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Entertainment May 13, 2026

Uprising by Tahmima Anam: A Fiery Novel of Female Rebellion

Tahmima Anam's 'Uprising' is a powerful novel of female rebellion set on an isolated Bangladeshi is…
A Novel of Female Defiance"Yes, you will leave this place," the chorus of child protagonists in a community of sex workers say at the start of Tahmima Anam's incantatory and fiery new novel of female defiance, Uprising. "This story will save your life," we were told three times in Deepa Anappara's 2020 debut, also featuring precarious children dwelling in the margins. What is the distance between imagination and action, lived realities and dreams? How can solidarities be forged in such circumstances? Uprising holds within its pages some answers and a deep conviction – for a better life, a more just world – and then reaches out and fights for it.The Island Community and Its OppressionAs a journalist, Anam visited the infamous "floating brothel" Banishanta in Bangladesh; her new novel, set on an isolated island "at the end of the country, in the middle of a river that emptied into the sea", fictionalises the island's community and ecological precarity. Here, a generation of daughters grow up watching their mothers trapped in sex work – "we knew that the work was something that was paid for in money, and also in bodies" – and wish a different life for themselves. The women are controlled by the cruel Amma, who was once herself sold into sex trafficking. The victim becomes the perpetrator – and the children are discerning enough to know that their mothers are "not here because they had done something bad, but because something bad had been done to them". The first lesson of the island? No one is coming to save you – and living here changes you, as inexorably as the rising tides.The island is a prison. The mothers are ghosts of their former selves. The children, witnessing the "sexing", are all too grown up, stripped of their innocence. By the time they are born, their mothers' memories have faded "like paint in the sun"; they live on the island "tied to" their daughters. What, or who, will it take to break free from these chains?Feminism and Climate Crisis in LiteratureWhen the waters rise, customers stay away. The mothers speculate: "the swirling river was keeping the smaller boats from making the journey"; "the land was cursed". In a last-ditch attempt to lure men back for business, Amma sends for a new girl. Little does she know that Kusum Khan's arrival will signal the beginning of the end. A girl from the city with a history of participating in protests against the Dictator, she doesn't acquiesce to the island's rules, as the others have been conditioned to; instead, she sows the seeds for what will grow into a life-altering act of resistance. The children start to believe that she is their saviour – maybe even Bon Bibi, a legendary guardian of the forest. A different life seems graspable, just beyond the island's shore. When the titular uprising at last arrives, it summons an all-consuming storm, washing over the island. And the reader, too, is ready to join the revolution – their fist in the open air.Uprising is a feminist novel ("here they were: a wall of women") and a protest novel ("The moment Kusum entered the protest, she felt as if she was becoming a small organ in a living, breathing thing"). It is a coming-of-age novel, and a response to the climate crisis; a story of sisterhood protecting, and failing to protect; of structural inequality and the rotten core of patriarchal corruption; of unlucky women in an unfair world. "When the men came to reclaim the island, we stood rooted in place with our eyes closed, unable to watch. We stood rooted in place with our eyes open, unable to stop watching." While the mothers and daughters in Anam's fictional world are victims of specific generational violence, this observation can be applied to humanity at large: we are all watching – frozen, complicit – as injustices rise the world over.The Power of Rage and Radical HopeThrough her unwaveringly political and unflinchingly forthright novel, Anam shows the power of rage and radical hope. A new world can burn bright from the fires of injustice – and here, it's the mothers that hold the match.
#Tahmima Anam #Uprising #Feminist Fiction
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World Wide May 13, 2026

Bahrain-led UN Resolution on Strait of Hormuz Gains Support of 112 Nations

A UN Security Council resolution calling for freedom of navigation through the Strait of Hormuz has…
The Lead A draft United Nations Security Council resolution calling for freedom of navigation through the Strait of Hormuz has gained 112 co-sponsors, according to diplomatic sources. This development underscores the breadth of global concern over the closure of one of the world’s most critical shipping lanes. The Event Details The resolution, tabled by Bahrain and the United States, seeks to protect international waterways, commercial shipping and energy supplies, and to ensure the safety of seafarers. It also calls for an end to Iranian attacks on its Gulf neighbours. Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait have joined Manama and Washington as principal sponsors, while India, Japan, South Korea, Kenya, Argentina and most member states of the European Union have also signed on. The Data Analysis “The list takes up three full pages,” said Al Jazeera’s correspondent in New York, Gabriel Elizondo. “It’s essentially being co-sponsored by two-thirds of all 193 UN member states.” This level of support indicates a significant international consensus on the need to maintain freedom of navigation through the Strait of Hormuz. The Impact Analysis The diplomatic push comes as peace negotiations between Iran and the US remain deadlocked. The US is demanding that Iran dismantle its nuclear programme and lift its restrictions on the strait. Iran has countered with calls for war reparations, an end to the US naval blockade of its ports and a ceasefire on all fronts, including in Lebanon, where US ally Israel is fighting Iranian-backed Hezbollah. The Prediction No date has been set for a vote on the resolution. However, with 112 co-sponsors, it is clear that there is significant international pressure on Iran to reconsider its stance on the Strait of Hormuz. The outcome of the vote will depend on the positions of key players such as China and Russia, which have voiced reservations about the draft but have not yet indicated whether they will veto it.
#Bahrain #United Nations #Strait of Hormuz
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Politics May 13, 2026

Jim Chalmers Explains Labor’s Partial Retention of Negative Gearing in the 2026 Budget

Treasurer Jim Chalmers outlined why the Labor government kept a scaled‑back version of negative gea…
Why Labor Opted for a Partial Negative Gearing RetentionIn a video released alongside the 2026 budget, Treasury Minister Jim Chalmers clarified that the Labor Party chose not to abolish negative gearing outright but to retain it in a limited form. The move is presented as a compromise between fiscal responsibility and the political imperative to support property investors.Chalmers' Explanation in the Budget VideoThe video highlighted three core arguments:Revenue Impact: A full repeal would shave billions off projected tax receipts, widening the budget deficit.Housing Supply: Negative gearing encourages investment in rental properties, which helps keep rental vacancy rates low.Electoral Considerations: Property owners constitute a key voter bloc in marginal seats.Budget Numbers Behind the DecisionThe 2026 budget projects a surplus of AUD 12.4 billion after accounting for existing tax measures. A total repeal of negative gearing was estimated to erode that surplus by roughly 5‑6 %, pushing the government toward a modest deficit. By scaling back the deduction to properties with annual losses below AUD 5,000, the Treasury expects to retain most of the fiscal headroom.Broader Political and Market ImpactRetaining a trimmed version of negative gearing sends several signals:It reassures investors that the government will not introduce abrupt policy shocks, stabilising the Australian housing market.It placates the Labor base in outer‑urban electorates where property investment is a significant income source.It leaves the door open for future reforms, such as tightening eligibility criteria or introducing a phased phase‑out.Outlook for Tax Policy and Housing AffordabilityAnalysts anticipate that the next budget cycle will revisit negative gearing as part of a broader tax‑fairness agenda. If fiscal pressures intensify, Labour may consider a gradual reduction rather than an immediate repeal, aiming to mitigate any sharp correction in property prices while still moving toward a more progressive tax system.
#Jim Chalmers #Labor Party #Negative Gearing
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Entertainment May 13, 2026

Cannes: The Beautiful Grueling Circus That Defines Cinema

Agnès Poirier reflects on the Cannes Film Festival as a unique, exhausting yet magical experience t…
The Unparalleled Experience of CannesNothing prepares you for the shock that is the Cannes film festival: the adrenaline, the fatigue, the elation and the emotion, but also the hunger, the anger, the magic and the ridicule. For young cinephiles, and for almost everybody who works in the film industry, it is the mecca of cinema and has been so for nearly eight decades. Anyone going for the first time this week, as I did 25 years ago, should not listen to the old grognards – Cannes' battle-worn veterans – who will lament that the festival has become an abominable circus and swear this year will be their last. It is a circus, and you can bet they will be back for as long as their knees can take it. For there is nothing quite like it.From Resistance to Global Cinema HubBorn to counteract Benito Mussolini's Venice film festival, its first edition was planned for September 1939, but Adolf Hitler had other plans. The previous year, under pressure from Berlin and Rome, the Venice film festival's top prize, the Coppa Mussolini, was handed to Leni Riefenstahl's propaganda film Olympia, prompting the French, British and American delegates to walk out. Hence Cannes, conceived as the festival of the "free world". More than 80 years later, for all its sins, it has remained faithful to that founding promise.The Expansive Scale of Modern CannesOver the decades, Cannes has mutated into an ever-hungrier mammoth, needing more space, and more venues, as it attracts an increasing number of journalists and professionals. A purpose-built Palais des Festivals had to be erected in the 1980s. "The bunker", as we have come to call it, is not exactly beautiful but brutally efficient at managing Cannes' mind-boggling crowds. This year, about 40,000 accredited festival-goers are descending on the French Riviera from 140 different countries, with dozens of films selected across all sidebars. At the same time, the Marché du Film, running alongside the festival since the late 1960s, is gathering about 16,000 participants, with thousands of films and projects up for sale. Cannes is both a summit for the cinema elite and a giant film bazaar.Three Worlds Colliding at La CroisetteFor 11 days in May, three different worlds lead parallel lives – critics, deal-makers and red-carpet royalty – colliding almost by accident on the seafront boulevard known as La Croisette. Hundreds of critics watch multiple films a day with monastic discipline. When they give in to parties, they bitterly regret it the next morning. You can spot some of us sleeping through entire screenings; how some colleagues manage to review films is a mystery. I remember a well-known French critic who had such vivid dreams in the darkness that he became convinced they were scenes in the films. His reviews were full of brilliant analysis of moments that did not exist.We critics rush between screenings, press conferences, interviews, our desks and the bunker's free espresso machines, often forgetting to eat or even pee. Downstairs, in the bunker's basement, and in hotel suites and rented apartments, the film market runs day and night: buyers juggle numbers, producers charm, directors and screenwriters fight for their vision. Above them floats Cannes' top layer – stars and "talent" spending hours in hair and makeup before climbing the 24 steps of the red carpet in borrowed couture and jewellery. When people in the industry groan, "oh God, it's Cannes again", it is this collision of financial anxiety, choreographed glamour and sheer exhaustion they are bracing themselves for.The Magic and Meaning Behind the GlamourThese worlds sometimes collide in the most poetic or grotesque ways. One morning, rushing to my first screening at 7.30am, I was walking along the Croisette when I saw, coming towards me, slightly dishevelled in a tuxedo, Jack Nicholson on his way back to his hotel after a long night. I smiled, he smiled back. He was alone, no bodyguards, no chaperones. Those were the days. I also shared a lift with Takeshi Kitano in full samurai attire, and I will never forget turning into a hotel corridor and finding myself nose to nose with Max von Sydow – Ingmar Bergman's medieval knight from The Seventh Seal. My cinephile heart skipped a beat.One of my favourite sidebars in Cannes, alongside the competition where you watch the year's best crop of films, is Cannes Classics, showing restored world masterpieces and documentaries about cinema. I always start the festival there: it is the best way to reset and begin afresh. Then I am ready for the 10-day onslaught of motion pictures, and for the magic moment that precedes each Cannes screening – the festival's own jingle, a palm ascending the red carpet from underwater and then into the sky, lifted by the ethereal arpeggios of Camille Saint-Saëns's Carnival of the Animals.Cannes: Enduring Symbol of Cinematic ResistanceIn 1955, Cannes gave its first official Palme d'Or to Delbert Mann's Marty; half a century later I found myself befriending its wonderful star, Betsy Blair, on the Croisette. I had the joy of seeing Ken Loach twice climbing those steps to collect the Palme, escorted by police outriders from Nice airport as if he were a head of state. I watched Iranian directors Jafar Panahi and Mohammad Rasoulof showing films at peril to their lives. For all the craziness of the red carpet and the samurai outfits, Cannes never forgets that it was founded as a gesture of resistance. That, as much as the glamour and the exhaustion, is why we keep going back.
#Cannes Film Festival #Agnès Poirier #cinema
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Business May 13, 2026

Trump Tower $1.5bn Gold Coast Project Scrapped Over ‘Toxic’ Brand

A $1.5 billion Trump Tower project on the Gold Coast was abandoned less than three months after a h…
The Quick Collapse of the $1.5bn Gold Coast Trump Tower DealIn February, David Young of Altus Property Group and Eric Trump announced a partnership to build the tallest tower in Australia on the Gold Coast, branding it Trump International Hotel & Tower Gold Coast. Within three months the agreement was terminated, with both sides blaming each other.Why Altus Property Group Cited the Trump Brand as ‘Toxic’Young posted on LinkedIn that the ongoing war in Iran had made the Trump brand “toxic to Australians”, claiming the negative perception was “pure sensationalism” and not related to the President himself.Altus argued the brand’s image was harming marketability.The Trump Organization responded that Altus failed to meet basic financial obligations.Financial Stakes: $1.5bn Project and Developer’s Bankruptcy HistoryProjected investment: $1.5 billion.Young has declared bankruptcy twice; the first was later annulled.The Trump Organization alleged missed payments upon execution of the agreement.Implications for Luxury Branding and Gold Coast DevelopmentThe fallout highlights the risk of attaching politically charged brands to high‑profile real‑estate projects, especially in a market sensitive to international conflicts. Gold Coast mayor Tom Tate confirmed no formal planning application had been submitted, underscoring regulatory caution.What’s Next for the Site and Similar High‑Profile ProjectsAnalysts predict the land will likely be re‑marketed under a different brand, but securing financing may remain challenging given the developer’s track record. The episode may deter other developers from pursuing “flash‑in‑the‑pan” branding strategies without solid financial backing.
#Trump Organization #Altus Property Group #David Young
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Politics May 13, 2026

Labour Unions Predict Keir Starmer Won't Lead Party into Next Election

Labour-supporting unions have predicted that Keir Starmer will not lead the party into the next gen…
The Leadership Challenge Keir Starmer will not lead his party into the next general election, Labour-supporting unions have predicted, in an intervention that threatens to further destabilise the prime minister after a damaging few days. The Unions' Statement The 11 Labour-affiliated unions – which include Unite, Unison and the GMB – are expected to issue a joint statement on Wednesday saying “at some stage” the party will have to put a plan in place to elect a new leader. Unions divided over whether to call for Starmer to set out a timetable for his departure Some union leaders have urged Starmer to quit, with Unite’s Sharon Graham saying the “writing is on the wall” for the prime minister The Impact on Starmer's Leadership Starmer was increasingly confident that he had seen off the immediate threat to his job on Tuesday after a challenge from Wes Streeting failed to materialise despite several of the health secretary’s allies quitting the government. However, his fragile authority has been weakened by the resignation of four ministers – three of them close allies of Streeting – in what appeared to be an orchestrated move. The Future of the Party In their draft statement, which is due to be released on Wednesday, the union general secretaries wrote: “Labour’s affiliated unions have been clear that Labour cannot continue on its current path. “Whilst we recognise progress has been made, such as aspects of the Employment Rights Act and the increase in the minimum wage, the results at the election last week were devastating. “Labour is not doing enough to deliver the change that working people voted for at the general election. The Prediction It's clear that the prime minister will not lead Labour into the next election, and at some stage a plan will have to be put in place for the election of a new Leader.
#Keir Starmer #Labour Party #Labour Unions
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Politics May 13, 2026

Trump heads to Beijing for high‑stakes summit with Xi as Iran war looms

Donald Trump will land in Beijing for the first U.S. presidential visit to China in nearly a decade…
Trump’s Beijing Arrival Sets Stage for a High‑Stakes SummitDonald Trump is scheduled to land in Beijing on Wednesday evening, marking the first visit by a U.S. president to China in nearly ten years. The two‑day meeting with President Xi Jinping is framed as a chance to restore U.S. prestige after the protracted war in Iran.Diplomatic and Business Agenda of the VisitThe delegation will include more than a dozen American business leaders, notably Elon Musk of Tesla and Tim Cook of Apple. Trump has promised a “big, fat hug” from Xi and expects headline‑grabbing deals, including a new board of trade to coordinate bilateral purchases.Economic Stakes: 500 Boeing Jets and a Fragile Trade Truce500 Boeing 737 Max jets are slated for sale – one of the largest orders in the aircraft maker’s history.The U.S. and China remain under a “fragile tariff truce” established last autumn.China’s economy is under pressure from sluggish domestic demand and a prolonged property crisis.Geopolitical Ripple: Iran War, Taiwan, and Global EnergyThe Iran‑Israel conflict has entered its third month, with Tehran tightening control of the Strait of Hormuz, a route that carries roughly a fifth of the world’s oil supply.Washington has sanctioned several Chinese firms for allegedly supporting Iranian oil shipments.Trump’s willingness to discuss U.S. arms sales to Taiwan could signal a shift in the long‑standing U.S. policy of not consulting Beijing on Taiwan matters.Looking Ahead: Scenarios for the Trump‑Xi DialogueAnalysts see three possible outcomes: a breakthrough that eases sanctions on China and secures Iranian de‑escalation; a stalemate that leaves the tariff truce intact but no substantive progress on Iran; or a deterioration that could reignite trade tensions and complicate U.S. commitments to Taiwan.
#Donald Trump #Xi Jinping #Elon Musk
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Entertainment May 13, 2026

Tonight's TV: Hard‑Hitting Documentaries and New Series Light Up UK Screens

Prime‑time tonight sees Channel 4 airing a hard‑hitting Ruislip abuse documentary, BBC Two launchin…
The Ruislip Abuse Documentary Takes Prime Time on Channel 4Do You Know This Man? airs at 10pm on Channel 4. It follows survivors Laura Hughes, Lauren Preston and Mary Sharp as they confront drug dealer Martin Butler, whose house became a party venue that led to multiple rapes. The programme blends courtroom testimony with personal recollection, highlighting the lasting trauma and the victims' resilience.Hannah Fry Explores Anti‑Ageing Science on BBC TwoAt 7.30pm, the new series The Future With Hannah Fry launches. The first episode travels from US bio‑hackers to Japanese butterfly research, probing how emerging science could extend human lifespan.Travel, Comedy and Drama Fill BBC One’s Primetime Line‑up8pm – Race Across the World: Teams reach Mongolia, facing harsher terrain and colder weather.9pm – Amandaland: A pretentious coffee‑shop saga in South‑West London turns into a clash of digital‑marketing egos.9.30pm – Only Child: The second series deepens the comic chemistry of a pensioner and his out‑of‑work actor son.9pm – Kidnapped By My Mum (BBC Three): A harrowing documentary revisits the 2017 disappearance of Alex Batty and his later rescue.Why These Programs Matter for British TelevisionAll four channels are prioritising real‑life narratives that blend investigative journalism with human‑interest storytelling. By airing a rape‑survivor documentary alongside a science‑focused series, broadcasters signal a willingness to tackle difficult subjects while still delivering entertainment.What to Expect Next SeasonIf audience metrics stay strong, we can anticipate more documentary‑driven slots on primetime, especially on Channel 4 and BBC Three, and further expansion of science‑communication formats like Hannah Fry’s series.
#Channel 4 #BBC Two #BBC One
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Health May 13, 2026

Prenatal Veggie Exposure May Shape Kids' Taste Preferences, Study Finds

A small study led by Prof Nadja Reissland at Durham University found that fetuses exposed to kale o…
Study Shows Fetal Exposure to Vegetable Flavours Influences Post‑Birth PreferencesThe research team gave pregnant volunteers powdered kale or carrot capsules during the third trimester and later measured their children’s facial reactions to the same smells. Reactions were recorded via ultrasound before birth, repeated at three weeks, and again when the children were about three years old.Methodology: Kale and Carrot Powder Capsules Administered to Expectant MothersParticipants were asked to swallow a capsule each day containing either kale or carrot powder. The study avoided large volumes of juice, which many volunteers found unpalatable, opting for a low‑cost capsule format.Capsules administered in late pregnancy (around 32 weeks gestation).Initial chemosensory response captured with ultrasound imaging.Follow‑up assessments at 3 weeks and 3 years post‑birth.Sample Size and Observed Reactions Reveal Early Flavor MemoryAlthough the cohort was modest, the findings were consistent:12 children were observed at age three.Infants exposed to carrot powder smiled when presented with a carrot scent and grimaced at kale, and vice‑versa for the kale group.The same preference pattern was evident in the ultrasound scans before birth.These results suggest that flavour exposure in utero can create a durable chemosensory memory.Potential Public‑Health Benefits of Early Dietary ConditioningIf replicated on a larger scale, the approach could offer a low‑cost strategy for improving population nutrition:Reducing childhood resistance to vegetables may lower long‑term risks of obesity and diet‑related diseases.Capsules are inexpensive and could be integrated into routine prenatal supplements.The concept is adaptable to different cultural diets, as noted by the researchers’ interest in fish‑rich Japanese diets.Next Steps: Larger Trials and Cross‑Cultural ApplicationsThe authors acknowledge the need for a bigger, funded study to confirm the effect across diverse populations. Future research aims to:Expand the sample size to hundreds of mother‑child pairs.Test additional flavours and odourants, including artificial sweeteners.Explore policy pathways for incorporating flavour‑exposure capsules into prenatal care guidelines.Published in Developmental Psychobiology, the paper titled “Do Human Fetuses Form Long‑Lasting Chemosensory Memories?” opens a new avenue for early nutritional interventions.
#Durham University #Prof Nadja Reissland #prenatal nutrition
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