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  • WeekDay AM: 10 Things you need to know this morning
    Fresh Israeli strikes, Melania denies Epstein links, and the ‘zombie filler’ trend

     
    today’s middle east story

    Israel agrees Lebanon talks but continues strikes

    What happened
    Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel would keep attacking Hezbollah in Lebanon, even as he issued an instruction to start direct ceasefire negotiations “as soon as possible”. The continuing strikes have placed fresh pressure on a fragile truce linked to the broader conflict involving Iran. Meanwhile the death toll from Israeli airstrikes in Lebanon on Wednesday rose to 303 people, according to Lebanon’s health ministry, making it the deadliest day for Lebanon since the war began.

    Who said what
    “There is no ceasefire in Lebanon,” said Netanyahu, adding Israel would continue acting “with force” until Hezbollah was disarmed. Iran’s foreign ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei said Tehran would skip planned talks with the US in Pakistan unless Lebanon was covered by any truce. 

    “Did Israel attack Lebanon to spoil the Iran war ceasefire?” asked Peter Beaumont in The Guardian. “What is clear is that in the half-baked ceasefire negotiations conducted by Donald Trump and his coterie of amateur diplomats, the question of Israel’s war in Lebanon against a proxy of Tehran has – deliberately or not – been left ticking like a timebomb”.

    What next? 
    Looking ahead, if there is to be any chance of a peace deal in the Middle East “Israel’s brutal strikes on Lebanon’s capital Beirut require a strong rebuke from the White House”, said The Independent’s editorial board. “As a fragile ceasefire buckles, Trump must finally show he can say no to Netanyahu.” 

     
     
    today’s US politics story

    Melania Trump denies Jeffrey Epstein links

    What happened
    Melania Trump has publicly dismissed allegations tying her to Jeffrey Epstein, urging that such claims “need to end today”. In an unanticipated appearance at the White House, she said she had only briefly encountered Epstein decades ago and had no involvement in his crimes. She also rejected suggestions that the convicted sex offender introduced her to Donald Trump. The remarks came without prior notice and included a call for lawmakers to hold formal hearings for survivors.

    Who said what
    “I have never had any knowledge of Epstein abuse of his victims,” the first lady said, adding: “I was never involved in any capacity.” She described a past email exchange with Ghislaine Maxwell as “casual correspondence”. She also said that victims should testify publicly before Congress, saying: “Each and every woman should have her day to tell her story.” Democratic Congressman Robert Garcia backed the proposal.

    What next?
    The comments mark a “rare public foray for the ‘unknowable’ first lady”, said Alistair Bell on Reuters. The appearance “stunned the internet”, said Dan Gooding in Newsweek. Tommy Vietor, a co-host of “Pod Save America”, said, “What the f*** was that Melania statement??? What story are they frontrunning over at the White House??” Another reporter, Ahmed Baba, shared a similar sentiment on X, saying, “Seems to me the First Lady just injected Epstein back into the news cycle unprompted.”

     
     
    Today’s nature story

    Emperor penguins have just been declared endangered

    What happened
    Emperor penguins have been officially declared in danger of extinction for the first time by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, with the population expected to halve by the 2080s.

    The deterioration of “fast ice” – fixed ice sheets to the coastline or ocean floor – due to climate change is the principal concern, with record lows in Antarctic ice since 2016.

    Who said what
    Around “half the colonies around the continent have experienced an early breakout of the ice”, said Philip Trathan of the IUCN penguin specialist group.

    Rod Downie, chief advisor, polar and oceans at WWF-UK, said the “shocking decline” in Antarctic sea ice could see these “icons on ice” heading down the “slippery slope towards extinction by the end of this century – unless we act now”.

    What next?
    The WWF is also calling for emperor penguins to be listed as a “specially protected species” at the next Antarctic treaty meeting in May in Japan, which would “help reduce other pressures on their habitat such as tourism and shipping”, said The Guardian.

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    Online marketplace Vinted has reported a 47% jump in sales to €10.8 billion (£9.4 billion), as more people buy and sell pre-owned clothes to save money and earn extra cash. With more than 16 million users in the UK alone, the platform’s growth suggests resale is becoming a lasting habit rather than a temporary fix for many consumers – pointing to a future where fashion is more circular and sustainable.

     
     
    under the radar

    AlloClae: The ‘zombie filler’ trending in cosmetic surgery

    A new injectable filler is making a splash for being minimally invasive and for the source that fills its vials: donated human fat from cadavers. The eerie origins of the shots have led to a mixed response. Some praise the innovations; others worry about future complications. 

    Tiger Aesthetics’ new product, AlloClae, has become popular with “patients eager to look their best in the boardroom” without “undergoing general anesthesia or taking days off for recovery,” said Business Insider. Rather than using an implant or a patient’s body fat to add volume to hips or augment breasts, AlloClae relies on “donor fat from a cadaver as a first-of-its-kind body filler.” On social media, influencers sometimes refer to buttocks injections of AlloClae as “zombie BBLs”, “zombie filler” and “corpse cosmetics”.

    The rise in GLP-1 use has contributed to the trend, along with “filler fatigue”, as traditional fillers can “cause problems such as puffiness and lymphatic issues”, said The Guardian’s Ask Ugly column. People who are on Ozempic or are dieting heavily are “really thin and don’t have enough fat to transfer”, plastic surgeon Melissa Doft said. They want their “legs and their belly to be skinny but want their breasts to be fuller”.

    Some are worried that fears about the origins of AlloClae could have a negative impact on organ donation. If people start “restricting their participation” due to fears of the product being used for cosmetic purposes, the “harm may outweigh the good”, Ryan Pferdehirt, the vice president of ethics services at the Center for Practical Bioethics, said to The Guardian. We need “skin grafts, bone marrow transplants and organ donation.” That is “far more important, I think, than the cosmetic aspects.”

     
     
    on this day

    10 April 1972

    The US, the USSR and 70 other nations agree to ban biological weapons at the Biological Weapons Convention. This month Iranian facilities affiliated with chemical and biological weapons research were hit by the US and Israel, satellite imagery and the analysis of images shared on social media showed.

     
     
    Today’s newspapers

    ‘We see you, Vlad’

    “We see you, Vlad”, says The Mirror, as The Telegraph reports that a Russian warship and two sanctioned vessels were “allowed” to pass through the Channel despite a pledge from Keir Starmer to “go after” sanctioned ships. More than 300 people died in Lebanon in 24 hours during a “ferocious attack” by Israel, says The Guardian. “Driving license to kill”, says the Daily Star, claiming that a legal loophole “permits foreign drivers to remain on Britain's roads without L-plates”.

    See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    tall tale

    Scents of duty

    Cambodia has unveiled the world’s first statue commemorating a landmine-sniffing rat. Magawa, who lived to eight years old, sniffed out over 100 landmines and other explosives in Cambodia during his five-year career that started in 2016. Using his acute sense of smell and training to detect a chemical compound within explosives, Magawa would alert human handlers of mines that could be later safely removed. In his heyday, Magawa cleared more could search a field the size of a tennis court in just 20 minutes. After a short retirement Magawa died in 2022, but now lives on, immortalised in Siem Reap, Cambodia.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Arion McNicoll, Jamie Timson, Will Barker, Theara Coleman, Ross Couzens, and Chas Newkey-Burden, with illustrations by Stephen P. Kelly.

    Image credits, from top: Anwar Amro / AFP / Getty Images; Mandel Ngan / AFP / Getty Images; Wolfgang Kaehler / LightRocket / Getty Images; Illustration by Stephen P. Kelly / Getty Images / Shutterstock.

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

    Recent editions

    • Morning Report

      Iran ceasefire stumbles toward peace talks

    • Evening Review

      Bad news for the global right

    • Morning Report

      Trump pulls back from Iran brink

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