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  • Attenborough turns 100: Iconic naturalist who brought the wild into our homes marks milestone birthday
    LONDON, May 7 — David Attenborough, a leading voice on climate change and biodiversity loss whose landmark documentaries transformed popular understanding of the natural world for a global audience, marks his 100th birthday on Friday.Attenborough’s natural history series, such as Life on Earth, in which he had a famous encounter with mountain gorillas in Rwanda, have brought the most remote corners of the planet into living rooms worldwide.“He’s taken us all to p
     

Attenborough turns 100: Iconic naturalist who brought the wild into our homes marks milestone birthday

6 May 2026 at 23:00

Malay Mail

LONDON, May 7 — David Attenborough, a leading voice on climate change and biodiversity loss whose landmark documentaries transformed popular understanding of the natural world for a global audience, marks his 100th birthday on Friday.

Attenborough’s natural history series, such as Life on Earth, in which he had a famous encounter with mountain gorillas in Rwanda, have brought the most remote corners of the planet into living rooms worldwide.

“He’s taken us all to places that we would never otherwise go. That’s a huge gift,” botanist Sandra Knapp, director of research at London’s Natural History Museum, told AFP.

The BBC is leading the celebration of the Briton’s centenary with a full week of programming dedicated to his life.

Classic episodes of series including Planet Earth II and Blue Planet II are being reshown along with others such as Life in the Freezer and Paradise Birds available on the BBC’s iPlayer service.

The centrepiece will be a 90-minute live show on his birthday from London’s Royal Albert Hall.

Knapp said Attenborough’s programmes had “expanded people’s horizons” and been an inspiration to many.

Jean-Baptiste Gouyon, professor of science communication at University College London (UCL), said Attenborough had made natural history as popular as football.

Attenborough’s programmes succeeded in instilling in the public an unparallelled passion and wonder for the natural world, said Gouyon.

Attenborough’s lifelong passion for the natural world began as child, and he went on to study geology and zoology at university.

Prince William, heir to the UK throne, has described him as a “national treasure”. Attenborough was also a firm favourite of the late Queen Elizabeth II, who knighted him in 1985.

Showing Attenborough’s cross-generational appeal, US singer-songwriter Billie Eilish has praised his “deep love and knowledge of our planet”, adding: “The animal kingdom brings out the childlike curiosity within us all.”

Mountain gorillas 

Attenborough has often reflected on his “luck” in being able to “find and film rare creatures that few outsiders have seen in the wild”.

And he has said he has been able “to gaze on some of the most marvellous spectacles that the wild places of the world have to offer”.

In 2006, he added his voice to those raising the alarm on climate change and biodiversity loss.

He declared himself “no longer sceptical” about the issue, having waited for conclusive proof that humanity was changing the climate.

Attenborough’s broadcasting career spanning nearly eight decades has been closely associated with the BBC, which he joined in the early 1950s.

Life on Earth, released in 1979, has alone been watched by 500 million people worldwide, while dozens of documentaries and associated books have made him a household name.

Recalling the series’ highlight, when he unexpectedly found himself up close with a group of mountain gorillas, Attenborough described the experience as “bliss” and “extraordinary”.

“I was simply transported,” he said ahead of his centenary, reliving how the adult female twisted his head and looked straight into his eyes and her two youngsters sat on him as the cameras rolled.

‘Modern colonialism’ 

Still making documentaries well into his nineties, he used his 2025 film Ocean to condemn the industrial fishing methods of wealthy nations, which he called “modern colonialism at sea”.

Despite his fame, the broadcaster — whose brother was the late actor and film director Richard Attenborough — has always refused to be seen as a celebrity.

Gouyon said Attenborough always made sure to direct the viewer’s gaze back to the subject matter.

On the threat to the natural world, Attenborough has said he hopes humanity will be able to change course.

“Perhaps the fact that the people most affected by climate change are no longer some imagined future generation, but young people alive today... will give us the impetus we need to rewrite our story, to turn this tragedy into a triumph,” he said at the UN Climate Summit in Glasgow in 2021.

“We are, after all, the greatest problem-solvers to have ever existed on Earth,” he said.

At 100, Attenborough no longer wanders the world’s jungles and deserts.

But he has continued to tell the story of the planet closer to home.

In Wild London, broadcast in early 2026, he marvels at the wildlife of the British capital, his birthplace, from foxes and beavers to hedgehogs and harvest mice.

After all his travels, he has confided that his favourite place remains Richmond, an affluent and leafy suburb in south-west London.

He has lived in the riverside town for many years, and still resides in the family home he shared with his late wife Jane and their two children. — AFP 

Video Shows Watercraft Colliding With Gray Whale

7 May 2026 at 00:33
Canada’s Department of Fisheries and Oceans is investigating after a person operating a personal watercraft struck a gray whale off Vancouver. Officials said the operator had been taken to a hospital in serious but stable condition.

FBI raiding office of Virginia Senate president who led redistricting push

6 May 2026 at 17:03
Federal authorities executed a search warrant on Wednesday morning at the offices of Virginia Senate President Pro Tempore L. Louise Lucas (D), a key player in the state's congressional redistricting fight, as part of a corruption investigation, a source familiar with the matter confirmed to The Hill's sister network NewsNation. Multiple FBI vehicles were positioned outside...

Norwegian government attacked over decision to reopen North Sea gasfields

6 May 2026 at 15:25

Approval for exploration in 70 new areas prompts fierce backlash from fossil fuel opponents

The Norwegian government has been heavily criticised for approving plans to reopen three North Sea gasfields nearly three decades after they were closed to help fill the gap in energy supplies created by the Middle East war.

Amid sharp price rises in oil and gas since the US and Israel’s attack on Iran in February, Oslo has also given its approval for oil and gas companies to explore in 70 new locations in the North Sea, Barents Sea and Norwegian Sea.

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© Photograph: Carina Johansen/AP

© Photograph: Carina Johansen/AP

© Photograph: Carina Johansen/AP

Hantavirus case triggers political friction in Spain as Canary Islands resist WHO‑mandated port call

6 May 2026 at 13:33

The arrival in the Canary Islands in the coming days of the ship where a Hantavirus outbreak occurred has quickly sparked a political battle in Spain. The premier of Spain’s Canary Islands, Fernando Clavijo, from the Canary Coalition, sparked tension Wednesday morning during a series of interviews with various media outlets. He stated that his government has not received detailed information on how the operation will be carried out and speculated that it might be a highly contagious variant.

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© Reuters TV (via REUTERS)

An aerial view of the cruise ship ‘MV Hondius.’
  • ✇The Guardian World news
  • US cancels visas for board of Costa Rica newspaper critical of Trump ally Oscar Lopez
    Leading newspaper La Nación calls US’s barring of board members ‘indirect attack on press freedom’ The US state department has cancelled tourist visas for more than half of the board members of Costa Rica’s leading national newspaper, La Nación, which has been a critical voice against the country’s president, Rodrigo Chaves, an ally of Donald Trump.During Chaves’s 2022 presidential campaign, La Nación published several articles documenting allegations of sexual harassment against him that had fo
     

US cancels visas for board of Costa Rica newspaper critical of Trump ally

6 May 2026 at 13:13

Leading newspaper La Nación calls US’s barring of board members ‘indirect attack on press freedom’

The US state department has cancelled tourist visas for more than half of the board members of Costa Rica’s leading national newspaper, La Nación, which has been a critical voice against the country’s president, Rodrigo Chaves, an ally of Donald Trump.

During Chaves’s 2022 presidential campaign, La Nación published several articles documenting allegations of sexual harassment against him that had forced him out of his job at the World Bank. The paper also reported on allegations of illegal campaign financing, which Chaves denied.

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© Photograph: Gustavo Garello/AP

© Photograph: Gustavo Garello/AP

© Photograph: Gustavo Garello/AP

  • ✇El País in English
  • Investors land in Caracas while mothers continue searching for their children in prisons Florantonia Singer
    José Perozo, a 24-year-old Venezuelan, is behind bars again. In 2024, he was arrested during the crackdown on protests against the presidential election results. This time, he had gone out to fill some water jugs at a reservoir near his home in Mariara, Carabobo state, when a patrol car pulled up beside him. They arrested him, put a hood over his head, and took him away. His mother has searched every police station in town without finding him. “How long will this go on? We can’t even go out on t
     

Investors land in Caracas while mothers continue searching for their children in prisons

6 May 2026 at 11:19

José Perozo, a 24-year-old Venezuelan, is behind bars again. In 2024, he was arrested during the crackdown on protests against the presidential election results. This time, he had gone out to fill some water jugs at a reservoir near his home in Mariara, Carabobo state, when a patrol car pulled up beside him. They arrested him, put a hood over his head, and took him away. His mother has searched every police station in town without finding him. “How long will this go on? We can’t even go out on the street!” pleads Yuraima Piñero.

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© Miguel Gutiérrez (EFE)

Protesters demonstrate for the release of political prisoners in Caracas, Venezuela, on May 3.
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