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SNP looks to unity candidate after Humza Yousaf quits as first minister

John Swinney emerges as favourite to become leader of party hit by series of damaging crises

Humza Yousaf has quit as Scotlandas first minister to clear the way for a new leader capable of giving the Scottish National party stability after a series of damaging crises.

During a dramatic day largely orchestrated by party managers, Yousaf announced he would step down as first minister just as a veteran former leader, John Swinney, quickly emerged as the favourite to succeed him.

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UK will not accept return of asylum seekers from Ireland, Rishi Sunak says

Prime minister dismisses potential deal with Dublin, increasing prospect of an escalating UK-Irish crisis

Rishi Sunak has said the UK will not accept the return of asylum seekers from Ireland and dismissed the prospect of a deal with Dublin.

The prime minister doubled down on his Rwanda deportation plan and appeared to reject any deal with the Irish government, which is alarmed at asylum seekers entering the republic from Northern Ireland.

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US military releases images of aid pier under construction off Gaza coast

Pictures released by US central command come after satellite photos showed US navy ship offshore with floating platform being built alongside it

The US military has released pictures it says show that a pier to help bring more aid into the besieged Gaza Strip is now under construction.

The images show what appears to be a large metal construction with workers in military uniform dotted along the floating platforms.

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Military horses injured galloping across London making progress, army says

Quaker and Vida, who were among the animals who got loose, were hurt when they collided with vehicles but have now had surgery

The two military horses who sustained injuries after colliding with vehicles in London are making progress after surgery, the British army has said.

Quaker, a Cavalry black, and a grey horse called Vida were seen galloping through the streets of the capital after being frightened by builders moving rubble last Wednesday. The pair bolted while they were on an extended exercise in Belgravia with five other horses and six soldiers from the Household Cavalry.

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Average rents in Great Britain climb to record high

Tenants typically asked to pay APS1,291 a month outside London and APS2,633 in capital but pace of growth is slowing, say analysts

Average private rents in Great Britain have risen to record highs, with annual rental growth in hotspot locations such as Reading and Coventry running at almost 20%.

Data from the property website Rightmove shows that the average advertised rent outside London climbed to a record APS1,291 a calendar month in the first quarter of 2024. That is 8.5% higher than a year earlier a a rate of growth well ahead of inflation.

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Trans patients to be treated in separate rooms in hospital under Tory plans

Ministers accused of dragging NHS into aculture wars debatea with proposal for patient rights update

Transgender people will be treated in single rooms in hospitals in England under new government plans to update the NHS constitution.

The proposal follows a pledge last year by the then health secretary Steve Barclay to prevent people who had changed their gender identity from being treated on male-only or female-only wards.

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Prisoners with cancer in England more likely to die of it than other patients

Exclusive: First study of its kind finds prisoners are 28% less likely to receive treatment for cancer

Prisoners diagnosed with cancer are more likely than people in the general population to die of the disease, according to research.

A study has calculated that compared with cancer patients in the general population, patients in English prisons are 28% less likely to receive treatment for cancer, particularly surgery to remove tumours, and have a 9% increased risk of death a half of which is due to treatment differences.

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Francis Ngannou confirms death of infant son Kobe in social media post

Francis Ngannou has confirmed the death of his 15-month-old son Kobe in a social media post.

The boxer and MMA fighter posted on X: aToo soon to leave but yet heas gone. My little boy, my mate, my partner Kobe was full of life and joy. Now, heas laying without life. I shouted his name over and over but heas not responding.

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Man admits amotivelessa killing of mobility scooter rider after leaving jail

Thomas OaHalloran was stabbed in west London by Lee Byer who had paranoid schizophrenia and had been released five days before

A man has admitted to the manslaughter by diminished responsibility of an 87-year-old mobility scooter rider in a amotivelessa knife attack in west London five days after being released from prison.

Lee Byer, 45, stabbed Thomas OaHalloran in the neck and chest in Greenford in 2022. It can now be reported that Byer had numerous previous convictions and days earlier had been released from Wormwood Scrubs prison in south-west London.

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Father pays tribute to adaddyas girla found dead at school before detention

Caitlyn Scott-Lee, 16, is thought to have taken her own life the day before she was due to have her first ever detention

The father of an autistic schoolgirl who is believed to have taken her own life the day before she was due to have her first ever detention has paid tribute to his adaddyas girla at the inquest into her death.

Caitlyn Scott-Lee, 16, was found dead at Wycombe Abbey, a private school in Buckinghamshire where she boarded, on 21 April last year.

In the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on freephone 116 123, or email jo@samaritans.org or jo@samaritans.ie. In the US, you can call or text the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline on 988, chat on 988lifeline.org, or text HOME to 741741 to connect with a crisis counselor. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other international helplines can be found at befrienders.org

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Platoas final hours recounted in scroll found in Vesuvius ash

Newly deciphered passages outline Greek philosopheras burial place and describe critique of slave musician

Newly deciphered passages from a papyrus scroll that was buried beneath layers of volcanic ash after the AD79 eruption of Mount Vesuvius may have shed light on the final hours of Plato, a key figure in the history of western philosophy.

In a groundbreaking discovery, the ancient scroll was found to contain a previously unknown narrative detailing how the Greek philosopher spent his last evening, describing how he listened to music played on a flute by a Thracian slave girl.

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Ukraine war briefing: Russia making gains from slow western aid, says Nato chief

Jens Stoltenberg says lack of ammunition has allowed Russia to push forward; Odesa missile strike kills at least four people. What we know on day 797

Nato countries have not delivered what they promised to Ukraine in time, which has benefited Russia on the frontline, Jens Stoltenberg has said. aSerious delays in support have meant serious consequences on the battlefielda for Ukraine, the Nato secretary general said in Kyiv while meeting the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy. Ukrainian officials say Russia is assembling forces for a major summer offensive, even if its troops are making only incremental gains at the moment.

aThe lack of ammunition has allowed the Russians to push forward along the front line,a Stoltenberg said. aLack of air defence has made it possible for more Russian missiles to hit their targets, and the lack of deep strike capabilities has made it possible for the Russians to concentrate more forces.a Zelenskiy said new western supplies have started arriving, but slowly. aThis process must be speeded up,a he said.

At least four people were killed and 32 injured in a Russian missile strike on residential buildings and acivil infrastructurea in Odesa on Monday, said regional officials. The attack hit a private law academy situated in a popular seafront park in the southern Ukrainian port city. A turreted Gothic-style building known as the aHarry Potter castlea was seen in flames after the strike. Ukrainian navy spokesperson Dmytro Pletenchuk said the strike was conducted by an Iskander-M ballistic missile with a cluster warhead. aMonsters. Beasts. Savages. Scum. I donat know what else to say,a said the Odesa mayor, Hennadii Trukhanov.

Debris showed that an North Korean Hwasong-11 ballistic missile hit Kharkiv on 2 January, UN sanctions monitors have told a security council committee in a report seen by Reuters. The missile was most likely illegally supplied to Russia, they conclude. North Korea is accused of developing such weapons and supplying them to Russia despite being under UN sanctions for its ballistic missile and nuclear programmes since 2006. Ukraineas allies have accused North Korea of transferring weapons to Russia for use against Ukraine in violation of an arms embargo. The US has accused Russia of launching North Korean-supplied ballistic missiles against Ukraine on at least nine occasions. Russia in March vetoed the renewal of sanctions monitoring against North Koreaas nuclear and ballistic missile programmes.

Away from the frontline, Polish farmers have lifted blockades at border crossings with Ukraine, officials said on Monday, ending a two-month protest over farm imports and alleged unfair competition. aThe traffic through all the border crossings [with Ukraine] is possible,a said Michal Derus, a tax administration spokesman in Polandas Lublin region after farmers ended the last blockade at the Hrebenne border crossing. aAll trucks are allowed to pass as long as they are not carrying sanctioned goods,a Derus added, referring to the grain imports from Ukraine that Poland imposed a temporary embargo on.

German prosecutors are investigating after a Russian citizen was arrested on suspicion of stabbing two Ukrainian soldiers to death. The soldiers a who had been convalescing in southern Germany a were found with serious stab wounds outside a shopping centre in the Bavarian town of Murnau am See on Sunday, according to police. One of them, aged 36, died at the scene, while the other, 23, died in hospital. A 57-year-old Russian citizen was arrested in his home on suspicion of murder, police said. The prosecutor generalas office in Munich said it had since taken over the case and was not able to rule out that the killings were politically motivated.

Sophie, Duchess of Edinburgh, on Monday became the first British royal to visit Ukraine since Russiaas full-scale invasion. The British foreign ministry said she met survivors of sexual violence and torture, as well as women displaced by the war, and children who were deported to Russia before recently being returned. aItas true that women and girls pay the highest price in terms of human cost a| Rape is used to demean, to degrade and to destroy, and we have to get better at trying to prevent that from happening,a Sophie said. The Russian army in Ukraine has been accused of numerous incidents of rape and sexual violence

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aThe hot topic is the wara: West Yorkshireas Muslim voters feel politically homeless

Kirklees residents are likely to punish both the Tories and Labour for their stance on Gaza in the 2 May local elections

Of all the issues being discussed and debated among voters in the lead-up to local elections, there is one that has taken precedence for some residents of the West Yorkshire borough of Kirklees: the conflict in Gaza.

This weekas votes are predicted to bring damaging results for Rishi Sunak a whose personal ratings have reached a record low.

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How UKas new border controls will affect animal and plant imports

Second phase of physical checks could result in price increases in shops, as businesses pass on costs to consumers

After more than three years of delays, Tuesday finally sees the introduction of physical checks on animal and plant imports coming into Britain from the EU.

Importers and trade associations have warned that the new bureaucracy could heap significant costs on to importers, resulting in increases to prices on shop shelves.

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Miriam: Death of a Reality Star review a as grubby as the cruel show that ruined her life

As this documentary smugly rehashes the transphobia that made Miriam Riveraas life hell a claiming it would never happen today a it becomes just as tawdry. Has TV learned nothing in the past 20 years?

It was, all in all, a moral quagmire of a TV format. In 2004, Thereas Something About Miriam saw six men vie for the attention of Miriam Rivera, a 21-year-old Mexican model who unbeknown to them had a asecreta: she was transgender. Even before it aired, this British reality-dating show had whipped up a tabloid frenzy, fuelled by the news that the contestants who had wooed Rivera were mounting a legal challenge to stop the show from airing. Lawyers claimed their lack of informed consent equated to a conspiracy to commit sexual assault.

Miriam: Death of a Reality Star retells the story of this queasy moment in pop culture, while also delving into Riveraas traumatic early life and suspicious death. Yet despite looking back disapprovingly, this three-part documentary attempts to have its cake (sanctimonious dismay) and eat it, too (milking exactly the same tawdry titillation as the original did). Thereas Something About Miriamas horrifying denouement a one of the men reacted violently to the news that Rivera was trans a is teased throughout, meaning the documentary is also powered by the promise of that reveal. (While the original series was removed from circulation by Sky, this documentary re-airs so much footage that it doubles as a worst-of clip show.) Later, it stages a superficial investigation into Riveraas death. Reality TV was a and still is a grounded in exploitation.

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Michelangelo: The Last Decades review a where has all the lust and longing gone?

British Museum, London
Michelangeloas drawings were anything but dull, but this exhibition sucks out all the drama by focusing on his spirituality at the expense of his sexuality

Lord Elgin, you let us down. With all the masterpieces of world art that Britainas rapacious collectors grabbed from hither and yon, couldnat they have got their hands on a single statue by Michelangelo? No, the only original work in marble by the great sculptor, painter, architect and poet in a British collection is a circular relief owned by the Royal Academy. What we have instead are extensive holdings of his drawings in the British Museum and Royal Collection. Unfortunately, the BMas hushed use of these works on paper to try to illuminate his later life shows what poor recompense they are.

The problem is disappointingly obvious from the start. After being moved by a portrait of the elderly, bearded, introspective Michelangelo by his most talented pupil, Daniele da Volterra, youare plunged into his designs for The Last Judgment, painted on the altar wall of the Sistine Chapel from 1536 to 41. Michelangelo was in his early 60s when he returned to the scene of his earlier triumph on its ceiling to create his cascading, tumbling vision of bodies rising to heaven and falling to hell against a deep blue. Here are his sketches of swarming muscular nudes, struggling and fighting a or embracing? a all desperate to join the ranks of blessed. Yet I couldnat tear my eyes from a projection of the actual fresco, or stop wishing I was there with the real thing, in the Sistine Chapel.

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Humza Yousafas unravelling tenure shows how short and brutish political lives have become

Scotlandas first minister and SNP leaderas demise shows Westminster does not have the monopoly on chaos and ineptitude

It must be contagious. Just when you thought Westminster might have the monopoly on incompetence and chaos, along comes Humza Yousaf, Scotlandas first minister, saying: aHold my Diet Coke.a Anything the Tories can do south of the border, the Scottish National party can manage north of it. We are in a new political era where the life span of politicians is measured in units of Liz Truss. Or lettuces. So Yousaf reaching seven and half Trusses a or approximately 54 lettuces. Which, all things considered, is fairly respectable. If a lot less than he had hoped.

Last Thursday, Yousaf had consciously uncoupled from the Scottish Green party. aYouare dumped,a he had announced, looking rather pleased with himself. It had been meant to be a power play. To ditch the Greens before they ditched him. A show of strength that the SNP could survive as a minority government without their coalition partner.

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Surreal claims, lawfare and abuse: toxic politics in Spain reflect the new Europe

Pedro SA!nchez is not alone in EU in facing aharassment through the media and the courtsa aimed at forcing him out of politics

Pedro SA!nchez may have decided to stay on as Spanish prime minister, but what made him hesitate a aharassment and bullyinga of him and his wife by his political opponents a is unlikely to go away anytime soon, in Spain or elsewhere in Europe.

In an ever more polarised political sphere and on a social media battlefield where reality coexists with the wildest fictions, politicians across the continent have to live a or not a with being targets of surreal accusations, alawfarea and increasingly ugly abuse.

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Blue Lights recap: series two, episode three a sexy, messy affairs

Itas not just new drug boss Lee causing tensions to rise on the streets of Belfast, as more tangled twosomes get steamy on patrol and Stevie deals with a heartwrenching case

The series reached its midway mark with simmering tension and surprise tragedy. Hereas your sit-rep on the third episode, titled Love Knows a|

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aIt can happen to any childa: parents of sextortion victim send out warning

Ros and Mark Dowey, whose son Murray took his life after being duped by criminals online, are calling for greater awareness and social media regulation

It was a relaxed evening at home in Dunblane, near Stirling, a few days before the turn of the year. The Dowey family a Ros, Mark and their three sons a were watching television when talk turned to plans for the new year. Murray, 16 years old and their middle boy, chatted about saving up for a holiday to Marbella he was planning with his friends that summer. At about half past nine, he went up to his bedroom. It was the last time his family saw him alive.

The next morning, Ros was preparing for a visit to friends in Glasgow. aI saw that Murrayas door was ajar with the light on,a she says. aI walked in and said aAre you up?a and found him there.a

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No Jerry Seinfeld, the aextreme lefta hasnat killed comedy | Stuart Heritage

The comedianas claim that wokeness is the reason why comedy is no longer as funny is lazy a and inaccurate

Jerry Seinfeld is currently at saturation point, promoting his new Pop Tarts movie Unfrosted. Still a canny operator, however, Seinfeld understands that the last thing anyone in the world wants to hear about is his new Pop Tarts movie. After all, there is realistically only so much available media interest in a streaming period comedy film about a breakfast product. And so Unfrosted has taken something of a backseat to a much more newsworthy proposition: Jerry Seinfeld mouthing off for clicks.

Until now, Seinfeldas targets have included the film industry (the people he worked with adonat have any idea that the movie business is overa) and his disdain for dabblers (aThereas nothing I revile quite as much as a dilettantea), despite being a man who has just directed his first film at the age of 70. True, he has also tried talking about things he actually enjoys, like his love of watching surfing videos on YouTube, but that isnat really what gets the clicks these days. And so, with some inevitability, Jerry Seinfeld has pulled out the big guns and declared that the left is destroying comedy.

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aOne of the most racist things Iave ever seena: how RIBA is decolonising its HQ

The Royal Institute of British Architects has been taking stock of the disturbingly imperial decoration of its palatial home a with a new show telling a larger, more unsettling story

Part Egyptian tomb, part masonic temple, the 1930s headquarters of the Royal Institute of British Architects has always exuded a cultish air. Sited on Londonas illustrious Portland Place, among embassies, consulates and oligarchsa pieds-A -terre, it is a fittingly regal headquarters for a chartered profession that has long styled itself as an exclusive gentlemenas club.

If you have ever been to an event there, you probably wonat have paid much attention to the dull brown mural at the back of the auditorium. Itas a dirty, poorly lit and badly scuffed screen, which tends to fade into the background of the surrounding art deco pomp. And thereas a good reason that the RIBA hasnat wanted to you look at it too closely.

aItas one of the most racist things Iave ever seen in my life,a says Thandi Loewenson, a Zimbabwe-born architectural designer and researcher. aAnd thatas saying something.a

Take a look, and youall see groups of semi-naked figures from all corners of the British empire, cartoonishly depicted as primitive savages with exaggerated features, huddled in timid submission around the edges of the mural. In the centre, radiating above a map of Britain like some heavenly vision, is the RIBA council, depicted as a professional parliament of identical faceless figures. Floating between the professionals and the natives, in a kind of architectural halo, are the symbolic buildings of empire: the government buildings of Pretoria, the viceroyas palace in New Delhi, the old parliament house of Canberra, and other works authored by the instituteas distinguished members.

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Humza Yousafas clumsiness meant he had to jump a but Westminster also gave him a push | Rory Scothorne

The SNP leader badly miscalculated his support. But Londonas meddling in Scottish politics played its part

Youave seen it posted on office walls and Instagram feeds: diamonds are formed under pressure. Well, so are career-ending mistakes. Hopefully Humza Yousaf, who last week collapsed his own governmentas majority by ending the SNPas cooperation agreement with the Scottish Greens and then resigned before a probable no-confidence vote at Holyrood, can find clarity and respite after what must have been a personally horrible year.

Politics is unforgiving at the best of times, but it must not be forgotten that for a sizeable chunk of his time in office some of Yousafas family members were trapped in Gaza. He spoke honestly about the emotional toll, and became one of the few western leaders a out of clear principle, not just personal investment a to openly criticise Israelas relentless assault on the Palestinian people.

Rory Scothorne is a historian and writer based in Edinburgh

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

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Achaz von Hardenberg on the plummeting fortunes of Rishi Sunak and Humza Yousaf a cartoon

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Britain has a problem that it wonat face up to: children's dangerous relationship with alcohol | Gary Nunn

With young people in the UK far more likely to drink than those in other countries, and adult overconsumption treated as a joke, itas clear: we are a nation in denial

Britain has a problem, and that problem is alcohol. Except, it is more nuanced than that. The issue is less the alcohol itself and more our attitude towards it and the problematic culture weave created around it. For far too many of us, itas all a bit of a laugh.

But it has all become a lot less funny since the publication last week of a major new report by the World Health Organization which shows that Great Britain has the worldas worst rate of child alcohol consumption. It makes for sobering reading. A third of our 11-year-olds have drunk alcohol. More than half of 13-year-olds in England have already started on the booze. Britain comes off worst of the 44 countries covered in the study, the largest of its kind. Itas alarming.

Gary Nunn is an author and journalist

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Yes, prime minister, itas a scandal so many of us are signed off work. Maybe you Tories should stop making us ill | Zoe Williams

The UK does not have a sicknote problem. It has a government-couldnat-care-less problem

Another week, another phantom menace for Rishi Sunak. The people he is talking about, regarding his benefit reforms, do not exist. The 1.35 million people who could work but just donat want to, who have a label of depression or anxiety but are just a little bit sad, who could have their benefits replaced by vouchers and find that incentivising: these people do not exist.

People are not signed off work because we are all a little bit more comfortable talking about our moods. People are not on disability benefits because Prince Harry did a podcast. We donat have a asicknote culturea because itas too easy to get a sicknote. The pressure on GPs will not be lifted by parcelling out sicknotes to private contractors. Those with depression and anxiety severe enough to claim a personal independence payment (Pip) are catastrophically unwell. If numbers have surged over the past 14 years, which they have, it is because Conservative governments make you catastrophically unwell.

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What will happen if the ICC charges Netanyahu with war crimes? | Kenneth Roth

The Israeli prime minister has good reason to worry, and the defenses he has offered so far are unlikely to help him

The Israeli government believes that the international criminal court (ICC) in The Hague is about to file war crimes charges against Benjamin Netanyahu and other senior Israeli officials. We canat know for sure a the ICC has kept its plans close to the vest a but the Israeli prime minister has good reason to worry, and the defenses he has offered so far are unlikely to help him.

The ICC chief prosecutor Karim Khanas most likely target is Netanyahuas starvation strategy for Palestinian civilians in Gaza. Because the Israeli government has refused to let ICC staff enter Gaza, it will take time for Khan to complete the detailed investigation required to demonstrate other possible Israeli war crimes, such as indiscriminately bombing civilian areas and firing on military targets with foreseeably disproportionate civilian consequences. But the facts surrounding Israelas obstruction of humanitarian aid are readily available.

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Fostering is getting a shot of much-needed millennial energy a just ask Kiri Pritchard-McLean | Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett

With Britain crying out for foster carers, my schoolfriendas comedy show sheds light on what itas like for those in their 30s

What do you do if you always imagined a house full of children, but donat want to be a biological parent? This was the dilemma facing one of my schoolfriends, the standup comedian Kiri Pritchard-McLean, who lives on Ynys MA'n (Anglesey) with her partner. Like many people in their 30s, they were surrounded by friends embroiled in the maelstrom of babies and young children. But the prevailing narratives around motherhood didnat really speak to Kiri, nor did the hard, thankless work of it appeal to her (to quote one of her jokes, aI see what my friends have got, and itas the fucking Manson family a| chaos, violence, no oneas washing their hair, everyoneas talking about sacrifice. It is a cult.a)

Foster caring isnat something that many millennials consider a the largest age group of carers are people in their 50s a but when Kiri and her partner heard an advert on the radio appealing for more carers, it felt right. In her new show, Peacock, she talks about the vetting process, which included many hours of training and more than 60 hours of interviews. Rather than being put off by how exhaustive the recruitment is, though, there was something reassuring about it. There are no qualifications for becoming a biological parent, no exam you have to sit, and no real way of knowing if youall be good at it before you embark. I, for example, naively thought that having been a young carer for my brother, and later an au pair, an aunt and a godmother, would mean I would be somewhat prepared for motherhood. Yet nothing truly prepares you, and you are humbled in profound, often mortifying, ways.

Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett is a Guardian columnist

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With Indiaas election in full swing, Narendra Modi is getting desperate a and dangerous | Salil Tripathi

The Indian PM may still be in a strong position; but incendiary, anti-Muslim rhetoric shows that all may not be going to plan

When Narendra Modi ran for prime minister for the first time in 2014, his overriding aim was to convince voters that he was a different man a no longer the chief minister of the western state of Gujarat, where, under his watch, more than 1,000 people were massacred in a communal pogrom in 2002. (A British government report found Modi adirectly responsiblea for not stopping the killing of Muslims; he has always denied culpability and was cleared of all charges by the supreme court.) Modi was going to be the man who would transform India by ushering in vikas, or economic development, for everyone.

His record as prime minister in the past decade belies that. Now the mask has fallen completely. In a recent campaign rally in Rajasthan, Modi made an exceptionally incendiary speech in which he claimed that his predecessor, Manmohan Singh, had declared that Muslims had athe first claima to the nationas resources. This was distortion and exaggeration. The reference was to a speech that Singh had made in 2006 about Indiaas development priorities.

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Outside London, the dating pool may be smaller a but there are fewer sharks | Elle Hunt

I thought moving out would be a dating disaster, but a new report finds my peers still living in the capital have it worse

When I left London for a smaller city, my only hesitation was over what it would mean for my love life. By moving from a large dating pool to a small one, was I committing myself to lifelong singledom?

The other thirtysomethings in my new home city seem mostly coupled up: either locals who got together in their 20s, or outsiders who have moved with partners to have kids. You donat have to be swiping for long before you are informed that youave exhausted the singles in the area. Hinge responds by re-serving the same selection, like an amateur magician trying to lead you to a particular card.

Elle Hunt is a freelance journalist and writer

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