Blog
-
Girl, 6, has sight restored through gene therapy
Saffie’s mum says Luxturna therapy at Great Ormond Street has been like “someone waved a magic wand”. -

29th July Stolen Lives Picnic Hampstead Heath

Stolen Lives London Picnic 2026
Need help?
Join us on Hampstead Heath for the third annual Stolen Lives London Picnic 2026, hosted by Antidepressant Risks.
Held on Prescribed Harm Day (29 July), the picnic brings together families, campaigners and supporters affected by prescription harm to gather in remembrance, connection and solidarity. The picnic is a space for families, survivors, friends, and supporters to come together, share stories, and honour lives lost or harmed.
This year, the picnic will be held immediately after the Stolen Lives London Talks at Burgh House in Hampstead. You’re welcome to join us at Burgh House, or the picnic on Hampstead Heath, or both. There are separate tickets for the London Talks, so remember to get your ticket for the London Talks if you’d like to attend.
The picnic is free to join, but spaces are limited due to restrictions on large gatherings on Hampstead Heath. It really helps us if you take a moment now to reserve your place at the picnic.
Although the picnic is free, we welcome your donations. Your donations help us to organise the day and to continue the work of Antidepressant Risks. Please consider making a donation today when you reserve your place at the picnic.
Where to Meet
We will meet under a pair of large trees on a sloped grassy meadow to the east of the East Heath Road, a short walk from both Hampstead Tube Station and Hampstead Heath Overground. The Google Maps location is https://maps.app.goo.gl/WMpjdFk1XD5EZiiJ9.
What to Bring
Please bring your own food and a picnic blanket.
For those who’ve lost a loved one to prescribed harm, you are welcome to bring a photo, a reading or poem.
To help keep the picnic safe for everyone, we kindly ask attendees not to bring food containing nuts.
Getting There
We want to support everyone who would like to join us to come to the picnic. If there’s anything we can do to help, please tell us by emailing contact@antidepressantrisks.org
Donate to us
If you aren’t able to join us but would still like to donate to Antidepressant Risks, you can do so here
The post 29th July Stolen Lives Picnic Hampstead Heath appeared first on Mad in the UK.
-
High Street mini-marts selling cocaine, cannabis and prescription drugs, BBC secret filming reveals
Across the UK, shopfronts are being exploited by criminal gangs pushing illegal drugs, experts say. -
‘My baby scratches and scratches’: Families say their homes are making their children sick
A cross-party report has called for safer conditions for the record number of families living in temporary accommodation. -

The Green Party’s Butch Ware: “I Love a Good Fight”
Butch ware is the Green Party candidate for Governor of California, where the gubernatorial race has seen some chaotic ups and downs in recent months. He joined Current Affairs editor-in-chief Nathan J. Robinson to discuss the election, his controversial exclusion from the California ballot, the dramatic rise of the Green Party in the U.K., and whether third parties can finally break through the obstacles that face them in the United States.

-
RAIL: Nonfree and unethical
Any software license that denies users their freedom is by
definition nonfree and unethical, and so-called "Responsible AI"
Licenses (RAIL) are no exception. If we want software to help decrease
social injustice, we should oppose licenses that restrict how software
can be used. -
International Court Clears Path to Try former Philippine President Duterte Over Drug War
Former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has lost a crucial legal battle at the International Criminal Court, with appellate judges ruling on Wednesday that the tribunal has jurisdiction to try him for alleged crimes against humanity connected to his deadly anti-narcotics campaign.
The ICC’s appeals chamber rejected all four grounds of Duterte’s appeal by a majority vote. The decision eliminates the final procedural roadblock before the court’s pre-trial chamber determines whether there is sufficient evidence for the case to proceed to trial — a ruling expected by April 28, following a confirmation of charges hearing held earlier this year.
“Having rejected the entire appeal, the appeals chamber considers that the defense request for the immediate and unconditional release of Duterte is moot,” Luz Del Carmen Ibañez Carranza, the presiding judge, said on Wednesday.
The jurisdictional dispute stems from the Philippines’ withdrawal from the ICC. Duterte, who served as president from 2016 to 2022, unilaterally withdrew the country from the Rome Statute in March 2018, shortly after the court opened a preliminary investigation into his drug war. Although the withdrawal became official a year later, the court maintained that it retained legal authority over potential crimes committed while the Philippines was still a member state.
Wednesday’s ruling marks Duterte’s third failed attempt to halt the investigation. The court previously rejected an appeal from the Philippine government in July 2023, and the pre-trial chamber upheld its jurisdiction in October 2025. This latest appellate decision is final, exhausting Duterte’s options to challenge the court’s authority.
The former leader was arrested in the Philippines and transferred to The Hague in March 2025. In September of that year, the ICC Office of the Prosecutor charged him with three counts of widespread murder, alleging he was an indirect co-perpetrator of extrajudicial killings.
The charges span his tenure as both mayor of Davao City and president of the Philippines. They include the alleged murders of 19 victims in Davao between 2013 and 2016; the killings of “high-value targets” nationwide between July 2016 and 2017; and the deaths of 45 victims during village, or barangay, clearance operations through September 2018.
Duterte has long maintained that he does not recognize the court’s authority, insisting he is only willing to face a domestic tribunal.
His chief legal counsel, Nicholas Kaufman, framed the appellate ruling as a product of institutional pressure. “The stakes are just too high for the court just to throw the case out,” Kaufman said, asserting that the tribunal is currently in a “state of crisis” and heavily reliant on Duterte’s high-profile prosecution.
Kaufman noted the defense team is fully preparing for trial, pending the pre-trial chamber’s upcoming decision. “We maintain everything that we argued at confirmation, and we believe that the evidentiary weaknesses that we identified at confirmation will lead ultimately to his acquittal,” he said.
Outside the court in The Hague, the ruling highlighted the deep, lingering polarization over Duterte’s political legacy.
Human rights advocates and Filipino progressive groups celebrated the decision. “Under the Duterte administration, killings without due process, terrorizing the poor, and the state’s use of armed forces to silence government critics were normalized,” said Aldo Gonzalez of Migrante Netherlands.
Icai Enriquez, a convenor for the Duterte Panagutin (Hold Duterte Accountable) Network Europe, said the ruling validated the court’s role as a vital backstop. “The purpose of international law is to make sure that countries like the Philippines… would be able to have an opportunity to still fight for justice at a higher court such as the ICC,” she said.
Across the gathering area, loyalists of the former president heckled the activists, chanting Duterte’s name and accusing his critics of being paid operatives. While some supporters grew emotional as the rejection of the appeal became clear, many vowed to continue demanding his release.
“I know sooner or later, the truth will come out. I will fight for him until he is released,” said Janet Suliman, a longtime resident of the Netherlands.
The legal drama in Europe is also amplifying political fractures back in Manila. Following a bitter public fallout between current President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. and Vice President Sara Duterte — the former president’s daughter — Duterte loyalists have accused the Marcos administration of facilitating the ICC arrest for political gain. Marcos had previously vowed he would not cooperate with the international tribunal.
“I am angry with the Bongbong administration,” said Alvin Sarzate, a pro-Duterte content creator gathered outside the court, using Marcos’s nickname. He lamented that the country’s reliance on an international body made its domestic justice system appear weak. “We are becoming a laughingstock in the international community.”
-
Nepal’s Home Minister Resigns over Financial Probe Weeks into new Government
Nepal’s Home Minister Sudhan Gurung resigned on Wednesday over alleged financial ties to a businessman under investigation for money laundering, marking an early setback for the country’s month-old government.
Gurung, who took office just four weeks ago after a youth-led uprising swept Prime Minister Balendra Shah to power, stepped down amid mounting public pressure over his shares in two micro-insurance companies linked to controversial power broker Deepak Bhatta.
In a statement posted to Facebook, Gurung said he was stepping aside to ensure an “impartial investigation” and to prevent any perceived conflict of interest. However, he dismissed the allegations as “sponsored rumors” orchestrated by critics fearful of his anti-corruption initiatives.
The resignation follows reports highlighting discrepancies in Gurung’s recent asset declaration. While the minister claimed his business investments were financed by a bank loan, the liability was reportedly missing from official records submitted to the prime minister’s office.
A former DJ who founded a non-governmental organization following Nepal’s 2015 earthquake, Gurung rose to national prominence as a volunteer distributing water during the September 2025 Gen Z protests. He quickly became a key figure in the movement that toppled the political establishment, formally joining the Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP) in January 2026.
His departure makes him the second cabinet member to exit Shah’s young administration in quick succession, following the recent dismissal of Labor Minister Deepak Kumar Sah over party discipline breaches.
Prime Minister Shah will oversee the Ministry of Home Affairs portfolio in the interim.
-
📁 How ICE Got My Data | EFFector 38.8
When we use the internet, we’re entrusting tech companies with some of our most private information. These companies have promised they’ll keep our data safe. But what happens when the government comes knocking at their doors? In our latest EFFector newsletter, we hear from an EFF client whose data was given to ICE after Google broke its promise to him.
For over 35 years, EFFector has been your guide to understanding the intersection of technology, civil liberties, and the law. This latest issue covers the ongoing fight to reform NSA surveillance, the many attempts to censor 3D printing, and the cost of Google’s broken promise to its users.
Prefer to listen in? EFFector is now available on all major podcast platforms. This time, we’re chatting with EFF Senior Staff Attorney F. Mario Trujillo about how state attorneys general can hold Google accountable for failing to protect users targeted by the government. You can find the episode and subscribe on your podcast platform of choice:
Want to help us hold companies accountable? Sign up for EFF’s EFFector newsletter for updates, ways to take action, and new merch drops. You can also fuel the fight for privacy and free speech online when you support EFF today!
