UK police studying Glastonbury performances after anti-Israel chants
UK police studying Glastonbury performances after anti-Israel chants/node/2606242/world
UK police studying Glastonbury performances after anti-Israel chants
Irish rap band Kneecap perform at the West Holts stage on the fourth day of the Glastonbury festival at Worthy Farm in England. (AFP)
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Updated 29 June 2025
Reuters
UK police studying Glastonbury performances after anti-Israel chants
Irish hip hop group Kneecap and punk duo Bob Vylan made anti Israeli chants in separate shows on the West Holts stage
Prime Minister Keir Starmer said earlier this month it was “not appropriate” for Kneecap to appear at Glastonbury
Updated 29 June 2025
Reuters
GLASTONBURY: British police said they were considering whether to launch an investigation after performers at Glastonbury Festival made anti-Israel comments during their shows.
“We are aware of the comments made by acts on the West Holts Stage at Glastonbury Festival this afternoon,” Avon and Somerset Police, in western England, said on X late on Saturday.
Irish hip-hop group Kneecap and punk duo Bob Vylan made anti-Israeli chants in separate shows on the West Holts stage on Saturday. One of the members of Bob Vylan chanted “Death, death, to the IDF” in a reference to the Israel Defense Forces.
“Video evidence will be assessed by officers to determine whether any offenses may have been committed that would require a criminal investigation,” the police statement said.
The Israeli Embassy in Britain said it was “deeply disturbed by the inflammatory and hateful rhetoric expressed on stage at the Glastonbury Festival.”
Prime Minister Keir Starmer said earlier this month it was “not appropriate” for Kneecap to appear at Glastonbury.
The band’s frontman Liam Og O hAnnaidh was charged with a terrorism offense last month for allegedly displaying a flag in support of Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah at a concert in November. He has denied the charge.
A British government minister said it was appalling that the anti-Israel chants had been made at Glastonbury, and that the festival’s organizers and the BBC broadcaster — which is showing the event — had questions to answer.
Health Secretary Wes Streeting said he was also appalled by violence committed by Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank.
“I’d also say to the Israeli Embassy, get your own house in order in terms of the conduct of your own citizens and the settlers in the West Bank,” Streeting told Sky News.
“I wish they’d take the violence of their own citizens toward Palestinians more seriously,” he said.
Lab-grown diamonds robbing southern Africa of riches
Botswana, which is 70 percent desert, was lifted from poverty by the discovery of diamonds in the 1960s
But the average price of natural diamond is now falling as consumers turn to cheaper diamonds created in China and India
Updated 8 sec ago
AFP
JOHANNESBURG: Botswana and southern African peers that built much of their prosperity on diamonds are scrambling for alternatives as cheaper, lab-grown stones threaten their economies.
Diamond-dependent Botswana is leading the way and launched a sovereign wealth fund this week to lay the “foundation for a more resilient, sustainable and diversified future beyond diamonds.”
It is exploring other avenues too, like boosting luxury wildlife tourism, launching into the medicinal cannabis market and exploiting its abundant sunshine for solar power.
President Duma Boko has even mooted taking a majority stake in industry giant De Beers and selling Botswana’s diamonds independently.
“Countries such as Angola, Namibia and South Africa are all exposed but not to the same degree as Botswana,” economist Brendon Verster at the Oxford Economics Africa think tank told AFP.
A picture taken at De Beers office on October 3, 2016 in Gaborone shows diamonds from Botswana diamonds mines. (AFP)
The stones are the country’s main source of income and account for about 30 percent of its gross domestic product (GDP) and 80 percent of its exports, according to the International Monetary Fund.
But, as consumers turn to cheaper diamonds created in China and India, the average price of a one-carat natural diamond is falling.
The price dropped from a peak of $6,819 in May 2022 to $4,997 by December 2024, according to the World Diamond Council.
Botswana, which is 70 percent desert, was lifted from poverty by the discovery of diamonds in the 1960s. It is already feeling the effects of the lab-grown competition.
‘Risks of economic collapse’
As its foreign reserves deplete, the government has turned to debt to fill the public coffers.
Government funds ran so low that the health system teetered on the verge of collapse in August, leading Boko to declare a state of emergency.
“If left unaddressed, there is a real risk of the situation becoming not just an economic challenge but a social time bomb,” he said in July.
Highlighting the fears, global ratings agency S&P on Friday dropped its long-term ratings on Botswana one notch to “BBB” and declared a negative outlook, citing the rapid expansion of the lab-diamond market.
Employees of the Blue Star diamond company cut and polish diamonds in Gaborone office in Botswana on October 4, 2016. (AFP)
Synthetic stones had captured “approximately 20 percent of the global market by value and up to 50 percent by volume in the US engagement ring segment in 2025,” it said in a statement.
Diversification is “essentially now or never,” Verster said.
“We don’t really see anything that would cause a monumental shift back in favor of natural diamonds to curb the rising popularity of synthetic diamonds.”
Also suffering is tiny Lesotho, where diamonds contribute up to 10 percent of its $2 billion GDP and the larger, vital textile market has been hit by US tariffs.
This month its biggest diamond mine, Letseng, said it would lay off a fifth of its workforce, citing “sustained pricing pressure” and “softer demand in key markets.”
The mine closures “could heighten risks of economic collapse,” independent economic analyst Thabo Qhesi told AFP, stressing an urgent need to explore other options, such as rare-earth resources.
The ‘real thing’
In a bid to keep the sparkle alive, Angola, Botswana, Namibia, South Africa and the Democratic Republic of Congo pledged in June to allocate one percent of their annual diamond revenues to marketing natural diamonds.
The campaign would need to reframe their value as a coveted “luxury product,” former Bank of Botswana deputy governor Keith Jefferis told AFP.
“We see a significant opportunity to engage consumers in the story of responsibly sourced diamonds from Botswana,” De Beers, also taking part, told AFP.
A clerk grades diamonds from Botswana diamonds mines at De Beers office on October 3, 2016 in Gaborone, Botswana. (AFP)
The South Africa-British firm is meanwhile exploring the potential of synthetic diamonds in high-tech fields like quantum networks and semiconductors, as prices fall below $100 per carat.
For Botswanan ministry of minerals official Jacob Thamage, natural and lab-made diamonds “offer different value propositions to different consumers and therefore can and will coexist.”
In an upscale Johannesburg mall, behind fortified steel gates, a natural yellow diamond priced at over $50,000 stood as a symbol of exclusivity.
Just steps away, a lab-grown diamond valued at $115 was unguarded.
“We each have our target,” one jeweller said. “So long as everyone is happy.”
Australia faces cascading climate risks, government report says
Updated 40 min 45 sec ago
Reuters
CANBERRA/SYDNEY: Australia will suffer extreme climate events more frequently — and often simultaneously — putting severe strains on health and emergency services, critical infrastructure and primary industries, a government climate report said on Monday.
No Australian community will be immune from climate risks that will be cascading, compounding and concurrent, the National Climate Risk Assessment report said, with the government warning natural ecosystems and biodiversity will face major challenges.
“While we can no longer avoid climate impacts, every action we take today toward our goal of net zero by 2050 will help avoid the worst impacts on Australian communities and businesses,” Energy Minister Chris Bowen said in a statement.
The report, the first comprehensive assessment of risks posed by climate change across Australia, shows the northern parts of the country, remote communities and outer suburbs of major cities will be particularly susceptible, Bowen said.
“Australians are already living with the consequences of climate change today but it’s clear every degree of warming we prevent now will help future generations avoid the worst impacts in years to come,” Bowen said.
A national adaptation plan was also released by Bowen, which he said would guide Australia’s response to the report’s findings. It would set out a framework for federal, state and local governments to better coordinate action, he added.
Bowen said the government would announce soon the next step in its plans to lower carbon emissions and set “an ambitious and achievable 2035 target.”
Since elected in 2022, the center-left Labor government has directed A$3.6 billion ($2.39 billion) into climate adaptation programs as it aims to cut carbon emissions by 43 percent by 2030 and reach net-zero emissions by 2050.
The previous conservative government was considered by clean energy advocates as a global laggard for its emissions policies.
What is ‘involution’, China’s race-to-the-bottom competition trend?
Beijing is facing decisions to take action against overcapacity, excessive competition and brutal price wars because deflationary pressures have been mounting in the world’s second-largest economy
The fight against deflation is a complicated one that poses risks to employment and growth. It comes as an unresolved trade spat with the US intensifies the squeeze on factory profits
Updated 59 min 47 sec ago
Reuters
SHANGHAI: China’s leaders have pledged to put an end to aggressive price cuts by some Chinese companies which regulators say are spurring excessive competition that is damaging the economy.
The so-called “anti-involution” campaign has been sparked by overcapacity among Chinese manufacturers — a legacy of past government efforts to stimulate the economy — and price cuts made to clear stock or spur consumption. Those cuts have prompted price wars across various sectors that are raising concerns deflation may become entrenched and hinder efforts to stabilize China’s $19 trillion economy. What is involution?
The Chinese term for involution, “neijuan,” began trending online in 2020 and was initially used by young people to describe the hypercompetitive and often self-defeating pursuit of traditional markers of success.
Some of the contexts they used it in included questioning what was the point of working hard to get into a good school if the reward was working 996 hours (9 a.m. to 9 p.m., six days per week) in a tech company? If you were lucky enough to land a job, that is, in an era of high graduate unemployment.
Though the term is far less commonly used in English, involution comes from a latin term which means “to roll or turn inwards.” It was popularized by American cultural anthropologist Clifford Geertz in the 1960s — in relation to his studies of Javanese agriculture — to describe economic or cultural stagnation despite increasing complexity or effort.
More recently, neijuan has become shorthand in China for the exhausting but also often futile and sometimes self-destructive grind of hyper-competition more broadly.
The concept is now also linked to the country’s pivot from property-driven growth to an industrial complex encompassing a third of global manufacturing, which has seen more resources invested without any accompanying increase in returns. It’s a race to the bottom.
Why is competition a bad thing?
On social media in China there is an oft-repeated joke that goes something like this: In other countries, governments intervene to prevent anti-competitive behavior; here (in China), they intervene to curb competition.
The issue is that the level of competition has reached a point where the returns are not only diminishing, they are threatening economic stability.
Beijing is facing decisions to take action against overcapacity, excessive competition and brutal price wars because deflationary pressures have been mounting in the world’s second-largest economy.
Consumer behavior is changing in ways that could lead to further downward pressure on prices, economists say, raising concerns that deflation could become entrenched, and posing more headaches for China’s policymakers.
The fight against deflation is a complicated one that poses risks to employment and growth. It comes as an unresolved trade spat with the US intensifies the squeeze on factory profits.
Beijing sees employment as key to social stability. Exporters and even the state sector are already shedding jobs and cutting wages, while youth unemployment runs at 17.8 percent.
Which industries are most exposed?
Excessive competition has led to shrinking corporate profit margins across multiple sectors, including electric vehicles (EVs), solar panels, lithium batteries, steel, cement and food delivery.
In the EV sector, a brutal price war erupted in the world’s largest auto market in 2023 between dozens of brands including BYD and Tesla. In May, Chinese regulators ordered the sector to stop its incessant price cuts.
According to data from LSEG covering 33 listed automakers headquartered in China, the sector’s median net profit margin fell to just 0.83 percent in 2024 from 2.7 percent in 2019.
China’s solar industry has also been in the cross-hairs of the anti-involution drive as massive levels of overcapacity and price wars have led to losses in the photovoltaic manufacturing value chain reaching $40 billion last year, according to Trina Solar Chairman Gao Jifan.
Even though restructuring to cut oversupply has begun, there is a long way to go before China’s solar output matches demand. Analysts estimated that China’s 2024 wafer, cell and module capacity alone is sufficient to meet annual global demand through to 2032.
Some industries remain embroiled in the policy change.
In the food delivery sector, tech giants Alibaba, JD.com and Meituan have poured billions of dollars into a subsidy-driven battle for “instant retail” market share in an expensive bet that the fast-growing one-hour delivery segment will be vital to the future of China’s e-commerce market as a whole.
Analysts at Nomura estimate industry-wide cash burn exceeded $4 billion in the second quarter alone, investment expected to further depress their short- to medium-term profits.
Trump says he is willing to impose sanctions on Russia
"Europe is buying oil from Russia. I don't want them to buy oil," Trump told reporters on Sunday
Updated 15 September 2025
Reuters
WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump said on Sunday he is willing to impose sanctions on Russia but Europe has to act in a way that is commensurate with the United States.
"Europe is buying oil from Russia. I don't want them to buy oil," Trump told reporters on Sunday. "And the sanctions ... that they're putting on are not tough enough, and I'm willing to do sanctions, but they're going to have to toughen up their sanctions commensurate with what I'm doing."
Britain and US to sign nuclear power pact during Trump’s visit
Among the other investments expected to be announced is a deal for UK-based Urenco to supply an advanced type of low-enriched uranium to the US market
Updated 15 September 2025
Reuters
LONDON: Britain and the United States will sign a deal to work together on boosting nuclear power during US President Donald Trump’s state visit this week, the British government said, helping secure investment to fund new plants.
Britain’s government has launched a major push to expand nuclear power in recent months, pledging to invest 14 billion pounds ($19 billion) in a new plant at Sizewell C and advancing plans for a Rolls-Royce unit to build the country’s first small modular reactors (SMR).
Trump arrives in Britain for a two-day visit on Tuesday, during which he and Prime Minister Keir Starmer will announce the nuclear power tie-up. The collaboration aims to speed up new projects and investments, including plans expected to be announced by US nuclear reactor company X-Energy and Britain’s Centrica to build up to 12 advanced modular reactors in northeast England.
An 11 billion pound ($15 billion) project to develop advanced data centers powered by SMRs in central England at the former Cottam coal-fired power station set to be announced by US company Holtec International, France’s EDF and real estate partner Tritax, is also on the cards, the statement added.
“These major commitments set us well on course to a golden age of nuclear that will drive down household bills in the long run,” Starmer said on Monday.
Trump and Starmer discussed working more closely together on SMRs when they met at the US president’s golf resort in Scotland in July.
“Today’s commercial deals set up a framework to unleash commercial access in both the US and UK,” US Energy Secretary Chris Wright said in the statement.
The new tie-up will cover nuclear regulation, meaning if a reactor passes safety checks in one country, the other can use the findings to support its own checks, cutting licensing time to two years from three to four years at present.
Commenting on its new partnership deal with X-Energy, Centrica’s Group CEO Chris O’Shea said it would build a resilient, affordable, low-carbon energy system, while X-Energy’s CEO J. Clay Sell said Hartlepool was the right place for it to scale its technology in Britain given its experienced workforce and local services.
Holtec chair and CEO Kris Singh said its plan with EDF would create thousands of local jobs while drawing on the lessons from its Palisades project in Michigan, while Simone Rossi, CEO of EDF in the UK, said the plan would benefit energy security.
In a related announcement, Rolls-Royce said it had entered the US regulatory process for its SMR, paving the way for potential new jobs and investment in the US
Among the other investments expected to be announced is a deal for UK-based Urenco to supply an advanced type of low-enriched uranium to the US market.