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Zelenskyy says Europe is a ‘global force’ that can stand against any other power in address to MPs – as it happened

about 12 hours ago
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Zelenskyy suggests Ukraine is also protected by its values.We believe in people, in their rights and freedom.We believe in culture and we want nations to live in real peace, strong peace and communities in respect together.double quotation markEurope is a global force – one the world cannot do without and that no one can stand against.Zelenskyy says European leaders must protect it so “that the future generations will say these leaders acted when it mattered and that people lived in safety.

”He goes on to urge the UK to work with Ukraine, so that in future in Kyiv and in London people will never have to “hide under a drone nest, or live under the concrete without a safe sky, safe land or safe seas, in a world where drones rule instead of people”.He says that Britain needs “tools like this iPad” (the one he has been talking about them, used by the Ukrainians to coordinate their air defences and monitor attacks and the damage being caused in real time).He ends by saying he met King Charles this morning, and presented him with one of the iPads.He says the king asked if he had another one.Unfortunately, he didn’t.

So the king told him, in that case, he would share his with Starmer.Rachel Reeves has announced that the Treasury will draw up plans to give regional leaders a share of national tax revenues as part of a radical plan to rebalance the English economy.Nigel Farage has sold videos in which he endorsed a neo-Nazi event, repeated extremist slogans and supported a man convicted over his involvement in a far-right riot, a Guardian investigation has revealed.The Iranian regime and Vladimir Putin’s Russia are “brothers in hatred”, Volodymyr Zelenskyy has told MPs and peers.As the Press Association reports, the Ukrainian president highlighted co-operation between Tehran and Moscow on Shahed kamikaze drones which had targeted Ukraine and countries across the Gulf.

He said Ukraine’s bitter experience had resulted in expertise in combating drone warfare which was now being offered to help countries in the Middle East,Zelenskyy suggested the technology developed in his country could have helped protect RAF Akrotiri from the drone strike which hit it earlier this month,Speaking in a Westminster committee room, Zelenskyy said:double quotation markThe regimes in Russia and Iran are brothers in hatred and that is why they are brothers in weapons,And we want regimes built on hatred to never, never win in anything,And we want no such regime to threaten Europe or our partners.

Students in Kent are to be offered a targeted vaccination against meningitis B after two more cases in the deadly outbreak were confirmed and pharmacies ran out of vaccine doses.The government is to put the BBC’s charter on a permanent footing for the first time, after the corporation said the change was needed to protect it from political interference.Religious leaders have said that plans to rip up the UK’s asylum rules by ending the right to permanent refugee status would damage integration and should be rethought.For a full list of all the stories covered on the blog today, do scroll through the list of key event headlines near the top of the blog.Antonia Romeo, the new cabinet secretary, has confirmed that a formal leak inquiry is taking place into how Tim Shipman, the Spectator’s political editor, was able to obtain information from a national security council meeting about the Iran war.

In his report, published days after the war started, Shipman said that, the day before the war actually started, Ed Miliband, Rachel Reeves and Yvette Cooper ganged up to insist that the UK should initially refuse the US permission to use British military bases,Shipman said that Starmer was more keen on allowing the US to use British bases to attack Iranian military bases – a position the UK later adopted, after the war started, after the US submitted a formal request and after Iran started attacking other Gulf states where British citizens are based,Romeo has disclosed that a leak inquiry is taking place in a letter responding to one sent by Alex Burghart, the shadow Cabinet Office minister, who wanted to know if the leak was being taken seriously,When Theresa May was PM, she sacked Gavin Williamson as defence secretary after he was accused of leaking from a national security committee meeting – a claim he denied,In a post on social media, Shipman said holding a leak inquiry was an over-reaction.

double quotation markThat the prime minister is in hock to the soft lefties in his cabinet is hardly a state secretdouble quotation markIn all seriousness nothing I was told was remotely sensitive from a security point of view.It was politically embarrassing, that’s all.How patheticDan Sabbagh is the Guardian’s defence and security editor.A British counter drone team operating near Erbil, Iraq, shot down over five drones last night, the highest number destroyed by a single unit since the start of the Iran war at the end of last month.Defence sources indicated it was the same unit that last Thursday had shot down two drones during overnight attacks on bases used by western forces in Erbil.

A French soldier was subsequently reported killed.Further details about the latest air raid were limited, though it is understood there were no casualties.The origin of the attack was not identified but it is most likely to have been conducted by pro-Iranian Iraqi militias.Western forces have long been based around Erbil as part of a counter Islamic State operation that dates back over a decade.RAF F-35 and Typhoon pilots also conducted air patrols over Qatar, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Jordan and the Eastern Mediterranean overnight, the Ministry of Defence said.

The UK’s Space Command was monitoring Iranian missile launches, it added,Ben Quinn is a Guardian political correspondent,Donald Trump has once again criticised Keir Starmer, repeating a jibe that he was “no Winston Churchill” - before the Irish taoiseach, Micheál Martin, stepped in to defend the prime minister during an encounter in the Oval Office,double quotation markSpeaking to reporters, Trump said: [Starmer] hasn’t been supporting the United States … I went out of my way [to help the UK with a trade deal],As you know they couldn’t a deal with Biden because they had no real administration to make a deal.

But we went out of our way,We made a deal, We made a good deal for them and frankly probably wasn’t appreciated,It fell to the Irish leader, in Washington DC for the annual St Patrick’s Day reception at the White House, to engage in a rare moment of public disagreement with the US president, by crossing him not just on his characterisation of Starmer but of other issues including European immigration policies and Ukraine,“I was disappointed because Keir was willing to send two aircraft carriers after we won,” said Trump, who pointed at a bust of Winston Churchill, adding “Keir is not Winston Churchill,” Martin was allowed by Trump to interject amid interrupted shouted comments by the press, telling Trump that Starmer was an “an earnest, decent person” who the US president had the capacity to get on with.

Martin said:double quotation markNotwithstanding what has happened, the transatlantic relationship between Europe and the US is very, very important on a number of fronts.I think we have had issues over the last year or two but we have settled them … Keir Starmer has done a lot to reset the Irish British relationship.I just want to put that on the record.I do believe he is a very earnest sound person who I think you have a capacity target on with.Trump said he agreed with “almost everything” Martin had said, but launched back into fresh criticism of Starmer after being told by a GB News journalist that Starmer was not making the case to the British people for why the UK should join the US in its operations in the Middle East.

Zelenskyy suggests Ukraine is also protected by its values.We believe in people, in their rights and freedom.We believe in culture and we want nations to live in real peace, strong peace and communities in respect together.double quotation markEurope is a global force – one the world cannot do without and that no one can stand against.Zelenskyy says European leaders must protect it so “that the future generations will say these leaders acted when it mattered and that people lived in safety.

”He goes on to urge the UK to work with Ukraine, so that in future in Kyiv and in London people will never have to “hide under a drone nest, or live under the concrete without a safe sky, safe land or safe seas, in a world where drones rule instead of people”.He says that Britain needs “tools like this iPad” (the one he has been talking about them, used by the Ukrainians to coordinate their air defences and monitor attacks and the damage being caused in real time).He ends by saying he met King Charles this morning, and presented him with one of the iPads.He says the king asked if he had another one.Unfortunately, he didn’t.

So the king told him, in that case, he would share his with Starmer.Zelenskyy says the “dignity of our people” is one of Ukraine’s great strengths.Zelenskyy says Ukraine did not become expert in technology by chance.It was a response to war lasting for year, and the result of hard work.Zelenskyy says Ukraine is winning back territory from Russia.

Zelenskyy says Ukraine now has the technology to stop the cheap Shahed drones, used by Russsia,It can stop them in Europe, and in the Gulf, he says,He explains how this could help Ukraine’s allies,double quotation markThe evolution of threats never stops,For example, your military bases in in Cyprus.

This is what our security proposal could look like.Our experts would place interception teams and set up radars and acoustic coverage, and these would all war if Iran launched a large scale attack similar to Russian attacks.We would guarantee protection.This is the kind of reinforcement we offer, and it may soon be needed across Europe.And drones can be launched not only from land but also from ships at sea.

Such long range strikes are no longer rare,Different countries already use them, and since European seas still have many targets, from Russia’s shadow fleet, launching drones from such vessels is no longer something unexpected,Ukraine didn’t have a strong navy like Britain or some of our other partners, but we have pushed what is left of Russia’s fleet into distant base in the Black Sea, where the ships hide from Ukrainian sea drones,This is a completely new security reality in our sea,The Russian fleet, which was powerful, has no effective way to counter our drones.

Zelenskyy says soon weapons will run on AI, which can operate more quickly than any human.He says, if Putin had been pushed back in 2022, the world might have avoided “mass drone warfare”, which is a threat to mankind.He says some countries think missiles are enought to protect them from drones.But, on their own, they are not enough.There are has to be a system in place, not just interceptors.

Ukraine needs about 1,000 interceptors per day.And it can produce them at this rate too, he says.He says Ukraine also has radar that can keep working while signals are being jammed.
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Australian households fear double whammy of rate hikes and higher petrol prices will lead to recession

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about 16 hours ago
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London bars shun Margot Robbie’s gin over shellfish allergen concerns

Margot Robbie said she “couldn’t wait” to see the artisan gin brand she had created stocked in her London local. But the willingness of the capital’s venues to fulfil her dream has been seriously compromised by three words on the side of the bottle – “warning: contains molluscs”.The Wuthering Heights star has had to change the recipe of her spirit after top London bars and restaurants rejected it due to allergen concerns, the Guardian can reveal.The drink, Papa Salt, uses oyster shells as a botanical, which she hoped would evoke the sandy dunes of Australia where she grew up. It means people with a shellfish allergy are advised not to drink it, because though the distilling process of gin removes most shellfish proteins, some can still remain when it is made with oysters

about 18 hours ago
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Close Brothers banking group to cut 600 jobs and roll out AI ‘at pace’

The UK banking group Close Brothers is to cut about 600 jobs and roll out the use of AI “at pace” after posting further losses amid a mounting compensation bill for the UK motor finance scandal.The specialist lender said the cuts – almost a quarter of its 2,600-strong workforce – would be made over the next 18 months across its teams in the UK and Ireland.It aims to reduce costs by £25m in the year to the end of September, up from a previous target of £20m, and by another £60m in the next financial year, a year earlier than planned.It said it would make the cuts through outsourcing and offshoring work and reducing office space. “In parallel, we are progressing the deployment of automation and artificial intelligence at pace, providing further opportunity both to reduce costs and enhance customer experience,” the lender added

about 18 hours ago
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Starbucks shareholders push to oust board members over stalled union talks

Starbucks shareholders are pushing to remove two board members at the company who they argue have contributed to stalling the coffee chain’s long-fought-over union drive.The SOC Investment Group, Trillium Asset Management, Merseyside Pension Fund, the non-profit Shareholder Association for Research and Education (Share), and the New York state and New York City comptrollers wrote a letter to Starbucks shareholders to vote “no” on the re-election of board members Jørgen Vig Knudstorp and Beth Ford at Starbucks’s annual shareholders meeting on 25 March.More than 680 Starbucks stores have voted to form unions since the barista-led organizing campaign started in 2021. The union has reached 34 tentative agreements with Starbucks, but the company has not reached a single final agreement.Starbucks workers began an unfair labor practice strike at the coffee chain in November 2025, escalating up to the holidays in December 2025 with several thousand workers on strike

about 19 hours ago
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‘Very damaging’: how the Iran war is hitting energy-intensive industries

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