence: it is a useful tool in some specific settings, but why do I need this information pollutant in every damn app I use? Martin If, like me, you’re sad that the Winter Olympics are over, check out this list of this year’s most wonderful moments from the Games. Aamna Sport Football | Manchester United supersub Benjamin Sesko scored 13 minutes after entering the field to seal a 1-0 win over Everton in the Premier League. Boxing | Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao will face each other on 19 September in Las Vegas in a rematch of one of the biggest fights in boxing history. Cricket | England’s planned Twenty20 series in South Africa next January has been scrapped owing to a clash with the domestic SA20 tournament in the latest indication of the growing primacy of franchise cricket. The front pages “Mandelson arrested on suspicion of misconduct over Epstein links” is the Guardian splash, and that’s the theme of the day across all the front pages. “Mandelson arrest sparks jeopardy for Number 10” headlines the i paper, the Telegraph says “Mandelson arrested” and “Things can only get sweatier” quips the Sun. The Times runs “Mandelson arrested over ‘secrets passed to Epstein’”, “Disgraced Lord Held” is top story at the Mirror, and the Mail says “Now Mandelson faces the music”. The FT leads on “Mandelson arrested on suspicion of misconduct over Epstein connection”. Just after 2am, the Metropolitan police said Mandelson had been released on bail pending further investigation. Today in Focus Ukrainian men on how four years of war has changed them A DJ turned soldier explains how life has changed for Ukraine’s men while Tracey McVeigh and Shaun Walker report on the impact of the conflict and what could happen next. Cartoon of the day | Stephen Lillie The Upside A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad An astonishing 1.3 million children in Malawi have been vaccinated against polio in just four days after emergency World Health Organization supplies were airlifted into the country. Malawi, one of the world’s poorest countries, declared an outbreak after the virus was detected in sewage in Blantyre, where the only known victim lives. The country had been free of wild poliovirus since 2022. The global fight to eradicate the disease is a battle against the virus and for community trust. In Blantyre’s Ndirande township, the Guardian spoke to young mothers; half knew nothing about the disease, while the other three were wary of the vaccine. However, community organisers, health workers, religious leaders, and traditional authorities are correcting misinformation and reassuring families. Their targeted engagement has seen success: in the remote village of Ndirande, 45 out of 84 initially reluctant households accepted the vaccine for their children. Sign up here for a weekly roundup of The Upside, sent to you every Sunday Bored at work? And finally, the Guardian’s puzzles are here to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow. Quick crossword Cryptic crossword Wordiply