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Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Don’t fool yourself, wokery is far from defeated

May 26, 2026
Don’t fool yourself, wokery is far from defeated

As soon as she heard the news thatBridget Phillipson, the equalities minister, was providingguidance on single-sex spacesin line with the Supreme Court ruling, a friend texted me jubilantly to say that perhaps a portal into sanity was finally opening. “Being allowed to say no to men in women’s toilets is the first step to being allowed to say no more broadly to insane, bad things,” she said.

The Telegraph The sign indicating the 'Women Only' swimming pool is seen attached to gates on Hampstead Heath in central London on June 27, 2018

One wants to believe that if people see the light about A, they’ll see the light about B, the whole woke edifice will simply crumble; some semblance of cultural rationality and decency will return and the West will survive.

But on receiving his text, I shook my head ruefully. For unfortunately I think that glimmers of sense pushing against the incursions of the trans activist agenda are rather more contained than one would hope.

We’ve already had endless would-be Eureka moments – theHilary Cass reportinto the scandal of puberty blockers liberally dispensed by NHS trusts to children, the slow progress on banning men from women’s sport, the Supreme Court ruling itself that sex should be defined as biological and so, praise be, women’s loos really do mean women’s loos.

Bridget Phillipson

These were all important strikes against madness, but never really seemed to go beyond themselves. The reason the Government is now belatedly issuing guidance is that the activists running our public institutions largely ignored the Supreme Court. For instance there is a new sign up at theLadies Pond on Hampstead Heath, where I frequently swim, saying that trans women are welcome.

Conspiracies spread like wildfire, but good ideas, sadly, don’t.The killing of George Floydwas a starting gun for an era in which progressive Western societies lost their heads. Longer-running wokisms, like extreme affirmative action, were amplified, and new fires of madness, like teaching pre-schoolers about “white supremacy”, were ignited.

In the years since George Floyd and the atom bomb explosion of identitarianism, we have – as creatures of hope – heard many times about how the madness might finally have been defeated. But it most certainly hasn’t, and those celebrating are, I fear, clutching at straws.

Demonstrators attack a police car during a anti-racism demonstration on June 7, 2020 in Gothenburg, Sweden, in solidarity with protests raging across the US over the death of George Floyd, an unarmed black man who died during an arrest on May 2

That’s not to say some things haven’t shifted. Greenism has had a battering, though in the typicallyirresponsible style favoured by Trump(rather than the way it ought to be battered: by encouraging enterprise to solve the real problem of global warming). At any rate, Trump has opened the door to a culture in which pursuing the bottom line, environmental virtue-signalling be damned, has become more acceptable.

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In the UK, there is a bit more honest conversation about what a luxuriously silly campaign net zero is. But… meh. It’s barely a dent in the sprawling edifice of loonyism in which we all must live.

False hope is everywhere. Ever heard of “grandpersoning” an idea into reality, or a person to success, rather than “grandfathering”? The Aussies have, thanks to Greens senator Nick McKim deploying it to describe some aspect of the opposing Labor Party’s housing policy. It was met with jeers and consternation. Well, you might say, at least we get to laugh at such things now. Sanity has surely returned!

Let us not forget the poor eco-zealous restaurateurs who were awarded newfangled green stars from Michelin, in recognition of their commitment to the environment, only to have them wrenched away because everyone confused them with the gastronomic red ones.

President Donald Trump shushes journalists before signing the Paycheck Protection Program Flexibility Act in the Rose Garden at the White House June 05, 2020 in Washington, DC

Do spare a thought for Hylton Espey, owner ofCulture restaurant in Falmouth, who serves mushrooms from a nearby “no-dig” garden, and Cecily Fearnley, ofHomestead Kitchen Garden in North Yorkshire, who have now lost their green stars and are very unhappy about it. To be fair, their food sounds great so maybe they will soon get some real red ones.

And they can take comfort that Michelin Guide’s zeal for saving the planet, one plate offoie grasat a time, is not dwindling in the slightest, thanks to its Mindful Voices initiative, a “global editorial platform” about sustainable restaurants.

It’s not impossible that a small thing could unravel the whole. And so I am always on the lookout for signs that chinks in the armour of the woke beast are connecting to, and diminishing, the horror and falsehood that defines treatment of Israel. And the answer to that question is repeatedly and disappointingly no.

Take the existence of prominent persons in the Western feminist movement who have staked their morality ondenying that Hamas raped and sexually tortured Israeli womenon and after October 7. Some of these women are “gender-critical” feminists, i.e. they are opposed to the trans movement. Sadly, this does not offer the assurance you’d think it would.

I have repeatedly encountered fellow travellers who are crestfallen and confused when they find out that this or that “gender-critical”, i.e. sane-seeming, feminist, still seems keener to bolster a jihadi Islamist group 2,000 miles away than the Jewish women they butchered (and the Muslim women they continue to butcher).

EM Forster introduced the evocative injunction “only connect” inHoward’s Endin 1910. But in a world of fracture, boredom, anxiety, intellectual thinning and incoherence, it is becoming increasingly hard to do so. If one bit of madness is punctured, a million more remain intact.

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Monday, May 25, 2026

'Hearts' Shankland agrees free transfer to Rangers' - gossip

May 25, 2026
'Hearts' Shankland agrees free transfer to Rangers' - gossip

Lawrence Shankland is flying back to Glasgow from holiday to have a medical and complete a transfer to Rangers, who have offered the 30-year-old striker a two-year contract - with an option of a third - and will join the Ibrox club for free because of a clause in his Hearts contract.(Daily Record)

BBC

Hearts captain Lawrence Shankland will sign for Rangers after agreeing personal terms with the club he supported as a boy.(Scottish Sun)

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Lawrence Shankland could overtake centre-half Emmanuel Fernandez and midfielder Nicolas Raskin as Rangers' new captain should the Scotland striker complete his transfer from Hearts.(Football Insider)

Read Monday's Scottish Gossip in full.

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French Open day two order of play and schedule with Swiatek and Rybakina in action

May 25, 2026
French Open day two order of play and schedule with Swiatek and Rybakina in action

Four-time championIga Swiatekbegins herFrench Opencampaign on Monday as first-round action continues on another busy day in Paris.

The Independent US The first round continues on day two of the French Open (Getty)

The Polish third seed takes on Australian wildcard Emerson Jones first on Court Philippe-Chatrier, with second seed Elena Rybakina following against Slovenia’s Veronika Erjavec.

Fan favouriteGael Monfilsis slated to start his last Roland-Garros before retirement in the night session on Chatrier, where he has been drawn against compatriot Hugo Gaston, while former champion Stan Wawrinka also begins his final Roland-Garros against Dutch lucky loser Jesper de Jong.

Elsewhere, 2024 finalistJasmine Paoliniopens against Dayana Yastremska, Italian Open championElina Svitolinabegins her campaign against Anna Bondar. There’s British interest too as qualifier Toby Samuel has a tough first-round tie against eighth seed Alex de Minaur, while British No 2 Katie Boulter takes on American wildcard Akasha Urhobo.

Is the French Open on TV?

The tournament will be shown live onTNT Sportsin the UK as well as online on HBO Max.

In the US, it will be shown live on TNT Sports, Max, truTV and CNN.

French Open day two order of play

all times BST

Court Philippe-Chatrier - 11am

  • Emerson Jones v Iga Swiatek (3)

  • Veronika Erjavec v Elena Rybakina (2)

  • Ugo Humbert(32) v Adrian Mannarino

Court Philippe-Chatrier - from 7.15pm

  • Hugo Gaston v Gael Monfils

Court Suzanne-Lenglen - 10am

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  • Arthur Rinderknech (22) v Jurij Rodionov

  • Elina Svitolina (7) v Anna Bondar

  • Sarah Rakotomanga v Amanda Anisimova (6)

  • Daniel Merida Aguilar v Ben Shelton (5)

Court Simonne-Mathieu - 10am

  • Jasmine Paolini (13) v Dayana Yastremska

  • Stan Wawrinka v Jesper de Jong

  • Casper Ruud (15) v Roman Safiullin

  • Anastasia Zakharova v Karolina Muchova (10)

Court 14 - 10am

  • Alex de Minaur (8) v Toby Samuel

  • Tatjana Maria v Elise Mertens (23)

  • Kaitlin Quevedo v Leolia Jeanjean

  • Flavio Cobolli (10) v Andrea Pellegrino

Court 4 - 10am

  • Liudmila Samsonova (20) v Jil Teichmann

  • Julia Grabher v Rebecca Sramkova

  • Mariano Navone v Jenson Brooksby

  • Francisco Cerundolo (25) v Botic Van De Zandschulp

Court 5 - 10am

  • Susan Bandecchi v Cristina Bucsa (31)

  • Petra Marcinko v Eva Lys

  • Emilio Nava v Camilo Ugo Carabelli

  • Yibing Wu v Marcos Giron

Court 6 - 10am

  • Pablo Carreno Busta v Jiri Lehecka(12)

  • Thanasi Kokkinakis v Terence Atmane

  • Jelena Ostapenko (29) v Ella Seidal

  • Diana Shnaider (25) v Renata Zarazua

Court 7 - 10am

  • Maja Chwalinska v Qinwen Zheng

  • Eliot Spizzirri v Frances Tiafoe (19)

  • Ignacio Buse v Andrey Rublev (11)

  • Alycia Parks v Leylah Fernandez (24)

Court 8 - 10am

  • Luca Van Assche v Patrick Kypson

  • Jaume Munar v Hubert Hurkacz

  • Akasha Urhobo v Katie Boulter

  • Camila Osorio v Ekaterina Alexandrova (14)

Court 9 - 10am

  • Daria Kasatkina v Zeynep Sonmez

  • Roberto Bautista Agut v Brandon Nakashima (31)

  • Panna Udvardy v Viktorija Golubic

  • Raphael Collignon v Aleksandar Vukic

Court 12 - 10am

  • Alexander Shevchenko v Alex Michelsen

  • Aleksandar Kovacevic v Rafael Jodar (27)

  • Talia Gibson v Yulia Putintseva

  • Kamilla Rakhimova v Jaqueline Cristian

Court 13 - 10am

  • Marton Fucsovics v Matteo Berrettini

  • Maya Joint v Anastasia Potapova (28)

  • Rinky Hijikata v Tommy Paul (24)

  • Hanyu Guo v McCartney Kessler

French Open schedule

The tournament main draw gets underway on Sunday 24 May. Finals weekend is across Saturday 6 and Sunday 7 June.

  • 24–26 May — 1st Round

  • 27–28 May — 2nd Round

  • 29–30 May — 3rd Round

  • 31 May – 1 June — Round of 16

  • 2–3 June — Quarterfinals

  • 4 June — Women’s Semifinals

  • 5 June — Men’s Semifinals

  • 6 June — Women’s Singles Final & Men’s Doubles Final

  • 7 June — Men’s Singles Final & Women’s Doubles Final

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Qalibaf reelected as Iran's parliament speaker, Fars says

May 25, 2026
Qalibaf reelected as Iran's parliament speaker, Fars says

DUBAI, May 25 (Reuters) - ‌Iran's ‌top negotiator ​in talks with ‌the ⁠United States, Mohammad ⁠Bagher ​Qalibaf, ​has ​been ‌reelected as the country's parliamentary ‌speaker, ​semi-official ​Fars ​news ‌agency reported ​on ​Monday.

Reuters Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf looks on after a press conference with Lebanese Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, in Beirut, Lebanon, October 12, 2024. REUTERS/Amr Abdallah Dalsh Iran's Parliament Speaker, Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf speaks in parliament about Iran's response to possible U.S. attacks, in Tehran, Iran January 11, 2026, in this screengrab obtained from a video. IRINN/via Reuters TV/Handout via REUTERS

Iranian Parliament Speaker Qalibaf visits Beirut

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(Reporting by ​Elwely ‌Elwelly;Editing by ​Alison ​Williams)

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Sunday, May 24, 2026

When is the French Open draw? Seeds, wildcards and confirmed entry list

May 24, 2026
When is the French Open draw? Seeds, wildcards and confirmed entry list

TheFrench Opengets underway on Sunday with the clay-court season coming to a climax on the red dirt of Roland-Garros.

The Independent US Jannik Sinner is the heavy favourite to win the French Open for the first time (Getty)

In the men’s draw,Jannik Sinneris the overwhelming favourite to win his first French Open title and to claim the careerGrand Slamin the process, continuing a hugely successful season in which he has already made history as only the second man, and the youngest, to win all nine Masters 1000 titles.

In the absence of arch-rival and defending championCarlos Alcaraz, who is absent with a wrist injury, there appear few players who can stop the Italian - although the veteranNovak Djokovichas offered the stiffest competition in recent months and will arrive in Paris with renewed motivation to win an outright record 25th major.

The women’s draw meanwhile is full of potential winners, with defending champion Coco Gauff having had a mixed clay-court season thus far but arriving with a point to prove after a tough defeat in the Italian Open final.

The American returns to action alongside Australian Open champion and last year’s runner-up Aryna Sabalenka, four-time Roland-Garros winnerIga Swiatek, and a rejuvenatedElina Svitolina, who recently won her biggest title in eight years on the clay in Rome to put herself among the contenders.

Here’s everything you need to know:

When is the French Open draw?

The French Open draw will take place on Thursday 21 May at 2pm local time, which is 1pm UK time.

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Women’s seeds and full entry list

  1. Aryna Sabalenka

  2. Elena Rybakina (KAZ)

  3. Iga Swiatek (POL)

  4. Coco Gauff (USA)

  5. Jessica Pegula (USA)

  6. Amanda Anisimova (USA)

  7. Elina Svitolina (UKR)

  8. Mirra Andreeva

  9. Victoria Mboko (CAN)

  10. Karolina Muchova (CZE)

  11. Belinda Bencic (SUI)

  12. Linda Noskova (CZE)

  13. Jasmine Paolini (ITA)

  14. Ekaterina Alexandrova

  15. Marta Kostyuk (UKR)

  16. Naomi Osaka (JPN)

  17. Iva Jovic (USA)

  18. Sorana Cîrstea (ROU)

  19. Madison Keys (USA)

  20. Liudmila Samsonova

  21. Clara Tauson (DEN)

  22. Anna Kalinskaya

  23. Elise Mertens (BEL)

  24. Leylah Fernandez (CAN)

  25. Diana Shnaider

  26. Hailey Baptiste (USA)

  27. Marie Bouzková (CZE)

  28. Anastasia Potapova

  29. Jelena Ostapenko (LAT)

  30. Ann Li (USA)

  31. Cristina Bucsa (ESP)

  32. Wang Xinyu (CHN)

Remaining draw

  • Jaqueline Cristian ROU

  • Maya Joint AUS

  • Sara Bejlek CZE

  • Katerina Siniakova CZE

  • Emma Raducanu GBR

  • Alexandra Eala PHI

  • Emma Navarro USA

  • Elisabetta Cocciaretto ITA

  • Janice Tjen INA

  • Barbora Krejcikova CZE

  • Tereza Valentova CZE

  • Dayana Yastremska UKR

  • Laura Siegemund GER

  • Mccartney Kessler USA

  • Maria Sakkari GRE

  • Magdalena Frech POL

  • Lois Boisson FRA

  • Jessica Bouzas Maneiro ESP

  • Tatjana Maria GER

  • Qinwen Zheng CHN

  • Yuliia Starodubtseva UKR

  • Talia Gibson AUS

  • Caty McNally USA

  • Magda Linette POL

  • Anna Bondar HUN

  • Zeynep Sonmez TUR

  • Antonia Ruzic CRO

  • Daria Kasatkina AUS

  • Elsa Jacquemot FRA

  • Solana Sierra ARG

  • Nikola Bartunkova CZE

  • Oleksandra Oliynykova UKR

  • Panna Udvardy HUN

  • Katie Boulter GBR

  • Donna Vekic CRO

  • Elena-Gabriela Ruse ROU

  • Renata Zarazua MEX

  • Taylor Townsend USA

  • Shuai Zhang CHN

  • Yulia Putintseva KAZ

  • Petra Marcinko CRO

  • Camila Osorio COL

  • Beatriz Haddad Maia BRA

  • Anastasia Zakharova —

  • Alycia Parks USA

  • Eva Lys GER

  • Viktorija Golubic SUI

  • Kimberly Birrell AUS

  • Anhelina Kalinina UKR

  • Veronika Erjavec SLO

  • Kamilla Rakhimova UZB

  • Sofia Kenin USA

  • Oksana Selekhmeteva

  • Ajla Tomljanovic AUS

  • Lilli Tagger AUT

  • Peyton Stearns USA

  • Simona Waltert SUI

  • Diane Parry FRA

  • Daria Snigur UKR

  • Tamara Korpatsch GER

  • Ella Seidel GER

  • Emiliana Arango COL

  • Anna Blinkova —

  • Hanne Vandewinkel BEL

  • Francesca Jones GBR

  • Katie Volynets USA

  • Moyuka Uchijima JPN

  • Dalma Galfi HUN

  • Julia Grabher AUT

  • Jil Teichmann SUI

  • Sara Sorribes Tormo ESP

  • Danka Kovinic MNE

Women’s wildcards

  • Clara Burel (FRA / Age 25)

  • Ksenia Efremova (FRA / Age 17 / No.623)

  • Fiona Ferro (FRA / Age 29 / No.197)

  • Léolia Jeanjean (FRA / Age 30 / No.127)

  • Emerson Jones (AUS / Age 17 / No.129)

  • Sarah Rakotomanga (FRA / Age 20 / No.159)

  • Alice Tubello (FRA / Age 25 / No.256)

  • Akasha Urhobo (USA / Age 19 / No.183)

Major absentees

The women’s draw features a stacked field, with all the top 32 in the WTA rankings set to compete in Paris. Former Wimbledon champion Marketa Vondrousova,who has been charged with refusing a doping control testand revealed she had experienced an acute stress reaction during the incident, is not playing. Britain’s Sonay Kartal is out of the remainder of the clay season due to a back injury.

Men’s seeds and full entry list

1. Jannik Sinner2. Alexander Zverev3. Novak Djokovic4. Felix Auger-Aliassime5. Ben Shelton6. Daniil Medvedev7. Taylor Fritz8. Alex de Minaur9. Alexander Bublik10. Flavio Cobolli11. Andrey Rublev12. Jiri Lehecka13. Karen Khachanov14. Luciano Darderi15. Casper Ruud16. Valentin Vacherot17. Arthur Fils18. Learner Tien19. Frances Tiafoe20. Cameron Norrie21. Alejandro Davidovich Fokina22. Arthur Rinderknech23. Tomas Martin Etcheverry24. Tommy Paul25. Francisco Cerundolo26. Jakub Mensik27. Rafael Jodar28. Joao Fonseca29. Tallon Griekspoor30. Corentin Moutet31. Brandon Nakashima32. Ugo Humbert

Remaining draw

  • Gabriel Diallo CAN

  • Jaume Munar ESP

  • Denis Shapovalov CAN

  • Zizou Bergs BEL

  • Terence Atmane FRA

  • Fabian Marozsan HUN

  • Sebastian Korda USA

  • Mariano Navone ARG

  • Alejandro Tabilo CHI

  • Adrian Mannarino FRA

  • Tomas Machac CZE

  • Marin Cilic CRO

  • Botic van de Zandschulp NED

  • Ethan Quinn USA

  • Yannick Hanfmann GER

  • Nuno Borges POR

  • Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard FRA

  • Marton Fucsovics HUN

  • Rafael Jodar ESP

  • Daniel Altmaier GER

  • Sebastian Baez ARG

  • Miomir Kecmanovic SRB

  • Alexei Popyrin AUS

  • Ignacio Buse PER

  • Zhizhen Zhang CHN

  • Roman Andres Burruchaga ARG

  • Jenson Brooksby USA

  • Hubert Hurkacz POL

  • Camilo Ugo Carabelli ARG

  • Raphael Collignon BEL

  • Lorenzo Sonego ITA

  • Stefanos Tsitsipas GRE

  • Reilly Opelka USA

  • Juan Manuel Cerundolo ARG

  • James Duckworth AUS

  • Alexander Blockx BEL

  • Kamil Majchrzak POL

  • Thiago Agustin Tirante ARG

  • Alexander Shevchenko KAZ

  • Marcos Giron USA

  • Valentin Royer FRA

  • Vit Kopriva CZE

  • Mattia Bellucci ITA

  • Marco Trungelliti ARG

  • Jan-Lennard Struff GER

  • Damir Dzumhur BIH

  • Cristian Garin CHI

  • Zachary Svajda USA

  • Thanasi Kokkinakis AUS

  • Eliot Spizzirri USA

  • Sebastian Ofner AUT

  • Dino Prizmic CRO

  • Hamad Medjedovic SRB

  • Aleksandar Vukic AUS

  • Quentin Halys FRA

  • Matteo Berrettini ITA

  • Francisco Comesana ARG

  • Roberto Bautista Agut ESP

  • Pablo Carreno Busta ESP

  • Alexandre Muller FRA

  • Patrick Kypson USA

  • Adolfo Daniel Vallejo PAR

  • Jacob Fearnley GBR

  • Aleksandar Kovacevic USA

  • Luca Van Assche FRA

  • Martin Landaluce ESP

  • Wu Yibing CHN

  • Rinky Hijikata AUS

  • Stan Wawrinka SUI

  • Jesper de Jong NED

Men’s wildcards

  • Nishesh Basavareddy (USA / Age 21 / No.623)

  • Titouan Droguet (FRA / Age 24 / No.109)

  • Hugo Gaston (FRA / Age 25 / No.118)

  • Arthur Gea (FRA / Age 21 / No.143)

  • Moïse Kouame (FRA / Age 17 / No.313)

  • Gaël Monfils (FRA / Age 39 / No.222)

  • Clément Tabur (FRA / Age 26 / No.168)

  • Adam Walton (AUS / Age 27 / No.103)

Major absentees

The big name missing is reigning champion Carlos Alcaraz, who has missed out on the second half of the clay season - pulling out of Barcelona and Madrid - and will also skip the grass season.

Lorenzo Musetti has withdrawn, with former champion Stan Wawrinka receiving his place in the main draw rather than a wildcard, as he had previously been allocated. Fellow young stars Holger Rune and Jack Draper are also absent as they continue to recover from injuries, while 17th seed Arthur Fils withdrew with a hip injury.

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Why Man Utd's trip to Brighton matters

May 24, 2026
Why Man Utd's trip to Brighton matters

In one sense, Manchester United's trip to Brighton is of little consequence.

BBC Manchester United players with Erik ten Hag

United will finish third no matter what the result, Michael Carrick has been confirmed as the permanent boss and clearance for Casemiro to leave early shows the campaign is at an end.

Yet, it is not quite as simple as that.

Firstly, there is definitely something on the game for Brighton, who could qualify for the Champions League for the first time in their history, Europe for only the second time, or miss out completely. Carrick has already mentioned the "respect" he must pay to the situation.

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Secondly, Brighton have been a thorn in United's side for a number of years. They have beaten United in seven out of their last 10 meetings and earlier this season, knocked them out of the FA Cup. If there is any team they are due a victory against, it is them.

Beyond that, it is a chance for fringe players and younger players to show they are worth a place in United's future plans.

Recruitment is going to be of huge significance at Old Trafford this summer. This is a chance for players like Shea Lacey to confirm their value in a squad that will try to compete on four fronts. Is this a final opportunity for Manuel Ugarte to show he is worth persevering with?

There is never really a meaningless game for Manchester United. A last day trip to the Amex is certainly not that.

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Hoax fire call hits flat of Polish president’s family member, Tusk says

May 24, 2026
Hoax fire call hits flat of Polish president’s family member, Tusk says

WARSAW, May 24 (Reuters) - Poland is facing a series of false alarms about fires or other ‌threats, including one on Saturday at a flat in ‌Gdansk belonging to a member of President Karol Nawrocki's family, Prime ​Minister Donald Tusk said.

Reuters

Tusk held a sitting of the Government Security Center on Sunday morning after the incident, which he said was part of a recent series of such ‌false calls.

The interior ⁠ministry said overnight that an emergency notification centre received a report of a fire at ⁠an apartment. Services were sent to the location and firefighters decided to forcefully enter the flat belonging to a ​member of ​Nawrocki's family.

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"The apartment was inspected ​and found no fire ‌hazard or injured persons, as the premises were empty. Due to the situation, the police are conducting an investigation to identify the perpetrators," an interior ministry spokesperson said.

Tusk called the incident "another telephone provocation" and said that while ‌firefighters had responded correctly, procedures for ​identifying such false alarms need ​to be reviewed and ​perpetrators have to be identified as soon ‌as possible.

"The provocateurs' actions are ​aimed at national ​security. At all of us. We will use all available methods to identify and apprehend the saboteurs, ​regardless of where ‌they come from or who directs them," he ​wrote on social media platform X.

(Reporting by Anna ​Wlodarczak-Semczuk; Editing by Christian Schmollinger)

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