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Middle East crisis live: Iran says Trump’s threats to ‘blow up’ Oman ‘dangerous and bullying’

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Thursday he had ordered the country’s military to take control of 70% of the Gaza strip, in defiance of the terms of a fragile ceasefire that took effect in October. “We are currently squeezing Hamas. We now control 60% of the territory in the strip,” he said at a conference in an occupied West Bank settlement, according to a video aired by Israel’s Channel 12 network. He said the military had controlled 50% of Gaza under the terms of the ceasefire, adding: “My directive is to move to... 70%”. “We’re squeezing them from all [sides]. We’ll deal with what’s left afterwards.”

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Russia on the back foot with dynamics of war shifting in Ukraine’s favour, EU says – as it happened

… and on that note, it’s a wrap for today! EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas has said that “Russia is on the back foot” as “the dynamics of the war are shifting in Ukraine’s favour,” as she called for Europe to keep pressure on Moscow (14:23). Her comments come as Ukraine has agreed a major defence deal with Sweden including plans to buy up to 20 Gripen fighter jets (10:41, 11:35, 13:12, 13:22, 13:32), with Zelenskyy insisting that at this stage “diplomacy cannot stop Russia” as he pleaded for more air defence missiles from the US (13:38). In other news, Hungary’s new prime minister Péter Magyar has suggested that his government is nearing a political deal with the European Commission on an agreed programme of post-Orbán reforms that would unblock billions of euros in EU funds ahead of his meeting with Ursula von der Leyen tomorrow (12:16, 12:21, 12:26). Meanwhile, Bulgaria’s new prime minister Rumen Radev also visited Brussels, holding key talks with Nato’s Mark Rutte (13:58) and EU’s von der Leyen (16:00, 16:10). And over in Latvia, the parliament has approved a new government, led by centre-right opposition lawmaker Andris Kulbergs (16:28), two weeks after the previous administration collapsed over internal disputes over the government’s handling of Ukrainian drones that strayed into Latvian territory from Russia. If you have any tips, comments or suggestions, email me at jakub.krupa@theguardian.com. I am also on Bluesky at @jakubkrupa.bsky.social and on X at @jakubkrupa.

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Dormitory fire at Kenyan girls’ school kills at least 16 students

A fire has ripped through a dormitory at a girls’ school in Kenya’s Rift valley, killing at least 16 students. The fire broke out just after midnight at Utumishi girls academy in Gilgil, Nakuru county, about 76 miles north-west of Nairobi, police said. The education minister, Julius Migos Ogamba, told reporters that 79 other students were injured, although 71 of them have already been discharged from hospital. Ogamba said: “Investigations are ongoing, but the ... cause of the fire is not yet identified.” Students at the school are between 15 and 18, and about 220 girls were sleeping in the dormitory when the fire started on the building’s second floor. Doors on that floor were initially locked and some girls died while jumping out of the windows, a first responder said. Multiple survivors told first responders that a student had lit a mattress with a match, the first responder told Reuters. They did not know what the student’s motive may have been. The tragedy is the latest fatal fire at a school in Kenya in recent years. In 2024, 21 boys were killed at a boarding school in central Kenya when a fire tore through their dormitory, while in 2017 nine girls died in a blaze at a school in Kibera, the largest slum in Nairobi. In 2016, there were about 120 incidents of students setting fire to their sleeping quarters, many in protest at strict discipline and bad conditions. A 2022 report by the country’s auditor general found that most state secondary schools were not prepared to deal with fires. The Kenyan Red Cross said on X that the blaze in Gilgil was reported at about 3.30am on Thursday. “Several students have been evacuated and are receiving treatment in various hospitals,” it said. “A multi-agency response involving the county fire brigade, county disaster response teams, @PoliceKE and Kenya Red Cross remains ongoing.” Dozens of parents gathered at the school on Thursday morning, frantically searching for news of their children. Some injured students were carried out of the school by police officers, while others limped. Wambui Nderitu told the BBC her niece had survived the fire but broken her leg. She added: “Some of those at the top floor had to jump out, that’s why they are injured.” Kenya’s president, William Ruto, said his “heart and prayers” were with the girls’ families. “No words can truly ease the pain of losing young lives filled with promise, hope and dreams for the future,” he said in a social media post. “As a nation, we mourn with the parents, guardians, teachers and fellow students who are enduring this unimaginable tragedy. “Our immediate attention is focused on the rescue of those affected, the treatment of the injured, and support for their families, while investigations continue into the cause of the fire.” • This article was amended on 28 May 2026. An earlier version said Gilgil was north-east of Nairobi; in fact, it is north-west of the capital.

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Donald Trump shares draft Iran peace agreement with Israel and other allies

Donald Trump has circulated a draft peace agreement for the war with Iran among allies including Israel as both sides try to prevent fresh breaches of the ceasefire escalating out of control and scuppering any deal. In an attempt to speed up the negotiations, Pakistan’s foreign minister, Mohammad Ishaq Dar, will fly to Washington on Friday to meet his US counterpart, Marco Rubio. Tehran targeted a US air base in Kuwait on Thursday after Washington struck what it described as an Iranian drone operation near the strait of Hormuz, highlighting the fragile situation as both sets of negotiators refuse to cede ground on final points of disagreement. Trump’s Wednesday cabinet had been expected to discuss the deal, but Axios reported the US president as saying he needed a few more days to think about it. The draft Trump has shared is not vastly different to the one that has been circulating across the Middle East for days, under which the strait of Hormuz would be opened to commercial shipping, the US blockade of Iranian ports would by lifted and Iran would be given access to as much as $12bn (£9bn) in frozen assets. The aim would be for commercial shipping in the strait to return to pre-war levels within 30 days and for negotiations envisaged to last as long as 60 days to commence on the future of Iran’s nuclear programme. This would include discussions about its stockpile of highly enriched uranium, a time-limited suspension of further enrichment and supervision by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the UN’s nuclear watchdog. Iran would renounce the use of nuclear weapons. China is pressing for the UN security council to ratify any agreement. The current scope of the agreement would be deeply unpalatable for Israel, because it defers Iran making any firm nuclear commitments and requires a permanent ceasefire to include Lebanon. The draft is less specific than Tehran’s version about lifting sanctions on Iran’s oil and petrochemical exports. It also asserts toll-free navigation in the strait of Hormuz. Iran is trying to negotiate an agreement with Oman separate to any memorandum of understanding that would result in fees imposed for “navigational services”. In remarks that produced no official response from Muscat, Trump threatened on Wednesday to “blow up” Oman if it tried to reach a deal with Tehran that included the imposition of tolls. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ navy issued a statement reasserting its control of the strait, saying that 26 commercial ships and oil tankers had been given permission to pass through the waterway in the past 24 hours. The IRGC said “seeking permission is mandatory and passage through other routes will be considered as disruption”. It intervened on Wednesday night to prevent four ships trying to sail through the strait with their transponders off. It said two were stopped in place and two forced to turn back. Any skirmishes so far between the US and Iran have not stopped their indirect contact mediated by Pakistan and Qatar, but if oil tanker operators step up their efforts to pass through the straitwithout Iranian permission the fragile ceasefire agreed on 8 April could collapse. Oil prices climbed 2% on Thursday morning, but remained below $100 a barrel. In Moscow, Iran’s deputy foreign minister, Ali Bagheri, reiterated the demand that frozen assets be released into Iranian bank accounts with no conditions attached. Washington has countered by imposing sanctions on Iran’s nascent Persian Gulf Strait Authority set up to manage the passage of vessels through the waterway. Tehran has been trying to gain Oman’s agreement to coordinate. The US treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, threatened on Thursday to target Oman if it helped impose a toll system in the strait, warning of sanctions against any countries involved. As tensions grow inside Iran about the wisdom of negotiating with Trump, the country’s supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, told officials not to turn differences into divisions, and to make sure the parliament, which is currently closed, dealt the public’s economic concerns. Khamenei said the US and Israel were seeking to “bring the country to its knees. The enemy’s blind plan ... is to create division and destruction in order to compensate for its military defeats,” he said. Senior diplomats in Oman were reportedly shocked and furious at Trump’s threat on Wednesday. Oman, seen as a western ally with a commitment to mediation in the Middle East, has been in talks with Iran over the future of the strait, but does not favour an agreement that results in tolls or heavy-handed Iranian interference in free navigation. Omani newspapers did not report Trump’s threat. In a sign of ongoing repression inside Iran, Amnesty International reported that the authorities had arrested more than 6,000 people since the US and Israel launched their offensive on 28 February, including protesters, journalists, lawyers, human rights defenders, dissidents and members of ethnic and religious minorities.

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Salmonella infections in England at highest level in a decade, figures show

The number of people in England struck by salmonella poisoning after eating contaminated food has reached its highest level for a decade. There were 10,406 laboratory-confirmed cases last year of non-typhoidal salmonella, the type of the bacteria found in contaminated foods such as meat, poultry and eggs. That was 26% up on the 8,242 cases in 2016 and just above the 10,389 in 2024. The rate of salmonella infection has also increased over that time from 14.9 per 100,000 people in 2016 to 17.8 per 100,000 in 2025. The UK Health Security Agency, which released the figures, highlighted the consistently high numbers of people with food poisoning caused by salmonella and campylobacter, another bacteria. The agency urged people to practise good hygiene habits to reduce their risk of suffering the debilitating gastrointestinal symptoms, such as diarrhoea and vomiting as well as a high temperature, caused by bacteria in contaminated food. Although the number of cases of campylobacter infections fell year-on-year from 70,392 to 69,394, the UKHSA said they remained stubbornly high. Dr Gauri Godbole, the UKHSA’s deputy director for gastrointestinal infections, said: “We are seeing consistently high levels of gastrointestinal infections in England. These infections spread in many ways – through contaminated food or water, contact with an infected person or contact with infected animals or their environment. “Washing hands thoroughly with soap and water, particularly after using the toilet, handling raw meat, eating, and contact with animals or farms, can help prevent infection.” Foodborne outbreak data that the agency published on Thursday shows that outbreaks of 13 types of salmonella bacteria during 2025 left 269 people unwell. Thirty-three needed to be admitted to hospital for treatment but none died. Four of the outbreaks occurred across England as a whole. The sources of the other outbreaks included four restaurants, a takeaway, a hospital, a nursery and a prison, all of which were unnamed. Children aged up to nine are most affected by salmonella and the bacteria affects men and women equally. The highest number of cases occurred in September, the UKHSA figures show. Salmonella and campylobacter infections are usually the result of eating contaminated foods such as poultry, meat, eggs, raw fruit or vegetables and unpasteurised milk products. But infection can also result from close contact with someone who is infected or cross-contamination in the kitchen, for example by using the same utensils for raw and cooked food. Listeriosis, another infection, last year killed 28 of the 181 people infected by it and also resulted in 13 stillbirths or miscarriages. It is an infection caused by listeria bacteria, which is associated with consuming contaminated raw, chilled or ready-to-eat foods. While most people who get listeriosis have no symptoms or a mild stomach upset, it can seriously affect older people, those whose immune system is compromised and people with underlying health conditions. In pregnancy it can also cause stillbirth, miscarriage and make babies very unwell. Dr James Cooper, the Food Standards Agency’s deputy director of food policy, said the FSA and the UKHSA were looking into the reasons cases of salmonella and campylobacter remained so high. He advised that people buying food in cafes and restaurants use the FSA’s food hygiene ratings when deciding where to eat, and follow the four Cs of food hygiene: chilling, cleaning, cooking and avoiding cross-contamination.

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EU fines Temu for failing to stop sale of illegal and dangerous products

EU regulators have fined the Chinese shopping website Temu €200m (£173m) for failing to stop the sale of illegal and dangerous products. The European Commission imposed the penalty after a 19-month investigation that found consumers were very likely to encounter illegal or unsafe products including baby toys and electronics on the firm’s website. An unpublished mystery shopping exercise carried out for the commission found a “high percentage” of unsafe baby products and a “very high percentage” of dangerous chargers for sale on the platform, as well as unsafe clothes and jewellery. Consumer groups across Europe have previously reported baby toys with loose parts presenting choking hazards, dummy chains long enough that they could strangle a child, jewellery laced with dangerous metals including lead, clothes made with banned chemicals and chargers that posed risks of burns, electric shocks or fire. The commission also criticised Temu over inadequate controls on the design of its website. Recommender systems and promotions by influencers “could amplify dissemination risks of illegal products” it said. The €200m fine is the second and highest-ever imposed under the EU’s Digital Services Act (DSA), which has applied to the world’s biggest tech companies since February 2024. It follows a €120m penalty issued to Elon Musk’s X last December for “deceptive” verification badges and lack of transparency over advertising. A senior EU official said the commission had found a particularly serious breach of the act related to an inadequate risk assessment on unsafe products that Temu carried out in 2024. The fine represents only a fraction of Temu’s fast-growing revenues. Its parent company, PDD Holdings, reported global revenues of $54bn (£40bn) in 2024, although this included income from another popular Chinese e-commerce site, Pinduoduo. Under the DSA a company can be fined up to 6% of global turnover. The senior EU official said the fine was proportionate and that other parts of the investigation into Temu, which could also lead to financial penalties, were continuing. The commission is also looking into the sale of illegal products, addictive design and whether independent researchers had access to Temu’s data. Temu has 130 million consumers in the EU, almost a third of the population. Once nicknamed the price butcher, it offers a vast range of very cheap products and has become a market leader in many countries. The DSA is intended to protect people from a wide range of online harms, ranging from disinformation and age-inappropriate content to dodgy products. The European Commission vice-president who leads on tech regulation, Henna Virkkunen, said: “Temu’s risk assessment underestimates concrete risks, lacks specificity, is not grounded in solid evidence, and is not comprehensive. It leaves regulators, users and the public in the dark about the true scale of potential harm posed by illegal products sold on Temu. “Now it is time for Temu to comply with the law.” Temu, which has the right to appeal against the fine, said it was “reviewing the decision carefully and considering all available options”. A spokesperson for the company said: “Temu respects the objectives of the Digital Services Act and the need for clear, consistent rules across the digital economy. However, we disagree with the European Commission’s decision and consider the fine to be disproportionate. “The decision relates to our first DSA assessment in 2024 and does not reflect the current state of our systems. Temu engaged constructively with the commission throughout the process and has since taken further steps to strengthen risk assessment, platform governance, and user protection.” Temu has until 28 August to submit an action plan to the commission setting out how it intends to remedy the situation.

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Family accuse UK government of lack of support over death of Briton in Grenada

The grieving family of a British man found dead in his home on the Caribbean island of Grenada have accused UK authorities of failing to support their fight for justice. The family of Andrew Frederick, 47, whose body was discovered on 4 January, are calling for an urgent review of the policies governing UK assistance to the loved ones of Britons killed abroad. A spokesperson for the family said they had been forced to launch their own public appeals for information, and commission an independent forensic pathologist and a private investigator, after they grew concerned about the direction of the police investigation in Grenada. The pathologist, approved by the Royal Grenada police force (RGPF), found that Frederick had been tortured and concluded that his death was a homicide, the family spokesperson said, adding that family members then referred the case to the UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office. Despite being provided with a postmortem report establishing that Frederick had been tortured and killed, the FCDO refused to refer the case to its murder and manslaughter team, a specialist unit that supports families of British nationals who are victims of homicide abroad, the spokesperson said. The family said in a statement: “Acting on pure discretion and with no guidance to underpin its position, the FCDO chose to defer to the local police force’s classification of Andrew’s death as suspicious but not a homicide over the determination of the only medical professional who examined Andrew.” After the family referred their case to the Ealing Central and Acton MP, Dr Rupa Huq, she tabled a question in parliament in April, asking “on what legal basis” did the FCDO defer “to a foreign police force’s classification of the death of a British national abroad over the determination of an officially appointed pathologist and an official death certificate in circumstances where those findings would constitute grounds for a homicide investigation in England and Wales?” The FCDO undersecretary, Hamish Falconer, responded that he was aware of the family’s case and added that there was no “guidance on the specific circumstances”. The family said the delays and continuing gaps in support from UK authorities had taken an “immeasurable toll” on them, adding that they had received no information or any updates from the RGPF since mid January. They said: “We have been unable to grieve properly for Andrew because grief requires a degree of resolution or at least the belief that those with the power to act are acting. Instead, nearly five months have been spent driving a campaign for justice while carrying the weight of what was done to him. “This includes examining horrific pictures and the knowledge that the organisations that exist precisely to help families in these circumstances have, at every turn, forced us to fight for the most basic engagement. This is not what grief should look like. It is what institutional failure looks like.” Eve Henderson, who co-founded the Murdered Abroad charity in 2001, which is helping Frederick’s family, said she was baffled by the UK’s reluctance to offer the support of the murder and manslaughter team, despite the postmortem and death certificate categorising the case as a homicide. Murdered Abroad, created after Henderson’s husband was killed in 1997 while on holiday in France, was instrumental in the campaign for the establishment of the FCDO’s murder and manslaughter team in 2015. Henderson said: “On average, there are between 60 and 80 homicides of British nationals abroad every year, which, I believe, is about 10% of all homicides in England and Wales last year. When it happens to you … you just assume that you will be assisted by our police or the Foreign Office or the coroner. But most of the people the charity helps find themselves facing a maze of complications and frustrations, Henderson said. One of the challenges, she added, is that much of the support is discretionary and not backed up by law. “There’s no statutory right to whatever they’re offering in the guidance. So it falls down on, ‘we may be able to help’,” she said, adding that attempts to get the support written into law through parliament had failed. Bernie Kinsella, a UK retired chief superintendent of police, who worked on the high-profile case of the British student Joanna Parrish, 20, who was murdered in France in 1990, echoed Henderson’s concerns. Kinsella, who is an adviser to Murdered Abroad, said while he understood British police were limited because they had no jurisdiction in a foreign investigation, there had been a lack of meaningful progress in support for families since he first worked on an overseas homicide case 25 years ago. An FCDO spokesperson said: “We are supporting the family of a British man who has died in Grenada and are in contact with the local authorities.” The Metropolitan police said they did not publicly comment on investigations being led by other forces. In Grenada, the director of public prosecution, Howard Pinnock, said Andrew Frederick’s file had been reviewed, adding: “My advice to the police was to refer the matter to the coroner for an inquest.” The RGPF was approached for comment.

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Argentina’s ‘European’ self-image under renewed scrutiny after racist incidents in Brazil

A woman celebrating her 32nd birthday on a train journey in the Brazilian state of Minas Gerais was horrified when a fellow passenger alerted her that an unknown man had been secretly filming her seven-year-old son. When confronted, the man – an Argentinian tourist – initially refused to show his phone. But after being pressed by other travellers, the man admitted he had sent the images to a WhatsApp contact. Police later revealed that under the photos, Eduardo Ignacio Murias, 63, an architect from the Argentinian province of Santiago del Estero, had written: “He’s Black but very cute. I could take him as a slave. I’m thinking of taking a slave, there are many here.” The child’s mother photographed the phone screen and passengers kept Murias inside the the train until it reached its destination, where he was arrested for “racial insult”, a crime under Brazilian law. The case has reignited debate in both countries about racism, national identity and Argentina’s longstanding pride in its European heritage. Murias was the third Argentinian to be arrested for racism in Brazil this year, at a time when record numbers of Argentinian tourists are travelling to the country. In April, José Luis Haile, 67, was arrested after allegedly directing racist insults at a food delivery worker at a supermarket in Rio. He is awaiting trial. In January, Agostina Páez, 29, was arrested in Rio after being filmed mimicking a monkey towards a waiter at a nightclub. Although later released, she was barred from leaving Brazil for two and a half months while the investigation continued. During that time, she claimed on social media that her rights were being violated and she was facing “persecution” – a narrative echoed by parts of the Argentinian media. The waiter is suing Páez for moral damages. “The claimant is a Black man who daily faces a society that insists on pushing him backwards simply because of the colour of his skin,” his lawyers wrote in the filing. “And yet, while carrying out his work, he was forced to hear words that diminished him and animalised him.” When Páez returned to Argentina in April, while still facing legal proceedings in Brazil, she was welcomed by the far-right senator Patricia Bullrich, a close ally of Argentina’s president, Javier Milei. Paéz’s father, Mariano Páez, was later filmed in a bar imitating a monkey to celebrate his daughter’s return. The political scientist and African-Argentinian activist Federico Pita said none of the recent cases came as a surprise given Argentina’s long history of racism. “Racism is inscribed within the very project of the Argentine nation. Argentina is constitutionally a supremacist country,” he said, citing article 25 of the constitution, which states: “The federal government shall promote European immigration.” Pita said Argentina continued to see itself as a “European” country while denying the existence of African-Argentinians and Indigenous peoples who, according to the 2022 census, make up about 1% and 3% of the population respectively. Activists and researchers, however, argue that those figures are likely to be underestimates. Experts believe the majority of the population has Indigenous ancestry, even if they do not identify as such. Pita said: “An Aymara descendant born in the north of Argentina is treated as Bolivian, a Mapuche born in Argentine Patagonia is treated as Chilean; and an African-descendant from Buenos Aires is treated as Uruguayan or Brazilian, because the only thing considered truly Argentine is whiteness.” In March, Argentina was the only Latin American country to vote against a UN resolution declaring the transatlantic slave trade “the gravest crime against humanity”. The US and Israel were the only other countries to oppose the measure. Although slavery was abolished in Argentina in 1853, the descendants of enslaved Africans – and their influence on the country’s culture, from tango to language and food – remain. Pita said comparisons between Argentina and Brazil were complex. While Black Brazilians make up a far larger share of the population, they also experience disproportionately high levels of poverty, police violence and social exclusion. “I don’t know what is more serious: a country like Argentina, which says its Black population does not exist, or Brazil, where a young Black man is killed every few minutes. They are equally grave,” he said. Cases of racism by Argentinians against Brazilians are not new – in 1920, players from Brazil’s national football team refused to play a friendly match after being depicted in an Argentinian newspaper as “monkeys”. To this day, fans imitating monkeys are caught in virtually every match involving clubs from the two countries. Although there is no evidence that such incidents are becoming more common, social media has helped put them in the spotlight. Meanwhile, thanks to the overvalued peso, more Argentinians are travelling to Brazil and account for a third of the 9.3 million foreign tourists in 2025. Pita said it was also important not to generalise about Argentinians. “Most of the Argentinian population not only never travel to Brazil, but most likely have never left the country,” he said. “But they do represent a deeper Argentina” that still struggles with racism.