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Economy May 22, 2026

Lebanon's Economy Collapses Under Weight of Regional Conflict and Fuel Crisis

Lebanon's economy, showing modest growth in 2025, is now facing collapse due to renewed conflict wi…
The Economic Crisis in War-Torn LebanonBeirut, Lebanon – Mario Habib, a 51-year-old barber who opened his shop in 2006 just before war broke out between Israel and Hezbollah, is now living through another conflict. Twenty years later, his business in Furn el-Shebbak neighborhood is struggling as Lebanon's economy deteriorates under the weight of renewed war and global fuel crisis. "The price of running the generator is killing me," Habib said. "Everything has gotten more expensive, the price of petrol doubled, the supermarket is more expensive, even the products [I use for my business] got more expensive."Regional Conflict Disrupts Fuel Supplies and Economic GrowthIsrael's war on Lebanon and the broader US-Israel war on Iran are severely damaging Lebanon's fragile economy. Supply issues have particularly affected oil from the Gulf region, which has largely stopped flowing since the US and Iran blockaded the Strait of Hormuz. In Lebanon, which was already suffering from a severe economic crisis, there is less work and people are losing their jobs at an alarming rate.Despite Lebanon's government expressing optimism about the country's economy in 2025, with the World Bank recording a modest 3.5 percent GDP growth that year, the renewed conflict has erased those gains. In March 2026, inflation reached an 18-month high in Lebanon. Lebanon's Bank Audi now predicts that there will be 0 percent GDP growth in 2026 if the war continues.Economic Indicators Show Deteriorating ConditionsInflation reached an 18-month high in March 2026Bank Audi projects 0% GDP growth for 2026 if war continuesLebanon had recorded 3.5% GDP growth in 2025Reconstruction and recovery costs estimated at $11bn by World BankWar-related losses in 2026 estimated at $3bn (with more expected)Oil prices have increased approximately 65% since MarchCompounding Crises Create Perfect Economic StormLebanon's current economic crisis is not solely the result of recent conflicts. The country has been facing multiple compounding crises for years:2019: Financial mismanagement led to a banking crisis, cutting people off from their savings2020: Beirut port explosion killed 218 people and devastated infrastructure2021-2022: Worsening state services and mass emigration2023-2024: Hezbollah-Israel war displaced thousands of Lebanese2024: Israel intensified attacks, displacing more than one million people2026: Renewed Israeli attacks have displaced over 1.2 million people"This is a war that comes after a war," said Sami Zoughaib, an economist and research manager at The Policy Institute, a Beirut-based think tank. "It comes after institutional collapse. It comes after one of the worst financial crises in history."Societal Impact and Economic VulnerabilityThe economic crisis is disproportionately affecting Lebanon's most vulnerable populations. According to the World Bank, agriculture, commerce, and tourism—sectors accounting for 77 percent of economic losses—are key income sources for low-wage and informal workers now at significant risk.Remittances, which were approximately $6.6bn in 2023, are expected to drop significantly in 2026 due to rising oil prices. The 65% increase in oil prices since March particularly affects remittances from Gulf countries, which are crucial to Lebanon's economy.The displacement crisis has mostly impacted Lebanon's Shia community, from which Hezbollah draws its support. However, economists warn that the economic fallout could exacerbate societal divisions, with political elites potentially scapegoating displaced people for the country's economic problems—a pattern seen in the past with Syrians and Palestinians.Future Outlook: Economic Collapse or Recovery?Should the current pattern of conflict continue, Lebanon's economy could soon become unviable, with many investors deciding that opening or operating businesses is not worth the potential returns. The impact has been felt across the country, with no community left untouched by the economic consequences of war.While some areas have been hit harder than others, economist Sami Zoughaib warns that Lebanon may be reaching a point of no return. "That is, for me, very dangerous," Zoughaib said, referring to the potential for political elites to exploit economic divisions for their own gain.For ordinary Lebanese citizens like Mario Habib, the immediate concern is survival. Despite rising costs and reduced business, Habib refuses to raise his prices. "I always prefer that the person who comes here is comfortable," he said. "A lot of things are more expensive, but I prefer to be conservative on this. I feel like if you come to me, you want to be happy and relaxed."
#Lebanon #Economy #Israel-Lebanon War
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Economy May 22, 2026

Petrol Purchases Plunge Drives Biggest UK Retail Sales Drop in a Year

Motorists cutting back on petrol purchases at the steepest rate since the Covid pandemic drove reta…
The Fuel-Driven Retail ContractionMotorists cutting back on petrol and fuel purchases at the steepest rate since the Covid pandemic in 2020 drove retail sales in Great Britain to their biggest monthly decline in a year. The Office for National Statistics (ONS) reported that the overall volume of retail sales plunged by 1.3% in April compared with the previous month, marking the biggest contraction since May last year and exceeding economists' expectations of a -0.6% decline.The Fuel Purchase FreefallFuel purchases plunged more than 10% month on month, representing the biggest slide since November 2020, when monthly sales fell 14.8% as pandemic protocols put households into a second national lockdown. After strong growth in March, motorists appear to be conserving fuel, with the ONS noting that "these subdued fuel purchases contributed to a sizeable monthly fall for total retail sales in April."Financial Impact AnalysisThe ONS slightly revised down its initial estimate of retail sales growth in March from 0.7% to 0.6%. That previous rise had been driven by a 6.1% increase in fuel sales volumes – and a 12% rise in the value of fuel sales, the biggest monthly increase since November 2021 – as the Iran war prompted "panic at the pumps" and a rush to stock up amid the biggest jump in fuel prices for more than three years.When excluding the impact of the dramatic fall in fuel purchases, total retail sales still fell by 0.4% month on month, indicating broader consumer caution beyond just fuel purchasing decisions.Shifting Consumer Behavior in RetailDespite the overall decline, there were "strong and sustained" sales at beauty product and computer and tech shops in April. However, retail stores faced a 0.4% decrease versus March, with clothing stores taking the brunt as sales declined 2.4% – the lowest level since June last year. This decline occurred amid variable weather conditions and lower demand as shoppers worried about rising prices.Consumer sentiment has fallen at its fastest rate for four years, according to Jacqueline Windsor, head of retail at PwC UK, who noted that "April 2026 will be remembered as the first month that the impact of the Middle East conflict first hit British consumers."Future Outlook for UK RetailThe question now is whether the downward momentum in retail sales will continue, or if May's better weather and potentially lower inflation can encourage consumers back into stores as spring turns to summer. Over the first quarter, total retail sales rose by 1.1% year on year and 0.5% compared with the final three months of last year, suggesting some underlying resilience despite the April downturn.The retail sector faces significant headwinds from geopolitical tensions affecting fuel prices and broader economic uncertainty, which may continue to influence consumer spending patterns in the coming months.
#Great Britain #Office for National Statistics #Retail Sales
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Music May 22, 2026

Mabe Fratti and Bill Orcutt Unite for 'Almost Waking' Album

The new album 'Almost Waking' brings together Guatemalan cellist Mabe Fratti and US guitarist Bill …
The Unlikely Union of Mabe Fratti and Bill Orcutt This dreamlike, intimate album unites one of experimental music's current stars with one of its most prolific veterans. During an interview promoting 2024's acclaimed Sentir Que No Sabes, 34-year-old Guatemalan cellist Mabe Fratti praised Bill Orcutt, the 64-year-old US guitarist whose disjointed, aggressive four-string playing – honed in 90s noise-rock band Harry Pussy – graces more than 100 records. Orcutt reached out, and they started sharing files. While their friendship is new, Almost Waking reveals a deep kinship between these true originals. The Album's Conversational Duets The album centres on conversational duets between Fratti's cello and Orcutt's guitar. On the overdriven Forced & Forced & Forced, Orcutt's trademark string-snapping plucking is matched by Fratti's fragmented, agitated bow-scraping. Just as both players can wrestle with their instruments, they know how to make them feel like voices. On Steps of the Sun, the cello and guitar harmonise tenderly and take turns as lead, performed with the complex phrasing and dynamism of a sung duet. Vocal Appearances and Musical Chemistry Fratti's soaring vocals appear on two tracks. El Inicio Es Cuestión De Suerte is a stately ballad set to a looping guitar melody, while Todo Puede Ser Error has more showmanship, featuring a jangling Orcutt solo. If the instrumentals reveal how naturally Fratti fits in Orcutt's spidery world – her lusher, warped art-pop shaped by the same fragmentation – these tracks prove his adversarial style can work in more melodic settings. While Almost Waking feels like an aside for Fratti and Orcutt, both are reframed in this wonderfully alive-sounding album.
#Mabe Fratti #Bill Orcutt #Almost Waking
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Entertainment May 22, 2026

Claire Fuller Merges Social Realism and Gothic Horror in 'Hunger and Thirst' Review

Claire Fuller's new novel *Hunger and Thirst* intertwines the bleak realities of 1980s British care…
Lead: A Bold Fusion of Realism and HorrorClaire Fuller returns with Hunger and Thirst, a novel that fuses the gritty texture of social realism with the unsettling atmosphere of gothic horror. Set in 1987, the story follows Ursula, a young woman haunted by the deaths of her mother and a later, more sinister companion, while the narrative oscillates between documentary‑style observation and nightmarish spectacle.Fuller Blends Social Realism with Gothic Horror in 'Hunger and Thirst'The novel opens with Ursula’s traumatic childhood—spending two days trapped in a Moroccan bathroom by her mother’s corpse after a dengue fever death. By sixteen, she drifts through seven children’s homes before landing a postroom job at Winchester School of Art, where she meets the volatile Sue and her boyfriend Vince. Their obsession with horror films like The Shining and The Stepford Wives steers the plot toward a derelict house, the Underwood, where a seance and a reenactment of a past murder blur the line between art and atrocity. Fuller’s prose captures the “porousness” of identity, as characters literally and figuratively inhabit each other’s bodies.Publication Details and PricingPublisher: Fig TreeRelease price: £18.99Publication year: 2026Previous award: Fuller’s 2021 Costa‑winning Unsettled GroundSocial Critique of Thatcher‑Era Care System Through HorrorThe novel uses its horror framework to expose the under‑resourced British care system of the 1980s, a period when Thatcher’s government prioritized nuclear families over community support. Ursula’s movement between children’s homes and a “halfway house” populated by addicts and ex‑prisoners illustrates the systemic neglect that left many youths adrift. By juxtaposing this social critique with visceral horror, Fuller argues that the genre can convey truths about societal failure more starkly than conventional realism.Potential Legacy and Reader ReceptionFuller’s “outrageous aesthetic gamble” may set a new benchmark for literary horror that does not sacrifice social urgency. If readers and critics embrace the novel’s dual narrative—documentary‑style observation paired with gothic terror—it could inspire a wave of fiction that treats horror as a vehicle for political commentary. The book’s blend of “intense feeling” and “intimate portrayal” positions it as a contender for future literary awards and a touchstone for authors exploring the intersection of genre and social critique.
#Claire Fuller #Hunger and Thirst #The Guardian
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Politics May 22, 2026

US Clarifies Stance on Sanctions Against UN Rapporteur Francesca Albanese

The US has denied that the cancellation of sanctions against Francesca Albanese, the UN special rap…
The US Stance on Sanctions Against Francesca Albanese The United States has denied that the cancellation of sanctions against Francesca Albanese, the United Nations special rapporteur for the Palestinian territory, constitutes a change in the government’s policy. Court Ruling Leads to Sanctions Removal On Thursday, the Department of State clarified that the administration of President Donald Trump only removed Albanese from a sanctions list due to a recent court ruling. Intention to Reimpose Sanctions “The Government has appealed the court’s order,” the State Department added in its statement, before reaffirming its intention to return Albanese to the list of Specially Designated Nationals (SDNs). The US government intends to restore Ms Albanese’s name to the SDN List if the DC Circuit stays or overturns the court order. Background on Sanctions Against Albanese The Trump administration targeted Albanese with sanctions in July 2025, after she recommended that the International Criminal Court (ICC) issue arrest warrants for Israeli officials, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Impact of Sanctions on Albanese Albanese, a human rights expert, has been outspoken in her criticism of Israeli policies towards Palestinians, and she has issued reports documenting Israel’s ongoing genocide in Gaza. The Palestinian death toll in the narrow territory is estimated to exceed 75,000. Future Outlook While Albanese is Italian, her daughter is a US citizen, and she has assets in the country. In February, her family filed a civil complaint in a US federal court in Washington, DC, seeking to overturn the sanctions as a violation of Albanese’s constitutional rights, including the right to free speech.
#US #Francesca Albanese #UN
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Sports May 22, 2026

Premier League: 10 Key Storylines for the Final Day of the Season

The final day of the Premier League season is set to be filled with drama and intrigue. Brighton an…
Welbeck and Seagulls Push for Europe Brighton must overcome Manchester United on the final day to secure a place in Europe for the second time in their history. Danny Welbeck could be key against his former club, having enjoyed his most prolific season with 13 league goals. The Battle for the Wooden Spoon Burnley and Wolves face off in a match that will determine which team finishes 19th and receives £2m in prize money. Both teams have had a disappointing season, but a win for either side could move them off the bottom of the table. A Carnival Atmosphere at Selhurst Park Crystal Palace host Arsenal in a match that promises to be a celebration of the Gunners' Premier League title. Manchester City's failure to beat Bournemouth means that Arsenal can now focus on their upcoming Conference League match. Fulham in Mendes Merry-Go-Round? Could this be Marco Silva's final match in charge of Fulham? The manager has been linked with Benfica, and his departure could trigger a series of moves involving other top players. Liverpool Exits and a Return Liverpool host Brentford in a match that will see several players say goodbye to Anfield. Mohamed Salah and Andy Robertson are among those departing, while Jordan Henderson returns to the stadium with his new club. The Manchester City Farewells Manchester City's final match of the season will see Pep Guardiola and several key players say goodbye to the club. The team has dominated English football for over a decade, and their departure will be felt across the league.
#Premier League #Manchester United #Liverpool
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Environment May 21, 2026

London Primary School Turns Flooded Playground into Climate‑Resilient Play Space

St John’s CofE Primary in Barnet, north London, transformed a flood‑prone tarmac playground into a …
The Flood‑Prone Playground That Stopped Kids From PlayingFor years the play area at St John’s CofE Primary was unusable after heavy rain; water pooled on the clay‑based tarmac, forcing teachers like Macci Dobie to dismiss children from the playground or even lift them out of puddles. The school’s location in a natural basin made the problem chronic and disrupted daily routines.Designing a Rain‑Garden Play Area with Trees for CitiesWhen parent governor Sarah Taggart launched a climate‑action plan, the school secured Department for Education funding to replace part of the tarmac with a sustainable drainage system. Trees for Cities landscape architect Alfie Davies led the design, installing stepping logs across a rain garden planted with ornamental grasses, shrubs, perennial flowers and a native bird‑cherry tree that tolerates both soggy and dry conditions.Rain garden drains excess water in about 10 minutes after a heavy downpour.Native planting supports pollinators and reduces the urban heat‑island effect.Stepping logs create a functional play element while guiding water flow.How the New Landscape Cuts Drainage Time and HeatThe soil‑based beds absorb runoff, replacing impermeable surfaces that previously caused standing water. By integrating vegetation that transpires water and provides shade, the playground also lowers surface temperatures, addressing the hotter summers projected for London under the climate crisis.Educational and Community Benefits of the Climate‑Adapted SpaceBeyond flood mitigation, the redesign serves as a living classroom. Trees for Cities runs a year‑long engagement programme where pupils monitor water cycles, identify native species and participate in tree‑identification walks. Teachers report higher joy levels and increased curiosity about nature among students.What This Model Means for UK Schools Facing Climate RisksThe success at St John’s provides a replicable template for schools in flood‑risk zones. With modest public funding and partnership with specialist charities, schools can turn vulnerable play areas into climate‑responsive assets, delivering safety, biodiversity and educational value while contributing to national goals on heat‑stress protection for children.
#St John's CofE Primary #Trees for Cities #Sarah Taggart
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Tech May 21, 2026

Spotify Unveils AI‑Driven Studio App to Challenge Google’s NotebookLM

Spotify Labs launched a desktop app called Studio that creates personalized podcasts from emails, c…
The Launch of Spotify’s AI‑Powered Studio AppSpotify Labs introduced Studio, a standalone desktop application that lets users generate personalized podcasts from emails, calendars, and web searches. The preview, rolled out in more than 20 markets on 2026-05-21, positions the music‑streaming giant against Google’s NotebookLM in the emerging AI‑audio briefing space.How the App Turns Data into a Daily Audio BriefingUsers submit multistep prompts such as “Create a daily audio brief for my road trip through Italy…”An integrated AI agent browses the web, extracts personal schedule information, and assembles a custom podcast.Generated podcasts are saved privately in the user’s Spotify library and synced across devices.The tool is labeled a “research preview,” with Spotify warning that AI‑generated content may be unreliable.Market Implications for Spotify and Its CompetitorsSpotify expands beyond music streaming into AI‑driven content creation, a segment valued at billions of dollars.Competing directly with Google’s NotebookLM, which already offers similar podcast generation.Early adoption could boost user engagement metrics, though no revenue figures are disclosed yet.Strategic Impact on the Audio‑Productivity LandscapeThe launch signals a shift toward audio‑first knowledge workers, challenging text‑centric tools from Adobe, ElevenLabs, and emerging startups like Hero and Huxe. If successful, Spotify could integrate the app with its broader ecosystem, potentially adding system‑audio capture for meeting‑note transcription.Future Outlook for AI‑Generated PodcastsSpotify plans to iterate on the Studio app, broaden market availability, and explore additional integrations such as Granola‑style note‑taking. The next wave may see tighter coupling with Spotify’s Discover feed and monetization through premium podcast features.
#Spotify #Google #NotebookLM
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Politics May 21, 2026

What’s Trump’s ‘anti‑weaponisation fund’ and why legal experts are alarmed

The Justice Department has created a $1.8 billion “anti‑weaponisation” fund to compensate people wh…
Executive Summary: DOJ Launches $1.8 B “Anti‑Weaponisation” Compensation FundThe U.S. Department of Justice announced a new anti‑weaponisation fund worth just under $1.8 billion, designed to compensate individuals who allege they were victimised by federal legal actions. The fund is part of a settlement in former President Donald Trump's $10 billion lawsuit against the IRS over leaked tax returns.Mechanics of the New Fund and Its Legal OriginsThe fund originates from a “judgement fund,” a standing government account used for legal settlements without needing fresh congressional legislation. Key operational details include:Claims can be filed by anyone who believes they suffered from unlawful government‑initiated legal action.Every three months the fund must report recipients, payment types (cash, debt relief, etc.) to the Attorney General.A five‑person oversight panel, appointed by the Attorney General with one member selected in consultation with congressional leaders, will manage the fund.The fund will stop accepting new claims after December 1 2028, after which any remaining balance reverts to the federal treasury.Financial Scale: $1.8 B Allocation and Settlement ContextThe allocation is comparable to the annual policing or school budget of a midsized U.S. city, far exceeding the typical size of a single‑lawsuit settlement. It stems from the settlement of Trump’s lawsuit alleging the IRS leaked his tax information between 2018‑2020. The settlement was approved by a federal judge, meaning no additional legislative action is required to activate the fund.Political Fallout: Why Democrats and Legal Scholars Decry a Slush FundCritics, including more than 90 House Democrats and senators such as Elizabeth Warren and Ron Wyden, argue the fund:Pushes the limits of executive authority by creating a large compensation scheme without congressional oversight.Could be used to reward supporters of the January 6, 2021 Capitol riot, many of whom were pardoned by Trump.Represents a “slush fund” that may funnel taxpayer money to politically aligned individuals, echoing past concerns about “lawfare.”The Cato Institute and other think tanks have published analyses labeling the fund as an unprecedented bypass of normal appropriations processes.Looking Ahead: Congressional Pushback and Potential Fund FateDemocratic lawmakers are preparing legal challenges and may seek to block the fund through congressional action or a court injunction. The Justice Department has indicated that any unspent money after the fund’s termination will be returned to the Treasury, but the debate centers on whether the fund should have been created at all. If Congress intervenes, the fund could be restructured, placed under stricter oversight, or dissolved entirely, setting a precedent for future executive‑legislative financial arrangements.
#Donald Trump #Todd Blanche #IRS
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