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  • WeekDay AM: 10 Things you need to know this morning
    Trump at the G7, a Russian arson plot, and AI passes the Turing test

     
    today’s international story

    Trump declares US-Iran peace deal ‘all signed’ at G7

    What happened
    Donald Trump has said that the Strait of Hormuz will be fully accessible from Friday under a new agreement with Iran. Despite this guarantee, world leaders gathered at the G7 summit are still working to prevent any ongoing tensions from derailing the arrangement before it is formally signed.

    The accord, due to be finalised in Geneva, is expected to restore shipping through the strategic waterway in return for the removal of US naval restrictions on Iran. Yet uncertainty remains over key details, including whether Iran will be permitted to levy charges on vessels using the route and how any nuclear commitments will be enforced.

    Who said what
    Trump said the agreement was complete and insisted that passage through the Strait would be “open” and “toll-free”.

    French President Emmanuel Macron backed plans for a European maritime presence to help safeguard commercial traffic while German Chancellor Friedrich Merz warned that the ceasefire commitments must extend beyond Iran to neighbouring Lebanon.

    Trump “has achieved none of his aims in Iran”, said Sam Kiley in The Independent, asserting that his ‘ceasefire’ can’t work and won’t work. It is little more than a “juvenile fantasy which won’t last”. The US president “once said that Tehran ‘never lost a negotiation’ – now he appears to have fallen victim to that phenomenon”, said Charles Moore in The Telegraph.

    What next?
    Technical negotiations are expected to begin in the coming days, with the focus on sanctions relief, frozen Iranian assets and nuclear verification measures.

     
     
    today’s crime story

    Russian-linked arson plot targeted Starmer properties

    What happened
    Two men have been convicted over a series of firebomb attacks on homes connected to Keir Starmer after a court heard that they were recruited online by a Russian-speaking figure known only as “El Money”.

    At the Old Bailey, jurors found Roman Lavrynovych, 22, and Stanislav Carpiuc, 27, guilty of conspiracy to damage property. A third defendant, Petro Pochynok, 35, was acquitted.

    Who said what
    Commander Helen Flanagan, head of Counter Terrorism Policing London, said investigators believed that the unidentified organiser had sought to generate “fear” and “uncertainty” in Britain. She said there was no evidence that the convicted men were politically motivated or knew they were targeting properties associated with the prime minister.

    The attack was “just one part of an extensive campaign of sabotage, provocation and lies leading all the way to the Russian state”, said Daniel De Simone on the BBC. Russian operatives “ran their sabotage and provocation campaign remotely” through social media to organise “acts of vandalism in the UK and stir up division and fear”.

    What next?
    Lavrynovych and Carpiuc are due to be sentenced on Friday.

     
     
    Today’s hospitality story

    Britain’s oldest Indian restaurant to fight eviction

    What happened
    The UK’s oldest Indian restaurant is embarking on a court battle against the Crown Estate to remain at its Regent St premises.

    Michelin-starred Veeraswamy has been operating at Victory House since 1926, but the Crown Estate has declined to extend its lease in order to carry out renovation works on the office space that occupies the rest of the building.

    Who said what
    Veeraswamy has long been a London institution, said The Times. “Princess Anne, Lord Cameron of Chipping Norton and King Abdullah of Jordan have all dined there.” In 2016 it was awarded a Michelin star.

    Ranjit Mathrani, the co-owner of Veerswamy’s parent company, said the renovations could be carried out “in a manner which could accommodate the restaurant business”. A spokesperson for the Crown Estate claimed that it had tried to help secure the restaurant “new premises on our portfolio” and had also offered “financial compensation”.

    What next?
    A five-day hearing that will decide Veeraswarmy’s future will begin on 29 June at the Central London County Court.

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    Fantasy fiction is helping independent bookshops enjoy a revival, with the number of stores reaching its highest level since 2012. Booksellers say the booming interest in genres such as fantasy, science fiction and romantasy has fuelled the opening of specialist stores across the UK. Industry figures show that 1,086 independent bookshops are now operating, up from 867 a decade ago. Owners say readers are increasingly seeking community, escapism and a break from the online world.

     
     
    under the radar

    AI talks the talk, passes the Turing test

    Artificial intelligence systems can now convince you that they are human. Two large language models (LLMs) have passed the Turing test, which determines if a machine can “show the same intelligence as a human being”, said The Independent.

    In the test, a person “engages in text-based conversations with both a human and a machine without knowing which is which”, said Stanford University. If the individual cannot tell them apart, the machine is considered to have passed the test. Researchers tested four AI systems and found that newer LLMs can “effectively imitate people in short interactions”, according to a study published in the journal PNAS.

    “Given the right prompts, advanced LLMs can exhibit the same tone, directness, humour and fallibility as humans,” said study author Cameron Jones. “While we know LLMs can easily produce knowledge on nearly every topic, this test showed that they can also convincingly display social behavioural traits, which has major implications for how we think of AI.”

    AI models passing for humans is a concerning development. The Turing test is a “game about lying for the models”, added Jones, and “one of the implications is that models seem to be really good at that”. A big risk of the existence of AI models with this ability is the rise of “counterfeit people”. Thanks to the ease of deception, we “need to be more alert” and “people should be much less confident that they know they’re talking to a human rather than an LLM.” Still, AI is not yet at a level where it can be deceptive on its own.

     
     
    on this day

    16 June 1487

    The Battle of Stoke Field, the last major clash in the Wars of the Roses, took place at East Stoke in Nottinghamshire, ending in victory for Henry VII. A recent survey by the Richard III Society found that only six out of 106 UK undergraduate history degrees offer a unit on the Wars of the Roses.

     
     
    Today’s newspapers

    ‘Rush job’

    “Starmer’s social media ban ‘a rush job’”, says The Telegraph. “Our hope has been restored”, says the Daily Express, reporting on campaigners for the assisted dying bill. Ten years after Jo Cox was murdered, The Mirror announces a campaign called “Britain Talks”, which it hopes will “help heal divisions in our society”. The Daily Mail reports on the “eight missed chances to save baby Preston”, after a teacher was found guilty of sexually abusing and murdering the 13-month-old baby boy he adopted with his partner. Preston was “betrayed”, says The Sun. 

    See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    tall tale

    Oh Romeow

    A cat “stole the show” during the climactic scene of a performance of “Romeo and Juliet” in Turkey, said ABC News. The ginger moggy wandered on to the stage during the finale of the production by the Imperial Russian Ballet Company. The whiskered wonder approached Romeo, who was lying dead in the tomb as Juliet mourned over his body, then settled beside his head and pawed at his hair before nibbling at him, prompting laughter from the audience.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Arion McNicoll, Rebecca Messina, Devika Rao, Ross Couzens and Chas Newkey-Burden, with illustrations by Stephen P. Kelly.

    Image credits, from top: Isabel Infantes / Pool / AFP / Getty Images; Leon Neal / Getty Images; Mark Kerrison / In Pictures / Getty Images; Illustration by Stephen P. Kelly / Getty Images.

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

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