Category: 4. World

  • Manchester Arena Bomber’s Brother Is Accused of Attack on Prison Guards

    Manchester Arena Bomber’s Brother Is Accused of Attack on Prison Guards

    The brother of the terrorist who bombed an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester, England, in 2017 was accused on Saturday of launching a violent attack inside a high-security jail where he was serving time for his own role in the concert bombing.

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  • Thousands attend pro-Serbia government rally after months of unrest

    Thousands attend pro-Serbia government rally after months of unrest

    Thomas Mackintosh

    BBC News

    Guy De Launey

    Balkans correspondent

    Getty Images Supporters of Serbia's President hold national flags during a pro-government rally in BelgradeGetty Images

    President Aleksandar Vucic rallied his supporters in Serbia’s capital, Belgrade

    Tens of thousands of Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic’s supporters have held a rally in Belgrade following months of unrest across the country.

    A monitoring organisation said around 55,000 people had gathered in front of the National Assembly. Despite some Vucic followers travelling from neighbouring countries, attendance was significantly lower than last month’s huge anti-government protest.

    There have been regular demonstrations in Serbia since November when the collapse of a railway station canopy in the city of Novi Sad killed 15 people, triggering widespread public anger.

    A number of Serbians blamed the incident on alleged corruption and corner-cutting by Vucic’s Progressive Party.

    The Serbian leader had promoted the rally on Saturday as the launch of a “Movement for the People and the State”, which would “save” Serbia from forces working to “destroy” the country.

    In a speech at the event, he called on prosecutors to work to restore order and peace.

    He claimed the student-led protests had been threatening Serbia’s peace and stability, accusing attendees of being paid by “foreign intelligence agencies”.

    “Certain foreign powers cannot bear to see a free, independent and sovereign Serbia”, he said, without clarifying which “powers” he was referring to.

    Vucic also criticised national broadcaster RTS, describing it as a “key participant” in an attempted “colour revolution”.

    Getty Images A man holds a flare in the air as thousands gather in central BelgradeGetty Images

    Those showing their support for Vucic and his government did so well into Saturday evening

    After the Novi Sad incident last November, some blamed what had happened on more than a decade of governing by the Progressive Party of Vucic – who closely associated himself with the station’s prior renovation.

    It was considered a key part of the government’s flagship infrastructure project – the high-speed line from Belgrade to Budapest in Hungary.

    The demonstrations that followed the disaster saw attendees use the slogan “corruption kills”.

    They claimed that the opaque procurement procedures the government used for infrastructure projects had enriched a few favoured contractors while putting public safety at risk.

    Despite multiple resignations – and Vucic’s insistence that he was going nowhere – protests grew.

    Last month, hundreds of thousands of people descended on Serbia’s capital.

    An independent monitor estimated 325,000 – if not more – had gathered, making it Serbia’s largest protest ever.

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  • Why is British Steel in trouble, who owns it and what has the government done?

    Why is British Steel in trouble, who owns it and what has the government done?

    Jennifer Meierhans

    Business reporter

    Sean Seddon & Maia Davies

    BBC News

    Getty Images A British Steel plant, with steam billowing out of it, behind a row of terrace housesGetty Images

    The UK government has taken control of British Steel’s plant in Scunthorpe, Lincolnshire, after it was put at risk of imminent closure.

    MPs were called back to Parliament on Saturday from their Easter break to pass an emergency law that handed control of the Chinese-owned site to the government, in order to keep its two blast furnaces operating.

    What is British Steel and how many people work there?

    British Steel’s plant in Scunthorpe, Lincolnshire, employs 2,700 people, about three-quarters of the company’s entire workforce.

    It is the last plant in the UK capable of producing virgin steel, which is used in major construction projects like new buildings and railways.

    Two huge blast furnaces are used to produce the steel, which has fewer imperfections than the recycled steel made elsewhere in the country.

    Were the plant to cease producing virgin steel, the UK would become the only member of the G7 group of leading economies without the ability to make it – a prospect the government views as a risk to the country’s long-term economic security.

    Who owns British Steel and has it been nationalised?

    The company was founded in 2016 when Tata Steel sold its loss-making long products division in Scunthorpe to private investment firm Greybull Capital for a token £1.

    The new owners renamed the business British Steel.

    Following a period of financial instability, British Steel was taken over by the government’s insolvency service in 2019 and then acquired by Chinese steel-making firm Jingye the following year.

    In late March 2025, Jingye said the plant was losing around £700,000 a day and launched a consultation on its closure.

    The government held talks with Jingye aimed at keeping the plant operational.

    After these appeared to have largely broken down, emergency legislation was fast-tracked through Parliament in a single day on Saturday – handing control of the plant to the government.

    Jingye still owns the site, but the business secretary now has sweeping powers to control management and workers to make sure production continues.

    This means British Steel has not been nationalised – which is when a government takes ownership and control of a company.

    But Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds acknowledged that public ownership was “the likely option”.

    While the government hopes to secure private investment to save the plant, ministers admit there are currently no companies willing to buy it.

    Reuters An aerial view of the British Steel plant in ScunthorpeReuters

    Why did the government step in?

    The supplies needed to keep the blast furnaces running – coking coal and iron pellets – are running low at the Scunthorpe plant.

    This added time pressure to the talks, because once a blast furnace shuts down it is a costly and complex process to restart it.

    Unions said the situation was on a “cliff-edge,” while the Community Union described the lack of supplies as an “extreme emergency”.

    The government offered to buy the raw materials needed to keep the furnaces running earlier this week, but Jingye did not agree to that proposal.

    In the Commons on Saturday, the business secretary said Jingye had wanted “an excessive amount” of money.

    He said it had become clear during negotiations that the company intended to “refuse” to buy enough material to keep the furnaces running, and “to cancel and refuse to pay for existing orders”.

    “The company would therefore have irrevocably and unilaterally closed down primary steel making at British Steel,” he added.

    The emergency law gives the government the ability to order raw materials to keep the furnaces running, and to direct the company’s workforce and board.

    The government has told the company’s UK management to keep the site operational, and the new law will ensure that any employees who are sacked by the Chinese owners can be reinstated.

    Getty Images Ed Miliband and Sir Keir Starmer in a steel plant in Scunthorpe, wearing high-vis jackets and hard hats Getty Images

    Sir Keir Starmer has said he is committed to keeping UK steel operations going

    Why is the Scunthorpe plant losing money?

    Jingye said the blast furnaces were “no longer financially sustainable,” blaming “highly challenging” market conditions, tariffs and costs associated with transitioning to lower-carbon production techniques.

    UK steel production has been falling for several decades and the financial pressures facing the industry were heightened in March when the US imposed a 25% tariff on any steel it imports.

    Global over-production of steel has created “a glut of steel on the international market”, according to a UK government briefing on the industry, which has pushed prices down. British manufacturers also face higher costs, particularly on electricity, than elsewhere.

    Who else produces steel in the UK?

    There are 1,160 businesses in the UK steel industry, directly supporting 40,000 other firms across the country, according to government figures.

    Tata Steel at Port Talbot in Wales was once the UK’s largest virgin steel producer but it turned off its blast furnace in September 2024, saying it was losing £1.7m a day.

    An agreement with the UK government was reached which saw it commit £500m to help the company move to greener forms of steelmaking.

    Other steelmakers in the UK include Liberty Steel, Celsa, Marcegaglia and Outokumpu.

    Liberty Steel also has a plant in Scunthorpe which is facing closure. More than 120 jobs are at risk, with bosses blaming high energy costs.

    In 2023 the UK steel industry contributed £2.3 billion to the UK economy – equivalent to 0.1% of total UK economic output and 1.0% of manufacturing output.

    In the same year, the UK produced 5.6 million tonnes of crude steel, or 0.3% of the world’s total. In comparison, China produced more than 1,000 million tonnes, 54% of global production.

    The EU produced 126 million tonnes of steel in 2023, 7% of the world’s total. Compared with EU countries, the UK ranked as the eighth largest steel producer, after Germany, Italy, Spain, France, Austria, Poland and Belgium.

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  • How ‘pot belly’ went from status symbol to silent killer

    How ‘pot belly’ went from status symbol to silent killer

    Getty Images An overweight man points at his stomach (stock photo)Getty Images

    The Indian pot belly – once a badge of prosperity, indulgence and aging respectability – has long been a target of satire and social commentary.

    In literature, it quietly signalled comfort or complacency; in films, it became a…

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  • Yair Netanyahu to Macron: Screw you! Stop the neo imperialism of France – Israel News

    Yair Netanyahu, son of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, responded on Saturday to a post on X by French President Emmanuel Macron in which he outlined his position on Gaza.

    The post called for the independence of multiple French territories…

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  • UK government to take emergency control of British Steel – DW – 04/12/2025

    UK government to take emergency control of British Steel – DW – 04/12/2025

    Members of Parliament in the United Kingdom approved on Saturday plans to take emergency control of British Steel’s blast furnaces.

    The decision to save the steel plant in the industrial town of Scunthorpe followed an emergency parliamentary…

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  • British Steel law rushed through Parliament but it is just a stop gap

    British Steel law rushed through Parliament but it is just a stop gap

    PA Media Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who has short grey hair and wears a blue suit with a white shirt and blue tie, stands beside a man with white facial hair wearing a black t-shirt that reads 'support UK steel'.PA Media

    The prime minister met steelworkers in Lincolnshire shortly after the House of Commons sitting

    There was a moment where all they could do was wait.

    Government officials were holed up in a Premier Inn down the road from British Steel’s…

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  • Russian Offensive Campaign Assessment, April 12, 2025

    Russian Offensive Campaign Assessment, April 12, 2025

    Grace Mappes, Daria Novikov, Olivia Gibson, Angelica Evans, Davit Gasparyan, and Frederick W. Kagan with Nate Trotter

    April 12, 2025, 6:00 pm ET

    Click here to see ISW’s interactive map…

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  • Hostages Still Held in Gaza Cast Shadow Over Passover in Israel

    Hostages Still Held in Gaza Cast Shadow Over Passover in Israel

    When Yona Schnitzer, a marketing writer from Tel Aviv, attended the traditional Passover Seder meal last year, he said a special prayer for the return of all of the hostages still being held by Palestinian militants in Gaza.

    He had thought their…

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