Fujitsu, which made the faulty Horizon software in the Post Office IT scandal, may have to pay out millions to victims. Postal affairs minister Kevin Hollinrake has said the Japanese firm should be âheld accountable, including making any paymentsâ. United Airlines has discovered bolts that need âadditional tighteningâ on some of its Boeing 737 Max 9s, after a chunk of fuselage fell off an Alaska Airlines plane mid-flight on Friday. The vast majority of the 215 jets in operation worldwide have been grounded. South Korea is to ban the dog meat trade by 2027, ending a centuries-old practice. Dog meat stew, or boshintang, was once considered a delicacy, but now less than a fifth of South Koreans support the right to chow down on canines.
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Toby Jones and Julie Hesmondhalgh in Mr Bates vs the Post Office |
The Post Office scandal: a sign of things to come |
It should not have taken an ITV drama â Mr Bates vs the Post Office â to shame politicians into caring about the Horizon IT scandal, says The Independent. Due to a software glitch, more than 700 subpostmasters were falsely accused and convicted of having their fingers in the till. Many were jailed; others were bankrupted. âAt least four died by suicide.â For years the Post Office and Fujitsu, the Japanese firm responsible for the tech, did everything they could to âobfuscate and deny justiceâ. Politicians and civil servants utterly failed to hold the organisation to account, not least Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey â as postal affairs minister when the issues came to light in 2010, he had a chance, ârarely for a Lib Demâ, to actually do something. The government must ensure not only that victims âreceive belated justiceâ, but also that âthose guilty of wrongdoing are held responsibleâ.
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Whatâs scary, says Hugo Rifkind in The Times, is that Horizon is just one example of many. In recent years, all around the world, automated systems designed to spot fraud have ended up making baseless accusations. In Michigan, a computer falsely accused 34,000 people of welfare fraud between 2013 and 2015. More recently, in Australia, the so-called âRobodebtâ scandal saw fines issued to 470,000 people on benefits, leading to at least three suicides. The problem in these cases wasnât just the âabrupt, unfair demand for life-ruining sumsâ. It was that when the innocent victims tried to talk to an actual human to put things right, they found there wasnât one. And the more we automate, the fewer people there will be who understand whatâs going on. For now, there is still some guilty techie lurking behind the code. âHound them. Blame them. Just as importantly, though, make sure theyâre always there.â
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These pictures may look like works of art, but they were actually taken by neuroscientists trying to find out more about the human nervous system, says The New York Times. They include a detailed image of a brain captured by a new MRI scanner; the giant blue web of a brain cell called an astrocyte; a âsea of tumour cellsâ that resembles a blossoming tree; and a miniature cerebral cortex grown by cancer researchers in the Netherlands. See more here.
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David Cameron resigned from his âbelovedâ London membersâ club, Whiteâs, in 2008 because of its refusal to admit women, says Ethan Croft in the Evening Standard. But the Foreign Secretary now has a ânew base in Clublandâ: Prattâs, often described as the âmost exclusiveâ club in London, and where staff are âuniformly referred to as âGeorgeââ. The St Jamesâs establishment began admitting women last May, though this doesnât appear to have been what swayed the former PM â he joined back in 2020.
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After six years of deliberation, âitâs officialâ, says Le Monde: âloose glitterâ will be banned from the EU. The measure is part of the European Zero Pollution action plan, which is taking aim at the shiny microplastics because they are, as anyone whoâs ever spilled a jar knows, âimpossibleâ to clean up. Young Europeans are up in arms. âIn my world,â 32-year-old influencer Sam Dylan told the German tabloid Bild, âeverything has to shine.â Another German star denounced the EU for âtaking away the last sparks of glamourâ.
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An estimated 70% of Gazaâs housing has been damaged or destroyed. Mohamed Abed/AFP/Getty |
Whatâs Israel really up to in Gaza? |
The conventional wisdom is that Israel âlacks a strategyâ for Gaza beyond toppling Hamas, says Peter Beinart in The New York Times. But several top Israeli officials have made it clear that they have a plan, âor at least a preferenceâ, for what comes next: they want to force many Palestinians out of the territory. Ministers began talking about âpopulation transfersâ within days of the October 7 attack. Behind the scenes, Benjamin Netanyahu has reportedly urged the US, Britain and France to push Egypt into accepting hundreds of thousands of Gazan refugees.
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The Israeli PM will doubtless try to portray any such resettlement as âvoluntaryâ. But the truth is that his military action is rendering Gaza uninhabitable. About 85% of the Palestinian territoryâs population has been displaced, according to the UN, and an estimated 70% of its housing damaged or destroyed. Two in five residents are at risk of famine. This âcataclysmâ could ease if the fighting ends soon, but Netanyahu has made it clear the military operation will continue for months, perhaps years. The longer it goes on, the more pressure Egypt will be under to alleviate the humanitarian crisis by letting Gazans cross the border. Palestinians have been here before, of course â many live in Gaza because their families were forced out of their original homes by the Israelis in 1948, in what they call the nakba. Thatâs the âchilling historical backdropâ to all this. Gazans know that if they leave, Israel will probably never let them return.
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Swiper Games has come up with a brilliantly simple time-waster, says The Hustle. You click a button to turn on a switch, then try to turn it off again after exactly 5.5 seconds. Itâs harder than it looks â and strangely addictive. Give it a go here. |
If you think live sport in the UK is expensive, spare a thought for American football fans, says Axios. The average ticket price for last nightâs college National Championship game between Michigan and Washington was an eye-watering $2,845. Even the cheapest seats were $1,302. |
Itâs Bet365 chief Denise Coates, who earned âclose to ÂŁ300mâ last year in pay and dividends, says the FT. The 56-year-old has taken home an estimated ÂŁ1.1bn in salary alone from the family-owned business over the past four years, making her one of the worldâs best-paid executives. As youâd expect â or not, given the tax-dodging antics of some billionaires â Coates is also one of Britainâs highest taxpayers: together with her father Peter and brother John, she handed over ÂŁ460m to the Treasury last January.
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âShared joy is double joy. Shared sorrow is half sorrow.â
Old Swedish proverb |
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