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Europe should pick negotiator for possible Russian talks, says Zelenskyy – Europe live

Over in Latvia, opposition leader Andris Kulbergs has been designated to try form a new government after Evika Siliņa’s resignation last week after a drone incursion incident. Kulbergs was tapped by the country’s president, Edgars Rinkēvičs, during the pair’s meeting on Saturday, and given 10 days to form a new cabinet. On Monday, Kulbergs told Latvian media he was looking at picking non-political appointees for key jobs in a bid to form a technical interim government. The new government will still need to be approved by the parliament, and would only lead the country until the parliamentary election in October.

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Middle East crisis live: Trump warns ‘clock is ticking’ for Iran to reach peace deal

The Israeli military has ordered residents of three towns and villages in southern Lebanon to evacuate immediately by a “distance of no less than 1000 meters to open areas” in advance of attacks against the locations. The affected towns and villages are: Harouf, Burj Al-Shamali and Dibal, according to a social media post by the IDF’s Arabic-language spokesperson, Avichay Adraee, who claimed the attacks are being launched due to Hezbollah, the Iranian backed Lebanese militant group, violating the US-mediated ceasefire agreement Israel signed with the Lebanese state in mid April. International law experts say Israel’s warnings are inconsistent and often overly broad and open-ended. Sometimes there is no warning at all before the airstrikes. More than one million people have already been displaced by the renewed Israeli war on Lebanon which started when Hezbollah launched missiles at Israel on 2 March after the US-Israeli bombing of Iran in late February. In its latest update, the Lebanese health ministry said since 2 March Israeli attacks have killed at least 2,988 people, including many women and children.

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Weather tracker: Europe braces for swing from Arctic chill to extreme heat

After a prolonged spell of cool conditions across much of Europe, a dramatic swing in temperatures is expected in the coming days as warmer air surges north into western and central parts of the continent. A large blocking high over the North Atlantic and slow-moving low pressure across southern Scandinavia dragged Arctic air southwards last week, sending temperatures 10-15C below the seasonal average for more than a week. Overnight frosts affected gardeners and farmers, including in France, where grape growers lit fires to protect vineyards. Such widespread and persistent cold weather has become increasingly rare in recent decades as Europe continues to warm faster than any other continent as a result of the climate crisis. The cool, unstable air also combined with strong May sunshine to trigger widespread thunderstorms. Between 11 and 16 May, about 750,000 lightning strikes were recorded across Europe and the surrounding areas. Serbia’s national weather and hydrological service issued red warnings for strong winds, heavy rainfall and hail. Over the weekend, an extension of low pressure farther to the north-west of Europe cut off the northerly flow and winds turned more westerly. Later this week, a large area of high pressure is forecast to build across western parts of the continent, drawing in hot air from north Africa. By Friday, temperatures in countries including France and England could climb 15C higher than a week earlier, reaching the mid- to high-30s celsius in Spain and Portugal. Overnight lows in these regions may exceed daytime highs recorded last week. Dramatic temperature contrasts are also unfolding across the US this week. In late spring, such swings can be especially pronounced. In the north-west, where temperatures soared to about 30C last week, cold air is sweeping south from Canada and interacting with low pressure to produce the region’s second winter storm of the month. Significant snowfall is forecast across higher terrain in Wyoming, northern Colorado and north-east Utah early this week, with up to 46cm (18in) possible over the highest ground. Winds of up to 60mph (96km/h) are expected to whip up blizzards and create hazardous driving conditions in places. Farther south-west, gusty winds and persistently low humidity have triggered red-flag warnings across several states, signalling a heightened risk of wildfires. To the east, the sharp contrast between the cold air and warmer, more humid conditions across the central US is likely to fuel further thunderstorm development. The Storm Prediction Center has warned of a 15% tornado probability for Monday across four central states, spanning a region home to almost 900,000 people.

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Drones reshape war in Colombia as deaths and injuries mount

As night fell over southern Colombia, and a group of children began their weekly Tuesday football match, a drone appeared overhead. The children looked up, and the drone dropped a grenade, its blast killing a 10-year-old boy and injuring 12 more civilians. The child’s death, in southern Cauca in 2024, marked the first known time a person in the country had been killed in a weaponised drone attack. He would not be the last. In February 2025, also in Cauca, a drone dropped an explosive near a temporary Médecins Sans Frontières hospital, injuring several health workers. That August in Antioquia, an attack brought down a police helicopter, killing at least eight officers. In October, the house of the mayor of Calamar was hit. In December, a strike on a military base killed seven soldiers and injured 30 more. In February 2026, in the mining town of Segovia, a drone dropped a mortar shell on a house, killing a mother and her two sons inside. Earlier this month, a drone packed with explosives was found near Bogotá’s international airport and an adjacent military base. Drone strikes by armed groups have surged across Colombia since 2023, opening a dangerous new front in the country’s decades-long conflict. Hospitals, schools, police stations, electricity grids and homes have all been struck, and injuries now number in the hundreds. Only one such attack was recorded in 2023, according to Armed Conflict Location and Event Data (ACLED), a leading monitoring organisation. But that figure jumped to 38 in 2024 and 149 in 2025. Colombia’s ministry of defence reported an even steeper rise, recording no attacks in 2023, 61 in 2024 and 333 in 2025. Colombia’s conflict has ravaged villages, towns and cities for more than six decades. Fought between guerrillas, paramilitary groups, drug traffickers and state forces, it has left more than 450,000 people dead and displaced millions more. While a 2016 peace deal tempered the fighting and ushered in fragile stability, violence is once again on the rise. Armed groups have expanded their ranks, tightened their grip on drug routes and illegal mining, and sought to fill power vacuums left by demobilised forces. They are also now investing in more sophisticated weaponry – such as drones – a shift experts said was driving a dangerous escalation in the conflict. “The old guerrillas tried a thousand times to get missiles and never succeeded,” said Humberto de la Calle, Colombia’s former vice-president, after a wave of drone attacks last summer. “With drones, I think strategically we are at a point where we must stop the ways we are being attacked from the air. This has never happened before in Colombia.” Dissident factions of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc) were the first to adopt the technology, analysts said, followed quickly by rival groups like the National Liberation Army (ELN). Fighters typically modify off-the-shelf commercial drones – often costing just a few hundred dollars from China – to carry explosives, with many attacks taking a “kamikaze” form in which the drone itself becomes the weapon. By 2025, it is believed that almost all major armed groups were using militarised drones, with attacks spreading far beyond traditional conflict zones. “What is concerning is not only the very rapid escalation and frequency of their use, but also the geographical spread,” said Tiziano Breda, an ACLED senior analyst. He noted that drones were used in 12 municipalities in 2024 and 41 in 2025. Most drone attacks have targeted police, army patrols and rival armed groups, data shows. In December 2025 alone, ACLED recorded at least four attacks on police stations in Cauca andon the military base in Cesar. Seven further attacks against police and military units were recorded in January 2026, all claimed by ELN and Farc fighters. But their use has increasingly expanded beyond combatants. Between 2024 and 2025, ACLED also recorded a sharp rise in drone attacks affecting civilians. In some cases, civilians were caught in the crossfire. During the December attacks on police stations and the military base, at least five civilians were injured. “They drop the explosives on targets with little precision but terrifying effect,” Breda said. In others, civilians appear to have been the targets. When the 10-year-old boy was killed in 2024, army commander Gen Federico Mejia accused fighters from a Farc dissident group of targeting civilians to pressure them “to reject the presence of state military”. The sound of their buzzing has become a source of terror in many communities. In Putumayo, Indigenous leaders have said that armed actors used drones not only to launch attacks but to intimidate residents, hovering above villages to assert control, according to Human Rights Watch. On a recent reporting trip for the Guardian in Barrancabermeja, a drone followed and monitored this reporter while an interview about illegal armed groups was under way, forcing it to be cut short. Analysts link the spread of drone warfare in Colombia to global conflicts, particularly Ukraine, where the mass use of drones – alongside online footage and returning foreign fighters – has accelerated the circulation of tactics, technical knowledge and supply chains. “This war in Ukraine and the massive use of drones in that context, coupled with the participation of a lot of foreigners in the foreign region, particularly Colombians, sort of helped spread the use of these devices,” Breda said. The device found last Wednesday near Bogotá airport was a fibre optic drone, which is resistant to jamming and has become a feature in Russia’s war against Ukraine. Colombian armed groups’ transnational criminal ties, including links to Mexican and Balkan cartels, have further eased access to equipment and training. Experts said there was also a growing number of reports that children, considered more adept with the technology, were being recruited to operate drones. Armed groups are also formalising drone units. A commander with one group told news outlet La Silla Vacía last year that it had formed a dedicated unit of drone operators, known as droneros. “Our drone unit is the one we protect most,” he said. The shift is not merely tactical but technological. In July, a Farc faction struck a navy patrol boat with a first-person-view (FPV) drone, which the operator flew directly into the vessel before detonating it. FPV drones are manually guided in real time, enabling precision strikes on moving targets – a development analysts said marked a worrying escalation. The Colombian government has been scrambling to respond, unveiling a multibillion anti-drone “shield”, tightening restrictions on drone imports and creating specialised military units. However, officials have also acknowledged the difficulty in countering drone strikes across a fragmented battlefield. “You can understand that this is arduous, difficult, and costly work. The national army alone has 3,000 platoons deployed nationwide, and being able to equip all our personnel [with anti-drone systems] is complicated,” said army commander Maj Gen Luis Emilio Cardozo last year. The president, Gustavo Petro, admitted to troops that “narco-traffickers have the aerial advantage”. Experts caution that armed groups are moving faster than the state can adapt. “There are reports of armed groups having anti-drone technology already, which would show they are adapting really fast,” said Martina Rapido Ragozzino, a researcher at Human Rights Watch. As drones reshape Colombia’s conflict from above, analysts said that the balance was shifting faster than institutions could respond – leaving civilians increasingly exposed in a war where the frontlines were no longer fixed to the ground.

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Spain’s conservatives forced to rely on far-right Vox party after losing majority in Andalucía

Spain’s conservative People’s party (PP) won Sunday’s Andalucían regional election, but lost its absolute majority, leaving it dependent on the support or abstention of the far-right Vox party to form a new government. After the poll in Spain’s most populous region – which will serve as a barometer of wider electoral opinion before next year’s general election – the socialists slumped to an all-time low and Vox picked up one additional seat. The PP took 53 seats in the 109-seat regional parliament, leaving them two seats short of an absolute majority and five down on the 58 they won at the last election in 2022. The Spanish Socialist Workers’ party (PSOE), which is led nationally by the prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, dropped from 30 seats to 28, while Vox climbed from 14 seats to 15. The leftwing Adelante Andalucía party climbed from two seats to six, and the leftist coalition Por Andalucía held on to the five seats in won four years ago. Sunday’s results mean that the regional PP leader, Juan Manuel “Juanma” Moreno, will have to negotiate his return to office with Vox – something he was keen to avoid during the campaign. “I’m going to try to govern alone and I’ll work as hard as possible to so there are no constraints or conditions from Vox,” he told Cadena Ser radio last week. “I’ve said very clearly that I have no interest in governing with Vox. None at all.” Moreno has criticised the far-right party’s so-called “national priority” policy, which would favour Spaniards over foreign-born people when it comes to housing and benefits. Although Moreno dismissed it as “an empty slogan”, Vox has made the policy a key part of the coalition agreements it has recently reentered with the PP in regions such as Extremadura and Aragón. Speaking after the results came in, Moreno said his party had come very close to another absolute majority, but that the arithmetic had always been complicated. “It’s true that we didn’t get top marks we were hoping for, but we’ve still achieved and outstanding grade” he said. Moreno also insisted he had been given an mandate “to continue transforming Andalucía”, and promised “four more years of reforms and stability”. The PP, which could now face months of negotiations with Vox to form a new government, described its win as a “resounding victory” and said Sánchez’s socialists had suffered “a catastrophic result”. The prime minister congratulated Moreno but said his party would “continue to drive the kind of social and political advances that improve people’s lives”. Vox’s leader, Santiago Abascal, called on Moreno to heed the voices of the 576,000 Andalucíans who had backed his party and thereby shown that they “believe in national priority … and believe that regional governments can work to stop the migrant invasion”. Polls leading up to next year’s general election suggest the PP is on course to defeat Sánchez, whose inner circle, party and administration have been battered by a series of corruption scandals. However, the conservatives are expected to fall short of an absolute majority and would probably need Vox’s support to govern at a national level.

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UAE blames Iran or proxies for strike near nuclear plant, as Trump tells Tehran ‘clock is ticking’

The United Arab Emirates has blamed a fire near its nuclear power plant on a drone launched by Iran or one of its proxies in what the UAE called a “dangerous escalation”. The fire was just outside the Barakah nuclear plant and caused no injuries or radiation alerts, with the emirate’s nuclear regulator saying there was no radioactive leak or risk to the public. But it came at an extremely tense moment in the sixth week of a ceasefire in the Iran war, with peace talks stalled and Donald Trump voicing impatience at the deadlock. “For Iran, the Clock is Ticking, and they better get moving, FAST, or there won’t be anything left of them. TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE!” the US president wrote on his Truth Social site. According to Axios, Trump met national security advisers on Saturday at his golf course in Virginia and is due to meet his national security team on Tuesday to discuss options. Trump also spoke to Benjamin Netanyahu before an Israeli security cabinet meeting to discuss Iran, Lebanon and Gaza, amid widespread speculation in Israel that the Iran war will restart in the absence of signs of compromise. According to state media, the UAE foreign minister, Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan, held talks with other states in the region, including Saudi Arabia with which it has had a strained relationship recently. Riyadh condemned the attack. The minister also informed the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Rafael Grossi, of the details of the drone strike. He told Grossi that his country had the full right to respond to such “terrorist attacks”. The IAEA said in a social media post that Grossi expressed “grave concern about the incident and says military activity that threatens nuclear safety is unacceptable”. The UAE is reported to have retaliated for earlier Iranian attacks on its oil infrastructure with airstrikes on Iranian facilities. It has tightened its partnership with Israel over the course of the war and has been the most hawkish of the Gulf states over military action against Iran. The UAE’s defence ministry said the drone that targeted the Barakah plant was one of three that “entered the country from the western border direction”. It said the unmanned aircraft had hit “an electrical generator outside the inner perimeter of the Barakah nuclear power plant in the Al Dhafra area”. “Investigations are ongoing to determine the source of the attacks, and updates will be disclosed upon completion of the investigations,” the ministry added. Anwar Gargash, an Emirati presidential adviser, made clear that he believed Iran or a regional proxy were the perpetrators. “The terrorist targeting of the Barakah clean nuclear power plant, whether carried out by the principal perpetrator or through one of its agents, represents a dangerous escalation,” Gargash wrote on X. Gargash called the incident “a dark scene that violates all international laws and norms”, and accused those responsible of having a disregard for civilian lives.

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Monday briefing: Is the bond market making Britain ungovernable?

Good morning. Last week, crisis turned to chaos in Westminster, as a Labour leadership contest kicked off, then sort of didn’t. At the same time, the cost of UK government borrowing sky-rocketed. By Friday, 30-year gilt yields on UK government bonds – in essence, the rate of interest the government pays on new borrowing – hit 5.85%, a near three decade high. These figures will probably rise again this week, as further drama unfolds. Despite fluctuations, the long-term upward trajectory is undeniable. Dominant thinking in the centre of British politics dictates the bond market needs to be appeased. Brief spikes during moments of political unrest might be unavoidable, but spooking investors with radical economic reform à la Liz Truss is considered catastrophic. This attitude has defined Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves’s faltering tenure. But there’s a growing rumble of discontent from within Labour’s ranks at this received wisdom. Last year, Manchester mayor and Labour leadership hopeful Andy Burnham admonished Starmer’s government for being “in hock to the bond markets”, (before swiftly backtracking). Last week, MP Paula Barker suggested “the markets will have to fall into line” should Labour’s next leader opt for a more progressive economic agenda, and Clive Lewis has written an essay-length X post on the subject. For today’s First Edition, I spoke to Daniela Gabor, professor of economics at Soas, University of London. We discussed how the bond market works, and the case for radical reform. First, this morning’s headlines. Five big stories UK politics | The UK’s next ambassador to Japan could be called to give evidence over the decision to award Peter Mandelson security clearance against the advice of vetting officials. UK news | More than 100 new datacentres in the UK plan to burn gas to generate electricity, some potentially doing so permanently. World news | An Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Uganda is a “public health emergency of international concern”, the World Health Organization has said. UK politics | Andy Burnham faces a perilous race to win the Makerfield seat, his allies have said, as he gears up to fight a byelection that could decide the long-term future of Labour and the country. Middle East | The United Arab Emirates has blamed a fire near its nuclear power plant on a drone launched by Iran or one of its proxies, in what the UAE called a “dangerous escalation”. In depth: ‘Austerity is hardwired to be at the top of the bondholder wishlist’ It’s clear there’s no end in sight to Britain’s already decade-long stretch of political instability. The country never recovered from the 2008 financial crash, thanks to Osborne and Cameron’s unrelenting austerity; we’re still dealing with the fallout from Brexit; a sixth change of prime minister in just seven years is all but inevitable; there was that Liz Truss mini budget; and internationally, warfare, strongmen and the climate crisis add to pressure on public finances. While the economy stumbles, the state must continue to function, and when governments want to spend more than they can raise in revenue, they borrow. This is done through the issuing of debts known as bonds, or gilts in the UK. On Friday, the 10-year gilt yield – the benchmark for government bonds – climbed above 5.18%, a level last hit in 2008, during the global financial crisis. For context, during the late 2010s, this figure hovered about 1%, and was still below 2% in 2022. “Basically, if the cost of borrowing increases,” says Gabor, “governments have to dedicate a lot more revenue to servicing their debt.” Every year, the UK now spends more than £100bn on debt interest. Our debt-to-GDP ratio is 94%. By comparison, Germany’s is 64%, and the Netherlands 44%, though Spain, France and the United States are all more than 100%. But, the UK has the highest borrowing costs of any G7 nation. In Japan, rates hover at 2.5%, and in Germany 3%. Italy, France and Canada are all under the 4% mark, while the US is about 4.5%. Currently, government data shows that British insurance corporations and pension funds hold about 20% of existing gilts, and another 15% are with other British financial institutions such as hedge funds. British banks hold a further 5%, while foreign investors hold about 35%. The Bank of England holds about 20%. *** The bond vigilantes Since taking up office in 2024, Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves have prioritised “stability and moderation” in government. In the end, this incremental approach to change looks to have spelled their downfall, with both left and right blaming the recent electoral drubbing on the lack of visible progress. But Gabor argues reshuffling personnel alone won’t rectify this problem. Bond markets don’t only respond to brief moments of political uncertainty, they react to signals of shifting economic priorities and policies. Behind these moves are investors – people – protesting action they perceive to be irresponsible, reducing the security of their investment. The whole purpose of bonds for investors, after all, is to provide “high-quality collateral” – a secure place to put their money. When those investors sell their bonds, the cost of government borrowing increases. “We call them bond vigilantes,” says Gabor. “Men and women in suits in front of screens, looking at fiscal plans and policy trajectories across the world. Through investment, they offer their stamp of approval – or lack of it – to fiscal decisions.” Gabor’s view is that these bond-buyers aren’t independent soothsayers, but skin-in-the-game financial actors. Banks, pension funds and private equity have their own profit agendas. “In fact, honest bond investors recognise the structural preference of many bond vigilantes for governments to be fiscally conservative,” says Gabor. “It’s how they get the best returns. Bond vigilantes don’t like fiscal policies that generate growth through spending as it affects their short-term profitability [due to inflation].” In essence, austerity is hardwired to be at the top of the bondholder wishlist. *** A choiceless democracy Even in last week’s reset speech, an attempt to resurrect his premiership, Starmer was accused of being too incrementalist. Gabor believes this is a problem far bigger than the moribund PM: it’s woven into the system. While it can’t account for his many mistakes in government – the many U-turns, the appointment of Peter Mandelson – it does restrict the ability of Starmer, and any successor, to take bolder economic action. “You end up in what the late Malawian economist Thandika Mkandawire labelled ‘choiceless democracies’,” says Gabor. “If whichever government you vote for concedes to the power of the bond market, nothing transformative can happen. If you simply always follow what bondholders dictate, you cannot do progressive politics or implement progressive economic policies.” When liberal governments seem powerless to implement change, struggling people often turn to radical parties of the right, promising something different. It might seem counterintuitive, but Gabor believes, “the best compliment a government can get from the bond market is a mild sell-off”. In essence, she argues, we misunderstand how bond vigilantes work. “Actors in the bond market have an incentive to produce returns – the government mission is to produce growth. They have different goals – bondholders and chancellors are frenemies at best.” *** Taking back control … of monetary policy So what can governments do to shore up bond markets while increasing spending? One option is to take more control over monetary policy. “Five years ago, the Bank of England held nearly 35% of gilts,” says Gabor. “Since 2022, the Bank has been a net seller. It is unique in the way it has done this, selling bonds before they mature rather than waiting for the government to pay its debts on expiry.” Often, these bonds are worth much less than they were originally bought for. Meanwhile, an Osborne-era agreement between the Treasury and the Bank means the UK government is liable for losses made by the Bank on bonds. The US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank simply record these losses on the central bank’s balance sheet, to be paid down by future profit. The New Economics Foundation suggests moving to this system could free up to £26bn a year for the Treasury. Plus, the UK is a global outlier in its heavy usage of bonds which guarantees investor returns in line with inflation. In fact, if it wanted to, the Bank could even opt to wipe the UK government debt it holds in bonds. But government has no control over that – in 1997, Gordon Brown made the Bank of England independent from government. Only, central bank independence does not mean central bank neutrality. “There is no theoretical reason for the Bank of England to sell bonds at a loss,” Gabor says. “It is a political and ideological choice.” She points to Liz Truss’s much-maligned mini-budget disaster in 2022. It was the spike in the bond market, after all, which toppled Truss, forcing a U-turn on her proposed £45bn in unfunded tax cuts, and her swift ejection from office. “We have to get rid of the narrative that Liz Truss proved you cannot fight the bond market,” Gabor says. “The Bank of England has a responsibility to be a market-maker of last resort.” In simple terms, to buy up government bonds during periods of significant financial pressure, feeding demand and reducing rates. “It did not do that in 2022. Some have labelled this inaction a soft-coup; Andrew Bailey left Truss out to hang.” It’s something Bailey denies – and the decision not to get involved was supported by the Guardian at the time. But Gabor is unconvinced. “Whether or not you think her plan was crazy, I do not think technocrats should be making decisions to bring down democratically elected politicians.” Gabor advocates for a series of further bond market reforms, chief among them changes to force UK pension funds to invest more in gilts. “Not all of these will be easy,” says Gabor, “but the British public no longer wishes to live in an era of moderate incrementalism. From the right and left, the demand is for change.” What else we’ve been reading Across stage and screen, from Harry Potter to Adolescence, Jack Thorne is one of the most in demand and multitalented writers working today. Miriam Gillinson talks with him about his latest show, Failing, which starts this week on Channel 4. Toby Moses, head of newsletters As another week begins, could you benefit for taking a pause and reassess what stress may be doing to your body? Joel Snape takes us behind the science to understand the impact of chronic stress and how best to deal with it. Yassin El-Moudden, newsletters team Given the state of the world, Elle Hunt’s interview with Simone Stolzoff is required reading, with the journalist offering some insight on how we can all become better at living with uncertainty. Toby Has Britain become the 21st Century’s answer to Italy? Once a byword for political instability, with its revolving doors of prime ministers, the UK is now giving Italy a run for its money. Tom Clark asks why No10 keeps losing its occupants. Yassin Social care has long been the third rail of British politics, but Heather Stewart argues that whoever the next incumbent of No10 is, they’re going to have to tackle the issue or leave the country in a perilous state. Toby Sport Golf | Aaron Rai became the first Englishman to win the US PGA Championship in 107 years, closing with a 5-under 65, including a 68-foot birdie putt on 17th. Football | Will Osula scored twice as Newcastle ran out 3-1 winners and left West Ham staring at relegation to the Championship. Rugby union | England sealed their eighth successive Women’s Six Nations title after a battling 43-28 victory over France in Bordeaux. The front pages “Burnham facing ‘perilous’ race in crunch byelection” is the Guardian’s front page today, while the Times says “Burnham’s allies accuse Streeting of sabotage”. The FT writes “Burnham plays down rejoining EU as Labour battle reopens Brexit wounds”. The i Paper leads with “Streeting will stand for PM on pledge to rejoin the EU”. The Telegraph says “Burnham retreats on push to rejoin the EU” while the Daily Mail calls it “Backlash over Brexit betrayal”. The Express says “Voters are not fools and deserve honesty” and Metro goes with “UK faces summer in limbo”. The Mirror leads on the story that Ben Needham’s mother has been told police will no longer investigate his disappearance, with the headline “Heartbreak”. Today in Focus Making jokes as the world collapses The comedian Munya Chawawa tells Nosheen Iqbal how he finds jokes in the age of social media and what Donald Trump has in common with wrestlers. Cartoon of the day | Ella Baron The Upside A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad This weekend Ian McKellen cut the red ribbon at the Our Lady, Star of the Sea Catholic church venue in County Durham, now called the Playhouse, entertaining the audience with anecdotes from a career as one of Britain’s finest classical actors. The space will be a home for Ensemble 84, a theatre company formed 18 months ago that auditioned for local talent and gave people jobs as actors and performers. “This is the only company of actors in the United Kingdom and it’s in … Horden?” he says. “I’m feeling very emotional. This fulfils all my romantic dreams I’ve had ever since I discovered the joys of theatre-going and acting.” Even the National Theatre doesn’t employ any actors full-time, “it’s not right”, he says. “Actors make each other better when they work together over a long period.” That is the aim of Ensemble 84, and the company now has a theatre to call its own. Sign up here for a weekly roundup of The Upside, sent to you every Sunday Bored at work? And finally, the Guardian’s puzzles are here to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow. Quick crossword Cryptic crossword Wordiply

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‘The end of the road’: the man on a mission to take Barcelona back from overtourism

After decades of relentlessly marketing their vibrant Mediterranean city, the Barcelona authorities have appointed a man on a mission to say “no more” – and, he says, to return its most iconic market back to local residents. Last year, the Barcelona area attracted 26 million visitors, up 2.4% on 2024. The appointment of José Antonio Donaire as the city’s first commissioner for sustainable tourism represents a significant change of heart and a shift away from viewing tourism as an unalloyed good to believing it is alienating citizens and eroding the Catalan capital’s identity. “We’ve reached the end of the road, Barcelona has reached the maximum number of tourists it can accommodate,” he says. “We don’t want more tourists, not even one more, but we need to manage those we have.” It could take some time to feel the impact of the changes Donaire proposes, not least because, whatever the city’s intentions, other actors, many of them beyond its control – such as the port, the airport, airlines, hoteliers and the big-is-better travel industry – may not be on the same page. But there is no doubting his sincerity and ambition, which even extends to rescuing Barcelona’s famous La Boquería market, emblematic of the worst of what mass tourism has wrought on the city’s identity. La Boquería, once a haven for chefs and foodies but for years a no-go area for most of Barcelona’s residents, will, he says, return to being a market that sells fresh food rather than takeaway snacks, which will be banned with the consent of the majority of stall holders. “Within a year you’ll see the new Boquería,” Donaire says. The city’s attempt to curb visitor numbers began in 2017 with a moratorium on building new hotels in central Barcelona, but that was largely undermined by the rapid surge in short-let tourist apartments listed on sites such as Airbnb. In 2028, Barcelona’s 10,000 legal tourist apartments will have their licences revoked and it is hoped by the city council that the majority of these properties find their way back on to the rental market and alleviate the city’s housing crisis. Donaire accepts this has not been the case in New York City – which in effect banned tourist apartments in 2022 without any subsequent increase in rentals – but says Barcelona has plans to incentivise landlords to put property back on the market. “At the moment the housing stock is growing by 2,000 homes a year,” he says. “If we can get those 10,000 tourist apartments on the residential market, it’s the equivalent of five years’ growth.” Donaire, an eloquent man with a penchant for tartan waistcoats who came to the job with a professorship at the University of Girona and as director of its tourism research institute, says the new policies are not aimed so much at reducing numbers as changing the profile and behaviour of visitors. About 65% of visitors are classified as “leisure tourists” while the rest are either in Barcelona for conferences, or are what Donaire describes as “cultural visitors” who come for the museums, architecture and music festivals. He says the aim is to reduce the number of leisure tourists to arrive at an equal three-way split between them, culture visitors and people coming on business. Other measures include reducing the number of cruise ship berths from seven to five: the city though will still receive upwards of three million cruise passengers each year. These visitors spend little when they’re ashore and, as Donaire puts it, “create more problems than benefits”. Another group that will not be affected by restrictions on city centre hotels and tourist lets are the seven million annual day trippers, most of whom arrive by coach. Barcelona has increased parking fees and forced coaches to park on the periphery of the city in an effort to reduce numbers. About half of tourists in Barcelona are repeat visitors who will have already seen the main sites and Donaire plans to encourage this group to make day trips out of the city or to visit areas such as Montjuïc, a large park that is home to several museums but scarcely any residents. “What we don’t want is to encourage tourism in areas that aren’t prepared for it and where it will create problems,” he says. Barcelona is also – and not for the first time – clamping down on various forms of antisocial behaviour, including a ban on organised pub crawls. “We’re not interested in this type of tourism and we want it to disappear,” says Donaire. It furthermore plans to invest a portion of the recently increased tourist tax into the city centre to increase local commerce in an area where retail is dominated by convenience stores, souvenir and cannabis shops. Such proposals will no doubt be received with some scepticism, especially as quality over quantity – although those were not Donaire’s words – is not a new refrain, but he and his backers hope that after 30 years of tourist boom the balance may be tipped back in favour of Barcelona’s residents. “Many citizens feel the city centre no longer belongs to them,” Donaire says. Can he be the man to give it back to them?