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Politics Apr 12, 2026

UK Government Prepares Bill to Adopt EU Single Market Rules Using Henry VIII Powers, Bypassing Full Parliamentary Vote

The UK government is drafting legislation that would allow ministers to align British regulations w…
Britain’s cabinet is set to introduce a sweeping bill that would let ministers dynamically align UK regulations with EU single‑market rules using so‑called Henry VIII powers. The proposal would enable the government to adopt evolving EU standards in sectors such as food, drink, automotive and emissions trading without the need for a separate parliamentary vote on each change.The legislation is tied to the forthcoming food and drink trade deal with the EU, which the government claims will generate £5.1 billion a year for the British economy. By granting ministers the ability to implement new EU rules through secondary legislation, the bill aims to cut red tape, lower costs for businesses, and accelerate the rollout of trade agreements.Under the proposed framework, Parliament would retain the ability to approve or reject secondary legislation but would not be able to amend it. Critics warn this could turn MPs into mere "rubber‑stamps" for EU‑aligned regulations, limiting democratic scrutiny and potentially provoking retaliatory measures from the EU if the UK blocks such instruments.Political analysts note that the move comes amid heightened geopolitical tension following the United States’ war with Iran, which has exposed the fragility of Britain’s special relationship with Washington. Ministers argue that deeper regulatory alignment with the EU will add billions to the UK economy, mitigate the cost of the conflict, and address the “sluggish productivity” that has plagued the post‑Brexit era.Economic forecasts from the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) underscore the stakes: Brexit is projected to cut long‑run productivity by 4 % and shrink both exports and imports by 15 % compared with a scenario where the UK remained in the EU. Proponents of the bill contend that aligning with EU standards without re‑joining the customs union or single market will help reverse these losses while respecting political red lines on sovereignty and freedom of movement.Opposition parties, including hard‑Brexit advocates and the Liberal Democrats, have signalled they will challenge the bill, particularly in the House of Lords. The government acknowledges that while the Commons is unlikely to reject the proposal, the Lords could pose a significant obstacle.Academic voices, such as Prof Anand Menon of the think‑tank UK in a Changing Europe, caution that the approach amounts to “integration with the EU by stealth,” stripping the UK of a vote on the rules it will be forced to follow. He describes the situation as “the ugly trade‑off of Brexit,” where political control is sacrificed for economic access.Supporters counter that the bill will streamline the implementation of existing and future agreements, with any regulatory disputes to be settled by an independent tribunal rather than an EU court. They argue this balances the need for swift economic action with the preservation of constitutional safeguards.Prime Minister Keir Starmer has framed the initiative as part of a broader “reset” of UK‑EU relations, emphasizing a strategic partnership that deepens trade and defence cooperation while avoiding a return to the customs union or single market membership. The government stresses that Parliament will still play its “full constitutional role” in scrutinising the legislation.
#UK Government #Henry VIII powers #EU single market
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Sports Apr 12, 2026

Crystal Palace Stun Newcastle with Late Comeback Win

Crystal Palace secured a thrilling 2-1 comeback victory over Newcastle United, with Jean-Philippe M…
Crystal Palace and Newcastle United faced off in a highly anticipated Premier League match at Selhurst Park. The visitors took an early lead through William Osula's close-range finish before halftime. However, Jean-Philippe Mateta proved to be the game-changer for Palace, scoring the equalizer with 10 minutes to play and then converting a penalty in injury time to give his team the win.The match saw significant changes in fortunes for both teams. Newcastle, who had a convincing win over Palace last April, succumbed to their third successive defeat. This loss comes at a time when Eddie Howe's side is struggling with confidence, still reeling from defeats to Barcelona and Sunderland.Palace, on the other hand, entered the match with renewed energy following their Conference League rout of Fiorentina at home. The win brings them closer to a European semi-final, giving manager Oliver Glasner a chance to end his tenure with another trophy. Glasner has confirmed his departure from the club this summer, following in the footsteps of Marc Guéhi and Eberechi Eze.The match also highlighted the challenges facing Newcastle, with Kieran Trippier confirming his departure and speculation surrounding the futures of Sandro Tonali and Anthony Gordon. The team's performance was marred by a lack of confidence, with Howe's side looking lost for much of the game.Palace's comeback was fueled by the introduction of Mateta off the bench in the second half. His equalizer was set up by Tyrick Mitchell's lobbed ball, and his penalty was awarded after Sven Botman was penalized for shirt-pulling Jefferson Lerma. The win marked a significant turnaround for Palace and capped off a thrilling match.
#Crystal Palace #Newcastle United #Jean-Philippe Mateta
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World Apr 12, 2026

Intense 21‑Hour US‑Iran Negotiations in Islamabad Falter Amid Deep‑Rooted Disputes

A massive delegation of Iranian officials and nearly 300 US officials, led by Vice‑President JD Van…
Two planes of Iranian negotiators, many from the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, arrived in Pakistan to confront a 21‑hour deadline for talks that span two decades of nuclear tension and new strategic concerns such as control of the Strait of Hormuz and U.S. compensation for past attacks.The United States responded with a delegation that included Vice‑President JD Vance and roughly 300 officials, signaling a recognition that Iran’s seasoned team—featuring figures like Ali Bagheri Kani and former chief negotiator Abbas Araghchi—was well‑prepared.During the marathon, Vance held multiple conversations with former President Donald Trump and, notably, with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Iranian officials claimed the Netanyahu call hardened the U.S. stance, underscoring the delicate diplomatic balance.Veteran negotiators Robert Malley and Aaron David Miller warned that the time frame was either too long for a mere reiteration of rejected demands or far too short for genuine negotiation, highlighting a strategic misreading of Tehran’s position.Vance concluded the session by presenting what he described as a “best and final offer,” leaving the door open for further dialogue pending Iranian acceptance.Meanwhile, President Donald Trump signaled an intention to impose a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz—a move that could inflate global oil prices and further destabilize the region.Iran’s objectives included drafting a memorandum of understanding to extend a tentative ceasefire and address three core issues: an end to Israel’s offensive in Lebanon, a governance framework for Hormuz shipping, and the disposition of its highly enriched uranium stockpile, whether through UN‑supervised down‑blending or export to a third party.Vance emphasized the need for an affirmative Iranian commitment not to pursue a nuclear weapon or the rapid pathways to one, a demand that intersects with ongoing debates about Iran’s sovereign right to enrich uranium—a capability currently null after recent U.S. strikes.In practice, Iran is already exercising selective control over Hormuz traffic, allowing 2 million barrels of Iraqi oil and 4 million barrels of Saudi oil to pass, a tactic described by an Iranian parliamentarian as a “continuous atomic bomb” that provides strategic depth.Beyond the diplomatic impasse, Iran confronts severe domestic challenges: hyperinflation approaching triple‑digit levels, an internet blackout threatening economic activity, and a political climate marked by assassination threats. These pressures compound the difficulty of achieving a sustainable peace settlement.
#iran #israel #lebanon
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Sport Apr 12, 2026

Sergio García gets code‑of‑conduct warning after club‑break episode at the Masters and assists Jon Rahm on the course

The 2017 Masters champion Sergio García was warned by officials after smashing his club on the seco…
Sergio García, the 2017 Masters winner, made the cut at Augusta National but saw his weekend marred by a heated outburst on the second hole. After a mis‑hit tee shot, he struck his club into the ground, snapped off its head, and tossed it into a nearby cooler.Masters officials responded swiftly, issuing García a code‑of‑conduct warning. Under tournament rules, a second breach would add a two‑stroke penalty, while a third could lead to disqualification.In the aftermath of the incident, García stepped in to assist his playing partner Jon Rahm, picking up and carrying Rahm’s clubs while Rahm’s caddie was occupied raking a bunker.The Masters has seen several disciplinary actions this year. Scotland’s Robert MacIntyre received a reprimand for flashing an obscene gesture toward spectators after a wayward shot landed in water.García entered the round 16 shots behind leaders Rory McIlroy and Cameron Young. Although he managed a par on the second hole, he recorded three bogeys in the first four holes, slipping further down the leaderboard.Known for a volatile temperament, García’s latest flare adds to a history of on‑course confrontations: at the 2023 Open Championship he broke his driver after a similar outburst, was disqualified from the 2019 Saudi International for damaging greens, and clashed with officials at the 2022 Wells Fargo Championship before departing the PGA Tour for LIV Golf.
#his #garc #masters
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World Economy Apr 12, 2026

GSK Reports Promising Early Results for Ovarian and Womb Cancer Drug

GSK has announced positive early results for its ovarian and womb cancer drug, Mocertatug Rezetecan…
GSK has revealed promising early results for its treatment for gynaecological cancers, Mocertatug Rezetecan (Mo-Rez), as its chief executive, Luke Miels, seeks to speed up drug development at the group.The company reported that in an early-stage trial, Mo-Rez shrank or eliminated tumours in 62% of patients with ovarian cancer where chemotherapy had failed, and in 67% of those with endometrial cancer.GSK acquired the Mo-Rez cancer treatment, an antibody-drug conjugate (ADC), from China’s Hansoh Pharma in late 2023, and has trialled it in 224 patients around the world, including the UK, over the past year. Few patients needed to stop treatment because of side-effects, the most common being nausea. It is administered every three weeks via intravenous infusion.Combined with data from a separate, intermediate trial in China, these results give GSK the confidence to go straight to late-stage trials, with five clinical studies planned globally in the next few months, including on patients in the UK.Presenting the results at the Society of Gynecologic Oncology’s annual meeting on women’s cancer in Puerto Rico, Hesham Abdullah, GSK’s global head of cancer research and development, said: “Treatment of gynaecological cancers remains a major challenge, with a pressing need for new therapies that offer improved response rates. With Mo-Rez we now have compelling evidence of a promising clinical profile.”Endometrial cancer affects 1.6 million women globally, with 417,000 new cases each year. Ovarian cancer affects 843,000 people, with 240,000 new cases annually.Abdullah described Mo-Rez as a “key asset” in the company’s growing cancer portfolio, expected to be a blockbuster drug with peak annual sales of more than £2bn, which GSK hopes will help it achieve its 2031 sales target of £40bn.
#gsk #cancer #drug
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Politics Apr 12, 2026

Syrian Camp Escapees Face Uncertain Future After 12-Year Ordeal

The escape of Eva Dumani from a Syrian camp after 12 years of detention has brought attention to th…
The story of Eva Dumani, a 20-year-old Albanian woman who was kidnapped at the age of nine and held in a Syrian camp for 12 years, has shed light on the plight of thousands of foreign nationals still detained in similar conditions. Dumani's emotional reunion with her uncle, Xhetan Ndregjoni, after escaping from the al-Hawl camp, has highlighted the urgent need for governments to repatriate their citizens held in these camps. The collapse of al-Hawl camp and the uncertainty over the future of the smaller al-Roj facility have raised concerns about the security and well-being of those left behind, including women and children from over 40 countries with alleged ties to Islamic State. According to Devorah Margolin, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, governments can no longer ignore the issue and must take proactive steps to repatriate their citizens and provide them with trauma-informed care and reintegration support. The humanitarian crisis in these camps has been well-documented, with Human Rights Watch describing the conditions as “inhuman, degrading, and life-threatening”. Many women and children have been held without charge or trial for years, and there are concerns about their vulnerability to exploitation and recruitment by extremist groups. In a recent development, Belgium has arrested a woman charged in absentia for IS membership upon her return from Syria, while Australian authorities are working to repatriate over 30 Australians who attempted to leave the al-Roj camp. The Albanian government has faced criticism for its handling of the situation, with Ndregjoni calling on the government to bring back home the remaining Albanians still trapped in northern Syria.
#Syrian refugee camps #United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees #International Organization for Migration
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World Apr 12, 2026

US Vice President JD Vance Blames Iran’s Nuclear Stance for Collapse of Islamabad Talks

The US‑Iran negotiations in Islamabad ended without an agreement after 21 hours, with Vice Presiden…
The United States’ senior envoy, Vice President JD Vance, said the marathon talks in Islamabad collapsed because Iran would not abandon its nuclear weapons programme, a stance Tehran’s representatives dismissed as a lack of US goodwill. Vance, who departed Islamabad on Sunday after a 21‑hour session with Iranian officials, reiterated that Washington’s red lines required an "affirmative commitment" from Tehran that it would not pursue a nuclear weapon or the means to acquire one quickly. He described the stalemate as "bad news for Iran much more than it is for the United States." Iranian parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf countered that, despite offering "constructive initiatives," the US failed to win the trust of the Iranian delegation, leaving it to Washington to decide whether it can regain that confidence. Iran’s foreign ministry downplayed expectations, stating that no one anticipated a deal in a single session and emphasizing continued regional contacts, while the semi‑official Tasnim news agency blamed "excessive" US demands for the impasse. The talks took place under a 14‑day ceasefire agreed by the US, Iran and Israel, with Pakistan’s foreign minister Ishaq Dar urging both sides to honour the pause and offering to facilitate renewed dialogue. The conflict, which began on 28 February, has already claimed over 3,000 lives in Iran, more than 2,000 in Lebanon, and dozens across the Gulf region, while inflicting extensive infrastructure damage. Israeli security cabinet minister Ze’ev Elkin warned that Iran is "playing with fire," even as he left the door open for further negotiations. These were the first direct US‑Iran talks in more than a decade and could determine the fate of the fragile ceasefire and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz—a chokepoint for roughly 20 % of global energy supplies. The war has already sent international oil prices soaring. In addition to Vance, US special envoy Steve Witkoff and former President Trump’s son‑in‑law Jared Kushner met with Ghalibaf and Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi for two hours before a brief recess. The Iranian delegation arrived in black mourning attire for the late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and carried shoes and bags belonging to children killed in a school bombing near a military compound—a strike the Pentagon says is under investigation, with some reports suggesting US involvement. Pakistani security forces sealed off Islamabad, a city of over two million, underscoring Pakistan’s newly prominent mediating role after a year of diplomatic isolation. The US military announced it was "setting conditions" to clear mines and allow warships to pass through the Strait of Hormuz, a claim Iran’s state media denied. Prior to the talks, a senior Iranian source told Reuters that the US had agreed to release frozen Iranian assets held in Qatar and other banks, a statement the US later denied. Tehran’s broader demands include control over the strait, payment of war reparations, a region‑wide ceasefire—including in Lebanon—and the collection of transit fees from shipping traffic. President Trump’s minimum objectives remain the free passage of global shipping through the strait and the crippling of Iran’s nuclear enrichment capability to prevent the development of an atomic bomb.
#iran #talks #iranian
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Technology Apr 12, 2026

Anthropic Withholds ‘Mythos’ Model Citing Safety Risks While Launching Aggressive PR Campaign

Anthropic announced its new AI model, Mythos, but chose not to release it, citing responsibility an…
This week Anthropic revealed that its latest AI system, dubbed Mythos, is so powerful that the company will not make it publicly available, arguing that the potential risks outweigh commercial incentives.U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent convened senior banking executives to discuss the implications of the model, underscoring growing governmental concern over advanced AI capabilities.In the United Kingdom, Reform MP Danny Kruger wrote to the government urging an immediate dialogue with Anthropic, warning that Claude Mythos could pose "catastrophic cybersecurity risks" to the nation.Critics such as AI researcher Gary Marcus questioned the hype, suggesting that Anthropic’s co‑founder Dario Amodei may possess strong technical skills but is "graduated from the same school of hype and exaggeration" as OpenAI’s Sam Altman.Beyond the policy debate, Anthropic has mounted a striking media offensive. The startup secured a 10,000‑word profile in the New Yorker, two feature pieces in the Wall Street Journal, and a Time magazine cover that placed founder Amodei alongside the Pentagon and U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.Co‑founder Jack Clark and Amodei appeared on separate New York Times podcasts, fielding questions about machine consciousness and the model’s potential to "rip through the economy." Their "resident philosopher" even discussed with the WSJ whether Claude, Anthropic’s commercial product used for cryptocurrency trading and missile‑target designation, possesses a "sense of self."Anthropic’s public‑relations lead, Danielle Ghiglieri, celebrated the coverage on LinkedIn, describing the Time cover as a "mad dash" that finally let the company tell its own story.However, the company’s PR triumphs have not been without missteps. In early April, Anthropic inadvertently released part of Claude’s internal source code, though it assured that no customer data or credentials were exposed.Experts remain skeptical about the unverified claims surrounding Mythos. Dr. Heidy Khlaaf of the AI Now Institute warned that the vague marketing language could be an attempt to attract investment without substantive scrutiny.Cybersecurity specialist Jameison O’Reilly acknowledged the model’s novelty but downplayed Anthropic’s assertion of discovering "thousands of zero‑day vulnerabilities," noting that in a decade of offensive operations, zero‑days were rarely needed to achieve objectives.Anthropic also faces operational constraints. The firm has imposed usage caps on its popular Claude model and now requires customers to purchase additional compute capacity for third‑party tools, suggesting that infrastructure limitations may be a practical reason for withholding Mythos.As the race to dominate the emerging AI market intensifies, Anthropic’s strategy appears to blend genuine safety concerns with a calculated publicity push, positioning Mythos as a strategic signal that the company remains "open for business" while keeping the technology under tight control.
#anthropic #mythos #claude
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Technology Apr 12, 2026

The AI Art Heist: A Threat to Creativity and Humanity

The article discusses the impact of generative AI on the art world, with artists seeing their work …
The rise of generative AI has sparked concerns about its impact on the art world. Artists are seeing their work stolen and used to train AI models without consent or compensation. This has led to a heated debate about the role of AI in creative industries and the need for regulation.In 2022, the author, an artist, first started to see knock-offs of their work generated by AI image generators. The tech industry's approach has been to move fast and break things, with little regard for the consequences. The author argues that this is the greatest art heist in history, with billions of images harvested from the internet without credit, compensation, or consent.The tech lords knew what they were doing, with venture capitalist Marc Andreessen claiming that enforcing copyright law would “kill” the entire industry. The industry's narrative of inevitability is a way of getting people to comply in advance. The author notes that people seemed utterly unprepared to question the impact of AI on creative industries.In response, journalist Marisa Mazria Katz and the author launched an open letter demanding to keep AI-generated images out of newsrooms. The letter attracted thousands of signatures from around the world. Other artists have fought back in more powerful ways, including a lawsuit against leading image-generation companies Midjourney and Stability AI.The author argues that the tech elite's anti-humanism is revealed in their attacks on art. They shun human interaction and its serendipities, annoyances, and joys. The author notes that friction is the basis of all pleasure and that learning to make art is also friction.The impact of AI on creative industries has been devastating, with many artists out of work and entry-level illustration gigs annihilated. The audience will have to get used to the fact that generative AI is a tool to discipline and eliminate the human worker. The author argues that this is sold as progress, but it is actually a dystopian future.The author draws parallels with the luddites, who fought against the “satanic mills” and were skilled artisans fighting for their way of life. Artists too are fighting for a way of life, and if they are too disorganised to triumph, that will be everyone’s loss. The author concludes that AI companies' scraping may have started with the work of illustrators, but it has grown to encompass everything else, including culture, education, sanity, and our very imaginations.
#work #tech #companies
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