Fifa bans fans from taking water bottles into World Cup stadiums
Fans will not be allowed to take reusable water bottles into World Cup stadiums due to safety concerns, Fifa says in a late policy change.
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Fans will not be allowed to take reusable water bottles into World Cup stadiums due to safety concerns, Fifa says in a late policy change.
Kanye West will be allowed to perform two gigs in the Netherlands after a judge shot down a Jewish group's attempt to block them.
Medical cannabis patients in the most populous state will be allowed to get behind the wheel without the fear of losing their driver's licence.
Though guests who flock to Disney resorts may see it as the happiest place on Earth, for those who work there, the parks can be a much darker place
For the past 25 years, Expanding the Walls program has allowed teenagers to express their identities and their lives via photography. In Expanding the Walls: Making Connections Between Photography, History, and Community on view until 8 June at the Studio Museum in Harlem, a survey contrasts the past and the now with a selection of images for an insight into the world and minds of teens in New York City Continue reading...
State sues maker of ChatGPT and CEO Sam Altman, alleging company โallowed a dangerous product to reach millionsโ Florida filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT, and its CEO, Sam Altman, on Monday alleging that the company concealed serious safety risks with its chatbot. Florida is the first state in the US to sue the artificial intelligence company. The 83-page suit was brought by Floridaโs attorney general, James Uthmeier, and alleges that OpenAI โaggressively marketedโ ChatGPT to the public while ignoring safety warnings and possible dangers of the product. Continue reading...
Children of those on care worker visas, who came legally before rule change, told to leave even if parents can stay Children as young as five who are living legally in the UK are being told by the Home Office they must leave the country even if their parents have been given permission to remain. The Guardian has seen five letters sent to children by the Home Office telling them they must leave the UK. A sixth letter has been sent to a woman who is six months pregnant and lives in the UK with her husband, telling her she must leave him and return to her country. The children have parents on care worker visas, which until March 2024 had allowed them to bring partners or children with them to the UK. Continue reading...
Garda bosses allowed the force's insignia to be used on a commercial basis for at least three years - the first and only time this occurred in the history of the state.
The Americans will be allowed to return home on Monday after spending weeks in quarantine, but they have a few more rough weeks ahead of them.
Premier Group Recruitment went into administration with debts of ยฃ2.9m โ including ยฃ647,000 owed to HMRC A recruitment executive โ who was allowed to buy back the assets of his bust company in instalments despite it accumulating almost ยฃ3m of debt โ has fallen behind on promised payments after pledging to send staff on an all-expenses paid trip to Las Vegas. The development is the latest case to raise questions about the practice of โphoenixismโ, accountingโs controversial art of liquidating companies to allow directors to rise from the ashes with a new entity, free of debts. Continue reading...
Only licensed doctors were allowed to ink tattoos in Korea - breaking the law could lead to heavy fines or jail.
The former Mash Report starโs latest show takes aim at his manosphere-courting, Saudi comedy festival-attending peers. Could he be the angry progressive standup we need right now? Nish Kumar โ mop of curly hair, Jimi Hendrix T-shirt, fancy coffee shop cookie in hand โ is sitting centimetres away from me in a meeting room in his publicistโs offices in Soho, central London. Nevertheless, another comedian is drawing the eye. On the wall is a massive poster promoting Prime Videoโs Last One Laughing UK โ and looming over us from the centre of the frame is the showโs host, Jimmy Carr. This feels, letโs just say, a tad ironic. In Kumarโs last standup show, he recalled the time he furiously confronted Carr about his decision to appear on manosphere influencer Jordan Petersonโs podcast. (โThis is a radicalisation event thatโs happening on an unprecedented scale,โ he told Carr.) Then thereโs the blurb for his upcoming tour, Angry Humour from a Really Nice Guy, in which Kumar expresses concern that comedy has been โco-opted by charlatans in service of autocratsโ โ partly a reference to last autumnโs Riyadh comedy festival, where Carr performed. Continue reading...
The Irish singer-songwriter says her rise has been increasingly โtarnished by the fact that I would be allowed to enjoy it so much more if I was thinโ The Irish singer-songwriter CMAT has responded to ongoing abuse she has received about her body and her weight following an appearance last week at BBCโs Radio 1 Big Weekend. The musician, whose real name is Ciara Mary-Alice Thompson, wrote on Instagram on Thursday that she had felt โcompelled to wade in and speak for myselfโ after learning of the abuse being directed at photos taken of her on stage at the Sunderland festival on 24 May. Continue reading...
Shannon OโConnor, 52, was convicted of charges including child endangerment and facilitating forcible sexual assault A judge has sentenced a San Francisco Bay Area mother to 35 years in prison after her conviction for a slew of crimes resulting from hosting drunken sex parties for young teenagers. Widely known as the โLos Gatos party momโ, a nickname that references her hometown, 52-year-old Shannon OโConnor was convicted of four dozen crimes in March, including child endangerment, dissuading witnesses from reporting a crime and facilitating forcible sexual assault. Her sentence was the maximum allowed under state law. Continue reading...
Arsenal co-chair Josh Kroenke says behind-closed-doors football during the Covid-19 pandemic allowed manager Mikel Arteta "space" help revive the "sleeping giant".
Cybercriminals still allowed to walk into office blocks and convince staff to let them plug in their own thumb drives
The hallowed radio show is celebrating 75 glorious years โ by stepping out of the studio and on to the stage. We sent the Guardianโs food writer (and Ambridge obsessive) along to meet her heroes and find out more Iโm very careful not to betray my true levels of excitement when I speak to The Archers actor Susie Riddell, before a nationwide theatre tour to mark the rural radio dramaโs 75th anniversary. I may be an Ambridge superfan but I still donโt want to scare the horses (nor indeed the cows, pigs or sheep). Riddellโs character Tracy Horrobin (who will be appearing with husband, Jazzer, local lush Lilian and cravat-wearing criminal Brian) is not one to hold back however: โItโs like a dream come true for me too!โ she confides, slipping easily into broad Borsetshire. โI never thought Iโd see the day that I was interviewed by the Guardian. Iโve seen it in the Bull!โ The Bull, for the uninitiated, is a half-timbered pub on the village green offering ale, artisanal food and, it seems, copies of the Guardian. Itโs a thrilling thought: I briefly entertain the idea of rock star turned vegan baker turned wedding caterer turned pub chef Fallon sitting in the snug, poring over my pie recipes in the Guardian. But itโs stretching credibility to believe an old-fashioned village boozer would find room for any reading material more substantial than Farmers Weekly. Riddell concedes the point. โMaybe Helen left it behind?โ Continue reading...
Exclusive: prison multinational MTC uses a โminimalist staffing modelโ that critics say is putting detainees and staff in serious danger Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast A series of catastrophic security failures involving the US private prison company running Australiaโs immigration detention centres has allowed the escape of high-risk detainees, caused ill-equipped staff to be stabbed and hospitalised, and triggered multiple investigations, one of which warned its โminimalist staffing modelโ was putting workers and detainees at risk. Guardian Australia can reveal that in September 2025, just six months after Management and Training Corporation assumed control of onshore detention, the home affairs minister, Tony Burke, was forced to haul in the companyโs president from the US to dress him down in a secret face-to-face meeting. Seriously ill detainees are missing medical appointments because MTC lacks the staff to escort them to health centres, a situation that has infuriated the home affairs department. Two MTC staff members were admitted to hospital with smoke inhalation after trying to rescue an unconscious detainee from a fire. Investigators found MTC had not given the staff basic respiratory equipment and fire-response training six months after assuming control of the centre. More than 12 escapes or attempted escapes have occurred in the 14 months MTC has had control of the system. A significant number took place during transport and escort operations to hospitals, airports or detention centres. A child sexual abuse offender deemed high-risk escaped MTC custody during an escort to Sydneyโs Bankstown hospital despite being handcuffed and supposedly under close watch. In September a detainee absconded by shimmying up a light pole next to a boundary fence at Brisbane immigration detention centre. His disappearance was not discovered for 12 hours. Late last year two detainees were able to flee a guarded MTC vehicle travelling less than 500m in Melbourne. One managed to evade capture for four days. The risk assessment system MTC uses to classify detainees is so broken that Comcare, the federal work safety regulator, has warned the home affairs department it is putting staff at serious risk of violence. Continue reading...
After visiting an island brothel in Bangladesh, the novelist was inspired to write an imagined uprising. She explores the radical fictional worlds where women have the power In the spring of 2024, I am finally able to visit Banishanta, the island in southern Bangladesh that has been haunting my dreams. When I arrive I find it is little more than a long patch of grey mud, with a string of flimsy huts lining a craggy shore. Thirteen years earlier, I was on a boat on my way to the Sundarban mangrove forest when a guide casually pointed out the island and told me it was a state-licensed brothel that had been there since the time of the British. When I went home, I didnโt want to think about Banishanta, because if I did, I would have to imagine the terrible things the women there were enduring while I lived a life of casual entitlements many thousands of miles away. Yet the women squatted in my imagination, refusing to leave. I resolved to never write about them, because it would say things about the world I didnโt want to know. It was only when I decided I could write a novel, set on a fictional island, about a rebellion of women, that I allowed them in. Continue reading...
The first ever Enhanced Games are taking place this weekend in Las Vegas, with big names, big money and much controversy.