
First Thing: Iran and Israel trade more attacks as Trump leaves G7 summit early
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.
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.
This is a developing story. Follow our live updates here.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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?
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.
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.
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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Reuters
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39 minutes ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Channel crisis ‘deteriorating', No 10 admits as French use tear gas on migrants
Hundreds gathered on the dunes before making dashes towards the Channel at Gravelines beach near Calais, all intent on boarding a single dinghy on Tuesday morning. The French authorities stood by and watched as those not deterred by the gas waded into the water intent on boarding a single dinghy to risk the Channel crossing. The scenes at Gravelines unfolded just hours after a meeting between Sir Keir Starmer and Emmanuel Macron in Canada to address a situation No 10 acknowledged was 'deteriorating'. Some 16,545 people have crossed in small boats so far in 2025 according to Home Office figures, a 45% increase on the same period in 2024. At Gravelines on Tuesday, migrants of all ages who made it to the sea had to wait in waist-deep water for almost an hour before any of them were able to board the small boat. An older man on crutches had to be carried out of the water by two others, who then ran off to re-join the crowd. Many others did not make it to the water, raising their arms in surrender under a thick blanket of tear gas fired by the French Police Nationale. Officers were trudging the sands at Gravelines beach before the sun had risen on Tuesday morning, armed with riot shields, tear gas and batons. Pictures taken by the PA news agency show a cloud of smoke as migrants ran from the dunes. A warning cry of 'baby, baby' was heard as a man carrying a tiny child sprinted out of the smog. Those who made it to the water bunched into three groups and waited for the dinghy to collect them, watched by the French police from the shoreline. While they waited, an Afghani migrant who wished to remain anonymous told PA that he was seeking a better life in the UK. 'Just I want to go for a good life, I have a situation bad in my country,' he said. Well over 50 migrants made it aboard the small black dinghy before it finally took off into the Channel. Others were left to watch as it floated out to sea. Pictures from the morning show a woman sitting dejected on the sand after chasing the dinghy as it left the beach. She and her friends, thought to be Ethiopian, complained that it was mostly men who had managed to get on the boat that morning. They had been hit by tear gas when the migrants were making their initial sprint to the water. The dinghy, which had originally come to shore around 7am local time (6am BST), headed out to sea at 9.30am. The boat appeared to be overloaded and witnesses saw it was eventually brought back to shore at around 11am local time. The police present on Gravelines beach would not confirm whether the use of tear gas had now become common practice during these clashes. A beach comber who has begun to document crossings was watching events unfold on Tuesday. The 28-year-old said of French police: 'I think they show them that they tried to stop them but they're happy if a few hundred or thousand are away because the camps are more empty.' The Prime Minister and Mr Macron will hold a summit in July focused on tackling the migration problem, No 10 said after a meeting between the pair in the margins of the G7 in Canada. 'Migration should be a key focus given the deteriorating situation in the Channel, they confirmed – adding that they should continue to work closely with other partners to find innovative ways to drive forward progress,' an official readout of the meeting said. Downing Street acknowledged there were 'no quick fixes', but insisted action was already being taken and 'the days of Britain being a soft touch for these gangs are over'. That includes measures aimed at getting the French authorities to intervene even if migrants are already in the sea. Asked if the Government approved of the use of tear gas, the spokesman said: 'Our work with the French has never been closer. 'We are the first government to have secured agreement from the French to review their laws so their border enforcement teams can intervene in shallow waters.' Shadow home secretary Chris Philp said: 'Starmer is right, under his watch the Channel crisis is spiralling out of control.' He said 2025 was the worst year on record but Labour's answer was 'to ask the British taxpayer to foot the bill for their accommodation or to pay half a billion pounds for the French to wave the boats off and do next to nothing to prevent Channel crossings'. He added: 'The gangs are laughing, the boats keep coming, and Labour's response is to form another taskforce and hold a summit. It's weak and it's embarrassing.'