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Politics May 22, 2026

Turkey Shutters Liberal Istanbul Bilgi University Amid Criminal Probe

Turkey’s president revoked the licence of Istanbul Bilgi University, forcing its immediate closure …
Government Decree Forces Immediate Closure of Bilgi UniversityIn a presidential decree published in the Official Gazette on 22 May 2026, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan revoked the operating licence of Istanbul Bilgi University, a private institution known for its liberal ethos, effective immediately.Licence Revocation Follows Year‑Long State SeizureThe university was seized last year after its parent company, Can Holdings, became the subject of a money‑laundering and tax‑fraud investigation. Since the seizure, a court‑appointed administrator has run the campus.Scale of the Institution and Immediate Academic Disruption~20,000 enrolled students from Turkey and abroadFounded in 1996, ranked 1,401 globally by QSParticipates in the Erasmus Mundus programmeStudents redirected to Mimar Sinan University for end‑of‑year examsImplications for Academic Freedom and Turkey’s Higher‑Education LandscapeThe closure signals a tightening of state control over institutions perceived as independent. The Council of Higher Education pledged “necessary measures” to protect students, but protests and statements from faculty highlight growing concern over the erosion of liberal academic spaces.Potential Ripple Effects and Future of Private Universities in TurkeyAnalysts warn that the precedent may embolden further licence withdrawals, pressuring other private universities to align with government expectations. International partners, especially those in the Erasmus network, may reassess collaborations, while domestic investors could face heightened regulatory scrutiny.
#Istanbul Bilgi University #Recep Tayyip Erdogan #Can Holdings
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Science May 22, 2026

Unlocking Immunotherapy: The Future of Cancer and Disease Treatment

Immunotherapy is a revolutionary approach to treating diseases, including cancer, by harnessing the…
What is Immunotherapy? Immunotherapies are biological treatments that harness the immune system to prevent, control and fight diseases and other conditions. The most familiar are vaccines, which train the immune system to recognise targets such as invading pathogens. Other immunotherapies boost immune responses when they are too weak, or dampen them down when they are out of control. Still others draw on engineered immune cells or lab-made antibodies to disrupt disease processes. The Evolution of Immunotherapy Efforts to prevent disease by boosting the immune system date back thousands of years, but advanced therapies for a wide range of illnesses have come to the fore in the past two decades. A global registry of clinical trials listed 1,257 trials of immunotherapies between 2006 and 2016. The figure leapt to 4,591 in the past decade. How Do Cancer Immunotherapies Work? Cancer patients have seen great benefits from immunotherapies and dozens are now approved for more than 30 types of cancer. Some tumours evade the body’s defences by switching off immune cells, but antibody-based drugs – called checkpoint inhibitors – reactivate them so they can recognise and attack the malignancies. The Future of Immunotherapy: Beyond Cancer Researchers are now testing whether existing immunotherapies can help a broader range of patients. This includes treating allergies, infections, brain diseases, and autoimmune disorders. Some of the most exciting new immunotherapies draw on recent Nobel prizewinning work on regulatory T-cells, or Tregs, which can be used to dampen down immune responses. The Potential of Tregs in Immunotherapy Tregs are unusual immune cells that stand the immune system down once the threat has been dealt with. Therapies are in the pipeline for dementia and autoimmune diseases from type 1 diabetes and rheumatoid arthritis to lupus and chronic inflammation. The potential for Tregs is vast, and researchers believe that half of all deaths have a component that is immunological.
#Immunotherapy #Cancer Treatment #Medical Research
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Health May 22, 2026

Eli Lilly’s Retatrutide Shows Record Weight‑Loss in Phase 3 Trial

Eli Lilly announced that its experimental triple‑agonist Retatrutide produced an average loss of 28…
Retatrutide Delivers Up to 28% Body‑Weight Reduction in Phase 3 StudyA new weight‑loss drug has helped participants in a sizable trial lose much more weight than other obesity drugs already on the market – up to an average of 28% of their body weight, Eli Lilly announced on Thursday. Phase 3 Trial Design and Dosing RegimenThe Indiana‑based company randomized 2,339 adults with obesity or overweight and at least one weight‑related comorbidity (no diabetes) to receive Retatrutide at 4 mg, 9 mg, 12 mg, or placebo for 80 weeks. The drug is a once‑weekly triple hormone receptor agonist targeting GLP‑1, GIP, and glucagon. Quantitative Outcomes and Safety ProfileAverage weight loss: 70.3 lb (28.3%) at the 12 mg dose.Average loss at 9 mg: 64.4 lb (25.9%).Average loss at 4 mg: 47.2 lb (19.0%).45.3% of 12 mg participants lost ≥30% of body weight.65.3% reduced BMI below 30; 37.5% of those starting with BMI ≥ 40 achieved this.Side‑effects increased with dose: nausea (28.6%‑42.4%), diarrhea (25.2%‑34.1%), vomiting (up to 25%).For comparison, Zepbound yields 15‑20% loss over 72 weeks and Wegovy 14‑19% over 64‑72 weeks. Implications for the Obesity‑Drug LandscapeThe magnitude of loss positions Retatrutide as the most effective pharmacologic option to date, potentially shifting prescriber preference away from existing GLP‑1 monotherapies. Its triple‑agonist mechanism adds glucagon, a hormone absent from current products, which may enhance metabolic control and appetite suppression. Future Outlook: Approval Path and Market PotentialAnalysts expect regulatory submissions within the next year, with a likely U.S. FDA review in 2027. If approved, Retatrutide could capture a sizable share of the rapidly expanding obesity‑treatment market, prompting competitors to explore multi‑agonist formulations.
#Eli Lilly #Retatrutide #Obesity
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Environment May 22, 2026

Explosive and Gentle: Broom, Dead‑Nettle, and Dandelions Reveal the Wild Diversity of Pollination

A spring walk along a former railway line uncovers three starkly different pollination tricks: the …
The Lead: A Spring Showcase of Contrasting Pollination TacticsOn a sunny May morning along a former railway line, thousands of flowers display a startling range of pollination mechanisms—from the violent, explosive release of pollen in broom (Cytisus scoparius) to the precise, almost surgical delivery by white dead‑nettle (Lamium album) and the generous, pollinator‑free bounty of dandelions (Taraxacum officinale).Location: former railway line, May morningSpecies observed: broom, white dead‑nettle, dandelionPrimary pollinators: bumblebees, common carder beeBroom’s Explosive Pollen Release: Violence in the Keel PetalWhen a bumblebee lands on a broom flower it finds no nectar; the moment its abdomen contacts the keel petal, ten stamens and a coiled stigma burst free, slamming pollen onto the insect and delivering a “gut‑punch.” The trap is triggered in almost every flower, ensuring both pollen export and collection in a single, forceful act.Mechanism: explosive stamens and stigma releaseEffect on pollinator: brief contact, no nectar rewardOutcome: simultaneous pollen deposition and collectionWhite Dead‑Nettle’s Precise Pollen Transfer: Gentle EngineeringIn contrast, white dead‑nettle hides its stamens inside a hooded standard petal. A visiting common carder bee probes the flower’s throat for nectar; hidden stamens deposit a dab of pollen onto the bee’s thorax, which is later deposited on the next flower’s fork‑tipped stigma. The process is subtle, causing no apparent distress to the pollinator.Mechanism: concealed stamens within hooded petalPollinator interaction: gentle pollen placementResult: efficient cross‑pollination with minimal disturbanceDandelions’ Redundant Generosity: The Free Lunch for BeesDandelions produce abundant nectar and pollen but are apomictic, setting seed without fertilisation. For bumblebees the flowers are an “all‑you‑can‑eat” buffet, providing essential spring energy even though the plant does not rely on pollinators for reproduction.Reproductive strategy: apomixis (self‑seeded)Pollinator role: energy source, not required for seed setEcological benefit: supports pollinator populations during early seasonEcological Implications: Why Diverse Strategies MatterThe coexistence of violent, precise, and redundant pollination tactics illustrates the evolutionary arms race between plants and their visitors. Violent mechanisms like broom’s may deter less efficient pollinators, while gentle precision maximises pollen placement. Redundant generosity, as seen in dandelions, supports pollinator populations during scarce periods, indirectly sustaining ecosystem health.Evolutionary pressure: plant‑pollinator co‑adaptationCommunity impact: varied strategies sustain diverse pollinator assemblagesConservation insight: preserving a mix of pollination types benefits ecosystem resilienceLooking Ahead: Future Directions for Plant‑Pollinator CoevolutionAs climate change reshapes flowering phenology, the balance between these strategies could shift. Species that can both attract a wide range of pollinators and ensure successful fertilisation—whether through force, finesse, or self‑sufficiency—may gain a competitive edge, influencing future biodiversity patterns.Potential shift: altered timing of flower bloom and pollinator activityAdaptive advantage: flexible pollination mechanismsResearch focus: monitoring how climate impacts plant‑pollinator dynamics
#Cytisus scoparius #Lamium album #Taraxacum officinale
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Politics May 22, 2026

Police Appeal for Information in Prince Andrew Misconduct Probe

Thames Valley Police have broadened their investigation into alleged sexual misconduct, corruption …
Police Expand Probe into Prince Andrew's Alleged MisconductThames Valley Police (TVP) announced that their “unprecedented investigation” into Prince Andrew, 66 now covers a wide range of possible offences – from sexual misconduct to fraud and the illegal sharing of confidential information. The force is urging witnesses to contact them via the official online portal with any relevant details. Scope, Timeline and Key Evidence GapsFebruary 2026 – Prince Andrew arrested and questioned under criminal caution on suspicion of misconduct in public office (MIPO) linked to his role as a British trade envoy.Investigators are seeking original US Department of Justice documents that reference alleged information sharing with Jeffrey Epstein. Only printed extracts have been obtained so far.TVP is reviewing a claim from a US‑based woman who says she was taken to Windsor in 2010 for sexual purposes; the police have contacted her lawyer but have not opened a full criminal investigation.Three other UK forces are conducting separate criminal inquiries stemming from the same Epstein files, while the Metropolitan Police declined to open its own probe. Potential Political and Institutional RepercussionsThe investigation touches several sensitive arenas: the credibility of the royal household, the legal definition of MIPO for a trade envoy, and the UK’s cooperation with US authorities on high‑profile financial crimes. If evidence confirms that the prince used his diplomatic position to pass confidential information, it could trigger a constitutional debate over the limits of royal privilege and the Crown’s role in public office. What the Next Months May Hold for the InquiryPolice expect the probe to extend well into 2027, contingent on obtaining the original Epstein documents and completing forensic analysis of seized material from the prince’s Norfolk and Windsor residences. Formal discussions with the Crown Prosecution Service are already underway, suggesting that charges could be considered once the evidentiary threshold is met. Meanwhile, the appeal for public tips aims to fill information gaps that could accelerate the timeline.
#Prince Andrew #Thames Valley Police #Jeffrey Epstein
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Sports May 22, 2026

Premier League: 10 Key Storylines for the Final Day of the Season

The final day of the Premier League season is set to be filled with drama and intrigue. Brighton an…
Welbeck and Seagulls Push for Europe Brighton must overcome Manchester United on the final day to secure a place in Europe for the second time in their history. Danny Welbeck could be key against his former club, having enjoyed his most prolific season with 13 league goals. The Battle for the Wooden Spoon Burnley and Wolves face off in a match that will determine which team finishes 19th and receives £2m in prize money. Both teams have had a disappointing season, but a win for either side could move them off the bottom of the table. A Carnival Atmosphere at Selhurst Park Crystal Palace host Arsenal in a match that promises to be a celebration of the Gunners' Premier League title. Manchester City's failure to beat Bournemouth means that Arsenal can now focus on their upcoming Conference League match. Fulham in Mendes Merry-Go-Round? Could this be Marco Silva's final match in charge of Fulham? The manager has been linked with Benfica, and his departure could trigger a series of moves involving other top players. Liverpool Exits and a Return Liverpool host Brentford in a match that will see several players say goodbye to Anfield. Mohamed Salah and Andy Robertson are among those departing, while Jordan Henderson returns to the stadium with his new club. The Manchester City Farewells Manchester City's final match of the season will see Pep Guardiola and several key players say goodbye to the club. The team has dominated English football for over a decade, and their departure will be felt across the league.
#Premier League #Manchester United #Liverpool
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Sports May 22, 2026

Andy Robertson: 'It was easy to fall in love with Liverpool – I'm fortunate Liverpool fell in love with me'

Liverpool's beloved left-back Andy Robertson reflects on his nine-year journey at the club, from re…
The Journey of a Reject to Liverpool LegendThere was the Barcelona comeback on the night he ruffled Lionel Messi's hair, the Champions League triumph in Madrid, winning Liverpool's first league title in 30 years and pressing five Manchester City players in one career-defining run at Anfield when 4-1 up. But the best feeling Andy Robertson experienced at Liverpool was "climbing the mountain" with Jürgen Klopp's all-conquering team. Nobody climbed higher or harder.The boy who was rejected by Celtic at 15 and tweeted: "Life at this age is rubbish with no money" after his debut for Queen's Park aged 18 became the man many consider to be Liverpool's finest left-back, and arguably the best in the world at his peak. With 377 fiercely committed appearances in a Liverpool shirt behind him, Robertson will say goodbye on Sunday. The 32-year-old Scotland captain leaves "with no regrets, no bitterness" and "glad that one of our Egyptian friends might take a bit more of the limelight. I can just sneak underneath that."The Climbing of the Mountain Together"We were on the most amazing journey ever, all together," he reflects. "When we started out Mo Salah didn't sign as the best player in the world or the best winger in the world. Virgil van Dijk had the potential to be but wasn't the best centre-back in the world. Alisson wasn't the best goalkeeper in the world. Trent [Alexander-Arnold] wasn't the best right-back in the world. Hendo [Jordan Henderson] was still trying to find his feet as captain. We were all just on this journey from the bottom to the very top together and climbing that mountain was the best feeling ever."Every day we came in knowing we were getting better and better and starting to click as a team. We'd beat teams in the tunnel. Genuinely. When I speak to my Scotland teammates, they were lining up in the tunnel and looking over thinking: 'We're going to need to run our socks off today to get anything.' And more often than not they didn't get anything."We had an unbelievable environment to express ourselves, to play with freedom, but in our minds we knew we had to work at 100%. That was obviously from the manager, from the coaches, and I think then all the staff and people behind the scenes bought into it and you had the whole training ground determined to achieve all our dreams. Everyone was on the same page and we just made magical things happen thankfully."The Impact of Tragedy and TransitionRobertson's reminiscence prompts an inevitable follow-up. Why does Liverpool not feel like that now? His reply stops everyone in their tracks, and brings home the tragic reality of what this season has entailed for the now deposed Premier League champions. "In terms of the club I am leaving behind I think we are not at the 2017 stage, we are at the transition stage," begins one of Diogo Jota's closest friends. The Liverpool forward's death in a car crash alongside his brother in north-western Spain last July cast a dark pall over the campaign."This year hasn't worked out for a variety of reasons. We can't hide away from it, and it is not an excuse, but what we went through in the summer no team will ever go through. No member of staff will go through. I hope they never go through it because the devastation we went through … football didn't matter. We didn't care about football for weeks. None of us wanted to train. You were getting treatment off physios and physios didn't want to treat you. That is the reality of it."As footballers we of course have a duty, we have to move on and we managed that. We started the season fairly well although it was still an emotional time for us. The [season-opening] Bournemouth game was ridiculously emotional with all of Jots' family being there. I think after the 20th minute you saw a real dip in performance because of the emotional impact that it had on all of us.The Future of Liverpool FC"But then the season has been inconsistent. We bought players that we all got excited about, and they will all have an unbelievable career at Liverpool. I have no doubt about that. But they are also young. The one thing I get annoyed about in football is that footballers do not control their price tag. The market controls it. These players will be successful for Liverpool but they probably need a bit of time."Then some players who have played at a ridiculously high level haven't played to that level. If you add all that in then we have had an inconsistent season and that is the huge frustration for us. We have been too easy to play against. There is no hiding away from that but I believe they have more than enough in that changing room to be successful for Liverpool again."
#Andy Robertson #Liverpool FC #Premier League
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Politics May 22, 2026

UN Peace Envoy Warns of Permanent Gaza Divide Under Current Status Quo

UN Peace Envoy Nickolay Mladenov warns that the deteriorating status quo in Gaza risks becoming per…
The Diplomatic Warning The high representative overseeing the United States-founded Board of Peace for Gaza, Nickolay Mladenov, has warned that the deteriorating status quo in the devastated Palestinian enclave risks becoming "permanent." Speaking to the United Nations Security Council (UNSC), Mladenov presented a roadmap detailing obligations for Israel and Hamas to implement a permanent ceasefire. "Let me say this clearly: the implementation cannot advance through Palestinian obligations alone," Mladenov said, speaking via video call. "The continued killings and Israeli restrictions affecting humanitarian flows are not abstract issues." He urged the UNSC to use "every means at its disposal" to press Hamas to disarm, while also saying that Israel must uphold its commitment under a ceasefire agreed in October. The Humanitarian Crisis The war that Israel launched following the October 7, 2023 attacks on southern Israel by Hamas and other armed Palestinian groups was halted by a ceasefire in October 2025. More than 72,775 Palestinians have been killed in the conflict. But the Israeli military maintains a strict security regime, and many hundreds more have been killed in the past seven months. Conflict monitors warn that since the ceasefire in the US-Israel war on Iran was struck last month, Israeli bombardment of Gaza has accelerated. Violent raids by settlers and the military in the occupied West Bank have also been increasing. On Thursday, an Israeli drone attack killed a 26-year-old in Gaza's al-Mahatta area, east of Deir el-Balah city, according to Wafa news agency. The Stalled Peace Process In January, the US announced that the Gaza "ceasefire" was moving to phase two, which is supposed to focus on Hamas's disarmament, long-term governance and the establishment of a panel of Palestinian technocrats to lead post-war Gaza. It also calls for the gradual retreat of the Israeli army, which still controls more than 50 percent of the Palestinian territory, and the deployment of an international stabilizing force. But with the war in Iran drawing the world's attention amid a global energy crisis, the transition to the second phase has been stalled for weeks. Mladenov, a veteran Bulgarian diplomat, warned of the risks of inaction by both parties. The Regional Implications "The risk is that the deteriorating status quo becomes permanent: a divided Gaza, Hamas holding military and administrative control over two million people across less than half the territory," Mladenov said. "Those people are likely to remain trapped in the rubble, dependent on aid with no meaningful reconstruction, because reconstruction financing will not follow where weapons have not been laid down." "And the result? Another generation growing up in tents in fear, with despair as the most rational thing for them to feel." This, he said, is a scenario that Israelis, Palestinians and the region "should all fear and mobilize to avoid."
#Nickolay Mladenov #Gaza #UNSC
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Tech May 21, 2026

Spotify Unveils AI‑Driven Studio App to Challenge Google’s NotebookLM

Spotify Labs launched a desktop app called Studio that creates personalized podcasts from emails, c…
The Launch of Spotify’s AI‑Powered Studio AppSpotify Labs introduced Studio, a standalone desktop application that lets users generate personalized podcasts from emails, calendars, and web searches. The preview, rolled out in more than 20 markets on 2026-05-21, positions the music‑streaming giant against Google’s NotebookLM in the emerging AI‑audio briefing space.How the App Turns Data into a Daily Audio BriefingUsers submit multistep prompts such as “Create a daily audio brief for my road trip through Italy…”An integrated AI agent browses the web, extracts personal schedule information, and assembles a custom podcast.Generated podcasts are saved privately in the user’s Spotify library and synced across devices.The tool is labeled a “research preview,” with Spotify warning that AI‑generated content may be unreliable.Market Implications for Spotify and Its CompetitorsSpotify expands beyond music streaming into AI‑driven content creation, a segment valued at billions of dollars.Competing directly with Google’s NotebookLM, which already offers similar podcast generation.Early adoption could boost user engagement metrics, though no revenue figures are disclosed yet.Strategic Impact on the Audio‑Productivity LandscapeThe launch signals a shift toward audio‑first knowledge workers, challenging text‑centric tools from Adobe, ElevenLabs, and emerging startups like Hero and Huxe. If successful, Spotify could integrate the app with its broader ecosystem, potentially adding system‑audio capture for meeting‑note transcription.Future Outlook for AI‑Generated PodcastsSpotify plans to iterate on the Studio app, broaden market availability, and explore additional integrations such as Granola‑style note‑taking. The next wave may see tighter coupling with Spotify’s Discover feed and monetization through premium podcast features.
#Spotify #Google #NotebookLM
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