Magenta Is Ready to Paint Your Portfolio Green
This clinical-stage biotech is looking to make stem cell transplantation faster, easier, and safer for both donors and patients.
The trial is set to begin 12 July
The world’s most wanted billionaire Nirav Modi has had his extradition to India approved by Priti Patel. The Home Secretary ordered the extradition of the diamond tycoon after a British judge ruled there was sufficient evidence to send him back to India for trial. He has been accused of money laundering and fraud over allegations that he embezzled more than $1 billion (£700 million) from the Punjab National Bank (PNB). Mr Modi was tracked down by The Telegraph after he went on the run. He was found living in a luxury apartment in a high rise block in London’s West End in March 2019.
Exclusive: ‘You can’t keep putting pressure, accountability and responsibility on people and expect them to endlessly soak it up’
The pictures were unearthed from a private collection and show Philip looking after a 13-year-old Elizabeth.
Chinese foreign ministry spokeperson says ‘Japan should not forget the historical tragedy’
Cleese said he was sorry for 'any distress' caused.
Experts have called for the government to take action after it emerged that a concerning COVID variant first found in India has already been detected in the UK.
The UK wanted US troops to stay in Afghanistan, the head of the Armed Forces has revealed. General Sir Nick Carter said President Biden's decision to pull out all 2,500 US troops by September 11 was "not the decision” the UK wanted. The Chief of Defence Staff said: "It's not a decision that we'd hoped for. But we obviously respect it, and it's clearly an acknowledgement of an evolving US Strategic posture." Earlier this week President Biden vowed to end America's "forever war" in Afghanistan, which began 20 years ago following 9/11, when they first arrived to bring down the Taliban regime harbouring Osama bin Laden. Nato said the withdrawal process would begin by May 1 and could be completed in just a few months. However, many have cautioned that the UK, which has agreed to an "orderly departure of our forces" by withdrawing the remaining 750 British troops by the deadline, said they had no choice but to cooperate because staying without the US was impossible. Former defence minister Tobias Ellwood, Chairman of the Defence Select Committee, said the US decision risked "losing the peace" and allowing extremism to "regroup". It was "concerning" and "not the right move". He said British forces had "no choice" but to leave due to the US's "significant force protection capabilities from which we benefited". Mr Ellwood added: "Remaining allied forces are unable to fill that vacuum without upgrading our posture for which there is no political appetite."
Throughout his decades in public life, Prince Philip was known for putting his royal foot in his mouth with occasional off-the-cuff remarks that could be embarrassing. But his faux pas at a White House dinner with President Richard Nixon in 1969 was enough for Philip to actually lose sleep. In a handwritten note to the president uncovered by archivists at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum in Yorba Linda, California, the Duke of Edinburgh wrote to "humbly apologise" for failing to toast the president's health as dictated by protocol during a "stag" dinner in his honor. "After the brilliance of the other speakers and yourself, I am afraid my contribution was very lame," Philip wrote to Nixon from Greenland on Nov 7 after his solo US trip had concluded. He added: "That night I woke up in a cold sweat when I realised I had forgotten to propose your health!" Philip died last week at age 99, and his funeral is Saturday. He was married to Queen Elizabeth for 73 years. "I think the letter itself shows the character of Prince Philip that so much of the public in the U.K. and across the Commonwealth, and really across the world, have come to admire," said Jim Byron, executive vice president of the Nixon Foundation. He said the letter was discovered before the coronavirus pandemic but made public this week, as a way of marking Philip's death. "It expresses some private feelings of a moment in time that the public really doesn't always get a chance to see," Mr Byron added.
‘Very few people had any idea what she was clearly going through,’ tweets GB News presenter Dan Wootton
If you think you’re a master of British superstitions, try your luck with our multiple choice quiz.
TGA admits minors mistakenly given AstraZeneca vaccine and says woman’s death an ‘atypical case’. Therapeutic Goods Administration says death of New South Wales woman Genene Norris ‘most unusual’
Congressional Democrats introduce legislation to expand the US Supreme Court from nine to 13 justices, arguing it is necessary after the Senate confirmed former president Donald Trump's nominee just eight days before the 2020 election to give the bench a firm conservative majority. The move has drawn angry protests from Republicans accusing their rivals of attempting a power grab to enact President Joe Biden's agenda.
Parents need more support due to pandemic, say school leaders
The BBC's Huw Edwards will lead six hours of coverage of Prince Philip's funeral across three channels – despite record complaints to the broadcaster about its coverage of his death.
Michel Barnier has warned that France could follow the UK out of the EU, as polls show growing support for the Eurosceptic Marine Le Pen. He said there was “social unrest and anger” over immigration and Europe’s failure to defend its borders and for the “red tape and complexity” of the EU. “We could draw some lessons from Brexit for ourselves. It's now too late for the UK but not for us," the former EU chief negotiator said. “We can find, not just in the UK, but here in France, in the northern regions […] citizens who want to leave the EU,” Mr Barnier, who has returned to domestic politics, said. He added, “It is our responsibility to understand why the British left [...] it's important for us to listen to the anger that was expressed in the UK, and to implement the kind of changes that are necessary to better understand and reassure the European citizens that remain.” Latest IFOP polling shows that Ms Le Pen, who leads the National Rally party, would beat the pro-EU Emmanuel Macron by two percentage points in the first round of next year’s presidential elections. Mr Macron is predicted to win in the second round by 54 percent to 46 percent but that is narrower than the 66.1 percent to 34.6 percent defeat she suffered four years ago. Ms Le Pen called for Frexit in that election but has since stopped campaigning for France to leave the bloc. Instead she wants to create a “Europe of nations”. Mr Barnier hopes to rebuild support for the centre-Right Républicains party ahead of the elections. He was speaking at an event on Brexit in Northern France, where fishermen are complaining they have not yet got fishing licences from the UK since Brexit. Clément Beaune, France’s Europe Minister, said the EU was accused of “being weak and slow”. He said that the bloc should take heart from its robust approach to the Brexit negotiations. “Back in 2016 people thought that this was the beginning of the end for Europe, but we have been able to show that we can be agile, that we can react, that we can be consistent in defending our interests in a firm way to defend the greatest European assets – the Single Market and our political unity.” He added: “These are lessons that we must all keep in mind as Europe is facing more difficulties.” The European Commission warned Britain that any further unilateral action over the Northern Ireland Protocol was unacceptable at a meeting on Thursday night. Maros Sefcovic, the commission vice-president, told Lord Frost that “solutions can only be found through joint actions and through joint bodies”. Britain insists that its unilateral actions in extending the grace periods on food products and parcels is lawful and made in good faith. The meeting over the implementation of new post-Brexit customs arrangements in Northern Ireland was said to be “constructive” by both sides.
The Lebanese Shiite group Hezbollah has launched a chain of supermarkets that are stocked with Syrian, Iraqi and Iranian products at reduced prices that are accessible with a party-issued card. It’s a welcome initiative in a country crippled by a financial crisis and food shortages. But critics say it’s yet another bid by the powerful Shiite movement to win loyalty by providing services in a weak state and oversee a parallel economy. As the people of Lebanon grapple with a series of acute economic, social and political crises, accompanied by high inflation and food shortages, the pro-Iranian Hezbollah movement recently opened several supermarkets in its various strongholds in Beirut, the Bekaa region and the country’s south, in a bid to quell public anger. Food in Lebanon is not just overpriced but often impossible to find.The supermarket chain – named “Al-Sajjad”, for the imam Ali Al-Sajjad, a figure of Shiite Islam known for his generosity – sells Syrian, Iraqi and Iranian products, a party official told FRANCE 24. “To be able to shop in these supermarkets, you have to have a card issued by Hezbollah,” said the official, who asked not to be named. To be eligible for the card you must earn less than 1,500,000 Lebanese pounds per month (about $125 on the black market), he explained.In Lebanon, more than half of the population now lives below the poverty line and the national currency has lost more than 80 percent of its value.“Anyone in need can shop with us, regardless of their religious affiliation and even if they are not Hezbollah supporters,” the official said. But for now, most of the customer base is from the Shiite community, and the new initiative has raised eyebrows.For months, Hezbollah has been accused of facilitating the smuggling of essential food products to Syria, including sugar and flour, thereby contributing to the emptying of store shelves and depriving the Lebanese of the same basic products that it now sells in its stores.Hezbollah has not said how many people have cards allowing them to benefit from its supermarkets, but the number is estimated to be over 8,000.Residents sought out by HezbollahLina, a 40-year-old, single and unemployed woman living in a small village in the Bekaa valley, said she hadn’t asked for the card, but received a visit from Hezbollah party members who offered it to her. Her name, like those of the other people interviewed for this article, has been changed to protect her identity.“The stores look like large depots and are always fully stocked. I was able to buy milk, rice, sugar and vegetable oil at reduced prices,” Lina said, adding that she was not a member of Hezbollah. “Anybody with an Al-Sajjad card is entitled to a certain quantity of products every month, including five kilos of rice, five kilos of sugar, five litres of cooking oil, four kilos of washing powder, three packs of pasta, four cans of tuna, or even two bottles of dishwashing detergent,” she said.Hassan, a 39-year-old teacher and father of two living in Nabatieh in the south, also said he had been approached by Hezbollah members from his village who offered to give him an Al-Sajjad card.“They only asked me for a copy of my ID card. They know who I am and trust me,” he said. “We’re entitled to a 35 percent discount on any purchase over 1 million pounds. This card will even allow us to access health care at reduced prices in the long term,” he said.“Hezbollah’s sale of food products certainly also has electoral motives, but the poorest have pressing needs,” said Maya, 38, who works for a media outlet affiliated with the party. She herself did not get an Al-Sajjad card, because she is not considered a priority case, but she said many Lebanese did urgently need it.“There are remote and poor areas in Lebanon that the state has not cared for in years. So these regions’ inhabitants are going to accept all the help they can get,” she said.‘The state no longer exists’Not everyone shares Hezbollah supporters’ enthusiasm for the new supermarket chain. Journalist Mounir Rabih warns of the danger such a project presents in a country where the state is increasingly failing.“Hezbollah is telling its public that neither the state nor the associations will be able to help it, which is very dangerous. That simply means that the state no longer exists. This is how the Shiite party undermines the people’s conception of the state,” Rabih said.Hezbollah’s initiative is proof of its “wish to maintain a certain stability within the Shiite community and to hamper any protest or revolt”, he said.“Hezbollah is always afraid of its community’s fury. It wants at all costs to avoid any outburst of anger due to hunger,” he explained, adding that it was planning for the long term, “because it considers that this is a crisis that won’t be resolved quickly”.“Hezbollah hopes to come up with a comprehensive social assistance plan, including focusing on the development of health care in the future,” Rabih said.“The party sees itself as a victim of a plot hatched against it by the United States, to bring it to its knees,” he said. “It’s responding by ensuring that its public doesn’t go hungry by securing its own supply channels through Iran, Syria or Iraq.”Adam, a 40-year-old photographer from a Sunni village in southern Lebanon, is also critical of the pro-Iranian movement’s plans.“Hezbollah is trying to control its popular base by all means. The Al-Sajjad card reflects its institutional side and shows that this party has the means to replace the state. I even think it already has. Lebanon is now a province within the state of Hezbollah,” Adam lamented. “Through its chain of supermarkets and products at reduced prices, it’s doing everything so that the Shiites view Hezbollah as the exclusive remedy against the crisis”, the photographer said.The names of the people interviewed for this article have been changed at their request. The article was translated from the original in French.
In the tale of The Very Hungry Caterpillar, along with an ice-cream cone, a pickle, a slice each of Swiss cheese and salami, a lollipop, a wedge of cherry pie, a sausage, cupcake and a slice of watermelon, our ravenous protagonist devours a piece of chocolate cake. It is perhaps no coincidence that the latter has become synonymous with the insect (and visa versa), and subsequently that a caterpillar-shaped sponge is often the most familiar guest at birthday parties and office celebrations across the land. Nor is it surprising that the news of Marks & Spencer taking Aldi to court in a bid to protect its Colin the Caterpillar cake has provoked such an uproar. The retailer has accused the discounter chain of riding on its reputational coat-tails after Aldi began selling its own Cuthbert the Caterpillar cake, which looks very similar. But since M&S launched Colin (a chocolate-coated sponge cake bearing buttercream, topped with sweets and fronted by a smiling white-chocolate face) some 30 years ago, similar critters have emerged, and not only from the German discount store. From Cuthbert and Wiggles to Curly and Carl the free-from caterpillar, there are cute-faced chocolate Swiss rolls in almost every supermarket – and each has a band of fervently loyal supporters. But how do they compare to each other? Does Colin hold the gold standard when it comes to softness of sponge and flavour of edible boot? Are the sprinkles on Curly superior to those adorning Morris? While Aldi has not stocked its Cuthbert cake since mid-February and so was sadly unavailable for review, we netted the best of the rest and put them to the test.
R measures the number of people, on average, that each sick person will infect.
One of the inevitable results of Prince Philip’s sad death is a shake-up in the House of Windsor. And Prince Edward, who will in time become the Duke of Edinburgh, is bound to take on a more prominent role in supporting the Queen and, in time, her successor, Prince Charles. Prince Philip may not have been in the royal line of succession. But his importance to the monarchy was paramount – and his death leaves a huge gap to be filled. The title of Duke of Edinburgh has now been automatically inherited by Prince Charles. But, in a sign of the affection of the Queen and Prince Philip for their youngest son, it will be passed on to Prince Edward on the sad day of the Queen’s death. This was made clear by the Queen in 1999, when Prince Edward married Sophie Rhys-Jones in 1999 and was made Earl of Wessex. When Prince Charles becomes king, the title of Duke of Edinburgh will ‘merge in the Crown’, meaning the title no longer exists. But Charles III will bestow on his youngest brother a new ‘creation’ of the ‘Duke of Edinburgh’ – the fourth creation of the title since it was first bestowed in 1726. It makes perfect sense. Of Prince Philip’s four children, Prince Edward has always been most closely associated with the Duke of Edinburgh’s International Award, created by Prince Philip in 1956. Prince Philip funeral news and royal family updates