As Sudan’s devastating civil war passed the two-year mark, NGOs and aid agencies told Rachel Savage that “massive scale” rights violations were being perpetrated. Kaamil Ahmed spoke to relatives of the dead from recent attacks by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces on IDP camps, and Mark Townsend got hold of a leaked UN report that raised fresh concerns over the UAE’s role in the war. Patrick Wintour reported on Arab states’ refusal to sign up to a modestly worded communique to end the suffering. There have been two significant developments this week as a result of our reporting in the UK. Former Conservative MP Craig Williams was among 15 people charged over bets on the timing of the 2024 UK general election, following stories broken by Pippa Crerar. And the Department for Work and Pensions announced an overhaul of the way carer’s allowance overpayments will be checked, after Josh Halliday and Patrick Butler’s reports on the thousands of people left with life-changing debts. On Palm Sunday morning, a bus was driving down Petropavlivska Street in Sumy, north-eastern Ukraine, when a Russian Iskander missile carrying cluster munitions exploded nearby. Luke Harding’s reporting from the bomb site brought home in vivid detail the impact of the deadly Russian attack, and the survivors’ outrage. In the US, pro-Ukraine Republicans called for president Trump to increase the pressure on Putin to stop such “barbaric attacks”. Senior figures in the Labour party urged the government to rethink the rules around Chinese investments in UK infrastructure, following the latest crisis at British Steel, as Kiran Stacey reported, and Tom Burgis had a scoop about Chinese access to UK GP records. Liberal Democrat MP Wera Hobhouse said that she suspects she was refused entry to Hong Kong because she is on a Chinese blacklist for speaking out on human rights, and Tania Branigan wrote on why so many in China see Trump as an American version of Chairman Mao. Our reporters have been busy covering the Australian election, including a fascinating profile of the prime minister, Anthony Albanese, by Paul Daley, as the latest Guardian Essential Poll shows Labor pulling ahead of the opposition. Ben Smee revealed how a Coalition MP told a group of climate science deniers that blackouts were “a big political opportunity” and urged fellow MPs to adopt a “do nothing strategy”. The UK’s supreme court has ruled the term “woman” in the Equality Act refers to a biological woman, in a judgment viewed by gender critical campaigners as a victory. Severin Carrell and Libby Brooks covered the news. Jessica Murray spoke to trans people and gender critical campaigners about the significance of the ruling. Marina Hyde had plenty to say about the Blue Origin spacecraft, writing that the “vacuous” spectacle set us back decades in terms of female empowerment. Moira Donegan said it highlighted how the US was “increasingly tailored to the impulses of the richest and least responsible”, and showed a vision for women that is “dependent on men, confined to triviality, and deeply, deeply silly.” Reflecting on his four decades of writing about science for the Observer, Robin McKie lamented the lack of progress on the most important topic he has covered – the dangerous climate experiment that humans are carrying out on themselves. Ewan Murray and Andy Bull were in Augusta to witness sporting history as Rory McIlroy became only the sixth man to complete the grand slam of all four majors as he finally banished the ghosts of 2011. Re-live the victory with our Masters in pictures gallery. Ireland correspondent Rory Carroll detailed how McIlroy’s home town of Holywood in Northern Ireland celebrated its local hero. Jenny Kleeman heard from Renée Ballou that she was horrified to learn that rogue fertility doctors stole her eggs and gave them to another woman, who then got pregnant. In our Dining across the divide column, a former Labour-voting aid worker and a Reform-voting welder debated empire and socialism, producing one of “the most interesting conversations I’ve had”, according to one of the diners. I also enjoyed Jude Rogers asking if Michael Sheen really was the best person to save Welsh theatre. Finally, the 28 fake photos that fooled the world, introduced by Jonathan Freedland, was a deeply absorbing look at how many of the most well-known images date from decades before the advent of Photoshop or deepfakes. One more thing …If you can catch it before it closes, go to see a double bill at London’s Hayward Gallery of the artists Linder and Mickalene Thomas. It’s an intriguing pairing of exhibitions from two women, one a punk Mancunian who subverts porn, the other an African American who uses rhinestones and lush colours. Their different kinds of subversive glamour disrupt the female experience in ways that speak to each other across generations, races and continents. |