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Politics

New Films, TV Shows, Albums And Tours In 2026: What’s Still To Come?

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Rafe Spall in Channel 4's new comedy Number 10

We’re officially halfway through the year, and 2026 has already served up plenty of unforgettable pop culture moments.

Over the last six months, we’ve flocked to the cinemas to spend more time with Miranda and Andy in The Devil Wears Prada 2, hid behind our hands during Obsession and fell in love with Rocky during Project Hail Mary.

Meanwhile, our playlists have been full of pop divas thanks to new music from Madonna and Olivia Rodrigo, and we’ve sweated it out at Harry Styles’ Wembley Stadium residency.

We’ve also marvelled and gossiped about big celebrity weddings from the likes of Zendaya, Dua Lipa and Taylor Swift.

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But don’t go thinking that the best of 2026’s new music, TV and film is now behind us. Here are 21 things happening in the world of entertainment still to come in the next six months that we are totally hyped about…

Charlie and Nick’s love story comes to an emotional end in Heartstopper Forever

Later this month, we’ll be saying goodbye to Charlie Spring and Nick Nelson when Netflix’s Heartstopper ends with a feature-length finale.

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The last time we saw the boys, they had admitted their love for each other and taken their relationship to the next level – but drama loomed, as Nick was about to go to university while Charlie finished up at school.

In an interview with Tudum, Heartstopper’s creator Alice Oseman teased what fans can expect from the upcoming film.

“The movie will be an exploration of time, memory, love, pain, the changing of the seasons, endings and beginnings, and the core element of Heartstopper: the ordinary magic of our everyday lives,” they said.

Alice added: “I think this movie will explore what makes love survive, or what elevates it, or deepens it. At 18 and 17, Nick and Charlie are hurtling towards their adult lives. Many teenage relationships don’t survive that pivotal moment of change.”

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Excitingly, Netflix has also announced a behind-the-scenes documentary to mark the end of Heartstopper, drawing on unseen footage throughout all the series and celebrating the beloved show.

Heartstopper Forever premieres on Netflix on Friday 17 July.

Christopher Nolan brings the Greek epic The Odyssey to life with an A-list cast

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Christopher Nolan’s much-anticipated adaptation of the Greek classic, The Odyssey, is finally sailing onto the big screen.

Following on from Oppenheimer’s box office and awards season successes, film fans are expecting Nolan’s first film entirely shot in IMAX to be the must-see event of this summer.

Telling the epic story of Matt Damon’s Odysseus as he tries to return home to his family at the end of the Trojan war, the cast is a who’s who of A-listers, including the likes of Tom Holland, Anne Hathaway, Zendaya and Robert Pattinson.

Speaking to Time earlier this year, Matt Damon hyped up the film as the type of epic that, sadly, don’t make it to the big screen anymore.

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“Movies like this are not getting made anymore,” he claimed. “To do this without a green screen, the way that David Lean would have done it, I don’t know anybody, with the exception of Chris, that’s even trying to do that.”

The Odyssey hits cinemas on Friday 17 July.

Madonna, Shakira, Justin Bieber and BTS promise to put on a show at the World Cup halftime show

In May, it was announced that Fifa would have its first ever halftime show to commemorate the end of the 2026 World Cup, which will be made up of an 11-minute show featuring Madonna, Shakira, Justin Bieber and BTS.

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Curated by Coldplay’s Chris Martin, the show plans to raise money for Fifa and Global Citizen’s Education Fund.

“As the world unites for the most significant football match in history on Sunday 19 July 2026 at the New York New Jersey Stadium, this groundbreaking spectacle, curated by Chris Martin of Coldplay, will celebrate football, music and our shared values, ensuring a legacy that transcends the final whistle,” Fifa president Gianni Infantino wrote on Instagram.

Given the type of epic performances we’re used to seeing from Shakira, Madonna and BTS, it’s sure to be a show-stopper, and given the divided reaction to his recent performances at the Grammys (where he appeared in just boxers for a low-key rendition of his song Yukon) and Coachella (where he served as one of this year’s headliners) earlier this year, we’re intrigued to see what he brings to the stage this time around.

The Fifa World Cup Halftime Show will take place on Sunday 19 July.

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The Big Bang Theory gets an epic multiverse spin-off

The Big Bang Theory’s socially-awkward comic book owner Stuart Bloom is the latest character from the hit sitcom to get his own spin-off.

Don’t expect your standard multi-camera sitcom with Stuart Fails To Save The Universe, though.This new spin-off sees Kevin Sussman’s character being tasked with restoring reality, after he breaks a device built by Sheldon and Leonard, accidentally bringing on a multiverse incident.

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He is assisted on this new quest by his girlfriend Denise, geologist friend Bert, and smarmy quantum physicist Barry Kripke – all of whom fans of The Big Bang Theory will recognise from the original show.

Over the course of his quest, he will also encounter alternate-world versions of more characters from the world of The Big Bang Theory. Look forward to seeing your favourite sitcom characters in a very different light, as Stuart navigates a multiverse Armageddon of his own making.

Creator Bill Prady has described the show as “a complex science fiction story” with “the kind of mythology that those characters love while maintaining the comedic elements”.

Stuart Fails To Save The Universe premieres on Friday 24 July on HBO Max.

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Charli XCX has a completely new sound on Music, Fashion, Film

Many of us have only just recovered from Brat Summer, but Charli XCX is already back with new bops.

Titled Music, Fashion, Film, Charli’s seventh album takes a very different approach compared to her Grammy-winning 2024 release, and includes the divisive singles Rock Music, Wink Wink and SS26.

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In an interview with British Vogue earlier this year, the pop star teased her new sound and a lyric from the album’s lead single, which read: “I think the dance floor is dead…so now we’re making rock music.”

She claimed: “For me, it’s fun to flip the form. We know there’s gonna be people who are bothered by it, but that’s fine.”

While Charli has denied that Music, Fashion, Film is a straight-forward rock album, she warned fans on TikTok her new record will sound different from Brat, and they might not warm to it as much.

“I love it! And you might not, and that’s cool,” she said “If you do [love it] that’s cute, but if you don’t, that’s totally OK because that’s just what it is to have personal preferences,” the Vroom Vroom singer said.

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Charli XCX’s Music, Fashion, Film is released on Friday 24 July.

We’re also getting new music, a tour and a film from Ariana Grande

If you’ve been enviously watching clips from Ariana Grande’s latest world tour in the last few weeks, rest assured that the UK will finally get to see the One Last Time diva in person in just a few weeks, when her Eternal Sunshine show hits our shores.

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Before that, though, comes the release of her eighth album Petal. Ariana said in a press release that Petal is about “growing through the cracks of something cold and hard and challenging,” but “something that is full of life”, while in a video posted to Instagram, she called the album “a little feral”.

“It’s definitely from a place I’ve been maybe too shy or polite to tap into before,” she claimed. “This kind of just feels like, ‘Fuck it’.”

If that isn’t enough for Arianators, she’ll also appear in the fourth instalment in the Meet the Parents franchise, titled Focker In-Law later this year.

She will play Olivia Jones, a former FBI hostage negotiator and the fiancée of Pam and Greg’s son, Henry, who is subjected to the iconic “circle of trust”.

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Ariana Grande’s Petal is released on Friday 31 July, with the UK leg of the Eternal Sunshine world tour beginning on Saturday 15 August. Focker-In-Law will then hit cinemas on Friday 25 November.

Ted Lasso returns to the pitch on Apple TV+

After fans feared season three would be the last we saw of Richmond FC, news finally broke last year that Ted Lasso had been renewed, with plans to bring it back for not one, but three new series.

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Joining leading man Jason Sudeikis in the fourth season are Brett Goldstein‘s Roy Kent, Juno Temple’s Keeley Jones and, of course, Hannah Waddingham’s Rebecca Welton, as well as new additions played by Sex Education’s Tanya Reynolds and Enola Holmes actor Abbie Hern.

The fourth iteration of the award-winning sports comedy will see Ted taking a new challenge: women’s football.

“As we all continue to live in a world where so many factors have conditioned us to ’look before we leap, in season four, the folks at AFC Richmond learn to leap before they look, discovering that wherever they land, it’s exactly where they’re meant to be,” Jason Sudeikis told Deadline.

Ted Lasso returns to Apple TV+ on Wednesday 5 August.

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The DC Cinematic Universe continues to take shape

Flying in hot on the heels of last year’s Superman and this summer’s Supergirl, DC’s next big-screen venture will be Lanterns.

Created by Ozark’s Chris Mundy, Watchmen’s Damon Lindelof and comic book writer Tom King, Lanterns stars Kyle Chandler as veteran test pilot Hal Jordan and Aaron Pierre as rookie John Stewart, who are paired up to investigate a grisly murder in a small Nebraska town.

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This isn’t your standard murder mystery, though, as it involves two famous members of the cosmic police force, who have the power to create constructs of whatever they can imagine.

In the past, the Green Lantern story hasn’t had the best luck when it comes to live-action adaptations, with 2011′s critically-panned Ryan Reynolds film being one particular low, but things appear to be looking up in James Gunn’s rebooted DC Universe.

Also coming later this year for DC fans is Clayface, the first solo film for the Batman baddie.

The upcoming body horror film follows actor Matt Hagen, played by House Of The Dragon’s Tom Rhys Harries, who, in desperation, has his body turned into clay after suffering facial disfigurement.

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Written by The Haunting Of Hill House scribe Mike Flanagan, the October release hints at a new horror angle to the DCU.

Lanterns premieres on HBO Max on Sunday 16 August.

Strictly Come Dancing is back with a bold new look

Our annual Strictly Come Dancing fix will be a little different when it returns in the autumn.

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Not only do we have new hosts in Emma Willis, Josh Widdicombe and Johannes Radebe, but the whole show is rumoured to be getting a revamp.

Despite all the changes, definitely still expect to fall in love with a new cast of famous faces from the world of music, TV and sport as they go on a journey through learning to dance.

Although the whole cast hasn’t been announced, we do know that Dani Dyer is back after pulling out last year due to injury and will be joined by the likes of Aussie pop star Delta Goodrem and EastEnders star Lacey Turner.

Strictly Come Dancing is expected to return to our screens in early September.

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You’re cordially invited to season four of The Gilded Age

The lavish period drama The Gilded Age is back in production, with season four coming to our screens in autumn.

Created by Downton Abbey screenwriter Julian Fellowes, The Gilded Age takes place in late 19th-century New York, and centres on the tension between two high-society families: the old-money van Rhijns and the new-money Russell family.

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Fortunately, Carrie Coon, Cynthia Nixon, Christine Baranski, Morgan Spector and Louisa Jacobson are all returning as your favourite 1880s socialites in the new run of episodes.

An official synopsis for the new episodes teases: “Bertha Russell changed Society at a cost. Now, her family must reckon with the consequences as Agnes van Rhijn seizes an opportunity to regain her position.

“Meanwhile, Marian forges a new path for herself and Peggy works to be accepted by her future in-laws. In this new era, you must be careful what you wish for.”

We’re ready for one last adventure in the final season of Outer Banks

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Enjoy one last trip with the Pogues when the fifth and last series of Outer Banks drops all at once this summer.

Set in an affluent beach town in North Carolina, the hit young adult series follows two rival gangs, who embark on a dangerous treasure-hunting mission.

These 10 new episodes will follow the fall-out from the tragedy of season four, and sees the characters “stranded far from home and mourning the heart of their crew,” after they “lost the Blue Crown and continue to face a gauntlet of familiar threats”.

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Returning for one final journey are Madison Bailey’s Kiara, Jonathan Daviss’ Pope, Carlacia Grant’s Cleo and Drew Starkey’s Rafe. Meanwhile, murderer J. Anthony Crane’s Chandler Groff remains on the run, while Pollyanna McIntosh’s Dalia and the Corsairs pursue the Pogues relentlessly.

“The Pogues are in a desperate race to reclaim their future and finally win the freedom they’ve always been chasing,” Netflix teased in the official synopsis. “It’s the Pogues against the world as they seek to avenge their best friend and bring it on home … one final time.”

Season five of Outer Banks will arrive on Netflix on Thursday 20 August.

Tom Cruise moves away from action franchises in Digger

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Tom Cruise is so synonymous with the Mission: Impossible movies, it’s sometimes hard to see him as anyone other than Ethan Hunt.

In October, he will return to his indie cinema roots with Digger, a black comedy directed by Birdman’s Alejandro G. Iñárritu.

Tom plays an eccentric, cat-loving oil baron who accidentally triggers a catastrophic ecological disaster, alongside a cast that includes Jessie Plemons, Riz Ahmed, John Goodman and Sandra Hüller.

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The film, which is Iñárritu’s first English-language picture since The Revenant, will see Tom’s billionaire character doing all he can to repent for his crimes, and eventually become humanity’s saviour.

Digger is slated for release on Friday 2 October.

Diane Morgan takes on the world of AI in her new comedy

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Motherland, Mandy and Philomena Cunk star Diane Morgan returns with a brand new BBC sitcom, Ann Droid.

Co-written by Taskmaster’s Sarah Kendall, Ann Droid sees Diane reuniting with her Motherland co-star Paul Ready, and brings comedy icon, The Royle Family’s Sue Johnston, back onto our TV screens.

In her new venture, Diane will play Linda, an AI AnnDroid who Paul’s character buys to help his widowed mum – only to turn out to be an “overly attentive, socially inept pain in the arse”.

An official synopsis reads: “She soon works out she can use the droid to her benefit in settling scores and doing the things her son never gets round to.

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“What develops is a buddy comedy between an older woman and her robot who isn’t quite as advanced socially as she is technically.”

Diane also joked about the show: “I’m thrilled that the BBC has finally commissioned a programme about AI and how it will affect your mum.”

Ann Droid premieres on BBC One on Friday 17 July.

The Celebrity Traitors reopens its doors to a new cast of famous faces

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The first season of The Celebrity Traitors became the most talked-about show of 2025, with more than 15 million people watching the likes of Joe Mahler, Celia Imrie and Alan Carr shacked up in a castle to separate the traitors from the faithful.

In the autumn, a new cast of 21 more celebrities will join Claudia Winkleman to be put through their paces in TV’s most famous castle.

The latest all-star cast includes the likes of Bella Ramsey, Michael Sheen, Maya Jama, and Rob Beckett, all of whom we can expect to see bickering at the round table, completing grueling (and puzzling) challenges and becoming inadvertent national treasures.

The Celebrity Traitors will be back on BBC One in the autumn.

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Rivals returns after that devastating cliffhanger

Fans were gutted when they discovered that the long-awaited second series of Rivals was being divided into two parts.

Episode six dropped in May on Disney+, and ended with a shocking cliffhanger as a storm swept through Rutshire, leaving us all on tenterhooks about what’s next for David Tennant’s Tony, Danny Dyer’s Freddie and Alex Hassell’s Rupert Campbell-Black.

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An official Disney+ synopsis for the rest of season two teases: “As Tony Baddingham and Declan O’Hara’s contest for the Cotswolds crown hits a fever pitch, Rupert Campbell-Black is forced to confront his own personal demons.”

Fortunately, the new episodes promise “hedonistic parties”, “Bonfire Night chaos”, “the Hampshire Hunt Ball” and “a turbulent Christmas”, during which “affairs unravel, alliances fracture and rivalries intensify”.

Rivals will be back on Disney+ in November with six more episodes airing weekly.

A brand new take on Pride & Prejudice is coming to Netflix

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The misty moors get a new look and a star-studded cast, as Jane Austen’s Pride & Prejudice gets a new TV adaptation.

The Crown’s Emma Corrin will take on the lead role of Elizabeth Bennet, with Slow Horses star Jack Lowden as her Mr Darcy.

Also in the cast will be Olivia Colman and Rufus Sewell as Mrs. and Mr. Bennet, with Louis Partridge playing Mr. Wickham.

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Scripted by Dolly Alderton, the author of Everything I Know About Love, and directed by Heartstopper’s Euros Lyn, this adaptation promises to stay faithful to the source material while also appealing to a Gen Z audience.

“I am so excited to reintroduce these hilarious and complicated characters to those who count Pride and Prejudice as their favourite book, and those who are yet to meet their Lizzie and Mr Darcy,” writer Dolly said.

Emma also shared their delight at stepping into Elizabeth Bennet’s petticoats, enthusing: “To be able to bring this iconic character to life, alongside Olivia and Jack, with [screenwriter Dolly Alderton’s] phenomenal scripts, is truly the greatest honour. I can’t wait for a new generation to fall in love with this story all over again.”

Pride & Prejudice is expected to premiere on Netflix in the autumn, although an exact release date has not yet been announced.

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Florence Pugh is back on our screens in East Of Eden

Another literary adaptation Netflix is treating us to this year is East Of Eden.

Inspired by the John Steinbeck novel – previously brought to life on the big screen in a classic James Dean film – the upcoming series tells the story of two interwoven families across two generations.

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Considered one of America’s most important pieces of literature, East Of Eden is a loose retelling of the biblical tale of Cain and Abel, and promises an epic story of generational trauma, and the struggle between good and evil.

The miniseries follows Adam, played by Christopher Abbott, who marries Florence Pugh’s Cathy, after which he discovers her startling true colours.

Unlike past takes on the story, the new series, directed by Zoe Kazan, is set to shift the narrative by focussing on its anti-hero, Cathy, and offering a new insight into her psychology.

East Of Eden is one of three exciting Florence projects still to come in 2026, alongside Dune: Part Three and Avengers: Doomsday.

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East Of Eden will premiere on Netflix later this year.

Steven Moffat opens up the doors of Number 10 in a new political comedy

Rafe Spall in Channel 4's new comedy Number 10
Rafe Spall in Channel 4’s new comedy Number 10

Former Doctor Who and Sherlock showrunner Steven Moffat is set to make British politics even more ridiculous with his new six-part Channel 4 dramedy.

Taking place almost exclusively inside the PM’s official residence and workplace, this upcoming series isn’t concerned with party politics, and instead shines a light on the individuals who keep the country running, when the politicians get themselves into mishaps.

“It’s just about what it’s like being in there, with the two most powerful people in the country in the attic, the worst coffee shop you’ve ever seen in the basement, and basically a knock-through with mice and a nuclear deterrent,” Steven told the Radio Times.

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Based on an entirely fictional government, Rafe Spall will appear as prime minister Harry Douglas, while Katherine Kelly plays his formidable Chief of Staff and Jena Coleman as the ambitious Deputy Chief of Staff.

Number 10 will premiere on Channel 4 in the autumn.

The new Hunger Games film will reintroduce Haymitch Abernathy as we’ve never seen him before

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We’re back to Panem with The Hunger Games: Sunrise On The Reaping, a prequel to the iconic film series.

Set 24 years before Katniss Everdeen first entered the arena – and 40 years after The Ballad Of Songbirds & Snakes – the dystopian movie predominantly follows a young Haymitch Abernathy at the 50th Hunger Games.

The new film, based on Suzanne Collins’ book of the same name, will also include younger versions of some of our favourite characters, including Elle Fanning taking over Elizabeth Banks′ role of Effie Trinkett, Jesse Plemons taking the mantle from Phillip Seymour Hoffman as Plutarch Heavensbee, and Kieran Culkin portraying Caesar Flickerman, the host of the Hunger Games, in a role previously played by Stanley Tucci.

Meanwhile, Ralph Fiennes is the new President Coriolanus Snow, a character previously portrayed by Donald Sutherland and, more recently, Tom Blyth.

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The film’s all-star cast also includes Glenn Close, Billy Porter and Maya Hawke as Capitol residents and Hunger Games mentors.

The Hunger Games: Sunrise On The Reaping is released on Friday 20 November.

Dune reaches its epic conclusion with a third film that’s completely different from its predecessors

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Denis Villeneuve’s epic space saga concludes in December, with the third instalment in the Dune series

The upcoming sci-fi film will take place 17 years after the events of Part Two, and follow the fall-out from Timothée Chalamet’s character Paul Atreides’ rise as galactic emperor.

In an IMAX special reveal event, the Oscar-nominated director teased that audiences will “see Paul dealing with the consequences of having too much power and him trying to figure out how to get out of this cycle of violence”.

“And of course he’s an emperor who can see the future, so he’s kind of invincible,” the Oscar nominee added.

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More recently, the Canadian filmmaker also teased the darker themes of his franchise’s conclusion.

“It’s more of a thriller,” he claimed. “It’s a more intense story. And it’s definitely more emotional as well.”

The recently-released trailer depicts Paul becoming a more malevolent figure, under attack from both the outside and inside, with even his former lover and mother of his children, Zendaya’s Chani, turning against him.

Anya Taylor-Joy – who briefly appeared at the end of the second film – is becoming a more prominent figure in Part Three as Alia, Paul’s younger sister, while Javier Bardem returns as Stilgar.

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Florence Pugh and Jason Momoa will also reprise their roles as Princess Irulan and Duncan Idaho, too, with Robert Pattinson on hand to play a new bad guy as he takes on the role of the shapeshifting Scytale.

Dune: Part Three will be released on Friday 18 December.

The world’s mightiest heroes band together to fight a new threat in Avengers: Doomsday

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As if Dune won’t already be keeping cinemagoers busy enough on 18 December, Avengers: Doomsday is released that same day.

The 39th MCU film will see some of your favourite superheroes coming together to take on a new intergalactic and multiversal threat.

Newbies like Pedro Pascal, Vanessa Kirby and Lewis Pullman will team up with MCU veterans like Chris Hemsworth, Letitia Wright and Mark Ruffalo to defeat this new evil, alongside Patrick Stewart’s Professor X, Ian McKellen’s Magneto and James Marsden’s Cyclops, making the jump from Fox’s X-Men movies for the first time.

Even more intriguingly, fans were shocked back in 2024, when Robert Downey Jr announced that he would be returning to the MCU – not as Iron Man, but as the villainous Doctor Doom.

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Robert Downey Jr. at Comic-Con in 2024
Robert Downey Jr. at Comic-Con in 2024

Matt Winkelmeyer via Getty Images

Marvel has teased: “Beloved heroes from three distinct universes are set on a deadly collision course and face an existential threat unlike anything they’ve ever encountered.”

Avengers: Doomsday will arrive in cinemas on Friday 18 December.

Our heroes hit the real world in Jumanji: Open World

Kevin Hart and Dwayne Johnson in Jumanji: The Next Level
Kevin Hart and Dwayne Johnson in Jumanji: The Next Level

Frank Masi/Columbia/Sony/Kobal/Shutterstock

The final instalment in the rebooted Jumanji franchise opens up for gameplay on Christmas Day.

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However, this time around, instead of taking place inside the films’ central video game, the avatars – played by Dwayne Johnson, Kevin Hart and Jack Black – are heading into our world.

Yes, after escaping their games console, the avatars will bring all the jungle beasts and catastrophic natural disasters usually relegated to the game world into real life.

Also returning to the action comedy are Danny DeVito, Nick Jonas, Awkwafina and Alex Wolff.

“I’ve never had more fun working on a movie. This is my favorite so far,” Jack Black teased at CinemaCon.

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Jumanji: Open World is slated to arrive in cinemas on Friday 25 December.

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Politics

Cardiff Uni student assaulted by security staff for holding Palestine flag

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Cardiff University

Cardiff University

Security staff have twice assaulted a Cardiff University student — for holding a Palestine flag and then for trying to take a photo of them. The Caerdydd Students for Palestine (CS4P) group described what happened:

As a student was on the way OUT of graduation she was physically assaulted and had the Palestinian flag ripped out of her hands with such violence it ripped her acrylic nails off.

She was simply carrying the flag in her hands on her way out of the building. She was then assaulted AGAIN when trying to get photos of the staff after they refused to give their names as seen on this video.

The blonde woman also mocked the word genocide and said graduation “isn’t political.” The arena supervisor said there’s nothing they could do!

Please share this everywhere and say SHAME on @utilitaarenacardiff and their violent staff. This was the actions of SUPERVISORS.

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@cardiffuni this is who you trust to manage your graduations?

The group posted footage of the two staff involved:

Cardiff University — a shameful record

This is not Cardiff University’s first rodeo when it comes to suppression of Palestine solidarity — nor the Utilita Arena’s. In July 2025, the university threatened to remove students for a display of solidarity, while Utilita staff harassed and intimidated students wearing keffiyehs:

At the beginning of 2025, the university was accused of spying on pro-Palestine staff and students. A month earlier, it had suspended two students for taking part in an anti-genocide protest. In May 2025, it set police on students holding an anti-genocide picket and in June went to court for an injunction against them.

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CS4P has asked opponents of genocide to share news of the latest incident widely.

Featured image via Cardiff.ac

By Skwawkbox

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14yo charged with terror offence for alleged plan to attack mosques

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Terrorism

Terrorism

A 14-year-old boy has been charged with a terrorism offence over an alleged plan to attack two mosques in the Sutton area of south London. The plan, the latest in a flood of Islamophobic violence, was linked to “extreme right-wing terrorism”.

The youth was originally arrested on suspicion of criminal damage, but a subsequent search of the address revealed “a number of documents of concern” according to the Met Police. He is in custody and will appear at Westminster Magistrates’ court tomorrow ,16 July 2026.

“Very serious terrorism”

For once, after months of the establishment ignoring Islamophobic violence, police officers responded appropriately to the planned attack. Detective Chief Superintendent Nick Blackburn said:

These charges come just days after 12 people were arrested for a suspected threat to an Islamic festival in Suffolk and a man was arrested for an alleged assault outside a mosque in Leyton.

We should not underestimate the cumulative impact of incidents of this nature on the Muslim community.

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His colleague counter-terror Commander Helen Flanagan added that this is a “very serious terrorism charge against a young boy” that is “particularly concerning” to the Muslim community.

Featured image via MiddleEastMonitor

By Skwawkbox

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Trump’s hyped national guard deployments did absolutely nothing to lower crime

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Trump

Trump

US president Donald Trump’s much-hyped national guard deployments did nothing to lower crime rates. Canary readers will recall how Trump filled the streets of US cities with troops at the start of his second term.

A major centre-left US thinktank has now debunked any claims that the military presence lowered crime. And what’s more, the whole project has ripped off taxpayers to the tune of billions.

The Center for American Progress (CAP) warned in a new report:

The second Trump administration is trying to take credit for the historic drop in violent crime across America despite the fact that this trend began before it took office, and it is using these declines to justify expanding policies that are unpopular, ineffective, and costly.

However, CAP claims the data “clearly shows” violent crime and homicides were:

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already dropping in American cities in 2023 and 2024.

Yet:

the Trump administration has continued to threaten city and state leaders and argue that its extreme actions, such as deploying the National Guard to support law enforcement operations, are improving public safety.

CAP reported:

analysis finds no evidence that National Guard deployments have reduced violent crime.

And they added that:

if these deployments are extended and continue through the end of 2026, they could cost American taxpayers more than $1.7 billion.

The authors were very blunt in their conclusions. Trump has no basis to make any claims his deployments worked as stated:

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This analysis should give policymakers confidence to reject out of hand the Trump administration’s claims that its actions have materially improved public safety in these cities, call out its falsehoods, and demand better solutions for the American people.

Trump’s ICE are still killing people

And while the story has largely dropped out of international media, Trump’s immigration thugs are still killing people in the US.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) reportedly killed a Colombian national in the north-eastern US state of Maine on 14 July. The BBC reported:

An ICE agent has fatally shot a Colombian national during an immigration enforcement operation in the US state of Maine.

The killing came only:

a week after the agency used deadly force against another migrant in a Texas traffic stop.

The authorities have not identified the man killed, but:

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local lawmakers and neighbours have identified him as Joan Sebastian Guerrero.

The truth is Trump’s military deployments and increased ICE thug raids were never about security for the public. They were about militarising public spaces, hunting terrified migrants and rebuilding the US in Trump’s image: as a fearful place with a more obedient and, ultimately, whiter population.

Featured image via the Canary

By Joe Glenton

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Unions and anti-corruption campaigners react to damning Covid Inquiry report

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PPE

PPE

Yesterday, 15 July, the Covid Inquiry published its latest update — this time focusing on the Johnson government’s failure to secure adequate personal protective equipment (PPE). In response, both anti-corruption campaigning organisations and the unions representing affected hospital workers have been swift to issue their condemnation.

As the Canary’s Joe Glenton previously reported:

Boris Johnson’s government wasted £10bn on unusable personal protective equipment (PPE), the Covid inquiry report has found. Inquiry chair Heather Hallett also slammed the then-Conservative government’s use of firms with Tory ‘VIP’ connections to fulfil major PPE contracts.

BMA: Government performance ‘an omnishambles’

Reacting to the Module 5 report, British Medical Association (BMA) council deputy chair Dr Emma Runswick said:

What we saw unfold was an omnishambles; a scramble in procurement, supply and distribution, resulting in chaotic and slapdash approaches to try to get PPE to those who needed it.

Yet we know they often didn’t receive it. Time and time again, from the beginning of the pandemic, and right through the multiple waves of 2020, doctors and our colleagues were left without the PPE needed to protect them and their patients from a fatal disease. This impact was uneven, with women and ethnic minority doctors either unable to access suitable fitting PPE, or indeed, facing greater pressure to work without proper protection.

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Runswick also highlighted that the report “makes a number of positive recommendations” for preparation. However, those recommendations served to highlight the UK’s current sorry state:

it is shocking, six years on, to see in black and white that still not enough is being done to ensure both the size and quality of the PPE stockpile, or prepare more widely.

A new pandemic, as well as wider global risks in an increasingly hostile world, remain very real threats to our healthcare systems and the safety of our population. Yet we remain unprepared – both in terms of supplies like PPE, but also in the state of the very buildings we work in, the facilities to provide critical care, and the staffing capacity we have to treat people.

Royal College of Nursing: “is unforgivable”

Meanwhile, the Royal College of Nursing’s (RCN) reaction was similarly outraged. Rose Gallagher, the RCN’s leader for infection prevention during the pandemic, said:

This report is a damning indictment of just how badly nursing staff were let down. The total failure to plan meant stockpiles of PPE were too low, while much of the equipment meant to protect our profession didn’t fit or work effectively. That so many staff were forced to repurpose shower caps, or wear bin bags in desperate attempts to protect themselves, should be marks of shame for the successive governments that left us so unprepared.

Gallagher also praised the nurses who continued in their vital work despite the dangerous position the government placed them in. The infection-prevention lead added:

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Despite this litany of government failures to prepare, nursing staff continued to show up for their patients knowing the very real risk to themselves and their families. We know so many died after being sent onto wards, into care homes and into the community with inadequate protection. Meanwhile, scores more continue to live with the long-term effects of Covid to this day. It is unforgivable.

Even back in 2021, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) had already noted the disproportionate level of deaths among nursing staff. The ONS recognised 157 deaths among nurses, averaging over 50 fatalities per 100,000 members of the profession. [ED NOTE: (24.5+79.1)/2=51.8]

Anti-corruption campaigners on PPE report

Given the scandal of the bogus procurement contracts, corruption watchdogs also offered comment on the latest report. For example, Gavin Hayman – executive director of the UK Anti-Corruption Coalition’s Open Contracting Partnership — said:

The British Government bought the wrong things, from the wrong people, in the wrong way. The Inquiry has shown what happens when emergency powers, weak controls and political access collide with disastrous results. Giving huge direct awards to untested companies [specialising in lingerie, drinking straws, confectionery and the like] recommended by politicians harmed the UK’s Covid emergency response.

Likewise, Transparency International UK works with governments and businesses to tackle corruption both at home and around the world. Chief executive Daniel Bruce, who previously gave evidence to the inquiry on behalf of the UK Anti-Corruption Coalition, said:

The inquiry’s report lays bare the failings of the so-called VIP lane for PPE contracts. It confirms our earlier findings that there was systemic bias in awarding contracts to those with connections to the party of government and that, in a majority of cases, there was no objective assessment of those firms’ ability to actually deliver PPE.

The inquiry underscores the damage done to public trust by a prolonged and unnecessary failure of transparency in public spending.

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It also challenges the new government to go further to guard against the risk of corruption in future emergencies.

And for PPE Medpro?

Spotlight on Corruption is a research and monitoring organisation which publishes findings on the UK’s implementation of its anti-corruption laws. Executive director Sue Hawley criticised the so-called ‘VIP Lane’:

Its ongoing use, beyond the very early stages of the pandemic, undermined trust in government, and trust in government is never more important than during a public health emergency.

VIP contracts failed at three times the rate of standard ones and cost 80% more per unit, even as nurses resorted to bin bags on the frontline. Five years on, nearly £10 billion has been written off, only one supplier has been taken to court, and the public is still owed a full accounting.

The supplier Hawley alluded to there is PPE Medpro. The firm, which has links to Tory peer Michelle Mone through her husband Doug Barrowman, is at the centre of an ongoing criminal investigation. Mone recommended the company to other ministers, who promptly awarded it over £200m in PPE contracts.

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Mone and Barrowman have denied any wrongdoing. The National Crime Agency is still investigating, but hasn’t yet brought charges. However, the company has already had to pay back £148m to the government by order of the High Court.

Whilst the Covid Inquiry held a full day of hearings on PPE Medpro, it can’t yet publish the results due to restrictions surrounding the criminal proceedings.

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By Grace

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SAS troops dropped prisoners from forklift ‘for fun’, inquiry hears

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SAS troops currently under investigation for war crimes dropped prisoners from a forklift “for fun”, an inquiry has heard. And one soldier who served with them was allegedly called a “Taliban-loving apologist” for raising concerns about the elite unit’s behaviour.

The inquiry into allegations that the SAS extrajudicially murdered Afghan civilians between 2010 and 2023 occupation heard from two whistleblowers on 14 July:

Monica Grenfell, a former journalist, and Christopher Green, who was part of the Army Reserve, contacted the Afghanistan Inquiry to give evidence after the chairman issued a request for information.

According to Sky News:

Both witnesses spoke behind closed doors with only redacted excerpts released on Tuesday.

Green served alongside special forces as an attached army reservist. He tried to raise concerns about the killings of three Afghan brothers. Green said the deaths were:

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described to him as having “gone wrong”, forcing special forces to shoot lawfully “in self-defence”.

However, Green said the army’s intelligence was:

pretty clear that there was nothing to suggest that the sons were anything other than farmers and even less to suggest that they were Taliban commanders.

When he raised these concerns with a liaison officer, he encountered strong resentment from the elite commandos:

At some point he did call me a ‘Taliban-loving apologist’.

Green also asked to see so-called ‘gun tapes’ — video recordings of the raids — but was denied access despite having the right security clearance.

SAS — Forklift ‘fun’ with prisoners

Monica Grenfell served alongside the SAS as a stores person and kitchen staff member. She told the inquiry she was informed by a soldier that special forces troops had abused prisoners by lifting them up on the forks of a forklift and then dropping them.

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I specifically recall him telling me that he would put prisoners on a forklift, raise it up and drive very fast so that they fell off.

Grenfell said she had:

Never been anywhere that was as bad as there.

There was a sense that:

People had been let off the leash somehow.

Adding:

You felt no one was really watching them [the soldiers], and the language was just… I’ve never known the language like it.

After the US-led occupation of Afghanistan collapsed in 2021, then-PM Boris Johnson said UK troops should be:

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Proud of their achievements and we should be deeply proud of them.

The nature of allegations which have since the war included suppressed evidence, murdered children, and failure to report serious allegations simply to spare the alleged killer’s morale. They make this kind of grandiose claim even more precarious than before.

The story of the UK’s shadow war in Afghanistan may never be fully known, but the kind of stories starting to appear are shocking indeed.

Featured image via the Canary

By Joe Glenton

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Gathering of Latino-American politicians shows little love for Argentina

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Gathering of Latino-American politicians shows little love for Argentina

LOS ANGELES — Some of the most powerful Latino politicians in the United States were invited to wear their favorite soccer jerseys. But few chose Argentina’s Abiceleste. 

Mayor Frank Figueroa of Coachella, California said his feelings toward Argentina as a “Latin American country” (in finger quotes) were so strong, he was willing to back England, the team that knocked out Mexico — where Figueroa traces his heritage — in a contentious quarterfinal match.

“Just by looking at their soccer team. For me, it’s like who’s playing on the soccer team compared to all the other Latin American countries who had the people playing on their team,” said Figueroa. “That is a big thing for me. They all look European.”

With the World Cup semi-finals coinciding with one of the country’s largest gatherings for Latino policymakers, organizers of the National Association of Latino Elected Officials annual conference embraced the timing. They have scheduled Telemundo World Cup watch parties in a hotel ballroom and are selling NALEO soccer jerseys to celebrate the organization’s 50th anniversary. Multicolored soccer jerseys — most commonly the green of Mexico’s El Tri — were scattered among the polished suits and business-casual attire in the conference venue.

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But the absence of support for the tournament’s only remaining Latin American team was notable. In fact, it was easier today to spot England’s colors than Argentina’s hours before the two countries faced off in Atlanta.

Argentina’s history of blanqueamiento policies encouraging mass European migration, sanctuary for Nazis after World War II and its “genocide” against Afro-Argentines contributes to the “systemic problems and challenges” in Argentina’s history, said Karina Moreno, a councilmember representing Palm Desert, California. It’s a history that Moreno said continues the “fallacy” of superiority from Argentina to other Latin American countries.

Animosity towards Argentina was compounded after Argentine media personality Eduardo Feinmann said he “detested Mexicans” in on-air comments after Mexico’s tournament exit last week. Feinmann went on to describe “the envy the Mexicans feel for us Argentines, not just in football, but in everything.” The ensuing controversy escalated with a public rebuke from Mexican president Claudia Sheinbaum.

“It’s not the first time, and it validates what we’re talking about,” Moreno said, referring to the incident.

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The behavior of Argentina fans has also come under scrutiny, with FIFA opening an investigation into a supporter’s alleged racist abuse of American streamer IShowSpeed during the team’s victory against Cape Verde earlier this month. Egyptian coach Hossam Hassan’s made FIFA’s designated gesture to report racist abuse — a crossed-arm “X” gesture — against Argentina..

Salta Lake City councilmember Alejandro Puy, a Salt Lake City councilmember sported one of the rare Argentina jerseys. Raised in Buenos Aires, he says “rivalries are expected” between countries in soccer.

“Ultimately we are all brothers and sisters of this continent and we stand by it,” Puy said, though he still says there’s “no doubt” Argentina has the best team in Latin America.

Though he said he appreciated the Latino camaraderie in the conference, Puy was headed to Argentina’s Consulate in Los Angeles to watch the game and not feel “a little alone.”

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Scottish independents should back England, needles conservative leader

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Scottish independents should back England, needles conservative leader

Tory Leader Kemi Badenoch was in a jovial mood during the usually combative PMQs by calling for all MPs to unite behind England against Argentina this evening.

Badenoch said that while Keir Starmer may be “disappointed that he won’t be emulating his hero Harold Wilson in winning multiple elections … we all hope that he may be about to emulate him in another way, by being the prime minister when England win the World Cup.” England’s only previous success came in 1966.

The Tory leader said that was something “every single one of us in this house should get behind, especially the SNP.” But the diminished rump of Scottish independence-supporting MPs, possibly still bruised from going out in the World Cup group stage, shook their heads.

Indeed, opposition to England’s success crossed party lines.

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Scottish Labour MP Brian Leishman told POLITICO he’ll be watching “from behind the couch and the cracks in our fingers,” adding it will be “unbearable” if England makes the final.

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Big day for a British Overseas Territory (no, not that one)

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Big day for a British Overseas Territory (no, not that one)

LONDON — Soccer fans in Atlanta may be exchanging chants about the Falklands — but there’s another British Overseas Territory making news today.

The 118-year-old border between Gibraltar and Spain will disappear on Wednesday. You can thank Brexit.

Today is the culmination of a decade of uncertainty for the British Mediterranean territory, which back in 2016 voted by 95.9 percent to stay in the EU — but was pulled out against its will.

Life immediately became harder for the thousands of people who cross the Gibraltar-Spain border every day, including 15,000 Spaniards who go to work in the territory.

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Passport checks became more onerous and transporting goods became more complicated. As a result Brussels, London, Gibraltar and Madrid have spent the last 10 years negotiating an agreement to remove physical border controls from the frontier with Spain.

It’s an ironic move given it was triggered by Britain’s decision to leave the EU. While Gibraltar will remain fully British and sovereign, the border will become, for the most part, just a line on a map.

The agreement’s details will be familiar to anyone who has ever taken a Eurostar train under the English Channel. As at London St Pancras station, passengers arriving at Gibraltar’s airport will go through both Gibraltarian passport controls and EU passport controls in succession. Once through, they’ll be free to roam both Gibraltar and the Schengen area, provided they get the approval of both authorities.

As a result, Gibraltar and Spain will do away with border controls at the land border. Gibraltar will also align with various EU single market and customs rules to ease the flow of goods, which have sometimes become harder to source since Brexit.

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Gibraltar is adamant it isn’t joining the EU passport-free Schengen area. Legally, it is right.

For many passengers, though, it will feel pretty similar, with no passport checks to walk into Spain. The difference will be that Gibraltar will still set its own visa policy.

The U.K’s Europe Minister Stephen Doughty is formally signing the agreement Tuesday in Brussels with the EU Trade Commissioner Maroš Šefčovič.

The deal was a bipartisan effort on the British side, with former Foreign Secretary David Cameron working to get it over the line during his time in office. In spring 2024 the deal looked close to being done — only for Rishi Sunak to call an election. The resulting change in government delayed it by another year.

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Some critics, notably Tory Euroskeptics, have said the agreement harms Gibraltar’s sovereignty, but the Rock’s government is very keen on the plan.

“Brexit was sold to the British people in a false prospectus,” Gibraltar’s Chief Minister Fabian Picardo told the Telegraph newspaper in the run-up to the dismantling of the border. “The United Kingdom needs to seriously reconsider its relationship with the European Union, whether that is to return to membership or a much closer relationship.”

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Sikhism must not be put on trial after Henry Nowak’s murder

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Sikhism must not be put on trial after Henry Nowak’s murder

Some reports of Henry Nowak’s killing have described the murder weapon as a Sikh sword, a ceremonial knife or a large Sikh dagger. That matters. Once the word ‘Sikh’ is attached to the weapon, the crime begins to look like a case about religious liberty. It was not. The Sikh faith was invoked in Vickrum Digwa’s defence – but it should not have been. The kirpan is an article of faith. The criminal use of a blade – and the blade Digwa carried – is not.

More than 20 years ago, I published a paper in the Psychiatric Bulletin on the care of Sikh patients who wear the kirpan. It was about a practical question: how clinicians might respect a patient’s religious observance without compromising safety on a hospital ward. I did not expect to return to the subject because of a murder. The killing of Henry Nowak in Southampton, and the debate that followed, has made that necessary.

The facts established at trial are stark. Digwa was convicted of murdering 18-year-old student Henry Nowak. Digwa inflicted five wounds with a large blade and then told the police, falsely, that he had been the victim of a racist assault. The jury rejected his claim of self-defence. The sentence has since been referred to the Court of Appeal as potentially unduly lenient, though that is a separate question from the one I wish to address here.

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What is important is that this murder does not turn into a religious dispute. Whatever else may be said of the case, no question of religious entitlement arises from these facts, and it is a source of real distress to me, and many other Sikhs, that the language of faith was enlisted in his defence at all.

Digwa did not kill with the small kirpan that was recovered, unused, from around his neck. He killed with a separate and much larger blade. Some reports have called the weapon a kirpan. Others have called it a Sikh sword. That loose language is a problem. A blade cannot be carried or used as an offensive weapon just because the man carrying it is Sikh.

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There is a martial inheritance in Sikhism. That should not be denied or airbrushed away. Shastar Vidya, the art of weaponry, has a place within parts of the Sikh martial tradition. But it is a discipline, not a licence. It does not require a weapon to be carried in public, as has been widely claimed. Still less does it justify drawing one in anger. To present the carrying of an offensive weapon as a religious duty is an inversion of Sikhism.

The kirpan is one of the five articles of faith, the Panj Kakkar, worn by initiated Sikhs of the Khalsa, the order constituted by Guru Gobind Singh in 1699. Its name is commonly understood as joining kirpa (mercy) and aan (honour). The kirpan is normally sheathed and worn against the body. It is not there to suggest the wearer has a right to violence – it is a reminder of one’s duties: to resist injustice, protect the vulnerable and govern one’s own passions. Sikh teaching is clear that it is not to be drawn in aggression. A man who turns a blade on an unarmed youth has not exercised a religious right. He has betrayed the discipline the kirpan signifies.

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English law already draws this distinction. Under section 139 of the Criminal Justice Act 1988, it is an offence to carry a bladed or pointed article in public. The act provides a defence where it is carried for religious reasons, but the burden is on the accused to establish that this is the blade’s purpose. What’s more, it is only a defence for possessing such a blade – it is not a licence to use a blade as a weapon. The Nowak case is not evidence that religious minorities get away with violence that would be punished in others. Instead, it is evidence that the law’s existing limits operate as intended.

Other countries have faced the same concern. In Canada, the Supreme Court held in Multani v Commission scolaire Marguerite-Bourgeoys that an absolute ban on a non-violent schoolboy’s kirpan infringed religious freedom, while allowing conditions: the kirpan had to be secured and sewn inside his clothing. The court sensibly observed that many ordinary objects may be misused without being prohibited. Italy went the other way. In 2017, the Court of Cassation upheld a fine imposed on a Sikh man in Lombardy for carrying a kirpan of almost 20 centimetres outside his home. The court was explicit that public safety must prevail and that those who choose to settle in a country are bound to observe its law.

Parts of that judgment’s reasoning, which strayed into pronouncements upon the proper character of Italian society, were criticised. Yet what followed is instructive. The roughly 200,000 Sikhs in Italy, the largest such community in continental Europe, did not respond with defiance or disorder. They accepted the ruling and continued, as before, to be counted among Italy’s most industrious and law-abiding citizens. Liberal societies can set different boundaries. What they should not do is confuse religious symbolism with permission for violence.

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There is a wider point here. In many countries where Sikhs have settled – Britain, Canada, East Africa and Italy among them – the pattern has generally been one of hard work, integration, civic loyalty and service. There is no contradiction between Sikh identity and obedience to the law of the land. Sikh tradition enjoins respect for just law. It also forbids the use of the kirpan as a weapon. A Sikh has no more quarrel with legal limits on a blade designed to cause harm than a Scottish Highlander has with legal limits on the sgian-dubh.

We must resist two mistakes. The first is to let one crime cast suspicion on every Sikh who wears the article Digwa dishonoured. The second is to let religious language soften the plain character of what happened. It was murder. The sentencing judge himself remarked that Digwa’s actions had wrongly associated a faith-based symbol with a brutal crime. That false association is what should be challenged – not the Sikh faith, nor the community.

The right response is the calm application of a law that already draws a necessary distinction between violence and non-violence, and not the diminishment of law-abiding Sikhs who have given this country, and many others, a great deal more than they have ever taken.

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Swaran Singh was a commissioner for the Equality and Human Rights Commission, and is professor of social and community psychiatry at the University of Warwick and an NHS consultant psychiatrist.

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F*** Messi

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Irish comedian Tadgh Hickey has a simple message as the World Cup progresses in the US: “Fuck Messi”. The Israel-linked Argentinian football star has been silent on Israel’s genocide in Gaza.

Hickey posted a heart-breaking video to his YouTube channel. While Egypt’s football coach has spoken out against the silence of many clubs and stars on the genocide, Hickey added no comment to his post apart from the pithy title. None is needed for those who watch the chilling video to the end:

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Fuck Messi.

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