News, sport and opinion from the Guardian's UK edition
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Headlines
Monday 22 May 2023
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Ukraine armed forces says Russia carrying out airstrikes on ruined city
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Exclusive: research reveals 350 low-paid workers a day are raising complaints about errors in benefit top-ups
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52-year-old, in hospital for more than a year after bike accident, wants to be repatriated but is not listed as a resident in Sweden
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Ukraine’s leader knows he needs to win over nonaligned countries such as Brazil and India to increase the pressure on Russia
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‘Bakhmut is only in our hearts. There is nothing ... just ruins and dead Russians,’ says Ukraine’s president
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More than half of weapons exports were for repressive regimes such as Qatar and Saudi Arabia, as sales doubled last year
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Russian-imposed Donetsk leader Denis Pushilin says demining is being carried out in Bakhmut; Ukraine’s deputy defence minister insists Ukraine still had a small foothold inside the city
Spotlight
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Postnatal depression affects up to 15% of new mothers, but studies suggest almost as many fathers also show symptoms – and little is being done to help them
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The Ethiopian-born computer scientist lost her job after pointing out the inequalities built into AI
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After hearing some home truths from his wife on his 65th birthday, Scott Wright was determined to figure out ‘who the hell I was’. He ended up on a hallucinogenic retreat in Mexico
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Imagine the benefits of having a joined-up service at last. Combined with AI and genomic medicine, this is the future for our health service, says Labour leader Keir Starmer
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The party turns nasty and brutish when it fears for its future. The use of this term – with its clear links to antisemitism – is just the latest example, says author Samuel Earle
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Pep Guardiola’s team are dominant now but their success and the wealth that has driven it may be best left to posterity
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Club professional revels in ‘dream’ performance at Oak Hill which has earned him invites to the Charles Schwab Challenge and Canadian Open
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Once it was so polluted it caught fire several times - and was declared dead in 1969, but Toronto’s Don river is now roaring back to life
Can the Don River be resurrected ? -
Move to power Glenbrook steel plant with electricity from renewables rather than coal will reduce emissions by 1% – or the equivalent of taking 300,000 cars off the road
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Just 192 hectares of ‘natural colonisation’ have been established in England under woodland creation offer
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Wildlife and environment groups condemn plan promising renewable energy for 600,000 homes
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From the UK
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Kat Watkins, who requires a ventilator at night, said she is suffering from severe back pain after night at Travelodge in Hounslow
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Labour leader to say plan for reforming NHS will focus on ‘biggest killer of young lives in this country’
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Documentary questioned Indian prime minister’s leadership during 2002 Gujarat riots
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UK museum of the year award has shortlist of five showing ‘astonishing ambition and boundless creativity’
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Prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis’s party on 40% share against Syriza on 20
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Convicted sexual offender reportedly threatened to expose Gates’s relationship with Russian bridge player Mila Antonova
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Emilia-Romagna still on alert, with 36,000 people homeless after six months’ worth of rain fell in 36 hours
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‘Extradition in this case is a matter of life and death,’ campaigner tells National Press Club
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Actor says he wants to leave the show ‘respectfully’, given his character Mike Young bought a home on Ramsay Street in the show’s finale
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Sisters reunite after their mother’s death in Maryland. Plus: things get ugly in the penultimate episode of Succession. Here’s what to watch this evening
Suella Braverman Home secretary should go if she broke ministerial rules, says Starmer
Analysis A second reprieve for Braverman could be a tall order
Exclusive Braverman ‘tried to get out of final vote on small boats bill’