Giorgia Meloni Italian PM greeted with anti-fascist song Bella Ciao at convention – video Giorgia Meloni, Italy’s prime minister and leader of a party with neo-fascist origins, was greeted during a speech in Rimini with some delegates singing the protest song at her arrival. Meloni was speaking during a convention of the three main Italian unions, CGIL, CISL, and UIL when some unionists sang the song and left the hall with their fists raised.
Health & wellbeingThe genetic condition is one of the most common in the UK and may be a leading cause of infertility in men. Why does it so often go untreated?Three years ago, Paul (not his real name), now 31, went to the doctor with stomach pains. His blood test came back with low testosterone levels. “We went to see a urologist and he said bluntly that we wouldn’t have any options to have kids with my sperm – we would have to use a donor or adopt,” he says.
Medical researchMan dies after inhaling fungal spores from garden compost· Common mould can harm lungs, scientists warn · An 'occupational hazard' for gardeners, but risk lowGardeners should take extra care when handling old bags of compost after a man died from kidney failure after inhaling poisonous fungal spores, doctors have warned.
The 47-year-old welder from Buckinghamshire, who has not been named, died in intensive care a week after being engulfed by "
Science This article is more than 14 years oldMockingbirds bear a grudge against particular peopleThis article is more than 14 years oldIn the first published account of wild animals recognising individuals of another species, the songbirds attacked people who had threatened them in the pastMockingbirds can remember people who have threatened them and even start dive-bombing them if they see the person again, a study has found.
An urban population of the songbirds ignored most passers-by, but took to the air when they recognised people who had approached their nest days before.
ShortcutsCannabisThe Metropolitan police commissioner says she can’t smell dope, and never has been able to. We ask an expert if that’s possibleThe clue is in the name. The vast majority of cannabis sold in the UK these days is superstrong skunk, so called not just because it’s very potent in what it does to your brain, but because it’s also very smelly.
I smell it pretty much every day, on the street on the way home from work.