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Ugly scenes in Belfast expose a broken politics | Letters

I agree with John Harris’s analysis (Cars burn in Belfast, bricks fly in Southampton – and the ubiquitous cry of ‘civil war’ goes up again, 10 June). He misses one obvious point, though. Since the election of the first Thatcher government in 1979, there has been a continuous attack on the rights and living standards of working-class people, such that we are now seeing a decline in healthy life expectancy for the poorest in the UK. We might think of this as a civil war which only one side is waging. Because the language of class has been erased from our politics, the “white working class” only hear themselves being spoken about when Nigel Farage or Stephen Yaxley-Lennon tell them how the system has failed them. As was the case in Germany in 1933, a political class that has no answers to the problems its politics have created is considering turning to a demagogue stirring up civil war as the way out of its dead end. When people hear talk of “civil war” or the need to make “white lives matter”, it fits with their recognition that their own lives don’t matter, and in the absence of any analysis that puts class at the forefront, race becomes the vehicle through which their lives make a kind of sense. Until we construct an alternative politics which unites fragmented communities around more than liberal pieties, the tinderbox of inequality will remain for Farage to lob matches at. Nick Moss London • Should not some sharp interviewer ask Richard Tice whether he and Nigel Farage not merely condemn the burning of innocent migrants from their homes, but feel a “pure cold rage” about it? And if so, whether an appropriate response would be to deport the perpetrators of this modern Kristallnacht, the original of which was a night of indiscriminate retribution against a whole defenceless population stirred up by extreme-right politicians as a response to the murder in Paris of a Nazi officer by a Jewish teenager. I believe and hope that a majority of the voters of Makerfield will feel enough rage against Reform UK to return any candidate but theirs. Vincent McNeany Gateshead, Tyne and Wear • The scenes in Belfast are all too reminiscent of violent pogroms in the same areas not just a century ago but also in the 1960s and subsequently. Then the victims burned out of their houses were Catholic families; now they are people of colour; the rhetoric and the perpetrators are the same. Hatred of the “other” may be rooted in deprivation, but it is still whipped up by people whose loyalties, clouded in vaunted patriotism, are to anywhere other than these mean streets. The parties led and funded by millionaires delude street mobs who can be found on other days chanting for Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu. The leaders smirk as the victims flee in terror and communities are further impoverished. Kevin Donovan Birkenhead, Merseyside • As a young imam living in Britain, I found the recent violence in Belfast deeply worrying. It is absolutely unjustifiable. There can be no excuse for violence of any kind. It comes at a time when immigration has become increasingly politicised, with negative rhetoric fuelling mistrust and a growing sense that entire communities are being blamed for the actions of a few individuals – a situation we cannot afford. Those who come seeking a better life deserve a chance to integrate and contribute. That is a moral obligation rooted in basic humanity. However, governments must also ensure immigration is managed with great care, so integration works and communities are not left feeling overlooked. As a Muslim, I am reminded of the Qur’anic principle: “Be always just; that is nearer to righteousness.” But when justice is not upheld, divisions grow within society, and I fear we risk moving further away from the kind of society many of us still hope to preserve in the United Kingdom. Usama Mubarik Farnborough, Hampshire • Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.

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Middle East crisis live: final text of peace deal between US and Iran agreed, says Pakistan’s prime minister

Pakistan’s prime minister Shehbaz Sharif has said that a final, agreed text of a peace deal between the United States and Iran had been reached. Islamabad is working with both sides to finalise next steps, Sharif added in an X post. US president Donald Trump has reposted a social media post by the Iranian foreign minister (see our previous post here). Abbas Araqchi had said a memorandum of understanding to end the Iran war had “never been closer”. An emerging deal between the United States and Iran is “performance-based”, a senior Trump administration official said on Friday. They added that Tehran will get none of its frozen assets until it carries out its part of the agreement. Trump dismissed Iranian media reports on an imminent deal with the US as “fake news”, saying they were not the terms Washington agreed to. Several Iranian media outlets have been reporting what they described as details of a draft proposal being reviewed by Iran’s leadership. Some of the terms of the agreement, according to the reports, include Iran’s control of the strait of Hormuz and postponed discussions on its nuclear programme (see posts at 12:49 and 09:32). The prime minister of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu, said he is “in full agreement” with Donald Trump to keep Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons. Hezbollah said on Friday that its fighters had confronted Israeli forces advancing towards a southern Lebanese town, as Israel pressed on with its strikes in Lebanon. In a statement, Hezbollah said its fighters first targeted Israeli troops advancing towards Majdal Zoun, around five kilometres (three miles) from the western side of the border, on Thursday evening “with repeated rocket barrages, forcing them to retreat”. The Israeli military said it struck 310 Hezbollah targets in southern Lebanon in the past week, as it claimed to have killed “80 terrorists”. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) also revealed it conducted a raid in the southern Lebanese village Dibbine several weeks ago. Global oil prices fell on Friday to lows not seen since the first week of the Iran crisis after Donald Trump claimed he was close to reaching a peace deal with Tehran. The price of Brent crude began to tumble from about $93 a barrel in overnight trade after the US president called off further military strikes against Iran which were scheduled for the evening.

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Chaotic talks on a US-Iran deal continue on the Trump rollercoaster

Great news! Donald Trump has said the US and Iran are on the verge of a peace agreement. Oil prices are down, and the stock market is up. This comes only hours after Trump warned Iran was about to be struck “VERY HARD”, a threat that had sent oil prices up and stocks down. It has been another ride on the Trump rollercoaster, keeping traders on edge, most of the world poorer, and people of the Middle East constantly whiplashing between fear and hope. But whether the ride veers up or down, the management always makes money. This is the 39th time that the president has declared US-Iranian talks to be on the point of fruition (other counts have the figure higher – it depends on what you term a prediction or just a hint). On five of those occasions, the promise of peace has involved walking back the threat of mass devastation, including the destruction of critical civilian infrastructure, a near-certain war crime if carried out. As he was menacing Iran with “very hard” strikes on Thursday night, Trump also pledged the US would take over “total control” of the country’s oil and gas markets and seize the island of Kharg. He has threatened the capture of Kharg, a focal point of Iran’s hydrocarbon industry, several times before, although in this instance the threat was made while actually bombing Iran, in a tit-for-tat exchange with Tehran in which a critical reservoir and water tanks were badly damaged in the drought-stricken south, a war crime if intentional. By Thursday afternoon however, the prospect of mass destruction had evaporated as quickly as it had materialised. “I have, as President of the United States of America, cancelled the scheduled strikes and bombings against Iran this evening,” Trump declared on his Truth Social platform as if providing his full capitalised title added any weight to the statement. A signing ceremony could even take place in Europe this weekend, the president suggested in remarks later in the day. Tehran reacted sceptically, saying that no deal was imminent, but the oil price fell below $90 (£67) a barrel nonetheless. No matter how many times Trump predicts conflagration or diplomatic breakthrough, the markets still obediently bob up and down like a trained seal. It is a guaranteed response that represents an opportunity to make big, easy money for anyone with advance knowledge of presidential announcements. A recent BBC investigation found that multimillion-dollar trades have been made in global markets just before he makes major administration announcements, particularly involving oil trades on the futures market. After so many false dawns and hoax armageddons, why are traders still reacting to Trump’s rhetoric? One theory is that, while individual traders are no suckers, they suspect that some of their competitors might be, so react rapidly to presidential statements to get ahead of the curve. An alternative explanation, suggested by Australian-American economist Justin Wolfers, is what he calls the “known liar problem”. The markets know Trump is an unreliable narrator and heavily discount everything the president says, but the economic implications of war or peace in the Gulf are so enormous that even a heavily discounted reaction still moves the dial. After all, one day there will be a deal. The president’s on-off signals are not being sent in a vacuum, but in the midst of talks between the two sides intended to turn the ceasefire, which has mostly held since April, into something more permanent. According to reports from the region, the gaps in those talks are indeed getting smaller. The focus is on a limited memorandum of understanding (MoU), putting off nuclear negotiations for later and focusing on opening the Strait of Hormuz, a vital route for global trade. The most immediate impasse is about cash. Tehran has no confidence Trump would keep his word in any deal so wants to be paid up front from a $24bn tranche of an estimated $100bn of its assets frozen around the world, in return for lifting its blockade on the Strait of Hormuz. The US wants rewards to follow tangible progress, but the administration has a fundamental problem with releasing Iranian assets. Trump and other top Republicans have spent years lambasting Barack Obama for delivering unfrozen assets to Iran in the form of pallets of cash as part of a 2015 nuclear deal, which was successful in curbing Iran’s programme until Trump walked out of it in 2018. The workaround being discussed according to a source briefed on the talks involves a line of credit from a bank in a Gulf state issued against Iran’s $100bn of frozen assets as collateral. It will fool only those who want to be fooled, but that would include the administration’s defenders on the American political stage. The second major sticking point is how much detail about nuclear issues should be included in the MoU. The US wants concrete parameters including a moratorium on uranium enrichment of 15 years or so, and arrangements for the disposal of Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium. US officials focus on these two factors in briefings to the American press, but when the Iranians have briefed diplomats and experts lately, they have insisted such matters have hardly been mentioned and are pressing for only vague references to nuclear issues in the memorandum, leaving them to be negotiated in Geneva in the weeks after an MoU is agreed. Trump may have shown the way for a possible fudge by insisting that the deal will ensure “Iran will never have a nuclear weapon”. That is something that Tehran might agree to. Iran’s renunciation of atomic arms was once reinforced by religious edict, or fatwa, but the supreme leader who issued that fatwa, Ali Khamenei, was killed by an Israeli bomb in the first seconds of the US-Israeli war on Iran on 28 February. Any Iranian pledge now is likely to be secular, and contingent on the MoU being upheld. A compromise MoU along similar lines appeared close to agreement in late May, but Trump helped derail it by suddenly moving the goalposts, including the suggestion that the regional guarantors of the agreement normalise relations with Israel as a gesture of gratitude for the suspension of hostilities. The suggestion was greeted by a stunned silence across the Middle East. Throwing last-minute surprises into negotiations has long been a Trump tactic in business and US politics. It has not worked in the Iran talks. Instead, the president has sometimes behaved as a finicky eater faced with a stark menu of two unpalatable options: all out war or messy compromise. He has noisily wavered between choosing one or the other in the hope of being presented with something more to his taste, but that has yet to happen. “You have an impasse. Trump doesn’t have any good options. He’s come close to accepting an MoU, but then he’s backed away because it’s difficult for him to politically sell it at home and claim victory,” said Vali Nasr, a former state department adviser, who is now professor at Johns Hopkins University’s school of advanced international studies. “Trump wants an MoU in which he offers the Iranians nothing really, but gets a lot from them. The only offering that he’s giving is that he can make their life worse. And they’re not going to accept that.” The US administration’s explanation for the long delay in achieving an MoU is a divided camp in Tehran, in which Iran’s chief negotiator, foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, is constantly being second-guessed by Revolutionary Guard generals back home. That may be true. The internal dynamics of the Tehran regime were murky before the bombing started, but now they are virtually a black box. The one certainty is that the Revolutionary Guard, the principal target of US-Israeli decapitation bombing, has emerged stronger in relation to the other power centre. It is unclear whether Khamenei’s successor, his badly injured son Mojtaba Khamenei, is any more than a figurehead. However it organises itself internally, the regime has shown itself to be remarkably resilient. Dead leaders have been replaced and domestic unrest has been suppressed. The war has arguably made that suppression easier. The brunt of the economic war being waged by the US is being borne by the Iranian people but that has yet to turn into decisive pressure on the leadership. Peace is likely to be more dangerous to the regime than war, as there will no longer be an external enemy to blame for runaway inflation and high employment. Nasr said that is why Tehran is so insistent on getting funds up front in any deal. “Trump is basically saying: let’s go back to where we were before 28 February and there’s no stomach for that in Tehran,” he said. “They don’t want to go back after all of this fighting just to where things were before. They’ve incurred $200-300bn dollars of damage during the war.” Despite Iran’s dogged survival in the face of a US-Israeli onslaught, in which the US alone claims to have bombed 13,000 targets, the Israeli leadership and Washington hawks are continuing to try to convince Trump that one more big push will finally bring down the regime. “I think the president eventually is going to do a much bigger kinetic military strike,” Darin Selnick, a former Pentagon deputy chief of staff told BBC Radio 4. “[US forces] never finished the target list. So they have about 20% of the target list. They can start taking out what will really hurt, which is the various oil facilities … They can take out another level of military leadership. They could have taken out those who are at the negotiating table, but they wanted to have someone to negotiate with. They can take those guys out as well. “Then they can forcibly reopen the strait themselves. If this trade opens … Iran would really have no ability to do anything but surrender.” For all his past threats of civilisational erasure if Iran fails to acquiesce, Trump has so far shown himself reluctant to double down on a military bet that has already failed. Ali Vaez, Iran project director at the International Crisis Group, argued that Trump’s latest threat of devastating strikes was performative. “Trump is using the threat either to force the Iranians to make last minute concessions, or to justify a deal that he knows would be criticised by the hawks,” Vaez said. Richard Nephew, a former Iran affairs director at the US national security council and now a research scholar at Columbia University, said: “I think he is probably poised to try and cut some sort of deal. He’s going to want to describe some sort of Iranian concession as coming from how loudly he barked. “I think the Iranians will dispute that, but I think the bigger problem is that you start to see [the Revolutionary Guard] talking about preemptive military action.” The Iranian military has managed to retain 70% of its missile arsenal from the start of the war, and might be tempted to use it before losing it, if it expected another mass US-Israeli attack. Nephew called it a “preemption paradox”. Trump’s repeated threats might be discounted by traders, but if they were taken seriously by his adversary, his attempts to game the markets could easily run out of his control.

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Palestinian and Israeli civil society groups urge G7 to take action on Gaza

Palestinian and Israeli civil society groups meeting in Paris on Friday have urged G7 leaders to act at their summit in the French spa town of Évian-les-Bains next week to save the narrowing chances of a two-state solution. The groups called for specific action on enforcing a ceasefire, disarming Hamas and starting reconstruction in Gaza, and said the various peace processes including the Board of Peace initiative should be integrated into one programme. The Paris meeting drew up proposals from five working groups and assembled as many as 150 activists from across the Israeli-Palestinian divide. “Gaza is devastated, Israel remains under threat,” the groups said in a joint statement. “Settler violence, settlement expansion and de facto annexation and threats to the Palestinian Authority continue to undermine the viability of a future Palestinian state. Israelis and Palestinians alike remain trapped in fear, insecurity and trauma.” The groups said they feared talks over Gaza might be cast aside at the G7 summit and urged its leaders to instead “recognise the window for a solution remains open, but it is narrowing. The moment requires urgent diplomacy, grounded in partnership with civil society.” Progress on Palestinian self-rule and an Israeli exit from Gaza has been stalled for six months as each side blames the other for failing to take the steps required for peace laid down in Donald Trump’s 20-point plan. A meeting of Palestinian groups this week in Cairo made limited progress in persuading Hamas to lay down its remaining heavy weaponry to an unspecified Palestinian organisation. Hamas is demanding an Israeli withdrawal from Gaza, but Israel wants Hamas to disarm first. The chance of a joint G7 statement on Gaza is described as vanishingly small. A key focus of the Paris gathering, attended by Arab and European foreign ministers including Kaja Kallas, the EU foreign policy chief, was to try to integrate the diplomatic work on a two-state solution into the civil society movements that still work together in Israel and Palestine. John Lyndon, the executive director of the Alliance for Middle East Peace, a coalition of more than 200 NGOs, said there was an openness in Israeli society to a two-state solution but this constituency was not well represented by the political parties. “Diplomacy for Israelis and Palestinians has been too elite-driven, too top-down, and increasingly removed and alien from the lived reality of Israelis and Palestinians,” he said. “There are many challenges, but one of the untapped resources is a rich, highly developed civil society that is really regionally best in class, and creative, determined and knows how to work together.” He said it was ironic that it was sometimes easier to bring such groups together in Paris under the umbrella of the French government than in Israel because of restrictions imposed by the Israeli government. The meeting in Paris came as the UK, Canada and Australia came together this week to set up a long-demanded funding stream to nurture peace groups in the region. There is deep concern that Israel, in the run-up to elections later this year, is permitting ever more settler violence on the West Bank, while the Palestinian Authority, starved of finances and democratic legitimacy, is not challenging entrenched Hamas rule in Gaza. The call to action proposes a permanent monitored ceasefire, meaningful consequences for settler violence, guaranteed humanitarian access, and the funding of reconstruction – “currently hidden from view” – undertaken via a transparent multi-year mechanism with real Palestinian ownership including civil society involvement and a clear drive to link Gaza and the West Bank. The groups in Paris have also called for Palestinian elections this year. The Paris meeting called for diplomats to ensure the Palestinian Authority was properly funded, warning that without this, the instability in the West Bank would deepen Hamas’s entrenchment in Gaza, while Israel would be left with an expanding security crisis “with no political exits”. The groups said in their statement that regional integration could be a catalyst for ending the occupation, provided it was not seen as a substitute for Palestinian statehood.

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All of us are migrants, says pope as he rounds off tour of Spain in Tenerife

Pope Leo has used the final day of his week-long tour of Spain to stress that “all of us are migrants” as he praised the power of integration, adding: “Yesterday’s foreigner may be today’s brother and neighbour.” The pontiff arrived on Friday in Tenerife, the largest and most populous of the Canary Islands. Soon after, he made his way to a reception centre housed in a former military barracks, which has accommodated as many as 4,000 people, to address the hundreds of migrants gathered there. Since his arrival on Thursday in the archipelago, one of Europe’s migration hotspots, the pontiff has delivered some of his most pointed remarks to date on migration. The Atlantic route to the Canary Islands ranks among the world’s deadliest, with an estimated 1,906 people – roughly five people a day – losing their lives last year in attempting to reach Europe. On Friday Leo cast their plight as one that affects everyone. “In a sense, all of us are migrants, for we are all pilgrims on our way to our heavenly homeland,” he said. “Let us help make this journey more humane for everyone by contributing in whatever way we can.” His remarks came on the same day that the EU’s landmark overhaul of migration was to take effect. Rights campaigners have widely criticised the hardline measures, with Human Rights Watch saying this week that the overhaul “takes a sledgehammer to the right of asylum”. On Friday Leo called on leaders to do more to welcome and integrate migrants, warning that many face a “silent shipwreck” after they arrive, finding themselves “left alone in a city, without a voice, without ties, work or a sense of security, and susceptible to those who take advantage of vulnerability”. His call to protect the rights of migrants has clashed with the rhetoric espoused by many politicians, particularly from far-right and conservative parties, who have taken a hard line on migrants even as they profess to hold Christian values. On his visit to Spain, the US-born pope has consistently highlighted this incongruence. “A human conscience, and even more so a Christian conscience, cannot remain indifferent in the face of these graveyards of the sea, to the victims of shipwrecks and the lack of aid,” Leo said. “Every life lost on these routes is a failure for the human family.” On Friday he also told people smugglers – who often charge thousands of euros a person to ferry people across borders, forcing people later into prostitution or other forms of black market labour by withholding their documents – that they would face God’s wrath for taking advantage of desperation. “I want to speak clearly to those who take advantage of desperation; to those who organise death routes, traffic in people, withhold documents, exploit workers, threaten women, deceive families, and turn the suffering of others into a business. Stop! Repent!” he said. “For every life lost, every family deceived, every body subjugated, every woman threatened, every worker exploited, you will have to appear before divine justice.” The remarks came a day after the pope warned: “We cannot grow accustomed to counting the dead,” and called for a reckoning as to why we had built a world where so many “must risk death to seek life”. On Friday, the pontiff heard from Bousso Diouf, originally from Nigeria, who said she was speaking in the name of the many who had been forced to leave their homes in search of security, peace and dignity. “The road to get here was not an easy one,” she said. “The journey was full of fear, pain and uncertainty ... It meant facing hunger, cold, despair and often death.” She said she had a “simple but profoundly human request” for society. “We aren’t asking for privileges. We aren’t asking for compassion. We just want respect, humanity and the chance to live with dignity.” The pontiff listened intently as she spoke. “We ask that borders do not become walls of indifference,” she continued. “Let us not be seen only as immigrants, as numbers or documents, but as people with history, with dreams, with families and with hope.”

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More of the Christchurch shooter’s online comments have been uncovered, New Zealand researchers say. Does it change the picture?

Terrified children hid in the corners of their classrooms at the Islamic Center of San Diego, as they had been trained to do, after the shooting began. The center’s longtime security guard, Amin Abdullah, prevented two teenage gunmen from entering the building and reaching the school inside but he was shot and killed. The pair killed two others: another staff member and a man whose wife worked in the kindergarten. The attack on the Islamic Center this May followed the well-worn script of contemporary far-right terror: a livestream of brutality against a minority group and a “manifesto” written to spread online. In the document attributed to the attackers, they called themselves the “Sons of Tarrant”. “Sons”, that is, of Brenton Tarrant, the Australian who used semi-automatic weapons to massacre 51 people as they attended prayers at two mosques in the New Zealand city of Christchurch in 2019. The attack and its perpetrator have become deeply enmeshed in digital spaces where such violence is venerated. His livestream is promoted and his writing praised and copied – but our understanding of the terrorist’s own relationship to the internet has remained incomplete, according to a new book by a pair of New Zealand researchers. Previous media reports, and the royal commission into the gunman’s activities before the massacre, identified a trail of online activity across Facebook and YouTube, and donations to white supremacist figures overseas. But the Australian claimed that he had largely been an onlooker on notorious message boards including 4chan and 8chan, and the commission did not find any evidence he had contributed comments. A new book claims to have found these engagements. It suggests that the attacker, who was jailed for life, was a regular commenter on 4chan – telegraphing his racist views and affinity for violence among a deluge of anonymous commenters long before 15 March 2019. For the authors of He Told Us, Dr Chris Wilson and Michal Dziwulski, the terrorist’s claim about his limited online activities was calling out for further investigation. “It is only through such examination, as horrific as it is, that we can hope to learn and to make the changes that will prevent a repetition of his atrocity,” they write. The document the terrorist sent to government offices and the media before the attack, and even the names he wrote on his weapons, were soaked in the symbolism and rhetoric of these online spaces – there was “14”, a reference to a Nazi slogan about securing the white race, and “remove kebab”, a meme related to killing Bosnian Muslims. Could he really have been only an onlooker and never an active participant? And, if he wasn’t, have we underestimated the extent to which he was shaped by the online community that now memeifies him? By matching the terrorist’s specific linguistic quirks with geographic indicators on 4chan based on the user’s IP address that align with his known travels, among other markers, the researchers believe they have found a trove of online activity that investigators never uncovered. The book is based on peer-reviewed research, after the researchers began to surface the posts in late 2023. In anonymous comments on 4chan’s “political incorrect” or /pol/ board, posts they identify claim to be by “an Aussie tourist in kyrgz”, at the time the gunman travelled in Kyrgyzstan. In others, the poster wrote he was “from grafton NSW”, the rural Australian town where the terrorist was born in 1990. In these spaces, they say he celebrated acts of white supremacist violence and complained about “islamic only kindergartens” in New Zealand, telling others to “stay and fight”. Because the comments are “unguarded and candid”, Wilson and Dziwulski argue that they potentially tell us far more about the terrorist than the content he intentionally spread as he began his attack in 2019. They show, Wilson tells Guardian Australia, that he was “desperate, narcissistic and attracted to violence”. ‘Wanting to show off’ After the terrorist attack, the Australian’s long history of interactions with the far right in his country began to surface. He had joined the Facebook pages of groups emerging in the mid-2010s, including United Patriots Front and the Lads Society. He posted in furious support of their leaders and threatened their critics. His Facebook comments were uncovered shortly after the attack, but Wilson and Dziwulski suggest the 4chan engagement they believe they have found shows that his “militancy and excitement” increased online as Australian far-right groups became more emboldened. His online participation in these spaces should be regarded as a kind of membership, Wilson says. “The learning process, the influence from leaders, the sense of belonging,” he says. “The sense of wanting to gain status within that group, the sense of wanting to show off.” The comments they link to him further undermine the story the terrorist told about his past. He told the royal commission his relationship with the Aboriginal community in Grafton was “generally good”. Yet in 2014 comments on 4chan linked to him by Wilson and Dziwulski, he appears to have described Aboriginal people as subhuman and questioned: “How would have killing them all not have improved modern Australia?” For the researchers, some of the most disturbing comments they say they have traced back to him followed the attack by the US Nazi Dylann Roof, who murdered nine people in an attack at a Black South Carolina church in 2015. In 4chan posts on 21 June 2015 they link to the terrorist, he appears to have written up to 30 responses in support of the church attack. At the time, the small flag on these posts indicate they were made in Kyrgyzstan – matching the timeline of his global travel. These posts argued that the violence was aimed at starting a race war: “There is an electricity in the air right now, an incident or two will be all it takes.” “It was almost like he was talking about his own attack,” Wilson says. “He’s talking about the goal of attacking a place of worship and killing people at their most vulnerable.” Creating ‘a script’ After the Christchurch attack, there are parallel worlds, the authors says: the mainstream where people “don’t want to talk about” the terrorist, and have engaged in a “forgetting that’s really been incredibly insulting [to] the Muslim community and the victims, and also really dangerous”. And another, where his propaganda flows freely and acts as a “curriculum”. He is part of “saint culture” for people like the San Diego shooters, as the extremism researcher Amarnath Amarasingam has written, where such acts are seen “as sacred models whose work must be continued”. “Tarrant has become, in far-right accelerationist spaces, the paradigmatic ‘saint’,” Amarasingam writes. “A figure depicted in their propaganda documents in quasi-Christian iconography and viewed as the attacker who kick-started a new wave of racial violence.” Dziwulski suggests the Australian created a “script” that others follow – the manifesto full of insider references and “the first-person shooter video-game perspective” of the livestream of his crime. And from Buffalo, New York to Bratislava, Slovakia, they are following it. In Australia too, people as young as 14 have been found with the Christchurch video on their devices. Wislon and Dziwulski say they have had little response from officials in New Zealand to their findings, and their questions about whether the attacker could have been identified before the catastrophe. The New Zealand Security Intelligence Service director general, Andrew Hampton, told Guardian Australia that the agency had “undergone a significant transformation” since the attack. “As the authors have acknowledged, this research has been undertaken with the benefit of hindsight and the significant amount of known information about the terrorist’s activities,” he said. “There is no question that there is a large amount of hateful rhetoric online. The job of the NZSIS is to detect those with the intent and capability of carrying out an attack.” Does it change the picture? Wilson and Dziwulski argue that their findings should prompt a reassessment of the terrorist and his path to violence. “[We need] to be able to reckon with him,” says Wilson. “To look at him realistically, and then hopefully deflate some of this facade that’s built up around him, that creates this kind of glorification.” He Told Us by Chris Wilson and Michal Dwizulski is out now through Allen & Unwin

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Antarctica’s west coast missing an area of sea ice the size of France as temperatures peak 20C above average

Antarctica’s west coast is missing an area of winter sea ice the size of France, sparking concerns for threatened penguins other marine life and global sea levels. One expert said the loss of ice in the Bellingshausen Sea was “depressing” and the failure of ice to form could have intensified a heatwave over the continent’s peninsular last week that saw daytime temperatures peak at 15.4C which is more than 20C above average. It’s winter in Antarctica, when sea ice expands rapidly around the continent peaking in September. But satellite observations showed the Bellingshausen Sea – on the west side of the Antarctic peninsular and which by June would usually be covered by ice – was almost completely ice free. Sign up for the Breaking News Australia email Scientists said the region was missing about 650,000 sq kilometres (250,000 sq miles) of sea ice, compared with the average between 1991 and 2020. That is an area about the size of France and almost 10 times the size of Tasmania. “I’m concerned. It’s depressing,” said Dr Will Hobbs, an Antarctic sea ice expert at the University of Tasmania with the Australian Antarctic Program Partnership. “It is remarkable that we are in June and there is no sea ice there.” He said this was the third time in four years that sea ice had been very low in the region. “I don’t think we will see sea ice there any more. It’s done,” he said. He said the loss of sea ice was likely linked to changes in the ocean and scientists were trying to understand if global heating was a factor. He said the region was important for krill – a critical part of the food web for species in the region. Krill would usually be hiding from predators under the ice in winter, where they graze on algae. On 10 June there was about 11.4m square kilometres of sea ice around the entire continent compared to a long-term average for that date of 12.6m sq km. Dr Phil Reid, who monitors Antarctic conditions at Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology, said the Bellingshausen Sea had seen “incredible coastal exposure” in winter and summer in recent years. He said just to the area’s west were the Pine Island and Thwaites glaciers – the continent’s major contributors to ice loss and sea level rise. Floating ice shelves in front of the glaciers could break up faster if protective sea ice is absent for longer periods, he said, and this could then speed up the loss of ice from the glaciers, pushing up global sea levels in the future. The Bellingshausen Sea’s coastline was the site of tragedy in late 2022 when thousands of emperor penguin chicks died during a “catastrophic breeding failure” in four colonies. That event contributed to UN advisers pushing the species up two categories to “endangered” on its international threatened species list earlier this year. Dr Peter Fretwell, a scientist at the British Antarctic Survey who has been documenting the penguin’s decline, said the current loss of sea ice in the region was “a serious problem for penguins, especially emperors”. “Sea ice is forming too late and breaking up too early. It leads to reduced breeding success and longer trips to moulting grounds.” Adelie penguin numbers were also falling and crabeater seals were being forced to migrate in summer to find stable ice, he said. This month the Antarctic peninsular witnessed an extreme temperature spike over several days. Hobbs said while “nobody has done the numbers” it was reasonable to suggest the heatwave was “made worse by the lack of sea ice”. Sea ice would usually help to cool any warmer airflow entering the region from the north, he said. Officials at Argentina’s national weather service, Servicio Meteorológico Nacional, said the country’s Esperanza base at the peninsular’s northeastern tip had experienced an “extreme temperature event” that peaked on 5 and 6 June. Maximum temperatures of 15.4C and 13.4C, respectively, were recorded at a period when average daily maximums were -6.2C. The previous June temperature record at the base of 13.3C was set on 12 June 1998.

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Tornadoes rip through central US while extreme heat and humidity creep into the north-east

An Illinois man whose home was destroyed by a tornado on Thursday was pulled from the rubble by a police officer and a photojournalist, who captured the terrifying storm and subsequent rescue in dramatic video footage. Scott Lasker, who describes himself as a storm chaser, recorded the tornado ripping through the town of Streator and was filming the damage it inflicted when he came across the man trapped in the debris of his house. “A lady maybe about a hundred yards away was screaming for help,” he told CBS News. “I ran over there and her husband is stuck beneath the rubble in their leveled house. “I tried to lift a heavy door off the man’s leg, and gave him a little comfort, and then the police showed up.” The man’s condition was not known on Friday morning, but Lasker said he was bloodied, and that he suspected the victim had sustained broken limbs. Chicago’s ABC7 News showed scenes of widespread destruction, and interviewed Streator residents who said the tornado’s quick arrival gave them no time to prepare. “It was the scariest things I’ve witnessed,” one resident, Clint Stevens, said. “I mean, being this close to me and actually watching the funnel cloud. It was definitely scary.” The tornado that struck Streator was one of a series of devastating tornadoes that tore through several Illinois and Indiana communities late on Thursday, fueled by high heat and humidity that have also reached into several north-eastern states over the last few days. At least one death was reported in Iowa, after a man was struck by a falling tree. Hundreds of thousands were without power, authorities said, with active tornado warnings stretching to Michigan. More than a thousand flights were grounded, mostly in Pennsylvania, Illinois and New York. According to AccuWeather, almost 700 severe weather incidents, with close to two dozen tornadoes, have been recorded over the last three days in the central US, with drenching thunderstorms forecast for eastern states through the end of the week. Some of the worst damage was in areas south of Chicago, where at least three tornadoes destroyed several homes and tore down trees and power poles. In Merrillville, Indiana, police told residents to take emergency cover as a large column of wind swept through and pulled the roof from a high school. Residents emerged to roads blocked by dozens of fallen trees. The nearby manufacturing and farm city of Streator set up a family-reunification center for displaced residents in its city hall as officials took stock of the major damage. Tara Bedei, the city’s mayor, said there were no reported deaths. “We are incredibly grateful for the safety of our residents and the quick action of emergency personnel,” she said in a statement. Strong storms delayed or halted flights at airports in some cities, including Chicago, Philadelphia and New York on Thursday. Parts of the north-east and mid-Atlantic also strained under high heat and humidity. The tornadoes came after severe storms swept through the midwest on Wednesday, knocking out power, damaging buildings and canceling flights. In Des Moines, Iowa, a 54-year-old man died at a homeless encampment in a park after being hit by a tree that “broke apart and fell during strong storms”, police said in a statement. There were no immediate reports of other deaths or injuries from the storms. In Chicago, a baseball series finale between the White Sox and the Atlanta Braves was postponed due to rain and rescheduled for August. AccuWeather said strong thunderstorms crossed into other eastern states on Thursday, and there were reports of wind damage from northern Virginia and West Virginia, through New York and east to Connecticut. The weather outlet said another round of disruptive thunderstorms was expected on Friday afternoon and evening from parts of North Carolina to much of New York state and a portion of New England. Temperatures in the mid-90s fahrenheit (mid-30s celsius) were expected, which could feel like 100F or higher with humidity, the National Weather Service said. Meanwhile, a new round of severe weather was forming in the midwest that was predicted to affect Oklahoma, Kansas, Illinois and southern Wisconsin on Saturday, AccuWeather said. This week’s severe weather coincides with the arrival of El Niño, a phenomenon that supercharges extreme weather events and pushes global temperatures to record heights. This year’s El Niño could intensify to historic levels in the fall, US officials said on Thursday. The Associated Press contributed reporting