Jawad Iqbal

Jawad Iqbal

Jawad Iqbal is a broadcaster and ex-television news executive. Jawad is a former Visiting Senior Fellow in the Institute of Global Affairs at the LSE

Why is Sadiq Khan trying to restart his fight with Donald Trump?

From our UK edition

London mayor Sadiq Khan, whose official day job is running the capital, is in New York this week, where he has denounced Donald Trump and urged Americans to vote for Kamala Harris. Trump would set the wrong tone for the rest of the world, Khan declared. 'What I’d say in a respectful way to Americans is: I don’t think you realise that the rest of the world is watching because we’ve got skin in the game,' he said. Come again? Trump would set the wrong tone for the rest of the world, Khan declared Americans are choosing a leader for their country. What the world thinks about this – least of all Khan, who almost no one in America will have heard of – is really neither here nor there.

Gary Neville’s tin-eared defence of Keir Starmer

From our UK edition

Gary Neville, the Sky Sports pundit and former Manchester United footballer, can’t help himself when it comes to tedious political rants. His latest comes in the form of a one-eyed defence of the Prime Minister’s right to accept freebies, including tickets to Premier League matches. Neville, a prominent Labour supporter, believes Sir Keir Starmer has 'not done anything wrong' by accepting thousands of pounds worth of football freebies, and that watching Arsenal with his family was 'his only release'. 'Given the absolute corruption of the past eight years... it's absolutely incredible people are angry about @Keir_Starmer getting free @Arsenal tickets'@GNev2 responds to the freebies furore while speaking at the @UKLabour party conference https://t.co/EElqczzT1K pic.

When will the families of Lucy Letby’s victims be allowed to move on?

From our UK edition

When Lucy Letby was convicted last year of murdering seven infants and attempting to kill seven others it seemed that the parents of her victims had at last secured justice. But in recent months, Letby's crimes – for which she is serving 15 whole-life sentences – have become the subject of heated debate. Victims’ families have said that the campaign to free the killer nurse has made them question humanity. 'All of this noise has caused enormous additional distress to the parents who have already suffered far too much' Letby's crimes are now, once again, back in the headlines, as the public inquiry set up to examine what happened at the Countess of Chester Hospital during the time Letby worked there is now formally underway.

How fake news thrived in the aftermath of the Southport stabbings

From our UK edition

It has fallen to Jonathan Hall KC, the independent reviewer of state threat legislation, to say the obvious in pointing out that the recent riots following the attacks in Southport show ‘why the public must be told more’ when such attacks happen. Hall, speaking at a conference organised by the Counter Extremism Group, highlighted the dangers posed by the ‘information vacuum’ in the immediate aftermath of the stabbings. He said: ‘I think we are at a point in time where trust in public institutions should not be taken for granted and when matters of high importance in the public mind happen that, as far as is possible, the police, the government and the media should level with them.

When will the Channel migrant horror end?

From our UK edition

Twelve migrants, including six children and a pregnant woman, have died after their overcrowded dinghy capsized while they were trying to cross the Channel. Two people remain in a critical condition. Some 53 people were rescued, with several requiring emergency medical attention. Local French media reported that rescue workers are still searching for other migrants feared lost at sea. The disaster is the deadliest loss of life in the Channel this year. The boat, believed to be carrying 70 people, got into difficulties off Cape Gris-Nez, near Boulogne-sur-Mer, on the northern French coast. The Channel is one of the world’s busiest shipping routes and currents are strong. Crossings on small boats are more dangerous than ever.

How Emma Raducanu lost her way

From our UK edition

It is back to the drawing board for Emma Raducanu after her embarrassing first-round defeat at the US Open. Raducanu crashed out of the tournament, losing by two sets to one, to Sofia Kenin, a player ranked outside the top 50. A tearful Raducanu admitted after the match that her preparation for the tournament was wrong and that she didn’t played enough matches in the run-up to the Grand Slam. The bigger mystery is how quickly Raducanu’s tennis career is unravelling, increasingly dogged by questions and controversy. Just three years ago – after her surprise triumph in the US Open took the tennis world by storm – she was widely predicted to dominate the game for the foreseeable future. It all seems so long ago.

Why is David Lammy hiring Columbia’s disastrous president?

From our UK edition

Few will shed a tear at the news that Columbia University president Minouche Shafik is stepping down after months of criticism of her handling of campus protests over the war in Gaza. Her abrupt resignation – just a few weeks before the autumn semester is due to begin – brings to a close her turbulent 13-month reign at Columbia, one of America’s most prestigious educational institutions.‘This period has taken a considerable toll on my family, as it has for others in our community,’ Shafik wrote in an email to staff and students. ‘It has also been a period of turmoil where it has been difficult to overcome divergent views across our community’.

Liz Truss needs to learn to take a joke

From our UK edition

It is hard to know what Liz Truss hoped to achieve by storming off stage during an event in Suffolk promoting her new memoir. The former PM did so after campaigners unfurled a banner emblazoned with the phrase: ‘I crashed the economy’ below a picture of a lettuce. All that Truss, who lasted just 49 days in office, succeeded in doing was to draw even more attention to the prank – the clip has amassed over six million views on social media. In the process she also managed to confirm what many have long suspected, which is that she really can’t take a joke, however lame.  Truss was sitting comfortably on stage, discussing the US presidential election, expressing her support for Donald Trump before she was pranked.

Hong Kong’s justice system is an insult to democracy

From our UK edition

Lord David Neuberger of Abbotsbury, the British lawyer who sits on Hong Kong’s highest court, needs to take a long hard look in the mirror. The territory’s court of final appeal has upheld verdicts and prison sentences against some of Hong Kong’s leading pro-democracy activists for taking part in a peaceful protest in 2019. The court ruling has been decried as 'unjust' by Chris Patten, the last British governor of Hong Kong before the territory was returned to Chinese rule in 1997. The court unanimously agreed to uphold the convictions of seven activists who participated in the the unauthorised 2019 protests, during which 1.7 million people took to the streets in opposition to Beijing’s growing control of the territory.

The good, the bad and the ugly of the Paris Olympics

From our UK edition

After more than two weeks showcasing a series of extraordinary sporting feats, Paris brought the curtain down on the 2024 Olympics with a star-studded closing ceremony at the Stade de France last night. Billie Eilish, the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Snoop Dog were just some of those to feature across the evening. Tom Cruise, star of the Mission Impossible series, abseiled down from the roof of the stadium to mark the close of the Games and signify the hand-over from France to the state of California, home to Hollywood. It was both dramatic and silly, a fitting end to one of the most memorable Games ever. Paris 2024 had it all, proving that nothing beats the thrills, tensions and sheer spectacle of live sport. There were also controversies aplenty.

Starmer’s riot troubles aren’t over yet

From our UK edition

Sir Keir Starmer is turning out to be something of a lucky general. The Prime Minister appears to have passed his first big test in government by quelling the violent and ugly unrest that has marred towns and cities across Britain in recent days. His tough stance on law and order – hundreds of arrests, rapid sentencing, and a huge police deployment to snuffle planned far-right protests – is working. Even so, the PM is taking no chances, with police forces ordered to ‘remain on high alert’: 6,000 riot officers will be deployed over the weekend as officers wait to see if the worst of the violence is finally over.  Starmer is lucky in the sense that this crisis has played to his strengths as a former public prosecutor.

Vigilante justice won’t stop the riots

From our UK edition

There were ugly scenes in Birmingham last night after hundreds of men, some wearing masks, gathered in the Alum Rock and Bordesley Green areas of the city, following false reports that far-right protesters planned to march there. Rumours of a far-right gathering had been circulating all day and were the subject of discussions in a Telegram group linked to the initial violence in Southport after three girls were stabbed last week. In the event, the far-right protest failed to materialise, but West Midlands police are investigating reports of assault, criminal damage, and a man in possession of an offensive weapon.  Scores of demonstrators had gathered to 'protect property' and 'defend their communities' amid fears of another night of violence.

Starmer needs to get a grip on the riots

From our UK edition

Hundreds of angry protestors have attacked a hotel in South Yorkshire that has been used to house migrants and asylum seekers. Videos posted on social media show the police retreating under a hail of objects thrown by anti-immigration protesters outside the Holiday Inn Express in Rotherham. There are pictures of protestors hurling pieces of wood and chairs at riot police The scenes are some of the worst so far as unrest across Britain enters its fifth day, after three young girls were stabbed to death in Southport on Monday. The Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, in responding to the events in Rotherham, vowed ‘to bring these thugs to justice as quickly as possible’.

Boxing mismatch shows Olympic officials need to get a grip

From our UK edition

The hugely controversial Olympic boxing bout between Italian Angela Carini and her opponent Imane Khelif from Algeria lasted just 46 seconds. After taking two punches from Khelif to the chin, Carini was forced to quit, saying she had done so ‘to save my life’. She said she had ‘never felt punches like it’, after sustaining a suspected broken nose. Carini sank to her knees in the centre of the ring and wept openly at having her Olympic dream shattered. ‘It’s not fair,’ she cried out. It is a damning charge that will go on to haunt these games. Carini was hit by two savage punches from Khelif, and the force of the blows was so great that she immediately felt she was in serious danger.

The horror of the Southport knife attack

From our UK edition

Two children have died and nine have been injured, six critically, after a series of stabbings in Southport, Merseyside. Two adults are also in a critical condition – they were apparently injured trying to protect the children from their attacker. A 17-year old boy, from the nearby village of Banks in Lancashire, remains in custody after being arrested on suspicion of murder and attempted murder. A witness described it as 'the worst thing I’ve ever seen in my life' The stabbings took place at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class on Monday lunchtime. A man, wearing a mask and armed with a knife, entered the venue and started to repeatedly stab child after child. There are thought to have been around 25 children – aged between six and 11 – taking part in the dance workshop.

Team GB is a force to reckon with

From our UK edition

Expectations are high for Team GB at the Paris Olympics. UK Sport, the Olympic funding agency, expects British athletes to win at least 50 medals and achieve a top-five finish in the overall table. That must count as the bare minimum and there is every chance that Britain could do even better than this. Why the confidence? Britain boasts 41 current World Champions across all the main Olympic disciplines. Paris is also the first games in a European time zone since the London 2012 Olympics, which helps with preparation and conditioning. Performing well at the Olympics is becoming routine: Team GB won 51 medals in the Beijing Games in 2008, followed by 65 medals at London 2012, 67 medals in Rio 2016, and a tally of 64 medals at the delayed Tokyo Games three years ago.

Don’t rush to judgement on the Manchester Airport police video

From our UK edition

A video of an armed police officer kicking and stamping on a man’s head has plunged Greater Manchester Police (GMP), the country’s second largest force, into crisis. The incident at Manchester Airport on Tuesday night has led to widespread condemnation. Protestors have gathered outside Rochdale police station, with some in the crowd chanting: 'GMP shame on you'. The footage showed a uniformed officer holding a Taser over a man lying on the floor before kicking him twice An officer has been suspended and the force has referred itself to the policing watchdog, the Independent Office for Police Conduct. Feelings are understandably running high locally, but investigators must be allowed time to assess the available evidence before the rush to judgment.

The Horizon scandal shows how badly Britain is run

From our UK edition

The Post Office inquiry has shed an unflattering light on the inner workings of Whitehall, a hermetically sealed world in which officials purr with reassurance, ministers unquestioningly promulgate their findings to the outside world, and the little people (in this case, innocent sub-postmasters) are fobbed off as know-nothing troublemakers. Witness after witness has expressed regrets, a sense that something more should have been done The inquiry is investigating what happened and who is to blame for the Horizon scandal. Between 1999 and 2015, hundreds of sub-postmasters were accused of wrongdoing after faulty IT software showed errors in their accounts. Many were accused of false accounting, theft, or fraud: 236 ended up in prison.

How will Labour deal with a problem like JD Vance?

From our UK edition

JD Vance, unveiled last night as Donald Trump’s pick for vice-president, has claimed that Britain is 'the first truly Islamist country that will get a nuclear weapon'. Vance made the comments at a National Conservatism Conference in Washington on Thursday. This is what he had to say: 'I was talking with a friend recently. And we were talking about one of the big dangers in the world, of course, is nuclear proliferation…And I was talking about, what is the first truly Islamist country that will get a nuclear weapon and we were like, maybe it’s Iran, maybe Pakistan already kind of counts. And then we sort of finally decided maybe it’s actually the UK, since Labour just took over.

Yes, David Lammy’s old tweets are a problem

From our UK edition

David Lammy was always a somewhat implausible choice as foreign secretary. His historical reputation for mouthing off on social media on a range of topics – not least Donald Trump’s fitness for office – seemed a blatant hostage to fortune.  His ill-judged tweeting has come back to haunt him this weekend. A 2019 tweet from Lammy is what’s caused new embarrassment. Trump said there had been no president who had been ‘treated so badly’ as he had. In response, Lammy said: ‘4 US Presidents  have been assassinated snowflake.’ That’s not the kind of language to be expected of someone who will end up as foreign secretary. In 2018, Lammy called then-President Trump a ‘neo-Nazi-sympathising sociopath’ in an opinion piece for Time magazine.