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      ‘We keep secrets because we’re scared’: Guvna B on porn addiction and recovery

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 19 March 2026 • 1 minute

    After writing about a racist attack on his last album, the award-winning musician wanted his new work to be happier. Then life took him down a different path. He discusses stigma, shame and how he got help

    The past five years have been punishing for Isaac Borquaye, AKA the British rapper Guvna B. In 2021, he was left without sight in one eye for several months after being targeted in an unprovoked racist attack at his local coffee shop in east London. It left him shaken, but also motivated him to write his searing 2023 album The Village Is on Fire, which questioned structural racism. The album’s cover featured a closeup image of his bloodied eye.

    In the opening track, the 36-year-old musician intersperses his own words – “Coffee in his hand and he dashed it in my face / Five seconds later, right hook to my socket” – with voice notes his cousin, the actor and writer Michaela Coel, left him in the days after the attack. The record immediately became one of his most streamed, with listeners drawn not only to his frank recounting of the attack but also to his thoughts on youth violence and gentrification, and his grief at the death of his father in 2017. His new, equally confessional album – more on which shortly – tackles even more thorny themes.

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      We can tell you who will really get rich from this oil crisis – and how we can stop them | Isabella Weber and Gregor Semieniuk

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 19 March 2026 • 1 minute

    Soaring oil costs signal the great transfer of wealth away from households, but also a new opportunity to redistribute it

    The strait of Hormuz is now at the centre of the world. While the US-Israeli war against the Islamic Republic leads to death, destruction and pollution across the Middle East, the whole of the global economy is bracing for the fallout from the conflict. Shipping through the narrow passage has come to a near halt. Already, crude oil prices have shot to above $100 per barrel , up from $60 a barrel at the beginning of the year, while gasoline prices are jumping and airlines are announcing price hikes. Governments of oil-importing countries are scrambling to contain the fallout, announcing measures ranging from shorter work weeks to conserve fuel to price regulations. What they are not yet discussing – and what they should – is who, exactly, is about to get very rich from this.

    The 2022 oil and gas crisis offers a template. It was the last time we saw a price explosion of this magnitude, triggered by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine . In our recently published paper in Energy Research & Social Science we map, in unprecedented detail, where those profits went. We also suggest there are ways to prevent profiteering, and redistribute the gains and losses from these shocks more fairly.

    Isabella Weber is an associate professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and author of the forthcoming book Anti-fascist Economics

    Gregor Semieniuk is an associate professor of public policy and economics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and researches the economics of climate change mitigation

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      Number of meningitis cases linked to Kent outbreak rises to 27

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 19 March 2026

    Hundreds of students at University of Kent take up offer of meningitis B vaccination amid ‘very unusual outbreak’

    The number of cases of meningitis linked to an outbreak in Kent has risen to 27, up from 20, the UK Health Security Agency has said.

    Prof Robin May, the chief scientific officer at the UKHSA, said it was a “very unusual outbreak”.

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      ‘Life-changing’ international learning scheme in Wales at risk of closure

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 19 March 2026

    Taith programme, set up after UK’s post-Brexit withdrawal from Erasmus+, faces uncertain future over funding

    A “life-changing” international learning programme set up in Wales after Brexit is at risk of being closed down.

    Taith , which means “journey” in Welsh/Cymraeg, was established by the Senedd in 2022 after the UK pulled out of the Erasmus+ student exchange programme. Its reach is much wider: many participants get involved through schools, youth groups or adult education centres, and nearly half come from underrepresented backgrounds. Data suggests Taith has already funded approximately twice as many projects in Wales as Erasmus+ did, working with less money.

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      Iran will boycott the US but not the World Cup, country’s football head says

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 19 March 2026

    • Video released of federation president Mehdi Taj

    • Fifa has no plans to move Iran games to Mexico

    Iran will “boycott the United States” but “not the World Cup”, the Iranian football federation president, Mehdi Taj, said in a video released by the Iranian press agency Fars.

    Iran are scheduled to play their group matches in the US in this summer’s tournament. “We will be preparing for the World Cup,” Taj said. “We will boycott the United States but not the the World Cup.”

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      Ministers announce huge expansion of electronic tagging in England and Wales

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 19 March 2026

    Most dangerous offenders on probation will now be watched more closely than ever before, says government

    Tens of thousands of offenders will be released from prisons in England and Wales wearing tags that track their location in real time as part of the biggest expansion of electronic tagging in British history, ministers have announced.

    The prisons minister, James Timpson, said a new pilot scheme would track domestic abusers and stalkers, alerting authorities if they approached their victims, while other offenders will wear geolocation tags that will enable probation officers to track their live location.

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      Oil and gas prices jump after Iran and Israel attack gasfields

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 19 March 2026

    Month-ahead UK wholesale gas price hits highest level since August 2022 as Donald Trump threatens retaliation

    Gas prices jumped and oil prices rose again after an escalation of attacks by Israel and Iran on gasfields heightened fears of prolonged disruption to international energy supplies.

    Brent crude, the global oil benchmark, rose by 8% to $116 a barrel. Crude prices have soared by nearly 60% since US and Israeli attacks on Iran started the war on 28 February.

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      Meta on trial over child safety: can it really protect its next generation of users?

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 19 March 2026

    New Mexico prosecutors allege Meta prioritized profit, even as child abuse surged on Instagram and Facebook

    Meta is facing a reckoning over its child safety practices as a trial surfaces fresh allegations that the company prioritized profit incentives and engagement over protecting children.

    The landmark trial in New Mexico has now completed its fifth week, with the state attorney general resting the case on 5 March. Proceedings are expected to continue for another week as Meta presents its defense before the jury begins deliberations.

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      A Queer Inheritance by Michael Hall review – the National Trust’s LGBTQ history revealed

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 19 March 2026 • 1 minute

    It’s recently been accused of turning ‘woke’ – but the institution has been gay since the beginning, argues this deeply researched book

    When it emerged that the National Trust had put vegan scones on the menu, it was seized on by some newspapers as a marmalade dropper – or strawberry jam dropper, perhaps – proof that the institution was woke. Wait until they hear about all the queer men and women who helped to make the Trust what it is today. The charity’s 5.4 million members and others visit its grand piles for a nice day out and a tea towel, unaware that they are surrounded by the ghosts of these figures. They are brought to life by Michael Hall, a former architecture editorof Country Life and author of books on Waddesdon Manor and the gothic revival in Britain.

    Some of them, such as the buttoned-up Henry James, who lived at Lamb House, Rye, merely lent their lustre to properties that were later taken over by the trust. Others introduced features to the estates that continue to delight trippers to this day. They include Vita Sackville-West and Harold Nicolson, partners in a lavender marriage, who created the gardens at Sissinghurst, appropriately enough.

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