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Reward of £20k offered for police station bomb information
A car with a gas cylinder device was blown up outside Dunmurry Police Station at the end of April.
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Ukraine war briefing: EU sanctions 16 officials accused of helping Russia abduct thousands of Ukrainian children | Russia
The EU on Monday imposed sanctions on 16 officials accused of helping Russia to abduct tens of thousands of children from Ukraine and force many to change their identities or be put up for adoption. Sanctions were also slapped on seven centres suspected of indoctrinating the children or training them to serve in the armed forces, either for Russia or pro-Russian militias inside Ukraine. More than 130 people and “entities” are now under EU travel bans and asset freezes over the abductions.
EU headquarters said the measures target “those responsible for the systematic unlawful deportation, forced transfer, forced assimilation, including indoctrination and militarised education, of Ukrainian minors, as well as their unlawful adoption and removal to the Russian Federation and within temporarily occupied territories.” Since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in early 2022, about 20,500 children have been unlawfully deported or forcibly transferred to Russia or Russian-held territories in eastern Ukraine.
EU officials say many of the children are stripped of their Ukrainian identity and culture, given Russian passports and put up for adoption. Some are forced into schools for indoctrination or into military camps. “Russia is trying to erase their identity,” Latvian foreign minister Baiba Braže said Monday at a meeting with EU counterparts in Brussels. “When you look at the Genocide Convention, it’s one of the features of the genocide crime. So, it’s very serious.”
Ukrainian authorities served president Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s powerful former chief of staff with an official notice of suspicion as part of a major corruption investigation, Kyiv’s anti-corruption agencies said on Monday. The agencies did not name the official, in line with Ukrainian law, but local media widely identified him as Andriy Yermak, who resigned late last year amid a corruption scandal. Yermak was Zelenskyy’s closest aide and one of Ukraine’s most powerful men, before he resigned in November 2025 after his home was raided by anti-corruption officers. He had served as Zelenskyy’s right-hand man throughout much of the Russian invasion.
EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said Monday the “dynamics” of the Ukraine war were changing in Kyiv’s favour as Russia suffers record casualties and strikes on key oil facilities. “Moscow’s record battlefield losses, Ukraine deep strikes into Russia, and Moscow’s shrinking military parade, these things all show that the dynamics of the war are changing,” Kallas said after a meeting of EU foreign ministers. “Ukraine is in a much better position than a year ago,” she said. “But of course, there is no time for complacency.”
Zelenskyy said Monday that fighting with Russia was ongoing despite a three-day US-brokered ceasefire, accusing Russia of not wanting to end the four-year war. Both Russia and Ukraine have accused each other of violating the ceasefire, announced by Donald Trump, over three days from 9 May. “Today there was no silence at the front, there was fighting. We have recorded all of this,” Zelenskyy said in his daily address. “We also see that Russia has no intention of ending this war; unfortunately, it is preparing new attacks,” he added.
European governments on Monday rejected a suggestion by Russian president Vladimir Putin that former German chancellor Gerhard Schröder could represent them in possible future talks with Moscow. They dismissed any role for Schröder, who has worked for Russian state companies and cultivated a close relationship with Putin. “It’s clear why Putin wants him to be the person – so that actually … he would be sitting on both sides of the table,” Kallas told reporters. “If we give the right to Russia to appoint a negotiator on our behalf … that would not be very wise,” she said.
Russia has cut its economic growth forecast for 2026 and the following three years but left unchanged the projected oil price despite the spike in global prices driven by the war in the Middle East, deputy prime minister Alexander Novak told Vedomosti daily in an interview on Tuesday. Russia’s $3tn economy, hit by the war in Ukraine, western sanctions, and high interest rates, contracted by 0.3% in the first quarter, marking its first quarterly decline since early 2023.
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Baby loss couple: We were told we'd picked a bad day to give birth
Couple whose baby was stillborn in hospital hope maternity review will lead to improvements.
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‘A consistent pattern of lying’: Musk v OpenAI trial exposes what insiders think of Sam Altman | California
OpenAI, despite its name, is usually extremely secretive about its operations. It promotes a carefully crafted image to the world. Over the course of Elon Musk’s case against the startup and its CEO Sam Altman, however, the artificial intelligence firm has been forced to publicly contend with some of the messiest parts of its rise to power in public.
The Musk v OpenAI trial, which on Monday entered its third week, has featured a who’s who of Silicon Valley testifying about OpenAI’s past and its CEO’s contentious leadership. Musk’s attorneys have used former executives, private text messages, diary entries and internal email exchanges to portray Altman as untrustworthy. Altman, who denies Musk’s allegations, will take the stand in the coming days. OpenAI has likewise issued denials.
Although Musk’s case hinges on accusations that OpenAI and Altman broke a founding agreement by shifting the company from a nonprofit to a for-profit structure, the trial has often appeared to be more of a public relations battle than a debate over corporate governance. The history of internal drama at OpenAI, which includes a five-day saga in 2023 when Altman was effectively fired then rehired, has provided plenty of ammunition for that fight.
Altman’s leadership and trustworthiness have long been a subject of scrutiny in the tech industry and have been well chronicled in numerous profiles and books on OpenAI – including a recent New Yorker article that included other tech figures suggesting Altman showed deceptive tendencies. The trial has exposed even more details about OpenAI’s fractious corporate past than previously documented, as well as confirmed previously reported incidents through testimony under oath.
Altman’s former allies call him untrustworthy
In court last week, jurors heard video testimony from Mira Murati, OpenAI’s former chief technical officer, once a very close associate of Altman, in which she accused him of “creating chaos” at the company. Murati, who left OpenAI in 2024, testified that Altman had a pattern of “saying one thing to one person and completely the opposite to another person”.
The court also viewed text messages from Altman to Murati from 2023, during a brief period when OpenAI’s board ousted him as CEO after accusing him of being misleading in his conduct. Before he was reinstated five days later amid an internal power struggle, Altman texted Murati a series of questions about how the board was weighing his fate. She pointed to a very different future than the one that would come to pass, one in which Altman was cast out for good.
“Can you indicate directionally good or bad?” Altman texted Murati about his prospects.
“Directionally very bad,” Murati responded.
“Ok,” Altman replied.
Murati was one of several witnesses who testified about Altman’s personal and professional conduct. Former board member Helen Toner, who backed Altman’s ouster, told the court in a video deposition that there was a “pattern of behavior related to his honesty and candor” that led to Altman’s removal. Natasha McCauley, another former OpenAI board member, alleged in her deposition that Altman caused “repeated crisis events” through his leadership.
Musk’s lawyers on Monday also called OpenAI co-founder and former chief scientist Ilya Sutskever to the stand to testify. Sutskever, who was another member of the board that ousted Altman and left OpenAI in 2024, stated that he had held concerns about Altman’s running of the company and truthfulness.
“You told the board that Altman ‘exhibits a consistent pattern of lying, undermining his execs and pitting his execs against one another’,” Musk’s lawyer Steven Molo asked Sutskever.
“Yes,” Sutskever responded.
“That was clearly your view at that time,” Molo asked.
“Yes,” Sutskever replied.
‘Amateur city’: Microsoft’s CEO criticizes OpenAI’s board on the stand
Musk’s attorney also questioned Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella on Monday about the 2023 OpenAI blowup and Altman, with Nadella giving his own perspective on the chaotic attempt at driving Altman away – an event that OpenAI employees would later refer to as “the blip”. Microsoft at the time was OpenAI’s largest investor by a large margin.
“Whenever I’ve asked explicitly why Sam was fired, they never gave me, that I remember, a specific reason,” Nadella responded. “I never got clarity from anyone on that,” he added.
Under questioning from Microsoft’s own lawyer, Nadella criticized the OpenAI board that tried to remove Altman for creating instability and its poor communication.
“It was sort of amateur-city as far as I’m concerned,” Nadella testified, adding, “I was very worried that the employees were going to leave en masse.”
Musk’s own mess
OpenAI and Altman have denied all of Musk’s allegations and argued that his case is part of a pattern of harassment motivated by personal jealousy of OpenAI’s success. The jury has also heard testimony about the Tesla CEO’s own erratic behavior. OpenAI’s president Greg Brockman claimed last week that Musk became irate and “stormed around the table” at a meeting shortly before the billionaire left the company in 2018.
OpenAI’s attorneys alleged in a filing that Musk reached out to Brockman to settle the case two days before the trial, then became threatening when Brockman refused to meet his demands.
“By the end of this week, you and Sam will be the most hated men in America. If you insist, so it will be,” Musk texted Brockman two days before the trial began, according to a court filing.
Musk is seeking the removal of Altman and Brockman, as well as $134bn to be redistributed to OpenAI’s nonprofit and the undoing of its for-profit structure. The trial’s closing arguments are set to take place on Thursday.
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