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| | | | First Thing: More Israeli hostages and Palestinians freed as ceasefire extended | | Hamas releases 11 hostages from Gaza in exchange for 33 Palestinians in Israeli jails as truce extended by two days. Plus, can we solve our addiction to consumerism? | | | Sahar Kalderon, 16, who was released from the Gaza Strip yesterday, is embraced by a loved one at Sourasky Medical Center in Tel Aviv, Israel. Photograph: Israeli Defense Forces/Reuters | | Nicola Slawson | | Good morning. Eleven more Israeli hostages have been freed from Gaza in return for dozens of Palestinians held in Israeli jails, as the two sides agreed to extend the ceasefire by two days. Hamas released the hostages – nine children and two women – late on Monday, with all of them from the Nir Oz kibbutz, according to officials from the community. A further release in return for Palestinian prisoners is scheduled to take place later on Tuesday. The Israeli hostages released on Monday evening included three with French citizenship, two with German citizenship and six Argentinian citizens. Their return to Israel after 51 days in captivity brought “a sigh of relief to our community, however we remain deeply concerned about our loved ones that are still held hostage,” Osnat Peri, a kibbutz official, said. Shortly afterwards, a release of a further 33 Palestinian prisoners – 30 children and three women – was confirmed by Israel’s prison authority. It was the last exchange under the initial ceasefire deal. How are the hostages? Itai Pessach, the head of the Safra children’s hospital said: “Seeing the hostages reunited with their families and the fact that they are recovering physically gives a sense of optimism, but given their difficult, complex stories of captivity, they will have a long way to go until they are [fully] healed.” What will happen after the extension ends? Aid agencies have voiced concern that the anticipated resumption of Israel’s attack on Hamas will lead to an even deeper humanitarian crisis among Palestinians. A particular concern is the impact on people in the crowded south of the Gaza Strip, where it is estimated by Israel and aid agencies that about 2 million people are now living. Georgia prosecutors oppose plea deals for Trump, Meadows and Giuliani | | | | Trump speaking at a rally. He has pleaded not guilty in the Georgia racketeering case Photograph: Artie Walker Jr./AP | | | Fulton county prosecutors do not intend to offer plea deals to Donald Trump and at least two high-level codefendants charged in connection with their efforts to overturn the 2020 election in Georgia, according to two people familiar with the matter, preferring instead to force them to trial. The individuals seen as ineligible include Trump, his former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows and his former lawyer Rudy Giuliani. Aside from those three, the Fulton county district attorney, Fani Willis, has opened plea talks or has left open the possibility of talks with the remaining codefendants in the hope that they ultimately decide to become cooperating witnesses against the former president, the people said. The previously unreported decision has not been communicated formally and could still change, for instance, if prosecutors shift strategy. But it signals who prosecutors consider their main targets, and how they want to wield the power of Georgia’s racketeering statute to their advantage. Former world leaders seek $25bn levy on oil states’ revenues to pay for climate damage | | | | A letter is being sent to the Cop28 president, Sultan Al Jaber (pictured), who is also the head of the UAE’s national oil company, and to the G20 presidency holder, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, the president of Brazil. Photograph: Kamran Jebreili/AP | | | The bumper revenues of oil-producing states should be subject to a $25bn levy to help pay for the impact of climate disasters on the world’s poorest and most vulnerable people, a group of former world leaders and prominent economists has said. Seventy international figures led by the former UK prime minister Gordon Brown signed a letter calling for the measure before the crucial Cop28 climate summit, which begins in Dubai on Thursday. The signatories include 25 former prime ministers or presidents. Such a levy would shave off only a fraction of the bonanza that oil-producing countries have made in recent years, and would help to fill a fund for the “loss and damage” to poor countries afflicted by the effects of the climate crisis. Brown told the Guardian: “The deadlock on climate finance has to be broken if Cop28 is to succeed. After more than a decade of broken promises, a $25bn oil and gas levy paid by the petrol states and proposed by the UAE as chair of Cop would kickstart finance for mitigation [reduction of greenhouse gas emissions] and adaptation in the global south.” Who signed the letter? Signatories include the former UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon; the former New Zealand prime minister Helen Clark; the former president of Malawi Joyce Banda, and the former president of Chile Michelle Bachelet, as well as scores of leading economists. In other news … | | | | The Silkyara tunnel that collapsed while being under construction in Uttarkashi, India. Photograph: Harish Tyagi/EPA | | | Indian rescuers have drilled through rocks and debris to reach 41 workers trapped for 17 days in a collapsed tunnel in the Himalayas, and plan to pull them out one by one to safety, officials said. The men have been stuck in the 3-mile (4.5km) tunnel in Uttarakhand state since it collapsed on 12 November. North Korea has claimed its recently launched satellite has sent back “detailed” images of the White House, the Pentagon and US nuclear aircraft carriers that have been viewed by the regime leader, Kim Jong-un. The existence of the images has not been independently verified. A southern California man has been sentenced to more than seven years in federal prison after he and his younger brother scammed more than 40 people out of $7m in investments. Their fraud targeted victims from the San Fernando Valley’s Orthodox Jewish Israeli community. Ron DeSantis’s chief elections fraud official collapsed after abruptly leaving a “contentious” meeting in the Florida governor’s office, then lay dead or dying for almost half an hour in the hallway outside until he was found, an investigation published yesterday has revealed. Support the Guardian this Giving Tuesday | | | | | | Powerful actors are toying with our planet, our democracy and our health. Fearless, independent journalism is essential for pushing back. The Guardian is not owned by a billionaire or shareholders – we depend on reader support to keep us independent and free. Support the Guardian this Giving Tuesday from as little as $1. Thank you. Stat of the day: Levels of toxic PCB chemicals found at 30 times ‘safe’ limits in stranded whales | | | | A dead beached fin whale in Cornwall. Scientists called the findings a ‘huge wake-up call’ for human health as well as that of marine mammals. Photograph: Alexander Turner/The Guardian | | | Nearly half of the whales and dolphins found in UK waters over the past five years contained harmful concentrations of toxic chemicals banned decades ago, an investigation has found. Among orcas stranded in the UK, levels of PCBs, a group of highly dangerous and persistent chemicals that do not degrade easily, were 30 times the concentration at which the animals would begin to suffer health impacts, researchers said. Scientists described the findings as a “huge wake-up call” that should ring alarm bells not only for the future of marine mammal health but for human health, too. Don’t miss this: Too much stuff – can we solve our addiction to consumerism? | | | | Living without things is impossible. And things can give us experiences of joy. Things connect us to each other, our pasts, our identities. Composite: Guardian Design/Getty Images | | | Mass consumption has brought numerous benefits: jobs and financial wealth, physical safety and security. New ways of connecting, talking and thinking. Easy travel to nearly anywhere in the world. Lights that keep the dark nights at bay. Music constantly available. But the costs have also been staggering. Economic inequality and wars over non-renewable resources have killed untold numbers. The steep increase in products in recent decades has accelerated pollutant emissions, deforestation and climate breakdown. Even if we accept the positives of mass consumption to date, we must acknowledge that the situation is unsustainable. And yet, we can’t seem to stop ourselves. Or this: The buddy boost – how ‘accountability partners’ make you healthy, happy and more successful | | | | Pace-setter … a running buddy can help you go from a jog round the park to a half marathon. Illustration: Gus Scott/The Guardian | | | The idea of a friend who helps you commit to your goals is growing in popularity. They can be used to help a person to get fitter or achieve career and personal goals, for example. Indeed, one US study found that you have a 65% chance of completing a goal if you tell someone else you’re committing to doing it. And if you have specific check-ins with a partner, your chance of success increases to 95%. The practice has its origins in Alcoholics Anonymous and related 12-step addiction support groups which have always utilised the positive power of having a designated “sponsor” to help members navigate the daily path to sobriety outside structured meetings. Last Thing: ‘It’s amazing’ – scientists analyse 4.6bn-year-old dark dust from Bennu asteroid | | | | Researchers at the Natural History Museum received 100mg of the material. Photograph: Trustees of the Natural History Museum, London | | | A teaspoon’s worth of dark dust and granules scooped from an asteroid 200m miles from Earth has arrived at the Natural History Museum in London, where scientists are preparing to unlock its secrets. Researchers at the museum received 100mg of the pristine material, which at 4.6bn years old dates back to the dawn of the solar system, after Nasa’s Osiris-Rex mission stopped at asteroid Bennu in 2020 and returned samples to Earth in September. The spacecraft briefly touched down on Bennu, an asteroid that has a 1-in-1,750 chance of colliding with Earth in the next 300 years, and gathered more than 60g of untouched material, the largest amount brought back from space since the Apollo programme. Sign up | | | | | First Thing is delivered to thousands of inboxes every weekday. If you’re not already signed up, subscribe now. Get in touch If you have any questions or comments about any of our newsletters please email newsletters@theguardian.com | |
| Naomi Klein | Columnist, Guardian US |
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| There are the wars … and then there are the information wars. The hacked accounts. The doctored photos. The deepfakes. The battles over casualty figures and targets. The surging conspiracies. In a time of raging information wars, the Guardian doesn’t treat news and information as a weapon of war. Instead, it treats it as a right that all people deserve. These principles are why I urge you to support the Guardian. As climate breakdown intersects with surging authoritarianism and spiraling militarism, the need to protect and strengthen this unique international media organization feels more urgent than at any point in my lifetime. So much of our media landscape is bisected by paywalls, but the Guardian has a different and, in my opinion, very special model. It isn’t owned by a corporation or by a billionaire, and it provides its journalism to anyone in the world who wants and needs it as a right. There is only one reason the Guardian can do that: you – the commitment of supporters who fund its journalism. You make it possible to meet information wars with information rights. This Giving Tuesday, please consider supporting the Guardian from just $1. Thank you. | Support us |
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