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First Thing: Iran and Israel trade more attacks as Trump leaves G7 summit early
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US president last night told residents of Tehran to ‘immediately evacuate’. Plus, MyPillow CEO ordered to pay $2.3m
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 Smoke rises from the building of Iran's state-run broadcaster after an Israeli strike in Tehran on Monday. Photograph: AP
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Jem Bartholomew
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Good morning.
Donald Trump dramatically left the G7 summit in Canada a day early to rush back to Washington, with the French president, Emmanuel Macron, claiming the US leader was considering the prospect of a ceasefire between Israel and Iran.
“There is indeed an offer to meet and exchange. An offer was made especially to get a ceasefire and to then kickstart broader discussions,” Macron told reporters at the G7. “We have to see now whether the sides will follow.”
Trump told reporters he had to leave early for “obvious reasons”, but later posted that his early exit had “nothing to do with” working on a ceasefire between Israel and Iran. Trump described his reasons as “much bigger than that” in a post on his Truth Social platform.
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What is the latest in the Israel-Iran conflict? Attacks continued on both sides. On Tuesday, the Israeli military claimed to have assassinated Ali Shadmani, who it identified as Iran’s wartime chief of staff, Reuters reported. On Monday, Trump told Iranians to “immediately evacuate” Tehran, not long after Israel told people to evacuate a large part of the city ahead of a bombing campaign. One airstrike hit the building of Iran’s state-run television while on air.
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This is a developing story. Follow our live updates here.
At least 51 Palestinians killed in Gaza waiting for food trucks, says health ministry
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 Palestinian casualties – who had been waiting to receive aid – were brought into Nasser hospital after an Israeli strike in Khan Younis, southern Gaza, 17 June. Photograph: Hatem Khaled/Reuters
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At least 51 Palestinians were killed in Gaza on Tuesday morning while waiting for UN and commercial trucks to enter the territory with desperately needed food, according to Gaza’s health ministry and a local hospital.
Palestinian witnesses said Israeli forces carried out an airstrike on a nearby home before opening fire toward the crowd in the southern city of Khan Younis on Tuesday morning. The military did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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Did this involve the new Israel- and US-supported aid delivery network? The killings did not appear to be related to the program, which was introduced last month and has been marred by controversy and violence.
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What is happening with that network? Israeli forces have repeatedly opened fire on crowds trying to reach food distribution points run by the US and Israel-backed aid group, local health officials say, with scores killed and hundreds wounded.
At least 14 die in Russian strikes on Kyiv in ‘one of most horrific attacks’ of Ukraine war
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Russia launched a sustained missile and drone attack on Kyiv in the early hours of Tuesday, killing at least 14 people and wounding 55 in what was one of the deadliest nights in the Ukrainian capital since the full-scale war began in spring 2022.
The toll seemed likely to rise as several sites across the capital were hit. At a nine-storey Soviet-era apartment block in the west of Kyiv, an apparent direct missile hit led to part of the building collapsing, leaving a gaping hole and a pile of rubble in the middle of the block.
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What damage have the attacks inflicted? Thirty apartments were destroyed in the strike, said the Kyiv mayor, Vitali Klitschko. “There could be people under the rubble, and we can’t exclude that the number of dead may rise,” he said.
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What’s the latest on peace-deal negotiations? US-led attempts to start a peace process have largely failed, with Russia ignoring Donald Trump’s demands to agree to a full ceasefire before talks begin. Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, had been due to meet Trump at the G7 summit in Canada on Tuesday.
In other news …
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 The actor Matthew Perry, 54, was found dead in October 2023. He had been using ketamine. Photograph: Willy Sanjuan/Invision/AP
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A doctor charged with giving Matthew Perry ketamine in the month leading up to the Friends star’s overdose death has agreed to plead guilty, authorities said Monday.
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The MyPillow CEO, Mike Lindell, has been ordered to pay $2.3m after being sued for defamation by a former employee of a voting machine company.
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The UK government has been accused of a “disjointed, inadequate and painfully slow” response to the Air India plane crash by the grieving family members of three deceased British citizens.
Stat of the day: The $9 congestion toll has transformed New York City streets – but can it survive Trump?
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 Public transit ridership has reached its highest level since the pandemic, and buses are moving up to 20% faster on routes through Manhattan. Composite: Rita Liu/The Guardian/Alamy
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From 5 January, drivers entering lower Manhattan began paying a $9 congestion toll, which it is hoped will raise $500m annually for infrastructure upgrades. The policy has produced impressive early results: buses are moving up to 20% faster, 70,000 fewer vehicles are entering the area each day, and noise complaints on busy streets dropped 70%. Donald Trump, however, has pushed to revoke its federal approval (granted in 2023 under Joe Biden). “CONGESTION PRICING IS DEAD,” he wrote back in February. “Manhattan, and all of New York, is SAVED. LONG LIVE THE KING!” The reports of its death may have been greatly exaggerated, but can congestion pricing survive the president?
Don’t miss this: Republican hawks vs Maga isolationists – the internal war that could decide Trump’s Iran response
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 Donald Trump left the G7 early, reportedly to deal with the conflict between Israel and Iran. Photograph: Suzanne Plunkett/EPA
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As Donald Trump considers a direct intervention in Israel’s conflict with Iran, another kind of war has broken out in Washington between conservative hawks, calling for immediate US strikes on uranium enrichment facilities, and Maga isolationists, who are demanding Trump stick to his campaign pledge not to involve the US in new overseas wars.
Climate check: Insects are dying – here are 25 easy and effective ways you can help protect them
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 Insect species are under huge pressure, and although many drivers of their decline are structural there are things we can do on an individual level to help. Photograph: Aleksei Antropov/Alamy
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Around the world, scientists are reporting catastrophic declines in insect numbers, even in nature reserves that are largely protected from humans. We are also beginning to see huge drops in the populations of other animals – such as birds – that depend on insects as food. Here are 25 small science-backed actions to help protect them.
Last Thing: ‘I didn’t sleep for 45 days’ – the people who raffle off their homes
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 Dunstan Low raffled off his six-bedroom manor house in the UK. Photograph: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian
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It’s an eccentric and work-intensive way to sell your house, but people are now raffling off even the most modest properties. Is it a good idea? One family, when asked if they’d do it again, said: “Never. Never in a million years.”
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What terrible truth were they trying to expose?
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Our new six-part investigative podcast series uncovers what happened to a journalist and an indigenous defender after disappearing in the Amazon.
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New episodes every Monday.
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Betsy Reed
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Editor, Guardian US
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I hope you appreciated this newsletter. Before you move on, I wanted to ask whether you could support the Guardian’s journalism as we face the unprecedented challenges of covering the second Trump administration.
As Trump himself observed: “The first term, everybody was fighting me. In this term, everybody wants to be my friend.”
He’s not entirely wrong. All around us, media organizations have begun to capitulate. First, two news outlets pulled election endorsements at the behest of their billionaire owners. Next, prominent reporters bent the knee at Mar-a-Lago. And then a major network – ABC News – rolled over in response to Trump’s legal challenges and agreed to a $16m million settlement in his favor.
The Guardian is clear: we have no interest in being Donald Trump’s – or any politician’s – friend. Our allegiance as independent journalists is not to those in power but to the public.
How are we able to stand firm in the face of intimidation and threats? As journalists say: follow the money. The Guardian has neither a self-interested billionaire owner nor profit-seeking corporate henchmen pressuring us to appease the rich and powerful. We are funded by our readers and owned by the Scott Trust – whose only financial obligation is to preserve our journalistic mission in perpetuity.
With the new administration boasting about its desire to punish journalists, and Trump and his allies already pursuing lawsuits against newspapers whose stories they don’t like, it has never been more urgent, or more perilous, to pursue fair, accurate reporting. Can you support the Guardian today?
We value whatever you can spare, but a recurring contribution makes the most impact, enabling greater investment in our most crucial, fearless journalism. As our thanks to you, we can offer you some great benefits. We’ve made it very quick to set up, so we hope you’ll consider it.
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However you choose to support us: thank you for helping protect the free press. Whatever happens in the coming months an | | | | | | | |