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Middle East crisis live: Israel has carried out an attack on Iran, US officials say, after blasts reported near Isfahan

US officials say military operation carried out, without giving further details; Iran state media says air defences fired and airspace closed in some areas

Itas 7:24am in Tehran and 6:54 In Tel Aviv. Letas get a reminder of what we know so far:

US officials have confirmed that Israel has carried out military operations against Iran but did not describe those operations.

The Israeli military has told news agencies including Agence France-Presse and Associated Press: aWe donat have a comment at this time.a

Iranas state media reported explosions in the central province of Isfahan Friday

Air defence systems over several Iranian cities were activated, state media reported, after the countryas official broadcaster said explosions were heard near the city of Isfahan.

Iranas Fars news agency reported athree explosionsa were heard near the Shekari army airbase in the north-west of Isfahan province, while Iranas space agency spokesperson Hossein Dalirian said aseverala drones had been asuccessfully shot downa.

Nuclear facilities in Isfahan were reported to be acompletely securea, Iranas Tasnim news agency reported, citing areliable sourcesa.

Flights were suspended across swathes of Iran on Friday. aIranas air defence has been activated in the skies of several provinces of the country,a Tehranas official IRNA news agency said.

Mehr news agency reported that aflights to Tehran, Isfahan and Shiraz, and airports in the west, northwest and southwest have been suspended.a

Flight-tracking software showed commercial flights avoiding western Iran, including Isfahan, and skirting Tehran to the north and east.

There was no immediate comment from Dubaias Emirates airline, which was operating several of the planes.

Blasts were also reported in southern Syria, according to a local activist group. aThere were strikes on a Syrian army radar position,a said Rayan Maarouf, who runs the Suwayda24 anti-government website that covers news from Sweida province in the south, reports AFP.

Oil prices surged more than three per cent in early Asian trade on Friday after the reports of explosions.

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Israel has carried out airstrikes on Iran, US officials say

Iranian state media reports that drones have been shot down over Isfahan province in attack on Friday and that the nuclear site there is acompletely safea

US officials have confirmed that Israel has carried out airstrikes against Iran as explosions were reported in the sky over the cities of Isfahan and Tabriz, while the Iranian government sought to play down the scale of the attack.

Officials in Washington said Israeli forces were carrying out military operations against Iran but did not describe the character or scale of those operations. Iranian state media said that drones had been shot down over Isfahan province in the early hours, and showed live shots of morning traffic in Isfahan city after sunrise to show that the situation was calm.

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What we know so far about Israelas strike on Iran

US officials have confirmed that Israel carried out a military operation against Iran, while state media reports air defences are active near the city of Isfahan

US officials have confirmed that Israel has carried out military operations against Iran. The officials said Israel warned the Biden administration earlier on Thursday that a strike was coming in the next 24 to 48 hours. According to CNN, the Israelis assured their US counterparts that Iranas nuclear facilities would not be targeted.

Iranian state media reported that air defence batteries had been activated after reports of explosions near a major airbase close to the city of Isfahan. The Iranian government appeared to play down the scale of the attack, with a senior commander in Iranas army saying there was no damage in Isfahan, according to state TV.

Isfahan is home to sites associated with Iranas nuclear program, including its underground Natanz enrichment site. State television described all sites in the area as afully safea and the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), confirmed there was no damage to any nuclear sites.

The airbase close to Isfahan has long been home to Iranas fleet of American-made F-14 Tomcats a purchased before the 1979 Islamic revolution.

Airports in Tehran, Shiraz and Isfahan were closed and flights have been cleared from the western half of Iran, flight tracking website FlightRadar24 reported. Local warnings to aviators suggested the airspace may have been closed. At 8am local time some airports lifted restrictions, local media in Iran reported. Although UAE based FlyDubai cancelled all flight to Iranas capital on Friday.

Tensions across the region remain high after Iran launched hundreds of drones as well as cruise missiles towards Israel on Saturday, in the Islamic Republicas first ever direct attack on the Jewish state, in response to the 1 April strike on an Iranian diplomatic building in the Syrian capital, Damascus, which killed a senior figure in Iranas Islamic Revolutionary Guards and eight other officers.

On Thursday, Iranas foreign minister told CNN that if Israel chooses to retaliate, Tehranas response would be immediate. aIf the Israeli regime commits the great error once again our response will be decisive, definitive and regretful for them,a Hossein Amir-Abdollahian said.

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All 12 jurors seated in Trump hush-money trial after two dismissals

First criminal trial of a former president one significant step closer to beginning after full jury selected in New York

A full jury of 12 people has been seated in the criminal case against Donald Trump, bringing the first criminal trial of a former president a significant step closer to beginning.

At least one of six alternate jurors had been selected before court concluded on Thursday.

A guide to Trumpas hush-money trial a so far

The key arguments prosecutors will use against Trump

How will Trumpas trial work?

From Michael Cohen to Stormy Daniels: the key players

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Exclusive: Georgia lawmaker runs secret election-conspiracy Telegram channel

Bridget Thorne, a Republican elected in Fulton county in 2022, has spread election fraud lies and accused county employees of crimes

A Fulton county commissioner in Georgia has been operating a private Telegram channel for years, propagating debunked claims about the 2020 election, and spreading accusations of crimes by county employees, including Ruby Freeman, an election worker defamed by Rudy Giuliani in the wake of Donald Trumpas 2020 loss.

Bridget Thorne, a Republican representing the relatively conservative cities of Fulton county north of Atlanta, indirectly identifies herself as the creator and administrator of the Fulton County Elections channel on Telegram, a mobile messaging platform, in multiple posts to its page. The channel uses the official logo of the Fulton county board of registration and elections.

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Voting begins in Indiaas election with Modi widely expected to win third term

First phase in worldas largest democratic exercise begins, with 969 million people eligible to vote over six-week period

Voting has begun in Indiaas mammoth general election, as Narendra Modias Bharatiya Janata party hopes to increase its parliamentary majority amid allegations that the countryas democracy has been undermined since it came to power 10 years ago.

Indiaas elections are the largest democratic exercise in the world, with more than 969 million voters, amounting to more than 10% of the worldas population. The voting began at 8am on Friday, when polling opened at 102 constituencies across the country, and will continue over the next six weeks, in seven phases, until 1 June. All the results will be counted and declared on 4 June.

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aLost for wordsa: Joe Bidenas tale about cannibals bemuses Papua New Guinea residents

Presidentas suggestion that his aUncle Bosiea was eaten by cannibals harms US efforts to build Pacific ties, say local experts

Joe Bidenas suggestion that his uncle may have been eaten by cannibals in Papua New Guinea during world war two has been met with a mixture of bemusement and criticism in the country.

Biden spoke about his uncle, 2nd Lt Ambrose J Finnegan Jr, while campaigning in Pittsburgh on Wednesday, describing how aUncle Bosiea had flown single engine planes as reconnaissance flights during the war. Biden said he agot shot down in New Guineaa, adding athey never found the body because there used to be a lot of cannibals, for real, in that part of New Guinea.a

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Police arrest Columbia University students protesting Israelas war on Gaza

Students set up encampments to demand Columbia divest from Israel while those at USC gathered in support of Asna Tabassum

Tensions on Columbia Universityas campus continued to rise on Thursday as the New York police department began breaking up student protests over Israelas war on Gaza, at the direction of the schoolas president, and arrests were made.

Hundreds of students pitched tents and began camping out in the center of the famous central campus from early morning on Wednesday in protest, demanding a ceasefire and for the university to financially divest from Israel, prompting Columbiaas president, Minouche Shafik, to issue a stark warning.

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Polish man arrested over alleged Russian plot to assassinate Zelenskiy

Polandas national prosecutor says man was preparing to share security details of airport used by Ukrainian president

A Polish man has been arrested on allegations that he aided a plot by Russian intelligence services to assassinate the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, according to Polish and Ukrainian prosecutors.

The office of Polandas national prosecutor said in a statement that the man, identified only as Pawel K, was accused of being prepared to pass airport security information to Russian agents and that he was arrested in Poland on Wednesday.

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Prince Harry confirms he is now a US resident

Paperwork filed shows the royal has informed British authorities that he has moved and is now ausually residenta in the United States

Prince Harry, the Duke of Sussex, has formally confirmed he is now a US resident.

The acknowledgment is said to underscore the princeas increasing estrangement from Britain, after he and his wife Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex, walked away from royal duties four years ago.

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Kennedy family members endorse Biden in stinging rebuke to RFK Jr

Siblings appear on stage with president at campaign event in Philadelphia and offer full-throated support of White House run

Prominent members of the Kennedy political dynasty delivered a full-throated endorsement of Joe Bidenas re-election campaign on Thursday, a pointed message that was in equal measure a stinging repudiation of their relative Robert F Kennedy Jr, who is making an independent run for the White House.

Kerry Kennedy, one of six siblings of the controversial candidate on stage at a Biden campaign event in Philadelphia, called the US president amy heroa as she celebrated a litany of his achievements she said would have pleased her father, the late former US attorney general Robert F Kennedy and late uncle and president John F Kennedy.

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US resumes deportation flights to Haiti despite continuing bloodshed

Critics condemn areckless and cruela expulsions and say deportees likely to be targeted by armed gangs who control much of country

More than 70 Haitians expelled from the United States have been flown back to Haiti on the first deportation flight since heavily armed gangs launched a bloody insurrection which has paralysed the capital and forced the prime minister from office.

The flight, which landed in the port city of Cap-HaA-tien early on Thursday, was described as ainhumanea by human rights activists who warned that deportees would likely be targeted by the criminal factions who control most of the country.

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Guardian wins award for exposA(c) of foundersa links to transatlantic slavery

Press Awards recognise cross-platform Cotton Capital series, and there are wins for several Guardian reporters

The Guardian has won a diversity award at the prestigious Press Awards after its exposA(c) on its foundersa links to transatlantic slavery, while one of its reporters took home the award for news reporter of the year.

Judges at the Press Awards called the Guardianas cross-platform Cotton Capital series, encompassing news articles, long-form essays, podcasts, video, a magazine, a 15-part newsletter and social media content, a abreathtakingly honest mea culpaa.

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The jurors: who is on the Trump trial jury?

Seven men and five women have been chosen to sit on the jury in the ex-presidentas hush-money trial. Hereas what we know

The difficult process of selecting a jury in the case against Donald Trump neared its conclusion on Thursday, with a jury of 12 people empaneled for the first criminal trial of a former president in US history.

The jury is made up of seven men and five women who live in different parts of Manhattan, including the Upper East Side, Harlem, Hellas Kitchen and the West Village. They come from a range of personal backgrounds and employment histories. Several jurors said they had no strong opinions on Trump, and a few said that they do not closely follow the news. The exact racial makeup of the jury, and the ages of the jurors, is unclear.

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She was fired after not endorsing Splenda-filled salads to people with diabetes. Why? | Neil Barsky

Elizabeth Hanna says she was fired by the American Diabetes Association after refusing to approve recipes heaped with the additive made by a major donor

Elizabeth Hanna had a simple job: help people with diabetes figure out what to eat. Anyone with common sense knows this should probably not entail foods that might increase peopleas risk of getting diabetes. But thatas not necessarily the thinking at the American Diabetes Association (ADA), the worldas leading diabetes research and patient advocacy group, which also receives millions of dollars from sponsors in the pharmaceutical, food and agricultural industries.

According to a lawsuit Hanna recently filed against the ADA, the organization a which endorses recipes and food plans on its website and on the websites of apartnera food brands a tried to get her to greenlight recipes that she believed flew in the face of the ADAas mission. These included recipes like a acucumber and onion salada made with a third of a cup of Splenda granulated artificial sweetener, aautumnal sheet-pan veggiesa with a quarter cup of Splenda monk fruit sweetener and a acranberry almond spinach salada with a quarter cup of Splenda monkfruit sweetener.

Neil Barsky, a former Wall Street Journal reporter and investment manager, is the founder of The Marshall Project

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Blueberries and bell peppers: six fruits and vegetables with the most pesticide risk

From green beans to kale, here are some foods considered to be healthy yet which test poorly for pesticides

Pesticides pose a serious risk in conventionally grown versions of the produce shown below, according to a new analysis by Consumer Reports. Hereas why these fruits and vegetables are so problematic, plus how to safely fit them into your diet or make smart substitutions.

Read more from this pesticide investigation:

We found unhealthy pesticide levels in 20% of US produce a hereas what you need to know

Can you wash pesticides off your food? A guide to eating fewer toxic chemicals

Kale, watermelon and even some organic foods pose high pesticide risk, analysis finds

Whatas safe to eat? Here is the pesticide risk level for each fruit and vegetable

This story was amended on 18 April 2024 to correct the name of the illustrator, whose name is Israel Vargas.

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Taylor Swift: The Tortured Poets Department review a fame, fans and former flames in the line of fire

(Republic)
Subtly detailed album splits the difference between 1989as glossy pop-rock and Midnightsa understatement a and lets her ex Matty Healy have it in no uncertain terms

The two cliches used to describe the new release by a major star are that itas long-awaited and eagerly anticipated. You could hardly describe Taylor Swiftas 11th studio album as long-awaited a itas barely 18 months since her last album, Midnights, a blink of an eye in the release schedule of a pop superstar. Sheas also put out another three hours of music in the interim, in the shape of bonus track-packed re-recordings of 2010as Speak Now and 2014as 1989. But The Tortured Poets Department is certainly eagerly anticipated. The torrential nature of Swiftas output is one reason behind her current position as not just popas biggest star, but a figure who dominates pop culture to such a preposterous degree you struggle for a historical comparison: we live in a world where her endorsement of a candidate is considered a potentially deciding factor in the US presidential elections and where the prime minister of Singapore is embroiled in a row with his Thai counterpart over exclusivity rights to the south-east Asian leg of Swiftas Eras tour.

Among the countless other factors in her rise to omnipresence a her keen understanding of todayas altered media landscape and a desire for collective experience in a music world obsessed with individualised experiences a is, of course, her music, which can dim in comparison to the media noise. Thatas a shame, because, as The Tortured Poets Department underlines, Swift is an authentically skilled songwriter: melodically gifted, thoughtful, witty and willing to take risks in a risk-averse era for pop.

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Premier League and FA Cup semis: 10 things to look out for this weekend

Two big Wembley meetings await in the Cup, while a desperation derby looks to be in store at Goodison Park

There was a distinct end-of-season vibe at the Gtech Community Stadium following Brentfordas recent win over Sheffield United, with Thomas Frank and his players performing what amounted to a lap of honour as they took plaudits from fans relieved that the spectre of relegation had finally been banished from their small corner of west London. Of course only time will tell if the Bees become the first Premier League team to decamp to the metaphorical beach this season and this weekendas match against Luton at Kenilworth Road will provide a fair indication. Ravaged by injury with up to 11 players likely to be unavailable, Luton were on a hiding to nothing in their game against Manchester City but still emerged from the rout with their heads held high having restricted the champions to a one-goal lead until their capitulation after the hour mark. It is increasingly difficult to compliment Rob Edwardsa side without sounding condescending, but if it transpires that the Brentford side that turns up in Bedfordshire has mentally tapped out, the Premier Leagueas most dashing manager, his players and their fans are unlikely to have any complaints whatsoever. Barry Glendenning

Luton v Brentford, Premier League, Saturday 3pm (all times BST)

Sheffield United v Burnley, Premier League, Saturday 3pm

Manchester City v Chelsea, FA Cup semi-final, Saturday 5.15pm

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Abigail review a Draculaas daughter gets kidnapped in fun-sucking horror

Thereas some low-stakes pleasure to be had in the first half of the gory new film from the team behind Ready or Not and Scream but things fall apart disastrously

Last yearas handsome gothic horror The Last Voyage of the Demeter and bombastic Nic Cage comedy Renfield allowed Universal the opportunity to present known IP as something fresh, at least on the surface, stories involving Dracula but told in ways we hadnat seen before. They represented a nifty marketing strategy for a back catalogue of classic monster movies but both worked better as loglines than finished films a Dracula on a boat, Dracula as a bad boss a and audiences proved as uninterested as critics, the stench of old property distracting from the promise of something new.

As the studio preps a new take on The Wolf Man with next yearas Christopher Abbott-led Wolfman and Robert Eggersa remake of the Dracula-inspired Nosferatu, here comes Abigail, a poppy reimagining of the little-remembered 1936 horror Draculaas Daughter. In the contemporary take, sheas a ballerina (Matildaas Alisha Weir) who gets kidnapped by a group of unaware criminals, hired to keep her locked in a grand old house for 24 hours while ransom money is obtained. But early on, recovering addict and single mother Joey (Melissa Barrera) figures out that something is up and starts to realise that the scared little girl in their care might not be so scared after all.

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Do you have an aemotionally immature parenta? How a nine-year-old book found a new, younger audience

Therapist Lindsay Gibsonas 2015 book has sold over a million copies and its message has soared on social media. What does it mean?

In an ideal world, adults would be more mature than their kids. They would be better at handling stress, resolving conflicts with others, or talking about their feelings. In the opening chapter of the book Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents, therapist Lindsay Gibson presents an unsettling alternative.

aWhat if,a she wrote, asome sensitive children come into the world and within a few years are more emotionally mature than their parents, who have been around for decades?a

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Kimmel hits back at Trump: aThe only person still talking about this joke is hima

Late-night hosts discuss Donald Trumpas day off from court and his Truth Social rant about Jimmy Kimmelas performance at the Oscars five weeks ago

Late-night hosts talked Donald Trumpas Truth Social rant about Jimmy Kimmel and his day off from the criminal hush-money trial in New York.

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Shock of the old: 11 transport fantasies that never got off the ground a from jetpacks to swan-powered paragliders

From Leonardo da Vinci to the engineers of Bell Aerosystems, some of our finest minds have devoted themselves to finding a better form of travel. Still, anyone can have an off day a|

Thereas an innocent optimism to transport visionaries. They really thought they could change the world! They absolutely couldnat! But all respect to them for trying: someone got lucky with the wheel once, didnat they?

Being a transport visionary must have been more interesting back before technological progress and grotesque wealth allowed billionaires to adisrupta the boring A-to-B-ness of conventional travel and blast a car into space, just because. Imagine conceiving of human flight back when your only model was birds and some gossip about a guy called Icarus. Or looking at a horse and thinking: aHmmm, thatas fast, muscular and terrifying; I wonder if I could compel it to take me somewhere, somehow?a

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aIave used hairbrushes, spatulas, car keys, apples ...a Sheila E on drumming with Prince, Marvin Gaye, Michael Jackson and more

The Latin music legend a back, at 66, with her first salsa album a answers your questions on her star collaborations, screen chemistry, and what she and Stevie Wonder still canat agree on

When did you first know you were a drummer? axolotly
I still donat know if Iam a adrummera! Sometimes people mean percussion a like congas and timbales a and sometimes they mean drum set, which wasnat a thing for me until I played with George Duke in the mid-70s. My dad [Pete Escovedo, a well-known Mexican American jazz percussionist] played and practised at the house every day. Iad have heard him while I was in my motheras womb. I couldnat reach his percussion instruments so my mum would put the pots and pans on the floor and Iad bang along on those. I played with a local band when I was 15 and I learned a lot from Billy Cobham, and would play his drums for a minute, but sitting in with George Duke for one song was enough to start me playing drums.

Was there anything that stopped you progressing as a female musical artist and have these problems lessened today? Whovian79
Growing up in Oakland, California there were a lot of jam sessions in the streets and parks. A lot of young women would bring shakers, djembes and such. Once I knew I could play, Iad go to concerts and ask if I could sit in. Lots of times they said no so Iad go to the other side of the stage and get someone to say yes. Once I left home and started flying to Los Angeles to play with other artists I did experience male chauvinism a aYouare a girl. Girls donat play drumsa a until word of mouth was that Sheila Escovedo can play. Now there are more female drummers and percussionists all over the world. I message them on social media and just say: aHey, Iam a fan.a Thereas so many that I reach out to on a daily basis.

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aWhen I wear this shirt, I feel part of a tribea: how running club merch became a marker of cool

Casual running clubs that give members the chance to exercise and socialise are popping up all over the UK. And each one is developing a style of its own

At just before 9am on a bright April morning in Greenwich, south-east London, runners gather in the shadow of the Cutty Sark. There are just a few at first, then more and more until the group numbers around 40. Itas a little awkward (for a first-timer like me, at least) as we shiver and make small talk. But soon we coalesce to form a big circle and run through a warm-up before doing a gentle 5km around Blackheath a weall be installed in a local cafe by 10am.

A version of this scene can be found up and down the country every weekend. Running seems to be more popular than ever a almost 580,000 people applied for this weekendas London Marathon, an increase of 120,000 on the year before a but recently there has been a boom in casual, community-focused running clubs that organise regular turn-up-and-run events for people looking to supplement their training, meet new friends, or simply get out of the house.

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Anti-woke Republicans attacked Columbia University. It capitulated | Alisa Solomon, Marianne Hirsch, Sarah Haley and Helen Benedict

In a congressional hearing, Republicans used specious charges of rampant antisemitism to advance an illiberal agenda on campuses

As Jewish faculty at Columbia University, we watched with alarm as our president, Minouche Shafik, appeared before the House education and workforce committee on Wednesday to answer questions about antisemitism on our campus. While we are deeply concerned about antisemitism, we are also disturbed by the ways the hearing a like those in December, and surely those to follow a used specious charges of rampant antisemitism to advance an illiberal agenda.

We were shocked that President Shafik capitulated to its mendacious premises and failed to stand up for fundamental academic principles of honest intellectual inquiry and free expression. Most galling was the absence of any acknowledgment of the relentless devastation in Gaza: the urgent reason for the student protests that the committee caricatures and condemns as antisemitic.

Alisa Solomon is a writer, professor of journalism, and the director of the arts and culture concentration at the Columbia Journalism School. Marianne Hirsch is the William Peterfield Trent professor of English and comparative literature at Columbia University and professor in the Institute for Research on Women, Gender, and Sexuality. Sarah Haley is associate professor of history at Columbia University. Helen Benedict is a novelist and professor at Columbia Journalism School.

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The Guardian view on the catastrophe in Gaza: it must not be overshadowed by the Iran crisis | Editorial

Hopes of a ceasefire have ebbed, concerns about an assault on Rafah endure, and aid remains wholly insufficient

The Middle East is aon the precipicea and aone miscalculation, one miscommunication, one mistake, could lead to the unthinkable,a the UN secretary-general, AntA3nio Guterres, warned on Thursday. Israel has vowed to retaliate to Iranas weekend barrage of missiles and drones a itself a response to Israelas killing of two generals at an Iranian diplomatic facility in Damascus. It is hard to have confidence in eitheras ability to calibrate their actions when both have misjudged already.

Yet the spectre of full-scale regional conflict, and the many deaths that could result, must not draw attention away from the almost 34,000 Palestinians already killed in Gaza, according to its health authorities, and the many more who will soon die without an immediate ceasefire and massive increase in aid in what Mr Guterres called a ahumanitarian hellscapea.

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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NPR needs a serious critique not a politically charged parting shot | Margaret Sullivan

How Uri Berliner went about his complaint made it clear he was not interested in constructive criticism, but a viral moment

It took only days from Uri Berlineras publishing his fiery essay about his employer, NPR, to his suspension, to his resignation in a blaze of bad-faith glory.

aYou knew the martyrdom was coming,a was how journalist Issac Bailey put it.

Margaret Sullivan is a Guardian US columnist

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A life without my dogs seems imponderable. Yet we do keep going after losing the animals we adore | Paul Daley

My lifestyle is so attuned to that of my pets I sometimes feel our identities are fused

One of my dogs, Olive, turned five years old this week and, while every minute for her holds unfettered joy, love and promise, the birthday was burnished with a little melancholy for me.

Five!

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Itas sad that Hugh Grant v Rupert Murdoch wonat go to court, but good can come of it | Jane Martinson

The mogul has taken these hacking allegations out of the public arena. Use this moment to craft reforms that can be trusted

True crime dramas, in which nobody wins but the lawyers, are not the kind of films that made Hugh Grant famous. His starring role in the long-running legal action against the Sun newspaper for phone hacking instead proves that real life is far more flawed and frustrating than film.

After more than a decade of leading a campaign against what he called the aworst excesses of the oligarch-owned pressa, Grant settled with Rupert Murdoch when offered such an aenormousa sum of money that to proceed would have seen him liable for even bigger costs.

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You don't 'hike' Fiery Furnace, Utah's exclusive maze of slot canyons. You get lost in it

In Fiery Furnace, a maze of red rock, slot canyons, towering arches and giant spires inside Arches National Park, not even GPS will save you. And that's the fun of it.


Will Disneyland get an Avatar land? It's likely. Here's what else may be in store

With the approval of DisneylandForward, new attractions and adventures will be coming to Disneyland. Here's what's been teased by Disney officials so far.


Classic film lovers: See James Dean's apartment and more on new TCM tour at Warner Bros.

Warner Bros. is now offering a Turner Classic Movies behind-the-scenes tour that will bring guests to previous off-limit areas of the lot.


This iconic wildflower spot can be dazzling. Is it worth the trek from L.A. this year?

The Carrizo Plain nature preserve is one of California's most iconic wildflower viewing areas. But this year, if you're looking for blankets of bright color covering the hills, prepare for a different experience.


How to have the best Sunday in L.A., according to Tia Mowry

For the "Sister, Sister" star and cookbook author, an ideal Sunday involves hanging out with her kids, grocery shopping at Erewhon, exercising at Equinox and eating pasta.


Disneyland touts a lifetime ban for disability cheats. That's not what's worrying some park-goers

Disney 'reset' elements of its Disability Access Service program, or DAS, that has become Orlando's and Anaheim's most popular service, a spokesperson said.


This L.A. escape room explores corporate greed a and shows how corruptible you really are

The Ladder from Hatch Escapes has become one of the most buzzed-about escape rooms in the country, redefining how puzzles can tell stories.


The unmissable addition to Disneyland's Star Tours ride? Space whales

Star Tours has become one of Disneyland's most versatile attractions, and its latest update nods to series such as 'The Mandalorian,' 'Ahsoka' and 'Andor.'


Hoping to see a superbloom this spring? Look no further than Los Angeles International Airport

A superbloom has showed up in an unlikely location: Los Angeles International Airport. But wildflowers have sprung up there in the past.


An old rail track in Northern California could become a 300-mile hiking trail

An abandoned train track could be transformed into a 307-mile hiking, cycling and horseback pathway through California's remote North Coast, along the Eel River and towns such as Fortuna.


Want to see Disneyland's most advanced animatronics? Visit Tiana's Bayou Adventure

With new droids at Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge and some of the most lifelike characters ever created at Tiana's Bayou Adventure, Disney is looking to wow guests.


How to watch the solar eclipse from California a and avoid heartbreak if chasing 'totality'

Though there won't be totality in California, the state will still enjoy an impressive partial eclipse in the late morning a if the skies remain cloud-free.


How to have the best Sunday in L.A., according to Cheech Marin

Bowls of soup, bowls of herb, stacks of newspapers and a salon of sorts with wife Natasha add up to the perfect Sunday for the comedian, actor and prolific art collector.


They escaped a world of fast fashion to teach L.A. how to give old clothes new life

Other Lives Studio calls itself a 'redesign atelier,' elevating old clothes to look like couture, at a minimal cost to the wearer and the environment.


3:30 a.m. alarms, coffee and a quest to find the greatest sunrise spots in Joshua Tree

With a routine of 3:30 a.m. alarms, pots of coffee and backpacks full of snacks, our family set out each day with hope, unsure of what the sky would bring.


Dine at a table that moves you from room to room? A look at the future of theme parks

Here are 5 takeaways from the Themed Entertainment Assn.'s annual gathering in Hollywood.


What became of Marlon Brando's ecological wonderland on the sea? I visited to find out

During the last years of his life, Marlon Brando told me what his Tahitian atoll Tetiaroa meant to him, and what he wanted it to become after he died. In honor of his 100th birthday, I'm sharing his words with you.


Too much poop, trash and trampling of habitats shuts down Big Sur's only free camping site

Overuse and abuse by visitors lead Coastal Commission to ban campers from San Carpoforo Beach, the only free camping site in Big Sur, for two years.


The challenge: Trek from Carson City to Canada. You could make $5,000

People will soon be able to trek from the Carson City through the mountains to the Pacific Crest Trail before completing the 1,600-mile journey to Canada.


This popular SoCal hiking spot is bursting with wildflowers a and bighorn sheep

In his road trip report, Times photographer Raul Roa describes the moment he noticed the holy grail of Anza Borrego wildlife.


He built a mini-Disneyland in his backyard a and you can walk through it this spring

Fans can't get enough of Castle Peak and Thunder Railroad in Anaheim Hills, David Sheegog's miniature love letter to Disneyland and Disney animation.


Some travelers will be able to screen themselves at security at Las Vegas airport. Here's how it works

TSA is unveiling a self-service security screening system at the Harry Reid International Airport in Las Vegas.


Riding this train through California's snowy mountains rules right now

For Californians, crossing the fabled Donner Pass and descending to Lake Tahoe is one of those essential rites of passage. But forget doing it in a car.


California libraries may lose free passes to state parks as budget deficit mounts

A program that allowed Californians to check out free passes to state parks at their local library is in jeopardy as the state contends with a budget deficit.


This treehouse hotel sits in an otherworldly forest. Here's how to book a reservation

In a forest fit for hobbits, get to the gate, punch in the secret code and enter a realm where it's perfectly normal to sleep in a tree.


How to have the best Sunday in L.A., according to Jay Shetty and Radhi Devlukia

A perfect Sunday for Jay Shetty and his wife, Radhi Devlukia, involves meditation, hiking, hitting the farmers market and cooking dinner at home.


A slime museum is coming to L.A. a and it's bringing the healing power of play

The Sloomoo Institute is a playful palace dedicated to all things slime, where guests can toss it, mold it, walk on it, get drenched by it and even experience the ASMR benefits of it.


Will Taylor Swift be able to park a private jet for Super Bowl? Vegas airports are full

The FAA is regulating the number of private jets that can park at Las Vegas area airports during Super Bowl weekend. Did Taylor Swift make plans in advance?


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