News
US tech firm investigating after Coldplay concert embrace goes viral
Romance scam victim travels 700km 'to marry French beauty queen'
El Salvador and US negotiate prisoner swap with Venezuela
Three killed in explosion at Los Angeles police training facility
Court orders Bolsonaro to wear ankle tag and puts him under curfew
'There were bodies everywhere': Druze residents describe 'bloodbath' in Syrian city Suweida
Royal swan count sees numbers resurface after dip
Colombian gold miners rescued after about 18 hours trapped underground
North Korea bans foreigners from seaside resort weeks after opening
Germany's Merz tells BBC Europe was free-riding on US
Kill Russians, win points: Is Ukraine's new drone scheme gamifying war?
What is Trump's vein condition and how serious is it?
Weekly quiz: Why is Kew Garden's Palm House closing?
Relentless immigration raids are changing California's way of life
Why 2025 is a scarily good year for horror movies
UK sanctions Russian spies for malicious activity
Police drop investigation into Kneecap's Glastonbury performance
'Trusting The Salt Path author was our biggest mistake', family says
Man who jumped from edge of space dies paragliding
Libyan war crimes suspect arrested in Germany under ICC warrant
Trump sues Murdoch for libel over Jeffrey Epstein letter story
A furious Chinese internet takes on privilege
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert to end in May 2026
Business
US passes first major national crypto legislation
Spud-tacular: How India became a french fry superpower
Meta investors settle $8bn lawsuit with Zuckerberg over Facebook privacy
Netflix boss says AI effects used in show for first time
Meta apologises after auto-translated post declares India minister 'dead'
The deepening water shortage row between the US and Mexico
'I can't drink the water' - life next to a US data centre
Heat pump makers are ready for a rush: Will customers come?
Former HSBC trader has fraud conviction overturned
Plans for direct train to Berlin in new UK-Germany treaty
Samsung boss cleared of fraud by South Korea's top court
Jaguar Land Rover to cut up to 500 UK jobs
'It's cheaper to bring 100 people to Ireland': Why the Irish film industry is booming
Busiest UK airports raise kiss-and-fly fees, says RAC
Is buying with friends the answer to a tough housing market?
Why Jane Street, a US trading giant, is in trouble in India
Trump discussed firing Fed boss but 'highly unlikely' he will
Canada curbs steel imports to shield domestic industry from Trump tariffs
'It's just better!' Trump says Coca-Cola to change key US ingredient
Largest Mars rock ever found on Earth sells at auction after $4.3m bid
German defence tech firm to make drones in UK
Could axing two national holidays save France from its mountain of debt?
Does the UK video games industry have a class problem?
Innovation
How the Space Shuttles were given better names thanks to Star Trek
UK's most powerful supercomputer comes online
Babies made using three people's DNA are born free of hereditary disease
Unique 1.5m year-old ice to be melted to unlock mystery
The atomic bomb marker inside your body
The handshake in orbit that made the International Space Station possible
Is breakfast really the most important meal of the day?
'We're not just gonna roll over': The US Civil War battlefield at the centre of a new conflict
'Wobbly-tooth puberty': How children's brains change at six years old
What your snot can reveal about your health
Sourdough v white sliced: Which breads should we be eating?
Healthcare provider to use AI to cut paperwork
University team compete in robot football contest
British spies and SAS named in Afghan data breach
How bad is Afghan data breach for MI6 and SAS?
Culture
Buzzy titles to blockbusters: 10 of the best summer reads
Citizen Kane sled saved from destruction sells for nearly $15m
Connie Francis: Pretty Little Baby singer dies at 87
Legend of Zelda movie casts two British actors in lead roles
Emma Watson banned from driving for speeding
'It makes me feel strong': Burlesque is back - but is it empowering or degrading to women?
KPop Demon Hunters: How the Netflix film became a global sensation
'First there is trust, then passion, then death': Why the 'Virgin Queen' never married
'They hold hands, they embrace, they kiss': The woman who changed our view of chimps - and human beings
Too Much: What film and TV get wrong about London
'They scream the choruses': How Japanese anime songs became Gen Z's latest musical obsession
Why Alice Cooper saved the Hollywood sign
'Mysterious' Sam Allardyce mural appears in Dudley
First phase of museum reopens after £10m revamp
The art made out of plastic bottles and old toys
Teens recall Gromit trail memories 12 years on
Original Balamory stars return for new CBeebies series
Historical novel named Wales Book of the Year
Club where Hendrix and Bowie played celebrated in book
Tom Grennan to play 'intimate' gig ahead of tour
Rapper Giggs releases song with son after opening up about autism
Arts
Inside Italy's secret mosaic school
How embarrassing ancestor went from 'bit of a giggle' to icon
'It's just a weird, weird bird': Why we got the dodo so absurdly wrong
Wizard of Oz show hits the road to meet Fringe costs
Dancer inspiring students after escape from Ukraine
Wig ban only lasts a day in Senegal theatre after backlash
Auditions open for Opera House Gala choir
Advance bookings plea to protect local theatres
New town sculpture created with community unveiled
Travel
India's ancient and mysterious 'dwarf' chambers
How to 'weatherproof' your next holiday
How to experience Italy like a local this summer
A pizza chef's guide to the best pizza in Naples
Tall Ships event gets under sail in 'party city'
Glasgow Airport 48-hour strike called off
Blue Islands quits Loganair alliance over new route
Tourism impact on city's economy grows - report
The European bike trail that hits three countries in a day
The secret royal 'pyramids' of Scotland
A vintage ride on the British Isles' only electric mountain railway
The ski resort Olympians flock to each summer
Where to go instead of the big US parks this summer
Want Italy's best food? Head to its national parks
The world's most liveable cities for 2025 - and what it's really like to live there
Italy's sunken city returning from the sea
Is this the most Scottish town in Italy?
Earth
Serious water pollution incidents up 60% in England, Environment Agency says
How Old Dubai's historic streets beat extreme heat
Will taller turbines spoil Hockney's Bigger Trees?
Yorkshire gets over £2.5m of clean energy funding
Storm-hit port reopens fully for school holidays
Butterfly count to assess population 'emergency'
More money to be spent on new biochar plant
Will there be a drought where I live?
Drought declared in Midlands after hot, dry weather takes its toll
Extreme weather is the UK's new normal, says Met Office
How to keep dogs cool in hot weather
Med Sea heatwave might feel nice for holiday swimming but there's a catch
Sea snot: The noxious plague troubling Istanbul's coast
Heatwave to peak this weekend as temperatures soar to 34C
'LA's loneliest bachelor': How a mateless Hollywood puma inspired the world's biggest animal bridge
Israel-Gaza War
Pope expresses sadness after Israeli strike on Gaza church kills three
At least 20 killed in crush at US-backed GHF aid site in Gaza
Gaza hospital says 24 people killed near aid site as witnesses blame IDF
Gaza ceasefire talks on verge of collapse, Palestinian officials say
'They were just kids': Mother mourns sons killed in Israeli strike while waiting for aid
Gaza father's outrage after Israeli strike kills son 'searching for sip' at water point
Gaza officials say children killed in strike as Israeli military admits 'error'
Released Hamas hostage says Trump can bring home those still captive in Gaza
Cordon set up as police make terror-related arrest
Five more arrested over raid at defence firm
War in Ukraine
Two dead and many injured in Russian strike on Ukrainian shopping centre
I'm 'disappointed but not done' with Putin, Trump tells BBC
Rosenberg: Russia more relieved than rattled by US tariff threat
North Korea reaffirms support for Russia's war in Ukraine
Ukrainians unimpressed by Trump's 50-day ultimatum to Putin
Trump says Ukraine should not target Moscow
Trump weapons pledge marks major step forward for Ukraine
Steve Rosenberg: Moscow shrugs off Trump's irritation with Putin
Russia's summer push in Ukraine targets three fronts but faces stern resistance
The doctor fighting for women's health on Ukraine's front line
'I lost limbs but stayed to help others in Ukraine'
'Not our war' - Trump's Nato weapons deal for Ukraine sparks MAGA anger
Trump threatens Russia with tariffs while unveiling Ukraine weapons plan
US & Canada
Trump orders production of more Epstein material after mounting pressure
Bill that cuts foreign aid and public broadcasting heads to Trump's desk
US seeks one-day prison for officer convicted in Breonna Taylor shooting
Trump's voters want to see the Epstein files - but have faith in their president
Mother and son rescued in California forest after leaving handwritten notes
Ramaphosa struggles to mend fences with Trump
'It's cheaper to bring 100 people to Ireland': Why the Irish film industry is booming
How Trump woke me up for surprise interview - and the key takeaways
What does the US education department do - and can Trump truly dismantle it?
Africa
Burkina Faso military rulers scrap electoral commission, taking control of future polls
From military ruler to democrat - ex-Nigeria President Buhari's life in pictures
Buhari - the austere Nigerian military ruler who defeated a sitting president
Inside the Congolese mine vital to mobile phones, as rebels give BBC rare access
Is William Ruto the most disliked president in Kenya's history?
Mother mourns 'beautiful' 12-year-old shot while watching TV during Kenya protests
Six things Trump should know about Liberia after he praised leader's 'good English'
South Africans fear spike in HIV infections as US aid cuts bite
Why Trump invited five African leaders to the White House
Tributes to former teacher killed by elephant
Ex-Nigeria President Buhari buried at home
Aid workers 'executed' in Ethiopia's Tigray war, charity says
Constance Marten spent months at 'torture' church, friend tells BBC
MP charged for accusing Lesotho king of signing over country to South Africa
World's oldest president to seek eighth term
Asia
'Booked in the womb' and sold for £500: Police bust baby trafficking ring
Pakistan monsoon rains kill 63 in 24 hours
Sirens and evacuations as Taipei rehearses to counter China invasion threat
Four dead, 1,300 evacuated as heavy rains hit South Korea
Trump says India and US very close to finalising trade deal
Thai woman arrested for blackmailing monks with thousands of videos after sex
Teacher and parent held for breaking into school to steal exam papers
Driver held for hit-and-run death of world's 'oldest' marathon runner
Labubu firm sees profit soaring by at least 350%
Mystery surrounds Russian mum and children found in Indian cave
Why is South Korea retrying a spy chief who assassinated a president?
India can't wish away coal - but can it be made cleaner?
German backpacker lost in outback 'beyond grateful' to be found
My focus was on saving lives after Afghan data breach, Shapps says
Afghans express fear for relatives' safety after UK data leak
Australia
Fewer school-age children vaping in Australia since ban, study says
Man who murdered British backpacker Peter Falconio dies
The mushroom killer was obsessed with true crime. Now true crime fans are obsessed with her
I finally found my brother, just in time to make memories
Indigenous elders lose landmark climate battle against Australian government
Another 800 children to be tested for disease linked to alleged childcare abuser
An Indigenous Australian community is fighting to protect sacred springs from a coal mine
'You did it': How doctor realised mushroom cook was a killer
'Everyone knows somebody affected': The small towns in shock after mushroom murders
Inquest finds police officer who shot Aboriginal teen was racist
Mushroom murders and cancer lie: Nine weeks of evidence that gripped a courtroom
German backpacker found after 11 nights in Australia's outback
Europe
Tomorrowland organisers plan to build new stage after fire destroys original
Body found in search for hiker missing in Italy
Tributes as two British nationals die in Portugal
Three jailed over murder of Swedish hip-hop star in car park
Fourteen people arrested after anti-migrant riots in southern Spain
The undersea tunnel network that could transform Shetland's fortunes
Speeding fines quashed over camera location error
Latin America
Trump launches probe into Brazil's 'unfair' trade practices
US deports five 'barbaric' migrants to Eswatini
Cuban minister resigns after saying country has no beggars
Trump imposes 17% tariff on Mexican tomatoes
Argentina's Milei told to 'grow up' by VP in spat over pensions
EU and Mexico criticise Trump's proposed 30% tariff
Watch: Was Lady Gaga's Rio concert really attended by 2.1m people?
Brazil vows to match US tariffs after Trump threatens 50% levy
Trump threatens Brazil with 50% tariff and demands Bolsonaro's trial end
Baby stolen during Argentina's military rule found after 48 years
Middle East
UN says it has credible reports of summary executions during Syria fighting
Almost 600 killed in south Syria violence, monitoring group says
Iraq's shopping centre fire leaves 61 dead, many missing
Israel says it regrets deadly strike on Catholic Church in Gaza
Syria leader vows to protect Druze after sectarian violence prompts Israeli strikes
US says 'specific steps' agreed to end Syria violence after Israeli strikes hit Damascus
Israeli strikes kill 12 in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley, governor says
Who are the Druze and why is Israel attacking Syria?
Outrage builds over plan to force all Gazans to southern city
Netanyahu visits US as Trump puts pressure to agree Gaza ceasefire deal
BBC InDepth
The fate of the Sycamore Gap tree has shed light on a deeper concern
The 'strongman' PM who inspired Trump's playbook - but now finds his power crumbling
Trump's tariffs are looming large over the UK’s last surviving steel towns
After Diddy: Why hip-hop is still struggling to have its own 'MeToo' moment
How King Charles will help rebuild the shaken UK-France friendship during the state visit
Is the UK really any safer 20 years on from 7/7?
New online safety rules are here - but as tech races ahead, expect changes
How Trump is using the 'Madman Theory' to try to change the world (and it's working)
Labour might be down, but it's not necessarily out - voters reflect on a year in power
BBC Verify
North Korea's Benidorm-style resort welcomes first Russian tourists
Why do Channel migrants want to come to the UK?
Did US government cuts contribute to the Texas tragedy?
Is the government meeting its pledges on illegal immigration and asylum?
A US tech company announced that it has launched an investigation after a big screen embrace at a Coldplay concert - rumoured to involve two of its employees, including its CEO - went viral.
In the clip, which initially appeared on a giant screen at the Boston concert, two people are seen with their arms wrapped around each other.
When their faces appear for thousands to see, the man and woman abruptly duck and hide from the camera.
Reports that both are executives at the company Astronomer and rumours of an affair sparked by the band leader's comment, then spread online, but the information remains unverified by the company.
The video of the pair swaying to music, then quickly trying to hide exploded on the internet after the concert on Wednesday night.
Chris Martin, lead singer of Coldplay, after seeing the pair hide, said to the crowd: "Either they're having an affair, or they're just very shy."
The initial video posted to TikTok received millions of views. It was then shared across platforms, turned into memes and made fun of on television programs.
Two days after the internet became inundated with chatter about the embrace, Astronomer put out its own statement announcing an investigation into the matter, without specifying the video.
"Astronomer is committed to the values and culture that have guided us since our founding," the statement read. "Our leaders are expected to set the standard in both conduct and accountability. The Board of Directors has initiated a formal investigation into this matter and we will have additional details to share very shortly."
The man in the video is rumoured in multiple reports to be Astronomer CEO Andy Byron, who has been with the company since July 2023. Mr Byron himself has not confirmed his identity in the video. The woman was identified online as Kristin Cabot, the company's chief people officer, who has been with Astronomer since November 2024.
She has not confirmed her identity either. The BBC has been unable to confirm the identities of the people in the video.
The Astronomer statement added that Mr Byron had not released a personal statement, and that reports otherwise were incorrect. It also said no other employees were in the video.
Fake statements from Mr Byron went viral on Thursday.
A Belgian man has travelled 760km (472 miles) to meet a French beauty queen he had been led to believe would be his future wife, only to realise he had been a victim of online romance fraud.
Michel, 76, turned up at the home of Sophie Vouzelaud in France but was met by the model's husband.
He told Ms Vouzelaud's husband, Fabien, he had paid €30,000 ($35,000) to the scammers and thought he had been in a romantic relationship for several weeks.
"I am an imbecile," the man said to the couple as he contemplated taking the long journey back.
Michel's misadventure became known after a video of his unfortunate encounter with the couple was shared online by Fabien.
For weeks, the Belgian - a widower of four years - had been communicating on WhatsApp with who he thought was Ms Vouzelaud, former Miss Limousin and first runner-up to Miss France in 2007.
He turned up outside the couple's property in Saint-Julien, some 420km (270 miles) south of Paris, on 9 July and according to Fabien said: "I am the future husband of Sophie Vouzelaud", to which he retorted: "Well, I'm the current one."
Ms Vouzelaud, 38, then tried to explain to him that he had been swindled and the couple urged him to go to the police to file a complaint. It is not clear if he has done so.
Romance fraud is when someone is conned into sending money to a criminal who convinces them they are in a genuine relationship.
How to avoid romance scams
* Be suspicious of any requests for money from someone you have never met in person, particularly if you have only recently met online
* Speak to your family or friends to get advice
* Profile photos may not be genuine, so do your research first. Performing a reverse image search using a search engine can help you find photos that have been stolen from somewhere else
* Reassure your loved one you are there for them and it is not their fault
* Improve your own understanding about romance scams
* Remember to look after yourself, too - supporting someone through romance fraud can be tough
El Salvador is repatriating dozens of detained Venezuelans in exchange for US nationals held in Venezuela, the governments of the US and El Salvador announced on Friday.
The central American country sent approximately 250 prisoners incarcerated in its notorious Cecot (Centre for the Confinement of Terrorism) prison in return for the release of 10 US nationals from Venezuela.
The planeload of migrants deported from the US to El Salvador is scheduled to arrive in Maiquetía, Venezuela later on Friday.
Relations between Salvadorean leader Bukele and US President Donald Trump have warmed significantly in recent months, especially as Bukele has agreed to detain deported US migrants.
A senior administration official told reporters on Friday that, with the release, there are currently no longer any US nationals being held by the government of Nicolas Maduro in Venezuela.
"Today, we have handed over all the Venezuelan nationals detained in our country, accused of being part of the criminal organization Tren de Aragua (TDA)," Bukele said in a post on X.
He said the exchange was done in return "for a considerable number of Venezuelan political prisoners" as well as the US citizens.
In a separate post, US Secretary of State Marc Rubio confirmed the exchange and thanked Bukele and American officials.
The Venezuelans had originally been deported by the US under the Trump administration to El Salvador earlier this year, under the 1798 Alien Enemies Act, which gives a US president power to detain and deport natives or citizens of "enemy" nations without usual processes.
A senior Trump administration official told reporters on Friday that El Salvador made the "independent decision" to release the Venezuelan prisoners - which it considers to be gang members - for humanitarian reasons.
The exchange of Venezuelans for Americans facilitated by El Salvador highlights the strong relationship between Trump and Bukele - the self-styled "world's coolest dictator".
"This deal would not have been possible without President Bukele," the administration official said. "We extend our deep, deep gratitude."
The Salvadoran leader visited Trump in the White House in April, where the pair appeared friendly as they spoke to reporters, often laughing and cracking jokes together.
Bukele has backed the deportation of migrants from the United States to El Salvador's Cecot maximum security jail.
Trump said at the time that Bukele is "really helping out" the US out by facilitating these detentions, as the Salvadoran president responded that his country is "very eager to help".
Around the same time, Bukele first proposed swapping Venezuelan deportees for "political prisoners", including family members of Venezuelan opposition figures, journalists and activists detained in a government electoral crackdown in 2024.
"The only reason they are imprisoned is for having opposed you and your electoral fraud," he wrote to Maduro on X.
"However, I propose a humanitarian agreement that includes the repatriation of 100% of the 252 Venezuelans who were deported, in exchange for the release and surrender of an identical number (252) of the thousands of political prisoners you hold."
The senior administration official said that while the deal only pertained to US nationals kept in Venezuela, the Trump administration is still actively working on the release of "dozens" of political prisoners held by the Maduro government.
Three police officers were killed in an explosion at a County Sheriff's Department training facility in East Los Angeles, officials say.
The explosion occurred at the Biscailuz Center Academy Training on Friday morning at around 07:30 local time (15:30 BST), according to first responders.
Confirming the deaths in a post on X, US Attorney General Pam Bondi called it a "horrific incident" and said that federal agents have been deployed on the scene and are "working to learn more".
It was unclear what caused the explosion or if there were any more victims.
The explosion occurred in a parking lot of the Special Enforcement Bureau at the facility, the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department (LASD) told BBC's US partner CBS News.
California Governor Gavin Newsom has been briefed about the explosion and he is "closely monitoring the situation", his office said in a statement on X.
Newsom's office added that state assistance has also been offered to help respond to the incident.
Kathryn Barger, Chief of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors, wrote in a statement that she is "closely tracking the situation as we learn more about what occurred and the condition of those affected".
"My heart is heavy, and my thoughts are with the brave men and women of the Sheriff's Department during this difficult time," she said.
A court has ordered Brazil's former president Jair Bolsonaro to wear an ankle tag and put him under curfew over fears he might abscond while standing trial.
He governed Brazil from 2019 to 2022 and is accused of plotting a coup to prevent President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva from taking office in January 2023. He denies any wrongdoing.
It follows US President Donald Trump's attempts to quash the case, which he has called a "witch hunt", by threatening steep tariffs on Brazilian goods.
Bolsonaro said the court restrictions amounted to "supreme humiliation" and that he had never considered leaving Brazil.
On Friday, police raided his home and political headquarters on orders from the Supreme Court.
Judge Alexandre de Moraes also ordered that Bolsonaro be banned from social media and barred from communicating with his son, Eduardo Bolsonaro, who has been lobbying for him in the US, and foreign ambassadors, diplomats or embassies.
The ex-president will be placed under 24-hour surveillance and have to comply with a nighttime curfew.
Judge Moraes said Bolsonaro was acting deliberately and illegally, together with his son Eduardo, to have sanctions imposed on Brazilian public officials.
In a statement, Bolsonaro's lawyers expressed "surprise and outrage" at the court's decision, adding that the former president had "always complied with the court's orders".
According to the Federal Police, Bolsonaro has attempted to hinder the trial and undertaken actions that constitute coercion, obstruction of justice and an attack on national sovereignty.
Last week, the US president threatened a 50% tariff on Brazilian goods from 1 August, directly citing Brazil's treatment of Bolsonaro.
Lula hit back, saying he would match any tariffs imposed on Brazil by the US. In a post on X, the president said Brazil was a "sovereign country with independent institutions" and "no one is above the law".
On Thursday, Trump posted a letter on Truth Social that he had sent to Bolsonaro in which he said the criminal case amounted to political persecution and that his tariff threat was aimed at exerting pressure on Brazilian authorities to drop the charges.
The US president has compared the prosecution to legal cases he himself faced between his two presidential terms.
Bolsonaro is standing trial along with seven accused over events which culminated in the storming of government buildings by his supporters a week after Lula's inauguration in January 2023.
The eight defendants are accused of five charges: attempting to stage a coup, involvement in an armed criminal organisation, attempted violent abolition of the democratic rule of law, aggravated damage and deterioration of listed heritage.
If found guilty, Bolsonaro, 70, could face decades behind bars.
The former president has consistently denied the charges against him, calling them "grave and baseless" and claiming to be the victim of "political persecution" aimed at preventing him running for president again in 2026.
Speaking in court in June, Bolsonaro said a coup was an "abominable thing" and there had "never been talk of a coup" between him and his military commanders.
He narrowly lost the presidential election to his left-wing rival Lula in 2022.
Bolsonaro never publicly acknowledged defeat. Many of his supporters spent weeks camped outside army barracks in an attempt to convince the military to prevent Lula from being sworn in.
A week after Lula's inauguration, on 8 January 2023, thousands of Bolsonaro supporters stormed Brazil's Congress, Supreme Court and the presidential palace in what federal investigators say was an attempted coup.
Bolsonaro was in the US at the time and has always denied any links to the rioters.
A federal investigation into the riots and the events leading up to them was launched. Investigators subsequently said they had found evidence of a "criminal organisation" which had "acted in a coordinated manner" to keep then-President Bolsonaro in power.
Their 884-page report, which was unsealed in November 2024, alleged that "then-President Jair Messias Bolsonaro planned, acted and was directly and effectively aware of the actions of the criminal organisation aiming to launch a coup d'etat and eliminate the democratic rule of law".
Brazil's Attorney General Paulo Gonet went further in his report published in February, accusing Bolsonaro of not just being aware of but leading the criminal organisation that he says sought to overthrow Lula.
Over the last five days, Rima says she has witnessed "barbaric" scenes.
The 45-year-old Druze woman has lived in the southern Syrian city of Suweida her whole life, and never thought her once-peaceful hometown would become the scene of a bloodbath.
"There were bodies everywhere outside our building," she told the BBC in a phone interview, using a pseudonym out of fear for her safety.
Rima said she huddled inside her home, bracing for the unimaginable, as gunmen - government forces and foreign fighters - moved through her neighbourhood earlier this week, going door-to-door looking for their next victim.
"One of the worst feelings ever is to keep waiting for people to come into your house and decide whether we should live or die," she recalled, her voice still trembling with fear.
The violence has left Rima and her neighbours feeling abandoned and afraid in their own homes, as bullets and shells sounded off outside.
Long-running tensions between Druze and Bedouin tribes in Suweida erupted into deadly sectarian clashes on Sunday, following the abduction of a Druze merchant on the highway to the capital, Damascus.
As the fighting spread to other parts of the southern province, the government of interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa - who led the overthrow of Bashar al-Assad's regime by Islamist-led rebels in December - announced that it would deploy the interior and defence ministry's forces to "restore stability".
Since the fall of Assad, some local Druze leaders have rejected the presence of the security forces in Suweida city. When government forces were deployed on Tuesday, the fighting escalated.
Soon, the government's forces were being accused of attacking both Druze fighters and civilians, which prompted the Israeli military to intervene with a series of air strikes that it said were intended to protect the Druze.
As Rima watched this play out, the lack of internet and power made it difficult to keep up with the unfolding events. All she knew for sure was what she could see from her window: slaughtered bodies and burned buildings.
Syrian state media have also cited authorities and Bedouin tribes as saying that "outlaw groups" carried out "massacres" and other crimes against Bedouin fighters and civilians.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a UK-based monitoring group, has said it has documented the killing of at least 594 people since Sunday, including 154 Druze civilians, of whom 83 were summarily killed by government forces, and three members of Bedouin tribes who were summarily killed by Druze fighters.
Nayef, a Druze man whose name we have also changed, was also confronted with horrific scenes in Suweida.
"We are collecting bodies from the streets. We found bodies left outside houses, next to houses for two or three days," he told the BBC in a phone interview.
Despite being a government employee, Nayef lashed out in disbelief at what he saw as the government forces' brutality inside the city.
"They stormed neighbourhoods, selecting the houses that look wealthy. They looted these houses and then torched them. They sprayed unarmed civilians with bullets."
Videos circulating on social media appeared to support Nayef's allegations.
Footage shared on Facebook on Wednesday afternoon shows at least half-a-dozen men dressed in camouflage firing live rounds at a group of residents, who are kneeling on the sidewalk.
The UN human rights office said it had documented the killing of at least 13 people on Tuesday by armed men affiliated with the government who deliberately opened fire at a family gathering. On the same day, they reportedly summarily executed six men near their homes.
While bullets and shells rained down, Suweida residents were left wondering when help was coming.
But it never came.
Rima said she watched as security forces and foreign fighters entered her neighbourhood and later shot her neighbour in front of his mother.
"Is this the army and security forces who were supposed to come and protect us?" she asked. "People's livelihoods were stolen. Those who were killed were young and unarmed."
Other testimony we heard backed up Rima's claim. Those we spoke to said most of the fighters who entered Suweida and attacked civilians appeared to be Islamists.
One woman heard the fighters shouting "Allahu Akbar" (God is greatest) in her building, calling the Druze "infidels" and "pigs", and saying they were there to kill them.
Some of these fighters posted videos of themselves online humiliating men in Suweida, including cutting or shaving off the moustaches of Druze sheikhs. The moustaches are a symbol of Druze religious identity.
The BBC has approached the Syrian government for official comments on the issue but not so far received a response.
In a televised address early on Thursday, Sharaa vowed to hold the perpetrators accountable and promised to make protecting the Druze a "priority".
"We are eager to hold accountable those who transgressed and abused our Druze people because they are under the protection and responsibility of the state," he said.
He went on to blame "outlaw groups", saying their leaders "rejected dialogue for many months".
For many, the promise of protection felt like déjà vu.
It resembled the message the president delivered when government forces and allied Islamist fighters carried out deadly reprisals against civilians from another religious minority, the Alawites, in response to attacks by Assad loyalists in the coastal region in March.
A committee was established to investigate those violations - but is yet to deliver any findings.
The accounts from Nayef and others bore many similarities to what happened on the coast in March.
"There's a total lack of trust with the government," Nayef said. "They are just doing a lip-service. They say nice things about freedoms, documenting violations and accountability, but they are all lies."
Many Suweida residents say this latest episode of sectarian violence will have long-lasting effects.
"If it was not for Israel's bombardment, we wouldn't be able to talk to you today," one woman told the BBC.
However, some were also critical of Israel's airstrikes and its claim that it was acting to protect the Druze.
Nayef said: "Nobody wants Israel. We are patriotic people. We were at the forefront of people to adopt patriotism. Our loyalty and patriotism should not be doubted."
Additional reporting by Samantha Granville in Beirut
Swan numbers have begun to recover on the Thames, after a couple of years of worrying decline, according to an annual royal survey of swans.
A five-day search along the Thames, completed on Friday, found 115 young swans, rather than 86 last year, showing signs that the disappearance of swans could be starting to be reversed.
The traditional count is called "swan upping", but in recent years it has been more like swan downing, with numbers plunging due to avian flu and human cruelty, including reports of swans being attacked by catapults and air guns.
But the new figures released by the King's swan marker, David Barber, show a more optimistic picture, after a 45% fall over the past two years.
The tradition of swan upping sees six boats sailing from Sunbury Lock in west London to Abingdon Bridge in Oxfordshire, with the "swan uppers" counting, weighing and giving a health check to young swans found along the way.
The annual event has also become a popular spectacle, with crowds gathering along the riverbank in the sunshine to watch the boats go past, with their colourful flags and crews in ceremonial outfits.
The fall in swan numbers had threatened to make the classic image of swans on the Thames an increasingly rare sight.
But the swan uppers have more positive news about the swan population and will be hoping a corner has been turned - though it's still down on the 155 counted in 2022.
At the outset of the trip, Mr Barber said he was hoping that avian flu had "eased off", after a "quite disastrous" impact on the swan population.
"Fortunately, there has been a decrease in reported cases of the disease in the River Thames area in recent months," said the King's swan marker.
With a swan's feather in his cap and wearing a scarlet jacket, Mr Barber also spoke of the other risks to swans nesting on the Thames.
He said their search had found swans needing to be cleaned from pollution such as engine oil. Fishing tackle was a longstanding problem and there were attacks from dogs and vandalism from humans.
Swan upping dates back to the 12th Century and was once about counting royal property - with the monarch having ownership of unmarked mute swans swimming on open water.
But is now more about conservation and education, involving schools along the route and helping to teach young people to respect and protect swans.
In particular, Mr Barber wants to discourage young people from the mistreatment of swans - such as shooting them with catapults, which he says causes terrible suffering.
The figures so far show a more hopeful picture for swans on the Thames.
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Eighteen workers trapped for about 18 hours in a gold mine in north-western Colombia have been rescued by emergency crews, the country's government has said.
The miners became stuck on Thursday in the El Minón mine, in Colombia's Antioquia region, after equipment failure, according to AFP news agency.
After a 12-hour-long rescue operation, all the workers are in good health, Colombia's National Mining Agency (ANM) said.
In a letter sent to the government, the local mayor in Remedios said the mine was apparently unlicensed.
The operation to free the miners finished at just after 03:00 local time (09:00 BST) on Friday, according to Colombia's energy minister.
Video of the rescue showed the miners' colleagues clapping and cheering as they climbed out of the mine shaft.
Yarley Erasmo Marin, a representative of a local miners' association, told the AFP news agency that a mechanical failure caused the collapse of a structure designed to prevent landslides, blocking the mine's main exit.
Oxygen had to be given to the trapped miners through hoses while they waited to be rescued, local radio station ABC reported.
The ANM said in a statement that the mining community should "refrain from illegal mining activities, which endanger the lives and safety of those involved and also impact the country's resources and the environment".
Mining accidents are not uncommon in Colombia and dozens of deaths have been recorded in recent years.
North Korea has announced that its newly opened seaside resort will not be receiving foreign tourists.
The Wonsan Kalma Coastal Tourist Zone, opened on 1 July, has been touted as a key part of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un's ambitions to boost tourism.
In the lead-up to its opening, the resort was promoted as an attraction for both locals and foreigners. But as of this week, a notice on North Korea's tourism website says that foreigners are "temporarily" not allowed to visit.
Last week, the first Russian tourists reportedly arrived at the resort in Wonsan - around the same time that Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov met Kim in the city.
Lavrov hailed the seaside development as a "good tourist attraction", and said he hoped it would become popular among Russians, AFP reported. The two countries are set to launch direct flights between Moscow and Pyongyang by the end of the month.
A Russian tour guide previously told NK News that they had planned several more trips to the resort in the coming months.
Wonsan, a city along North Korea's east coast, is home to some of the country's missile facilities and a large maritime complex. It's also where Kim spent much of his youth, among holiday villas belonging to the country's elites.
The new seaside resort has lined 4km (2.5 miles) of its beachfront with hotels, restaurants, shopping malls and a water park. It has a capacity of some 20,000 people, according to state media.
However, since the resort began construction in 2018, human rights groups have protested the alleged mistreatment of its workers. They point to reports of people being forced to work long hours to finish the massive project, under harsh conditions and inadequate compensation.
Russian ambassadors attended the resort's completion ceremony on 24 June, along with Kim and his family.
Last year, North Korea allowed Russian tourists to visit North Korea after a years-long suspension of tourism during the pandemic.
In February, North Korea also started to receive tourists from the West, including Australia, France, Germany and the UK. It abruptly halted tourism weeks later, however, without saying why.
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has accepted US accusations that Europe was doing too little to fund its own defence and security, but now believes they are on the same page.
"We know we have to do more on our own and we have been free-riders in the past," he told the BBC's Today Programme, "they're asking us to do more and we are doing more."
Merz was in the UK to boost defence ties with Germany, as part of a historic friendship treaty that also aims to tackle irregular migration and promote youth exchanges.
Russia's war with Ukraine has framed the early weeks of his chancellorship, as has US President Donald Trump's threat to impose 30% import tariffs on European Union exports from 1 August.
Merz told Nick Robinson, in his first UK broadcast interview as chancellor, that he had now met Trump three times and they were on good speaking terms: "I think President Trump is on the same page; we are trying to bring this war to an end."
"We are on the phone once a week; we are co-ordinating our efforts. One issue is the war in Ukraine, and the second is our trade debates and tariffs."
Merz was a vocal supporter of Ukraine on the campaign trail, and visited Kyiv months before he took Germany's centre-right Christian Democrats to victory in elections in February.
Four days after he was sworn in early in May, he was on a train to Kyiv in a show of solidarity with Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and President Emmanuel Macron of France.
"We are seeing a big threat, and the threat is Russia. And this threat is not only on Ukraine. It's on our peace, on our freedom, on the political order of Europe," he warned.
In the run-up to the German elections, US Vice-President JD Vance shocked an audience at the Munich Security Conference with a list of accusations against European allies, including the UK.
Reflecting on the remarks, Merz said the government "had to draw our consequences out of that". The message from Vance's "very open manner" had, in other words, been heard loud and clear.
Canan Atilgan of the Konrad Adenauer Foundation in London which is closely affiliated to Merz's party believes that had a profound effect on the incoming chancellor: "I think in Munich he thought we lost the Americans - we have to look after ourselves - and then Zelensky in the Oval Office happened."
Even before he had been sworn in, the chancellor steered through a change in the German constitution to enable a huge rise in defence spending, saying the rule now for German defence was to do whatever it takes.
"We are not strong enough, our army is not strong enough, so that's the reason why we are spending a lot of money," he said in his BBC interview.
Together, the UK, Germany and France are working on a triangular alliance of major European powers, dubbed the E3, which Merz says will focus not just on security and foreign policy but on economic growth as well.
The chancellor said he was now "very close with Keir Starmer" and with the French president too. Macron is due to visit him in Berlin next week.
The French leader signed a wide-ranging treaty with Germany in Aachen in 2019, and last week he agreed a deeper defence pact during a state visit to the UK, so the UK-German friendship treaty completes a triangle of bilateral ties.
Sitting in the plush surroundings of the German embassy, Friedrich Merz was about to head to the Victoria and Albert Museum to sign the pact with the Prime Minister.
Merz said the bilateral treaty renewed the two allies' commitment to defend each other - which is not just part of the Nato treaty but was also previously part of their alliance when the UK was in the EU.
British and German firms already collaborate in making products such as Typhoon Eurofighter jets and Boxer armoured vehicles, and the two governments have agreed to launch joint export campaigns that Downing Street believes could attract billions of pounds.
They are also developing a missile with a range of 2,000km (1,250 miles) and the chancellor later told a press conference that Ukraine would soon receive substantial additional support in "long-range fire".
Merz, 69, is regarded as a strong believer in the transatlantic alliance and knows the US well from his years outside politics working for an American investment firm.
However, on the night of his election victory he declared that the Trump administration was "largely indifferent to the fate of Europe", a remark seen at the time as undiplomatic for a chancellor-in-waiting.
Asked if he had since changed his mind, he said he had not, as Trump was "not as clear and as committed as former US presidents were, former US administrations were".
The Americans were moving away from Europe and turning to Asia, he observed, and that was why it was important to look at greater independence from American defence.
The UK has largely escaped the turbulence surrounding US tariffs on its exports, but the European Union is facing a deadline less than two weeks away, and the threat of 30% tariffs on all its goods.
EU trade negotiator Maroš Šefčovič travelled to Washington this week in search of a deal that would spare all 27 member states from a surge in US import taxes.
Merz sees the high tariffs as unacceptable and killing Germany's export industry.
"My observation is that the president himself is seeing the challenges and that he is willing to come to an agreement. He gets it."
Another important element of the UK-German treaty is Berlin's agreement to change the law to criminalise smugglers storing small boats in Germany for use in illegal Channel crossings. The storage of boats in Germany was revealed by a BBC investigation last year.
The chancellor said his government would "do our homework immediately" and expected it would not take long to push through parliament after the summer recess.
There are also plans for a direct rail link from London to Berlin, and for British and German students to take part in exchanges, which have declined since Brexit.
Merz said he very much hoped that the first people who might see a practical difference from the friendship treaty would be students, so that the younger generation could drive relations between the two allies in the future.
The images come in every day. Thousands of them.
Men and equipment being hunted down along Ukraine's long, contested front lines. Everything filmed, logged and counted.
And now put to use too, as the Ukrainian military tries to extract every advantage it can against its much more powerful opponent.
Under a scheme first trialled last year and dubbed "Army of Drones: Bonus" (also known as "e-points"), units can earn points for each Russian soldier killed or piece of equipment destroyed.
And like a killstreak in Call of Duty, or a 1970s TV game show, points mean prizes.
"The more strategically important and large-scale the target, the more points a unit receives," reads a statement from the team at Brave 1, which brings together experts from government and the military.
"For example, destroying an enemy multiple rocket launch system earns up to 50 points; 40 points are awarded for a destroyed tank and 20 for a damaged one."
Call it the gamification of war.
Each uploaded video is now carefully analysed back in Kyiv, where points are awarded according to a constantly evolving set of military priorities.
"I think, first and foremost, it's about quality data, the mathematics of war, and understanding how to use limited resources more effectively," says the man behind the e-points scheme, Mykhailo Fedorov, Ukraine's Minister of Digital Transformation.
But after three and a half long years of grinding, all-out war, the system has another vital use.
"It's also about motivation," Fedorov says. "When we change the point values, we can see how motivation changes."
Fedorov's office sports a huge video screen with dozens of live feeds from Ukrainian drones flying over the front lines.
Together, the feeds provide a vivid glimpse into Ukraine's drone war, in which commanders claim flying robots now account for an estimated 70% of all Russian deaths and injuries.
Since the early days of Russia's full-scale invasion, social media feeds have been full of drone videos, usually set to soundtracks of thudding heavy metal music.
The turret of a tank, exploding in a ball of flame. A lone soldier, fending off an attacking drone with a rifle or a stick.
It can make for gruesome viewing. Each video celebrating the death of an opponent. The video going fuzzy as the drone explodes.
But beyond a sense of grim satisfaction, hard-pressed front-line units now operate in the knowledge that evidence of their exploits can bring them rewards.
The BBC reached out to more than a dozen units to find out what front line soldiers make of the scheme. The responses were mixed.
"In general, my comrades and I are positive," said Volodymyr, a soldier from the 108th Territorial Defence Brigade. He asked us not to use his surname.
At a time when frontline units are burning through equipment, especially attack drones, at a ferocious rate, Volodymyr says the e-points scheme is proving useful.
"This is a way to make up for what we lose… while inflicting losses on the enemy as effectively as possible."
The 22nd Mechanised Brigade, currently fighting in the north-east of the country, has had about three months to get used to the new system.
"Once we figured out how it works, it turned out to be quite a decent system," said a soldier from the 22nd with the callsign Jack.
"Our lads are worn out, and nothing really motivates them anymore," Jack said. "But this system helps. The drones are provided through this programme, and the lads get rewarded. It's a decent motivation."
But others are less convinced.
"The fundamental issue of motivation isn't resolved by this," said a soldier who asked only to be identified by his callsign, Snake.
"Points won't stop people fleeing from the military."
A soldier who identified himself as Dymytro sent us a lengthy response in which he complained that units were spending too much time trying to claim each other's hits or would deliberately attack a Russian vehicle that had already been disabled, in order to earn more points.
For Dymytro, the whole concept seemed morally dubious.
"This system is just a result of our twisted mental habit of turning everything into profit," Dymytro complained, "even our own damned death."
But the e-points scheme is typical of the way Ukraine has fought this war: creative, out-of-the-box thinking designed to make the most of the country's innovative skills and minimise the effect of its numerical disadvantage.
Fedorov says 90-95% of fighting units are now participating, providing a steady stream of useful data.
"We've started receiving quality information and making decisions based on it," he says.
"By collecting data, we can propose changes, but the foundation is always military strategy."
In an anonymous office block in Kyiv, we met some of the analysts whose job it is to pour over the footage, verify each hit and award points to the unit responsible.
We were asked not to reveal the location or use real names.
"We have two categories: hit and destroyed," Volodia told us. "So a different amount of e-points goes to the different categories."
It turns out that encouraging a Russian soldier to surrender is worth more points than killing one – a prisoner of war can always be used in future deals over prisoner exchanges.
"If for one… killed Russian you get one point," Volodia said, "if you capture him you multiply it by 10."
Volodia's team analyses thousands of hits every day.
"The hardest part is artillery," he said, showing us a video of a drone navigating expertly through the trees and into a trench where a gun is concealed.
"The Russians are very good at hiding and digging."
As Russia's tactics have evolved, so too has the e-points system.
Moscow's increased use of small, probing units, on foot or riding motorbikes, means that the value of an individual soldier has risen, relative to a tank or other armoured vehicle.
"Whereas previously the killing of an enemy soldier earned 2 points," the Brave 1 statement read, "now it earns 6."
And enemy drone operators are always more valuable than the drones themselves.
The system of rewards is being refined too.
Until now, units have been able to convert their points into cash, which many have used, along with crowd sourcing, to purchase badly needed extra equipment.
Now the e-points system is being directly integrated into something called the Brave 1 Market, which designers describe as "the Amazon for war".
Soldiers can browse more than 1,600 products, use their accumulated points, purchase items directly from manufacturers and leave reviews, with the Ministry of Defence picking up the tab afterwards.
Brave 1 Market is designed to sit alongside traditional, cumbersome military procurement, rather than replace it. The hope is that units will have quicker access to preferred items, from drones to components and unmanned ground vehicles (UGVs) that can evacuate wounded soldiers from dangerous frontline positions.
Points for kills. Amazon for war. To some ears, it might all sound brutal, even callous.
But this is war and Ukraine is determined to hold on. By fighting as effectively, and efficiently as it can.
On Thursday, the White House announced that US President Donald Trump has a medical condition in his veins called chronic venous insufficiency.
During a regular news briefing, Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt revealed that Trump, 79, had noticed swelling in his legs, prompting a check-up with his doctor who diagnosed him with the condition.
Trump had also been recently photographed with patches of make-up on the back of his hand. The White House has said it is unrelated to the vein condition but is instead bruising as a result of frequent handshaking.
Here are the some of the key things to know about the US president's diagnosis.
What is chronic venous insufficiency?
Trump's condition is "benign and common", particularly in individuals over the age of 70, according to a note from White House physician, Captain Sean Barbabella, released to reporters.
Chronic venous insufficiency occurs when leg veins don't allow blood to flow back up to the heart, causing it to pool in the lower limbs.
Normal blood flow from the legs back up to the heart moves against gravity, which in older people can become a difficult process.
This can be due to weakening valves in veins, something that can occur as people age.
What are the symptoms?
When blood pools in the legs due to chronic venous insufficiency, it can cause swelling like the kind seen in Trump's ankles in recent photographs.
"It can be associated with serious conditions, but in and of itself it is not a serious condition, and one that is very common," Dr Matthew Edwards, chair of the Department of Vascular Surgery at Wake Forest University, told the BBC.
"People in his age (group), I would say probably somewhere between 10 and 35% of people would have this."
Experts say other risks include being overweight, having a history of blood clots, and having jobs that require patients to be on their feet for long durations.
What did Trump's doctor say?
After noticing swelling in his legs, President Trump was evaluated by the White House Medical Unit "out of an abundance of caution", a statement from Trump's doctor, Sean Barbabella, said.
Dr Barbabella wrote that President Trump underwent a "comprehensive examination" that revealed chronic venous insufficiency, which he says is a "benign and common condition".
"Importantly, there was no evidence of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) or arterial disease," he added.
Tests also showed "normal cardiac structure and function," Dr Barbabella said, adding: "No signs of heart failure, renal impairment, or systemic illness were identified."
Dr Barbabella also noted bruising on the back of Trump's hand, which has been noticed in recent photographs, sometimes covered by make-up.
"This is consistent with minor soft tissue irritation from frequent handshaking and the use of aspirin, which is taken as part of a standard cardiovascular prevention regimen," he said.
The memo concluded by saying President Trump "remains in excellent health".
How could the condition affect Trump?
The US-based Society for Vascular Surgery said the condition can cause heaviness in the affected limb, as well as swelling and pain.
In some cases, chronic venous insufficiency can also cause painful cramps, spasms and leg ulcers.
Wearing custom-made, medical-grade compression stockings can help manage the condition, and experts also recommend patients elevating their legs at night and using lotion.
What has Trump said about his health?
In April, Trump underwent his first annual physical of his second presidential term.
"President Trump remains in excellent health, exhibiting robust cardiac, pulmonary, neurological, and general physical function," Dr Barbabella said in a memo at the time.
That health assessment revealed that the president takes several medications to control his cholesterol - Rosuvastatin and Ezetimibe, as well as Aspirin for cardiac prevention and Mometasone cream for a skin condition.
The US president has regularly touted his good health and once described himself as "the healthiest president that's ever lived".
After his first annual physical, Trump told reporters that "overall, I felt I was in very good shape", and added that he thought he had "a good heart, a good soul, a very good soul".
This week saw the UK government announce plans to let 16 and 17-year-olds vote, the men who cut down the famous Sycamore Gap tree sent to prison, and Donald Trump wake a BBC reporter up for a surprise interview.
But how much attention did you pay to what else happened in the world over the past seven days?
Quiz collated by Ben Fell.
Fancy testing your memory? Try last week's quiz, or have a go at something from the archives.
When immigration agents came to the farm where he worked, Jaime Alanis tried to hide.
Climbing to the roof of a greenhouse, while agents rounded up and arrested dozens of his coworkers below, Mr Alanis hoped to stay out of sight.
Then he fell.
His neck was broken and skull fractured. He died later in hospital.
Meanwhile, immigration agents fired teargas at a crowd of some 500 protestors, who had gathered to stop the raids outside two legal cannabis farms. Some threw rocks, and the FBI says one fired a gun at federal agents.
Mr Alanis's death, and the violent clashes that ensued at those cannabis farms, are the latest examples of the kind of chaos that has swept across Southern California since the beginning of June, when immigration raids began to intensify in the region.
Those crackdowns sparked protests, which led to US President Donald Trump deploying the National Guard and US Marines, to protect federal officers from the demonstrators and to ensure that his mass deportations, which he had long promised, were carried out.
While many Americans support President Trump's tough immigration policies, the relentlessness of the raids in the region has also triggered a fierce backlash from neighbours and activists. Southern California is home to an estimated 1.4 million undocumented immigrants, many of whom have been forced into hiding - too afraid to go to work, school or even the grocery store.
In so doing, the raids have altered the landscape of one of the country's most populous regions. Businesses are shuttered, cities have cancelled community events - including Fourth of July fireworks celebrations.
"Everyone's looking over their shoulders," says a "raspado" vendor in Los Angeles on a recent Sunday, where normally crowded soccer fields and picnic tables were mostly deserted. As she prepared the shaved ice with sweet strawberry syrup, she seemed wary of questions but grateful for a customer.
"It's never like this," she said.
The raids at the two cannabis farms are now being touted as the largest immigration operation since President Trump took office.
Of the 361 migrants detained during those raids, four had "extensive" criminal records, including rape, kidnapping, and attempted child molestation, media reported. Immigration officers also found 14 migrant children, who the administration claims have been "rescued from potential exploitation, forced labor, and human trafficking".
While the administration frequently highlights the convicted rapists, murderers and drug dealers they have arrested in operations, scores of immigrants - many with no criminal convictions who have spent decades building businesses, families and homes - have been caught in the crosshairs.
"They just kidnap you," says Carlos, who didn't want his full last name used out of fear that he could be deported to his native Guatemala. He has been too afraid to go to work since his sister, Emma, was detained while selling tacos outside a Home Depot last month. "If I'm brown, if I'm Hispanic, they just come and catch you and take you."
The Trump administration says claims that people are being targeted because of their skin colour are "disgusting" and false.
Carlos says he feels a bit safer since a federal judge in California ordered the Trump administration to stop "indiscriminately" detaining people with "roving patrols" of federal agents. But he doesn't trust that they will stop, and he needs to go back to work.
"How am I going to pay my rent," he says. "I'm stuck inside."
Churches and immigrant rights groups have been organising food delivery for people in hiding. They have also been training people to protect immigrants out on the streets using apps, text chains and social media to alert people when federal agents are nearby.
When dozens of armed agents in camouflage descended on MacArthur Park on horseback and in armoured vehicles earlier this month, few were surprised.
Word had spread quickly of the operation – and rumours had swirled that "la migra" was coming hours before the troops arrived. Dozens of protesters swarmed in to greet the troops – including LA Mayor Karen Bass, who demanded they leave the park.
Witnesses say no arrests were made and no one was seen running to escape. By the time troops arrived – with professional looking camera crews recording the overt show of force – the only people in the park were protesters, some kids at a summer camp, and some homeless people asleep in the grass.
"It's been gut wrenching," says Betsy Bolte, who lives near the park and had showed up to protest and yell obscenities at the agents.
"It's war against the people – the heart and soul of the economy. And it's all intentional. It's part of the plan," she said, crying while showing reporters her footage.
Activists accuse the government of terrorising its own people.
"This is part of a programme of terror. From Los Angeles to the Central Coast, the Trump administration is weaponising the federal government and military against Californians," says the advocacy group CAUSE.
But not all Californians agree.
President Trump won 38% of the ballots in November. Recently, the BBC featured the story of one woman who is still devoted to the president and his mass deportation plans, even while she's locked up as an illegal immigrant.
And a lone Trump supporter showed up at the protest at the cannabis farm last week, only to be beaten and jeered at and spit on by protesters.
Perhaps ironically, the architect of many of President Trump's deportation policies, is an Angeleno himself. Senior White House aide Stephen Miller was raised in liberal Santa Monica where even as a teenager he was known on conservative radio for condemning the use of Spanish in his school.
He told Fox News this week that California's "violent" Democratic politicians who show up to protest were inciting violence against federal immigration agents.
"No city can aid and abet an invasion of this country over the will of the American people and the law enforcement officers empowered to enact the American people's wills," he said.
President Trump's "border czar" Tom Homan says Los Angeles has itself to blame because LA's sanctuary laws prevent local law enforcement from cooperating with immigration agents inside jails, where they could detain immigrant offenders outside of the public eye.
"We're going to double down, triple down on sanctuary cities," Mr Homan told reporters, adding that they do not have such overt public raids in Florida because all the sheriffs there let immigration agents into the jails to detain immigrants.
"If they don't let us arrest the bad guy in the county jail, they're going to arrest them in the community. We're going to arrest them at a work site."
In Los Angeles, the impact of the month of raids is noticeable. In parks and neighbourhoods once bustling with shoppers, foot traffic, music and street vendors, the absence of familiar sounds is eerie.
There are 88 cities in LA County and many of them have cancelled public summer events due to the ongoing immigration enforcement activity.
"Many residents have expressed fear and uncertainty, leading them to remain indoors, refrain from work, and withdraw from daily public life," the city of Huntington Park said in a statement about cancelled events. "Our priority is and will continue to be the safety and peace of mind of our community.
Now some immigrants are afraid to turn up for their scheduled hearings, because they are being detained outside court.
Pastor Ara Torosian of Cornerstone Church in West LA said the bulk of his Persian language congregants were asylum seekers. One couple with a three-year-old daughter were detained outside court when they showed up for what they thought was a "routine" hearing. Now they are in Texas at a family detention centre.
Five members of his congregation were detained in June – two of them on the street as Pastor Torosian filmed and begged the agents to stop.
"The are not criminals," he said. "They were obeying everything, not hiding anything."
Lights down, armrest gripped, teeth clenched - just an average evening at the cinema for a horror film fan.
The genre is having a great year in 2025, with the top three examples - Sinners, Final Destination: Bloodlines and 28 Years Later - taking a total of £41.3m ($55.6m) in the UK.
That's compared with £32.1m ($43.1m) for the eight biggest horrors released last year, according to Box Office Mojo.
In North America, scary movies have accounted for 17% of ticket purchases this year - up from 11% in 2024 and 4% a decade ago, according to a report from the Reuters news agency.
"Right now it feels like we're in the renaissance of horror," Chase Sui Wonders, one of the stars of I Know What You Did Last Summer (IKWYDLS), tells BBC Newsbeat.
"Everyone's going to theatres watching horror movies."
The small screen's also helping to switch us on to new releases.
According to data provided by TikTok, there's been an rise in horror-related videos globally on the app in the past 12 months.
It said 10.7m people used the horror hashtag - an increase of 38% - while HorrorTok rose 40% to 2.6m.
The tags aren't exclusively used on movie-related content, but TikTok said it had noticed a spike in videos using them during the Cannes Film Festival in May.
While the figures for the past year could suggest a horror explosion, long-time fans argue the popularity hasn't crept up on us out of nowhere.
Ash Millman, a journalist and presenter who specialises in covering horror, says the genre's success has been more of a slow-burn than a jump-scare.
Over the last 10 years, she says, it's been gathering more critical and commercial success.
She says the success of artier efforts such as Hereditary, from studio A24, and crowd pleasers from horror specialists Blumhouse.
But Ash does admit that this year has been a particularly good one for fans.
"It's got a bit of everything for everyone," she says.
"We have sequels, then amazing new things like Sinners.
"I do think we're going to be talking about 2025 for years to come."
Ash points out that the genre has constantly been fed by producers of smaller-scale indie productions, but the number of major releases this year is notable.
"I think blockbuster horror has become a thing again," she says.
"People want to go to the cinema, they want to see it on the big screen, they want to be scared."
Since the Covid-19 pandemic, when streaming films at home increased, Hollywood has been struggling to get people back into cinemas.
Horror movies, which tend to be relatively cheap to make, seem to be bucking the trend, and IKWYDLS is the latest big studio release hoping to do the same.
Its director Jennifer Kaytin Robinson tells Newsbeat the feeling of watching with an audience is hard to replicate on your sofa.
"I think it's the collective experience of being scared," she says.
"It's so fun. Everybody wants to go to the movies with their friends and jump and scream and have a good time."
IKWYDLS is a retread of the cult 1997 slasher movie about a group of friends who agree to cover up a tragic accident, only to be pursued a year later by an anonymous killer known as the Fisherman.
The original came out in October - the traditional "spooky season" window for big horror releases.
But IKWYDLS cast member Jonah Hauer-King says he thinks the new version won't feel out of place in July.
"Counter-intuitively, though it is frightening and scary, there is something feel-good about this kind of film," he says.
"It doesn't take itself too seriously and it is a bit of a wild ride, so it feels like a summer popcorn film with the scares and with the thrills."
Jonah thinks there is also a deeper reason for the appeal of horror, too.
"I think at the moment people want to go to the cinema for a bit of escapism, forget about things and have a bit of fun," he says.
Ash agrees, and says times of "chaos and uncertainty" in the wider world tend to boost the genre.
"I think that's always a big festering ground for horror to make statements," she says.
"I feel like horror is a reflection of society but gives us a bit of control over it.
"Usually you see people kind of battling against a great evil and overcoming it in blockbuster horror, where we get a nice wrapped-up ending.
"And I think that's a really nice form of escapism and a way of kind of moving past these horrible things going on in the world."
Listen to Newsbeat live at 12:45 and 17:45 weekdays - or listen back here.
A number of Russian spies have been sanctioned for conducting a "sustained campaign of malicious cyber activity" including in the UK, the Foreign Office has said.
Three military intelligence units from Russia's GRU espionage agency and 18 officers have had sanctions placed on them for "spreading chaos and disorder on [Russian President Vladimir] Putin's orders".
UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy linked the activity to the UK's continued support of Ukraine, and said GRU spies were "running a campaign to destabilise Europe".
Separately, the European Union placed its "strongest sanctions" yet on Russia, which Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky called "essential and timely".
The latest EU measures, announced on Friday, included a ban on transactions related to the Nord Stream natural gas pipeline and lowering a cap on the price at which Russian oil can be bought.
The UK joined the move to lower the price cap, with Chancellor Rachel Reeves saying Europe was "turning the screw on the Kremlin's war chest".
They come as European allies hope to ratchet up the pressure on Russia to bring the three-year-long war in Ukraine to an end.
But former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, a close ally of Putin, said his nation's economy would survive the sanctions and that Moscow will continue striking Ukraine "with increasing force".
The EU sanctions are the 18th round of such measures since Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine began in 2022.
The UK Foreign Office said one of the intelligence units it had sanctioned - Unit 26165 - had been involved in targeting Mariupol, including a strike that hit the Ukrainian city's theatre, killing hundreds of civilians.
It said it had also placed measures on intelligence officers who placed spyware on the phone of Yulia Skripal, who with her father was targeted by suspected Russian agents in Salisbury with the nerve agent Novichok.
The Foreign Office added that Russia had targeted UK media organisations, telecoms companies, energy infrastructure and political institutions.
"The Kremlin should be in no doubt: we see what they are trying to do in the shadows and we won't tolerate it," Lammy said in a statement. "Putin's hybrid threats and aggression will never break our resolve."
People or entities that are sanctioned can face a range of restrictions, including having financial assets frozen.
European leaders are also looking for the US to place further pressure on Russia.
Earlier this week, Donald Trump threatened Russia with severe tariffs if a peace deal was not reached within 50 days. The US president has become increasingly impatient with Putin.
The Foreign Office also announced sanctions on three leaders of the "African Initiative", a social media campaign it said was founded, funded and employed by Russia to conduct disinformation operations in West Africa.
Police who were investigating Kneecap's performance at Glastonbury will not take any further action.
Last month, a criminal investigation was launched by Avon and Somerset Police into performances by the Irish language rap trio at the music festival.
It said it had appointed a senior detective to investigate whether comments made on stage amounted to a criminal offence after reviewing footage.
On Friday, the force said detectives had sought advice from the Crown Prosecution Service and chosen not to take any further action against Kneecap on the grounds that there was "insufficient evidence to provide a realistic prospect of conviction for any offence".
"Kneecap was informed of that decision earlier today (Friday 18 July)," it added.
"Enquiries continue to be carried out in relation to separate comments made on stage during Bob Vylan's performance."
The force have also been investigating English punk-rap duo Bob Vylan's performance.
Police did not specify which part of Bob Vylan's or Kneecap's sets were subject to criminal investigation.
But in an earlier statement they said they had recorded them as a public order incident.
Kneecap had faced weeks of controversy over their pro-Palestinian stance, with Sharon Osbourne calling for their US visas to be revoked over messages they displayed on stage at Coachella.
The question over whether Kneecap should even perform at Glastonbury drew comment over the weeks before the festival, with even the prime minister stepping in to say he did not think it was "appropriate".
Group member Liam Óg Ó hAnnaidh had appeared in court charged with a terror offence, related to allegedly displaying a flag at a gig in November in support of proscribed organisation Hezbollah.
He denies the charge.
Kneecap did perform but the BBC did not livestream their performance.
Bob Vylan, whose set was broadcast live, led the crowd at the festival in chants of "death, death to the IDF [Israel Defense Forces]".
Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy called the scenes "appalling and unacceptable", and the BBC apologised for not cutting the feed.
A family who claim The Salt Path author Raynor Winn stole tens of thousands of pounds from their business say trusting her was their "biggest mistake".
Ros Hemmings and her daughter Debbie, from Pwllheli in Gwynedd, allege Ms Winn - who worked for their property business in the early 2000s - stole around £64,000.
It comes after an investigation by the Observer contained claims Ms Winn gave misleading information about her life story in her book The Salt Path, which has been made into a film starring Gillian Anderson and Jason Isaacs.
Ms Winn has called the Observer report "highly misleading" and disputed many of its claims.
The 2018 book The Salt Path, and its recent film adaptation, tells the story of a couple who decide to walk the 630-mile South West Coast Path after their home was repossessed following a bad business deal.
But the Observer claimed Ms Winn - whose legal name is Sally Walker - and her husband, Moth Winn, had lost their home after she took out a loan to repay money she had been accused of stealing from her previous employer, Martin Hemmings.
In a statement issued earlier in July, Ms Winn stood by the book's description of how they came to lose their house saying the dispute with the Hemmings did not result in her and her husband losing their home.
Martin Hemmings, who died in 2012, was an estate agent and property surveyor from north Wales, and husband to Ros Hemmings.
Mrs Hemmings, 74, became friends with Mr Winn when they worked at the same National Trust site in the 1990s.
"I got on extremely well with him," said Mrs Hemmings. "He seemed a really nice person."
Then in 2001, Mr Winn mentioned his wife had lost her job at a hotel as a bookkeeper.
"It coincided with my husband's bookkeeper retiring so I suggested her to my husband," said Mrs Hemmings.
"She came for an interview, and she was the one. She seemed very efficient, we liked her."
But she said after that her husband noticed a change in the business.
"Within a year or so we weren't making any money," said Mrs Hemmings.
Initially they did not suspect anything.
"I did not think there was any reason for this aside from the fact that Martin was rubbish at sending out bills," said Mrs Hemmings.
But their daughter Debbie, who was aged around 29 at the time, became emotional as she remembered receiving a distressed call from her father as the financial pressure built over a number of years.
"He said: 'I just don't know what's gone wrong, I'm working every hour God gives me and there's no money,'" said Debbie Adams, now aged 46.
"About five days after that first call he rings up and goes, she [Winn] has been nicking money. I was like, 'dad come on now, no. Surely there's something gone wrong?' He said 'no, we've had a look and there's money missing'."
They claimed a meeting between Mr Hemmings and the bank manager showed £6,000 to £9,000 was missing. They said Mr Hemmings then went straight to the police and a local solicitor.
They said shortly afterwards, Ms Winn visited them at their home.
"She was crying," said Mrs Hemmings. "She had brought a cheque I think it was for £9,000. She said this is all the money I have, I've had to sell some of my mother's things to do this, can we call it quits?"
Mrs Hemmings said her husband took the money on the advice of the police who said: "It may be all you get."
But they also advised the couple to start going back through the accounts to check if anything else was missing.
She said they went back through years of the business's financial paperwork.
"It was a very upsetting thing to do and it took us weeks and weeks," said Mrs Hemmings. "But we found she had taken about £64,000."
Mrs Hemmings said a few weeks later they received a letter from a solicitor in London offering to pay the money back and legal fees which came to around £90,000.
It included an agreement not to pursue criminal charges which Mr Hemmings signed.
Mrs Hemmings said: "He was keen to do it in a way, we had no money and had nearly been basically bankrupt. She also had young children, and to have a mother in prison or facing a criminal charge, he didn't want that to happen."
In a statement released in July after the Observer article, which included allegations from Mrs Hemmings, Ms Winn acknowledged making "mistakes" earlier in her career.
She said it had been a pressured time, and although she was questioned by police, she was not charged.
"Any mistakes I made during the years in that office, I deeply regret, and I am truly sorry," she said.
Ms Winn said the case had been settled between her and her ex-employer on a "non-admissions basis", because she "did not have the evidence required to support what happened".
She said: "Mr Hemmings was as keen to reach a private resolution as I was."
BBC Wales put Ms Winn's statement to Mrs Hemmings.
She responded: "I think she's just trying to put the best spin on the question.
"The mistake was that we ever employed her, and the biggest mistake my husband made, because obviously I'd recommended her in a way, was that he trusted her."
The Salt Path has sold more than two million copies since its publication, and Ms Winn has written two sequels, The Wild Silence and Landlines, which also focus on themes of nature, wild camping, homelessness and walking.
Mrs Hemmings said she had not read The Salt Path because she did not feel it would reflect her view on why the couple did the walk.
She added: "I'd have stamped on the book I think. Just to gloss over why they ran out of money to me was shocking."
Her daughter Debbie said: "I don't wish ill of them. I just wish that they would tell the truth, and the truth needs to be told."
In her statement in July, Ms Winn said: "The Salt Path is about what happened to Moth and me, after we lost our home and found ourselves homeless on the headlands of the south west.
"It's not about every event or moment in our lives, but rather about a capsule of time when our lives moved from a place of complete despair to a place of hope."
Ros and Debbie said they had no paperwork or contract from the time to back up their claims - although others, like their solicitor involved in the case, Michael Strain, have corroborated their claims as part of the Observer's investigation.
Mrs Hemmings said she was speaking out now to give "a voice" to her late husband.
"I can't forgive her for sort of destroying my husband's confidence in people, because it did," she said.
"And I think that's partly why we didn't talk about it. He was so embarrassed that this had happened to his business."
North Wales Police said they were unable to confirm or deny any details regarding Ms Winn.
When approached for comment, Ms Winn's spokesman referred BBC News to the statement Ms Winn made on 9 July.
He added: "She is very grateful for all the kind messages of support she has received from readers."
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Felix Baumgartner, who once broke the world record for the highest skydive by jumping from the edge of space, has died in a motorised paragliding accident in Italy.
The 56-year-old fell to the ground near the swimming pool of a hotel while flying over the village of Porto Sant'Elpidio in the eastern Marche region.
Porto Sant'Elpidio's Mayor Massimiliano Ciarpella said reports suggested he may have suffered a sudden medical issue mid-air.
The Austrian daredevil made headlines in 2012 when he broke the world record - and the sound barrier - for the highest-ever skydive, jumping from a balloon more than 39km (128,000 ft) up in the stratosphere.
Baumgartner was described as "a symbol of courage and passion for extreme flights" by Ciarpella, who offered the town's condolences for his death.
Fans have left their own tributes beneath one of the skydiver's final social media posts, a video of him working on the motor of his paraglider.
Another post from around 14:30 local time (13:30 BST) bore the text "too much wind" and featured a picture of a full windsock against a cloudy sky.
The extreme sportsman was known as "Fearless Felix" for his adventurous stunts.
He set one of his earliest records in 1999 for the world's lowest base jump, from the 30m (98ft) high hand of Rio de Janeiro's Christ the Redeemer statue.
In the same year, he set the world record for the highest parachute jump from a building, when he launched himself from the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia.
Then, in 2003, he completed a flight across the English Channel wearing a specially made jumpsuit with carbon-fibre wings.
But the extreme sportsman was best known for his space leap. Speaking at a news conference after his record-breaking jump, he said: "When I was standing there on top of the world, you become so humble."
He added: "You don't think about breaking records anymore, you don't think about gaining scientific data - the only thing that you want is to come back alive."
A Libyan man suspected of committing war crimes and crimes against humanity has been arrested in Germany on a warrant issued by the International Criminal Court (ICC).
Khaled Mohamed Ali El Hishri, commonly known as "Al-Buti", is alleged to have been one of the most senior officials at the Mitiga Prison complex in the capital, Tripoli, where thousands of people were detained.
He is suspected of having committed, ordered or overseen crimes including murder, torture and rape.
The atrocities were allegedly committed in the detention unit near Tripoli in the five years from 2015. There is no record of him commenting on the allegations.
The ICC has issued 11 arrest warrants in connection with alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity committed in Libya since the ousting and killing of the country's long-time leader, Muammar Gaddafi, which plunged Libya into civil war.
The situation was referred to the court by the United Nations Security Council in February 2011, at the start of the protests which led to Gaddafi's ousting later that year, with the help of Nato forces.
In its referral, the Security Council condemned the "violence and use of force against civilians... the gross and systematic violation of human rights, including the repression of peaceful demonstrators".
It also expressed "deep concern at the deaths of civilians", while "rejecting unequivocally the incitement to hostility and violence against the civilian population made from the highest level of the Libyan government", then under Gaddafi.
Since the overthrow of Gaddafi, after six decades in power, Libya has been split into areas controlled by various militias and is currently divided between two rival governments.
Mr Hishri was part of the Special Deterrence Force, also known as SDF/Rada, aligned to the interior ministry of the internationally recognised government based in Tripoli.
On 12 May 2025, Libya accepted the ICC's jurisdiction over its territory from 2011 to the end of 2027.
Eight other public ICC arrest warrants are still pending in connection with the violence that followed the fall of Gaddafi.
Earlier this year, Italy controversially released Osama Najim - also known as Almasri - who was allegedly the director of the Mitiga detention centre.
Amnesty International says Mitiga Prison was the scene of "horrific violations committed with total impunity".
Some of those kept in Mitiga are migrants trying to reach Europe.
Mr Najim was freed due to a legal technicality, according to sources in Italy's interior ministry.
The ICC said Mr Najim had been released by Italy "without prior notice or consultation with the Court" and issued another arrest warrant for him. He remains a fugitive.
Mr Hishri will remain in detention in Germany until arrangements are made for him to be surrendered to the ICC's custody and extradited to face justice in The Hague.
The ICC thanked "all the victims and witnesses from Libya who have stepped forward to cooperate in the investigation.
"Their strength, courage and commitment make these important developments possible," it said.
Mr Hishri's case will join others in the court's ongoing efforts to address crimes committed during Libya's conflict, though other suspects remain at large.
President Donald Trump has filed a lawsuit against the Wall Street Journal's parent company, its owner and two reporters, over a report claiming Trump wrote a "bawdy" personal note to paedophile Jeffrey Epstein in 2003.
The lawsuit, filed in Miami, names Dow Jones, News Corp and conservative media tycoon Rupert Murdoch, claiming the paper slandered him and violated libel laws.
Earlier, Trump had threatened that he would force Murdoch "to testify in my lawsuit against him and his 'pile of garbage' newspaper".
Trump says the note, which the paper reported he'd sent for Epstein's 50th birthday, is "fake". It comes amid a backlash from his supporters over his handling of the Epstein case files.
Trump acknowledged that he and members of his staff attempted to halt publication of the story. He said the newspaper and Murdoch "were warned directly" they would be sued if they printed the article, describing it as "false, malicious, and defamatory".
The lawsuit also names the two reporters who wrote the story, Khadeeja Safdar and Joseph Palazzolo.
Earlier on Friday, Trump took to his Truth Social platform, writing: "I look forward to getting Rupert Murdoch to testify in my lawsuit against him and his 'pile of garbage' newspaper, the WSJ. That will be an interesting experience!!!"
According to the Wall Street Journal (WSJ), a letter bearing Trump's name "contained several lines of typewritten text framed by the outline of a naked woman, which appears to be hand-drawn with a heavy marker".
"Inside the outline of the naked woman was a typewritten note styled as an imaginary conversation between Trump and Epstein, written in the third person," the paper reports.
It reportedly contains a joking reference that "Enigmas never age" and allegedly ends with the words: "A pal is a wonderful thing. Happy Birthday – and may every day be another wonderful secret."
Trump denied writing the note after the article was published on Thursday, posting: "These are not my words, not the way I talk. Also, I don't draw pictures."
On Friday, Trump declined to answer reporters' questions about his relationship with Epstein, and why he had not ordered the release of more documents.
Instead, he asked the Attorney General to produce documents related to secretive grand jury testimony, which could prove to be a lengthy court process. It's unclear when or if those documents will be released, or if they contain the details Trump's supporters have been demanding be released publicly.
Trump's order concerning grand jury testimony came after days of sustained pressure from some of his most loyal supporters demanding further disclosures in the Epstein case.
Some Trump loyalists have called for Attorney General Pam Bondi to resign after she reversed course on releasing certain documents related to Epstein.
In February, Bondi said that a "client list" belonging to Epstein was "sitting on my desk right now". Then last week, her office announced that there is no such "client list".
Chad Bianco, a Republican sheriff running for California governor, told BBC News that Trump's handling of the Epstein files was "not what I was expecting" and that "millions" of his followers are disappointed.
"We feel like we're being talked down to like stupid children."
Trump and Murdoch have a relationship that goes back decades.
The 94-year-old media tycoon's media empire, which includes Fox News, is often credited with helping propel Trump to the White House.
But the two grew more distant over the years and their relationship started to collapse following Trump's loss at the ballot box in 2020 to Joe Biden.
"We want to make Trump a non-person," Murdoch wrote in an email that emerged during court battles over Fox's role spreading misinformation in the 2020 election.
Trump's more recent victory in 2024 appeared to bring the two together again. During a February visit to the White House, Trump referred to Murdoch as "a class by himself" and "an amazing guy".
On Sunday, the two men were pictured together attending the Fifa World Cup in New Jersey.
Attorney General Bondi was also seen watching the match from the president's private box.
Meanwhile, members of Congress are pushing to pass a "discharge petition" that would force Bondi to "make publicly available in a searchable and downloadable format all unclassified records, documents, communications, and investigative materials in the possession of the Department of Justice, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation and United States Attorneys' Offices" relating to Epstein.
The effort has brought together some of Congress's fiercest opponents, including Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene and Democrat Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez who are both signed on as supporters.
This was supposed to be a breakout year for Chinese actress Nashi, with major roles in two blockbuster films and a highly anticipated TV drama.
But then in June, the 35-year-old's star crashed as a furore over her exam scores from more than a decade ago sparked a backlash online – and eventually an official investigation into her academic record.
The fallout was immediate. Her name was scrubbed from the credits of the drama, Lychees in Chang'an, and brands began cutting ties.
She joins a growing list of people facing intense scrutiny in China over their privilege, with authorities launching investigations to appease public anger.
In recent months, these viral scandals have hit two actresses, a Harvard graduate, and a doctor from a top Beijing hospital: all young women. They were accused of leveraging family connections to gain unfair advantage.
"There's privilege every year, but this year there's more than ever," says one user on Weibo. Another wrote: "I would love to see more scandals like this. They are truly eye-opening."
Frustrated with rising unemployment and a slowing economy, more and more young Chinese people feel that connections, or guanxi, pay off more than hard work, research shows.
Nashi, for instance, was accused of using her actress mother's connections to enrol in a prestigious drama school.
The programme, which her mother attended in the 1980s, was for ethnic Mongolian students like them. But then old interview clips resurfaced, in which she had said she didn't fulfil a key obligation - she went to study in Norway after graduating, instead of returning to work in Inner Mongolia as required by the programme.
Speculation grew in early June, just as millions of high school seniors sat for the gruelling university entrance exam called Gaokao – the same exam that earned Nashi a spot at the drama school in 2008.
Internet sleuths dug up the lowest scores for that year and suspected they were hers. Did she only go to the drama school because of her mum, they asked. It was a serious enough allegation that officials eventually stepped in to clarify that she had a much higher score.
But it was not enough.
The scandal that started it all
Internet scandals are hardly unique to China but they have become a much-needed outlet – for anger, questions or just disappointment - in a tightly-censored society.
Independent media is almost non-existent, leaving a lot of room for unchecked speculation and just plain rumours to spread rapidly through China's vast social media universe. And in some cases, users online have done their own investigations to verify allegations and unearth wrongdoing.
That is what happened in April when two doctors - identified only by their surnames, Mr Xiao and Ms Dong – at a top Beijing hospital found themselves caught in a national storm over an alleged love affair.
Mr Xiao's wife wrote a letter to his employer accusing him of favouring Ms Dong at work because the two were in a relationship. Among her many allegations was one that eventually cost him his job: she said he had left a sedated patient unattended on the operating table for 40 minutes to defend Ms Dong during a dispute with a nurse.
It was a shocking episode but it quickly became so much more, as attention shifted to Ms Dong. An angry internet found out that she had finished studying to be a doctor in just four years, compared to the minimum of eight years.
They accused her of cheating her way into an elite programme at China's most prestigious medical school, Peking Union Medical College, and plagiarising her graduation thesis.
So intense was the backlash that the National Health Commission investigated and confirmed the allegations. Authorities revoked Ms Dong's licence to practise medicine and her degrees, hoping that would put an end to the controversy.
Her clinical experience – which stretched across various specialties – also came under scrutiny, along with her family's political ties. But officials didn't respond to those accusations, raising further questions about a cover-up.
"There were failures at every step. There's no way they'll dig any deeper," says a young doctor in Qingdao city who did not wish to share her name.
It is not uncommon for people to use "guanxi" to help their children find jobs, she says, but what bothers her is the "deep-rooted unfairness".
Having spent 11 years to become a resident like Ms Dong, she says she and her colleagues had never heard of the programme Ms Dong graduated from: "We were all shocked when we learnt about it. Clearly, it's not meant for ordinary people like us."
This scandal particularly stung in hyper-competitive China where doctors work gruelling hours to earn a residency at top hospitals, or just to hold on to the jobs they do have.
"Why is everything so unfair," she asked, echoing the disillusionment that was widespread in the comments online.
"We work tirelessly treating patients with the utmost care - as if we were their grandchildren. Yet our life is far worse than [Ms] Dong's."
It was this discontent that also drove the outrage against Harvard graduate Yurong Luanna Jiang in June.
She drew attention after her speech at a graduation ceremony went viral the same day a US federal judge blocked US President Donald Trump's ban on foreign students at Harvard. When she shared the experience online, she spoke of a difficult childhood, spent "drifting from place to place", and how studying hard had given her everything she now had.
At first she was applauded for calling for unity in a polarised world - even some Chinese people commented saying they were touched by her words. But her social media posts soon irked the Chinese internet, which then began examining her resume and challenging her claim that hard work alone had led to her success.
Her critics did not sympathise with her challenges – they found holes in every story and when she pushed back, they doubled down.
She seemed to be yet another reminder of the narrowing opportunities that faced many young Chinese people.
Sluggish post-Covid growth has brought layoffs, salary cuts and hiring freezes. Millions of graduates are struggling to find jobs, settling for lower-paid work or quitting the race altogether.
One user on RedNote said she had been posting online in anger about these scandals only to find out hours later that a job offer she had accepted was retracted because the company had paused hiring.
"Sure enough, the things you weren't born with, you'll never have in this lifetime," she wrote.
'You know what you know'
This anger is not new. For some time now, the Chinese government has been censoring excessive displays of wealth by celebrities and influencers. But there are things that escape even their watchful eye, such as a pair of earrings.
Scandal came for actress Huang Yang Tian Tian when a suspicious internet began speculating that earrings she had recently worn cost more than ¥2.3 million ($320,000; £237,100).
They began questioning how she could afford them and discovered that her father was a civil servant-turned-businessman. Then they found out that he had worked in the local government in Ya'an, which was hit by a devastating earthquake in 2008.
The controversy blew up with more questions about the family's wealth, and insinuations that they had profited from post-quake recovery funds. Authorities denied this and said Ms Huang's earrings, made of glass, were a cheap replica of a luxury pair.
But not everyone believes them. "You know what you know," reads one Weibo comment with more than 1,000 likes. "Were the officials laughing?" another user asks.
While the Chinese Communist Party is concerned enough to launch investigations, their swift response does not seem to be enough.
"The loss of public trust didn't happen in a day or two," writes a user on RedNote. "It's the result of one investigation after another that insults our intelligence, one unresolved incident after another."
Public frustration lingers as the Party tries to grapple with increasing discontent. And its message to young people is they should "eat bitterness", a Chinese phrase for enduring hardship, in the pursuit of "national rejuvenation".
But online, one of the few places where Chinese people still speak openly, that message seems to be ringing hollow as people debate the advantages enjoyed by "the elites", often simply referred to as "they".
"They are the reason why we worked so hard for three generations and are still in misery," a top-liked comment on Weibo reads.
Another comment on RedNote, where no-one in particular is being accused, says: "We earn money one cent at a time, while they embezzle hundreds of millions - and then they teach us that hard work leads to prosperity and that labour is honourable."
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert will end in May 2026, the CBS television network announced in a surprise statement on Thursday.
The move "is purely a financial decision against a challenging backdrop in late night [television]," and "is not related in any way to the show's performance, content or other matters," CBS said.
The announcement comes just two weeks after CBS parent company Paramount settled a lawsuit with President Donald Trump stemming from a CBS interview with his 2024 election rival Kamala Harris.
The move brings a close to the more than three-decade old programme, leaving the network without a late-night comedy talk show for the first time since 1993.
Host Stephen Colbert broke the news at a taping earlier on Thursday evening, triggering a chorus of boos from the live studio audience.
"I do want to say that the folks at CBS have been great partners," Colbert said, adding: "And of course, I'm grateful to you, the audience, who have joined us every night in here, out there, all around the world."
Colbert had been informed of the decision on Wednesday night, he told the audience during his Thursday monologue.
"Yeah, I share your feeling," he said, as the crowd in the Ed Sullivan Theatre in New York shouted "no" and booed.
"It's not just the end of our show, but it's the end of The Late Show on CBS. I'm not being replaced. This is all just going away," he continued. "It is a fantastic job. I wish somebody else was getting it."
The Late Show was created by CBS, the BBC's US news partner, in 1993 as a competitor to NBC. It came after a dispute between David Letterman and host Jay Leno over who should succeed Johnny Carson on the wildly-popular NBC's Tonight Show.
Colbert took over the CBS programme from David Letterman in 2015, and has become one of Trump's staunchest critics on late night TV.
Before taking over the job at The Late Show, Colbert had been the host of "The Colbert Report" on Comedy Central – a programme which skewered American conservative politics and culture.
The announcement of the ending of the programme came amid talks between Paramount and Skydance Media to merge the two companies, a move that would require approval from the US federal government.
Democratic Senator Adam Schiff posted on X on Thursday that he had just finished taping an interview with Colbert, moments before the cancellation was announced.
He questioned whether the announcement was tied to the $16m (£12m) settlement the network agreed to pay to Trump, writing: "If Paramount and CBS ended the Late Show for political reasons, the public deserved to know".
The settlement came after Trump sued CBS last October alleging the network had deceptively edited an interview that aired on its 60 Minutes news programme with his presidential election rival Kamala Harris, to "tip the scales in favour of the Democratic party".
Paramount said it would pay to settle the suit, but with the money allocated to Trump's future presidential library, not paid to him "directly or indirectly".
Colbert has been a major critic of Trump, and has hosted many Democratic politicians during his tenure as host. Last month, he held a discussion with Zohran Mamdani, a Democratic Socialist leading the race to be New York City's next mayor.
The decision to cancel the programme comes as networks struggle to attract younger viewers, amid competition from online streamers and podcasts, along with increased costs of live television.
"We consider Stephen Colbert irreplaceable and will retire 'The Late Show' franchise," CBS said in its statement.
"We are proud that Stephen called CBS home. He and the broadcast will be remembered in the pantheon of greats that graced late night television.
Rival broadcast networks, ABC and NBC, will continue to air their late-night talk shows.
ABC's Jimmy Kimmel Live! will continue taping in the fall, while NBC hosts Jimmy Fallon and Seth Meyers have signed contracts to continue hosting The Tonight Show and Late Night until 2028, according to The Hollywood Reporter.
Lawmakers in the US have passed the country's first major national cryptocurrency legislation.
It is a major milestone for the once fringe industry, which has been lobbying Congress over regulation for years and poured millions into last year's election, backing candidates that included Donald Trump.
The bill sets up a regulatory regime for so-called stablecoins, a kind of cryptocurrency backed by assets seen as reliable, such as the dollar.
Trump is expected to sign the legislation into law on Friday, after the House passed the bill on Thursday, joining the Senate, which had approved the measure last month.
Known as the Genius Act, the bill is one of three pieces of cryptocurrency legislation advancing in Washington that is backed by Trump.
The president once derided crypto as a scam but his opinion shifted as he won backing from the sector and got involved in the industry as a businessman, with ties to firms such as World Liberty Financial.
Supporters of the legislation say it is aimed at providing clear rules for a growing industry, ensuring the US keeps pace with advances in payment systems. The crypto industry had been pushing for such measures in hopes it could spur more people to use digital currency and bring it more into the mainstream.
The provisions include requiring stablecoins, an alternate cryptocurrency to the likes of Bitcoin, to be backed one-for-one with US dollars, or other low-risk assets. Stablecoins are used by traders to move funds between different crypto tokens.
The use of these coins, which are viewed as less volatile, has grown rapidly in recent years.
Critics argue the bill will introduce new risks into the financial system, by legitimising stablecoins without erecting sufficient protections for consumers.
For example, they said it would deepen tech firms' participation in bank-like activities without subjecting them to similar oversight, and leave customers hanging in a convoluted bankruptcy process in the event that a stablecoin firm should fail.
They had also tried to rally opposition to the bill by arguing that voting in favour was effectively condoning Trump's business activities - including his family's promotion of their own crypto coins.
But it nevertheless drew significant support from Democrats, about half of which supported the bill, as well as the majority of Republicans.
"Some members may believe passage of this bill, even with flaws, is better than the status quo. We believe this is a fundamental misunderstanding of the risks involved with these instruments," a coalition of consumer and advocacy groups wrote in a letter to Congress this spring.
They warned that passage would "allow the proliferation of assets that consumers will wrongly perceive as safe".
Analysts had expected Congress to pass all three bills earlier this week, but unexpected hiccups led to delays.
The two other bills have passed the House and are headed to the Senate, where Republicans hold a narrow majority. Those bills would prevent the US central bank from establishing a digital currency and set up a regulatory framework for other forms of crypto.
The advance comes as Trump is reportedly working on an presidential order that could allow retirement accounts to be invested in private assets, such as crypto, gold and private equity.
The value of Bitcoin hit a new record this week, passing $120,000 (£89,000).
But Terry Haines of Washington-based analysis firm Pangaea Policy, said he did not expect the other two bills, which are more significant, to go further.
"This is the end of crypto's wins for quite a while - and the only one," he wrote. "When the easy part, stablecoin, takes ~4 to 5 years and barely survives industry scandals, it's not much to crow about."
French fries turned around the fortunes of Jitesh Patel.
He comes from a family of farmers in Gujarat in the northwest of India. Traditionally they grew cotton, but the returns were poor.
Droughts in 2001 and 2002 made the situation worse and the Patels knew things had to change.
"We realised that we had to start growing something that does not require lot of water," Mr Patel says.
So, they experimented with potatoes. Initially they tried table potatoes; the kind available in local markets and cooked at home, but the returns weren't much better than cotton.
Spurred by the arrival of french fry makers in their state, in 2007 they started growing the varieties of potato used by the food industry. It turned out to be a winning strategy.
"Since then, no looking back," says Mr Patel.
Mr Patel is part of India's rise to potato superpower status. It is already the world's second biggest spud producer.
But it's the export market, particularly of french fries, that's really flying.
Gujarat has become India's capital of french fry production, home to huge factories churning out chips, including facilities belonging to Canadian giant McCain Foods and India's biggest maker of French Fries, HyFun Foods.
From Gujarat fries are sent all over over the world. But the most important markets at the moment are in Asia, including the Philippines, Thailand and Indonesia, according to Devendra K, who has been studying the potato market for many years.
In February of this year, monthly exports of Indian frozen fries broke the 20,000 tonnes barrier for the first time. In the year to February, India's fry exports totalled 181,773 tonnes, a 45% increase compared with the previous year.
The success is partly down to price.
"Indian frozen fries are noted for being competitively priced in the international market," says Devendra.
He says that in 2024, the average price of Indian fries was even cheaper than those from China.
For the french fry makers, it's boom time.
"India has emerged as a significant player and exporter due to its abundant agricultural produce, cost-effective manufacturing, and growing focus on quality standards," says Haresh Karamchandani, CEO of HyFun Foods.
HyFun has seven plants processing potatoes in Gujarat with another two coming online by 2026.
"Urbanisation, increasing disposable incomes and changing lifestyles have promoted the consumption of frozen foods, not only in the household but also in food service establishments," says Mr Karamchandani.
Meeting that demand has required decades of innovation from farmers.
Jitesh Patel studied agriculture at university and has been applying science to farming ever since.
Along with friends and family they are continuously trying to improve their potato yield.
"We are a well educated bunch of farmers, so we keep trying new methods," he says.
One of their first innovations, back in 2003, was to switch to a drip system of irrigation, rather than flooding fields with water.
To keep the soil productive the fields are rested over the summer, and fertilised with cow manure.
Their focus now is finding the perfect potato plant.
"We are in the process of experimenting with seeds and soon we will have a new variety," he says.
Jain Irrigation Systems is a large agricultural technology company. As well as selling irrigation equipment, it has teams of technicians developing seeds for agriculture, including potato plants.
They use a set of techniques known as tissue culture. It's a way of cloning plants, with desirable traits and eliminating disease.
It involves growing small pieces of plant tissue in a controlled laboratory environment to create virus-free plantlets. These plantlets can then be used to produce more seed potatoes through methods like taking cuttings.
"Potato seeds destined for future seed production undergo meticulous breeding practices under the supervision of breeders," says Vijay Singh, vice president of marketing at the company.
One issue they are tackling at the moment concerns a variety of potatoes used to make chips. Farmers found that by November the potato crop starts to go brown because of its sugar content.
"Companies like us who are into tissue culture are trying to come up with a new variety to overcome the challenges that the industry is facing," says Mr Singh.
While Indian farmers are working on improving their yields, investment is needed elsewhere in the frozen food industry.
In particular, firms need to be able to store and transport goods at sub-zero temperatures.
Modern cold storage facilities have been built, but more are needed.
"Only about 10–15% of India's cold storage facilities are suitable for storing frozen foods," says Vijay Kumar Nayak, co-founder of Indo Agri Foods, an exporter of Indian food.
"These facilities are unevenly distributed, heavily concentrated in a few states, leaving rural and remote regions severely underserved.
Transportation is a problem as well.
"There is a notable shortage of specialised refrigerated trucks and containers, making temperature-controlled transportation extremely difficult and increasing the risk of spoilage," he says.
A reliable electricity supply is also essential.
"Frequent power outages in many parts of the country increase the chances of spoilage and make running a reliable frozen food supply chain a daunting task," says Mr Nayak.
"Indian companies face intense competition in export markets from countries like China, Thailand and Brazil. These nations benefit from more advanced logistics, infrastructure, and production systems," he points out.
Back at his Gujarat farm Mr Patel is happy that the chip makers moved in.
"Gujarat has become a food processing hub. Most of the farmers, including me, have become contract farmers which gives us security and good money for our yield," he says.
Mark Zuckerberg has agreed to settle a multibillion dollar lawsuit with a group of shareholders over how top executives and directors at Meta handled repeated privacy violations by Facebook.
The shareholders were seeking $8bn (£6bn) in damages. It is unclear how much they agreed to settle for.
The settlement was announced on Thursday by a lawyer for the shareholders, just before the trial was about to enter its second day in a Delaware court. Meta declined to comment on the settlement.
The Meta shareholders had alleged that Mr Zuckerberg's actions led to the Cambridge Analytica scandal in which the data of millions of Facebook users was leaked and used by a political consulting firm.
The shareholders had asked the judge to order the 11 defendants named in the case to reimburse Meta for more than $8bn in fines and legal costs, which they say the company has had to pay in order to resolve claims of users' privacy breaches.
The shareholders also questioned the timing of share sales by top brass at the company.
Meta was formerly known as Facebook, and is the parent company of the social media platform, along with photo-sharing app Instagram and the messaging app WhatsApp.
The shareholder lawsuit was filed in 2018, after it was revealed that data from millions of Facebook users was accessed by Cambridge Analytica, a political consulting firm that worked for President Donald Trump's 2016 election campaign.
Among the defendants was Jeffrey Zients, who served as Meta director for two years starting in May 2018, and was also former President Joe Biden's White House chief of staff.
In testimony on Wednesday, Mr Zients acknowledged that a $5 billion Federal Trade Commission fine was substantial, but said that the company did not agree to pay it to protect Mr Zuckerberg from legal liability.
Other defendants included Peter Thiel, co-founder of Palantir Technologies, and Reed Hastings, co-founder of Netflix.
The settlement allows the defendants to avoid testifying under oath.
Former chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg had also been slated to testify.
"One thing that could have come out of a full trial is a full accounting of how Facebook came to adopt and approve any illegal practices," said Ann Lipton, a law professor at the University of Colorado.
"It's valuable for society to know how this happened and what went wrong that they were breaking the law, if they were breaking the law," Lipton added. "That kind of exposure serves a valuable social purpose. We won't get that accounting now."
Meta was not a direct party to the lawsuit but has said that its has invested billions of dollars in privacy reforms since 2019.
Prior to the settlement, Chancellor Kathaleen McCormick, a Delaware judge, was set to hear testimony through next week before rendering a decision.
Last year, Ms McCormick drew the ire of Tesla boss Elon Musk after she rejected his $56 billion pay package.
The electric vehicle-maker has left Delaware and reincorporated in Texas.
Netflix says it has used visual effects created by generative artificial intelligence (AI) on screen for the first time in one of its original TV shows.
The streaming giant's co-CEO Ted Sarandos said AI, which produces videos and images based on prompts, was used to create a scene of a building collapsing in the Argentine science fiction show, The Eternauts.
He praised the technology as an "incredible opportunity to help creators make films and series better, not just cheaper."
The use of generative AI is controversial in the entertainment industry and has sparked fears that it will replace the work of humans.
The comments came after the company unveiled revenue of $11.08bn (£8.25bn) for the three months to the end of June,16% higher than the same time last year.
Netflix said the better-than-expected performance was boosted by the success of the third and final series of South Korean thriller Squid Game, which has so far attracted 122 million views.
Asked about Netflix's use of AI, Mr Sarandos said the technology has allowed productions with smaller budgets to use advanced visual effects.
The generative AI used in The Eternauts helped its production team to complete a sequence 10 times faster than if they had used traditional special effects tools, he said.
"The cost of it would just wouldn't have been feasible for a show in that budget."
"That sequence actually is the very first [generative] AI final footage to appear on screen in a Netflix original series or film. So the creators were thrilled with the result," said Mr Sarandos.
AI was among the key concerns raised during a Hollywood strike in 2023.
During the three-month walkout, the Screen Actors Guild–American Federation of Television and Radio Artists union called for tighter regulation of the use of AI.
Meta has apologised after an Indian chief minister's social media post was mistranslated on some of its platforms, falsely suggesting he had died, according to Press Trust of India (PTI) news agency.
On Tuesday, Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah posted a condolence message in Kannada language on Facebook and Instagram mourning the death of an actress.
But when the posts were auto-translated into English, they mistakenly said that Mr Siddaramaiah had "passed away".
On Thursday, a Meta spokesperson told PTI that the platform had "fixed an issue that briefly caused this inaccurate Kannada translation".
"We apologize that this happened," the spokesperson added.
The original post showing him paying tribute to veteran actress B Saroja Devi was wrongly translated to say he had died.
Following the error, Mr Siddaramaiah criticised Meta's auto-translate feature for Kannada, accusing it of "distorting facts' and 'misleading users". He warned that such mistranslations were especially dangerous in the context of official communication.
On Thursday, Siddaramaiah's media advisor KV Prabhakar wrote to Meta, asking it to fix the translation and temporarily suspend Kannada auto-translation until its accuracy improves. He also urged the company to work with Kannada language experts to prevent such errors.
When the BBC checked Mr Siddaramaiah's post on Friday, its English translation read:
"The multilingual star, senior actress B Sarojadevi who passed away yesterday, paid his last respects."
Meta has not commented on whether it would suspend Kannada translations until its accuracy was improved.
After the thirtieth consecutive month without rain, the townsfolk of San Francisco de Conchos in the northern Mexican state of Chihuahua gather to plead for divine intervention.
On the shores of Lake Toronto, the reservoir behind the state's most important dam – called La Boquilla, a priest leads local farmers on horseback and their families in prayer, the stony ground beneath their feet once part of the lakebed before the waters receded to today's critically low levels.
Among those with their heads bowed is Rafael Betance, who has voluntarily monitored La Boquilla for the state water authority for 35 years.
"This should all be underwater," he says, motioning towards the parched expanse of exposed white rocks.
"The last time the dam was full and caused a tiny overflow was 2017," Mr Betance recalls. "Since then, it's decreased year on year.
"We're currently at 26.52 metres below the high-water mark, less than 14% of its capacity."
Little wonder the local community is beseeching the heavens for rain. Still, few expect any let up from the crippling drought and sweltering 42C (107.6F) heat.
Now, a long-running dispute with Texas over the scarce resource is threatening to turn ugly.
Under the terms of a 1944 water-sharing agreement, Mexico must send 430 million cubic metres of water per year from the Rio Grande to the US.
The water is sent via a system of tributary channels into shared dams owned and operated by the International Boundary and Water Commission (IBWC), which oversees and regulates water-sharing between the two neighbours.
In return, the US sends its own much larger allocation (nearly 1.85 billion cubic metres a year) from the Colorado River to supply the Mexican border cities of Tijuana and Mexicali.
Mexico is in arrears and has failed to keep up with its water deliveries for much of the 21st Century.
Following pressure from Republican lawmakers in Texas, the Trump administration warned Mexico that water could be withheld from the Colorado River unless it fulfils its obligations under the 81-year-old treaty.
In April, on his Truth Social account, US President Donald Trump accused Mexico of "stealing" the water and threatened to keep escalating to "TARIFFS, and maybe even SANCTIONS" until Mexico sends Texas what it owes. Still, he gave no firm deadline by when such retaliation might happen.
For her part, the Mexican President, Claudia Sheinbaum, acknowledged Mexico's shortfall but struck a more conciliatory tone.
Since then, Mexico has transferred an initial 75 million cubic metres of water to the US via their shared dam, Amistad, located along the border, but that is just a fraction of the roughly 1.5 billion cubic metres of Mexico's outstanding debt.
Feelings on cross-border water sharing can run dangerously high: in September 2020, two Mexican people were killed in clashes with the National Guard at La Boquilla's sluice gates as farmers tried to stop the water from being redirected.
Amid the acute drought, the prevailing view in Chihuahua is that "you can't take from what isn't there", says local expert Rafael Betance.
But that doesn't help Brian Jones to water his crops.
A fourth-generation farmer in the Rio Grande Valley in Texas, for the past three years he has only been able to plant half of his farm because he doesn't have enough irrigation water.
"We've been battling Mexico as they've not been living up to their part of the deal," he says. "All we're asking for is what's rightfully ours under the treaty, nothing extra."
Mr Jones also disputes the extent of the problem in Chihuahua. He believes that in October 2022 the state received more than enough water to share, but released "exactly zero" to the US, accusing his neighbours of "hoarding water and using it to grow crops to compete with us".
Farmers on the Mexican side read the agreement differently. They say it only binds them to send water north when Mexico can satisfy its own needs, and argue that Chihuahua's ongoing drought means there's no excess available.
Beyond the water scarcity, there are also arguments over agricultural efficiency.
Walnut trees and alfalfa are two of the main crops in Chihuahua's Rio Conchos Valley, both of which require a lot of watering – walnut trees need on average 250 litres a day.
Traditionally, Mexican farmers have simply flooded their fields with water from the irrigation channel. Driving around the valley one quickly sees walnut trees sitting in shallow pools, the water flowing in from an open pipe.
The complaint from Texas is obvious: the practice is wasteful and easily avoided with more responsible and sustainable farming methods.
As Jaime Ramirez walks through his walnut groves, the former mayor of San Francisco de Conchos shows me how his modern sprinkler system ensures his walnut trees are properly watered all year round without wasting the precious resource.
"With the sprinklers, we use around 60% less than flooding the fields," he says. The system also means they can water the trees less frequently, which is particularly useful when the Rio Conchos is too low to allow local irrigation.
Mr Ramirez readily admits, though, that some of his neighbours aren't so conscientious. As a former local mayor, he urges understanding.
Some haven't adopted the sprinkler method because of the costs in setting it up, he says. He's tried to show other farmers that it works out cheaper in the long run, saving on energy and water costs.
But farmers in Texas must also understand that their counterparts in Chihuahua are facing an existential threat, Mr Ramirez insists.
"This is a desert region and the rains haven't come. If the rain doesn't come again this year, then next year there simply won't be any agriculture left. All the available water will have to be conserved as drinking water for human beings," he warns.
Many in northern Mexico believe the 1944 water-sharing treaty is no longer fit for purpose. Mr Ramirez thinks it may have been adequate for conditions eight decades ago, but it has failed to adapt with the times or properly account for population growth or the ravages of climate change.
Back across the border, Texan farmer Brian Jones says the agreement has stood the test of time and should still be honoured.
"This treaty was signed when my grandfather was farming. It's been through my grandfather, my father and now me," he says.
"Now we're seeing Mexico not comply. It's very angering to have a farm where I'm only able to plant half the ground because I don't have irrigation water."
Trump's tougher stance has given the local farmers "a pep in our step", he adds.
Meanwhile, the drought hasn't just harmed farming in Chihuahua.
With Lake Toronto's levels so low, Mr Betance says the remaining water in the reservoir is heating up with uncommon speed and creating a potential disaster for the marine life which sustains a once-thriving tourism industry.
The valley's outlook hasn't been this dire, Mr Betance says, in the entire time he's spent carefully recording the lake's ups and downs. "Praying for rain is all we have left," he reflects.
Additional reporting by Angélica Casas.
When Beverly Morris retired in 2016, she thought she had found her dream home - a peaceful stretch of rural Georgia, surrounded by trees and quiet.
Today, it's anything but.
Just 400 yards (366m) from her front porch in Mansfield, Georgia, sits a large, windowless building filled with servers, cables, and blinking lights.
It's a data centre - one of many popping up across small-town America, and around the globe, to power everything from online banking to artificial intelligence tools like ChatGPT.
"I can't live in my home with half of my home functioning and no water," Ms Morris says. "I can't drink the water."
She believes the construction of the centre, which is owned by Meta (the parent company of Facebook), disrupted her private well, causing an excessive build-up of sediment. Ms Morris now hauls water in buckets to flush her toilet.
She says she had to fix the plumbing in her kitchen to restore water pressure. But the water that comes of the tap still has residue in it.
"I'm afraid to drink the water, but I still cook with it, and brush my teeth with it," says Morris. "Am I worried about it? Yes."
Meta, however, says the two aren't connected.
In a statement to the BBC, Meta said that "being a good neighbour is a priority".
The company commissioned an independent groundwater study to investigate Morris's concerns. According to the report, its data centre operation did "not adversely affect groundwater conditions in the area".
While Meta disputes that it has caused the problems with Ms Morris' water, there's no doubt, in her estimation, that the company has worn out its welcome as her neighbour.
"This was my perfect spot," she says. "But it isn't anymore."
We tend to think of the cloud as something invisible - floating above us in the digital ether. But the reality is very physical.
The cloud lives in over 10,000 data centres around the world, most of them located in the US, followed by the UK and Germany.
With AI now driving a surge in online activity, that number is growing fast. And with them, more complaints from nearby residents.
The US boom is being challenged by a rise in local activism - with $64bn (£47bn) in projects delayed or blocked nationwide, according to a report from pressure group Data Center Watch.
And the concerns aren't just about construction. It's also about water usage. Keeping those servers cool requires a lot of water.
"These are very hot processors," Mark Mills of the National Center for Energy Analytics testified before Congress back in April. "It takes a lot of water to cool them down."
Many centres use evaporative cooling systems, where water absorbs heat and evaporates - similar to how sweat wicks away heat from our bodies. On hot days, a single facility can use millions of gallons.
One study estimates that AI-driven data centres could consume 1.7 trillion gallons of water globally by 2027.
Few places illustrate this tension more clearly than Georgia - one of the fastest-growing data centre markets in the US.
Its humid climate provides a natural and more cost-effective source of water for cooling data centres, making it attractive to developers. But that abundance may come at a cost.
Gordon Rogers is the executive director of Flint Riverkeeper, a non-profit advocacy group that monitors the health of Georgia's Flint River. He takes us to a creek downhill from a new construction site for a data centre being built by US firm Quality Technology Services (QTS).
George Dietz, a local volunteer, scoops up a sample of the water into a clear plastic bag. It's cloudy and brown.
"It shouldn't be that colour," he says. To him, this suggests sediment runoff - and possibly flocculants. These are chemicals used in construction to bind soil and prevent erosion, but if they escape into the water system, they can create sludge.
QTS says its data centres meet high environmental standards and bring millions in local tax revenue.
While construction is often carried out by third-party contractors, local residents are the ones left to deal with the consequences.
"They shouldn't be doing it," Mr Rogers says. "A larger wealthier property owner does not have more property rights than a smaller, less wealthy property owner."
Tech giants say they are aware of the issues and are taking action.
"Our goal is that by 2030, we'll be putting more water back into the watersheds and communities where we're operating data centres, than we're taking out," says Will Hewes, global water stewardship lead at Amazon Web Services (AWS), which runs more data centres than any other company globally.
He says AWS is investing in projects like leak repairs, rainwater harvesting, and using treated wastewater for cooling. In Virginia, the company is working with farmers to reduce nutrient pollution in Chesapeake Bay, the largest estuary in the US.
In South Africa and India - where AWS doesn't use water for cooling - the company is still investing in water access and quality initiatives.
In the Americas, Mr Hewes says, water is only used on about 10% of the hottest days each year.
Still, the numbers add up. A single AI query - for example, a request to ChatGPT - can use about as much water as a small bottle you'd buy from the corner shop. Multiply that by billions of queries a day, and the scale becomes clear.
Prof Rajiv Garg teaches cloud computing at Emory University in Atlanta. He says these data centres aren't going away - if anything, they're becoming the backbone of modern life.
"There's no turning back," Prof Garg says.
But there is a path forward. The key, he argues, is long-term thinking: smarter cooling systems, rainwater harvesting, and more efficient infrastructure.
In the short term, data centres will create "a huge strain", he admits. But the industry is starting to shift toward sustainability.
And yet, that's little consolation to homeowners like Beverly Morris - stuck between yesterday's dream and tomorrow's infrastructure.
Data centres have become more than just an industry trend - they're now part of national policy. President Donald Trump recently vowed to build the largest AI infrastructure project in history, calling it "a future powered by American data".
Back in Georgia, the sun beats down through thick humidity - a reminder of why the state is so attractive to data centre developers.
For locals, the future of tech is already here. And it's loud, thirsty, and sometimes hard to live next to.
As AI grows, the challenge is clear: how to power tomorrow's digital world without draining the most basic resource of all - water.
Correction: This article originally said that Beverly Morris lives in Fayette County, Georgia, and has been amended to explain that she lives in Mansfield, Georgia.
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On the day I visit Octopus Energy's heat pump factory in Craigavon, Northern Ireland, temperatures in London reached 29C.
Some of the staff meeting me, who are usually based in the south of England, are beaming. It's wonderful to escape the heat, they say.
And who can blame them. Climate change is making the UK hotter. In order to do something about that, decarbonising our energy systems – including domestic heating – is becoming more and more urgent.
Heat pumps run on electricity, not oil or gas, and Octopus is manufacturing heat pumps of its own design right here in Northern Ireland.
"It kind of gets harder as you go up – it's like levels in a game," says Patrick Doran, one of the workers here, after I view the production line.
He's referring to how, in just under a year, he's completed training in each stage of the manufacturing process.
From fitting pipework to attaching bundles of cables, which connect up the heat pump's internal electronics. "I get to do something different every day," enthuses Doran.
The government wants to see 600,000 heat pumps going in to UK homes annually by 2028, just three years away.
While installations have quickened recently, the country remains far behind that target. Total UK heat pump sales were slightly below 100,000 in 2024.
Demand for heat pumps boomed in Europe when gas prices spiralled following Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 2022 – but that enthusiasm has since cooled.
Gas has become slightly cheaper again meaning that heat pumps are finding it harder to compete against gas boilers in terms of running costs.
This factory, in a medium-sized warehouse, can churn out 600 heat pumps per month, I'm told – and this will soon double when a second production line becomes active.
And in principle, Octopus could introduce additional shifts here and make many times that number of units. If higher demand materialises.
"We can have a plug-and-play solution that works in the majority of homes in the UK," says Aimee Clark, head of commercial, as she explains why Octopus wanted to manufacture its own heat pump – which is unusual among electricity providers, to say the least.
Other heat pump makers, including Vaillant, have UK manufacturing sites. And Copeland, which makes heat pumps components, has a factory here in Northern Ireland. It supplies compressors to Octopus.
Heat pumps work by absorbing heat from the environment, usually the air. It's a way of harvesting free heat, if you like.
Ambient heat causes a refrigerant inside the heat pump to warm up and expand. A compressor squeezes that refrigerant, raising its temperature yet further.
Finally, a heat exchanger transfers this heat to water that gets pumped around your radiators, for instance.
The Octopus heat pumps sport an unusual design. They come in a dark grey plastic casing. I have to admit, to me, it looks a little bit dour – but it packs some original tech.
Mateusz Dewhurst, director of manufacturing, points out an internal metal plate the company has patented – refrigerant flows through this plate, absorbing heat from the machine's electronics and cooling them down. "That's a performance gain," says Mr Dewhurst.
He also says the heat pump's casing contains small grey insulation beads to reduce heat loss from the system. Exactly the same kind of beads that are sometimes used to insulate cavity walls in buildings, he explains.
Heat pump technology has been around since the 1800s.
Zhiwei Ma at Durham University says manufacturing these devices is relatively straightforward – he made one himself when he was a PhD student.
"It worked fine," he recalls. Companies such as Octopus are able to buy in the main components and assemble a finished product. "There's very little room to improve anything," argues Dr Ma.
Octopus would perhaps disagree. They say their design choices make a difference to overall performance, which the firm can track thanks to the many heat and pressure sensors it secretes within the device.
Heat pumps can produce multiple kilowatts of heat for every kilowatt of electricity they consume, a ratio known as their co-efficient of performance (Cop). Ensuring the Cop is as high as possible really matters in terms of keeping running costs low.
Octopus technicians can intervene should data from a heat pump's sensors indicate a severe dip in performance. And customers also get an overview of their heat pump's efficiency via a smartphone app.
Ensuring that heat pumps are installed competently is paramount, says Steven Metcalf at the University of Warwick. He and colleagues occasionally work with Mitsubishi, which has a heat pump factory in Scotland.
"It could be the difference of a Cop of 2.5 versus 4 – your bills will scale with that," he explains. "It can be a huge penalty for getting a bad install."
Public acceptance of heat pumps rests on people having confidence that switching to such a system won't turn out to be a massive headache – though it's worth saying that, in other countries such as colder Norway, heat pumps have long been embraced by locals.
Octopus says surveys of its customers suggest a majority find their heat pump costs the same or less than their old gas boiler, and provides heat that is just as comfortable if not more so.
Taxing fossil fuels harder is one way to spur demand for domestic appliances that use electricity as an alternative, says Paul Kenny, director general of the European Heat Pump Association, an industry body.
"Right now what we have is factories that are at low capacity factors, they're idle or running well below what they could be running," he says, referring to the slackening demand for heat pumps in Europe at present.
There could also be greater consistency regarding subsidies.
Despite having the highest proportion of especially-polluting oil heating systems of any UK nation, Northern Ireland is the only region within the UK or Ireland that doesn't have a widely available grant to reduce the cost of a heat pump installation.
I point out the irony, therefore, of making heat pumps here to TJ Root, Octopus's Cosy program director, after my factory tour. "It's incredibly ironic," he agrees.
A British trader who was jailed in the United States for allegedly manipulating foreign exchange rates has had his conviction overturned after a nine-year struggle for justice.
Former HSBC trader Mark Johnson, 59, has fought to establish his innocence ever since he was convicted of fraud in 2017 in connection with a large foreign exchange trade six years earlier.
He served time in jail in US federal prisons and in Wandsworth prison in the UK, exhausting avenues of appeal before being released on license in 2022.
After the US courts in 2023 overturned a law that was used to prosecute him, he launched a fresh appeal, which has now been allowed by a US appeal court, granting him a full acquittal.
Mr Johnson's US lawyer Alexandra Shapiro said: "We are delighted that justice has finally been achieved for Mark Johnson, after a nine-year ordeal. This is a case that never should have been brought."
Prosecutors at Mr Johnson's trial alleged he had conspired with a colleague to increase the price of sterling against the dollar before executing a huge foreign exchange trade for HSBC's client Cairn Energy, converting $3.5bn into pounds.
They alleged that on behalf of HSBC, Mr Johnson arranged to buy sterling in advance, inflating the currency's value so that the bank made a quick gain before executing the trade for its client at a higher price – so called 'front-running'.
Following his conviction a foreign exchange industry body, ACI Financial Markets Association, petitioned the court, protesting that purchasing a currency ahead of a large trade was a normal industry practice to manage a bank's risk, known in the industry as 'pre-hedging'.
"Mr Johnson carried out the Cairn transaction consistent with industry practice and in violation of no law or rule, and he looks forward to moving on with his life," said Ms Shapiro.
Mr Johnson, a father of five from Hampshire, was originally arrested on 19 July 2016 as he accompanied his son and a friend to JFK Airport on his way home to the UK and was later tried and convicted on 18 October 2017.
His arrest took place three days after demands in Congress for the US government to pursue the prosecution of HSBC employees who had avoided facing justice.
Those calls were prompted by a congressional report, Too Big to Jail, which revealed that the British government had secretly intervened on HSBC's behalf in 2012, when the bank face the risk of prosecution for helping a Mexican drug cartel launder £881m and for facilitating trades with US-sanctioned countries such as Iran, Libya and Sudan.
Senior executives at HSBC had urged him to accept a new role in the US in March 2016, four months before his subsequent arrest. Because he was arrested in the US, it meant that there was no need for extradition proceedings.
By contrast his alleged co-conspirator, Stuart Scott, contested extradition to the US and won his hearing. The US Department of Justice later withdrew the charges against him.
The UK and Germany have agreed a plan to create a new, direct rail link between London and Berlin as part of a wide-ranging treaty.
The Kensington Treaty also includes opening e-gates for frequent travellers between the two countries next month, as well as agreeing school exchange visits.
Friedrich Merz made his first official visit to the UK as German chancellor to sign the deal, which will also tighten laws around people smuggling gangs and strengthen defence ties.
Downing Street said the move will make it easier for German authorities to investigate and act against warehouses and storage facilities used by smugglers to conceal small boats intended for illegal Channel crossings to the UK.
The new travel arrangements come as part of plans to re-set relations around trade and business between the two countries.
A joint taskforce will be established for transport experts from both governments to examine how to establish the necessary border and security controls for direct long-distance rail passenger services.
Transport Secretary, Heidi Alexander, said the rail link could offer an alternative to flying within the next decade.
"We're pioneering a new era of European rail connectivity and are determined to put Britain at the heart of a better-connected continent," she said.
"The Brandenburg Gate, the Berlin Wall and Checkpoint Charlie - in just a matter of years, rail passengers in the UK could be able to visit these iconic sights direct from the comfort of a train, thanks to a direct connection linking London and Berlin.
"This landmark agreement - part of a new treaty the prime minister [has signed] with Chancellor Merz today - has the potential to fundamentally change how millions of people travel between our two countries, offering a faster, more convenient and significantly greener alternative to flying."
Merz met Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer at the Victoria and Albert Museum in Kensington for the signing ceremony.
Sir Keir described the pact as "evidence of the closeness of our relationship as it stands today" as well as a "statement of intent, a statement of our ambition to work ever more closely together".
Commercial investments in the UK, worth more than £200m and expected to create more than 600 new jobs, have been announced, and a new UK-Germany Business Forum has been established.
Defence and security was also a key part of discussions, including support for Ukraine, and a new agreement on the joint export of co-produced military equipment has been unveiled.
Downing Street said the agreement on equipment such as Boxer armoured vehicles and Typhoon jets was likely to lead to billions of pounds of additional defence exports in the coming years.
On security, Merz has committed to changing the law, making facilitation of illegal migration to the UK a criminal offence, by the end of the year.
Facilitating people-smuggling is not technically illegal in Germany currently, if it is to a country outside the European Union - which, following Brexit, includes the UK.
A BBC investigation last year exposed the significant German connection to small boat crossings, with the country becoming a central location for the storage of boats and engines.
Sir Keir said: "Chancellor Merz's commitment to make necessary changes to German law to disrupt the supply lines of the dangerous vessels which carry illegal migrants across the Channel is hugely welcome."
The German agreement comes a week after the UK announced a new pilot returns scheme with France, during President Emmanuel Macron's state visit.
Under the "one in, one out" deal, some small boat arrivals would be returned to France in exchange for the UK accepting an equivalent number of asylum seekers with connections to the UK.
The prime minister is under pressure to tackle the number of people crossing the Channel in small boats.
More than 21,000 people have made the dangerous journey so far this year - a 56% increase on the same period in 2024.
The Conservatives' shadow home secretary Chris Philp said the figures showed "the crisis in the Channel continues to spiral".
"This is just more of the same tired, headline-chasing from Keir Starmer.
"This government has clearly lost control of our borders and left the country exposed when they cancelled our returns deterrent."
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Samsung boss Lee Jae-yong has been cleared by South Korea's top court of fraud charges, concluding a years-long legal battle over his role in a 2015 merger deal.
Lee, the grandson of Samsung's founder and the de facto head of the company since 2014, had been accused of using stock and accounting fraud to try to gain control of the firm.
In its final verdict, the Supreme Court in Seoul upheld a not guilty verdict, after Lee was acquitted of all charges in two earlier trials.
The case drew widespread scrutiny of the technology giant, as the country grapples with corporate corruption scandals involving its powerful family-run conglomerates known as chaebols.
"Today, the Supreme Court has clearly confirmed through its final ruling that the merger of Samsung C&T and the accounting treatment of Samsung Biologics were lawful," said Samsung's lawyers on Thursday.
"We sincerely thank the court for its wise judgment following a thorough five-year trial process."
Prosecutors accused Lee and his advisors of inflating the value of his pharmaceutical firm, Samsung Biologics, through fraudulent accounting.
They argued that the higher value allowed him to buy a larger share of a key Samsung subsidiary in a 2015 merger deal, which secured his succession.
Prosecutors also said the merger was designed to shift control of the company from Lee's father, Lee Kun-hee. His father, who faced legal troubles of his own, suffered a heart attack in 2014 and died in 2020.
The younger Lee was first arrested in 2017 for bribing an advisor to former President Park Geun-hye to smooth his succession at Samsung.
Over the course of his legal problems, he had separate jail terms cut short - one due to a special presidential pardon when he was on parole from prison.
At the time, the government said the leader of the country's biggest company was needed to spearhead South Korea's economic recovery in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic.
In 2024, a district court cleared Lee of all charges linked to the merger worth around $8bn (£5.97bn) of two of its subsidiaries.
Lee was cleared again after prosecutors appealed the case in the High Court.
The legal cases over the past decade have added to Samsung's troubles as it struggled with intensifying competition.
Samsung Electronics, which has major operations making smartphones and computer chips, has been facing declining sales in recent years.
Last year during a trial, Lee acknowledged that Samsung faces major challenges.
"The reality facing [Samsung] is harder than ever, but I will overcome and take a step forward," he said.
US President Donald Trump's tariffs are another potential hurdle for Samsung, which exports a large number of products to America.
The court's decision was welcomed by the country's business community.
The Federation of Korean Industries said in a statement that the ruling will allow swift decisions at the top of Samsung, which will help the economy navigate trade turmoil with the US.
Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) is to cut up to 500 management jobs in the UK, as the carmaker faces pressure on sales and profits from US trade tariffs.
JLR said it would launch a voluntary redundancy scheme, and that the cuts were not expected to exceed 1.5% of its British workforce. The firm described the move as "normal business practice".
Last week, the carmaker revealed a drop in sales in the three months to June caused partly by it pausing exports to the US because of tariffs and also due to the planned wind-down of older Jaguar models.
The company warned last month that US President Donald Trump's decision to impose a 10% tariff on British cars exported to the US would hit its profits.
JLR said it "regularly offers eligible employees voluntary redundancy" and said the current programme was based on "the business's current and future needs".
It added that the UK-US trade deal on car imports gives it "confidence to invest £3.5bn" per year.
Car industry expert Professor David Bailey of the Birmingham Business School said the tariffs "play a big role" in the job cuts.
"It wasn't that long ago that JLR was reporting bumper profits - £2.5bn profit to the year ending in March - which was its best results in a decade," he told the BBC's Wake Up to Money programme.
The firm has also been taking on workers in preparation for producing more electric cars so the tariffs "have definitely had an impact", he said.
As part of a wave of tariff announcements made by Trump earlier this year, UK exports of UK cars and automotive parts faced an extra 25% tax, on top of an existing 2.5% levy. This led to JLR pausing shipments of its vehicles to the US.
However, the UK-US deal saw the tariff cut to 10% for a maximum of 100,000 UK cars, which matches the number of these vehicles that the UK exported last year.
Despite this, Prof Bailey said the new rate is still "a big increase" from the previous tariff of 2.5%, adding that one of its best selling cars, the Defender, is made in Slovakia and that still faces a 27.5% tariff.
Downing Street rejected "absolutely" any suggestion that JLR's job cuts were a personal embarrassment for Sir Keir Starmer, who visited the company in May and declared it was his intention to protect British jobs in the car industry.
A spokesperson for the PM said the UK-US trade deal was "jobs saved, not job done", adding that JLR was "responding to challenging global conditions" in making the cuts.
JLR is a large employer in the UK automotive sector with more than 30,000 workers.
It has sites in Solihull, Wolverhampton and Halewood on Merseyside, and builds Range Rover SUV models in the UK.
Speaking before JLR made its announcement about job cuts, Preet Kaur Gill, Labour MP for Edgbaston in Birmingham, said the UK's recent trade deal with the US had helped to preserve jobs at the company.
"In my region, Jaguar Land Rover is a really important employer. The fact that we've managed to save 12,000 jobs, bring tariffs down... this is an ongoing relationship and our commitment is to make sure we continue that," she said.
Helped by generous tax breaks, Ireland's film and TV production sector has never been stronger.
When Irish director Dearbhla Walsh started her career in Ireland in the late 1980s, opportunities for budding film-makers were limited.
"There was no work in Ireland," says Walsh, "To aspire to be a director was almost a fantasy."
Today, the picture is decidedly different. Ireland has emerged as a major force in the global film industry in recent years, both in the development of its own films and television series, as well serving as a location and production hub for international productions.
Walsh was the lead director of Apple TV+'s dark comedy Bad Sisters, one of many TV shows shot and set in the Republic of Ireland in recent years that, alongside programmes including Normal People and Bodkin, have drawn the attention of global audiences to Irish stories. This year actress Sharon Horgan received her second consecutive nomination for an Emmy Award for her portrayal as Eva Garvey in Bad Sisters.
Irish films have also gained international recognition, with both The Banshees of Inisherin and The Quiet Girl being nominated for Academy Awards in 2023. A new generation of Irish screen talent has found the spotlight, including Saoirse Ronan and Paul Mescal.
"I think Ireland is having a moment," says Walsh, "Irish people have a greater confidence. They're able to create from home and sell stories about Ireland."
The film and TV sector contributes more than €1bn ($1.2bn/ £845m)to the Irish economy annually and directly supports the equivalent of around 10,000 full-time jobs. That's according to a report from Screen Ireland, the development agency for the Irish film industry.
Walsh, who is currently working in Los Angeles shooting Apple TV+'s upcoming drama series Margo's Got Money Troubles starring Michelle Pfeiffer and Nicole Kidman, has built an award-winning international career as a director.
With Bad Sisters, Walsh says she relished the opportunity to tell a story from an Irish perspective. "It was incredibly exciting for me to come home and tell a story that I really felt I understood," she says.
The growth of the Irish film industry has been attributed to three decades of sustained investment, support and training along with generous tax incentives.
The Irish government offers a standard 32% tax credit for film, TV and animation, one of the highest in the world. The way this works is that Irish film production companies can claim back 32% of their production costs against their business tax bill. In California the equivalent rate is 20%.
US actor Rob Lowe recently commented that "it's cheaper to bring 100 people to Ireland" than to film in Los Angeles. His popular American quiz show, The Floor, is actually recorded in the Irish town of Bray, 20km (12 miles) south of Dublin.
Meanwhile, lower budget Irish movies get an even higher tax break of 40%, which was introduced in May 2025.
And the Irish government has boosted Screen Ireland's annual budget by 3.3% to €40.85m (£34.41m/ $47.77m) in 2025, its highest ever level.
"Our ambition for Ireland is that it's a home for screen storytelling at the highest levels, and a leading European hub for film-making," says Désirée Finnegan, Screen Ireland CEO. "But most of all, we see it as a home for the film-makers and story makers themselves."
Irish film producer Alan Moloney, who was the executive producer of the Irish-British-Canadian movie Brooklyn (2015), says the investment by Screen Ireland been successful for two main reasons.
First, it has strategically focused on developing indigenous talent. Secondly, it has attracted international productions, such as Netflix series Wednesday, which recently became the biggest international production to ever film in Ireland.
"Now we have an industry that is competing at the highest level, and we're punching way above our weight," Moloney says.
Moloney co-founded Dublin-based production company, Big Things Films, alongside Oscar-winner Cillian Murphy in 2022. Big Things is behind the award-winning film Small Things Like These and the upcoming Netflix movie Steve, both starring Murphy.
"[Cillian and I] had both grown up through the Irish film industry," says Moloney. "Whether the industry was having this boom or not... our interests were always going to be there."
Moloney also leads a consortium of film industry and property development professionals behind a new film and TV studio planned for Dublin, set to be Ireland's largest yet.
He believes the industry has the resilience to withstand Trump's threat in May to apply a 100% import tariff against movies made in foreign countries.
"We came through Covid intact. We came through the [Hollywood writers'] strike last year intact. We'll come through this intact," Moloney says.
Ruth Treacy, producer and co-founder of Dublin-based production company Tailored Films, is similarly sanguine. "There's a big chance [the tariff threat] won't end up coming to pass," she says. "I would have said to colleagues, let's not panic, because creating more panic destabilises the industry further."
Treacy – whose company is behind new Irish thriller Bring Them Down, starring Barry Keoghan, and Oscar-nominated 2024 Trump biopic The Apprentice – adds: "Some people mentioned that maybe [Trump's tariff threat] was a backlash against The Apprentice. But, much as I'd like to think we impacted him that much, I really don't think that was on his mind."
Looking at the Irish film industry in general, Treacy says its growth has brought with it a shift in the types of content being made.
"The level of ambition changed," she says. "It stopped being about what you might describe as kitchen sink or Irish rural drama. It's not necessarily about looking inwards at ourselves, but more about looking outward at the world."
Irish horror is a now burgeoning genre, with upcoming release Fréwaka, billed as the first ever Irish-language horror film.
Irish-language productions in general have had a breakthrough, with the success of films like The Quiet Girl [An Cailín Ciúin], which was the first in the Irish language to be nominated for an Oscar.
Ciarán Charles Ó Conghaile is the co-founder of Fíbín Films, the Galway-based company behind Irish-language broadcaster TG4's crime-thriller series Crá, which became the first Irish-language drama on BBC, and has been sold to multiple countries.
"There's a richness to the Irish language. But I think it's not about the language, it's the storytelling," Ó Conghaile says. "What [the Irish industry] does well is we have lots of pathos and levity in our work. We also have a distinctive Irish humour."
Irish animation is another a key growth sector within the industry, employing over 2,500 full-time professionals.
Rebecca O'Flanagan, producer at Treasure Entertainment, which is behind the Irish film Good Vibrations and TV thriller Smother, sees Ireland's cultural heritage as a key factor in the industry's success. "I don't want to go too far down the cliche of saints and scholars, but I do think that Ireland is a creative nation."
For Ó Conghaile, Irish film and TV has only scratched the surface. "I'm just excited about the stories that have yet to be told," he says.
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More than half of Britain's busiest airports have raised "kiss-and-fly" fees for cars dropping off passengers close to terminals, according to research from the RAC.
The motoring group found 11 out of 20 UK airports had put up prices since last July, with Gatwick, Bristol, Leeds Bradford and Southampton joining Stansted in charging the top rate of £7 to park for a matter of minutes.
In contrast, at nine of the 10 busiest airports in the European Union there are no drop-off fees.
Airports UK, which represents the industry, said all hubs offer free drop-off options further from the terminals, such as "park and ride" facilities where people can leave their car and take a bus to the airport.
London Heathrow, Edinburgh, Birmingham and Liverpool all raised their prices by £1 to £6 for between 10 and 20 minutes.
The RAC also found that Cardiff airport had introduced a fee for the first time, asking £3 for 10 minutes.
Meanwhile, London Luton and Manchester airports are the most expensive on a cost-per-minute basis, the research showed, with drivers paying £5 to stop for five minutes.
Rod Dennis, senior policy officer at the RAC, said: "Drivers are a captive audience and that's why we think airports are so keen on these sorts of fees. But honestly, £7 for a stop that could be no more than 10 minutes does seem a little steep.
"And the fact that these costs keep going up year after year I think is going to be a huge source of frustration for anyone dropping off a friend or loved one this summer."
In the RAC's survey of European airports, hubs including Frankfurt and Paris Charles de Gaulle charged nothing. Only Schipol in the Netherlands asked for €2.50 (£2.17) to kiss-and-fly.
Karen Dee, chief executive of Airports UK, said: "Where fees are charged, this helps airports manage and reduce congestion, noise, carbon emissions and air pollution for local communities, something that they are mandated to do by the Government and local authorities.
"These charges are a part of the airport business model and help enable the provision of the widest variety of flights from the airport."
London City airport was the only one on the list which charges no fee.
A spokesperson for Gatwick, said: "The drop off charge helps to limit the number of cars and reduces congestion at the entrance to our terminals and funds a number of sustainable transport initiatives."
It added that holders of a Blue Badge, which is a parking permit for people with disabilities or health conditions affecting mobility, remain exempt from the charge.
Birmingham, Edinburgh, Heathrow, Liverpool, and Southampton also said Blue Badge holders remain exempt from the fees.
Leeds Bradford lets Blue Badge holders use the pick-up and drop-off area for an extended time of 60 minutes for the same £7 charge.
On lifting its kiss-and-fly prices, a spokesperson for Southampton, said: "All of the funds generated through our parking facility are reinvested into the airport and play an important role in securing new routes for the region."
The BBC has contacted other airports for comment.
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Four friends keen to get on the property ladder, but finding prices too steep, clubbed together to buy a home in London. Could this be the future of home ownership?
The two couples, now each with a baby, live together in a three-bedroom flat in north-east London.
Francesca, Graeme, Sonja and Kieran, all 34, have known each other since school and university, and lived together during the Covid pandemic until the landlord "doubled the rent overnight".
From moving in, to house renovations, to the women giving birth four months apart, how is it all working out?
Francesca, a musician, says when they all bought the flat together in 2022, she and her partner Graeme would not have been able to afford a suitable place in London on their own.
Graeme says they would have been able to afford a property in the £350,000-£400,000 price range - but by bringing all four incomes together, they could afford "a lot more". They ended up paying £650,000.
He says "apart from some estate agents being surprised", there were no massive hurdles to overcome to buy as two couples versus a sole couple.
They got a floating deed of trust, a legal document that outlines how ownership of a property is divided between joint owners.
Rise in non-traditional mortgages
The four friends are among a growing number of people with non-traditional mortgages.
Some of the UK's biggest lenders have reported trends in people co-buying with friends, siblings and parents.
Lloyds Bank said its research found half of young first-time buyers were willing to consider more non-traditional routes to be able to afford a home, while Barclays reported "a strong interest" in non-traditional mortgages this year.
Natwest head of mortgages Lloyd Cochrane said the bank was seeing "more and more customers think about different ways of getting on the housing ladder", but there was a need to raise awareness of non-traditional ways to get there.
Sales and marketing director at Fairview New Homes, Chris Hood, said that in the past two years they had seen an increase in the number of enquiries and sales from first-time buyers teaming up with friends or family members to purchase a home.
Part of the decision for Francesca, Graeme, Sonja and Kieran was that they wanted to stay close to their workplaces in London.
It helped they were already close friends and living together "so it didn't feel like such a big step", Francesca says.
"If anything, moving in just the two of us felt like a bigger step."
Kieran points out the couples have each been together for a decade, so they were "fairly confident" they would not to split up and "cause havoc".
Francesca and Sonja found another bonus, in that they spent a lot of their maternity leave together, which Sonja says "helped in a time that can be really lonely".
The two families share groceries, childcare and cooking - splitting all expenses four ways - and their two children get on "like siblings", according to all the parents.
The reaction from others has been positive, Kieran says.
"Whoever I tell about it, they always think it's a great idea and they like it," he says.
"But I do have to preface it with: 'It's not like a commune or anything. It's communal living.'"
SpareRoom, a UK-based website that specialises in flat-sharing and finding flatmates, recently conducted a survey on 6,524 flatmates and lodgers in the UK.
When asked how they planned to afford a deposit, of those who expected to buy a property, 89% said savings, 44% said they planned to team up with a partner, 25% said with financial help from friends or family, 17% said inheritance, 9% will team up with a sibling or parent, and 6% will team up with a friend.
Of the 14% who said they did not expect to be able to buy a property, almost half said it was because their family could not help with a deposit.
* The legal agreement or deed of trust
* Credit scores
* Other costs
Friends Mirko, 37, and Lorenzo, 30, moved from Italy to London more than 10 years ago to work in casinos.
After nine years, realising they had spent £160,000 on rent between them, they pooled their salaries and bought a two-bedroom flat in Woolwich for £450,000 with a deposit of £90,000.
"We thought... why, instead of paying rent, don't we pay a mortgage?," Mirko says. "We've known each other so long, we trust each other. We can do that."
He says the bank told them it was more likely to give a mortgage to friends because "couples are more likely to split up".
"The bond you can have with a friend is bigger than a bond you can have in a relationship," Mirko says.
Lorenzo adds that "with the money of a two-bedroom flat in London, you can buy a villa with a swimming pool" in big Italian cities like Rome and Milan, and their parents are proud of what they have achieved because they know how expensive London is.
Mirko says he would recommend the set-up for "no more than two people" because it is difficult to find friends who think in the same way, but "if you find the right person, I think it's the right solution".
'I see huge value'
It has been three years since Sonja, Kieran, Francesca and Graeme moved in together, and the experience, they say, has "really worked" - although Kieron says he would not recommend it to everyone.
"You have to be confident with who you're living with and be very open with your finances and your family plans - and have a timeline," he says.
Sonja says she could see such an arrangement working throughout different stages of life.
"I think there's something sad when your networks narrow. I see huge value for this type of investment in retirement as well," she says.
"Who knows what the next stage is for us - whether we'll continue to live together or separate into different homes - but I'd really like to have some element of communal living in my life."
Additional reporting by Anna O'Neill
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New York based trading giant Jane Street has been in the eye of a storm over the past few weeks after India's market regulator banned it from the securities market.
The regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has accused Jane Street of indulging in a "sinister scheme", alleging that its "manipulation" of India's stock market has led to small investors trading at "unfavourable and misleading prices".
Jane Street has not responded to the BBC's request for comment, but according to the Financial Times, the firm has told staff in an internal email that it was "beyond disappointed" by Sebi's order and planned to challenge it.
So what is Jane Street, and what are they accused of?
What is Jane Street?
Jane Street was founded by a small group of traders and technologists in a tiny New York office. It is a quantitative trading firm which uses mathematical models and algorithms to decide trading strategies.
The company has more than 3000 employees who trade in a broad range of asset classes across 45 countries. According to the Financial Times, the firm accounted for over 10% of North America's equity trading volume in 2023, making it a significant player on Wall Street.
What is Jane Street accused of doing?
India's stock market has two main segments. The cash market is where investors buy and sell actual shares of companies, owning a piece of the business. And the derivatives market is where traders use tools like futures and options to bet on stocks or commodities, without owning the underlying shares.
Sebi claims the suspicious trading activity by Jane Street happened on India's Bank Nifty index which tracks the performance of 12 large Indian banks.
The regulator alleges that Jane Street operated in both the cash and derivatives market through different entities.
So on a very basic level what is alleged is, one entity bought large quantities of bank shares – pushing up the price of Bank Nifty when the market opened in the morning.
Simultaneously, it's claimed, the second entity would bet on the decline in Bank Nifty's value in the derivatives market.
On the day of expiry - when the contracts are settled in the derivative market - as the trading session inched towards close of day, Jane Street, it's claimed, dumped the bank shares it bought in the cash market, causing the bank index price to plunge. This, in turn, would pay off the bet taken by its other entity in the derivatives market on a decline in prices, Sebi says.
"Such a trade is called 'marking the close' which is considered illegal even in the US," says Deepak Shenoy, CEO, Capitalmind Asset Management Pvt Ltd in Bengaluru city.
Mom and pop investors lost money because during the day they'd bought shares at higher levels, as they were pushed up because of the big volumes bought by Jane Street.
What has Sebi said?
Sebi basically said Jane Street's activities created "a false or misleading appearance of market activity" and attracted "unsuspecting" investors to trade at levels that were "artificial and temporary".
By doing this, it was enticing unsuspecting investors to trade in Bank Nifty index options at interim levels that were artificial and temporary.
On 3 July, in a lengthy order, Sebi concluded that "the integrity of the market, and the faith of millions of small investors and traders, can no longer be held hostage to the machinations of such an untrustworthy actor".
What is Jane Street's defence?
As per several global media reports, Jane Street has denied all these allegations of wrongdoing and described the trades as "basic index arbitrage" - the price differential between the price of a stock in the cash market and its corresponding derivatives contract - saying it plans to challenge SEBI's order.
What do independent experts think?
"Index arbitrage is legal and even Indian broking firms have done this for ages and used algorithms and machines to trade in the market. But what they (Jane Street) did is not index arbitrage," claims says Mr Shenoy.
"What they have done is taken a position in two different markets. And this is not arbitrage. You took X on one side and 7X on other side. You sold that X and gained from 7X. That is the problem," he explains.
"The same script would play out every week on expiry day when index contracts are settled," says Mayank Bansal, a UAE-based investor who operates in India's derivatives market . "While retail investors lost money expecting a strong finish, Jane Street would have profited by betting on a fall and we are talking of a trade of millions of dollars."
"It is not illegal to be smarter than your counterparties in a swap transaction. However if you read the allegations made in the Sebi filing, the whole thing appears to stink very badly," Alexander Gerko, CEO of XTX, a rival firm of Jane Street, wrote on his LinkedIn account.
What impact will this have on the broader markets?
According to recent data from the regulator, there are nearly 10 million retail investors in the derivatives market. In FY25 they lost 1.05 trillion rupees ($11.6bn, £8.6bn) up from 750bn rupees in FY24.
On average, each retail investor lost 110,069 rupees ($1,283; £958) last year.
While these losses cannot be attributed to Jane Street directly, Sebi says the firm made $4.3bn from India in a little over two years while small investors were bleeding.
"They've rigged the prices for their own convenience," a Mumbai-based investor, who didn't want to be named, alleged to the BBC.
"On 17 January 2024, Sebi says Jane Street had its most profitable day. I lost nearly $7,000, my worst single-day loss in a year."
The episode exposes deeper regulatory concerns say experts.
"SEBI should have acted before so many people lost their money," says Mr Bansal. "The surveillance systems must be strong enough to detect and stop manipulation in real time. Who knows how many more players are operating like this here," he says.
So, what happens next?
The Indian market regulator says Jane Street has deposited just over $560mn in an escrow account with a lien marked in favour of Sebi, requesting it to lift the temporary trading ban.
Sebi says Jane Street's request to remove the trading ban is currently "under examination".
But under Indian laws, if these allegations of market manipulation are proven, the US trader could face a fine that is up to three times this amount.
President Donald Trump has said it is "highly unlikely" he will fire the head of the US central bank, hours after asking lawmakers whether he should sack Jerome Powell.
Stock markets and the dollar slipped following reports Trump had broached the idea with Republicans on Tuesday but quickly bounced back after he downplayed the discussions.
Dismissing the chair of the Federal Reserve would be a major break with precedent.
Trump has repeatedly called on Powell to lower US interest rates in a series of highly critical outbursts, which continued on Wednesday when the president called him a "knucklehead" and claimed he was "doing a lousy job".
Speaking at the White House, the president acknowledged that he had revived discussions about firing Powell - who Trump nominated for the role during his first term - but said he was "not planning on doing anything".
Pressed on whether he was ruling out the idea, he said: "It's highly unlikely unless he has to leave for fraud."
The president's allies have joined in the attacks against Powell by accusing the central bank boss of mismanaging the renovation of Fed properties.
Last week, budget director Russell Vought called for an investigation into cost overruns on a $2bn (£1.5bn) project to renovate Fed buildings in Washington. Trump said earlier this week he thought it was "sort of" a fireable offence.
Analysts at Deutsche Bank said the recent shift in the focus of the attacks suggested the administration was building a case against Powell.
"Whether or not the president chooses to act on this case is an open question," they wrote, noting that recent developments "suggest that the risk has risen".
The Federal Reserve was established by Congress and has powers to set policy independent of the White House.
Powell's second term as Fed chair ends in May next year and he can stay on as a governor of the central bank until 2028.
Under federal law, the president can remove Fed governors before the end of their terms "for cause". The phrase typically implies serious misconduct.
Powell has repeatedly stated his intent to serve out his term as chair, denying that Trump has the power to fire him over a policy disagreement.
The Fed has also pushed back against the criticism of the renovations, updating its website with information to respond to some of the attacks.
It has said the renovations will ultimately reduce costs by allowing it to consolidate operations and blamed the increase in expenses on "unforeseen conditions" such as more asbestos than anticipated.
Trump has flirted with the idea of firing Powell since his first term, when he objected to the Fed raising rates. He has repeatedly stepped back from the plan in the face of investor concern, however, including most recently this spring.
But on Tuesday, Anna Paulina Luna, a Republican congresswoman from Florida, wrote on social media that the firing was "imminent". It followed posts by other Trump allies in recent weeks suggesting Powell might be stepping down or calling for him to go.
A senior White House official confirmed to the BBC that Trump had indicated to Republicans that Powell's firing could happen soon.
The White House's increasingly determined aggression against one of the most important independent institutions in the world is adding a new dimension to a fragile global financial system, which is already reeling from Trump's trade wars.
The US economy is slowing and facing stressors from the president's sweeping tariffs which economists have warned could fuel inflation.
As head of the Fed, Powell plays a key role helping to determine where the US central bank sets interest rates, a decision with implications for borrowing costs across the economy.
The key interest rate is currently hovering around 4.3% which is down from last year.
However, the Fed has not reduced it as quickly as other central banks such as the European Central Bank and the Bank of England - something Trump has highlighted.
The president is among those arguing that it should be lowered to make it easier to borrow and give the economy a boost.
Powell has said the bank, which is charged with keep inflation stable, should proceed cautiously given concerns that tariffs could raise prices.
Many economists and investors have warned that political interference in the leadership of the Fed could would risk undermining price stability and investor confidence.
Speaking to analysts earlier this week, the head of America's biggest bank warned that the Fed's independence was "absolutely critical".
Jamie Dimon, chief executive of JP Morgan Chase, said: "Playing around with the Fed can often have adverse consequences, the absolute opposite of what you might be hoping for."
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said earlier this week that a "formal process" was under way to identify a replacement for Powell. He described Trump's criticism of Powell as "working the refs" - alluding to efforts to pressure referees in sports games.
Trump has floated Bessent as a candidate. Others in the running include Kevin Hassett, who currently leads Trump's National Economic Council, and conservative economist Kevin Warsh.
Powell was nominated to lead the Fed by Trump in 2017, replacing Barack Obama's appointee Janet Yellen.
Former President Joe Biden extended his term in 2021.
Canada will restrict tariff-free import of cheap, foreign steel to help domestic manufacturers reeling from levies imposed by the US, Prime Minister Mark Carney has announced.
Speaking at a news conference in Ontario, Carney also pledged to diversify its trading partners away from the US and prioritise the use of Canadian steel.
The announcement comes in the wake of punitive tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump - first a 25% levy on Canadian steel in March, later doubling it to 50% in June.
On Tuesday, the prime minister raised the possibility that US tariffs may remain in place even after a bilateral agreement.
Speaking to reporters on Wednesday, Prime Minister Carney noted that imports currently accounted for nearly two-thirds of Canada's steel consumption, while over 90% of Canadian steel exports were destined for the US - a level of dependency he described as "unsustainable".
Under the new measures, the government will tighten its tariff rate quotas - from 100% to 50% of 2024 steel import volumes from countries without free trade agreements with Canada.
Any imports exceeding that limit will face a 50% tariff.
Carney also targeted China in his announcement, saying there would be an additional tariff on steel imports from non-US countries "containing steel melted and poured in China".
He added that there will be no changes to the products that are exempt under the Canada-US-Mexico free trade agreement (Cusma).
The prime minister also pledged to change the federal government's policy to require contractors to use Canadian steel.
He added that Canada's "big projects" - such as the push to build more housing and to strengthen the defence sector - will use Canadian steel.
These changes will ensure Canadians are "giving ourselves far more than any foreign government can take away", he said.
Canada's steel and aluminium industries are among the hardest hit by Donald Trump's sector specific tariffs.
Catherine Cobden, the president and CEO of the Canadian Steel Producers Association, told CBC News that there had been a 30% fall in steel production since Trump first imposed his metal tariff in March.
"This is something we should have been doing all along, but it's fantastic to see that we are making progress," Cobden said referring to Carney's announcement.
President Donald Trump says Coca-Cola has agreed to use real cane sugar in its drinks sold in the US.
Coca-Cola uses corn syrup in its American products, but Trump's Health Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr has voiced concern about the ingredient's health impacts.
"I have been speaking to Coca-Cola about using REAL Cane Sugar in Coke in the United States, and they have agreed to do so," Trump wrote on social media. "I'd like to thank all of those in authority at Coca-Cola."
Without explicitly confirming the recipe tweak, a Coca-Cola spokesperson said they "appreciate President Trump's enthusiasm" and "more details on new innovative offerings within our Coca-Cola product range will be shared soon".
Trump said in Wednesday's post on Truth Social: "This will be a very good move by them - You'll see. It's just better!"
While Coke sold in the US is typically sweetened with corn syrup, in many other countries it is sweetened in different ways - for example, Mexico uses cane sugar.
In April, Coca-Cola CEO James Quincey told investors that "we continue to make progress on sugar reduction in our beverages".
He said the Atlanta-based company has "done this by changing recipes as well as by using our global marketing resources and distribution network to boost awareness of and interest in our ever-expanding portfolio".
But any decision to use cane sugar instead might leave a bitter aftertaste for American corn farmers.
Corn Refiners Association President and CEO John Bode said in a statement: "Replacing high fructose corn syrup with cane sugar would cost thousands of American food manufacturing jobs, depress farm income, and boost imports of foreign sugar, all with no nutritional benefit."
The US health secretary and his Make America Healthy Again movement have advocated for companies to remove ingredients such as corn syrup, seed oils and artificial dyes from their products, linking them to a litany of health problems.
Kennedy has also been critical of the amount of sugar Americans consume and reportedly plans to update nationwide dietary guidelines this summer.
Trump is a regular drinker of Diet Coke - which uses the artificial sweetener aspartame. He had a button installed in the Oval Office's Resolute desk so he can be served the soda.
Follow the twists and turns of Trump's second term with North America correspondent Anthony Zurcher's weekly US Politics Unspun newsletter. Readers in the UK can sign up here. Those outside the UK can sign up here.
An "unbelievably rare" piece of Mars - the largest ever found on Earth - sold at a New York auction on Wednesday for a $4.3m (£3.2m) bid.
The meteorite known as NWA 16788 weighs 54lb (24.5kg) and is nearly 15in (38.1cm) long, according to Sotheby's.
It was discovered in a remote region of Niger in November 2023 and is 70% larger than the next biggest piece of Mars that has been recovered, the auction house said.
Meteorites are the remains of rock left after an asteroid or comet passes through Earth's atmosphere.
Additional taxes and fees brought the total price of the rock up to about $5.3m, Sotheby's said.
Sotheby's auction house described the meteorite, a reddish brown rock, as "unbelievably rare". Only about 400 Martian meteorites have ever been found on Earth.
"This is the largest piece of Mars on planet Earth. The odds of this getting from there to here are astronomically small," Cassandra Hatton, vice-chairman of science and natural history at Sotheby's, said in a video posted online.
"Remember that approximately 70% of Earth's surface is covered in water. So we're incredibly lucky that this landed on dry land, instead of the middle of the ocean, where we could actually find it."
It remains unclear where the meteorite will end up as information about the sale will remain private.
At the Wednesday auction, which featured more than 100 items, a Ceratosaurus skeleton from the late Jurassic period sold for $26m and the skull of a Pachycephalosaurus sold for $1.4m.
A German defence technology company will soon begin producing drones in the UK, it has been announced.
Stark, which makes the unmanned weapon systems for Nato, is set to open a new 3,700 sq m (40,000 sq ft) factory in Swindon in Wiltshire.
The expansion is expected to create more than 100 skilled jobs and will be the company's first site outside Germany.
Local MP Will Stone said he was proud that Stark would "bring back defence manufacturing" to Swindon, which has a "proud military legacy".
Mike Armstrong, managing director of Stark UK, said both the UK and Germany were "world-leaders in new technology" and the expansion will help "define the battlefields of the future".
"We need rapid and scalable production to protect our people, defend our sovereignty and deter aggression. That means resilient supply chains which stretch across Europe," said Mr Armstrong.
Mr Armstrong said Stark, which was founded in 2024, wanted to take advantage of technological and defence expertise in the UK.
Swindon, which helped produce the Supermarine Spitfire in the Second War, will once again be part of defending Europe, he added.
The company said its flagship loitering munition system 'Virtus', which has vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) capabilities, has a strike radius of up to 100km (62 miles) and a 5kg weapons payload.
"This is the direction of travel: creating high-skilled, well-paid jobs and putting Swindon back at the heart of Britain's industrial future," said Mr Stone, the MP for Swindon North.
"This is just the start," he added.
Swindon Borough Council leader Jim Robbins said the news was a "strong endorsement of our town's growing reputation in advanced manufacturing and innovation.
He said the investment was a "major step forward" in the ambition to position the town "as a national leader in defence advanced manufacturing".
"I'm excited to see this cutting-edge UAV technology take shape right here in Swindon," he added.
The announcement comes as the UK and Germany expand their defence and security relationship, building on the Trinity House Agreement set in 2024.
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Prime Minister François Bayrou has put the cat among the pigeons in promising to cut two of France's national holidays in order to rescue the country's finances.
Predictably enough, his proposal on Tuesday to axe the Easter Monday and 8 May holidays triggered howls of protest from the left and the populist right – with his own centrists and the conservative right expressing at best guarded support.
In a country with such a strong tradition of worker protest, the sudden removal of two statutory days off was never going to be an easy sell.
Essentially, men and women would be made to work two extra days a year for no increase in salary. The gain in productivity would help pull the country out of its ever-deepening hole of debt.
The French are indeed very attached to their jours fériés.
The month of May is awaited with glee every year, not just because it heralds spring – but also because of the succession of long weekends that regularly occur.
If 1 May (Workers' Day) and 8 May, marking the end of World War Two, fall on a Tuesday or Thursday, then the weekends become four-day treats because the Monday and the Friday will automatically be taken as holiday too.
On top of that there is Ascension (always a Thursday) plus Easter Monday and Whit Monday (or Pentecost).
If the Church calendar obliges, an early Easter can combine with 1 or 8 May to provide not just a pont or bridge - meaning a four-day weekend spanning a Monday or Friday, but a veritable five or six-day viaduc (viaduct).
November is another feast of feasts, with All Saints' on the first of the month and Armistice on the 11th offering relief from autumn blues. And on top of that, there are the famous "RTT" days, which many get in return for working more than the legal 35 hours a week.
But before we lapse into humorous self-satisfaction about "those incredibly lazy French and their God-given right to endless downtime", we need to bear in mind a couple of other considerations.
First, far from the popular image, the French actually have fewer national holidays than the European average.
France has 11, like Germany and the US.
Slovakia has the most, with 15, and England, Wales, and the Netherlands have the fewest, with 8.
Ireland and Denmark have 10.
Second, according to the UK's Office for National Statistics, French productivity (output per worker) is 18% higher than the UK's, So any gloating about holidays from across the Channel is misplaced.
Third, this is not the first time in recent years that France has proposed to axe national holidays. It has happened before – and worked (kind of).
In 2003, the conservative government under President Jacques Chirac wanted to do something radical after the deadly heatwave of that summer which killed 15,000 people.
So Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin decided to turn Whit Monday into a Day of Solidarity. People would work instead of taking the day off, and the money gained by employers would be paid to the government for a fund to help the elderly and disabled.
There was an outcry, and a few years later the change was watered down so that now the Day of Solidarity is voluntary. It is all highly confusing, and no-one really understands how it functions, but non-Whit Monday still generates €3bn (£2.6bn; $3.5bn) every year in receipts.
Another precedent goes back to the 1950s and Charles de Gaulle.
Newly appointed as president, in 1959 he axed the 8 May Victory in Europe holiday, saying the country could not afford it. It was reinstated in 1981 by the Socialist François Mitterrand.
Bayrou looks to scrap two holidays in bold bid to cut debt
So when on Tuesday the Greens accused Bayrou of trying to "wipe from the collective memory the eradication of Nazism", it was quite easy for minister Benjamin Haddad to retort: "Actually, it was De Gaulle who first did this, and I seem to recall he played a certain role in eradicating Nazism."
None of this means that Bayrou is any the more likely to see his proposals become real.
The truth is that the prime minister is in a position of almost total impotence – running a government with no majority in parliament, which could fall at any minute if the opposition groups so decide.
But, in an odd way, this very powerlessness has given Bayrou the freedom to say what he thinks.
If there is little likelihood of his budget proposals getting voted through the Assembly - and the chances are virtually zero - then he might as well give the French the unsugared truth.
The economic situation is dire, he said.
Every second that passes, France has €5,000 more debt.
Today it stands at €3.3tn. In these circumstances, Bayrou believes maybe we need to re-think the way we live. And work.
"I'm scared for the future of games," says Chris Goodyear. "It could end up going the way that theatre has, and become a very privileged thing."
At one of the UK's largest conferences for video game developers, social class was on the agenda.
The concern raised by Chris, a producer working to highlight accessibility barriers in the industry, is one that some in the sector feel has gone unappreciated for too long.
This year, Develop:Brighton featured its first meet-up dedicated to working-class and low-income people in the UK games industry.
The event was put on by the non-profit organisation Into Games.
Its boss Declan Cassidy set the body up six years ago to try to help "underrepresented people more broadly" in the industry.
This narrowed to focus solely on social mobility, as he said they realised "there weren't really any other champions" in that area.
In 2024 Into Games released a report which found there was a "really high number of people in working-class and low-income backgrounds coming through existing game educational pathways," Declan said.
But not many of them actually completed that journey and got jobs.
"They're being failed at the last hurdle," he added.
The Into Games report highlighted barriers such as location, access to finance, reduced cultural capital and lack of networks which prevented people from lower socio-economic backgrounds from breaking into the industry.
It found that 59% of participants said they had been made to feel "othered" at some point in their career.
Will Luton, the founder of Village Studio Games, attended the event in Brighton and said he had "felt overt discrimination" due to his class.
He added he often found himself having to "mask" or "rework" the way he talked so he didn't "give away" where he was from.
Will argued that those like himself who had made it into the industry had a part to play in highlighting the problem, rather than suggesting that just because "they were in" the industry, it suddenly "wasn't an issue".
The report also suggested the gaming sector had a smaller proportion of people coming from lower socio-economic backgrounds (13%) compared to film and TV (29%) or music and visual arts (22%).
Nick Poole, head of games industry body Ukie, believed that while the talent was available, the "opportunity wasn't".
"If you're going to tell real stories, people who are young, gifted and broke need to be able to find their way into the industry," Nick said.
'Huge' benefits for studios
Declan Cassidy hopes Into Games' approach can help those from working class backgrounds across the UK find their place within a precarious sector, which in recent years has seen thousands of jobs lost across the globe.
The organisation plans to focus support on six areas - Birmingham, Brighton, Dundee, London, Manchester and Tees Valley - in the next five years.
The support will include targeting outreach in schools, paid internships and government-funded training, with the group stating that over 100 game studios have confirmed they will take on working-class talent through their programmes in 2025 and 2026.
"By 2030, our aim is to be increasing the number of people from working-class backgrounds in the UK games industry by a factor of 50%," Declan said.
The benefit could be "huge for studios," he added.
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The first Space Shuttle was originally going to be named Constitution. US President Gerald Ford agreed to rename it Enterprise – here's how Star Trek fans persuaded him.
It's 17 September 1976. The world's press has gathered in Palmdale, California, for the revealing of Nasa's first Space Shuttle vehicle: The Enterprise. But it wasn't always supposed to have that name.
It was a huge day for Nasa and for the US administration, as they began a new adventure in space travel. After the Moon landings, the Space Shuttle would be Nasa's project to make spaceflight routine, affordable and accessible for the future.
In the audience were presidential aides, Nasa officials, astronauts and some very special guests. Many of the cast and crew members of TV science fiction series Star Trek also came along to watch the vehicle be unveiled.
It was also quite the day for the show's fans. The US president and Nasa agreed to dedicate and name the first Space Shuttle after the flagship of Star Trek’s fleet, the Star Ship Enterprise.
"Nasa has received hundreds of thousands of letters from the space-orientated Star Trek group, asking that the name be given to the craft," said government aide William Gorog, in a now declassified memo to the then President, Gerald Ford.
Fans bombarded Nasa and the White House with letters about why the ship should be renamed. And it was not the first time Star Trek fans had run a campaign like this, either.
The mastermind behind the campaign was among those watching the unveiling at Palmdale. Her name is Betty Jo Trimble, otherwise known to Star Trek fans as Bjo Trimble. She has become something of an icon in the science fiction world.
Bjo became famous for her fashion shows at the World Science Fiction Convention, which was an early form of Comicon. Her fashion shows would give fans a glimpse of all kinds of outfits from the sci-fi world. But, one day, Gene Roddenberry, the creator of Star Trek, got in touch with her. He wanted to use the fashion shows to promote some early Star Trek costumes.
Trimble became a close friend of the show. She was invited on to set to meet the actors. She got to know Rodenberry personally. She ran her own fanzine. They would even become a crew member, when they appeared in an unnamed role in the Star Trek: The Motion Picture in 1979.
But Bjo is most famous for running the successful Save Star Trek campaign, with her husband John Trimble, which stopped NBC from cancelling the show after its first two seasons. The campaign has become one of the most famous in TV history.
"Star Trek fans could be very persuasive," admitted Leonard Nimoy, who played Spock in the series. (He also attended the Enterprise ceremony.)
Building the space shuttle
The Space Shuttle was a challenge that had never before been undertaken by a space programme. The idea was to create a vehicle that could leave the Earth like a rocket but then land after its mission was completed like a plane.
The challenge was famously laid down to Nasa's engineers at a meeting on April Fool's Day 1969 where Max Faget, an eccentric mechanical engineer who could always be found wearing his famous bowtie, strode into the room, pulled a balsa wood model of a "funny looking" plane from a bag and flew it across the room. Faget was the designer behind the Mercury spacecraft, and later the Apollo and Gemini aircraft for Nasa, and would play a vital part in the design of the new shuttle as engineers tried to figure out how to build the vehicle within Nasa's budget. (Hear more about the dramatic story of this pioneering spacecraft in 13 Minutes Presents: The Space Shuttle.)
Palmdale in California was the centre of the aeronautics industry. One of the biggest companies there was Rockwell International, which had built aircraft like the successful B-1 bomber, which is still in service today. Rockwell were offered the contract to the build this prototype.
In 1974, construction began and two years later, the Shuttle was finally ready to be unveiled.
Changing the name
The prototype was originally planned to be called The Constitution, to mark the centenary of the foundational document of the United States. But Star Trek fans had other ideas.
"A couple of other fans started this project, but for some reason, they could not finish it, and asked us to take it over," Bjo Trimble told the official Star Trek website in an interview in 2023. "We thought it was a good idea to make the public really aware of the space programme by using a popular name for the first shuttle."
The Trimbles, among a few others, set up another letter-writing campaign to change the name, drawing on the same techniques they had used during the Save Star Trek campaign. There were no home computers at time, so the couple hit the phones, connecting conventions, newsletters and Star Trek communities all over the world through typewriter and telephone
Eventually their letters began to work and found their way into a memo to the President. In the declassified letter Gorog suggested to President Ford that the idea might help the space programme.
After all, Nasa was launching a new ship and a new idea to the American public. It needed their attention.
Gorog summarised in the memo:
* This group comprises millions of individuals who are deeply interested in our space programme
* The name "Enterprise" is tied in with the system on which the Nation's economic structure is built.
* Use of the name would provide a substantial human interest appeal to the rollout ceremonies scheduled for this month in California, where the aeronautical industry is of vital importance.
Many agreed. James Fletcher, Nasa's chief administrator was also open to the idea. Jim Cannon, a political advisor to President Ford, agreed it seemed an "excellent name", that it would "personally gratify" one of the most dedicated constituencies in the country.
And there was naval history to the name too. During World War Two, Enterprise was an aircraft carrier that served in the Pacific while another ship with the name helped fight pirates in 1803 in the days of the American republic.
Eventually, the five Space Shuttles that followed all bore the names of famous ships of exploration that had traversed Earth's oceans: Columbia, Challenger, Discovery, Atlantis and Endeavour.
President Ford responded positively to the pressure, approving a decision memo recommending the name change on 3 September 1976. A few days after the memo, the President met with Fletcher to confirm that a name change would be suitable.
It offered both a public relations win for the presidential office, Nasa and Star Trek fans.
The rollout
Back to the big unveiling day in Palmdale, the nose of Enterprise appeared from the corner of a giant aircraft hangar. It was flanked either side by white-suited technicians. It was brilliant white, with a black underside, stubby wings and a high tail fin.
As the vehicle's wheels rolled onto the tarmac, the United States Air Force band had a surprise for the gathered guests. They broke out into the Star Trek theme to massive cheers from the audience.
The vehicle would be used for the early aerial and landing tests of the Shuttle in the years that followed. These gave the astronauts and pilots who would later fly the Space Shuttles on their missions into orbit vital experience of what the vehicle could do.
Eventually, on 12 April 1981, Nasa flew STS-1, the first flight of the Space Shuttle programme. The vehicle they used, Columbia, was redesigned from the original Enterprise prototype. But the legacy of the original vehicle and the public relations campaign stuck.
Actress Nichelle Nichols, who portrayed Lieutenant Uhura on the TV show, was hired by Nasa to help them recruit women and members of minority groups to the astronaut programme in the 1970s.
Other sci-fi fans wanted in on the action too. After Space Shuttle Enterprise was renamed, a flyer appeared in the Star Wars newsletter Falcon. Star Wars fans wanted their place in space history too. Using a similar letter writing campaign to Star Trek's, they started their own campaign. Sadly, they were unsuccessful in naming the second shuttle the Millenium Falcon, but the legacy of the links between sci-fi and the US space agency are still strong.
More like this:
• What caused the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster?
• Why astronauts get nervous on the launchpad
• The man who designs the future
Over the years many astronauts have used for Star Trek motifs on their mission badges and in group portraits. Others have spoken about how the show inspired them in the first place while many of the actors have developed strong relationships with Nasa.
In 2012, some of the same Star Trek stars who were there at that initial rollout of the space shuttle Enterprise watched as the craft made its final journey, landing at John F Kennedy Airport in New York on its way to its current home at the Intrepid Sea, Air and Science Museum.
It was a fitting tribute to a spacecraft that, to use words from the opening sequence of Start Trek, had enabled humans to boldly go where no-one had gone before.
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A supercomputer that is the most powerful in the UK has been made fully operational in Bristol.
Technology Secretary Peter Kyle "flicked the switch" on the Isambard-AI machine as the government unveiled fresh artificial intelligence plans.
The computer will become part of the UK's public AI computing capacity along with a machine in Cambridge called Dawn.
The aim is to use the supercomputer for public projects such as bringing down NHS waiting lists and developing new tools to tackle climate change - although AI is notoriously energy-hungry.
In addition, the government announced that Scotland and Wales will be in line for billions of investment in so-called AI Growth Zones.
Part of the Isambard-AI computer was being used in January for a medical project to develop vaccines, but it has now been turned on entirely.
As the name suggests, a supercomputer has more processing power and can complete more tasks more quickly than a less powerful computer.
It processes data in the same binary format as regular computers but uses thousands more processing units to analyse more data at faster speeds.
'Huge advances'
Along with Dawn, the supercomputers will form the UK's "AI Research Resource" and will be available for public projects, although they won't combine computing power.
This resource, which may in future include other supercomputers, will be expanded 20-fold over the next five years, the government said.
Speaking to BBC economics editor Faisal Islam, Kyle said AI would enable "huge, unimaginable advances in the cure of disease".
"But it's also going to change the workplace. In order to benefit from that, you have to be prepared."
The government is preparing and training a million students in AI, and 7.5 million people will be trained in the broad economy in the coming months and years.
Kyle said he understood that people may be "anxious about the future" in terms of how AI would affect their jobs, but the UK was "already seeing huge improvements in productivity" due to the technology.
"AI is going to happen to Britain," he said. "What we can do, and what we have a choice over, is how it happens in Britain."
Isambard-AI uses more than 5,400 Nvidia GH200 Grace Hopper Superchips, with Hewlett-Packard technology, while Dawn, at the University of Cambridge, uses more than 1,000 Intel chips, along with Dell technology.
The supercomputer was built by the University of Bristol, but paid for using public money.
David Hogan, Nvidia's European vice president, said Isambard-AI was a "truly transformational machine" but that it was "just a starting point".
To support the government's plans, researchers, academics and tech bosses have been brought together to develop an AI strategy to be published in the autumn.
The group includes Google DeepMind vice president Pushmeet Kohli, vice president of the Royal Society, Alison Noble, and chairwoman of the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, Charlotte Deane.
The UK government has claimed that more investment in and scaling up of British supercomputers will help it fulfil its plans for growth and "position the country as an AI maker rather than an AI taker".
Companies around the world are currently vying to acquire the best talent and hardware in the sector to try and cement their dominance in it.
The Bristol supercomputer recently ranked 11th in the latest list of the world's top 500 most powerful, commercially available computers.
Additional reporting by Liv McMahon
Eight babies have been born in the UK using genetic material from three people to prevent devastating and often fatal conditions, doctors say.
The method, pioneered by UK scientists, combines the egg and sperm from a mum and dad with a second egg from a donor woman.
The technique has been legal here for a decade but we now have the first proof it is leading to children born free of incurable mitochondrial disease.
These conditions are normally passed from mother to child, starving the body of energy.
This can cause severe disability and some babies die within days of being born. Couples know they are at risk if previous children, family members or the mother has been affected.
Children born through the three-person technique inherit most of their DNA, their genetic blueprint, from their parents, but also get a tiny amount, about 0.1%, from the second woman. This is a change that is passed down the generations.
None of the families who have been through the process are speaking publicly to protect their privacy, but have issued anonymous statements through the Newcastle Fertility Centre where the procedures took place.
'Overwhelmed with gratitude'
"After years of uncertainty this treatment gave us hope - and then it gave us our baby," said the mother of a baby girl.
"We look at them now, full of life and possibility, and we're overwhelmed with gratitude."
The mother of a baby boy added: "Thanks to this incredible advancement and the support we received, our little family is complete.
"The emotional burden of mitochondrial disease has been lifted, and in its place is hope, joy, and deep gratitude."
Mitochondria are tiny structures inside nearly every one of our cells. They are the reason we breathe as they use oxygen to convert food into the form of energy our bodies use as fuel.
Defective mitochondria can leave the body with insufficient energy to keep the heart beating as well as causing brain damage, seizures, blindness, muscle weakness and organ failure.
About one in 5,000 babies are born with mitochondrial disease. The team in Newcastle anticipate there is demand for 20 to 30 babies born through the three-person method each year.
Some parents have faced the agony of having multiple children die from these diseases.
Mitochondria are passed down only from mother to child. So this pioneering fertility technique uses both parents and a woman who donates her healthy mitochondria.
The science was developed more than a decade ago at Newcastle University and the Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and a specialist service opened within the NHS in 2017.
The eggs from both the mother and the donor are fertilised in the lab with the dad's sperm.
The embryos develop until the DNA from the sperm and egg form a pair of structures called the pro-nuclei. These contain the blueprints for building the human body, such as hair colour and height.
The pro-nuclei are removed from both embryos and the parents' DNA is put inside the embryo packed with healthy mitochondria.
The resulting child is genetically related to their parents, but should be free from mitochondrial disease.
A pair of reports, in the New England Journal of Medicine, showed 22 families have gone through the process at the Newcastle Fertility Centre.
It led to four boys and four girls, including one pair of twins, and one ongoing pregnancy.
"To see the relief and joy in the faces of the parents of these babies after such a long wait and fear of consequences, it's brilliant to be able to see these babies alive, thriving and developing normally," Prof Bobby McFarland, the director of the NHS Highly Specialised Service for Rare Mitochondrial Disorders told the BBC.
All of the babies were born free of mitochondrial disease and met their expected developmental milestones.
There was a case of epilepsy, which cleared up by itself and one child has an abnormal heart rhythm which is being successfully treated.
These are not thought to be connected to defective mitochondria. It is not known whether this is part of the known risks of IVF, something specific to the three-person method or something that has been detected only because the health of all babies born through this technique is monitored intensely.
Another key question hanging over the approach has been whether defective mitochondria would be transferred into the healthy embryo and what the consequences could be.
The results show that in five cases the diseased mitochondria were undetectable. In the other three, between 5% and 20% of mitochondria were defective in blood and urine samples.
This is below the 80% level thought to cause disease. It will take further work to understand why this occurred and if it can be prevented.
Prof Mary Herbert, from Newcastle University and Monash University, said: "The findings give grounds for optimism. However, research to better understand the limitations of mitochondrial donation technologies, will be essential to further improve treatment outcomes."
The breakthrough gives hope to the Kitto family.
Kat's youngest daughter Poppy, 14, has the disease. Her eldest Lily, 16, may pass it onto her children.
Poppy is in a wheelchair, is non-verbal and is fed through a tube.
"It's impacted a huge part of her life," says Kat, "we have a lovely time as she is, but there are the moments where you realize how devastating mitochondrial disease is".
Despite decades of work there is still no cure for mitochondrial disease, but the chance to prevent it being passed on gives hope to Lily.
"It's the future generations like myself, or my children, or my cousins, who can have that outlook of a normal life," she says.
'Only the UK could do this'
The UK not only developed the science of three-person babies, but it also became the first country in the world to introduce laws to allow their creation after a vote in Parliament in 2015.
There was controversy as mitochondria have DNA of their own, which controls how they function.
It means the children have inherited DNA from their parents and around 0.1% from the donor woman.
Any girls born through this technique would pass this onto their own children, so it is a permanent alteration of human genetic inheritance.
This was a step too far for some when the technology was debated, raising fears it would open the doors to genetically-modified "designer" babies.
Prof Sir Doug Turnbull, from Newcastle University, told me: "I think this is the only place in the world this could have happened, there's been first class science to get us to where we are, there been legislation to allow it to move into clinical treatment, the NHS to help support it and now we've got eight children that seem to free of mitochondrial disease, what a wonderful result."
Liz Curtis, the founder of the Lily Foundation charity said: "After years of waiting, we now know that eight babies have been born using this technique, all showing no signs of mito.
"For many affected families, it's the first real hope of breaking the cycle of this inherited condition."
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An ice core that may be older than 1.5 million years has arrived in the UK where scientists will melt it to unlock vital information about Earth's climate.
The glassy cylinder is the planet's oldest ice and was drilled from deep inside the Antarctic ice sheet.
Frozen inside is thousands of years of new information that scientists say could "revolutionise" what we know about climate change.
BBC News went inside the -23C freezer room at the British Antarctic Survey in Cambridge to see the precious boxes of ice.
"This is a completely unknown period of our Earth's history," says Dr Liz Thomas, head of ice core research at the British Antarctic Survey.
Red warning lights flash above the door, and inside there is an emergency escape hatch into a tunnel in case something went wrong.
The rules say we could only go inside for 15 minutes at a time, wearing padded overalls, boots, hats and gloves.
Our camera's electronic shutter froze shut and our hair started to crackle as it turned icy.
On a worktop next to stacked boxes of ice, Dr Thomas points out the oldest cores that could be 1.5 million years old. They shine and are so clear we can see our hands through them.
For seven weeks, the team will slowly melt the hard-won ice, releasing ancient dust, volcanic ash, and even tiny marine algae called diatoms that were locked inside when water turned to ice.
These materials can tell scientists about wind patterns, temperature, and sea levels more than a million years ago.
Tubes will feed the liquid into machines in a lab next door that is one of the only places in the world that can do this science.
It was a huge multinational effort to extract the ice cores in Antarctica, at a cost of millions. The ice was chopped into 1m blocks and transported by boat and then in a cold van to Cambridge.
Engineer James Veal helped to extract the ice close to the Concordia base in eastern Antarctica.
"To hold that in my carefully gloved hands and be very careful not to drop the sections - it was an amazing feeling," he says.
Two institutions in Germany and Switzerland also have received cross-sections of the 2.8km core.
The teams could find evidence of a period of time more than 800,000 years ago when carbon dioxide concentrations may have been naturally as high or even higher than they are now, according to Dr Thomas.
This could help them understand what will happen in our future as our planet responds to warming gases trapped in our atmosphere.
"Our climate system has been through so many different changes that we really need to be able to go back in time to understand these different processes and different tipping points," she says.
The difference between today and previous eras with high greenhouse gases is that now humans have caused the rapid rise in warming gases in the last 150 years.
That is taking us into unchartered territory, but the scientists hope that the record of our planet's environmental history locked in the ice could give us some guidance.
The team will identify chemical isotopes in the liquid that could tell us the wind patterns, temperatures, and rainfall for a period of time between 800,000 and up to 1.5 million years ago or possibly more.
They will use an instrument called an inductively couple plasma mass spectrometer (ICPMS) to measure over 20 elements and trace metals.
That includes rare earth elements, sea salts and marine elements, as well as indicators of past volcanic eruptions.
The work will help scientists understand a mysterious change called the Mid-Pleistocene Transition 800,000 to 1.2 million years ago when the planet's glacial cycles suddenly changed.
The transition from warmer eras to cold glacial eras, when ice covered a lot more of Earth, had been every 41,000 years but it suddenly switched to 100,000 years.
The cause of this shift is one of the "most exciting unsolved questions" in climate science, according to Dr Thomas.
The cores may have evidence of a time when sea levels were much higher than they are now and when the vast Antarctic ice sheets were smaller.
The presence of dust in the ice will help them understand how the ice sheets shrunk and contributed to sea level rise - something that is a major concern this century.
It is 80 years since the first nuclear weapon test – codenamed Trinity – detonated above the desert in New Mexico. Today the hidden legacy of nuclear bomb tests can still be found in our cells – and is proving surprisingly useful to scientists.
It's in your teeth. Your eyes and your brain too. Scientists call it the "bomb spike" (or "bomb pulse") – and for more than half a century its signature has been present inside the human body.
On 16 July 1945, scientists of the Manhattan Project detonated the first nuclear weapon, known as the Trinity test, in New Mexico. The 18.6kt explosion lit up the sky and sent a blast of searing heat across the desert as a fireball lofted high into the sky. In the days that followed, white flakes and dust rained down on areas downwind. A now de-classified report from the time warned that radioactive particles spread over an area of more than 2,700sq miles (6,993sq km). And this test was just the start of the atomic era.
In the 1950s, there were so many nuclear bomb explosions above ground that they transformed the chemical make-up of the atmosphere – altering the carbon composition of life on Earth ever since, along with oceans, sediments, stalactites and more.
Unlike the direct radioactive fallout from the explosions, the bomb spike is not harmful. In fact, it's proven surprisingly helpful for scientists in recent years. Some have even gone so far as to describe it as the "mushroom cloud's silver lining".
Why? Evidence of the pulse is so ubiquitous that it can, among many other insights, tell forensic scientists when a person was born (or died), provide discoveries about the age of neurons in our brains, reveal the origin of poached wildlife, determine red wine vintage and even unlock the true age of centuries-old sharks (see box: "The bomb spike's multiple uses").
And now it may also help to define a new geological era. In July 2023, a group of earth scientists recommended that its presence in a Canadian lake – along with other human-made markers from the mid-20th Century – should represent the official start of the Anthropocene.
So, what exactly is the bomb spike, and what can it reveal about us and the world?
Before the 1963 Nuclear Test Ban Treaty obligated signatory nations to test nuclear bombs underground, governments exploded hundreds of atomic weapons out in the open air. More than 500 of these blasts – mainly conducted by the US and Russia – spewed their contents into the atmosphere.
It's well-established that these tests spread radioactive material far and wide, harming humans and wildlife and rendering whole regions uninhabitable. Perhaps lesser known outside the scientific laboratory is that the bombs also reacted with natural nitrogen to form new isotopes – particularly carbon-14.
By the 1960s, overground bomb testing had produced almost twice the amount of carbon-14 in the atmosphere compared with previous levels. First the isotope entered water, sediments and vegetation, and then it passed along the food chain to humans. It has even reached organisms in the deepest ocean trench.
"In essence, every carbon pool on Earth which was in exchange with atmospheric CO2 since the late 1950s has been labelled by bomb carbon-14," writes Walter Kutschera of the University of Vienna, who published a review of the scientific applications of the spike in the journal Radiocarbon in 2022.
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Back in the mid-20th Century, scientists noted the carbon-14 spike when atmospheric testing stopped, but it took decades for them to realise that the elevated levels might be useful. From the 1950s onwards, they had been using carbon-14 to date paleolithic remains or ancient texts, but that was based on its radioactive decay – known as radiocarbon dating. The isotope is unstable: it decays slowly into nitrogen with a half-life of 5,730 years. So, when a Neanderthal died, for instance, the quantity of carbon-14 in their bones and teeth would have started to gradually decline. Measure the extent of the decline, and you have a Neanderthal date of death.
Radiocarbon dating, however, tends to be limited to samples that are more than 300 years old, because of the isotope's slow decay rate. Any younger, and it hasn't decayed enough for an accurate date. Muddying recent dating further is humanity's introduction of additional carbon dioxide into the atmosphere since the Industrial Revolution – the so-called Suess effect.
Around the turn of the century, however, researchers realised that the bomb spike could help them use carbon-14 in a different way – and crucially it allows for dating within the past 70-80 years.
Ever since the peak in the 1950s, levels of the isotope in nature (and human beings) have gradually declined. Scientists can therefore analyse the proportions of carbon-14 in any organic substance that has exchanged atmospheric carbon since the tests, and specify the window in which it formed, down to a resolution of one to two years.
And that includes you and me. If you were born in the 1950s, your tissues will have accumulated more carbon-14 than a 1980s child, but levels are only now approaching the pre-atomic state.
Forensic analysis
One of the earliest uses of the bomb spike was to assist crime investigators seeking to identify the age of unidentified human remains. Forensic scientists have found that they can measure bomb carbon-14 in teeth, bones, hair or even the lens of the eye to help them estimate how old a person was, or when they died, according to Eden Centaine Johnstone-Belford of Monash University and Soren Blau of the Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine in Australia.
In a 2019 review, Centaine Johnstone-Belford and Blau cite multiple examples where the bomb spike has informed police enquiries. For example, in 2010 investigators used it to confirm a body found in a northern Italian lake had been dumped there by the killer the previous year.
The pair also point out that knowing the time since death can be "a vital determination in human rights abuse cases such as war crimes, genocide and extrajudicial killings". In 2004, for example, bomb spike dating of hair samples from a mass grave in Ukraine allowed investigators to identify a Nazi war crime that occurred between 1941 and 1952.
The bomb spike has also unlocked new scientific discoveries, revealing new insights about the cells in our bodies and brains. In 2005, the biologist Kirsty Spalding of the Karolinska Institute in Sweden and colleagues showed that it was possible to date the relative ages of our cells by analysing bomb carbon-14 within their DNA. Across several subsequent studies, she has used the technique to answer whether certain cells in our bodies have been around since birth, or whether they are continually replaced.
For example, in 2008 Spalding and colleagues showed that the body continually replaces fat cells called adipocytes as the cells die. The number of these fat cells, she found, stays constant across adulthood – which promises new ways to tackle obesity. "Understanding that this is a dynamic process opens up new avenues of therapy, which may include manipulating the birth or death rate of fat cells, in combination with exercise and diet, to help reduce the number of fat cells in obesity," she says.
In 2013, Spalding and colleagues also used the bomb spike to look at the turnover of brain cells. For many years, researchers assumed that the number of neurons was fixed in childhood, and indeed her earlier research had suggested that was the case in regions like the cortex. However, by using carbon-14 to date neurons within the hippocampus, she and her team confirmed that new neurons may be produced there throughout adult life.
Corroborated by other research, the possible existence of "adult neurogenesis" has proven to be one of the most important neuroscience discoveries of the past 20 years. While the science is far from settled, it has suggested new avenues for medical strategies that might prevent neuron loss via disease, or even increase the generation of new neurons.
Dawn of a new age
Finally, the bomb spike was recently nominated as one of several markers that could help to officially recognise the dawn of the Anthropocene – the new geological era defined by human activity.
Not long after the idea of the Anthropocene was floated, geologists began to discuss how to define its location on Earth with a so-called "golden spike" – a rock, ice core or layer of sediment where a new era begins in the stratigraphic record. Every major geological period has one. The beginning of the Holocene is marked by a particular ice core from the centre of Greenland. The base of the Jurassic begins in the Austrian Alps, at Kuhjoch pass in the Karwendel Mountains, where the smooth-shelled Psiloceras ammonite makes a first appearance. And one of the oldest golden spikes on Earth can be found in the Flinders Mountains of Australia, marking the start of the Ediacaran more than 600 million years ago – a period when the climate was periodically plunging into a "Snowball Earth".
Over the years, various signatures of human activity have been explored as possibilities to mark the Anthropocene's dawn: it could have been the rise in methane caused by early farming thousands of years ago (seen in ice cores), evidence of early lead pollution from mining and smelting 3,000 years ago, or the rise in fossil fuel byproducts during the Industrial Revolution.
However, in 2016 the Anthropocene Working Group (AWG) – part of the organisation charged with making the decision – recommended the 1950s, when the carbon-14 bomb spike entered the geological record, along with other nuclear markers such as plutonium fallout and isotopes such as caesium-137 and strontium-90, as well as man-made deposits like spheroidal carbonaceous particles (SCPs), a type of fly ash produced by burning coal at high temperatures.
Not everyone agreed that selecting the 1950s was a good idea – indeed, one member of the group recently resigned in protest, arguing that profound human impacts began much earlier. However, the Working Group propose that the mid-20th Century marks a clear, recognisable point in geological strata when humanity made its presence in nature truly and fully known right across the globe. It also coincides, they say, with the "great acceleration" when our impact on the planet exploded through exponential rises in greenhouse emissions, water and land use, ocean acidification, fisheries exploitation, tropical forest loss, and more.
And the bomb spike will also last a long time, allowing geologists to see it in tens of thousands of years. "The radiocarbon signal will be detectable for about 60,000 years and is a fairly routine analysis," says geologist Colin Waters of the University of Leicester, who chairs the AWG.
The AWG studied 12 candidate locations that could host the official golden spike, including a cave in Italy where the bomb pulse and the other markers are encased in stalactites, an archaeological excavation in Vienna, a patch of peatland near the border of the Czech Republic and Poland, and a coral reef off the north-east coast of Australia.
In July 2023, they recommended a (perhaps soon-to-be infamous) "winner": Crawford Lake in Ontario, Canada. A core from the muddy lake sediments, featuring carbon-14, a particularly abrupt plutonium marker, and other man-made signatures, was removed to be kept at a safe location. (Read more: The Anthropocene: Canadian lake mud 'symbolic of human changes to Earth').
The proposal, however, has since become bogged down in scientific bureaucracy and in March 2024 the International Commision on Stratigraphy's Subcommision on Quaternary Stratigraphy rejected proposals for an Anthropocene Epoch as a formal unit of geological time. (Read about why it is proving so difficult to define the official dawn of the Anthropocene in this article.)
If the lake core ever does become the official designation, it technically means that we too will hold one of the markers of the Anthropocene's dawn in our cells. Future generations won't, because the elevated carbon-14 has almost returned to previous levels. Therefore if tomorrow's archaeologists happen to study our preserved bodily remains, it might tell them about a unique point in history – a time of nuclear bombs, a great acceleration, and the century when humans began to have an impact on nature unlike any before.
*Richard Fisher is the author of The Long View: Why We Need to Transform How the World Sees Time, and a senior journalist for BBC Future.
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This article was originally published on 9 August 2023. It was updated on 16 July 2025 for the 80th anniversary of the Trinity test.
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In 1975, a meet-up between American and Soviet spacefarers in orbit showed that the superpowers could work together. Its positive effects eventually led to the International Space Station (ISS).
At just 33, Glynn Lunney was one of Nasa's most experienced flight directors. By 1970, he had been at the heart of the action for everything from the Apollo capsule's first orbit to Neil Armstrong's first footsteps on the Moon.
Months after helping to lead efforts to save the crew of Apollo 13 when their spacecraft exploded, Lunney was preparing for his next lunar mission. Then he got a phone call from his boss, head of mission control, Chris Kraft.
"He said 'Glynn, start getting ready to go to Moscow, you're going to be there in a couple of weeks'," said Lunney. "It was an out-of-the-blue complete surprise, a stunner to me."
Having devoted his career to winning the space race against the Soviet Union, Lunney was now expected to lead a team to work alongside his Cold War opponents on a joint mission: the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project. The aim was to dock a US Apollo capsule and Soviet Soyuz spacecraft in orbit. Realising that plan would take Lunney the next five years.
Lunney died in 2021, but I was fortunate enough to interview him in 2012 for a BBC radio programme on the Moon landings. We met in Houston's famous Apollo Mission Control Room. The retired flight director sat beside me in his old chair – looking down over dark consoles and the blank main display screens. At the time (it has since been restored), the room felt neglected, the missions a distant memory.
Our conversation was meant to be about the challenge of landing on the Moon, questions he had answered numerous times before. But once Lunney got talking about Apollo-Soyuz, it was clear that this rarely discussed mission was a career highlight.
"I viewed myself as having gone from a Cold War warrior, in terms of getting our programme to the Moon first, to one who was sent to try to see what we could do to cooperate [in space]," he said. "I was just 33 years old when I went to Moscow for the first time, representing the United States and I was thinking, 'Wow!'"
The Soviet Union and United States had been competing in space since the launch of Sputnik-1 in 1957. But the idea of the world's two superpowers working together did not come completely out of the blue.
"There were efforts for many years to find collaborative programmes between the United States and the Soviet Union in space," says Teasel Muir-Harmony, curator for Apollo and Apollo-Soyuz exhibitions at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington DC.
"There was an agreement [about exchanging meteorological data] signed between the US and the Soviet Union in October of 1962, and if you know about October of 1962, it was also the Cuban Missile Crisis when we came closer to nuclear war than ever before in history," says Muir-Harmony. "The space race was always this combination of cooperation and competition."
By the 1970s, the Nixon White House was keen to reduce international tensions with the Soviet Union led by Leonid Brezhnev (the administration also opened-up dialogue with communist China) so Apollo-Soyuz was important diplomatically. But the endeavour had a very practical purpose – if spacecraft from different nations could dock with each other, they might be used to save stranded astronauts.
"The question was, how do you rescue each other's crews in space?" says Kenneth Phillips, curator for aerospace science at the California Science Center. "It was a noble idea that space exploration and collaboration bind us together."
When it came to astronauts assigned to the mission, the symbolism of the selection was also significant. The three-man US crew would include Deke Slayton, one of the original Mercury 7 astronauts. Grounded since 1962 because of a suspected heart condition, Slayton had finally been cleared to fly after watching from the sidelines as the other astronauts pioneered spaceflight and flew to the Moon. The two-man Soviet crew, meanwhile, would be led by Alexei Leonov, the first man to walk in space. If Russia's giant N1 Moon rocket had been successful, Leonov was slated to become the first man to walk on the Moon.
The technical challenge of joining the two spacecraft was considerable. In appearance the spherical Soyuz and conical Apollo spacecraft are very different. Soyuz was only ever designed to operate in low Earth orbit, whereas the Apollo capsule was originally built to fly to the Moon (this particular capsule would have been Apollo 18). Soyuz was mostly operated from the ground, whereas the Apollo astronauts were able to pilot their craft using a state-of-the-art digital computer. Even the air mixture each country's crews breathed in orbit was different.
But perhaps the greater challenge was overcoming the cultural divide and the suspicions that had built up since World War Two between the two Cold War enemies. As the US team headed to Moscow, they were not sure what to expect.
"We soon found out that the people that we were working with were not ogres, they were human beings," command module pilot for the mission, Vance Brand, told my podcast during an interview in 2019. "I had a lot of Russian people that I liked, though the KGB was very active and monitored the cosmonauts closely."
In fact, the rooms the US delegation were staying in at Moscow's Star City were all bugged – Brand's young son even walked in on a KGB listening room – but soon both sides found they were making friends.
"Ultimately many of the people who worked on the programme were surprised by the interest, willingness to compromise and the professionalism of their colleagues," says Muir-Harmony. "The relationship between Alexei Leonov and [Apollo commander] Tom Stafford is a great example – they became really close friends and maintained that friendship throughout their lives."
"Pilots have a lot in common no matter whether they've flown Sabre jets or MiGs," said Brand. "Engineers in the same field can also relate very easily… what we did not talk about was politics and religion."
While the US delegation struggled with learning Russian and getting to grips with drab 1970s-era Moscow, the Soviets cosmonauts had their own culture shock when they visited the States.
"When Alexei Leonov came to the United States, he looked at the highway and saw all these cars with different colours and he wanted to know why the cars come in all different colours," says Muir-Harmony.
On 15 July 1975, the Soyuz with Leonov and flight engineer Valery Kubasov launched from Baikonur in what is now Kazakhstan, followed seven hours later by Stafford, Brand and Slayton in their Apollo from Cape Canaveral. The Apollo carried the specially designed docking adapter that would link the two spacecraft. After orbiting the Earth for two days, on 17 July the spacecraft approached each other.
"I first saw them about 400 nautical miles (740km) out," Brand explained. "I aimed the telescope and saw a bright dot in the sky and finally we got very close to them – we could see the solar panels on their spacecraft which looked like wings and so gave it an almost bug-like appearance."
It was a perfect docking. "Then the Americans knocked on the hatch," says Muir-Harmony, "and the Soviets opened it, and they said, 'Who's there?'…which I think is a great joke."
Handshakes and an exchange of gifts followed before US President Ford addressed the crew (Nixon had resigned in August 1974 after the Watergate scandal), expressing his "very great admiration for your hard work your total dedication in preparing for this first joint flight".
After two days together, the spacecraft undocked to return to their homelands. But that wasn't the end of the story.
"Apollo-Soyuz represented a big breakthrough in US-Soviet collaboration," says Svetla Ben-Itzhak, assistant professor of international relations and space security at Johns Hopkins University in Washington DC. "It set the precedent for peaceful cooperation in orbit – this is the moment where space diplomacy really started."
The idea of space diplomacy is that space exploration unites nations with a – mutually beneficial – common goal and that collaboration can then extend back to Earth.
"Science and engineering objectives can bring people together who did not think they necessarily could collaborate productively," says Phillips. "The notion of exploration is something that we can all understand."
Apollo-Soyuz led to further cooperation between the superpowers and, with the fall of the Soviet Union, that relationship became closer still. In the 1990s, Space Shuttle missions flew to the Russian space station Mir – with crews from both countries living and working together for months on end. It was followed by the International Space Station (ISS), a collaborative effort between 14 countries with the US and Russia at its heart.
Even since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Russians, Americans and Western allies continue to work together in orbit on the ISS.
"It is absolutely amazing that this cooperation in space aboard the International Space Station continues, even when tensions on the ground have intensified and sanctions imposed against Russia, including in the space sector," says Ben-Itzhak. "Yet 450km (280 miles) above the Earth, we are still collaborating and working together."
To some extent Russia and the US have no choice but to work together. The ISS is designed so the various national segments are interdependent. If one partner pulls the plug, then the station will fail. The ISS partners are essentially trapped in a toxic marriage, although on the station itself all the astronauts reportedly get along fine.
Ben-Itzhak studies what she has termed "space blocs" – the emerging groupings of space nations. Right now, as countries plan a return to the Moon, it looks like the US and Russians will soon go their separate ways. Russia will likely side with China, and Western nations – including Europe and Canada – will coalesce around the US. But there are also other blocs emerging, including Arab, African and Asian nations (India, for example, is fast becoming a significant space power).
So, could the lessons learnt from the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project one day apply to the Moon? Both sides of this new space race are eyeing-up establishing bases at the lunar South Pole, even at the same crater. So, can Ben-Itzhak imagine handshakes and knock-knock jokes on the lunar surface?
"Right now, I'm sorry to say it is very unlikely," she says. "It's actually worse than that… the Artemis Accords is an international agreement establishing norms of behaviour on the lunar surface, including peaceful exploration, transparency, emergency assistance and preserving the common heritage including the footprints left by the astronauts."
"It's been accepted by 55 countries but not by China or Russia."
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As for Apollo-Soyuz, when I have mentioned to people that I'm writing this article, few – even in the space business – seem to have heard of it. The two sides of the mission are once again a world apart – both politically and literally. The Soyuz spacecraft is in the private Energia museum near Moscow and the Apollo capsule is now looked after by Phillips at the California Science Center in Los Angeles. He is, however, optimistic for the cooperative future of space exploration.
"There is an international community that is waiting to collaborate in space," Phillips says. "If government structures permit that, then I think we can do some really incredible work together."
As for Lunney, he went on to head up the Space Shuttle programme – America's next great space adventure. But, 50 years on, his leadership of Apollo-Soyuz deserves to be remembered for changing forever the way rival nations can learn to live and work together in space.
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We’ve all heard that the advice about having a good breakfast can set us up for the day. But does that mean this meal can makes us healthier and thinner – or is it something else?
Along with old classics like "carrots give you night vision" and "Santa doesn't bring toys to misbehaving children", one of the most well-worn phrases in the arsenal of tired parents everywhere is that breakfast is the most important meal of the day. Many of us grow up believing that skipping breakfast is a dietary travesty, but the number of us who take time to eat it can vary.
Around three-quarters of Americans regularly eat breakfast, while in the UK, around 94% of adults and just 77% of adolescents will regularly eat breakfast. A study in Switzerland showed only two thirds of adults there regularly consume the meal.
When pressed for time, the morning breakfast is often the first thing to go. How many of us eat it while on the run, or gladly exchange a a bowl of cereal, a couple of slices of toast or a pastry for a few extra minutes in bed?
Yet, the clue for why breakfast is supposed to be important is in its name: we're advised to eat it to break our overnight fast.
"The body uses a lot of energy stores for growth and repair through the night," explains dietician Sarah Elder. "Eating a balanced breakfast helps to up our energy, as well as protein and calcium used throughout the night."
But there’s widespread disagreement over whether breakfast should be deemed so important. As well as the rising popularity of fasting diets, there have been concerns around the sugar content of cereal and the food industry's involvement in pro-breakfast research – and even one claim from an academic that breakfast is "dangerous".
So what's the reality? Is breakfast a necessary start to the day… or a marketing ploy by cereal companies?
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Can skipping breakfast cause weight gain?
The most researched aspect of breakfast (and breakfast-skipping) has been its links to obesity. Scientists have different theories as to why there's a relationship between the two.
In one US study that analysed the health data of 50,000 people over seven years, researchers found that those who made breakfast the largest meal of the day were more likely to have a lower body mass index (BMI) than those who ate a large lunch or dinner. The researchers argued that breakfast helps increase satiety, reduce daily calorie intake, improve the quality of our diet – since breakfast foods are often higher in fibre and nutrients – and improve insulin sensitivity at subsequent meals, which can be a risk for diabetes.
But as with any study of this kind, it was unclear if that was the cause – or if breakfast-skippers were just more likely to be overweight to begin with.
To find out, researchers designed a study in which 52 obese women took part in a 12-week weight loss programme. All had the same number of calories over the day, but half had breakfast, while the other half did not.
What they found was that it wasn’t breakfast itself that caused the participants to lose weight: it was changing their normal routine. The women who said before the study that they usually ate breakfast lost 8.9kg when they stopped having breakfast, compared to 6.2kg in the breakfast group. Meanwhile, those who usually skipped breakfast lost 7.7kg when they started eating it – and 6kg when they continued to skip it.
If breakfast alone isn't a guarantee of weight loss, why is there a link between obesity and skipping breakfast?
Alexandra Johnstone, professor of appetite research at the University of Aberdeen, argues that it may simply be because breakfast-skippers have been found to be less knowledgeable about nutrition and health.
"There are a lot of studies on the relationship between breakfast eating and possible health outcomes, but this may be because those who eat breakfast choose to habitually have health-enhancing behaviours such as not smoking and regular exercise," she says.
A 2020 review of 45 studies looking into the relationship between breakfast and obesity confirmed that skipping breakfast increases the risk of obesity. The same effect has been found in children.
Does it matter when we eat breakfast?
Intermittent fasting, which involves fasting overnight and into the next day, is gaining ground among those looking to lose or maintain their weight or improve their health.
One pilot study published in 2018, for example, found that intermittent fasting improves blood sugar control and insulin sensitivity and lowers blood pressure. Eight men with pre-diabetes were assigned one of two eating schedules: either eating all their calories between 9am and 3pm, or eating the same number of calories over 12 hours. The results for the 9am-3pm group were found to be on par with medicine that lowers blood pressure, according to Courtney Peterson, the study's author and assistant professor of nutrition sciences at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
Still, the study's small size means more research is needed on its possible long-term benefits.
If skipping breakfast (and other food outside of a restricted time slot) could potentially be good for you, does that mean breakfast could be bad for you? One academic has said so as eating early in the day causes our cortisol to peak more than it does later on. This causes the body to become resistant to insulin over time and can lead to type 2 diabetes.
But Fredrik Karpe, professor of metabolic medicine at Oxford Centre for Diabetes, Endocrinology and Metabolism, argues this isn't the case. Instead, higher levels of cortisol in the morning are just part of our body's natural rhythm.
Not only that, but breakfast is key to jumpstarting our metabolism, he says. "In order for other tissues to respond well to food intake, you need an initial trigger involving carbs responding to insulin. Breakfast is critical for this to happen," Karpe says.
A randomised control trial found that skipping breakfast disrupted the circadian rhythms and led to larger spikes in blood glucose levels after eating. Eating breakfast, the researchers conclude, is essential for keeping our body clock running on time.
A 2023 review of Japanese adolescents found that skipping breakfast was associated with pre-diabetes – particularly among those who were overweight.
Peterson says those who skip breakfast can be divided into those who either skip breakfast and eat dinner at a normal time – getting the benefits of intermittent fasting, if not breakfast – or those who skip breakfast and eat dinner late.
"For those who eat dinner later, their risk of obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular disease goes through the roof. While it seems breakfast is the most important meal of the day, it might actually be dinner," Peterson says. "Our blood sugar control is best early in the day. When we eat dinner late, that’s when we're most vulnerable because our blood sugar is worst. There’s more research to do, but I’m confident you shouldn’t skip breakfast and have dinner late."
She says we should think of our circadian rhythm as an orchestra.
"There are two parts of our circadian clock. There's the master clock in the brain, which we should think of as analogous to a conductor of an orchestra, and the other half is in every organ, which has a separate clock," she says.
And that "orchestra" is set by two outside factors: bright light exposure and our eating schedule.
"If you're eating when you're not getting bright light exposure, the clocks that control metabolism are in different time zones, creating conflicting signals as to whether to rev up or down."
It's like two halves of an orchestra playing different songs, Peterson explains, and this is why eating late impairs blood sugar and blood pressure levels.
Researchers from the University of Surrey and University of Aberdeen have looked into the mechanisms behind how the time we eat influences body weight. Findings published in 2022 suggest that a bigger breakfast and smaller dinner is beneficial to weight control, as a bigger breakfast led to a smaller appetite for the rest of the day.
The health benefits of eating breakfast
Breakfast has been found to affect more than just weight. Skipping breakfast has been associated with a 27% increased risk of heart disease, a 21% higher risk of type 2 diabetes in men, and a 20% higher risk of type 2 diabetes in women.
This may be because skipping breakfast affects glucose and lipid control, and insulin levels, say researchers behind a 2023 study on fasting and diabetes. They tracked the diets of more than 100,000 people over an average of seven years, and found that the risk of developing the disease was significantly higher among the participants who regularly ate breakfast after 9am, compared to those who ate it before 8am.
One reason for some of the health benefits associated with eating breakfast – at least in the Western world – may be its nutritional value, partly because some cereals are fortified with vitamins. In one study on the breakfast habits of more than 8,000 people in the UK, researchers found that people who consumed breakfast regularly had a higher overall micronutrient intake, partly driven by current UK fortification of vitamins in breakfast cereals, bread and spreads, the researchers say. There have been similar findings in Australia, Brazil, Canada, Indonesia and the US.
Breakfast is also associated with improved brain function, including concentration and language. A review of 54 studies found that eating breakfast can improve memory, though the effects on other brain functions were inconclusive. However, one of the review’s researchers, Mary Beth Spitznagel, a clinical psychologist at Kent State University in Ohio, says there is "reasonable" evidence breakfast does improve concentration – there just needs to be more research.
"Looking at studies that tested concentration, the number of studies showing a benefit was exactly the same as the number that found no benefit," says Spitznagel. "And no studies found that eating breakfast was bad for concentration."
What's most important, some argue, is less whether we eat breakfast but what we eat when we do.
High-protein breakfasts have been found to be particularly effective in reducing food cravings and consumption later in the day, according to research by the Australian Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation.
While cereal remains a firm favourite among breakfast consumers in the UK and US, a 2020 Action on Sugar survey of 120 breakfast cereals found that a third were high in sugar, and only three cereals were low in sugar.
But some research suggests if we're going to eat sugary foods, it's best to do it early. One study found that changing levels of the appetite hormone leptin in the body throughout the day coincide with having our lowest threshold for sweet food in a morning, while scientists from Tel Aviv University have found that hunger is best regulated in the morning. They recruited 200 obese adults to take part in a 16-week-long diet, where half added dessert to their breakfast, and half didn’t. Those who added dessert lost an average of 40lbs (18kg) more – however, the study was unable to show the long-term effects.
A review of 54 studies found that there is no consensus yet on what type of breakfast is healthier and it concluded that the type of breakfast doesn't matter as much as simply eating something.
Another factor to consider is where you eat breakfast. A 2022 study looking at the breakfast habits of almost 4,000 young people found that those who eat breakfast out of the home were more likely to have psychosocial behavioural problems than those who eat breakfast at home. One reason for this, the researchers say, is that the social context of having breakfast as a family may be linked to having a more nutritious breakfast.
Final take
While there's no conclusive evidence on exactly what we should be eating and when, the consensus is that we should listen to our own bodies and eat when we're hungry.
"Breakfast is most important for people who are hungry when they wake up," Johnstone says.
For instance, research shows that those with pre-diabetes and diabetes may find they have better concentration after a lower-GI breakfast such as porridge, which is broken down more slowly and causes a more gradual rise in blood sugar levels.
Everybody starts the day differently – and those individual differences, particularly in glucose function, need to be researched more closely, Spitznagel says.
In the end, the key may be to be mindful of not over-emphasising any single meal, but rather looking at how we eat all day long.
"A balanced breakfast is really helpful, but getting regular meals throughout the day is more important to leave blood sugar stable throughout the day, which helps control weight and hunger levels," says Elder.
"Breakfast isn’t the only meal we should be getting right."
*This article was originally published on 27 November 2018. It was updated on 16 July 2025 to include recent research.
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The US state of Virginia saw some 50% of the nation's Civil War casualties. Now, mass construction of AI data centres is encroaching on historic lands, the environment and local communities.
As the gunner of the Bull Run Legion lifts the explosive charge from its container and carries it up to the cannon, dozens of phones are lifted from pockets. Visitors open camera apps and raise devices high, focusing in on the handful of blue-uniformed men as they swab the gun's barrel with an era-appropriate sponge fastened to a stick.
The cannon blasts its shot out into the air, and in the same moment, each phone fires its parcel of data at the cloud, landing in a data centre where banks of diligent servers sort, clean and route it along.
On 21 July 1861, Union soldiers defending the United States watched over the crest of the same hills now framed on tourists' smartphones, as rebelling Confederate forces charged out of the forest in the first major battle of the American Civil War. A century and a half later, the Bull Run Legion, a group of "living historians" (better-known as re-enactors), still gather at Manassas National Battlefield Park using historic techniques and uniforms to commemorate that struggle.
But today, the march of technology has turned this historic landmark into the scene of a new kind of battle.
Technology companies are planning to erect one of the largest data centres in the world here at Manassas, Virginia, on the very ground where the Union army lost the war's first major land battle. Demand for data centres has skyrocketed as the artificial intelligence (AI) industry blossoms – but experts and advocates say the race for technological growth could threaten resources including water, energy and land. Some experts foresee a "growing crisis" for residents and future generations.
The concerns aren't just practical, however – some fear building data centres too close to national landmarks could erase history and bury the lessons the Civil War has for future generations. "Do I want to see a data centre on the view line of this park? No, I do not. But do I recognise, since I worked in IT, that they're necessary? Yeah, I can get that. So there is no easy answer," Bart Wheeler, one of the living historians who works the cannon, tells the BBC. "Any interested citizen has to be worried."
Those building the data centres disagree with these concerns and say they are taking steps to ensure the development is respectful of the historical context, even planning new information kiosks and trails around the site.
Now, around 150 years after the Union army fought to protect this land in the 19th Century, a coalition of community advocates, environmentalists and history buffs are waging a differenty kind of war against an industry they say is steamrolling past their interests. It's a conflict with global repercussions.
'Data centre alley'
The infrastructure which makes the internet work often lives in massive windowless buildings ringed by high black fences. Inside, stacked banks of computer servers receive signals and crunch numbers from devices around the world, providing the technical horsepower that allows for viral videos, cheeky text messages and more recently, untold numbers of AI queries.
Data centres process our most intimate thoughts and transactions, but they're seldom seen by most users – that is, unless they're your neighbour. Around the world, the sprawling footprint of data centre development and their demands on resources have made this aspect of our digital lives more visible and controversial, particularly as the AI era sparks meteoric growth.
"Customer demand remains very strong, driven by the digitalisation of the economy and AI revolution," says Karen Cohen, a spokesperson for QTS Data Centers, one of two companies seeking to build the massive Prince William Digital Gateway data centre development at Manassas. According to the American Battlefield Trust, the 37-building complex is the largest planned data centre development on earth the world.
QTS and other data centre providers like it contract their servers out to other corporations, providing the backbone which makes the internet run. As the internet has grown, so has the industry's footprint in Northern Virginia: the region is already the world's biggest data centre market. As of this summer, there are plans for Virginia's approximately 340 data centres to be joined by up to 1,200 more, according to the Sierra Club, an environmental advocacy group.
Northern Virginia was a cradle for the tech industry and continues to be a major nerve centre. Its proximity to Washington, DC and the defence industry, alongside generous tax breaks and access to a skilled workforce, helped the industry plant roots in an area sometimes dubbed "data centre alley". Several of the re-enactors of the Bull Run Legion tell the BBC they have careers in IT themselves, attending battle reenactments on the weekends.
Rapidly scaling AI requires significantly more processing power and electricity than previous uses of the internet, and its need for data centres is ravenous: proposals have circulated to build data centres in lunar orbit, install nuclear reactors inside of them and spend trillions of dollars on their construction in the next few years.
The Prince William Digital Gateway, planned to occupy land where soldiers clashed during the Battle of Second Manassas, will have a footprint of over 23 million sq ft (2.1 sq km). Aaron Ruby, a spokesperson for Virginia's electric utility Dominion Power, tells the BBC that Dominion expects the energy demand of the state's data centre industry will quadruple over the next ten years – contributing to the doubling of the entire state's demand.
And Virginia is no outlier. In 2024, data centres accounted for 1.5% of global energy demand, and that figure is expected to double to 945 terawatt-hours (TWh) by 2030. That's more energy than Japan uses today.
But as the industry's footprint continues to grow, so too has local backlash.
A 'growing crisis'
A report by the state legislature says building the infrastructure to provide the necessary energy for the data centre boom "will be very difficult to achieve". The report adds that if the state intends to meet its clean energy goals and reduce the use of fossil fuels, it will be even harder to power the planned data centres. It also says that without guidelines in place, massive construction costs to build new power generation and lines could lead to higher electricity prices for regular consumers.
QTS, however, says that it will pay any costs related to upgrading the electricity grid to ensure no impact to residential rates. But that's unrealistic, according to Ann Bennett, data centre issues chair of the Virginia chapter of the Sierra Club. "This very reputable audit wing of the government says 'we have a big problem'," Bennet tells the BBC, describing the legislature's report. "We're subsidising these major companies with our energy, but also with our tax dollars."
Bennett and the Sierra Club have published their own report about the data centre industry and its environmental impacts, calling it a "growing crisis".
Tax breaks supporting the industry totalled over $730m (£536m) in 2024, and while data centres have brought significant revenue and some jobs to the state, critics argue the climate impacts and energy costs are not sufficiently accounted for.
Ruby of Dominion Power, though, says that "data centres currently pay the full cost of their power". In order to "make sure that remains the case going forward", he says the state report recommended consumer protections, and Dominion is working to get these protections approved.
Bennett says this won’t be enough. "It's almost too late," she says. "In some ways, this is becoming a mitigation project already." The data centre industry is entrenched in Virginia, and further development seems like an unstoppable force. But the Sierra Club hopes other jurisdictions can learn from Virginia's experience and strike the right balance.
The fight for history
"We are not anti-development," says David Duncan, a native Virginian and president of the American Battlefield Trust. His organisation, along with a group of others, is suing to stop the construction of the Prince William Digital Gateway. "We believe this should be an and conversation," Duncan tells the BBC. "That's what has been lost in this rush to build these types of facilities too close to our historic resources."
Cohen says the data centre development won't interrupt the historical value of the area and QTS plans to create "miles of multi-purpose trails" and install "historical landmarks, interactive kiosks and other tools in areas of historical importance" on the battlefield site.
But for some, the issue isn't a lack of signage. "Nobody wants to look into the forest and see these massive monoliths rising," Jim Matte, another member of the Bull Run Legion, tells the BBC.
The Digital Gateway's approval was finalised in a controversial marathon 27 hour town hall meeting in December 2023, after a 4-3 vote in a lame duck session by some legislators who had already lost their seats in the previous election. "We're in litigation because they took shortcuts in the approval processes", says Duncan, adding that activists and citizens alike believe developers and lawmakers anticipated public backlash, but chose to go ahead with the approval anyway. (QTS did not respond to questions on this issue.)
The Battlefield Trust has worked with – and litigated against – powerful developers in the past. Years ago, the organisation successfully altered a plan to build a Walmart at The Wilderness, another pivotal battlefield in Virginia, by moving the site three miles (4.8km) down the road. "When we clamp down on your ankle and don't let go, you're going to get sick of us. We're not just gonna roll over," Duncan says.
But he also feels the data centre industry has more money and momentum behind it than Walmart. "There's so much power," Duncan says.
The Civil War and technological transformation
The idea of a data centre would be lost on the soldiers of the American Civil War, but they would be no strangers to technological upheaval.
During the Civil War, freshly-strung telegraph lines knit marching armies together. The new technology of photography carried images of battle's toll to homes across the world. Advancements in munitions and firearms increased the deadliness of combat, locking the North and South in trench warfare stalemate through the war's final months. It ultimately gave the North – with its industrialised economy – the advantage.
Manassas stood near the crossroads of two railroads, a technology only a few decades old at that point. Manoeuvres throughout the war revolved around access to rail supply lines, with armies seeking to cut off or secure important junctions. The conflict itself was precipitated by the nation's railroad-fuelled westward expansion, which brought the question of extending slavery to new territories or abolishing it to a head.
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At Manassas, a version of the world these soldiers knew and fought for is preserved: the open pastures, rolling hills and the farmhouses they encountered on the march and then returned to as old men to commemorate.
Today, as Americans face another redefinition of their country in an era of big tech and political division, for many the historic battlefields remain an important resource.
"These places are crucial for the future of our country," says Duncan. "This country was defined on the battlefields of the American Civil War."
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Long neglected by science, "middle childhood" between the age of six and 12 years old is a transformative period preparing children for growing up. Here's what's going on in their heads during this turbulent time plus how to navigate it.
My first small act of rebellion came when I was around six years old. I'd just been to a birthday party in the local village hall, with a bunch of children I barely knew. They'd all arrived with their friends, and I felt shy and left out.
By the time I returned home, I was in the foulest of moods. I don't remember what my mum asked me to do, but I can clearly recall my response. "It's alright for you, lazing about," I snapped, "while I had to go to that party!"
I then stormed off, leaving her speechless. What had happened to her sunny little boy?
She might have been less surprised if we had lived in German-speaking country. The word Wackelzahnpubertät – literally "wobbly-tooth puberty" – describes how six-year-olds start to show the bad moods characteristic of adolescence. "Aggressive behaviour, rebellious activism, and deep sadness are typical of the wobbly-tooth puberty," is how the German magazine Wunderkind puts it. (Read on to the bottom of this piece for some tips on how parents can deal with this change in behaviour.)
Unlike the real deal, wobbly-tooth puberty is not driven by hormonal changes. Instead, it coincides with the start of "middle childhood" – a period of profound psychological change in which the brain lays the foundations for more mature thoughts and feelings. "It is a really key stage in which a child is constructing their identity, and they're trying to figure out who they are in relation to other people," says Evelyn Antony, a doctoral student in psychology at Durham University in the UK. "And their emotional world is expanding as well."
Whereas infancy and adolescence are now well-understood, middle childhood – which spans ages six to 12 – has been sorely neglected in scientific research. Some psychologists go as far as to describe it as our "forgotten years". "A lot of the research focuses on the early years, when babies are talking and walking, and then in adolescence when you have a bit more of rebellion," says Antony. "But there's less known about middle childhood."
That is now changing, with new research identifying the core characteristics of children's mental metamorphosis. The transformation includes a greater capacity to reflect on their feelings and modify them when needed, along with an "advanced theory of mind" that allows them to think more sophisticatedly about others' behaviours and respond appropriately. They also begin master the basics of rational enquiry and logical deduction, so that they can take more responsibility for their actions – which is why, in France, it is also known as l'âge de raison.
As the concept of wobbly-tooth puberty illustrates, the onset of middle childhood may be accompanied by some growing pains, but a deeper understanding of the neurological and psychological changes involved is offering new insights on the best ways to support a child throughout the journey.
Wobbly-tooth puberty
Let's begin with emotional regulation. By the start of middle childhood, most children will have already made some huge advances in their capacity to control their feelings. As a newborn, they were completely dependent on the adults around them to soothe their anguish, which is most often caused by physical stressors like hunger, fatigue, or colic. Over the next couple of years, they develop a greater emotional repertoire that includes joy as well as anger and fear, but they do not know how to regulate them – leading to those eardrum-exploding tantrums.
A child's burgeoning language can provide some relief from those maelstroms. That's partly because it allows the child to express their needs more precisely, so that others can respond appropriately before the frustration builds up. There is no need to scream when you want more food if you can simply say "I'm hungry", and a caring adult responds. Emotion words may bring an even more immediate benefit, however. Naming an emotion appears to change its neural response, engaging parts of the prefrontal cortex, which is an area involved in more abstract thought, while soothing the amygdala, the region involved in the sensation of the raw emotion.
As a child reaches five or six, however, they face new challenges that put their emotional understanding to the test, Antony and other researchers say. Rather than relying on adults to guide their every action, they are expected to have greater independence – creating uncertainty and ambiguity that may breed frustration.
They must make friendships by themselves, get along with people they don't like, and obey adults' rules. As Antony points out, they are also developing a stronger sense of self, with a need to define who they are against others.
This transition can stretch a child's emotional regulation to its limits, which may result in the moods of wobbly-tooth puberty, during which the child may become downcast and clingy, or explode in sudden bursts of anger.
Fortunately, children's brains quickly catch up with the new demands. This process usually includes developing a larger vocabulary to describe and understand what they are feeling, including the concept of mixed emotions. (By age nine, most children can recognise that the bittersweet ending of Disney's The Little Mermaid is both happy and sad, for example.)
They also learn new strategies to change how they are feeling by themselves, without relying on a parent or teacher to soothe them. Throughout middle childhood, people become more adept at using "cognitive reappraisal", for instance – which involves altering one's interpretation of an event to shift its emotional impact. If they are struggling with a task at school, for instance, a child might start out by thinking "I can't do this" or "I'm stupid" – or they might recognise their frustration as a prompt to adopt a new strategy, which is likely to calm their anger and enhance their perseverance.
Much of their path to maturity comes from observing the adults around them. "Children will learn how their parents deal with conflict and different issues that come up in their lives," says Antony.
Seeking friendship
The child's social world is also changing. "Middle childhood is a period where 'reciprocal friendships' start to develop," explains Simone Dobbelaar, a post-doctoral researcher in developmental and educational psychology at Leiden University in the Netherlands. In other words, they begin to understand the give and take in relationships, which become a greater focus in their lives. "Children start to spend more time with their peers in and outside of the school context."
Over middle childhood, individuals build on these social skills and mental insights to keep track of many people's thoughts and feelings.
Imagine, for instance, a story about a child, Nick, who wants to be on a football team, but doesn't think he's going to make the cut. The coach is aware of Nick's uncertainty, but wants him on the team. Once he has made his selection, does the coach know that Nick isn't yet aware of his decision to include him on the team? (The correct answer is yes.)
To answer this kind of question, a child has to consider what the coach knows about what Nick knows about the coach's opinion. In other words, they are considering one person's theory of mind about another person's theory of mind, which is known as a "recursive" process.
Such reasoning is important for keeping track of who knows a secret, passing gossip around the playground, and recognising when someone might be "double bluffing" to fool us in a game – but until recently, psychologists hadn't been clear when it first emerged in childhood.
To find out, Christopher Osterhaus at the University of Vechta, and Susanne Koerber at the University of Freiburg, recruited 161 five-year-olds and measured their performance on various theory-of-mind tasks over the next five years. Analysing the data, they found a "steep increase" in their abilities between five and seven, before their performance started to plateau. This suggests that it involved some kind of conceptual leap, he says: "If it was just [them getting gradually better at tackling] the complexity of the task, then you would expect a steadier increase."
This mental leap has immediate, positive consequences for children's social life and wellbeing, research suggests. "We find that the higher their social reasoning, the lower the feelings of loneliness," says Osterhaus. "Maybe they're finding it easier to make friendships or to engage in deeper friendships."
Along these lines, Dobbelaar's research suggests that enhanced sensitivity is linked with more prosocial behaviour, such as acting especially kindly to someone who feels excluded. To study this, she set up an experiment that mimicked the kind of petty bullying that is sadly only too common in many playgrounds. (Read more on a proven way for schools to stop bullying.)
The experiment involved a simple videogame called Cyberball, in which four players pass a ball between themselves. Unbeknown to the participants, the three other players were all controlled by the computer, two of which could be programmed to exclude the third bot by never giving them a turn to catch and throw the ball.
Younger participants appeared to be less sensitive to injustice. As they passed through middle childhood and into early adolescence, however, many of the participants started to compensate for the other players' mean behaviour by using their own turns to pass the ball to the bot that was being overlooked – providing a small sign of solidarity with the victim.
Using fMRI scans of the children's brains, Dobbelaar and her colleagues found that this was associated with some characteristic changes in neural activity, which suggested a reduced focus on themselves – and, presumably, an increased focus on others. "It could be due to increases in perspective-taking skills," she says, as the children's developing brains were able to consider the feelings of the "bullied bot”.
The beginning of self-doubt
Despite these many benefits, sophisticated social reasoning can come with a downside: greater self-consciousness and self-doubt. Consider a study of the "liking gap", which describes our tendency to underestimate how much another person likes us, compared to how much we like them. A recent study by Wouter Wolf, who is now based at Utrecht University, found that the liking gap first emerges at age five and increases steadily over middle childhood. The more attuned we become to other's mental lives, it seems, the more we start to worry that their view of us is not as friendly and positive as we'd like it to be.
I suspect this may explain my bad mood at the party; it was my first taste of self-consciousness and loneliness – and I didn't yet have the words to express why I felt sad and angry, or the skills to overcome the liking gap and build new friendships with people I didn't know well.
The power of a chat
The adults in a child's life can ease the development of these skills through regular conversations. Antony, for instance, points to research demonstrating the power of "emotion coaching". This involves listening to the child without judgement, validating what they are feeling, and then suggesting ways that they move on more positively. "It's not about the adult trying to fix everything for them, but guiding them through this process of managing their emotions," she says. An adult may encourage cognitive reappraisal, for instance, by showing the child how an initially upsetting event could be interpreted in different ways. The child may then apply this when are next upset, arming them against future stresses.
A parent or guardian may also talk through social dilemmas – either in real life or in fiction. "You might ask them, why did this person react that way? Why did they say it?" says Osterhaus. This helps them to think more carefully about other people's mental states, he says, which should encourage more advanced theory of mind.
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Sometimes, the two approaches will naturally converge. If a child is shaken because their best friend has been rude, you might encourage them to question the potential reasons for the nasty behaviour. Perhaps they were tired or having a bad day; it was nothing personal and can be treated with compassion rather than anger.
Like any skills worth learning, these abilities need constant practice. Over many such moments, however, the child will be well-equipped to understand their own and others' minds, guiding them well past their "wobbly-tooth puberty" into the adventures of adolescence and beyond.
* David Robson is an award-winning science writer and author. His latest book, The Laws of Connection: 13 Social Strategies That Will Transform Your Life, was published by Canongate (UK) and Pegasus Books (USA & Canada) in June 2024. He is @davidarobson on Instagram and Threads and writes the 60-Second Psychology newsletter on Substack.
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Snot plays a powerful role in protecting us from disease – and its colour alone can provide insights into what's going on in our bodies.
In Ancient Greece, snot was thought to be one of the four bodily fluids responsible for balancing human health and personality. The physician Hippocrates developed a theory stating that phlegm, blood, yellow bile and black bile were the four "humours". A person's balance of these humours could dictate their temperament; an excess of any of them could cause illness. For instance, phlegm was thought to be made in the brain and lungs, and during the cold and wet seasons, it could become too abundant and even cause epilepsy. Somebody with a phlegmatic personality would have a cold, damp and aloof character.
Of course, we now know that snot doesn't affect people's personalities or cause diseases – rather, it helps to protect us from them.
And though nobody likes a runny nose or flinging snot across the room in a sneeze, the mucus in our nasal passages is arguably one of the wonders of the human body. It protects us from intruders, and it has a unique composition that can reveal profound insights into what is going on inside us. Now scientists are hoping to hone the powers of snot to better diagnose and treat everything from Covid-19 to chronic lung conditions.
The gooey substance shields the insides of our nose, moisturising the nasal passages, and trapping any bacteria, viruses, pollens, dirt, dust and pollution trying to get into our body through our airways. Aided by hundreds of tiny hairs, snot is a barrier between the outside world and our inner one.
The adult body produces over 100 millitres of snot over the course of a day but children tend to be much snottier than adults because their bodies are learning to deal with being exposed to all of the world's molecules for the first time, says Daniela Ferreira, a professor of respiratory infection and vaccinology from the University of Oxford in the UK.
With a simple glance, our snot's colour and consistency can already help us glean a little bit about what's going on: snot can be like a visual thermometer. A runny schnozzle with clear mucus suggests the body is likely expelling something that's irritating its sinuses, like pollen or dust. White mucus means a virus may have entered the premises, as the white is caused by the white blood cells called up to fight off intruders. When mucus turns denser and yellowish-green, it's just a lot of dead white blood cells accumulating after having gathered in great numbers and flushing out. If your snot is reddish or pink, it may be a little bloody: maybe you've blown your nose too much and irritated its insides.
But looking at snot is just the first step.
The snot microbiome
While the gut microbiome – the ecosystem of bacteria, viruses, fungi and other microorganisms that inhabit our bodies – is very much in the public consciousness, scientists think that the microbiome in our snot is equally important. In fact, scientists now believe that it's intricately linked to human health and the proper functioning of the immune system.
Everybody has a unique snot microbiome. It is affected by sex, age, location, diet – and even whether you vape. The microbiome's makeup is what helps it fend off intruders, and some of these interactions are subtle. Research from 2024, for instance, found that whether potentially harmful Staphylococcus bacteria survive in the nose and infect a person, causing fever and pus-filled boils, depends on how the snot microbiome's bacteria hold onto iron.
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Ferreira is working to figure out exactly what a healthy snot microbiome looks like so that it can be put in an everyday nasal spray to boost snot health, like taking probiotics for gut health. "Imagine if you could alter what we have in our nose with lots of very good-guy species that stay there and colonise, and do not allow for the bad guys to come in and cause us to get sick," says Ferreira.
Ferreira's colleagues have selected the bacteria they think make up the perfect schnozzle microbiome, and they're testing them to see if these bacteria can take over people's airways and last long enough to impact and improve their health.
Since the snot's microbiome is so tightly linked with the immune system, says Ferreira, they are also studying it to fine-tune how to boost the immune system and even make it more receptive to vaccines. Research suggests that how a body reacts to a vaccine is altered by the type of microbiome a person has. Studies on the Covid-19 vaccine, for example, suggest it affected the snot's microbiome, and in turn, the microbiome affected how efficient the vaccine was.
"The Covid-19 vaccines were great at stopping us from getting sick, but we continued to transmit the virus," says Ferreira. "We could actually develop much better vaccines [so] the next generation people don't even get sick, whether that is Covid-19 or flu or any other respiratory viruses – and it's all there in that snot immunity."
The rise of diag-nosing
While Ferreira's work pinpointing the exact formula for the perfect snot microbiome might take a couple of years, in Sweden, scientists have had a head start by transplanting healthy people's snot into those who are sick with a chronically blocked nose and hay fever, everyday symptoms of rhinosinusitis.
The researchers asked 22 adults to shoot themselves up the nose with a syringe full of snot from healthy friends and partners each day for five days. They discovered that symptoms like cough and facial pain, for instance, dropped by almost 40% for up to three months in at least 16 of the patients. "That was great news to us, and no one reported any negative side effects," says Anders Martensson, a senior consultant in otorhinolaryngology and head and neck surgery from Helsingborg Hospital in Sweden, who led the study. These trials were inspired by work done in other laboratories about gut microbiomes, with faecal transplants, he says.
That first pilot programme, however didn't gather much data about how these people's snot microbiomes changed and what happened to the specific bacteria in their nose, whether they increased, decreased, and so forth. So another larger and more precise trial is underway.
In fact, snot can be a great barrier to chronic nose and lung diseases.
Jennifer Mulligan, an otolaryngologist at the University of Florida, uses snot to study people with chronic rhinosinusitis and nasal polyps – a condition that affects about 5 to 12% of the global population. In the first years of her career, she needed to surgically extract nose tissue from rhinosinusitis patients, but that was invasive and limiting. Now, her research has shown that snot can be an accurate proxy to more closely examine what's happening inside the body when someone develops rhinosinusitis. "We're using it to whittle down who are really the guilty culprits here, who's really driving this condition?" says Mulligan, adding that every patient has a slightly different profile for what's causing their rhinosinusitis.
Similarly, while treatment before was mostly trial and error – varying greatly from patient to patient, and sometimes costing tens of thousands of dollars for treatments lasting months – Mulligan suggests a snot analysis can quickly help identify the right treatment or surgery needed.
Several clinical trials for Mulligan's technique are underway worldwide. Emerging health-teach companies, such as Diag-Nose, launched by engineers at Stanford University, are developing snot-analysing AI systems and patenting devices for nasal microsampling: in 2025, they launched the first FDA-approved nasal microsampling device – a sampling device that collects precise volumes of nasal fluid – to reduce research variability by standardising sampling methods.
"We have learned so much that we could have never learned with just tissue biopsies. It's completely changed what we know about the disease, and it's going to change the way patients are diagnosed in the future and how they receive treatment," says Mulligan.
Mulligan uses the same snot tools to study what causes people to lose their sense of smell, too. Her team has already found that a vitamin-D nasal spray could potentially help restore a sense of smell in people who have lost it due to inflammation from smoking.
Plus, Mulligan says, what happens in the lungs happens in the nose and vice versa. So these diagnostic tools and therapies can be used for lung diseases too. New research suggests that by simply analysing how much of the IL-26 protein is present in a patient's snot, doctors can tell whether somebody is more or less susceptible to developing chronic obstructive pulmonary disease – a common smoker's disease, and the fourth most widespread cause of death in the world. With snot analyses, patients can be diagnosed early and treated rapidly.
Similarly, research teams around the world are developing analogous tools and methods to use snot to detect asthma, lung cancer, Alzheimer's disease, and Parkinson's disease. Snot can also be used to measure radiation exposure and several recent studies suggest that the gooey nasal fluid can pinpoint how much somebody is exposed to pollution, such as heavy metals and microparticles in the air.
"Snot is the future of personalised medicine. I wholeheartedly believe that," says Mulligan.
*Disclaimer
All content within this column is provided for general information only, and should not be treated as a substitute for the medical advice of your own doctor or any other health care professional. The BBC is not responsible or liable for any diagnosis made by a user based on the content of this site. The BBC is not liable for the contents of any external internet sites listed, nor does it endorse any commercial product or service mentioned or advised on any of the sites. Always consult your own GP if you're in any way concerned about your health.
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When it comes to bread, supermarkets have a dizzying array of choice. Yet the bread we eat can have a surprising impact on our health.
Like many of us, I started making sourdough during the Covid-19 lockdown in 2020. My colleagues at the BBC published a step-by-step guide, and I – alongside thousands of others – gave it a go. I must confess I didn't start completely from scratch as a friend gifted me some of her starter – the live mixture of wild yeast and bacteria which help bread to rise. After many failed attempts it became not only edible, but delicious. I don't have a very precise method, but it usually turns out OK.
At first, I carried on making bread because it was tasty, but after learning more about the health concerns around ultra-processed foods (UPFs) – which often contain added salt, sugar, fat, and industrial chemical additives – I felt determined to keep going. Not only did my bread taste better than supermarket offerings, but it was free of those ultra-processed food (UPF) ingredients that scientists warn aren't particularly good for us. Five years on, my starter is still thriving and used regularly.
However, not all of us have time to bake our own bread every day. Artisan sourdough can also be extremely expensive. In comparison, supermarket bread is cheap and convenient. But given that there are so many options in the supermarket, it can be difficult to know what's best to eat. So which bread is the healthiest, and what should we look out for when buying a loaf?
The Chorleywood method
In the late 1950s, scientists at the Chorleywood factory in the UK developed a method to produce dough much faster than before. They added hard fats, additional yeast and chemicals such as enzymes, oxidants (to strengthen the dough) and emulsifiers (which helps other chemicals combine), then mixed their recipe together at high speed.
This innovative new technique made bread quicker and cheaper to produce using low-protein British wheat. The extra additives such as emulsifiers gave the bread longer-shelf life too, which is why today about 80% of the loaves we eat are still made using the Chorleywood method.
Although the Chorleywood process was initially developed as a way to help small bakers compete with bigger industrial bakeries, it backfired. Despite the intentions of the scientists behind it, large industrial bakers adopted the process too, putting smaller bakeries out of business.
Sourdough
If the Chorleywood method produces quick, spongey loaves, sourdough bread is on the slower end of the bread-baking scale.
To make almost any risen bread (one that uses yeast or bacteria to create bubbles of gas), there are several essential steps involved. First the ingredients are mixed, then kneaded – this helps the gluten to form an elastic dough – followed by the first rise, which is where the dough is left, usually in a warm, humid environment, for the yeast to break down sugars and create pockets of carbon dioxide. After this, the bread will either be baked immediately or worked again to shape it into its final form, such as a baton or a baguette, and allowed to rise again. During this second step of fermentation, the yeast will form smaller bubbles of air, which improves the structure of the final loaf. Then the bread is ready for baking.
When I make bread, the final rise (called proofing) happens in the fridge overnight, which slows down the fermentation process, enhancing the flavour. This also means that the entire process, from activating my starter – where it is mixed with flour and water, and allowed to wake up before it's used – to taking the bread out of the oven, can take as long as 36 hours.
In its most basic form, the ingredients of sourdough are flour, salt, and water mixed with a sourdough starter – usually a mixture of bacteria and yeast – which acts as a natural raising agent. Those of us who eat it tend to love the taste, but what's even better are the health benefits.
Sourdough can be easier to digest than other breads as the slow fermentation process breaks down the protein and makes the vitamins and minerals easier for our body to absorb. As sourdough ferments, its natural lactic acid bacteria break down carbohydrates in the flour. This process significantly reduces the amount of hard-to-digest sugars known as fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides and polyols (fodmaps).
At the same time, the fibre and healthy compounds called polyphenols provide important fuel for our gut microbes. Similarly, the slow fermentation process makes it helpful for those who need to manage their blood sugar level. However, commercially available, (usually) yeast-based breads do have some benefits, including being fortified with certain vitamins and minerals.
Sourdough has also been found to keep you fuller for longer. Some studies have found that people feel less hungry after eating sourdough baked goods compared to other breads. Others though, didn't find any difference.
Ultra-processed bread?
Today, many breads found on supermarket shelves baked using the Chorleywood method are defined as UPFs, due to the chemicals and emulsifiers added to them. For example, in some countries, such as the US, processed bread may contain the additive potassium bromate, which helps bread to retain carbon dioxide and leads to larger loaves. However, it is considered a possible carcinogen in humans.
In the UK about 54% of the calories we consume are in the form of ultra-processed foods, according to a 2020 study. The figure is similar in the US, though estimates vary. It can be hard to identify what a UPF ingredient is, so a rule-of-thumb many academics advise is this: if the food contains five or more ingredients, as well as ingredients you wouldn't have in your own kitchen, it's likely to be UPF.
Most bread found in supermarkets today is mass-produced and contains additives that boosts production speed, extends shelf life, enhances flavour and texture, as well as replaces nutrients lost during the production. This means most supermarket loaves are classified as ultra-processed.
Mass produced bread accounts for about 11% of a typical diet and a diet high in UPFs is linked to a range of health conditions, though it's worth noting that the way food is categorised as UPF lumps many different food groups together, and researchers urge caution not to vilify all supermarket bread.
One option is to choose bread with as few extra ingredients that you do not recognise as possible. And if you are going for packaged bread, you might want to consider opting for wholegrain instead of white. Nutritionist Jenna Hope told BBC Good food that "different types of breads are associated with different health benefits. For example, wholegrain bread with seeds will be higher in fibre and have healthier fats than white bread."
Wholegrain bread
Wheat grains are made up of several layers. There's the germ – the embryo of the wheat which is rich in protein – the outer shell, known as the bran, and the starchy endosperm, which acts as a food store for the embryo.
In regular bread, the germ and the bran tend to be removed, leaving just the endosperm. In contrast, wholegrain bread uses all parts of the grain – and this is what gives it its range of health benefits, as they contain polyphenols (a group of chemicals with antioxidant properties), essential nutrients like vitamin E, folate and magnesium, as well as fibre, protein and healthy fats. White flour on the other hand, has the germ and bran removed.
Unlike refined grains, wholegrain bread is packed with more fibre, vitamins, and minerals. These benefits mean that swapping from white bread to wholegrain could reduce the risk of heart disease and improve your gut microbiome. Eating more wholegrains is also linked to a reduced cancer risk.
The fibre found in wholegrain bread can also keep you feeling full for longer as we digest it more slowly, so it can lead to a more gradual increase in blood sugar levels, rather than the spike we often get from white bread, which can make us hungrier sooner. One study found that those who ate three portions of wholegrain per day had a lower BMI and reduced belly fat compared to those who ate refined grains, showing that eating wholegrain food could help individuals maintain a healthier weight.
It's worth noting that some supermarket bread marketed as "seeded" is not necessarily made from wholegrain flour, even though it appears brown in colour. Of course, if you find it difficult to give up white bread, you can get wholegrain food in your diet from a range of other foods too, including brown pasta, brown rice, rolled oats, and even popcorn.
A healthier white bread
Today white bread is still the most popular form of bread bought by consumers in the UK, despite the fact that it lacks the nutritional value of wholegrain. That could soon change, however. Researchers have created a new wholemeal bread that tastes and looks like white bread.
To do so, the researchers plan to enrich bread with small amounts of peas, beans, and various cereals, alongside the bran and wheat germ that is typically removed in white bread flour. While the research is in its early stages, Catherine Howarth of Aberystwyth University, one of the researchers involved in making these loaves, stated in 2024 that the process is a "delicate balancing act", as the team tries to match the nutritional value of wholemeal bread but create the taste and consistency of white bread.
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The team is also incorporating other nutrient-rich grains like teff, sorghum, and millet, as well as seeds such as quinoa. Green peas and chickpeas are also being considered to provide an extra protein boost. "Using other cereals we can enhance the iron, zinc and vitamin levels and most importantly the fibre content, because white bread has very little fibre, which is so important for good health," Howarth told BBC News.
While my colleague, BBC Science correspondent Pallab Ghosh, tried an early prototype – and found it extremely tasty – it may take another two years before this product is available to buy.
So what should you choose?
A lot of choice ultimately comes down to personal preference, convenience and cost.
An expensive sourdough loaf may be out of reach for many, and minimally processed bread is not practical or affordable, yet it's still worth checking the ingredients of the produce you buy. Knowing what to look out for will help you make more conscious choices when it comes to choosing bread.
One loaf that looked fairly healthy to me in my local supermarket had added granulated sugar and preservatives, for instance.
Some supermarkets do sell sliced packaged sourdough – and the ingredient list is minimal, distinguishing it from UPF versions of sliced bread. And for those worried about shelf life, freezing bread is always an option too.
For those interested in baking their own bread, the BBC has plenty of recipes to follow, including how to make your own sourdough loaf.
* Melissa Hogenboom is a BBC health and science journalist.
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Guernsey's specialist medical care provider is to use artificial intelligence (AI) to help doctors spend more time with patients and less on paperwork.
The smart AI assistant, known as Heidi, helps doctors by taking notes during patient visits and automatically creating documents, such as referral letters and patient summaries, which the doctor checks and signs off.
The chief executive of the Medical Specialist Group (MSG), Dr Farid Fouladinejad, said this will save doctors significant time.
Heidi was piloted in June by 10 MSG consultants and their admin colleagues and is now set to be gradually rolled out for all outpatient consultations.
"Right now, doctors spend around 40% of their time writing and checking notes, letters, and reports. While this work is important, it takes them away from seeing patients," said Dr Fouladinejad.
"There's a lot of excitement about AI in medicine, but we must be careful and sensible in how we use it.
"One of the first ways MSG is using AI is to help our doctors in writing up and summarising their notes and letters.
"This could help them see more patients and reduce waiting times."
Dr Michelle Le Cheminant said the technology will hopefully give the best experience to MSG's patients.
"When you've thought about any change within medicine, for example, you take the dictaphone, the typewriter, we need to move forwards and this is part of that journey," she said.
Dr Le Cheminant says patients will not even notice the technology being used because Heidi works in the background "via a web browser on our computer or via an app on the doctor's phone."
"The main difference that patients will notice when they are in the clinic room is that we won't be having to produce a lot of handwritten notes, we won't be having to type a lot on the computer, so really the difference is that focus on the patient and that interaction."
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A team from the University of Hertfordshire have travelled to Salvador in Brazil to take part in a global football competition involving autonomous robots.
The aim of RoboCup 2025 is to develop humanoid robots capable of defeating the human FIFA World Cup champions by 2050 in a fair match.
Daniel Polani, a professor of artificial intelligence at the university and part of the team, said the AI robots "are nowhere close to the ability of a Messi or a Ronaldo because running is a very difficult task".
He added: "At this stage we are happy if they can walk without falling down."
RoboCup, which first started in 1997, has long served as a proving ground for AI and robotics researchers and this year's competition involves 250 teams from 37 countries.
"We have been playing with humanoid robots which look like humans and the robots we use are not allowed to use anything that humans don't have," said Mr Polani, who is also on the Board of Trustees of the RoboCup Federation.
"The robots are independent - they are not remote controlled because it is a competition where AI does everything," he said.
The only remote aspect is the whistle to stop and start the game, he added.
Mr Polani said the idea behind the competition was if you want to make intelligent machines you have to put them in the real world and "if they mess up they mess up themselves".
"It is a really difficult task to kick and not fall down and you have to contend with 22 different robots working in a coordinated fashion," he added.
The University of Hertfordshire sent its first team to RoboCup in 2002, as it believed it was "where the future of robotics will lie", said Mr Polani.
He said the French and Japanese teams were good, but he did not think that they would do well this year.
RoboCup takes place from 17-21 July alongside other competitions such as where robots are tested in rescue situations and perform household tasks.
Organisers said the competition was expected to attract 150,000 spectators.
Livestream coverage was also available throughout the event on Twitch and YouTube.
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The identities of more than 100 British officials, including members of the special forces and MI6, were compromised in a data breach that also put thousands of Afghans at risk of reprisal, it can be reported.
The latest fallout from the breach was kept secret by an injunction until Thursday, when the order was lifted in part by a High Court judge.
That allowed media organisations to reveal that detailed case notes in the database contained secret personal data of special forces and spies.
The government had already admitted on Tuesday the data of nearly 19,000 Afghans who had worked with the British during the 20-year war in Afghanistan and had applied to resettle in the UK had been inadvertently leaked.
Many were judged to be at risk of serious harm or even death as the Taliban sought retribution against those who had worked with the British government during the conflict.
This was part of the reason the information was protected by a so-called "super-injunction" - a kind of gagging order that prevents the reporting of even the existence of the injunction.
The data breach occurred in February 2022 but was not discovered by the government until August 2023, when someone in Afghanistan who had obtained the data posted part of it on Facebook and indicated he could release the rest.
The BBC revealed on Wednesday that the Ministry of Defence (MoD) had offered to expedite a review of the individual's application and brought him to the country after he posted the data - a sequence of events that government sources said was "essentially blackmail".
The MoD declined to comment on the actions of the individual but said that "anyone who comes to the UK under any Afghan relocation schemes" must go through "robust security checks in order to gain entry".
The discovery of the breach in 2023 forced the government to covertly set up the Afghanistan Response Route (ARR) - a resettlement scheme for those affected, who were not told about the breach despite the risk to their security.
The scheme has already allowed 4,500 Afghans and family members to move to the UK and a further 2,400 people are expected, at an estimated cost of £850m.
The accidental leak was the result of someone working at UK Special Forces headquarters in London inadvertently emailing more than 30,000 resettlement applications to an individual outside of government, thinking that he was sending data on just 150 people.
After the lifting of the super-injunction on Tuesday, a secondary injunction had prevented the revelations about special forces and security services personnel being compromised.
But that was also lifted on Thursday that barristers representing both the MoD and a group of media organisations reached a compromise that meant journalists could report the additional facts.
Defence Secretary John Healey told Parliament on Tuesday that the breach was a "serious departmental error" and acknowledged that it was "just one of many data losses" relating to the Afghan relocation schemes.
The shadow defence secretary, James Cartlidge, apologised on behalf of the former Conservative government, which was in power when the leak was discovered.
The MoD has refused to say how many people in Afghanistan may have been harmed as a result of the data breach. The Taliban government said on Thursday that it had not arrested or monitored Afghans affected by the leak.
But relatives of Afghans named in the leak told the BBC that they fear for their family still in the country, with one saying efforts by the Taliban to find their named relative intensified following the leak.
An MoD spokesperson said: "It's longstanding policy of successive governments to not comment on special forces.
"We take the security of our personnel very seriously, particularly of those in sensitive positions, and always have appropriate measures in place to protect their security."
On the face of it, the Afghan data breach is very bad indeed.
It is arguably the worst leak of secret UK government names since the former MI6 officer Richard Tomlinson went rogue and published a list online containing dozens of names of MI6 officers in 1999.
For a case officer in the Secret Intelligence Service (MI6), having your name and details outed in public is potentially a career-killer.
That said, names can be changed, forged or disguised.
What cannot be is biometric data - something increasingly used in counter-intelligence to uncover and catch spies - and there is no indication so far that UK officers have had this data leaked as well.
For serving and former members of the highly secretive Special Air Service (SAS) and Special Boat Service (SBS), leaks like this one can, in theory, expose them to the risk of threat to life, given the lethal, covert operations some will have taken part in that may have involved the deaths or capture of individuals. The physical risk resulting from this leak to those members of UK Special Forces whose names were on the leaked dataset is judged to be minimal.
Those who face the greatest risk are Afghans still in Afghanistan.
The revelation that, in addition to the thousands of leaked names and details of potentially vulnerable Afghans, there are 100 or more involving British operatives is certainly shocking.
But this "unauthorised data breach" was - belatedly - discovered as far back as August 2023.
So that has given the UK intelligence and special forces communities nearly two years in which to come up with ways to mitigate this disaster and adopt whatever protective measures they can, for both Afghans and Brits on the leaked dataset.
Amongst the worse-case scenarios that MI6 in particular will have had to consider is that Russia, China, Iran or even North Korea may now also be in possession of those leaked names.
It is a fair assumption to make that the Taliban's intelligence apparatus would have had little interest in the names of long-departed British soldiers and spies. But they would be canny enough to work out who would be interested: the UK's global adversaries.
For now, those who have most to fear are the 600 former Afghan government soldiers and their estimated 1,800 relatives who are still in Afghanistan.
Whatever routes out were being suggested to them will have now been compromised and the publicity surrounding this whole story will have inevitably re-energised some of the more fanatical members of the Taliban to hunt down those on the list and exact what they perceive as rightful vengeance for treachery during the 20 years when they were out of power.
From buzzy titles like Vincent Latronico's Perfection to Taylor Jenkins Reid's latest blockbuster, here's our pick of the best books to escape with this summer.
Whether you're packing for a fortnight spent poolside or just taking advantage of the long evenings in your own garden or local park, the heady days of summer bring with them the desire to lose ourselves in a great book. Luckily, there are plenty to choose from this year.
Depending on your tastes, the perfect summer read might mean catching up with 2025's most talked-about novels, immersing yourself in an epic family saga, or enjoying some biting satire on the current state of the world. Either way, these 10 titles are all worthy of escaping with for a few hours.
The following numbered list is not ranked.
1. Waist Deep by Linea Maja Ernst
A huge bestseller in Denmark, Waist Deep has now been translated into 10 languages, including English by Sherilyn Nicolette Hellberg. It follows a group of university friends, now in their 30s, who are reunited for a summer holiday in a rural cabin. What begins as a week of swimming, sunbathing and relaxing turns into uneasy self-examination of choices made over the past decade, and lives not lived. Vogue has dubbed this sensual book the "quintessential millennial novel" and it has drawn plenty of Sally Rooney comparisons. Its sun-soaked setting and languid literary vibes are ideal for this time of year.
2. The Names by Florence Knapp
Arguably the most buzzed about debut of the year, The Names is a Sliding Doors story of how a name can determine your destiny. Cora sets out to register the birth of her second child, with the three options for his name coming from herself, her husband, and her young daughter. Each choice sends the story in a different direction, showing how split-moment decisions can shape our whole lives. The themes are heavy – namely, domestic violence – but the writing is not, with Knapp skilfully weaving the three stories together to create a book that is as full of hope as it is horror.
3. Perfection by Vincent Latronico
This slim (120-page) novel is perfect for when you want to travel light but still read one of this year's most discussed books. Translated from Italian by Sophie Hughes, it tells the story of an expat millennial couple living and working in Berlin as digital nomads. Everything in their lives is carefully curated, from the houseplants and vinyl collection in their Art Nouveau apartment to their social life in the city. It all looks perfect from the outside (especially on the internet), but there's a creeping uneasiness about the inherent emptiness of a life in which aesthetics take priority. This short, sharp satire might make you think twice about posting that poolside selfie.
4. Atmosphere by Taylor Jenkins Reid
It's no coincidence that the latest book from Taylor Jenkins Reid was published just in time for summer. The powerhouse author's novels, which include Daisy Jones & The Six and The Seven Husbands of Evelyn, have become go-to sun lounger fare thanks to their glamorous retro settings (the '70s rock scene, Golden Age Hollywood; the '90s professional tennis world) and emotional love stories. Reid's latest novel – her ninth – is set in the world of space travel, specifically the 1980s Nasa Space Shuttle mission. Its protagonist, Joan, becomes one of the first women to join the programme and is confronted with huge challenges, both in Mission Control and her relationships with the other astronauts.
5. Flashlight by Susan Choi
Choi's last novel, Trust Exercise, was a huge success, scooping the National Book Award for Fiction and making countless best-of-2019 lists – including Barack Obama's. Her follow up looks set to make a similar impact. An ambitious generational saga meets mystery thriller that spans several decades and countries, it is told from the perspective of three members of the Kang family: a white American mother, a Korean father born in Japan, and their mixed-race daughter. The story begins with a disappearance, then ripples out from there for a compulsive read.
6. So Far Gone by Jess Walter
Jess Walter is responsible for one of the classic contemporary beach reads, 2012's Beautiful Ruins, which combined a glamorous Italian location with a dose of old Hollywood romance – and even featured appearances from Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor. Walter's latest has a less chic setting but an equally compelling premise. A retired, reclusive and disillusioned environmental journalist tries to opt out of modern life by going off-grid in his ranch but is forced to re-enter the real world when his daughter goes missing and his grandchildren are kidnapped. Cue a comedic road-trip through a divided America plagued by conspiracy theories.
7. The Benefactors by Wendy Erskine
With two short story collections, Wendy Erskine has already gained a reputation as one of the most exciting voices to emerge from Northern Ireland in recent years, and her debut novel only cements that. It centres on three mothers brought together when their teenage sons are accused of sexual assault, but features an expansive cast of characters who together paint a vivid picture of life in contemporary Belfast (The Times said it has "the style of Woolf but the heart of Dickens"). An absorbing, powerful novel about class, trauma and consent.
8. Fundamentally by Nussaibah Younis
It may have lost out on the Women's Prize, but Fundamentally is still one of the most lauded debut novels of the year. The subject matter - a British academic trying to de-radicalise IS brides – might not immediately scream beach read, but the writing is more hilarious than harrowing. Younis, who spent years working in international relations, even took a stand-up comedy course before writing the book because she wanted it to be a story that, above all, entertains people. Its word-of-mouth success proves it has succeeded at that.
9. The Sisters by Jonas Hassen Khemiri
Summer downtime is a great opportunity to tackle a doorstopper novel and, at more than 700 pages, this one is certainly meaty, not only in length but in subject. The sixth novel by Swedish author Jonas Hassen Khemiri is his first written in English (he then wrote it all over again in Swedish) and has been called "a staggering achievement." Following three sisters over three decades and three continents, the novel is told in six parts, each covering a progressively shorter timespan – from a year to a day all the way down to one minute. One to sink your teeth into on the sun lounger.
10. Great Black Hope by Rob Franklin
With the New York social scene providing a backdrop, Great Black Hope will allow you to vicariously experience a sweltering summer in the city – though this debut is much more than a simple tale of hedonism. Protagonist David Smith is a queer black Stanford graduate caught between two different worlds. His future looks bright, but when his roommate dies suddenly and he is arrested for cocaine possession at a party in the Hamptons, things start to unravel. This coming-of-age story explores the intersection of wealth and race, as well as friendship, grief and identity, with Vanity Fair hailing it "the novel you'll see by every Hamptons lounger this summer."
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A prop central to the celebrated opening scene of Citizen Kane - widely regarded as one of the best films ever made - has sold at auction for $14.75m (£11m).
The wooden Rosebud sled, one of at least three known to have survived, was long thought to have been lost until it was given to director Joe Dante in 1984, saving it from destruction.
He went on to use it as a reference for fans (known as an Easter egg) in films he directed, including Gremlins 2: The New Batch.
It is now the second most expensive piece of memorabilia to have ever been sold - a pair of ruby slippers used in The Wizard of Oz sold for $32m (£23.9) in December.
"Along with Dorothy's ruby slippers, the Rosebud sled from Citizen Kane is one of the most iconic objects in Hollywood history," Joe Maddalena, executive vice president at Heritage Auctions, which held the action, told its magazine the Intelligent Collector.
The identity of the sled's buyer was not revealed.
Other Rosebuds made for the film have been sold in the past, including one to legendary director Steven Spielberg, who later donated it to the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles.
However, the version sold on Thursday had not been seen for many years until it ended up in the hands of Dante.
He told Heritage auctions how he was making the film Explorers in 1984 on the same studio that was formerly owned by RKO Radio Pictures, which produced Citizen Kane.
Dante said crews were on site clearing out storage areas when one worker, who knew he liked vintage films, asked if he wanted it.
"I was astonished...Since I am a huge fan of the movie, I said, 'Yeah, I'll be glad to take it."
"Citizen Kane may be the greatest film ever made, and Rosebud is the linchpin of the story – the whole heart of the plot and the focal point of the mysterious drama in Kane's life.
"As a director, to own the prop that represents such a vital element of a cinema treasure is particularly meaningful."
Connie Francis, who was at one time the world's biggest-selling female artist, has died at the age of 87.
The musician, whose hits included Stupid Cupid and Who's Sorry Now, had recently enjoyed a resurgence after her 1962 song Pretty Little Baby went viral on TikTok.
Francis had recently been treated for pelvic pain caused by a fracture. During her stay in hospital, she was diagnosed with pneumonia and died on Wednesday night, the president of her record label, Ron Roberts, told BBC News.
Roberts had previously announced the star’s death on Facebook, “with a heavy heart and extreme sadness.”
"I know that Connie would approve that her fans are among the first to learn of this sad news,” he added.
The star's death comes just months after Pretty Little Baby became a trending song on TikTok.
Millions of people, including Kim Kardashian and Kylie Jenner, lip-synced to the easy listening ballad, while showing off their children and pets, or making displays of affection.
One video, by social media influencers Brooke Monk and Sam Dezz, was watched more than 158 million times.
ABBA singer Agnetha Fältskog also posted the song, saying that Francis had long been her favourite singer. And the actress Gracie Lawrence, who is currently playing Francis in the Broadway musical Just in Time, also shared a video of herself singing the track, while dressed in character.
Speaking last month, Francis said she had been surprised by the sudden success of a track that had originally been a b-side.
"To tell you the truth, I didn't even remember the song!" she told People magazine.
"I had to listen to it to remember. To think that a song I recorded 63 years ago is touching the hearts of millions of people is truly awesome. It is an amazing feeling."
Francis was born Concetta Rosemarie Franconero and grew up in a working-class Italian American family in Brooklyn, New York.
Encouraged by her father, she started playing the accordion at the age of three. By the time she was a teenager, she had changed her name to Connie Francis, and was making regular appearances on the US TV variety show Startime Kids.
Early attempts to launch a singing career were not successful.
She was turned down by almost every record label, only securing a contract with MGM Records because her demo song was called Freddy - which happened to be the name of the president's son.
Her initial recordings failed to find an audience, and Francis accepted a place to study medicine at university.
But she scored a breakout hit with her last contracted recording for MGM - a cover of the 1923 song Who's Sorry Now?, that she only recorded at her father's insistence.
"I had 18 bomb records," Francis told UPI in 1996. "He wanted me to record a song written in 1923. I said 'Forget about it - the kids on American Bandstand would laugh me right off the show.'
"He said, 'If you don't record this song, dummy, the only way you'll get on American Bandstand is to sit on the TV'."
It was almost prophetic. In 1958, Dick Clark championed the track on American Bandstand, telling viewers: "There's no doubt about it, she is headed straight for the number one spot."
Francis, who was watching at home, had no idea the song was going to feature on the show.
"Well, the feeling was cosmic - just cosmic!" she wrote in her diary that night.
"Right there in my living-room, it became Mardi Gras-time and New Year's Eve at the turn of the century!"
Pop icon turned victims' advocate
Over the next couple of years, Francis became a true pop icon.
She sold millions of records - including teen hits like Lipstick On Your Collar and Everybody's Somebody's Fool.
In 1960, she became the first woman to top the Billboard Top 100, with the bluesy ballad Everybody's Somebody's Fool.
Francis also had an affinity for languages, and was one of the first stars to record in multiple dialects.
Her title song from the 1961 movie Where the Boys Are, for example, was released in seven different languages - English, German, French, Italian, Japanese, Neopolitan and Spanish.
In 1963, she also recorded one of the first known charity singles, In The Summer Of His Years, a tribute to the assassinated US president John F Kennedy.
Her popularity waned in the mid-60s, as acts like The Beatles and Bob Dylan took over the pop charts; and she briefly lost her voice as a result of nasal surgery.
In 1974 Francis mounted a comeback at the Westbury Music Fair in New York, but after the performance she was beaten and raped at knife point in her motel.
Traumatised, she became a recluse and spent several spells in psychiatric hospitals (she later said she had been admitted against her will by her father).
At her lowest point, the star tried to kill herself with sleeping pills.
"I just felt that there was nothing for me to live for," she told Terry Wogan on his BBC One chat show in 1989.
"I had this free-floating fear of life in general after the rape, and I just said, 'Well, that's it, I'm going to check out'."
Francis said it was her adopted son, Joey, who saved her life.
"I was looking at this bottle of sleeping pills... and my son knocked at the door of the bathrooom and he said, 'Mommy, you're the best mommy I ever had'," she told Wogan.
"And that was it. I took the pills and threw them right down the toilet."
The singer later won $1.5 million (£1.1 million) in a lawsuit against the Howard Johnson's motel chain for failing to provide safe locks on the glass door through which her attacker entered.
Francis had just begun her return to the stage in 1981 when her younger brother George Franconero, who had testified against the mafia, was shot to death in front of his house.
The incident plunged her deeper into depression, and she spent much of the next decade receiving treatment, during which time she was diagnosed with bipolar disorder.
However, she also became a prominent voice in crime victims' advocacy groups, including Women Against Rape, and the Victims' Assistance Legal Organisation, and became a spokesperson for Mental Health America.
She resumed her recording career in 1989, and continued to sing for sold-out audiences until she was in her 70s.
Earlier this month, she told fans she had been admitted to hospital due to ongoing hip pain, but remained in good spirits.
Her death came after a short illness, said her friend and label boss Ron Roberts, adding that more details would be released at a later date.
Looking back over her life and career in 2010, she said that "with the exception of my brother's murder, I would do it all over again.
"Because although there were some terrible lows, there were also exhilarating highs that I would have never felt in any other profession."
* British actors Bo Bragason and Benjamin Evan Ainsworth will star in the first Legend of Zelda film
* Bragason previously appeared in Renegade Nell, while Ainsworth starred in 2022's Pinocchio
* Director Wes Ball promises a "serious and cool, but fun" take on the Zelda video game series
* The live-action film is set to be released in May 2027
The new film adaptation of the Legend of Zelda video game series will see two young British actors take on the leading roles, Nintendo has announced.
Renegade Nell star Bo Bragason, 21, has been cast as Princess Zelda, while Pinocchio's Benjamin Evan Ainsworth, 16, will play the role of Link.
Announcing the news on X, Nintendo's Shigeru Miyamoto said he was "very much looking forward to seeing both of them on the big screen".
This will be the first attempt to make a Zelda film, although the franchise previously had an animated TV series in 1989.
Bragason has previously appeared in Disney+ series Renegade Nell and the BBC series Three Girls and The Jetty. She has also appeared in horror films Censor and The Radleys.
Ainsworth's screen credits include the 2022 live-action remake of Pinocchio, starring Tom Hanks, as well as The Haunting of Bly Manor, Everything's Going to Be Great, and All Fun and Games opposite Sex Education's Asa Butterfield.
The Legend of Zelda film is scheduled to be released in May 2027.
Director plans 'serious but whimsical' adaptation
The game follows Princess Zelda and the elf-like warrior Link as they fight to save the land of Hyrule from an evil warlord-turned-demon king called Ganon.
In the games, Link never speaks, but fans have speculated this won't be the case in the film. Similarly, Princess Zelda is expected to have significantly more screen time in the film adaptation than she does in the games.
The live-action film was announced in 2023, when Sony confirmed it would collaborate with Nintendo to co-finance the project.
It will be directed by Wes Ball, best known for The Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes and The Maze Runner.
Ball previously told Total Film: "I know it's important, this [Zelda] franchise, to people and I want it to be a serious movie... a real movie that can give people an escape."
"That's the thing I want to try to create – it's got to feel like something real. Something serious and cool, but fun and whimsical."
Jurassic World's Derek Connolly was previously announced as the film's writer, but the latest draft has been written by Ball's previous collaborator TS Nowlin.
The Legend of Zelda game franchise was created by Miyamoto and Takashi Tezuka, with the first game launching in 1986.
Since then, the franchise as remained one of Nintendo's best known brands, and has sold more than 150 million copies across its multiple instalments over various consoles.
Video game adaptations have had a mixed reception at the box office over the years. Many, such as Resident Evil, Tomb Raider and Mortal Kombat, were not always as well received as their source material.
But more recently, the success of The Super Mario Bros Movie, Sonic The Hedgehog, A Minecraft Movie and Uncharted, along with the TV adaptation of The Last of Us, has gone some way to turning the tables.
The film is being produced by Miyamoto and former Marvel Studios CEO Avi Arad.
Its launch date of 7 May 2027 was originally due to be the release date of Avengers: Secret Wars, until it was delayed until December.
BBC News used AI to help write the summary at the top of this article. It was edited by BBC journalists. Find out more.
* Emma Watson received a six-month driving ban after speeding at 38mph in a 30mph zone
* The Harry Potter actress already had nine points on her licence before the offence, in Oxford
* The judge added three more points and fined Watson £1,044
* Actress Zoe Wanamaker also received a six month ban - at the same court on the same day
Harry Potter actress Emma Watson has been banned from driving for six months, after she was caught speeding.
Watson, who played Hermione Granger in the film franchise, drove a blue Audi at 38mph in a 30mph zone in Oxford on the evening of 31 July last year.
Watson already had nine points on her licence before the speeding incident occurred, the court heard.
The 35-year-old, now a student, was made to pay a total of £1,044 at High Wycombe Magistrates' Court on Wednesday.
She did not attend the five-minute hearing. Representatives for Watson have been approached for comment.
Watson's lawyer, Mark Haslam, told the court that she is a student, adding: "She is in a position to pay the fine."
The actress has been studying a master's degree in creative writing at the University of Oxford since 2023.
Watson shot to fame in 2001 with the release of Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, alongside fellow child stars Daniel Radcliffe and Rupert Grint.
She starred in eight Potter films in total, with the last being released in 2011, before going on to appear in movies such as Beauty and the Beast, The Bling Ring and The Perks of Being a Wallflower.
Watson's last film role was in the 2019 remake of Little Women, directed by Greta Gerwig. She launched her own sustainable gin brand with her brother in 2023.
A new TV adaptation of JK Rowling's Harry Potter books is currently in production, starring Dominic McLaughlin as Harry, alongside Arabella Stanton as Hermione and Alastair Stout as Ron.
John Lithgow has been cast as Dumbledore, Nick Frost as Hagrid, Janet McTeer as Minerva McGonagall and Paapa Essiedu as Severus Snape.
The series, being produced by HBO, is expected to take a decade to complete.
Separately, another Harry Potter actress, Zoe Wanamaker, was banned from driving on the same day and in the same court as Watson, for a speeding offence last year.
Wanamaker, who played Madam Hooch in the wizarding series, was caught speeding on 7 August 2024, on the M4 in Newbury, Berkshire.
The 76-year-old was driving at 46mph in a 40mph limit, the court heard.
She was also fined £1,044 and banned for six months.
Wanamaker's lawyer Duncan Jones said that she was not asking for "special treatment" and accepted the fine.
Like Watson, Wanamaker had nine points on her licence before the speeding incident occurred.
District Judge Arvind Sharma, sentencing, endorsed three more points on both stars' licences, meaning both are disqualified for six months.
BBC News used AI to help write the summary at the top of this article. It was edited by BBC journalists. Find out more.
As burlesque queen Dita Von Teese puts on a new London show, the art form, which blends glamour, striptease and humour, is having a moment again – but the debate around it continues.
Grab your nipple pasties and tip your bowler hat: burlesque is back. The art form, which blends vintage glamour, coquettish striptease, and a winking knowingness, is one that seems to blow in-and-out of fashion: it was huge in the 2000s, then faded from view. "When it's needed as a discursive form, it comes up," says Jacki Wilson, associate professor of performance and gender at the University of Leeds. And while in recent years, in the UK at least, drag has replaced burlesque as the trending cabaret act de jour, a couple of big new shows suggest burlesque might just be slinking back into the spotlight.
"I think it's having a true renaissance, actually – all over the world," burlesque performer Tosca Rivola tells the BBC. She'd know: her show Diamonds and Dust, a "narrative" burlesque show starring Dita Von Teese, has just opened in London. And while Von Teese may be the enduring queen of the art form, even she benefited from the Taylor Swift effect recently, being introduced to a new audience when she starred as a fairy godmother in the video for the singer's 2022 single Bejeweled. Also about to open in the West End is Burlesque the Musical – a stage version of the Christina Aguilera and Cher-starring 2010 film, while at Edinburgh's globally-renowned Fringe Festival this summer, a new International Burlesque Festival is set to run across five venues for the whole month, in response to a "major increase in burlesque productions staged at the Fringe" last year, according to organisers. And if an ultra-glam version of burlesque has endured more in the US than the UK over the last 15 years, it's also enjoying something of a renaissance there. When a Met Gala after-party centres around a burlesque performance by Teyana Taylor and FKA Twigs, as it did this year, it's clearly more hot ticket than old hat.
Or is it? Many of these offerings feel doubly retro: a throwback 20 years to the last mainstream period of an art form that was already harking back to a different era. Is the revival of interest in burlesque actually part of a broader wave of specifically millennial nostalgia? Burlesque the Musical is clearly targeting the same millennial audiences who have flocked to other movie-to-musical adaptations such as Cruel Intentions, Mean Girls, Legally Blonde and Clueless. And the fact that Von Teese is still the big draw for Diamonds and Dust suggests a looking back rather than any great leap forward. Glancing at social media, there is plenty of burlesque on Instagram and TikTok, but not too much evidence of Gen Z rediscovering or reinventing it just yet.
A short history of burlesque
Before we get lost in such layered timelines, here's a brief history. Burlesque's origins are in Victorian Britain: it grew out of music hall and vaudeville. When Lydia Thompson's troupe The British Blondes visited New York in 1868, their combination of parody, humour, singing, dancing and revealing costumes caused a sensation. "Burlesque is foundationally revolutionary feminist – a reclaiming of female sexuality," Kay Siebler, assistant professor at the University of Nebraska Omaha, tells the BBC. "The root, 'burle', is Italian, and means satire, and burlesque was originally created by women's suffrage performers whose whole objective was taking up public space, and not being confined by patriarchal ideas of what it means to be a woman." But from there, American burlesque developed into its own thing, the emphasis gradually moving towards striptease. There's also, it should be said, a parallel story of the art form's development across Europe, notably in the cabaret clubs of Paris and Berlin, towards the end of the 19th Century.
Fast-forward to the 1990s, and neo-burlesque was born in the US. By the mid-2000s, hastened by films such as Moulin Rouge and Chicago, burlesque helped drive a wider trend for vintage glamour, and dominated the stages of cabaret clubs across the globe – as an art form made by women, for women. "Throughout the 90s, I was very much under the hetero male gaze," Dita Von Teese tells the BBC, as she reflects on a career which started in strip clubs. "But I'd say around 2002 my fan base shifted to very female… I think because [burlesque] resonated with people, and they felt like they had some kind of permission to indulge in glamour and embrace their sensuality."
As an elder millennial, I remember this era well; long strings of pearls, fishnet stockings, corsets and feathery headbands still shriek mid-2000s as much as they evoke the belle epoque to me. By 2007, burlesque was mainstream enough that one of the first pieces I ever wrote for a newspaper was covering an amateur burlesque night in a small town in Wales that had faintly scandalised the locals. Because the more popular burlesque got, the more it was scrutinised, with increasing debate over whether it was a really an art form or mere titillation. Some argued: weren't women prancing around in corsets, stockings and suspenders just embodying old, patriarchal norms – stripping with pretensions?
It's worth restating Von Teese's point that neo-burlesque was created and performed by women, for audiences of women and gay men; it might have been using the language of classic heterosexual desire, but it became a safe space for embodying and playing with that. And a really significant strand of neo-burlesque took that further – or rather, went back to its radical roots. There's always been this more punk version, from the likes of legendary New York performance artist Penny Arcade through to the Australian collective of women of colour Hot Brown Honey – where the work may be subversive, satiric, grotesque, experimental, or deeply political, and the performance of femininity is also a critique of how all femininity is really a performance.
Is burlesque becoming more regressive?
That version feels much more relevant to 2025 – in step with drag and queer culture, and in line with the broader movement towards diversity and inclusivity that we've seen in the last decade. Yet what's surprising about some of the new burlesque offerings is how old-fashioned they seem. Burlesque the Musical has not yet officially opened, so I can't speak to how writer Steve Antin has updated it. But early reports from a preview run in Manchester suggest it's retained its hetero love story and a pretty uncomplicated attitude towards the joy of shimmying in a bejewelled thong.
But I have seen Diamonds and Dust – and found it to be a perplexingly retrograde offering. The dancers may be from different ethnic backgrounds, but otherwise it offers a terribly narrow range of Barbie-doll beauty: slim, leggy, busty, long-hair, lashings of pink and glitter. While they're all undeniably fantastic performers – some of the circus skills made my jaw drop – it also all feels boringly straight and sanitised, about as subversive as a Victoria's Secret show. Which is interesting, because there's certainly a broader revival in what we might term an old-fashioned form of femininity currently, notably in the Trad Wives phenomenon.
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Siebler argues that "the original burlesque was a social commentary about what it meant to be a woman, and that is absolutely absent from this very repressive, passive and disempowered version of female sexuality". Such pretty, teasing femininity is, she suggests, "a patriarchal script that women have internalised to say, my power is my sexual power. But are we able to think about how limited this power is?"
Wilson has a different perspective: she suggests that, far from just making a comeback now, burlesque has actually continued to bubble away in an underground form – within community spaces, where words like "empowering" do feel more relevant.
"Burlesque has opened up now to include queer people, older women, younger men, the transgender community, working-class women," says Wilson. "It's inclusive of different people who want to reflect on what sexiness means, what these tropes and stereotypes mean."
This grassroots burlesque, performed by amateurs, is of course a world away from polished, palatable commercial shows – which Wilson sees as distracting from the art form's more radical potential. "I really see the feminist value of burlesque," she says. "It's an incredibly important safe space for women to think about what their bodies mean."
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Since its release in June, KPop Demon Hunters has topped global Netflix charts and dominated global music charts – what's the secret to its extraordinary success?
Whether you're a devoted K-pop fan or not, you may have heard of this new global sensation. The animated film KPop Demon Hunters has quickly become a worldwide hit, topping Netflix's global charts with more than 33 million views in just two weeks, reaching the top 10 in 93 countries (it's currently at number two globally). It has its own fan art and audiences around the world are already demanding a sequel.
It's not just the film that's making waves. Since its release on 20 June, two fictional bands featured in the story – the righteous girl group Huntr/x and their rebellious counterparts Saja Boys – have dominated the global music charts, even surpassing K-pop powerhouses like BTS and Blackpink. Seven tracks from the film's soundtrack are now featured on the Billboard Hot 100. Their songs have risen to the top of Spotify's US chart, landing in the first and second spots. So, what's behind this extraordinary success and why does it resonate so strongly with global audiences?
KPop Demon Hunters follows the story of Huntr/x, an all-female K-pop group (Rumi, Mira and Zoey) who double as secret guardians of the world. Beyond the glamour of the stage, these global superstars protect their fans from supernatural threats, squaring off against their villainous counterparts Saja Boys. This animated film blends action with a story about friendship, trust and staying true to your identity. With its dazzling visuals, slick action sequences, humour and a splash of fantasy, along with a universal message about self-discovery, it's easy to see the appeal.
But it's the film's music that has been the key to its success. Maggie Kang, the Korean-Canadian co-director of the film, was apparently inspired by the K-pop idols she admired growing up. K-pop is the film's heartbeat. The group's music becomes a supernatural weapon that wards off dark forces. Each original track amplifies emotional moments. "Unlike other animated films, where songs are often added as a filler or commercial hook, the music here was woven into the narrative in a way that enhanced it rather than distracted," Lashai Ben Salmi, community leader with a focus on Korean culture in Europe, tells the BBC. "It gives the film a surprising level of maturity."
Knowing how vital the soundtrack would be, directors Maggie Kang and Chris Appelhans tapped into the expertise of seasoned K-pop producers. K-pop has evolved into a multi-billion-dollar industry, fuelled by a devoted global fanbase and known for its catchy, meticulously produced music, high-energy choreography and visually stunning music videos.
"Because we wanted the music to be really incredible and really speak to the K-pop fans and be legitimately fit into the K-pop space, we felt that it was important to partner with a Korean label," Kang said during a Netflix press interview. The film was made possible with the help of top music producers, including Teddy Park, known for his work with Blackpink, and Grammy-winning Lindgren, who has worked with BTS and TWICE.
Amanda Golka, a young content creator based in LA, tells the BBC that she isn't deeply into K-pop but has become obsessed with the film and the songs. "I have been blasting the soundtrack from Spotify every time I'm in the car" she says. "I always find it fascinating through different cultures the universal language that is music."
Kim Youngdae, a music critic and ethnomusicologist specialising in K-pop, says that the series appeals even to those who have little interest in K-pop or are simply curious about it. "For the past 20 or 30 years, K-pop has really struggled to figure out how to naturally integrate into what we call the mainstream of pop culture, like in the US or the UK… because of the cultural barriers," he tells the BBC. "But animation is a very effective way to introduce unfamiliar cultures to mainstream platforms."
Tradition meets trend
Another key reason for the film's popularity is the world's growing familiarity with Korean culture. K-pop, K-film and K-dramas have already become mainstream in Western markets like the US, and this film reflects that cultural shift with remarkable authenticity. It carefully weaves in everyday elements of Korean life, especially around food and dining customs, which are an essential part of Korean culture. It also captures scenes from places like the ancient walls overlooking Seoul, Hanuiwon (traditional Korean medicine clinics), public bathhouses and the iconic Namsan Tower. These choices reflect a conscious effort to portray Korean culture beyond clichés and superficial imagery. It offers Korean viewers a rare sense of representation that feels both accurate and respectful.
To achieve this level of authenticity, the production team travelled to South Korea and carried out extensive research into both traditional and modern aspects of Korean culture, from traditional clothing to the landmarks of Seoul. "We went to folk villages, we looked at what the bricks look like and how the streets are designed in Myeongdong. We took pictures because capturing the feeling is so important," Kang said. "We tried to make the movie feel as Korean as possible. And one way to do that was to, in every scene and every design aspect, add in Korean elements."
One of the examples of this cultural sensitivity is in the animation itself. Although the characters speak English in the final version, the animators designed their mouth movements to match the shapes of Korean pronunciation. The characters' reactions are authentically Korean, and they also speak or sing some Korean words. "We animated the film with the idea that we wanted to make sure that all of those things sounded Korean, and that the reactions of the characters felt Korean too," Kang said.
Moreover, the film vividly captures the unique culture of K-pop, immersing viewers in the world of fandom. It includes authentic details such as fan signing events, colourful light sticks, and Korean placards. The Huntr/x and Saja Boys perform perfectly synchronised dances – known as Kalgunmu in Korean. With its deep understanding of K-pop fan culture, the film invites audiences to connect with the characters as if they were real idols.
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"Because the concept was K-pop, it was able to include a wide range of K-pop bands. It's not about one particular group or one particular era - it's about the whole culture of K-pop," Kim said. "K-pop fans often focus on individual groups, but this film embraces the broader culture of K-pop as a whole."
And the film creates a unique blend of traditional Korean culture with contemporary K-pop. The girl group Huntr/x's use of swords and fans recalls Korean shamans called Mudang, while their rivals the Saja Boys represent evil spirits dressed like the Korean Grim Reaper. Korean shamanism appears in symbolic elements like Dangsan trees (deified tree) and Dokkaebi (Korean goblins). Even the weapons draw on traditional Korean designs, while their stage backdrop features traditional Korean paintings. Two mascots: Derpy, a tiger, and Sussy, a magpie, hold special meaning in late Joseon folk tales, symbolising guardianship and good fortune.
Beneath its vibrant surface, the film carries a universal message about characters who struggle with self-acceptance but ultimately reclaim their true identities. It's a coming-of-age journey that resonates across cultures. Even those unfamiliar with K-pop or Korean traditions can connect with its themes.
"[It's about] self-acceptance" says Golka. "Your friends may not understand right away, but… they do love you and they will figure it out. I think that has really resonated with people."
KPop Demon Hunters is available to stream on Netflix.
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Elizabeth I, daughter of Henry VIII, is the only English queen never to have married. The iconic Tudor monarch's last visit to Kenilworth 450 years ago may hold some clues to her solo reign – as revealed in a new art installation at the castle, depicting betrayal, beheadings and an elaborate declaration of love.
On a July evening in 1575, 41-year-old Queen Elizabeth I arrived at Kenilworth Castle in Warwickshire, UK, for what would be her longest and last visit. She had given the castle to Robert Dudley in 1563 and granted him the title of Earl of Leicester the following year. Dudley was a great favourite of the Queen and is thought to have been her childhood friend. The precise nature of their close relationship was the subject of much gossip.
Prior to the unmarried Queen's arrival, Dudley had given the magnificent castle a major refurb. New buildings had gone up, a new garden had been created and the estate had been landscaped. And the earl pulled out all the stops to lay on extraordinary entertainment in the form of music, dancing, acrobatics, spectacular fireworks and dramatic interludes performed by costumed actors. On the huge mere surrounding the castle, there was a moving island inhabited by the "Lady of the Lake". There was a 24ft (7.3m) dolphin that concealed musicians, and an 18ft-(5.5m) long swimming mermaid.
No expense was spared. It cost Dudley £1,000 ($1,400) a day – millions in today's money, and the whole extravaganza has been interpreted as an elaborate and expensive courtship display; the 16th-Century ruling class's equivalent of hiring a plane to fly a "Marry Me" banner. "The 1575 festivities were an attempt to woo Elizabeth – marriage is a theme in some of the events," Jeremy Ashbee, head curator of properties at English Heritage, tells the BBC. "Dr Elizabeth Goldring, who has made a detailed study of Lord Leicester, has called it 'his last throw of the dice'."
Dudley's gamble seemed to be going swimmingly, but then everything changed. The highlight of the stay was to have been a masque – or performance – on Wednesday 20 July. It never took place. Was it simply a case of bad weather preventing the event, as the official version had it? Or had the monarch got wind of the subject matter and been angered? The masque featured Diana, goddess of chastity, searching for one of her chaste nymphs, pointedly called Zabetta – a version of the name Elizabeth.
It concluded with a messenger of Juno, goddess of marriage, directly addressing Elizabeth, and imploring her not to follow the path of Diana but to marry instead. Dudley had a certain amount of leeway with the Queen, but this perhaps was going too far. Whatever the reason, the masque never took place, and the revelries were over. The Queen remained in her quarters for a few more days before leaving on 27 July.
'Proud and fiery'
Now, the artist Lindsey Mendick has marked the 450th anniversary of the visit by creating Wicked Game, a large sculptural installation at the castle. Wicked Game takes inspiration from ancient mythology as well as from the events of Elizabeth's visit, and the way in which she used her unwed state in her shrewd political manoeuvres throughout her 45-year reign. There are 13 different tableaux. Some are sinister, others are suffused with dark humour. The fragmented ceramic sculptures strikingly depict the Queen and those around her as animals. In the central piece, Elizabeth is a lion and Dudley is a bear. The tableaux are positioned on pieces of an exploded giant chessboard.
"Playing chess is the perfect analogy for what Elizabeth had to do to survive," Mendick tells the BBC. "I think she is incredibly interesting and that she's a great way of looking at how we treat women today. This event [that Dudley planned] at Kenilworth was meant to be this massive celebration for Elizabeth; it was meant to be decadent and enjoyable. But then also at the same time it was so loaded with something else. For powerful women like Elizabeth, refusing to marry or have children was a radical act of self-preservation and autonomy."
Elizabeth I, daughter of Henry VIII, is the only English queen never to have married. She came to power in 1558 at the age of 25, inheriting religious, political and financial problems from her two predecessors, her half-brother, Edward VI (1537-1553), and her half-sister, Mary I (1516-1558).
Advisers and members of Parliament repeatedly urged her to marry to protect England's security. A woman ruling alone? Inconceivable. A queen needed to marry, it was believed, not just to produce a male heir in order to avoid succession disputes but also so that a man could take charge of political and military matters. The entreaties to marry were ceaseless, and numerous matrimonial candidates were suggested or suggested themselves. Elizabeth repeatedly parried, deflected and refused. Why?
'No master'
It's entirely possible that she simply found the idea of having to obey or defer to a husband – any husband – intolerable. After all, she was very well educated (she learned five languages – French, Italian, Spanish, Latin and Flemish – and had studied history and rhetoric), highly intelligent, proud and fiery. She is said to have declared: "I will have but one mistress here and no master."
Also, Elizabeth knew that a woman could govern perfectly well without a man looking over her shoulder. In the summer of 1544, at Hampton Court, she witnessed the scholarly Katherine Parr, Henry's sixth wife, ruling with full authority while the king was on campaign in France. Katherine was a more than capable regent, and Elizabeth seems to have been profoundly influenced by seeing her stepmother exercising power, and accepting as her due the humble deference of powerful male ministers and courtiers.
Besides, her own immediate family had hardly furnished her with an image of the joys of marriage. Her father had her mother, Anne Boleyn, arrested on trumped-up charges of adultery and conspiracy, and then, shockingly, had her beheaded when Elizabeth was just three years old. One of Mendick's sculptures is an interpretation of this execution, showing Anne as a fox kneeling in prayer, before the executioner, who takes the form of a vicious dog.
Some commentators have suggested that Elizabeth might have been afraid of sex. Alison Weir, for example, in her book, Elizabeth, the Queen, wonders if the monarch "may have made the equation that sexual involvement was inextricably linked with death". The BBC's 2005 series The Virgin Queen portrayed "a monarch terrified of sex", according to the Telegraph. Paula Milne, who wrote the screenplay, told them at the time: "If I was asked to write a piece about a contemporary woman whose mother had been killed by her father, I would be expected to examine the psychological impact."
In fact, Elizabeth enjoyed the company of handsome men, and could be flirtatious with them. However, she had plenty of reasons to fear pregnancy and childbirth. Childbirth was a very high-risk enterprise in the Tudor era. Jane Seymour, Henry's third wife, died in childbirth, and Katherine Parr died of an illness shortly after giving birth, as had Elizabeth's grandmother, Elizabeth of York.
How Elizabeth has been portrayed
But there were political reasons, as well as personal, for not marrying. Keeping the country free from the influence of foreign powers may have been a consideration. Also, the prospect of Elizabeth's hand in marriage might have strengthened her negotiating position in her dealings with France, Spain and other nations. Meanwhile, if she'd married an English nobleman (and Dudley might have been a possibility had not his wife, Amy Robsart, died in somewhat suspicious circumstances in 1560), she would have automatically put another English nobleman's nose out-of-joint.
So she kept everyone waiting and wondering. She seems to have had an instinctive grasp of what we now call PR, and liked to present herself as wholly devoted to her realm. From early in her reign she cultivated the image of the Virgin Queen. In 1559 she declared, in response to MPs asking her to marry, that eventually "a marble stone shall declare that a queen, having reigned such a time, lived and died a virgin". At the end of Shekhar Kapur's much-loved 1998 film, Elizabeth, the young monarch is played by Cate Blanchett, who then played her again in the 2007 sequel Elizabeth: The Golden Age. In Elizabeth, she purposefully transforms herself into the Virgin Queen and, all in white, presents herself to her astonished court, announcing "I am married… to England".
Kapur's film plays fast and loose with the historical facts, but this dialogue echoes the Queen's actual assertion, made in 1559, that she would not marry because she was "already bound unto a husband which is the Kingdom of England". Her sister Mary I – also known as Bloody Mary – had claimed something similar but had then gone off and married Philip II of Spain.
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Elizabeth's decision not to marry has been a key element of depictions of her in popular culture. The connection between sex and death was made in the BBC's multiple-Emmy-winning 1971 series Elizabeth R. Glenda Jackson's Elizabeth says, in the very first episode: "I have trusted no man since the day when I was eight, and Queen Catherine Howard [Henry's fifth wife – beheaded] ran screaming along the galleries of the palace to plead with the great Henry… On every hand, men had betrayed her… First there is trust, then passion, then death."
Miranda Richardson's caricatured Elizabeth, who appears in the second season of the celebrated sitcom Blackadder, remarks in the first episode, "Everybody seems to get married except me." But in the series she uses the promise of marriage to manipulate Blackadder, and others, into doing what she wants.
Had the real Elizabeth allowed Dudley to think he might be in with a chance? And what did the Kenilworth visit mean for their relationship? "I don't believe that he felt humiliated by her rejection of his proposal," says Ashbee. "He was happy for an official account of the festivities to be published soon afterwards, and in his will, he stipulated that the castle was to be left exactly as it had been. I rather get the feeling that he saw 1575 as his 'finest hour'. He certainly didn't retire quietly into private life after 1575."
Elizabeth was furious with Dudley for a while when he married Lettice Knollys in 1578 – but she forgave him. When he died, in 1588, she locked herself in her room for so long that her chief adviser ordered that the doors be forced open. And when Elizabeth died in 1603, a note Dudley had sent her shortly before his death was found in a casket she kept by the side of her bed. She had written on it "his last letter".
Lindsey Mendick's Wicked Game will be on display in the Great Hall at Kenilworth Castle, Warwickshire, UK, until 31 October 2025.
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In 1960, Jane Goodall began her groundbreaking field study by living among chimpanzees in Tanzania. In 1986 she told the BBC how similar chimps and humans really are.
On 14 July 1960, 65 years ago this week, a young English woman with no formal scientific background or qualifications stepped off a boat at the Gombe Stream Game Reserve in Tanzania to begin what would become a pioneering study of wild chimpanzees. Her discoveries would not just revolutionise our understanding of animal behaviour but reshape the way we define ourselves as human beings.
Although she was just 26 years old at the time, Jane Goodall had long dreamt of studying and living with animals. "Apparently, from the time I was about one and a half or two, I used to study insects, anything, and this gradually evolved and developed and grew and then I read books like Dr Dolittle and Tarzan, then it had to be Africa that was my goal," she told the BBC's Terry Wogan on his talk show in 1986.
Upon finishing school, Goodall took a secretarial course while working as a waitress and as a film production assistant to fund her childhood ambition. By 1957, she had finally saved enough money to travel to see a friend in Nairobi, Kenya. While there, she arranged to meet the renowned Kenyan-British palaeoanthropologist Professor Louis Leakey, merely with the hope of talking to him about animals. Leakey, whose secretary had recently left, was so impressed by Goodall's quiet determination and extensive self-taught knowledge of African wildlife that he offered her a job as his assistant at the natural history museum.
Leakey would then become Goodall's mentor. "It was he who said, 'Well, I'm looking for someone to go and study chimpanzees because of the light their behaviour may shed on understanding early human behaviour,'" she told Wogan. Leakey viewed her lack of an academic science background as an advantage rather than a hindrance, believing her observations wouldn't be hemmed in by pre-existing scientific theories.
Goodall would not be alone on her trip to the Gombe Reserve. To comply with the colonial safety regulations of the time, her mother Vanne came along as a chaperone. "Initially I wasn't allowed to be on my own," she told the BBC. "The British government as it then was said, 'No, this is absolutely almost amoral for a young girl to go out in the bush.' So, I had to choose a companion, and my mother came with me for three months."
The first months proved to be tough going, with both Goodall and her mother, who were staying together in an ex-army camping tent, developing malaria. Even when Goodall was well enough to venture into the reserve, she could only go out with a local escort, and often at the sound of their approaching footsteps, the chimpanzees would simply vanish into the undergrowth. But as she learnt the forest trails and became used to moving through the dense terrain, "the authorities decided, well, I was crazy and I was OK", she said.
Once she started hiking on her own in the forested hills, she began to catch sight of the elusive primates through her binoculars from a peak overlooking two valleys. It was then that Goodall began to adopt an unorthodox immersive approach. Each day she would edge ever nearer to their feeding area with the hope of being able to sit among the chimpanzees and study them up close in their natural habitat.
Chimps use tools and communicate like humans
"I wore the same-coloured clothes every day and I think the most important thing was I never pushed it," she told BBC's Witness History in 2014. "I never tried to get too close. I would wait by a fruiting tree, where I knew the chimpanzees were coming, and when they left, I didn't follow them. Not to start with, because I felt that was pushing my luck. So gradually they came to accept that I was harmless."
As the apes lost their wariness of her, Goodall was able to sit for hours, patiently observing their behaviour and their hitherto unrecognised complex social system. She discovered that the chimpanzees were not in fact vegetarian as previously thought, but omnivorous, and would communicate with each other to hunt for meat. She was able to witness the closeness of their family bonds and how each animal's individuality would influence their behaviour.
"In chimp society, a female can be mated by all the males, or she can be led away and kept by one, and the males have very close bonds," she told Wogan. "They patrol the boundary of the community territory, they keep strangers out, they bring young new-blood females in, and all of them act as nice, tolerant, gentle, protective fathers to all the infants inside that community."
Instead of using a numbering system for her subjects, as was traditional in a research project, Goodall instead gave them names, recognising each animal's unique personality: She named one male chimp David Greybeard. It was while watching David Greybeard that she first saw him fashioning and using tools – activities that scientists had previously thought were exclusive to human beings. Indeed, at the time, toolmaking, which requires abstract thought to conceive of a tool's use in a future situation, was considered a defining characteristic of being human.
"[Chimpanzees] use more different objects as tools than any creature except ourselves. For example, a little twig from which they may strip the leaves, thus they modify it, for feeding on termites," she told Wogan. "A long stick from which they peel the bark, feeding on a very vicious biting ant and they chew it. Crumpled leaves for supping water out of a little hole when they can't reach it with their lips, or for wiping blood off their bodies. And weapons: stones hurled, branches used for intimidation or for clubbing."
At the time, the idea was revolutionary, challenging years of conventional scientific thinking. Since then, research has shown evidence of tool use across the animal kingdom, from the Indonesian octopus who uses coconut shells discarded by humans as armour against predators, to New Caledonian Crows who bend twigs and wires with their beaks to create hooks, enabling them to pull larvae out of tree bark.
As Goodall sat silently observing the chimpanzees, she began to see how similar their familial bonds and their non-verbal communication were to those of humans. "If chimps meet after a separation, they hold hands, they embrace, they kiss," she said. Understanding of this commonality with humans raised "new questions about the way that we are bringing up our children in the West", she told Wogan.
A common ancestor
"Well, if we leave a child crying at night, if we leave a child for long hours in a playpen, if we take a child to a daycare centre where there is a constant turnover of people, we may bring up a child that is highly intelligent. But from our experience of chimps who've had difficult upbringings, there is a suggestion that that child when it is an adult may have difficulty in making close relationships with others – may find it harder to cope in a stressful situation. This is very important," she said.
Goodall recognised how closely chimpanzees' ritualised behaviours and emotions can resemble our own. And how, like ours, their destructive and violent impulses could lead to brutal killings. "We discovered after the first 10 years that although chimps were very like us in their friendly ways, they're also like us in the fact they can become very aggressive. We found that under certain situations, there can be cannibalism and also an inter-community interaction that in some way is like a primitive form of human warfare," she said.
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In 1962, with Leakey's encouragement, despite not possessing an undergraduate degree, she began a PhD based on her exceptionally detailed findings. The same year, the National Geographic Society sent a Dutch wildlife photographer and film-maker, Hugo van Lawick, to document her work, which resulted in a 1965 documentary, Miss Goodall and the Wild Chimpanzees. Narrated by Orson Welles, the film helped showcase her discoveries to the wider public. Van Lawick would become her first husband, and in 1967, the year after she gained her doctorate, she gave birth to a son, Hugo, whom they nicknamed Grub. They built him a protective shelter to enable Goodall to remain with him and keep him safe while she continued her field work.
"Chimpanzees are hunters just like we are," she told Wogan. "They hunt co-operatively, they hunt medium-size mammals. There had been records of them hunting human children, just as humans hunt chimps, and so when he was very tiny and this was before he could walk, he was in a sort of caged-in veranda, and we always had to have people with him."
Goodall's trailblazing research into primatology presented evidence that humans are not separate from the rest of animal kingdom, but that Homo sapiens and chimpanzees share a common ancestor. Research has since shown that chimpanzees are incredibly genetically close to humans, sharing about 98.6% of our DNA.
"This is the thing," said Goodall. "Behaviour we see in man today and chimp today was probably in that common ancestor, and therefore we can imagine Stone Age people having long friendly relationships between family members and using little twigs to feed and embracing one another. I like to think of that."
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Films and TV shows have created a glamorous "Notting Hill" version of the UK's capital city. A new Lena Dunham series pokes fun at the stereotypes Americans believe about the country.
When Jessica, the heroine of Lena Dunham's new series, Too Much, first arrives from New York to live in London, she thinks she's heading to live on a country estate; the idyllic Jane Austen or Bridgerton-era kind she's seen on screen. Instead, Jessica (played by US comedian Megan Stalter) is dropped off on an East London council estate (a block of social housing). So begins another tale of a young American discovering Europe, but unlike Emily in Paris, packed with dazzling locations and couture outfits, Jessica discovers vast housing projects, grimy pubs and sweaty gigs. Does this series show the reality of modern London?
Since the 1990s, some of the most successful British films set in London have presented the so-called "Notting Hill" version of the city; a name stemming from the eponymous 1999 Richard Curtis film starring Hugh Grant, Julia Roberts and Rhys Ifans. It glamourised the area, whose colourful houses still draw a steady stream of tourists and Instagrammers (to the extent that frustrated residents started painting them black and grey.)
Curtis also wrote the romcoms Bridget Jones's Diary, Four Weddings and a Funeral and Love Actually, which he also directed. These films, alongside the successful Paddington franchise of the last decade, have depicted a more idyllic, upper-middle-class version of the capital, its characters often living in West London's stucco-fronted houses. Recent hit Netflix series such as The Crown and Bridgerton have also shown off the city's grandest landmarks.
Of course, London has been portrayed in different ways throughout cinema history, including its bombed-out ruins after World War Two, in films such as 1949's Passport to Pimlico. The city's edgier side has been evident in cult classics such as Stanley Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange (1971), featuring a brutalist housing estate in Woolwich, or 1987's Withnail and I, shot in Notting Hill and Camden, home to the protagonists' legendary squalid apartment. Performance, a 1970 gangster drama directed by Nicolas Roeg and starring Mick Jagger, was also set in a crime-ridden Notting Hill of the time. Most recently, the hit Apple TV+ series Slow Horses, starring Gary Oldman as the head of a group of MI5 misfits, has been filmed in urban East London.
However, international recognition of films such as Notting Hill, Four Weddings and a Funeral and Bridget Jones remains high, 30 years after some of them were made. Notting Hill is regularly named by critics as one of the best romantic comedies ever made, as is Four Weddings and a Funeral. These stories have also been enormously successful at the box office – the Bridget Jones series of films has made just under $1bn worldwide, the Paddington films nearly $750m.
So, it's little wonder that new arrivals to London might have a romanticised idea of the city. Canadian comedian Katherine Ryan, now a Londoner, confessed at the world premiere of Too Much that she'd also thought of the British capital differently before arriving.
"When I first came to London, I had a similar experience to the character of Jessica," she tells the BBC. "Abroad, we just hear about Buckingham Palace and places like that. I was moving somewhere that had 'mansions' in the title and it was a flat. I thought Lena [Dunham] did a beautiful job of capturing that experience."
Too Much mainly uses locations that only Londoners, or those who've lived there, will know well: areas such as Shoreditch, Hackney, Hoxton, De Beauvoir town, Camberwell and Nunhead. "It's so grey over there," observes Jessica's mother (played by Rita Wilson) on a video call from the US. "I thought it would be so creative over there and I'd be jealous. But I'm not jealous."
Poking fun at stereotypes
Lena Dunham, who wrote the series, moved to live in London in 2021. She tells the BBC that Too Much is based on the contrast between her own heightened expectations of the city, and what she discovered by actually living there. "I want people to see what I did when I first arrived, which is what I knew from the movies," she says. "That's the Notting Hill version, those refined old buildings."
Dunham adds that she took a similar approach with Girls, the landmark HBO series she also starred in, about four twenty-something young women living in New York City in the 2010s. "I loved Sex and the City, but with Girls I wanted to show parts of New York that felt more real to those who couldn't afford massive apartments," she says. "And I wanted to do the same with London. So we do shoot in a manor house, but we shoot on council estates, in record stores and music venues all over London. We really take a journey."
In fact, Too Much mocks the stereotype of Notting Hill in one episode (titled Notting Kill) as Jessica attends a dinner party thrown by her boss, played by Richard E Grant, and his wife, played by Naomi Watts. Jessica gets a photo at the famous blue door, where Hugh Grant's character lived in the film ("I'm Julia Roberts, bitch!" she squeals.)
Too Much also pokes fun at the tropes Jane Austen-era dramas have created. In one scene, Jessica's love interest Felix (Will Sharpe) makes a romantic overture and is briefly transformed in her eyes into 19th-Century military costume, with red jacket and tight white breeches. In doing this, Too Much makes a nod towards the production company behind the series: Working Title. Its producers, Tim Bevan and Eric Fellner, were behind Notting Hill, Love Actually and Bridget Jones's Diary. Working Title also produced the 2020 film version of Jane Austen's novel Emma and has announced it's making a new version of Sense and Sensibility.
"It's pretty meta what happens in the show, considering I produced most of the movies we're taking the mickey out of," Tim Bevan tells the BBC. He describes the series pitch of "an American coming expecting Pride and Prejudice and Richard Curtis, and getting something else altogether" as "a very easy sell. I'd always wanted to do something on how there is this delicious potential culture clash".
"In our work over the years, we've always tried to pick London to film in, and no one has done it on a big, big scale recently, in a loving way, to introduce a modern London." He adds: "I guess Too Much is prescribed as the antidote to Emily in Paris."
And although Emily in Paris has been criticised by some for pandering to an American vision of a chic, Chanel-wearing French capital, the show's economic benefits to France have been praised by President Macron: the series, as well as another French-language Netflix drama, Lupin, was cited in a recent French study as inspiring 1 in 5 tourists coming to Paris. And it's not just a recent phenomenon; the 2001 Oscar-nominated film Amélie, set in the Montmartre district of Paris, inspired a generation's perception of Parisian style and romance.
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In New York in the 00s, Sex and the City, the story of the love lives of four glamorous Manhattan women, was credited with helping to restore the city's image after the devastation of the 9/11 attacks on the city, while the 1990s sitcom Friends, also set in New York, has inspired a new generation of Gen Z visitors longing for the cosy (and even 30 years ago, suspiciously affordable) West Village neighbourhood it presented.
Bevan says he too has personal experience of how powerful film and series have become in shaping a modern city's image. "I live in Notting Hill," he says, "and the real locations [used in the film] still bring millions of people every weekend. Location tourism is really huge; hopefully Too Much will mean some weird pub in East London will be suddenly inundated from all over the world."
A loving tribute
"There is an element now of whatever you depict on screen, it's going to glamourise it," film historian Pamela Hutchinson tells the BBC. But she argues that the film Notting Hill wasn't simply presenting the glossier side to the neighbourhood when it was made in the 1990s.
"That part of London was a place that was quite affordable in many ways but was also still quite aspirational. There was a certain amount of both glamour and diversity. I think what the movie got right was the idea that in this urban area where everyone's crowded together, a book shop owner can really meet a movie star. And the beauty of its architecture really shines through in that film.
"Of course, it also had a way of making the world and his wife decide it was the most glamorous area of London they could possibly move to."
Nor is Too Much the first piece of on-screen fiction to, as Hutchinson says, "play with the idea that you move to London because you've seen Notting Hill, but when you arrive, you're actually in a Mike Leigh film."
She points to Danny Boyle's 1996 film Trainspotting, in which the characters go to London, "and they have the idyllic idea of the city being about double decker red buses and Trafalgar Square. Then they crash you into Mile End in East London and show you that they're having to work in a terrible estate agency, living in a cramped flat, run by a ruthless landlord. It's honest about the vision of London with red buses and Tower Bridge in every film."
Too Much might explore the stereotypical nature of international perceptions about London, but at its heart, Dunham says it's also a tribute to the place she now definitely thinks of as hers. "I've been in New York getting ready to make a film, and I came back [to London] a couple of days ago and I had a strong feeling of peace that I was at home. To come from the place that was my home for so many years and to feel a little bit like a stranger there and return to London and feel that my life is here – I'm in the right place. Thank you for having me, England."
Too Much is on Netflix from 10 July.
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Since the Covid-19 pandemic, music from Japanese animations is booming on Spotify and at gigs and club nights – especially among young people, who are drawn to its bold hooks and big emotions.
Around 20,000 rapturous fans have packed out London's O2 Arena on a summer night. Pulsing light sticks pierce the electrified air; on the stage, the enigmatic J-pop diva Ado (who performs in shadowy silhouette) launches into a song that the entire crowd knows: Kura Kura, taken from the Japanese animation series Spy x Family. The track is stylistically unpredictable yet immediately catchy: it ricochets between a 1960s-style pop groove, jazzy riffs and hyper-dramatic rock opera – a modern example of an anime music anthem, in a scene that is increasingly taking on a life of its own.
Japanese animation, or anime, has a legacy that stretches back to the early 20th Century, and a creative scope that spans seemingly endless stories and styles, from pirate sagas to sci-fi warfare; sorcery to sports action; martial arts mythology to star-crossed romance. The music used to soundtrack it is similarly adventurous. Songs vary significantly in their genres and tempos (often shape-shifting within a single track), but they also share common qualities: they elevate the visual action and deeply seal our bond with it. In the digital age, vividly evocative, insistently snappy themes are key to the viral impact of iconic Japanese animated series/films/manga comic adaptations – One Piece, Demon Slayer, Jujutsu Kaisen, Dragon Ball Z, Cowboy Bebop, Attack On Titan and Naruto, to name a few. "Anisongs", as they are known, are now a major musical force, particularly among younger people.
According to a recent study by anime streaming platform Crunchyroll and the National Research Group, anime is almost as big as Beyoncé with Gen Z-ers, with 54% of them globally being anime fans. Meanwhile Spotify reported a 395% increase in global streams of anime music between 2021 and 2024, as well as 7.2 million user-generated anime playlists on its site (at the time of writing). A Spotify spokesperson also tells the BBC that users under the age of 29 account for nearly 70% of global anime music consumption.
"Anime music has evolved into a global cultural force and Gen Z is really at the heart of that movement on Spotify," Sulinna Ong, Spotify's Global Head of Editorial, tells the BBC. "We're seeing fans connect with the music beyond the screen as the shows offer listeners a window into musical styles they may not otherwise have discovered. Our editors' curated playlists are built to help fans discover the full range of anime-inspired sounds. And as more artists take influence from the space, the sound is continuing to grow in bold and unexpected ways."
This global boom isn't limited to 21st-Century releases; as it's now easy to tune into anime's expansive catalogue, decades-old anthems – like the original rousing theme to pirate fantasy One Piece, called We Are! and sung by Hiroshi Kitadani – are winning new devotees. Anime music's hooks are composed for enduring effect; the melodies and lyrics (easily translated online, or released in multilingual versions) typically spark a tantalising headrush of sensations: affinity with favourite characters or narratives; adrenaline; escapism; nostalgia. As Satoshi Uto, Crunchyroll's director of music acquisition, tells the BBC: "The OPs and EPs [opening and end credit songs] are critical to fans' emotional connection with anime."
An example of a smash hit anisong is Japanese singer-songwriter Lisa's 2019 track Gurenge, which is the intro to anime series Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba. This elegant power ballad with explosive rock flourishes has inspired countless tributes, from TikTok influencers (such as young British piano talent Joe Jenkins) to the 2020 Tokyo Olympics closing ceremony (where it was included as an instrumental symphony). It is also sentimentally character-driven, as Lisa explained in a Billboard Japan interview: "I tried placing myself in the shoes of the protagonists, who keep forging ahead, despite their tragic pasts."
The reasons for the boom
The timing of audience spikes does suggest that the pandemic era played a pivotal part in the mainstream awakening to both anime and its atmospheric tunes; this form's fantastical themes, emotional intensity and free-ranging sounds may have represented a heady escape from lockdown constraints. In a 2022 article, The Hollywood Reporter noted, that "anime might just be the world's most Covid-resistant form of popular entertainment", referencing a study that showed global demand for anime content grew 118% between 2020 and 2022.
"You're looking at a massive spike in the availability of anime to new fans [based on a growing array of online platforms], and the time they had on hand to watch it," explains Jonathan Clements, author of books including the British Film Institute's Anime: A History. "And in the years since, a bunch of young fans have become consumerist teens with a love of anime.
For young fans, anime music offers a gateway to Japanese pop culture and beyond. It also has lifted up a new wave of stars onto a worldwide platform. Examples include the vibrantly catchy J-pop duo Yoasobi, whose 2023 track Idol, taken from the manga comic adaptation Oshi no Ko, became the first anime song to top the Billboard Global Chart; hip-hop act Creepy Nuts, whose viral smash Bling-Bang-Bang-Born, which is the intro for anime Mashle: Magic And Muscles, is a surreal bop blending quickfire rap and Latin licks; and melodic rockers Radwimps' soaring anthems for Makoto Shinkai's fantasy-dramas (Your Name; Weathering With You; Suzume). Ado's catalogue contains numerous anime themes, and her worldwide breakthrough was fuelled by the blockbuster success of One Piece Film Red, in which she sang tracks including the exhilarating electro-pop banger New Genesis, in character as the antihero Uta.
"When I first heard the demo for New Genesis, it felt like the world had opened up and a warm ray of light had shone through," Ado tells the BBC. "The character, Uta, is full of human touch in a good way," she says, adding that this song slickly captures the protagonist's complexity: "She is able to express feelings of joy and happiness, but also anger, hatred and sadness in a very simple relatable way."
Keeping up with this prolific scene can feel dizzying, but it regularly yields thrilling discoveries, and its blend of bold hooks, gripping storytelling and persuasive nostalgia seems to bring generations together more than most music – as I've found as a Gen X woman, geeking out alongside my Gen Alpha son. "Someone to look out for is [anime soundtrack composer] Kensuke Ushio, whose attention to detail and realism is truly astounding," says Clements. "On [2024 coming-of-age drama] The Colours Within he had to come up with the sound of the in-film garage band, carefully crafting electronic pop inspired by the early days of New Order. He even went as far as recording ambient sound in Japanese church halls, to ensure that the on-screen rehearsal sessions had the right room tone."
Anime music in the live arena
Anime music also increasingly translates to real-life realms, whether it's international concert tours from veteran composers such as Joe Hisaishi, the maestro famous for his work on the films of Studio Ghibli, or contemporary hitmakers including Ado and Yoasobi, or inclusive meet-ups and club events like those hosted by UK "diversity-led anime and gaming collective" Anime & Chill.
"For Gen Z specifically, anime hits differently," says Anime & Chill founder Eneni Bambara-Abban. "This is a generation raised on global internet culture, where J-pop, K-pop and anime AMVs [anime music videos] are part of the same online ecosystem.
"Platforms like TikTok and YouTube have also given anime songs a second life – clips go viral, people remix them, and suddenly, a theme from a niche show becomes a global anthem. We see it all the time at our events… the crowd knows the lyrics, they scream the choruses and they feel it." She emphasises the "emotional imprint" of these songs: "Anime music isn't just background music – it's the heartbeat of the [work]."
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Notable too is how Western musicians are getting in on anime culture. Back in 2003, French electronic duo Daft Punk re-imagined their Discovery album as an anime feature: Interstella 5555 (supervised by legendary artist Leiji Matsumoto); it seemed like a quirky curiosity at the time. But nowadays, a surge of western musicians reference anime in their own material, whether it's US hip-hop stars like Lil Uzi Vert and Megan Thee Stallion, or alt-pop heroine Billie Eilish name-checking characters in their lyrics and song titles, or London indie rapper Shao Dow who writes personal tracks based around famous anime series, and tells the BBC: "I use anime as a vehicle to explore ideas within my life". He adds that One Piece's teenage captain Luffy provided early creative influence: "I would look at this character who'd scream about being the king of the pirates, and people would laugh, but he'd keep doing it. Even though it's a cartoon, that positive energy inspired me: he's pushing forward with this dream."
Perhaps that's the ultimate power of anime songs; you can grow up with this music, but you never really grow out of it.
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For more than 100 years, the sign has been a Los Angeles landmark both in real life and on the silver screen. In 1978, Alice Cooper told the BBC why he was helping to restore the dilapidated icon.
Perched high on Mount Lee overlooking Los Angeles, the Hollywood sign is one of America's most instantly recognisable cultural icons. "[It] is like our London Bridge, our Big Ben," US shock rocker Alice Cooper said on a BBC music show, The Old Grey Whistle Test, in 1978. "In Hollywood, we don't have a landmark except for the Hollywood sign."
The exact date the monument went up is contested, but its official centenary was celebrated on 13 July 2023, making it 102 years old this week. It has now become synonymous with the film industry, but it wasn't originally intended to be. In fact, it wasn't even meant to last longer than 18 months. The sign was designed as a short-lived billboard, advertising a new housing development in the Hollywood Hills. It consisted of 13 enormous capital letters, each 30ft (9m) wide and 45ft (14m) tall, that spelt out HOLLYWOODLAND – the name of the real estate group selling the properties. Made of wood and sheet metal and held up by a framework of telephone poles, the structure cost more than $23,000 (about $430,000 or £300,000 today) to build.
To ensure it was especially eye-catching, it was illuminated with almost 4,000 lights that would flash the different sections of the sign, HOLLY, WOOD and LAND, consecutively. A handyman, Albert Koeth, was hired to keep the sign in good order and replace the bulbs as they burnt out. The idea was to promote an aspirational lifestyle choice to LA citizens rather than to act as some sort of endorsement of the entertainment industry.
Over the following decade, as LA and the film business grew, the sign stayed in place. But as the depression of the 1930s began to bite, its upkeep was cut back, and it quickly fell into disrepair. The songwriter Eden Ahbez, an early proponent of living the hippie lifestyle, camped for a time underneath the first L of the sign. Ahbez would later find fame for writing the 1948 Nat King Cole hit single Nature Boy.
The sign also began to achieve some unwelcome notoriety: its association with the death of aspiring Hollywood star Peg Entwistle linked it to the darker side of Tinseltown's allure. The 24-year-old Welsh-born actress had left a successful Broadway career to move to LA with dreams of becoming a film star. But after struggling to find success, on the night of 16 September 1932 Entwistle climbed a maintenance ladder to the top of the letter H and jumped to her death.
As the sign continued to rust and deteriorate, in 1944 the real estate company decided to donate it to the city, along with the remaining 425 acres of undeveloped land, for a token price of $1. By this time, a severe storm had already knocked down the letter H and many residents had come to regard the dilapidated sign as something of an eyesore. In 1949, a decision was reached to tear the whole thing down, but the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce managed to get the decision reversed on the proviso that they footed the bill to refurbish the crumbling sign and replace the missing letter. They shortened it, removing the LAND part, and a cultural icon was born.
But by the mid-1970s, through a combination of neglect, weather damage and vandalism, the now 50-year-old sign was falling apart again. By the time the BBC's Bob Harris came to interview Cooper in 1978, a severe storm had further disfigured it, breaking off part of the first O and sending a second O tumbling down the side of Mount Lee, leaving the sign to read HuLLYWO D.
The 'Save the Sign' campaign
"Nobody will take the responsibility for restoring it or anything," Cooper told the BBC. "The poor old thing is up there, dear to our hearts, and dying right in front of us. And I figured it would cost say $40,000 or $50,000 to restore. So I suggested that we would go and do a concert somewhere and just give them all the money," he said.
It would turn out that to bring the sign back to its former glory would cost considerably more than that. After compiling a structural report, the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce found that repairing the sign was impossible. It would need to be completely replaced. And to ensure it could withstand the winds on Mount Lee, the new steel letters would need to be supported by steel columns sunken into a concrete foundation. The price tag for this project would be $250,000.
A "Save the Sign" campaign was launched in May 1978, and the following month Hugh Hefner, founder of the international adult magazine Playboy, hosted a star-studded fundraiser at his mansion to raise money for the new sign. Cooper was the first person to sponsor a letter. "We figured it was $27,000 a piece, and I figured that would spark other people," he said.
The rocker paid for the final O, which he dedicated to his friend, the comedian and film star Groucho Marx, who had died the previous year. "And Andy Williams [the US singer known for his version of the song Moon River] donated a letter, and Warner Brothers of course did, and Gene Autry [famous as 'the Singing Cowboy'] and some really neat people did," said Cooper. "We more or less kicked it off, and I still believe that everybody in the world owes Hollywood a dollar at least for all the entertainment that comes out of Hollywood – and if we can't take care of it, the ones that live here, that's kind of silly."
The old sign was demolished, and a new 450ft (137m) long sign weighing 240 tonnes erected in its place. It has become the symbol of the city and the seductive promise of the film business.
"When you look at the Hollywood sign, you think of Hollywood glamour. We know glamour isn't real, but it seems real," film researcher and journalist Karen Krizanovich told David Willis on the BBC's podcast H-O-L-L-Y-W-O-O-D in 2023. "When you see the Hollywood sign, you think it's real. This whole fantasy about Hollywood is real, because of that sign."
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And the silver screen has responded in kind. Over the years, the Hollywood sign has featured in a myriad of films, starring alongside Charlton Heston in Earthquake (1974), Robert Downey Jr in Chaplin (1992) and Mila Kunis in Friends with Benefits (2011). But when it does turn up in films, such as Superman: The Movie (1978), The Day After Tomorrow (2004) and San Andreas (2015), it often doesn't make it out unscathed.
Over the years, it has been altered to reflect the times. In 1976, student Danny Finegood used curtains to make it read HOLLYWeeD to coincide with the relaxing of marijuana laws. The prank would happen again in 2017. When Pope John Paul II visited LA in 1987, it was altered to read HOLYWOOD. And the same year it was changed to OLLYWOOD in reference to Colonel Oliver North's testimony in the Iran-Contra scandal. On 31 December 1999 the new sign – which didn't have bulbs like the original – was lit up again for the first time in 60 years in a blaze of colours to celebrate the new millennium. During the closing ceremony of last year's Paris Olympics, its two Os were used to create the bottom two rings of the Olympic symbol in a nod to LA hosting the Games in 2028.
Speaking in 1978, Cooper, himself no stranger to theatricality, was comfortable with this dressing up of LA's most iconic monument. "I think they should have neon and flashing lights and everything on it," he said.
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A 10ft mural of former England and West Bromwich Albion manager Sam Allardyce has appeared in Dudley.
The artwork, depicting the former Premier League boss eating orange chips, a Black Country classic, is believed to have been pasted onto a wall in Union Street on Wednesday.
Allardyce grew up in Dudley and locals have suggested the area could now have its own Banksy.
Resident Scot Simmons said: "How did he do it without anyone seeing? Did he just put it up in a couple of minutes? Is he trying to remain mysterious?"
Fellow Dudley resident Andy Smith said: "Local lad eating orange chips, what more do you want?
"There is a genuine Banksy in Birmingham, perhaps this is Dudley's answer to Banksy."
Mr Simmons added: "Looking at it you don't know how good it is till you come down and see it.
"It's put Dudley on the map. Big Sam, immortalised here, yeah it's brilliant."
Allardyce managed Blackpool, Notts County, Bolton, Newcastle, Blackburn, West Ham and Sunderland during his career as well as having a short-lived spell as England boss.
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A museum is to welcome visitors as part of a phased reopening following a two-year, £10.3m revamp.
Poole Museum in Dorset closed in 2022, and on Saturday visitors will be able to explore its newly restored Scaplen's Court and Garden.
The revamp has been supported by BCP Council, which owns the site, the National Lottery Heritage Fund, the Arts Council and charitable trusts and foundations.
Museum interim director Jaine Fitzpatrick said: "Local businesses and community connections are central to the refreshed Poole Museum experience."
Scaplen Court has been made accessible for the first time, with the help of a new platform lift.
Capacity has increased from 60 to more than 250 people, enabling it to host larger events and celebrations.
The addition of the cafe on the ground floor and outdoor seating has transformed the space into a community hub.
The new museum shop will open the following week, while the full museum opens later in the year and entry will remain free.
The museum will include six new galleries across five floors, three new maritime galleries, a new ceramics, art and design gallery, and two flexible galleries for touring exhibitions.
Ms Fitzpatrick said: "By opening up parts of the site for the summer, we're encouraging residents and visitors to re-engage with us in Poole's historic Old Town whilst building anticipation ahead of the grand unveiling later in the year.
"This phased approach supports local enterprise, builds excitement, and offers early opportunities to enjoy revitalised spaces and cultural events."
Andy Martin, BCP Council's portfolio holder for customer, communication and culture, said: "This transformation of Poole Museum has been nothing short of incredible.
"The phased reopening is a fantastic opportunity for visitors to enjoy the museum in two exciting chapters."
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An artist has created an exhibition of pieces made out of plastic waste, including cleaning bottles and unwanted toys.
Bath artist Anya Beaumont said she was inspired by the "horror" of realising how much plastic was in her house and wanting to do something creative with it "rather than just chucking it in the recycling bin".
When telling people about her Hopeful Monsters exhibition, which includes intricate sculptural and wearable artworks, she said the most common reaction was relief because people finally had somewhere to take their unwanted plastic.
"I think a lot of people identify with what I'm doing," Ms Beaumont added.
The artist, whose work is on display at 44AD artspace in Bath until Sunday, said she would rather use material that already exists.
"It's quite depressing [the amount of waste plastic]," she added.
"My studio's getting fuller and fuller."
Ms Beaumont first started working with waste plastic after noticing her children returning from nursery and primary school with lots of bits of plastic.
"The infamous party bag would have a toy which they'd love for five minutes then before you knew it it was broken or forgotten about and I'd be left with all this stuff not really knowing what to do with it," said Ms Beaumont.
"In a broader sense I recognised just how much plastic was in the house," she added.
But she said using the colourful unwanted plastic "means that I've got a really vibrant source material to work with".
"I don't need to paint it, I can just collect it, sort it into different colours and there it is ready for me to use," she said.
She is also making brightly coloured brooches people can take away from the exhibition.
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Teenagers who grew up with the Gromit Unleashed trails in Bristol have been reminiscing on the latest version of the charity project, 12 years after it all began.
Many completed the first and second trails as young children and have returned to relive special memories with the latest installation.
Seventeen-year-old Naomi, who was five years old in 2013, the year of the first Gromit trail, said: "Because I'd done previous trials, it's a sentimental walk down memory lane."
The sculptures will be in place across Bristol until 31 August before they are auctioned off later this year in aid of The Grand Appeal, Bristol Children's Hospital charity.
Barney was only just tall enough to touch Gromit's nose when he took part in the first trail.
Now more than 6ft tall, the 15-year-old dwarves the famous beagle and said he still loves collecting models of the Aardman characters.
"I don't think you ever grow out of these characters really because you've been seeing them since such a young age, it was one of the first things I was really properly into," he said.
"When the first trail went up in 2013, I was three years old and I remember being really excited because I'd watched all the Wallace and Gromit films," he added.
"We decided as a family it would be nice to go out and hunt them all down."
Brothers Leo and Hugh both remember doing previous trails as a family, as they have a special connection to The Grand Appeal.
They began fundraising for the charity after their sister, Lydia, died of a heart condition and have since raised £65,000.
Leo was two when he went on his first Gromit trail with his dad, Austen.
He said: "I think the Wallace and Gromit trails are great fun because it gets you to places you wouldn't usually go to usually."
Hugh added: "I think the Grand Appeal is amazing because it helps people."
Anna Hitchcock, head of commercial at The Grand Appeal, said: "Gromit is really important to lots of people in Bristol and the character pulls people in.
"They've taken it [the trail] to their hearts, they want to collect the figurines and then do it again the next time.
"Something about the trail is about getting back to basics, going out with the family in the good weather and you get to explore Bristol and spend quality time together."
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Stars of the original BBC children's programme Balamory will revive their roles in a new series next year.
Julie Wilson Nimmo will be back as nursery teacher Miss Hoolie, Andrew Agnew as PC Plum, Kim Tserkezie as Penny Pocket and Juliet Cadzow as Edie McCredie in the reboot on CBeebies.
The BBC said it would blend familiar faces with a host of new characters for a "joyful mix of stories, comedy, songs and adventures".
The orginal hit programme from the early 2000s was inspired by the real life Scottish town of Tobermory on the Isle of Mull.
New characters include scientist and inventor Ava Potts, played by Danielle Jam, local vet Dr Ollie, played by Carl Spencer, and the harbour master, played by William Andrews.
Filming will take place in a studio in Glasgow and on location in Tobermory.
BBC children's commissioner Kate Morton said: "It's wonderful to see some of the original cast returning alongside new faces, creating a perfect mix of nostalgia and discovery for families to enjoy together.
"This vibrant new series will delight both children and the grown-ups who remember it fondly."
Originally produced from 2002 to 2005, Balamory became a television staple for young children.
It was broadcast around the world, becoming a hit with young audiences in Europe, Australia, Hong Kong, Canada and South Africa.
The BBC said the revival would continue its tradition of home-grown storytelling about the much-loved nursery school and island community that surrounds it.
The pogramme has been commissioned for two new series, produced by Lion Television Scotland, with 10 episodes in each.
A historical novel set on a remote Scottish island in 1843 has been named Wales Book of the Year.
Clear, written by Carys Davies, was described by the judges as an "intricately crafted, passionate and remarkable novel".
The book, which also won the fiction category, tells the story of the fragile bond forged between two strangers when the sole occupant of an island discovers an unconscious man on the beach.
Iola Ynyr's autobiography, Camu, was named Welsh language Book of the Year.
Ms Davies, who has written three novels, was presented with her award at a ceremony held by Literature Wales at Cardiff's Sherman Theatre.
She has won £4,000 as well as a trophy designed and created by artist Angharad Pearce Jones.
In Clear, newcomer to the island John Ferguson, an impoverished church minister, has been sent to evict its only occupant, Ivar, and to turn the island into grazing land for sheep.
Ivar, who has been living a life of quiet isolation, is unaware of the stranger's intentions and takes him into his home, developing a bond despite the two men having no common language.
Speaking on behalf of the judging panel, Carole Burns said: "We all loved this book, for its story, for its ambition, for its sentences, for its relevance to our world today."
"Excellence is always the only criteria, in the end, for a prize, and that's true for this winning book," she added.
Speaking after the ceremony, Literature Wales' artistic director Leusa Llewelyn congratulated all the writers and publishers who reached the shortlist, and said it was "an incredible night for Welsh literature".
"Special congratulations to Carys Davies for being crowned winner of the overall prize for her beautifully subtle yet evocative novella, Clear," she added.
Camu, published by Y Lolfa, is an autobiography by writer, playwright and director Iola Ynyr and was written as a series of personal essays.
In these essays, she aims to reclaim her life and memories through creativity, having lost periods of both due to alcoholism, trauma and mental illness, an awards spokesperson said.
The Wales Book of the Year has been in existence since the 1960s, but has been run by the literature development charity Literature Wales since 2004.
There are four categories in both Welsh and English - poetry, fiction, creative non-fiction and children and young people and each category winner receives £1,000, with the overall winner getting a further £3,000.
A book to celebrate the 60th anniversary of a club that brought music legends to Cheltenham is being released.
Everyone's Gone To The Moon was written by Richard Goddard, Dave Jackson, Chris Stanbury and Mike Williams, who are former members of the Blue Moon Club. The High Street venue attracted music fans from all over the country, as well as from the US.
Jimi Hendrix, Sir Elton John and David Bowie, who were all relatively unknown at the time, were just some of the artists who performed during the two-year period the venue was open for.
Mr Williams said "it was that buzz of being among people that were all likeminded" that made the club so special.
Former members still reunite a few times every year to dance and listen to music from the time.
Mr Williams was there on the opening night, which was headlined by the Bo Street Runners, a London R&B band.
"Their claim to fame was Mick Fleetwood was their drummer," he said.
"He went on to play for Fleetwood Mac of course, but we never saw or heard from them again."
One of the most famous nights in the Blue Moon's two years came in February 1967, when Jimi Hendrix performed.
Mr Goddard jumped the queue, which trailed back to The Promenade.
"I went along having heard him on the radio, he was up-and-coming," he said.
"We got in but it was absolutely rammed. The capacity was about 350 or 360 but there was over 700 in there."
The Blue Moon Club closed in May 1967 after the owners decided to change direction.
More than 500 members of the club came forward to contribute to the book.
"The publisher basically said 'Stop', we were putting too much into it and he's prompted us with a few ways we could go forward, something like a second edition," Mr Goddard said.
"A lot of people have put a lot of effort into giving us this information."
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Tom Grennan has announced an "intimate" gig for fans in his adopted city of Coventry.
The singer said his plan was to "open up a rehearsal for people to come to and basically make it a gig".
The show will feature songs from his new album and be an opportunity to try things out ahead of a tour, which starts in September.
It will be held in an exhibition hall at Coventry's CBS Arena on 29 August, with a reduced capacity and tickets are due to go on sale at 11:00 BST on Friday.
Grennan, who is originally from Bedford, said: "I've got such a connection with Coventry.
"I feel like I've just been taken in as one of your own."
His association with the city comes through his grandmother, who lives there, but he said "the attitude that Coventry people have is my same attitude".
The upcoming tour does not include a show in Coventry and he said he had received a lot of messages from people asking why not.
"I just wanted to make sure we were doing something in Cov because I know how many people wanted it," he said.
Grennan said the limited ticket numbers would make the show "intimate" and he hoped it would give his fans a taste of the preparation involved in a big tour.
He promised to perform requests from the audience and chat to people.
He also said he wanted to "hear their take on the album" and his planned set list for the tour, to inform his decision-making.
Ticket bundles are being sold via Crash Records.
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Rapper Giggs and his son ML have dropped a new track together that touches on their experiences of autism.
The pair say Own Motion, a remix of a song originally written and and released by ML, explores themes of struggling to fit in and having to do things differently.
Giggs says his son's openness about his autism diagnosis led the veteran UK hip-hop star to find that he also had the condition.
He recently told BBC Newsnight a lack of understanding when he was younger made him feel like he was "bad", and he didn't want his children to feel that way too.
"I was always getting in trouble," he told the programme.
"I always used to answer back, get kicked out of class every single day until I just thought: 'Well, I'm bad'."
The rapper says he took that message through life and that he ended up in prison twice before being "saved" by music.
'Stigma'
The track resonated with rapper Lickz, who also has autism.
She tells BBC Newsbeat she had a similar experience to Giggs at school.
"I did get sent out of class a few times for talking back or whatever," the 20-year-old, from Croydon, says.
"I was distracted and I wasn't focused on the lessons."
The Rap Game UK star wasn't diagnosed until she was 18 and says having artists like Giggs share their experiences helped her come to terms with her own.
"I was really upset because of the stigma behind it," she says.
"A lot of people feel like people that have autism are slow or they're stupid and because I'd never heard anything different it was devastating news to me.
"But then I learned more about it, I heard Giggs had it, people I look up to, so I was like: 'There's actually nothing wrong with having autism'."
The track's also inspired people like fan Ethan Appleby.
"One of the lines in the song - I used to be ashamed, I used to hide it, but now I own it - is really cool," he says.
The 20-year-old also has autism and says it's "such a wide spectrum", so "it can be hard to figure out yourself and how you fit into things".
He says it's "awesome" for someone with Giggs' influence to publicly say the condition doesn't have to stop you from doing what you want.
"Music is so important for stuff like this," he says.
"It can be so powerful."
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Hidden in a quiet Italian town is one of the world's most unique art schools – and a rewarding destination for curious travellers.
Walking the corridors of the Scuola dei Mosaicisti del Friuli (Friuli Mosaicists School) on a Friday morning, the first thing I noticed was the silence. I had expected the chatter of students, the hum of conversation between teachers, the shuffle of footsteps. Instead, the air was still, broken only by the occasional tap of a hammer and the delicate click of tiles sliding against tiles.
The second thing was the mosaics – everywhere. In the entrance courtyard, where a full-scale tessellated version of Picasso's Guernica greets visitors. In the hallways, where tiled reproductions of artworks like Michelangelo's Pietà and the Virgin and Child from Istanbul's Hagia Sophia line the walls. Mosaics climbed across flat surfaces and curled around corners, turning the entire building into a living archive of pattern, precision and patience.
Those same qualities were on full display inside the classrooms where students sat bent over their workstations, eyes locked on the fragments beneath their fingers. Mosaic, I would learn over the course of my visit, demands this kind of concentration: a craft shaped not just by hand and material, but by a collected atmosphere where meticulousness can thrive.
The school has been nurturing this kind of dedication for more than a century. Founded in 1922 in Spilimbergo, a small town of medieval lanes, a stately castle and Renaissance palazzi in Italy's north-eastern Friuli-Venezia Giulia region, it was originally created to provide formal training to local artisans and preserve the area's ancient mosaic tradition — one that dates to the Roman Empire and has left its mark on everything from Byzantine basilicas to modern monuments.
Today it's the only academic institution in the world entirely devoted to the mosaic arts. Students of all ages, from high school graduates to mid-career creatives, come from across the globe to enrol in its rigorous three-year programme, during which they learn historical mosaic techniques – from intricate Greco-Roman patterns to luminous Byzantine compositions — before experimenting with more contemporary, freeform designs.
In recent years, the school has also become a destination in its own right, drawing design-loving travellers intrigued by the singular world of mosaics to explore its grounds on both public and private tours. Some 40,000 visitors do so annually, making the Scuola Mosaicisti one of the most visited sites in Friuli.
While around 40 students are admitted to the three-year programme each year, no more than 15 complete the full curriculum, earning the title of maestri mosaicisti (mosaic masters). Of those, only a select group of six go on to do a fourth year – a sort of master's degree – to further sharpen their skills.
"It takes a lot of hard work and discipline to become a maestro mosaicista," said Gian Piero Brovedani, the school's director. "This is an art that's both humbling and exacting. It teaches you to slow down, pay attention and find beauty in repetition."
Indeed, mosaic-making is an incredibly precise specialty. It requires the artist to painstakingly place together hundreds, sometimes thousands, of small pieces called tesserae (which can measure as little as 0.5cm) to form intricate patterns and lifelike scenes. Made from marble, glass, smalto (opaque glass tiles) and even shells, these tiny inlays demand thorough craftsmanship and an intuitive sense of rhythm and placement.
As Brovedani noted, it's also deeply collaborative. Mosaicists generally work solo on sections of large compositions, but the true effect of that work emerges only when viewed in unison. "It's a craft that asks you to 'erase' yourself, in a way," said third-year teacher Cristina de Leoni. "One tile on its own doesn't say very much, but together with others, it creates an artwork. There's no ego in mosaic-making."
Glancing at the craft's rich history – which dates to Mesopotamia in the 3rd millennium BCE and stretches across countries and cultures, from the Greeks to the Maya, the Byzantine Empire to the Islamic world – it's easy to see her point. There are no Giottos or Raphaels in the mosaic arts, no singular Mona Lisa. Instead, this expressive form has always relied on anonymous virtuosity, walking a fine line between art and artisanship.
That's been all the truer in Friuli-Venezia Giulia, where mosaicists never stopped honing the craft, even as it slipped from the spotlight from the Renaissance onwards. With its abundance of stones from the Tagliamento (Friuli's main river) and close cultural ties to Venice – a city long at the epicentre of European art and craftsmanship – the region quietly became a stronghold of mosaic tradition, its skilled artists sought after across continents. In the 19th Century, Friulian artist Gian Domenico Facchina even helped usher mosaics into the modern era, devising the rovescio su carta (reverse on paper) method to assemble panels off-site – a game-changer for scale and speed. The foyer of Paris' Opéra Garnier was the first to showcase it.
Since then, Friulan mosaicists – most trained in Spilimbergo – have made their mark worldwide: from Rome's iconic Foro Italico sports complex to the New York City subway station at the World Trade Center; from the dome of Jerusalem's Church of the Holy Sepulchre to Tokyo galleries. These works are proof of a tradition that continues to evolve, tessera by tessera.
"The duality of mosaics makes them endlessly fascinating," said Purnima Allinger, a third-year student who left a marketing career in Berlin to pursue mosaics. "It's a precise and meditative-like craft, but also expressive and emotional like art. You're always shifting between the two – it keeps you completely engaged."
Amos Carcano, a maestro mosaicista from Switzerland, agrees. "You work with your hands, but you're also constantly inventing, playing with texture, colour and patterns. Contemporary mosaics push those boundaries even further. It's a tradition, but it's also wide open."
Carcano is currently one of 10 alumni working on one of the school's most ambitious pieces yet: a 1,265-sq-m mosaic floor for the courtyard depicting Friuli's native flora and fauna – a project set to take more than a year.
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It's not just maestri who create for the school. All those mosaics I saw as I toured the premises? They are by past and present students. "We think of the school as a bottega – a workshop," says Danila Venuto, who teaches mosaic history. "And in a workshop, you learn by doing. It's only natural that the students are put to work as soon as they start learning the ABC of mosaic. This is a craft that's mastered and kept alive through making."
And increasingly, you can learn even as a visitor. The school offers corsi brevi – short courses ranging from four-day intensives to week-long programmes – to give travellers a hands-on introduction to the art. Meanwhile, the tours include access to an archive of more than 800 mosaic works and the opportunity to glimpse into the classrooms where students and maestri work side by side. Leading each visit is usually one of the 79 guides that have specifically been trained by the school, or, for a more local flavour, Spilimbergo's volunteer city guides, who often pair the experience with a stroll through the town.
The experience doesn't stop at the school gates. Spilimbergo itself is full of mosaics: decorating the interiors of its imposing Roman-Gothic Duomo, embedded in shopfronts, woven into restaurant floors and tucked into hidden corners of the old town. On its main thoroughfare, Corso Roma, mosaic shops and showrooms display beautiful creations from the school's alumni for purchase; while on the outskirts of town, Fabbrica di Mosaici Mario Donà, a historic family-run kiln that moved from Murano to Spilimbergo in 1991, can be visited by appointment to see where the enamels for the mosaics are made.
Travel just a little further and you'll reach the source material that has long shaped the school's practice: the grave – smooth, river-washed stones carried by the Tagliamento. Nearby lies the Magredi, a stark plain formed by gravel brought in by two local streams, the Cellina and the Meduna. Though it may look barren, it teems with a variety of flora and fauna, from wildflowers to birds of prey – the very subjects featured in countless Friulian mosaics, including the school's soon-to-be-completed outdoor floor.
"People from Spilimbergo – and from Friuli at large – are very proud of this centuries-old tradition," said Venuto. "Mosaic-making is part of our cultural DNA, a true Friulian legacy."
And in this corner of Friuli, if you're curious, you're welcome to be part of it.
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One descendant has a statue on a massive column commemorating his life. The other has a few photos stuck in a bathroom.
It's not hard to imagine which one the family of the time was keener to remember. However, as a musical celebrating the man in the bathroom makes clear, sometimes you have to play the long game - or as the show's title says, How to Win Against History.
For the bathroom photos depict Henry Cyril Paget, 5th Marquess of Anglesey, a man who bankrupted his family and died young far from home, after a few short years of splashing his aristocratic forebears' cash on extravagant and outrageous self-produced shows in Edwardian Britain, appearing in women's dresses and costumes literally made of diamonds.
Now 120 years after his death a play and the film Madfabulous, inspired by his life, is putting him firmly back in the spotlight, but what does the current generation of his family make of the man who was once relegated to a toilet?
Alex, 8th Marquess of Anglesey, says Henry is now viewed with affection by himself and other family members, as time and changing attitudes have cast his exploits in a more understanding light.
Although Henry married his cousin, their marriage was apparently never consummated and his wife later filed for annulment. Was he gay? No conclusive evidence either way, but it's hard not to imagine he was somewhere on the LGBTQ+ spectrum of sexualities.
Alex says he first came to know of Henry through those bathroom photos. "The one I particularly remember was him dressed up as Boadicea with big Edwardian moustaches.
"[It was] a bit of a giggle. His existence wasn't denied but he wasn't a major part of the family heritage.
"He was viewed as the black sheep of the family, this eccentric, weird bloke who we knew about and thought he sounded quite funny.
"When I was growing up in the 1950s and 60s, homosexuality was still illegal. He wasn't necessarily gay actually, he was probably asexual, but that whole kind of thing of an alternative sexuality was certainly not generally in most circles accepted.
"That personal sexual liberation of the 1960s, and then more recently of course with LGBTQ identities, he has become a bit of an icon, and attitudes towards him have definitely changed."
Alex says because not much is known about Henry - his own diaries and letters were seemingly destroyed by the family after his death and most of the stories about him were told in sensationalist press reports - his life has become an opportunity for creatives to fill in many blanks with their own imaginings.
Henry was an only child who was left motherless at a very young age and was raised for the first years of his life in Paris by relatives, where he was exposed to the theatrical world of the period.
But then his father reclaimed him and he was sent to live at Plas Newydd on Anglesey, and his life followed the pattern of education at Eton and an affiliation with the military typical of his class.
However, on the death of the 4th Marquess in 1898, Henry inherited the title, the lands and the money, and proceeded to live as he chose.
He renamed Plas Newydd Anglesey Castle, converted the chapel to a performance space he called the Gaiety Theatre, and put on seemingly spectacular shows with elaborate and jaw-droppingly expensive costumes and props, inviting both notables and the local people in for free to witness his magnificence.
He ran through most of a fortune that in today's money has been estimated at about £60m and was bankrupted, leaving a shadow of his inheritance. Estranged from his wife, he moved to Monte Carlo and died aged 29.
'It's a pity he spent all the money'
And that is where Alex's branch of the family comes in. As he acknowledges, it is only because of Henry's lack of issue that he now holds the title of 8th Marquess, as it fell to Henry's cousin, Alex's grandfather, on his death.
What does he make of Henry, from the perspective of the 21st Century? While acknowledging the loss of the fortune - "it's a pity he spent all the money", he laughs, while clarifying he didn't actually quite spend it all.
"He wasn't totally unique. He was part of a culture, although a minority culture, people like Oscar Wilde in this country and [Marcel] Proust in France, where he initially grew up.
"That early 20th Century artistic, sexual liberation stuff was going on there in a minority world.
"He wasn't unique in that sense or even in the context of the English aristocracy - you know the empire-building, soldierly stuff wasn't the only side of the aristocracy," he says, with a nod to another Henry Paget, this time the one on the column, 1st Marquess of Anglesey and veteran of the Battle of Waterloo, who lost his leg fighting alongside the Duke of Wellington.
Pointing to Henry's father being a "playboy who certainly did not take any aristocratic responsibility, noblesse oblige stuff, very seriously at all", Henry can be viewed perhaps in a grand tradition of eccentric and hedonistic aristocrats, albeit one who stepped further outside the boundaries than was considered acceptable.
It was this sense of exclusion that spoke to How to Win Against History creator Seiriol Davies when they first came across the photos of Henry during a visit to Plas Newydd - which was been owned by the National Trust for half a century - as a child.
In the midst of "marvelling at all the pomp", the playwright and actor from Anglesey was struck by the contrast between the lionisation of the 1st Marquess and his heirs and "the little laminated photocopy of some pictures of [Henry] Blu-tacked on the wall next to the toilet.
"It said he was a very silly man who wasted all the family's money doing very silly plays.
"A little bell of proto-queer indignation rang in my tummy, and because I believe in swift and decisive action, decided to make a musical about it 25 years later."
They describe Henry as "mesmerising, fabulous, glamorous and totally out of his time, but also kind of lost".
As an only child without a mother, Alex agrees one interpretation of Henry's outlandish behaviour could be as a sort of search for connection. "Maybe this was one way of creating an identity, which he certainly did.
"I do think he's a fascinating character no doubt about it, and his whole persona does fit in with David Bowie and that sort of thing. There's some truth in those kinds of connections and 'he was the inventor of the selfie' idea, which comes into the film or the musical."
Seiriol calls their loose interpretation of Henry's life "a screwball, riot comedy camp-o-rama but it has at its centre someone who doesn't even have his internal life because it's been eradicated.
"In this fiction that we're making about a character which is a bit like Henry in some ways - and this is not trying to be the truth about him - within our story he's constantly trying to find connection, find acceptance; trying to get someone to see him as him."
"I think probably my grandfather's generation were pretty seriously embarrassed by him," said Alex.
"His existence was not denied but it's all summed up by the fact there were these photographs of him - but they were in the bathroom. They weren't portraits in the main room."
And now? "We're happy to celebrate his rather weird, to some degree not happy, but to some degree rather extraordinary and marvellous life."
The extinct flightless pigeon has captured imaginations for over 400 years. Experts and artists are now revealing how much we have distorted what the dodo was really like – nimble and slender, with a formidable beak.
When Karen Fawcett embarked on creating as accurate a model of a dodo as possible, she knew she was taking on a serious challenge.
As a palaeoartist, who creates artworks of prehistoric life based on scientific evidence, Fawcett is used to not relying on photographs to guide her work. But information on the dodo was especially scarce, she says.
"I've never seen this bird, and all I've got is some little tantalising clues about what it was like and… artist drawings and paintings of dodos," says Fawcett, who created the dodo model in her studio in Durham, UK, in 2019.
These artists often hadn't even seen a dodo themselves, she says, or were painting from taxidermy models or unhappy, captive birds in European menageries. The dodo's unusually small wings and large feet were also a challenge, she says: everything about it was "almost upside down" compared to modern birds. It all made the task all the more tantalising, though. "The dodo, it's so iconic, everybody knows what it is," she says. "I mean, there's even an emoji of a dodo on a phone. Yet nobody has seen one."
From the first encounter with dodos by Dutch sailors on the island of Mauritius in 1598 to their extinction a century later, there are plenty of depictions of this unusual ground-dwelling bird (which was, in fact, a large flightless pigeon). But disentangling truth from myth is tricky, especially when modern-day research has shown dodos were anything but the dumpy, clumsy, stupid birds so often represented.
The dodo has long been seen as an iconic image of "our ability to just destroy things", says Neil Gostling, a palaeobiologist at the University of Southampton in the UK. But today, researchers like Gostling – and the occasional artist with a scientific eye, like Fawcett – are probing the past to uncover everything they can about the real dodo, from what it really looked like and behaved, to why it evolved as it did and how it ended up among the first human-caused extinctions in modern times.
What they are discovering is firmly overturning the image of the dodo as a stupid, clumsy animal somehow destined for extinction. These scientists hope that finding out more about the dodo, and even scouring its genetics, could even help to address our current day extinction crisis.
But fascinating as it is to pursue our long-lived obsession with the dodo, can it really tell us anything about wildlife, and how to save it, today?
In unravelling the truth about the dodo, there's long been little to go on. Despite several live dodos being transported to Europe in the 17th Century, there are few remnants left anywhere today: an emaciated, mummified head known as the Oxford dodo along with a piece of skin once attached to this (these are the only surviving soft tissue); the remains of a feather; a head in Copenhagen; part of a beak in Prague; and plaster casts of a mouldy foot, itself lost sometime in the 19th Century.
Julian Hume, an artist and avian palaeontologist at the Natural History Museum in London who has published nearly 40 papers on the dodo, reckons he is the only person to have illustrated all these surviving parts of the bird. As well as these, he says, there are perhaps some 20 or 25 fossilised skeletons with some kind of skull material. But all of these, bar two near-complete skeletons from single individuals and a third partial one, are composite skeletons made from a jumble of bones from different dodos.
Apart from this, all we have are paintings from the time the dodo was alive, largely from taxidermy or captive birds. We also have a lot of inherited misbeliefs.
The dodo began capturing imaginations almost as soon as it was discovered in the 16th Century. "It's just a weird, weird bird," says Gostling. "It would have stood nearly a metre tall (3.3ft)… No one would have seen anything like it in Europe, just this remarkable animal. I think people took to it."
The biggest misconception of the dodo is "that it's sort of fat, stupid and deserved to go extinct", says Gostling. "It wasn't. It was adapted to its environment, and it had been doing very well… The thing that it wasn't adapted to were rats, cats, pigs and goats, and obviously people."
And it's only really in the last decade that people have started to question the negative image of the dodo, says Gostling. "It's so pervasive." Fawcett's sculpture, he says, is the most accurate model yet made.
Before she began working on it in 2019, Fawcett spent years finding out all she could about the dodo. She soon learned that many depictions were best left avoided. Among them was the famous dodo painting by Dutch artist Roelant Savery, painted in the 1620s. "I can tell you, there's lots wrong with that," she says. "It's more [like a] swan", she says: pigeons don't have "this bulbous, sticky-out bit at the front" of the neck. "And the belly on it... it's just obese, basically."
Savery is thought to have worked off a bad taxidermy bird, and apparently wildly exaggerated some features, but his depiction became the world's most well-known dodo image. It was the basis for the Alice's Adventures in Wonderland dodo illustration in 1865, which propelled the dodo to even more fame in the Victorian era. "That [idea] continued to the present day," says Gostling. "You can ask anybody, they'll know what a dodo is, and they'll draw this round bird with a funny beak and waddly feet… And it's absolutely wrong."
It didn't help, of course, that the first detailed scientific description of the dodo was only published in 1848, centuries after it went extinct. And even this was still 10 years before the theory of evolution was published, the first step to understanding how the dodo was, in fact, expertly adapted to its environment. A lot of scientists at the time took the exaggerated illustrations "as actual fact, because there was nothing else to go on", says Hume. The first reconstruction of a dodo's skeleton, for example, squeezed it into the outline of Savery's painting.
A few apparently accurate – but less famous – contemporaneous depictions do exist, though. Some were drawn by a Dutch sailor in the first decades of the 1600s. "They are the best drawings ever of dodos, and they were the only drawings done on Mauritian soil," says Hume.
The drawings depict a more upright and slender bird than in Savery's paintings. Fawcett used these sketches to create her dodo's head, along with a replica of the mummified Oxford dodo's head and some cast skulls. Unlike some depictions, they also show a particularly hooked beak, says Fawcett (it's thought to have been a formidable weapon).
Another good source was the 1625 painting by Mughal artist Ustad Mansur of a live dodo kept in a Hindustan emperor's menagerie which Fawcett used for features like colouration (it shows the dodo as having a brownish-grey colour). As the painting includes other birds still found today in the menagerie, she was able to cross-reference for accuracy.
For other details, live pigeons themselves were a handy source, adds Fawcett. "I often looked at Pidge," she says of her daughter's pet pigeon, useful in modelling finer details like how the eyelids look on a pigeon. She also used baby pigeons to model how the flightless dodo's tiny vestigial wings may have looked. Scientists now think dodos used these for balance when moving at speed.
Despite all the work to evidence her model, Fawcett acknowledges that "any form of palaeoart is a form of guesswork". It's a situation familiar to dodo researchers trying to scratch the surface of what the real dodo was like. "For probably one of the most famous birds in the world, we really don't know a lot in terms of facts," says Hume. Their ecology and population levels before humans arrived, for example, remain largely a mystery, he says. "There's so little to go on…It was such a short period of time when humans interacted with dodos."
In a project launched last year, Hume, Gostling and a set of collaborators are now hoping to find out the truth about the dodo. To start things off, in a 2024 paper they assessed some 400 years of dodo literature, principally in an effort to classify it correctly.
The task involved disentangling centuries of folk and sailors' stories from the truth. "You've got to remember, the sailors at the time would have been recording things like mermaids," says Gostling. At some point a completely fictional "white dodo" supposedly living on nearby Reunion island was invented. "There's all sorts, dodos here, there and everywhere," says Gostling. "No there weren't. The dodo [was] on Mauritius, and it's only ever been on Mauritius."
It doesn't help that when the dodo did disappear, it was not even noticed until a century later. Even then people had trouble understanding it, says Hume. "This could not be, you know – it was God's creation," he says. Amidst the confusion it became common to believe the dodo had been a myth, he adds. "Suddenly dodos were no longer around, and people started going, well, was it a made-up bird?"
The truth of how the dodo really disappeared continues to unravel to the present day. Diaries from the Dutch sailing vessels which encountered the dodo in its home territory show it was eaten by humans, but likely seldomly, as it was considered tough and less tasty than other available game on Mauritius.
It's now believed it was animals brought by sailors that ultimately caused the dodo's demise. "The dodo laid a single egg in a nest on the ground, which made these eggs particularly vulnerable to predation by introduced species like rats and pigs, which arrived on Mauritius at the same time as people," says Beth Shapiro, an evolutionary biologist at the University of California-Santa Cruz. Rats would have also been serious competition for food, says Hume.
It's not known how many dodos lived on Mauritius before people arrived there, says Hume, but accounts from the time tell us something of how the dodo behaved in its home habitat, with one noting "they could run very fast".
Dodos, like other birds on the island, appeared relatively unafraid of people, and were easy for humans to catch when out in the open. But accounts say that the dodo was incredibly agile when it got between the rocks and the trees and would apparently "stand upright and run incredibly fast, and you couldn't catch it", says Gostling.
Modern-day research is backing this up. In 2016, Hume and colleagues used laser surface scanning technology to digitally recreate – and correct the position of – the dodo skeleton housed in the Natural History Museum in Port Louis, Mauritius' capital. "I put the bones together, worked out the angles they would have been, and it brings the dodo up into that more upright, natural shape," he says.
Hume and Gostling also both say their ongoing (as-yet unpublished) analysis of dodo's ankle bones has shown it has large scars where apparently large tendons and ligaments were attached. “When we look at birds that have this giant tendon in their foot today… they're very fast runners, they're climbers," says Gostling. "And that's what the dodo was doing."
It all comes together to reveal that the dodo was likely much taller, slimmer, lighter and more upright than commonly thought, with relatively long, strong legs and robust limbs which allowed it to manoeuvre quickly in its dense, rocky forest habitat.
The dodo had no reason to fear humans, Shapiro notes, since it evolved on an island without predators. Much of Mauritius was extremely rocky at that time, adds Hume, and he believes that dodos had to get to the areas where the local giant tortoises, their competitors for food, couldn't. "So they evolved this ability to be manoeuvrable, get over those rocks and get to high peaks."
Gostling, Hume and their collaborators now hope to find out more about how exactly the dodo operated in its environment. "Simply working out how they moved around it is a big question," says Gostling. "We are trying to really uncover this animal. And it's a bit of a detective story."
They plan to build up the first accurate computer model of a moving dodo, recreating its musculature from the scars found on dodo bones – although funding has yet to be found for the project, says Hume.
But even while these scientists are working to find out more about the extinct dodo, a more controversial avenue is pursued to recreate it: the dodo is among the targets of "de-extinction" by gene editing company Colossal Biosciences. (Read more about why scientists are concerned about de-extinction).
In 2022, Shapiro, working with Colossal Biosciences, announced the sequencing of the dodo's complete genome, using a degraded DNA sample taken from a dodo skull. The results are as yet unpublished and still undergoing analysis, says Shapiro. She says the team's genetic research is "revealing the underlying DNA sequence variations that gave these birds their unique morphologies and allowing us to learn more about their evolutionary history and adaptation to their island habitats".
The longer-term plan is to use genome editing to engineer the genome of a Nicobar pigeon, the dodo's closet living relative, to "express key traits that defined a dodo", says Shapiro: its larger size, flightlessness and the unique beak suitable for consuming large fruit. The goal, she says, is both to return the dodo to Mauritius and to develop biotechnologies to stop other birds from becoming extinct. (Few tools of modern genome engineering are applicable to birds, notes Shapiro, since they cannot be "cloned" in the same way mammals can due to differences in their reproductive systems.)
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Successfully creating a dodo-like bird would allow scientists to see how the dodo interacts with other species in the Mauritian habitats, says Shapiro, as well as learn more about how engineered DNA sequences manifest as differences in physical appearance and behaviour. She notes that the introduction of (non-native) giant tortoises on Mauritius (to replace the extinct Mauritian giant tortoises) has already helped to control introduced plant species and support native plants.
Hume says he'd "love to be first in the queue if they ever bring the dodo back". But he believes it is still a long way off. "I don't think I'll ever see one in my lifetime," he says. "They're looking at ways of manipulating genes and trying to get it into the parent so it actually alters [the genes] before the egg develops. It would almost be a random shot in the dark, will this one come out with a big beak, this one comes out with small wings. And then you start cross breeding, it would never be a dodo, it'd be a mix match."
Gostling also has doubts. "What Colossal is trying to do is take dodo genes and put them into the Nicobar pigeon and make a more dodo-like Nicobar pigeon. I don't know that that's really going to work."
Still, says Hume, understanding the genetics of the dodo can be used "as a basis to understand a lot". "There's a lot of research to be done, and it's all quite exciting stuff." And learning how to tweak genes to increase genetic variability could indeed help other birds, he says. The pink pigeon, for example – the last surviving pigeon on Mauritius – is in dire need of help due to inbreeding, he says: tweaking its genes for more variability could help avoid it being wiped out.
Perhaps the dodo's most lasting impact on humans is as the emblem of an extinction crisis that continues to accelerate today. What's sad, is that, unlike in the 17th Century, "we know now that we can wipe out species", says Gostling. "We know what the message is…we know what we need to do. We now need to do it."
At this moment, notes Hume, another relative of the dodo, the tooth-billed pigeon on Samoa, is on the verge of extinction. "It's going to become like the dodo, there's so few left it's probably had it as a species, which is a tragedy," he says. Many birds around the world are "on the very edge of hanging on", Hume adds. According to one recent paper, assuming no change in the trajectory of human behaviour, more than 500 bird species could go extinct in the next century.
Back in Fawcett's studio, after cutting a Styrofoam dodo body, altered replicas of the mouldy dodo foot, small wings and a carefully constructed head, she made a resin cast of the whole contraption to produce her final model. The best part, she says, was putting the eyes in. "When you put eyes in something, it gives it life."
* Jocelyn Timperley is a senior journalist for BBC Future. Find her on Twitter @jloistf
** This article's fourth paragraph was corrected on 16/7/25 to note the dodo had small wings and large feet. It previously incorrectly stated the dodo had large wings and small feet.
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The rising costs of staging a production during the Edinburgh Fringe have led to an amateur theatre company's manager embarking on a walk to the capital.
Selkirk-based Creative Stage have won awards for tutoring young actors over the past couple of decades.
Having already staged a show at the Fringe before the pandemic, the theatre school was desperate to give their latest stars a chance to perform at the world's biggest arts festival.
Technical manager Lewis Wilde is hoping to help meet the £1,000-a-night costs of staging the Wizard of Oz with a 36-mile sponsored walk between the stage school and its venue.
The show is being staged in the capital during the second week of August.
Lewis said: "It costs crazy amounts these days to put on a show at the Fringe, and to try and bring down the costs for everyone involved in the show I decided to do this walk."
Although Creative Stage's production of Wizard of Oz, which was performed during the spring in Galashiels, had a cast of 140 students, it was decided to trim down numbers for the Fringe show.
As well as Dorothy, the Scarecrow, Tin Man, Lion and Wicked Witch, there will be a further 20 young people in the supporting roles.
'Amazing opportunity'
Creative Stage first performed Chorus Line at the festival in 2019 to sell-out audiences during its six-night run.
However, the costs of technical equipment, prop-hire, transport and venue space have all escalated over the past six years.
Lewis added: "We performed Wizard of Oz earlier this year and it was a great success.
"Taking the show to the Fringe is an amazing opportunity for all the young people to perform at the biggest arts festival in the world - but it comes at a cost."
Joining Lewis on the walk from Selkirk to Edinburgh is actor Alasdair Jeffrey and backstage hand Amy Thomson - as well as Dude the dog.
"In one moment, I realised, this is death, this is war."
In February 2022, professional ballet dancer and single mother, Kateryna Tor, woke to the sound of bombs going off in her home city of Odesa, Ukraine.
Fearing for her life, she jumped into her car in the early hours of the morning, with her one-year-old baby boy, driving for 38 hours with no sleep or food, determined to escape to safety.
Ms Tor travelled to three countries before settling in the UK, where she taught herself to speak English and started up a ballet school for adults of all abilities in the East Midlands.
The 41-year-old, who now lives in Alfreton, Derbyshire, started dancing in Ukraine in the 1990s, when she was six years old.
She fell in love with ballet and made a career out of it, training as a classical ballet dancer.
Ms Tor danced professionally in Odesa, but when Russian President Vladimir Putin launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine, she knew she had to leave her country.
"It was very scary, if you don't leave, you will die," she said.
Ms Tor fled Odesa with her baby in the early hours of 24 February 2022, when she was woken by the sounds of the city being invaded.
"I tried to avoid all the bombs, tried to stay alive," she explained.
Ms Tor travelled to Turkey, Romania and Bulgaria, before arriving in England in October 2023, as part of the Homes for Ukraine scheme.
She settled in the East Midlands, where she learned how to speak English.
Last year in September, Ms Tor set up her own business, teaching ballet dancing to adults of all ages and abilities in Eastwood, Nottinghamshire, and Alfreton in Derbyshire.
"I wanted to do something for this community, for this country, to show people Ukrainian culture," she said.
Ms Tor added the dangers in her home country push her to achieve every day.
"If I'm tired, or upset, or everything is horrible, or it's wet, I say - 'I'm not in Ukraine now'," Ms Tor said.
"In Ukraine, you can die, so go up."
Ms Tor teaches four sessions a week with a group of adults aged 25-70.
She said she wanted people to be inspired by her classes, and believes she could teach anyone to dance.
"I like it when I see my influence on them and see how they grow," she added.
The women who regularly attend the classes said Ms Tor had created a special community.
Amanda Sullivan, 59, from Mansfield, was inspired by Ms Tor to take up dancing again after 40 years.
"The fact that she's come over, she's learned a whole new language, new alphabet [from Cyrillic to Latin], she's had to make a completely new life for herself, and she can communicate, get us to do what she wants, she's an inspiration - she's brilliant," Ms Sullivan said.
'A superwoman'
Ms Tor's ballet classes are not just for experienced dancers but also for beginners of any age.
Rosie Finney, 27, from Riddings in Derbyshire, started going to the classes in January as a beginner.
"I literally had no idea what I was doing when I started," she said.
"She makes you feel like you can do it.
"She's a superwoman, it's incredible. I've never met anyone who does so much and does it so flawlessly and makes it completely effortless."
Some members of her classes in Eastwood, who had previous ballet experience, said the quality of her teaching was unmatched by any other teacher they had ever had.
Joanne Baker, 57, from Heanor, said: "She's very positive and picks out things that will help you, and immediately I improved."
"She just has an attitude that you can do anything."
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A sudden and swiftly reversed ban on wigs, hair extensions, and skin-lightening products at an iconic theatre in Senegal's capital, Dakar, has ignited a widespread public backlash - laying bare deep tensions around identity, gender politics, and cultural nationalism in the West African nation.
The internal memo was stamped by the national culture ministry and issued on Monday by Serigne Fall Guèye, director of the Grand Théâtre de Dakar.
He said the move was to "promote Pan-African values" and protect the institution's cultural image.
But critics accused Guèye of policing women's bodies under the guise of cultural pride, and the ban was reversed the following day.
Feminist groups and civil society leaders said the memo reflected broader concerns about gender inequality in Senegal, especially given the low number of women in President Bassirou Diomaye Faye's administration - four out of 25 - and the removal of the Ministry of Women.
Many social media users criticised the ban as sexist, invasive, and paternalistic.
The controversy was further complicated by Serigne Fall Guèye's own political background. Before being appointed to the Grand Théâtre in early 2024, Guèye was a prominent figure in Pastef - the ruling party known for its anti-colonial, pan-Africanist rhetoric.
At the time, he led the party's artistic and cultural commission, championing a return to what he called "authentic African values".
Critics fear that Guèye's personal ideology is now bleeding into what should be a neutral public entity.
"This isn't about wigs or skin," political analyst Fatoumata Ba tells the BBC. "It's about a broader power play - using state institutions to impose a particular version of identity, while silencing or sidelining anyone who doesn't conform."
One of the most widely shared responses came from Henriette Niang Kandé, a feminist analyst and public intellectual, who questioned the logic and intent behind the ban in a viral social media post, saying:
"As for [hair] grafts and wigs, should we remind this director that these are aesthetic choices, sometimes economical, often practical? Are we forbidding men from shaving their heads to hide baldness? From wearing false collars to lengthen their necks?"
Supporters of the now-cancelled ban, though in the minority, argue that the director's intention was rooted in cultural pride, not oppression. Guèye himself defended the memo as part of a broader mission to "restore African dignity and identity", particularly in the arts sector, which he believes has been overly influenced by Eurocentric beauty standards.
Yet critics say such policies reduce cultural pride to physical appearance - while ignoring deeper systemic issues.
"If you truly want to affirm African identity," sociologist Mame Diarra Thiam tells the BBC, "start with language, education, economic justice - not banning weaves and skin [lightening] cream".
By Tuesday, facing mounting pressure, Serigne Fall Guèye was forced to reverse the ban, citing public misunderstanding and reiterating his commitment to the theatre's mission. But the damage had already been done.
It has exposed growing discontent with Pastef founder and Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko among the urban youth and progressive civil society, who supported him in the 2024 elections but now feel betrayed by his government's perceived conservatism and centralisation of power.
At its core, the wig and bleaching ban at the Grand Théâtre was not just about aesthetics - it was about who gets to define cultural authenticity, and at what cost.
In a country where skin-lightening products remain popular despite known health risks, and where women's appearance is often subject to moral scrutiny, the debate is far from superficial. It touches on post-colonial identity, gender inequality, economic necessity, and personal freedom.
For now, the ban is gone - but the broader debates it sparked remain very much alive.
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An opera house in Jersey has announced it is looking for young voices to audition for its Gala choir.
Jersey Opera House (JOH) said the new youth choir was being formed to perform a selection of songs in production as part of the re-opening of the Gala.
Auditions are open to all young people in full-time education from school years three to 13, the opera house said.
"Don't miss the chance to be part of this historic moment and sing on the Opera House stage," it added.
"Choir members must be available to perform on 3, 4, and 5 October 2025, as well as attend all key rehearsals."
Parents or guardians who wish to register a young person can email gala@jerseyoperahouse.co.uk, stating their preferred time slot.
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Theatre goers are being asked to purchase their tickets further in advance to help keep performances running.
The Corn Hall theatre in Diss, Norfolk, say they have had to cancel or postpone performances due to a low number of advanced sales.
Lee Johnson, general manager at the theatre, said that as a charity, they needed people to book further in advance to work out if a show is financially viable.
He said: "Booking your tickets early helps us to ensure that the event can go ahead. I can say to the producer that we've sold 100 tickets... Then they're happy, and I'm happy."
Three performances have been cancelled at the Corn Hall this year because of low sales, and other have been postponed to a later date.
The change in habit to favour late bookings is something that Mr Johnson said became more "prominent" after the COVID 19 pandemic.
"I think people became so used to events getting cancelled during that difficult time," he said.
"You'd book a ticket, and the show would be cancelled, or it would get shunted forwards by six months, then something else would happen."
Mr Johnson said the cancellations had an "immense" effect on both the theatre's finances and reputation.
"It's not just the impact on the charity when we need to refund people, but people also think, 'well if they've cancelled that, what else are they going to cancel'.
"I really don't want to cancel any shows, but when you're talking to producers who say we are not going to make any money out of this, we are left with no other option."
Adam Taylor, chief executive of Norfolk charity The Garage Trust, said he has also noticed a shift in consumer habits.
He runs both The Garage theatre in Norwich, and The Workshop performing arts venue in King's Lynn.
"We are seeing the same trends that are being reported by a number of other theatres across the county in terms of ticket sales being much, much later than they were before," he said.
'Rising costs'
Mr Taylor said this meant more unpredictability with box office sales, and changes to programme to reflect it.
"Our programmes might now be more risk averse than they were three or four years ago, presenting less of a broad stroke in programmes," he said.
"Coming out of the pandemic we assumed that things were going to reset, and they very much haven't... Behaviours have changed quite substantially."
UK Theatre, which supports theatres and practitioners, said they were beginning to see audiences returning to advance bookings.
Hannah Essex, co-chief executive, said: "Encouragingly, there has been a marked return to earlier booking habits among regional audiences.
"While theatre is more popular than ever, many venues are facing rising costs with flat or declining public investment – a situation that is increasingly unsustainable.
"If we are to secure the future of regional theatres for the next generation of audiences and creatives, we must ensure there is a strategy for sustainable long-term investment."
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A sculpture featuring the artwork and dance moves of a community has been revealed.
Artists Aaron Li-Hill and Laura Brenchley created 'Our Woven Voices' after working with more than 1,000 people around North Shields, in North Tyneside, to capture the togetherness of the community.
The artwork shows two dancers woven together, a pose Mr Li-Hill said he chose and sculpted because it created "a strong metaphor of shared struggles and solidarities".
It was officially unveiled outside North Shields Magistrates' Court by the mayor of North Tyneside at 11:00 BST.
Workshops across the town saw residents create artworks and scrapbooks about what North Shields meant to them.
Themes included everyday places, like chip shops, beaches and parks.
Some of the art features on the sculpture.
Created with charity Helix Arts and commissioned by North Tyneside Council, the piece of art forms part of its masterplan to regenerate North Shields.
Mr Li-Hill said the pose was created through "workshopping various stances with local dancers".
"They told me that if their pinkie fingers at the top of their clasped hands slipped, if they weren't touching, they would fall," he said.
"Capturing this interwoven and dynamic pose in such a solidified form creates a strong metaphor of shared struggles and solidarities, a concept so important at this time of heightened global division."
Director of Helix Arts Cheryl Gavin said she was "really proud to see the people of North Shields' stories, hopes and creativity" incorporated into the sculpture.
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Nearly 1,000 Tolkien-esque megalithic chambers dot southern India's "Hill of the Dwarfs", and locals believe they were created by a supernatural race of "small people".
At first glance, Hire Benkal might be mistaken for any other village nestled in Karnataka's lush interior. Surrounded by rocky hillocks, mango groves, small brick kilns and fields fed by a nearby canal, it exudes a languid, laid-back charm characteristic of rural South India.
However, a 90-minute hike up one of the ridges flanking the village brought me to Moryar Gudda, or the "Hill of the Dwarfs", as its name means in the local Kannada language. Here, scattered across a granite-strewn plateau were nearly 1,000 prehistoric megalithic structures that have stood for more than 2,500 years. It's a startling sight: nearly as far as the eye can see, rows of giant stone chambers resembling houses and stone circles stretch across the landscape, forming one of the oldest and largest necropolises in India.
The trek felt like stepping into a Tolkien tale. Massive boulders teetered precariously on top of one another, creating natural sculptures that seemed on the verge of tipping over at any moment but have somehow stood firm for millennia. Some formations housed rock shelters with red ochre paintings dating from 700-500 BCE, many still vivid with scenes of creatures resembling cattle and boar whose meanings have long been lost to time.
Historians believe the formations were created as an ancient burial or commemorative site. However, its exact purpose remains a mystery.
Stonehenge may be the world's most famous megalithic monument, but tens of thousands of other such sites are scattered across the planet. While Europe counts more than 35,000 of these prehistoric constructions, only 3,000 or so have been documented in India. But by coming face to face with Hire Benkal's ancient, enigmatic structures and the painted scenes of battle axe-wielding horseback riders, spear-clutching hunters, and deified deer, peacocks and other animals, adventurous travellers can get a sense of how early Indian societies lived, worshipped and were laid to rest.
The Hire Benkal archaeological site spans roughly 20 hectares, with an east-west orientation that suggests ceremonial or astronomical significance. Dominating the landscape are giant rectangular megalithic tombs with large capstones and side walls, known as dolmen. Many of the larger dolmen are clustered around a wide, shallow water basin at the top of the hill. Experts believe this basin likely began as a natural rock pool and may have been expanded over time as ancient Indians quarried to construct additional megaliths.
That morning, white and pink water lilies floated in bloom across the small pond, evoking the delicate beauty of a Monet painting.
"It must have been a very important site for several centuries because it cannot have all been done in one time," said Srikumar Menon, an architect and associate professor at the National Institute of Advanced Sciences who has studied Hire Benkal and many other megaliths around the country.
According to local lore, the site's dolmen weren't built by humans, but by an extinct species of dwarfs known as the "moriyars". These supernatural beings were said to possess immense strength and engineering prowess. As Chandrashekar Anegundi, a local naturalist who led our trek, explained: perfectly cut circular portholes on some of the dolmen have led nearby villagers to believe these legends, as the shapes are so precise that they're thought to be too sophisticated for early sculptors.
"The villagers here believe moriyars were very short people and they were wiped out in a rain of fire," said Anegundi, who remains sceptical. "If they were so small, how could they have lifted these big stones?"
During his research, Menon encountered similar legends referring to an ancient race of "small people" who allegedly constructed megalithic sites across southern India, such as at Moribetta and Morikallu nearby in Karnataka, Sanna Moriyara Thatte in Telanganaand Moral Parai in Tamil Nadu. He speculates that such folklore could be a far-reaching cultural memory of ancient Indians recalling an extinct human-like species, akin to Homo floresiensis, the so-called "hobbit" species discovered in Indonesia who likely lived alongside Homo sapiens 60,000 to 100,000 years ago.
"We know the megalith builders were humans like us," Menon said. "But stories of these little people persist across the region."
Despite its archaeological importance and historical intrigue, Hire Benkal remains largely unknown beyond southern India and overshadowed by the nearby Unesco World Heritage-listed temples and monuments of Hampi. The erstwhile medieval capital of the Vijayanagara Empire, located just 42km south of the megalithic site and renowned for its stunning ruins and grand temples, attracts thousands of tourists and devotees annually.
Meanwhile, local guides report that only about 20 to 30 intrepid travellers venture to Hire Benkal some months, with a peak of roughly 100 arriving during the cooler tourist season from October to February. By comparison, Stonehenge's 83 standing stones lure more than one million visitors annually.
"This place has never been promoted, not even among people in nearby cities like Bengaluru," says Disha Ahluwalia, an archaeologist and research scholar at MSU Baroda. "And yet, it deserves so much more attention… A lot of effort has been made by ancient humans to build them; we need to make double the effort to preserve them. And first we need to document them."
As for the legend of the moriyas, Ahluwalia said the discovery of the site by British colonial officers in 1835 and their dismissive attitude towards ancient and rural Indian communities' technological prowess likely also fed into this myth.
"The officers were going to these sites without even knowing the culture. Even if the megaliths were discovered, they were not very well known. They were simply [seen as] stone slabs," she said.
In recent years, some of Hire Benkal's megalithic structures have fallen victim to vandalism, cattle herders and treasure hunters who dig beneath the dolmen in search of rumoured riches. The overgrowth of plants, the ravages of time and the lack of preservation have also taken a toll on the ancient burial grounds.
"It's a fragile site… people often vandalise what they don't understand," said Meera Iyer, convener at the Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage Bengaluru, which has been actively working to include Hire Benkal as a Unesco World Heritage site. A successful nomination could provide international recognition, government funding and improved conservation measures. Local communities could also benefit from more visibility and visitors.
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"But tourism is a double-edged sword," Iyer warned, noting that too much of it without appropriate protection could cause the site to fall into further decay. "What's needed is interpretation, education and better regulation."
While Hire Benkal's future remains unclear, one thing is certain: it's a hauntingly beautiful site. As rain clouds gathered over the Deccan plateau, the land seemed to have burst with life. On the walk up, shy songbirds flitted through the bushes. Peacocks were in full regalia, their iridescent tails fanned wide as monsoon heralded mating season. Rock agamas basked lazily on sun-warmed granite, while herds of goats meandered through the underbrush. Anegundi pointed out golden amaltas trees blooming between craggy outcrops.
"It's a paradise, for birds and for us," he said, collecting a few seed pods from the trees.
At Hire Benkal, the natural and the supernatural blend together. Standing at the summit, dolmen stretched out in orderly rows across the rocky ridge, boxes of stone holding the secrets of a forgotten people.
While we may never know exactly why our ancestors constructed these chambers, it is clear that this place mattered deeply to those who once lived here. For now, it remains one of India's most intriguing open-air secrets – a prehistoric monument hiding in plain sight.
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Beyond extreme weather or medical emergencies: some insurers now offer payouts for rain, heatwaves or "inconveniences" that spoil your trip.
The 18 hikers who flew into Nepal in September 2024 were prepared for the trek of a lifetime: a journey to Everest Base Camp. But just a day before their flight to Lukla, heavy rain began falling across the Kathmandu Valley.
"Within 24 hours, the capital recorded its heaviest rainfall since 1970," said Balaram Thapa, CEO of Nepal Hiking Team, who was leading the trek. "Roads were submerged, bridges damaged, and all Lukla flights were grounded for a full week. We were never in immediate danger, but the trip became impossible."
Though some of the hikers had travel insurance that reimbursed them for expenses like cancelled flights or additional hotel nights in Kathmandu, none of their policies would have covered the full cost of a completely rained-out bucket list trip.
That might soon change.
As extreme weather events grow more frequent – from torrential rain in India to scorching heatwaves in Europe – a new type of travel insurance is emerging. These protections go beyond covering catastrophes, offering compensation for milder but still trip-ruining weather events like extreme rain or heat.
"The thing that people really worry about in most cases is their trip being rained out," said Daniel Price, co-founder of WeatherPromise, a company that offers their global customers payouts if it rains more than a set number of hours during a booked stay. "The number one factor that causes someone to come back and say 'that wasn't a great trip' is if it pours and you didn't get to sit on the beach [like you'd planned.]"
The company, which also recently partnered with Marriott's Home and Villas brand to offer rain protection, is now exploring coverage for extreme heat, spurred by recent heatwaves across Europe and the US.
"What [we're] about is really giving people the confidence, the comfort and the ability to travel all over at different times of the year," said Price.
It's all part of a wider shift in the travel insurance industry. Since the Covid-19 pandemic, travellers have increasingly opted to take out coverage. And while traditional policies remain geared towards covering big, unexpected disruptions like hospitalisation or cancelled flights, new products are catering to travellers who want more flexibility – and more peace of mind.
These new offerings can range from flat-rate payments for "travel inconvenience," such as missing a scheduled port on a cruise ship through no fault of your own, to coverage that allows cancellations for any reason at all; an add on service which has become increasingly popular post-Covid-19.
"For example, a traveller may be accustomed to certain conditions like having air conditioning in their hotel," explained Chrissy Valdez, senior director of operations for travel insurance comparison site SquareMouth. "So, it may come as a surprise when they check into their hotel in Europe [and] the air conditioning is not working, or there is no air conditioning. [But] there are benefits that would allow them to interrupt their [trip] because they're just not comfortable where they're staying."
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Still, not all expanded policies are equal. What is covered and what is required to file a claim varies by provider. Therefore, it's still important for travellers to check the fine print, including confirming things like what weather qualifies, how much rain counts and what documentation is needed to make a claim.
Valdez also warned that as unexpected weather becomes the norm, some insurers may tighten their coverage definitions.
"There are underwriters looking at the definition of 'extreme' weather or 'inclement' weather," she said. "I can't say for certain if this is going to benefit the consumer or if they're going to look at it as a higher risk and possibly define those things even stricter than what they do today."
With unpredictable shifts in weather patterns only expected to continue, these new insurance products may offer at least some protection against the frustration of a ruined trip.
"As a Himalayan trek leader with over 20 years of experience, I'm seeing this type of disruption happen more often," said Thapa. "[It seems that] travel insurance is still catching up to what 'disruption' really means."
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There are a million reasons to go to Italy, so why do visitors always go to the same few places? Here are our favourite ways to shake up your Italian itinerary.
Does it seem like everyone is in Italy right now? Italy has been ranked as the top destination for American travellers in 2024 and 2025, according to a study by Price Waterhouse Cooper and the United States Tour Operators Association, but the honour should come as no surprise. The nation welcomes 80 million international visitors annually, drawn by its pastel-coloured villages, Renaissance treasures and Roman ruins.
From the Etruscans to the Romans to the Byzantines, each civilisation that has passed through this boot-shaped nation has left their own unique architectural stamp on the land, transforming its cities into open-air museums. Italy also enjoys a reputation for a deliciously laid-back lifestyle – especially in summer, when everybody's in the piazza and beach umbrellas stud the coastlines.
"Italy doesn’t ask you to be a tourist; it invites you to feel something," says Ruben Santopietro, CEO and founder of Visit Italy. "It’s a country where chaos meets elegance, where silence in a mountain village can be as powerful as an opera at [Milan's] La Scala [theatre]. You can visit 10 times, and the 11th time still surprises you, not with something new, but with something ancient you hadn’t noticed before. Italy doesn’t entertain you. It transforms you."
A 2024 study by TourismA found foreign visitors stick to the same few popular cities – equaling just 1% of Italy’s territory. Here are our favourite ways to explore the other 99% this summer.
Why Italy?
There are a million reasons to visit. Here are some of our favourites.
The Palio of Siena attracts history buffs with its recreation of a medieval horse race (2 July and 16 August), while Milan Fashion Week and opera season in Shakespeare's fair city of Verona are musts for culture vultures. Sports fans can experience the Giro d'Italia (9 May to 1 Jun in 2025) or the Formula One Grand Prix held in Imola (spring) and Milan (late summer).
Hack: Upwards of 30 million pilgrims are expected to head to St Peter's Basilica in Italy's already-overtouristed capital city to celebrate the Jubilee year for Roman Catholics. Visitors dreaming of Rome in 2025 would do well to skip summer and come during the shoulder months of October to March, avoiding the religious holidays of Easter, the Immaculate Conception (8 December), Christmas and the Epiphany (6 January).
For a detour from the bucket list art cities, visit the Dolomites. This limestone mountain range – spanning the Veneto, Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol and Friuli-Venezia Giulia regions – is beloved by Italians for its epic skiing and hiking, and lacks the tourist crowds of Rome, Florence and Venice.
"Limited time is an issue," admits Fiorenza Lipparini, DMO of Milan & Partners, which runs the website YesMilano. "There are no close international airports and a lack of accommodation – we're talking about very small villages."
The Dolomites, with their wild valleys, gorges and lakes offer thrilling hikes year-round. "They really are the most beautiful mountains in the world, from the Swiss Alps to [the valley of] Val Gardena," says Lipparini. "They're good in the summer almost as much as in the winter."
Meanwhile, Agrigento, Sicily is Italy's 2025 Capital of Culture. Explore its Unesco-listed Valley of Temples, and unwind on the stunning Scala dei Turchi beach.
Food & drink
Italian food is one of the most beloved cuisines in the world, but its superpower is its deep regionality. Tasting a familiar favourite like pizza in its homeland is a holy pilgrimage, but failing to try the deep culinary cuts is sacrilege.
When in Rome, enjoy pasta alla carbonara (pasta with egg yolk, pecorino Romano cheese and pork cheek) at Da Teo in romantic Trastevere or pasta cacio e pepe at Felice a Testaccio in Rome's ex-slaughterhouse district. Bistecca alla fiorentina – rare, ultra thick T-bone steak – in Florence is iconic (get a great one at Trattoria Mario on Via Rosina). Venice is famous for its cicchetti, baguette bites topped with a variety of seafood, meats and vegetables; they're delectable at Bar All'Arco in San Polo. Try traditional Milanese cuisine at Trattoria Masuelli San Marco, like osso buco (braised veal shanks) and risotto alla milanese (saffron-flavoured risotto).
Seaside Naples is the birthplace of pizza; get a perfect pie at the historic Antonio Starita. Bologna is the epicentre of stuffed pastas such as tortellini and lasagna bolognese; try them at generational pasta maker Sfoglia Rina on Via Castiglione. Be sure to sample artisanal products at the source; visit a caseificio (dairy) like the Caseificio di Biagio Staiano in Ravello to sample – and make! – fresh mozzarella, or one of Italy's 26 stunning national parks for the zero-kilometre culinary experience of a lifetime.
Oenophiles, you'd do well to venture past Tuscany. Sip volcanic island wines like the Biancolella in Ischia, or travel to the Russo family's Cantina del Vesuvio, at the foot of Mount Vesuvius, to try Lacryma Cristi ("Tears of Christ"), an ancient wine produced from Vesuvius' indigenous grapes, said to have been drank in Roman times.
How to fit in
Italy's monuments have attracted a lot of misbehaving tourists in recent years – don't be one of them. Keep your shoulders covered when visiting religious sites, and keep your hands off historical treasures.
Tipping is not expected or enforced in Italy (regardless of what the cheeky waiter might suggest).
Stick to traditional Italian mealtimes and food customs: a light breakfast of a pastry and espresso or cappuccino, lunch at 13:00, aperitivo (happy hour with snacks) from 17:00-19:00 and dinner after 20:00. Ask for a cappuccino after 11:00 and risk a wince from your barista.
Cultural attractions
Few are truly prepared for the magnificence of doomed Pompeii, and few visitors know that nearby Herculaneum was also destroyed – and preserved – by the eruption. Further south, the ruins of Paestum display exquisite temples and rare painted Greek tombs.
Art lovers usually head straight to the Sistine Chapel in Rome, but Renaissance masterpieces abound throughout Italy, like Leonardo da Vinci's The Last Supper at the Basilica di Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan. "The Last Supper, like the Mona Lisa, is universal," says Lipparini. "[It's] an unparalleled theatrical scene where love and anticipation, suspense and betrayal emerge from the collective interaction of the masterful portraits of Jesus Christ and the 12 apostles."
In Naples, find the Baroque Cappella Sansevero and Giuseppe Sanmartino's reality-defying masterpiece, il Cristo Velato, depicting the slain, shrouded Christ. The incredible realism of what appears to be a thin veil sculpted in marble has confounded admirers for centuries.
Outdoor adventure
Soaring mountain passes and centuries-old forests mean incredible hiking and cycling. "Cycling is an ideal way to discover the city and experience a day out on two wheels," says Lipparini. Try tackling a tract of the Via Francigena, an ancient 6th-Century, 1,700km pilgrimage trail snaking from Canterbury, England to Puglia in Italy's deep south, or check out YesMilano's Lombardy-based bike routes. Trekkers hit the rainbow-hued expanse of the Cinque Terre National Park and skyscraping Path of the Gods on the lemon-perfumed Amalfi Coast.
Italy's seaside culture has inspired countless films – and holidays. Today, its beaches range from family-friendly clubs like the sprawling white-sand San Vito lo Capo in Sicily to party beaches like Bazzano in Sperlonga on the Tyrrhenian Sea. You can explore Italy below the surface, too: take a guided snorkelling tour to discover underwater kingdoms like the sunken Roman villas of Baia or Ischia's underwater Roman city of Aenaria.
Shopping and markets
"Shopping in Milan is a unique experience," says Lipparini of the nation's fashion capital. "You’ll find emerging brands – both in fashion and design." Apart from the ultra-luxe (and ultra-frequented) Quadrilatero della Moda, Lipparini suggests visiting the Isola and Nolo neighbourhoods, both blooming with vintage and secondhand shops, as well as the Tortona Design District. "Without neglecting the Sarpi [Chinatown] or [quirky] Navigli neighbourhoods," she adds.
At the other end of the shopping spectrum, the market – mercato – is an integral part of everyday Italian life. Most cities host a weekly street market, where shoppers can score anything from vintage clothing to fresh fish. La Pignasecca in Naples is renowned as a hotspot for Neapolitan street food.
Support Italy's artisans by shopping for handmade traditional goods, like Vietri pottery in Vietri sul Mare on the Amalfi Coast, intarsio (inlaid woodwork) in Sorrento, mosaics in Spilimbergo or Murano glass in Venice.
Day trips to experience the real Italy
Find wonders far from the main tourist crowds.
Top day trips from Rome
Classic: Trains (~35m) run regularly to the Castelli Romani; a group of cobblestoned towns beloved for their rustic eateries (fraschette). Ariccia is famous for its porchetta; get some at Osteria da Angelo.
Detour: (2h) Head to Sperlonga, a seaside town halfway between Rome and Naples. Its white-and-blue Saracen ancient quarter has Santorini vibes, and its azure seas hide ancient Roman grottos.
Top day trips from Florence
Classic: Wander the russet-coloured streets of medieval Siena (1hr); head to the twin towers of San Gimignano.
Detour: The Val d'Orcia (1.5hr) valley is home to excellent wellness centres and spas. Head to Palazzo del Capitano in San Quirico d'Orcia after a day of cycling.
Top day trips from Naples
Classic: (1hr) Wander Sorrento's historic centre and visit the Cataldi Lemon Orchard to sip flights of 100% organic limoncello.
Detour: (33 minutes) Take the Cumana railway to Lucrino in the Campi Flegrei to snorkel the underwater ruins of a submerged Roman villa at the Parco Sommerso di Baia.
Top day trips from Milan
Classic: Italy's great Alpine lakes – Como, Maggiore and Garda – draw both tourists and locals for a Sunday stroll. "Take the train from Cadorna to Lake Como," advises Lipparini. "It takes an hour and you’re on the famous lake where everybody wants to get married."
Detour: Speed demons will appreciate visiting majestic Monza (15m); the site of the Autodromo Nazionale Monza racetrack.
Where to stay in Italy
Hospitality is in Italy's DNA.
Farm stays
Ideal for families and groups. Enjoy farm-to-table meals prepared at hilltop La Fontaccia, a rustic property on 14 hectares of olive groves half an hour's drive outside of Florence.
Luxury accommodations
The Grand Hotel Quisisana in Capri, built in 1845, overlooks the iconic Faraglioni rock formation and the Gardens of Augustus. It's filled with vintage tiled suites with opulent decor.
B&Bs, hotels and pensioni
The Cima Rosa in Venice offers five charming, modern suites in a 15th-Century palazzo.
Hostels
Budget-minded travellers can find accommodations in Italy, especially in the larger cities. The Beehive in Rome near Termini Station is a friendly space with a shared kitchen and pleasant outdoor seating area.
Boutique hotels
Blink and you'll miss the entrance to Le Petit Palais on the steep Via Pedamentina in Naples' Vomero neighbourhood. It's a charming boutique guesthouse with sublimely decorated rooms and a breathtaking tiled rooftop terrace.
Unique traditional stays
Travel back in time when you stay in Alberobello's ancient cone-shaped trulli and the sassi rock dwellings of Matera.
Getting Around
Italian cities are supremely walkable, but in ancient towns – particularly Amalfi Coast cities like Positano – be prepared to climb seemingly endless stone steps. Choose footwear that won't get tripped up by the cobblestones.
Public transport
Navigate between cities with TrenItalia, the national train company, and regional bus companies (see their respective apps to check timetables and purchase tickets). Rome, Milan, Naples and most recently Turin also have metro systems.
Driving
North American drivers will need an International Driver's License. On the Amalfi Coast, scooters are the most convenient option, but with the area's torturous curves, intense summer traffic and devil-may-care attitude towards traffic laws, only attempt if you're already an experienced driver.
Taxis are available on request but tend to be expensive.
When to visit
Summertime is beautiful in Italy, but time your trip for early to mid-summer to avoid inflated high-season costs, massive tourist hordes and suffocating heat waves. Avoid August, the month when Italians traditionally go on summer holiday, adding to crowds and the shutdown of many businesses and attractions.
Wonderful hikes are to be had in spring and autumn while some of the best swimming happens in October, after the tourists have cleared out and the heat has mellowed. In autumn, join the vendemmia (grape harvest); in winter, enjoy Christmas celebrations and partake in Italy's ski culture.
Off season means less crowds and lower costs, but also fewer services. Reserve accommodations and research ferry and bus times well in advance.
As overtourism continues to surge in many Italian destinations, travellers should explore what the other 99% of this spectacularly beautiful country has to offer.
"We're moving beyond the clichés," says Santopietro. "The Italy of 2025 is bold, conscious, and deeply connected to its roots. You’ll find ancient festivals reborn with new energy, culinary traditions elevated by the next generation of chefs, and small villages transformed into cultural hubs thanks to creative tourism and sustainable innovation. It's the year to come not just to admire Italy, but to understand it. To walk slower, ask questions, taste everything, and let the unexpected happen."
Want to explore even further? Check out BBC Travel's 25 Best Places to Travel in 2025 to find all the best destinations punctuating the globe right now.
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Neapolitan-born expert pizza maker Daniele Uditi believes that to understand pizza, you need to eat it in the place it was invented. Here are his top places to eat pizza in Naples.
Neapolitan-born master pizzaiolo (pizzamaker) Daniele Uditi has lived in the US for more than 15 years. But, "it doesn't matter where in the world I am, I will always be from Naples," he tells the BBC.
Like Uditi, pizza was born in the famously chaotic seaside Italian city; its invention widely credited to chef Raffaele Esposito who is believed to have created the white, red and green dish in tribute to the colours of the newly unified nation's flag. Uditi, who served as a judge in Hulu's 2022 pizza competition show, Best in Dough, notes that though pizza is beloved – and found in many forms – worldwide, he believes you've never truly had it until you've had it in its birthplace.
"To understand [pizza], you go to Naples, and you eat pizza the way it's supposed to be, al portafoglio," says Uditi, referring to Neapolitan street pizza that is folded twice on its sides "wallet-style". "Eating a pizza in the place that it was invented with all the sounds of the city, seeing another Neapolitan eat it while on the phone and walking with an overflowing pizza in the box because it stretched too big."
Can pizza be too big? "It's not perfect," admits Uditi. "Neapolitan pizza is an artisanal product, so sometimes you don't find the perfect circle. I think it's a perfect representation of the city. Naples is not a perfect circle. Naples has good things and defects, but when you take a bite, everything makes total sense."
Here are Uditi's top six pizzas in Naples.
1. Best all-around: Pizzeria La Notizia Enzo Coccia 53
High up in Naples's leafy, green Capodimonte quarter, Pizzeria La Notizia 53, helmed by chef Enzo Coccia, is a magnet for visitors from every walk of life, says Uditi. "You can find a university professor, a lawyer, or you can find a student, you can find a couple they just want to enjoy themselves."
Despite Coccia's reputation for inventive pizzas like one of his recent springtime offerings, topped with courgette, tomatoes and thyme, Uditi says the humble pizzeria's biggest draw is undoubtedly their classic Margherita. "You go there for the Margherita," he says. "The Margherita is special, because he has the perfect balance between the three ingredients… Everything comes together, nothing overpowering."
Website: http://www.enzococcia.com/
Address: Via Michelangelo da Caravaggio, 53, 80126 Naples NA
Phone: 081 714 2155
Instagram: @enzococcia_lanotizia
2. Best montanara: Antonio Starita
Antonio Starita, a historic pizzeria just outside the gritty Rione di Sanità neighbourhood, is what Uditi calls: "another staple in Naples".
But not just for its pizza – for its montanara.
Montanara – deep-fried dough topped with tomato sauce, fresh mozzarella and basil – is a beloved Neapolitan street food. Uditi loves Starita's: "the way he fries the dough, it's never oily. It's super light. And the sauce is cooked just right. On the montanara, the sauce has to be pre-cooked, right? So it's almost like a sugo [long-simmered sauce]."
"Also, the pizza he does is spectacular," adds Uditi. "And he's just a character. [When I was a kid], I used to see him behind the counter… he was one of the people that inspired me to be a pizza chef. He doesn't talk that much. He speaks through his product."
Uditi's hack for beating the beloved spot's oftentimes-long queues: "Go off hours. Don't go straight when they open up, because you're for sure not gonna find a spot. I'll go around early afternoon or late at night when they're almost about to close."
Website: https://pizzeriestarita.it/en/
Address: Via Materdei, 27/28, 80136 Naples NA
Phone: 081 544 1485
Instagram: @antoniostarita
3. Best for new takes on classics: Pizzeria Concettina ai Tre Santi
Heading deeper into Rione Sanità, Uditi enthusiastically recommends the generational Pizzeria Concettina ai Tre Santi; now run by the original owner, Concettina's, grandson, Ciro Oliva: "Ciro Oliva is one of the youngest pizza chefs in Naples, but he acts like a seasoned one. You can tell that Neapolitan traditions are safe in the hands of this guy, because he's gonna take care of it, but also never make it boring."
Apart from the classics, the upscale pizzeria serves highly inventive pizzas like the Fondazione San Gennaro – a mammoth pie topped with salami, smoked provola cheese and crumbled tarallo 'nzogna e pepe (traditional Neapolitan lard-enriched, almond-studded crackers).
"He was the first one to think about not just the pizza itself, but [giving] you texture," explains Uditi. "Pizza can be a soft experience, right? He said, 'I'm gonna disrupt that a little bit. Why don't we put tarallo 'nzogna e pepe on pizza?' It worked."
Website: https://www.concettinaaitresanti.com/locations/
Address: Via Arena della Sanità, 7 Bis, 80137 Naples NA
Phone: 081 290037
Instagram: @concettina3santi
4. Best female-run: Isabella de Cham
Just 100m from Concettina ai Tre Santi is Isabella de Cham, renowned for its pizza fritta – a deep-fried calzone, traditionally stuffed with ricotta, cicoli (pork cracklings) and black pepper – and her daring degustazione (tasting menu) of deep-fried appetizers.
"Everything you eat there is just unbelievable," says Uditi of the chic-yet-cosy eatery. "I like the fact that Isabella is a woman. Pizza fritta used to be made [only] by women; they would make it and sell it on the street. We need more women in this job; we need some gentle hands, some different approaches. That's what I find in Isabella de Cham's approach to pizza fritta. [She] makes one of the lightest that you'll ever have in your life. It's unbelievable. And then she always comes up with new flavours. I tell her to make me a classic pizza with cicoli, ricotta and pepper but then she comes out and, 'No, Daniele, you have to taste this.' And everything comes together so good that you wouldn't believe that you are eating a tasting menu of fried food and feeling so light."
Website: https://isabelladecham.com/
Address: Via Arena della Sanità, 27, 80137 Naples NA
Phone: 081 1863 9669
Instagram: @isabelladechampizzafritta
5. Best for gourmet pizza: Diego Vitagliano
"Diego Vitagliano would be the fine dining approach to the cuisine," says Uditi. "But also the way he thinks about the dough."
Diego Vitagliano's pizzeria, found in Naples's romantic Santa Lucia neighbourhood with outposts in Bagnoli and Pozzuoli, embraces new textures with a nod to tradition, often topping pizzas with ingredients found in classic Neapolitan dishes like pasta e patate (pasta, provolone and potato stew).
"It's just about him telling the history of Neapolitan cuisine by using the pizza as a vehicle," says Uditi. "For me, that's the genius there."
But, notes Uditi, "His classic Margherita will be one of the highlights of his menu. Sometimes people forget. They go there and say, 'Yeah, I want to try these new things'. And then he does it on purpose. In the degustazione, he [brings out the] Margherita last, because he wants to remind you, 'Yeah, this is fun, but this is what you came for'."
Website: https://diegovitagliano.it/
Address: Via Santa Lucia, 78 - 80 - 82, 80132 Napoli NA, Italy
Phone: 081 1858 1919
Instagram: @diegovitagliano_pizzerie
6. Best for a day trip: I Masanielli
Though pizza was invented in Naples, the city's dintorni (outskirts) are also well-distinguished in the art of artisanal pizza making. Take a day trip to the town of Caserta – home to the stunning Reggia di Caserta and Uditi's top overall pizza pick; I Masanielli, chef Francesco Martucci's gourmet pizzeria.
"Francesco Martucci is a nutcase!" says Uditi. "I used to go to school in Caserta and [I would eat his pizza after class]. I grew up with his pizza and now I'm a pizza chef as well."
Though the nostalgia factor is strong for Uditi, he is also an enthusiastic fan of Martucci's gourmet offerings.
"Sometimes he takes one ingredient and just that ingredient will be the highlight of the pizza," says Uditi. "For his 'five onion pizza', you have a pizza with onions treated in five different ways. It's one of the most delicious bites that you're gonna have in your life… [and] He was the first one to introduce three ways of cooking dough; steamed, fried and then baked. And then he used to make this pizza with scallops and, like, sea moss powder on the top. And pollen."
"On a pizza!" marvels Uditi. "On a freaking pizza!"
Website: https://www.pizzeriaimasanielli.it/
Address: Viale Giulio Douhet, 11, 81100 Caserta CE
Phone: 0823 741284
Instagram: @imasanielli
BBC Travel's The SpeciaList is a series of guides to popular and emerging destinations around the world, as seen through the eyes of local experts and tastemakers.
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The Tall Ships Races Aberdeen - labelled the biggest tourist event in Scotland this year - gets fully under sail on Saturday.
Hundreds of thousands of people are expected to attend, to see dozens of impressive vessels from around the world.
Scottish band Deacon Blue played a harbourside gig on Friday night as part of the warm-up for the four days before things get officially under way at the weekend.
But there is a Met Office Yellow warning for heavy rain in Aberdeen from Saturday afternoon until Sunday.
The city council said it would issue updates if there was any impact on the event as a result.
Aberdeen will be turned into a "party city", according to the organisers.
It runs until Tuesday, when the ships will then sail on to Norway.
The Granite City previously hosted the tall ships in 1991 and 1997.
Greenock and Lerwick are among other Scottish towns to have featured in the event's history, which dates back to the 1970s.
The event is billed as Europe's largest free family event.
Almost 50 ships have been confirmed as taking part in Aberdeen.
There will be about 2,000 international crew members taking part, from as far afield as Uruguay and Oman.
Hundreds of volunteers have been recruited to help at the event, which is expected to attract about "400,000 visits" - an estimate which includes repeat visits.
The races are designed to encourage international friendship and training for young people in the art of sailing.
What ships are taking part?
The vessels are divided into four classes, ranging from large sailing ships to smaller single-masted boats.
Dar Mlodziezy, from Poland, is the tallest at 62.5m (205ft) high.
Built in 1982, she made her Tall Ships debut in the same year.
Her name means "the gift of youth".
The BAP Union is the furthest travelled, having come to Aberdeen from Peru.
BAP Union's sailing distance from Callao to Aberdeen is about 7,500 nautical miles (13,890km).
The skipper of Norwegian vessel Sorlandet, Captain Tore Skjelbred-Knudsen, is looking forward to the event.
"It's a gathering of these ships, it's a beautiful sight, it's maritime history, we can show that to the people of Aberdeen," he told BBC Scotland News.
"But most of all it's for the young people joining the ships, it's changing their lives."
He added: "As a former student at the University of Aberdeen, I have been truly looking forward to visiting again.
"Even if it is a couple of decades ago, I vividly remember the charm, the friendly people, the vast culture, and all the friends I made during my time there."
Emma Wadee, Aberdeen City Council's Tall Ships Project Manager, said: "We hope people will turn out in their thousands again to enjoy everything on offer at The Tall Ships Races and help turn the Granite City into party city from morning to night.
"We know how much the people of Aberdeen love to party - we saw that during the Dons' Scottish Cup victory parade."
Where is the best place to view Tall Ships Aberdeen?
The ships will be berthed in Waterloo Quay, Regent Quay, Trinity Quay, Upper Quay, Jamieson's Quay and Blaikies Quay.
Full details of where each ship will be can be found here.
The main entrance to the harbour area will be via Marischal Street. Many of the ships will be open to visitors during their time in Aberdeen.
What other entertainment is there at Tall Ships Aberdeen?
Following on from Deacon Blue on Friday night, other gigs will include Kaiser Chiefs.
Additional attractions will include free live music, and street food stalls.
Aside from the main names, other acts include Tide Lines, Calum Bowie, Glasvegas, Brooke Combe, Little Kicks, Capollos and Look Busy Collective.
The event organisers say there will also be a "vibrant" line-up of live music, including Scottish trad, jazz, Afrobeat, hip hop, and Latin soul.
The line-up also features local choirs as well as youth ensembles.
Young children will be catered for with attractions at a family zone at Blaikie's Quay, including a giant sandpit.
People can also get their picture taken with Tall Ships Aberdeen mascot, Dorry the Dolphin, during the festival.
What will Tall Ships Aberdeen travel be like?
Aberdeen city centre is expected to be very busy with tens of thousands of spectators each day.
The organisers are recommending that people use public transport or car share if coming into Aberdeen, and that those staying locally could walk or cycle.
Four regular Park and Ride services will be in operation from Bridge of Don, Craibstone, P&J Live, and Kingswells.
Road closures and parking restrictions will be place on streets around Aberdeen harbour during the course of the event.
Castle Street, King Street, Marischal Street, Regent Quay, Blaikies Quay and Regent Road are among those affected.
Pocra Quay and New Pier Road in Footdee are open to business and resident access only.
You can keep up to date with the latest BBC weather forecast here.
A 48-hour strike due to go ahead at Glasgow Airport next week has been called off, a spokesman has said.
About 100 workers had been set to take part in the industrial action next Thursday in a dispute over pay.
Members of the Unite union due to walk out had included airside support officers, engineers and managers.
The Glasgow Airport spokesman said: "We have been informed by Unite that the planned industrial action for 24 to 26 July has been suspended to allow for further dialogue regarding our pay offer of 4%."
The industrial action would have fallen during the traditional Glasgow Fair fortnight and the airport's busy summer months.
These are the first summer holidays since the airport was bought over by AviAlliance.
The company completed a deal to buy AGS - the owners of Glasgow, Aberdeen and Southampton airports - in January for £1.53bn.
Unite has been contacted for comment.
The airline Blue Islands has pulled out of an agreement with Loganair, after the Scottish airline announced it would operate its own flights between Jersey and Southampton.
In 2020, the two airlines announced they had formed an alliance allowing customers to book connecting flights from Jersey to other destinations.
On Wednesday, Loganair announced it was to offer its own flights to Southampton, in direct competition with Blue Islands.
Blue Islands said it had served notice to Loganair of the "immediate termination of the codeshare agreement between the two airlines".
"We intend that existing bookings for all customers to connect between Blue Islands and Loganair flights, and for any customer who has booked a Blue Islands flight via Loganair, will be honoured in full," a spokesperson for Blue Islands said.
"There is no need for any customer holding an existing booking to take action, albeit no new codeshare bookings will be possible from today.
"If a customer wishes to amend or cancel any such booking for future travel, they are able to do so by contacting the airline or travel agent through which their booking was first made."
Blue Islands said it extends its grateful thanks and best wishes to team members across both airlines who have worked to deliver for its mutual customers over the five years of the co-operation.
Loganair said the new route would commence in early 2026 with flights going on sale later in the year.
A spokesperson for Loganair said: "We are delighted to be announcing another new route from our new Southampton base, linking this important coastal city to Jersey.
"We are also looking forward to supporting inbound tourism to Jersey, boosting the visitor economy and working in partnership with the outstanding local hospitality sector."
Follow BBC Jersey on X and Facebook. Send your story ideas to channel.islands@bbc.co.uk.
The number of visitors to York has still not recovered to pre-pandemic levels despite the tourism sector being increasingly important to the city's economy, a report has found.
Make It York, an organisation dedicated to promoting the city as a destination, said tourism contributed £2.01bn to York's economy in 2024 - an increase of 5.04% since 2023.
More than a third (34%) of spending by visitors was in the retail sector, with 27% at food and drink outlets and 25% on accommodation.
Ben Lerigo, data analyst at Make It York, said: "It's no exaggeration to say that York has something for everyone."
At 9.4m, annual visitor numbers to the city were still below pre-pandemic levels, he added, but wasn't able to identify any specific reasons "why the growth isn't happening as quick as possible".
Mr Lerigo added: "We're definitely seeing a trend more towards growth in domestic tourism particularly, but we've also seen an increase in international tourism as well."
According to the report, overseas visitors accounted for nearly a quarter of the economic impact.
It also highlighted a rise in employment in the tourism sector, with 16,788 employees in 2024, an annual increase of 4.8%.
The number of visitors staying overnight in York reached 1.7m in 2024, the report said, adding that it was a "slight" increase on the previous year.
More than half of those used serviced accommodation, such as hotels.
Concerns had recently been raised by residents in York about the impact of short-term rental accommodation on the city's housing market.
Mr Lerigo said it was "really important" to find a balance, and avoid "over-tourism", similar to that being seen in Spain.
Make It York was beginning to examine social impact and social return of tourism, he added.
"Economic return is a lot easier to understand the impact of, but there's other things as well and we want to make sure it's sustainable."
That work included encouraging visitors to use public transport, including park and ride services.
"We want to make sure that we're benefitting as many people as we can, both locals and tourists alike."
Listen to highlights from North Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.
Forty years after a tiny Luxembourgish village paved the way for border-free European travel, a series of scenic bike paths whisk travellers through the area's vineyard-studded landscape.
I pedal faster and faster until the bike glides over the wet tarmac. Vineyards rise up on my left, curving inward like the belly of a giant wave. On my right, the river trembles in the downpour. A sudden hiss from a brown-bodied goose leads me to nervously clench my handlebars, but bird aside, I'm all alone on the cycle path, and so I do something I haven't done since I was a child: I stand on my pedals, open my mouth and look up to catch the raindrops on my tongue.
I didn't come to Luxembourg to cycle. I came to look after two cats in Grevenmacher, a small town on the banks of the Moselle River. But with a few days to spare before my cat-sitting duties begin, I'm following my local hosts' advice and exploring the region by bike.
The Moselle River twists and turns for 545km from its source in eastern France's Vosges Mountains, flowing north to form a watery border between Luxembourg and Germany before joining the Rhine in Koblenz. On either side, beginner-friendly bike paths let travellers dip in and out of three countries without ever showing a passport – a freedom made possible by the Schengen Agreement, which abolished internal border checks and allowed for passport-free movement across participating European countries.
"I don't go to France as much, but I go to Germany to shop for cosmetics… and cheap strawberries," smiles my Schengen guide, Tessy Klopp Sowa, pointing out a yellow buoy in the Moselle River – a rather nondescript marker showing where Luxembourg, Germany and France meet.
This summer, the small Luxembourgish village of Schengen marks 40 years since European representatives signed the treaty in 1985 that paved the way for borders to open across the continent a decade later. Today, the agreement affects some 450 million people, including citizens of the 29 nations within the Schengen Area, as well as non-EU nationals who live there. But as border controls begin to quietly creep back into Europe, it's interesting to think about how the continent's borderless travel all started in this quiet, picturesque, 680-person village – and it's here that I begin my cycle.
"On the Luxembourg side, you'll pass more small villages [on the bike paths], but on the German side, it's quieter – at least for the first 10km. Of course, if you change your mind, you can just cross over one of the bridges," Klopp Sowa suggests, as I wonder which direction to start pedalling.
The Moselle region's cycle network is a choose-your-own-adventure dream. National routes, such as Luxembourg's PC 3 and Germany's Mosel-Radweg, link up with regional, themed and mountain biking trails, allowing you to choose sections, skip hills and stitch together your own customised route. In Luxembourg, cyclists can rent and return bikes (including e-bikes) at various points along the river. Services such as luggage transport, charging stations and free roadside assistance (April-October) make the whole experience surprisingly straightforward.
From Schengen, I cross the bridge into Germany and turn right towards France, taking a brief 5km detour along La Voie Bleue, a 700km route connecting Luxembourg with Lyon. As someone of average athleticism who hasn't cycled much since I was a child, I'm grateful the riverside routes are mostly flat, well-marked and car-free. Wobbly on my new wheels and busy trying to remember how to change gears, I hadn't realised I'd crossed another border until a text lit up my phone: "Welcome to France."
The town of Sierck-les-Bains is unmistakably French. Warm-hued buildings huddle together beneath the fortress of Château des Ducs de Lorraine, their closed, white, weathered shutters hiding any signs of life. I can't stay long – I plan to cycle back to Schengen and continue north, crisscrossing between Luxembourg and Germany to tick off three countries by sunset. But I do have one essential stop on my French itinerary: pastries.
Three gloriously overfilled éclairs later, I cross back into Schengen and stick to the Luxembourgish side of the river, cycling giddily through bursts of rain towards the so-called "Pearl of the Moselle", Remich, about 13km away. This section of the PC 3 traces the country's marathon-long wine region, home to grape varieties such as Riesling, Auxerrois and the indigenous Elbling. Much of Luxembourg's wine isn't widely exported, making a glass here all the more rewarding.
"We cross the borders every day as if they're not there," shrugs Corinne Kox, kneeling on the grass beside me at her family-run winery, Domaine Laurent & Rita Kox, in Remich. A few hours of sunshine have drawn wine lovers to the estate's garden, where I lounge barefoot under the dappled shade of an old tree. "We are neighbours," she adds, as she lines up the fresh, complex wines I've just blind tasted, now unmasked on the iron table.
That sense of connection is something the Kox family has bottled – literally. Cuvée M ("M" for Moselle) is the first French-German-Luxembourgish sparkling wine, made with grapes grown in all three countries and launched in 2016. "It was my father's idea," she says. "We're very open and always ready to innovate."
In the decades since the Schengen Agreement went into effect, other signs of that cross-border collaborative spirit are everywhere in the Moselle. Each summer, wine festivals on opposite sides of the river – one in Luxembourg, one in Germany – run simultaneously, with a free boat shuttling visitors between the two. In autumn, a Hiking Without Borders 33km tri-country trek takes place, with regional specialties served up along the way. And Via Mosel', the first cross-border wine and architecture tour, links villages and estates across all three countries, encouraging travellers to experience the valley as a single, shared region all year round.
More like this:
• Europe's most misunderstood capital?
• Scotland's epic 210-mile bikepacking adventure
• Schengen: A tiny village that changed European travel
"I always tell tourists to do the cycling on the German side," says Kox. "I think Luxembourg's landscape is more beautiful, and you see it much better from Germany."
I'd have to agree.
Crossing the bridge from Remich into Nennig, I continue north through Germany, following the trail as it carves through tunnels of poplar, sycamore and Norway maple trees. From the opposite bank, Luxembourg's grapevines cling to every contour, dotting the hillside in neat, obsessive rows. I pedal alongside railway tracks, through campsites filled with barbecuing families and past elderly couples on foot and young joggers. There are curly-haired pups in bike baskets and a rollerskating mother and daughter duo. Groups of cyclists occasionally flash past in a blur of neon Lycra, shouting over one another like a squabble of seaside gulls.
After a day of country-hopping and barely a sign to mark the change, I've lost track of where I am as I walk triumphantly into my guesthouse in Nittel an der Mosel, Germany. "I cheerily greet the receptionist in Luxembourgish: "Moien!". "Guten Tag, he replies in German. "In Germany, they can understand Luxembourgish because they are so used to it," says Julie Leruth, tourism coordinator for Visit Moselle.
On the other side of the river in Luxembourg, children are raised in a trilingual education system, juggling Luxembourgish, German and French from an early age. Since the Schengen Agreement made it easier to live in one country and work in another, more than 200,000 cross-border workers – or frontaliers, as they're known in French – work in Luxembourg, making multilingualism essential. "I hope we never lose this intercultural thing," Leruth tells me. "And that we always remember that we can learn from one another."
My accommodation, like many along the Moselle, is cyclist-friendly, with a lockable bike garage, e-bike charging stations and packed lunches available to fuel future journeys. Before gorging on the guesthouse's seasonal asparagus menu, I muster enough energy to cycle a short-but-steep trail into their vineyards. At the top, a selection of chilled whites awaits in their 24/7 wine vending machine.
I flop onto a wooden bench with a thump of relief. Across the river, silhouettes of cyclists trace the outline of Luxembourg, their shapes flickering in and out of view like frames from an old film. The bordering country is so close, I can hear its church bells. I think back to where I started that morning, in Schengen, standing at the border triangle with three countries at my feet. Tomorrow, I'll keep riding towards Trier, Germany's oldest city. Perhaps I'll switch from wine to beer – Bofferding on the left bank, Bitburger on the right. Seems only fair to try both.
Borders are often markers of difference – places of restriction, control and tension. While some internal borders in Europe have returned temporarily, it's hard to imagine that happening here. In the Moselle, open borders have opened minds, creating a region so closely tied it feels indivisible. As Klopp Sowa had told me earlier: "Here in the Moselle, we are one."
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Tucked deep in the woods of Balmoral, the Scottish royal estate beloved by Queen Victoria, lie 11 little-known memorial cairns – including one massive granite pyramid. Built to commemorate royal milestones and loss, they tell a quiet story of love, grief and nation building.
When Queen Victoria first visited Balmoral Castle in rural Aberdeenshire on 8 September 1848, six years after her first visit to Scotland, she took time out to appreciate the woodlands, gardens and rippling mountains.
Perhaps she deeply breathed in the Caledonian pine air. Perhaps a deer stood motionless, caught in her gaze. Certainly, she saw a different future for herself and her husband, Prince Albert, on Deeside in the Highlands. "All seemed to breathe freedom and peace, and to make one forget the world and its sad turmoils," she recorded in her diary. Soon after, the baronial estate became a mainstay for the rest of her life – and it remains a sanctuary for the British Royal Family to this day.
There are many stories hidden at Balmoral Castle, but perhaps none so intriguing as that of the estate's secret "pyramids", or memorial cairns. There are 11 of these, strewn almost negligently around the near-50,000-acre estate. The largest is a stone monolith more in keeping with the design of the great dynastic structures of Ancient Egypt than anything Scottish, while the smaller ones are scattered like clues to a greater mystery. And seeking them out – on a hunt akin to an Indiana Jones-type treasure hunt – is a little bit of everyday magic hidden among the Scots pine, firs and hemlocks.
Like many visitors to the Royal Deeside, I'd been to the country's best-known estate before. Located in the eastern Cairngorm mountains, the turreted 167-room castle, ballroom, mews courtyard, sunken garden and thistle-shaped maze are a bonanza for visitors, especially between April and early August when the full grandeur of the castle is open to ticketed visitors. There are around 80 residential properties on the wider estate, too, plus commercial forestry plantations, a hydroelectric dam, facilities for deer stalking and grouse shooting and a golf course.
But following the Covid-19 pandemic, when locals were forced to stay closer to home and making nearby discoveries became the national habit, the unlikely memorials appeared on social media posts like whispered secrets. Balmoral estate is 100 miles from where I live in Edinburgh, so I had lodged them in my mind as a rewarding challenge to track down the next time I was in Aberdeenshire.
Why were these marvels created? According to Ewen Cameron, professor of Scottish history at the University of Edinburgh, most were commissioned by Queen Victoria to commemorate significant events in the lives of her family, including the marriages of her nine children. The cairns commemorate Prince Albert Edward, Princess Alice, Prince Arthur and Princess Beatrice among others, forming a kind of family map across the forested hills.
"Princess Louise's cairn has perhaps the most interesting backstory," said Cameron, whose research includes Scotland's post-union history from the 1700s onwards and the politics of Highlands' land ownership. "She was the sixth child and fourth daughter and married John Campbell, the 9th Duke of Argyll, and this helped strengthen the family's ties to the Highlands, which was so important to Queen Victoria. There's a certain irony that a descendant of the House of Hanover was in thrall to this romantic idea of Scotland too."
Another marker came after the death of Prince Albert in December 1861. This saw the arrival of the estate's largest cairn, in the shape of a pyramid cut from granite, explained Gordon Casely, a respected heraldist and former journalist interested in the myths and legends of the north-east. Tucked away at the top of Craig an Lurachain hill with a stunning panorama of the surrounding Cairngorms National Park, it requires the most effort to reach and is now often dubbed "the Great Pyramid of Scotland".
"The cairns are a fabulous, if unlikely, addition to the estate," Casely said. "They're absolutely intriguing, as each one has its own backstory and design, and I'm not surprised more visitors are seeking them out. Their legends are worth telling."
Setting out from the Balmoral car park at Crathie, just east of the town of Braemar, I shouldered my backpack and entered the dark of the estate's woods to see all of these silvery-stone creations for myself. An ancestral path climbed high above the silvery River Dee then rollercoastered over thick roots and fell into a sharply cut glen. Every tree branch helped blot out the early summer Sun, and the only sound was birdsong.
The first cairns I found were Princess Helena's, soon followed by Princess Louise's on a yawning gap atop a rocky outcrop. Next came the Purchase Cairn, built in October 1852 to commemorate the purchase of the Balmoral estate from members of Clan Farquharson by Prince Albert. That it was the first memorial erected still holds significance today: the twisted forest is a maze, and the cairn's lofty outlook on the summit of Craig Gowan makes it by far the easiest to track down. It also captures one of the finest views of Royal Deeside.
What many don't realise is the cairns might well have ended up elsewhere. In the mid-1800s, Queen Victoria and Prince Albert visited a number of Highland estates before alighting on Balmoral. For a time, the royal couple even considered buying Ardverikie estate, which overlooks Loch Laggan on the far western side of the Cairngorms. For them, Cameron mused, it was perhaps too hard to get to, even for the Highlands. The alternative – Balmoral Castle – was leased in 1848, before the full estate was purchased four years later.
"Balmoral… was out of the way, but not too much," Cameron explained. "It had everything. The rugged Highlands' scenery, the River Dee, the mountains, and the Queen had imbibed this increasingly romantic idea of what Scotland was. Balmoral also became very useful to her after Albert's death in 1861 – she was in a kind of purdah after he died, aged only 42. It provided her with a sanctuary from the world."
Hunting down the cairns is a journey into that past – and into the very idea of Scotland as shaped by Victorian ideals. Queen Victoria was responsible for what has been labelled the "Balmoralisation" of the Highlands, and, as Cameron told me, the idea is still very alive in the minds of many of those who visit.
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"Scotland has long been pitched as an empty, wild, romantic place – even though we Scots know it's not," he said. "That idea has carried on through the centuries, whether through the influence of a writer like Sir Walter Scott or the art of Edward Landseer, a favourite painter of Queen Victoria, whose most celebrated work, The Monarch of the Glen, is a potent romanticisation of the deer-filled landscapes like Balmoral."
Today, for interested visitors, that royal commission-turned-nation-defining painting is on display at the National Galleries of Scotland in Edinburgh.
Back in the woods, my journey continued through this largely unchanged landscape, along six miles of meditative woodland trails in the company of red squirrels and an osprey, before, finally, the path began to climb steeply uphill. Then the trees opened onto a memorable scene: the near-11m-high Prince Albert pyramid overlooking all of Royal Deeside. The view was the archetype of beauty in nature: romantic and wild, just as it was when Queen Victoria first raised her royal banners there. The pyramid, stark and stony, is an unlikely version of the Highlands from the one that so many dream of.
Even in a country home to a trove of ancient stones, Neolithic sites and mysterious histories, this Victorian cairn is still a marvel. Approaching it and the other cairns on foot, alone and in silence apart from droning insects and birdsong, has the effect of making them even more bewitching – especially when seen in brilliant sunlight, under an uncommonly saltire-blue Highland sky.
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The Snaefell Mountain Railway reveals the Isle of Man's forgotten tourism boom – and serves as a gateway to the seven mythological kingdoms.
Our train was crawling slowly up a steeply pitched valley that felt hidden from the rest of the world. To the right of the tracks, the Laxey River dropped suddenly, turning south to vanish into the Irish Sea. Here and there, sheep grazed and the soft scent of gorse wafted into the carriage. I gazed out as the vegetation disappeared and we rattled higher – higher – as the train spiralled around the mountain's bald summit.
A howling wind greeted our arrival at the top station, and I looked out to a sea that had turned to thrashing waves. The view stretched even further. According to folklorists, the summit is where one can glimpse seven kingdoms, including those that aren’t acknowledged by any map. I could see England, Ireland, Wales, Scotland and the Isle of Man, but up there you can also see that of Manannán mac Lir, son of the sea and king of the otherworld in Gaelic mythology, and the kingdom of heaven. For believers, the journey is an imagined pilgrimage.
Snaefell, or "Snow Mountain", is no ordinary peak and the Snaefell Mountain Railway is no ordinary train. I was on the Isle of Man, atop the island's highest peak, having ridden the only electric mountain railway in the British Isles. The tradition to ride to the top is a profound one, but, equally, to learn about the train is to build a vivid portrait of the Isle of Man. For the railway's story is one of unemployment and migration, engineering milestones and the rise of Victorian-era tourism, and it still looms large in the legend of the island, revealing the independent character at the very heart of Manx life.
The day had begun at the Manx Museum, the Isle of Man's national museum in Douglas. The former hospital building is a nostalgic place by nature, with galleries dedicated to Viking silver hoards, Celtic crosses and Tynwald (the oldest continuous parliament in the world) helping distil the island's 10,000-year history into bite-sized nuggets. Chiefly, I was interested in the railway's timeline, which led me to the social history galleries and an encounter with Katie King, the museum's curator of art and social history.
"In the mid-19th Century, the Isle of Man was in a mess," she said, as we symbolically slipped back in time. "There was low population growth, no employment, exponential immigration and the island's mining industry was collapsing. The [Isle of] Man government was alarmed by all of this."
At the time, this was a familiar lament across many communities in the British Isles. But the Isle of Man, a UK Crown Dependency, had a secret weapon: its influential lieutenant governor, Sir Henry Brougham Loch, 1st Baron Loch. In office from 1863 to 1882, Loch realised the island's potential as a destination for spa tourism. Seaside holidays were booming in Queen Victoria's era and the Isle of Man, with sandy beaches and bracing waters, was primed to reap the rewards.
In one sense, the island's capital, Douglas, was sacrificed to tourism. A glossy marketing campaign appeared on the London Underground in the 1870s, featuring idyllic sailing boats and beautiful women in swimming costumes, transforming the working-class port town into a glamorous holiday destination. The journey to get there, from ports including Blackpool, Whitehaven, Silloth, Ardrossan and Greenock by the Isle of Man Steam Packet Company, the world's oldest continuously operating passenger shipping company, was also portrayed as an exotic sea crossing to a mystical island.
The speed at which things changed was astonishing. At its peak, 11 steamer ships made the crossing from Liverpool daily; and, by 1880, nearly 350,000 visitors were arriving every summer. A staggering 1,500 hotels opened, and, within a decade, Douglas had been transformed with a seafront promenade, pier and the largest ballroom in Europe. Despite moral outcry from the influential Methodist community, the island attracted legions of unchaperoned single men and women. And with liberal drinking laws, it was once described, as King puts it, as "one of the most debauched places in Britain".
"But the governor wasn't content with stopping there," added King. "All those visitors only spent time in Douglas because there weren't opportunities to explore the island. So, building a train was the next obvious step."
Enter the Manx Electric Railway at the northern end of the Loch Promenade. First opened to the coastal town of Groudle in 1893, it is now the oldest electric tram line in the world with its original rolling stock still in service. Then, two years later, the Snaefell Mountain Railway arrived as part of a further tourism push. Remarkably, the two connecting lines still run with much of their original Victorian-era infrastructure. Both feel like museums on wheels.
If it's fascinating to hear these stories, it's more thrilling to ride to Snaefell, all while peering out of the world's oldest operational electric tram cars. While the epic views mean that comfort is secondary, the enjoyment of the three-hour return journey to the summit comes from riding on period piece Victorian tram cars doing what they were built to do. First, the Manx Electric Railway rattles, stutters and sways along the seven-mile track from Derby Castle Station to Laxey; then it's a quick switch onto the Snaefell Mountain Railway as it pushes uphill for a further five miles to 621m. Inside, the shallow arched carriages are polished ash and pitch pine. There are glazed vestibules, mirrored panels and sliding windows. For me, it had the particular atmosphere of an Orient Express, as if run by model railway enthusiasts. For the Manx, the legends and reality of the train are ingrained in their psyche.
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"When the railway opened, it was like science fiction," Andrew Scarffe, Manx Heritage Railways' technical support officer, told me when I met him at the depot. "Droves of people came over on the ferry just to see its electric technology and innovation. What's rarely spoken of is we were 130 years ahead of the rest of the world with green travel. We began generating our own power back in the 1890s to run the railway, and the electric tram cars are still doing what they were built to be doing. Slow travel by electric train? It all started here."
As Scarffe tells it, the railway had one million annual passenger journeys at its peak, with trains leaving Derby Castle Station for Laxey every three minutes. These days, the Isle of Man's holiday traditions have been eroded, but the train still completes around 200,000 passenger journeys a year, from April to October. Like me, many come for the ride through the glens and fields, the train clawing past beech trees bursting to green before the hillside peters into rocks. Some come for the rare experience of driving the tram itself, with one day train-driving tutorials available. And those of a more spiritual bent come to savour the seven kingdoms.
Before dusk, I reflected on much of this as I scrambled to Snaefell's true summit above the rail tracks. Ireland lay in front of me, with Wales, Scotland and England at my back, facing east. Above, so Manx folklore says, was the domain of "otherworld", a legend more difficult to ignore because of the remains of a Victorian-era observatory at the summit. Around me was the watery kingdom of Manannán mac Lir (fun fact: he's reputedly buried under a grassy knoll behind the walls of Peel Castle on the island's west coast).
All of this was a confusion of the real and make-believe. And yet, looking out at this island full of stories made me realise that my short journey onboard the Snaefell Mountain Railway had taken me to more places than I ever could've imagined. It seems an ordinary train, but the tracks of this tiny electric mountain railway continue to keep both fantasy and so much of Manx history and culture alive.
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Tucked into the Andes Mountains in Chile, Ski Portillo is a place where time stands still. With no town and limited rooms, there's not much to do besides ski – which is exactly the point.
For many, a modern-day ski resort might include towering peaks cloaked in fluffy snow, high-tech lift lines, luxurious hotels with fabulous spas, buzzing apres-ski bars and shops filled with the latest in cold-weather fashion. These days, top mountain destinations are bustling winter wonderlands that cater as much to non-skiers as they do to powder hounds. But tucked away in the Chilean Andes is Ski Portillo, a remote, all-inclusive resort that's only open during the South American winter. There's little to do but ski – and for its devoted fans, that's exactly the point.
Spread across 5 sq km and home to 35 trails serviced by 14 lifts (including several drag lifts), Portillo was the first ski resort in South America. While it is not as massive as what you'll find in the Rockies or Alps, its off-piste terrain and advanced-level challenges have made it a bucket list destination. Just as important is the atmosphere: Portillo feels frozen in time – in the best way.
While other resorts have aggressively modernised, Portillo has held fast to its old-school charm. Getting here requires a two-hour drive north-east from Santiago on the same narrow mountain highway as transport trucks. The bright yellow hotel – where visitors gather for meals and barside revelry – has barely changed. Overnight capacity has only grown ever-so-slightly to 450 since it opened. There's no town to hang out in, and not much for non-skiers to do.
Launched by the Chilean government in 1949, Portillo's modern era began in the 1960s when Bob Purcell, a New York finance hotshot, won it at auction (he was the sole bidder). He then asked his nephew Henry, then 26 and making his way up at Hilton Hotels, to become its general manager. Skiing in the area goes back even further: Norwegian engineers traversed the mountains on skis in the 1880s while working on the railway linking Chile to the Argentine city of Mendoza on the other side of the Andes. After its completion in 1910, locals would ride the train – as if it were a ski lift – before skiing back down the peaks. That railway is long gone, but Portillo, equipped with real ski lifts now, is still going strong, with the Purcells still at the helm.
According to Ellen Guidera Purcell, Henry's wife and a key figure in Portillo's day-to-day operations, the early days mostly involved the Purcells inviting their famous friends here for ski parties. "The parties were an omen of the future," Guidera said. "Because Portillo has continued not only as a place for beautiful skiing but also as a place for good times with family and friends, a place of happy dinners, parties, bar dancing and making memories."
Carolina Mendoza, a retired business owner, first visited Portillo in the mid-1970s as a teenager growing up in Venezuela. She's returned nearly every year since, only missing a Portillo season during the pandemic or while living in Europe. For Mendoza, whose mother is Chilean, there's a magic to this little mountain hamlet. "There's such a sense of community here," she said. 'It almost makes you feel like you're with family."
But Portillo has also become synonymous with serious skiing. Known for its challenging alpine terrain, it hosted the FIS Alpine World Ski Championships in 1966, which established its reputation as a hardcore winter sports destination. Today, both the convivial atmosphere and the hair-raising slopes remain critical to Portillo's cult-favoured status. Every year from June to September, when the northern hemisphere is in the throes of summer, snow-chasers from the US, Canada, Europe and Latin America head here to enjoy an endless winter. Many, like Mendoza, are repeat visitors. Others are world-class athletes in training for big-ticket events like the Olympics.
US Olympian Breezy Johnson, a World Champion ski racer, has been to Portillo five times. Her first visit, in 2015, included training runs with skiing legends like Julia Mancuso, Laurenne Ross and Leanne Smith. "Portillo is a very unique place. I call it the cruise ship because it's kind of the only thing for a ways around," she recalls. "When I first came I was a bit – a lot – intimidated by the stark world that is Portillo."
That starkness turns out to be a perk. Johnson, who is now based in Jackson, Wyoming, says the compact layout is ideal. "We can literally walk down to breakfast, head to the slopes, put our seven pairs of skis out on the snow and get going," she says. "That convenience as opposed to multiple trams in Europe, long drives in New Zealand or a snowmobile ride down in Corralco, [Chile] makes the training super beneficial because you can maximise energy for skiing."
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And its not just Olympians who love the challenging terrain and no-fuss nature of skiing here. Intrepid visitors can often be seen hiking from lifts to explore off-piste terrain, and Roca Jack, one of Portillo's most beloved expert runs, extends to the bottom of the mountain for more than 2.6km. While elite athletes like Johnson love to train on Portillo's long trails and steep turns, so do average advanced skiers. But don't think you have to be at that level to enjoy the resort: given the tougher landscape, top-notch instructors are available to help intermediate skiers improve their skills.
The most popular package is a week-long stay with room, board and lift tickets. But the Purcells are evolving the experience, including introducing standalone A-frame chalets for those seeking more privacy, as well as events like Wine Week in August, when some of Chile's most esteemed vineyards host educational tastings. You can also level up with a heli-skiing tour of the area, or pair your Portillo visit with a few days at a partner hotel, like VIK, a luxury winery hotel located four hours south. But, "Portillo is about skiing," Guidera insists, adding that while they recently updated their guestrooms, there are still no TVs in there.
Perhaps more than anything, Portillo is about community. In a place where everyone loves the same thing and where there isn't much else to do, you'll run into the same faces at lunch at Tio Bob's or in the hot tub before dinner. "Life in Portillo happens on the slopes and in the many hotel common spaces where guests interact with one another and with us," Guidera says. "Friendships are made, couples fall in love, some get engaged, some get married there, babies are made, others leave saying 'what happens in Portillo stays in Portillo', and some have their ashes eventually scattered in Portillo."
In fact, Mendoza met her second husband here, through common friends she's made at Portillo over the years. And Johnson adds, the friends you make include the staff, who might be skiing on the same runs as you on their days off. After all, as she says, "It is a small community nestled in the mountains."
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There are more than 400 sites in the US National Park System. Here's why it's time to skip the most-visited top 10 and seek out quieter, equally spectacular ground.
Winding through one of the wildest corners of Colorado, 210,000-acres deep in Dinosaur National Monument, I found myself balancing sideways on the crest of the biggest wave in the river – somehow staying upright through the whirling Class IV rapids. That week, I paddled 71 miles down the Yampa River, Colorado's last free-flowing river, camping beneath towering red-and-orange striped canyons etched by ancient peoples. The experience left me with something rare: space to breathe and trust in the river to take its course.
Unlike marquee parks that strain under the pressure of mass tourism, Dinosaur has quietly struck a balance between visitation and protection. The original head of the Sierra Club, David Brower, saw its value back in the 1950s when he fought to stop a proposed dam on the Yampa. Without him, many of these canyons would now be underwater.
"The riparian zone on the Yampa River is the most natural stretch of river in Colorado," says Tom Kleinschnitz, director of Visit Moffat County. "Preservation of this resource is crucial for the natural habitat, and it is one of the last natural river sections that visitors can observe, enjoy and play in."
Rethinking how (and where) we explore
From Acadia's rocky coast to Yosemite's soaring peaks, the US has no shortage of iconic national parks. But visitation numbers continue to climb, often outpacing infrastructure and threatening the very environments they showcase.
To protect these wild places – especially as US national parks, forests and wildlife habitats are under threat of cuts and understaffing – long-time nonprofit partner of the National Park Service, Western National Parks has launched new itineraries spotlighting 72 lesser-known US parks and monuments.
"Our lesser-known parks are truly hidden gems," says Marie Buck, the association's president and CEO.
"They often offer a more intimate experience and an opportunity to understand the under-told stories that have shaped the nation. And they do all this often with fewer crowds." Since its founding, the nonprofit has contributed $162m to responsible visitation of US public lands.
Others are also encouraging off-the-beaten-path exploration. Former park ranger Ashli Nudd curates personalised national park itineraries; while Outdoorable, a company formed in the wake of potential NPS layoffs, is hiring former rangers to create custom trip itineraries and offer traveller tips. Even adventure travel company Intrepid Travel recently launched Active-ism tours through Zion and the Grand Canyon with routes designed to avoid high-traffic areas.
Here are four underrated spots that prove you don't need to sacrifice beauty, biodiversity or a sense of wonder to travel responsibly this summer.
Dinosaur National Monument, Colorado and Utah
This rugged desert landscape spans 210,000 acres across Colorado and Utah, blanketed with of purple park rockcress and rich with prehistoric fossils – including 1,500 dinosaur specimens from the 23 species unearthed here since 1909.
The findings, some of the most significant in the field, transformed paleontology – with the earliest-found bones even reaching the living room of Scottish industrialist and philanthropist Andrew Carnegie, who helped secure national monument status in 1915.
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Today, visitors can raft between spectacular towering canyon cliffs under certified International Dark Skies. The Yampa River remains one of the country's last undammed rivers and among the hardest river rafting permits to obtain, while the connecting Green River offers more accessible rafting routes, with stops for day hikes to waterfalls and ancient rock carvings. If rafting isn't for you, drive through canyon country to Echo Park to marvel at some of the monument's most dramatic scenery. Don't leave without seeing the wild horses grazing at nearby Sand Wash Basin and the largest wild mustang sanctuary in the US, the new Wild Horse Refuge, just outside the park.
Isle Royale National Park, Michigan
Accessible only by boat or seaplane, Isle Royale is one of the US's least-visited national parks – and one of its most peaceful. Located 56 miles from Michigan's Keweenaw Peninsula, the archipelago of 450 islands floats in the cool expanse of Lake Superior and is only open from mid-April through October each year.
To get here, catch the ferry from Copper Harbor or Grand Portage – your luggage will be ferried by wheeled carts to the lodges and campsites. There are no cars allowed on this Unesco-designated wilderness, so be prepared to explore by foot, canoe or kayak (rentals available at the Rock Harbor Marina and Lodge).
On Isle Royale, one of the world's largest lake islands, see where native Americans extracted copper to hand shape tools, weapons and ornaments 8,000 years ago. Then hike the island's trails to see moose and beaver and to find hidden fishing spots, like the Indian Portage Trail on Lake Richie.
Katahdin Woods and Waters National Monument, Maine
On your next New England trip, skip the crowds at Acadia National Park and head inland to Katahdin Woods and Waters National Monument instead. In the towering shadow of the state's highest peak, Mt Katahdin, lies a network of rivers and streams that once moved logs – Maine's primary heritage industry – from the woods to the mills. The mountaintop, which Henry David Thoreau called "vast, titanic, inhuman" marks the end of the world's longest hiking-only footpath, the Appalachian Trail.
The monument was established in 2016 following an 87,500-acre land donation by environmentalist and Burt's Bees co-founder Roxanne Quimby. Visitors can explore the 11,000-year-old land and waterways of Maine's native Wabanaki people, who relied on the woods and waterways for sustenance, transportation and cultural practices. There's also cross-country skiing, snowshoe hiking, biking and fishing in deep river valleys. Watch out for moose (Maine has the most moose of any state except Alaska) and embrace the rustic solitude at one of the park's campgrounds or cabins.
As night falls, this International Dark SkySanctuary offers pristine stargazing at Katahdin Loop Road Overlook and Kimball Deadwater.
North Cascades National Park, Washington
Just 2.5 hours from Seattle, North Cascades offers soaring mountains, alpine lakes and more than 300 glaciers on half a million acres of wilderness – yet receives just 1% of the visitors to nearby Olympic National Park.
While spring brings roaring waterfalls after the snowmelt, summer fills trails with vibrant lupine, paintbrush, columbine and glacier lilies. Adventurous travellers can paddle pristine lakes or hike through wildflower-filled meadows on the Maple Pass Loop. For a more challenging trek, the Cascade Pass and Sahale Arm trail provides breathtaking vistas of glaciers and rugged peaks. If you prefer a scenic drive, the North Cascades Highway (State Route 20), winds through the park offering dramatic views and quiet picnic spots.
At night, this stargazer's paradise offers astrophotography classes under some of Washington's darkest skies. Camp riverside or stay in a restful lakefront cabin at North Cascades Lodge at Stehekin.
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With so many famous cities and coasts to explore, most visitors to Italy never think to stop by its national parks, but these wild landscapes produce epic Italian culinary adventures.
Whenever we visit my husband's family in Calabria, at the tippy toe of Italy's boot, we invariably take the train; it beats the six-hour drive down an autostrada (motorway) full of lorries. But this time, we're taking the car since we'll be making a detour to a national park. For us, and for many Italians, that means one thing: we're bringing back food.
Italy has so many renowned cities and coastlines that most visitors never think to explore its parchi nazionali (national parks), let alone know that these wild areas are some of the best food destinations in a nation famous for its cuisine.
Italy has 26 national parks marching from its rugged Alpine spine in the north to its saw-toothed heel in the south, encompassing mountain ranges, waterfalls, centuries-old forests, picturesque villages and ghost towns. But within these biodiverse landscapes are also farms, generational vineyards and orchards. Hikers may pass herds of dairy cows, hogs and sheep and then wander past artisanal food stands and restaurants offering park-to-table dishes made with ingredients sourced directly from the surrounding land.
A nature lover's paradise? Certainly. An in the-know, Italians-only foodie secret? Absolutely.
National parks – Italian style
It may come as a surprise that Italy's national parks produce some of the country's finest food. After all, in many places – such as the US – private farms are rare on protected land. But in Italy, where many national parks were created around ancient villages and centuries-old agricultural businesses, it's a different story.
"In Italy, people and nature go hand in hand. They aren't two separate things. It's really a philosophical idea," says Paolo Iannicca, a tour guide based in the Parco Nazionale d’Abruzzo, Lazio e Molise. As a result, Italy's rich biodiversity combined with its ancient pastoral footprint have birthed an enormous variety of enogastronomic products – cultivated throughout the centuries and revered to this day.
Travelling to a national park to source the best ingredients may be the most Italian travel experience of all.
"It's in our DNA," says chef Maria Nasso, who frequently collaborates with the Parco Nazionale del Circeo's culinary initiatives. "Italians structure their days around food. Even the choice of accommodation when visiting a park during holidays – good food is always a constant."
That's why national park food experiences hit so hard for Italians. Though famous overseas for dishes like lasagna or pizza, within Italy, food culture is passionately tied to single ingredients and each village is often renowned for a locally cultivated product.
You may have heard of Parma ham and Marsala wine. Go deeper: the provola of Agerola; the artichokes of Sezze; the lentils of Pescasseroli. Italians may love pasta alla carbonara but we lose our minds over a strain of ancient wheat, gifting artisanal products to each other as though offering jewels to our liege. "I've been to the Dolomites," we'll say. "I bestow upon you the prized rhododendron honey."
Italy's wild parks are the epicentre of chilometro zero (zero-kilometre) products, from cheese to meat to native vegetables. "For Italians, typical local products are non-negotiable," says Iannicca, who runs La Bottega di Gaia, an artisanal shop selling products from the Parco Nazionale d'Abruzzo, Lazio e Molise. "They want to eat authentic, typical food, and that's exactly what [parks] provide."
Teresa Maradei, founder of the farm Terrægusto in Calabria's Parco Nazionale del Pollino, echoes this sentiment: "In Italy, food is part of the emotional geography. Visiting a park to savour its flavours means living the landscape with all your senses. It's a uniquely Italian way of doing ecotourism."
So why are Italy's national parks – and their culinary riches – off many tourists' radars?
"Because Italy's tourism narrative abroad is still too focused on art cities and iconic destinations," says Maradei."Parks are seen only as natural reserves, not as places of food culture."
But with the rise of the Slow Food movement in the late 1980s, dining in national parks – which widely encourage organic, eco-sustainable farming practices – is becoming increasingly popular. "More and more, travellers seek slow, immersive and genuine experiences – not just eating, but seeing where the product is born, who cultivates it and how it's transformed," says Maradei.
Italian national park websites typically list the park's endemic products, restaurants, dairies and enogastronomic itineraries.
"[National parks are] what you might call a 'lesser known' Italy, but not a lesser Italy," says Iannicca. "Italy is a nation made up of thousands of small, scattered towns. If you only go to the usual places… you're missing the real Italy."
Hence, us in our car, ready to devour the bounty of Calabria.
The Parco Nazionale del Pollino
Stretching 193,000 hectares, the Parco Nazionale del Pollino is Italy's largest protected wilderness area. It straddles both the Calabria and Basilicata regions and is home to epic mountain climbing, Bosnian pine forests and the nucleus of Italy's Arbëreshë (Italo-Albanian) population – the descendants of Albanians who found refuge here in the late 15th and early 16th Centuries.
Among its famed products are the fagiolo poverello bianco (white beans) of Mormanno, the white onions of Castrovillari, the caciocavallo cheese of Sila and the peppers of Senesi.
After our six-hour drive, we base ourselves in the village of Mormanno and visit the Neolithic ruins of Frascineto – believed by some locals to be an ancient solstice clock. At a trattoria, we refuel with an antipasto platter heaped with park-produced prosciutto and polenta draped with melted caciocavallo cheese.
The next day, we hike through massive Bosnian pine groves over carpets of wildflowers, passing mooing herds of Podolica cows. But the highlight comes in the town of Civita, with an Arbëreshë meal at Ristorante Kamastra. First we are served a selection of pickles made from Castrovillari onions, fava beans and oily hunks of cubed prosciutto. Then there is cavatelli con ricotta e nenesa (cavatelli pasta with ricotta and local nettles) followed by cinghiale alla bracconeria (boar in a savoury sauce). The standout is the krustul, an Arbëreshë dessert made of fried dough, cinnamon and Pollino honey.
Before leaving the park, we stop at the Catasta Pollino museum and culinary outpost and buy:
One sack white beans of Mormanno
One sack lentils of Mormanno
One box park-grown almonds and figs covered in chocolate
One fat round of caprino cheese
One bottle Timpa delle Fave white wine
One bottle Gëzuar Magliocco red wine
Back home, we soak the beans overnight then sauté them in tomatoes, peperoncino and garlic to make a stew, which we serve alongside hunks of the cheese and bread torn impatiently from the loaf. The prized beans are small, tender and flavourful, like pearls of butter on our tongues.
"Because every ingredient tells a story – of a family, a landscape, a season," says Maradei. "Italians cook the land itself, and endemic ingredients are markers of belonging. It's not just about taste – it's about recognising oneself in a shared past."
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While Vienna has topped the Global Liveability Index for years, 2025 crowned a new number one. From Copenhagen to Melbourne, we asked locals what it's actually like to reside in these famously liveable cities.
The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) has long ranked cities around the globe, offering a data-backed snapshot of where life is most comfortable and secure. The world's top-ranked cities have been remarkably consistent over the past few years. But in 2025, one major shift jolted the rankings: for the first time in three years, Vienna was dethroned. Copenhagen rose to the top thanks to perfect scores in stability, education and infrastructure – a tough trifecta to beat.
However, the biggest shake-ups in 2025 weren't just about rising or falling scores – they were about safety, with geopolitical tensions rising worldwide. Vienna, in particular, suffered from a bomb threat that cancelled the 2024 Taylor Swift concert as well as a recently planned attack on a train station.
Still, cities in Western Europe, Australia, New Zealand and Canada continue to fare well in the rankings, with Osaka the only Asian city cracking the top 10. So, what's it really like to call one of these places home? We asked locals from five of this year's top-ranked cities to find out.
Copenhagen
Taking the top spot in the liveability index, the Danish capital also recently ranked as the world's happiest city. The two go hand in hand, as Copenhagen's high stability, infrastructure and environment scores directly translate into daily happiness for residents.
"Trains show up at 12:16 when they are scheduled for 12:16. No one blinks if you turn up in sneakers at a fancy restaurant, and a swim in a clean harbour is possible even in January if you are feeling brave," said Copenhagen resident Thomas Franklin, CEO of fintech company Swapped.com. "Copenhagen wins me over every time with its calmness. Streets are wide, bikes outnumber cars and the city runs on common sense."
Franklin also appreciates the city's community spirit and a lack of pressure that means you can meet a friend by the water with no planning and have coffee for two hours. While the skies might often be grey, he says the city is brightened by open-air markets, public saunas and the sound of kids running in the park. "It is a city that never tries too hard but always delivers," he said.
American journalist Olivia Liveng moved here eight years ago and says that raising a child here has been "an unexpectedly wonderful experience" due to the city's family-friendly nature. "Our 2.5-year-old son attends a highly subsidised daycare that costs us about US$600 per month, covering everything," she said. "You can truly see where your tax money goes."
A good work-life balance also benefits families, with many companies encouraging employees to take three weeks off in July. In addition, Liveng finds the infrastructure to be thoughtfully designed. "There are elevators in all metro stations, clean and reliable public transport and stroller-friendly buses," she said, contrasting it to a recent visit to New York, where a lack of lifts meant navigating the subway with a pushchair was a challenge.
For a dose of local hygge, Liveng recommends a swim at Sandkaj Harbour Bath in the Nordhavn district. "It's a favourite spot to dip and lay in the Sun, especially during the warmer months," she said. For a winter visit, Franklin suggests the Islands Brygge harbour baths. "Grab a hot chocolate, sit at the water's edge and just watch Copenhagen drift by," he said. "The small rituals here are what stick with you."
Vienna
The Austrian capital may have slipped from first to second place in the index, but its perfect healthcare score still outranks every other city. It also maintains perfect scores in both education and infrastructure. The result is a place that residents rave about.
"I'm a native New Yorker who moved to Vienna for the lifestyle about four years ago and have no plans on returning," said Nataleigh O'Connell, a communications consultant at UNIDO. "I've found a quality of life that I didn't think was possible in a major capital city."
She points to affordability as a major draw, noting that rent is extremely reasonable, with a city-centre one-bedroom flat costing less than €850 per month. Vienna's extensive public transportation network is also clean and affordable, priced at just €1 a day for city residents.
"It's a city that offers enough of everything, whether it be new restaurants, world-class performances or art exhibitions, without ever feeling overwhelming," said O'Connell. To experience Vienna like a local, she recommends visiting heurigen, local vineyards within the city limits. "The hiking trails that connect them offer spectacular views of the city," she said.
Geneva
Switzerland consistently ranks high for quality of life, thanks to policy and infrastructure that support well-being. Both Zurich and Geneva made the top five this year, but Geneva residents say their city has a different feel – more compact, more relaxed but with all the benefits of a global hub.
"Geneva is a well-run city in a well-run country," said resident James F Royal, who moved here from Florida several years ago and is the author of the book Options Trading 101. "It offers many of the benefits of the big city – music, arts, business – in a cosier environment, meaning you get many advantages of urban life without the usual disadvantages."
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With perfect healthcare and infrastructure scores, the city is also clean, safe and easy to navigate. "Whether you want to walk to your destination or use the dense public transportation system, you can get around easily with no car required," Royal said. In addition, Switzerland's reliable train network and central location make it easy to travel almost anywhere in Europe in just a few hours.
Geneva is also one of Switzerland's most diverse cities, with more than 40% of residents born abroad. "Inhabitants get the benefits of that diversity, such as a wide range of cuisines and people with interesting backgrounds," Royal said.
The city's natural beauty – especially the crescent-shaped Lake Geneva and its mountain backdrop – also add to the appeal of daily life. The lake has plenty of spots to picnic and sunbathe, with La Grange Park offering unique lake views and expansive rose gardens. Royal recommends visitors enjoy the restaurants and pop-up bars that appear during the summer months, and the Christmas markets in the winter.
Melbourne
Ranked fourth in the index, Melbourne received perfect marks in healthcare and education. But its high scores in culture and environment are what inched it above other Australian cities – including Sydney and Adelaide, which also cracked the top 10.
Melbourne also scored well on infrastructure – and lawyer Oliver Morrisey says he chose to base his practice here due to an overall efficiency he rarely finds in other major cities.
"I can walk from the Supreme Court to a client meeting near Collins Street in under 15 minutes; and I can work intensely during the day then take my daughter for a walk through Fitzroy Gardens after school," he said. "That is what liveability means to me. It is not just about lifestyle. It is about ease of movement between the parts of life that matter."
Even for those outside the city centre, Melbourne's transportation network makes getting around simple. "The transport system connects the inner and outer suburbs for an easy commute within 50 minutes without segregating suburbs," said Melbourne resident Katherine Tuominen, founder of Catalyst Brand Strategy, who has lived in 10 cities around the world but finds Melbourne the most liveable.
She also loves Melbourne's multicultural energy, which brings together people from all walks of life and fuels a vibrant mix of activities, events and cuisines. "It's never boring, and there are always new ways to broaden your perspective and try something different," she said.
She recommends visitors wander the city's graffiti-lined laneways or explore speakeasy-style bars like Beneath Driver Lane and Miss Gunn's Basement Bar. Morrisey suggests lunch on Lygon Street, widely considered the birthplace of the city's cafe culture. "Eat slow, talk loud and take your time," he said. "That is the real Melbourne."
Osaka
The only Asian city to make the top 10 (ranked seventh overall), Osaka scored perfect marks in stability, healthcare and education. And while it's often overshadowed by flashier Tokyo, Osaka's under-the-radar vibe is exactly what residents love about living here.
"Osaka is a very well-developed, very cool city," said long-time resident Graham Hill who runs the review website Osaka City. "It is to Japan what San Francisco might be to the United States: a smaller city, but with a unique flavour of its own."
The city's reliable infrastructure – including a clean, punctual and wide-reaching transit system – make Osaka easy to live in, without the crowds of Tokyo. Hill says it's simpler to get reservations at top-tier places, and the prices are much better as well.
Dominic Dijkstra, director of mixology at the newly opened Waldorf Astoria Osaka, agrees: "Whether it's a quick bowl of ramen after work or a beautifully crafted kaiseki dinner, you're never far from an amazing meal."
Dijkstra learned his craft in Manchester, England, and says that Osaka has a similar kind and unpretentious vibe. "People are proud of their culture and are always ready to share it with you," he said. "Osaka has a warmth and humour in everyday life that makes it feel liveable beyond convenience. People chat to you in shops, joke with you at the bar and make the city feel like home."
While Osaka has major tourist attractions like the historic Osaka Castle, Hill recommends visitors seek out everyday Osaka pleasures. "Hanging out at Streamer Coffee Company in Shinsaibashi is a first-class 'cool' urban experience to rival any city," he said. "Grabbing something to eat from Utsubo Bakery Panena and sitting down in Utsubo Park delivers some of the simple pleasures available to an Osaka local."
Dijkstra recommends heading to Kyobashi train hub to find the city's true soul, noting that the string of tiny bars just outside the station is always full of friendly Osakans at any time of day. "Grab a beer or a highball and squeeze in next to the locals," he said. "You'll get an authentic glimpse into why this city is so special."
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A volcanic eruption sank Aenaria nearly 2,000 years ago. Now, underwater tours and ongoing excavations are bringing Ischia's fascinating history back to the surface.
"You're fine. Just don't look down."
I hold my breath, take the captain's outstretched hand and board the boat. The waves glimmer beneath my feet; the only thing separating me from the sea is a pane of glass.
As our tour sets sail, the vast Bay of Cartaromana opens up before us. Jagged cliffs shoot up from the waves; sunbathers sprawl on the inlet bridge leading to the 2,500-year-old Aragonese Castle, attached to the island like the tail of a whale periscoping through the waves. After just 10 minutes at sea, we reach a network of buoys marking the ruins below. I press my hands against the vessel's transparent bottom. Through the turquoise-blue water, between waving fields of seagrass and small striped fish, I glimpse a pile of rocks. Then the seagrass parts and I see that the rocks are arranged into a long rectangular form, its sides encased in wooden planks. This is an ancient city's quay; buried in the cool dark for centuries and perfectly preserved.
Ancient Rome, almost close enough to touch.
I am on the Italian island of Ischia, where sometime around AD180, the Cretaio volcano erupted, and the ensuing shockwaves sank the Roman port city of Aenaria beneath the sea.
At least, that's what archaeologists think happened. Unlike the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD79 – documented by Pliny the Younger in the hours before it devastated Pompeii – there are no records of the explosion, and very little written about the settlement itself.
For nearly 2,000 years, there was no physical trace of it either. The ruins lay submerged in the Bay of Cartaromana hidden for centuries beneath layers of sediment and volcanic material.
The first hints of its existence were in 1972, when two scuba divers found Roman-era pottery shards and two lead ingots off Ischia's eastern shore. The find intrigued archaeologists, but the ensuing investigation, helmed by local priest Don Pietro Monti and archaeologist Giorgio Buchner, yielded nothing. Officials cordoned off the bay. The case went cold for nearly 40 years.
Then, in 2011, passionate local sailors reopened the excavation, this time digging into the sea floor. Soon, they were able to confirm that 2m beneath the bay's volcanic seabed lay the ruins of a massive Roman-era quay. Further digs found coins, amphorae, mosaics, seaside villas and the wooden wreckage of a ship.
For centuries, Aenaria had existed somewhere between history and myth. Today, its rediscovery is reshaping Ischia's story – and offering travellers the rare chance each summer to dive into a piece of history once thought lost to the sea.
A puzzling past
As far as anyone had ever known, Ischia's DNA was Greek. The island was renowned as the site of the first Greek colony in the Italian peninsula, established around 750BC in the north of the island. The Greeks called the island Pithecusae and harnessed the healing powers of its volcanic thermal springs to found its first spas.
Today, with its lush beauty, laid-back vibe and revered thermal spa culture, Ischia is Italy's quintessential wellness retreat – despite sitting atop the Campi Flegrei supervolcano. But it's precisely that volatile volcanic geology that has shaped the island's verdant landscapes and wild beaches.
It's also what archaeologists long assumed had scared the Romans away from permanently settling here.
When the Romans seized Pithecusae sometime around 322BC, they renamed the island Aenaria – a name that appears in ancient texts from Pliny the Elder to Strabo, often in relation to military events. But unlike the Greeks, who left behind a necropolis, kilns and troves of pottery, the Romans left only a few modest tombs, engravings and scattered opus reticulatum. Scholars settled on the theory that they'd come to the island but never properly settled it – perhaps avoiding it due to its constant volcanic rumblings.
"The name was documented," echoes local resident Giulio Lauro. "But no one could find the place." Archaeologists had been looking for Roman Ischia on dry land, but it was buried below the sea.
The modern rediscovery
Lauro is the founder of the Marina di Sant'Anna; the cultural branch of the Ischia Barche sea-tourism cooperative. Along with various affiliated cultural groups – comprised of Ischian seafarers, history enthusiasts and archaeologists – they have self-funded the excavations for the past 15 years.
Lauro is quick to tell me that he's no scientist. "But I love the sea," he said. "In 2010, I got the idea to look again … People said maybe there was something there, because in the '70s they found artefacts. I thought, why not try?"
The plan was to launch underwater tours "to create a cultural attraction", says Dr Alessandra Benini, the project's lead archaeologist. "[Then] it was, 'let's see if there's truly a deeper history of our island'."
There were challenges, recalls Lauro: "Getting authorisations, training people, sourcing funds. We started from zero. We were lucky to believe in it. And then to actually find it."
Finally, the narrative could be rewritten.
"It was believed that the Romans never built a city on Ischia," says Benini. "It was the opposite."
Aenaria returned from the sea
Each day in the Bay of Cartaromana, swimmers dive off the rocks and sailboats bob in the waves. Do they know what's beneath the sea, I wonder?
"Most locals do, thanks to [the archaeologists]," says local tour guide Marianna Polverino. "But not many visitors know about Aenaria's existence, or that you can visit it."
Each summer, Benini and her team excavate the sea floor. Progress is painstaking due to a perennial shortage of funds. "They invest in Herculaneum, in Pompeii," remarks consulting archaeologist Maria Lauro, and because of the ocean's seasonal turbulence, they can only operate from May to October.
During the site's active months, curious visitors can take glass-bottomed boat tours, as well as snorkelling and scuba excursions to get even closer to the ruins. "You can see the underwater archaeologists at work, the equipment they use and everything involved," says Benini.
All tours start with viewing a 3D video in the cooperative's small auditorium, where artefacts from the site are displayed beneath glass flooring, arranged on a layer of sand evoking the seabed. My shoes tread over amphorae, oil lamps, herringbone-patterned clusters of opus spicatum tiles – a tile pattern "typically found in [Ancient] Roman shops", says Benini.
The video – featuring a submarine that winds up in a digitally reconstructed Aenaria – is geared towards children, but I'm enthralled. The quay hugs the coastline and just beyond is a Roman city resplendent with cobblestoned lanes and columned buildings. To think during the eruption nearly 2,000 years ago, someone – maybe a Roman soldier – may have been standing on that massive quay, terrified as it crumpled beneath their feet.
Benini has her own vision of that fateful day.
"There might've been a tsunami-like wave, or maybe an earthquake, that swept across the structures and pulled everything out to sea," she says. "That's the movie in our minds."
Rewriting ancient history
Each summer, a clearer picture of Aenaria emerges – although there remains some confusion as to what the ancient settlement actually was.
Were the ruins a city? Benini explains: "[The name] Aenaria referred to the island as a whole. So it's not that we haven't found the Aenaria mentioned by the ancients: Aenaria is Ischia – that's unquestionable. We've found a Roman-era settlement with a port that was well connected to the entire Mediterranean and, presumably, had an inhabited area behind it."
Radiocarbon dating of the quay's wooden stakes puts it at roughly 75 to AD30. The discovery of the shipwreck in 2020 unearthed naval equipment, like a bronze mooring post in the shape of a swan's head – typical of Roman military vessels – as well as items like lead sling bullets, suggesting that Aenaria may have been a crucial military outpost controlling the Gulf of Naples. Recovered amphorae also suggest Aenaria's wide reach; the 142 clay variants come from 12 Mediterranean production zones, stretching from Campania to the Levant. The most recent analyses showed that the site's lead came from Spain, painting an even clearer picture of how deep Aenaria's intercultural network was.
"It's likely there was also a small town nearby [the port]," says Benini. "We found thousands of mosaic tiles, roof tiles, wooden combs for hair, needles for mending nets, decorated plaster… These aren't just ship or trade related. They suggest a residential area."
Since the initial digs, two seaside villas have been uncovered, with grand tunnel-like galleries, alcoves and traces of Roman baths.
"The ruins of Aenaria give insight into the lives of the ancient people who lived on the island," says Polverino. "It was truly the centre of trade in the Mediterranean. You understand how important Ischia was – and still is – without ever forgetting the history that lies behind it."
Looking ahead
I ask Benini what she hopes to find this summer.
"My dream is to find the foundations of the residential city," she says. "If we've found the port, then we know there was a city."
The team hopes to introduce Lidar, Georadar and sub-bottom profiler instruments into the digs, but Benini points out, "That's expensive. We need more investors."
Funding aside, the true challenge for those involved has always been reaching a wider audience: "[We are] sharing a part of Ischia's history that, until now, had been missing," says Benini.
"What we've found is 99% underwater. It's like Pompeii: until it was excavated in the 1700s, no one knew it was there. But that doesn't mean it wasn't important or didn't exist."
"We rewrote history," adds Lauro. "They gave up on finding something in the bay. But we found something."
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With deep, emotional connections to Scotland, its own tartan and a fish and chips festival, the town of Barga is an unlikely "Brigadoon" in the Tuscan hills.
In the medieval hilltop town of Barga in Tuscany's Serchio Valley, between the marble-white Apuan Alps and chestnut forests of the Apennine mountains, many things can take the unwitting visitor by surprise.
The blue and white saltire of the St Andrew's Cross, Scotland's national flag, hangs above steep, cobblestone lanes scented by wisteria. Snippets of thick Scottish accents muddle with the rhythmic flow of Italian. At the right time of year, bagpipes drone through the air. Come towards the end of January, and, if you're lucky, you'll hear the poetry of Robert Burns and get the chance to sample haggis.
Year-round, meanwhile, the Scottish staple of vigorously fried fish and chips is on the menu of local restaurants. And misty-eyed locals will not hesitate to tell you about their deep, emotional connections to Glasgow and the Ayrshire towns of Ardrossan and Largs on Scotland's west coast.
All who visit agree that Barga has a distinctive story – the local tourist board proudly proclaims it as "the most Scottish town in Italy" – and when I visited this fantasy-like "Brigadoon" to learn about its curious history, the Sun was a golden flare in the sky, the surrounding mountains sparkled and the streets were empty. The quintessential Tuscan town walls; Renaissance-era stone houses; and lemon, orange and pink villas couldn't have felt further away from the world I'd just left behind in Glasgow.
"A few years ago, we thought we'd find out how deep our connections are," said Maria Elisa Caproni, a historian and the town's librarian who had volunteered to lead me through Barga's Scottish-Italian timeline. It was a question that the town felt important to answer. "Of our 9,000 inhabitants, we calculated that about 60% have Scottish roots. It's incredible, really."
Like so many other locals, Caproni has a typical story. Struggling to find work in the Serchio Valley, family on her grandfather's side migrated from Barga to Scotland in the early 20th Century. After making money in Scotland's prospering shipyards and forestry industries, many Barghese returned a few decades later, bringing a love for their adopted homeland and many of its traditions back with them. Straight away, I noticed the connections too: contemporary Scottish art here; a red telephone box there. Earlier, at the town's entrance road, I passed a sign proclaiming Barga's twinning with Prestonpans, Cockenzie, Port Seton and Longiddry – each towns located outside Edinburgh in East Lothian.
Barga was already famous – it was an essential gateway to Rome for pilgrims, merchants and traders – and has a rich history. During the Middle Ages, the surrounding cities of Lucca, Pisa and Modena fought for the town in bitter disputes, as to rule it was to control foot traffic, population flow and – crucially – taxes.
As Caproni tells it, Barga voluntarily gave itself to Florence in 1332 to guarantee its protection, yet remained far enough away from the modern-day Tuscan capital to hold onto its independence and still benefit from advantageous tax concessions. Surveying this history today is a sensory experience: the town's most magnificent building, the Duomo, or Cathedral of San Cristoforo, is a clear sign of Barga's former wealth. The colossal limestone facade is an architectural wonder, inlaid with symbols supposedly implying the presence and influence of the Knights Templar.
"Barga was a little island of Florentine power amid the hills," said Caproni, as we started our walkabout at Porta Reale gate, a liminal space between today's new town and the medieval warren of yesteryear. "But that's just the beginning of our story."
For five centuries under Florentine rule, Barga remained squeezed between the Republic of Lucca and the House of Este, a European dynasty with fiefdoms in today's Emilia-Romagna region, including Modena and Ferrara. Then the unification of Italy in 1861 changed everything. Following the fall of Italy's ancient city-states, Barga lost its privileges, the town's silk industry declined and waves of migration to the US and the UK began. A chief beneficiary of this Barghese labour? Scotland's west coast. Many had planned to sail to the US from there, but sufficient work saw plenty go no further on their journeys.
Soon, an influx of Italians began working along the fragmented seaboard. Then, opportunities beckoned through the opening of Italian restaurants, ice cream parlours (including Scotland's most famous, Nardini's in Largs) and fish and chip shops. Ever since, there has been a flow of people, families and stories between the Tuscan hills and Firth of Clyde coast.
A place that encapsulates this story is Giro Di Boa, a fish restaurant run by Riccardo Orsucci, originally from Barga, and his wife, Adele Pierotti, originally from Glasgow. For much of their lives, the Scottish Italian, Italian Scottish couple have been at the heart of this cross-cultural exchange, having lived, worked and brought up the next generation of Barghese Scots in both countries.
"It's common for someone to turn round and speak to you in a very clear Ayrshire or Glaswegian accent here," said Pierotti. "It can get confusing for Italians too. Sometimes, they feel like they are no longer in Italy. Sometimes, I used to think that too." The Scots' vernacular was such a dominant currency a few years ago, Caproni told me, that some shops had signs on their doors reading, "Qui si parla italiano" (Italian spoken here).
Orsucci and Pierotti met in the 1970s at Glasgow's Casa d'Italia, an Italian social club for immigrants in the city's wealthy Park Circus. At the same time, Orsucci had opened a restaurant, and it was, he told me, the only Italian spot that held a traditional Burns Supper, an annual celebration of Scotland's national bard on 25 January. Now, Giro Di Boa is perhaps one of the few restaurants in Tuscany that holds a Burns Night. Certainly, it's the only one in Barga. "I like to keep these traditions alive," he said.
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The chalk-written menu outside the couple's restaurant shows dishes including polpo all Siciliana (Sicilian-style octopus), spada e pistacchi (swordfish and pistachios) – and, rather conspicuously in English, fried fish and chips. These days, that meal is also the main feature of the two-week-long Sagra del Pesce e Patate (Fish & Chips Festival) for those with an appreciation of Scotland's deep-fried food culture. For two weeks each August, the town crowds around trestle tables to enjoy the simple business of paper plates loaded with crisp battered fish, fat chips, pots of mayonnaise and slices of lemon. This being Tuscany, bottles of Chianti also feature heavily. Perhaps, the feeling is that Barga's stories of migration and homecoming are best brought to life through Britain's iconic dish.
The most obvious similarity between Italy and Scotland in Barga is a shared love of good food and good times, but it is also apparent through art. That contemporary Scottish artist John Bellany, whose father and grandfather were fishermen, bought a house in Barga and was inspired by his surroundings is another breadcrumb to follow. His works are on display at the National Galleries of Scotland in Edinburgh, but his oil paintings of street scenes awash in typical Tuscan hues have also resulted in a permanent gallery opening in what became his adopted second home.
"When he arrived in Barga, his pictures exploded with colour – red, yellow and green – and it's clear the impression our town had on his creative spirit," said Caterina Campani, Mayor of Barga, whom I met later that day. "In part thanks to him, we have become a creative town of artists. More galleries open each year, and there is not only a strong emotional connection between here and Scotland but an economic one too. Many third- and fourth-generation Italian Scots have second homes now. So, Scotland is in our DNA. For us, it's a badge of honour."
It would be a mistake to think the similarities between the two places end there. There's an aesthetic dimension thanks to the Barga tartan (woven in green, white and red to represent the tricolour of the Italian flag), and Italy's other religion, football, has helped further unite the Barghese with Scotland.
Outside, on a corner of Via Borgo, I found the supporters' bar of the amateur football club, the Gatti Randagi, or the Stray Cats. It's no coincidence they play in the same green and white hoops as Celtic FC, who are based in the east end of Glasgow. In years to come, the hope is that in an increasingly divided world, these bonds will grow even stronger.
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Serious pollution incidents by water companies have risen 60% in a year, according to the Environment Agency.
In total there were 2,801 pollution incidents in England in 2024, the highest on record, compared with 2,174 in 2023.
Of these, 75 were considered to pose "serious or persistent" harm to fisheries, drinking water and human health - up from 47 last year.
The Public Accounts Committee - a cross party group of MPs - called the level of pollution "woeful" and said regulators were "missing in action" in holding the industry to account.
The data from the Environment Agency comes ahead of a landmark review of the water industry, to be published on Monday.
The chair of the Water Commission, Sir John Cunliffe, will lay out his recommendations on how to improve the environmental and financial performance of the sector.
Reporting by the Guardian on Friday suggested this could include scrapping the regulator, Ofwat, altogether. A government spokesperson said: "We are not going to comment on speculation."
But speaking on the pollution data, Steve Reed, the Environment Secretary said: "These figures are disgraceful and are a stark reminder of how years of underinvestment and weak regulation have led to record levels of sewage polluting our rivers."
Industry group Water UK acknowledged that the performance of some companies had not been good enough.
"The Environment Agency is right to highlight underinvestment in infrastructure and maintenance as the major causes of these results," said a Water UK spokesperson.
The industry was set a target to reduce pollution incidents by 40% by 2025 against 2016 levels. But this has been significantly missed - levels reported in 2024 were more than double the original EA target.
Every year the Environment Agency records the number of times pollution such as untreated sewage is released from water company sites such as treatment works into the country's waterways.
Just three companies were responsible for the vast majority of the most serious incidents - Thames Water (33), Southern Water (15) and Yorkshire Water (13).
"These figures expose a brutal truth. Serious pollution incidents are rising, sewage discharges remain rampant, and our rivers are spiralling toward ecological collapse. This is not just regulatory failure; it is a national disgrace," said River Action CEO James Wallace.
"Thames Water, the most egregious polluter, should be put into special administration to start the reset," he added.
The company saw their levels of serious pollution double, and were the worst performer for reporting pollution events to the regulator.
England has a combined sewage system which means both rainfall and sewage are processed through the same system. Last year, rainfall levels were up, which could have overwhelmed some water company infrastructure.
However, despite variations in rainfall, discharges that result in serious pollution are a breach of their permits and legal obligations.
Many incidents are reported to the Environment Agency by the companies themselves, but of the 4,000 inspections carried out last year by the regulator it found nearly a quarter of sites were in breach of their permits.
Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown, head of the Public Accounts Committee which has published its report into the sector, strongly criticised the government and Agency for being "missing in action".
"Regulators are overwhelmed by the number of prosecutions and appear unable to deter companies from acting unlawfully. Government must act now to strengthen regulators and support their efforts to hold companies to account," he said.
The Committee said that the continued incidents are a result of the regulators - the Environment Agency and Ofwat - "fail[ing] to ensure water companies maintain vital infrastructure".
It is estimated that at current rates it would take companies 700 years to replace the entire water mains network.
Water UK said the failing infrastructure was as a result of the regulator refusing to allow the sector to raise bills to make the necessary investments.
"Investment in the sector has been suppressed with Ofwat prioritising short -term cuts to people's water bills over the long-term resilience of the network. This is finally being put right, with a record £104 billion investment over the next 5-years," the industry body spokesperson said.
As a result of this investment consumer bills are expected to rise on average by £123 annually - although for Southern Water customers this could be as much as £224.
But Sir Geoffrey told the BBC the lack of investment was the fault of the industry.
"I think over a number of years the water companies have been taking money out of the water system and channelling it away to their investors making their debts higher. Meaning, us, the customers are having a huge cost of that interest.
"Instead of paying that money towards improving capital investment, improving the capacity of sewage treatment plants or renewing leaky pipes," he said.
On Monday, Sir Jon Cunliffe, the head of the Water Commission will publish his recommendations into how the government might turn things around.
In his preliminary findings last month he echoed the conclusions of the PAC that there were "deep-rooted, systemic and interlocking failures", but was most critical of the regulators - the Environment Agency, Defra and Ofwat - for not providing proper oversight.
"We really need a regulator that is close to companies, that oversees them and monitors them continuously, as we do in financial services with the banks – not just so they can intervene early… but so they can support companies to improve," he told BBC Breakfast in June.
His recommendations next week could include an overhaul or significant changes to those regulators.
Long before our reliance on air-conditioning, Dubai's old town kept people's homes cool using a combination of clever techniques to lower the temperature. The same techniques are being revived again today.
There's no heat like the heat of a Dubai afternoon. It is relentless – and often reaches deadly temperatures. But there's a little-known part of the city where you can cool down, and do so the old-fashioned way, without air conditioning.
As I step out of the heat and into the narrow lanes of the Al Fahidi Historical Neighbourhood, part of Old Dubai, I find refuge from the midday Sun. The shaded alleys here, with their high walls, seem to conjure a cool breeze from nowhere. A kind of merciful magic. Desert winds cooled and somehow tamed. The people who built this place really knew what they were doing.
Above me, I see four storey-tall wind towers rising against the sky – ingenious structures that once cooled dwellings below. Today here in Dubai, they are home to pigeons. In this calm, more modest part of the city, luxury gives way to creativity and functionality. In the architecture of the streets, you can read the environmental wisdom of a people who worked out how to survive the desert.
Parts of the Al Fahidi Historical Neighbourhood date to the 1700s. But the passively cooled, heatwave-resistant designs of buildings here are only becoming more relevant today. They are inspiring contemporary architecture – and even entire cities. Urban planners are turning to places like Old Dubai for inspiration as they rush to respond to climate change and the threat of rising global temperatures.
And no wonder. If clever architecture can keep people in Dubai cool, could it help keep the rest of us cool too?
Last year, temperatures in Dubai reached a scorching 51C and outdoor "feels like" temperatures – which take humidity into account – were as high as 62C. Air conditioning is widespread in the United Arab Emirates' (UAE), accounting for more than 70% of electricity consumption in the country during the summer months. However, proponents of traditional, passive cooling techniques say these tried and tested approaches to shading buildings and managing air flow could help people beat the heat without racking up massive electricity bills.
"The Emiratis built houses that were completely desert-proof," says Noor Ahmed, my tour guide. "Wind towers were used to catch the cool air from outside and drive out the hot air from inside," he adds. Gesturing at the labyrinthine alleyways of the old town, Ahmed points out how the high walls protect pedestrians from the blistering sun.
After Old Dubai emerged from the sands of time in the 1700s, it became a popular residential area when the ancestors of today's Emiratis transitioned from a nomadic to a more settled lifestyle along the Dubai Creek, a natural saltwater inlet that runs through the city.
The city's original inhabitants designed ingenious homes that could withstand the harsh climate of the Arabian Desert. They used technologies such as wind towers or wind-catchers known as barjeels, enclosed courtyards, latticed windows called mashrabiyas, coral stone houses, and narrow walkways called sikkas.
"The beauty of Al Fahidi's architecture lies in the fact that it uses several passive cooling techniques that work in tandem to keep the neighbourhood cool," says Ahmed Al-Jafflah, senior cultural speaker at Dubai's Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Centre for Cultural Understanding, a nonprofit organisation that promotes Emirati culture and history. "Our ancestors built a holistic architectural system that optimised wind quality, enhanced shade and minimised exposure to the Sun – all of which were crucial to maintaining comfortable temperatures in Old Dubai," he adds.
Barjeels, or traditional wind towers mounted on rooftops, create natural ventilation and cooling inside buildings by capturing breezes at a higher elevation and redirecting them inside. That cool air is then circulated inside the building while warm air rises and leaves. In some cases, this effect is enough to reduce internal temperatures by nearly 10C.
"Barjeels are one of the most effective approaches to cooling houses in the Gulf region," says Vrushali Mhatre, assistant professor in interior architecture and design at the Heriot-Watt University of Dubai. "That is why they have been widely adopted in modern buildings and complexes, including the modern Madinat Jumeirah and Khalifa Al Tjer Mosque, Dubai's Green Mosque that achieved Leed certification [a green building certification developed by the US Green Building Council] in 2016."
Most villas in the Al Fahidi Neighbourhood have inner courtyards that function as thermal regulators, allowing cool air to descend at night and spill into the surrounding rooms. Equipped with high walls, wide eaves and sometimes dense foliage, such courtyards provide protection from dust and sand and minimise Sun exposure. A study in Spain found that this form of architecture could lower a dwelling's cooling demands by up to 18%. Furthermore, the villa walls in the Al Fahidi Neighbourhood feature perforated window screens called mashrabiya that are used to control lighting. One 2024 study that simulated the effect these devices can have found that they could also reduce indoor temperatures by at least 3C.
"Old Dubai courtyards not only offer the comforts of natural light, cool air and shade but also provide a private, secure and tranquil inner space for the residents of the house, thus adhering to the local design principles of privacy and protection," adds Mhatre.
While Emiratis once used light-coloured coral to reflect light and reduce heat absorption by buildings, the UAE now prohibits the extraction of coral, in order to protect marine life. Using lighter colours on building exteriors, however, remains one of the best ways to reduce temperatures inside buildings. Old Dubai buildings also sport features such as cladding and vegetation including tall palms, which help to shade buildings.
"Perhaps the most underrated, but equally essential, passive cooling mechanism at work in Al Fahidi is the sikka", says Al-Jafflah. Sikkas, a traditional Emirati architectural feature, are narrow pedestrian walkways, not broader than 2-3m (6.5-10ft), that run among villas and lead pedestrians to open public spaces. They allow unrestricted circulation of air, often yielding a pleasant breeze from the Dubai Creek. "Tourists love to sit and relax in the sikkas on our walking tours. They are so cool and peaceful," adds Al-Jafflah.
Architects in the UAE have used traditional design principles to create buildings that passively manage extreme heat. Take Masdar City, for example, a well-known urban community on the outskirts of Abu Dhabi that aims to be world-leading in sustainability. The district's urban layout, consisting of closely spaced buildings and narrow streets, maximises shade and harnesses prevailing winds for natural ventilation, lowering ambient temperatures by as much as 10C versus the surrounding environment. The buildings there incorporate passive cooling features, including wind towers and perforated facades, meaning they consume 40% less energy than conventional buildings in Abu Dhabi.
Officials say that such innovations have helped the city to cut its overall energy consumption by 38.4%.
"Masdar City has smartly revived old Emirati design elements that reduce reliance on mechanical cooling," says Sherihan Alshahed, assistant professor of sustainable urban communities at the Arab Academy for Science, Technology & Maritime Transport in Egypt. "Because these techniques are low-cost and low-tech, they are easy to replicate."
As a result, many modern structures in the UAE use traditional architectural designs inspired by the historic buildings of Old Dubai. Madinat Jumeirah, a luxurious complex of residential and commercial buildings in Dubai, has several wind towers and a maze of narrow lanes to improve wind circulation, thereby creating a cooler microclimate.
At Khalifa Al Tjer Mosque, one of the most recent additions to Dubai's skyline, small openings at the top and bottom of its pillars facilitate vertical air movement. "While not a full traditional barjeel, this design cleverly utilises [wind catching technology] in a contemporary scenario, which cools the space without relying entirely on artificial systems," says Mhatre.
Wind towers and their modifications are now a common sight all over the world. From the Royal Chelsea Hospital in London, UK, to Windcatcher House in Utah, USA.
Al Bahr Towers, a commercial complex, in Abu Dhabi are fitted with responsive mashrabiya screens that open and close depending on the position of the sun. This controls the amount of daylight entering the building and reduces glare. Louvre Abu Dhabi, an art museum, also features a mashrabiya-inspired domed ceiling.
Contemporary buildings also make use of courtyard-style layouts, including the Sheikh Zayed Mosque in Abu Dhabi and the City Centre Midrif Shopping Mall in Dubai. They are not uncommon in other parts of the world, either. The Breathing Wall Residence in Thrissur, India, and the Optical Glass House in Hiroshima, Japan, are two examples of how indoor courtyards have been used for passive cooling in very different climatic conditions from those in the Gulf.
"These passive cooling techniques […] can be replicated around the world by customising them to the local climate," says Alshahed. "For example, in the tropics, rain and humidity have to be taken into account, whereas in the temperate regions, significant temperature variations and insulation need to be considered."
The common thread that connects the Old Dubai of the 1700s to modern, energy-efficient structures today is that crucial concept of designing buildings that are responsive to their environment. "Even today, understanding the ambient environment, and designing according to its needs, could contribute to cooling homes sustainably without the use of fossil fuels," says Mhatre.
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Residents have shared their views on plans to build tall wind turbines in East Yorkshire countryside made famous by artist David Hockney's Bigger Trees painting.
The proposed wind farm by Ridge Clean Energy (RCE), near Rudston, would have six turbines, each almost 500ft (152m) tall. Together, they could power about 24,000 homes.
One local resident said the turbines would be an "eyesore" from her kitchen window, while another described them as "the way forward".
RCE project manager Richard Barker said the company had received "mixed opinions as you would expect with something like this".
He added: "But what we want is to engage with people, have them come along. We can introduce the project, our proposals and they can give us their opinions," he added.
The company wants to expand the nearby Three Oaks Energy Park in Haisthorpe, with access to the site from the A614.
A formal application has yet to be submitted, but developers are promising a £5m community benefit fund should it go ahead.
The area, known as Hockney Country, became famous through the artist's painting Bigger Trees, inspired by Woldgate Woods, which he often passed on his way to his studio in Bridlington.
At a meeting about the plans, resident Michelle Foster said: "I don't want it.
"It's going to be an eyesore out of my kitchen window. They haven't given us enough notice."
Diane Trudgett, who lives in Rudston, said the view from her bungalow would overlook the turbines.
"This is why we moved here," she said.
"We saw a book of Hockney paintings when we used to holiday and we would come to see the village. Then we decided we were going to move to the village because of the paintings and the views."
Hockney previously described wind turbines as "big ugly things" that he wouldn't paint. The BBC has approached him for a comment on the latest proposal.
However, some residents think the turbines are a good idea.
"I think [the plans] are good. We need to move with progress now," resident Sue Ezard said.
Michael Marven, who lives just under 1.2 miles (2km) from the proposed turbines and would be able to see the site from his garden, said it was all about "balance".
"It is the way forward and the sign of the times but there are already quite a few turbines around this area," he said.
"It's getting that balance right between completely destroying the visual impact of the countryside to benefitting the environment."
Enthusiastic push
By Paul Murphy
Environment Correspondent
For many years, the upland landscapes of East Yorkshire felt like the poor relation to big-hitters like the Dales or the North Yorkshire Moors.
But David Hockney's decision a decade or more ago to draw inspiration from the rolling Wolds changed all of that.
His work Bigger Trees, which featured Woldgate Woods, brought global attention to this quiet corner of rural England.
There have been attempts to build wind turbines here before, but they met with fierce local opposition from those who wanted to protect "Hockney Country".
Hockney himself was among the objectors. The Ministry of Defence also expressed concerns about risks to low flying aircraft.
This time feels different.
The government has embarked on an enthusiastic push for more green energy and for it to be built more quickly.
The planning process is being streamlined. As the deadline looms for Net Zero objectives, ministers want faster decisions and less paperwork.
These 500ft (152m) tall machines have the potential to dominate the local landscape but they will also come with what developers describe as a community benefit fund worth £5m over the 40-year life of the project.
Local residents, businesses and politicians must now decide whether this is a price worth paying.
This is one of the biggest onshore turbine proposals in England for several years.
But with a government doing everything to encourage this industry this could just be the beginning of a raft of onshore wind proposals.
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Yorkshire's mayors have been awarded more than £2.5m by the government to invest in clean energy for libraries, schools, leisure centres and other public services.
Great British Energy, the government's clean energy company, announced that mayoral authorities across England would receive a share of a £10m grant.
The East Riding, North and West Yorkshire will receive £700,000 to invest in putting cleaner energy into its public services, while South Yorkshire will be given £572,025.
Energy Secretary Ed Miliband said the aim of the scheme was to help reduce energy bills.
He said: "Your local sports hall, library and community centre could have their energy bills cut by Great British Energy, the government's publicly-owned clean energy company.
"Our plans will mean more money can be spent on the services that make working people better off and help strengthen the ties that bind us in our communities."
Clean energy involves switching to energy sources that do not rely on greenhouse gas emissions or other pollutants for their production and use, such as solar panels, wind turbines and hydropower.
In North Yorkshire, the facilities that will benefit include Joseph Rowntree School in New Earswick, Jack Laugher Leisure Centre in Ripon and Whitby Leisure Centre.
North Yorkshire Mayor David Skaith said the money would be put towards "spending less on energy and more on supporting people".
He said: "We need to take action for our communities who suffer the devastation of flooding and for our farmers who face unpredictable weather.
"We are backing exciting projects that change how we heat our homes, produce electricity and grow our food."
'Lower bills and cleaner future'
Meanwhile in South Yorkshire, public spaces to benefit include Rotherham Outdoor Market and libraries, Bullcroft Memorial Hall in Doncaster and Hatchell Wood School, also in Doncaster.
South Yorkshire Mayor Oliver Coppard said the scheme would make the region "cleaner, greener and fairer".
He said: "The Rotherham Outdoor Market scheme is a brilliant example of how innovation can power local adaptation and resilience.
"By reducing emissions and energy costs, we're supporting the stallholders who are the beating heart of the market - helping them grow in the face of rising energy prices and making the market more attractive for both traders and shoppers.
"In Doncaster, solar panels on three local schools won't just save money, they'll help to educate the next generation."
And over in West Yorkshire, the police stations in Pudsey and Stainbeck, Sedbergh Sports Centre in Bradford and South Parade School in Ossett will get clean energy.
Tracy Brabin, Mayor of West Yorkshire, said moving to clean energy was a "key part of our plan to build a net-zero West Yorkshire by 2038".
She said: "This investment will make our public buildings greener, warmer, and cheaper to run – helping us save taxpayers' money and upgrade community spaces across the region."
The BBC has contacted Hull and East Yorkshire Mayor Luke Campbell for more information on which services would benefit from the grant.
Dan McGrail, the CEO of Great British Energy, added the clean energy scheme would make a "lasting positive impact for the country by creating new jobs, lower bills and a cleaner future".
Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.
One of UK's busiest ports will fully reopen on Friday, seven months after a berth was shut due to damage caused by a car ferry docking during a storm.
Two berths at Holyhead, the UK's second busiest passenger port, were damaged in two separate incidents hours before the height of a rare red weather wind warning that battered Wales in December.
The port was closed for five weeks, including at Christmas and new year, as engineers fixed one of the damaged berths before Holyhead partially reopened in January and services resumed to a revised timetable.
The other berth has taken seven months to repair and reopened on Friday with the economic impact of the closures an estimated £500m in lost trade.
"It's the busiest time of year and is really important and timely," said Wales' First Minister Eluned Morgan.
It comes as schoolchildren in Wales will finish their term within the next few days while most Republic of Ireland schools have already closed for the summer.
More than 1.5m people pass through Holyhead every year making it the most popular sea route between the UK mainland and the Republic of Ireland.
Why did Holyhead Port close?
Holyhead's operators have said its closure was after successive ferries made "contact" with berthing terminals at the port just before the height of Storm Darragh in December 2024.
The incidents shut both of Holyhead's terminals because of the "interconnecting nature" of the support structures as the terminals run parallel to each other.
It blocked the busiest and shortest route between the UK mainland and Republic and Ireland over the busy Christmas and new year period.
The 40-day closure, before one berth reopened on 16 January, caused chaos for passengers and truck drivers using the four daily services of both Stena Line and Irish Ferries as people and freight had to find alternative routes over the Irish Sea.
A boss of Stena Line, which runs the port, gave evidence to a Welsh Parliament committee and said berths were designed to "take contact but very slow-speed contact".
"These contacts, maybe of a different magnitude, happen all the time," Stena's head of UK Ports Ian Davies told the Senedd's Economy and Trade Committee.
The port or ferry companies say they would not elaborate on how these specific contacts closed the port despite both the Welsh and UK governments asking.
"Those incidents are now subject to an insurance claim and I can give no further details without prejudicing that insurance claims at this time I'm afraid," Mr Davies told the UK Parliament's Welsh Affairs Committee earlier this year.
Committee chair Ruth Jones MP replied: "That is very frustrating for us but, obviously, we understand where you are coming from."
When Mr Davies was before the Welsh Parliament's economy committee, he was asked by chair Andrew RT Davies was it "not necessarily the storm caused the damage, but the actual seamanship?"
Mr Davies replied to the Senedd committee: "All we can say is there's an ongoing investigation into the actual cause, and part of that is a claim going on."
Ferries that use Holyhead include the 50,000-tonnes Ulysses, which was the world's largest car ferry when it launched in 2000.
Holyhead's terminal five reopened on 16 January and the port has been able to operate its normal daily number of sailings - eight arrivals and eight departures.
But to accommodate that, both Irish Ferries and Stena Line had to adjust their timetables to synchronise arrivals and departures at the only operational berth.
Stena told the Senedd the damage had happened to part of terminal three, which is "predominantly" used by Irish Ferries.
Neither the port operators or the ferry companies would confirm who was taking action against whom. Both Stena Line and Irish Ferries have both declined to comment.
The berthing incidents happened during Storm Darragh - but before the red weather warning for wind kicked in at 03:00 GMT on 7 December.
According to Met Office data, three of the UK's five strongest gusts during Storm Darragh were in north Wales.
That included wind speeds of 79mph (127km/h) at Valley - about eight miles (13km) inland from Holyhead - which is the highest recorded gust on Anglesey for 27 years.
The Health and Safety Executive did not investigate the incidents, while the Marine Accident Investigation Branch made some "preliminary enquiries" into the "maritime aspects" of the crash.
But added in a statement: "The information gathered does not indicate any significant safety issues that would necessitate further investigation at this time."
Mr Davies said there was a "onward-going investigation" about the incidents and the port and ferry operators would review what happened once Holyhead was fully reopened.
Why has it taken so long to fully reopen Holyhead?
Seven months may seem like a long time without half of its berthing capacity but port bosses explained replacing Holyhead's damaged infrastructure was complex.
"The berths are a series of very large steel pile structures... roughly 2m (6ft 7in) in diameter and 50m (164 ft 1in) in total length and driven into the seabed," Mr Davies of Stena explained in his Senedd evidence.
He said the affected structure on terminal three "partially collapsed and had fallen at an angle" so engineers needed to charter specialist barges to get to the site and remove the fallen 120-tonne pile.
Stena needed to design, order, check and fit their new pile and its associated mechanisms.
"It was hoped we could replace the pile in the same pile socket, like replacing a false tooth, but that was not possible," added Mr Davis.
Engineers have had to drive the new pile into the sea bed and test before declaring the berth ready for passenger ferries.
"To be frank, seven months is a short amount of time," said maritime expert Dr Stavros Karamperidis.
"The analogy is having a car accident, insurance companies investigate and might offer money, the other company might dispute that and it goes back and forth.
"I'm sure the authorities have all the information but you can't give that publicly," added Dr Karamperidis, head of Plymouth University's maritime transport research group.
How important is Holyhead Port?
At just over 100 miles (161km) between Holyhead and Dublin, the three-hour and 15 minute crossing from north Wales is the quickest route between the UK mainland and the Republic of Ireland.
With more than 400,000 lorries and 400,000 cars a year using it every year, Holyhead is the second busiest passenger ferry port to Dover.
It is Wales' biggest international transport hub with almost double the amount of annual passengers of Wales' only major airport in Cardiff.
"It is one of the large corridors that connects Wales and the UK to Ireland because of the shortness and frequency of the crossing," Mr Davies told Parliament.
"It adds a dynamic, especially to the just-in-time logistics industry, which perhaps other corridors do not have. I cannot overemphasise how important it is. It is critical."
He added night ferries could create freight lorry convoys of up to three miles (5km) long, such is the strategic importance to both the UK and Republic of Ireland.
"Holyhead is a huge economic driver for us here in Ireland because so much of our exports by sea go through Holyhead into the UK," said Irish government Minister Sean Canney.
He said more than a third of roll-on, roll-off traffic traffic to the Republic of Ireland came through Holyhead, emphasising the importance part of another country is to his nation.
"Both countries rely on Holyhead for stuff coming in and out between the UK and Ireland, it's a huge vein across the Irish Sea," added Canney.
Experts estimate the economic impact of Holyhead Port and its supply chain in north Wales is more than £100m a year with 1,000 jobs locally relying on it.
Bangor University's senior economics lecturer Edward Jones also told Parliament an "additional 1,600 to 1,700 jobs at a national level is dependent" on Holyhead.
A Senedd Committee heard in April the value of trade going through Holyhead during the complete closure was almost £500m less than the year before.
Both the Welsh and Irish government also hoped everyone involved could "learn lessons" on how they react to incidents like this.
Stena Line said: "We would like to thank our staff and delivery partners for their hard work and commitment over the last months.
"Both Terminal 3 and 5 are now in operation for the ferry operators and their customers and we appreciate their patience and support during the repair work."
People are being urged to count the butteries and moths they see to help experts assess the "butterfly emergency".
Conservationists and students from St Swithun's School in Winchester gathered on Magdalen Hill Down in Hampshire to mark the start of the 24-day Big Butterfly Count 2025.
Simon Saville from Butterfly Conservation, which runs the project, said the health of butterfly populations was a "really good indicator" of how well other wildlife was doing.
"If you don't see butterflies then you should be worried and we should be taking action to improve the natural world," he said.
Last year's butterfly count yielded concerning results, with low numbers prompting Butterfly Conversation to declare an "emergency".
The event runs from 18 July to 10 August.
People are encouraged to choose a spot and count the butterflies and moths they see there for 15 minutes per day, logging it on the website or via the app.
"Then our data scientists will get those numbers and crunch the numbers," said Dr Dan Hoare from Butterfly Conservation.
"It's a way of tracking the state of nature every year, reacting to the kind of wild weather rollercoaster that we have now."
There are hopes that, with the warm weather, this year's count could be more positive.
"It's looking really promising," said Dr Hoare.
And it is not just about butterflies, according to site manager Fiona Scully.
"Moths are often underrated but they're still very important for pollination, and there's so many more moths - there's 2,500 species of moth, which vastly outweighs the number of butterflies," she said.
"They're doing a very important job of pollination, and they're also incredibly important in our food chain... they're really needed to support other animals."
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An extra £1.3m will be spend on a biochar scheme in a Shropshire market town.
Shropshire Council's planning application for the pyrolysis plant on Coder Road business park was approved in January.
At a full council meeting on Thursday, members were asked to set aside more money to complete the development, with the total budget increased from £2m to £3.3m.
Fifty-three councillors backed the increase, with 15 against and three abstaining.
The Liberal Democrat-run authority said the increase was due to several reasons, including issues with preparation work for the site, increased construction and machinery costs, and "additional demand for external technical expertise".
The new plant, which used to be home to an anaerobic digester, will process biochar, a form of charcoal.
The renewable energy and biochar produced can be sold for many uses in agriculture, construction and industry.
A paper delivered to council said that the project would return more than £466,000 within six years. The full £3.3m would be repaired by the 20th year of operation.
Councillor Dawn Hussemann, opposition leader for Reform UK, said members had not been given "sufficient information" to make a decision.
"If I walked into a bank with what I have been given and asked them to decide whether to lend me £1.3m on top of the £2m already agreed, I'd be chased out of their offices," she said.
"We are in a very precarious financial position, as we keep being reminded by the new administration.
"Well in my world, you don't borrow money to go on holiday if you can't pay your rent."
Roger Evans, the Lib Dem portfolio holder for finance, said: "I have criticised this council for many years of not investing to save."
"This is a good investment. It pays for itself within six years, and we're getting hundreds of thousands of pounds during that time.
"This council needs to invest, whether it's borrowed or using its own capital, as long as there is a profit in it. This shows there is."
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Millions of people in England are in regions hit by drought, and further parts of England are at risk of following if dry weather continues, the Environment Agency says.
Parts of eastern Scotland and west Wales are also being closely monitored amid low water levels, according to the water companies there.
So how is your area doing and how close are you to a drought? Here's a look at what's happening around the country, including our rain, rivers and reservoirs.
What is a drought and is there a hosepipe ban in my region?
There is no single definition of drought, but it is ultimately caused by a prolonged period of low rainfall, which has knock-on effects for nature, agriculture and water supplies.
A decision to declare drought is taken based on an assessment of current water levels and long-term weather forecasts.
It is a public sign that water companies might introduce restrictions on water use, such as hosepipe bans, if they aren't already in place.
Areas with hosepipe ban areas don't exactly match drought declarations, because plans to manage water vary between regions.
In England, the North West, Yorkshire, East Midlands and West Midlands are in drought, the Environment Agency says, as shown by the map below.
Most of the rest of the England is in a status of prolonged dry weather, the category below drought.
There are no official droughts currently in Northern Ireland or Wales, although Mid and South Ceredigion in west Wales are in "developing drought".
Scotland does not declare droughts but monitors "water scarcity". Parts of eastern Scotland are in "moderate" scarcity – the second most extreme category – which means there is "clear" environmental impact.
One of the driest springs on record
The main reason for these droughts being declared is the long period of low rainfall.
The UK had its sixth driest spring since records began in 1836.
So there has been less moisture to top up our rivers, reservoirs and rocks below the ground.
If that lack of rainfall continues for a long time, it can strain the water supplies that serve our homes and businesses.
In June there was slightly more rainfall than average for the UK overall, but with a big difference between east and west.
The start of July was drier than usual, but more changeable conditions are forecast for the rest of the month.
Rainfall amounts over the coming months will play a key role in shaping which other regions enter drought, and how quickly.
At the moment roughly average rainfall is expected between now and September, the Met Office says.
Drier rivers for most of the UK
That east-west divide in June rainfall is reflected in monitored river flows across the UK.
At the end of last month, river flows in western Scotland, Northern Ireland, Wales and north-west and south-west England were generally around their normal levels, or even above.
But river flows in many eastern, central and southern areas were about the same as - or even below - previous drought years of 1976, 2011, 2018 and 2022, said Lucy Barker, hydrologist at the UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology (UKCEH).
Soils are also much drier than usual across large parts of the UK, particularly England, UKCEH data shows.
Dry soils harm plant growth, hitting ecosystems and crop production. This dried-out vegetation also brings a higher risk of wildfires.
Drier soils also warm up more quickly, which can amplify heatwaves.
Exceptionally low reservoirs in north England
Reservoirs are a crucial part of water supplies in northern England, Scotland and Wales.
But England's reservoirs are at exceptionally low levels for the time of year in records going back more than 30 years.
Reservoir levels in the North East and North West were near record lows for the end of June.
The main reason for this is, of course, the lack of rain, but a small number of reservoirs can be affected by other factors.
Normally at this time of year, Scottish reservoirs are 84% full. They are currently at 79%, according to Scottish Water.
In Wales, most reservoirs are around normal, Welsh Water said.
Reservoir levels are also about average in Northern Ireland, according to NI Water.
A more mixed picture underground
Much of south-east England relies more heavily on groundwater than reservoirs.
Groundwater originates as rainfall and is naturally stored beneath the surface in the pore spaces and fractures in rocks. Rocks that store lots of groundwater are called aquifers.
It accounts for a third of England's water supply, though this is much higher in the south and east.
That is down to the UK's varied geology, which affects how much water can be stored in the ground.
Water can flow more quickly through some rock types than others, sometimes taking years to respond to current conditions.
This is the case for parts of south and east England, which is why these regions are currently closer to normal.
These groundwater stores "respond more slowly to changes in the climate than rivers, which is why they provide a useful buffer during periods of drought," said Prof Alan MacDonald of the British Geological Survey.
It is why groundwater droughts in the South generally take a longer time to develop but can be longer-lasting if they do occur.
What are the consequences of the dry weather?
People and nature are already feeling the effects.
"It's quite shocking that we are still only [in early] July," Rachel Hallos, vice-president of the National Farmers' Union, told BBC News at the beginning of the month.
"It's like it's the end of August when you look at the ground."
With this little rain, farmers have had to get water onto their crops using irrigation.
That has made things more expensive for them and means there is even less water to go around.
There is widespread concern about the months ahead, Mrs Hallos added.
"What am I going to have to harvest? What am I going to have to feed my livestock over winter?"
And then there is the impact on wildlife.
A spokesman from the bird protection charity RSPB said that a big challenge has been making sure enough water is getting to key wetland habitats so that birds have safe places to nest.
"We need to be thinking about making our sites more resilient to climate change, as these periods of prolonged dry weather become the norm."
And it's not just water-loving birds that are having a hard time. Even in our gardens, common visitors like blackbirds can struggle to find worms and insects on our parched lawns, the RSPB says.
Is climate change to blame for drought?
Droughts are complex phenomena, driven by a mix of natural and human causes.
The Met Office expects the UK to experience drier summers on average in future as the world warms, though there has been no clear trend so far.
But rising temperatures can play a more fundamental role by sapping moisture from the soil via evaporation.
"A warmer atmosphere is thirstier for moisture and this can mean water in the soil, rivers and reservoirs are depleted more effectively, leading to more rapidly onsetting droughts, heatwaves and wildfires," said Richard Allan, professor of climate science at the University of Reading.
But there are other factors that determine whether dry conditions lead to water shortages, including how we use water.
As part of plans to address water shortages, the government is planning nine new reservoirs for England by 2050, in addition to one under construction at Havant Thicket in Hampshire.
But the Environment Agency has warned that measures to tackle water leaks and control water demand - potentially including hosepipe bans and more smart meters - may be needed in England too.
Water companies in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland also said they were taking steps to secure future supplies.
Additional reporting by Dan Wainwright, Christine Jeavans and Muskeen Liddar
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The East and West Midlands have officially entered drought, joining the North West and Yorkshire, after yet another hot and dry spell of weather.
The Environment Agency announcement follows England's driest start to the year since 1976, leaving many rivers across the Midlands at extremely low levels.
Declaring a drought is a public sign that water companies might introduce restrictions on water use if they aren't already in place. That can involve hosepipe bans, which have already started for millions of people in Yorkshire.
Droughts are driven by natural weather patterns, but climate change and our growing use of water are raising the risks of water shortages, the Environment Agency says.
The National Drought Group is made up of the Environment Agency (EA), government, Met Office, water companies and others, and manages preparations for dry conditions in England.
It met on Tuesday morning and announced that it had "stepped up" its response, adding that conditions in the Midlands had deteriorated since early June.
Most of the rest of the England is in a status of prolonged dry weather - the category below drought - except for parts of the South West, East and South East.
There are no official droughts in Northern Ireland or Wales, although Mid and South Ceredigion in west Wales are in "developing drought".
Scotland does not declare droughts but monitors "water scarcity". Parts of eastern Scotland are in "moderate" scarcity – the second most extreme category – which means there is "clear" environmental impact.
In England there is no single definition of drought, but it is ultimately caused by a prolonged period of low rainfall, which has knock-on effects for nature, agriculture and water supplies.
England had its driest spring in more than 100 years, followed by its warmest June on record.
Some areas experienced three heatwaves in quick succession in June and July, with the intense warmth drawing more moisture out of the soil.
So while it may be raining where you live today, it's unlikely to be enough to bring water levels back to normal across the country.
The dry conditions can even be seen from space, with much of England much browner than usual.
That parched ground can have serious impacts on nature and farming.
Standhill Farm in Derbyshire has seen the lowest rainfall for a quarter of a century. The farmer, Robert Thornhill, has been taking meticulous readings of precipitation and grass length across his dairy farm for the last 24 years.
"It has been by far the driest spring by a long way," says Mr Thornhill. "The first quarter of this year was 50% drier than the next driest measurement I've taken."
"Less precipitation means less grass growth," he adds. In fact, there is now so little grass he can only let his 250-strong herd graze overnight, he says.
During the day they've been eating silage – fermented grass he cut on the farm last year. That would normally be used as winter feed so he's eating into his reserves but at least it means the cows can shelter in a barn out of the sun.
But as a result, Mr Thornhill says the milk yield is down almost 10% - a big hit in terms of revenues.
Rivers drying up
The River Derwent in the East Midlands, which provides water for three million people, is at its lowest level ever recorded.
That doesn't mean households will be without water, but low river levels are having serious consequences for the environment.
"It's absolutely concerning," said Matt Gable of the EA in the East Midlands, adding that fish stocks were already taking a hit.
"[The rivers] are such an important part of the ecosystem, and clearly it's not an aquatic ecosystem at the moment when there's no water in it," he said.
"So the longer it goes on, the more the more problematic it will be, and we're starting to see these impacts increase now as climate change begins to bite."
The EA declares droughts in England based on reservoir levels, river flows and how dry the soil is, alongside long-term weather forecasts.
England is in a better place than it was in the infamous drought of 1976, which was preceded by a dry 1975. This year, by contrast, was preceded by a wet 2024, which left water levels in a healthier state.
But in a "reasonable worst-case scenario" - where regions get 80% of their long-term average rainfall - another three regions across parts of central, eastern and southern England could enter drought status by September, according to the EA.
Current long-term forecasts suggest roughly normal levels of rainfall over the next few months, however.
If further droughts are declared, it does not automatically mean that hosepipe bans will be put in place, but these can often follow.
Hosepipe bans have already started for millions of people in Yorkshire.
Bans in other regions, such as parts of Kent, Sussex and the Thames region, will come into effect in the second half of the month, but these places are not in drought status at the moment.
Without further "substantial" rain, some water companies may need to implement further drought measures, including more hosepipe bans, according to evidence given to the National Drought Group.
The group adds that the public can play an important role by reducing water use in homes and gardens, while water companies need to take action to reduce leaks.
"It's about everyone playing a part, whether that's members of the public [or] water companies, everyone working together to deal with this, because we have had one of the driest starts to the year in 50 years," said Water Minister Emma Hardy.
The EA warned last month that England's water supplies could face a shortfall of six billion litres a day by 2055 without dramatic action, driven by rising temperatures, population growth and other factors.
Climate change is expected to lead to drier summers on average, while more intense heatwaves mean more water can be lost via evaporation.
Additional reporting by Jess Carr, Phil Leake and Muskeen Liddar
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The UK is breaking heat and rainfall records increasingly frequently as its climate continues to warm, the Met Office has warned.
The country's changing weather patterns mean the UK now experiences a "notably different" climate to what it was just a few decades ago, its State of the UK Climate report says.
We now have many more very hot days and many fewer extremely cold nights, according to this latest assessment.
It shows just how much global warming caused by the vast emissions of greenhouse gases our civilisation creates is reshaping the country's climate.
Climate change is bringing more severe weather events like storms and flooding - and inevitably the country's changing climate is having an impact on the natural world, with some species suffering.
The report focuses on 2024, when the UK experienced its second-warmest February, warmest May, warmest spring, fifth-warmest December, and fifth-warmest winter since records began in 1884.
The Met Office highlights that some of these records have already been surpassed in 2025 - more evidence of this trend towards more extreme weather.
This summer many parts of the country are in the throes of their third heatwave with very warm weather reaching into Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland as well as southern England.
The first hosepipe ban of the year was imposed in Yorkshire last week following England's warmest June on record, which came after the country's driest and sunniest spring for 132 years.
Yorkshire and the north west of England were declared in official drought by the Environment Agency in June. At least one region is expected to be added to the list when the UK's National Drought Group meets on Tuesday.
Mike Kendon, a Met Office climate scientist and lead author of the State of the UK Climate report, said: "Every year that goes by is another upward step on the warming trajectory our climate is on.
"Observations show that our climate in the UK is now notably different to what it was just a few decades ago."
Wetter as well as hotter weather
As an island squeezed between the vast Atlantic Ocean and continental Europe, the UK sits at the intersection of a whole series of major air masses. That's why the country's climate is so changeable and that variability also makes mapping some climate changes more difficult.
Rainfall patterns fluctuate much more than temperature, the Met Office says, but it finds that, as well as warming up, the UK is also getting wetter, with rainfall increasing significantly during the winter. Between October and March, rainfall in 2015-2024 was 16% higher than in 1961–1990, it says.
Behind all these changes is the relentless rise in average temperatures driven by climate change, the Met Office says. Global temperatures have risen by over 1.3C since the industrial revolution as humans continue to release carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases into the atmosphere at an unprecedented rate.
The Met Office calculates that the UK is warming at a rate of around 0.25C per decade, with the 2015-2024 period 1.24C warmer than the period between 1961-1990.
As the UK's national weather service, the Met Office is the custodian of the Central England Temperature record, the longest-running weather record in the world, based on measurements taken using thermometers and other instruments. It spans from 1659 to the present and it shows that recent warming has far exceeded any observed temperatures in over 300 years.
The last three years have been in the UK's top five warmest on record, with 2024 the fourth warmest year in records dating back to 1884.
Even a small shift in temperatures can significantly increase the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events, as the graph below shows.
Look how, as the distribution of temperatures shifts, those that were previously extreme are brought into the range and new extremes become significantly more likely.
We are often talking about how it used to be colder back in the day. Well that is borne out by the Met Office's data. We really are getting increasingly fewer cold days. The Met Office says there were 14 fewer days with air frosts – when the air temperature falls below zero - in the last decade compared to the period 1931 to 1990.
Flood risk growing
As in recent years, floods and storms caused the worst severe weather damage to the UK last year.
A series of named storms that pummelled the UK beginning in the autumn of 2023 helped cause widespread flooding in early January. That contributed to the wettest winter half year – October 2023 to March 2024 - in over 250 years.
Areas particularly badly hit by flooding included eastern Scotland, Derbyshire, Nottinghamshire and the West Midlands, with some places recording three to four times their usual rainfall for September.
In early January of 2024 the Royal Shakespeare Company had to cancel performances for two evenings in a row because of flooding in Stratford-upon-Avon. In November a wall collapsed in Tenbury Wells in Worcestershire after water in a local brook rose, flooding the town centre.
Met Office Chief Scientist Professor Stephen Belcher said the evidence of the impacts climate change is already bringing showed the urgent need for the UK to adapt to cope with future extremes.
"The climate is likely to continue to change, and we need to prepare for the impacts this will have on the weather we experience," he said.
For the first time this report highlights that UK sea level is rising faster than the global average.
As sea levels continue to rise around the UK, the risk of flooding is only going to increase further, says Dr Svetlana Jevrejeva from the National Oceanography Centre.
"We know from historical events it is only a matter of time until the UK is next in the path of a major storm surge event," she said.
Nature is changing with the climate
Inevitably the UK's changing climate is having an impact on the natural world.
Spring in 2024 was earlier than the average for 12 of the 13 spring events on record and was the earliest in the series from 1999 for both frogspawn appearing and blackbirds nesting.
The timing of seasonal activity in plants and animals is known as phenology and is collected by a network of volunteers coordinated by the Nature's Calendar citizen science project.
The changing pattern of natural events can have a huge impact. Dormice and hedgehogs – two of the UK's most threatened mammals – are particularly affected when the weather is very warm, for example.
Fruits and nuts ripen earlier in hot weather and that means fewer are available in the autumn when these animals are trying to build up the reserves of fat they need to see them through winter.
At the Alice Holt forest research centre outside London they are investigating how our trees and forests can be made more resilient to the country's future climate.
The sad fact is that many of our current tree species just can't cope, says Dr Gail Atkinson, the head of Climate Change Science at the centre.
"After a drought you can see reduced growth, so trees aren't growing as we would expect them to," she says.
"If you look up in the canopy you can see the leaves looking a little bit raggedy and there are other signs of stress as you're walking through the woodland including extreme examples you might find that the trees have actually died."
Studies at Alice Holt show one species that could do well as the UK continues to get hotter and wetter are coastal redwoods from California. It has been growing trees from different latitudes for the last 60 years to see how they fare in the UK climate.
It means that, in the decades to come, the world's tallest trees could become a common sight here in the UK.
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From burnt paws to heatstroke, dogs and other pets can suffer in the heat. Here's how veterinarians recommend keeping them cool.
As heatwaves break out this summer, many pet parents may become concerned about their companions. Our pups may eagerly join us on a sunny trip to the park, but they can have a hard time cooling off and can sustain heat injuries even when temperatures may not feel very hot to humans.
While some other pets, such as cats, generally fare better when it comes to avoiding overheating, they can be at risk of too much Sun too.
That said, it's possible for pets to enjoy time outside safely in the summer. Here's what experts recommend for keeping dogs and cats safe from the dangers of the heat.
Watch out for sudden temperature rises
Heatwaves around the world are becoming longer and more intense due to climate change. But even when the weather isn't blazing hot, pets can get heat injuries, catching owners off guard. Veterinarians say they often see a spike in heat injuries in dogs during late spring. "We can start seeing heatstroke pretty early, even if the weather itself isn't extraordinarily hot," says veterinarian Amanda Cavanagh, who leads urgent care services at the Colorado State University veterinary hospital.
Pet dogs often suffer heat injuries in late spring or early summer for two reasons: their physical fitness is down and they are not acclimatised to the heat. Some owners reduce walks during the colder months, says Katherine Farrell, an emergency and critical care veterinary specialist at the University of California, Davis. Then, when the days warm up, they are eager to take their dogs for a long hike, which can expose them to excessive heat. "They didn't anticipate the weather and their pet is not in that great of shape," says Farrell.
Canines can be conditioned to endure the heat, with military and police dogs often working through the summer heat, notes Cavanagh. But those German Shepherds and Belgian Malinois are exercised throughout the year, maintaining peak physical fitness.
Consider your pet's risk factors
Some dogs are poorly equipped to shed heat. You might be picturing a fluffy Samoyed, but they are not the worst-suited to the summer. Instead, squish-faced or brachycephalic breeds, such as bulldogs, French bulldogs and pugs top the list of dogs most likely to suffer in the Sun. One study found these canines had a risk of heat illness more than four times higher than dogs with longer snouts.
Their short snouts are to blame. Dogs mainly get rid of heat through panting, which moves heat out of their airways and into the environment, explains Cavanagh. The water vapour from their respiratory system evaporates, producing a cooling effect. (While dogs can sweat through their paws, this is of minimal significance for cooling, says Farrell).
"When you open up the mouth of a German Shepherd or a Labrador, you can see right down into their airway," says Cavanagh. "If you open the mouth of a bulldog, all you'll see is a giant tongue and a big soft palate, and it just looks like jowls and tissue back there."
That means they can't open up their airway and get rid of heat. "Having an obstructed airway from being a squishy-face breed is really the highest risk factor," adds Cavanagh.
For some dog breeds, a trip to the groomers may help with heat tolerance, as taking off extra length their coats can help them shed heat more easily, says Farrell.
But always consult your veterinarian for advice on what's best for your dog. While long coats may be warmer, they are more functional than they seem. A double coat, with short hairs beneath a layer of long fur, can insulate a pet from the heat, provided it's well-groomed and free of mats, says Cavanagh. For dogs with these thick double coats, including huskies and malamutes, the insulation they provide works better if the coat is left intact – meaning a shave can actually make them more vulnerable to overheating, says Farrell.
All dog breeds, as well as other furry animals like cats, will benefit from regular brushing to prevent build-up of fur and matting, allowing better airflow and cooling.
Overweight pets are also at greater risk of overheating, adds Farrell (it's estimated that over half of dogs and cats in the US are overweight or obese). Certain medicines can also reduce pets' ability to tolerate heat, she adds.
Go outside prepared
When the weather warms, start with shorter walks and don't push your dog if they are panting heavily: allow them a few weeks to acclimatise to warmer temperatures.
In hot weather it's safer to keep your outings to the early morning and evening, avoiding the middle part of the day. (Read about the science-backed ways to keep yourself cool in a heatwave too). During the midday heat, your pet may not be able to shed the heat they are producing through exercise, leading to a risk of overheating, says Cavanagh.
In general, pets can overheat at air temperatures over about 77F (25C), and this risk is far greater when humidity is over 65%, says Ronald Li, an emergency and critical care veterinary specialist at North Carolina State University. "High humidity in the air negates the ability of dogs to cool down by panting," he says, as the humid air reduces evaporation from the dog's tongue.
Don't leave your pet in the car or any other enclosed space that could easily heat up to dangerous temperatures, adds Cavanagh. Even on a mild, 70F (21C) day, the temperature in a car can climb almost 20F (11C) in just 10 minutes. Conservatories, sunrooms and caravans can pose a similar risk to both dogs and cats. And outdoor cats looking for a warm spot can end up trapped in overheated sheds and greenhouses, so make sure to check them before locking up.
When you do take your dog out, carry water for them and seek shadier spots. Lapping up some water outside recoups water lost through panting and reduces the chance they will guzzle their whole bowl when they get home, which can increase the risk of bloat, a potentially life-threatening condition, says Cavanagh.
And remember to check pavement temperatures. While the pads on dogs' feet may seem tough, they can still suffer burns from hot surfaces, says Farrell, who has seen burned paws in canine patients from walking on a hot pavement. If you can't hold your hand on the ground for 30 seconds, chances are it could burn your pet's paws, she says. Try to stick to places where your pet can walk on cooler surfaces like grass or dirt.
Choose heat gear wisely
If you can't avoid walking on hot pavements, outfitting your dog's paws with boots can help, says Farrell. Be sure to find a good fit, however – ill-fitting ones can create sores on their feet and ankles, adds Cavanagh.
Some pet companies market "cooling vests" designed to cool dogs through evaporation. There is some evidence in military working dogs that these vests can cool down canines – at least during a short bout of physical activity. But Cavanagh cautions that the effect doesn't last long: "They work for the first 10 minutes as they absorb all your heat, and then they're like this hot, wet blanket on top of you."
If your pet has a pink nose or sparse fur, they might benefit from a coat of children's sunscreen in those areas, says Cavanagh. Cats tend to get skin cancer on their less furry parts such as their ear tips and noses, she says, so sunscreen may benefit pets that like to sunbathe, such as felines that sun themselves by windows.
Spot the signs of overheating
One of the earliest signs of overheating in dogs is heavy panting beyond what your pet normally sounds like after some zoomies on a cooler day, says Farrell. Noisier breathing, with snoring or high-pitched sounds, is especially concerning – it could mean the airway is swelling and having difficulty dissipating heat. Cats may also start to breathe with their mouth open when they're too hot or otherwise need medical attention, added Farrell.
Heatstroke sets in when the body temperature becomes dangerously elevated; in canines, that cut off is generally above 105.8F (41C). When pets get this hot, the nervous system is affected, and you might see them appear disorientated or weak and wobbly, says Cavanagh. In dogs, pink gums turn bright red during heat stroke, she adds.
If you see these signs of heatstroke, bring your pet to a veterinarian. If the clinic is more than 10 to 15 minutes journey away, it can help to cool them down at home first, says Farrell – the faster you can bring their temperature down, the lower the risk of serious injuries. A splash of cool water is your best bet – in fact, one 2024 study found that voluntary head dunking in water (by dogs trained to do this by themselves) is more effective than wearing ice packs or wet towels. Hose your pet down with cool water, or dunk them in the bathtub, and run a fan across their wet fur, recommends Farrell.
Still, be careful with very cold water or ice, which can cause blood vessels to get smaller, reducing heat dissipation from the body, says Farrell. "Wide open blood vessels help dissipate heat."
More like this:
• The simple ways cities can adapt to heatwaves
• Why your dog loves to roll in poo
• The complicated truth about a cat’s purr
It's important to take action if you think your pet is overheating. Heatstroke can lead to kidney injuries, bruising and internal bleeding, and brain injuries, says Cavanagh. She has seen dogs with heatstroke hospitalised for days to weeks, and many need blood transfusions. "The biggest challenge with heat stroke is not necessarily cooling the animal back down," says Cavanagh. "Being hot can have consequences to all of the organs."
The vast majority of pets Cavanagh and Farrell see for heatstroke are dogs. "Cats often times don't get heatstroke from being outside or exercising too vigorously because they're kind of smarter than that," says Cavanagh. "They won't run themselves into a heat stroke episode like our Labradors will." Both mentioned, however, that they occasionally treat felines who have suffered heat stroke from getting trapped in the dryer – a risk to be aware of for the heat-loving creatures.
Eager to be at our sides, our canine companions will endure the heat even when it's a risk to their health. It's up to us to prepare them for warm outings and to be on the lookout for signs of overheating.
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Warmer water at the seaside might sound appealing for your holiday dip, but a recent ocean heatwave in the Mediterranean Sea has been so intense scientists fear potentially devastating consequences for marine life.
The temperature of the sea surface regularly passed 30C off the coast of Majorca and elsewhere in late June and early July, in places six or seven degrees above usual.
That's probably warmer than your local leisure centre swimming pool.
It has been the western Med's most extreme marine heatwave ever recorded for the time of year, affecting large areas of the sea for weeks on end.
The heat appears to be cooling off, but some species struggle to cope with such prolonged and intense warmth, with potential knock-on effects for fish stocks.
To give you some idea of these temperatures, most leisure centre swimming pools are heated to roughly 28C. Competitive swimming pools are slightly cooler at 25-28C, World Aquatics says.
Children's pools are a bit warmer, recommended at 29-31C or 30-32C for babies, according to the Swimming Teachers' Association.
Balmy temperatures can pose hidden threats. Harmful bacteria and algae often spread more easily in warmer seawater - which isn't treated with cleaning chemicals like your local pool.
Sea temperatures of 30C or above are not unprecedented in the Med in late summer.
But they are highly unusual for June, according to data from the European Copernicus climate service, Mercator Ocean International, and measurements at Spanish ports.
"What is different this year is that 30C sea temperatures have arrived much earlier, and that means that we can expect the summer to be more intense and longer," said Marta Marcos, associate professor at the University of the Balearic Islands in Spain.
"I grew up here, so we are used to heatwaves, but this has become more and more common and intense."
"We're all very, very surprised at the magnitude of this heatwave," added Aida Alvera-Azcárate, an oceanographer at the University of Liege in Belgium.
"It's a matter of high concern, but this is something we can expect to be happening again in the future."
Marine heatwaves are becoming more intense and longer-lasting as humanity continues to release planet-warming gases into our atmosphere, principally by burning coal, oil and gas.
In fact, the number of days of extreme sea surface heat globally has tripled over the past 80 years, according to research published earlier this year.
"Global warming is the main driver of marine heat waves… it's essentially transferring heat from the atmosphere to the ocean. It's very simple," said Dr Marcos.
The Mediterranean is particularly vulnerable because it's a bit like a bathtub, largely surrounded by continents rather than open ocean.
That means water cannot escape easily, so its surface heats up quickly in the presence of warm air, sunny skies and light winds - as happened in June.
For that reason, the Med is "a climate change hotspot" said Karina von Schuckmann of Mercator Ocean International, a non-profit research organisation.
The heat peaked as June turned to July, after which stronger winds allowed deeper, cooler waters to mix with the warm surface above and bring temperatures down.
But temperatures remain above average and there could be consequences for marine life that we don't yet know about.
Most life has a temperature threshold beyond which it can't survive, though it varies a lot between species and individuals.
But sea creatures can also suffer from prolonged heat exposure, which essentially drains their energy through the summer to a point where they can no longer cope.
"I remember four years ago diving in September at the end of summer, we found skeletons of many, many, many populations," said Emma Cebrian, an ecologist at the Centre for Advanced Studies of Blanes in Spain.
Seaweeds and seagrasses act a bit like the forests of the Mediterranean Sea, home to hundreds of species, as well as locking up planet-warming carbon dioxide.
"Some of them are well adapted to typical Mediterranean warm temperatures, but actually they often cannot withstand marine heatwave conditions, which are becoming more extreme and widespread," said Dr Cebrian.
The heat can also cause what ecologists call "sub-lethal effects", where species essentially go into survival mode and don't reproduce.
"If we start to see ecological impacts, there will almost certainly be impacts on human societies [including] losses of fisheries," warned Dan Smale, senior research fellow at the Marine Biological Association in Plymouth.
"We'll have to wait and see, really, but because the temperatures are so high this early in the summer, it is really alarming."
The fast-warming Med is "a canary in the coal mine for climate change and marine ecosystems," he added.
Excessive ocean heat can also supercharge extreme weather.
Warmer seas mean extra evaporation, adding to the moisture in the atmosphere that can fuel extreme rainfall.
If other conditions are right, that can lead to devastating flooding, as happened in Libya in 2023 and Valencia in 2024.
And warmer waters can reduce the cooling effect that coastal populations would usually get from the sea breeze.
That could make things very uncomfortable if there's another heatwave later in the summer, Dr Marcos warned.
"I'm pretty sure that's going to be horrible."
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As summer warms Istanbul's waters, the megacity's authorities are having to battle a noxious algal bloom dubbed "sea snot".
On a crisp, bright late April day, when the cold poyraz winds blow down from the Black Sea in the north, Koenraad Marinus van Lier contemplates the sea. He lives on Burgazada, an Istanbul islands where cars are forbidden, and the Sea of Marmara wraps around every corner like a big blue hug.
Van Lier is an artist. He is also a swimmer. Every sharp winter morning on the island, he swims in the sea just downhill from his studio, taking long strokes in the cold water. In the summer, the island fills up with weekend tourists and summer house residents, but during the off season, the sound of birds chirping and the soft wind in the fragrant pines comes through clear and strong.
Recently, though, van Lier had to stop swimming. As the water and the weather warmed, a familiar plague returned to the Sea of Marmara. It's early in the season, but van Lier has already seen the mucilage.
The Sea of Marmara is the world's smallest sea. It is also densely settled, highly industrialised, and semi-enclosed. "The Marmara Sea is like a bathtub," van Lier notes. There are only two narrow entry points: the Bosphorus Strait, which leads to the Black Sea, and the Dardanelles Strait, which leads to the Aegean Sea. This makes the sea particularly vulnerable to marine mucilage, also colloquially known as sea snot.
In the early summer of 2021, a plague of mucilage struck the Sea of Marmara. The gunky, sticky ropes of algae hovered like a bad dream on the surface of the water, strangling fish and marine life, leaving a film of bacteria behind. The mucilage is an overgrowth of phytoplankton, which coats the living things in the water with a mucus-like layer of slime that prevent oxygen transfer and can kill fish larvae, eggs, mussels, corals and whatever else comes in its path. The global news leaped on the story and measures were taken to reduce the mucilage. By June 2021, the problem was declared under control. But the mucilage never fully went away. It's been deep under the surface, mucking things up far out of sight of 18 million people who call Istanbul home. And now, it is returning to the surface.
"Mucilage is essentially an ecological situation, an ecological disaster… but the situation we have experienced in the Sea of Marmara in recent years is not natural," says Mustafa Sarı, a professor in the department of water resources management at Bandirma Onyedi̇ Eylül University. According to Sarı, three factors coming together trigger the mucilage.
The first is climate. The world is getting hotter and so is the Sea of Marmara. "The Sea of Marmara is currently 2.5C warmer than the average temperature data of 40 years. The temperature is high," says Sarı. "In other words, it is related to climate and is [in the short term] beyond our control, we cannot control it. I wish we could."
The second is the natural state of the Sea of Marmara. The water that comes in from the Black Sea in the north is low in salt, while the water from the Mediterranean in the south is very salty. The difference in salinity and density means that the water from the two seas has trouble mixing together, creating a transition layer in the Sea of Marmara that limits the vertical circulation of the water. This can trap the mucilage under the top layer. "For this reason, the Sea of Marmara is an ideal environment for ecological events such as mucilage formation," says Sarı. "This is also out of our control."
The third factor, however, is human-made. There are more than 25 million people who live around the Sea of Marmara in and outside of Istanbul, and 50% of their waste goes into the sea without being treated, according to Sari. Seventy percent of the industrial and agricultural waste generated by factories and farms around the Sea of Marmara also goes into the sea without being treated. This pollution disrupts the nitrogen-phosphorus ratio in the water, which is the trigger that tips the balance.
"We can list hundreds of factors related to mucilage, contributing to mucilage, having a share in mucilage formation," says Sarı. "But when these three triggers come together, the catastrophic mucilage that we are experiencing in 2021 and now emerges."
Tahsin Ceylan has seen the disaster up close. He has been diving in the sea since 1985 and shooting underwater images for nearly as long, documenting the wild world that exists under the surface. "The more I get to know the blue world, the more it fascinates me. I try to be the voice and the eyes of that silent world," Ceylan says.
During the pandemic, he saw firsthand the blooming of mucilage underwater that erupted into the globby catastrophe during the summer of 2021. During those days, the thick carpet of mucilage that strangled the sea on the surface was the most visible symptom of the problem, but there was an equally thick layer under the water. In some of Tahsin's images, the sea snot wraps around the seagrass on the ocean floor like a sticky spider web of goo.
"It's a tragedy for bottom-dependent species," says Ceylan. "Unless the waste released into the Marmara Sea is purified, marine life is on the verge of extinction. The breakdown in the ecosystem is now at an irreversible point."
There are plans to address the mucilage, but aren't necessarily new The Marmara Sea Action Plan, consisting of 22 recommended actions, was created in 2021 by many concerned parties after that summer's sea snot bloom, including the Minister of the Environment, the President of the Parliamentary Environment Commission, and the mayors and the governors of the seven provinces that surround the Sea of Marmara.
Suggestions included monitoring all wastewater treatment plants that discharge into the sea, implementing studies that can raise awareness among citizens, and trying to establish the Sea of Marmara as a protected area. The plan was announced on 6 June 2021, and many of the suggestions were put into action. And yet, the mucilage remains.
"What happened in these three years? Unfortunately, we have not been able to reduce the pollution load in the Marmara Sea in three years," says Sari. "In 2021, the rate of advanced biological treatment of domestic waste was 51%, and by 2024, this rate was 51.7%. In other words, progress is not even 1%."
Though everyone came together to agree to the action plan, not everyone has followed through with the implementation. "If you ask me, everyone is responsible together… What interests me more than the reasons for the problems in implementation is why everyone who signed this action plan did not fulfil their responsibilities," says Sari. "We declared a special environmental protection area, great! We formed boards, great! We made decisions, great! We made plans, great! So what are these for? To reduce the pollution load! Were we able to reduce it? We could not reduce it."
In response, the Marmara Municipalities Union, the region's largest local government association, told the BBC: "Since the announcement of the Marmara Sea Action Plan in 2021, many of the commitments made have indeed been fulfilled. These include increased monitoring efforts, stakeholder coordination and public awareness campaigns. However, achieving the plan's full set of targets remains challenging due to factors beyond the control of its signees."
The association says that while several pollution sources have been addressed, insufficiently treated wastewater entering the sea is an ongoing problem and more investment and cooperation is needed to progress further. "Restoring [the sea's] health is essential to improving the quality of life for millions of people," the association says.
There have been other attempts to deal with the mucilage issue. One professor at Bursa Uludağ University is attempting to create "floating islands" that will naturally clean up pollution in the sea. There are also grassroots efforts to draw attention to the problem. A group called the Women Change Makers of Marmara have launched a petition advocating local government officials to take action to get rid of the mucilage and save the Sea of Marmara.
"As women from the Marmara ChangeMakers programme, ecological advocates rooted in the local communities of the Marmara Region, we carry the power to tell the story of the people most affected. We've come to realise that many of those living with the impacts of mucilage either aren't fully aware of the scale of the problem or feel powerless to take action," says Miray Saygı, on behalf of the community. "So our petition is one of the most peaceful and democratic ways to raise awareness and demand accountability from those in power."
The women of the Marmara ChangeMakers are optimistic, which drives their activism. They believe that as long as the steps in their proposal, or in the action plan, are carried out, the situation will improve for the better. "We've seen how quickly people can come together and take action when they truly care… Hope, for us, is action. As long as we continue to speak out, take actions, and demand change, hope is alive – and growing," says Saygı.
In 2021, there was work to clean the mucilage from the sea, but its impact was mostly limited to the mucilage that was visible on the surface. The main solution will be a reduction in the pollution in the sea, and while the majority of that is industrial and should be addressed from authorities, regular consumers could help in their own small way by making sure they use detergents that don't contain phosphorus, for example, which contributes to the pollution in the sea.
Recent sediment cleaning projects in the Gulf of Izmit have already contributed to a reduction in the mucilage in the sea this season. If the temperature of the sea remains around average, the mucilage might remain manageable. That might buy time for the more ambitious solutions, like addressing the vast industrial pollution into the sea.
More like this:
• What happens if Istanbul's water supplies run dry?
• The pollution causing harmful algal blooms
• The hidden ocean pollution killing marine mammals
But as summer arrives in Istanbul, the urgency of the problem is only likely to get worse. And according to Zafer Murat Çetintaş, the secretary general of the Istanbul Environmental Council, the mucilage is spreading. "Mucilage has reached from the [Bosphorus] Strait to the Black Sea. The Black Sea already has a very polluted structure, so this year, with the warming of the waters, the Black Sea coast will also encounter mucilage," warns Çetintaş. The word for the Bosphorus in Turkish is "boǧaz", which means throat. Istanbul's sea is being strangled by snot; now maybe its throat will be too.
Meanwhile, Koenraad Marinus van Lier hasn't been able to swim, as the mucilage creeps back to the shores of Burgazada. And he knows that no matter how much sea snot he sees, it's only a hint of what's really there. The clean-up has been mostly cosmetic, neglecting to clean up the mucilage that gunks up the bottom of the sea.
"The problem is what is not visible," says van Lier. "It's like an iceberg."
So van Lier waits to swim, to return to the sea that buoys his island life. The tourists will flock to Burgazaada in the summer, and perhaps they will go to the island's beaches, but van Lier stays away for now.
"I want to be in the water," says van Lier, but "the sea is dying".
"I'm afraid we're already too late."
--
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* Published10 July 2025
Temperatures are forecast to increase across the UK over the next few days - reaching above the official heatwave threshold in some places for the third time this year.
Highs of 34C are likely on Friday and possibly Saturday, with the sweltering temperatures continuing into early next week.
The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) has extended yellow heat health alerts to cover every region in England, which will remain in place until 10:00 BST on Tuesday 15 July.
The warnings mean that health and social care services could be significantly affected by the weather – through increased demand or a rise in deaths.
Yellow alerts are less serious than the UKHSA's amber alerts, which were issued during previous spells of hot weather this year.
Organisations including the Alzheimer's Society have issued advice on how to keep people safe in the heat.
The charity reiterated warnings that high temperatures can lead to severe health problems for those with dementia.
South-east Wales, central southern and south-east England will likely see the hottest weather with temperatures on Friday, up to 33C forecast.
However, all parts of the UK should expect hotter weather.
It could even be Wales' hottest day of the year so far if the temperature exceeds 30.8C as forecast.
The Scottish Fire and Rescue Service has an "extreme wildfire warning" in place from Friday until Monday, covering different parts of the country across the weekend.
It is urging the public to "think twice" before using anything involving a naked flame. Firefighters in Scotland have had to tackle a number of wildfires during recent warm periods.
This heatwave's peak is unlikely to exceed the UK's highest temperature of the year so far, when 35.8C was reached on 1 July in Faversham, Kent, during the last heatwave.
The Met Office defines a heatwave as when a temperature threshold - which varies by region - being reached or exceeded for at least three consecutive days.
[people looking hot and bothered with mini fans]
Saturday will be another hot and sunny day for most with temperatures in the high twenties and low thirties.
Highs of 33-34C have been forecast in the Midlands, east Wales and parts of central-southern England on Saturday.
Wimbledon's finals in London over the weekend will see temperatures exceeding 30C.
The tennis tournament recorded its hottest opening day (32.2C) this year, but will likely fall just short of the hottest finals day, of 34.1C in 1976.
By Sunday, a cooler north-easterly breeze will develop, shifting the hottest weather into more central areas of England and eastern Wales, before a likely end to the heatwave on Monday or Tuesday.
England has also seen its driest start to the year since 1976, a report from the Environment Agency said.
Reservoir levels fell at nearly three-quarters of sites in June and are below average in all regions.
Yorkshire Water said a hosepipe ban for households will be in place to protect water supplies over the coming weeks.
Watering gardens, cleaning cars, filling paddling pools and other activities using hosepipes will be restricted in the region from Friday.
Meanwhile, the Liberal Democrats called on the Government to open "cool hubs" in public spaces with air conditioning, such as gyms, leisure centres and libraries.
"Cool hubs could provide a lifeline to the most vulnerable in our communities who are struggling in the sweltering conditions," said the party's energy spokesperson Pippa Heylings.
[view over a field with yellow crop, surrounded by green hedges and blue skies overhead]
How unusual is a third summer heatwave?
Comparing heatwaves is difficult because they are location dependant and the current Met Office definition has only been in place since 2019.
A heatwave occurring at some point during the summer is fairly common.
The last time the UK experienced three heatwaves was in 2022, when the highest temperature on record - 40.3C - was observed at Coningsby.
In terms of the number of heatwave days - when at least one location meets the temperature threshold - there have been 25 days so far in 2025.
Only in 1989 and 2018 were there more heatwave days by this point in the year - with 26 and 34 days, respectively, according to data from weather website Starlings Roost Weather, external.
Temperatures over the next few days will be around 7-10C above average for mid-July.
While linking climate change with specific individual extreme weather events can be difficult, scientists say climate change is generally making heatwaves hotter, longer and more frequent.
The head of conservation at the Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Northamptonshire Wildlife Trust, Matt Jackson, told BBC Breakfast the heat has both short- and long-term impacts on wildlife.
An immediate effect is wildlife patterns becoming out of step, he said.
"We get the butterflies which feed the birds, for instance, coming out [at a time that is] out of sync with the bird breeding cycle - so they don't have the amount of food they need to feed their chicks."
However, drought is the "biggest threat" to nature reserve management in the long term, Mr Jackson added.
"It is changing the way our nature reserves work and we're having to try and work out how to adapt to that."
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Inspired by a mountain lion isolated from potential mates, the world's largest wildlife bridge is being built in Los Angeles to allow animals to roam freely.
There had been rumours for a few months in the Hollywood Hills that a 90lb (41kg) beast was skulking through one of Los Angeles's most heavily trafficked parks at night. But it wasn't until a camera captured a photo of a mountain lion in 2012 that scientists could confirm the lore.
P-22, P as in puma (another word for mountain lion), was a 1.5-year-old male the National Park Service determined had journeyed by himself nearly 30 miles (48km), crossing two major freeways, to end up in Griffith Park, in central LA just outside of Hollywood, where he took up permanent residence.
Nearly overnight, P-22 became Los Angeles's newest celebrity – seen as a mascot for some locals. But P-22's story was also one of isolation, for the mountain lion was miles away from others of his species and would likely stay mateless for life.
When Beth Pratt, California regional executive director at the non-profit National Wildlife Federation, first read about P-22, she immediately called Jeff Sikich, a wildlife biologist for the National Park Service.
"He gave me a tour of Griffith Park. And then he talked about not just P-22 but the entire mountain lion population in the Santa Monica Mountains. And P-22 was just one example. The worst example," says Pratt.
Pratt learned from Sikich that while P-22 was rare in that he had survived leaving the western Santa Monica Mountains to cross into the eastern flank of the mountain range, he was not alone in his seclusion. Most of the mountain lions living in the western range were also stuck and inbreeding, because of how the city's transportation infrastructure had evolved.
In fact, road development in Los Angeles has cut off many species from their normal roaming territory, from bobcats to birds. Solitary mountain lions, which seek out "home ranges" of up to 250 sq miles (648 sq km), are among the most affected.
"These roads were just literally dooming this population to extinction because they were trapped and isolated and were inbreeding themselves out of existence, which science was starting to show," says Pratt. "And it was that day [at Griffith] I literally was like, 'Oh my God. We have to do something.'"
• P-22, Hollywood's celebrity mountain lion, ends his reign
Thirteen years later, Los Angeles is gearing up to open the largest wildlife crossing in the world. Set to open in 2026, the 165ft (51m)-longbridge will mirror the desert terrain of the nearby valley and be dotted with rocks and low shrubs to reconnect the Santa Monica Mountain range. It will allow mountain lions and other species, such as coyotes, bobcats and deer, to roam more freely.
Wildlife crossings are used globally as a way to let animals safely cross roads and highways, from migrating red crabs in Australia's Christmas Island to "ecoducts" in the Netherlands used by wild boar, badgers and foxes. But Los Angeles's crossing stands out not just for its magnitude, but its location: in the US's second largest city, often considered the birthplace of the country's modern highway system.
What Pratt didn't know when she first learned of P-22 back in 2012 is that there was already an effort underway in Los Angeles to fix the problem of separated wildlife corridors.
Scientist and researcher Paul Edelman had for decades been putting together an effort to build a bridge between mountain ranges to let animals like pumas range more freely and lower the risk of being run over.
His efforts began in 1989 when he was a consultant for the non-profit The Nature Conservancy and was given a grant by the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy, a state authority, to study what it would take to connect Southern California's three mountain ranges.
"I was just put in a fortunate position to where I was told, 'Okay, here's some money, and you get a year to study this and produce something.' And so I got to devote my working life to studying it and it just very soon became crystal clear what we needed to do," says Edelman, who is now deputy director of natural resources and planning at the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy.
After he submitted the study in 1990, Edelman determined there was a need to build a crossing over the eight lanes of the 101 Freeway at a place in Calabasas called Liberty Canyon, where two parcels of publicly owned land could be connected by a bridge.
Mountain lions are routinely struck and killed by traffic in California. A 2024 report from the University of California, Davis, found that 613 of them were killed on California roads between 2016 and 2023. Vehicle collisions with large animals such as mountain lions and deer also cost $1.64bn (£1.2bn) during that seven-year period, the report noted.
The problem is especially bad near the Santa Monica Mountains, where over 300,000 cars use the 101 Freeway daily, according to Pratt. More than a third of all the mountain lion deaths on roads in California happen on the stretch of highway that crosses through these mountains, says Edelman.
Animal roadkill is an issue that persists across the US but is especially a problem in the Midwest and West where there are large open roads and migrating herds of large animals from elk to deer to wolves, according to Patricia Cramer, founder of US-based non-profit The Wildlife Connectivity Institute, whose PhD was on pumas in Florida.
Cramer studies transportation ecology, which considers how animal crossings can lead to safer roads, fewer accidents, less expensive costs to automobiles and longer lives for animals. She is confident that the new crossing will benefit California's puma population. "Pumas are really widely distributed. They go 10 miles (16.1km) in a night. They will find it, and they'll find it quickly," Cramer says.
"People will say: 'All that money for one structure?' But Beth Pratt and her company, they've brought so much attention to the idea," she adds.
She says that getting communities to invest in wildlife crossings is not just about animal safety though, it also requires buy-in from local communities and state officials. "They have got to care enough to want to save the species of wildlife in their area."
In California, Edelman was so passionate about the cause he would spend the next two decades of his life working on it. To connect the two parcels of state-owned park land on either side of the 101, Edelman needed to buy up land that lined the freeway. This was largely smaller privately owned parcels of land, and he ultimately amassed 12 of these. One was a proposed storage facility, another a planned condo complex, another previously used to keep beehives, he says.
To fund these purchases, Edelman used a combination of state funds from two propositions that passed in 1992 and again in 1996, he says, which provided funds to the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy, as well as proceeds from fees collected at a nearby county landfill. It took 32 years, but by December 2021, Edelman had purchased 439 acres (1.8 sq km) for $16m (£11.7m).
While his work was ongoing, researchers were continuing to document telltale signs of inbreeding among the species, like kinked tails and males having only one descended testicle.
"We never thought it would take that long. But the complexity of it, I guess I never gave up on it," says Edelman. "We got the land, and then somebody came through and said, 'Let's do the bridge.'"
The bridge would take millions more to build. That's where Pratt says she realised she could play a connecting part – as a leader at a non-profit, she could help fundraise through private donations, and she used P-22 as the face of the effort.
It started with tapping into the virality of the puma, whose famous photo in front of the Hollywood sign appeared on front pages and was featured on CBS News' 60 Minutes. The marketing campaign included a fundraising video with an actor from the US version of The Office, a "Ghost Cat" red wine that gave part of its proceed to the #SaveLACougars campaign, a P-22 ugly Christmas sweater that featured LA's notorious traffic, and a limited edition library card.
Pratt established an Instagram account for P-22 with the caption "LA's loneliest bachelor". It generated 15,400 followers. His Facebook page has 27,000 followers. The pages highlight murals dedicated to P-22 across the city, as well as progress on funding for the wildlife crossing. Pratt dubbed P-22 the "Brad Pitt" of pumas.
Pratt said some scientists thought what she was doing was bizarre – turning P-22 into a meme of sorts – but she realised the LA community connected with P-22 on a deep level.
"I think building relationships with animals is actually what we need to be doing, and what humanity has done for a long time," she says.
The story of P-22 captivated donors. The fundraising campaign raised over $100m (£73m) for the crossing with a roughly 50/50 split between public and private funds, according to Pratt. Most of the private funds came from the Annenberg Foundation, Pratt says - leading to the crossing being named after heiress and philanthropist Wallis Annenberg.
Celebrities including Leonardo DiCaprio and Barbra Streisand donated as well as 6,000 individual contributions from people around the globe from Bolivia to Australia, Pratt adds.
To get the crossing built, the #SaveLACougars campaign turned to landscape architect Robert Rock, president of Rock Design Associates, an architecture firm based in Chicago.
Rock says he immediately connected with the project on a personal level.
"Growing up in rural Iowa, hitting a deer is a pretty common thing. It's a traumatic moment when you hit a large animal," he says.
Rock consulted with several experts including wildlife biologists and structural engineers. Their goal was to not only figure out how to build the momentous structure 210ft (64m) long and 174ft (53m) wide, says Rock,but also how to make sure animals would use it. That meant considering everything from the impact of the traffic's sound, the slope of the bridge, planted vegetation, sun glare, burying transmission lines and the colour of the poured concrete.
Fires were also a consideration, because the area frequently burns. In fact, construction was put on pause momentarily in February 2025 after a spot fire burned the freeway for a day and the Palisades fire continued to burn into Malibu nearby, according to Pratt. In 2018, the area was scorched during the Wolseley Fire, which burned 96,949 acres (392 sq km) through the Santa Monica Mountains. Plants growing on the crossing will be watered by sprinklers that can double as ground wetters in the face of future fires.
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The hope is that the crossing will also be an escape route for impacted animals. During the Woolsey fire, conservationists saw the devastating impacts of isolation on mountain lions. Two tagged males perished, according to a report by Associated Press – including one that had escaped the flames but later died of malnourishment with badly burned paws, according to Pratt.
"California is a wildfire state, wildfires are part of the natural ecological function here. So any plant or animal in California has some adaptation to fire, but these are not wildfires," says Pratt. "These are human-caused fire storms that are running hotter, longer, faster, and so the adaptations that once worked for these animals don't work."
Several factors influence how well-used a wildlife crossing is, including its width. One 2022 review of 120 wildlife passes around the world found that wider crossings helped a greater diversity of species to use the crossing effectively. Crossings around 50m (164ft) wide or more were often "ecologically sound and cost-effective solutions", the authors wrote.
However, a well-proportioned wildlife crossing can still face challenges, as animals can be deterred by noise pollution. One 2018 report analysed 20 wildlife crossings in California to see how animals were using them at night, finding that sound-sensitive species – including mountain lions – were less abundant near noisy crossings.
The Wallis Annenberg Wildlife Crossing won't officially open until late 2026, but it has already spurred momentum in the wildlife crossing space, according to Pratt and Rock. Pratt has launched the Wildlife Crossing Fund, with help from Annenberg, where she consults with outside groups how to create similar campaigns for wildlife corridors in places like Washington, Colorado and Florida.
Rock is now working on drafting plans for everything from a salamander crossing down in Jackson, Mississippi, to a crossing for bighorn sheep on the nation's first tribal national park in North Dakota.
In 2021, the US Congress provided funding for a wildlife crossing pilot programme administered by the Federal Highway Administration to reduce wildlife vehicle collisions. While the bill passed by former President Joe Biden is facing defunding under the current administration, ecologists like Cramer hope the programme will become permanent.
In Southern California, wildlife crossings are already growing in popularity. There's also a study underway for a bridge across Los Angeles’s Interstate 5 and 100 miles (161km) north of Los Angeles another crossing was recently funded to cross the 101 Freeway along the Gaviota coastline.
In December 2022, P-22 started exhibiting erratic behaviour. At 12-years-old, the mountain lion began coming closer to houses and humans and attacked and killed a small dog as he was being walked on a leash. When park officials captured him, they found P-22 was suffering from rodenticide and looked like he'd been hit by a car.
The day before they put him down, Pratt said she finally got to meet P-22 face to face, the mountain lion she'd made a central part of her life for the past decade. Separated by a fence, she said she talked to him about the movement he had helped inspire.
"I told him he was a good boy and to look at what we were doing. And not only did this one crossing get built, but all were going to get built because of him," Pratt says.
"It's probably the first time in history that a mountain lion saw a blonde woman sobbing to him out of control."
--
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Pope Leo XIV has renewed his call for a Gaza ceasefire after three people sheltering in the Catholic church in Gaza City were killed in an Israeli strike.
A telegram said the Pope was "deeply saddened to learn of the loss of life and injury caused by the military attack" on the Holy Family Church.
The Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem, which oversees the church, said it was "struck by the Israeli army". Nine other people were wounded, one of whom is in a critical condition in hospital. The parish priest was lightly injured.
Israel's prime minister said it "deeply regrets that a stray ammunition hit" the church and the Israeli military said the incident was under review.
Many displaced families from Gaza's small Christian community have been living in the church compound since the war began after their own homes were destroyed.
While he was alive, the late Pope Francis called them on a near-daily basis.
A video and photos shared with the BBC showed the roof of the Holy Family Church was hit, close to the cross, and that windows were broken.
TV footage showed the Argentine parish priest, Father Gabriele Romanelli, walking unsteadily and checking on a man on a stretcher at the Al-Ahli hospital in Gaza City.
The Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, told the Vatican News website that the Holy Family Church was hit by a tank shell.
"What we know for sure is that a tank, the IDF [Israel Defense Forces] says by mistake, but we are not sure about this. They hit the church directly," he said.
The charity Caritas Jerusalem said the shell hit the church roof, "scattering shrapnel and debris across the yard".
"At the time, some individuals were outside the main building, including two elderly women who were sitting inside our Caritas psychosocial support tent. Both were severely wounded and were transported by ambulance to Al-Ahli Hospital after a 15-minute delay," it said.
"Three young people who had been standing at the entrance of the church were also badly injured and were rushed to the hospital using private vehicles."
Later, the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem announced that "three individuals lost their lives as a result of the injuries sustained and nine others were wounded, including one in critical condition and two in serious condition".
It named those killed as Saad Issa Kostandi Salameh, the 60-year-old parish janitor, Foumia Issa Latif Ayyad, 84, and Najwa Abu Daoud.
The patriarchate said it "strongly condemns this tragedy and this targeting of innocent civilians and of a sacred place".
"However, this tragedy is not greater or more terrible than the many others that have befallen Gaza. Many other innocent civilians have also been harmed, displaced and killed," it added.
The Vatican's secretary of state sent a telegram to the victims saying Pope Leo was deeply saddened by the loss of life and had assured Father Romanelli "and the whole parish community of his spiritual closeness".
"His holiness renews his call for an immediate ceasefire, and he expresses his profound hope for dialogue, reconciliation and enduring peace in the region," it added.
In the evening, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said: "Israel deeply regrets that a stray ammunition hit Gaza's Holy Family Church."
"Every innocent life lost is a tragedy. We share the grief of the families and the faithful."
The IDF said an initial inquiry suggested that "fragments from a shell fired during operational activity in the area hit the church mistakenly".
"The cause of the incident is under review," it added.
Asked by reporters, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said US President Donald Trump had rung Netanyahu to discuss the issue.
"It was a mistake by the Israelis to hit that Catholic church, that's what the prime minister relayed to the president," she said.
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni said: "The attacks against the civilian population that Israel has been carrying out for months are unacceptable."
"No military action can justify such an attitude," she added.
The Greek Orthodox Patriarchate in Jerusalem also condemned the strike, which it called a "flagrant violation of human dignity and a blatant violation of the sanctity of life and the sanctity of religious sites".
It estimated that 600 displaced people were sheltering inside at the time, the majority of whom were children as well as 54 people with special needs.
The Holy Family Church falls within part of Gaza City that the Israeli military has previously told locals to leave.
Caritas Jerusalem said Father Romanelli had urged people to remain in the rooms "due to the presence of Israeli tanks near the church compound and continuous strikes in close proximity".
"If Father Gabriel hadn't warned us to stay indoors, we could have lost 50 to 60 people today. It would have been a massacre," one Caritas staff member said.
More than 20 people are reported to have been killed by Israeli attacks in Gaza on Thursday.
In the north, medical sources said eight men protecting aid lorries and a couple and their five children were among those killed.
Israel launched its war in Gaza in retaliation for the Hamas-led attacks on 7 October 2023, which killed about 1,200 people and led to 251 others being taken hostage.
Israeli attacks have since killed more than 58,500 people in Gaza, according to the Hamas-run health ministry. The ministry's figures are quoted by the UN and others as the most reliable source of statistics available on casualties.
At least 20 people have been killed in a crush at an aid distribution centre in southern Gaza run by the US- and Israel-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), the organisation and a local hospital say.
The GHF said 19 were trampled to death and one was stabbed "amid a chaotic and dangerous surge" at its site in the Khan Younis area. It added that it believed people "armed and affiliated with Hamas" fomented unrest.
But Gaza's Hamas-run Government Media Office denied the claim and accused the GHF of trying to "cover up" a crime.
Nasser hospital in Khan Younis said it had received the bodies of 21 people who died from suffocation as a result of tear gas inhalation and a crush at the aid site.
It is the first time the GHF has confirmed deaths at one of its aid sites.
In a graphic video shared on social media and verified by the BBC, a witness standing on a cart filled with the bodies of six boys and men at Nasser hospital said they had been crushed between fences set up at the GHF site while waiting for food handouts on Wednesday.
"They are children. What is it their fault dying for aid?" the man shouts as he holds up the body of one of the boys.
"What happened is [that] at the door of the aid [site], the foreigners made a fence here and a fence here," he gestured. "The boys went to the front and the people came and stepped on them."
One injured man being treated at the hospital, Mahmoud Fojo, 21, said that when he reached the GHF site he found that contractors were "closing the gates".
"People kept gathering and pressuring each other. When people pushed each other, those who couldn't bear it fell down under the people and got run over," he told Reuters news agency.
"Those who couldn't stand fell under the people and were crushed. Some people started jumping over the wire fence and got wounded."
Another man, Ahmed Abu Omra, said armed contractors standing near the narrow passageways into which the crowds were funnelled had fired "pepper bombs".
The Government Media Office accused the security contractors of causing the crush by closing the gates of the site after thousands of people had gathered in narrow channels, and then firing canisters of tear gas and live rounds towards them.
A GHF spokesperson said the claim was "completely false".
"At no point was tear gas deployed, nor were shots fired into the crowd. Limited use of pepper spray was deployed, only to safeguard against additional loss of life.
"In at least one instance, an American worker physically entered the violent crowd to rescue a child who was being trampled," they added.
At a press briefing later on Wednesday, the first it has staged, GHF spokesperson Chapin Fay said the deadly incident was "instigated by armed Hamas operatives who infiltrated" the crowd and "deliberately incited chaos that led to 20 deaths".
He added that the individual who was stabbed was a medic who had attempted to tackle an armed "Hamas affiliate".
The GHF uses private security contractors to distribute aid from sites in Israeli military zones. Israel and the US say the system is necessary to stop Hamas from stealing aid.
The UN refuses to co-operate with it, describing its set-up as unethical.
There have been almost daily reports of Palestinians being killed while seeking aid since the GHF began operations in late May. Witnesses say most have been shot by Israeli forces.
A spokesperson for the UN human rights office, Thameen Al-Kheetan, told the BBC that it was aware of the reports about Wednesday's incident but did not have any details.
"In general, there is a severe shortage of humanitarian assistance and life-saving aid in Gaza. Hundreds of thousands of hungry people have to gather at only three or four distribution points managed by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation," he said.
"We continue to record reports of shootings or shelling by the Israeli military in the vicinity of these sites. Therefore, increasing desperation and breakdown of law and order are resulting in a high level of chaos."
Kheetan called on Israel, as the occupying power, to "facilitate the full and unimpeded access to Gaza of humanitarian assistance commensurate with the needs of the civilian population".
On Tuesday, the UN human rights office said it had so far recorded 674 killings in the vicinity of the GHF's four sites in southern and central Gaza over the past six weeks. Another 201 killings had been recorded along routes of UN and other aid convoys, it added.
Before Wednesday, the GHF had denied that there had been any deadly incidents in close proximity to its sites and accused the UN of using "false and misleading" figures from Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry.
The Israeli military said last week that it recognised there had been incidents in which civilians had been harmed and that it was working to minimise "possible friction between the population and the [Israeli] forces as much as possible".
The Nasser hospital in southern Gaza has said 24 people have been killed near an aid distribution site.
Palestinians who were present at the site said Israeli troops opened fire as people were trying to access food on Saturday.
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said there were "no known injured individuals" from IDF fire near the site.
Separately, an Israeli military official said warning shots were fired to disperse people who the IDF believed were a threat.
The claims by both sides have not been independently verified. Israel does not allow international news organisations, including the BBC, into Gaza.
Footage seen by the BBC later on Saturday showed what appeared to be a number of body bags at Nasser hospital's courtyard surrounded by nurses and people in blood-stained clothes.
In another video, a man said people were waiting to get aid when they came under targeted fire for five minutes. A paramedic accused Israeli troops of killing in cold blood.
The videos have not been verified by the BBC.
Reuters news agency said it had spoken to witnesses who described people being shot in the head and torso.
There have been almost daily reports of people being killed by Israeli fire while seeking food in Gaza.
Israel imposed a total blockade of aid deliveries to the Gaza Strip in March, and later resumed its military offensive against Hamas, ending a two-month ceasefire. It said it wanted to put pressure on the Palestinian armed group to release Israeli hostages.
Although the blockade was partially eased in late May as warnings grew of a looming famine, there are still severe shortages of food, as well as medicine and fuel.
The UN agency for Palestinian refugees, Unrwa, says there are thousands of malnourished children across the territory, with more cases detected every day.
In addition to allowing in some UN aid lorries, Israel and the US set up a new aid distribution system run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), saying they wanted to prevent Hamas from stealing aid.
On Friday, the UN human rights office said that it had so far recorded 798 aid-related killings, including 615 in the vicinity of the GHF's sites, which are operated by US private security contractors and located inside military zones in southern and central Gaza.
The other 183 killings were recorded near UN and other aid convoys.
The Israeli military said it recognised there had been incidents in which civilians had been harmed and that it was working to minimise "possible friction between the population and the [Israeli] forces as much as possible".
The GHF accused the UN of using "false and misleading" statistics from Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry.
Earlier this month, a former security contractor for the GHF told the BBC he witnessed colleagues opening fire several times on hungry Palestinians who had posed no threat. The GHF said the allegations were categorically false.
Israel launched a military campaign in Gaza in response to Hamas' cross-border attack on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.
At least 57,823 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.
Negotiations between Israel and Hamas in Qatar on a new Gaza ceasefire and hostage release deal are on the brink of collapse, according to Palestinian officials familiar with the details of the discussions.
One senior official told the BBC that Israel had "bought time" during Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's visit to Washington this week and deliberately stalled the process by sending a delegation to Doha with no real authority to make decisions on key points of contention.
They include the withdrawal of Israeli troops and humanitarian aid distribution.
Before he left the US on Thursday, Netanyahu had maintained a positive tone, saying he hoped to complete an agreement "in a few days".
He said the proposed deal would see Hamas release half of the 20 living hostages it is still holding and just over half of the 30 dead hostages during a truce lasting 60 days.
Since last Sunday, Israeli and Hamas negotiators have attended eight rounds of indirect "proximity" talks in separate buildings in Doha.
They have been facilitated by Qatar's Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdul Rahman Al Thani and senior Egyptian intelligence officials, and attended by US envoy Brett McGurk.
The mediators have relayed dozens of verbal and written messages between the Hamas delegation and the Israeli delegation, which has included military, security and political officials.
But on Friday night, Palestinian officials familiar with the negotiations told the BBC they were on the verge of collapse, with the two sides deeply divided on several contentious issues.
They said the most recent discussions had focused on two of those issues: the mechanism for delivering humanitarian aid in Gaza and the extent of the Israeli military withdrawal.
Hamas has insisted that humanitarian assistance must enter Gaza and be distributed via United Nations agencies and international relief organisations.
Israel, on the other hand, is pushing for aid distribution via the controversial Israeli- and US-backed mechanism run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).
According to mediators involved in the process, there has been some limited progress on bridging the divide over this issue. However, no formal agreement has been reached.
The second major sticking point is over the extent of the Israeli withdrawal.
During the fifth round of talks, Israeli negotiators reportedly handed mediators a written message stating that Israel would maintain a limited "buffer zone" inside Gaza that was between 1km and 1.5km (0.6-0.9 miles) deep.
Hamas, according to a Palestinian official who attended at least two of the rounds of talks, viewed this proposal as a possible starting point for compromise.
However, when Hamas requested and received a map outlining Israel's proposed withdrawal zones, the document contradicted the earlier message, showing far deeper military positions. The map was said to indicate buffer zones that were up to 3km (1.8 miles) deep in certain areas and confirmed a continued Israeli presence in vast swathes of territory.
They covered all of the southern city of Rafah, 85% of the village of Khuzaa east of Khan Younis, substantial parts of the northern towns of Beit Lahia and Beit Hanoun, and eastern neighbourhoods of Gaza City, such as Tuffah, Shejaiya and Zeitoun.
Hamas officials saw the map as a bad-faith manoeuvre by Israel, further eroding trust between the sides.
Palestinian officials accused the Israeli delegation of deliberately stalling to create a positive diplomatic backdrop for the Israeli prime minister's recent visit to Washington.
"They were never serious about these talks," one senior Palestinian negotiator told the BBC. "They used these rounds to buy time and project a false image of progress."
The official also claimed that Israel was pursuing a long-term strategy of forced displacement under the guise of humanitarian planning.
He alleged that Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz's plan to move Palestinians to a "humanitarian city" in Rafah was part of a broader effort to permanently relocate them.
"The goal of concentrating civilians near the Egyptian border is to pave the way for their expulsion either across the Rafah crossing into Egypt or out through the sea," the official said.
On Monday, Katz briefed Israeli reporters that he had instructed the military to prepare a plan for a new camp in Rafah that would initially house about 600,000 Palestinians - and eventually the whole 2.1 million population.
According to the plan, the Palestinians would be security screened by Israeli forces before being allowed in and not permitted to leave.
Critics, both domestically and internationally, have condemned the proposal, with human rights groups, academics and lawyers calling it a blueprint for a "concentration camp".
With the talks at a critical juncture, the Palestinian side is calling on the US to intervene more forcefully and pressure Israel to make meaningful concessions.
Without such intervention, mediators warn, the Doha negotiations could collapse entirely.
That is a scenario that would further complicate regional efforts to reach a durable ceasefire and avert a broader humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza.
Diplomats in Doha say there is still a narrow window for compromise, but that the situation remains fragile.
"This process is hanging by a thread," one regional official said. "Unless something changes dramatically and quickly, we may be heading towards a breakdown."
The Israeli military launched a campaign in Gaza in response to the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.
At least 57,823 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.
Iman al-Nouri's youngest son, two-year-old Siraj, woke up crying from hunger on Thursday and asked to get some nutritional supplements.
Siraj's 14-year-old cousin, Sama, agreed to take him and two of his older brothers - Omar, nine, and Amir, five - to the Altayara health clinic in Deir al-Balah, central Gaza.
"The [medical] point was still closed, so they were sitting on the pavement when suddenly we heard the sound of the strike," Iman told a local journalist working for the BBC.
"I went to [my husband] and said: 'Your children, Hatim! They went to the point.'"
Warning: This piece contains graphic descriptions of death and violence
Iman, a 32-year-old mother of five, rushed to the scene after hearing the strike, only to find her sons and niece lying on a donkey cart that was being used to transport casualties to the hospital because there were no ambulances.
Amir and Sama were among the dead, while Omar and Siraj were seriously wounded.
"Omar still had some breath in him. They tried to revive him," Iman recalled. "Omar needed blood, and it took them an hour to get it. They gave it to him, but it was in vain."
"Why are they gone? Why? What did they do wrong?" she asked.
"They had dreams just like any other children in the world. If you gave them a small toy, they'd be so happy. They were just kids."
Iman said Siraj's head was bleeding and he had lost an eye – an image that she cannot now get out of her head.
"He had fractures in his skull and... according to the doctor, not just bleeding, but [a major haemorrhage] on his brain," she added. "How long can he stay like this, living on oxygen? Two are already gone. If only he could help me hold on a little longer."
Tragically, doctors have said they are unable to treat Siraj.
"Since yesterday at 07:00 until now, he's in the same condition. He's still breathing, his chest rises and falls, he still has breath in him. Save him!" she pleaded.
A spokesperson for the US-based aid group Project Hope, which runs the Altayara clinic, told the BBC that the strike happened at around 07:15.
Women and children were waiting outside before it opened at 09:00, in order to be first in line for nutrition and other health services, Dr Mithqal Abutaha said.
CCTV footage of the Israeli air strike shows two men walking along a street, just metres away from a group of women and children. Moments later, there is an explosion next to the men and the air is filled with dust and smoke.
In a graphic video showing the aftermath of the attack, many dead and severely wounded children and adults are seen lying on the ground.
"Please get my daughter an ambulance," one woman calls out as she tends to a young girl. But for many it was too late for help."
Dr Abutaha said 16 people were killed, including 10 children and three women.
The Israeli military said it targeted a "Hamas terrorist" and that it regretted any harm to what it called "uninvolved individuals", while adding that the incident was under review.
Project Hope said the strike was "a blatant violation of international humanitarian law, and a stark reminder that no one and no place is safe in Gaza".
Dr Abutaha said it was "unbearable" when he found out that people were killed "where they [were] seeking their basic humanitarian and human rights".
He questioned the Israeli military's statement on the strike, including its expression of regret, saying that it "cannot bring those patients, those beneficiaries back alive".
He also said that the clinic was a UN-recognised, "deconflicted humanitarian facility", and that no military actions should have taken place nearby.
Iman said her children used to go to the clinic every two or three days to get nutritional supplements because she and Hatim were not able to give them enough food.
"Their father risks his life just to bring them flour. When he goes to Netzarim [military corridor north of Deir al-Balah], my heart breaks. He goes there to bring food or flour."
"Does anyone have anything? There's no food. What else would make a child scream if he didn't want something?"
Israel imposed a total blockade of aid deliveries to Gaza at the start of March and resumed its military offensive against Hamas two weeks later, collapsing a two-month ceasefire. It said it wanted to put pressure on the Palestinian armed group to release Israeli hostages.
Although the blockade was partially eased in late May, amid warnings of a looming famine from global experts, there are still severe shortages of food, as well as medicine and fuel.
The UN agency for Palestinian refugees (Unrwa) says there are thousands of malnourished children across the territory, with more cases detected every day.
Dr Abutaha said Project Hope had also noticed an alarming rise in cases of malnutrition among adults, which they had not observed before in Gaza.
In addition to allowing in some UN aid lorries, Israel and the US helped set up a new aid distribution system run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), saying they wanted to prevent Hamas from stealing aid. But since then, there have been almost daily reports of people being killed by Israeli fire while seeking food.
The UN human rights office said on Friday that it had so far recorded 798 such killings, including 615 in the vicinity of the GHF's sites, which are operated by US private security contractors and located inside military zones in southern and central Gaza. The other 183 killings were recorded near UN and other aid convoys.
The Israeli military said it recognised there had been incidents in which civilians had been harmed and that it was working to minimise "possible friction between the population and the [Israeli] forces as much as possible".
The GHF accused the UN of using "false and misleading" statistics from Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry.
Dr Abutaha called on Israel to allow in enough food, medicine and fuel to meet the basic humanitarian needs of everyone in Gaza, so that "everyone could have a dignified life".
He also expressed concern that people were being given "false hope" that Israel and Hamas could soon agree a new ceasefire deal.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Thursday that an agreement on a 60-day truce and the release of 28 hostages could be just days away.
But Palestinian officials said on Friday night that the indirect talks in Qatar were on the brink of collapse because of significant gaps remaining on issues like Israeli troop withdrawals and Hamas's rejection of an Israeli plan to move all of Gaza's population into a camp in Rafah.
"Every day they talk about a ceasefire, but where is it?" Iman said.
"They've killed us through hunger, through gunfire, through bombs, through air strikes. We've died in every possible way."
"It's better to go to God than stay with any of them. May God give me patience."
Additional reporting by Malak Hassouneh
Mahmoud Abdul Rahman Ahmed says his son, Abdullah, was "searching for a sip of water" when he took the family's jerrycans on Sunday morning and headed as usual to one of the water distribution points in the urban Nuseirat camp, in central Gaza.
"That area was inhabited by displaced people, others who were exhausted by the war, and those who have seen the worst due to the imposed siege and limitations, and the ongoing aggression," Mahmoud said in an interview with a local journalist working for the BBC.
"The children, Abdullah among them, stood in a queue with empty stomachs, empty jerrycans, and thirsty lips," he added.
"Minutes after the children and thirsty people of the camp gathered, the warplanes bombed those children and the water distribution point, without prior notice."
Graphic video filmed by another local journalist and verified by the BBC showed the immediate aftermath of the Israeli strike on a street in the New Camp area of Nuseirat.
He passes two men carrying young children before coming across a destroyed structure, beneath which dozens of yellow plastic jerrycans are clustered.
Women scream as bystanders pull a man from the rubble, while others try to help another man covered in blood. Other adults and children are seen lying motionless nearby.
Al-Awda hospital in Nuseirat said 10 people, including six children, were killed in the strike, and that 16 others were injured.
Along with Abdullah, they named the children who died as Badr al-Din Qaraman, Siraj Khaled Ibrahim, Ibrahim Ashraf Abu Urayban, Karam Ashraf al-Ghussein and Lana Ashraf al-Ghussein.
When asked about the strike, the Israeli military said it had targeted a Palestinian Islamic Jihad "terrorist" but that "as a result of a technical error with the munition, the munition fell dozens of meters from the target".
The military said it was "aware of the claim regarding casualties in the area as a result" and "regrets any harm to uninvolved civilians", adding: "The incident is under review."
However, Mahmoud claimed that Israel "intended to convey a message: it won't allow people to drink even the drinking water that they crave."
He also lamented that dreams of Abdullah and the other children would never be realised.
"They were looking at reality with the hope of it changing, and of becoming like the other children of the world - practicing their normal role of playing, moving, traveling, eating, drinking, and living in safety," he said.
The UN says water shortages in Gaza are worsening due to the lack of fuel and spare parts for desalination, pumping and sanitation facilities, as well as insecurity and inaccessibility due to Israeli military operations against Hamas and evacuation orders.
As a result, many people are receiving less than the emergency standard of 15 litres per day, amounting to what the UN calls "a human-made drought crisis".
"You see children queuing up, by the side of the road, with yellow jerrycans every single morning, waiting for the daily water truck to come and get their five litres [or] 10 litres, of water used for washing, cleaning, cooking, drinking, etc," Sam Rose, the acting Gaza director for the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (Unrwa), told the BBC.
"Every death is a tragedy. This one is particularly emblematic, given the circumstances in which it took place. But it's one of many," he added.
Last Thursday, 10 children and three women were killed as they waited for nutritional supplements outside a clinic in the nearby town of Deir al-Balah.
The Israeli military said it had targeted a Hamas "terrorist" nearby and, as with Sunday's incident, that it regretted harming any civilians.
"We focus on these incidents, but of course these weren't the only children killed in Gaza [on Sunday]," Rose said. "Every single day, since the start of the war, on average of classroom full of children have been killed."
The executive director of the UN children's agency (Unicef), Catherine Russell, meanwhile called both incidents "horrific" and demanded that Israeli authorities "urgently review the rules of engagement and ensure full compliance with international humanitarian law".
Later this week, the UN Security Council will convene to discuss the situation of children in Gaza, following a request by the UK.
However, Israel's permanent representative Danny Danon said council members would be "better served to apply pressure on Hamas for prolonging this conflict".
"The children in Gaza are victims of Hamas, not Israel. Hamas is using them as human shields and the UN is silent," he claimed.
Mahmoud said it was Israel which should be pressured to end the war.
"We have no power and no strength. We are victims. We are civilians just like other people in the world, and we don't own any nuclear weapons or arms or anything," he added.
"This war needs to stop, and so does the ongoing massacre happening in the Gaza Strip."
Ten people, including six children, have been killed in an Israeli air strike while waiting to fill water containers in central Gaza on Sunday, emergency service officials say.
Their bodies were sent to Nuseirat's al-Awda Hospital, which also treated 16 injured people including seven children, a doctor there said.
Eyewitnesses said a drone fired a missile at a crowd queuing with empty jerry cans next to a water tanker in al-Nuseirat refugee camp.
The Israeli military said there had been a "technical error" with a strike targeting an Islamic Jihad "terrorist" that caused the munition to fall dozens of metres from the target. The incident is under review, the military added.
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said it was aware of the "claim regarding casualties in the area as a result", adding that it works to mitigate civilian harm "as much as possible" and "regrets any harm to uninvolved civilians".
Verified video of the aftermath shows dozens of people rushing to help injured people, including children, lying among yellow jerry cans.
BBC Verify was able to pinpoint the location by matching it with the position of nearby rooftops, trees and telegraph poles.
It was filmed early morning local time, going by shadows, on a road about 80m (262ft) south-west of the Nuseirat Junior High School. The site itself is two buildings along from another building listed online as a kindergarten.
Satellite imagery from three weeks ago shows a tanker truck parked across the street.
From the video, it cannot be determined what struck the site and, if it was a malfunctioning Israeli munition, from which direction it had been fired.
The strike came as Israeli aerial attacks across the Gaza Strip have escalated.
A spokesperson for Gaza's Civil Defence Agency said 19 other Palestinians had been killed on Sunday, in three separate strikes on residential buildings in central Gaza and Gaza City.
Separately, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said it had treated more mass casualty cases at its Rafah field hospital in southern Gaza in the last six weeks than in the 12 months before that.
It said that its field hospital in Rafah had received 132 patients "suffering from weapon-related injuries" on Saturday, 31 of whom died.
The "overwhelming majority" of the patients had gunshot wounds, it added, and "all responsive individuals" reported they had been trying to access food distribution sites.
It said that the hospital had treated more than 3,400 weapon-wounded patients and recorded more than 250 deaths since new food distribution sites opened on 27 May - exceeding "all mass casualty cases treated at the hospital" in the year prior.
"The alarming frequency and scale of these mass casualty incidents underscore the horrific conditions civilians in Gaza are enduring," the ICRC said.
On Saturday, southern Gaza's Nasser hospital said 24 people were killed near an aid distribution site, where witnesses said Israeli troops had opened fire as people were trying to access food.
The Israeli military said there were "no known injured individuals" from IDF fire near the site. Separately, a military official said warning shots were fired to disperse people who the IDF believed were a threat.
The UN human rights office said on Friday that it had so far recorded 789 aid-related killings.
It said that of those, 615 were in the vicinity of the US and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF)'s sites, which opened on 27 May and are operated by US private security contractors inside military zones in southern and central Gaza.
The other 183 killings were recorded near UN and other aid convoys.
The Israeli military said it recognised there had been incidents in which civilians had been harmed and that it was working to minimise "possible friction between the population and the [Israeli] forces as much as possible".
The GHF accused the UN of using "false and misleading" statistics from Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry.
GHF boss Johnnie Moore previously told the BBC he was not denying deaths near aid sites, but said "100% of those casualties are being attributed to close proximity to GHF" and that was "not true".
Israel does not allow international news organisations, including the BBC, into Gaza.
Israel launched a military campaign in Gaza in response to Hamas's cross-border attack on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.
At least 57,882 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.
Most of Gaza's population has been displaced multiple times.
More than 90% of homes are estimated to be damaged or destroyed. The healthcare, water, sanitation and hygiene systems have collapsed, and there are shortages of food, fuel, medicine and shelter.
This week, for the first time in 130 days, 75,000 litres of fuel was allowed into Gaza - "far from enough to meet the daily needs of the population and vital civilian aid operations", the United Nations said.
Nine UN agencies warned on Saturday that Gaza's fuel shortage had reached "critical levels", and if fuel ran out, it would affect hospitals, water systems, sanitation networks and bakeries.
"Hospitals are already going dark, maternity, neonatal and intensive care units are failing, and ambulances can no longer move," the UN said.
Additional reporting by Richard Irvine-Brown and Benedict Garman, BBC Verify
An American Israeli man who was held captive by Hamas has told the BBC that US President Donald Trump has the power to secure the release of the remaining hostages and end the war in Gaza.
Keith Siegel, 66, was kidnapped from Kibbutz Kfar Aza during the Hamas-led attacks on Israel on 7 October 2023. He was released this February after 484 days in captivity under a ceasefire deal that Trump helped broker just before he took office.
He was taken along with his wife, Aviva, who was held for 51 days before being freed during an earlier ceasefire.
Mr Siegel was speaking ahead of a meeting between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Trump at the White House on Monday evening.
In an interview in Tel Aviv, he thanked Trump for securing his own release and said the president could now do the same for the remaining 50 hostages, up to 20 of whom are believed to still be alive.
"I believe he has a lot of strength, power and ability to put pressure on those that need to be pressured, on both sides in order to get the agreement, get the deal signed, and get all of hostages back and bring an end to the war," he said.
Trump has said he hopes a new ceasefire and hostage release deal will be agreed this week, but it appears there are still significant gaps between Israel and Hamas.
The two sides resumed indirect talks in Qatar on Sunday evening but they ended after three hours without a breakthrough, according to a Palestinian official.
Before he flew to Washington DC, Netanyahu said he believed his meeting with Trump could "definitely help advance that result we are all hoping for".
It is believed the plan includes the staggered release of 10 living hostages and the bodies of 18 dead hostages in exchange for Palestinians held in Israeli jails.
Hamas said on Friday that it had delivered a "positive response". But a Palestinian official said it had requested several changes, including a US guarantee that hostilities would not resume if negotiations on an end to the war failed - an idea Netanyahu has previously rejected.
Mr Siegel described in vivid detail how Hamas members beat and taunted him, and said he was still haunted by the torture of a female captive he witnessed.
He said Hamas operatives had moved him through the streets of Gaza, sometimes in daylight, to 33 different locations during the course of his captivity.
When asked whether he would support a deal which released the hostages but saw Hamas remain in power in Gaza, he replied: "It's of the highest priority and urgency to get all of the 50 hostages back as soon as possible."
But he continued: "We cannot let Hamas continue to threaten people and to kill and murder people, and I think Hamas is responsible for death on both sides."
Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry says more than 57,000 people have been killed there since Israel launched military operations in response to the 7 October attacks, during which about 1,200 people were killed in Israel and 251 others taken hostage.
I asked Mr Siegel, as he continues to campaign for the release of the remaining hostages, whether his thoughts also focus on the suffering of the Gazan population.
"I believe that peace and security for all people and freedom... are basic human rights that every person deserves," he said.
"I think it's the responsibility of all leadership to ensure that that happens. Any innocent person that is hurt or killed or murdered is something that I hope or I dream will not happen."
Additional reporting by Samantha Granville
A sixth person has been arrested as part of an ongoing investigation in which 18 people have been charged with numerous terror-related offences.
Members of the recently proscribed group Palestine Action are accused of breaking into the Elbit Systems UK site near Bristol on 6 August last year.
A 20-year-old man from London has been taken into custody, alongside the arrests of five other people on Tuesday in connection with the investigation.
The BBC also understands a cordon set up by the Counter Terrorism Policing South East (CTPSE) in St Werburghs, Bristol, on Tuesday is connected to the latest arrests.
Counter Terrorism Policing South East (CTPSE) said the arrested people were detained on suspicion of the commission, preparation and instigation of acts of terrorism, contrary to Section 41 of the Terrorism Act 2000.
Palestine Action allege Elbit Systems UK is involved in the manufacture and supply of weapons to the Israeli military - a claim the company strongly denies.
The six arrested this week - a 66-year-old man from Bristol, a 20-year-old woman from Whitstable in Kent, a 19-year-old man from London, a 27-year-old man from London, a 33-year-old man from London, and a 20-year-old man from London - remain in custody.
Palestine Action was declared a proscribed organisation under the Terrorism Act 2000 on 5 July.
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Five more people have been arrested over an alleged ram-raid at a defence technology firm as part of a pro-Palestine protest.
Members of the recently proscribed group Palestine Action are accused of breaking into the Elbit Systems UK site near Bristol on 6 August last year.
Counter Terrorism Policing South East (CTPSE) said they are accused of causing "extensive damage" to inventory and assaulting employees and two police officers.
Palestine Action allege Elbit Systems UK is involved in the manufacture and supply of weapons to the Israeli military - a claim the company strongly denies.
CTPSE said that on Tuesday the five people were arrested on suspicion of the commission, preparation and instigation of acts of terrorism, contrary to Section 41 of the Terrorism Act 2000.
The five - a 66-year-old man from Bristol, a 20-year-old woman from Whitstable in Kent, a 19-year-old man from London, a 27-year-old man from London, and a 33-year-old man from London - remain in custody.
A total of 10 people were arrested shortly after the incident last year, with a further eight arrested in November.
They have all been charged with various offences and are currently awaiting trial.
Palestine Action became a proscribed organisation under the Terrorism Act 2000 on 5 July.
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At least two people have been killed and a further 27 injured following a Russian air strike on a shopping centre and market in the town of Dobropillia in Ukraine's eastern Donetsk region, officials have said.
More than 50 shops, 300 apartments and eight cars were damaged in the attack on Wednesday evening, regional governor Vadym Filashkin said on Telegram.
In his nightly address, President Volodymyr Zelensky described the strike as "simply horrific" and said there was "no military logic" to it. Russia has not commented.
It comes as the US special envoy to Ukraine, Keith Kellogg, is in Kyiv on a week-long trip to discuss US-Ukrainian co-operation with Zelensky.
"The Russians have again deliberately targeted an area where there are lots of people - a shopping centre in the middle of town," governor Filashkin wrote on Telegram on Wednesday.
"This time with a 500-kg (1,100-pound) air bomb."
Filashkin said the bomb had been dropped at 17:20 local time (14:20 GMT) when the area was busy with people out shopping.
Situated 20km (12 miles) from the frontline, and north-east of the city of Pokrovsk - a focal point of Russia's slow advance through the Donetsk region - Dobropillia has been subject to other attacks since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
In March, a rocket, drone and missile attack killed 11 people in the town, including five children.
Meanwhile, Moscow's Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said Russia's defence ministry had shot down three drones flying towards the capital in the early hours of Thursday morning.
He said emergency service were working at the site of the wreckage but he did not mention casualties. Ukraine has not commented on the strikes.
It comes after US President Donald Trump said on Tuesday that Ukraine should not target Moscow with strikes, after the Financial Times reported that Trump on 4 July had privately encouraged Ukraine to escalate attacks on Russia.
Russia has escalated its drone and missile strikes across Ukraine in recent weeks, killing more than 230 civilians in June, according to the United Nations - the largest number killed in a month during the three years of war.
Trump has been growing increasingly frustrated that his efforts to end the war have not amounted to a ceasefire or a significant breakthrough.
Following a meeting with Nato chief Mark Rutte in Washington on Monday, Trump said he was "disappointed" with Vladimir Putin and the fact that his "very nice phone calls" with the Russian president are often followed by air strikes on Ukraine.
"After that happens three or four times you say: the talk doesn't mean anything," Trump said.
He warned he would impose severe sanctions on Moscow if a peace deal was not reached within 50 days.
The US president also announced that the US would send "top-of-the-line weapons" to Kyiv via Nato countries to ensure "Ukraine can do what it wants to do."
Donald Trump has said that he is disappointed but not done with Vladimir Putin, in an exclusive phone call with the BBC.
The US president was pressed on whether he trusts the Russian leader, and replied: "I trust almost nobody."
Trump was speaking hours after he announced plans to send weapons to Ukraine and warned of severe tariffs on Russia if there was no ceasefire deal in 50 days.
In an interview from the Oval Office, the president also endorsed Nato, having once described it as obsolete, and affirmed his support for the organisation's common defence principle.
The conversation moved on to Nato, which Trump has previously criticised as "obsolete".
He said he did not think that was still the case as Nato "is now becoming the opposite of that" because the alliance was "paying their own bills".
Trump said it was "amazing" that Nato leaders had agreed to ramp up defence spending to 5% of their economic output.
"Nobody thought that was possible."
He said he still believed in collective defence, because it meant smaller countries could defend themselves against larger ones.
Trump said that the leaders of countries including Germany, France and Spain, had come to respect him and his decision making, partly because world leaders believed that there was a "lot of talent" in being elected to the presidency twice.
When asked whether world leaders were at times "obvious in their flattery", Trump replied that he felt they were "just trying to be nice".
In the Oval Office on Monday, Donald Trump was talking tough, announcing new US arms shipments to Ukraine paid for by European governments, and threatening new tariffs which, if imposed, would hit Russia's war chest.
But, back in Moscow, how did the stock exchange react? It rose 2.7%.
That's because Russia had been bracing for even tougher sanctions from President Trump.
"Russia and America are moving towards a new round of confrontation over Ukraine," Monday's edition of the tabloid Moskovsky Komsomolets had warned.
"Trump's Monday surprise will not be pleasant for our country."
It wasn't "pleasant". But Russia will be relieved, for example, that the secondary tariffs against Russia's trading partners will only kick in 50 days from now.
That gives Moscow plenty of time to come up with counter proposals and delay the implementation of sanctions even further.
Nonetheless, Donald Trump's announcement does represent a tougher approach to Russia.
It also reflects his frustration with Vladimir Putin's reluctance to sign a peace deal.
On his return to the White House in January, Donald Trump had made ending Russia's war in Ukraine one of his foreign policy priorities.
For months, Moscow's response was: "Yes, but…"
Yes, Russia said in March, when it welcomed President Trump's proposal for a comprehensive ceasefire. But first, it said Western military aid and intelligence sharing with Kyiv should end, along with Ukrainian military mobilisation.
Yes, Moscow has been insisting, it wants peace. But the "root causes" of the war must be resolved first. The Kremlin views these very differently to how Ukraine and the West see them. It argues that the war is the result of external threats to Russia's security: from Kyiv, Nato, 'the collective West.'
Yet, in February 2022, it wasn't Ukraine, Nato or the West that invaded Russia. It was Moscow that launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine, triggering the largest land war in Europe since World War Two.
For quite some time, the "Yes, but…" approach enabled Moscow to avoid additional US sanctions, while continuing to prosecute the war. Keen to improve bilateral relations with Russia and negotiate a peace deal on Ukraine, the Trump administration prioritised carrots to sticks in its conversations with Russian officials.
Critics of the Kremlin warned that with "Yes, but"… Russia was playing for time. But President Trump hoped he could find a way of persuading Vladimir Putin to do a deal.
The Russian president has appeared in no rush to do so. The Kremlin believes it holds the initiative on the battlefield. It insists it wants peace, but on its terms.
Those terms include an end to Western arms shipments to Ukraine. From Donald Trump's announcement it is clear that is not going to happen.
President Trump claims that he is "not happy" with Vladimir Putin.
But disillusionment is a two-way street. Russia, too, has been falling out of love with America's president. On Monday, Moskovsky Komsomolets wrote:
"[Trump] clearly has delusions of grandeur. And a very big mouth."
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un offered Moscow his "unconditional support" on the war in Ukraine, according to state media reports.
In talks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in North Korea, Kim said that Pyongyang stood by "all the measures taken by the Russian leadership" to tackle the "root cause of the Ukrainian crisis".
Western officials believe Pyongyang has sent an estimated 11,000 troops to Russia over the last year to fight against Ukraine.
Russian President Vladimir Putin launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
According to North Korean state media KCNA news agency, Kim and Lavrov met on Saturday in "an atmosphere full of warm comradely trust".
The North Korean leader also expressed a "firm belief that the Russian army and people would surely win victory in accomplishing the sacred cause of defending the dignity and basic interests of the country".
On Telegram, Russia's foreign ministry posted a video showing the two men shaking hands and greeting each other with a hug.
North Korea's renewed military support for Russia comes as US President Donald Trump has resumed military supplies to Ukraine, after a brief hiatus.
Trump told NBC News on Thursday that he had made a deal with Nato for the US to send Patriot air defence systems to Ukraine via the alliance, after a surge of Russian aerial attacks.
Pyongyang first publicly acknowledged sending troops to Russia in April, months after Ukraine and the West revealed the large-scale troop movement from North Korea to the Russian-Ukrainian frontline.
Kim signed an accord with Russian leader Vladimir Putin in June last year, agreeing to support each other if either country was dealing with "aggression".
Apart from soldiers, North Korea also promised to send thousands of workers to help rebuild Russia's war-torn Kursk region, Moscow's security chief said last month.
Ukrainians are tired, run down by the emotional toll of the invasion and the physical toll of sleepless nights due to air raid sirens, explosions and the screeching sounds of attack drones. "It was a long night," is a common remark you will hear in Kyiv.
So, US President Donald Trump's decision to give Russia 50 days to agree to a ceasefire or face "very severe tariffs… at about 100%" has not gone down well.
One of Ukraine's most prominent politicians, Kyiv Mayor Vitaly Klitschko, asked "why such a delay?" while speaking on German television. Russian attacks had become "more intense", he said, and more people could be killed in that 50-day period.
President Volodymyr Zelensky spoke to Trump after the president said "top-of-the-line weapons" would be sent from the US via Nato partners in Europe, and thanked him for his "willingness to support Ukraine". If implemented, the "secondary tariffs" would hit countries that buy Russia's oil exports.
But Ukrainian MP Kira Rudik says Trump's announcement was "bitttersweet", as it gave Putin another 50 days to continue his deadly bombardment and maintain his offensive on the front line.
"It is very hard and very personal for us because we don't know if some of us will survive for these 50 days," she told the BBC.
More than 230 civilians were killed in Ukraine last month and many more wounded, according to UN human rights monitors - the biggest number for three years, as Russia unleashed record numbers of drone and missile attacks.
Read More:
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Among the weapons being sent to Ukraine are Patriot air defence batteries to help protect cities from attack.
"[There] hasn't been a single fact that would prove Russia wants to stop the war. Ukraine is ready for an unconditional ceasefire, we have done everything by the book," Rudik added.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Tuesday that Trump's announcement was "very serious" and warned such decisions were seen by Kyiv "not as a signal for peace but as a signal to continue the war".
There was little faith in Trump's promises on the streets of Kyiv.
Residents Yuliia and Alisa said they both worried about his relationship with the Kremlin.
"I don't believe it is real help for Ukraine… it's all about his ego," Yuliia told the BBC. "I guess these four years [of Trump's presidency] are going to be very tough for Ukraine."
"Everything that happened during the last six months just proved that nothing will change despite what Trump does or does not say," Alisa added.
Nina, who also lives in Kyiv, was more optimistic that additional weapons sent by the US and paid for by Nato member states in Europe could "speed up the end of the war".
It could have come to an end sooner if Russia had not have been helped by allies like North Korea and China, she said.
Artem, whose father is serving in the Ukrainian army, was "hoping for the best".
"People say a lot, let's see how it goes. I hope that everything will be the way we want. And we want peace, for the war in Ukraine to end, and for all the guys to return alive," he said.
Walking around the wall encircling St Michael's monastery in Kyiv, photos of the fallen stare out at you - some were taken before the war, featuring men and women posing with family members and pets.
As Trump talks of imposing new tariffs on Russia, the war continues - with these images a reminder of the soldiers who will never come home.
President Donald Trump said on Tuesday that Ukraine should not target Moscow with strikes, after the Financial Times reported that Trump on 4 July had privately encouraged Ukraine to escalate attacks on Russia.
Citing anonymous sources, the outlet said Trump also asked if Ukraine could do so if the US provided the country long-range weapons.
But this week, the Republican president said the US was "not looking to do that".
In his call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, Trump was "merely asking a question, not encouraging further killing", the White House told the BBC in a statement.
"He's working tirelessly to stop the killing and end this war", continued press secretary Karoline Leavitt.
On Monday, Trump announced he would send weapons to Ukraine and warned of more tariffs on Russia if the country did not come to a ceasefire deal with Ukraine in 50 days.
The president said the US would impose 100% secondary tariffs targeting Russia's remaining trade partners if a peace deal with Ukraine was not reached in that timeline.
Among the weapons involved in the latest deal, Trump said "everything" including defensive Patriot missiles, though the exact details are not yet known.
Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte said that the US, Europe and Ukraine are still working through the details of the weapons agreed in the deal.
In recent weeks, Russia has escalated its drone and missile attacks in Ukraine, killing more than 230 civilians in June, according to the United Nations - the largest number killed in a month during the three years of war.
Trump's question to Zelensky about whether the country could strike Moscow came a day after a "bad" call between the US president and Putin, according to the Financial Times.
"Volodymyr, can you hit Moscow? . . . Can you hit St Petersburg too?" Trump asked on a separate call with Zelensky after, the outlet reported.
Ukraine has struck several targets deep inside Russia this year with missiles provided by the US and the UK.
Since returning to the White House in January, Trump has pledged to end Russia's war in Ukraine.
But the promise has proven more complicated than expected, and Trump has grown increasingly frustrated with the Russian leader and the lack of progress in ending the conflict.
On Monday, Trump told the BBC that he was "disappointed" in Russian President Vladimir Putin. "But I'm not done with him," he added.
Trump also said he was "working at" getting Putin to put an end to killing in Ukraine.
"We'll have a great conversation. I'll say: 'That's good, I'll think we're close to getting it done,' and then he'll knock down a building in Kyiv."
Two rounds of ceasefire talks between Russia and Ukraine took place earlier this year but no other meetings have been scheduled.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Tuesday that Trump's pledge to raise tariffs and send weapons to Ukraine was seen "not as a signal for peace but as a signal to continue the war".
For the first time since returning to the White House, Donald Trump has pledged to make new weapons available to Ukraine.
Under a new deal, the US will sell weapons to Nato members who will then supply them to Kyiv as it battles Russia's invasion.
The president didn't give too many specifics about what he said was "billions of dollars' worth of military equipment". But when asked if the deal included Patriot air defence batteries and interceptor missiles, he replied "it's everything".
One European country has 17 Patriot systems and "a big portion" would soon be on the way to Ukraine, Trump said.
For Ukraine, a huge country that currently operates handful of batteries - perhaps as few as eight - this is a major step forward, giving Kyiv a chance to expand protection against Russian ballistic and cruise missiles.
Sitting beside the president, the Nato Secretary General, Mark Rutte, hinted at a bigger package.
"It's broader than Patriots," he said.
"It will mean that Ukraine can get its hands on really massive numbers of military equipment, both for air defence, but also missiles, ammunition..."
This is a significant moment.
Less than two weeks ago, there was horror in Kyiv at news that the Pentagon had suspended military shipments to Ukraine, including Patriots.
The decision-making surrounding that announcement remains unclear, but on Monday, Trump once again tried to make light of it, saying it had been made in the knowledge that this deal would be struck.
"We were pretty sure this was going to happen, so we did a little bit of a pause," the president said.
Now, thanks to some tortuous negotiations, many of them involving Rutte, the weapons can continue to flow without Washington picking up the tab.
"We're in for a lot of money," the president said, "and we just don't want to do it any more."
The deal is a personal triumph for Rutte, the "Trump whisperer", who has flattered and encouraged the president, in part by helping to secure a member-wide Nato commitment to spend 5% of GDP on defence.
As they sat side by side in the Oval Office, Rutte continued to flatter Trump, calling the latest deal "really big" and saying it was "totally logical" that European members of Nato pay for it.
Any analysis of Donald Trump's current thinking on Russia risks getting out of date very quickly.
Read too much into an individual tweet, post or off-the-cuff comment by the US president, and the danger is that your conclusions will be contradicted by tomorrow's tweet, post or off-the-cuff comment.
Believe me. I've been there.
As today's edition of the Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper put it: "The US president blows hot and cold…he changes his mind on key issues as easily as he changes shoes."
Recently, though, when it comes to Russia, the White House does appear to have been blowing more cold than hot, which explains the headline in today's edition of Moskovsky Komsomolets: "The Russian-American Chill."
Following Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump's most recent telephone conversation on 3 July – their sixth this year – President Trump revealed that the two leaders "didn't make any progress" towards ending the war in Ukraine.
"I'm not happy about that," he added.
Four days later, President Trump threatened to impose a 10 percent tariff on any country aligned with the BRICS, the group of nations that includes Russia.
On Tuesday, his frustration boiled over with some of his strongest language so far: "We get a lot of bullshit thrown at us by Putin, if you want to know the truth," President Trump said at a cabinet meeting.
"He's very nice all the time, but it turns out to be meaningless."
Today I asked for the Kremlin's reaction.
"We are pretty calm about this," Vladimir Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov told me on a Kremlin conference call for journalists.
"Trump's way of talking is generally quite harsh…we plan to continue our dialogue with Washington to mend our broken bilateral relations…we hope that Trump and his team will continue their efforts to get the peace process back to the realm of diplomacy."
The Kremlin was trying, at least, to sound diplomatic.
The Russian press? It wasn't even trying.
In Komsomolskaya Pravda, a political pundit accused Donald Trump of "an absence of geopolitical achievements".
The tabloid Moskovsky Komsomolets wrote about President Trump's "mercurial temperament, his propensity for sudden moods and chaotic changes of direction".
This week's edition of Arguments and Facts mocked Donald Trump over Elon Musk's new America Party.
"Now every time the US president says 'Make America Great Again' he'll be inadvertently promoting Musk's party," the paper wrote.
This is a sea-change from the previously positive coverage in Russia of the Trump administration. Back in March, a political scientist told Izvestia that "America now has more in common with Russia than Washington does with Brussels or Kyiv".
In May, the business daily Kommersant declared: "Donald Trump's stance couldn't be more advantageous to Moscow.
"He refused to strengthen sanctions against Russia and confirmed his determination to develop large-scale trade with Russia."
The optimism was understandable. Earlier this year, the White House was publicly criticising President Zelensky (not President Putin) and exerting pressure on Kyiv (not Moscow).
The US and Russia had launched bilateral talks to boost their relations.
What's more, President Trump's envoy Steve Witkoff was a frequent visitor to Russia for talks with President Putin. At one of their meetings the Kremlin leader gave him a present to take back for Trump: a portrait of the US president.
It seemed as if Moscow and Washington were destined to forge a new relationship.
But it's been more than two months since Witkoff's last visit. And, in June, Russia announced that the US had cancelled the next round of talks between the two countries aimed at restoring the operations of diplomatic missions.
Meanwhile, President Trump has, it seems, been growing increasingly frustrated by Russia's refusal to agree to a comprehensive ceasefire in Ukraine.
"The Kremlin believes that Trump offers Russia too little and, therefore, the continuation of a 'good quarrel' is better than a 'bad peace' from the point of view of Russia's long-term national interests," wrote Moskovsky Komsomolets today.
In other words, on Ukraine, Vladimir Putin wants more than Trump has been prepared to offer.
More in terms of territory, more in terms of concessions from Kyiv on the future size of Ukraine's army, more in terms of cutting back Western arms supplies to Kyiv.
And, to borrow a Trumpian expression, Vladimir Putin clearly believes that "he holds the cards" right now and can hold out for a better deal.
Is he right? Or is Moscow miscalculating?
Much will depend on what President Trump does next: on the scale of future US military assistance to Ukraine, and on whether the White House decides to strengthen sanctions against Russia.
But keep in mind my caveat.
And that vivid image, in Komsomolskaya Pravda, of Donald Trump changing his shoes.
Only a week ago Russian commentators were celebrating the US government's decision to freeze some military assistance to Ukraine.
So, follow closely. Not only what Donald Trump says on Russia and Ukraine, but the action he takes.
While Russia's overnight drone and missile attacks on Ukraine have hit record levels, on the ground its military is claiming territorial gains.
Last month Russian forces seized 556 sq km (215 sq miles), its biggest land grab this year, according to the open-source DeepState monitoring website in Ukraine. That is an area four times the size of Liverpool and nearly the same size as the city of Chicago.
Russia's goal is to cut off supply routes used by Ukrainian troops in the east, and create a buffer zone inside Ukraine's northern borders.
But its advance remains relatively slow. At this pace it would take more than 70 years to capture the entire country.
* The Sumy region that borders Russia in the north-east
* The two eastern cities of Pokrovsk and Kostyantynivka
* A third front, west of Pokrovsk
Vladimir Putin says he wants to create a buffer zone to protect Russian territory, after Ukrainian forces captured a swathe of Kursk territory last summer. Russian forces eventually drove them out, with the help of North Korean troops and ammunition.
The Russians then crossed into Ukraine but quickly became bogged down in fighting over small border villages, which keep changing hands even today. Without major reinforcements, it is unlikely Russian troops will be able to push much further here.
Another northern region where Russia's army has reportedly crossed the state border is Kharkiv. Last week they claimed the capture of a border village, but without committing substantial resources they are unlikely to make further gains.
Military observers believe these operations are aimed at forcing Ukraine to spread its forces too thin along the entire 1,200-km long front line, so that they divert troops from key areas.
One of those frontline areas is Pokrovsk, a strategic hub in eastern Ukraine, which Moscow has been trying to capture for more than two years. According to the head of Ukraine's army Gen Oleksandr Syrskyi, Russia has concentrated some 111,000 troops in that area.
Russians rarely launch massive assaults, says Lt Artem Pribylnov from Ukraine's 155th brigade, stationed near Pokrovsk.
Any large movement of troops and armoured vehicles will be quickly detected and destroyed by drones. Instead, Lt Pribylnov says, the Russians rely on small groups of infantry troops who relentlessly attack Ukrainian positions, sometimes on motor bikes but more often on foot.
This kind of "creeping offensive", as some call it, is aimed at exhausting Kyiv's resources until endless waves of Russian soldiers eventually push the Ukrainians out of their positions. But the price they pay is frighteningly high.
Ukraine's general staff puts Russia's casualties at more than 1,000 soldiers a day. The BBC cannot verify these figures independently, but they do indicate the heavy losses Russia is suffering.
Russia's aim in eastern Ukraine appears to be to create "a cauldron", semi-encircling the Ukrainians around Pokrovsk and Kostyantynivka and then forcing them to retreat.
Russian troops are now trying to wedge into the area between these two cities to create "a bridgehead from where they can attack Pokrovsk or Kostyantynivka", says Maj Viktor Trehubov, a spokesman for the Khortytsya operational-strategic group, which co-ordinates forces in eastern Ukraine.
A breakthrough here is not considered likely. Russia's advance between Kostyantynivka and Pokrovsk is already slowing down and earlier attempts to push from other sides have stalled.
The biggest Russian gain in recent weeks was further west from Pokrovsk, in an area referred to by the Ukrainian military as the Novopavlivske direction, named after the village of Novopavlivka which became a defence hub following the westward retreat of Ukrainian troops.
Military observer Kostyantyn Mashovets says Moscow's operation there was most threatening for Ukraine as its defence measures "collapsed", allowing the Russians to advance up to 10km a day.
Their move was so rapid that Russian military bloggers even claimed that their troops had reached the neighbouring Dnipropetrovsk region for the first time since the start of the invasion.
Ukrainian military officials deny these claims, saying that a small group of Russian soldiers entered a village in the Dnipropetrovsk region to take photos with a Russian flag but were quickly "eliminated". The Institute for the Study of War, however, indicates that Russian troops are still operating there.
Maj Trehubov argues this area offers little strategic advantage for Russian troops and their assault was instead motivated by political goals.
Advancing further into Dnipropetrovsk region may work well for propaganda messages, but would require greater resources that are currently tied up in Pokrovsk and Kostyantynivka.
The Ukrainians are nevertheless facing increasing pressure on the front lines, as Russian troops are constantly trying to cut off their supply lines with drone attacks.
"Those routes that we used two months ago, we can't use them now, not during the daytime, not even at night," Staff Sgt Viktor Pyasetskyi from Ukraine's 93rd brigade stationed near Kostyantynivka told the BBC over the phone.
As a result it has become extremely complicated and slow to deliver food and ammunition, evacuate the wounded and rotate troops on the front line.
Russian drones like the Gerbera can fly for hundreds of kilometres to reach places that until recently were regarded as relatively safe.
Their aim is not just to erase defence lines but also "to terrorise the population", says Staff Sgt Pyasetskiy. "They systematically destroy civilian buildings. They want to undermine morale and weaken our faith in Ukraine's ability to stop the Russians."
As he spoke, he was interrupted by the roar of drones. Shortly afterwards there were reports of an apartment block being hit. It was later confirmed the staff sergeant had survived.
In a rural village close to the Ukrainian front line, a group of women queue quietly outside a purple and white ambulance, waiting to be seen by a doctor with his shaved head dyed the blue and yellow of the Ukrainian flag.
For many of them, it's their first time seeing a doctor since the war began more than three years ago.
Since 2022, Dr Serhii Baksheiev, 53, has carried out more than 1,000 gynaecological examinations on women throughout front-line areas in his kitted out mobile clinic - named 'The Feminine Shuttle' and complete with a bright pink examination chair.
"This is a humanitarian volunteering mission. It's for people who need help, in places where there are no doctors or hospitals, and it's absolutely free," he says.
The war with Russia has placed a huge strain on Ukraine's healthcare system, with more than 1,940 attacks on health facilities since the invasion, according to the World Health Organization (WHO) - making it the highest number in any humanitarian crisis to date - and with a significant increase in those attacks since December 2023.
When the war began, Dr Baksheiev, who is an obstetrician and gynaecologist, initially spent his days in a bunker in Kyiv helping to deliver babies as bombs fell above.
The idea for an on-the-road clinic came to him, he says, after later medical volunteer missions to the front line revealed the lack of facilities because medical centres and hospitals had been completely destroyed.
"We went to Kharkiv and Chernihiv, which were very damaged, and the most difficult thing was not being able to provide gynaecological services because there were no tools and equipment, because everything was ruined," he says.
Dr Baksheiev and his team would have to use anything available as an examination table, including old sofas, meaning he would have to kneel on the floor to conduct examinations.
Today, walking around the electric vehicle, it's clear Dr Baksheiev is incredibly proud of its capabilities: it's been kitted out with everything he and his team could need in these remote areas, including an ultrasound machine and medical equipment to carry out minor surgeries.
During a two-day mission the team can perform up to 80 colposcopies - where they examine the cervix and vulva for signs of cancerous or pre-cancerous tissue.
The work - often carried out in secret - is crucial to the people living in these rural and remote areas on the front line.
Figures provided by Ukraine's public health ministry and seen by the BBC show detection rates for ovarian and cervical cancers are down by 17% and 10% respectively since 2020.
And when doctors like Dr Baksheiev do get into those areas to perform examinations, they are finding a higher than average incidence of malignant tumours.
On average, up to 4% of all women are diagnosed with malignant tumours after being examined, according to FRIDA Ukraine, the medical organisation Dr Baksheiev volunteers for.
Dr Ulana Supron was Ukraine's health minister from 2016 to 2019. She says there is a concern about the "ticking time bomb" of health outcomes as the war drags on.
"In the public health community, there definitely is a lot of worry about what's going to happen as the war continues," she says.
"Not only in terms of physical health, but also mental health - because there is a constant stress, constant psychological trauma happening."
Dr Supron says the government has managed to partially or fully rebuild as many as 964 medical facilities that were damaged by Russia.
"They're working closely with the WHO and with other international organisations to try to come up with a plan on how we can rebuild the health system that was in place prior to Russia's invasion," she adds.
Despite a cancer diagnosis himself in September 2024, Dr Baksheiev continues to volunteer and provide treatment to women across the country.
"Apart from the medical examination, you also hear them out because a lot of patients have stories about how the Russians attacked their villages," he says.
"So we are not only doctors, we're the therapists for these patients."
An aid worker who lost an arm and a leg in a Russian drone strike in Ukraine says the war has left thousands of people in need of prosthetic limbs.
Eddy Scott, from Dorset, was helping evacuees from the front line town of Pokrovsk on 30 January when his vehicle was targeted.
Despite his injuries, he chose to remain in his adopted country and now works for Superhumans - the medical charity that supplied his prosthetic leg.
He said Ukrainians were being looked after by the "comprehensive state system" but the charity helped people get back to being "whole human beings".
Mr Scott, originally from Shaftesbury, said he was "doing really well" since his ordeal.
Speaking on BBC Radio Solent's Dorset Breakfast show, he said: "I haven't had a lot of the problems other people have suffered with, particularly mentally.
"I was offered an evacuation for treatment and I told the team, as long as I'm not taking a bed up from a Ukrainian, I'll stay in Ukraine.
"It's turned into an incredible decision. I'm very happy to be able to continue to help my adopted country in a very positive way."
Superhumans offers free, state-of-the-art prosthetics, reconstructive surgery, rehabilitation and psychological support for adults and children affected by the war.
It has supplied 1,600 prosthetics in the last two years but said there were at least 80,000 more people in need of artificial limbs.
Mr Scott, 28, said he had been "incredibly lucky".
He said: "Through Superhumans, I've received a top-notch prosthetic leg, which I'm incredibly grateful to get and I've been slowly learning to use.
"There is a very comprehensive state system - both medical and rehab - so people are being looked after but it's really places like Superhumans that have the time and the funds to go the extra mile, getting us back to being as whole human beings as possible."
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Some conservative members of Donald Trump's "Make America Great Again" movement have reacted angrily to the president's plans to sell weapons to Nato, arguing it is a betrayal of his promise to end US involvement in foreign wars.
On Monday, Trump said he would send weapons to Ukraine via Nato, while also threatening Russia with more tariffs if a deal to end the war is not reached in 50 days.
Republican Congresswomen Marjorie Taylor Greene, a key Trump ally, and former Trump strategist Steve Bannon are among those who have criticised the decision, with Bannon telling his podcast listeners that Ukraine is a "European war".
The White House has emphasised that Europe will pay for the US-made weapons.
'We still hate it'
One former Trump campaign official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to Politico, said Europe's purchase of the weapons "mitigates" the anger from Trump's isolationist supporters.
"But we still hate it," the official said. "This is not our war, and escalation isn't in America's interest."
Steve Bannon, a former adviser to Trump, said on his War Room podcast that "Ukraine is getting so dangerous".
"It's a European war. Let Europe deal with it," he said. "They have the resources. They have the manpower."
"We're about to arm people we have literally no control over," Bannon said of Ukraine. "This is old-fashioned, grinding war in the bloodlands of Europe - and we're being dragged into it."
In a statement quoted by Politico, White House Deputy Press Secretary Anna Kelly said that Trump's MAGA base "aren't panicans like the media".
"They trust in Trump, and they know that this president is restoring peace through strength."
The BBC has contacted the White House for comment.
A White House official who spoke to Politico on the condition of anonymity disagreed that the president's base opposed his moves. They pointed to one recent poll that suggested nearly two-thirds of Trump voters support continuing to send arms to Ukraine.
Officials in the Trump administration have also defended the president's decision, with Under Secretary of Defense Elbridge Colby writing on X that Trump's "America First message is that our alliances have to be fair and equitable".
"This is eminently reasonable but was treated for many years as heresy," he added. "Yet now with the historic Nato commitment we see that it can work."
That recent commitment from Nato leaders to ramp up defence spending to 5% of their economic output was praised by Trump supporters on Monday, who argued that even with the new weapons deal Europe was taking on more responsibility for its defence.
And in an exclusive interview with the BBC on Monday, just hours after he met Nato chief Mark Rutte at the White House, Trump said the alliance was now "paying its own bills".
He affirmed his support for the organisation's common defence principle, and said he was "disappointed but not done" with Russia's Vladimir Putin.
The president said that he had thought a deal to end the war in Ukraine was on the cards with Russia four different times.
US President Donald Trump has announced the US will send "top-of-the-line weapons" to Ukraine via Nato countries, while also threatening Russia with severe tariffs if a deal to end the war is not reached within 50 days.
"We want to make sure Ukraine can do what it wants to do," Trump said following a meeting with Nato chief Mark Rutte in Washington.
Rutte confirmed the US had decided to "massively supply Ukraine with what is necessary through Nato" and that the Europeans would foot the bill.
European countries will send Kyiv their own Patriot air defence systems - which Ukraine relies on to repel Russia's deadly air strikes - and replacements will then be issued by the US, Trump said.
On the tariffs front, Trump said that the US would impose 100% secondary tariffs targeting Russia's remaining trade partners if a peace deal with Ukraine was not reached within 50 days.
This would see any country that trades with Russia face the tax if they want to sell their products to the US.
For example, if India keeps buying oil from Russia, US companies that purchase Indian goods would have to pay a 100% import tax, or tariff, when the products reach American shores.
This would make the goods so expensive that US businesses would likely choose to buy them cheaper from elsewhere, resulting in lost revenue for India.
The intention is also to hobble Russia's economy. Theoretically, if Moscow was unable to generate money by selling oil to other nations it would also have less money to finance its war in Ukraine.
Given that oil and gas account for almost a third of Moscow's state revenue and more than 60% of its exports, 100% tariffs could make something of a dent Russia's finances.
Still, the Moscow Stock Exchange Index rose sharply following the announcement, likely as investors were expecting Trump - who last week teased a "major statement" on Russia - to pledge even harsher measures.
Although detail about both the tariffs and the Nato weapons deal was scant, Monday was the first time Trump pledged new military equipment for Ukraine since returning to the White House.
The briefing was also notable for the tone struck by US president, whose rhetoric on Vladimir Putin has become increasingly harsh.
Not for the first time, Trump implied Kyiv bore some responsibility for Russia's decision to launch its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
But he mostly appeared frustrated at the lack of progress in ending a conflict which he once seemed to believe could be easily solvable.
Asked about his relationship with Putin, Trump said that the two speak "a lot about getting this thing done" but voiced his displeasure at the fact that "very nice phone calls" with the Russian president are often followed by devastating air strikes on Ukraine - which have been growing in intensity and frequency.
"After that happens three or four times you say: the talk doesn't mean anything," Trump said.
"I don't want to call him an assassin but he's a tough guy. It's been proven over the years, he fooled a lot of people – Clinton, Bush, Obama, Biden," he added. "He didn't fool me. At a certain point talk doesn't talk, it's got to be action."
Two rounds of ceasefire talks between Russia and Ukraine took place earlier this year but no other meetings have so far been scheduled - something Moscow has blamed on Kyiv.
Ukraine's President Zelensky is currently hosting US envoy Keith Kellogg in Kyiv and earlier on Monday hailed a "productive meeting" - saying he was "grateful" to Trump for his support.
The Kremlin did not immediately comment on the announcement - but commentary trickling in from Moscow appeared to indicate a measure of relief.
Pro-Kremlin pundit and former Putin aide Sergei Markov called the tariffs announcement "a bluff" that indicated Trump had "given up on trying to achieve peace in Ukraine".
Senator Konstantin Kosachev argued that "if this is all Trump had to say about Ukraine today, then so far it's been much ado about nothing".
In 50 days, a lot could change "both on the battlefield and in the moods of the powers that be in the US and Nato," Kosachev wrote.
Trump's decision led to praise from critics, including from within the rival Democratic Party.
The decision to send Patriot missiles to Ukraine, "made possible through the meaningful investments of our European partners, will save countless Ukrainian lives from Putin's horrific assault," said Democratic Senator Jeanne Shaheen, the top Democrat on the powerful Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
She called the measure "positive, but overdue" and said that the US needs to provide "a sustained flow of security assistance to Ukraine over the long term" in order convince Putin to end the war.
Denys Podilchuk, a 39-year-old Ukrainian dentist from Kyiv, praised European leaders for helping to persuade Trump.
"I am pleased that finally European politicians, with their patience and convictions, have slightly swayed him (Trump) to our side, because from the very beginning it was clear that he did not really want to help us," he told Reuters.
Additional reporting by Dearbail Jordan
US President Donald Trump says he's ordered the justice department to produce some additional documents related to sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
"Based on the ridiculous amount of publicity given to Jeffrey Epstein, I have asked Attorney General Pam Bondi to produce any and all pertinent Grand Jury testimony, subject to Court approval," Trump said in a social media post.
It's unclear whether Trump is authorising the public release of these documents or when that could come - though such action would typically require the approval of a court.
The development comes after days of sustained pressure from some of Trump's most loyal supporters demanding further disclosures in the Epstein case.
Attorney General Pam Bondi posted minutes after the president: "We are ready to move the court tomorrow to unseal the grand jury transcripts."
A grand jury is a group of citizens set up by a prosecutor to determine whether there is enough evidence for charges to be filed. In legal terms, it determines whether probable cause exists to believe a crime has been committed.
Grand jury decisions still must be tested before a normal jury in court, in order for a suspect to be convicted of a crime.
It is unclear whether the president's post concerned testimony from the first set of cases concerning Epstein in the early 2000s or whether it stemmed from the federal charges brought in 2019.
Some grand jury documents have been already released concerning the case in Florida in 2006 that led to him being charged with solicitation of a prostitute. The case was heavily criticised over the lack of serious charges and the severity of the testimony given by victims, which included multiple minors.
While campaigning last year, Trump promised to release files relating to the disgraced financier.
However Bondi last week announced that the US justice department did not believe Epstein had a so-called client list that could implicate high-profile associates, and that he did take his own life - despite conspiracies over his death.
That prompted furious response from scores of Trump's most ardent supporters who have called for Bondi to resign after failing to produce the list, which Trump officials had previously claimed to have in their possession.
Conservative commentator Charlie Kirk, who was critical of the administration's handling of the files in recent days, praised Trump's move.
"This is massive, this is something that we've been talking about for quite some time, and really a power to the grassroots," he said.
Epstein died in a New York prison cell in 2019 as he awaited trial on sex trafficking charges. His death while incarcerated happened more than a decade after his conviction for soliciting prostitution from a minor, for which he was registered as a sex offender.
The US House of Representatives has passed a bill allowing Congress to claw back billions in pre-approved funding for public broadcasting and foreign aid.
The bill, which will see the government cut $9bn (£6.7bn) in total, was passed in a 216 to 213 vote just hours after midnight on Friday. All Democrats and only two Republicans voted against the cuts.
The US Senate passed its version of the bill less than 24 hours earlier.
The bill now heads to President Donald Trump's desk to be signed into law. "THIS IS BIG!!!", he wrote on social media after the vote.
Republicans have said the rescissions package, a political tool to cut funding already approved by Congress, is likely to be the first of many.
"This isn't the end, it's the beginning," House Speaker Mike Johnson said after the bill was passed.
The victory for Republicans and President Trump is the latest development in their ongoing effort to shrink government spending.
"Nine billion dollars is a good start," House Majority Leader Steve Scalise said.
The approved funding cuts include large reductions to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which includes PBS and NPR.
It also includes cuts to the US Agency for International Development (USAID), the largest US global humanitarian programme.
The spending cuts, however, were slightly smaller than Trump had originally proposed. In the Senate version of the bill, lawmakers voted to keep $400m in the budget for Pepfar, a global Aids prevention programme, bringing the proposed cuts from $9.4bn to $9bn.
The bill faced a bit of a rocky path on its way through the House and Senate, with lawmakers on both sides of the isle wary of cuts to foreign aid and public broadcasting.
As the Senate was preparing to vote on its version of the bill, people in Alaska were told to tune into their local radio station that includes NPR programming after an earthquake that struck off the coast prompted tsunami warnings on Wednesday.
"Public radio is a lifeline, connecting rural communities to the rest of the nation, and providing life-saving emergency broadcasting and weather alerts. It cannot be replaced," NPR President Katherine Maher said after the Senate passed the bill.
According to US media, this rescissions package was the first to succeed in over 30 years.
The Trump administration is asking for a one-day prison sentence for a former Kentucky police officer convicted in connection with a raid that resulted in the death of Breonna Taylor, a black woman, in her home.
A federal jury had convicted former officer Brett Hankison of violating Taylor's civil rights by using excessive force - the maximum sentence for the charge is life in prison.
If the judge agrees to the US Justice Department's recommendation, Hankison would serve one day in prison and be absolved of further time behind bars because of time already served.
Attorneys representing the Taylor family decried the move calling it "an insult to the life of Breonna Taylor".
"Every American who believes in equal justice under the law should be outraged," attorneys for the Taylor family said in a statement. "Recommending just one day in prison sends the unmistakable message that white officers can violate the civil rights of Black Americans with near-total impunity."
Brett Hankison was the only officer who was charged and convicted in connection with the botched raid.
Federal prosecutors said that the jury's verdict almost guaranteed that Hankison would never serve as a law enforcement officer again and that additional prison time "would simply be unjust under these circumstances".
In addition to the one-day sentence, the Justice Department also asked the judge to sentence him to three years of supervised release.
Prosecutors argued that although he was involved in "executing the warrant" during the deadly raid, he did not shoot Taylor "and is not otherwise responsible for her death".
Taylor became a face of the Black Lives Matter movement in 2020 following her death and the police killing of George Floyd.
She was killed after officers in plain clothes executed a "no-knock" search warrant at her home. They burst into her apartment in the early morning hours while she and her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, were asleep.
Authorities believed Taylor's former boyfriend was using her home to hide narcotics.
Mr Walker fired a single shot when the police knocked the door down, hitting one officer, Sgt John Mattingly, in the leg. Mr Walker said the officers did not announce themselves as police, and he thought they were intruders.
The three officers returned fire, shooting 32 bullets into the flat.
Hankinson fired 10 times into her apartment, in order, he said during the trial, to protect fellow officers.
None of Hankison's bullets hit anyone, but they did enter a neighbouring property, where a pregnant woman, a five-year-old and a man had been sleeping.
Prosecutors said Hankison acted recklessly and "violated one of the most fundamental rules of deadly force: If they cannot see the person they're shooting at, they cannot pull the trigger."
Hankison was fired from Louisville Metro Police Department in June 2020.
A judge will consider the government's request at a sentencing scheduled for next week.
West Pittston, just outside of the industrial centre of Scranton, Pennsylvania, has a classic smalltown-American look.
There are clapboard houses, a main drag with businesses bearing charming vintage patina and lampposts bearing flags of the town's military veterans.
And MAGA faithful.
On Wednesday, in 85F (30C) weather, they lined the streets outside Don's Machine Shop where JD Vance spoke, touting President Donald Trump's recent legislative victory, what he calls his Big Beautiful Bill.
But a lawn sign nearby as the US vice-president spoke pointed to an additional priority on some minds - a rare backlash against the Trump presidency from his own supporters.
"WHERE IS THE LIST???" the sign read - a reference to the release of the so-called Jeffrey Epstein files, a purported tranche of government documents on the disgraced financier and sex offender.
Rumors of a "client list" of Epstein's famous friends have circulated online for years.
But the Justice Department recently threw cold water on the theory, releasing a memo saying it found no evidence that a client list exists.
A mother and her nine-year-old son lost in the rocky mountain forest of Sierra Nevada in the US state of California were rescued thanks to a trail of handwritten notes they left behind - after getting stranded for more than 24 hours.
A search and rescue team found the pair on 12 July after discovering multiple notes tucked beneath rocks, left by the mother, aged 49. "HELP. Me and my son are stranded with no service and can't call 911," one said.
The pair were found by members of the Calaveras County Volunteer Search and Rescue Team, who already happened to be in the area.
The mother told ABC10 it had been a "very scary experience", but paid tribute to the "amazing" efforts of the rescuers.
The mission was detailed in a Facebook post by the Calaveras County Sheriff's Office.
On 11 July, someone phoned the Calaveras County Dispatch Center and informed officers that the duo were "overdue" to return after departing for Camp Wolfeboro around 11:30 PST (18:30 GMT), the post said.
The mother and son were also not responding to phone calls, police were informed.
Speaking to ABC10, the mother, who identified herself as Tami, confirmed that they were unable to make any calls of their own, and that her son Stirling resorted to blowing his Cub Scout whistle in an effort to gain attention.
She had been attempting to drop off Stirling for a camping trip, she explained.
The police Facebook post said a volunteer search and rescue team already in the area for monthly training was soon deployed. It established a command post along the highway that leads to Wolfeboro.
"The team began assessing the terrain and the complex network of interconnecting, labyrinth-like roads to establish effective search parameters," the post added. "Air assets" and "specially equipped" off-road vehicles were also used in the search.
A group of campers sent a text message to an emergency line telling police that they had seen a vehicle matching the description of the missing persons, which authorities said "confirmed that the teams were searching in the correct area".
Shortly afterwards, a rescue crew located the first handwritten message.
"We are ahead, up the road to the right. Please call 911 to get help for us. Thank you!" the message said.
The teams followed the road and found a second note, which included a telephone number and the names of the missing individuals.
Roughly a mile further along, officials found the mother and son.
Recounting the moment of their rescue, Tami told ABC10 that she first heard a vehicle honk. "I turned around and I saw this truck coming down the road and it was just the best feeling ever."
She and Stirling had spent the night in the car to avoid wild animals, and were lucky to have food, she added.
After locating the duo, the search team deployed vehicle recovery equipment to free their car and assisted them to return to waiting family members.
Officials determined the pair became lost in part due to a GPS signal that stopped working after they reached a remote area, leaving them unable to retrace their route.
The Trump administration is treating South Africa almost like a pariah, blacklisting its envoys, refusing to send top-level officials to meetings it hosts, and threatening to hit the nation with such high tariffs that its economic crisis is likely to deepen.
The latest sign of this came with the revelation by the second-biggest party in South Africa's coalition government, the Democratic Alliance (DA), that the US government had rejected President Cyril Ramaphosa's special envoy, denying him a diplomatic visa in May and refusing to recognise him as an "official interlocutor".
Ramaphosa had created the post for Mcebisi Jonas, the non-executive chairman of mobile phone giant MTN and a respected former deputy finance minister, to improve South Africa's rock-bottom relationship with the US.
Ramaphosa's spokesman accused the DA of "disinformation", but did not explicitly deny the party's claim. The US State Department declined to comment when contacted by the BBC, citing "visa record confidentiality".
Jonas's appointment came after President Donald Trump had cut off aid to South Africa, accused Ramaphosa's government of persecuting white people, condemned it for binging a genocide case against Israel at the International Court of Justice (ICJ), and for "reinvigorating" relations with Iran - an implacable foe of the US.
Priyal Singh, a South Africa foreign policy expert at the Pretoria-based Institute for Security Studies think-tank, told the BBC that if the DA's claims about Jonas were true, it would be in line with the Trump administration's strategy to give South Africa the "cold shoulder, and cut off channels of communication that it so desperately needs".
The US has not only cut back bilateral relations with South Africa, but also boycotted it in global bodies like the G20 - which Ramaphosa currently chairs, hoping to advance the interests of developing nations in talks with the world's richest states.
The latest sign of this was US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent's decision to skip Thursday's meeting of G20 finance ministers in South Africa, preferring to send a lower-ranking official instead.
Bessent skipped a similar meeting in February, while Secretary of State Marco Rubio stayed away from a meeting of G20 foreign ministers, saying Ramaphosa's government was doing "very bad things" and he could not "coddle anti-Americanism".
Ramaphosa had hoped to get relations with the US back on an even keel after Trump invited him to the Oval Office in May - only for the US president to ambush him by showing footage and brandishing a sheaf of spurious reports to advance his widely discredited claim that a genocide was taking place against white people in South Africa.
Jonas was strikingly absent from Ramaphosa's high-powered delegation, giving credence to the DA's claim that he was unwelcome in Washington.
This put South Africa back to square one as the US had expelled its ambassador to Washington, Ebrahim Rasool, after he accused Trump, in a leaked speech given at a meeting of a think-tank, of "mobilising a supremacism" and trying to "project white victimhood as a dog whistle" as the white population faced becoming a minority in the US.
In a politically odd decision, Ramaphosa left the post vacant, despite its significance, suggesting that his government had a dearth of well qualified career diplomats who could rebuild relations with South Africa's second-biggest trading partner.
Instead, Ramaphosa pinned his hopes on a special envoy who, he said at the time of Jonas's appointment, would "lead negotiations, foster strategic partnerships and engage with US government officials and private-sector leaders to promote our nation's interests".
But it is unclear how Ramaphosa expected Jonas to achieve this given that he, like Rasool, had made controversial remarks about Trump, calling him a "racist" and a "narcissistic right-winger" in a 2020 speech that came back to haunt him after his appointment.
This was compounded by the fact that MTN had a 49% stake in Iran's telecom company IranCell, a major concern for the US.
Compared to its previous stances, South Africa was "more circumspect" - as Mr Singh put it - in its response to US air strikes on Iran in June, merely saying that it viewed the conflict with "great anxiety" and hoped that it could be resolved through dialogue.
W Gyude Moore, a policy analyst at the US-based Center for Global Development, told the BBC that it was not surprising that South Africa was in Trump's firing line.
He pointed out that South Africa championed what Trump's support-base saw as "woke culture". For instance, Ramaphosa regarded the G20 as a forum through which to promote international "solidarity, equality and sustainability", which Rubio had opposed, equating it to "diversity, equity and inclusion", as well as climate change.
Mr Moore said this was also borne out in the Trump's administration's attitude towards South Africa's "black empowerment" policy, accusing it of "race-based discrimination" against white people. Ramaphosa's government sees it as necessary to address the legacy of the racist system of apartheid.
"I cannot see how the differences can be resolved. South Africa will just have to carry on, and strengthen ties with other countries. It's not the only one in the crosshairs of the Trump administration," Mr Moore added.
But it is a major blow to South Africa, as it had maintained strong trade and aid relations with successive Republican and Democratic administrations despite having sharp differences with them.
Mr Singh pointed out that South Africa, for example, opposed the Republican George W Bush's war in Iraq and Afghanistan, but South Africa still benefited from Pepfar, the programme he had established to tackle HIV/Aids, until the Trump administration slashed funding earlier this year.
"The Trump administration is completely different, and caught everyone off-guard. South Africa will just have to weather out the storm, and try to mitigate the damage," Mr Singh said.
But the economic consequences could be devastating - especially if Trump imposes 30% tariffs on South African goods from 1 August, as he has threatened to do.
South Africa's central bank chief Lesetja Kganyago said the tariffs could lead to around 100,000 job losses - worrying for a country where the unemployment rate stands at a staggering 32.9%.
The tariffs would hit South Africa's agriculture sector hard. This is ironic as Trump has portrayed himself as a champion of the country's Afrikaner farmers, offering them refugee status in the US.
It also gives them an opportunity to farm in the US and boost its economy in line with Trump's "America First" policy.
More BBC stories on US-South Africa relations:
Go to BBCAfrica.com for more news from the African continent.
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Helped by generous tax breaks, Ireland's film and TV production sector has never been stronger.
When Irish director Dearbhla Walsh started her career in Ireland in the late 1980s, opportunities for budding film-makers were limited.
"There was no work in Ireland," says Walsh, "To aspire to be a director was almost a fantasy."
Today, the picture is decidedly different. Ireland has emerged as a major force in the global film industry in recent years, both in the development of its own films and television series, as well serving as a location and production hub for international productions.
Walsh was the lead director of Apple TV+'s dark comedy Bad Sisters, one of many TV shows shot and set in the Republic of Ireland in recent years that, alongside programmes including Normal People and Bodkin, have drawn the attention of global audiences to Irish stories. This year actress Sharon Horgan received her second consecutive nomination for an Emmy Award for her portrayal as Eva Garvey in Bad Sisters.
Irish films have also gained international recognition, with both The Banshees of Inisherin and The Quiet Girl being nominated for Academy Awards in 2023. A new generation of Irish screen talent has found the spotlight, including Saoirse Ronan and Paul Mescal.
"I think Ireland is having a moment," says Walsh, "Irish people have a greater confidence. They're able to create from home and sell stories about Ireland."
The film and TV sector contributes more than €1bn ($1.2bn/ £845m)to the Irish economy annually and directly supports the equivalent of around 10,000 full-time jobs. That's according to a report from Screen Ireland, the development agency for the Irish film industry.
Walsh, who is currently working in Los Angeles shooting Apple TV+'s upcoming drama series Margo's Got Money Troubles starring Michelle Pfeiffer and Nicole Kidman, has built an award-winning international career as a director.
With Bad Sisters, Walsh says she relished the opportunity to tell a story from an Irish perspective. "It was incredibly exciting for me to come home and tell a story that I really felt I understood," she says.
The growth of the Irish film industry has been attributed to three decades of sustained investment, support and training along with generous tax incentives.
The Irish government offers a standard 32% tax credit for film, TV and animation, one of the highest in the world. The way this works is that Irish film production companies can claim back 32% of their production costs against their business tax bill. In California the equivalent rate is 20%.
US actor Rob Lowe recently commented that "it's cheaper to bring 100 people to Ireland" than to film in Los Angeles. His popular American quiz show, The Floor, is actually recorded in the Irish town of Bray, 20km (12 miles) south of Dublin.
Meanwhile, lower budget Irish movies get an even higher tax break of 40%, which was introduced in May 2025.
And the Irish government has boosted Screen Ireland's annual budget by 3.3% to €40.85m (£34.41m/ $47.77m) in 2025, its highest ever level.
"Our ambition for Ireland is that it's a home for screen storytelling at the highest levels, and a leading European hub for film-making," says Désirée Finnegan, Screen Ireland CEO. "But most of all, we see it as a home for the film-makers and story makers themselves."
Irish film producer Alan Moloney, who was the executive producer of the Irish-British-Canadian movie Brooklyn (2015), says the investment by Screen Ireland been successful for two main reasons.
First, it has strategically focused on developing indigenous talent. Secondly, it has attracted international productions, such as Netflix series Wednesday, which recently became the biggest international production to ever film in Ireland.
"Now we have an industry that is competing at the highest level, and we're punching way above our weight," Moloney says.
Moloney co-founded Dublin-based production company, Big Things Films, alongside Oscar-winner Cillian Murphy in 2022. Big Things is behind the award-winning film Small Things Like These and the upcoming Netflix movie Steve, both starring Murphy.
"[Cillian and I] had both grown up through the Irish film industry," says Moloney. "Whether the industry was having this boom or not... our interests were always going to be there."
Moloney also leads a consortium of film industry and property development professionals behind a new film and TV studio planned for Dublin, set to be Ireland's largest yet.
He believes the industry has the resilience to withstand Trump's threat in May to apply a 100% import tariff against movies made in foreign countries.
"We came through Covid intact. We came through the [Hollywood writers'] strike last year intact. We'll come through this intact," Moloney says.
Ruth Treacy, producer and co-founder of Dublin-based production company Tailored Films, is similarly sanguine. "There's a big chance [the tariff threat] won't end up coming to pass," she says. "I would have said to colleagues, let's not panic, because creating more panic destabilises the industry further."
Treacy – whose company is behind new Irish thriller Bring Them Down, starring Barry Keoghan, and Oscar-nominated 2024 Trump biopic The Apprentice – adds: "Some people mentioned that maybe [Trump's tariff threat] was a backlash against The Apprentice. But, much as I'd like to think we impacted him that much, I really don't think that was on his mind."
Looking at the Irish film industry in general, Treacy says its growth has brought with it a shift in the types of content being made.
"The level of ambition changed," she says. "It stopped being about what you might describe as kitchen sink or Irish rural drama. It's not necessarily about looking inwards at ourselves, but more about looking outward at the world."
Irish horror is a now burgeoning genre, with upcoming release Fréwaka, billed as the first ever Irish-language horror film.
Irish-language productions in general have had a breakthrough, with the success of films like The Quiet Girl [An Cailín Ciúin], which was the first in the Irish language to be nominated for an Oscar.
Ciarán Charles Ó Conghaile is the co-founder of Fíbín Films, the Galway-based company behind Irish-language broadcaster TG4's crime-thriller series Crá, which became the first Irish-language drama on BBC, and has been sold to multiple countries.
"There's a richness to the Irish language. But I think it's not about the language, it's the storytelling," Ó Conghaile says. "What [the Irish industry] does well is we have lots of pathos and levity in our work. We also have a distinctive Irish humour."
Irish animation is another a key growth sector within the industry, employing over 2,500 full-time professionals.
Rebecca O'Flanagan, producer at Treasure Entertainment, which is behind the Irish film Good Vibrations and TV thriller Smother, sees Ireland's cultural heritage as a key factor in the industry's success. "I don't want to go too far down the cliche of saints and scholars, but I do think that Ireland is a creative nation."
For Ó Conghaile, Irish film and TV has only scratched the surface. "I'm just excited about the stories that have yet to be told," he says.
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Donald Trump makes a habit of calling reporters out of the blue. The US president seems to prefer an off-the-cuff telephone conversation to a sit-down interview on camera.
On Monday evening it was my turn. And I'll be frank with you - I was asleep when the White House rang.
I'd spent the best part of five days believing there was an outside chance I would get an interview with him, to mark a year since the attempt on his life in Butler, Pennsylvania.
My reporting from that shooting had made global headlines and probably caught the president's attention. So I judged that perhaps that connection might be a way of securing a presidential interview - pretty rare things for foreign news organisations in the US.
On Sunday night I was told I was minutes away from the call so my team and I were standing by ready to record, but it didn't come.
By last night, I'd given up on the interview happening and after a long few weeks on the road without a day off, I was exhausted and taking a nap. Then the phone rang.
I blearily answered, and the voice of Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt came over the speaker: "Hi Gary, I'm here with the president, here you go."
I dashed into my living room, scrambling for my digital recorder; the line dropped and I thought I'd lost it. But they came back on the line and I spent almost 20 minutes speaking to Trump about everything from that fateful night in Butler, to his frustrations with Vladimir Putin, to his new-found belief in Nato and to his view of the UK.
Here are my five key takeaways from our surprise conversation.
1. Trump shows a different side, touching on Butler
2. No commitment to US deportation numbers
Turning to domestic American politics, I asked whether the president's plan for mass deportations was working - both in terms of speed, and given that some individuals were being swept up who the president perhaps wouldn't want to see deported.
The president insisted his team had done a "great job" at fulfilling his campaign promises, citing the drastic decrease in migrants crossing into the US from southern neighbour Mexico.
Some of Trump's team have expressed frustration that deportations are being carried out too slowly. When I pushed him on the question of how many deportations in this second presidential term would mark a success, Trump refused to give a figure.
"Well I don't put a number on but I want to get the criminals out quickly, and we're doing that, as you know," he said. "We're bringing them to El Salvador, lots of other places."
3. More frustration with Putin
Trump expressed his frustration with Russian President Vladimir Putin - capping off a day in which he threatened to hit Moscow's economy with secondary sanctions if a deal over the war in Ukraine was not reached within 50 days.
Having campaigned on a promise to quickly end the war, Trump seemed perplexed that he had not yet managed to strike an agreement with his Russian counterpart to end the years-long conflict.
He again indicated there was a gap between words and actions on Putin's part: "I thought we had a deal done four times and then you go home, and you see, just attacked a nursing home or something in Kyiv. I said: 'What the hell was that all about?'"
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and other European leaders have long accused Putin of not being serious about ending the war. To them, feelings of doubt will be nothing new.
But, when I asked Trump whether he had finished with the Russian leader, he continued to leave the door open: "I'm not done with him, but I'm disappointed in him."
4. New tone on Nato
I pointed out to Trump that he once suggested Nato was obsolete, and he replied that he now thought the Western military alliance was "becoming the opposite of that".
He was fresh from hosting Nato chief Mark Rutte - a man he seems to be able to work well with. The pair exchanged warm words in front of the world's cameras, and announced that the US would sell weapons to Nato which would then be passed on to Kyiv.
During our call, Trump indicated that he was shaking off his grudge that his country spent proportionately more on defence than its allies.
"It was very unfair because the United States paid for almost a hundred percent of it, but now they're paying their own bills and I think that's much better," he said, appearing to refer to a pledge last month by Nato members to ramp up defence spending to 5% of each country's economic output.
"We changed Nato a lot," he told me.
5. Respect for Starmer and UK
Trump emphasised his respect for the UK and its prime minister, Sir Keir Starmer, with whom he last month signed an agreement to remove some trade barriers. "I really like the prime minister a lot, even though he's a liberal," Trump explained.
Trump emphasised that the relationship between the two countries was just as "special" as many Britons like to believe, adding that he believed the UK would fight alongside the US in a war.
He sounded relaxed over perceived slights against him. Although his state visit to the UK later this year will not entail a speech to Parliament, he was not insistent that lawmakers be recalled. "Let them go and have a good time," he said.
Trump labelled his future host King Charles "a great gentleman". He shrugged off a recent speech that was given to Canada's parliament by the monarch that was seen as an endorsement of Canadian sovereignty in the face of Trump's threats.
He even had a joke. "You have many different names you go by," he said. "England, if you want to cut off a couple of areas. And you go UK, and you have Britain and you have Great Britain. You got more names than any other country in history, I think."
One of President Donald Trump's top aims is to dismantle the Department of Education, and in the opening days of his second term he signed an executive order to begin taking apart the agency that administers student loans for thousands of borrowsers, runs programmes to help low-income children, and oversees some funding for public schools.
Trump is now one step closer to his goal after the Supreme Court ruled on Monday that his administration could move ahead with plans to lay off half the department's workforce, more than 1,000 people.
The six conservative justices on the court, three of whom were appointed by Trump, voted to stop a lower court judge's order that had blocked the firings. The three liberals dissented.
On social media, Trump called the ruling a "major victory" for both parents and students that would pave the way to carrying out his executive order, saying Education Secretary Linda McCmahon could now "begin this very important process".
Trump and his allies have accused the department of indoctrinating young people with racial, sexual and political ideologies.
Conservatives, though, have long sought to eliminate the department, almost from the moment it was established in 1979. A complete shuttering would most likely have to involve Congress, and so Trump's approach has been to dramatically shrink its reach and capacity.
What does the department do - and not do?
What is its budget and how many people work there?
The department's allocation was $238bn (£188bn) in fiscal year 2024 - less than 2% of the total federal budget.
The agency has about 4,400 employees, the smallest of any cabinet-level department. The Trump administration has sought to cut that and the department announced plans to slash about half of its workforce.
Most public funding for US schools comes from state and local governments.
In 2024, the Education Data Initiative estimated that the US spends a total of just over $857bn on primary and secondary education - the equivalent of $17,280 per pupil.
Can Trump shut down the department?
On his own, no.
Not only would Trump need congressional approval to get rid of the department, but he would also probably need a supermajority in the US Senate - 60 out of 100 senators.
Republicans have a 53-47 majority in the Senate, so they would need at least seven Democrats to vote to abolish the agency - a political longshot.
Even in the House of Representatives, Trump might struggle to gain necessary support.
A vote last year to abolish th department - which was attached as an amendment to another bill - failed to pass as 60 Republicans joined all Democrats in the House to oppose it.
Trump's executive order directs Secretary McMahon to "take all necessary steps to facilitate the closure" of the agency and transfer authority to state and local governments.
It also instructs her to ensure "the effective and uninterrupted delivery of services, programs, and benefits on which Americans rely".
It does not include a timeline or deadline for the move, which has faced legal challenges.
Trump has moved to shrink other government departments in recent months, despite questions about the legality of those moves.
Education department employees are among those who are the focus of the administration's efforts to shrink the federal workforce.
What happens to student loans?
Trump previously promised that part of his dismantling of the education department would include rehousing certain programmes, such as student loans, in different government agencies.
He announced plans in the spring to move student loans from the education department to the small business administration, but was almost immediately blocked by a judge's order
That portfolio includes more than $1.5tn (£1.1tn) in loans taken out by more than 40 million Americans.
The text of the executive order shutting the education department down compares the debt portfolio managed by the department to the size of the Wells Fargo bank.
"The Department of Education is not a bank, and it must return bank functions to an entity equipped to serve America's students," the executive order states.
Regardless of which agency manages student loans, borrowers will still have to pay them back.
Court rulings and Trump's policies have reversed some changes that former President Joe Biden attempted to make to lower borrowing costs and forgive some debts.
Why do Republicans want to abolish it?
The idea of eliminating the education department has been floated by Republicans for nearly as long as it has existed.
During Ronald Reagan's 1980 presidential campaign, he pushed for it to be dismantled.
Republicans have historically pushed against centralising education policy, believing that it is best left up to individual states and localities.
More recently they have accused the education department of pushing what they describe as "woke" political ideology on to children, including on gender and race.
Trump's allies also want to expand school choice, which would allow students and families to use public money to select private or religious alternatives to public schools.
Conservatives argue that education department functions should be handled by other agencies, for instance that civil rights infractions are the Department of Justice's domain.
Burkina Faso's military rulers have disbanded the country's electoral commission calling it a waste of money.
The interior ministry will handle elections in the future, state-run RTB TV reported.
Since seizing power in September 2022, the coup leaders have initiated sweeping reforms, including the postponement of elections which would lead to a return to civilian rule.
A nationwide vote was due last year, but the junta extended the period of transition to democracy until July 2029, allowing leader Capt Ibrahim Traoré to remain in power and free to contest the next presidential election.
The AFP news agency quotes Territorial Administration Minister Emile Zerbo as saying that the electoral commission was "subsidised" with around $870,000 (£650,000) a year.
Abolishing the commission would "reinforce our sovereign control on the electoral process and at the same time limit foreign influences", he added.
After coming to power three years ago amid criticism that the civilian authorities were failing to deal with a growing Islamist insurgency, the military leaders have rejected the assistance of former colonial power France in favour of Russia.
Rights groups have since accused the army of targeting civilians in its attempt to quash the militants, as well as suppressing political activity and the freedom of expression.
There are also question marks over the effectiveness of the military operation. In the first half of 2025, jihadist group JNIM said it had carried out over 280 attacks in Burkina Faso – double the number for the same period in 2024, according to data verified by the BBC.
Additional reporting by BBC Monitoring and David Bamford.
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Muhammadu Buhari's life tracked the dramatic changes in politics in Nigeria over the last five decades – and he was often at the centre of events.
The former Nigerian president, who died on Sunday at the age of 82, became the country's military leader after a coup, was imprisoned by a new junta, then reinvented himself decades later to win the presidency in a democratic election.
Often pictured in dark glasses or thick, black-framed spectacles, traditional zanna cap and sporting a broad smile, much of Buhari's life was played out in public.
Buhari - pictured here in 1977 with the then-King of Sweden Carl XVI Gustaf and Saudi Arabia's Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani in 1977 - began his military career straight out of school.
By the time this picture was taken, Buhari had risen to become a regional military commander.
A few years later, in 1983, soldiers overthrew elected President Shehu Shagari.
Although Buhari took the role of military ruler, he denied having plotted the coup, saying he was simply installed by senior commanders who needed a figurehead. Other accounts describe Buhari as playing a more active role in the takeover.
After two years of iron-fisted rule, characterised by a crusade against corruption and various human rights abuses, Buhari was himself ousted. The new junta placed him under house arrest for three years.
In 2003, following decades away from politics, Buhari decided to have another go at leading the country.
This time, he bid for the top job through a democratic election - running for the All Nigerian Peoples Party (ANPP).
Here he can be seen on the right, with his running mate Chuba Okadigbo on the left and ANPP chairman Don Etiebet.
Buhari was well beaten by Olusegun Obasanjo in 2003, and he made two other unsuccessful runs for the presidency in 2007 and 2011.
Despite these failed bids, he accumulated supporters, including disaffected youngsters, with his pledges to fight corruption and insecurity.
Buhari was particularly popular in Nigeria's north, the region in which he was born.
Here, a sign displayed in the city of Kaduna during the 2015 election, tells passers-by that locals will only vote for "Baba [Father]" Buhari.
Buhari was eventually elected in 2015, besting incumbent President Goodluck Jonathan.
He made history, becoming the first ever opposition candidate to win a general election.
The historic moment in which Jonathan called Buhari to concede was captured on camera.
But after finally taking office, Buhari's first term was rocky. The economy entered a recession for the first time in a decade and security crises piled up.
When Buhari's wife - pictured below - publicly criticised his administration, the president sparked outrage by saying she belonged to the kitchen.
Despite the challenges of his first term, Buhari was re-elected in 2019.
As the president of one of Africa's largest economies, he travelled the world, attending high-profile summits and meeting his fellow heads of state.
Buhari was greeted by Queen Elizabeth at a Commonwealth leaders gathering in 2015.
Earlier in 2015, he was welcomed to the White House by then-US President Barack Obama.
And in 2018, Buhari was the first leader from sub-Saharan Africa to meet President Donald Trump in Washington.
In 2015, Buhari travelled to India for an India-Africa summit and was greeted by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
Following his death at a clinic in London, Buhari is being remembered by some as a man who broke his campaign promises and crushed dissent.
By others, as champion of order who tried his best amid a dysfunctional political system.
In a tribute to his former rival, Jonathan described Buhari as someone who "was selfless in his commitment to his duty and served the country with character and a deep sense of patriotism".
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Nigeria's former President Muhammadu Buhari, who has died aged 82 in a London clinic, was an ex-military ruler who returned to power through elections but struggled to convince Nigerians he could deliver on the change he promised.
The cause of death was not disclosed but he had suffered from ill-health for many years.
Never a natural politician, he was seen as aloof and austere. But he retained a reputation for personal honesty - a rare feat for a politician in Nigeria.
After three failed attempts, Buhari achieved a historic victory in 2015, becoming the country's first opposition candidate to defeat an incumbent. In 2019, he was re-elected for another four-year term.
Buhari had always been popular among the poor of the north (known as the "talakawa" in the Hausa language) but for the 2015 campaign, he had the advantage of a united opposition grouping behind him.
Many of those who supported him thought his military background and disciplinarian credentials were what the country needed to get to grips with the Islamist insurgency in the north. Buhari also promised to tackle corruption and nepotism in government, and create employment opportunities for young Nigerians.
But his time in office coincided with a slump in global oil prices and the country's worst economic crisis in decades.
His administration also came under fire for its handling of insecurity. While campaigning he had promised to defeat the Islamist militant group Boko Haram. But the group remains a threat and one of its factions is now affiliated to the so-called Islamic State group.
There was also an upsurge in deadly clashes between farmers and ethnic Fulani herders in central Nigeria. Mr Buhari, a Fulani, was accused of not being tough enough on the herders or doing enough to stop the crisis.
The activities of so-called bandits in the north-western part of the country saw the abduction of hundreds of secondary school students.
Under his watch armed forces were accused of human rights abuses - like opening fire on anti-police brutality protesters at the Lekki tollgate in Lagos in October 2020.
Who was Muhammadu Buhari?
Muhammadu Buhari was born in December 1942 in Daura in Katsina state in the far north of Nigeria, near the border with Niger. At the time, Nigeria was controlled by the British and it would be another 18 years before the country gained independence.
Buhari's father, who died when he was four, was Fulani, while his mother, who brought him up, was Kanuri. In a 2012 interview, Buhari spoke of being his father's 23rd child and his mother's 13th. He said his only recollection of his father was of the two of them and one of his half-brothers being thrown from the back of a horse.
The young Buhari attended primary school in Daura and then boarding school in the city of Katsina. After leaving school, he was admitted to the Nigerian Military Training College, joining the Nigerian army shortly after independence.
Buhari undertook officer training in the UK from 1962-1963 and then began his steady climb up the ranks.
In later years, Buhari attributed his disciplinarian bent to spending his formative years at boarding school, where corporal punishment was the norm, and in the military. He was "lucky" to have experienced such tough environments, which taught him to work hard, he said.
In 1966, there was a military coup and then counter-coup in Nigeria - a time of upheaval for army officers but Buhari always maintained he was too junior to have played any significant role.
Less than 10 years later, under a military government, Buhari had risen to become military governor of the north-east, an area then comprising six states.
After less than a year, Buhari, now in his mid-30s, was promoted again, becoming federal commissioner for petroleum and natural resources (in effect oil minister) in 1976 under Olusegun Obasanjo in his first spell as Nigerian head of state.
Indiscipline and corruption
By 1978, Buhari, then a colonel, had returned to being a military commander. His tough stance in 1983 - when some Nigerian islands were annexed in Lake Chad by Chadian soldiers - is still remembered in the north-east, after he blockaded the area and drove off the invaders.
The end of 1983 saw another coup, against elected President Shehu Shagari, and Buhari, now a major-general, became the country's military ruler. By his own account, he was not one of the plotters but was installed (and subsequently discarded) by those who held the real power and needed a figurehead.
Other accounts suggest he played a more active role in removing Shagari than he was willing to admit.
Buhari ruled for 20 months, a period remembered for a campaign against indiscipline and corruption, as well as for human rights abuses.
About 500 politicians, officials and businessmen were jailed as part of a campaign against waste and corruption.
Some saw this as the heavy-handed repression of military rule. Others remember it as a praiseworthy attempt to fight the endemic corruption that was holding back Nigeria's development.
Buhari retained a rare reputation for honesty among Nigeria's politicians, both military and civilian, largely because of this campaign.
As part of his "war against indiscipline", he ordered Nigerians to form neat queues at bus stops, under the sharp eyes of whip-wielding soldiers. Civil servants who were late for work were publicly humiliated by being forced to do frog jumps.
Some of his measures might have been seen as merely eccentric. But others were genuinely repressive, such as a decree to restrict press freedom, under which journalists were jailed.
Buhari's government also locked up Nigeria's greatest musical hero, Fela Kuti - a thorn in the side of successive leaders - on trumped-up charges relating to currency exports.
Buhari's attempts to re-balance the public finances by curbing imports led to many job losses and the closure of businesses.
As part of anti-corruption measures, he also ordered that the currency be replaced - the colour of the naira notes was changed - forcing all holders of old notes to exchange them at banks within a limited period.
Prices rose while living standards fell, and in August 1985 Buhari was ousted and imprisoned for 40 months. Army chief Gen Ibrahim Babangida took over.
Historic election victory
After his release and, he said, having seen the consequences of the break-up of the Soviet Union, Buhari decided to enter party politics, now convinced of the virtues of multiparty democracy and free and fair elections.
Despite this, Buhari always defended the 1983 coup, saying in 2005: "The military came in when it was absolutely necessary and the elected people had failed the country."
He also rejected accusations that his measures against journalists and others had gone too far, insisting that he had been merely applying the laws that others had been breaking.
He was elected president in 2015, becoming the first opposition candidate to defeat an incumbent since the return of multiparty democracy in 1999.
As president, Buhari made a virtue of his "incorruptibility", declaring his relatively modest wealth and saying he had "spurned several past opportunities" to enrich himself.
He was plain spoken by nature, which sometimes played well for him in the media and sometimes badly.
Although few doubted his personal commitment to fighting corruption and there were several notable scalps, some questioned whether the structures enabling mismanagement had really been reformed.
And attempts to improve youth employment prospects were, at best, a work in progress.
'Bag of rice'
On the day Buhari left office, some Nigerians were asked in a video that was widely shared on social media, what they would remember most about his time in office, and all respondents said the same thing: 'Bag of rice'.
The reason was simple - rice is the staple food in the country.
A standard 50kg (110lb) bag of rice, which could help feed a household of between eight and 10 for about a month, cost just 7,500 naira ($5; £3) under President Goodluck Jonathan, who was defeated by Buhari in 2015, but went up to 60,000 naira a few years afterwards.
This led to hunger in many parts of the country.
The huge surge in the price of rice was because, in an echo of his earlier policy as a military ruler, Buhari banned the importation of rice to encourage more Nigerian farmers to grow the crop.
However, local producers were unable to meet the high demand and many of his supporters lost their faith in him.
Ismail Danyaro, a resident of the northern city of Kano, said he had backed Buhari since he first contested the presidency in 2003.
"I used to buy a 50kg bag of rice under Goodluck [Jonathan] but when Buhari came, I found it difficult to buy even a 25kg bag of rice because it became so expensive," he told the BBC.
At one point, even Buhari's wife threatened not to support his re-election bid.
'Baba go slow'
Nigerians love nicknames and some of the country's leaders' nicknames have stuck even long after they left office.
For example, former military leader Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida is still called "Maradona" for what people perceived as his tactical dribbles on issues and situations.
For Buhari, it was "Baba [Father] go slow" after it took him six months to name his first cabinet on assuming office in 2015.
Responding to his nickname years later, Buhari said it wasn't his fault that it took so long to get anything done.
"Yes, we are slow because the system is slow. It's not Baba that is slow but it is the system so I am going by this system and I hope we will make it," he said in 2018.
Nigerian politics in 2022-2023 remains one of the most interesting in the country's democratic history.
In the minds of many, it was the first time that a sitting president wasn't really bothered about who his successor was going to be.
Openly, Buhari declared he would support whoever won his party’s (All Progressives Congress) nomination but insiders say behind the scenes he was ambivalent.
Buhari's body language emboldened all five candidates seeking the APC's endorsement and their supporters all went around saying they had his backing.
At one point it felt as if Buhari opposed the candidacy of his eventual successor, Bola Tinubu.
What followed was the declaration of the "naira swap policy" which the Buhari administration announced would, among other things, limit the influence of money in the 2023 elections.
Many Nigerians believed that the policy was targeted at preventing Tinubu from becoming president even though he had been chosen as the APC candidate.
The policy involved the confiscation of trillions of old naira notes and their replacement with new notes for the highest denominations.
However, there were not enough new notes, leading to shortages and suffering by millions, particularly the less well-off, who rely on cash for their daily transactions.
The policy was only suspended after a Supreme Court ruling, just days before the election.
Tinubu won narrowly, with 37% of votes cast, as the opposition was divided.
Any assessment of Buhari's presidency must take account his declining health, which caused him to take significant absences from work, especially during his first term.
The former military ruler may have reinvented himself as a democrat but there was no such commitment to transparency concerning his own health, with Nigerians left uninformed about the fitness of their head of state for office.
Muhammadu Buhari married twice, first to Safinatu Yusuf from 1971-1988, and then in 1989 to Aisha Halilu, who survives him. He had 10 children.
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M23 rebels in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo recently allowed the BBC to visit a huge mining site under their control which is vital to the production of the world's mobile phones - and over its vast expanse not one person was idle.
Thousands of miners dotted the landscape covered with pits and tunnels.
Some were deep underground digging up ore with shovels, others then hoisted sacks of the extracted rock containing coltan, which is used to make many electronic devices, on to their shoulders. They then took it to assembly points where others washed and filtered it with spades and by hand.
"We usually have more than 10,000 or more people working here daily," Patrice Musafiri, who has supervised the Rubaya mining site since the rebels took control of it in April last year, told the BBC.
It is tricky terrain to navigate - our team needed the aid of walking sticks, as well as Mr Musafiri's guidance, to stop us falling - yet for most of the men it is the only life they have known. It may be onerous and dangerous, but it allows them to make a small living.
"When we are deep in the mines, temperatures are very high - digging the mineral is also very hard... plus there can be other harmful gases," mineworker Peter Osiasi told the BBC.
"Sometimes cold air is pumped inside so that we can continue working," he said.
But the young man said he was grateful that since he began mining five years ago, he has been able to save a little money for a dowry and is now married with children.
"My life has really changed. Mining has really helped me."
The swathe of golden scarred earth they mine is found in the sprawling, lush Masisi Hills of North Kivu province - around 60km (37 miles) north-west of the city of Goma - and holds 15% of the world's coltan supply and half of the DR Congo's total deposits.
Little wonder that global investors have their eyes on this area.
It has provided immense wealth over the years to the various armed groups that have overseen it at different times, including the army.
During our brief visit - we were allowed access for around 45 minutes - there was no hint that the chain of command was about to change.
The supervisor, appointed by the M23, was keen to explain how the set-up at Rubaya had been reorganised over the last year and how the rebel group had brought security to allow miners to work without fear - specifying that no armed men were allowed on the site.
"We have already solved so many issues," Mr Musafiri said.
"Presently we have a mining department that regulates and monitors safety issues and also resolves internal disputes within the mines. If a tunnel becomes dangerous, people are told to leave to avoid accidents.
"People from different groups come here to mine daily and others to buy the minerals and now we have a huge market in Goma where they can resell what they buy here."
In December, a UN experts' report detailed how the M23 makes hundreds of thousands of dollars each month from taxing coltan, much of it was sent directly to Rwanda - allegations both the M23 and Kigali deny.
Surrounded by his colleagues wearing jeans, sweaters and wellington boots, all of whom buy permits to work at the site, Mr Osiasi agreed that conditions were better.
"Business is going on very well here because we have at least some semblance of peace, but the pay is very low. We are paid very little money," the miner said.
Trump's second term coincided with the M23's seizure of much of North Kivu and South Kivu provinces and the humiliating retreat of the Congolese army.
Political analyst Akramm Tumsifu says DR Congo decided to use its rich mineral reserves as a bargaining chip to get US assistance - for months it had sought military support.
With a tentative peace process under way, the Congolese authorities' great hope, he told the BBC, was that American firms would be in a position to make "massive investments" in its mining sector, which is currently dominated by Chinese companies.
US companies are reportedly already looking to cash in on the opportunity to invest in Rubaya's mining sector.
The Rubaya supervisor told us investment would be welcomed, but only initiatives aimed at boosting the local economy - with jobs, schools and hospitals - would be allowed.
"Any foreign investor can come here, as long as they come with development for our people and increase daily wages for the miners," Mr Musafiri said.
Despite the country's colossal natural endowments, most mining communities have little infrastructure, without even accessible roads to the mines where the wealth is scooped from the ground.
Mr Tumsifu reckons the presence of American investors could also act as a "caution against fighting or a resurgence of other armed groups".
But it is not yet clear how or with whom an investor would do business given the M23 is still very much in control in the east.
A parallel mediation effort led by Qatar - which involves direct talks between the armed groups and the Congolese government - may yield more clarity in the coming months.
The M23, which is part of the broader Congo River Alliance, said the Washington-backed deal had fallen short of addressing the causes of the long conflict. It maintains it took up arms to protect the rights of the minority Tutsi group in DR Congo.
While the belligerents try and hammer out their preferred pathways to peace, local people at the Rubaya mine, like elsewhere in eastern DR Congo, only hope for a definitive end to the fighting and bloodshed which has seen hundreds of thousands of people flee their homes.
"My appeal to fellow young men and our leaders is to keep and maintain peace in our area," said Mr Osiasi.
As he prepared to go back to hours of more digging, he added: "I also appeal to the owners of the mines to increase our pay because it's very little."
Additional reporting by the BBC's Robert Kiptoo and Hassan Lali
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Kenya's William Ruto rode into office on a wave of enthusiasm among ordinary people who hoped he would live up to his promises to improve their lives. Instead, he is facing unrelenting criticism – seen as unmatched in the country's history.
Seemingly frustrated by the intensity of the backlash, he on Wednesday asked why such public outrage was never directed at his predecessors, including Daniel arap Moi, who ruled with an iron fist for over two decades marked by political repression and human rights abuses, and others who departed under clouds of controversy.
On Wednesday Ruto posed: "All this chaos, why wasn't it directed at [former presidents] Moi, Mwai Kibaki, Uhuru Kenyatta…Why the contempt and arrogance?"
Analysts describe the current wave of public anger toward President Ruto, which has seen more than 100 people killed over the past year, as "unprecedented", uniting Kenyans across ethnic, religious, and class divisions.
"What is different [this time] is that the scale of spread of information is higher," she says, noting the impact of Kenya's digitally savvy youth, whose widespread access to social media and digital tools has amplified public discourse.
She also describes Ruto as always having been "very conservative," suggesting that his political outlook clashes with the more liberal values embraced by many Kenyans - particularly young people.
This ideological mismatch, she argues, has contributed to growing tensions.
The current resistance campaigns are largely youth-led, online-based, decentralised and seen as leaderless, mostly unfolding outside the established political class. Since last year, they have been driven by anger over the high cost of living, aggressive taxation, corruption and police brutality.
But pointing to ethnic politics and incitement as fuelling the latest unrest, the president said on Wednesday: Let's stop ethnic division, hatred, pride and contempt. We are all Kenyans".
He vowed to use "whatever means necessary" to maintain peace and stability. He called on the police to shoot in the legs protesters who were targeting businesses, rather than killing them. His remarks sparked more outrage and mockery.
Since last year, the Kenyan government has responded to protests and dissent with brutal crackdowns, including mass arrests and alleged abductions by security operatives.
It is a strategy that rights groups say has only deepened public outrage and alienated the citizens from the state, with the police accused of using excessive force to quell the protests.
More than 100 people have been killed in successive waves of anti-government protests since June last year. The latest one on Monday claimed 38 lives, marking the deadliest day of unrest yet.
Rather than serve as a catalyst for police reform or push efforts to pacify the demonstrators, the deaths have often served as a spark for subsequent protests, turning grief into rage.
The government has blamed the violence on protesters, accusing them of attacking police stations and even trying to stage a coup.
Political communication expert Dr Hesbon Owilla calls the unrest "probably the most intense outrage against a regime" in Kenya's history. He says it has brought people from all walks of life to unite in defiance.
He puts it down to how the president communicates to the people. He says Ruto's promises to uplift the fortunes of ordinary people were "real, extremely real" and shifted the campaign from ethnic mobilisation toward issue-based politics.
"Then he became president. We are still waiting. What Kenyans are experiencing is worse," he tells the BBC, capturing the deep sense of disappointment among many Kenyans.
He says that unlike past governments that made cautious promises, Ruto made, and continues to make, sweeping pledges leading to broken expectations.
"The disillusionment is creating the rage," he says.
Citing the example of the order to shoot protesters, he also says that the president often speaks when silence might serve him better - overexposing himself and inadvertently making serious national issues feel personal.
As a result, when there is criticism, it tends to be directed squarely at him, rather than being attributed to a failure of governance systems.
Even so, Ruto has repeatedly highlighted his administration's efforts to better the lives of all Kenyans, pointing to the government's flagship affordable housing project, a universal health scheme, digital jobs, and an overseas employment programme as key achievements.
While inspecting one of the housing sites this week, he acknowledged the severity of youth unemployment but emphasised that the problem predates his presidency.
He insisted that his government was the first to take deliberate steps to tackle the crisis, citing state initiatives such as the housing project that he says has created hundreds of thousands of jobs.
The president appealed for patience, as the problem would take time to resolve.
Yet patience, especially amid the high cost of living, unmet expectations, and growing frustration, is not something that most Kenyans feel they can afford.
Some of those flagship programmes have come at a steep cost to Kenyans, who now have 1.5% housing levy and a 2.75% health insurance tax deducted from their monthly incomes. The pain of paying some of these higher taxes has dominated everyday conversations, especially with a perception that higher taxes have not resulted in better public services.
To the government's credit, Dr Owilla says some of the initiatives, like the universal healthcare project, have had a great impact, and others may eventually deliver for many.
But Mr Bichachi argues that the government has "lost touch with how people feel", and its tone has remained unchanged despite rising public resentment.
He says the issue is unlikely to change based on how the government performs – describing it as a "love-hate relationship" between the people and the presidency.
That is "how we find ourselves where we are", he concludes, referring to the intense resentment that is now faced by the president, who was once one of the "the most applauded and lauded leaders to come onto the Kenyan state".
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On Monday, as anti-government protests swept across parts of Kenya, 12-year-old Bridgit Njoki sat watching television in her family's modest home.
She had no idea that the deadly clashes between these protesters and Kenya's armed police would find their way into her living room.
A single bullet pierced the roof, puncturing the ceiling and striking Njoki in the head, her mother, Lucy Ngugi, tells the BBC. Within hours, she was pronounced dead in hospital.
"She was my everything," Ms Ngugi says, while sobbing in her home just outside the capital, Nairobi. "She was all I had."
"Let me be the last mother to weep because of the death of a child. An innocent child. I wish she was even playing outside… but inside the house? Oh Lord, this is painful."
Njoki is one of the youngest victims of the violence that has rocked Kenya over the past month. According to the Kenya National Commission on Human Rights (KNCHR), almost 70 people have died and hundreds were wounded in the three major protests that have taken place since 17 June.
The protests - mainly led by young Kenyans - reflect growing discontent over issues like the cost of living, tax hikes, runaway public debt, and police brutality.
On 7 July, the day Njoki died, the authorities barricaded major roads in preparation for the demonstrations.
Video evidence shows the police firing tear gas, and in some cases, live rounds in residential areas where protesters had regrouped.
"The bullet came over the roof of the house. It penetrated into the ceiling, right where Njoki was seated on a chair," says Njoki's grandmother, Margaret Njeri.
"Immediately, her mother grabbed her and came screaming to my home: 'Mum, my child has been shot!' I couldn't even hold the child."
The family had thought they were far from the violent clashes, given they lived in Ndumberi, a village nearly two kilometres (1.2 miles) from a main road.
"I was sure it was a bullet," says Njoki's mother. "The bang that hit the roof was so loud. Very loud."
The police have dismissed the family's claims, insisting a bullet couldn't travel from the main road to their house. But Njoki's lifeless body told a different story.
A report from the 12-year-old's post-mortem examination says doctors retrieved a bullet from her body, and that her head injury was "consistent with a gunshot".
Njoki had been a Grade 7 student at Benson Njau School in Ting'ang'a, a nearby village. As the family's firstborn, she was a caretaker, helper, and the pride of the household.
"She was always number one in her class," her grandmother says. "So obedient, so specific, so neat.
"Even in the way she spoke. She was just a very good girl. She loved serving in church. She helped her siblings. She cooked for me. She was everything."
Njoki's mother describes her as "a beautiful girl, a charming girl, who had so many dreams".
Her father is crushed, unable to speak. Her siblings are also silent. Grief hangs like a shroud in the house, while Njoki's chair sits empty.
The deaths of dozens like Njoki have drawn international condemnation.
The UN said it was deeply troubled by the killings and criticised the Kenyan police for using "lethal ammunition" against protesters.
This all feels like a repeat of last year, when according to the KNCHR, more than 50 died in a police crackdown on months of anti-government protests.
President Ruto has taken a particularly hard-line stance this time.
In a national address following the 7 July protests, in which 38 people were killed, according to the state-run human rights commission, Ruto said: "Anyone caught burning another person's business or property should be shot in the leg, hospitalised and later taken to court. Don't kill them, but ensure their legs are broken."
Ruto has accused political rivals of inciting violence in a bid to unseat him illegally, but the president's opponents have dismissed this allegation.
Meanwhile, back in Ndumberi, Njoki's family are simply calling for an end to the brutality.
"I'll bury Njoki, but I'll never forget the Saba Saba Day [7 July]. Let Njoki be the last sacrifice of these protests," her mother says.
The ongoing anti-government protest movement has reshaped Kenyan politics. It has demanded transparency, empathy and a listening ear. But it has also paid in blood.
And as the uprising continues, Njoki's name and those of many others lost have become a symbol - of innocence, state overreach, and a lack of accountability.
"Let's not burn our country. Let's have dialogue. Let's talk. We are brothers and sisters, I'm begging our government - let this not happen to any other parent," Njoki's mother says.
"Don't let another child die like Njoki."
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US President Donald Trump has praised Liberian President Joseph Boakai for speaking "good English" and asked him where he went to school.
What Trump might have missed is that Liberia shares a unique and long-standing connection with the US.
English is the country's official language and many Liberians speak with an American accent because of those historical ties to the US.
It may have been this accent that Trump picked up on.
Here are six things to know about the West African country:
1: Founded by freed slaves
Liberia was founded by freed African-American slaves in 1822 before declaring independence in 1847.
Thousands of black Americans and liberated Africans - rescued from transatlantic slave ships - settled in Liberia during the colonial era.
Former US President Abraham Lincoln officially declared Liberia's independence in 1862 but the country retained a lot of US heritage and it remained in the American "sphere of influence" during the colonial period.
Due to this integration, Liberian culture, landmarks and institutions have a strong African-American influence.
Ten of Liberia's 26 presidents were born in the US.
The descendants of these freed slaves, known as Americo-Liberians, dominated the country for more than 100 years.
This was resented by some indigenous Liberians and the last president from that community, William Tolbert, was overthrown and killed in a coup in 1980.
They account for about a quarter of the population, according to the Britannica website, which says more than two dozen languages are spoken in the country.
President Boakai is from the Kissi ethnic group and so would have spoken that as his mother tongue, before learning English at school.
2: The capital is named after a former US president
Liberia's capital, Monrovia, was named in honour of America's fifth President, James Monroe, who was a strong supporter of the American Colonization Society (ACS).
The ACS was the organisation responsible for resettling freed African-Americans in West Africa - which eventually led to the founding of Liberia.
Not surprisingly the early architecture of the city was largely influenced by American-style buildings.
Many streets in Monrovia are named after colonial American figures, reflecting the city's founding and historical ties to the US.
The city's main hospital is called the John F Kennedy Medical Center (JFKMC), named after the former US president.
3: Nearly identical flags
The flag of Liberia closely resembles the American flag. It features 11 alternating red and white stripes and a blue square with a single white star.
The white star symbolises Liberia as the first independent republic in Africa.
The US flag, in comparison, has 13 stripes representing the original 13 colonies and 50 stars, one for each state.
The Liberian flag was designed by seven black women - all born in America.
4: Ex-president's son plays for US football team
Timothy Weah, the son of Liberia's former President George Weah, is an American professional football player who plays for Italian club Juventus as well as the US national team.
The 25-year-old forward was born in the US but began his professional career with Paris St-Germain in France, where he won the Ligue 1 title before moving on loan to the Scottish team, Celtic.
His father, George, is a Liberian football legend who won the Ballon d'Or in 1995 while playing for Juventus's Italian rivals AC Milan. He is the only African winner of this award - and went on to be elected president in 2018.
5: Former president won the Nobel Peace Prize
Liberia produced Africa's first elected female president, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.
She was elected in 2005, two years after the nation's bloody civil war ended, and served as president until 2018.
Johnson Sirleaf has a strong American background as she studied at Madison Business College and later went to Harvard University where she graduated as an economist.
She has received worldwide recognition and accolades for maintaining peace during her administration.
Her story is pitted with remarkable feats of defiance and courage.
In 2011, along with Leymah Gbowee and Tawakkul Karmān, she won the Nobel Prize for Peace for her efforts to further women's rights.
In 2016, Forbes listed her among the most powerful women in the world.
6: World's largest rubber plantation
What do Liberians make of Trump's comments?
Foreign Minister Sara Beysolow Nyanti denied it was an awkward moment, saying there was a "lack of understanding" around the world about the languages people speak in Africa, which she described as a "multi-lingual continent".
"Liberia happens to have the American-English intonation and I believe President Trump heard something familiar in the way President Boakai spoke, which is different from the way others speak on the continent," she told the BBC's Newsday programme.
"We were not offended at all," she said, adding that away from the TV cameras, there was a discussion of the two countries' shared history.
But there was a mixed reaction among other Liberians.
Accountant Joe Manley, 40, told the BBC that Trump should have been properly briefed before meeting Liberia's leader.
"Liberia has always been an English-speaking country. Our president represents a country with a rich educational tradition."
For human resources professional Henrietta Peters Magbollah, the US president's surprise at Boakai's eloquence reflects a broader problem about global ignorance with regard to African nations and its peoples.
"From travel experiences and observations, most citizens of other nations outside Africa do not know a lot about African countries," she said. "The few that know a little, their minds are clouded by narratives of war, poverty, and lack of education."
However lawyer and politician Kanio Gbala agreed with the foreign minister that there was no insult meant.
"I believe President Trump's remark was a genuine compliment on President Boakai's command of English," he told the BBC. "There is no evidence of sarcasm. Reading it as disrespectful may reflect political agendas."
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Gugu used to collect her antiretrovirals from a USAID-funded clinic in central Johannesburg.
But when President Trump's cuts to aid funding were announced earlier this year, she and thousands of other HIV-positive patients across South Africa suddenly faced an uncertain future.
Gugu was lucky, the clinic where she got the medication that helps suppress her symptoms contacted her before it closed down.
"I was one of the people who was able to get their medication in bulk. I usually collect a three-month prescription. But before my clinic closed, they gave me nine months' worth of medication."
She will run out of antiretrovirals (ARVs) in September, and then plans on going to her local public hospital for more.
A former sex worker, the 54-year-old found out she was HIV-positive after she'd quit the industry.
Ten years ago she got a chesty cough, and initially thought it was tuberculosis. She went to a doctor who told her she had a chest infection and treated her for it.
But when the treatment failed, she went to a clinic to get an HIV test.
"By then I already assumed that I was HIV-positive, and I told the nurse this."
She was right, and she has been on ARVs ever since. We're not using her real name at her request.
She currently works as a project coordinator for an NGO.
"We help pregnant sex workers get their ARVs, to ensure their children are born HIV-negative. We also do home visits to make sure that the mothers take their medication on time, and to look after their babies when they go for their monthly check-ups."
Many HIV-positive sex workers in South Africa relied on private clinics funded by the US government's now-defunct aid agency, USAID, to get their prescriptions and treatments.
But most of the facilities closed after US President Donald Trump cut most foreign aid earlier this year.
Gugu believes that many sex workers could be discouraged from going to public hospitals for their ARVs if they can no longer get them from clinics.
"The problem with going to public hospitals is the time factor. In order to get serviced at these facilities, you have to arrive at 4 or 5am, and they may spend the whole day waiting for their medication. For sex workers, time is money," Gugu says.
She adds that she recently went to her local hospital with some friends to register her details and build a relationship with staff.
"The nurse who attended to us was very rude. She told us there was nothing special about sex workers."
She thinks this could lead to many sex workers defaulting on their medication, "especially because their hospital files contain a lot of personal information, and the concern is that sometimes the nurses at these local clinics aren't always the most sensitive in dealing with this kind of information".
In a report released on Thursday, the UN body in charge of fighting HIV/Aids does not single out the US, but says that drastic cuts from a number of donors have sent shockwaves around the world, that the "phenomenal progress" in tackling the illness risks being reversed.
"New HIV infections have been reduced by 40% since 2010, and 4.4 million children have been protected from acquiring HIV since 2000. More than 26 million lives have been saved," UNAids says, warning that if the world does not act, there could be an extra six million new HIV infections and four million Aids-related deaths by 2029.
UNAids said that, before the funding cuts, the annual numbers of new HIV infections and Aids-related deaths had sunk to their lowest levels in more than 30 years.
All of the data published in the report is from before the US and other donors slashed funding earlier this year. But it does highlight how much progress could be lost as a result of these cuts.
Sub-Saharan Africa has seen a 56% decline in the number of new infections. The region is still the epicentre of the epidemic - half of all new infections last year were from the continent. But four African countries - Lesotho, Malawi, Rwanda and Zimbabwe - were on track to achieve a 90% decline in new infections by 2030 compared with 2010.
Another success story for Africa has been the performance of antiretrovirals, which help suppress HIV symptoms. Along with other medical advances in the field, they helped increase life in sub-Saharan Africa from 56 years in 2010 to 62 years in 2024.
The turnaround began when then-US President George W Bush launched an ambitious programme to combat HIV/Aids in 2003, saying it would serve the "strategic and moral interests" of the US.
Known as the President's Emergency Plan for Aids Relief (Pepfar), it led to the investment of more than $100bn (£74bn) in the global HIV/Aids response - the largest commitment by any nation to address a single disease in the world.
South Africa has about 7.7 million people living with HIV, the highest number in the world, according to UNAids.
About 5.9 million of them receive antiretroviral treatment, resulting in a 66% decrease in Aids-related deaths since 2010, the UN agency adds.
South Africa's government says Pepfar funding contributed about 17% to its HIV/Aids programme. The money was used for various projects, including running mobile clinics to make it easier for patients to get treatment.
The Trump administration's cuts have raised concern that infection rates could spike again.
"I think we're going to start seeing an increase in the number of HIV infections, the number of TB cases, the number of other infectious diseases," Prof Lynn Morris, Deputy Vice-Chancellor of Johannesburg's Wits University, tells the BBC.
"And we're going to start seeing a reversal of what was essentially a real success story. We were getting on top of some of these things."
Gugu points out that treatment is a matter of life and death, especially for vulnerable populations like sex workers.
"People don't want to default on their ARVs. They're scared that they're going to die if they don't get access to them.
The cuts have also affected research aimed at finding an HIV vaccine and a cure for Aids.
"There's the long-term impact, which is that we're not going to be getting new vaccines for HIV," Prof Morris adds.
"We're not going to be keeping on top of viruses that are circulating. Even with new viruses that might appear, we're not going to have the surveillance infrastructure that we once had."
South Africa has been one of the global leaders in HIV research. Many of the medications that help prevent the virus, and which have benefitted people around the world, were trialled in South Africa.
This includes Prep (pre-exposure prophylaxis), a medication which stops HIV-negative people from catching the virus.
Another breakthrough preventive drug released this year, Lenacapavir, an injection taken twice a year and that offers total protection from HIV, was also tried in South Africa.
In a lab at Wits University's Health Sciences campus, a small group of scientists are still working on a vaccine for HIV.
They are part of the Brilliant Consortium, a group of labs working across eight African countries to develop a vaccine for the virus.
"We were developing a vaccine test to see how well that works, and then we would trial it on humans," Abdullah Ely, an Associate Professor at Wits University, tells the BBC in his lab.
"The plan was to run the trials in Africa based on research carried out by Africans because we want that research to actually benefit our community as well as all mankind."
But the US funding cuts threw their work into doubt.
"When the stop order came, it meant we had to stop everything. Only some of us have been able to get additional funding so we could continue our work. It's set us back months, probably could even be a year," Prof Ely says.
The lab lacks funding to carry out clinical trials scheduled for later this year.
"That is a very big loss to South Africa and the continent. It means that any potential research that comes out of Africa will have to be tested in Europe, or the US," Prof Ely says.
In June, universities asked the government for a bailout of 4.6bn South African rand ($260m; £190m) over the next three years to cover some of the funding lost from the US.
"We are pleading for support because South Africa is leading in HIV research, but it's not leading for itself. This has ramifications on the practice and policies of the entire globe," says Dr Phethiwe Matutu, head of Universities South Africa.
South Africa's Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi announced on Wednesday that some alternative funding for research had been secured.
The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the Wellcome Trust have agreed to donate 100m rand each with immediate effect, while the government would make available 400m rand over the next three years, he said.
This would bring the total to 600m rand, way below the 4.6bn rand requested by researchers.
As for Gugu, she had hoped that by the time she was elderly, a cure for HIV/Aids would have been found, but she is less optimistic now.
"I look after a nine-year-old. I want to live as long as I can to keep taking care of him," she tells the BBC.
"This isn't just a problem for right now, we have to think about how it's going to affect the next generation of women and young people."
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US President Donald Trump began a three-day summit in Washington DC with the leaders of five African states, an event the White House sees as an "incredible" commercial opportunity.
Trump's guests include the leaders of Gabon, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mauritania and Senegal - all countries with small populations and economies.
The meetings are expected to concentrate on Trump's "trade, not aid" policy and with all of them facing 10% tariffs on goods exported to the US, they may be hoping to do deals to negotiate this rate down.
During a televised lunch at the White House on Wednesday, the African leaders lavished Trump with praise while encouraging US economic partnership.
Seated diagonally from Trump across a long wooden table, Mauritania President Mohamed Ould Ghazouani was the first African leader to speak.
"In the short time you've been back in office, the last few months you came to the rescue for peace," Ghazouani said.
"You rushed to Africa to resolve a longstanding problem," he continued, referring to a peace deal between DR Congo and Rwanda facilitated by the White House.
His remarks were echoed by the other African state leaders, most of whom made direct comments in support of Trump being nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize.
Mr Mouloumbi added that the US might be most keen to strengthen ties with Gabon not only because it had "strategic" minerals like manganese and uranium, as well as oil, but also because it was strategically located along the Gulf of Guinea, with a coastline of about 800km (500 miles).
It could host a US military base that America plans to build in the region, Mr Mouloumbi said.
Mr Diagne made a similar point about piracy, saying that "maritime terrorism in the Gulf of Guinea has become an extremely important issue" for the US.
Many tankers carrying oil and gas travel through the Gulf of Guinea, which has been known as a piracy hot spot for several years.
For Mauritania and Senegal, migration will be central to discussions, according to Ousmane Sene, the head of the West African Research Centre (WARC),
"Let's not forget that between 2023 and 2025, no fewer than 20,000 young Mauritanians left for the US via Nicaragua, along with hundreds of young Senegalese," the analyst told the BBC.
"All these countries are also departure points for illegal emigration," he added.
"That's an extremely important point in his [Trump's] migration policy, and every day people are turned back at the borders."
Mauritania is the only one of the five countries that does not have diplomatic ties with US ally Israel - cutting them in 2009 over an offensive in Gaza - and sources have told Semafor that restoring them may be a sticking point for any would-be White House deal.
Visa overstay rates are another issue to be settled - especially for Gabon and Liberia, which both have higher ones than Burundi, which last month became subject to US travel restrictions with visa overstays cited as a key reason.
Liberia may also be considering a US proposal to accept people deported by the US, including criminals. The country, which has close historical links to America, was reportedly included on a proposed list of countries that the US had approached.
The country, which was brought to its knees by a 14-year civil war and then the devastating Ebola epidemic of a decade ago, is in desperate need of cash as it has been severely affected by US aid cuts.
In particular the impact has been felt by its fragile health system, which had relied on US funding for 48% of its budget.
Guinea-Bissau, which has suffered a series of coups and attempted coups over the years, is reportedly keen for the US embassy to reopen in the capital, Bissau, following its closure after the army mutinied in 1998.
President Umaro Cissoko Embaló was clearly proud of the White House's invite for Guinea-Bissau, which several years ago was labelled a "narco-state" by the US and UN as it was once a major transit hub for cocaine from Latin America to Europe and North America.
"Guinea-Bissau has now emerged from a state of disorder to become a real state. The Americans do not invite just any state to their country - only a well-structured state," he was quoted as saying at the airport before he left for Washington.
He and his counterparts - Brice Clotaire Oligui Nguema of Gabon, Joseph Boakai of Liberia, Mohamed Ould Ghazouani of Mauritania and Bassirou Diomaye Faye of Senegal - will be hoping they hold some cards to do a deal with Trump.
They certainly do not want a replay of May's infamous high-stakes meeting between South Africa President Cyril Ramaphosa and Trump in the Oval Office, which did little to ease relations.
In fact, it seems to have completely backfired as this week Africa's biggest economy found out that from next month its exports to the US are being slapped with a 30% tariff.
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A school has paid tribute to one of its former teachers who died after being attacked by an elephant during a walking safari in Zambia.
Janet Easton, also known as Janice, 68, taught chemistry at Titus Salt School in Baildon, Bradford, from September 1983 until her retirement in August 2022.
Ms Easton, along with a 67-year-old female tourist from New Zealand, was trampled to death by the nursing elephant on 3 July, after efforts by tour guides to stop it by firing shots failed.
Phil Temple, head teacher at Titus Salt, described Ms Easton as an "exemplary professional" who he said was an "intrepid traveller, keen photographer and much-loved friend".
Mr Temple said Ms Easton's impact on "generations of pupils" in the local community had been "profound".
He said her "skill, tenacity and determination to ensure all young people had the opportunity to succeed" had been admired by "countless colleagues".
He added: "Janice will be fondly remembered by all in the Titus Salt School and wider communities."
Local police chief in Zambia, Robertson Mweemba, said the two women had been part of a guided safari group who were walking in the park when the elephant charged towards them at high speed.
"They were moving to other camps when the elephant charged from behind.
"We are really sorry that we have lost our visitors," Mr Mweemba said.
Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.
Nigeria's former President Muhammadu Buhari has been buried at his home in northern Nigeria two days after his death at the age of 82 at a clinic in London.
His body was flown back to the country earlier on Tuesday and his successor, Bola Tinubu, was at the airport in Katsina state to receive the remains.
It was then taken to Buhari's home town of Daura, where hundreds attended Islamic funeral prayers at the central mosque.
His body was finally interred in a grave dug in the grounds of his home with dignitaries including Tinubu, Guinea-Bissau President Umaro Sissoco Embaló and Buhari's Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo present.
Tributes poured in for the late leader who served for two four-year terms after initially being elected president in 2015, becoming the first opposition leader to defeat an incumbent.
The man he beat, President Goodluck Jonathan, described Buhari as someone who "was selfless in his commitment to his duty and served the country with character and a deep sense of patriotism".
Former military ruler, Gen Ibrahim Babangida, who overthrew Buhari in a 1985 coup, also showered praise on the octogenarian.
"He is a man who, even in retirement, remained a moral compass to many, and an example of modesty in public life,” Babangida noted.
Tinubu, who will attend the funeral prayer in Daura, declared a seven-day national mourning period in honour of his predecessor.
In an official condolence statement released on Sunday evening, Tinubu said the nation would pay its final respects to the former leader with dignity and honour, starting with the lowering of all national flags to half-mast across the country from Sunday.
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An investigation by medical charity Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) into the "execution" of three of its workers during a humanitarian mission in Ethiopia's war-hit northern Tigray region has found evidence that the country's army was responsible for the killings four years ago.
MSF's report includes claims that Ethiopian troops were present at the scene of the killing of the three - a Spanish national and two Ethiopians.
"They were executed," MSF Spain's general director Raquel Ayora told the BBC. "They were facing their attackers [and] were shot at very close range... several times."
The BBC has asked the Ethiopian government for a response to the allegation.
MSF said it was releasing the findings of its report into the incident as the government had failed to provide a "credible account" of the deaths despite 20 face-to-face meetings over the last four years.
Thirty-five-year-old Spaniard María Hernández Matas, along with 32-year-old Yohannes Halefom Reda and 31-year-old Tedros Gebremariam, were killed on 24 June 2021 while travelling in central Tigray to assess medical needs.
"They were very professional and passionate," Ms Ayora told the BBC.
She added that the three were fully identifiable in MSF vests and their vehicle had the charity's flag and logos on either side when they were shot.
"So, they knew that they were killing humanitarian aid workers," she said.
Ms Matas had been working in Tigray since before the war and "was very much loved" by people in the region, Ms Ayora said.
Her death has been particularly devastating for her mother as she was her only child, the MSF official added.
Mr Tedros was killed soon after his wife had given birth to a baby girl. His widow named the baby Maria, after her father's killed Spanish colleague, Mr Ayora said.
The Tigray conflict broke out in 2020 following a massive fall-out between the regional and federal governments, with neighbouring Eritrea entering the war on the side of the Ethiopian National Defence Force (ENDF).
The conflict ended two years later following a peace deal brokered by the African Union (AU). Its envoy, former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo, put the number of people who died in the conflict at around 600,000.
Researchers said the deaths were caused by fighting, starvation and a lack of health care.
MSF said the killing of its staff took place at a time when the conflict was intensifying, and Ethiopian and Eritrean troops were becoming increasingly hostile towards aid workers in the region.
The charity's report includes what it says is evidence that a convoy of soldiers from the Ethiopian army, retreating from fighting, was present at the scene of the deaths, which, it adds, is corroborated by satellite imagery.
The report says both civilian and military eyewitnesses had come forward to directly implicate Ethiopian army soldiers in the killings, including one who allegedly heard a commander order an attack on the aid workers' vehicle.
However the charity says "the level and nature" of the army's involvement in the attack "remains to be clarified".
"The review found a large body of corroborating evidence that placed a convoy of retreating ENDF troops on the road where the killings took place on the day of the incident," MSF said.
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Constance Marten was a disciple of infamous Christian preacher, TB Joshua, who was accused of rape and violence in a BBC News investigation.
Marten spent four months at Joshua's Synagogue Church of All Nations in Nigeria as a teenager.
A fellow disciple, who knew Marten when she was at the church, told the BBC it was "a place of torture" and sexual assault. The BBC has no reason to believe Marten was subjected to any abuse there.
Marten, 38, has been found guilty of gross negligence manslaughter following the death of her baby, Victoria.
Warning: This story contains descriptions of physical and sexual abuse
Now the retrial is over BBC News can report Marten, who comes from an aristocratic family with royal connections, was a disciple at the Synagogue Church of All Nations (Scoan) from September 2006, when she was aged 19.
She lived at a compound while at Scoan, one of the world's biggest Christian evangelical churches.
The BBC Eye investigation, published last year, found evidence of widespread abuse and torture by Joshua. A televangelist who had an immense global following, Joshua died in 2021.
As part of the investigation, dozens of former members alleged atrocities by Joshua, including rape and forced abortions, spanning almost 20 years.
Marten was taken to Scoan by her mother, Virginie De Selliers, after leaving school. She remained in Lagos, Nigeria, to become a disciple when her mother returned to the UK.
Angie, the fellow disciple who spoke to the BBC, said she had shared a dormitory with Marten while the pair were at the church.
"It's no wonder she just ended up distrusting normal institutions - because clearly, something broke within her at some point," she said.
Joshua had a worldwide following among some evangelical Christians thanks to videos of his "miracles" posted online by the church. After meeting him, people in wheelchairs were seen to walk again, and people with HIV and Aids showed off certificates saying they had been "cured".
However, the BBC Eye investigation revealed those videos had been faked and found how disciples had been discouraged from contacting their families, deprived of sleep, forced to denounce one another, and sometimes physically assaulted by Joshua - a man they called "Daddy".
One woman told the investigation it was her role to recruit teenage female visitors as live-in disciples, because Joshua liked to prey on them, especially virgins. Other interviewees said they were stripped and beaten with electrical cables and horse whips.
Scoan did not respond to allegations in the BBC investigation but has said previous claims were unfounded.
"Making unfounded allegations against Prophet TB Joshua is not a new occurrence… None of the allegations was ever substantiated," it wrote.
Angie, who was a Scoan disciple for 10 years, recalls Marten as being "bright, witty, compassionate, funny, kind, and very independent".
She told the BBC how the church was "a place of torture, psychological abuse, physical abuse, spiritual abuse, and sexual abuse" under Joshua's leadership.
Angie said: "I wouldn't wish that experience on anyone and I feel very sad that she [Marten] was taken there in the first place."
Unlike some Scoan disciples, who remained under Joshua's control for years, Marten was thrown out after a few months and returned to the UK, where she went to Leeds University to study for a degree in Arabic and Middle Eastern Studies.
But messages seen by BBC News suggest she was still affected by her experiences in Nigeria years later. In October 2012, she got in touch with Angie via Facebook Messenger.
"I haven't spoken to anyone about what happened at the synagogue," Marten wrote. "All my university friends are secular, and if I told them about what I'd seen in Lagos, they'd think I was lying or mad!"
Marten wrote about how TB Joshua had abruptly thrown her out of the church and explained that, for years, she thought it was her fault. She said she didn't want to acknowledge Joshua was effectively running what she and others felt was a cult at the time.
Marten said she had tried to deal with what she experienced "silently and with a lot of confusion". "It's taken me years to get back to normal," she wrote.
She said it would be a great help "both emotionally and spiritually" to talk to Angie, who replied and later met Marten twice.
In another message, Marten said she couldn't talk about her experiences with her mother, who BBC News understands continued to donate small sums to the church at the time, prior to allegations about Joshua surfacing.
"I honestly think that she needed help back then and that she needs help now," Angie said of Marten. "I feel extremely sad to see what has happened subsequently."
"The story that I see is very different from what you see on the headlines. The story that I see is a young girl who was taken to an awful place, was broken down, doesn't understand what happened to her, and is therefore unable to process what's happening to her now. She really, really needs help."
For Angie it has been difficult to watch how events have unfolded for her former friend. "My heart breaks for her because I don't wish this on anyone - at the same time I wish I could shake her," she added.
Marten's first job after leaving university was as a researcher at the Al Jazeera news channel, where she tried to make a documentary about TB Joshua's megachurch - a project she mentioned in messages sent to Angie in early 2013.
"I really want this film to give an understanding to viewers of how cults work, and the very subtle manipulation that happens, so subtle that you can't even notice it," Marten wrote.
She said Joshua's "hoodwinking of innocent people" must "come into the light".
Bisola Hephzibah Johnson, another former disciple, told the BBC she persuaded Marten not to return to Scoan in 2013 to carry out secret filming for her documentary, saying it would be too dangerous.
She says everyone who spent time at Scoan has been deeply affected by their experiences there. "Some cannot until today co-ordinate their lives," she said.
The last message Angie received from Marten was in September 2014.
Marten and her husband Mark Gordon were found guilty of gross negligence manslaughter on Monday, following the death of their baby daughter, Victoria.
At an earlier trial, which ended last year, they were found guilty of child cruelty, concealing a birth of their daughter and perverting the course of justice.
That trial heard Marten and Gordon, 51, were "arrogant" and "selfish individuals" who were in a toxic relationship.
Their baby had been "neglected and exposed to dangerous conditions", the trial heard.
The BBC approached Constance Marten's mother, Virginie de Selliers, for comment but she did not respond.
A Lesotho MP is facing criminal charges after he accused the country's monarch and government of signing over control of Lesotho to its much larger neighbour, South Africa.
Dr Tshepo Lipholo also faces charges of "violating the dignity and reputation" of the royal family by declaring himself the chief ruler of the landlocked country.
He reportedly appeared in court on Monday to apply for bail but this was postponed to a later date this month.
The opposition MP has previously called for parts of South Africa to be declared "Lesotho's territory" and wants them returned to Lesotho's control.
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The world's oldest head of state, Cameroon's President Paul Biya, 92, has said he will run once more for re-election in October aiming to extend his 43 years in power.
"Rest assured that my determination to serve you matches the urgency of the challenges we face," he said in a post on X.
He added that his decision to go for an eighth term came after "numerous and insistent" calls by people from all regions in Cameroon and the diaspora.
Biya's administration has faced criticism over allegations of corruption and embezzlement, as well as accusations of bad governance and failure to tackle security challenges. There have also been concerns about his health and ability to govern.
His absence from the public for more than six weeks last year led to speculation about his well-being and unfounded rumours that he had died.
His candidacy was expected but not formally confirmed until Sunday's social media post.
Biya has never lost an election since taking power in 1982 and if he wins another seven-year term he could be president until he is nearly 100.
There have been growing calls from inside and outside Cameroon for him to step aside and give way for fresh leadership in the central African nation.
Prominent human rights lawyer Felix Agbor Nkongho says the country deserves leadership that represents the hopes of the people, "not one that clings to power". Le Messager newspaper ran the headline, "We are finished."
Biya's candidacy follows a recent political divorce from key allies from the northern regions, who had been crucial in helping secure votes in previous elections from that part of the country.
Two of these men - prominent minister Issa Tchiroma Bakary and former Prime Minister Bello Bouba Maigari - recently quit the ruling coalition and separately announced plans to run in the election.
Last month, Tchiroma said the Biya administration he belonged to had "broken" public trust and he was switching to a rival party.
Multiple opposition figures, including 2018 runner-up Maurice Kamto, as well as Joshua Osih, Akere Muna, and Cabral Libii, have also announced their candidacies.
However, members of the governing Cameroon People's Democratic Movement and other supporters have since last year publicly called for Biya to seek another term. He was already the de-facto candidate as the party leader.
Biya abolished term limits in 2008, enabling him to seek the presidency indefinitely.
He won the 2018 elections with more than 71% of the vote although opposition groups said there were widespread irregularities.
Reacting to Biya's latest bid for the presidency, many people on the streets of the capital Yaoundé told the BBC they did not feel safe commenting openly on politics for fear of reprisals. Others withheld their names, ages or occupations out of caution.
"Never in the political history of nations have I seen or heard that a man of that age, is declaring his candidacy in a presidential election," said one member of the public, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
"I really thought he would go and rest, and hand over to a new generation," another local resident, Camille Esselem, said of Biya in surprise at the news.
However, some people welcomed another seven years under the veteran leader.
"The president still has much to offer the Cameroonian people," said public sector worker Ngono Marius, adding, "if he is a candidate it means he's capable to lead".
Sylvia Tipa, a consultant in the city, told the BBC that although she believes in change and the democratic principle of "relaying" power to the next comer, maybe "there's no-one better than [Biya]".
"So far he has done a lot for the nation - we see his role played in conflict management and many other aspects," she added, wondering if perhaps his long stay in power was God's doing.
Additional reporting by Will Ross
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Indonesian police have uncovered an international baby trafficking syndicate which has allegedly sold at least 25 infants to buyers in Singapore since 2023.
Authorities made 13 arrests related to the syndicate in the Indonesian cities of Pontianak and Tangerang this week, and rescued six babies who were about to be trafficked – all of whom are around a year old.
"The babies were first housed in Pontianak and had their immigration documents arranged before being sent to Singapore," West Java Police's director of general criminal investigation, Surawan, told BBC News Indonesia.
BBC News has contacted Singapore Police and Singapore's Ministry of Home Affairs for comment, but received no response.
The syndicate's alleged modus operandi was to target parents or expectant mothers who allegedly did not want to raise their child - in some cases initiating contact via Facebook before pivoting to more private channels such as WhatsApp, according to police.
"Some babies were even booked while still in the womb," Surawan said. "Once born, the delivery costs were covered, then compensation money was given, and the baby was taken."
Police said members of the group included recruiters who tracked down babies to be trafficked; caretakers and people who housed them; and others who prepared fraudulent civil documents such as family cards and passports, he explained.
After being taken from their mothers, the babies were given to caretakers for two to three months before being sent to Jakarta and then Pontianak, where their birth certificates, passports, and documents were prepared, police said.
The babies were sold for between 11 million Indonesian rupiah ($673; £502) and 16 million Indonesian rupiahs each, they added.
According to some of those arrested, the syndicate sold at least 12 male and 13 female babies domestically and abroad - most of them having come from various districts and cities in the Indonesian province of West Java.
Indonesian police on Thursday said that their "immediate task" was to find the adopters in Singapore.
"We will cross-check the data with the babies who departed, so we know exactly who departed, who accompanied them, when they departed, and who the adopters there are," Surawan told reporters.
Most of the information gathered by police indicated that the babies had changed nationality, he added, noting that authorities were still looking for their passports.
Surawan earlier told BBC Indonesia that the babies were obtained through agreements between the traffickers and the parents, and that none so far had been taken by kidnapping. Parents who reported their child as kidnapped did so because the broker had failed to pay them, he said.
It is suspected that at least some parents may have agreed to sell their children due to financial hardship. They too could be charged with a criminal offence, Surawan said.
"If it is proven there was an agreement between the parents and the perpetrators, they can be charged with child protection crimes and human trafficking offenses," he explained.
Police in Indonesia have requested assistance from Interpol and Singaporean police to arrest syndicate members who are still abroad, as well as buyers.
"We will list the perpetrators as wanted persons," Surawan explained. "In addition, we will issue a red notice or request law enforcement in those countries to arrest them."
Child trafficking syndicates typically target women in desperate situations, according to Ai Rahmayanti, commissioner of the Indonesian Child Protection Commission (KPAI).
"For example, they became pregnant due to sexual violence, abandonment by the husband, or unwanted pregnancies from casual relationships," she told BBC News Indonesia.
Abortion is illegal in Indonesia except under certain conditions, such as medical emergencies and pregnancies resulting from rape.
Ai Rahmayanti said baby or child trafficking syndicates often pose as maternity clinics, orphanages or social shelters that appear to care for vulnerable women and children.
"These clinics or shelters use language that sounds compassionate at first, such as 'you can give birth and take your baby home'. But in reality, they offer money and illegally transfer custody of the baby," she explains.
While there is no official data on the numbers of babies being sold in Indonesia, KPAI's own data on human trafficking crimes indicates that the trend is persistent and growing.
While in 2020 KPAI recorded 11 cases of children as victims of illegal adoption, in 2023 it recorded 59 cases related to child abduction and trafficking under the guise of illegal adoption in 2023.
One of the most recent cases that KPAI advocated occurred in 2024, when babies were found in the process of being sold in locations such as Depok, West Java and Bali.
The babies, she said, were sold at varying prices.
"In Java, [the price is] between Rp11 million and Rp15 million, while in Bali it can reach Rp20 million to Rp26 million," she explained. "The price is also based on several indicators, one of which is the baby's physical appearance."
Torrential rains in Pakistan's Punjab province have killed at least 63 people and injured 290 in the 24 hours since downpours started on Wednesday morning.
Most of the victims were crushed by collapsing buildings, while the rest either drowned or were electrocuted, according to the National Disaster Management Authority.
Authorities in the city of Rawalpindi, next to the capital Islamabad, declared Thursday a public holiday to keep people at home, while those living near a swelling river which runs through the city have been asked to evacuate.
The latest deaths take the nationwide toll to nearly 180 since the monsoon started in late June. More than half of them were children.
The floods have closed several expressways throughout Punjab and either cancelled or delayed dozens of flights.
On Thursday, the province's Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz said an emergency had been declared in a number of areas. "Government institutions are working with utmost effort," she wrote in a post on X, urging residents to abide by safety guidelines.
In Chakwal, a city deluged by 400mm of rainfall in the past day, photographs and video showed rescue boats trying to locate people stranded in floodwaters.
Military helicopters can also be seen circling heavily flooded areas.
Punjab authorities have warned that more rains and flash floods are expected throughout the weekend. Thousands of rescuers across the province have been put on standby.
Pakistan, which has a population of nearly 250 million, is among the countries most vulnerable to climate change.
It bears the brunt of two major weather systems - one can cause high temperatures and drought, while the other brings monsoon rains.
Pakistan is also home to more than 13,000 glaciers which have been melting at an accelerated pace.
In 2022, monsoon floods submerged a third of the country and killed 1,700 people. They also left the country with economic damages exceeding $30bn.
In 2023, the United Nations Secretary-General had called for the international community to help the country recover from the catastrophic floods, saying it was "doubly victimised" by climate change and a "morally bankrupt" global financial system.
Additional reporting by Azadeh Moshiri in Islamabad
Taiwan's capital Taipei came to a standstill on Thursday as the island held one of its largest-ever civil defence exercises against possible Chinese invasion.
Air raid sirens rang out across the metropolitan area and in some areas residents sought shelter indoors, while traffic ground to a halt. The city also held mass evacuation drills and mass casualty event rehearsals.
The exercise was held in conjunction with Taiwan's largest ever war games - the annual Han Kuang exercises - as the island increasingly attempts to ramp up its defences.
China claims self-ruled Taiwan as its part of its territory and has not ruled out the use of force to "reunify" with the island.
Tensions have increased since last year when Taiwan elected its president William Lai, whom China reviles as a "separatist".
Thursday's event was attended by Lai, government and city officials, and foreign officials including Raymond Greene, the head of the American Institute of Taiwan which serves as a de facto US embassy on the island.
In a speech at the end of the exercise, Lai stressed the importance of unity and resilience of Taiwan's society to protect the island and its democratic values.
He also stressed that the Han Kuang and Urban Resilience exercises were aimed at building up Taiwan's defences and that the island was not seeking war.
"We hope by preparing for war, we can avoid war, to achieve the goal of peace," he said. "With preparation, we have strength."
China has criticised the exercises as "a bluff and self-deceiving stance" by Lai and his ruling Democratic Progressive Party aimed at pushing a pro-independence agenda.
While previous Han Kuang exercises also had civil defence components, this year authorities have combined them in a single Urban Resilience exercise across the island which began on Tuesday and ends on Friday.
Each day of the exercise sees air raid sirens ringing out for half an hour in several cities.
Residents in designated areas in each city must shelter indoors or risk incurring a fine. All shops and restaurants must also pause operations. Road traffic must also come to a stop, with drivers required to pull over and head indoors immediately.
In Taipei, hundreds of emergency workers and volunteers took part in air raid drills and evacuations at a busy temple square, schools, subway stations and highways.
They also held a mock mass casualty event simulating missile or bomb strikes on buildings, where emergency personnel pulled out survivors and treated their injuries, and set up distribution points for emergency supplies.
This week's Urban Resilience exercise is the latest civil defence drill Taiwan has held this year as it tries to prepare its cities for possible attacks and raise its population's defence awareness.
While US officials have warned of an imminent threat from China and that President Xi Jinping wants his military to be capable of invading Taiwan by 2027, most Taiwanese remain sceptical that an actual invasion will take place.
One poll done last October by a government-linked think tank, the Institute for National Defence and Security Research (INDSR), found that more than 60% of Taiwanese do not believe China will invade in the next five years.
"The chances of China invading are low. If they really wanted to invade us, they would have done it long ago," said Ben, a 29-year-old finance professional interviewed by the BBC in Taipei on Wednesday.
"But I do believe we need these drills, every country needs it and you need to practise your defence… I believe there is still a threat from China."
Others were more sceptical.
"There is just too big a difference in the strengths of China and Taiwan's militaries," said Mr Xue, a 48-year-old office worker. "There is no use defending ourselves against an attack."
The IDSR poll had found that only half of Taiwan's population had confidence in their armed forces' capability to defend the island.
It is a long-running sentiment that has spurred the Taiwanese government in recent years to beef up its military and expand Han Kuang.
More than 22,000 soldiers - about 50% more than last year – rehearsed defending the island from potential attacks from China in land, sea and air drills.
Newly acquired military hardware such as the US-supplied Himars mobile missile system as well as Taiwan-made rockets were tested.
This year's Han Kuang exercise also focused on combating greyzone warfare and misinformation from China, as well as rehearsing military defence in cities.
In recent days soldiers took part in urban warfare exercises in an exhibition centre and on the subway in Taipei.
On Thursday morning at a riverside park in a Taipei suburb, troops practised re-fueling and re-arming Black Hawk and Apache helicopters with Hellfire and Stinger missiles supplied by the US.
The day before the military rehearsed pushing back enemy troops on the streets of Taichung city, and turned a high school in Taoyuan into a battle tank repair station.
Four people have died and another 1,300 evacuated as torrential rains pound South Korea, with authorities warning that the unseasonal deluge will continue.
Among those killed were two men in their 80s. Authorities believe one of them was trying to drain flood waters from the basement of his home.
A third victim was crushed when a wall collapsed onto his car. Moments before, he'd called his wife to say the vehicle was "being swept away", authorities say. The fourth victim died of a cardiac arrest.
The record rainfall has prompted South Korea's government to raise the weather-related disaster alert to its highest level.
More than 400mm of rain poured down in just half a day in Seosan, the worst-affected city, along the country's west coast - the weather agency described it as a once-in-a-century event.
Photos and videos on social media show vehicles and homes submerged, with pieces of furniture floating in the water.
"Everything is covered by water except the roof [of my house]," a resident in an affected area wrote online.
Several injuries were reported across the country, including two people suffering from hypothermia and two others who sustained leg injuries.
As of 16:00 local time (07:00 GMT) on Thursday, more than 1,300 people had been evacuated.
Authorities have urged people to stay away from riverbanks, steep slopes and underground spaces, warning that the risk of landslides and flash floods remains high.
Dry air from the north-west mixed with hot and humid air from the south to form especially large rain clouds, South Korea's meteorological administration says.
But forecasters expect high temperatures to return next week, with the possibility of a heatwave.
Washington and Delhi are "very close" to finalising a trade deal, US President Donald Trump has said, as high-level talks between the two sides continue.
"We're very close to a deal with India where they open it [the market] up," Trump told reporters at the White house on Wednesday.
Later in the day, he reiterated that the deal with India was "very close" when asked about upcoming trade agreements in an interview with broadcaster Real America's Voice.
India and the US have been locked in intense negotiations over the past few months, aiming to reach an agreement before steep tariffs kick in.
While the two sides have been negotiating for months, key sticking points persist, particularly over agricultural access, auto components and tariffs on Indian steel.
For years, Washington has pushed for greater access to India's farm sector, seeing it as a major untapped market. But India has fiercely protected it, citing food security, livelihoods and interests of millions of small farmers.
Until recently, the US was India's largest trading partner, with bilateral trade reaching $190bn. Trump and Modi have set a target to more than double this figure to $500bn.
India has already reduced tariffs on a range of goods - including Bourbon whiskey and motorcycles - but the US continues to run a $45bn (£33bn) trade deficit with India, which Trump is keen to reduce.
Meanwhile, Trump has recently renewed his aggressive tariff plans from earlier this year. He has issued warning letters to dozens of countries, signalling his intent to impose steep tariffs starting 1 August.
The list of targeted nations includes all of America's major trading partners - the European Union, Canada, Mexico, Japan and South Korea.
On Wednesday, in addition to the deal with India, he said the US "could possibly make a deal with (the) EU" soon.
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Thai police have arrested a woman who allegedly had sexual relations with monks, and then used photos and videos of the acts to extort money from them.
The woman, who police are calling "Ms Golf", had sex with at least nine monks, police said at a press conference on Tuesday. They believe she received around 385 million baht ($11.9m; £8.8m) over the past three years.
Investigators who searched her house found more than 80,000 photos and videos used to blackmail the monks, the police spokesman said.
This scandal is the latest to rock Thailand's much revered Buddhist institution, which in recent years has been plagued with allegations of monks engaging in sex offences and drug trafficking.
Police said the case first came to their attention in mid-June, when they learned that an abbot in Bangkok had suddenly left the monkhood after being extorted by a woman.
Ms Golf "had a relationship" with the monk in May 2024, police said. She later claimed to have his baby and demanded child support of more than seven million baht, they added.
Authorities then discovered that other monks had similarly transferred money to Ms Golf - which police called her "modus operandi".
Police added they found that nearly all of the money has been withdrawn and some of it had been used for online gambling.
When investigators searched Ms Golf's house earlier this month, they seized her phones and found more than 80,000 photos and videos that she had used to blackmail the monks, police said.
She is facing multiple charges including extortion, money laundering and receiving stolen goods.
The police have also opened a hotline for people to report "misbehaving monks".
The scandal has prompted the Sangha Supreme Council - the governing body for Thai Buddhism - to say it will form a special committee to review monastic regulations.
The government is also pushing for harsher penalties - including fines and jail time - for monks who breach the monastic code.
This week, Thailand's King Vajiralongkorn revoked a royal command he had issued in June conferring higher titles to 81 monks. He cited the recent cases of misconduct, which he said have "caused Buddhists to suffer greatly in their minds".
In Thailand, where more than 90% of the population identify as Buddhist, monks are highly revered. Many Thai men also choose to temporarily ordain as monks to accumulate good karma.
But the Buddhist institution has been plagued by scandals in the recent past.
Wirapol Sukphol, a jet-setting monk known for his lavish lifestyle, made international headlines in 2017 when he was charged with sex offences, fraud and money laundering. And in 2022, a temple in the northern province of Phetchabun was left without any monks after all four of its monks were arrested in a drug raid and were disrobed.
Despite years of criticism about disciplinary and accountability issues within the Thai Sangha, many say there has been little real change in the centuries-old institution. A big part of the problem lies with its strict hierarchy, say experts.
"It is an authoritarian system similar to the Thai bureaucracy where senior monks are like high-ranking officials and junior monks are their subordinates," religious scholar Suraphot Thaweesak told BBC Thai. "When they see something inappropriate, they do not dare to speak up because it is very easy to be kicked out of the temple."
But some see ongoing investigations, both by the police and the Sangha council, as a key step to push ahead with much-needed reform.
"The important thing is to reveal the truth so that the public can ease their doubts about the innocence of the Sangha," said Prakirati Satasut, a sociology scholar at Bangkok's Thammasat University.
"It depends on whether the Supreme Sangha Council will cut off some arms and legs to save the organization."
South Korea has arrested a high school teacher and a student's mother who allegedly broke into a school late at night to steal exam papers.
Their attempt took place at 01:20 local time on 4 July (18:20 GMT) at a school in Andong, a city southeast of Seoul, but was foiled when the school's security alarm went off.
The teacher is facing charges for accepting bribes and trespassing, while the mother has been accused of trespassing.
A facilities manager at the school, who allegedly conspired with the duo, has also been arrested for allowing theft and unlawful entry into the school.
Authorities say the teacher had privately tutored the child of the arrested mother - which teachers actively employed by schools in South Korea are not allowed to do.
The student had "consistently maintained top grades", according to public broadcaster KBS, but it is unclear if their academic record is related to previous cases of exam-paper theft.
Police also suspect that money had changed hands between the mother and teacher, and that this was not their first intrusion attempt, KBS reported.
This incident is the latest in a series of exam-related scandals in South Korea, a country notorious for its hyper-competitive education system.
In June, police announced they were investigating the leak of answers to a nationwide English exam via an online chatroom.
In February, 249 people were detained - dozens of school teachers among them - for selling mock questions for the high-stakes Suneung exam to private academies.
And in late 2023, dozens of students sued the government after teachers accidentally cut their test short by 90 seconds.
South Korea consistently ranks among industrialised countries with the highest levels of stress for young people aged 11 to 15.
Police in India have arrested a man in connection with the death of Fauja Singh, the world's oldest marathon runner, in a hit-and-run case.
According to the police, the accused, Amritpal Singh Dhillon was driving a speeding SUV when he struck the 114-year-old British-Indian runner. Singh sustained critical injuries and died shortly after being taken to hospital.
The incident took place in the northern state of Punjab on Monday, where Singh was out on his afternoon walk.
Singh, a global icon, set records by running marathons across multiple age categories, including when he was over 100. He began running at 89 and ran nine full marathons between 2000 and 2013, when he retired.
A white-coloured SUV, allegedly used in the incident, has also been recovered by the police.
The hit and run occurred near Fauja Singh's birth village of Beas Pind, close to Jalandhar city.
Police said Singh was crossing a road when he was struck by a vehicle. Locals took him to hospital, where he later died.
According to Indian media reports citing the police complaint, the runner's life might have been saved had the 26-year-old driver immediately taken Singh to the hospital.
Singh had many records to his name.
In 2011, he reportedly became the first person over 100 to finish a full marathon, in Toronto. He also carried the Olympic torch at the 2012 London Olympics.
Despite his achievements, Guinness World Records could not recognise him as the oldest marathon runner because he did not have a birth certificate from 1911.
The BBC earlier reported that Singh's British passport showed his date of birth as being 1 April 1911, and that he had a letter from the Queen congratulating him on his 100th birthday.
Guinness said they wanted to give him the record but could only accept official documents from the year of birth.
His marathon trainer had earlier said that birth certificates were not issued in India at the time.
His running club and charity, Sikhs In The City, said its upcoming events in Ilford, east London, where he had lived since 1992, would be a celebration of his life and achievements.
As a young boy, Singh was often teased in his village in Punjab because his legs were weak. He couldn't walk properly until the age of five.
"But the same boy, once mocked for his weakness, went on to make history," he told BBC Punjabi in June.
Singh never went to school and didn't play any sports growing up. He worked as a farmer and lived through both World Wars and the turbulent partition of India.
"In my youth, I didn't even know the word 'marathon' existed," he said.
He started running much later in life, after going through deep personal loss.
In the early 1990s, after his wife died, Singh moved to London to live with his eldest son. But during a visit to India, he witnessed his younger son Kuldeep's death in an accident, which left him devastated.
Back in the UK, Singh was overtaken by grief. One day, during a visit to the local gurdwara in Ilford, he met a group of older men who went on regular runs. That's where he also met Harmander Singh, who later became his coach and his journey as a runner began.
Singh shot to international fame when Adidas signed him for their 2004 Impossible is Nothing advertising campaign, which also featured legends such as Muhammad Ali.
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Pop Mart, the Chinese toy firm behind the hugely popular Labubu dolls, has said its profits are set to soar for the first six months of this year.
The Beijing-based company said it expects profits for the period to jump by at least 350% as revenues more than tripled.
Pop Mart, which has a stock market value of more than $40bn (£31.6bn), also said profitability had been boosted by increased recognition of the brand globally and cost controls.
Collectors have been obsessed with the viral Labubu dolls - fictional elf-like creatures with a row of jagged teeth - which have flown off shelves and sparked long queues in shops worldwide.
Pop Mart is best known for selling toys in "blind boxes" - a type of packaging that hides its contents until it is opened. The marketing tactic has faced criticism for encouraging gambling-like behaviour and compulsive buying.
Launched in 2019, Labubu dolls have helped the company become a major retailer, operating more than 2,000 vending machines and stores around the world.
Pop Mart began selling its shares on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange in 2020. The company's stock market valuation has jumped by almost 600% in the last year.
Sales from outside mainland China contributed to nearly 40% of its total revenue in 2024.
Many shops around the world had to pause sales of Labubu dolls due to overwhelming demand.
Labubu has taken off, especially in the US, thanks to celebrity endorsements by including celebrities like Kim Kardashian and Lisa from K-pop group Blackpink.
Pop Mart's partnerships with major names such as Coca-Cola and the manga franchise One Piece has also boosted Labubu's profile around the world.
In June, Lababu sales in the US were up by 5,000% compared to a year earlier, according to estimates from equity research firm M Science.
"I've not seen anything like this from other toy companies," M Science senior analyst Vinci Zhang told the BBC.
The company has huge potential in the US where it operates about 40 shops compared to around 400 in China, he added.
The buying frenzy has created a booming resale market where the dolls, originally sold at around $10, can fetch up to hundreds of dollars.
In June, a human-sized Labubu sold for $150,000 at an auction in Beijing.
Labubu's popularity has also fuelled a boom in counterfeits, often referred to as Lafufu dolls.
Chinese authorities seized more than 46,000 fake Labubu toys in June, as they crack down on a growing black market for the dolls.
Police in India are trying to piece together the story of a Russian woman who was found living in a cave in the southern state of Karnataka with her two young daughters.
Nina Kutina was rescued on 9 July by policemen who were on a routine patrol near Ramteertha hills in the Gokarna forest, which borders the tourist paradise of Goa.
Authorities say the 40-year-old and her daughters - six and five years old - do not have valid documents to stay in India. They have been lodged in a detention centre for foreigners near Bengaluru, the state capital, and will be deported soon.
Kutina has defended her lifestyle in two video interviews to Indian news agency ANI, saying she and her children were happy living in the cave and that "nature gives good health".
But even a week after they were found, there is very little clarity on how the woman and her children came to be in a forest infested with snakes and wild animals; how long they had been living there and who they really are.
Police stumble on the cave dwelling
"The area is popular with tourists, especially foreigners. But it has a lot of snakes and it's prone to landslides, especially during the rainy season. To ensure the safety of tourists, we started patrolling the forests last year," M Narayana, superintendent of police for Uttara Kannada district, told the BBC.
A second policeman who cannot be named and was part of the patrol party that stumbled on the cave dwelling said they walked down a steep hill to investigate when they saw bright clothes that had been hung outdoors to dry.
When they got closer to the cave - the entrance to which had been curtained off with brightly coloured saris - "a little blonde girl came running out". When the shocked policemen followed her inside, they found Nina Kutina and the other child.
Their possessions were meagre - plastic mats, clothes, packets of instant noodles and some other grocery items - and the cave was leaking.
Videos shot by the police at the cave dwelling which the BBC has seen, show the children dressed in colourful Indian clothes, smiling into the camera.
"The woman and her children appeared quite comfortable in the place," Mr Narayana said. "It took us some time to convince her that it was dangerous to live there," he added.
Police said when they told her that the cave was unsafe because of the presence of snakes and wild animals in the forest, she told them: "Animals and snakes are our friends. Humans are dangerous."
Kutina and her daughters were taken to a hospital for a check-up after their rescue and were certified to be medically fit.
Who is Nina Kutina?
An official in India's Foreigners Regional Registration Office (FRRO) has told the BBC that she's Russian and that she will be repatriated once the formalities are completed.
He says they have reached out to the Russian consulate in Chennai - the BBC has also written to the Russian embassy in Delhi but they are yet to respond.
In video interviews with India's ANI and PTI news agencies, Kutina said she was born in Russia but hadn't lived there for 15 years and travelled to "a lot of countries, Costa Rica, Malaysia, Bali, Thailand, Nepal, Ukraine".
In her interviews with both agencies, Kutina said she had four children between the ages of 20 and 5 years. She talked about the eldest - "my big son" - who died in a road accident in Goa last year.
Officials say her second son is 11-years-old and is in Russia - and that they have shared the information with the consulate.
On Tuesday night, the FRRO said they had tracked down the father of the girls - Dror Goldstein - and that he was an Israeli businessman. They said he was in India at the moment and that they met him and were trying to persuade him to pay for Kutina and her daughters' repatriation.
On Wednesday, Goldstein told India's NDTV channel that Kutina had left Goa without informing him and that he had lodged a missing complaint with the police there.
He said he wanted joint custody of his daughters and would do everything to prevent the government from sending them to Russia.
When did she come to Gokarna?
There is no clarity on how and when Kutina and her daughters reached the forest in Karnataka.
Police said she told them that they had been living in the cave for a week. They added that she had bought some vegetables and groceries, including a popular brand of instant noodles, from a local store, a week ago.
They said she told them that she arrived in Karnataka from Goa where she also claimed to have lived in a cave. She also said that one of her daughters was born in a Goa cave.
In her interview to PTI on Wednesday, she complained about the detention centre where she's been lodged with her daughters saying "it is like jail".
"We lived in a very good place. But now we cannot be alone. We cannot go outside. Here it's very dirty, and there's not enough food," she added.
It's not clear when and how Kutina came to India.
Police say she told them she had lost her passport, but they were able to find an older expired passport among her belongings which showed that she had come to India on a business visa which was valid from 18 October 2016 to 17 April 2017.
But she overstayed, was caught a year later, and the Goa office of the FRRO issued her "an exit permit" to leave India. According to immigration stamps in her passport, she entered Nepal on 19 April 2018 and exited three months later.
It's not clear where she went after that, but Kutina told ANI that overall she had "travelled to at least 20 countries" - at least "four of them since leaving India in 2018".
It's also not clear when she returned to India next, although some reports say she's been back since February 2020. She told PTI that she returned because "we really love India".
Kutina admitted that her visa expired a few months back. "We don't have our visa, valid visa, our visa finished," she said, adding that the lapse happened because she was grieving for her dead son and couldn't think of anything else.
Why was Kutina living in a cave?
After an idol of Panduranga Vittala, a form of Hindu god Krishna, was found in her cave dwelling, it was reported that she had gone there to do meditation and for spiritual reasons.
But in her interview to ANI, she rejected the narrative. "It is not about spiritually. We just like nature because it gives us health... it's very big health, it's not like you live in a home."
She added she had "big experience to stay in natural, in jungle" and insisted that her daughters were happy and healthy there. The cave she had chosen was "very big and beautiful" and it was "very close to a village" so she could buy food and other necessities.
"We were not dying, and I did not bring my children, my daughters, to die in jungle. They were very happy, they swam in the waterfall, they had a very good place for sleeping, a lot of lessons in art making, we made from clay, we painted, we ate good, I was cooking very good and tasty food," she told ANI.
Kutina also rejected suggestions that living in the forest exposed her children to danger.
"For all the time we lived there, yes we saw a few snakes," she said, but added that it was similar to people reporting finding snakes in their homes, kitchens or toilets.
Two gunshots.
That is how Yoo Seok-sul begins recounting the night of Friday, 26 October, 1979.
A former security guard in the Korea Central Intelligence Agency, or KCIA, as the South's spy division was known, Yoo has many stories to tell. But this is perhaps the most infamous.
He remembers the time - nearly 19:40 - and where he had been sitting - in the break room. He was resting after his shift guarding the entrance to the low-rise compound where President Park Chung-hee entertained his most trusted lieutenants. They called it the "safe house".
In his 70s now, wiry with sharp eyes, Yoo speaks hesitantly at first - but it comes back to him quickly. After the first shots, more gunfire followed, he says. The guards were on high alert but they waited outside for orders. The president's security detail was inside, along with the KCIA's top agents.
Then Yoo's boss, a KCIA officer who oversaw security for the safe house, stepped outside. "He came over and asked me to bury something in the garden." It was two guns, bullets and a pair of shoes. Flustered, Yoo followed orders, he says.
He did not know who had been shot, and he didn't ask.
"I never imagined that it was the president."
The guns Yoo buried were used to assassinate Park Chung-hee, who had ruled South Korea for the previous 18 years, longer than any president before or since. The man who shot him was his long-time friend Kim Jae-gyu, who ran the much-feared KCIA, a pillar of Park's dictatorship.
That Friday shook South Korea, ending Park Chung-hee's stifling rule and ushering in another decade under the military. Kim was executed for insurrection, along with five others.
Now, 46 years later, that night is back in the spotlight as a court retries Kim Jae-gyu to determine if his actions amounted to treason. He has remained a deeply polarising figure - some see him as a killer blinded by power and ambition, others as a patriot who sacrificed himself to set South Korea on the path to democracy. The president he killed is no less divisive, lauded for his country's economic rise and reviled for his authoritarian rule.
Kim's family fought for the retrial, arguing that he cannot be remembered as a traitor. They will now have their day in the Seoul High Court - hearings began on Wednesday - just as impeached president Yoon Suk Yeol goes on trial for the same charge that sent Kim to the gallows.
Yoon's martial law order last December was short-lived but it threw up questions about South Korean democracy - and that may influence how the country sees a man who shot dead a dictator he claimed was on the brink of unleashing carnage.
Was Kim trying to seize power for himself or to spark a revolution, as he claimed in court?
When news of the shooting broke in the morning, it sent shockwaves through South Korea. Initial reports called it "accidental".
What was left of Park's coterie tried to make sense of what had happened. Kim had been a close ally since Park seized power in a coup in 1961. They shared a hometown and had started out together at the military academy.
Veteran journalist Cho Gab-je acknowledges that Kim seemed uncomfortable with some of Park's actions, but "there's no record that Kim actually acted on those concerns, no evidence he released political prisoners, clashed with Park, or submitted formal objections".
Kim told the court he had thought about killing Park at least three times. But history shows he supported Park as he tightened his grip, abolishing direct presidential elections and term limits, allowing him to control the National Assembly and even suspend constitutional rights.
"My brother was never the kind of person who would commit such an act just to become president," insists his sister Kim Jung-sook, who is now 86.
But he ran the KCIA, which was notorious for jailing, torturing and even framing innocent students, dissidents and opposition figures with false charges.
"They tortured people, fabricated charges, and imprisoned them… and if you criticised that, you'd get arrested too," says Father Ham Se-woong, who was imprisoned twice in the 1970s for criticising the government.
Kim was not a saviour many could accept. But that is the mantle he took on, according to court transcripts that were not widely reported at the time. He told the judges he believed it was imperative to stop Park, whose ruthlessness could plunge South Korea into chaos and cost them a critical ally, the United States.
"I do not wish to beg for my life, as I have found a cause to die for," he said, although he asked the court to spare his men who followed his orders - "innocent sheep", he called them. He said he had hoped to pave the way for a peaceful transition of power, which had eluded his country so far.
On hearing about this back then, even a fierce critic like Father Ham tried launching a campaign for him. "He wanted to prevent further bloodshed. That's why we had to save him," he says.
Father Ham ended up in prison again for his efforts, as the trial became a sensitive subject. The country was under martial law. Days after the trial started - on December 12 - the man who led the investigation into the assassination, General Chun Doo-hwan, seized power in a coup.
Proceedings in the military court moved at lightning speed. On 20 December, it convicted Kim of trying to seize power through murder, and six others of aiding him. Yoo was sentenced to three years in prison for hiding the guns.
By 20 May the following year, Kim had lost his final appeal. Four days later he was hanged, along with four others. One was spared and another had been executed earlier. Kim died as the army brutally suppressed a pro-democracy uprising, killing 166 civilians in the city of Gwangju.
"I got the impression that Chun Doo-hwan was trying to quickly wrap up anything related to the previous regime in order to seize power for himself," says Kim Jung-sook.
She says she saw her brother just once through all this, a week before he was executed: "I think he sensed it might be the last time. So he bowed deeply to my mother as a goodbye."
Yoo survived but he says after he was free, he was followed for years: "I couldn't get a job. Even when I returned to my hometown, they kept tailing me. I couldn't say a word about the case." He now works as an attendant in a private parking lot outside Seoul.
Ms Kim says her family did not speak up until about 10 years ago. After South Korea became a democracy, Park's image recovered, improved by time and wealth. His daughter became president, often defending his legacy for its economic record.
It was her downfall - following massive protests over a corruption scandal - that threw open the door to revisit Kim Jae-gyu's conviction.
"This case should never have gone to a military court because the assassination happened before martial law was declared," says Lee Sang-hee, the lawyer in charge of his retrial. She adds that the "sloppy transcripts" would have influenced his appeal because the defence was not allowed to record the proceedings.
"When I reviewed the documents, I couldn't understand how he could be convicted of insurrection when there was such little evidence. And above all, there was torture," she says, which the court cited as a valid reason when it agreed in February to a retrial.
It accepted Kim's statement, which he submitted in his unsuccessful appeal in 1980, alleging "the investigators beat me indiscriminately and used electric torture by wrapping an EE8 phone line around my fingers".
Reports at the time alleged that Kim Jae-gyu's wife had been detained and tortured too, along with her brother-in-law and brothers, which officials at the time denied.
Now in her 90s, his wife has always been opposed to a retrial.
"She never talked about what she had gone through and trembles even now," Kim Jung-sook, the spy chief's sister, says.
Ms Kim is resolute in her defence of her brother, repeatedly emphasising that "he was a man of integrity".
"Because we believe that he did not kill the president and his security chief for personal gain, we have been able to endure all of this."
The security chief was Cha Ji-cheol, who had been growing closer to Park, and often clashed with Kim as the two men vied for the president's ear.
In the weeks before the assassination, they differed on how to deal with Kim Young-sam, an outspoken opposition leader who Park saw as a threat. In an interview with the New York Times, the opposition leader had called on the US to end Park's dictatorship. The National Assembly, controlled by Park, expelled him.
The decision kicked off huge protests in Kim Young-Sam's strongholds. Cha wanted to crush the uprising, while Kim Jae-gyu advised caution, which would also reassure a Washington that was growing impatient with Park's rule.
Kim told the court he warned against firing at protesters, which would only ignite anger - to which Cha said, "three million died in Cambodia, and nothing happened. If we kill one million demonstrators, we'll be fine".
That evening at the safe house, the public broadcaster reported that the US ambassador was going to meet Kim Young-sam.
An angry Park criticised Kim Jae-gyu for not arresting the opposition leader. When Kim pushed back, the court heard, Park retorted: "The agency should be feared, it should prosecute those who deserve it."
They sat across from each other, sipping Scotch and sharing a meal. Park sat between two women, a popular singer and a young model. Cha and Park's chief of staff were also there.
The terse exchanges continued, and mid-way through a love song, Kim Jae-gyu said, he pulled out the gun, aimed it at Park and told him he needed to change his politics: "Sir, you should approach things with a more magnanimous vision."
Turning to a shocked Cha, he cursed as he pulled the trigger, wounding him in the hand as Cha tried to block the shot. Then Kim fired into Park's chest. Outside, acting on his orders, KCIA agents shot dead the president's security detail - two were eating dinner, and two were on standby.
Kim tried shooting the president again, but the pistol malfunctioned. He ran out to one of his men, who gave him a revolver. Then he returned. He killed a fleeing Cha, walked towards Park, who was leaning against the model as he bled, and shot him in the head.
The two women left unharmed after being paid to keep quiet. The president's chief of staff was never targeted.
Kim then went to the next building, where the army chief he had summoned earlier was waiting. The men left in a car for KCIA headquarters.
It's likely he didn't argue with Kim - even a shoe-less, suspiciously rattled Kim was powerful, and his men guarded the compound. But en route he was persuaded to go to the army's headquarters, where he was arrested soon after midnight.
Kim told the court he had planned to use the army, perhaps even impose martial law, to complete the "revolution" and transition to democracy.
This is the crux of the retrial. The prosecution had argued it was a premeditated coup, while Kim claimed far loftier motives.
But sceptics point to the lack of planning. The gun that jammed was plucked from a safe before dinner, there were enough witnesses to derail the plot, and he did not seem to have a strategy for his "revolution". He did not even make it to the KCIA headquarters.
They say it may well have been an impulsive act of revenge by a man whose power was waning.
That's what the army general investigating the murders alleged two days later - Kim, second only to the president, had so much to lose as Park sidelined him in favour of Cha Ji-cheol.
The following month, he also charged Kim with attempting a coup.
"For a charge of insurrection to be proved, the accused must forcibly halt the function of constitutional institutions, but that didn't happen in this case," says lawyer Lee Sang-hee.
Unlike in impeached president Yoon's case - where the court will decide if he directed the military to block parliamentary proceedings - there is no evidence Kim Jae-gyu tried to seize control of state institutions, she argues.
For South Korea though, the retrial is more than that. Many see it as a defining moment to reflect on the trajectory of a democracy threatened just six months ago.
It is also an opportunity to re-evaluate Park Chung-hee, whose legacy some say is overstated. "His achievements were real, but so were his faults," says Kim Duol, an economics professor at Myungji University. "Would South Korea's growth have been possible without such an authoritarian regime?"
Kim's family hopes his retrial will shed a kinder light on his legacy. Killing Park was "a painful decision", Kim had told the court, but he had "shot at the heart of Yusin [the regime] with the heart of a wild beast".
Is that enough to make the former spy chief a hero? That is a question the court cannot answer.
India has always taken a hard position on coal, arguing that it is crucial for its energy security and developmental needs.
But energy experts and environment campaigners are increasingly saying it should at least try to decarbonise or curtail emissions from coal-fired power plants, if it can't be phased out altogether.
"You can't wish away coal," Ashok Lavasa, a former secretary of union ministries of finance, and environment, forest and climate change, said at an event on 1 July.
"The question is, if coal is king, then can it be a benevolent king?"
This signals to the fact that, realistically speaking, coal - albeit cleaner coal - may remain the primary power source of energy in India, despite years of international climate talks asking for the highly polluting fossil fuel to be phased out entirely.
But why has India - the world's third largest carbon emitter - decided to stick to coal in the first place? After all, the country has international obligations to significantly cut its carbon emissions, along with its own target to bring down the levels to net zero by 2070.
A part of the answer lies in the rising power demands of the country.
India's electricity demand has grown by more than 9% between 2021 and 2025, surpassing a previous prediction of 6.6% - and it is now forecasted to double by 2030.
Coal-fired power plants have generated more than 70% of the total electricity supply every year since the early 2000s - a figure that remains unchanged.
But the environmental cost of this reliance on coal is huge.
Estimates suggest that India's electricity generation alone accounts for more than 40% of the annual carbon emissions – and nearly three-quarters of that electricity comes from coal-burning.
The country has made progress in meeting its renewable energy targets - it contributes 46% of India's total installed capacity - but renewable sources have limitations. They generate electricity when the sun is up and the wind is blowing.
Even at daytime, experts say, supply from renewables can fluctuate, whereas thermal plants remain a constant source of electricity and are able to cater to peak demand in the evenings and at nighttime.
What's more, India's energy storage capacity - or the ability to store excess electricity from renewables at daytime - has not been able to keep pace with the expansion of resources.
"This means that there is no other option [other than thermal energy for constant supply] unless and until we have large-scale storage quantities in the system," said Rajiv Porwal, director with Grid India, the grid controller of India under the ministry of power, speaking at the 1July event, organised by the Centre for Science and Environment (CSE).
Experts say constant supply from thermal plants is crucial for the stability of the grid, or the network of towers and transmission lines that carries electricity from power plants to consumers.
"Any large mismatch of demand and supply will destabilise the grid and that can mean power-cuts and blackouts, similar to what we recently saw in Spain," says Anjan Kumar Sinha, an independent power sector expert.
With all these factors at play, India is looking to reduce emissions from coal-fired power plants, instead of phasing out coal completely.
A recent report by the CSE said that decarbonisation from coal-based thermal plants alone can cut down the country's greenhouse gas emissions by 30%.
This is particularly significant given the country's commitment to reduce emissions intensity (carbon emissions produced per unit of a country's economic output) by 45% by 2030 under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.
But there are challenges.
The common problem thermal plants face is that they must keep running at least at 55% capacity even at daytime, despite having alternate renewable sources like wind and solar power to rely on.
That's because operators cannot ramp up capacity to the fullest at short notice, particularly during the peak hours of evening when supply from renewables is down.
Experts say there is an urgent need to make thermal plants more efficient so they can run at a lower capacity.
"How low can we go [to bring down the minimum running level threshold] is the question," said Ramesh Veeravalli, a member with India's Central Electricity Regulatory Commission, speaking at the event. "Technically it is possible."
Another way to improve efficiency of plants is to adapt technologies that capture carbon dioxide emissions to keep them from escaping into the atmosphere
But some say this has produced limited results, with one estimate by the World Resources Institute saying the technology at present captures only about 0.1% of the global emissions.
A third suggestion is to burn agricultural residue in the place of coal in thermal plants.
"This idea has led to a substantial reduction in coal usage in thermal power plants in Delhi and surrounding cities," said Parth Kumar, a programme manager with CSE that has suggested methods of reducing emissions in its recent report.
"But other parts of the country are yet to adopt this seriously, even though regulation requires them to," he added.
Experts say that reducing emissions from coal-fired power plants would need larger systemic changes, involving huge costs.
But how much that cost would come down to - and who would bear it - are tough questions with no immediate answers.
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A backpacker who survived nearly two weeks lost in Western Australia's outback has said she is "simply beyond grateful to have survived".
Caroline Wilga, a 26-year-old German national, was rescued on Friday after spending 11 freezing nights alone and lost in the bushland.
She survived by drinking from puddles and sheltering in a cave, police said.
In her first public statement since being rescued, Ms Wilga said she had hit her head after losing control of her van, causing her to exit the vehicle in a state of confusion.
She was spotted by a driver and airlifted to a hospital in Perth, where she is recovering.
Ms Wilga thanked the medical staff, German consulate and all the people who had helped search for her, in a statement to Western Australia Police posted on Instagram.
"I want to express a huge thank you from the bottom of my heart – a thank you that truly comes from the depth of my soul," she said.
"Some people might wonder why I even left my car, even though I had water, food, and clothing there," Ms Wilga added.
She said she "lost control of the car and rolled down a slope", hitting her head "significantly" in the subsequent crash.
"As a result of the accident, I left my car in a state of confusion and got lost," she added.
"Previously, I didn't know where my place was in a culture on the other side of the world to my own, but now, I feel a part of it. I am deeply impressed by the courage, helpfulness, and warmth that has been shown to me here.
"Western Australia has taught me what it really means to be part of a true community. Here, humanity, solidarity, and care for one another are what truly matter – and in the end, that's what counts most."
She was found walking barefoot by motorist Tania Henley - whom Ms Wilga described as her "saviour and angel" - more than 30km away from where she had abandoned her van, on a scarcely used track north of Beacon.
Ms Henley told Australia's public broadcaster ABC that she saw Ms Wilga waving by the side of the road, and she appeared to be in a "fragile state", suffering from exhaustion, dehydration, insect bites and an injured foot.
"Everything in this bush is very prickly. I just can't believe that she survived. She had no shoes on, she'd wrapped her foot up," Ms Henley said.
Before her rescue, Ms Wilga was last seen at a general store in the town of Beacon, Western Australia, in her van on 29 June.
"I am certain that I survived only thanks to this incredible outpouring of support," she said.
"The thought of all the people who believed in me, searched for me, and kept hoping for me gave me the strength to carry on during my darkest moments," she said.
The rescue was down to "sheer luck", acting police inspector Jessica Securo said in a news conference.
Former defence secretary Grant Shapps has defended the decision to keep secret a data breach involving the details of thousands of Afghans and some British officials.
In his first interview since it became public, Shapps told the BBC erring on the side of caution was "entirely justified", adding his focus had been "sorting out the mess and saving lives".
Many people were judged to be at risk of serious harm or even death as the Taliban sought retribution against those who had worked with the British government during the conflict.
He said the injunction blocking reporting of the breach was "quite rightly" applied for by his predecessor and he believed at the time it should stay in place.
A "super-injunction" - a kind of gagging order that prevents the reporting of even the existence of the injunction - was lifted earlier this week.
Shapps told BBC Radio 4's Today Programme that "faced with the choice of whether that list would get out and people would be pursued, murdered and executed as a result of it, or doing something to try and save those lives, I'd much rather now be in this interview explaining why a super-injunction was required, than being in this interview explaining why I failed to act and people were murdered".
He added he was surprised the order lasted so long and that he had thought, as the risks started to lessen, it would have ended last year.
Shapps was also asked why Intelligence and Security Committee, which scrutinises the security services, wasn't informed, to which he replied "even a hint of this getting around...meant the risks were incredibly high".
"The 'who was briefed' was decided by conversations with the judges," he said, adding: "You can argue that circle should be wider".
The data of nearly 19,000 Afghans who had worked with the British during the 20-year war in Afghanistan and had applied to resettle in the UK were inadvertently leaked in February 2022.
The details of over 100 Britons were also released, including spies and special forces.
The discovery of the breach in 2023 forced the government to covertly set up the Afghanistan Response Route (ARR) - a resettlement scheme for those affected, who were not told about the breach despite the risk to their security.
The scheme has already allowed 4,500 Afghans and family members to move to the UK and a further 2,400 people are expected, at an estimated cost of £850m.
The accidental leak was the result of someone working at UK Special Forces headquarters in London inadvertently emailing more than 30,000 resettlement applications to an individual outside of government, thinking that he was sending data on just 150 people.
The Ministry of Defence has refused to say how many people in Afghanistan may have been harmed as a result of the data breach.
The Taliban government said on Thursday that it had not arrested or monitored Afghans affected by the leak.
Relatives of Afghans whose names were accidentally leaked by a UK official three years ago have told the BBC they fear retribution by the country's Taliban rulers.
Rahim - not his real name - says his father-in-law learned on Tuesday that his name was on that list - alongside those of thousands of Afghans who had applied to be relocated to the UK after the Taliban seized power in 2021.
The Taliban intensified their efforts to track his father-in-law down in 2023 and 2024, he said, adding that he was now able to understand why.
And Rahim fears it is only a matter of time before they succeed. "It's not about if - it's when the Taliban get him," he says.
The UK government says there has been little evidence of systematic killings or retribution by the Taliban since the February 2022 leak.
But others who spoke to the BBC on condition of anonymity - fearing retribution against family members - expressed shock over the leak, with one describing it as the "biggest mistake the British government has made".
Rahim, now 42 and living in the UK, knows all too well about Taliban score-settling. Two of his cousins were killed by the group in the two years before it seized power.
A couple of years later, the target of such revenge appeared to be his father-in-law, who is currently in hiding.
"We couldn't work it out, why [from 2023] there was a sudden spike in the hunt by the Taliban to capture him," Rahim says.
"We can't say for sure, but we believe they have access to that data."
Rahim says his father-in-law provided evidence of these attempts to hunt him down to the Ministry of Defence (MoD), most recently last December - his third attempt to be resettled in the UK under the Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy (Arap).
He says his father-in-law's previous applications through the scheme were turned down because it was decided he had not worked directly with the UK government.
But Rahim says his father-in-law's latest application included "compelling evidence" that he had worked alongside British forces.
He adds that, since December 2023, his father-in-law has been hiding out in safe houses provided by a non-governmental organisation.
"Some Taliban members spent more than a decade in prison. When they came to power, they were simply looking for retribution."
But he hopes the attention given to the data leak will mean that the relocation application is expedited so his father-in-law can finally join his daughter - Rahim's wife - and him in the UK.
"The family are very concerned," Rahim says.
"Because of this data leak the risk [to my father-in-law] is more real, it's heightened, and it's imminent. It's just a matter of time."
The MoD says it will not comment on individual cases, and that a review into the data breach carried out in 2025 had concluded that there was limited evidence that certain individuals had been targeted with any degree of consistency as a result of it.
The MoD adds that the review had also found little evidence of systematic killings or retribution campaigns, and had considered the amount of time passed since the fall of Kabul and the wealth of data the Taliban otherwise have access to.
Defence Secretary John Healey also told the BBC earlier this week that it was "highly unlikely" being on the list would now increase the risk of being targeted by the Taliban.
But the data breach was called the "biggest mistake the British government has made" by one man who says he worked directly with the UK forces in Afghanistan to help them collect information on Taliban movements.
The man, who we are calling A, successfully relocated to the UK with his family but says his application to the government included details of his parents, brothers and sisters.
"I didn't know that my contacts were exposed and I only found out yesterday [Tuesday]," he tells the BBC.
"An apology alone will not remove our greatest fears because our data and our families' are now in everyone's hands - their lives are in danger.
"I called my parents in Kabul and told them to leave the city immediately and find a safe place somewhere in the province. They were also scared, they didn't know where to go... They haven't contacted me yet."
Another man - who we are calling B - says he was told the data breach included the details of his parents and two younger brothers, none of whom previously knew about the nature of his work with the British.
"Yesterday, I received an email from the MoD asking me to 'check the reference number to make sure your data has not been leaked. If it's red, it's leaked, if it's green, it's not'," he says.
"When I saw that the number was red, I couldn't sleep and I was very worried."
Though he says he is now safe, he fears for his mother and younger brothers, who he left in a northern province of Afghanistan. He adds he did not call them about the leak over concerns about their safety.
"In the past the Taliban and other people repeatedly asked my father 'where is your son', why and how [I] left the country.
"My father [was] extremely worried [and] died six months ago.
"I wish I had not told the British officials when I signed up for the job and hadn't revealed the names of my brothers. They could be in danger now.
"I didn't expect such a leak from British intelligence, we are all in shock."
School-age children in Australia are vaping less, research suggests, a year after a government ban on disposable vapes came into effect.
Vaping rates among 14 to 17 year olds fell from 17.5% at the start of 2023 to 14.6% in April this year, according to the latest update from Cancer Council Australia's nationwide study Generation Vape.
The survey also found rates for people aged over 15 reduced by more than a third.
Australian Health Minister Mark Butler said vaping rates for young Australians "have now turned the corner", adding that officials have seized more than 10 million illegal vapes in the past year.
"Our education and prevention campaigns as well as support to deter people from taking up vaping and smoking or to quit are making a difference," he said in a statement.
New laws to stop single-use vapes from being made, imported, advertised and supplied in Australia were introduced in July 2024. Nicotine vapes can now only be legally purchased with a prescription at pharmacies. However, a black market for nicotine vapes has been thriving in the country for years.
The UK similarly banned the sale of disposable vapes from June this year.
Vapes are considered safer than normal cigarettes because they do not contain harmful tobacco - but health experts advise that they are not risk-free and the long-term implications of using them are not yet clear.
Australian authorities - like those in the UK - were particularly concerned about the uptake of vapes by youth, with Mr Butler arguing the products were creating a new generation of nicotine addicts.
The latest Generation Vape survey found that 85.4% of young people - from a pool of about 3,000 children aged between 14 to 17 - had never vaped.
Less than a third of those teenagers expressed an interest in vaping, which the Cancer Council says represents a drop in curiosity about the products.
Attitudes towards vaping among school-age children are changing too, the researchers said, pointing to interviews conducted in the study where many current or former vapers said they felt a sense of shame or embarrassment about their vape use.
Though fewer teenagers are reporting that they're able to buy their vapes themselves, however, tobacconists and vape shops remain a key source of vape sales, despite the new laws.
Speaking to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) on Wednesday, Mr Butler said he is confident the "peak of vaping" is behind Australia.
"I know this is a really, really tough fight and we've got a lot more to do, not just in the area of vaping, but illicit tobacco as well," he said.
Tobacco use remains Australia's leading cause of preventable death - despite some of the strongest anti-smoking laws in the world - and kills more than 24,000 people each year.
Bradley Murdoch, an Australian man who murdered British backpacker Peter Falconio in 2001, has died from throat cancer.
Murdoch, 67, was serving a life sentence at a prison in Alice Springs, in Australia's Northern Territory. He never revealed the location of Mr Falconio's body.
The victim's parents, Joan and Luciano Falconio, said they were relieved that the killer was dead, but they had hoped that Murdoch would one day reveal where their son's body is.
"Even now we still hold out hope that his remains will be found," they said in a statement.
The Northern Territory Police Force said: "It is deeply regrettable that Murdoch has died without, as far as we are aware, ever disclosing the location of Peter Falconio's remains."
Murdoch died in the Alice Springs hospital's palliative care unit on 15 July, a day after the 24th anniversary of the killing, the Department of Corrections told the BBC. His death will be investigated by the coroner.
The murder of Peter Falconio remains one of Australia's most high-profile cases. It attracted worldwide attention and partly inspired the 2005 horror film Wolf Creek.
The backpacker was shot dead on a remote stretch of highway near the Northern Territory town of Barrow Creek, about 300km (186 miles) north of Alice Springs in July 2001.
The 28-year-old and his girlfriend, Joanne Lees, who were both from Yorkshire, were travelling around Australia at the time of his murder.
Murdoch, who was 43, pulled up beside their vehicle, claiming to have seen sparks coming from the camper van he was driving.
He shot Mr Falconio in the head as he inspected the car, before taking 28-year-old Ms Lees, into his car and binding her wrists with cable ties.
She managed to escape by hiding in outback scrub for several hours before she was able to wave down two men driving a truck.
The police investigation was enormous - there were 600 persons of interest at one point. The case sparked a media frenzy, with British and Australian media fixating on Joanne Lees and treating her as a suspect.
In 2005, Murdoch was convicted of murdering Mr Falconio and of the attempted kidnap and assault of Ms Lees.
Her hair elastic, which was found tied around Murdoch's gun holster, proved to be the vital piece of evidence that would seal his fate.
"I think it was a trophy but no-one will ever know," lead investigator Colleen Gwynne told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC).
During the eight-week trial, prosecutors said Murdoch was likely to have disposed of Mr Falconio's body in the wilderness between Alice Springs and Broome, a distance of nearly 1,600km (1,000 miles).
In 2016, the Northern Territory introduced "no body, no parole" legislation, meaning he would not have been eligible for parole in 2032 if he did not reveal the location of the remains.
Murdoch had always maintained his innocence, despite DNA evidence linking him to the crime, and unsuccessfully appealed to overturn his convictions twice.
Mr Falconio's parents said that upon hearing of Murdoch's death, their "first feeling was of relief, it's like a weight that's been lifted... We don't want to let him ruin our lives more than he already has."
Joan and Luciano Falconio added that they are instead focusing on their other children and grandchildren.
"The awful thing is our family's future with Peter was cruelly taken away."
Ms Gwynne told the ABC that it was a "sad day" for Mr Falconio's family, and that "an enormous opportunity" to find his remains had been lost.
"[Murdoch's] silence has denied the Falconio family the closure they have so long deserved," the police statement said.
The police said in the statement that they remain "committed to resolving this final piece of the investigation", and reiterated that a reward of up to A$500,000 (£240,000) is available for information leading to the discovery of the remains of the murdered British backpacker.
Acting Commander Mark Grieve told a press conference in late June that police had "made numerous approaches" to Murdoch, but that "unfortunately... on all occasions he has chosen not to engage with police".
A statement released by Murdoch's family after his death said that he had always denied responsibility for the crimes "from his arrest until his death", and added that "he was much more than the headlines".
Additional reporting by Tiffany Wertheimer
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For years, from behind a computer screen, Erin Patterson built up a reputation in an online true crime community as a "super sleuth".
Today, she herself has become a true crime obsession.
When three people died – and another fell gravely ill - after eating toxic-mushroom-laced beef Wellingtons at her home in rural Victoria two years ago, her entire life was put under a microscope.
Journalists have descended from around the world to cover her lengthy murder trial, spectators have queued daily to nab a spot in the courtroom, and thousands of people have picked apart details of the case online.
But, despite a jury earlier this week finding her guilty on all charges, the frenzy of speculation and depth of fascination has only intensified.
"It has shades of Macbeth," criminal psychologist Tim Watson-Munro told the BBC.
It was in one of Australia's smallest courtrooms that its biggest trial in recent history took place.
Over 11 weeks, seven documentary-making teams cast their lenses on the tiny town of Morwell. Podcasters here were a dime a dozen. Journalists vied for the six seats reserved for media inside the court each day. Even one of Australia's best-loved authors, Helen Garner, frequently dropped by the Latrobe Valley Law Courts, fuelling rumours that she is preparing to write another best-seller.
Waiting with the sea of tripods outside the building most mornings of the trial was a queue of camp chairs.
Come rain, frost or fog, court watchers – predominantly women, often rugged up in beanies and encased in sleeping bags – watched for the moment the glass doors would open.
Once inside, they would lay a line of belongings – scarves, water bottles, notepads, bags – outside the courtroom entry to reserve their spot.
Tammy Egglestone commuted for more than an hour to reach Morwell most days of the trial. "I'm a bit of a true crime fanatic," she explains.
She was in court when it heard evidence that Patterson was once just like her.
Patterson had been an active member in a Facebook group focussed on the crimes of Keli Lane, a woman who was found guilty of killing her two-day-old daughter in one of Australia's most notorious cases.
In 2018, Lane became the subject of a major podcast after writing to a journalist claiming to have been wrongly convicted and begging her to investigate.
At Patterson's trial, one of her online friends Christine Hunt said she was renowned among her peers for her nimble researching and tech skills.
"She was a bit of a super sleuth," she said. "She was highly regarded in that group."
But as her case unfolded in Morwell, Patterson was also put on trial in the court of public opinion.
She became water-cooler talk in workplaces around the country, gossip among friend groups, and the ultimate topic of debate online.
Thousands of people theorised over a motive for the crime, provided commentary on bits of evidence, and even alleged corrupt forces were behind the case – much of the discussion unfounded, almost all of it in breach of laws designed to give defendants a fair trial.
Memes filled social media feeds. On Google Maps, someone created a restaurant listing at Patterson's home address. Others shared trial bingo cards they had created for those following it closely.
Throughout the week the jury was considering their verdict, sequestered in a hotel to protect them from the maelstrom, the question everyone had was: what were they thinking?
"What are they doing in there?" one lawyer was overheard asking in a Morwell café on day four of deliberations.
With jury members bound by strict secrecy requirements, we will never know.
"In the US, they can interview jurors after a trial," Mr Watson-Munro said. "We can't get into the heads of jurors in Australia… so it's really hard to know what their thinking has been and why they've come to that conclusion."
That leaves a massive vacuum for members of the public to fill with their speculation.
People like Ms Egglestone pondered: if the poisoning was intended to kill, wouldn't Patterson have planned and executed it better?
She said the discourse around the case was "very pitchforky".
"You know, [it's] she's guilty, she's guilty, she's guilty.
"And a lot of them are using hindsight reasoning. 'If I was in that situation, I wouldn't do this, this and this.' Well, you don't know what you would do in that situation."
But people like her were drowned out by the hordes proclaiming Patterson guilty.
Many said it was her lies that convinced them. Some claimed the evidence showed a clear lack of empathy and concern for those who died.
"What really gave her away was wearing white pants when she had 'gastro' and needed to go to hospital for it!" one person posted, referring to CCTV footage of her movements in the days after the lunch, which was played at the trial.
Already, the case has inspired a television special, a silver screen drama series, a bevy of podcasts, several documentaries and a handful of books.
"It has those typical cliché things that make true crime sell," Ms Egglestone said, explaining why she and flocks of others have become obsessed with the case.
"Poison's the weapon, the fact that she did take out family members... [she's] white, female, financially stable, you know. And they're all church people."
For David Peters, the seemingly benign circumstances surrounding the crime – and the fact it was in his local area – drew him in: "The fact that it was a family sitting down to do something you would consider to be safe - have a meal - and then the consequences of that meal..."
Several people tell the BBC the case reminds them of the frenzy over Lindy Chamberlain's notorious trial in 1982. She was falsely convicted of murder after her infant daughter Azaria was taken from an outback campsite by a dingo.
It's no coincidence that both of those cases centre around women, criminology researcher Brandy Cochrane tells the BBC.
The world has long been fascinated by women who kill – in no small part because it contradicts their traditional "caring" gender role, they explain.
Those stereotypes also cast a shadow on Patterson's time in court.
"She's expected to act in a particular way, and she's not," says Dr Cochrane, a lecturer at Victoria University.
"It's like, 'Oh, obviously she's guilty, she's not crying the whole time' or 'Obviously she's guilty, she's lied about this'... The legal system in and of itself treats women very differently."
Away from the ghoulish spectre of the trial, there's anger – albeit dwindling – among the communities where the victims are from over the way the case has been dissected, local councillor Nathan Hersey told the BBC.
Don and Gail Patterson and Heather Wilkinson were respected and adored by many in the South Gippsland region, he said, but it feels like they've been forgotten.
"This has been an extremely high-profile case that's brought a lot of attention, often unwanted through to our local community.
"[And] some people haven't had that humanity… they've certainly lost focus that for people, there is a loss, there is grief."
Six years ago, Jess Basey-Fisher was holding her mother's ashes when her father, Nicholas, said he needed to tell her something.
He revealed that his wife, Jess's mother, Ann, had kept a secret until the day she died.
She had given birth before she met him and put the baby boy up for adoption.
"From the moment I found out, I was determined to find my older brother," says the 53-year-old nurse, who lives in Carleton St Peter in Norfolk.
Jess did not have many facts to go on. She knew that the father was someone who Ann had met at a ball at a US airbase in Sculthorpe in Norfolk.
Ann, who went on to work as a nurse and a midwife, was sent away to London to give birth.
Using that information, Jess managed to track down her brother's birth record from September 1962 on the Ancestry website, after searching for a 15-year period.
"I knew the surname, and I just had a hunch that she would have called him something like James, and it turned out to be correct," Jess says.
Her father, Nicholas, a GP, was very supportive of the search but died on a cycling holiday a few months after revealing his wife's secret.
'An incredible moment'
Jess contacted a social worker who managed to find James on Facebook in 2021. He had been renamed Alistair Dalgliesh, though the social worker could not tell Jess due to data protection.
The social worker sent him a message, and he replied with his email address, but there was no further correspondence, and Jess presumed he did not want to be found.
"I was very anxious because I didn't even know whether he was aware he had been adopted," Jess adds.
In October, Jess decided to try and contact her brother again, through social workers, and a conversation started.
"That was an incredible moment for me," Jess says. "And I found out my brother lives in Australia."
In an astonishing coincidence, Alistair's adoptive mother, Marjorie, was a nurse and his father, Ken, was a GP - mirroring Jess's upbringing.
They had a daughter but were struggling to have another child when they adopted Alistair.
They went on to have another biological son, and the family then moved from Kent to Australia when Alistair was three, under the Ten Pound Poms scheme.
The siblings arranged to speak on FaceTime and had a conversation for two hours, in which they laughed about how similar they look.
Jess recognised her brother's mannerisms as being very similar to their mother, and told him they shared a passion for music and history.
Alistair, 62, did not actively search for his birth family but often thought about them over the years.
"I was really happy to be found," he says, speaking from his home in Queensland. "I had such a great upbringing with amazing parents, and I feel very lucky."
Fortunately, Alistair knew from the age of ten that he was adopted, but Jess was worried about telling him that their mother had died.
Alistair took the news well, but wishes he could have reassured his biological mother before she died that he had a great life.
"My only regret is that I didn't get to tell her. All I wanted to do was say, 'It's ok. Don't worry about me," he says.
Jess was able to share with her brother that her parents got married on his birth date, six years after he was born.
Alistair says the information sent a shiver down his spine.
"That made me realise that I still meant a lot to her," he says.
A month after the siblings first spoke, Alistair called his sister with some news. He had been diagnosed with stage four lung cancer.
Jess decided to visit him to help him through chemotherapy and arrived in Australia in April to spend five weeks with him.
Alistair's adoptive mother Marjorie was particularly pleased to meet her.
"I just wanted to support him. It was a magical time. He is the most loving person - he gave me a kiss and a hug every morning and night, and the whole family embraced me," Jess says.
Alistair is coming to stay with Jess in Norfolk in October, when he will meet his wider family.
Jess says she wishes her mother could have shared her secret before she died.
"I feel devastated for her and I feel cheated out of knowing Alistair for longer. But we are going to make the most of the time we have left," she says.
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The Australian government has won a landmark climate case against residents of islands under siege from the impacts of climate change.
In 2021, community elders Pabai Pabai and Paul Kabai launched legal action against the then-Liberal government for breaching its duty of care to protect the Torres Strait Islands from the impacts of climate change.
But a Federal Court judge dismissed the case and said climate policy was a matter for parliament, not the courts.
The ruling also found that the government did not owe a duty of care to protect the islands from the impacts of climate change.
"My heart is broken for my family and my community," Uncle Pabai, a community leader from Boigu island, said in statement to local media.
The Torres Strait Islands - located between far-north Queensland and Papua New Guinea - are made up of about 270 islands, of which only a few dozen are inhabited. They are part of Australia, and the islands' residents are Australian citizens.
About 4,000 people live on the islands, according to the latest official figures, with 90% identifying as Indigenous.
In their submission, Uncle Pabai and Uncle Paul said sea levels in the north of Australia had been rising "significantly higher than the global average".
Between 1993 and 2019, sea levels in the Torres Strait rose by about 6cm per decade, the court was told.
The court also heard that the islands are home to a "distinctive customary culture known as Ailan Kastom", where the residents have a "unique spiritual and physical connection" to the islands and waters.
The case added that by failing to take greater action against climate change in its emissions targets, the islands' unique culture would be lost, and residents would become climate refugees.
However, Justice Michael Wigney said that while he recognised the "devastating impact" caused to the islands by climate change, current negligence laws in Australia do not allow for compensation where the loss of culture, customs and traditions were the result of a government's policies.
He acknowledged that while "climate change related flooding and inundation events had damaged their sacred sites and the burial grounds of their ancestors", matters of "core government policy", such as emissions targets, was "ordinarily to be decided through political processes, not by judges".
He did, however, recognise that action was needed: "There could be little, if any, doubt that the Torres Strait Islands and their traditional inhabitants will face a bleak future if urgent action is not taken to address climate change and its impacts."
In his submission to the court, Uncle Pabai described the deep spiritual connection he and other locals have with the waters and land, especially the cemeteries. "Talking to my ancestors is a big part of my culture," he wrote.
"If Boigu was gone, or I had to leave it, because it was underwater, I will be nothing."
Uncle Paul, the other elder behind the court action, was equally stunned by the findings.
"I thought that the decision would be in our favour, and I'm in shock," he said.
"This pain isn't just for me, it's for all people Indigenous and non-Indigenous who have been affected by climate change. What do any of us say to our families now?"
During earlier court hearings, Uncle Paul had described his childhood memories of Saibai in the 1970s and 1980s, when it was a "land of plenty", with an abundance of barramundi, a type of fish, and crabs in inland freshwater swamps.
But now, more extreme weather events and higher sea levels meant an increase in saltwater coming inland, and coupled with less rain, the higher salt levels in the swamps have made it impossible for fish and crabs to survive, he said.
He told the court about a seawall - built around 2017 - that was breached by a king tide in 2020, destroying crops and flooding homes.
"If the water keeps on rising, in the way it has in the last 10 years or so, the seawall will not be able to protect Saibai at all," he said in his submission.
"My country would disappear. I would lose everything: my home, my community, my culture, my stories, my identity. Without Saibai, I do not know who I would be," the court heard.
In handing down his decision, Justice Wigney said that while the previous government "paid scant if any regard to the best available science" in setting emissions reductions, the new targets set by Labor were "significantly higher and more ambitious".
In a joint statement following the court decision, Australia's Minister for Climate Change and Energy Chris Bowen and Minister for Indigenous Australians Malarndirri McCarthy, said they "understand that the Torres Strait Islands are vulnerable to climate change, and many are already feeling the impacts".
"Where the former Government failed on climate change, the Albanese Government is delivering – because it's in the interest of all Australians," the statement said.
Riona Moodley, from the University of NSW's Institute of Climate Risk and Response said while the decision was "definitely a setback" for Torres Strait Islanders, it does not mean the law can not change.
"The reality is that Australian law will need to adapt to meet the challenges of climate change," she told the BBC.
Her colleague Wesley Morgan said the court's finding should also propel greater action from government on its climate policies.
"It must listen to the science telling us we need to be as ambitious as possible in the decade ahead," he said.
Australian authorities have recommended infectious disease testing for some 800 children across four childcare centres that had employed a man accused of a string of offences including child rape.
Earlier, around 1,200 children across 20 childcare centres were also asked to undergo testing as a precaution.
Joshua Dale Brown, 26, was arrested in May and faces 70 charges. Police allege that he abused eight children, aged between five months and two years old, from April 2022 to January 2023.
The update by police on Tuesday comes after four more childcare centres were added to a list of places Mr Brown had worked at between January 2017 and May 2025.
One centre was removed from the previous list after police found that Mr Brown did not work there.
Authorities did not reveal if Mr Brown had tested positive for sexually transmitted infections, but said that the manner in which the alleged offences had been carried out meant some children might be asked to undergo screening for infectious diseases.
Authorities said the potential risk of exposure to infectious diseases is "considered low", and "testing results to date reaffirms this assessment".
"We acknowledge how distressing this is for all families involved and everything possible is being done to provide the vital support now required," a notice on the Victorian government website said.
The case has prompted shock and anger among parents - not just at Mr Brown's alleged offences but also at what they say is a lapse in the government's screening of childcare workers.
Mr Brown had a valid Working with Children Check - a mandatory screening process for people doing child-related work - and was employed as a childcare worker when he was arrested, authorities said.
Over the weekend, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation reported that Mr Brown had managed to keep his working certificate despite being reported to state authorities two years ago for his behaviour at the childcare centre where he allegedly abused the eight children. The reports were unrelated to sexual misconduct.
G8 Education, the childcare operator which had employed Mr Brown, have said that they would accelerate the rollout of security cameras across more than 400 centres.
It also said it would commission an independent review of the allegations against Mr Brown after the police investigation and criminal proceedings have finished.
Mr Brown is due to appear at Melbourne Magistrates Court in September.
A small ceremonial fire has been burning for more than 1,300 days on a dusty stretch of Wangan and Jagalingou Country in central Queensland, the second largest state in Australia.
The flame marks the site of a protest that has been going on for more than four years. It stands at the heart of a long-running standoff between part of the local Indigenous community and the Carmichael coal mine, one of the country's most controversial mining projects.
The mine, owned by Indian energy giant Adani which operates locally as Bravus, sits just across the road. It is located on the traditional land of the Wangan and Jagalingou (W&J) people.
Adrian Burragubba and his son Coedie McAvoy have been waging a long campaign against Bravus, taking, as they see it, a spiritual stand as well as fighting for cultural survival.
"Where my land is, there's a mine trying to destroy my country," Adrian says. "That country is the roadmap to my history and knowledge about who I am and my ancestors."
At the heart of their resistance is Doongmabulla Springs, a sacred site which they believe was created by the rainbow serpent Mundagudda – a powerful ancestral being in many ancient Aboriginal creation stories, often associated with water, creation and the land.
Hydrocarbon traces
The Doongmabulla Springs are connected to a bigger underground water system that helps keep the dry land alive. It sits above the Galilee Basin, one of the largest untapped coal reserves in the world, a 247,000-sq-km region containing more than 30 billion tonnes of coal.
Some scientists - which include Prof Matthew Currell, one of Australia's leading hydrogeologists, from Griffith University in Melbourne - say the site is ecologically significant and potentially vulnerable.
"We started noticing a couple of things, from time to time actually seeing hydrocarbons being detected within the spring waters themselves," says the academic, who has studied the area for several years.
"If hydrocarbons have only started turning up after mining, then we have to explain why. If it's linked to mining activity, then it's a red flag that the spring water quality is imminently under threat," he says.
"We're seeing signs that the impact from the mine is greater than what had been predicted when it was approved. I think that needs to prompt a full re-evaluation of that approval."
A growing body of evidence suggests that mining activity could be having more impact on groundwater than originally forecast.
Prof Currell's findings, co-authored with Dr Angus Campbell and peer-reviewed in 2024, have raised concerns about Adani/Bravus's groundwater modelling.
The company rejected the findings and accused some of the article's authors of being anti-coal campaigners, which they deny.
Australia's national science agency, CSIRO, also reviewed Adani's analysis of the impact of the Carmichael mine on groundwater in the area in 2023. That review, which is part of the evidence being examined in an ongoing court case, concluded that Adani's models were not "fit for the purpose" of assessing the impact of the mine on the springs.
In 2023, following a review of Adani/Bravus's groundwater monitoring data, the government banned their planned underground mining due to uncertainty over the impact it would have on the springs.
Adani is challenging this ban in court. The company insists it has complied with environmental and legal standards.
"There have been no breaches of our groundwater conditions and the Doongmabulla Springs complex is not at risk from any of the mining we are doing now or are authorised to do in the future," it said in a statement to the BBC.
Queensland's Environment Minister, Andrew Powell, told the BBC: "We are committed to protecting the cultural and environmental values of the springs by taking appropriate enforcement action."
A divided community
The government's decision to approve the Carmichael mine has polarised Australia for nearly a decade.
Adrian Burragubba and his family argue that the mine is threatening their sacred water source, and that their rights, culture and connection to "country", as Indigenous Australians term their ancestral homeland, are being ignored.
The UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, adopted in 2007, requires "states to obtain free, prior and informed consent before undertaking projects that affect rights to land, including mining". While not legally binding, the declaration serves as a framework for harmonising relations between states and Indigenous peoples.
The controversy surrounding the mine has also long been a flashpoint in the climate debate, attracting both protests across the nation and strong support from local mining communities. The Queensland government had approved the project, citing its potential to generate jobs and boost exports.
Australia is already one of the world's top coal producers. The Carmichael mine exports to the Asia-Pacific region, where demand for coal is projected to stay high, even as economies aim to use more renewable energy.
Bravus says it has invested more than $486m in the town where many of the mine's workers reside. But allegations of poor working conditions have surfaced.
Journalist Kim Nguyen, who has spent years covering stories on the Carmichael mine, has spoken to workers who say they have been exposed to unsafe dust levels, made to work in substandard infrastructure and faced a culture of fear when raising concerns.
Queensland's mining safety regulator confirmed there were 875 pages worth of serious accident reports from 2019 to 2024, but said the mine's incident rate was "broadly consistent with industry averages".
Bravus responded: "We have a zero-fatality record (…) We maintain high standards, comply with all legislation, encourage people to raise concerns anonymously or in person and these are resolved as they arise."
After the state government declared it would approve the mine without Indigenous consent, seven out of twelve W&J family groups signed a land agreement with Adani in exchange for a community fund.
"It's split families," says W&J woman Jackie Broderick. "I feel terrible about the destruction of the land, but if we hadn't agreed [to the mine project], they would have just gone ahead anyway. We got out of it what we could," she says.
Others believe the deal came at too high a cost. "Mining is God in this country. One mine has divided a whole nation," says Coedie.
In a statement, Bravus said: "Adrian Burragubba and his allies in the anti-fossil fuel movement have tried for many years to discredit our company and stop our Carmichael mine, which has been operating safely and responsibly in line with Queensland and Australian law."
Land rights claim
In 1915, Queensland's Aboriginal Protection Act allowed the forced removal of Aboriginal people from their land. Many W&J people were sent more than 1,000km away. Families were separated and practising Aboriginal culture was banned.
In 1993, the Native Title Act gave Aboriginal people limited land rights if they could prove continuous connection with it, including the right to negotiate on mining projects.
The W&J people lodged a Native Title claim in 2004. With that, they had the right to negotiate with Adani, which offered benefits in exchange for signing an agreement. However, in 2012 and again in 2014, no agreement could be reached, so Adani sought approval through the Native Title Tribunal without Indigenous consent.
In 2021, after 17 years, a judge dismissed the W&J Native Title claim, removing their right to consultation or compensation for future mines under the law. This was because they failed to establish a sufficient connection to the land.
"A judge ultimately made a determination that the native title did not exist in the claim area, and it's now subject to application to the High Court of Australia for special leave to appeal," says Tim Wishart, head of the Queensland South Native Title Service.
"I don't think it's a particularly fair system, but it's all we've got at the moment," he adds.
Legal fight continues
Adrian is now pursuing a judicial review in Queensland's Supreme Court, arguing that the mine violates his community's human rights by threatening a sacred site.
Their argument is based on Section 28 of the state's Human Rights Act, which protects the right of Indigenous people to practise their culture and maintain their connection to land and water.
It is a case that could set a precedent, says Alison Rose, Adrian and Coedie's lawyer.
"It will be a really important test case that will be followed by other First Nations [Indigenous] people who are wanting to protect culture and country," she says.
This is Adrian's fourth case against the government, using pro bono lawyers. Previously, he became bankrupt after fighting one court case and being hit with $680,000 in costs.
But despite the bankruptcy, the court losses and internal community rifts, Adrian, his son Coedie and their family remain undeterred.
"We come from the water," Adrian says. "Without the water, we're all dead. Without land, we've got nothing."
The Queensland government has requested the court strike out Adrian's human rights case. The verdict has yet to come.
Text adapted by Selin Girit and edited by Alexandra Fouché
Within minutes of Erin Patterson walking into a tiny hospital in rural Victoria, doctor Chris Webster realised she was a cold-blooded killer.
"I knew," he tells the BBC.
"I thought, 'Okay, yep, you did it, you heinous individual. You've poisoned them all'."
Dr Webster had spent the morning frantically treating two of the four people a jury this week found Erin had intentionally fed toxic mushrooms - concealed in a hearty beef Wellington lunch served at her home in July 2023.
She was convicted of the murders of her in-laws, Don and Gail Patterson, both 70, as well as Gail's sister, Heather Wilkinson, 66. Erin was also found guilty of attempting to murder local pastor Ian Wilkinson – Heather's husband – who recovered after weeks of treatment in hospital.
But initially, when Heather and Ian presented to Leongatha Hospital with intense gastroenteritis-like symptoms, Dr Webster and his team thought they were dealing with a case of mass food poisoning.
Heather had described for him a "lovely" afternoon at Erin's house, the physician told the trial.
"I did ask Heather at one stage what the beef Wellington tasted like and she said it was delicious," Dr Webster said.
His suspicion had fallen on the meat, so the doctor took some blood samples as a precaution and sent them off for analysis in a town with better medical facilities, before hooking the Wilkinsons up with fluids.
But soon he would receive a call from the doctor treating Don and Gail at Dandenong Hospital, about a 90-minute drive away, and his stomach dropped.
It wasn't the meat, it was the mushrooms, she told him. And his patients were on the precipice of an irreversible slide towards death.
He immediately changed tack, beginning treatment to try and salvage their failing livers, and preparing to transfer them to a larger hospital where they could receive specialist care.
It was at this point that someone rang the bell at the front of the hospital.
Through a Perspex security window was a woman telling him she thought she had gastro.
"I'm like, 'Oh, hang on, what's your name?' And she said, 'Erin Patterson'," Dr Webster says.
"The penny dropped… it's the chef."
He ushered Erin into the hospital and told her he suspected she and her guests were all suffering from life-threatening poisoning from toxic mushrooms. He quizzed her on the source of the fungi included in her home-cooked dish.
"Her answer was a single word: Woolworths," he says.
"And it all just suddenly coalesced in my brain."
There were two things that convinced him of her guilt in that moment, Dr Webster explains.
One, it was a far-fetched answer. Admitting she had foraged wild mushrooms, as many locals in the area do, wouldn't have set off alarm bells. Saying they came from a major grocery chain with stringent food safety standards, on the other hand, was suspicious.
And two, there was no concerned reaction from the mother-of-two – despite being metres from where Ian and Heather, relatives she said she loved, lay on beds desperately sick.
"I don't know if she even acknowledged their presence," he says.
Briefly leaving Erin with nurses to undergo some basic health checks, he went to see the Wilkinsons off to Dandenong Hospital. He recalls watching the elderly couple being loaded into an ambulance, Heather calling out to thank him for his care as the vehicle doors were closed.
"And I knew," he says, trailing off.
"It's actually quite difficult to talk about without getting emotional.
"She could have quite easily done the complete opposite and screamed… 'Thanks for nothing'."
That may have been easier to accept than her sincere gratitude, he says. "You know, I didn't catch it [the poisoning] earlier."
But he had no time to process the gravity of their last interaction, rushing back to the urgent care room only to find Erin had discharged herself against medical advice.
After desperately trying to call her on her mobile phone, gobsmacked and concerned, Dr Webster decided to call the police.
"This is Dr Chris Webster from Leongatha Hospital. I have a concern about a patient who presented here earlier, but has left the building and is potentially exposed to a fatal toxin from mushroom poisoning," he can be heard saying in the call recording, which was played at the trial.
He spells her name for the operator, and gives them her address.
"She just got up and left?" they ask. "She was only here for five minutes," Dr Webster replies.
At her trial, Erin said she had been caught off guard by the information and had gone home to feed her animals and pack a bag, pausing to have a "lie down" before returning to the hospital.
"After being told by medical staff you had potentially ingested a life-threatening poison, isn't it the last thing you'd do?" the prosecutor asked her in court.
"It might be the last thing you'd do, but it was something I did," Erin defiantly replied from the witness stand.
But before police reached her house, Erin had returned to hospital voluntarily. Dr Webster then tried to convince her to bring in her children – who she claimed had eaten leftovers.
"She was concerned that they were going to be frightened," he said in court.
"I said they can be scared and alive, or dead."
Erin told the jury she wasn't reluctant, rather overwhelmed by the doctor who she believed was "yelling" at her. "I've since learnt this was his inside voice," she added.
Dr Webster clocked off shortly after, but the trial heard medical tests performed on Erin and her children would return no sign of death cap poisoning, and after a precautionary 24 hours in hospital, they were sent home.
Guilty verdicts a 'relief'
Two years later, when news of the jury's verdict flashed on his phone on Monday, Dr Webster began shaking.
He was one of the prosecution's key witnesses, and had struggled with the "weight of expectation".
"If the picture is going to make sense to the jury, if a small puzzle piece is out of place, it could upset the whole outcome of the trial… I really didn't want to crack under the scrutiny."
It's a "relief" to have played his part in holding Erin Patterson – who he calls "the definition of evil" – accountable.
"It does feel like [there's] that reward of justice."
For him though, the biggest sense of closure came from seeing Ian Wilkinson – the only surviving patient – for the first time since sending him and his ailing wife off in an ambulance.
"That memory of Heather being sort of taken away in that fashion, that's now bookended by seeing Ian standing on his feet again."
"That brought some comfort."
The winters in Victoria's Gippsland region are known for being chilly. Frost is a frequent visitor overnight, and the days are often overcast.
But in the small town of Korumburra - a part of Australia surrounded by low, rolling hills - it's not just the weather that's gloomy; the mood here is plainly subdued.
Korumburra is where all of Erin Patterson's victims made their home. Don and Gail Patterson, her in-laws, had lived there since 1984. They brought up their four children in the town of 5,000. Gail's sister Heather Wilkinson lived nearby - her husband Ian was the pastor at the local Baptist church.
The four were invited to Erin's house on 29 July 2023 for a family lunch that only Ian would survive, after a liver transplant and weeks in an induced coma.
And on Monday a jury rejected Erin's claim she accidentally served her guests toxic mushrooms, finding her guilty of three counts of murder and one of attempted murder.
Her 10-week trial caused a massive stir globally, but here in Korumburra they don't want to talk about it. They just want to return to their lives after what has been a difficult two years.
"It's not an easy thing to go through a grieving process... and it's particularly not easy when there's been so much attention," cattle farmer and councillor for the shire Nathan Hersey told the BBC.
"There's an opportunity now for a lot of people to be able to have some closure."
The locals are fiercely loyal - he's one of the few people who is willing to explain what this ordeal has meant for the many in the region.
"It's the sort of place that you can be embraced in very quickly and made to feel you are part of it," he explains.
And those who died clearly helped build that environment.
Pretty much everyone of a certain generation in town was taught by former school teacher Don Patterson: "You'll hear a lot of people talk very fondly of Don, about the impact he had on them.
"He was a great teacher and a really engaging person as well."
And Mr Hersey says he has heard many, many tales of Heather and Gail's generosity and kindness.
Pinned to the Korumburra Baptist Church noticeboard is a short statement paying tribute to the trio, who were "very special people who loved God and loved to bless others".
"We all greatly miss Heather, Don and Gail whether we were friends for a short time or over 20 years," it read.
It's not just Korumburra that's been changed by the tragedy though.
This part of rural Victoria is dotted with small towns and hamlets, which may at first appear quite isolated.
The reality is they are held together by close ties - ties which this case has rattled.
In nearby Outtrim, the residents of Neilson Street – an unassuming gravel road host to a handful of houses – have been left reeling by the prosecution claim their gardens may have produced the murder weapon.
It was one of two locations where death cap mushrooms were sighted and posted on iNaturalist, a citizen science website. Pointing to cell phone tracking data, the prosecution alleged that Erin Patterson went to both to forage for the lethal fungi.
"Everyone knows somebody who has been affected by this case," Ian Thoms tells the BBC from his small farm on Nielson Street.
He rattles off his list. His son is a police detective. His wife works with the daughter of the only survivor Ian. His neighbour is good friends with "Funky Tom", the renowned mushroom expert called upon by the prosecution – who coincidentally was also the person who had posted the sighting of the fungi here.
Down the road another 15 minutes is Leongatha, where Erin Patterson's home sits among other sprawling properties on an unpaved lane.
She bought a plot of land here with a generous inheritance from her mother and built the house assuming she would live here forever.
It has been sitting empty for about 18 months, a sign on the gate telling trespassers to keep out. A neighbour's sheep intermittently drop by to mow the grass.
This week, the livestock was gone, and a black tarpaulin had been erected around the carport and the entrance to her house.
There's a sense of intrigue among some of the neighbours, but there's also a lot of weariness. Every day there are gawkers driving down the lane to see the place where the tragic meal happened. One neighbour even reckons she saw a tour bus trundle past the house.
"When you live in a local town you know names - it's been interesting to follow," says Emma Buckland, who stops to talk to us in the main street.
"It's bizarre," says her mother Gabrielle Stefani. "Nothing like that has [ever] happened so it's almost hard to believe."
The conversation turns to mushroom foraging.
"We grew up on the farm. Even on the front lawn there's always mushrooms and you know which ones you can and can't eat," says Ms Buckland. "That's something you've grown up knowing."
The town that's felt the impact of the case the most in recent months, though, is Morwell; the administrative capital of the City of Latrobe and where the trial has been heard.
"We've seen Morwell, which is usually a pretty sleepy town, come to life," says local journalist Liam Durkin, sitting on a wall in front of Latrobe Valley courthouse.
He edits the weekly Latrobe Valley Express newspaper, whose offices are just around the corner.
"I never thought I'd be listening to fungi experts and the like for weeks on end but here we are," he says.
"I don't think there's ever been anything like this, and they may well never be in Morwell ever again."
While not remote by Australian standards, Morwell is still a two-hour drive from the country's second largest city, Melbourne. It feels far removed from the Victorian capital – and often forgotten.
Just a few months before that fateful lunch served up by Erin Patterson in July 2023, Morwell's paper mill - Australia's last manufacturer of white paper and the provider of many local jobs - shut down. Before that, many more people lost their jobs when a nearby power station closed down.
Older people here have struggled to find work; others have left to find more lucrative options in states like Queensland.
So locals say being thrust in the spotlight now is a bit bizarre.
In Jay Dees coffee shop, opposite the police station and the court, Laura Heller explains that she normally makes about 150 coffees a day. Recently it's almost double that.
"There's been a lot of mixed feelings about [the trial]," she says.
There's been a massive uptick for many businesses, but this case has also revived long-held division in the community when it comes to the police and justice systems, she explains.
"This town is affected by crime a lot, but it's a very different type of crime," Ms Heller says, mentioning drugs and youth offending as examples.
"Half the community don't really have much faith in the police force and our magistrates."
Back in Korumburra, what has been shaken is their faith in humanity. It feels like many people around the globe have lost sight of the fact that this headline-making, meme-generating crime left three people dead.
"Lives in our local community have changed forever," Mr Hersey says.
"But I would say for a lot of people, it's just become almost like pop culture."
Though the past two years has at times brought out the worst in the community, it's also shone a light on the best, he says.
"We want to be known as a community that has been strong and has supported one another... rather than a place that is known for what we now know was murder."
Additional reporting by Tiffanie Turnbull
The police officer who killed Indigenous teenager Kumanjayi Walker in 2019 was "racist" and had an "attraction" to adrenaline-style policing, a coroner's inquest has found.
Walker, 19, died shortly after he was shot three times at close range by Constable Zachary Rolfe during a home arrest in Yuendumu, a remote Indigenous community in the Northern Territory (NT).
Rolfe - no longer a policeman - was charged with Walker's murder and acquitted in 2022, sparking protests about Indigenous deaths in custody.
In delivering her findings, Judge Elisabeth Armitage said Walker's death was "avoidable" and there was "clear evidence of entrenched, systemic and structural racism" within NT's police force.
Judge Armitage handed down a summary of her findings - more than 600 pages - at an open-air presentation in Yuendumu, about 300km (190 miles) north-west of Alice Springs on Monday.
She found that "Rolfe was racist and that he worked in and was the beneficiary of an organisation with hallmarks of institutional racism".
Rolfe was "not a case of one bad apple", she said, finding that racist language and behaviour was "normalised within the Alice Springs police station".
While she could not "say with certainty that Mr Rolfe's racist attitudes" contributed to Walker's death, "I cannot exclude that possibility", she told those gathered at the presentation, which included members of Walker's family.
In addition, Rolfe's "derisive attitudes" toward female colleagues and some superiors, as well as his "contempt for bush cops", may have influenced his actions the day he shot Walker, Judge Armitage found.
On 9 November 2019, Rolfe and another officer arrived at Walker's home in Yuendumu to arrest him for breaching a court order.
Three days earlier, police had tried to arrest Walker and he had threatened them with an axe.
Walker was a "vulnerable teenager" who had a history of trauma and "poor impulse control", Judge Armitage found, noting that police should have been "on notice" to avoid another confrontation.
During Rolfe's Supreme Court trial in 2022, the court heard the officers became involved in a scuffle with Walker about one minute after arriving at his home.
Walker stabbed Rolfe's shoulder with a pair of scissors, prompting Rolfe to shoot him without warning - a move that Rolfe's lawyers said was in self-defence. Prosecutors agreed.
Seconds later, Rolfe fired two more shots at Walker. Prosecutors argued these were not necessary, while the defence said they were because Rolfe feared for his colleague's safety.
In her findings, Judge Armitage found that Rolfe made a "series of flawed decisions" that led to "officer-induced jeopardy" - a situation where police "needlessly put themselves in danger... creating a situation that justifies the use of deadly force".
She also said Rolfe - a former soldier - found combat situations "exhilarating" and had an "attraction to adrenalin policing". He had also ignored an arrest plan for Walker created by a female officer because he "thought he knew better", Judge Armitage said.
After Walker was shot, officers dragged him out of the house before taking him to the police station, where he was given first aid. He later died.
"Dragging is a disrespectful act and it should not have happened," Judge Armitage said.
She made 32 recommendations, including developing "mutual respect agreements" to limit when police carry guns in the Yuendumu community, and for police's anti-racism strategy to be strengthened, targeted and made public, and for compliance with its measures be publicly reported.
As she finished her one-hour speech, Judge Armitage thanked those who took part in the inquest and to Walker's family.
"I am sorry for your profound loss," she said.
Walker's cousin Samara Fernandez-Brown said the report was "overwhelming" and the family would assess the recommendations, according to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
In a statement, NT Police said the inquest had been a "long and painful journey for all involved".
"This has been a hard road, and we are determined to ensure that what has been learned is not lost," said acting commissioner Martin Dole.
A coroner's inquest into Walker's death was launched in 2022. Under NT law, all deaths in custody must be investigated. The findings are not legally binding.
The orange plate
Gail and Don had turned up on their daughter-in-law's doorstep just after midday on that fateful Saturday, an orange cake in hand. With them were the Wilkinsons: Heather and Ian, who weeks after the meal would emerge from a coma to find he was the only guest to have survived.
Noticeably absent was Erin's estranged husband Simon Patterson. He'd pulled out the day before, saying he felt "uncomfortable" attending amid tension between the former couple.
Erin had spent the morning slaving over a recipe from one of the nation's favourite cooks, tweaking it to make individual servings of beef Wellington: expensive cuts of steak slathered with a mushroom paste, then encased in pastry.
For the jury, Ian recounted watching the parcels go onto four grey plates – and an orange one for Erin – with mashed potatoes, green beans and gravy heaped on the side.
A sixth serving allegedly prepared for Simon, in case he changed his mind and came over, went into the fridge. Erin was originally accused of attempting to murder him too – on several occasions – but those charges were dropped on the eve of the trial and the allegations were not put to the jury.
The group said grace and then dug in, exchanging "banter" about how much they were eating.
"There was talk about husbands helping their wives out," Ian said.
Stuffed, they nibbled on dessert before Erin stunned her guests with a declaration that she had cancer, the trial heard.
Even the defence concedes that was not true. But on that day, the two elderly couples gave Erin advice on how to tell her kids, before ending the meal the way it had begun – with a prayer.
Ian told the court he didn't know the host well, but "things were friendly".
"She just seemed like a normal person to me," he said.
By that night, all of the guests were very ill, and the next day the four went to hospital with severe symptoms. Donald - who had eaten his portion of lunch and about half his wife's - told a doctor he had vomited 30 times in the space of a few hours.
Suspicion soon began to trickle in.
The trial heard several of those asked to the lunch had been surprised by the invitation. Simon said it was rare for his estranged wife to host such an event, and Ian said he and his late wife had never even been to Erin's house before.
In hindsight, one of the guests apparently wondered aloud why Erin had served herself on a different type of plate to the rest of the family.
"I've puzzled about it since lunch," Heather said, according to a witness. "Is Erin short of crockery?"
Later, at hospital in Leongatha, Erin's ailing guests asked if their host was sick too. They'd all eaten the same meal, hadn't they?
Detectives would pose similar questions days later, in a police station interview room with Erin.
"We're trying to understand what has made them so ill," the detectives were heard saying, in a tape played to the court. "Conversely, we're trying to understand why you're not that ill."
An orange cake
Detailing the lunch publicly for the first time, from the witness stand, Erin Patterson offered an explanation.
She told the court that after waving off her relatives she had cleaned up the kitchen, before rewarding herself with a slice of the orange cake Gail had brought.
"[I ate] another piece of cake, and then another piece," she said. Before she knew it, the rest of the cake was gone and she felt overfull.
"So I went to the toilet and brought it back up again," Erin told the trial. "After I'd done that, I felt better."
She outlined for the jury a secret struggle with bulimia, saying she had been regularly binge-eating and purging since her teens - something her defence team suggested accounted for her lack of symptoms.
Erin had taken herself to hospital two days after the lunch, reporting feeling ill. But she initially rebuffed the urgent pleas of staff who wanted her and her children – who she claimed had eaten leftovers – to be immediately admitted for treatment.
One "surprised" doctor, who had seen the other sick lunch guests, was so concerned for their welfare that he called police to ask for help.
But when medics finally got Erin in for checks, neither she nor her children demonstrated similar symptoms to the others who'd eaten at the house, and tests showed no traces of death cap mushroom poisoning.
After a precautionary 24 hours, Erin was sent on her way.
Red flags
Her victims, though, continued to suffer in hospital. And as their relentless diarrhoea and vomiting was escalating to organ failure, Erin was covering her tracks, prosecutors alleged.
The day after she was discharged from hospital, CCTV captured Erin travelling to a local dump and disposing of a food dehydrator later found to contain traces of poisonous mushrooms.
She was also using three phones around the time of the lunch, two of which disappeared shortly afterwards. The one she did hand over to police had been repeatedly wiped – including while detectives were searching her house.
For investigators, the red flags began mounting quickly.
Questions about the source of the mushrooms elicited odd answers. Patterson claimed some of them had been bought dried from an Asian grocery in Melbourne, but she couldn't remember which suburb. When asked about the brand, or for transaction records, she said they were in plain packaging and she must've paid cash.
Meanwhile detectives found out death cap mushrooms had been spotted in two nearby towns in the weeks before the meal, with concerned locals posting pictures and locations to online plant database iNaturalist. Erin's internet history showed she'd used the website to view death cap mushroom sightings at least once before. Her mobile phone location data appeared to show her travelling to both areas – and purchasing the infamous food dehydrator on her way home from one of those trips.
But Erin told police she'd never owned such an appliance, despite an instruction manual in her kitchen drawer and posts in a true crime Facebook group where she boasted about using it.
"I've been hiding powdered mushrooms in everything. Mixed into chocolate brownies yesterday, the kids had no idea," she wrote in one.
And when digital forensics experts managed to recover some of the material on her devices, they found photos showing what looked like death cap mushrooms being weighed on a set of kitchen scales.
During the trial, Erin said she realised in the days after the lunch that the beef Wellington may have accidentally included dried mushrooms that she had foraged and mistakenly put in a container with store-bought ones. But she was too "scared" to tell a soul.
"It was this stupid knee-jerk reaction to dig deeper and keep lying," Erin told the court.
Why did Erin Patterson do it?
What baffled police, though, was the question of motive.
Simon told the trial he and Erin had initially remained chatty and amicable after their split in 2015. That changed in 2022, he said, when the couple started having disagreements over finances, child support, schools and properties.
He said there was no inkling of ill will towards his family, though.
"She especially got on with dad. They shared a love of knowledge and learning."
With his voice faltering, Simon added: "I think she loved his gentle nature."
But Erin herself told the court she was feeling increasingly isolated from the Patterson family – and there was evidence presented which indicated she had grown frustrated with them.
"You had two faces," the prosecutor Nanette Rogers said, after making Erin read aloud expletive-laden Facebook messages in which she had called Simon a "deadbeat" and his parents "a lost cause".
The prosecution opted not to present a specific motive, however, saying the jury may still be wondering what drove Erin to kill long after the trial wrapped.
The lack of a clear motive was key to Erin's defence: why would she want to kill her family, people she said she loved like her own parents?
"My parents are both gone. My grandparents are all gone. They're the only family that I've got… I love them a lot," she told police in her interrogation.
Everything else could be explained away, Erin's barrister argued.
The messages critical of her in-laws were just harmless venting, they said; the cancer claim a cover for weight-loss surgery she was planning to have but was too embarrassed to disclose.
Cell phone tracking data isn't very precise, so there's no real evidence she actually visited the towns where death cap mushrooms were sighted, they argued.
They also suggested that Erin was sick after the meal, just not as sick as the others because she'd thrown it all up. She strongly disliked hospitals, which was why she had discharged herself against medical advice.
And her lies and attempts to dispose of evidence were the actions of a woman worried she'd be blamed for the accidental deaths of her guests.
"She's not on trial for lying," Colin Mandy said. "This is not a court of moral judgment."
He accused the prosecution of trying to force a jigsaw puzzle of evidence together, "stretching interpretations, ignoring alternative explanations because they don't align perfectly with the narrative".
But the prosecution argued Erin had told so many lies it was hard to keep track of them.
"Perhaps the starkest", Dr Rogers said, were her attempts to explain the cancer fib. To prove that she actually had plans to undergo gastric-band surgery, Erin claimed to have booked an appointment at a Melbourne clinic – one that did not offer the treatment.
"She has told lies upon lies because she knew the truth would implicate her," Dr Rogers said. "When she knew her lies had been uncovered, she came up with a carefully constructed narrative to fit with the evidence – almost."
Dr Rogers said the jury should have "no difficulty" in rejecting the argument "this was all a horrible foraging accident".
Ultimately, after a week of deliberations, the jury did just that.
Now a convicted killer, Erin Patterson will return to court for a sentencing hearing at a later date.
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A backpacker survived nearly two weeks lost in Western Australia's outback by drinking from puddles and sleeping in a cave, police have said.
Carolina Wilga, 26, from Germany, was rescued on Friday. She had suffered from exhaustion, dehydration, "extensive insect bites" and an injured foot, according to police.
Officers said she walked 24km (15 miles) away from her van in a "confused and disorientated" state after it became stuck in remote bushland.
Ms Wilga had convinced herself she was not going to be found, police said, adding that the backpacker's family was relieved and thankful.
"She spent 11 nights exposed to the elements and survived by consuming the minimal food supplies she had in her possession, and drinking water from rain and puddles," a Western Australia police statement said.
The rescue was down to "sheer luck", acting police inspector Jessica Securo said in a news conference.
Ms Wilga was spotted by a driver and airlifted to a hospital in Perth.
Tania Henley, the driver, told Australia's public broadcaster ABC that she saw Ms Wilga waving her hands by the side of the road, and she appeared to be in a "fragile state".
"Everything in this bush is very prickly. I just can't believe that she survived. She had no shoes on, she'd wrapped her foot up," Ms Henley said.
Before her rescue, Ms Wilga was last seen at a general store in the town of Beacon, Western Australia, in her van on 29 June.
Police found her abandoned van on Thursday in dense bushland north of Beacon.
Securo said it appeared Ms Wilga had lost control of the vehicle, which became mechanically unsound and bogged.
Ms Wilga has had a "good night's sleep" in hospital and is "just taking it one day at a time", Securo said.
Tomorrowland festival in Belgium plans to build a new main stage in time for the start of this weekend's event, organisers have said a day after a fire completely destroyed the original platform.
Organisers say the festival, in the town of Boom, south of Antwerp, will begin two hours later than originally planned on Friday with or without a new stage.
If they have not managed to secure a new stage then the event will open in a reduced capacity, with plans to fully open on Saturday.
Some 400,000 people are expected to attend the electronic dance music festival over two weekends, with tens of thousands having already arrived at the Dreamville campsite to stay overnight.
Hundreds of artists, including David Guetta, Lost Frequencies, Swedish House Mafia and Charlotte De Witte are expected to perform.
Nobody was injured in Wednesday evening's fire and experts are working to determine a cause. The local fire service has declared the site safe.
At a press conference on Thursday evening, Tomorrowland spokeswoman Debby Wilmsen said they hoped a "nice, new stage" would be ready for Friday.
If not, Dreamville and the festival grounds will function as two separate areas on Friday. Artists scheduled to perform the main stage will instead play on the Gathering Stage at the campsite.
People camping will also not be able to access the rest of the festival grounds in this scenario.
Bradley Cooper-Barnard drove from London to Belgium with three other friends.
"This is my fourth Tomorrowland and things definitely feel a little different," he told the BBC before the latest announcement.
"Dreamville itself feels very much subdued, there's a bit of a sombre feeling around. In all of my previous years by this time of the day people are partying and there's usually music everywhere - it's quite quiet but a good amount of people around," he said.
"We've got our tents set up and we're going to have a great time come what may."
In an Instagram on Thursday morning, Tomorrowland said: "It is impossible to put into words what we're feeling."
It added that the Orbyz main stage "wasn't just a stage... it was was living breathing world".
Meetings were held on Thursday between festival organisers, safety experts and local government officials to discuss contingency plans.
There are 14 other stages at the festival, all much smaller than the main stage.
The fire started around 18:00 local time (16:00 GMT) on Wednesday. Videos posted on social media showed thick grey smoke engulfing the stage.
Some residents were evacuated as firefighters worked to stop the flames from reaching neighbouring homes and woodland.
A police helicopter carrying water was also deployed to help extinguish the fire.
One employee who had been working on the site described "an apocalyptic scene" as the fire broke out.
"We suddenly heard bangs and saw fire near the stage, a huge amount of fire," the unnamed individual told Het Nieuwsblad newspaper.
"We were just putting the finishing touches on it. One more day and it would be finished. Four weeks of work... gone in half an hour."
Tomorrowland began in 2005 and has become the biggest electronic dance festival in the world, attracting music fans from every continent.
Rescue teams searching for British man Matthew Hall in the Italian Alps have found a body.
The discovery was made on Wednesday evening close to the Cross of Daloo, a mountain viewpoint high above the town of Chiavenna, where the 33-year-old had been staying.
Mr Hall, from Hull, went missing on 9 July. Italian police said his family had been informed.
Sam Jackson, who travelled to Italy to join the search, said everyone was in shock at the loss of an "amazing" friend.
"We all absolutely loved him," he added. "At least we are bringing him home – back to where he should be."
A spokesperson for the Foreign Office said: "We are supporting the family of a British man who has died in Italy and are in contact with the local authorities."
Mr Hall was staying at the B&B Ploncher hotel when he went missing.
He was thought to have planned an eight-hour trek, but told a friend in a text message he had taken a wrong turn and was having a rest.
Lt Gim Toni De Masi said a body was found at 19:00 local time in a crevice in the area from where Mr Hall sent the message.
Due to the danger involved in reaching the body, a helicopter was brought in to assist with the recovery.
Mr Hall's mother arrived in Italy on Wednesday. His father is expected to arrive on Friday, the officer added.
More than a dozen of Mr Hall's friends and colleagues travelled to Italy to join the search.
They said three helicopters, multiple mountain rescue teams, police and a specialist drone had been working around the clock to try to find him.
Speaking to the BBC in Italy, Mr Jackson said the group had been optimistic that they would find him.
Paying tribute to his friend, he said Mr Hall loved snowboarding, skateboarding and watching his local rugby league side Hull KR.
The Italian police, rescue workers and the community in Chiavenna had given them "amazing" help and support.
"They have found our pal," Mr Jackson added.
Mr Hall began his solo hiking trip on 5 July and had been due to fly back from Milan to Manchester on 12 July. He was known to be a confident walker with knowledge of mountains and rugged terrain.
In a statement, Mr Hall's employer, the broadband firm Quickline, said: "We are devastated to learn that our colleague Matt, who was reported missing while on holiday in Italy, has sadly been found dead.
"Matt was a much-loved and respected member of the Quickline team and our thoughts are with his family, friends and colleagues at this incredibly difficult time."
'Love and support'
Analysis by Phillip Norton
Steep trails lead to a huge wooden cross towering over the valley and the town of Chiavenna below. A plaque at the base of the cross marks its height. 1,100m above sea level.
The spectacular vista from this high altitude viewpoint beside the tiny mountain village of Daloo would have been everything Matthew Hall hoped to see on his hiking trip.
We know Matthew reached this point to enjoy the view before he disappeared; he proudly shared a photo he had taken of the cross with friends back home.
Sadly, but almost fortuitously, it was among the holiday snaps he had taken that would ultimately lead search teams to the area where his body was found.
As night began to fall on Wednesday, and town centre restaurants filled with people enjoying the warm evening, the sound of a rescue helicopter grew louder. People here had become used to the noise during the search, but the timing seemed odd as it hovered above.
Police say the helicopter was needed to help recover Matthew's body, discovered in a dangerous crevice, close to the Cross of Daloo.
His friends who flew here to help with the search soon learned the devastating news. They raised a glass, and toasted a life well lived.
That so many of them travelled here to help, taken to heart and looked after by the locals, spoke volumes about their friendship and efforts here, all carried out with such dignity. They are so grateful for the work of rescuers, and the love and support shown by the town of Chiavenna.
It was not the day any of them ever wanted to see. But as their journeys home begin, they take a degree of comfort knowing Matthew will also return to his family, his friends, and the people of Hull who loved him.
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Two British nationals who died while on holiday in Portugal have been named locally.
Mo Liasu, 27, and King Edonmi, 29, were from Ipswich, the BBC understands.
Local Portuguese media reported the men drowned at a hotel in Albufeira and a fundraising page set up in their memory said they "tragically lost their lives less than 24 hours after arriving".
"We are supporting the families of two British men who have died in Portugal and are in contact with the local authorities," a spokesperson for the Foreign Office said.
Candles and floral tributes have been left against a wall near flats on Ipswich Waterfront.
Among them was a message that said: "Gone too soon but never forgotten.
"Your spirit lives on in every shared memory and quiet moment. These flowers are a symbol of the love and friendship that will always remain."
A tribute read: "In loving memory of a bro whose kindness, laughter and warmth will never be forgotten.
"These flowers are a small tribute to a life that touched so many and a heart that will always be missed."
More than £22,000 has been donated via an online fundraising page set up in the friends' memory.
The page's organiser said the money would be used to pay for the repatriation of the men's bodies back to the UK.
It states: "On what was meant to be a joyful holiday in Portugal, our two dear friends Mo and King tragically lost their lives less than 24 hours after arriving.
"What was supposed to be sunshine and laughter turned into heartbreak no one could have imagined."
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Three men in their 20s have been given long jail terms for their part in the fatal shooting of award-winning hip-hop artist C Gambino in Gothenburg last year.
C Gambino, whose real name was Karar Ramadan, had been named hip-hop artist of 2023 in Sweden's Grammis music awards a month before he was murdered, in what prosecutors described as a ruthless and premeditated shooting.
All three men were convicted of aiding and abetting murder, and two of them were cleared of murder, as the Gothenburg court ruled it could not be established beyond reasonable doubt who had fired the fatal shots.
The gun that killed C Gambino has never been found and a car used in the shooting was later found burned out.
C Gambino's murder has been linked to a local gangland conflict, although the motive remains a mystery. Prosecutors said there was no evidence to suggest that he was part of any criminal network.
For several years Sweden's biggest cities have been beset by gang violence that have claimed dozens of lives, often involving children recruited to carry out violent attacks.
The rapper, who was 26, was shot at a multistorey car park in Gothenburg in June 2024 in what the court said was a carefully planned attack and had the character of a "pure execution".
Investigators were unable to find DNA traces of the attackers but did map their movements from mobile phones around the time of the shooting.
The prosecutor also told Swedish public broadcaster SVT that police had been able to use hours of CCTV footage from the car park and elsewhere.
Videos showed the killers' vehicle entering the car park more than a week before the shooting, and then waiting for hours before the attack took place as C Gambino returned home from the gym late in the evening.
Although he was able to raise the alarm, emergency services who arrived at the scene were unable to use their communication system and had to shout to each other, SVT reported.
The artist died in hospital about an hour afterwards.
In its verdict, the court gave a 22-year-old man a life sentence in jail, while two others aged 21 and 20 were handed terms of 15 and a half years and 12 and a half years respectively,
A fourth man, aged 19, was convicted of setting fire to their car.
Another gang-related case concluded on Wednesday with a 14-year-old boy found guilty of shooting dead a man in his home on the order of one of Sweden's most notorious gangs, Foxtrot.
Two other boys were convicted: one for conspiracy and another for preparing the murder in Skurup in southern Sweden. None of the three will face punishment because they are below the age of criminal responsibility, which is 15 in Sweden.
The victim of the Skurup murder was targeted because his son had refused to carry out an attack for the Foxtrot gang.
Police in Iraqi Kurdistan have meanwhile arrested a key figure in the Foxtrot gang, according to Swedish radio.
The suspect is described as close to gang leader Rawa Majid and has been linked to a number of killings in Sweden, including the Skurup shooting.
A total of 14 people have been arrested and extra police have been deployed after an attack on a pensioner sparked anti-migrant unrest in a small town in southern Spain.
Three people of North African origin have been detained on suspicion of attacking the 68-year-old man in Torre Pacheco last Wednesday.
The unrest began after a video circulated on social media, inflaming the town of 40,000 people which is home to a large immigrant population.
The pensioner and police later said the video was unrelated to the incident but social media calls to find and attack the perpetrators multiplied quickly.
By Friday groups armed with batons could be seen roaming the streets of Torre Pacheco.
One far-right group called "Deport Them Now" called for attacks on people of North African origin. Further messages on social media have called for renewed attacks on immigrants over three days this week.
A leading member of the extremist group was detained in the north-eastern town of Mataró on suspicion of spreading hate speech.
The 68-year-old victim of last Wednesday's attack, named locally as Domingo Tomás Domínguez, told Spanish media he was thrown to the ground and hit while taking his morning walk.
A photo circulating on social media showed his face bearing extensive bruising.
Police said the motive for the attack was unclear. Mr Domínguez said he was not asked to hand over money or his belongings and did not understand the language his attackers were speaking.
Police presence has been beefed up, with more than 130 officers from both the local police in the province of Murcia and Guardia Civil.
The three people arrested on suspicion of attacking the pensioner are all of Moroccan origin and in their early 20s, according to Spanish media, and none are residents of Torre Pacheco.
One of the suspects was arrested on Monday as he prepared to take a train from the Basque region to cross the border to France.
The worst of the unrest occurred at the weekend, when groups of youths - some hooded - attacked vehicles and businesses. Clashes were also reported between far-right groups and people of North African origin.
On Sunday night journalists witnessed several dozen youths hurling glass bottles and other objects at riot police.
In a CCTV video shared by several Spanish outlets, a group of men, some armed with bats and sticks, could be seen vandalising a kebab shop on the same night.
Torre Pacheco mayor Pedro Ángel Roca called on the "migrant community not to leave their homes and not to confront rioters".
Many of the town's residents of migrant origin work in the area's booming agricultural sector, and some have complained of no longer feeling safe in the town. The mayor said they had been living in Torre Pachecho for more than 20 years.
Users of an extreme-right Telegram group reportedly called on people to flock in from other parts of Spain and take part in "hunts" of North Africans over three days this week. Their channel has since been shut down.
Interior Minister Fernando Grande-Marlaska attributed the violence to anti-immigration rhetoric from far-right groups and parties such as Vox - Spain's third largest political force.
Vox leader Santiago Abascal denied responsibility for the riots and blamed "mass immigration" policies for allowing the alleged perpetrators of last week's attack to enter the country.
Talking about migration, Abascal said: "It has stolen our borders, it has stolen our peace, and it has stolen our prosperity."
Murcia prosecutors have opened an investigstion for hate crimes into the regional president of Vox, José Ángel Antelo, who last week said the violence was the "fault" of Spain's two main parties - the Popular Party (PP) and Socialist Party (PSOE).
Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said on X: "What we are seeing in Torre-Pacheco challenges us all. We must speak out, act firmly, and defend the values that unite us. Spain is a country of rights, not hate."
Shetland wants to ditch ageing ferries and replace them with undersea tunnels connecting five islands including Unst, the most northerly of the British Isles.
The plans sound grand but they have also been greeted with some scepticism.
Can the Shetland Isles really pull off such an ambitious plan, given the UK's struggles to deliver big projects such as high speed rail?
Yes, says the prime minister of the tiny Faroe Islands, which are 200 miles further out into the Atlantic.
Aksel Johannesen says Shetland could boost growth and revitalise island life by following the example of his country, which has been building tunnels since the 1960s.
The 18 islands, which make up the self-governing nation under the sovereignty of Denmark, are now connected by 23 tunnels, four of which run below the sea. More are under construction.
Most dramatic is a 7.1 mile (11.4km) tunnel which connects the island of Streymoy to two sides of a fjord on the island of Eysturoy.
It includes the world's only undersea roundabout. Nicknamed the jellyfish, driving around it is a dramatic experience showcasing an impressive feat of engineering.
At its deepest point the tunnel is 187m (614ft) below the waves and has halved the driving time between the capital Tórshavn and the second biggest town, Klaksvik.
"I think we have learned in the Faroe Islands that investment in infrastructure is a good investment," Johannesen told us.
In Scotland there is a degree of envy about the Faroes' network, which was funded by borrowing money which is being paid back by tolls.
Critics say politicians have wasted years talking about tunnels while the Faroes have actually built them.
"It is frustrating," says Anne Anderson of salmon producer Scottish Sea Farms, which employs nearly 700 people in Scotland, including just under 300 in Shetland.
The island chain produces a quarter of all Scottish salmon - the UK's most valuable food export with international sales of £844m in 2024.
"Ten years ago Scottish salmon used to have 10% of the global market. Nowadays we're slipping ever closer to 5%," adds Ms Anderson, who blames that slide, in part, on a lack of investment in public infrastructure.
She wants the UK to look to the Faroes for inspiration.
"Identify what works well for them and then just copy and paste and let's get moving," urges Ms Anderson.
Speaking in his grass-roofed office looking out over a busy harbour in Tórshavn, Aksel Johannesen says tunnels helped to grow the population and the economy of the Faroe Islands, which are home to some 54,000 people, in contrast to Shetland's 23,000.
"It's about ambition," says tunnel builder Andy Sloan, whose company worked on part of the Faroese tunnel project.
He adds the islands have led the world "in connecting an archipelago in the middle of the North Atlantic through blood, sweat and tears – and focus.
"They have delivered a remarkable piece of infrastructure," says Mr Sloan, who is executive vice-president of engineering firm COWI.
It is now advising Shetland Islands Council on the technicalities and financing of tunnels.
The Faroese tunnels were constructed using a technique known as drill and blast – where holes are drilled in rock, explosives are dropped in, and the rubble is then cleared away – which Mr Sloan says could also be used in Scotland.
"Without doubt, Shetland can copy what has been achieved in these islands," he adds.
Prof Erika Anne Hayfield, dean of the Faculty of History and Social Sciences at the University of the Faroe Islands, says the tunnels have delivered significant benefits.
"People can live and thrive in smaller settlements," while still participating fully in island life and commuting to "the central labour market" in Tórshavn, she explains.
"In the long term, in terms of demography, social sustainability, a lot of people on islands believe that it is necessary," adds Prof Hayfield.
But she said the costs of some tunnels had been controversial, with some Faroese arguing that they are being built at the expense of investing in schools and hospitals.
Shetland's main town, Lerwick, may be closer to Tórshavn than it is to Edinburgh – and closer to Copenhagen than London – but advocates of tunnels insist the islands are not a remote backwater but an advanced economy constrained by poor infrastructure.
The archipelago of 100 islands at the confluence of the North Sea and Atlantic Ocean boasts the UK's only spaceport and a thriving fishing industry.
"We land more fish in Shetland than we do in the whole of England, Northern Ireland and Wales," says council leader Emma Macdonald.
"Tunnels could be incredibly transformational," she continues, adding: "We're really excited about the opportunity."
The 20th Century oil and gas boom brought Shetland riches but the islands have since embraced the shift to renewable energy and are home to the UK's most productive onshore wind farm.
"Shetland's really integral to Scotland and to the wider UK," says Macdonald.
The council has authorised a £990,000 feasibility study into building tunnels connecting Shetland's main island with four outlying isles – Unst, Yell, Bressay and Whalsay.
It has not yet published an estimated cost for construction or a timeframe. A source close to the discussions has told BBC News that a detailed report on how the tunnels could be delivered and funded will be completed early next year, with decisions to follow later in 2026.
"Tunnels would really open up this island for businesses," says Elizabeth Johnson, external affairs manager of Saxavord Spaceport on Unst.
She adds that they would "enhance the economic viability of the island".
But with neither the Scottish nor UK governments volunteering to pay for Shetland's tunnels, the Faroese funding model of borrowing paid back by tolls looks likely to be adopted.
"I think people recognise that there is probably a need for tolling and I think people understand that," says Macdonald.
She adds: "They already have to pay to go on the ferries."
At present the council runs ferry services to nine islands, carrying around 750,000 passengers each year on 12 vessels at a cost of £23m per year.
The average age of the fleet is 31.5 years, costs have risen sharply in the past decade, and some routes are struggling to meet demand for vehicle places.
Hebridean and Clyde ferries, off the west of Scotland, run by Scottish government-owned Caledonian MacBrayne, are also ageing and have been beset by problems.
Mr Sloan says tunnels could provide more robust transport links for the west coast as well as the Northern Isles.
"Quite frankly, it can be repeated in Shetland, and not just Shetland, possibly elsewhere in Scotland."
Mr Sloan agrees that tolls are the most feasible funding option.
Tolls were abolished on the Skye Bridge in 2004 after a long-running campaign of non payment, and were scrapped on the Forth and Tay road bridges in 2008.
But Ms Johnson, of the Saxavord Spaceport, reckons Shetlanders would be happy to pay their way.
"I don't think anybody that I've spoken to would be against tolls," she says.
Although there is no organised opposition to tunnels in Shetland some locals do express concern about whether they would change what it means to be an island.
Pat Burns runs the northernmost shop in the British Isles, The Final Checkout on Unst.
She was not convinced about tunnels at first, fearing that they would alter the nature of island life.
"I like the challenges of trying to get from A to B," she explains.
However, after years of worrying about bad weather interrupting supplies for her shop and seeing tourists turned away because ferries are full, she has changed her mind.
"I was a wee bit iffy-iffy about it before," she says, "but now I realise that if Unst doesn't get a tunnel, the challenge is going to be too big."
Hundreds of drivers in the Republic of Ireland have escaped fines and penalty points due to a mistake in processing a speed camera's location.
An Garda Síochána (Irish police) said a total of 914 speeding fines issued to drivers for offences on the N25 road in County Kilkenny are being revoked.
They were detected by a static speed safety camera between 30 May and the end of June.
A gardaí spokesperson said the fines have been overturned because of "human error when inputting the offence location onto the processing system".
Some drivers had paid the fine and been issued with penalty points before gardaí became aware of the error on 30 June.
Gardaí said they are now in the process of writing to those drivers.
"This error is very much regretted," Ch Supt David Harrington said.
He added: "An Garda Síochána is very conscious of our statutory responsibility for road safety and is committed to delivering a professional policing service to enforcement of speeding via a variety of speed safety cameras."
Earlier this year almost 2,000 Irish motorists had fines and penalty points quashed after their speeding was detected by an uncertified speed camera.
Some 1,871 drivers who were caught speeding on the N17 in County Mayo late last year had fixed charge notices overturned.
The Trump administration says it has launched an investigation into Brazil's "unfair" trading practices.
It will include the Brazilian government's policies "related to digital trade and electronic payment services; unfair, preferential tariffs; anti-corruption interference", a statement from the US trade representative said.
The investigation seeks to determine whether they are "unreasonable or discriminatory and burden or restrict US commerce."
Last week, US President Donald Trump urged Brazilian authorities to end their prosecution of the country's former President Jair Bolsonaro, accusing them of carrying out a "witch hunt".
US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said the probe was being launched at Trump's direction "into Brazil's attacks on American social media companies as well as other unfair trading practices that harm American companies, workers, farmers, and technology innovators".
"I have determined that Brazil's tariff and non-tariff barriers merit a thorough investigation, and potentially, responsive action," he said.
Greer accused Brazil of disadvantaging American exports by offering lower tariffs to other trade partners.
Investigators will look into alleged attempts by Brazil to penalise US companies involved in digital trade and services for not censoring political speech.
The office also alleged a lack of adequate enforcement of intellectual property rights, harming US workers "whose livelihoods are tied to America's innovation- and creativity-driven sectors."
Trump first threatened the investigation in a letter to Brazil's president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, last week.
In the same letter, the US president announced a 50% tariff on Brazil starting on 1 August. Lula said in response that Brazil would match any increase in tariffs.
Last year, trade between the two countries was worth $90bn (£67.2bn).
Washington reported a trade surplus with Brazil of $7.4bn in 2024, a 33% percent increase on the previous year.
The US has deported five people who it described as "criminal illegal aliens" to the southern African kingdom of Eswatini.
On board the flight were five deportees from Vietnam, Jamaica, Laos, Cuba and Yemen who have been convicted of crimes ranging from child rape to murder, US Homeland Security Department Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in an online post.
"This flight took individuals so uniquely barbaric that their home countries refused to take them back," McLaughlin wrote on X.
Eswatini, the last absolute monarchy in Africa, said it acknowledged "widespread concern" within the country regarding the deportations.
"Five inmates are currently housed in our correctional facilities in isolated units, where similar offenders are kept. The nation is assured that these inmates pose no threat to the country or its citizens," government spokesperson Thabile Mdluli said in a statement.
Eswatini and the US will work with the United Nation's immigration agency to "facilitate the transit" of the deportees to their country of origin, Mdluli added.
Earlier this month, the US sent eight migrants from several countries to South Sudan after a court lifted restrictions on sending people to countries where they have no ties.
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Cuban Minister for Labour Marta Elena Feitó Cabrera has been forced to resign after she made comments denying the existence of beggars on the Communist-run island.
The minister had said there was no such thing as "beggars" in Cuba and people going through rubbish were doing so out of choice to make "easy money".
Her comments, made in parliament, were widely criticised by Cubans at home and abroad, and prompted a response from the island's president, Miguel Díaz-Canel. She resigned soon after.
Poverty levels and food shortages have worsened in Cuba as it continues to grapple with an economic crisis the Cuban government blames on the US embargo.
Both the public criticism her comments triggered and the rebuke the minister received are unusual in Cuba, a country where anti-government protests are banned and open dissent can land critics in jail.
Feitó Cabrera made the comments earlier this week at a session of the National Assembly.
"There are no beggars in Cuba. There are people pretending to be beggars to make easy money," she said.
Furthermore, Feitó Cabrera accused people searching through the rubbish of being "illegal participants in the recycling service".
The minister clearly misjudged the anger her comments would cause and the extent to which they portrayed the country's leadership as unfeeling, authoritarian and deeply removed from the dire economic struggles of ordinary Cubans.
President Díaz-Canel criticised Feitó Cabrera at the parliamentary session - albeit without mentioning her by name - saying the leadership could not "act with condescension" or be "disconnected from the realities" of the people.
Amid food and housing shortages, the sight of people rummaging through rubbish bins for food and sleeping in doorways has become more common.
Daily life is further disrupted by fuel shortages and frequent power cuts. Many Cubans also have to hunt for basic medicines by going from pharmacy to pharmacy.
Critics say that the problems are the result of the Cuban government's mismanagement of the economy but its supporters point to the damaging effects of the long-standing US embargo on the island as the main factor.
Sanctions tightened under US President Trump's first administration were kept in place under President Biden.
A number of Cuban activists and intellectuals also published a letter calling for the minister's removal, saying the comments were "an insult to the Cuban people".
Feitó Cabrera's resignation was accepted by the Cuban Communist Party and the government.
The US is imposing a 17% tariff on most tomatoes imported from Mexico with immediate effect, the government said.
The duty came into force after the US withdrew from a long-standing agreement with its southern neighbour, arguing that the deal "had failed to protect US tomato growers from unfairly priced Mexican imports".
US Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick said that "for far too long our farmers have been crushed by unfair trade practices that undercut pricing on produce like tomatoes".
Mexico rejected accusations it had dumped its tomatoes on the US market at low prices and said the popularity of Mexican tomatoes was down to their good quality.
The measure is expected to lead to higher prices at supermarkets and restaurants, such as pizza parlours and Mexican eateries.
Tomato-based pizza sauces and salsas are among the products likely to be most hit.
About 70% of tomatoes consumed in the US are imported from Mexico, according to advocacy group Florida Tomato Exchange.
Backers of the newly imposed tariff argue that it will encourage consumers to buy tomatoes grown in the US, thereby boosting local trade.
But the Mexican economy and agriculture ministry said it would be "impossible to substitute Mexican tomatoes" given the volume imported from Mexico.
The Mexican government said it would try to negotiate a new deal before its producers were hit, but also promised to help Mexican tomato growers find new markets.
US tomato growers first petitioned the US government for help in 1996, arguing that they were being undercut by Mexican growers, whom they accused of dumping their tomatoes in the US at a price lower than their normal value.
In order to protect its tomato growers, the US issued an antidumping order, imposing duties on imported tomatoes in order to make US tomatoes more attractive to consumers.
Since then, the two countries have signed five agreements which suspended those tariffs in exchange for Mexico agreeing to sell their tomatoes at or above a minimum price.
It is the latest of these suspension agreements - signed in 2019 - that the US has now withdrawn from.
The US president has also threatened to impose 30% tariffs on all Mexican goods from 1 August.
Trump said this was because Mexico, in his view, had not done enough to stop North America becoming a "Narco-Trafficking Playground".
Other countries, such as Brazil and China, as well as the EU trading bloc have also been threatened with US tariffs.
Argentine President Javier Milei and his vice-president, Victoria Villarruel, have engaged in a bitter public war of words over plans to increase pensions.
Milei shared posts on X in which his running mate had been called "stupid" and described as "a traitor", and in response Villarruel told the president to "grow up".
The president's anger was triggered by a heavy defeat in Congress on Thursday, when the Senate approved motions aimed at boosting pensions and increasing disability allowances - which Milei had vehemently opposed.
Milei said he would veto the pension hike, arguing that the extra expenditure threatened his fiscal surplus, and blamed Villarruel for allowing the vote to proceed.
In Argentina, the country's vice-president also acts as the president of the Senate.
It was in this role as Senate leader that Villarruel allowed the debate on the emergency pension hike to proceed, even though senators allied with the government boycotted the session.
With government-aligned senators absent, the motion passed with 52 votes in favour and four abstentions.
Its backers argue that higher payments are essential in order for pensioners to make ends meet.
But President Milei says it goes counter to his promise to eliminate Argentina's chronic fiscal deficit and bring down inflation.
In January, Milei scored a major economic victory when it emerged that 2024 was the first year in more than a decade that Argentina had registered a budget surplus.
Last month also saw the country's monthly inflation rate drop to 1.5%, the lowest it has been in more than five years.
But the austerity measures that helped the libertarian president lower the deficit and drive down inflation have also triggered protests, with pensioners holding weekly rallies outside Congress.
Following the approval of the motion on Thursday, President Milei was quick to announce that he would block the pension hike.
"I bet a hundred thousand to one that you all know what I'm going to do. You know what? We're going to veto it. And if, by some chance, which I don't believe will happen, but if the veto is overturned, we will take it to court," he said.
But he also turned on his vice-president, reposting a comment on X in which she was labelled a "traitor, a demagogue and stupid in economic terms".
Villarruel responded on Instagram arguing that pensioners and people with disabilities "could not wait" any longer for their payments to be raised and suggested the president should make savings by spending less on the intelligence services and on his travels.
Since becoming president in December 2023, Milei has travelled abroad extensively.
In one of the most publicised events, he wielded the chainsaw which has become emblematic of his government cuts before handing it to Elon Musk at the US Conservative Political Action Conference.
Villarruel also urged the president "to speak and act like an adult" in responses she gave her critics on Instagram.
The European Union (EU) and Mexico have expressed disappointment at US President Donald Trump's threat to impose 30% tariffs on their imports from 1 August.
Mexico criticised what it called Trump's "unfair deal" and insisted its sovereignty was non-negotiable, while the EU's chief, Ursula von der Leyen threatened to take "proportionate countermeasures", if needed. Both said they wanted to keep negotiating with the US.
Trump has warned he will impose even higher import taxes if either of the US trading partners decide to retaliate.
This week Trump also announced new tariffs on goods from Japan, South Korea, Canada and Brazil from next month.
In the letter sent on Friday to European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, Trump wrote: "We have had years to discuss our trading relationship with the European Union, and have concluded that we must move away from these long-term-large, and persistent, trade deficits, engendered by your tariff, and non-tariff, policies and trade barriers.
"Our relationship has been, unfortunately, far from reciprocal," the letter added.
In his letters to the EU and Mexico, Trump warned that if either trade partner retaliated with import duties of their own against the US, he would hit back by raising tariffs by a similar percentage over and above the 30%.
In a pre-recorded interview with Fox News which aired on Saturday night, President Trump said some countries were "very upset now" but he insisted the tariffs meant "hundreds of billions of dollars" were "pouring in".
France's President Emmanuel Macron said he was in "very strong disapproval" of Trump's announcement.
If no agreement is reached, the French leader suggested the EU plan "speeding up the preparation of credible countermeasures".
Bernd Lange, the head of the European Parliament's trade committee, described Trump's move as "a slap in the face for the negotiations".
He said that it was "no way to deal with a key trading partner," adding said Brussels should enact countermeasures as soon as Monday.
Some EU leaders called for a deal with Trump. Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni said in a statement she trusted "a fair agreement" could be reached, adding: "It would make no sense to trigger a trade war between the two sides of the Atlantic."
Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof said on social media that the EU "must remain united and resolute" in its aim to reach a "mutually beneficial" deal with the US.
Germany's Association of the Automotive Industry warned about the prospect of rising costs for German carmakers and suppliers, and said it was "regrettable that there is a threat of a further escalation of the trade conflict".
In his letter to Mexico's leader, Trump said the country had not done enough to stop North America becoming a "Narco-Trafficking Playground".
"Mexico has been helping me secure the border, BUT, what Mexico has done, is not enough," Trump added.
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum expressed confidence that a deal could be reached.
"We believe, based on what our colleagues discussed yesterday, that we will reach an agreement with the USA and that we will, of course, achieve better conditions," Sheinbaum said on Saturday.
"We are clear on what we can work with the USA and we are clear on what we cannot," she added. "And there is something that is never negotiated, ever, and that is the sovereignty of our country."
Trump's letter did not say if Mexican goods traded within the 2020 United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement would be exempt from the proposed 1 August tariff hikes, as the White House said would be the case with Canada.
Earlier this week, the White House sent a letter to Canada threatening a 35% tariff.
As of Saturday, the Trump administration has now proposed tariff conditions on 24 countries and the EU - composed of 27 countries.
On 12 April, White House trade adviser Peter Navarro set a goal to secure "90 deals in 90 days".
So far, the president has announced the outlines of two such pacts with the United Kingdom and Vietnam as negotiations with others continue.
After a reader wondered if 2.1 million people could really have seen Lady Gaga at Rio de Janeiro's Copacabana Beach in May, BBC Verify looked into it.
The Lady Gaga concert was paid for by the seaside city in an attempt to revitalise its economy.
Fans reportedly travelled from all across the country to see the grandiose performance, which was expected to bring in more than $100m (£75m) to the local economy.
Rio officials heralded the 2.1 million attendance as a triumph.
However, careful analysis by the BBC Verify team and a crowd density expert reveal it is highly improbable the claims are accurate.
Instead, it would require the entire length of the beach, rather than a section, to comfortably fit more than two million people.
Despite the BBC's findings, city officials have maintained their claims. They have not however explained how their data was measured.
Watch the full analysis above.
Produced by Kevin Nguyen, edited by Mohamed Shalaby, graphics by Mesut Ersoz.
Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has said he is ready to match any tariffs imposed on Brazil by the United States.
Lula was responding to Wednesday's threat by his US counterpart, Donald Trump, to impose a 50% import tax on Brazilian goods from 1 August.
In a letter, Trump cited Brazil's treatment of former President Jair Bolsonaro as a trigger for tariff-hike.
Bolsonaro is currently on trial for allegedly attempting to stage a coup against Lula after being defeated by him in the 2022 election.
Trump referred to Bolsonaro as "a highly respected leader throughout the world". "This Trial should not be taking place," he wrote, calling on Brazil to immediately end the "witch hunt" against the former president.
Trump's support for Bolsonaro does not come as a surprise as the two men have long been considered allies.
The US president had already slammed Brazil for its treatment of Bolsonaro on Monday, comparing it to the legal cases he himself had faced in US courts.
The 50% tariff threat was met with a robust and lengthy response by President Lula.
In a post on X, he stressed that Brazil was "a sovereign country with independent institutions and will not accept any tutelage".
The Brazilian leader also announced that "any unilateral tariff increases" would be met with reciprocal tariffs imposed on US goods.
The US is Brazil's second-largest trade partner after China, so the hike from a tariff rate of 10% to an eye-watering 50% - if it comes into force - would hit the South American nation hard.
But Lula also made a point of challenging Trump's assertion that the US had a trade deficit with Brazil, calling it "inaccurate".
Lula's rebuttal is backed up by US government data, which suggests the US had a goods trade surplus with Brazil of $7.4bn (£5.4bn) in 2024.
Brazil is the US's 15th largest trading partner and among its main imports from the US are mineral fuels, aircraft and machinery.
For its part, the US imports gas and petroleum, iron, and coffee from Brazil.
Brazil was not the only country Trump threatened with higher tariffs on Wednesday.
Japan, South Korea and Sri Lanka were among 22 nations which received letters warning of higher levies.
But the letter Trump sent to his Brazilian counterpart was the only one focussing matters beyond alleged trade deficits.
As well as denouncing the treatment of ex-President Bolsonaro, Trump slammed what he said were "secret and unlawful censorship orders to US social media platforms" which he said Brazil had imposed.
Trump Media, which operates the US president's Truth Social platform and is majority-owned by him, is among the US tech companies fighting Brazilian court rulings over orders suspending social media accounts.
Lula fought back on that front too, justifying the rulings by arguing that "Brazilian society rejects hateful content, racism, child pornography, scams, fraud, and speeches against human rights and democratic freedom".
Rafael Cortez, a political scientist with Brazilian consulting firm Tendências Consultoria, told BBC News Brasil that rather than hurt him, the overly political tone of Trump's letter could end up benefitting Lula.
"Those confronting Trump win at home when Trump and other conservative leaders speak out on issues pertaining to their countries. That happened, to a certain degree, in Mexico, and the elections in Canada and Australia," Mr Cortez says of other leaders who have challenged Trump and reaped the rewards in the form of rising popularity levels.
Creomar de Souza of the political risk consultancy Dharma Politics told BBC News Mundo's Mariana Schreiber that it would depend on the Lula government coming up with organised and united response if it is to "score a goal" against Trump.
US President Donald Trump said he was planning to impose a 50% tax on goods made in Brazil, escalating his fight with the South American country.
He announced the plan in his latest tariff letter, which was shared on social media.
In it, Trump accuses Brazil of "attacks" on US tech companies and of conducting a "witch hunt" against former far-right president Jair Bolsonaro, who is facing prosecution over his alleged role in a plot to overturn the 2022 election.
Responding in a social media post, Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said an increase in tariffs on Brazil would be reciprocated, and he warned against any interference in the nation's judicial system.
A man who was forcibly taken from his captive mother as a newborn during Argentina's military rule and raised by strangers has been identified after 48 years, thanks to a DNA test.
The man's sister, Adriana Metz, who had been searching for her long-lost brother for decades, said she had spoken to her sibling for the first time last week.
Ms Metz was able to find him with the help of the campaign group Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo, which has long tried to reunite the estimated 500 babies stolen by the military junta with their families.
Ms Metz's brother, whose identity has not been revealed publicly to protect his privacy, is the 140th baby the group has found.
In a news conference, the founder of the Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo, Estela de Carlotto, read out a statement while members of the group clapped and cheered.
"Today we welcome the son of Graciela Alicia Romero and Raúl Eugenio Metz," the 94-year-old said, while sitting next to a beaming Adriana Metz.
While the man, whom the group referred to as "Grandchild 140", was not present, the group gave details of how he had been separated from his family.
His parents were both political activists in Bahía Blanca, a city in Buenos Aires province.
His father, Raúl Metz was one of 10 siblings. He followed in his father's footsteps and worked on the railways, while also being an active member of the Communist Party.
His mother, Graciela Romero, studied economics and joined a Marxist guerrilla group, the PRT-ERP, with Metz shortly before the two got married.
The couple had a daughter, Adriana, and Ms Romero was five months pregnant with a second child when the two were arrested at their home in December 1976.
Shortly after seizing power in a military coup in March 1976, the junta tried to eradicate any opposition to its rule by rounding up critics.
Tens of thousands were snatched in raids and held in clandestine detention centres.
Many were tortured. Human rights groups estimate that some 30,000 people were killed or forcibly disappeared between 1976 and the end of military rule in 1983.
Survivors told the Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo that Graciela Romero had given birth to a son on 17 April 1977 while in captivity in the clandestine detention centre known as "La Escuelita" (Little School).
Fellow detainees say that both Romero and Metz were physically and psychologically tortured while in captivity, before being disappeared.
Their one-year-old daughter Adriana was first looked after by neighbours who eventually handed the infant to her paternal grandparents.
Both the Romero and Metz family searched for the couple and their son for decades.
The pair are listed as disappeared and are feared to be among the many left-wing activists who were killed by the military regime.
The Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo said it was an anonymous tip-off which had eventually led the group to "Grandchild 140".
Working with the National Identity Commission (Conadi), an official body created to find children abducted by the military junta, they approached the man in April and offered him a DNA test.
He agreed to take the test, and on Friday Conadi informed him that he was indeed the baby snatched from Graciela Romero in 1977.
Adriana Metz said that during their phone call last week, he said that he had been raised as an only child.
"I told him 'hey, here I am'," she said at the press conference.
Adriana added that she was eager to meet her brother, who lives 400km (250 miles) away, in person to hug him.
Estela de Carlotto, who found her own missing grandson in 2014, said the fact that the Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo had managed to locate one of the missing after 48 years showed how crucial their work was even after so many decades.
The UN human rights chief says his office has received credible reports indicating widespread violations and abuses, including summary executions and arbitrary killings, during the recent violence in the southern city of Suweida.
Among the alleged perpetrators were members of the security forces and individuals affiliated with the interim government, as well as local Druze and Bedouin armed elements, Volker Türk said in a statement.
"This bloodshed and the violence must stop," he warned, adding that "those responsible must be held to account".
Almost 600 people are reported to have been killed since sectarian clashes between Druze militias and Bedouin tribes erupted in the province on Sunday.
Interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa's government responded by deploying its forces to the predominantly Druze city of Suweida for the first time since Islamist-led rebels overthrew President Bashar al-Assad in December, ending 13 years of civil war.
A fragile truce appeared to be holding in Suweida on Friday, two days after the government announced that it had agreed the military would pull out and responsibility for security would be handed to religious elders and some local factions.
However, the fighting escalated and government forces were accused by residents and activists of killing Druze civilians and carrying out extrajudicial executions.
According to Türk, the UN human rights office has documented the unlawful killing of at least 13 people on 15 July, when "armed individuals affiliated with the interim authorities deliberately opened fire at a family gathering".
"On the same day, they reportedly summarily executed six men near their homes in two separate incidents," he said.
The office has also documented the public humiliation of a Druze men, including the forcible shaving of his moustache, which is an important cultural symbol for the Druze community.
"My office has received accounts of distressed Syrians who are living in fear for their lives and those of their loved ones," Türk said. "The deployment of state security forces should bring safety and protection, not add to the fear and violence."
The BBC has contacted the Syrian government and security forces about allegations of summarily killings and other violations.
In a televised address early on Thursday, Sharaa vowed to hold the perpetrators accountable and promised to make protecting the Druze a "priority".
"We are eager to hold accountable those who transgressed and abused our Druze people because they are under the protection and responsibility of the state," he said.
He went on to blame "outlaw groups", saying their leaders "rejected dialogue for many months".
He also said the government had agreed that the military would pull out of Suweida and responsibility for security would be handed to religious elders and some local factions.
State media have also cited authorities and tribes as accusing "outlaw groups" of carrying out "massacres" of Bedouin fighters and civilians and other violations.
The UN human rights chief said there must be "independent, prompt and transparent investigations into all violations, and those responsible must be held to account, in accordance with international standards".
"It is crucial that immediate steps are taken to prevent recurrence of such violence. Revenge and vengeance are not the answer," he added.
Türk raised concerns regarding reports of civilian casualties resulting from Israeli air strikes on Suweida, Daraa and in the centre of Damascus, where the defence ministry's headquarters and a site near the presidential palace were hit.
Israel said it carried out the strikes to stop government forces from attacking the Druze and to force the military to withdraw from Suweida province.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) said on Thursday night that it had documented the killing of at least 594 people during the violence.
The UK-based monitoring group reported that 300 members of the Druze religious minority were killed, including 146 fighters and 154 civilians, 83 of whom were "summarily executed" by members of the interior and defence ministry's forces.
At least 257 government personnel and 18 Bedouin fighters were also killed, while three Bedouin civilians were summarily killed by Druze fighters, it added.
A monitoring group says 594 people have been killed during the recent violence in southern Syria that took on a sectarian dimension.
The UK-based Syrian Observatory of Human Rights (SOHR) documented a significant outbreak of brutality in the killings that have gripped Suweida province since Sunday.
Three hundred members of the Druze religious minority were killed, including 146 fighters and 154 civilians, 83 of whom were "summarily executed" by government forces, the SOHR said on Thursday evening.
At least 257 government personnel and 18 Bedouin fighters were also killed, while three Bedouin civilians were summarily killed by Druze fighters, it added.
The fighting was sparked by a dispute between the Bedouin and Druze communities.
Another 15 government personnel were reportedly killed in Israeli air strikes, which Israel said it carried out to protect the Druze and make the government forces withdraw from Suweida.
It was not immediately possible to verify the SOHR's figures.
However, security sources put the toll at 300 and another monitoring group, the Syrian Network for Human Rights said it had documented the deaths of at least 169 civilians.
An uneasy calm has mostly held on Thursday, with the withdrawal of government forces from the Druze-majority city of Suweida. Residents reported scenes of damage and looting, as well as bodies being found in the streets.
Convoys of fighters from Syria's Islamist-led government began entering the city on Monday, ostensibly to restore order following the clashes between the Druze and Bedouin.
But that was followed by an escalation in the fighting and a fracturing of Syria's Druze, whose religion is an offshoot of Shia Islam with its own unique identity and beliefs.
The Syrian government announced a ceasefire on Wednesday evening ahead of its withdrawal.
However, one prominent Druze leader, Sheikh Hikmat al-Hajri, rejected it, calling for further fighting until the "total liberation of our province from gangs", referring to government forces.
Sheikh Hajri, whose followers led the fighting against the government's forces, has sought to forge close relationships with Israel. Other branches of Suweida's Druze community have sought to work closely with Syria's new Islamist-led government.
There is also a sizeable Druze community in Israel and the occupied Golan Heights.
On Thursday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel intended to continue imposing its interests on Syria with force.
Israel's intervention in the clashes was done partly to protect the Druze, Netanyahu said, but also to prevent the Syrian military from deploying in the south of the country.
"That will also be our policy going forward - we will not allow Syrian army forces to enter the region south of Damascus, and will not allow any harm to the Druze," he added.
On Wednesday, Israeli air strikes caused severe damage to the Syrian ministry of defence in Damascus and struck the vicinity of the presidential palace - a dramatic escalation in Israel's repeated attacks on its neighbour since the fall of Bashar al-Assad in December last year.
In a televised statement on Wednesday evening, Syria's interim president Ahmed al-Sharaa called Israel's attacks an attempt to destabilise his country.
"We find ourselves in the heart of a battle to protect the unity of our land, the dignity of our people and the resilience of our nation," he said. "The Israeli entity, which has consistently targeted our stability and sown discord since the fall of the former regime, now seeks once again to turn our sacred land into a theatre of endless chaos."
Addressing Syria's Druze, he continued: "We affirm that protecting your rights and freedoms is among our top priorities. We reject any attempt - foreign or domestic - to sow division."
A fire that tore through a five-storey shopping centre in the eastern Iraqi city of Kut has left at least 61 dead, local officials said.
The blaze at the mall, which opened seven days ago, broke out on Wednesday night and has since been brought under control.
Videos posted on social media showed firefighters rescuing people from the mall's roof, but state media reported that many were still missing.
"A tragedy and a calamity has befallen us," regional governor Mohammed al-Miyahi said, adding that legal action would be brought against the shopping centre's owner. The cause of the fire was not immediately known.
The governor has also declared three days of mourning.
Videos on INA's news channel show flames ripping through several floors of the Corniche Hypermarket in the city's centre, as firefighters try to douse them.
Other clips circulating on social media appear to show a small number of people on the roof during the fire, as well as the burned out insides of the centre.
A number of people were rescued from the building by firefighters, al-Miyahi told local media.
Ambulances were still taking casualties to hospitals in the city, which is about 160 km (100 miles) southeast of Baghdad, at 04:00 local time.
"The tragic fire claimed the lives of 61 innocent citizens, most of whom suffocated in bathrooms, and among them 14 charred bodies yet to be identified," the interior ministry said in a statement.
It added that 45 people were rescued from inside the building.
Nasir al-Quraishi, a doctor in his 50s, told AFP he lost five family members in the blaze.
"A disaster has befallen us," he said. "We went to the mall to have some food, eat dinner and escape power cuts at home.
"An air conditioner exploded on the second floor and then the fire erupted and we couldn't escape it."
Ali Kadhim, 51, had been looking for his cousin, who is missing alongside his wife and three children, at the main hospital and the mall where rescuers were searching for survivors.
"We don't know what happened to them," he said.
Moataz Karim, 45, identified the bodies of two of his relatives - one of whom began working at the mall three days ago - on Thursday morning.
"There is no fire extinguishing system," he told AFP, as he waited for further news of a third missing relative outside the forensic department.
Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani expressed condolences to the families of victims in a statement.
He has also asked the interior ministry to launch an immediate investigation into the fire's causes, as well as to identify shortcomings and "to take all necessary strict measures to prevent the recurrence of such incidents".
The mall, which included a restaurant, opened a week ago, according to the interior ministry.
Safety standards are often poorly observed at Iraqi construction sites, which have faced decades of mismanagement and corruption.
In 2023, a fire swept through a Christian wedding party in northern Iraq, killing more than 100 people.
More than 90 people died in the Iraqi city of Nasiriya after a fire in a Covid isolation ward at a hospital in 2021.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said his country "deeply regrets that a stray ammunition" hit Gaza's only Catholic Church, killing three people sheltering there.
"Every innocent life lost is a tragedy. We share the grief of the families and the faithful," he said in a statement.
The incident happened on Thursday when an Israeli strike hit the Holy Family Church in Gaza City. Several people were also injured, said the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem which oversees the small parish.
Pope Leo XIV said he was "deeply saddened to learn of the loss of life and injury", renewing his call for a Gaza ceasefire.
In his statement, Netanyahu said Israel was "investigating the incident and remains committed to protecting civilians and holy sites".
In a statement later on Thursday, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said: "An initial inquiry into reports regarding injured individuals in the Holy Family Church in Gaza City, suggests that fragments from a shell fired during operational activity in the area hit the church mistakenly. The cause of the incident is under review.
"The IDF directs its strikes solely at military targets and makes every feasible effort to mitigate harm to civilians and religious structures, and regrets any unintentional damage caused to them," the statement added.
Earlier in the day, White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt said US President Donald Trump did not have a "positive reaction" to the attack on the church.
Trump called Netanyahu to discuss the incident on Thursday morning. During the call, Netanyahu described the attack as a "mistake", Leavitt cited him as saying.
The Patriarchate said the parish priest, Father Gabriel Romanelli, was a part of those who had been injured in the attack.
It said that people found a "sanctuary" in the church "hoping that the horrors of war might at least spare their lives after their homes, possessions, and dignity had already been stripped away".
It added that the "war must come to a complete end".
Syria's interim president has said it is his "priority" to protect the country's Druze citizens, after Israel vowed to destroy government forces it accused of attacking members of the religious minority in Suweida province.
In his first televised statement since Israel's air strikes on Damascus on Wednesday, Ahmed al-Sharaa also warned that Syrians were not afraid of war.
Syrian state media reported that the military was withdrawing from Suweida under a ceasefire agreement with Druze leaders. But it is not clear whether that will hold.
More than 350 people are reported to have been killed since sectarian clashes between Druze militias and Bedouin tribes erupted in the province on Sunday.
The government responded by deploying its forces to the predominantly Druze city of Suweida for the first time since Sharaa's Sunni Islamist group led the rebel offensive that overthrew President Bashar al-Assad in December, ending 13 years of civil war.
However, the fighting escalated and government forces were accused by residents and activists of killing Druze civilians and carrying out extrajudicial executions.
The Druze religion is an offshoot of Shia Islam with its own unique identity and beliefs. In addition to Syria, there are sizeable communities of Druze in Lebanon, Jordan, Israel and the occupied Golan Heights.
Syrian Druze and other minorities have remained suspicious of Sharaa since he took power because of his jihadist past. His Islamist group, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), is a former al-Qaeda affiliate that is still designated as a terrorist organisation by the UN.
Their fears have been heightened by several outbreaks of deadly sectarian violence, including one in May between Druze militias, security forces and allied Islamist fighters that also prompted Israel intervene militarily.
In his speech early on Thursday, Sharaa stressed that the Druze were "a fundamental part of the fabric of this nation", and that he rejected any attempt for them to be dragged into the hands of what he called "an external party".
The president said government forces deployed to Suweida had "succeeded in restoring stability and expelling outlawed factions despite the Israeli interventions", which he said caused a "significant complication of the situation" and "a large-scale escalation".
"We are not among those who fear the war. We have spent our lives facing challenges and defending our people, but we have put the interests of the Syrians before chaos and destruction," he said.
Responsibility for security in Suweida would now be handed to religious elders and some local factions "based on the supreme national interest", he added.
Sharaa ended the speech by promising that the government was "keen on holding accountable those who transgressed and abused our Druze people".
On Wednesday, Israel's Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, told the country's own Druze citizens that Israeli forces were "acting to save our Druze brothers and to eliminate the gangs of the regime".
The Israeli military said its aircraft struck the Syrian military's headquarters in Damascus and a military site near the presidential palace, as well as armoured vehicles on their way to Suweida, and firing posts and weapons storage facilities in southern Syria.
"We are acting decisively to prevent the entrenchment of hostile elements beyond the border, to protect the citizens of the State of Israel, and to prevent the harming of Druze civilians," the military's chief of staff, Lt Gen Eyal Zamir, said during a visit to the Golan Heights.
"We will not allow southern Syria to become a terror stronghold," he warned.
The general also said there was "no room for disorder near the border fence", after hundreds of Druze crossed the heavily fortified frontier with Syria on Wednesday.
The US Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, said it was speaking to all of the parties involved and had "agreed on specific steps that will bring this troubling and horrifying situation to an end".
"This will require all parties to deliver on the commitments they have made and this is what we fully expect them to do," he added, without giving any details.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR), a UK-based monitoring group, says more than 350 people have been killed since Sunday.
They include 79 Druze fighters and 55 civilians, 27 of whom were summarily killed by interior ministry and defence ministry forces, according to the group.
At least 189 members of the government forces and 18 Bedouin tribal fighters have also been killed in the clashes, it says.
It was not immediately possible to verify the SOHR's casualty figures, but Syrian security sources also said Wednesday that the death toll was close to 300.
Israel's military struck the Syrian defence ministry in Damascus and government forces in southern Syria for a third day on Wednesday, as deadly sectarian fighting in the mostly Druze province of Suweida continued.
Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said it was "working to save our Druze brothers". Interim Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa accused Israel of causing a "large-scale escalation".
More than 350 people are reported to have been killed since Sunday, when clashes between Druze militias and Bedouin tribes erupted in Suweida.
The Syrian military reportedly began to withdraw its forces from Suweida late on Wednesday, as the US said it had agreed "steps" to end the violence.
"We have agreed on specific steps that will bring this troubling and horrifying situation to an end tonight," US Secretary of State Marco Rubio wrote on X.
Syria's state news agency, Sana, reported that troops were leaving Suweida as part of an agreement between the government and the Suweida's religious leaders, following the "completion of the army's pursuit of outlaw groups".
The Syrian foreign ministry said the country "welcomes the efforts made by the US and Arabian sides" to "resolve the current crisis" peacefully.
Israel has not yet commented on the ceasefire efforts.
The Israeli military began striking Syrian security forces and their weapons on Monday, after they were deployed to the city of Suweida for the first time since Sunni Islamist-led rebels overthrew President Bashar al-Assad in December.
Minority groups including the Druze - whose religion is an offshoot of Shia Islam with its own unique identity and beliefs - are suspicious of Sharaa and his government, despite his pledges to protect them.
Their fears have been heightened by several outbreaks of sectarian violence over the past eight months, including one in May in which dozens of people were reportedly killed in clashes between Druze, security forces, and allied Islamist fighters in Damascus and Suweida.
In the wake of that fighting, the government reached an agreement with Druze militias to hire local security forces in Suweida province from their ranks. The continued control of Suweida by the militias sparked tensions with Bedouin tribes backed by the government.
Netanyahu has said he is committed to preventing harm to the Druze in Syria because of their deep ties to those living in Israel and the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.
Hundreds of Druze crossed the heavily fortified frontier with Syria on Wednesday, prompting Israeli troops to fire tear-gas in an attempt to stop them. Netanyahu urged those with Israeli citizenship to "return to your homes and let the [Israeli military] take action".
Israel said the significant escalation of its bombing campaign was aimed at making the Syrian government immediately withdraw its forces from Suweida province.
Defence Minister Israel Katz wrote on X on Wednesday afternoon that "the warnings in Damascus" had ended and that the Israeli military would "continue to operate vigorously in Suweida to destroy the forces that attacked the Druze until they withdraw completely".
He later posted that "the painful blows have begun", above a video clip showing a TV presenter diving under a desk live on camera as an Israeli air strike hit the nearby entrance to the Syrian defence ministry in Umayyad Square, in central Damascus – where huge crowds celebrated Assad's downfall last year.
A separate strike on what the Israeli military called a "military target in the area" of the presidential palace underscored the severity of Israel's warning to Sharaa.
Fadi Al Halabi, a London-based Syrian filmmaker who is visiting Damascus, said he was nearby when he heard the Israeli fighter jets approach.
"People's faces were so afraid. Everyone started running [in] the street. No-one knew where to go. Suddenly the air strike[s] began, targeting some of the most crowded areas, including the ministry of defence," he told the BBC.
The Israeli military said it also struck armoured vehicles loaded with heavy machine guns and weapons on their way to Suweida, and firing posts and weapons storage facilities in southern Syria.
Syria's foreign ministry said the strikes targeted government institutions and civilian facilities in Damascus and Suweida and killed "several innocent civilians".
"This flagrant assault, which forms part of a deliberate policy pursued by the Israeli entity to inflame tensions, spread chaos, and undermine security and stability in Syria, constitutes a blatant violation of the United Nations Charter and international humanitarian law," it added.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR), a UK-based monitoring group, meanwhile reported that the humanitarian situation in Suweida city had rapidly deteriorated.
It cited sources as saying there were clashes in several area of the city and that tanks had attacked the national hospital, causing panic among the scores of casualties from the fighting being treated there. They also said there were acute shortages of water and medical supplies.
Later, the Syrian health ministry said government forces had entered the hospital and found "dozens of bodies" after "outlaw groups withdrew", according to the official Sana news agency.
A man named Hosam told the BBC he was in the centre of Suweida city and had witnessed civilians coming under fire from artillery and snipers.
"I lost my neighbour today on the street. One of the snipers shot him. We tried to [get an] ambulance [to take] him to hospital, but we couldn't," he said.
Other witnesses and local activists have described scenes of looting and extrajudicial killings.
The SOHR says more than 350 people have been killed since Sunday in Suweida province.
They include 79 Druze fighters and 55 civilians, 27 of whom were summarily killed by interior ministry and defence ministry forces, according to the group.
At least 189 members of the government forces and 18 Bedouin tribal fighters have also been killed in the clashes, it says.
It was not immediately possible to verify the SOHR's casualty figures, but Syrian security sources also told the BBC on Wednesday that the death toll was close to 300.
The fighting between Bedouin tribes and Druze militias in Suweida is said to have been sparked by the abduction of a Druze merchant on the highway to Damascus last Friday.
On Sunday, armed Druze fighters reportedly encircled and later seized a neighbourhood of Suweida city that is inhabited by Bedouin. The clashes soon spread into other parts of Suweida province, with tribesmen reportedly launching attacks on nearby Druze towns and villages.
Syria's interior ministry later announced that its forces and those of the defence ministry would intervene and impose order, saying the "dangerous escalation comes in light of the absence of relevant official institutions".
However, they were soon accused by Druze residents of looting, setting homes on fire, and humiliating community leaders.
Earlier this year, Israel's prime minister demanded the complete demilitarisation of Suweida and two other southern provinces. He said Israel saw President Sharaa's Sunni Islamist group, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), as a threat. HTS is a former al-Qaeda affiliate that is still designated as a terrorist organisation by the UN and UK, but no longer by the US.
The Israeli military has already carried out hundreds of strikes across Syria to destroy the country's military assets since the fall of the Assad regime.
And it has sent troops into the UN-monitored demilitarised buffer zone between the occupied Golan Heights and Syria, as well as several adjoining areas and the summit of Mount Hermon.
At least 12 people have been killed in Israeli air strikes in Lebanon's eastern Bekaa Valley, a regional governor says.
Seven Syrians, including a family of five, and three Lebanese were killed when the Wadi Faara area was hit, Baalbek-Hermel Governor Bachir Khodr wrote on X. The other two deaths were reported in Shmustar.
The Israeli military said it had struck a number of military compounds belonging to the armed group Hezbollah, including training camps affiliated to its elite Radwan Force.
These were the deadliest strikes since a ceasefire ended a year of fighting between Israel and Hezbollah, including two months of all-out war that left the group severely weakened.
Hezbollah has not yet commented on the attacks, although its Al-Manar TV channel said they constituted violations of both the ceasefire and Lebanon's sovereignty.
The Arabic-language spokesperson of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), Lt Col Avichay Adraee, said on X that Tuesday's strikes hit several Hezbollah targets.
"As part of the strikes, military compounds belonging to the Radwan Force have been targeted, where terrorist operatives and warehouses used to store combat equipment employed by Hezbollah have been identified," Adraee said.
The Radwan Force is Hezbollah's elite commando unit.
The IDF said in a separate English statement that it had killed the Radwan Force's commanders in September 2024 - when it launched an intense air campaign against Hezbollah and invaded southern Lebanon - and that since then the unit had been "operating to re-establish its capabilities".
The IDF asserted that Hezbollah's storage of weapons and military activities in the Bekaa Valley constituted a "blatant violation of the understandings between Israel and Lebanon and constitute a future threat to the State of Israel".
Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said the strikes sent "a clear message" to Hezbollah and the Lebanese government, emphasising that Israel was prepared to "respond with maximum force against any attempt at rebuilding" Hezbollah's military capabilities.
The basis of the ceasefire agreement between the Israeli and Lebanese governments, brokered by US mediators in November, was the full implementation of UN Security Council resolution 1701, which ended the last war in 2006.
Hezbollah was required to withdraw its forces to positions north of the Litani River - approximately 30km (20 miles) from the Israeli border - leaving only the Lebanese army and United Nations peacekeepers authorized to operate with arms in that area.
Israel was required to fully pull its forces out of Lebanon, but it has maintained a military presence at five sites in the south that it considers strategically important.
The agreement also noted that the resolution reaffirmed previous Security Council calls for the "disarmament of all armed groups" in Lebanon.
A fresh wave of deadly sectarian violence has rocked Syria, putting into focus the country's fragile security landscape as the new government attempts to impose its authority over the fractured territory.
On Sunday 13 July, the reported abduction of a merchant from the Druze minority sparked days of deadly clashes between Druze militias and Sunni Bedouin fighters in southern Syria.
Later on Tuesday 15 July, Israel intervened militarily, saying its forces were seeking to protect the Druze and to eliminate pro-government forces accused of attacking them in Suweida. At least 350 people are reported to have been killed in Suweida since Sunday, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
The violence is the first in the Druze-majority province of Suweida since fighting in April and May between Druze fighters and Syria's new security forces killed dozens of people. Prior to this, clashes in Syria's coastal provinces in March were said to have killed hundreds of members of the Alawite minority, to which former ruler Bashar al-Assad belongs.
The deadly unrest, along with the violent Israeli strikes, have re-ignited fears of a security breakdown in Syria, as the country grapples with the fallout from over a decade of civil war, and the recent Islamist-led rebel takeover of Damascus in December 2024. Syria's current leader, former jihadist Ahmed al-Sharaa, has vowed to protect Syria's minorities.
Who are the Druze?
The Druze are an Arabic-speaking ethno-religious minority in Syria, Lebanon, Israel and the occupied Golan Heights. The Druze faith is an offshoot of Shia Islam with its own unique identity and beliefs.
Half of its roughly one million followers live in Syria, where they make up about 3% of the population. The Druze community in Israel is largely considered to be loyal to the Israeli state, owing to its members' participation in military service. There are some 152,000 Druze people living in Israel and the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, according to the Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics.
They have historically occupied a precarious position in Syria's political order. During Syria's almost 14-year civil war, the Druze operated their own militias in southern Syria.
Since the fall of Assad in December, the Druze have resisted state attempts to impose authority over southern Syria. While the Druze factions in Syria are divided in their approach to the new authorities, ranging from caution to outright rejection, many object to official Syrian security presence in Suweida and have resisted integration into the Syrian army - relying instead on local militias.
Despite the Syrian government condemning the recent attacks on Druze people and vowing to restore order in southern Syria, its forces have also been accused of attacking the minority - with the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) war monitor documenting "summary executions" of Druze people by government forces. Such reports have fuelled mistrust among some members of the Druze community towards the authorities in Damascus.
After Assad's sudden fall, Israel has been reaching out to the Druze community near its northern border in a bid to forge alliances with Syria's minorities. It has increasingly positioned itself as a regional protector of minorities, including the Kurds, Druze and Alawites in Syria, while attacking military sites in Syria and government forces.
During the sectarian clashes in May, Israel carried out strikes near the presidential palace in Damascus, saying it was a warning against attacks on the Druze. However, some Druze figures in Syria and Lebanon have accused Israel of stoking sectarian divisions to advance its own expansionist aspirations in the region.
Why is Israel attacking Syria now?
The most recent strikes have primarily acted as a warning and a deterrent against the Syrian army deploying to southern Syria, with Israel seeking to create a demilitarised zone in the area. In particular, Israel fears the presence of Islamist fighters near its northern border, along the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.
While the Israeli air strikes on 15 July were limited to targeting security forces and vehicles in Suweida, the Israeli military expanded the scope of its attacks on 16 July, striking the Ministry of Defence and the Syrian army headquarters in Damascus. Syria has condemned the attacks.
The strikes represented the most serious Israeli escalation in Syria since December 2024, when it obliterated hundreds of military sites across the country and seized a UN-patrolled buffer zone in the Syrian Golan Heights. Israel has struck Syria multiple times, with the intention of preventing the new authorities from building its military capacities - viewed as a potential threat to Israeli security.
"The warnings in Damascus have ended - now painful blows will come," Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz wrote on social media on 16 July, shortly after Israeli strikes on Damascus began.
The targeting of the Syrian military headquarters was broadcast live by the leading Syria TV channel, from its studios located across from the building - with the presenter captured on air fleeing the studio.
How has the rest of the world reacted?
The US Secretary of State Marco Rubio has said the US was "very concerned" about the violence and announced on 16 July: "We have agreed on specific steps that will bring this troubling and horrifying situation to an end tonight."
Several Arab states, including Lebanon, Iraq, Qatar, Jordan, Egypt, and Kuwait, have condemned the Israeli strikes targeting Syrian government and security forces. Saudi Arabia's foreign ministry denounced what it described as "Israel's blatant attacks" on Syria, while Iran described the attacks as "all too predictable".
Turkey, a key stakeholder in post-Assad Syria, described the strikes as "an act of sabotage against Syria's efforts to secure peace, stability and security".
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres also condemned Israel's "escalatory" strikes in Suweida and Damascus.
What could happen next?
The violence has underlined the fragility of Syria's post-war security and political landscape, with the most recent spate of violence fuelling fears of renewed sectarian attacks across Syria.
As Sharaa attempts to establish control over Syria and to unite its various groups, it remains to be seen whether his Islamist-dominated government will be able to reconcile Syria's deep-rooted sectarian divisions, stoked by years of civil war. The sectarian clashes, along with the Israeli strikes, threaten to derail attempts at state-building and post-war recovery.
Israel, for its part, is likely to continue to perceive the new authorities, and its affiliated Islamist fighters in the south, as a significant security threat - pushing it to pursue alliances with groups that may feel alienated by the new authorities.
For Gazans, a 60-day ceasefire being negotiated between Israel and Hamas would be a lifeline.
A window to bring in large quantities of desperately needed food, water and medicine after severe – and at times total - Israeli restrictions on aid deliveries.
But for Israel's defence minister Israel Katz a two-month pause in military operations would create an opportunity to build what he has called a "humanitarian city" in the ruins of the southern city of Rafah to contain almost every single Gazan except those belonging to armed groups.
According to the plan, Palestinians would be security screened before being allowed in and not permitted to leave.
Critics, both domestically and internationally, have condemned the proposal, with human rights groups, academics and lawyers calling it a blueprint for a "concentration camp".
It's unclear to what extent it represents a concrete plan of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government or whether it is a negotiating tactic to put more pressure on Hamas in the talks on a ceasefire and hostage release deal.
In the notable absence of any Israeli plan for Gaza after the war ends, this idea is filling the strategic vacuum.
Katz briefed a group of Israeli reporters that the new camp would initially house about 600,000 Palestinians - and eventually the whole 2.1 million population.
His plan would see the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) securing the site from a distance while international bodies managed the area. Four aid distribution sites would be established in the area, he said.
Katz also restated his desire to encourage Palestinians to "voluntarily emigrate" from the Gaza to other countries.
But it has not gained traction or support among other senior figures in Israel, and according to reports the proposal even triggered a clash between the prime minister and the head of the IDF.
Israeli media say the office of the chief of the general staff, Lt Gen Eyal Zamir, made clear the army was not obligated to forcibly transfer civilians, as the plan would require.
It's claimed Gen Zamir and Netanyahu were involved in an angry exchange during a recent war cabinet meeting.
Tal Schneider, a political correspondent at the centrist Times of Israel, said Zamir would be in a strong position to push back because the government "practically begged him to take the job" six months ago – and Netanyahu strongly endorsed his appointment.
It's not only the top military brass that is opposed to the idea. There is also consternation among rank and file too.
"Any transfer of a civil population is a form of war crime, that's a form of ethnic cleansing, which is also a form of genocide," IDF reservist Yotam Vilk told the BBC at his home in Tel Aviv.
The 28-year-old former officer in the Armored Corps is refusing to serve any longer in the army following 270 days of active combat in Gaza.
He describes himself as a patriot and argues Israel must defend itself but that the current war has no strategy nor end in sight.
Vilk is also part of Soldiers for the Hostages, a group calling for an end of the war to secure the release of the 50 Israelis still being held captive by Hamas in Gaza, up to 20 of whom are believed to be alive.
Meanwhile 16 Israeli experts in international law issued a joint letter on Friday denouncing the plan, which they said would constitute a war crime. The letter urged "all relevant parties to publicly withdraw from the plan, renounce it and refrain from carrying it out".
The plan has unsurprisingly dismayed Palestinians in Gaza.
"We completely reject this proposal, and we reject the displacement of any Palestinian from their land," Sabreen, who had been forced to leave Khan Younis, told the BBC. "We are steadfast and will remain here until our last breath."
Ahmad Al Mghayar from Rafah said: "Freedom is above everything. This is our land, we should be free to move wherever we want. Why are we being pressured like this?"
It's not clear how much support Katz's plan has among the general public, but recent surveys have indicated the majority of Jews in Israel favour the expulsion of Palestinians from Gaza.
One poll published in the left-wing daily newspaper Haaretz claimed as many as 82 per cent of Jewish Israelis supported such a move.
But there has been curious lack of public support for the proposal among the far-right, including prominent ministers in the coalition Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich.
Both have been vocal proponents of Palestinians leaving Gaza and Jewish settlers returning.
Tal Schneider said both ministers may still be weighing up giving their backing to the proposal for a mass camp.
"Maybe they're waiting to see where the wind blows to see if it's serious. Both Smotrich and Ben-Gvir are cabinet members and have more access to internal discussions. Maybe they think this is just to put political pressure on Hamas to come to the table."
Outside Israel, the proposal for a new camp for all Gazans has attracted widespread criticism.
In the UK, minister for the Middle East Hamish Falconer posted on social media that he was "appalled" by the plan.
"Palestinian territory must not be reduced," he wrote. "Civilians must be able to return to their communities. We need to move towards a ceasefire deal and open a pathway to lasting peace."
British human rights lawyer Baroness Helena Kennedy KC told the BBC the project would force Palestinians into a "concentration camp".
The description, which other critics including academics, NGOs and senior UN officials have used, holds considerable resonance in light of the role of concentration camps in the Holocaust.
Baroness Kennedy said the plan - as well as the latest actions of Israel - has led her to conclude Israel is committing genocide in Gaza.
"I was very reluctant to go there, because the threshold has to be very high. There has to be specific intent for genocide. But what we're now seeing is genocidal behaviour," she said.
Israel has vehemently rejected the charge of genocide and says it does not target civilians.
The Israeli foreign ministry also told the BBC that "the notion that Israel is creating concentration camps is deeply offensive and draws parallels with the Nazis". Israel "adheres to the Geneva Convention", it added, referring to the international regulations governing the treatment of civilians in occupied territories.
Aside from grim warnings about what might happen, the prospect of a new camp is having an impact on efforts to end the Gaza war.
Palestinian sources at the ceasefire talks grinding on in the Qatari capital Doha have told the BBC the plan has alarmed the Hamas delegation and has created a new obstacle to a deal.
Additional reporting by Joyce Liu and John Landy
After 21 months of war, there are growing hopes of a new Gaza ceasefire announcement as Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets US President Donald Trump in Washington.
Trump previously told reporters he had been "very firm" with Netanyahu about ending the conflict and that he thought "we'll have a deal" this week.
"We are working to achieve the deal that has been discussed, under the conditions we have agreed," the veteran Israeli PM said before boarding his plane. "I believe that the conversation with President Trump can definitely help advance this outcome, which we all hope for."
Indirect talks between Israel and Hamas on a US-sponsored proposal for a 60-day ceasefire and hostage release deal resumed in Qatar on Sunday evening.
However, it is unclear whether key differences that have consistently held up an agreement can be overcome.
Only cautious optimism is being expressed by weary Palestinians living in dire conditions amid continuing daily Israeli bombardment, and the distressed families of Israeli hostages still held by Hamas.
"I don't wish for a truce but a complete stop to all war. Frankly, I'm afraid that after 60 days the war would restart again," says Nabil Abu Dayah, who fled from Beit Lahia in northern Gaza to Gaza City with his children and grandchildren.
"We got so tired of displacement, we got tired of thirst and hunger, from living in tents. When it comes to life's necessities, we have zero."
On Saturday evening, large rallies took place urging Israel's government to seal a deal to return some 50 hostages from Gaza, up to 20 of whom are believed to be alive.
Some relatives questioned why the framework deal would not free all captives immediately.
"How does one survive under such conditions? I'm waiting for Evyatar to return and tell me himself," said Ilay David, whose younger brother, a musician, was filmed by Hamas in torment as he watched fellow hostages being released earlier this year during the last, two-month-long ceasefire.
"This is the time to save lives. This is the time to rescue the bodies from the threat of disappearance," Ilay told a crowd in Jerusalem.
"In the rapidly changing reality of the Middle East, this is the moment to sign a comprehensive agreement that will lead to the release of all the hostages, every single one, without exception."
Netanyahu is visiting the White House for the third time since Trump returned to power nearly six months ago.
But the leaders will be meeting for the first time since the US joined Israeli attacks on Iranian nuclear sites and then brokered a ceasefire between Israel and Iran.
There is a strong sense that the recent 12-day war has created more favourable circumstances to end the Gaza war.
After months of low popularity ratings, the Israeli PM has been bolstered by broad public support for the Iran offensive and analysts suggest he now has more leverage to agree to a peace deal over the strong objections of his far-right coalition partners, who want Israel to remain in control of Gaza.
Hamas is seen to have been further weakened by the strikes on Iran - a key regional patron - meaning it could also be more amenable to making concessions needed to reach an agreement.
Meanwhile, Trump is keen to move on to other priorities in the Middle East.
These include brokering border talks between Israel and Syria, returning to efforts to normalise relations between Israel and Saudi Arabia, and completing unfinished business with Iran, involving possible negotiations on a new nuclear deal.
For months, ceasefire talks between Israel and Hamas have been deadlocked over one fundamental difference.
Israel has been ready to commit to a temporary truce to return hostages but not an end to the war. Hamas has demanded a permanent cessation of hostilities in Gaza and a full pullout of Israeli troops.
The latest proposal put to Hamas is said to include guarantees of Washington's commitment to the deal and to continued talks to reach a lasting ceasefire and the release of all the hostages.
Nothing has been officially announced, but according to media reports the framework would see Hamas hand over 28 hostages - 10 alive and 18 dead - in five stages over 60 days without the troubling handover ceremonies it staged in the last ceasefire.
There would be a large surge in humanitarian aid entering Gaza.
After the return of the first eight living hostages on the first day of the agreement, Israeli forces would withdraw from parts of the north. After one week, the army would leave parts of the south.
On Day 10, Hamas would outline which hostages remain alive and their condition, while Israel would give details about more than 2,000 Gazans arrested during the war who remain in "administrative detention" - a practice which allows the Israeli authorities to hold them without charge or trial.
As seen before, large numbers of Palestinians would be released from Israeli jails in exchange for hostages.
President Trump has described this as the "final" truce proposal and said last week that Israel had accepted "the necessary conditions" to finalise it.
On Friday, Hamas said it had responded in a "positive spirit" but expressed some reservations.
A Palestinian official said sticking points remained over humanitarian aid - with Hamas demanding an immediate end to operations by the controversial Israeli and American-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) and a return to the UN and its partners overseeing all relief efforts.
Hamas is also said to be questioning the timetable for Israeli troop withdrawals and operations of the Rafah crossing between southern Gaza and Egypt.
Netanyahu's office stated on Saturday that the changes wanted by Hamas were "not acceptable" to Israel.
The prime minister has repeatedly said that Hamas must be disarmed, a demand the Islamist group has so far refused to discuss.
In Israel, there is growing opposition to the war in Gaza, with more than 20 soldiers killed in the past month, according to the military.
The Israeli military's chief of staff, Lt Gen Eyal Zamir, said last week that it was nearing the completion of its war goals and signalled that the government must decide whether to move ahead with a deal to bring home hostages or prepare for Israeli forces to re-establish military rule in Gaza.
Polls indicate that two-thirds of Israelis support a ceasefire deal to bring home the hostages.
In Gaza, some residents express fears that the current wave of positivity is being manufactured to ease tensions during Netanyahu's US trip - rationalising that this happened in May as Trump prepared to visit Arab Gulf states.
The coming days will be critical politically and in humanitarian terms.
The situation in Gaza has continued to deteriorate, with medical staff reporting acute malnutrition among children.
The UN says that with no fuel having entered in over four months, stockpiles are now virtually gone, threatening vital medical care, water supplies and telecommunications.
Israel launched its war in Gaza in retaliation for the Hamas-led attacks on 7 October 2023, which killed about 1,200 people and led to 251 others being taken hostage.
Israeli attacks have since killed more than 57,000 people in Gaza, according to the Hamas-run health ministry. The ministry's figures are quoted by the UN and others as the most reliable source of statistics available on casualties.
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James Canton spent two years sitting beneath an 800-year-old oak tree near his home in Essex, watching acorns fatten and butterflies land on the massive knurled grey trunk. Sometimes he sat in the branches too.
Canton, a lecturer at the University of Essex, recalls how it helped him feel a "sense of connection". "We're happier sat in an oak tree ten foot from the ground, watching blue tits feeding on caterpillars – involved and immersed in that natural world." He went on to write a book called The Oak Papers about that time spent studying the Honywood Oak.
For years, it was easy to forget that we used to be a woodland nation: around 6,000 years ago untouched swathes of oak, hazel, birch and pine blanketed an estimated 75% of the UK.
But in recent months the felling of the Sycamore Gap tree next to Hadrian's Wall in Northumberland has put our relationship with trees, and the natural world more widely, back under the spotlight.
Two men are due to be sentenced today for the crime that has been called a "mindless destruction". Canton calls it a "symbolic" moment.
The felling of the Sycamore Gap has prompted calls for stricter legal protections for trees, not only to help prevent similar crimes in future but also to help the public appreciate the value of trees at a time when many of our woodlands are in poor health and targets for tree-planting are not being met.
But even if the government were to back calls for greater legal protections, other questions remain - namely, which trees should be protected?
And arguably even more pressingly: should Britain be thinking more broadly about how to save our depleting woodlands - and is legal protection enough or is a fundamental rethink required?
UK's 'odd relationship' with trees
The Sycamore Gap wasn't a particularly ancient tree, nor a native species, but its position gave it a totemic status.
Tucked into a fold of the hills in an area of outstanding beauty, it was famous around the world. People went there to have picnics, propose marriage, scatter ashes and to seek solace during lockdown.
Local people spoke of their devastation at its loss, while Northumberland National Park Authority received thousands of emails, letters and messages.
And yet despite apparently being a nation of tree lovers, the UK is one of the most nature-depleted countries on Earth - it still isn’t planting enough trees, despite calls by successive governments.
The UK has 13% woodland cover, compared to an average of 38% in Europe, according to Prof Mary Gagen of Swansea University.
Despite woodland creation rates being much higher now than they were in the 2010s, they remain off track, according to statistics from Forest Research.
The target set by the previous Conservative government was to plant 30,000 hectares a year by 2025 across the UK, in line with the heyday of tree planting in the 1970s.
Statistics show that 20,700 hectares of new woodland was created in the UK between April 2023 and March 2024, a big achievement. However, this fell to 15,700 hectares over the year to March 2025, largely as a result of a drop-off in planting in Scotland. (Rates in England, Wales and Northern Ireland went up – though from a low base.)
And the woodlands that already exist aren't in great shape. Only 7% of it is in good ecological health, says Prof Gagen.
She is among those who think that this all nods to an "odd relationship" with trees – one of "simultaneously adoring and denuding woodlands".
Andrew Allen of the Woodland Trust warns there could be a knock-on effect: "While money goes into getting new trees in the ground, we continue to spend very little on looking after the trees we already have - and this risks serious consequences."
'Why would a tree older than Stonehenge go unprotected?''
Ancient trees provide a home to hundreds of different bird, insect and mammal species, yet they have no automatic right of protection. This is unlike some other countries, including Italy and Poland, where so-called "heritage" trees have specific legal protections.
Some UK trees are protected through being in a nature reserve or a site of special scientific interest, while Tree Preservation Orders can be made by a local planning authority to protect specific trees or woodland from deliberate damage or destruction.
Yet many fall through the gaps. Only a fifth of our "oldest and most important veteran trees" are in protected areas, says Prof Gagen. Veteran trees are trees that through their own decay act as a habitat for other species, promoting biodiversity.
The Tree Council charity has written a report calling for greater protections for the country's "most important trees", such as the one that stood at the Sycamore Gap.
The outpouring of emotion and anger after the felling shows how valued these "socially, culturally and environmentally important trees are", says Jess Allan, science and research projects manager at the charity.
On the back of a Heritage Trees Bill, introduced in December 2023 as a private members bill in the House of Lords, the charity is calling for legislation to create a statutory list of the most valuable trees and to impose stricter penalties for damaging them, mirroring the system for listed buildings.
Crucially, this could protect trees that are much-loved and culturally important because of their place in the landscape, as well as protecting ancient trees that are vital in preserving nature.
Jon Stokes, the charity's director of trees, science and research, points out that in Portugal, the fine for destroying a notable tree can be as much as €500,000 (£433,000).
He says protecting our "most celebrated trees" is a no-brainer. "There are yew trees in this country that are older than Stonehenge – nobody would ever contemplate not protecting Stonehenge so why would a living thing that's older than Stonehenge not receive some protection?"
He hopes something positive could come out of the felling of the Sycamore Gap: it has made people realise that some of the UK's trees are "truly vital to our culture and heritage and history – and our biodiversity - we should be looking after them better than we are at the moment".
The Tree Council's report is currently being assessed by the government, but there is no date on when any decision will be made.
'You can't stop reckless acts'
There are some who believe legal reforms are not enough. After all, the proposed new measures might not have saved the famous sycamore: its felling involved trespass onto land owned by the Northumberland National Park.
A Tree Preservation Order wouldn't have made a difference either, adds Sarah Dodd of Tree Law in Barry, Wales, a law firm that specialises in legal issues involving trees.
"Ultimately, you can put all the protection you want on trees, but some people are just going to break the law. You can't stop some people doing some reckless acts.”
The bigger question, she says, is how we get people to appreciate the value of trees and therefore not want to fell them. She hopes that giving trees special legal status will raise their profile, and make people recognise their importance.
Mr Stokes, of the Tree Council, says that to maximise the biodiversity value of trees, it’s crucial to celebrate and protect the old ones. And to build up new trees next to older ones, so that wildlife can flow "from these ancient bastions into the new woods and hedges and individual trees that we're planting".
A recent report by the Woodland Trust confirmed that the current health of woods and trees is "concerning".
Proposed solutions include more woodland creation, better management, agroforestry (combining agriculture and trees), ancient woodland restoration, and natural flood management, whereby trees are planted to slow down water flow.
But this will not be easy and Prof Gagen of Swansea University says saving the UK's woodlands is a complex problem that demands difficult choices.
Difficult choices ahead
”Unfortunately, for most people if asked if they'd like more new, cheaper housing or faster transport, or to protect nature, they are going to sacrifice a woodland," says Prof Gagen.
She argues there is a need to ensure people are aware of the "true value of nature".
"A single big tree in the right place is providing thousands of pounds worth of carbon store, flood protection, free air conditioning, habitat, wellbeing provision, pollution control and a hundred other benefits, and no one is asked to pay those costs if the tree is felled for development.
“That needs to change to save UK woodlands."
As for Canton, he stills visits the Honywood Oak near his home, and is involved in projects to turn around the fortunes of the "forgotten forests", areas of ancient woodland that were historically turned into timber plantations and now need to be restored.
He hopes that years from now we will have learned from the loss of the Sycamore Gap tree and others like it, and changed our attitude.
"I'd really like to think that in a generation's time, there will be rights for trees – trees that are over say 100 years old that you cannot do this, and you get much worse punishments than currently exist," he says.
"Hopefully in time we will gradually get there – our society is naturally catching up with our natural emotional connection with the natural world."
Top image credit: Joe Daniel Price via Getty
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Hungarians have a popular saying: "Visszanyal a fagyi". Translation: "The ice-cream licks back." In other words, watch out, because what you enjoy devouring, might enjoy devouring you.
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has assiduously attacked a liberal world view for at least two decades, transforming the country into what he has variously called an "illiberal democracy" and nation of "Christian liberty".
Meanwhile he has drawn admirers around the world, including US Vice President JD Vance and Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze. US President Donald Trump has called Orban "smart" and "a tough person".
"One of the most respected men, they call him a strong man," Trump said in September 2024.
Ahead of the next Hungarian election in April 2026, the LGBTQ community appear to be among Orban's targets – his Fidesz party rubber stamped a new law that sought to ban Pride from going ahead. And yet between 100,000 and 200,000 people turned out last month - up from just 35,000 last year.
But watching huge crowds march through Budapest to celebrate gay pride, free speech and the right to assemble - all in defiance of the ban - many wonder: could the liberal worldview bite back?
And in some ways, that in itself is the wrong question. Orban's power is indeed now under threat, but not in the way – or from the people – one might expect.
As the real challenge comes not from the liberal left, but the centre right.
A surprise challenger from Orban's own circle
Peter Magyar, a 44-year-old formerly of Orban's own circle, appeared as a surprise challenger in February 2024.
This followed a scandal involving a decision to pardon a man convicted of covering up child sexual abuse that led to President Katalin Novak resigning on live television. Justice Minister Judit Varga (Magyar's ex-wife) also resigned - and the scandal dealt a blow to Orban's claim to stand for traditional family values.
Magyar gave a long interview to Partizan, the flagship opposition YouTube channel, blasting what he called the nepotism and corruption of the governing party.
Robert Puzser, an opposition activist who heads a new, non-party initiative called Citizens Resistance, says that Magyar is treading carefully, amid Fidesz officials and certain quarters of the media trying to portray him as a liberal or leftist.
Magyar, he argues, is trying to avoid alienating his conservative base in the countryside, which until recently was Orban's undisputed heartland. And he has created his own powerful narrative – of a Hungary that is collapsing.
Most national polls put Tisza, Hungary's main opposition party led by Magyar, between 9% and 18% ahead of Orban's party. Only one, the pro-government thinktank Viewpoint Institute, still puts Fidesz narrowly ahead.
The parlous state of state hospitals, state schools, and state railways are all being used against Orban by Magyar and his party. Now, Orban's long-established playbook, so admired abroad, is starting to fail at home – and it leaves Hungary closer than ever to ousting a man who has ruled it for the past 15 years.
Orban's tried-and-tested strategy
Orban has been in power for 19 of the 35 years since the fall of Communism in 1990, making him one of the most experienced leaders in the EU. In the early 1990s, Fidesz broke away from its liberal roots, and Orban instilled a new conservative, nationalist, right-wing identity.
In 2015, as scores of people travelled to Europe asking for asylum, Orban referred to them as part of "a migratory movement composed of economic migrants, refugees and also foreign fighters". He has opposed military support for Ukraine since the full-scale Russian invasion in February 2022, and also opposes Ukraine's bid for EU membership.
A cornerstone of Orban's playbook has been his ability to identify what his voters fear: this was true of each of his landslide victories, in 2010, 2014, 2018, and 2022.
A public opinion survey by the Publicus agency carried out from 23-25 June found 45% of people were in favour of the Pride march in Budapest and 48% were against. Just 8% of Fidesz voters approved, however, so it was a flag to rally his own camp behind.
Since the march, Fidesz supporters have shared some provocative images from Budapest Pride, including nudity and the tale of a man arrested by police for masturbating in public.
After the event, folk singer Marianna Majorosi, whose song was performed during a drag queen show at the Pride event, said, "it deeply upsets me that as a performer I have no right to prevent someone from doing this to my voice". Orban expressed his support for her on Facebook.
In 2022, the government organised a referendum on child protection to coincide with the general election. The questions included: "Do you support allowing children in public schools to participate in sexual orientation classes without parental consent?" And, "do you support the promotion of gender reassignment for minors?"
A total of 3.7 million Hungarians took part, with the vast majority voting, "No". Government officials have since cited that referendum result as proof that Hungarians oppose what Pride stands for.
The winner takes all
Another key to Orban's playbook is that the winner takes all. Orban lost power in 2002 then returned to office in 2010, and in a new electoral law of 2011 he shrank Parliament from 386 seats to 199 and abolished the second round of elections, effectively channelling votes to the strongest party.
While the fractious opposition parties fought for the crumbs, Fidesz took the cake. They took 45% of the vote in 2014, which translated to 67% of seats in Parliament. The former system of proportional representation was replaced by something closer to the first-past-the-post system, as used in the UK.
He has also appointed Fidesz-friendly judges to the Constitutional and Supreme Court.
In 2014 he said that the "illiberal state" he was constructing "does not reject the fundamental principles of liberalism such as freedom… but it does not make this ideology the central element of state organisation".
Orban is still struggling to find the right name for his invention. András Lánczi, a philosopher widely considered a strong influence on the prime minister, calls it "political realism… Ideas based on experience rather than the utopias and moralising that leftists like so much".
How he won over world leaders
Orban rules by bullet-points, simple messages culled from unpublished opinion surveys commissioned by his government to find out what is worrying the public. Pro-government media, social media, and nationwide billboards then act as an echo chamber for these messages.
Some leaders overseas appear to admire his approach, while many MAGA Republicans love Orban for confronting "woke" culture.
The Slovak and Georgian prime ministers are also seemingly firm admirers, as are Alice Weidel (Alternative for Germany), Geert Wilders (Dutch Party for Freedom), and Herbert Kickl (Austrian Freedom Party).
Orban has instilled in his countryfolk "a new self-confidence", Mr Lánczi suggests, after centuries of foreign rule. "This nation has become stronger, and we would like to believe that we are not inferior to any other nations."
But just as he reaches the height of his fame abroad, the carpet is apparently being tugged from under his feet at home.
Are cracks starting to appear?
Peter Magyar has toured the country almost continuously, attacking the government for conditions in hospitals, a failing rail network and public service wages that are among the lowest in Europe.
He draws large crowds, and his visits to hospitals, schools or care homes are broadcast live on Facebook, with many attracting tens of thousands of views.
"We will re-build this country together, brick by brick," Magyar repeats. "Brick by brick!" chant the crowds, in unison.
Fidesz publicists have dismissed him as a hollow "messiah", or a traitor from their own ranks. But Magyar has given the public an alternative vision of repairing the homeland.
Orban has himself started to make some mistakes, like backing the ultra-nationalist candidate George Simion in the recent Romanian presidential election, despite a long history of anti-Hungarian remarks. He considered him to be a useful ally in the European Parliament where he shares Orban's message that "Christian Europe" is under threat. But Simion was the surprise loser of the second round of that election.
Orban's failure to stop Pride, after he promised his supporters it would not take place, also suggests some weakening of his power.
But perhaps most seriously, the Hungarian economy, heavily dependent on the German market, especially German cars manufactured in Hungary, is stagnating. Orban can no longer deliver an improved standard of living.
Even András Lánczi, who believes Orban will win the next election, says: "Unavoidably, there are so many conflicts during such a long time [in power]", conflicts that "erode trust, erode respect, erode a lot of positive things that unite that political community."
Battle for the soul of Hungary
Defeat for Orban, who has ruled Hungary for the past 15 years, would be monumental.
"Orban is able to mobilise his core electorate, which is about two million people, but it's not enough to win the elections," says Zoltan Kiszelly, a political analyst close to Fidesz.
The Tisza party now also has about two million supporters. More than five million Hungarians voted in the 2022 election, with a 69% turnout - so the election in April 2026 will likely be decided by those who are currently undecided.
"We are looking for policy issues that can attract these 500,000 to one million more voters who are needed to outnumber the opposition," Mr Kiszelly explained.
In 2022, amid the war in Ukraine, Orban portrayed himself as the "peace" candidate, and claimed the opposition would drag Hungary into war. It was a successful tactic in a country, often overrun in its history by foreign armies. In 2026, Ukraine could help Orban win again, Mr Kiszelly believes.
Yet if the war in Ukraine is over by then, Orban "the political realist" will be able to claim credit as the Western leader who warned that Ukraine cannot defeat the might of Russia. Or, if the war continues, Fidesz could step up its campaign against Manfred Weber, leader of the European People's Party (EPP), which supports continued Western military supplies for Ukraine.
"Orban can present himself, once again, as the dove of peace," Mr Kiszelly explains.
Orban also depicts his good relations with Russian President Vladimir Putin as a guarantee of cheap Russian gas and oil for Hungarian consumers - constantly under threat from EU sanctions against Russia. (Though Orban has not successfully blocked any of the 18 packages of EU sanctions against Russia so far.)
But his opponents hope that Tisza, and Magyar, can maintain their polling lead. Mr Puzser, the opposition activist, believes Tisza will win "sooner or later".
He describes Hungary as being at a crossroads. "There is a path leading to a democratic transition from this semi-authoritarian, semi-constitutional system," he argues, "and there is a despotic path leading to a dictatorship."
As for Orban, he said in March that there was a struggle "for the soul of the Western world" – some see next April's election as a battle for the soul of Hungary.
Top image credits: Anna Moneymaker/ Leon Neal/ Pierre Crom via Getty
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Ryan Davies worked at the Port Talbot steelworks for 33 years and from his very first day, he heard rumours that the plant was on the verge of closing.
Whispers would spread among his colleagues about new ownership and redundancies. Usually, they weren't true.
"You took it with a pinch of salt," he recalls.
It was an exhausting job. He remembers the clanging of metal and the high-pitched whining of steam, as well as the fear of gas leaks. In the summer it became "excruciatingly" hot inside the plant and his shifts lasted 12 hours.
But he also valued his job. Being a steelworker was part of his identity.
Then, a few years ago, he heard a new rumour: that Tata Steel, the plant's Indian owners, was to close its blast furnaces. This one turned out to be true.
The two furnaces were switched off in July and September last year, part of a restructure that would ultimately remove around 2,000 jobs, half of the number employed there.
"It was the end of it all - the end of 100 years of steelmaking in Port Talbot," says Mr Davies, who took voluntary redundancy in November.
He is 51 now and unsure about his own future, and what the news means for his wife and his 19-year-old daughter. But he also worries deeply about Port Talbot.
Steel is integral to the town's identity. The bronze-coloured chimneys loom across the skyline; the first thing you see as you drive towards the town from the M4.
Steel, Mr Davies says, was "the whole reason Port Talbot was ever a successful town".
It is a similar story across the handful of other British communities that historically relied on steelmaking as a source of employment.
As well as Port Talbot, they include places like Redcar in North Yorkshire and Scunthorpe in Lincolnshire.
At its peak around 1970, the UK's steel industry produced more than 26 million tonnes of steel each year and employed more than 320,000 people.
Then came the long decline. Now just four million tonnes are produced each year, with fewer than 40,000 employed.
But in the last few years, the industry has entered a particularly difficult period, thanks in part to rising energy prices. The ongoing uncertainty about tariffs on steel exports to the US is not helping.
This has frayed nerves and cost the UK steel industry orders from US companies, according to steel industry executives.
While 27.5% tariffs on cars were reduced to 10% and tariffs on aerospace products were lowered to zero, a 25% tariff on UK steel and aluminium exports to the US is still in place.
British officials say they are determined to reduce steel tariffs to zero too, and talks are ongoing. But this all adds to a sense of foreboding on the ground in steel towns.
So, what comes next if UK steel manufacturing really does near extinction? And where does that leave places like Port Talbot and Redcar that have so much of their identity bound up in their industrial history?
The 'wilderness' ghost steel towns
If you want to peer into a post-steel future, look at Redcar on the northeast coast - an area sometimes described as Britain's "rust belt", owing to the derelict industrial sites scattered across the landscape.
Teesside's steel industry emerged in the mid-19th Century and went on to employ more than 40,000 people. It has long been a point of local pride that the Sydney Harbour Bridge was built from Teesside steel.
But along with other steel towns, it suffered in the latter half of the 20th Century. Cheap imports from China created tough competition. Britain moved from a manufacturing to a service-based economy - and towns like Redcar were left behind.
In 1987, Margaret Thatcher walked with a handbag through a nearby derelict wasteland; a photograph of the "wilderness" visit became a symbol of industrial hardship.
More recently, the steel industry has struggled under the weight of the UK's relatively high energy prices (which makes it expensive to heat a furnace).
Some analysts also say that the UK's drive towards decarbonisation is raising costs for steel producers.
In 2015, the Thai owners of Redcar's steelworks pulled the plug. Sue Jeffrey, then Labour leader of Redcar Council, remembers watching the blast furnace in action, on one of its final days in use.
"It was one of the most devastating things I've been involved in," she recalls.
About 2,000 workers lost their jobs at the site, with thousands more affected through the steel supply chain.
Local businesses were hit too; B&Bs have lost custom from the contractors no longer visiting the area.
The council set up a task force to help former steelworkers into new jobs. It saw some success.
Of the more than 2,000 steelworkers who made an initial claim for benefits when the plant closed, the vast majority had come off benefits within three years, according to a council report published in 2018.
But Ms Jeffrey argues that many could not find jobs that made use of their industrial skills.
Some became dog walkers and decorators; others, chimney sweeps. Many, she says, accepted a large cut in salary.
The same tale has been told in other steel towns; laid-off worker forced to find new jobs.
Some are delighted with the change.
After his redundancy from Port Talbot, Ryan Davies decided to pursue his dream since boyhood: street art. He now runs a business, painting murals of ladybirds, ducks and mythical creatures.
Though his income is lower, he finds it fulfilling. "I've been a far happier person since I left," he says.
"When you've got a grey wall and you paint something colourful, it makes people smile."
But not everyone is so upbeat.
Cassius Walker-Hunt, 28, opened a coffee shop in Port Talbot last year after taking redundancy from the town's steelworks, using a £7,500 loan from Tata Steel to buy professional coffee-making equipment.
"I've been working around the clock just to survive," he says today.
The fight to keep blast furnaces burning
The job security that steelmaking once offered is one reason unions argue it's imperative to keep the industry alive.
Alun Davies, national secretary at the Community Union, the largest union for steelworkers, thinks governments should step in when required to keep blast furnaces burning.
That's exactly what happened earlier this year in Scunthorpe, the last place in the UK that makes virgin steel from melting iron ore in blast furnaces.
It has lurched from crisis to crisis. The last government took control when it was on the brink of going bust and - £600million of UK taxpayer support later - sold it to Chinese company Jingye.
Now it is back in government control. The government was forced to intervene after Jingye failed to order vital supplies to keep the furnaces burning.
From here, Scunthorpe's future is uncertain. Some have urged the Labour government to fully nationalise the site.
But Jonathon Carruthers-Green, an analyst at steel consultancy MEPS International, believes that ministers will be wary of that option because of the huge potential costs and complications.
Alternatively, the plant could be sold to a different foreign buyer.
But, asks Mr Carruthers-Green, "Who is going to come along and start making steel in the UK, where there's higher [energy] costs, where there's all sorts of issues around decarbonisation?"
Scunthorpe resident, Sean Robinson, told the BBC earlier this year that he fears the town will become another steel "ghost town".
A question of Trump's tariffs
Looming large over all of this is the question of what will become of Trump's tariffs and how it will impact UK steel.
The good news is that the UK was exempted from a surprise hike on those tariffs from 25 to 50% last month, and trade officials seem confident that they will also be unaffected by the new deferred date of 1 August, which is when the White House says its most swingeing tariffs on US trading partners will come into effect.
But steel companies are still frustrated that the original plan to reduce tariffs on UK steel to zero is yet to be agreed.
There are two sticking points. The first, according to steel industry sources, is that US trade negotiators are overwhelmed with the sheer volume of work to get through when negotiating with the rest of the world simultaneously.
But the second, and the reason steel was not waved through alongside cars and planes, is that there are concerns in the US that the UK's largest steel maker Tata no longer makes steel from scratch.
Having closed its blast furnaces, it no longer "melts and pours" the steel but rather imports virgin steel from India to be modified in the UK, leading to some questions in the US as to whether it even counts as UK steel.
Even if and when a zero-tariff deal is done on steel, it is likely to include quotas above which tariffs will be charged, putting a ceiling on future growth in exports to the US.
Is 'romanticism' blocking sensible debate?
There is, however, a bigger, more profound question that steel towns must wrestle with. In a post-industrial age, what exactly are these places for?
And, should they try to reignite the embers of their dying steel trade - or pivot to a new industry of the future?
Some trade union leaders maintain that steel towns can, in effect, remain steel towns. With the right investment in green technologies, Mr Davies of the Community Union thinks, a new, cleaner steel industry could emerge.
"Imagine Port Talbot without any steelworkers - it's unthinkable," he says.
But others think that view is unrealistic. Paul Swinney, a director at the Centre for Cities think tank, argues that there is a certain romanticism in the debate around steel that blocks sensible thinking.
"I think it's wrapped up in what some people perceive as being 'good jobs,'" he says. "You did a hard day's graft, you got your hands dirty, and you felt like you'd contributed. [But that framing] just isn't helpful."
As he sees it, "there's no plausible route forward which is going to have more of these kinds of jobs. "The UK economy has changed," he argues.
Instead, he believes towns like Port Talbot and Redcar should look to industries of the future.
Industries of the future
Redcar is already taking steps in this direction. The derelict land that once housed the town's steelworks is now at the centre of an ambitious redevelopment led by the South Tees Development Corporation.
The old steelmaking structures have been flattened to make way for renewable energy and carbon capture and storage.
The managers of the Teesworks project say they have created more than 2,000 "long-term" jobs - and they hope to create 20,000 in total.
But last year, a central government review criticised "inappropriate decisions and a lack of transparency" at the corporation, and looked at why private property developers had ended up owning a large amount of the site.
Tees Valley Conservative Mayor Lord Houchen, who at that point chaired the corporation, said he "welcomed" the panel's recommendations to improve transparency.
Speaking on local radio in May, he said the Teesworks project has provided "billions of pounds of investment for the region".
But Mr Swinney of Centre for Cities says we need to think bigger still. Rather than trying to recreate their industrial glory, steel towns may want to lean into white-collar, knowledge economy jobs - the sort of work that made many city centres comparatively rich.
The key is to improve transport from steel towns to cities, where office jobs tend to be located, he says.
But ex-steelworker Ryan Davies laughs at the suggestion of steelworkers slipping seamlessly into office jobs.
"When you come from an environment of 33 years of steelworking, going into an office is such a radical difference," he says.
There are other challenges too: people in steel towns tend to have fewer formal qualifications - often essential for office work.
For example, about 37% of working-age adults in Port Talbot have the equivalent of one year of university education, versus a UK average of 49%.
A slow death vs hope for the future
Ultimately, the future of these towns may rest on the wider fate of the UK's steel industry. And there is some cause for optimism.
The government insists that Scunthorpe and the rest of the UK steel industry has a future, not least because of the big increase in spending on a steel-intensive defence industry.
Mr Carruthers-Green thinks that the UK's decarbonisation drive could also eventually play to steel's advantage.
With more investment in green energy, he says, there will be further demand for the sort of high-quality steel used in things like wind turbines. This, in turn, creates more energy, lowering prices for steel producers.
"The hope is we can get into this virtuous spiral," he adds.
Gareth Stace, director general of the trade group UK Steel, is a little more cautious, however. There's a "worst case" scenario where the UK "continue[s] to make less and less and less, he argues.
As he puts it, "We don't go out of business in one bang". Instead, there's a slow death.
Yet he also believes that with some tailored policies, steel could be revived even in this scenario. In particular, he wants to see action on energy prices, as well as policies on procurement in which government departments buy more steel from the UK instead of from abroad.
"If it works," he says, "for the first time in a very, very long time, we'll actually have some hope for the future."
Additional reporting: David Macmillan
BBC InDepth is the home on the website and app for the best analysis, with fresh perspectives that challenge assumptions and deep reporting on the biggest issues of the day. And we showcase thought-provoking content from across BBC Sounds and iPlayer too. You can send us your feedback on the InDepth section by clicking on the button below.
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One day in 2010, Sean "Diddy" Combs was in the kitchen of his Beverly Hills estate with his assistant Capricorn Clark. "Let me show you something," he said, summoning his girlfriend, Casandra Ventura, into the room.
Turning to her, he issued a string of commands: "Sit down, stand up, turn around, walk over there, hand me that. Now go back." His girlfriend obeyed his every word.
"Did you see that?" said Combs to his assistant. "You won't do that. That's why you don't have a man like me."
This account, shared by Ms Clark in her testimony during Combs' recent eight-week trial, gave a glimpse into his dynamic with his partner - and a sense of what was happening behind closed doors.
Ms Ventura (also known as Cassie), an R&B singer who was previously signed to his record label, testified that throughout their long-term relationship, Combs – who was 17 years her senior – beat her, blackmailed her and coerced her into drug-fuelled sex sessions with escorts. He had, she continued, controlled her life.
Central to the trial was the claim that Combs, 55, a multimillionaire music mogul once credited with bringing rap into the mainstream, forced his partners to engage in elaborate sexual performances, known as "freak-offs", that he directed, often filmed and arranged with the help of his staff.
Last week, he was found guilty on two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution. He was acquitted on the more serious charges of racketeering conspiracy and sex trafficking.
After the verdict was announced, Ms Ventura's lawyer, Doug Wigdor, said that by coming forward, she had "brought attention to the realities of powerful men in our orbit and the misconduct that has persisted for decades without repercussion".
But now, campaigners, survivors of sexual violence and insiders within the music industry are asking: Why did it take so long to hold Combs accountable?
And, in light of Hollywood's MeToo movement that uncovered and helped root out sexual harassment and abuse in the film industry, and which began nearly a decade ago - is it now time that the music industry, or more specifically, hip-hop, had a MeToo movement of its own?
'A playbook that shields predators'
Cristalle Bowen is a rapper from Chicago who was part of an all-female trio called RapperChicks. "The Diddy trial only highlights what many of us already know," she says, referring to the struggle to hold powerful people to account.
In 2022 she wrote a book about misogyny in the industry. The tagline is: Navigating Hip-Hop and Relationships in a Culture of Misogyny. "Being the token women on labels and in crews leaves you susceptible to, at the very least, name calling," she claims. "At the most… you've been abused in some way.
"When there is money involved, it becomes tricky. From hush money to stalled careers to the way we all see survivors treated… It's a difficult task."
Campaigners and industry insiders who spoke to the BBC say that sexual abuse and harassment exists across all genres in the music business, not only hip-hop. They point to a culture of silence, where they claim that predators are protected and victims risk being blacklisted, sued or fired.
Caroline Heldman, an academic and activist, agrees. She is co-founder of the US-based Sound Off Coalition, which advocates for the elimination of sexual violence in music, and argues that there is a history of using "threats to push out women artists who are targets of abuse by men".
"The music industry has followed a playbook for dealing with sexual abuse that shields predators, including musicians, producers, managers, executives, and other behind-the-scenes players, from liability," she claims.
Non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) – legal contracts that stop people from sharing certain agreed-upon private information – are used legitimately in the industry, for example to help protect commercial secrets. But some argue that these are being misused and can contribute to a culture of silence in cases of abuse.
"[It] makes for a very difficult decision for a lot of victims," says Arick Fudali, a New York-based lawyer. One of his clients is Dawn Richard, a singer who testified against Combs at the federal trial and has an ongoing lawsuit against him.
"I've had clients who have declined that and chosen to file their lawsuit publicly," he adds. "They can receive less money than if they had just settled privately and confidentially."
Ms Bowen argues that she has seen this happen first-hand. "Moguls write the cheques and artists need the cheques - there's usually no checks and balances when mogul money is involved."
But, there may be other reasons for not speaking out.
And in hip-hop specifically, some survivors of abuse and experts we spoke to argue that this culture of silence is exacerbated by the combined forces of racism and misogyny, and a desire to fiercely protect a genre that has created rare avenues to stardom and financial success.
A mouthpiece for liberation and resistance
Originating in the African-American and Latino communities of New York City in the 1970s, hip-hop became a mouthpiece for liberation and resistance against the authorities and social injustice.
"Hip-hop allowed young black people to tell their own stories on their own terms, it gave that generation a voice," explains Mark Anthony Neal, professor of African-American studies at Duke University, particularly when popular culture was offering a limited portrayal of black America.
It's now the most commercially successful music genre in the US, leading in album sales and streaming numbers. "Rappers are the new rock stars," says Thomas Hobbs, a writer and co-host of a hip-hop podcast, Exit the 36 Chambers. "They're the people now most likely to fill arenas."
As an artist and businessman who ran an empire that encompassed fashion, alcohol and TV as well as his label, Bad Boy Records, Combs - who has an estimated net worth of about $400m (£293m) - has been championed not only for helping hip-hop become commercially viable but for creating jobs and opportunities, particularly for black men.
Throughout his career he has been vocal about "black excellence" – platforming achievements – as well as highlighting struggles within the black community.
This was something his legal defence raised in court, saying: "Sean Combs has become something that is very, very hard to be. Very hard to be. He is a self-made, successful, black entrepreneur."
Outside court during his trial, fans erupted in cheers after he was acquitted of the more serious charges and onlookers debated aloud whether he had been unfairly targeted. "Of course he was. He's a powerful black man," one said.
For weeks, others had been wearing and selling "Free Puff" T-shirts, after Combs' 90s stage name, next to a speaker blaring out his music.
Sociologist Katheryn Russell-Brown has described a phenomenon she calls "black protectionism".
"Those who have managed to obtain large-scale prosperity, in spite of legal, political, economic, educational and social barriers, are given the status of racial pioneers," she wrote in her book, Protecting Our Own: Race, Crime, and African Americans, which was inspired by the OJ Simpson case.
"It is, therefore, predictable that black people as a group are suspicious when criminal charges are brought against members of its elite, protected class."
Black women in particular carry the fear that speaking out could reinforce harmful stereotypes about their community, argues Treva Lindsey, a professor in the Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Department at Ohio State University who researches misogyny in hip-hop.
"When we portray hip-hop as uniquely sexist, or sexually violent, or harmful, that has repercussions for black people of all genders," she says.
The start of a reckoning?
And yet across the entertainment industry more broadly, a retrospective focus is slowly happening now, in part because of shifts in attitudes.
Recent changes to law in some US states have also enabled people to take action over alleged historic misconduct.
New York and California passed laws in 2022 called the Adult Survivors Act that for one-year only allowed people to file sexual abuse claims, regardless of when the alleged incidents took place.
Ms Ventura filed a lawsuit against Combs in November 2023, accusing him of physical and sexual abuse. It was settled the following day, and Combs denied the claims.
He is also facing more than 60 civil cases from men and women accusing him of drugging or assault, spanning his entire three-decade career.
In a statement, Combs' team has said: "No matter how many lawsuits are filed, it won't change the fact that Mr Combs has never sexually assaulted or sex trafficked anyone - man or woman, adult or minor."
There are several other hip-hop titans of the 90s and 00s who have been accused in a relatively recent wave of allegations.
Music executive and producer Antonio LA Reid, who worked with artists including Usher, Kanye West (now known as Ye) and Rihanna, was accused of sexual assault in a lawsuit filed in 2023. He denies all claims against him.
Meanwhile, Russell Simmons, co-founder of hip-hop label Def Jam Recordings, has faced allegations of violent sexual behaviour by more than 20 women since 2017, all of which he has denied.
Drew Dixon, who is former vice president of Artists and Repertoire (A&R) at Arista Records, is among them. She has claimed she was abused by both Mr Simmons and Mr Reid when she worked in the music industry in the 1990s and 2000s.
She told The New York Times: "You're not just going up against the person who assaulted you," she said. "You are going against everyone who benefits from their brand and revenue stream.
"Those forces will mobilise against any accuser. It's daunting."
Backlash after speaking out
Sil Lai Abrams, who is a writer and gender violence activist, began working as an executive assistant at the Def Jam music label in 1992. She is one of the women who accused Mr Simmons of sexual assault. He has denied all allegations.
"It's harder for women of colour to speak out against abuse in the music industry," she argues - something that she believes still applies today. "[Women have] been conditioned to see abuse of power and sexual harassment as the price one pays to work in the industry."
Then there is the question of the response from the public if people do speak out. When Ms Ventura first filed her lawsuit against Combs, she faced widespread abuse. Memes on social media accused her of being a gold-digger. Some in the hip-hop industry criticised her too.
"Quit trying to expose people for money," US rapper Slim Thug said in a video shared with his two million followers on Instagram in 2023.
Only when CNN broadcast security camera footage dating back to 2016 which showed Combs grabbing, dragging and kicking Ms Ventura in the hallway of a hotel did the sentiment towards her change.
Slim Thug publicly apologised for his comments.
Combs responded in a video statement posted on Instagram, saying: "My behaviour on that video is inexcusable. I take full responsibility… I'm committed to be a better man each and every day… I'm truly sorry."
"Before the video of Combs beating her came out and people couldn't deny the evidence, people said Cassie was a liar," says Dr Nikki Lane, assistant professor in Gender, Sexuality & Feminist Studies at Duke University.
Yet Dr Lane argues that more still needs to change. "Black women's bodies are constantly traded upon within the culture of hip-hop as tropes to be ridiculed".
Dr Lane points to the example of rapper Megan Thee Stallion, who was shot in the foot in 2020.
Fellow rapper Tory Lanez is currently serving a 10-year sentence for the assault, but after the incident, the artist Drake was criticised for lyrics in his 2022 song Circo Loco - "This b- lie 'bout gettin' shots, but she still a stallion" - which seemed to refer to the incident.
'Some people look the other way'
There remains the question of what happens to the art – and indeed the music – when an idol is convicted of serious crimes.
R&B singer R Kelly was sentenced to 30 years in prison in 2022 for sex trafficking, racketeering and sexually abusing women and children, but years later, his music remains popular. It generated about 780 million audio streams in the US since January 2019. On Spotify, he has around 5.2 million monthly listeners.
"There are still people [who] defend R Kelly," says Mr Hobbs. "I won't be surprised if Diddy's streams, just like R Kelly's, stay high."
"There's a kind of cognitive dissonance" from fans, he argues. "These songs become so embedded in people's lives that they find it very difficult to get rid of them… [they're] part of people's DNA.
"So, I think some people are able to look the other way."
The bigger question, perhaps, is how should the industry react? After the MeToo movement began in 2017, at least 200 prominent men accused of sexual harassment lost their jobs, and changes were made to workplace policies.
However, the Combs verdict in itself is unlikely to lead to wider changes, according to Prof Lindsey. "I think what happens in this moment is Diddy, kind of like R Kelly in the R&B black music pantheon, is seen as exceptional… and not indicative of something else," she says.
"There isn't a cultural reset where we look inward and ask: 'How does this happen?'"
But that is exactly what is missing, argue some others in the industry, including Ms Abrams. "What is lacking is a political environment against which survivors can count on to change the material conditions that allowed someone like Combs to act with impunity," she says.
Following MeToo in Hollywood, certain changes were introduced, including making intimacy coordinators more of a standard practice when filming sex scenes. Some music insiders now hope that migrates over to music video sets.
The Sound Off Coalition is calling for new company rules that require people in positions of power in music to report accusations of sexual assault.
Tangible measures are what matter, argues Dr Lane. "The only way for me to believe that there's been a reckoning would be to see changes in laws, policies, and actual business practices of the industry… [Ones] that are not based on how long Diddy goes down for."
For all the latest reaction and analysis on the verdict, you can listen to the Diddy on Trial podcast available on BBC Sounds.
Additional reporting by Florence Freeman and Fiona Macdonald
Top picture credit: Rich Polk/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images
BBC InDepth is the home on the website and app for the best analysis, with fresh perspectives that challenge assumptions and deep reporting on the biggest issues of the day. And we showcase thought-provoking content from across BBC Sounds and iPlayer too. You can send us your feedback on the InDepth section by clicking on the button below.
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Few scenes convey British pomp and soft power more than the King and Queen in a carriage procession through the picturesque streets of Windsor. They are being joined on Tuesday by Emmanuel and Brigitte Macron for the first state visit by a French president since 2008, and the first by a European Union leader since Brexit.
The Prince and Princess of Wales will be there too - a Royal Salute will be fired and Macron will inspect a guard of honour. But at a time of jeopardy in Europe, this three-day visit to Windsor and London promises much more than ceremony.
There is a genuine hope that the coming days will make a difference to both countries.
Macron will address MPs and peers at Westminster, and he and Brigitte will be treated to a state banquet back at Windsor. The trip will culminate with a UK-France summit, co-chaired by Sir Keir Starmer and Macron, during which the two governments hope to reach an agreement on the return of irregular migrants.
They will also host Ukraine's leader by video as they try to maintain arms supplies to his military.
But the wider question is how closely aligned they can really become, and whether they can put any lingering mistrust after Brexit behind them.
And, given that the trip will involve much pageantry - with the tour moving from the streets of Windsor, the quadrangle of the Castle and later to the Royal Gallery of the Palace of Westminster - how crucial is King Charles III's role in this diplomacy?
Resetting a 'unique partnership'
It was less than two months ago that the UK and EU agreed to "reset" relations in London. Ties with France in particular had warmed considerably, driven partly by personal understanding but also strategic necessity.
The two neighbours have much in common: they are both nuclear powers and members of the United Nations Security Council.
They are also both looking to update a 15-year-old defence pact known as the Lancaster House treaties, which established a 10,000-strong Combined Joint Expeditionary Force (CJEF), and they have recently been working on broadening it to include other Nato and European countries.
"It has always been a unique partnership," says former French ambassador to the UK Sylvie Bermann. "I think this partnership will be crucial in the future."
All of this is unlikely to escape the notice of US President Donald Trump, who is also promised a state visit, his second to the UK, probably in September.
King Charles is 'more than a figurehead'
King Charles, who is 76, has already navigated some complex royal diplomacy this year.
Macron was the first European leader to visit Trump in the White House in February, but it was Sir Keir who stole the show days later, handing him a personal invitation from the King.
Then, when Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky returned to Europe fresh from a bruising meeting with Trump at the White House in February, it was King Charles who welcomed him to Sandringham, and then met him again at Windsor in June.
He has spoken in the past of the heroism of Ukrainians in the face of "indescribable aggression".
Even before ascending the throne, King Charles amassed decades of experience in international affairs (he is also fluent in French). He was only 21 when he attended the funeral in 1970 of Charles de Gaulle, the wartime general who became the architect of France's current Fifth Republic.
He went on to become the longest-serving Prince of Wales in history, and now he is King he has weekly audiences with the prime minister. "The choreography is a strange dance, I suspect, between Number Ten and the Palace," says royal commentator Richard Fitzwilliams.
"There's no doubt at all that Charles is considerably more than a figurehead."
Windsor Castle, which dates back to the first Norman king, William the Conqueror, has hosted French presidents before. But there is a quiet significance in the appearance of the Prince and Princess of Wales in welcoming Emmanuel and Brigitte Macron, as Catherine recovers from treatment for cancer.
Between them, the King and Macron have played their part in resetting relations between the two neighbours, and by extension with the European Union too.
The King is a francophile, says Marc Roche, a columnist and royal commentator for French media: "He has always had a good relationship with France."
A year after the death of Queen Elizabeth II, it was France that King Charles and Queen Camilla chose for their first state visit in September 2023.
Macron had reminded the world in 2022 that the late Queen had "climbed the stairs of the Élysée Palace" six times - more than any other foreign sovereign. His words were warmly received in the UK.
The King received a standing ovation after an address in French to the Senate, and the Queen played table tennis at a sports centre with Brigitte Macron. France's first lady has since visited her in London for a cross-Channel book award.
Gentle touches they may have been, but it followed a very rough period in Franco-British relations.
Brexit negotiations soured relations
The mood had soured during negotiations over Brexit, which the French president said was based on a lie.
Then four years ago, Australia pulled out of a deal to buy 12 French submarines and signed a defence pact with the UK and US instead. The French foreign minister called it a "stab in the back".
Boris Johnson, who was prime minister at the time, told the French they should "prenez un grip" and "donnez-moi un break".
It had been Macron's idea for a European Political Community (EPC) in 2022 that brought the UK into a broad group of countries all seeking to respond to Russia's full-scale invasion.
In 2023 the then-Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak, sought to turn the page on several years of frosty relations at a Franco-British summit in Paris.
British and French prime ministers have come and gone: the UK had three in 2022, and last year France had four. It was Sunak's team that organised last year's EPC summit at Blenheim, but it was Starmer as new prime minister who chaired it.
Sébastien Maillard, who helped advise the French presidency in setting up the EPC, said he believed "on both sides there is still a lack of trust… The memory of these difficult times has not vanished".
"Trust needs time to build and perhaps the Russian threat, support for Ukraine and how to handle Trump are three compelling reasons to rebuild that trust," says Maillard, who is now at the Chatham House think tank.
Susi Dennison, of the European Council on Foreign Relations in Paris, agrees relations with France are not back to pre-Brexit levels, but suggests some things the UK and France are "bickering" about were being argued over even before the Brexit vote.
For Macron, this is a chance to not only improve the relationship but also to shine on the international stage when his popularity at home has sunk, Mr Roche believes. "It's a very important visit, especially the first day, because the French are fascinated by the Royal Family."
After eight years in power, Macron's second term still has almost two years to run, but he has paid the price politically for calling snap elections last year and losing his government's majority. His prime minister, François Bayrou, faces a monumental task in the coming months in steering next year's budget past France's left-wing and far-right parties.
As president, Macron's powers - his domaine réservé - cover foreign policy, defence and security, but traditionally France's prime minister does not travel with the head of state, so Macron comes to the UK with a team of ministers who will handle far more than international affairs.
The difficult question of migration
During the summit, the two teams will also work on nuclear energy, artificial intelligence and cultural ties. Differences still have to be sorted over "post-Brexit mobility" for students and other young people, and France is expected to push the Starmer government on that.
But most of the headlines on Thursday's UK-France summit will cover the two main issues: defence and migration.
Defending Ukraine will take pride of place. An Élysée Palace source said it would discuss "how to seriously maintain Ukraine's combat capability" and regenerate its military.
"On defence our relationship is closer than any other countries," says former ambassador Sylvie Bermann. "We have to prepare for the future… to strengthen the deterrence of Europe."
And if a ceasefire were agreed in Ukraine, the two countries could provide the backbone of the "reassurance force" being proposed by the "coalition of the willing". Sir Keir and Macron have played a prominent part in forming this coalition, but so too have the military chiefs of staff of both countries.
Migration is the stickiest problem the two countries face, however. How they deal with their differences on it - particularly on small boats - is crucial to their future relationship.
They are especially keen to sign an agreement on migrant returns and on French police stopping people boarding "taxi boats" to cross the Channel.
France has long argued that the UK has to address the "pull factors" that drive people to want to risk their lives on the boats - the UK, for its part, already pays for many of the 1,200 French gendarmes to patrol France's long northern coastline to stop the smugglers' boats.
The countries are believed to have been working on the terms of a "one-in, one-out" agreement, so that for every small-boat arrival in the UK that France takes back, the UK would allow in one asylum seeker from France seeking family reunification.
Several countries on the southern coasts of Europe are unimpressed because it could mean France sending those asylum seekers handed back by the UK on to their country of entry into the EU, bordering the Mediterranean.
In the UK, the opposition Conservatives have branded the idea "pathetic", accusing the government of a "national record - for failure" on curbing small-boat crossings.
And yet every country in Europe is looking for a way to cut illegal border crossings. Meghan Benton, of the Migration Policy Institute, believes a Franco-British deal could work as a possible pilot for the rest of Europe: "What works for the Channel could also work for the Mediterranean."
Any agreement on this tricky issue could also signal a real, practical improvement in the countries' political relationship. France's right-wing Interior Minister, Bruno Retailleau, has already been working with Labour's Home Secretary Yvette Cooper to try to find a workable solution.
How far they get, and its wider impact on Europe, is still to be decided, but it does reflect a new willingness between the two neighbours to tackle the divisions between them.
Boris Johnson once accused France of wanting to punish the UK for Brexit. That difficult chapter appears to be over.
As Susi Dennison puts it: "There's a certain distance that will always be there, but things are operating quite well."
During King Charles' 2023 state visit to France he called on the two countries to find common ground, "to reinvigorate our friendship to ensure it is fit for the challenge of this, the 21st Century".
And so this visit will help show - both in the relationships between individuals and on concrete policy debates - whether his call has been answered.
BBC InDepth is the home on the website and app for the best analysis, with fresh perspectives that challenge assumptions and deep reporting on the biggest issues of the day. And we showcase thought-provoking content from across BBC Sounds and iPlayer too. You can send us your feedback on the InDepth section by clicking on the button below.
There are extraordinary secret surveillance images - now largely forgotten - that in their own grainy and mysterious way, tell the story of missed opportunities that maybe, just maybe, could have stopped the horrific suicide attacks that took place in London 20 years ago.
They are images of the ringleader of the 7/7 bombings - first caught on camera at an al-Qaeda-associated training camp in the Lake District in 2001.
Two more images from 2004 show him - name and intentions then unknown - meeting a different cell of bomb plotters outside London and being followed by an MI5 team as he made his way back to Leeds.
'Of course it was a failure'
The 7/7 attacks were the worst wake-up call imaginable for the UK's then outdated counter-terrorism operations.
Until that day in 2005, the UK's response to terrorism groups was heavily influenced by the experience of combating the IRA, which organised itself along military lines.
Al-Qaeda (AQ) was also broadly organised in a military way - directing its adherents, including the 7/7 bombers. But the key lesson from 7/7 was that this analogy only went so far.
MI5 and the police realised they had to work closer together to penetrate AQ's cells.
MI5 teams were the experts in secretly gathering intelligence. They could bug, burgle and listen to "subjects of interest", to use the jargon. But in the run-up to 7/7, the agency often fell short of sharing that information widely and quickly enough.
Peter Clarke was the Metropolitan Police officer in charge of counter-terrorism policing at the time of 7/7.
"I haven't spoken to anybody who was involved in either counter-terrorism or in the intelligence agencies, who don't regard it as a failure," he told me. "Of course it was."
The failure was complex. Lord Jonathan Evans, the former head of MI5 - and at the time of 7/7, the deputy head - highlights the pressure intelligence teams were under.
"You have to make choices in counter-terrorism investigations. You can't investigate everything, so the question is are you investigating the most immediately threatening intelligence and making the right priority calls?"
The reason why the future 7/7 ringleader was put to one side in 2004 was that there was no substantial intelligence that he was actually planning an attack.
The agencies were focusing on a huge bomb plot they knew about - Operation Crevice. It was run by the men Khan was seen meeting. But the brutal fact was that they had no idea that Khan could be a serious threat because he had been discounted as a priority for further investigation.
How MI5 foiled the liquid bomb plot
The 2005 attacks forced the agency and police to think deeply about how they could end a doom loop of not investigating someone because they had decided they didn't know enough to think they were worth investigating.
Some of that was about funding - and there was a huge injection into counter-terrorism in the years that followed.
But more importantly MI5, alongside their partners in the police, began to develop a better "triage" system to work out which of the thousands of potential plotters they had titbits of intelligence about needed to be prioritised.
That helped get the police closer, more quickly, to the point where they could seize evidence to land someone in jail.
Nowhere was this more successful than in Operation Overt, which came a year after 7/7. The Overt plotters had an al-Qaeda recipe for a liquid bomb disguised as a soft drink - and they planned to blow up transatlantic planes.
MI5 captured in extraordinary detail the gang's preparations. They saw the men working with tools to make strange-looking devices from household items including drink bottles and camera flash circuits.
Nobody was sure what they were up to - until the surveillance revealed the men recording "martyrdom" videos envisaging their own deaths mid-air.
This time, the intelligence was being shared in almost real-time - and the police and prosecutors dived in and arrested and charged the gang before the devices were finally ready. The success of Operation Overt shows that plots could be disrupted early.
Lord Evans points to another critical shift in thinking. "We had always been predominantly, not exclusively, a London-based organisation," he says. "But when you recognise that the 7/7 bombers came down from Yorkshire, the threat was national.
"We needed to have an effective regional network working very closely with the police in the major cities and that was accelerated and was a very successful way of ensuring that we were able to find out what was happening in Manchester or Birmingham or wherever as effectively as we had traditionally done in London."
Then, in 2006, Parliament created a new offence of preparing for acts of terrorism.
This meant the police could swoop in even earlier than in the case of Operation Overt - even before an attacker's plan was settled. All they needed now was to show a court that an individual had a terrorism mindset and was taking steps towards an outrage - such as researching targets, even if their plan was not finalised.
Max Hill KC led some of the UK's most complex terrorism trials - and went on to be the Director of Public Prosecutions between 2018 and 2023. He always wanted the strongest case to put to a jury and judge - in order to get the longest possible sentence to protect the public. But in the case of a bomb-maker, that presented a dilemma for the police and MI5.
"How long to let a person run towards their ultimate aim of deploying devices?" he says. "The longer you leave it, the more serious the jail sentence. But the longer you wait, the greater the risk that there will be damage or harm."
Success after success followed - and cells of plotters were also increasingly infiltrated by spooks finding secret ways to capture chats about plans. Until, that is, the rise of the self-styled Islamic State, which changed all of that once again.
DIY attacks across Europe
By 2014, thousands of young radicalised men and women had flocked to the territory the group had seized in Syria and Iraq, convinced that the ultra-violent movement was building a utopian state.
Its ideologues told some followers, who could not travel, to plan their own attacks at home and without any direction from commanders.
This was a new and terrifying prospect - and led to a wave of DIY attacks across Europe, including in the UK. So the government turned to other tools to "disrupt" extremists coming home from abroad, by cancelling their passports or stripping citizenship.
The first of a number of attacks in 2017 was committed by a killer who drove into pedestrians on Westminster Bridge before stabbing to death a police officer at the gates of Parliament. He acted without warning and seemingly alone, rapidly self-radicalising - moving from thought to violence before his intentions became clear to anyone else.
The rapidity of these attacks - and the regularity of them, disrupted or acted out, had an extraordinary consequence that further complicated the picture. Far-right extremists watched and learned and, seeking a form of "revenge", became determined to respond in kind.
In 2015, a 25-year-old member of National Action, a now banned extreme right-wing group, carried out a racist attack on a Sikh-heritage dentist in a supermarket. The attacker acted alone. The man who murdered Jo Cox MP a year later, during the Brexit referendum, planned and acted in a similar manner.
This DIY rapid violence did not rely on personal connections to puppet-masters. It was increasingly linked to how extremists found and absorbed extremist material all over the internet.
But that also presented an opportunity. The security service and partners - including the FBI - created teams of "online role-players". They would pose as extremist recruiters in vile chat groups to identify would-be attackers and befriend them. It began to work.
One early success in 2017 saw a young man, angry at the death of his uncle who had been fighting in Syria, ask these spies for a bomb to attack Downing Street. It was a crazy and unrealisable plan. But he genuinely wanted to do it.
The Prevent system - which was set up to identify potential extremists and to stop them supporting terrorism - struggled to win public support amid fears that it was a network to spy on people.
But today it is a vital tool in the state's armoury - with figures showing that since 2015, some 5,000 young people have been identified as being at risk of extremism and given support, typically through counselling and mentoring, to reject it.
Why MI5 failed to stop the Manchester bombing
The Manchester Arena terror attack of 2017 - in which 22 people were killed - revealed that MI5 missed a significant chance to focus on the would-be suicide bomber and stop him - but it also revealed how lax security at public gatherings could be exploited.
Figen Murray's son Martyn Hett was one of the 22 killed.
"You don't ever come to terms with it," she tells me. "It's the brutality, the randomness. These people who commit terrorist attacks do not care who they kill. They don't select people in most cases.
"Our loved ones are pawns in a big game, because terrorists really want to make a statement against the state."
Her grief spurred her on to come up with one of the biggest legal changes of the last 20 years - a practical measure to protect people if the security services fail to spot an incoming threat.
Along with Nick Aldworth, a former senior police officer, they lobbied government to create "Martyn's Law".
The legislation - which is coming into force over two years - requires venues to have a security plan to help stop acts of terrorism on their premises.
In time, sites with more than 800 people will need extra measures such as CCTV or security staff and all venues that can hold more than 200 people will have to devise some kind of plan to protect the public and make sure their staff know how to act on it in an emergency.
At the O2 Arena in London, for example, staff process arriving guests a bit like they are going through an airport. There are machines available to scan for weapons too.
Violence without an ideology
Deputy Assistant Commissioner Vicky Evans, the current head of counter-terrorism policing, says her officers are seeing suspects getting younger, with violent material on the internet playing a role in that.
In some cases officers are trying to work out what to do about people bent on extreme violence, inspired by acts of terrorism, but who have no clear-cut ideology.
Many of these complex cases are referred by the police to the Prevent counter-radicalisation programme to see if specialist mentors can help.
The case of the Southport murderer Axel Rudakubana - who had been repeatedly flagged to Prevent - is at the heart of a debate about internet-fuelled violence. The forthcoming public inquiry will look for answers, and may even mean we have to rethink what we mean by the word "terrorism".
The Home Secretary Yvette Cooper's recent decision to ban Palestine Action under terrorism laws - for causing massive criminal damage - is further adding to a national debate about what threats the counter-terrorism network should confront.
Today, many many more powers are in place - and the UK's counter-terrorism network, which has a dedicated secret headquarters in London, is a well-oiled machine. But the threat is more diverse than ever.
Since 2017, the police say there have been 15 domestic terrorism incidents and they have disrupted 43 "late-stage" plots.
In the wake of the 2005 attacks, Sir Tony Blair was accused of trampling over civil liberties in the search for the right set of powers he thought the security services needed.
I asked whether he had got the balance right - and the question he posed back will be in the mind of every one of his successors.
"The most fundamental basic liberty is to be protected from violence - and particularly random terrorist violence," he said.
"You've got to ask yourself, are the policy tools we have in our toolbox adequate to deal with the threat?"
Additional Reporting: Jonathan Brunert
Top image credits: AFP via Getty and Justin Talli
BBC InDepth is the home on the website and app for the best analysis, with fresh perspectives that challenge assumptions and deep reporting on the biggest issues of the day. And we showcase thought-provoking content from across BBC Sounds and iPlayer too. You can send us your feedback on the InDepth section by clicking on the button below.
It's surely the darkest fear of any mum or dad - losing their child to a world that's out of sight, a place where they can't protect them.
Esther Ghey, Ian Russell, Mariano Janin, Liam Walsh, Ellen Roome, Lisa Kenevan, Hollie Dance and Judy Thomas.
They are all parents who believe the internet played a part in the death of their children: Brianna, Molly, Mia, Maia, Jools, Isaac, Archie and Frankie.
And they've courageously told us their stories, sharing their pain, partly in the hope of pushing the authorities to regulate what happens on the internet more effectively.
After years of campaigning and political debate, tech platforms will - within weeks - be legally obliged to stop kids seeing harmful content online, including pornography and material encouraging self-harm. They'll be expected to check users' ages, and if they don't, they could be punished with heavy fines.
But the debate over whether the changes will have the right effect is already raging. In private, the government freely admits the new rules already need an update. So what is going on?
Technological advances
The Science, Innovation and Technology Committee, which investigated the law in the wake of the Southport riots, said internet users were being exposed to large volumes of harmful and misleading content "which can deceive, damage mental health, normalise extremist views, undermine democracy, and fuel violence".
MPs in the committee concluded that the Act failed to keep UK citizens "safe from a core and pervasive online harm".
Many safety campaigners think the rules simply don't go far enough and that Ofcom has been far too cautious. A former cabinet minister tells me: "I just don't understand their lack of pace or urgency."
It took years to get the Online Safety Act passed as law in the first place. Parliament spent a long time grappling with real dilemmas - especially how to protect fundamental rights of free speech and privacy.
Then Ofcom took many months to write the codes of practice that have come into force over time. They wanted to create rules that were practical for the tech platforms themselves.
One industry source says Ofcom had been "sensible and grown-up", and while the rules weren't "revolutionary" they were important, positioning the UK between tighter regulations in the EU and a more lax regime in the US.
However you look at it, these new laws have been a very, very long time coming. And while Whitehall has been grinding along, technology, and the kinds of experiences we all have online, has been racing ahead.
Who had really heard of AI five years ago? Many sources I've spoken to question now if the way the whole system has been designed is the right one.
The former minister I spoke to said it was a "category error" to regulate the internet in this way, questioning whether Ofcom was the right body to do the job.
But ultimately, Ofcom can only work within the laws MPs set.
While we'll be focusing in the studio tomorrow on the effect the new rules will have, there is already an obvious demand among politicians to go further.
Labour's education secretary branded the Tories' suggestion to ban phones in schools a "gimmick". The PM said it was "unnecessary". But the House of Lords might back the idea in votes in mid-autumn, pushing the question back to MPs.
Might some newly emboldened Labour backbenchers be tempted to support it too? One of them told me if there were a reshuffle, and a new education secretary, "I'd be straight in there to say, ditch the battle, get on the right side of the public and parents, and agree to the Tories' proposal."
But I understand there are new measures developed in government that might emerge even before then, shortly after the summer.
With the age verification measures about to come into force, the cabinet minister in charge, Peter Kyle, wants to shift the conversation towards healthy habits. The Online Safety Act focuses on what we can see on the internet. But Kyle's next focus is on how we use it, considering how some apps could be addictive.
A source said: "kids shouldn't have to be grateful they can't see violent porn on their devices… the next debate is about what is healthy online."
Ministers are considering how they could protect children from algorithms that "can make kids feel out of control", or drive compulsive behaviour. Proposals on the table include an "app cap", screen time limits, extra rules on live streams, and making more of a distinction between what 13 and 16-year-olds can do online.
More legislation is likely to bring in the next round of changes, but right now, as one MP said: "it is stuck somewhere in the system."
You can expect the next round of conversations about how governments can protect the public from the worst excesses of the internet while enjoying its incredible opportunities to be part of the political soundtrack of the autumn.
Technology has changed so many aspects of our lives so fast for the better in recent years. But for too many families, their experiences online have brought terrible pain. Just as our heads might spin trying to understand all the changes, politicians have perhaps struggled to balance the dangers as well as the opportunities, and how they might be called on to protect the public.
What happens online is not the usual turf of politics like making ends meet, running schools or hospitals. But just as our virtual lives are an increasing part of our world, they are becoming a bigger part of our political life too.
A list of organisations in the UK offering support and information with some of the issues in this story is available at BBC Action Line
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Asked last month whether he was planning to join Israel in attacking Iran, US President Donald Trump said "I may do it. I may not do it. Nobody knows what I'm going to do".
He let the world believe he had agreed a two-week pause to allow Iran to resume negotiations. And then he bombed anyway.
A pattern is emerging: The most predictable thing about Trump is his unpredictability. He changes his mind. He contradicts himself. He is inconsistent.
"[Trump] has put together a highly centralised policy-making operation, arguably the most centralised, at least in the area of foreign policy, since Richard Nixon," says Peter Trubowitz, professor of international relations at the London School of Economics.
"And that makes policy decisions more dependent on Trump's character, his preferences, his temperament."
Trump has put this to political use; he has made his own unpredictability a key strategic and political asset. He has elevated unpredictability to the status of a doctrine. And now the personality trait he brought to the White House is driving foreign and security policy.
It is changing the shape of the world.
Political scientists call this the Madman Theory, in which a world leader seeks to persuade his adversary that he is temperamentally capable of anything, to extract concessions. Used successfully it can be a form of coercion and Trump believes it is paying dividends, getting the US's allies where he wants them.
But is it an approach that can work against enemies? And could its flaw be that rather than being a sleight of hand designed to fool adversaries, it is in fact based on well established and clearly documented character traits, with the effect that his behaviour becomes easier to predict?
Attacks, insults and embraces
Trump began his second presidency by embracing Russian President Vladimir Putin and attacking America's allies. He insulted Canada by saying it should become the 51st state of the US.
He said he was prepared to consider using military force to annex Greenland, an autonomous territory of America's ally Denmark. And he said the US should retake ownership and control of the Panama Canal.
Article 5 of the Nato charter commits each member to come to the defence of all others. Trump threw America's commitment to that into doubt. "I think Article 5 is on life support" declared Ben Wallace, Britain's former defence secretary.
Conservative Attorney General Dominic Grieve said: "For now the trans-Atlantic alliance is over."
A series of leaked text messages revealed the culture of contempt in Trump's White House for European allies. "I fully share your loathing of European freeloaders," US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth told his colleagues, adding "PATHETIC".
In Munich earlier this year, Trump's Vice-President JD Vance said the US would no longer be the guarantor of European security.
That appeared to turn the page on 80 years of trans-Atlantic solidarity. "What Trump has done is raise serious doubts and questions about the credibility of America's international commitments," says Prof Trubowitz.
"Whatever understanding those countries [in Europe] have with the United States, on security, on economic or other matters, they're now subject to negotiation at a moment's notice.
"My sense is that most people in Trump's orbit think that unpredictability is a good thing, because it allows Donald Trump to leverage America's clout for maximum gain…
"This is one of his takeaways from negotiating in the world of real estate."
Trump's approach paid dividends. Only four months ago, Sir Keir Starmer told the House of Commons that Britain would increase defence and security spending from 2.3% of GDP to 2.5%.
Last month, at a Nato summit, that had increased to 5%, a huge increase, now matched by every other member of the Alliance.
The predictability of unpredictability
Trump is not the first American president to deploy an Unpredictability Doctrine. In 1968, when US President Richard Nixon was trying to end the war in Vietnam, he found the North Vietnamese enemy intractable.
"At one point Nixon said to his National Security Adviser Henry Kissinger, 'you ought to tell the North Vietnamese negotiators that Nixon's crazy and you don't know what he's going to do, so you better come to an agreement before things get really crazy'," says Michael Desch, professor of international relations at Notre Dame University. "That's the madman theory."
Julie Norman, professor of politics at University College London, agrees that there is now an Unpredictability Doctrine.
"It's very hard to know what's coming from day to day," she argues. "And that has always been Trump's approach."
Trump successfully harnessed his reputation for volatility to change the trans-Atlantic defence relationship. And apparently to keep Trump on side, some European leaders have flattered and fawned.
Last month's Nato summit in The Hague was an exercise in obsequious courtship. Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte had earlier sent President Trump (or "Dear Donald") a text message, which Trump leaked.
"Congratulations and thank you for your decisive action in Iran, it was truly extraordinary," he wrote.
On the forthcoming announcement that all Nato members had agreed to increase defence spending to 5% of GDP, he continued: "You will achieve something NO president in decades could get done."
Anthony Scaramucci, who previously served as Trump's communications director in his first term, said: "Mr Rutte, he's trying to embarrass you, sir. He's literally sitting on Air Force One laughing at you."
And this may prove to be the weakness at the heart of Trump's Unpredictability Doctrine: their actions may be based on the idea that Trump craves adulation. Or that he seeks short-term wins, favouring them over long and complicated processes.
If that is the case and their assumption is correct, then it limits Trump's ability to perform sleights of hand to fool adversaries - rather, he has well established and clearly documented character traits that they have become aware of.
The adversaries impervious to charm and threats
Then there is the question of whether an Unpredictability Doctrine or the Madman Theory can work on adversaries.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, an ally who was given a dressing down by Trump and Vance in the Oval Office, later agreed to grant the US lucrative rights to exploit Ukrainian mineral resources.
Vladimir Putin, on the other hand, apparently remains impervious to Trump's charms and threats alike. On Thursday, following a telephone call, Trump said he was "disappointed" that Putin was not ready to end the war against Ukraine.
And Iran? Trump promised his base that he would end American involvement in Middle Eastern "forever wars". His decision to strike Iran's nuclear facilities was perhaps the most unpredictable policy choice of his second term so far. The question is whether it will have the desired effect.
The former British Foreign Secretary, William Hague, has argued that it will do precisely the opposite: it will make Iran more, not less likely, to seek to acquire nuclear weapons.
Prof Desch agrees. "I think it's now highly likely that Iran will make the decision to pursue a nuclear weapon," he says. "So I wouldn't be surprised if they lie low and do everything they can to complete the full fuel cycle and conduct a [nuclear] test.
"I think the lesson of Saddam Hussein and Muammar Gaddafi is not lost on other dictators facing the US and potential regime change...
"So the Iranians will desperately feel the need for the ultimate deterrent and they'll look at Saddam and Gaddafi as the negative examples and Kim Jong Un of North Korea as the positive example."
One of the likely scenarios is the consolidation of the Islamic Republic, according to Mohsen Milani, a professor of politics at the University of South Florida and author of Iran's Rise and Rivalry with the US in the Middle East.
"In 1980, when Saddam Hussein attacked Iran his aim was the collapse of the Islamic Republic," he says. "The exact opposite happened.
"That was the Israeli and American calculation too... That if we get rid of the top guys, Iran is going to surrender quickly or the whole system is going to collapse."
A loss of trust in negotiations?
Looking ahead, unpredictability may not work on foes, but it is unclear whether the recent shifts it has yielded among allies can be sustained.
Whilst possible, this is a process built largely on impulse. And there may be a worry that the US could be seen as an unreliable broker.
"People won't want to do business with the US if they don't trust the US in negotiations, if they're not sure the US will stand by them in defence and security issues," argues Prof Norman. "So the isolation that many in the MAGA world seek is, I think, going to backfire."
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz for one has said Europe now needs to become operationally independent of the US.
"The importance of the chancellor's comment is that it's a recognition that US strategic priorities are changing," says Prof Trubowitz. "They're not going to snap back to the way they were before Trump took office.
"So yes, Europe is going to have to get more operationally independent."
This would require European nations to develop a much bigger European defence industry, to acquire kit and capabilities that currently only the US has, argues Prof Desch. For example, the Europeans have some sophisticated global intelligence capability, he says, but a lot of it is provided by the US.
"Europe, if it had to go it alone, would also require a significant increase in its independent armaments production capability," he continues. "Manpower would also be an issue. Western Europe would have to look to Poland to see the level of manpower they would need."
All of which will take years to build up.
So, have the Europeans really been spooked by Trump's unpredictability, into making the most dramatic change to the security architecture of the western world since the end of the Cold War?
"It has contributed," says Prof Trubowitz. "But more fundamentally, Trump has uncorked something… Politics in the United States has changed. Priorities have changed. To the MAGA coalition, China is a bigger problem than Russia. That's maybe not true for the Europeans."
And according to Prof Milani, Trump is trying to consolidate American power in the global order.
"It's very unlikely that he's going to change the order that was established after World War Two. He wants to consolidate America's position in that order because China is challenging America's position in that order."
But this all means that the defence and security imperatives faced by the US and Europe are diverging.
The European allies may be satisfied that through flattery and real policy shifts, they have kept Trump broadly onside; he did, after all, reaffirm his commitment to Article 5 at the most recent Nato summit. But the unpredictability means this cannot be guaranteed - and they have seemed to accept that they can no longer complacently rely on the US to honour its historic commitment to their defence.
And in that sense, even if the Unpredictability Doctrine comes from a combination of conscious choice and Trump's very real character traits, it is working, on some at least.
Top image credit: Getty Images
BBC InDepth is the home on the website and app for the best analysis, with fresh perspectives that challenge assumptions and deep reporting on the biggest issues of the day. And we showcase thought-provoking content from across BBC Sounds and iPlayer too. You can send us your feedback on the InDepth section by clicking on the button below.
"There's only one relationship that really matters," a senior figure in government told me in the middle of Labour's dreadful week, where ministers lost control of their backbenchers.
"It's the one with the voters." Well, quite.
And that relationship has soured since Labour has been in power. After days of frenzied coverage in Westminster around an anniversary the party might rather forget, what is the state of that vital relationship?
We gathered a group of Labour's 2024 voters together to delve into what's gone wrong, according to those who matter the most – the public.
Our participants were from two constituencies in Kent: Dartford and Gravesham. Both seats were won by Labour in the heady days of July 2024, thanks not only to Labour's campaign itself, but the collapse of the Conservative vote. And the swing to Sir Keir Starmer's party in both places was enormous, nearly 20%.
Our panel was selected by the political research group, More in Common, and the questions were asked to the group not by me, but by its director, Luke Tryl.
It's worth knowing too, when our panel was recruited, they were not told they would be asked about politics.
It could have been for any other market research exercise, for washing powder or water bills, rather than anything to do with Westminster - so it wasn't a gathering of political junkies.
But our group, who all voted Labour last time, certainly had a strong sense of what has happened to the government they elected just twelve months ago, and it wasn't pretty.
First of all, we asked the group about their impressions of Labour's first year back in office, overall.
The overwhelming sense, and one of the words used most often, was "disappointed".
"I've always been Labour, but I expected much more from them," Yvette, who's 57 and a nutritionist said. "I thought they'd be there for the people."
Kelly is 35, and a stay-at-home mum. She was frustrated about what she sees as a lack of progress on immigration. "Everything they promised, nothing has come of it yet," Kelly said. "Immigration is a big thing for me."
Adam, is an illustrator aged 37. He was a bit more forgiving of Sir Keir's problems: "They are patching things up, the first year is not the year to push the big ideas, let's steady the ship."
But 30-year-old Sodiq, who owns his own business, reckons Labour hadn't been completely straight about what its plans were to start with.
"I think a lot of the things that were promised were never going to happen," Sodiq said.
Kirsty, who's 35 and a teacher, even told us, "I feel lied to".
What about the chaos of Parliament this week, and Labour's many changes of direction since they've been in office? The group had definitely noticed what had gone on in the last seven days, not always the case when it comes to shenanigans in SW1.
Veronica, a 64-year-old carer, had seen the chancellor's tears and had some sympathy.
"I think she's trying her best - there are going to be teething problems, it's only the first year." But she said, "crying at the Commons the other day and Keir Starmer didn't even notice, but everyone else did? Sometimes I think, 'Is it the pressure getting to her?'".
Hayley, who is a personal assistant, was also dubious that Sir Keir didn't notice, but reckons the government deserves more time.
"You can't turn the country round in a year," the 40-year-old said.
But it was clear the group had reservations about Labour's repeated shifts in position - whether on welfare this week, or winter fuel before.
While praising Sir Keir for listening, Adam said: "What happened this week - another U-turn - was worrying, it pushes the idea that there is no direction."
Yvette said "if he makes a decision he should stand by it", changes of heart were like "lastminute.com".
In the general election there were big shifts towards Reform UK, even though they didn't win either the Dartford or Gravesham seat.
But Kent was one of the 10 councils Farage's party took control of in the local elections this May.
Reform's progress has certainly been noticed. Kelly said: "They are picking away at figures and picking away at other things – they seem to be doing things, and proactive."
Given how Reform is doing in the national polls, consistently ahead of the other political parties, it was no surprise that some of the group were thinking about giving Nigel Farage a chance next time round.
"If there were an election tomorrow I would vote for him," Yvette said, suggesting he should be given a chance even though "a lot of bad things are said about him".
But Sodiq said: "I'm at the other end of the scale. He's a politician, like others, who says things people want to hear, and people generally are not comfortable with the two main parties, and just want to try something else."
Labour is worried by their grisly position in the polls, and there's something of a sense of bewilderment too about just how shaky things have got in the last few weeks.
But at senior levels, sources believe if they keep on keeping on, eventually, many voters like those we met this weekend will return to them if hopes for improvements in the NHS and the economy come to pass.
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Watch tomorrow to hear the advice that our group would give Sir Keir Starmer in order to improve, to make that happen.
Of course this is only a taste of what's on some voter's minds in just two constituencies, but the mood was certainly disappointed with what has, and has not happened since Labour moved back into power. But there was a sense, a grudging willingness among these Labour voters to give Sir Keir and the government more time.
After twelve months, Labour is most certainly down, but not necessarily out.
Top image credit: Reuters
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A new beach resort in North Korea, criticised by human rights groups for the harsh treatment of construction workers, has welcomed its first group of Russian tourists this week.
The Wonsan Kalma resort was opened in a grand ceremony last month by North Korea's leader, Kim Jong Un, who hailed it as a "world-class tourist and cultural destination".
The details of how this resort was built have been shrouded in secrecy in a country largely closed to the outside world.
BBC Verify has studied satellite imagery, obtained internal planning documents, and spoken to experts and former North Korean insiders about their concerns over human rights abuses during the development of the site.
Echoes of Benidorm
Kim Jong Un spent much of his youth in Wonsan, and prior to the building of the new resort the town was a popular holiday destination for the country's elite.
"When the Wonsan tourist area was initially planned… the idea was to attract around one million tourists to the area while keeping it a closed-off zone," says Ri Jong Ho, a senior North Korean economic official involved in the resort's early planning stages and who defected in 2014.
"The intention was to open North Korea up a bit."
In 2017, a year before construction began, Kim sent a delegation on a fact-finding mission to Spain, where the team toured the resort of Benidorm.
The North Korean delegation "included high ranking politicians and many architects who took lots of notes," recalls Matias Perez Such, a member of the Spanish team that hosted the delegation on a tour including a theme park, high-rise hotels and a marina.
A North Korean brochure with a map of the resort has 43 hotels identified along the beach front, as well as guest houses on an artificial lake, and camping sites.
We've matched these locations with high-resolution satellite imagery, although we are unable to verify whether they have actually been completed.
An aquatic park, complete with towering yellow water slides, is set back from the beach.
Further north, there's an entertainment quarter which includes buildings that are identified in the plan as a theatre, recreation and fitness centres, and a cinema.
Beginning in early 2018, satellite images taken over 18 months reveal dozens of buildings springing up along the 4km (2.5 mile) stretch of coastline.
By the end of 2018, around 80% of the resort had been completed, according to research carried out by satellite imagery firm, SI Analytics, based in South Korea.
However, following this whirlwind construction effort, work on the site then appears to have paused.
Construction then resumed after a June 2024 meeting with Kim and Vladimir Putin, where the Russian president said he would encourage his citizens to visit North Korea's holiday resorts.
The human cost of construction
This rapid pace of construction has raised concerns over the treatment of those working at the site.
The UN has highlighted a system of forced labour used in North Korea, in particular "shock brigades" where workers often face harsh conditions, long hours, and inadequate compensation.
James Heenan of the UN Human Rights Office in Seoul says "there are reports that the resort was built using what they call shock brigades".
"We've also seen reports that people were working 24 hours at the end to get this thing finished, which sounds like a shock brigade to me."
The BBC has spoken to one North Korean who served in and eventually managed shock brigades.
Although Cho Chung Hui - who has subsequently defected - wasn't involved in the construction of the Wonsan resort, he recalled the brutal conditions of the brigades he oversaw.
"The principle behind these [brigades] was that no matter what, you had to complete the task, even if it cost you your life," he said.
"I saw many women who were under so much physical strain and eating so poorly that their periods stopped altogether."
Kang Gyuri, who worked in Wonsan before fleeing to South Korea in 2023, says her cousin volunteered to work on the construction site because he saw it as a pathway to residency in the country's capital of Pyongyang, which is reserved for citizens trusted by the regime.
"He could hardly sleep. They [didn't] give him enough to eat," she said.
"The facilities are not properly organised, some people just die while working and they [the authorities] don't take responsibility if they fall and die."
Ms Kang also said residents in Wonsan were driven out from their homes as the resort project expanded, often without compensation.
Though not specific to Ms Kang's experience, BBC Verify was able to identify through satellite analysis the demolition of buildings near a main road leading towards the resort. In their place, larger tower blocks are now visible.
"They just demolish everything and build something new, especially if it's in a good location," Ms Kang said.
"The problem is, no matter how unfair it feels, people can't openly speak out or protest."
The BBC reached out to North Korean officials for comment.
Where are the foreign tourists?
North Korea has been almost entirely closed to foreign visitors with only a few highly-controlled tours permitted to visit the country in recent years.
Wonsan Kalma is seen not only as playing an important role in reviving the sanctioned country's ailing economic fortunes, but also as a means of strengthening its ties with Russia - which have grown closer following Pyongyang's military support for Moscow's war in Ukraine.
According to early planning documents seen by BBC Verify, the initial goal was to attract more than a million visitors, with foreign tourists expected to mainly come from China and Russia.
We have scanned tourist agency sites both in China and Russia for any listings promoting trips to the new resort.
None of the Chinese agencies we checked were advertising trips to Wonsan. In Russia, however, we identified three agencies offering tours that included Wonsan Kalma.
We called one of the Russian agencies in early July posing as an interested customer a week before its first scheduled departure on 7 July and were told that it had attracted 12 people from Russia.
The week-long trip to North Korea, including three days at the Wonsan resort, cost $1,800 (£1,300) - that's 60% more than the average monthly salary in Russia.
Two further trips have been scheduled for August, according to this tour operator.
We contacted the other two agencies offering similar tour packages, but they declined to disclose how many people had signed up.
Andrei Lankov, an expert in Russian-North Korean relations at the Kookmin University in Seoul, said Wonsan Kalma was "highly unlikely to become seriously popular with Russian visitors".
"Russian tourists can easily go to places like Turkey, Egypt, Thailand and Vietnam, which are far superior to everything North Korea can develop," he said.
"The standards of service are higher and you are not put under constant supervision."
Additional reporting by Yaroslava Kiryukhina, Yi Ma and Cristina Cuevas. Graphics by Sally Nicholls and Erwan Rivault.
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Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and French President Emmanuel Macron have agreed that "new and innovative solutions" are needed to tackle small boat crossings.
The UK is paying France hundreds of millions of pounds to stop the boats leaving the French coast but, so far this year, the numbers of migrants arriving in the UK this way - most of whom go on to claim asylum - have reached record levels.
France has claimed that one factor attracting them is the ability to "work without papers" in the UK economy.
BBC Verify looks at the evidence for this and other "pull factors" cited as reasons for asylum seekers to choose the UK as a destination.
The informal economy?
The French government has argued that asylum seekers come to the UK because they believe they will be able to work in its informal economy - where tax is not paid and people are employed without legal status and proper documentation.
Estimating the size of the informal economy is not simple for obvious reasons.
Nevertheless, one recent study from researchers at the European Parliament, suggests the size of the UK's was about 11% of the total economy in 2022.
This was actually lower than their estimate for France's at 14% and lower than the average of 31 European countries at 17%.
By its nature the UK's informal economy provides potential opportunities for asylum seekers - and other irregular migrants - to work illegally - and the UK government has accepted the need for more enforcement in this area.
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper described this as a potential "pull factor" earlier this week.
The Home Office has increased the number of visits to employers suspected of hiring unauthorised workers.
There were 10,031 visits and 7,130 arrests in the year since the July election, compared with 6,797 visits and 4,734 arrests in the same period last year.
The volume and value of fines issued has also increased.
In the year to March 2025, 2,171 fines were issued to employers worth a total of £111m. In the same period last year, there were 1,676 fines worth £31m.
There is no data on the type of businesses targeted but recent Home Office press releases have mentioned restaurants, nail bars and construction sites.
Former Prime Minister Tony Blair - and a number of Labour MPs - have called for the introduction of UK-wide digital identification to help the government tackle "illegal 'off-the-books' employment".
Digital ID, which exists in many EU countries, could be used as a tool to check an individual's right to work and to clamp down on illegal working.
But given some of these countries also appear to have sizeable informal economies, it is unclear about how much impact digital IDs have in this area.
The legal economy?
Access to the legal labour market for asylum seekers, while they wait for their claims to be processed, is more restrictive in the UK than in many major European countries.
In the UK, they can apply for permission to work if they have been waiting for more than a year for an initial decision on their claim.
If granted, they can apply for jobs on the immigration salary list. There are no published figures on how many asylum seekers have been granted the right to work.
By contrast, in France asylum seekers can apply for a work permit six months after submitting their asylum application.
In Italy, they can seek employment 60 days after submitting their application.
Madeleine Sumption from Oxford University's Migration Observatory think tank said: "I'm a bit sceptical of the narrative you often hear from French politicians about the UK being a soft touch on right-to-work issues because we have broadly the same set of policies as they do and some of the same challenges on unauthorised workers."
She added that research suggests that the ability of asylum seekers to speak English over other European languages and existing family links with the UK are significant pull factors.
Another factor cited is the "general impression that the UK is a good place to live" - a message promoted by people smugglers trying to sell Channel crossings.
State support?
The majority of asylum seekers cannot access welfare benefits in the UK, but they do gain legal protections while awaiting a decision - including accommodation if they cannot support themselves financially.
They can get £49.18 per person per week loaded onto a pre-paid debit card if they are in self-catered accommodation. People receiving support in catered accommodation can get £9.95 per person per week.
Asylum seekers are generally entitled to free access to the NHS and can get some free childcare.
Children of asylum seekers are also entitled to state education and in some circumstances can qualify for free school meals.
This is in contrast to many of the migrants in Calais - hoping to cross into the UK - who have not applied for asylum in France and are not entitled to state support there, but do get limited help from charities.
Research suggests that benefits are not a significant pull factor for asylum seekers.
A 2021 paper by Aalborg University in Denmark, found that other factors, such as which countries are most likely to recognise refugee status as well as the ability to reunite with family are more influential.
Another paper, written by University of Essex professor Timothy Hatton in 2020, said border controls and processing policies have significant deterrent effects while welfare policies do not.
Ms Sumption says the findings indicate that "technical tweaks to your [benefit] system don't tend to have a big impact, [although] they may have some impact at the margins".
What about push factors?
When it comes to the overall numbers of asylum seekers, researchers also stress the importance of "push factors", such as conflict and repression in their home countries.
Some relevant context is that asylum applications have risen sharply in recent years not just in the UK, but across Europe.
Claims are up in countries like France, Germany, Spain and Italy since 2020 - and in 2024 they were higher in absolute numbers in those countries than the number of claims submitted in the UK.
Additional reporting by Tamara Kovacevic and Rob England
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In the aftermath of the fatal Texas floods, some Democrats have warned about the "consequences" of the Trump administration's cuts to the federal government workforce, including meteorologists, with Senator Chris Murphy saying that: "Accurate weather forecasting helps avoid fatal disasters."
The suggestion is that the cuts may have impeded the ability of the National Weather Service (NWS) - the government agency which provides weather forecasts in the US - to adequately predict the floods and raise the alarm.
But the White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said on Monday: "These offices [of the NWS] were well staffed… so any claims to the contrary are completely false."
BBC Verify has examined the impact of cuts under President Trump in this area and while there has been a reduction in the workforce at the NWS, experts who we spoke to said the staffing on hand for the Texas floods appears to have been adequate.
What are the cuts?
The Trump administration has proposed a 25% cut to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) current annual budget of $6.1bn (£4.4bn). NOAA is the agency which oversees the NWS.
This would take effect in the 2026 financial year which begins in October this year - so these particular cuts would not have contributed to the Texas tragedy.
However, the staffing levels of the NWS have already been separately reduced by the Trump administration's efficiency drive since January.
The Department of Government Efficiency (Doge), previously run by Elon Musk, offered voluntary redundancies, known as buyouts, as well as early retirements to federal government workers. It also ended the contracts of most of those who were on probation.
As a result, about 200 people at the NWS took voluntary redundancy and 300 opted for early retirement, according to Tom Fahy, legislative director of the National Weather Service Employees Organisation union. A further 100 people were ultimately fired from the service, he said.
In total, the NWS lost 600 of its approximately 4,200 staff, says Mr Fahy, causing several offices across the country to operate without the necessary staffing.
In April, the Associated Press news agency said it had seen data compiled by NWS employees showing half of its offices had a vacancy rate of 20% - double the rate a decade earlier.
Despite this, climate experts told BBC Verify that the NWS forecasts and flood warnings last week in Texas were as adequate as could be expected.
"The forecasts and warnings all played out in a normal manner. The challenge with this event was that it is very difficult to forecast this type of extreme, localised rainfall," says Avantika Gori, an assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering at Rice University in Texas.
And Andy Hazelton, a climate scientist who modelled hurricane paths for the NOAA until he was fired during the layoffs in February, says: "I don't think the staffing issues contributed directly to this event. They got the watches and the warnings out."
What about the impact on offices in Texas?
However, some experts have suggested that staffing cuts may have impeded the ability of local NWS offices in Texas to effectively co-ordinate with local emergency services.
"There is a real question as to whether the communication of weather information occurred in a way that was sub-optimal," says Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at University of California Los Angeles.
"The impact might have been partially averted if some of the people at the weather service responsible for making those communications were still employed - which they were not in some of these local offices," he adds.
The San Angelo and San Antonio offices, which cover the areas affected by the flooding, reportedly had some existing vacancies.
For example, the San Antonio office's website lists several positions as being vacant, including two meteorologists.
The NWS union legislative director told BBC Verify that the San Angelo office was missing a senior hydrologist, a scientist who specialises in flooding events.
The San Antonio office also lacked a "warning coordinating meteorologist", who coordinates communications between local forecasting offices and emergency management services in communities, Mr Fahy said.
However, he noted that both offices had temporarily upped their staffing in anticipation of a dangerous weather event, which is typical in these circumstances.
"The NWS weather forecast offices in Austin/San Antonio and San Angelo, Texas had additional forecasters on duty during the catastrophic flooding event," NWS spokeswoman Erica Grow Cei said in a statement to BBC Verify. "All forecasts and warnings were issued in a timely manner," she added.
NWS meteorologist Jason Runyen, who covers the San Antonio area, also said in a statement that where the office would typically have two forecasters on duty during clear weather, they had "up to five on staff".
When asked on Sunday if government cuts had left key vacancies unfilled at the NWS, President Trump told reporters: "No, they didn't."
Were weather balloon launches reduced?
In a video shared thousands of times on social media, US meteorologist John Morales said: "There has been a 20% reduction in weather balloon releases, launches... What we're starting to see is that the quality of the forecasts is becoming degraded."
Some social media users have been pointing to Mr Morales' words as evidence that budget cuts have limited forecasters' ability to anticipate extreme weather events like the floods in Kerr County, Texas.
Weather balloons are an important tool used by meteorologists to collect weather data - from temperatures, to humidity, pressure, or wind speed - from the upper atmosphere.
In the US, NWS stations would typically launch them twice a day.
In a series of public statements released since February, the NWS confirmed that it either suspended or reduced weather balloon launches in at least 11 locations across the country, which it attributed to a lack of staffing at the local weather forecast offices.
However, there is no evidence to suggest that any of those changes directly affected weather balloon launches in the areas impacted by the floods in Texas.
Publicly available data shows that, in the lead-up to the floods, weather balloon launches were carried out as planned at Del Rio, the launch station nearest to the flood epicentre, collecting data that informed weather forecasts which experts say were as adequate as they could be.
Additional research by Kumar Malhotra
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The prime minister has made tackling illegal immigration and "restoring order" to the asylum system a priority for the government.
Sir Keir Starmer has promised to "smash the gangs". It follows predecessor Rishi Sunak's pledge to "stop the boats".
BBC Verify looks at key government pledges - including tackling small-boat crossings, ending the use of asylum hotels and returning more people with no right to be in the country.
'Smash the gangs'
As of 6 July, 21,117 people had arrived in the UK in small boats in 2025 - up by around 56% compared with the same period in 2024.
To reduce the number of crossings, the government has pledged to disrupt the people-smuggling gangs behind them.
But it is unclear how the government plans to measure its progress, or when this goal will be met.
The Home Office told us data on actions taken by officials to disrupt criminal gangs was "being collected and may be published in the future".
There is some information on efforts to prevent small boat crossings by French authorities - who, under a 2023 deal, are receiving £476m from the UK over three years.
They say about 24,791 people were prevented from crossing between July 2024 and May 2025. We do not know what happened to them or whether they tried to cross again.
There have been high-profile cases of UK-based smugglers being sentenced, including a man who helped smuggle more than 3,000 people and raids on the continent.
And at a recent UK-EU summit both sides pledged to work together on finding solutions to tackle illegal immigration.
This includes people who arrive on small boats, or hidden in lorries, and people who remain in the UK after their legal visa expires.
The vast majority of UK immigration is legal - this includes people who have been granted permission to come to work, study, claim asylum or for other authorised purposes.
Over the past 12 months, about 44,000 people entered the UK illegally - about 5% of the nearly one million people who immigrated to the UK between April 2024 and March 2025.
'End asylum hotels'
Labour promised to "end asylum hotels, saving the taxpayer billions of pounds" in its general election manifesto, and in the recent Spending Review.
The government wants to fulfil this pledge by 2029.
However, recent figures show there were more asylum seekers staying in hotels in March 2025 than at the end of June 2024, a few days before the general election.
At the end of June 2024, 29,585 people were in hotels, by March this year there were 32,345.
The government does not regularly publish figures on the number of actual hotels in use but figures obtained by BBC Verify show there were 218 asylum hotels in December, up from 212 in July.
The asylum process determines whether a person can remain in the UK because they have a "well-founded fear of persecution" in their home country.
Once someone applies for asylum, they gain legal protections while awaiting a decision - including accommodation if they cannot support themselves financially.
Almost everyone who arrives by small boat claims asylum - they made up a third of all asylum applications over the past 12 months. Another large group of claimants were people already in the UK who had overstayed their visas.
Since 2020, the government has been increasingly reliant on hotels, partly because the supply of other types of asylum accommodation has not kept up with the numbers arriving in small boats.
But using asylum hotels is expensive - costing £8m per day in 2023-24. The government has started to save money by adding beds to rooms in hotels to maximise the number of people in each site.
The Independent Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration, David Bolt, told Parliament in June that he did not believe the government would meet its pledge:
"Frankly, I do not think that it will be achieved", he said.
"They are very large numbers, and it is very hard to see how they are going to be reduced significantly, even over the length of the Parliament."
'Clear the asylum backlog'
The government has also promised "to clear the asylum backlog".
This refers to the backlog of claims by asylum seekers who are waiting to hear whether they will be granted refugee status and be allowed to remain in the UK.
Since last summer, there has been a 58% increase in decisions on asylum cases.
This, combined with a recent fall in applications has meant the overall backlog of asylum cases has fallen compared with the end of June 2024.
Under Labour, 40% of asylum claims were granted between January and March 2025.
Another backlog the government wants to clear is the high number of court appeals from asylum seekers following rejected claims.
That backlog has got worse since last summer's election. There were nearly 51,000 in March 2025 - a record high.
'Increase returns'
The government has also promised to "increase returns" of people with no legal right to be in the UK. It said it would set up a new returns and enforcement unit with 1,000 extra staff.
Between July 2024 (when Labour came to power) and May 2025, there were 29,867 returns recorded by the Home Office.
This is up 12% compared with the same period 12 months ago.
So the government is meeting this pledge but it is worth noting that just 7,893 people were forcibly removed - which could involve being escorted on a plane by an immigration official.
The figures also show 8,511 failed asylum seekers were returned in this period but they do not say how many were enforced or voluntary.
Separate government figures from January to March gave a fuller breakdown showing many of those who did leave voluntarily did so without government assistance or even its knowledge at the time, as BBC Verify has previously pointed out.
This is despite repeated claims from ministers that the government has "removed" or even "deported" this many people.
The Home Office says all returns outcomes are the result of collective efforts by the department.
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