Was England’s win a watershed moment for Borthwick or a fleeting slice of joy?
Gold hits record high as Trump announces tariffs on steel and aluminium
Gold has reached a record high and aluminium prices rose after Donald Trump said he would impose new 25% tariffs on steel and aluminium imports into the US, rattling financial markets.As investors rushed for a safe haven for their money, the spot price of gold rose by more than 1% to $2,896 (£2,336) an ounce on Monday morning, above the record high set on Friday. Gold has been rising in recent weeks, amid concerns over the impact of Trump’s policies. It has gained 10% since the start of the year, after ending 2024 at $2,623 an ounce.Aluminium prices also rose, as investors worried that the tariffs could lead to supply problems and hit economic growth, which would reduce demand for the metal
Asil Nadir, Polly Peck tycoon turned fugitive, dies aged 83
Turkish Cypriot businessman Asil Nadir, once a fugitive from justice for stealing millions from his British Polly Peck conglomerate, has died, a social media post by his wife said. He was 83. The news was confirmed to the Times newspaper by his British lawyer Giles Bark-Jones.Nadir was being treated at a hospital in the breakaway Turkish Cypriot enclave in northern Cyprus and died overnight, Turkish media reported hospital officials as saying.Once one of Britain’s richest men and a Conservative party donor, Nadir was accused of stealing from Polly Peck – a fruits-to-electronics conglomerate that had a meteoric rise in the 1980s – to fund a lavish lifestyle including purchases of antiques, racehorses and country houses
England win has fans dreaming again as Borthwick’s plans come together | Robert Kitson
After it was all over on Saturday night, England’s players peeled away to seek out their loved ones in the stands. Fin Smith’s parents, Andrew and Judith, were awaiting their match-winning boy and the shared family embrace, when it came, was among the more heartwarming things you’ll see in sport all year. All those unsung hours on school and club touchlines, all those youthful ups and downs, distilled into a tight group hug of the purest emotional joy.In a strange way it also captured the tangled charm of the Six Nations. Andrew Smith is a proud Scot who met his wife – whose father Tom represented Scotland and the British & Irish Lions – at a post-match curry night in the clubhouse at London Scottish
UK tax administration costs spiralling due to complex system, says watchdog
An increasingly complex tax system is burdening the government and businesses with hundreds of millions of pounds more in administration costs, Whitehall’s spending watchdog has warned.The report by the National Audit Office (NAO) also said “poor levels of service” meant some taxpayers and their representatives were “finding it more difficult to deal with their tax matters and are losing trust in HM Revenue & Customs [HMRC]”.The UK’s tax authority has found itself under fire from various quarters recently: last month, another official spending watchdog accused HMRC of deliberately running down its phone services to force people to go online after finding that average call waiting times had increased sharply.HMRC’s administration costs for running the tax system rose by 15% – equivalent to £563m – in real terms between 2019-20 and last year, and totalled £4.3bn in 2023-24, with tax revenue increasing at a similar rate, according to the NAO
Britain’s system for controlling arms exports is broken, former diplomat claims
Britain’s system for controlling arms exports is broken, subject to political manipulation and has seen conduct that crossed the threshold into complicity with war crimes, a former UK diplomat has claimed.Writing for the Guardian, Mark Smith, who resigned from the Foreign Office in August, said officials were instructed to manipulate findings on the misuse of UK arms by allies, and if they did not do so, their reports were edited by senior colleagues to give the impression that the UK was in compliance with the law.Appealing to serving Foreign Office officials to end their cooperation with a broken process, he wrote: “What I witnessed was not just moral failure but conduct that I believe crossed the threshold into complicity with war crimes.“The British public deserves to know how these decisions are made behind closed doors – and how systemic dysfunction enables the government to perpetuate harm while shielding itself from scrutiny.”He also said his efforts to raise his concerns were blocked, and he was ordered not to put his concerns in writing in case they became subject to freedom of information requests
The Great Indian, London: ‘A thoroughly delightful food pub’ – restaurant review
An old north London boozer has found new life as an Indian restaurant, and redefined ‘gastropub’ along the wayThe Great Indian, 139 Marlborough Road, London N19 4NU. Small plates £7.50-£11.50, large dishes £9.50-£23
Jordan Mailata makes history as first Australian to win a Super Bowl
New York Jets and Aaron Rodgers to part ways, according to reports
Furbank and Feyi-Waboso fitness boost bolsters England’s Six Nations charge
Rohit Sharma hits century as India surge to ODI series victory over England
Super Bowl 2025: Kansas City Chiefs 22-40 Philadelphia Eagles – as it happened
Scotland 16-32 Ireland: Six Nations 2025 – as it happened