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Germany drops promise to resettle hundreds of Afghans

11 December 2025 at 11:54

Interior ministry will tell 640 people awaiting sanctuary ‘there is no longer any political interest in their being admitted’

Hundreds of Afghans previously promised sanctuary in Germany have been told they are no longer welcome, in a stark U-turn by the conservative chancellor, Friedrich Merz‪.

The 640 people in Pakistan awaiting resettlement – many of whom worked for the German military during the US invasion and occupation of Afghanistan – will no longer be taken in, as Merz’s government axes two programmes introduced by its centre-left-led predecessor.

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© Photograph: Thomas Peter/Reuters

© Photograph: Thomas Peter/Reuters

© Photograph: Thomas Peter/Reuters

Does the Job of C.E.O. or Private Investor Come First? Intel’s Chief Is Juggling That Question.

10 December 2025 at 05:03
Lip-Bu Tan, who was appointed chief executive of Intel in March, is also a longtime venture capitalist. His dual roles have caused some consternation.

© Laure Andrillon/Reuters

Lip-Bu Tan, the chief executive of Intel, has led a venture capital firm since 1987.

Fabio Cannavaro: ‘Uzbeks are tough, never give up. Playing them is a pain in the arse’

10 December 2025 at 03:00

In an exclusive interview, the former World Cup winner talks about taking Uzbekistan to the 2026 World Cup and a project close to his heart in Naples

Uzbekistan may have made history by qualifying for the World Cup for the first time in the country’s 34 years of independence in June after losing only once in 15 qualifiers. But they then had a problem: Timur Kapadze stepped down and they needed a head coach for next year’s tournament.

They turned to Fabio Cannavaro, Italy’s 2006 World Cup-winning captain and Ballon d’Or winner, who has had a rich and varied coaching career and was ready to take on the challenge of managing a nation still taking its first steps in international football.

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© Photograph: Roberto Salomone/The Guardian

© Photograph: Roberto Salomone/The Guardian

© Photograph: Roberto Salomone/The Guardian

Russian Launch Site Mishap Leaves Country’s Space Program in Limbo

2 December 2025 at 13:49
The ability of Russia to launch astronauts to the International Space Station remains in limbo after an incident last week at the Baikonur base in Kazakhstan.

© Pavel Mikheyev/Reuters

A Soyuz spacecraft launching from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on Nov. 27. The rocket itself headed to space without problem, but the rocket’s exhaust knocked a service platform out of its protective shelter.

First revealed in spy photos, a Bronze Age city emerges from the steppe

21 November 2025 at 10:07

Today all that’s left of the ancient city of Semiyarka are a few low earthen mounds and some scattered artifacts, nearly hidden beneath the waving grasses of the Kazakh Steppe, a vast swath of grassland that stretches across northern Kazakhstan and into Russia. But recent surveys and excavations reveal that 3,500 years ago, this empty plain was a bustling city with a thriving metalworking industry, where nomadic herders and traders might have mingled with settled metalworkers and merchants.

Photo of two people standing on a grassy plain under a gray sky Radivojevic and Lawrence stand on the site of Semiyarka. Credit: Peter J. Brown

Welcome to the City of Seven Ravines

University College of London archaeologist Miljana Radivojevic and her colleagues recently mapped the site with drones and geophysical surveys (like ground-penetrating radar, for example), tracing the layout of a 140-hectare city on the steppe in what’s now Kazakhstan.

The Bronze Age city once boasted rows of houses built on earthworks, a large central building, and a neighborhood of workshops where artisans smelted and cast bronze. From its windswept promontory, it held a commanding view of a narrow point in the Irtysh River valley, a strategic location that may have offered the city “control over movement along the river and valley bottom,” according to Radivojevic and her colleagues. That view inspired archaeologists’ name for the city: Semiyarka, or City of Seven Ravines.

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© Radivojevic et al. 2025

When Security Is a Matter of Life and Death: The UK Afghan Data Leak

28 October 2025 at 15:15

UK Afghan Data Leak Linked to 49 Deaths

A new study that looked at 231 people exposed by a 2022 UK data leak of Afghans seeking resettlement after the Taliban takeover found that 49 had friends or colleagues killed in Afghanistan. The UK Afghan data leak report, by the charity Refugee Legal Support in consultation with two academics, looked at the damage done by the Ministry of Defence (MoD) data leak of 18,000 people who had applied for asylum. The report was submitted to a House of Commons Defence Committee inquiry into the data breach.

UK Afghan Data Leak Exposed 87% to Risk and Threats

The survey focused on 231 respondents who said they had been told directly by the Ministry of Defence that their data had been exposed in the leak, which was the result of an inadvertent emailing of a spreadsheet by a soldier. Of the 231 affected Afghans, 200, or 87%, “reported personal risks and/or threats to family members,” the report said, and 207 (89%) “reported impacts on their own physical and/or mental health and the same number (207) reported negative impacts on their family’s physical and/or mental health.” Some of the responses detailed in the report are harrowing. One respondent said, “My father was brutally beaten to the point that his toenails were forcibly removed, and my parents remain under constant and serious threat. My family and I continue to face intimidation, repeated house searches, and ongoing danger to our safety.” “I live under constant fear for my life and the safety of my family due to repeated raids, threats from the Taliban and local intelligence groups, and the risk of forced marriage for my daughter,” said another respondent. “The ongoing stress, anxiety, and fear for my family’s well-being have severely impacted my emotional and physical well-being.” One respondent who had relocated to the UK said fears from the breach remain a constant torment for family members who remain in Afghanistan. “Whether it's legal advice, mental health resources, or help accelerating family reunification, anything that can ease this burden would mean the world to me,” the person said.

UK Advice Deemed Inadequate

The report also found that the advice given to the affected Afghans in the wake of the breach was largely inadequate. The report described “a profound mismatch between the MoD’s security advice” – which focused on things like restricting use of social media accounts and advising the use of VPNS – “and the severity of reported risks and threats, which included direct threats, violence, and displacement.” One respondent said, “The security advice provided by the Ministry of Defence was very general and limited. They only advised me not to answer calls from unknown numbers and to secure my emails. These instructions were insufficient given the serious threats and risks I faced, including my house being searched, my brothers being summoned by intelligence services, and direct threats to our lives. Such general advice did not provide any practical help to protect my situation.” The report also found “no evidence that the Ministry of Defence offered local risk management or follow-up with individuals outside of the UK” who were affected by the data breach and were not offered resettlement. The report called for expedited review of remaining resettlement cases, including affected family members. “As both the quantitative and qualitative data from our survey shows, the data breach has had devastating consequences for many individuals and families,” the Refugee Legal Support report said. “The UK Government must act decisively to protect those affected, restore trust, and ensure that such a failure never happens again; or that if it does, those placed at risk will not also be left alone in the dark.”
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