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  • WeekDay AM: 10 Things you need to know this morning
    Hunt for a killer, Bolsonaro sentenced, and Mexico’s forced disappearances

     
    today's US story

    Hunt for killer of Charlie Kirk intensifies

    What happened
    Federal and state authorities are ramping up their search for the gunman who shot and killed conservative activist Charlie Kirk during a speech at Utah Valley University on Wednesday. The suspect still remains at large more than a day after the attack. Investigators recovered an older-model Mauser .30-06 rifle in a wooded area near the campus, along with cartridges and impressions from a hand, arm and shoe. The FBI has released two photos (above) of a man described as a “person of interest”, showing him in a stairwell wearing a black shirt, cap and sunglasses.

    Who said what
    Utah’s public safety chief Beau Mason told reporters the gunman had arrived on campus shortly before noon, blended in as someone of “college age” and then climbed on to a rooftop before firing a single fatal shot that struck Kirk in the neck.

    Across much of the political left and centre, responses to Kirk’s death have focused largely on calls to reverse America’s slide towards political violence. The shooting has left a “polarised America” in its wake, said Politico. The country is now “left to reckon” if the “Gordian knot of political violence can be untied”.

    What next?
    Officials postponed a planned press conference, citing “rapid developments”. US Vice President J.D. Vance arrived in Salt Lake City to meet Kirk’s family before flying his body on Airforce 2, his vice-presidential jet, to Phoenix, where Kirk’s organisation is headquartered. Meanwhile, analysts from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives are tracing the recovered weapon.

     
     
    today's international story

    Court hands Bolsonaro 27-year jail term

    What happened
    Brazil’s Supreme Court has sentenced former president Jair Bolsonaro to 27 years and three months in prison after convicting him of leading a conspiracy to overturn the 2022 election. Four of the five justices ruled that he was guilty of charges tied to efforts to keep him in power, including pressuring military leaders and undermining the electoral system.

    Who said what
    Justice Cármen Lúcia, casting the decisive third guilty vote, likened the coup attempt to a “virus” threatening democracy. Bolsonaro (pictured above) has dismissed the proceedings as a “witch hunt”. The ruling will “deepen political divisions” in Brazil, said Politico, and will “likely prompt a backlash from the United States government”. Following the court ruling, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said his government would respond, but did not specify how.

    What next?
    Bolsonaro can still appeal, although the wide margin of his conviction means that success is unlikely. A final decision on where he will serve his sentence is expected later this year, with his health issues making house arrest, hospital care or a secure facility the most probable outcomes.

     
     
    Today's music story

    Ireland floats Eurovision boycott over Israeli inclusion

    What happened
    Ireland will not take part in next year’s Eurovision Song Contest if Israel also participates, according to the country’s national broadcaster RTÉ. Ireland’s stance follows similar declarations from Iceland, Spain and Slovenia in recent months.

    Who said what
    Ireland’s participation in the event “would be unconscionable given the ongoing and appalling loss of lives in Gaza”, said RTÉ.

    Eurovision Director Martin Green said he “understood the concerns and deeply held views around the ongoing conflict in the Middle East”. “We are still consulting to gather views on how we manage participation and geopolitical tensions around the Eurovision Song Contest.”

    Last year’s Eurovision “was overshadowed by protests over Israel’s participation in the contest while its military conducts an onslaught in the Gaza Strip”, said Politico.

    What next?
    RTÉ plans to make a final decision on whether it will withdraw once Eurovision’s organiser, the European Broadcasting Union, determines whether Israel can participate.

     
     

    It's not all bad

    Kenneth Branagh will return to Stratford-upon-Avon after 30 years to play Prospero in “The Tempest” for the Royal Shakespeare Company next year, while simultaneously rehearsing Anton Chekhov’s “The Cherry Orchard”. Branagh, 64, joins an RSC season featuring Helen Hunt, Mark Gatiss, Adrian Lester and Ncuti Gatwa. Co-artistic director Tamara Harvey said the Belfast-born Oscar winner was drawn to the “rigour, excitement and challenge” of acting at night and rehearsing by day.

     
     
    under the radar

    Mexico’s forced disappearances

    They are known as the victims of Mexico’s long-running “invisible war”. Since then president Felipe Calderón launched his “war on drugs” in 2006, more than 130,000 people have gone missing.

    “In many cases those disappeared have been forcibly recruited into the drug cartels – or murdered for resisting,” said the BBC. But “while drug cartels and organised crime groups are the main perpetrators, security forces are also blamed for deaths and disappearances”.

    Cases of people being reported missing or snatched from the street at gunpoint never to be seen again “were once rare in Mexico”, said The Washington Post. This began to change 15 years ago when huge numbers of disappearances “began to flare into global news, with the discovery of mass graves filled with putrefying bodies”.

    By 2023 more than 5,600 mass graves had been recorded in Mexico, according to the collective of families and journalists A Dónde van los Desaparecidos. In March this year a cartel training and extermination camp was discovered on a ranch in the western Mexican state of Jalisco, complete with burned human remains and 200 pairs of shoes.

    The “official narrative” is that Mexico’s violence is “entirely the fault of drug cartels, period”, said author Belén Fernández on Al Jazeera. “This rationalisation conveniently excises from the equation the Mexican state’s established track record of killing and disappearing – not to mention the lengthy history of collaboration between Mexican police and military personnel and cartel operatives.”

    This is perhaps why the authorities have been hesitant to acknowledge the scope and scale of the crisis. “As Mexico’s invisible war rages on, disappearance may have already become normalised,” said Fernández.

     
     
    on this day

    12 September 1624

    The first submarine was publicly tested on the Thames in London for King James I. This week the Australian government committed to spending $1.7 billion (£834 million) to acquire a fleet of dozens of Ghost Shark submarines for the Royal Australian Navy.

     
     
    Today's newspapers

    ‘Finally sacked’

    Keir Starmer “ignored a string of warnings” about Peter Mandelson, says the Daily Mail, and Labour MPs have described his handling of the episode as “a shambles”. Downing Street was “aware” of Mandelson’s relationship with Jeffrey Epstein but “chose to override the concerns”, says The Telegraph. The “weak” PM is “under fire”, says the Daily Express. Starmer is “facing wrath of Labour”, agrees The i Paper, while Mandelson is “home in disgrace”, says The Mirror. Meanwhile, The Sun has a photo of a “person of interest” in the assassination of US activist Charlie Kirk, with the headline “Face of evil”.

    See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    tall tale

    Slime and punishment

    Residents of an apartment block in Schwabach, Germany have discovered that the “prankster” tormenting them late into the night by repeatedly pressing the building’s entry buzzer was, in fact, a slug. “Angry residents” initially assumed that misbehaving teens were to blame and called the police, but a closer investigation revealed that a slug “had been sliding up and down the bell plate”, said The Guardian. The waggish invertebrate was moved to a nearby stretch of grass.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Arion McNicoll, Jamie Timson, Rebecca Messina, Ross Couzens and Chas Newkey-Burden, with illustrations by Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: FBI Salt Lake City / Getty Images; Sergio Lima / AFP / Getty Images; Patrik Stollarz / AFP / Getty Images; Illustration by Julia Wytrazek / Getty Images.

    Morning Report and Evening Review were named Newsletter of the Year at the Publisher Newsletter Awards 2025
     

    Recent editions

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