Thursday, May 21, 2026

If it ain’t broke: You share your oldest gadgets

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Ricky Boleto

These days, your shiny new gadget is likely to be rendered obsolete by software updates (or a lack of them) before it physically grinds to a halt.

A recent report by the consumer campaign group Which? suggests the lifespan of a smart fridge could be just a few years if the brand behind it stops providing software support and updates.

Meanwhile, Sonos has released new software for its internet-connected speakers that does not work on its own-branded older devices.

And this prompted me to casually mention on Twitter that I have a 12-year-old TV.

To make myself feel better, I also asked people to share their oldest working gadgets.

And a floodgate opened.

Made in the days before software updates, operating systems and security vulnerabilities were part of of the ecosystem, they’re all still going strong.

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@ReesMF

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This Kenwood food mixer dates back to 1964, owner Matthew Rees says

Kitchen gadgets were built to last, with a number of 20-, 30-, 40- and even 50-year-old whisks and mixers proudly shown off, along with a 20-year-old Breville sandwich toaster, a rice cooker from the early 1990s and a 33-year-old Braun juicer.

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Rachel Rogers

Kate Bevan has a 30-year-old washing machine.

Rachel Rogers has a working toaster, which belonged to her grandmother, from 1925.

And the broadcaster Mariella Frostrup has a 25-year-old Magimix food processor.

Mary Branscombe, meanwhile, writes: “Dishwasher from 1996, fridge and washing machine from 1997 – but the Braun hand blender is from the early 90s. And of course my mid-80s sandwich toaster from college is still going strong.”

Sarah is still using a Sunbeam iron she received as a wedding present in 1977, which “lasted longer than the marriage”.

And Sue says: “My Prestige High Dome pressure cooker was a Christmas present in 1975 – still in use. My mother’s identical one, from Christmas 1953, was passed on six years ago, still good.”

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Ricky Boleto

A surprising number of Nintendo Game Boys (launched in 1989) and the occasional NES (Nintendo Entertainment System, launched in 1983) are still being put through their paces too.

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Jorn Madslien

Chris Green still plays on a 37-year-old ZX Spectrum.

Jorn Madslien’s teenage son has acquired his mum’s Binatone console from the early 1980s.

And Peter Gothard’s Sega Mega Drive is “coming up for 30, and still working perfectly”.

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Ewan Spence

Ewan Spence still uses a Psion organiser from 1993.

And Amin has been using the same memory stick since 2005.

“This little stick has been ‘backing me up’ since before I can remember,” he says.

“It even broke and I fixed it with superglue many years ago.”

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Moataz Attallah

There are also a number of vintage calculators still in service – the one above belongs to Prof Moataz Attallah.

“My dad bought it for me in 1997 from France – hence the name, Graphique Couleur,” he says.

“It can plot graphs, do matrix calculations and more, with 64KB”.

Meanwhile, Peter Gillingwater’s Casio FX-602P, which he bought in 1981, still works.

And Paul Marks has been using his Casio FX-29 calculator since he got it, in 1977.

“Fitted well in the knee pockets of high-waisters – anyone remember those?” he asks.

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Modha

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This Sony Walkman, from 1991, is still going, reports Modha on Twitter

Plenty of iPods, Sony Walkmans and hi-fis are still in good working order, along with the occasional Minidisc player and one 1960s HMV record player.

“Functioning, probably – the Vestax recorder, which I have had since the early 90s,” Keith Devereux says, “unused now since I can’t really get audio cassettes any more. Currently in use? Almost certainly the trusty old iPod from the early 2000s.”

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Zoe Kleinman

Sean McManus says: “My Amstrad CPC 464 computer from 1984 still works fine.

“I’ve got some music keyboards from the mid-80s and early-90s too.”

And restaurant critic Jay Rayner asks: “Does a Yamaha Clavinova digital piano from 1993 count?”

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@_Tumulus

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This 1960 Rock-Ola 1484 jukebox still has pride of place

There are also a variety of working FM radios, turntables, early digital radios and speakers.

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Neil Craig

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Neil Craig only recently parted with this working lawnmower, from the 1950s

“As hardware lifecycles get shorter and shorter, with some even measured in months not years, it’s easy to think that most people just want the latest version of a product,” Wired UK executive editor Jeremy White says.

“Well, that view may have value in the worlds of laptops and smartphones but sometimes older products are just better – better components, better design and a better lifespan.

“Hi-fi gear shows this time and again.

“A new Bluetooth speaker may have the latest software and chipsets – but this won’t mean it’s superior.

“I still use a TV sound system that came out in 2009.

“And I’ve yet to find one that sounds better or works as seamlessly.”

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Martin Mander

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Mr Mander’s modified 1975 Hitachi TV set

However, some older gadgets may need a little bit of 21st-Century magic.

Martin Mander, host of the YouTube channel Old Tech New Spec, modifies old devices that continue to be of service in today’s world.

On his wall at home is a Hitachi CRT TV from 1975, which he has refitted to stream digital video.

“At its heart, old technology was really bulky and modern technology is really tiny,” he says, “so you have more space inside an old device to modify it.

“You can fit something new inside it, like a Raspberry Pi or an Arduino, to make it work like it is supposed to but in a more modern way.”

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Minnesota Officers Acknowledge Slashing Tires At Minneapolis Protest

The Minnesota Department of Public Safety confirmed Monday that officers from two law enforcement agencies slashed dozens of vehicles’ tires as part of the response to protests in Minneapolis last weekend.

Minnesota state troopers and deputies from the Anoka County Sheriff’s Office punctured and deflated tires in “a few locations,” Department of Public Safety spokesman Bruce Gordon told The Star Tribune.

“State Patrol troopers strategically deflated tires … in order to stop behaviors such as vehicles driving dangerously and at high speeds in and around protesters and law enforcement,” he said.

Gordon acknowledged that law enforcement slashing tires is “not a typical tactic,” but defended it as reducing the risk of vehicles “being used as dangerous weapons and inhibiting our ability to clear areas and keep areas safe.”

Several of the damaged cars belonged to reporters on the scene covering the protests that erupted following the police killing of George Floyd on May 25 in Minneapolis. Journalists have repeatedly been targeted by law enforcement officers as they cover protests across the country.

In Minneapolis, police fired tear gas at reporters “at point-blank range,” according to a Los Angeles Times reporter, who said she was hit in the leg by a canister. And a Vice News reporter said he was thrown to the ground, held down and pepper-sprayed by police after identifying himself as press.

Freelance writer Linda Tirado said she’s “permanently blind” in her left eye after allegedly being hit by a rubber bullet or tracer round fired by authorities in Minneapolis at the end of May. Tirado said officers fired at her even after she’d identified herself as press.

Similar incidents occurred over and over across the U.S., including in Louisville, Kentucky, where cops fired pepper balls directly at TV reporter Kaitlin Rust and her cameraman:

In Denver, reporters from several different outlets were fired upon, including Denver Post photographer Hyoung Chang, who had his press badge split by a projectile.

Protests have upended cities across the globe following the death of the 46-year-old Floyd, a Black man who died after a Minneapolis police officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes while he gasped out the words, “I can’t breathe.”

On Sunday, a majority of Minneapolis City Council members announced support for dismantling the city’s police department in response to calls for fundamental changes in how the policing function is performed.



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Woman’s body found inside a home in Sydney’s west

An investigation is underway after the body of a woman was found in Sydney’s west.

Police were called to a home on Barlow Street, in Cambridge Park, near Penrith, last night following reports of concern for her welfare.

They found the body of a 20-year-old woman inside just after 9pm.

The cause of death remains unclear and the home is now being examined by specialist forensic officers.

Anyone with information is urged to call police.

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Erdogan links antifa to Kurdish groups

Jun 8, 2020

Turkey tried today again to connect protests against police violence in the United States to Kurdish groups in the Middle East.

In a call with US President Donald Trump, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said that people committing acts of violence and looting in the United States are cooperating with the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) in Turkey and the People’s Protection Units (YPG) in Syria. Erdogan and Trump also discussed Libya, according to Turkey’s state-run Anadolu Agency.

The PKK fights for greater Kurdish political rights in Turkey and is considered a terrorist organization by both Ankara and Washington. The YPG in Syria shares a communalist ideology with the PKK but denies further links. The United States backs the YPG in its fight against the Islamic State. Turkey strongly and vocally opposes this support, believing the YPG to be the Syrian version of the PKK.

Erdogan’s comments are related to the antifa movement in the United States. The loosely organized movement — whose name means anti-fascist — has allegedly been involved in many anti-Trump demonstrations — some of them violent — as well as the ongoing George Floyd protests in the United States.

Some antifa supporters fought in the YPG in Syria, which is the basis of the Turkish government’s claims of a connection. Following reports of alleged YPG-antifa ties in Turkish media, some foreign YPG fighters told Al-Monitor there were some antifa supporters in the group but there was no formal relationship between the two.

Turkey took some territories from the YPG last year following an extensive military offensive, seeing the YPG presence near the Turkish border as a threat. The YPG says Turkey and its Syrian rebel allies are pursuing forced demographic change against Kurds in the area.

Erdogan’s remarks follow Trump’s threat to label antifa a terrorist organization due to its alleged role in looting and property destruction that occurred during the protests in the United States.

The two presidents also agreed in their conversation to work together for peace and stability in Libya, according to the Anadolu Agency. Turkey is a major backer of the UN-recognized Government of National Accord (GNA) in Libya. The GNA has lately had significant military success holding on to the capital, Tripoli, against eastern-based Gen. Khalifa Hifter’s Libyan National Army. The United States opposes Russian support for Hifter.



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The treasure trove hidden in discarded computers

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Hypromag

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Valuable rare metals can be harvested from discarded disk drives

What do you do with an old hard disk drive, the kind that still spins up inside most PCs, once it reaches the end of its life?

If Allan Walton has his way, parts of it could soon be propelling your next car along the road, assuming you go electric.

The University of Birmingham professor is a director in the firm Hypromag, which extracts and recycles neodymium magnets from used hard disks.

Neodymium is a rare earth metal – chemical elements considered essential ingredients in many of today’s must-have technologies, from smartphones to TV screens. Neodymium is used, among other things, to make magnets that turn the motors that drive electric vehicles.

Prof Walton believes that in the next 10 years, his company could be recycling enough neodymium to meet a quarter of the UK’s demand – almost all of which is currently imported from China.

Once electric vehicles are assembled and running, they are broadly seen as being more environmentally friendly than cars with an internal combustion engine. But making magnets from rare earths is far from green.

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Hypromag

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The disk drive part is bathed in hydrogen, revealing the valuable neodymium

Though processes needed to refine rare earths use many of the same chemicals found in oven cleaners and cosmetics, their waste can be destructive if not properly controlled.

At one mining site, Bayan Obo in Inner Mongolia, they have contributed to a vast toxic lake.

Next to the mine itself is a tailing dam, a reservoir created by what is left over from separating rare earths.

Steel and aluminium already have large established recycling programmes which help to reduce chemical processing.

However, rare earth minerals used in phones, hard drives and old wind turbines are generally lost.

Four years ago at the University of Birmingham, Prof Walton and his mentor, Prof Rex Harris, discovered that running hydrogen gas through old hard-disk drives turns the magnets into powder which can be harvested, re-packed and coated, to become new magnets.

Not only will the project offer a greener solution to the rare earths market, the global demand for these minerals means there is a business case to be built.

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Less Common Metals

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The reclaimed neodymium can be melted down to make new magnets

“We are missing a trick. There is no trouble finding rare earths, it’s the processing them into a useful material, like a magnet,” says Prof Walton.

This year, Hypromag expects to announce a deal with the UK car company Bentley.

It has received a £2.6m grant from Innovate UK and a half a million pounds of investment and further partnership from an African junior mine, Mkango.

However, the Hypromag solution will only meet a fraction of the growing demand for rare earths, which analysts estimate will double by 2025.

Prof Walton believes that if Britain acts now and creates a scaled-up rare earths recycling industry, it could become a world leader.

The opportunity is huge, with many emerging technologies such as 5G demanding rare earths, on top of the growing need for established technologies such as phone handsets, microprocessors and wind turbines.

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Getty Images

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More electric cars will mean more demand for rare earth metals

However, the main reason rare earths have been compared to oil, is government policies that will fuel the demand for electric vehicles.

After 2025, the Netherlands will not sell petrol or diesel cars. The UK and France have pledged to meet this goal by 2040. This year, China aims for 12% of cars sold in the country to produce zero emissions.

When it comes to the production of rare earths and magnets made from them, China is the world leader.

The country corners the market because its companies can mine rare earths and process them locally into finished products. More than 70% of rare earth products are exported by China.

More Technology of Business

The country corners the market because it is the only place in the world with companies that can make rare earth minerals into finished products. More than 70% of rare earth products are exported by China.

And, its established supply chain offers them unmatchable discounts.

Rare earths are part of the Made in China 2025 plan to become the world’s leading manufacturer.

But while China exports processed products, the country’s natural resources are not rich in heavier types of rare earth that are most in demand, like the neodymium used for car magnets.

China gets most of its neodymium from Burma and the United States, says Christopher Ecclestone, a mining strategist at Hallgarten.

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Getty Images

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The Mountain Pass mine in California is part-owned by China’s Shenghe Resources

The Mountain Pass mine in California sells 100% of its rare earths in a concentrated form to China – and is part-owned by Chinese firm Shenghe Resources, which has a 9.9% stake.

“The US is one of China’s largest sources of rare earths and the Chinese are taking it for a song. It drives the Pentagon crazy,” he says.

What put China in control of the market was that rare earths were a by-product of already established mines, says Ian Higgins, the director of Less Common Metals in Ellesmere Port near Liverpool.

Other rare earth metals and their uses

  • Neodymium – permanent magnets used in cars and wind turbines
  • Erbium – fibre cables for high-speed broadband and lasers
  • Dysprosium – commercial lighting and also nuclear reactors
  • Cerium – glass polish, catalytic converters and oven cleaner
  • Yttrium and Terbium – weaponry including laser targeting and cruise missiles

Mr Higgins’s firm is one of the only manufacturers outside of China to make and combine rare earth metals into alloys.

He points out that Chinese mines are supported by government subsidies and opaque accounting practices.

While environmental policy in China has improved, the largest mines were built before their implementation.

“There is a lot of processing of rare earths which is horrific and there is also a lot of black and grey market smuggling of heavier rare earths.” says Mr Higgins.

However, he adds that the country is beginning to wake up to the environmental impact of its rare earths industry.

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Less Common Metals

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Ian Higgins is one of the few manufacturers of rare earth alloys outside China

The Covid-19 pandemic has caused global assembly lines to grind to a halt. But it has also spurred manufacturers who use rare earths to question the global supply chain and their reliance on a single source country.

The crisis has pushed governments and businesses to “localise resources,”, according to Andrew Bloodworth a director at the British Geological Survey.

“People like me tell our government that any production that is concentrated in small places will be vulnerable to disruption,” says Mr Bloodworth.

America, the UK and Europe are trying to build supply chains for rare earths outside of China.

On 13 May, legislation was put before US legislators, aimed at giving tax breaks to the industry – $50m in funding was also earmarked for start-up mines in the US.

In the EU, the Horizon 2020 fund has launched an initiative to build a supply chain across several European and Nordic countries, including Britain.

In the UK, rare earths are integral to the government’s industrial strategy, according to Jeff Townsend, who this year set up a lobbying firm to represent the industry’s interests.

“Government needs to understand and do more than set out a grand vision of an industrial strategy. It needs to get its hands dirty and provide the supply chain,” he says.

“Covid has knocked everyone sideways and lots of people are looking again at the way we do things,” says Mr Townsend.

He adds: “If we make the decision that we want to be better, then we have to try to be better because that’s the only way we change society.”

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Intel: US sanctions Iran shipping line after humanitarian deferral ends

Jun 8, 2020

The Donald Trump administration sanctioned an Iranian shipping line and its Chinese subsidiary today after a six-month humanitarian deferral period ended.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo first announced sanctions on Mahan Air alongside the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines (IRISL) and its Shanghai-based subsidiary, E-Sail Shipping Company Ltd (E-Sail), in December. Pompeo noted in a statement today that the Trump administration delayed the IRISL and E-Sail sanctions for six months “to allow exporters of humanitarian goods to Iran sufficient time to find alternate shipping methods.”

“Now that this generous delay has come to an end, those in the commercial and maritime industries doing business with Iran must use carriers or shipping methods other than IRISL or E-Sail,” said Pompeo. If not, humanitarian exporters could run afoul of US nonproliferation sanctions on Iran.

Why it matters: While the Treasury Department maintains a formal sanctions exemption for humanitarian trade with Iran, the sanctions on E-Sail are likely to pose another obstacle to Tehran’s ability to import food and medicine.

Treasury Department website guidance notes that the E-Sail sanctions cover “agricultural commodities, food, medicine or medical devices,” warning that anyone who engages in humanitarian transactions risks “exposure to sanctions.”

Pompeo asserted that the Iranian shipping line “has repeatedly transported items related to Iran’s ballistic missile and military programs and is also a longstanding carrier of other proliferation-sensitive items.”

What’s next: Pompeo has also threatened to pursue snapback sanctions on Iran at the United Nations unless Russia and China agree to extend the arms embargo on Tehran, which expires in October as the first sunset provision under the 2015 nuclear deal.

Know more: Congressional Correspondent Bryant Harris takes a deep-dive into how Trump’s Iran sanctions regime has impacted humanitarian trade amid the coronavirus pandemic.



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Report: Some Jewish parts of West Bank to be excluded from annexation

Jun 8, 2020

Some parts of the West Bank populated by Jewish settlers will be excluded from Israel’s planned partial annexation of the Palestinian territory, according to a report in Israeli media. The report is the latest disagreement between Israeli settlers and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on the plan.

The Israeli public news outlet Kan 11 reported today that 25 Jewish areas of the West Bank will not be within the lines being drawn by Israel and the United States, citing settlement leaders.

Israel plans to move forward with annexation of Jewish settlements in the West Bank and the entire Jordan Valley in July. The United States conditionally supports the idea, but Palestinians, Arab states and some European countries oppose it. Israel believes the move is necessary for its security, while Palestinians think it prevents their self-determination and statehood aspirations.

The West Bank is presently divided into areas controlled by the Palestinian Authority and Israel. Most of the population consists of Palestinians who do not have Israeli citizenship, but there are thousands of Israeli settlers as well. The Palestinians and much of the international community regard the territory as occupied by Israel, which captured it from Jordan during the Six-Day War in 1967.

The report says that 25 areas that together have around 2,000 Israeli Jewish residents will not be included within the annexed area. The locales are largely outposts, which differ from settlements in that they were not constructed with permission from the Israeli government. Instead, Israeli Jews, often devoutly religious, built the makeshift communities on their own.

Israel’s plan would also make some Palestinian residents of the West Bank become residents of Israel, according to comments by Netanyahu.

Settler leaders have written a letter to Netanyahu demanding clarification of the areas’ status and that nobody there be evicted from their homes, according to the report.

Some settlers have criticized Netanyahu lately because the annexation plan could lead to a Palestinian state in the future, which they oppose.

After months of political squabbling, Israel’s unity government took office in May and includes Netanyahu’s Likud party and his former rival Benny Gantz’ Blue and White party. The deal gave Netanyahu and his allies the political backing to pursue their long-awaited goal of annexing parts of the West Bank.



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Family of imprisoned Saudi activist Loujain al-Hathloul worries after contact cut off

Jun 8, 2020

It’s been a month since the family of Loujain al-Hathloul has heard from the imprisoned women’s rights activist, raising further concerns about her safety in Saudi Arabia’s notorious maximum security prison. 

Hathloul’s family, which has been unable to visit the prison since March, is supposed to speak with her by phone once a week. On Sunday, Hathloul’s sister Lina al-Hathloul said they hadn’t heard from her in over 30 days. 

“My sister @LoujainHathloul has not called for a month now. Where is Loujain?” Lina asked on Twitter.

Hathloul has spent more than two years inside the al-Ha’ir prison complex near Riyadh. Her arrest in May 2018 came as part of a sweeping crackdown on female activists campaigning for women’s driving rights and the end of restrictive male guardianship laws.

A month after Hathloul’s arrest, Saudi Arabia lifted the world’s only ban on women driving.

Since then, her family says Hathloul has been tortured with waterboarding, electric shocks and sexual harassment and at times held in solitary confinement. In a 2019 New York Times op-ed, her sister Alia Hathloul wrote that during a family visit, Loujain “was shaking uncontrollably, unable to hold her grip, to walk or sit normally.”

Her court date was scheduled for March but has been postponed indefinitely amid the coronavirus pandemic.

“It is totally unacceptable for the Saudi government to use the pandemic as an excuse to further violate Loujain’s human rights, and we call on the state to immediately and unconditionally release her,” Suad Abu-Dayyeh, Equality Now’s MENA consultant, told Al-Monitor in emailed comments.

The continued detention of Hathloul comes as Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) aims to polish his country’s image abroad while at the same time silencing his critics.

The CIA concluded he personally ordered the October 2018 operation to kill Washington Post columnist and MBS critic Jamal Khashoggi at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul.

The young prince has reportedly orchestrated the arrest of a number of members of the royal family, including Princess Basmah bint Saud. In March, two senior Saudi princes were detained for allegedly planning a coup.

The crown prince’s crackdown on critics comes as the coronavirus continues to spread throughout the country and amid reports that Saudi authorities are denying medical treatment to prisoners. According to Amnesty International, detained human rights activist Abdullah al-Hamid died in April after being denied treatment for a heart condition.

Equality Now called on Saudi authorities to immediately and unconditionally release Hathloul along with other jailed activists including Nassima al-Sada, Samar Badawi, Maya Al-Zahrani and Nouf Abdelaziz.



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Archaeologists using pioneering radar tech to map out Roman city

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Ground penetrating radar images of the Roman city of Falerii Novi, Italy (Credits: PA)

An entire ancient Roman city has been mapped for the first time without any digging – thanks to a pioneering radar system.

Cambridge University archaeologists used advanced ground penetrating radar (GPR) to reveal in ‘astonishing detail’ the city’s bath complex, market, temple, public monuments and sprawling network of water pipes.

It allowed the team to understand how the city of Falerii Novi in Italy evolved over hundreds of years.

Professor Martin Millett, of Cambridge University’s Faculty of Classics, said: ‘The astonishing level of detail which we have achieved at Falerii Novi, and the surprising features that GPR has revealed, suggest that this type of survey could transform the way archaeologists investigate urban sites, as total entities.

‘It is exciting and now realistic to imagine GPR being used to survey a major city such as Miletus in Turkey, Nicopolis in Greece or Cyrene in Libya.’

GPR, like other radars, bounces radio waves off objects in the earth and uses their ‘echo’ to build up a picture at different depths.

Archaeologists have used advanced technology to map out the entire ancient Roman city buried deep underground without any digging. (Credits: PA)

The team used a quad bike to tow the radar over the area within the city’s walls – over 30 hectares, taking readings every 12.5 cm (about 5 inches).

Falerii Novi, located about 30 miles north of Rome, was about half the size of Pompeii and was occupied between the year 241BC and 700AD.

The map revealed the city was different to other well studied towns like Pompeii, challenging certain assumptions about Roman urban design.

Professor Millett added: ‘We still have so much to learn about Roman urban life and this technology should open up unprecedented opportunities for decades to come.’

The team discovered a bath complex, a market, a temple and a public monument (Credits: PA)

The architecture of the temple, market buildings and baths were more elaborate, while the city’s layout was not standardized as would usually be expected.

It also revealed a long rectangular building, which is thought to have been an open-air pool as part of the city’s bathing facilities and two large structures near the city’s north gate, believed to be part of an ‘impressive’ public monument unlike anything seen before.

While the city has been well documented in historic records and has not been covered by modern buildings, the GPR has built a far more complete picture.

The team have already used the ground breaking radar to survey other cities including Interamna Lirenas in Italy and Alborough in North Yorkshire, but are hoping to tackle bigger sites.

The ground penetrating radar rig that was used on the Roman city of Falerii Novi, Italy (Credits: PA)

The radar however produces vast amounts of high-resolution data, which takes a long time to analyse, around 20 hours per hectare.

The team is working on automated techniques to speed things up, but it will be some time before the map of Falerii Novi is finished.

The findings were published in the journal Antiquity.



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UK households face £6bn debts because of Covid-19, says charity

British households are expected to rack up debts worth a combined £6bn because of the coronavirus crisis, as millions of people fall behind on credit card payments, council tax and utility bills.

Sounding the alarm as the economic fallout from the health emergency mounts, the StepChange debt advice charity said 4.6m households risked building up dangerous levels of debt because of the pandemic.

The charity warned that debts racked up during the crisis would stifle the country’s economic recovery and that debt advisory services would be deluged once the reality of people’s situations began to hit home in the coming months.

In response to the looming national debt crisis, the Treasury said it was pumping an additional £38m of funding into debt advice services to help manage a flood of new arrears cases.

John Glen, economic secretary to the Treasury, said: “We know that some people are struggling with their finances during this difficult time, which is why we want to make sure people can access the help and support they need to manage their debts and get their finances back on track.”

StepChange said debt charities were gearing up for a doubling of demand for their services as Covid-19 and lockdown measures triggered rising job losses and reduced working hours and pay.

According to a study carried out by the organisation, each affected adult will have accumulated an additional £1,076 of arrears and £997 of debt on average each because of the health crisis. StepChange said 4.6m households had been affected so far.

But despite the mounting risk of financial hardship, many people have saved money during the early stages of the pandemic, as lockdown has prevented them from eating and drinking out, visiting most shops and commuting to work.

Amid the biggest-ever fall in consumer spending, UK households repaid a record £7.4bn of debt on credit cards and personal loans in April, according to Bank of England figures. Household bank deposits jumped by £16.2bn, more than triple the average monthly rise.

The savings boom has, however, been uneven. According to the Resolution Foundation, as many as two in five high-income families have experienced budget gains in the crisis, comparedwith one in eight low-income households.

StepChange said that since the beginning of lockdown in late March, as many as 1.2 million people had fallen behind on utility bill payments, 820,000 people on council tax, and 590,000 on rent. Around 4.2 million people had borrowed to make ends meet, mostly by using a credit card, overdraft or a high-cost product such as a payday loan. 

According to the charity, as many as 2.7 million people have used payment holidays on mortgages and credit products that were brought in after talks between ministers and the banking industry.

The government has extended payment holidays on mortgages by three months. The scheme was announced in March to help borrowers in financial difficulty because of the health crisis, and was due to expire at the end of June before it was extended by a further three months. The deadline for applying for an extension was also shifted to 31 October.

The Financial Times reported on Monday that talks with banks were in progress about extending the break for those struggling to repay credit card debts. However, StepChange said more flexible terms would still be needed once the holidays ended to prevent a “cliff edge” for people who needed to start paying back their debts.

Phil Andrew, chief executive of StepChange, said: “We were already dealing with a debt crisis, but Covid has so far added another four million people and counting to the number who are going to need help finding their way back to financial health.

“This is a problem that isn’t going to solve itself.”

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