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Economy Jun 22, 2026

UK Retail Sales Surge in May as Heatwave Fuels Fan and Pool Purchases

Retail sales in Great Britain grew 1.2% in May, the strongest monthly increase since January, drive…
May Retail Rebound Driven by Record Heatwave Retail sales in Great Britain returned to growth in May, expanding 1.2% month‑on‑month – the strongest rise since January – as unusually hot weather boosted demand for cooling and outdoor leisure products. Heatwave Spurs Record Fan and Pool Purchases Desk and pedestal fans jumped 750% versus April, according to Shopify merchant data. Pool loungers rose 500%, outdoor umbrellas 70%, and sales of paddleboards, surfboards and kayaks also climbed. Department stores posted a 2.5% increase; household‑goods stores were up 3.2% month‑on‑month. Online retail (non‑store) surged 6.1%, the biggest monthly rise since February 2025. ONS Reports 1.2% Monthly Growth and Sector Highlights Overall retail volume up 3.2% year‑to‑date versus May 2025. Supermarkets were the sole sector in decline, falling 0.4%. Computer and telecoms stores continued to benefit from new product launches. World Cup excitement added an almost double month‑on‑month rise in football shirts and strong sales of boots, TVs and disposable cups. Implications for the High Street and Consumer Sentiment Analysts had forecast only 0.5% growth; the actual 1.2% suggests a stronger short‑term rebound. Experts such as Hai‑Ly Nguyen (McKinsey & Company) view the surge as a “heat‑driven spike rather than a turning point”. Rajeev Shaunak (MHA) warns that confidence remains deeply negative and many households are still cutting back on big purchases. Outlook: Temporary Spike or Sustainable Recovery? If warm weather persists, seasonal categories may continue to lift monthly figures. Absent sustained consumer confidence, the high street could revert to modest growth once the heatwave ends. Monitoring upcoming ONS releases will be key to distinguishing a fleeting weather effect from a broader economic upswing.
#Office for National Statistics #Shopify #McKinsey & Company
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Politics Jun 21, 2026

Prosperity Party Secures Overwhelming Parliamentary Victory in Ethiopia

Ethiopia’s Prosperity Party, led by Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, captured more than 90% of parliament…
Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s Prosperity Party secured an overwhelming parliamentary majority in Ethiopia’s June 2026 elections, positioning the Nobel laureate to continue his reform agenda.The Election Outcome: Prosperity Party Wins More Than 90% of SeatsThe ruling party swept the ballot, winning over 90% of the available seats in the House of Peoples' Representatives. The victory was expected after a campaign focused on the government’s economic record and promises to improve food security.Election date: June 2026Seats won by Prosperity Party: >90% of totalOpposition presence: Minimal, with most seats uncontestedNumbers on the Ballot: Seat Share and Voter TurnoutWhile official turnout figures have not been released, analysts estimate participation at roughly 65% in regions where voting occurred. The Tigray region did not hold elections, citing “unfavourable conditions.”Seats available: 547Seats secured by Prosperity Party: ~492Regions without voting: TigrayPolitical Repercussions: Consolidated Power Amid Regional TensionsThe result consolidates Abiy Ahmed’s control but deepens concerns in ethnically volatile areas such as Oromia, Amhara and the disputed northern Tigray region. Human‑rights groups warn that the government’s recent crackdown on journalists and civil‑society groups could undermine the democratic veneer of the election.Key opposition grievances: Media repression, civil‑society restrictionsSecurity challenges: Ongoing militia activity in Amhara and Fano presenceInternational reaction: Calls for inclusive political dialogueLooking Ahead: Risks of Unrest and Economic ProjectionsDespite the political win, the government projects economic growth of over 10% in 2026, one of Africa’s fastest rates. Analysts caution that without stability in Tigray and broader regional reconciliation, the growth target may be hard to achieve.Projected GDP growth: >10% in 2026Potential flashpoints: Tigray political re‑assertion, Oromia protestsOutlook: Continued dominance for Prosperity Party, but heightened risk of localized unrest
#Abiy Ahmed #Prosperity Party #Ethiopia
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World Wide Jun 15, 2026

Deadly Bus Crash in Ethiopian Mountains Kills 31 Amid Rising Road Safety Concerns

A bus crash in northern Ethiopia's mountainous region has killed at least 31 people and injured doz…
The Tragedy in the Ethiopian HighlandsAn overcrowded bus has crashed in northern Ethiopia, killing at least 31 people and injuring dozens more, police have confirmed. The bus veered off the road while travelling to the capital, Addis Ababa, early on Monday and plunged into a ravine approximately 100 metres (330 feet) deep.The bus had departed from the town of Dessie in the northern Amhara region of Ethiopia, whose roads are among the most dangerous in the world. The crash happened on a zigzagging mountainous road known as Harego, which is surrounded by forests.Images Reveal Extent of DamageImages of the bus posted on social media show a severely damaged vehicle broken apart and lying by a hillside. According to the Associated Press news agency, several people died because they received medical attention too late.Inadequate Emergency Response Complicates CrisisPoor infrastructure and a lack of ambulance services meant people were forced to make their own way to treatment centres, allowing their injuries to worsen, AP wrote. This systemic issue in Ethiopia's healthcare and emergency response infrastructure has been a persistent problem in the country.A Pattern of Road Safety FailuresEthiopia is one of the worst countries in the world for road traffic accidents. The East African country has notoriously dangerous roads, which, according to official statistics, are only becoming even less safe. Road traffic deaths more than doubled in the 12 years between 2007 and 2018.A United Nations report has concluded that a lack of traffic signage and road markings poses a significant safety risk. In December 2024, 71 people were killed when the truck they were travelling in fell into a river in the southern Sidama region.Call for Improved Infrastructure and Safety MeasuresThis latest tragedy underscores the urgent need for Ethiopia to address its road safety crisis. With the country's population continuing to grow and more vehicles on the road, the lack of proper infrastructure, emergency services, and safety regulations creates a deadly combination that has claimed hundreds of lives in recent years.
#Ethiopia #Bus Crash #Road Safety
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Politics Jun 01, 2026

Ethiopia’s 2026 Election: Prosperity Party Poised for Landslide Amid Regional Turmoil

Ethiopians began voting on 1 June 2026, with Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s Prosperity Party expected …
Ethiopians started voting on 1 June 2026 in parliamentary and regional elections, and analysts expect Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s Prosperity Party to dominate the results despite significant security challenges across the country.Voting Begins Amid Exclusion of Tigray and Regional ConflictMore than 50 million citizens are registered to vote, but the National Election Board of Ethiopia (NEBE) has suspended polling in the northern Tigray region, citing “unfavourable conditions” after the 2020‑2022 civil war. In Oromia, clashes with the Oromo Liberation Army have caused hundreds of deaths, while in Amhara the Fano armed group has disrupted voting in at least eight of the region’s 138 constituencies.Numbers Shaping the Election: Voter Registration, Seats, and Projected Growth50 million registered voters on election day.Prosperity Party previously won 410 of 484 parliamentary seats in the 2021 election.Ethiopia’s population stands at roughly 135 million, with nearly half under the age of 18.Official forecasts project national economic growth to exceed 10 percent in 2026, one of the fastest rates on the continent.Implications for Ethiopia’s Political Stability and Regional RelationsThe opposition alleges systematic suppression, including arrests of party leaders and legal obstacles to campaigning, claims the government denies. Human‑rights groups warn that recent crackdowns on journalists and civil‑society actors could reverse reforms introduced after 2018. Meanwhile, renewed rhetoric about Ethiopia’s right to sea access has strained ties with Eritrea, reviving old animosities.What the June 11 Results Could Mean for Ethiopia’s FutureIf the Prosperity Party secures a landslide, it will consolidate Abiy Ahmed’s grip on power and enable continuation of his economic agenda. However, persistent regional insurgencies and a fragmented opposition could limit the government’s ability to deliver on promised growth and could reignite internal conflicts, influencing both domestic stability and Ethiopia’s role in the Horn of Africa.
#Ethiopia #Abiy Ahmed #Prosperity Party
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Politics May 31, 2026

Ethiopia's General Election: Key Parties and Candidates Explained

Ethiopians are voting in a general election to choose members of parliament, who will select the ne…
The Lead-Up to the Election Ethiopians vote on Monday in a general election to choose members of parliament, who will in turn select the next prime minister. The National Election Board of Ethiopia (NEBE) said 47 political parties and more than 10,900 candidates are in the race, including 2,198 for the federal parliament, 8,736 for regional and city councils and 73 independents. The Main Political Parties The contest brings together ruling, opposition, regional and independent politicians under Ethiopia’s federal parliamentary system, where the government is formed through a parliamentary majority and MPs select the prime minister. The Prosperity Party (PP) The Prosperity Party is the ruling political party in Ethiopia, led by Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed. It was formed in 2019 following the merger of several regional parties that previously made up the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF). The party holds a majority in the House of Peoples’ Representatives following the 2021 general election. The National Movement of Amhara (NAMA) The National Movement of Amhara is a regional political party operating mainly in Ethiopia’s Amhara region. It is led by Belete Molla and participates in Ethiopia’s federal parliamentary elections through constituency-based contests. Ethiopian Citizens for Social Justice (EZEMA) The Ethiopian Citizens for Social Justice is a national political party led by Berhanu Nega. Formed in 2019, it has participated in national elections since 2021 and operates across multiple regions. The Peace for Ethiopia Coalition The Peace for Ethiopia coalition is an alliance of smaller regional parties, including the Agew National Council, Gamo Democratic Party, Gambella Peoples’ Freedom Movement, Kaffa Green Party, and Tigray Democratic Cooperation. Electoral Stakes and Political Environment The election will determine the composition of Ethiopia’s federal government and which party or coalition controls parliament. Elected MPs will select the prime minister, who then forms the federal government. Voter Engagement and Demographics NEBE reports that more than 50 million people are registered to vote in the election. Young people make up a large share of the population, with a median age of about 19 years, according to UN population estimates. Women account for around half of registered voters.
#Ethiopia #General Election #Prosperity Party
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World Wide May 29, 2026

Ethiopia's Ethnic Groups and Conflict Areas: A Visual Guide

Ethiopia is set to hold its first nationwide elections since the end of the Tigray war. The country…
The Lead-Up to Ethiopia's Elections Ethiopia will head to the polls on June 1 for its first nationwide elections since the formal end of the Tigray war, a devastating two-year conflict from 2020 to 2022 that concluded with a peace agreement between the Ethiopian federal government and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF). Ethiopia at a Glance Ethiopia is a landlocked country in the Horn of Africa, covering an area of 1,104,300sq km (426,400sq miles) and bordered by Eritrea, Sudan, South Sudan, Kenya, Somalia and Djibouti. The country has sustained notable economic growth over the past two decades, with the IMF projecting a 9.2 percent expansion in 2026, the highest on the continent. Yet persistent challenges remain, including high inflation (11.7 percent as of April 2026), foreign exchange shortages, and the costly burden of post-war reconstruction. Ethiopia's Ethnic Groups The East African country is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in the world, with more than 80 distinct groups. The Oromo are the largest, making up about 35 percent of the population, concentrated largely in the south and central regions. The Amhara are the second-largest, about 24 percent, and have historically been the politically dominant group. Other significant groups include the Somali (7 percent), in the east; the Tigrayan (6 percent), concentrated in the northern Tigray region; and the Sidama (4 percent), in the southern highlands. Armed Violence Across the Country Ethiopia has been in near-continuous conflict since 2020, across several fronts: Tigray (2020-22): Ethiopian forces (ENDF) and their allies, including Eritrean forces, fought the Tigray defence forces (TDF). Oromia (2019-present): Conflict between Oromia regional forces, the ENDF, and the Oromo Liberation Army (OLA) has killed thousands of civilians. Amhara (2023-present): Amhara militias fought alongside federal troops in the Tigray war, but that alliance collapsed when the federal government reached a peace deal with the TPLF. According to Armed Conflict Location & Event Data (ACLED), an independent conflict monitor, between January 1, 2022 and May 15, 2026, more than 7,400 attacks have been recorded across the country.
#Ethiopia #Tigray #Abiy Ahmed
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Politics May 29, 2026

Ethiopia's June 2026 Election: Abiy's Path to Victory Amidst Conflict and Controversy

Ethiopia prepares for general elections on June 1, 2026, with Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed's ruling pa…
Ethiopia's Contested Election LandscapeAddis Ababa, Ethiopia – Ethiopia will hold general elections on June 1, 2026, with Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed's governing Prosperity Party (PP) widely expected to secure a decisive victory. A fragmented opposition and violence in parts of the country could keep millions from voting, raising questions about the legitimacy of the electoral process.In the capital, Addis Ababa, the ruling party has closed major roads, including Meskel Square in the city centre, to stage large rallies for supporters, while opposition parties say they have been barred from holding comparable gatherings.Election Dynamics and Government Campaign StrategyThe electoral board claims more than 50 million people have registered to vote out of a population of at least 130 million, though critics dispute these figures, pointing to large parts of the country affected by conflicts in regions including Amhara and Oromia, as well as lingering instability following the Tigray conflict.Several of the country's most populous regions, including Amhara, Oromia, Gambella and Tigray, remain unstable after a civil war that ended in 2022, killing an estimated 600,000 people and displacing millions.Regional Conflicts and Electoral Legitimacy"The polls are primarily a symbolic exercise intended to confer legitimacy on the incumbent," Kjetil Tronvoll, professor at Oslo New University College and an expert on Ethiopia, told Al Jazeera. "Multiparty elections in Ethiopia have never been a genuine contest with the real possibility of changing government, neither under the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) nor under the PP.""With the exclusion of Tigray, the challenge is far bigger than it appears on the surface," Tronvoll said, adding that it reflects Ethiopia's political and territorial crisis. "It is a consequence of the federal government's lack of territorial control and the erosion of federal authority over political institutions in the region."Suppression of Opposition and Media ControlMany opposition voices have been pushed out of formal political space, with armed movements active across Amhara, Oromia and other regions. Tigray has been excluded entirely from the election, as the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF), a banned but influential political actor in the region, consolidates its authority.Opposition leader Mistresilasie Tamerat, 23, who heads the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Party (EPRP), says she has been repeatedly denied permits and venues to organize rallies, an issue also highlighted by the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission (EHRC), a government-established human rights body.Press Freedom Under SiegeMuch of Ethiopia's media and journalists have been warned against critical coverage of the upcoming election, while the media regulatory authority has come under scrutiny for its actions against the press, including the reported deportation of journalists and restrictions affecting outlets such as The Economist and The Africa Report.Ethiopia now ranks 145th out of 180 countries in Reporters Without Borders' 2025 Press Freedom Index, alongside Eritrea, North Korea and Iran near the bottom of the ranking. Addis Standard, a leading critical online publication, has had its licence withdrawn, while The Reporter newspaper, the country's largest-circulation paper, has been warned to align its reporting with government narratives.Diminished Public Engagement and Future OutlookDays before the vote, the mood in Addis Ababa is subdued. There are few campaign signs beyond those of the governing party and little visible political activity, reflecting a mood shaped by double-digit inflation and an influx of displaced people fleeing insecurity elsewhere in the country.Even music perceived as critical of the government, including songs by popular artist Teddy Afro, is increasingly absent from public spaces and radio broadcasts, residents say. For many Ethiopians, the election represents a continuation of the status quo rather than a genuine opportunity for political change, with the government's control over institutions and public space ensuring its anticipated victory.
#Ethiopia #Abiy Ahmed #Prosperity Party
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Theatre Apr 30, 2026

Driftwood review: Trinidadian tale of longing hits emotional high notes

Driftwood, a play by Martina Laird, tells the story of a fractured family in 1950s Trinidad, captur…
The Emotional Landscape of Driftwood The air hangs heavy in Alma, a drinking club in 1950s Port of Spain, Trinidad. Heat and rum bring their own kind of languor – but in Martina Laird's play, change is coming, both within a fractured family and in the wider world. Characters and Conflict Alma is managed by a mother and daughter. Ellen Thomas gives the indomitable Pearl a basilisk glare but not maternal instincts (“the only thing I done wrong is to make children dat not worth nothing”). Ruby (an exuberant, citrussy Cat White) runs a honeypot scam on tourists, but doesn’t intend to “stay here in downtown hell”. The Plot Thickens When Pearl's long-abandoned son Diamond arrives, tensions seethe. The RSC's content warnings flag up incest – so it's no surprise when Ruby and Diamond catch each other's glance. She stands in golden lamplight, and he draws close, moth to flame. Martins Imhangbe's towering Diamond moves in an unhurried, proprietary roll, teetering and then rising on his toes. Capturing a Nation on the Brink Laird captures a country on the febrile brink of change. Nationalist Eric Williams (later the independent island's first prime minister) is standing for election, urging voters to reject the claims of British rule and American economic encroachment. Calypsos with a satirical snap play between scene changes. A Critical Verdict Laird's first staged play, runner-up for the Verity Bargate award, still feels in need of another draft. Plot and emotion are dialled up to 11 but don't shake you as they might. A different production might ignite the dialogue's crackle; Justin Audibert's heavy-handed direction sloshes in music to underscore emotive speeches and ambles towards the flickering redemption that might break the cycle of personal and political history. Atmosphere and Performance Driftwood is steeped in atmosphere, enhanced by Simon Spencer's lighting: amber gliding over ink-blue walls, or dunking late night confessions in an eerie moss green. The best of Laird's writing is equally vivid: the tang of sour memory, the detail of dreams betrayed. At the Other Place, Stratford-upon-Avon, until 30 May. Then at Kiln theatre, London, 3 June-4 July
#Driftwood #Martina Laird #RSC
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Environment Apr 13, 2026

Spring in the Lake District: Keswick’s Timeless Landscape Balances Floods and Farm Life

Enid J Wilson’s 1976 Country Diary entry paints a vivid picture of an early‑April morning in Keswic…
At the break of day in Keswick, the air still carries a chill despite it being April. From a drystone wall on St John’s Vale, I watched the sky race past Helvellyn, while bright daffodils bowed on a nearby farm as if shivering in the breeze. The surrounding trees stood still, and a shaft of sunlight ignited the bracken below the crags, turning it a vivid colour that starkly contrasted with the dead grass and dark scree. This scene illustrates a place where change has settled gently, with farms preserving their protective belts of trees that nestle comfortably against the fell’s edge.The low fields echoed with the call of curlews, and although some farmers elsewhere lament a lack of moisture, the land here was saturated; the river ran brown with flood‑water and the becks churned white. Many ewes were gathered for lambing, yet one independent ewe chose to give birth alone on a small green shelf in a ghyll above a stream. The newborn lamb was still damp and trembling when a farmhand arrived in his tractor, loading the pair onto a hay‑lined trailer to bring them back to the safety of the farm, fearing the lamb might tumble into the beck as its mother went to drink.
#Keswick #Lake District #Enid J Wilson
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