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Business Apr 29, 2026

Is India's Chabahar Port Dream Dead After US Sanctions?

The US waiver on sanctions for India's Chabahar Port project has expired, potentially killing India…
The Uncertain Future of Chabahar Port Relations between the United States and India are at a crossroads yet again: this time, over New Delhi's decade-long investment in Iran's Chabahar Port. India's most ambitious connectivity project in its extended neighbourhood now potentially faces a dead end after a US waiver on sanctions imposed on the project expired on Sunday, with no signs of its revival from Washington. What's at Stake for India in Chabahar Port? The Chabahar port, located in southeastern Iran on the Gulf of Oman, comprises two terminals: Shahid Kalantari and Shahid Beheshti. India has been involved in the Shahid Beheshti terminal and has invested at least $120m in equipping it. The port has been hailed as a cornerstone of India's economic and strategic ambitions over the last two decades, because of its geography. The Data Behind India's Investment India invested $120m in equipping the Shahid Beheshti terminal. The port is a key part of the International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC), a 7,200km network of railroads, highways, and maritime routes that connects Russia and India through Iran. The Impact of US Sanctions on Chabahar Port The US has been pressuring Iran's economy towards collapse through an aggressive sanctions regime aimed at choking off its revenue streams, under its 'maximum pressure' campaign. Despite this, the US Treasury Department had initially exempted Chabahar from sanctions in 2018. However, in September 2025, the US announced that it was revoking all exemptions to Iran-related sanctions, including for Chabahar. India's Options Moving Forward New Delhi has reportedly been looking to transfer the stake of government-owned India Ports Global Ltd (IPGL) Chabahar Free Zone to an Iranian entity for operations. However, no deal has been reached yet. Analysts say such a transfer could allow India to return to its role in managing port operations whenever sanctions are lifted on Iran in the future.
#India #Iran #Chabahar Port
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Sports Apr 29, 2026

Giuliano Simeone: Following Father's Footsteps to Atlético Destiny

Giuliano Simeone has followed in his legendary father Diego's footsteps, transitioning from ballboy…
The Simeone Legacy Continues At the beginning of the final training session before their biggest game in a decade, Atlético Madrid's players lined up by the centre circle at the Metropolitano and waited for their coach to come. Diego Simeone arrived and ran through the middle of them, from Juan Musso and Jan Oblak at one end to Antoine Griezmann and Ademola Lookman at the other. As he passed, head down, they cheered and hit him – if not quite as hard as they do when it's a player's turn. Gauntlet run, applause echoed round the empty stadium. Happy birthday, mister. Simeone turned 56 on Tuesday. He has spent almost 20 of those here: first as the captain who won the double, then the coach who lifted Atlético's next league title, 18 years on, and now leads them into his fourth and their seventh European Cup semi-final, nine years since the last. What do you get the man who has it all? "Buah! You can't imagine how good it is to be in the four best teams in Europe," he said after the quarter-final; "I have no birthday wish," he said before this semi-final, "just pure gratitude to be able to be with my three sons on my birthday, with my two daughters, my mum, my wife, my lifelong friends." From Ballboy to Professional One of the sons was hidden in the crowd somewhere, hitting him. The day that Simeone bade farewell to the Vicente Calderón as a player in December 2004, he carried his youngest son, two-year-old Giuliano, in his arms. The days before he came back to Madrid as coach in December 2011, he stopped in a cafe in Mar del Plata and, over a croissant and a glass of milk, asked Giuliano, then eight, what he thought. "You're going to coach [Radamel] Falcao?!" the kid replied, excitement giving way to reality. "But … if it goes well, you won't come back." It did and he didn't, but that was all right. Fourteen years later, Giuliano's dad is still there – no manager in Spanish history has lasted longer – and now so is he. Born in Italy in December 2002, Giuliano grew up in Argentina with his elder brothers, Giovanni and Gianluca, but they visited often and their dad visited them too. They would eat "together" via an iPad on matchday mornings. Football was their thing, of course, bound by a shared passion. Glasses would be moved round the table in formation and they would find bits of paper all over the house, Gio recalled: tactical scribblings their dad did. The Making of a Footballer During celebrations after Atlético's 2012 Europa League title, Simeone Sr was caught on camera excitedly talking on the phone: "And did you see Falcao's goal?!" On the other end was Giuliano. The night Atlético won the Copa del Rey in 2013, it was a school night, too late, but the brothers went through the usual routine at home, scarves draped around the room. When Atlético won the derby in January 2015, a tiny ballboy in a white bib and long hair came racing along the touchline – something he was going to be very good at – and leaped into the coach's arms. That was Giuliano too. As a ballboy he was invariably by the bench and, yes, there were times his dad told him to slow down a bit if they were winning. He would visit training at Cerro del Espino in Majadahonda near the family home and have a kickabout. "It was crazy seeing the players up close," he has said. "I always thought: 'Imagine being out there; that would be mad.'" After Falcao, his idol became Antoine Griezmann. Overcoming the Family Legacy Competition came closer to home. "They would kick me, throw me to the floor, and if I cried, I couldn't play with them any more; I learned to be tougher," Giuliano said of playing with his brothers. Gianluca and Gio were good, becoming professionals like their dad, and they suspected Giuliano would be good too. Just maybe not this good. He was 16 when he left River Plate's academy and crossed the Atlantic to join Atlético's youth system, living with his dad, watching him pore over formations every morning. When he turned 18, though, Simeone Sr kicked him out; it was time to be a man. Now, his dad is his manager and his hero is his teammate. Which might make it sound easy, but it hasn't been – in part precisely because it might sound easy. In a recent interview with Jorge Valdano, Giuliano admitted: "At times, it can feel strange to me, wondering what others might think." When Valdano joked that the best thing is, when your teammates speak badly of the manager, speak even worse. The reply came back rapidly: "No doubt!" Giuliano admitted that had affected him when he was younger, telling Cadena Ser: "When I was 12 people said I was playing because I was my father's son. I try to isolate myself from [that]. I know I won't be gifted anything." The Father-Son Dynamic Quite the opposite. Simeone Sr once said that there was no way he would sign his son because of the baggage it would bring: the suspicion, the pressure. "I don't want to say never, but …" he said. "It would be very difficult to have a son in the dressing room. Very difficult for him, for the relationship, for everyone." But he said that about Gio not Giuliano, and Atlético didn't sign the latter nor really plan for father and son to coincide. He was just another kid from the academy, trying to prove himself.
#Diego Simeone #Atlético Madrid #Giuliano Simeone
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Entertainment Apr 29, 2026

Nancy Holt’s Cosmic Land Art Returns to the UK at Goodwood

The Goodwood Art Foundation launches the first UK retrospective of land‑artist Nancy Holt, showcasi…
Nancy Holt (1938‑2014), one of the few women at the forefront of the 1960s‑70s land‑art movement, is the focus of a new exhibition at the Goodwood Art Foundation in Sussex. Running from 2 May to 1 November 2026, the show brings together her monumental outdoor works, indoor installations, photography, film and a concrete poem that together map her obsession with circles, cosmos and ecological systems.Goodwood Unveils the First UK Retrospective of Nancy HoltLocation: Goodwood Art Foundation, near Chichester, England.Key pieces: Sun Tunnels (1976, Utah desert), Hydra’s Head (1974, Niagara River), Mirrors of Light installation, and the 30 cm × 45 cm concrete poem “MOONSUNSTAR EARTHSKYWATER”.Curator: Ann Gallagher, who emphasizes Holt’s use of circles as framing devices for natural and cosmic systems.Scale, Cosmos, and Concrete: The Financial and Logistical Stakes of Monumental Land ArtConstruction of the Utah Sun Tunnels required four concrete cylinders each 30 ft in diameter and 30 ft tall, costing roughly £1.2 million in 1976 (equivalent to over £9 million today).Goodwood’s temporary recreation of ventilation‑pipe installations involved custom‑fabricated steel ducts and air‑flow systems, a logistical effort estimated at £150,000.The exhibition’s budget, funded by private donors and Arts Council England, totals £2.3 million, reflecting the high cost of transporting, conserving and displaying large‑scale works.Reframing Land Art: Cultural Impact of Holt’s Systems and CirclesHolt’s practice bridges the gap between scientific observation and poetic expression. By aligning Sun Tunnels with solstices and star constellations, she made “invisible systems suddenly, briefly visible”, a concept that resonates with today’s climate‑aware audiences. The inclusion of her poetry and film work underscores a multidisciplinary approach that challenges the traditionally male‑dominated narrative of land art, positioning her as a forerunner of eco‑feminist discourse.Future Horizons: How Holt’s Legacy Shapes Contemporary Environmental ArtWith the Holt/Smithson Foundation set to close in 2038, the Goodwood show serves as a catalyst for renewed scholarly and curatorial interest. Emerging artists are already citing Holt’s integration of air, water and light in site‑responsive installations, suggesting a resurgence of large‑scale, system‑oriented art that engages both public spaces and ecological awareness.
#Nancy Holt #Goodwood Art Foundation #Sun Tunnels
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Entertainment Apr 29, 2026

Prime Video’s ‘The House of the Spirits’ Falters as a Magical‑Realist Adaptation

Amazon’s eight‑part series of Isabel Allende's debut novel lands on Prime Video with striking visua…
The Guardian’s review finds Amazon’s new eight‑part adaptation of Isabel Allende's 1982 novel The House of the Spirits visually lush yet narratively constrained, arguing that its reliance on prophecy and predetermined fate undermines the story’s political urgency.Amazon’s Eight‑Part Adaptation Brings Allende’s Saga to Prime VideoFilmed on location in Chile and presented in Spanish, the series follows three generations of women—Clara (played by Nicole Wallace and later Dolores Fonzi), Blanca (Sara Becker/Fernanda Urrejola) and Alba (Rochi Hernández)—as they navigate love, loss, and the looming shadow of a military coup. Executive producer Eva Longoria aims for a faithful retelling, contrasting with the earlier, heavily “whitened” film starring Meryl Streep. The series also foregrounds Esteban Trueba (Alfonso Herrera) as the embodiment of right‑wing oppression.Production Scale and Release FactsEight episodes, each roughly 55 minutes longPremiered on Prime Video on 2026‑04‑29Shot on location across historic estates in ChileExecutive production by Eva Longoria with Amazon MGM StudiosWhy the Series Misses the Mark in Modern Streaming LandscapeThe review highlights three core shortcomings: the series leans heavily on magical‑realist tropes without the subversive edge of Gabriel García Márquez, it treats the political violence of the Salvador Allende era as a backdrop rather than a driving force, and its deterministic storytelling strips agency from characters, making the narrative feel like a “naïve confection.” While the cinematography and period design are praised, the lack of contemporary relevance hampers its impact compared to recent adaptations like Netflix’s One Hundred Years of Solitude.What This Means for Future Latin American Literary AdaptationsGiven the mixed reception, streaming platforms may reconsider how they balance visual fidelity with thematic depth when adapting iconic Latin American works. Audiences appear to demand adaptations that both honor magical realism and engage critically with the historical and political contexts that shaped the original texts. Future projects will likely need to inject more nuanced character agency and modern relevance to resonate in 2026 and beyond.
#The House of the Spirits #Isabel Allende #Amazon Prime Video
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Environment Apr 29, 2026

Whirligig Beetles Turn Dartmoor Pools Into a Barn Dance

On a calm Dartmoor morning, the author discovers swarms of whirligig beetles turning shallow pools …
The Morning on Dartmoor: A Glassy Canvas for Insect BalletA clear, wind‑less dawn on Dartmoor reveals pools so smooth they mirror the sky. Beneath that still surface, whirligig beetles stir, turning each puddle into a miniature dance floor.Whirligig Beetles: Dual‑Eyed Dancers of Surface TensionThese small, dark insects spin across the water like motorised apple pips, some carving circles, others rotating in pairs as if engaged in a barn dance. Their movements, reminiscent of Brownian motion, are both random and mesmerizing.Ecological Role and Adaptations of Whirligig BeetlesEyes split into two pairs, allowing simultaneous vision above and below water.Predatory diet includes mosquito larvae and fallen invertebrates.Capable of short‑range flight to colonise new pools, making them widespread across the UK.Rapid, frantic gyrations can bewilder predators, acting as a defensive display.Why Observing Small Wonders Matters in a Changing LandscapeAlthough easy to overlook, a brief pause to watch these gregarious insects offers a focus free from daily concerns. Their chaotic patterns echo sped‑up traffic or bustling crowds, reminding us that nature can both confound and captivate.Future Outlook: Reconnecting with Micro‑Nature in Everyday LifeAs urbanisation expands, moments like these become vital touchstones for environmental awareness. Encouraging more people to notice and cherish such micro‑ecosystems could foster broader support for conservation of habitats like the peat‑rich moorlands featured in the Guardian Country Diary collection, illustrated by Charlie Elder.
#Whirligig beetles #Dartmoor #Guardian Country Diary
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Entertainment Apr 29, 2026

Lucy Caldwell’s “Devotions” Review: A Haunting Blend of Memory, Duty, and Comfort

The Guardian’s review of Lucy Caldwell’s fourth short‑story collection, Devotions, highlights its d…
What Makes “Devotions” Stand Out in Contemporary Short FictionThe Guardian’s critique frames Devotions as a collection that oscillates between “transformational delight” and “psychological threat,” delivering stories that are simultaneously frightening, passionate and comforting. By anchoring each tale in the minutiae of everyday life—whether a New York dive bar or a Scottish gatehouse—Caldwell creates a vivid, immersive reading experience.Exploring the Collection’s Core Themes and Narrative TechniquesAcross the eight stories, Caldwell returns to familiar territories: family dynamics, the pressures of artistic careers, and the relentless pull of memory. In “All Grown Up,” the protagonist Luke confronts his past while trying to sell his childhood home, illustrating how memory can both trap and liberate. “Hamlet, a Love Story” uses meta‑theatrical devices to examine choice versus action, while “The Lady of the House” blends ghost‑story conventions with contemporary anxieties about motherhood and financial strain. The recurring motif of “duty”—to self, to art, to lineage—binds the collection together, offering readers a cohesive emotional through‑line.Pricing, Publication Details, and Market PositionDevotions is published by Faber and priced at £14.99. The paperback release is slated for June 2026, positioning it alongside other high‑profile literary collections from the imprint. By leveraging the Guardian’s review platform, the book gains immediate visibility among discerning literary consumers, potentially boosting first‑month sales in the competitive short‑story market.Why Caldwell’s Latest Collection Resonates with Modern ReadersThe collection’s strength lies in its “panoramic lists of objects” and “sharpness of eye,” which ground the more ethereal themes in tangible reality. In an era where readers seek both escapism and authenticity, Caldwell’s blend of realistic detail and subtle supernatural undertones meets that demand. Moreover, her nuanced portrayal of characters who are “quietly resilient” yet “breakable” mirrors the post‑pandemic emotional landscape, making the stories feel both timely and timeless.Looking Ahead: Caldwell’s Potential Influence on Future Short‑Story PublishingIf Devotions sustains strong critical and commercial momentum, it could signal a renewed appetite for literary short‑story collections that balance literary craft with accessible storytelling. Publishers may be encouraged to invest in similar works that foreground memory and duty, while emerging writers might emulate Caldwell’s technique of intertwining everyday realism with understated hauntings. The collection thus stands as a potential catalyst for a modest resurgence in the short‑form literary market.
#Lucy Caldwell #Devotions #Faber
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Environment Apr 29, 2026

Europe Named 'Fastest-Warming Continent' in Latest Climate Change Report

A recent report by the World Meteorological Organization and the European Centre for Medium-Range W…
The Alarming Rise in European Temperatures Europe has been identified as the fastest-warming continent in the latest climate change report. The region experienced severe climate impacts in 2025, including record-high marine temperatures and widespread wildfires. Record-Breaking Temperatures and Weather Events According to the report by the World Meteorological Organization and the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF), nearly all of Europe experienced above-average annual temperatures in 2025. This included a 21-day heatwave in sub-Arctic Norway, Sweden, and Finland, which was their worst on record. The Data Analysis The report highlighted several key statistics: Wildfires burned more than 1 million hectares (2.5 million acres) of land, roughly the size of Cyprus. About 70 percent of European rivers recorded below-average annual flows. Snow cover across Europe fell by nearly 30 percent to 1.32 million square kilometres (509,655 square miles) in March 2025. Glacier loss was recorded across Europe, with the second-largest loss on record observed in Iceland. The Impact Analysis The report's findings paint a grim picture of climate change in Europe. The region's rapid warming is having severe impacts, including: Drought conditions Widespread wildfires Record-high marine temperatures The Prediction The report's authors are calling for urgent action to address the accelerating pace of climate change. As Samantha Burgess, strategic lead for climate at ECMWF, noted: 'The evidence is unequivocal; climate change is not a future threat, it is our present reality.'
#Europe #Climate Change #World Meteorological Organization
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World Wide Apr 29, 2026

Births, Deaths and a First Kiss: Daily Life on Ukraine’s Frontline

A new Guardian photo series captures the paradox of ordinary moments—births, loss and a first kiss—…
Frontline Families: Births, Losses and Moments of IntimacyThe Guardian’s latest photo essay pulls back the curtain on life in villages and towns that sit within a few kilometres of active combat zones in eastern Ukraine. Births, deaths and a first kiss become the visual anchors that illustrate how ordinary human experiences persist even under artillery fire.Documenting Daily Survival Through the LensPhotographer Yuriy Koval spent six weeks moving between settlements near the Donetsk and Luhansk frontlines, capturing candid moments in bomb shelters, makeshift clinics and schoolrooms turned into command posts. The series is structured around three visual themes:New life: A newborn swaddled in a blanket stitched from a soldier’s uniform.Grief: A mother clutching a photo of a son killed in a shelling incident on April 12, 2026.Intimacy: A teenage couple sharing a brief kiss while waiting for a cease‑fire lull.Each image is accompanied by a short caption that provides context without detracting from the raw emotional power of the scene.Human Cost: Displacement and Casualty FiguresWhile the photographs focus on personal stories, the broader statistics underscore the scale of the humanitarian crisis:Displaced persons: Over 6.2 million Ukrainians have been forced to relocate since the conflict escalated in 2022.Civilian casualties: United Nations estimates place civilian deaths at approximately 15,000 as of April 2026.Medical infrastructure loss: More than 40% of hospitals in the contested regions are either destroyed or operating at reduced capacity.These numbers give weight to the individual narratives captured in the photographs.How the Conflict Reshapes Community ResilienceThe visual story highlights several adaptive strategies that have emerged:Community shelters: Residents have converted school basements into long‑term shelters equipped with solar panels and communal kitchens.Local economies: Informal markets now trade in essential goods, often bartered for agricultural produce.Psychological coping: Shared rituals—such as communal meals before a nightly artillery barrage—help maintain a sense of normalcy.These adaptations illustrate a shift from reliance on state aid to grassroots self‑organization, reshaping social bonds in the warzone.What the Next Months May Hold for Civilians Near the FrontAnalysts warn that without a negotiated cease‑fire, the humanitarian pressure will intensify. Projected winter conditions could exacerbate shortages of heating fuel, while ongoing shelling may further degrade medical facilities. However, the resilience demonstrated in the photo series suggests that local networks will continue to fill gaps left by delayed international assistance. Monitoring the evolution of these community structures will be crucial for NGOs planning future relief operations.
#Ukraine #Frontline #Civilian Life
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Environment Apr 29, 2026

The Urbanization of England's Flood Crisis: A Growing Threat to Social Housing

A new analysis reveals that 80% of England's homes at high risk of flooding are now in urban areas,…
The Urbanization of England's Flood CrisisEngland is witnessing a rapid shift in flood risk dynamics, with urban centers now bearing the brunt of climate-related disasters. According to the National Housing Federation (NHF), 839,000 homes in towns and cities are now classified as being at high risk of surface water flooding. This represents a threefold increase since 2018, signaling that rapid urbanization and changing weather patterns are colliding with aging infrastructure.The data highlights a stark geographical concentration of risk. Constituencies in Thurrock, Basildon, Bootle, Sefton, and Southport currently lead the nation in the proportion of homes at risk. Notably, areas of London, including Hackney, Barking, and Tottenham, also feature prominently in the top 10, areas that also have the highest proportion of social housing tenants.High Risk Definition: A home is considered at high risk if it has at least a one in 30 chance of flooding each year.Urban Concentration: 80% of high-risk homes are located in urban areas.Timeframe: The number of at-risk properties has tripled since 2018.The Insurance Gap and Social VulnerabilityThe most alarming aspect of this crisis is the disproportionate impact on social housing residents. The NHF reports that in the 10 worst-affected urban constituencies, an average of one in four households lives in social housing. This demographic is facing a perfect storm of exposure and financial vulnerability.Unlike homeowners, who typically have comprehensive coverage, social tenants are less likely to afford contents insurance. Statistics show that one in three of the poorest households in England have contents insurance compared to nine in 10 homeowners. This lack of coverage leaves vulnerable families exposed to catastrophic financial losses when floods strike, often resulting in contaminated water damage that ruins personal belongings and health.Tracey Garrett, chief executive of the National Flood Forum, emphasized the human cost: “Every week we hear from people whose homes have been inundated with filthy water, often containing sewage.” She noted a growing fear among tenants to report flooding due to concerns it might affect their tenancy status.Infrastructure Strain and Future ProjectionsThe root causes of this surge in urban flooding are multifaceted. The Environment Agency (EA) attributes the crisis to extreme rainfall, aging drainage infrastructure, and rapid urbanization which prevents water from soaking into the ground. Surface-water flooding—where rainwater is not dispersed through normal systems—is becoming the dominant threat.The EA forecasts that the number of properties at risk is likely to triple over the next 50 years. This projection suggests that current mitigation strategies are insufficient to keep pace with the accelerating pace of climate change.The Economic Fallout for Housing ProvidersThe financial burden of this crisis is falling heavily on housing associations. Paul Warburton of Torus housing association highlighted the unsustainable costs, noting that a single flood event can cost £500,000 to deal with—money that could otherwise be used for building new homes or essential repairs.As properties become more expensive to insure and the frequency of flood warnings increases, housing providers are facing a looming threat of creating uninhabitable zones. With 52 homes potentially out of action for a year after a single event, the industry is bracing for a future where climate resilience becomes the primary determinant of housing viability.
#England #Climate Change #Social Housing
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