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How Sean Penn became Zelensky’s closest American ally after Trump’s latest snub

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How Sean Penn became Zelensky’s closest American ally after Trump’s latest snub

At the 2026 Oscars ceremony, actor Sean Penn joined a small coterie of male performers who have three Academy Awards to their name. But the 65-year-old, who was named Best Supporting Actor for his brilliant portrayal of a racist military officer in Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another, wasn’t among the stars gathered at Los Angeles’ Dolby Theatre on Sunday night.

“Sean Penn couldn’t be here this evening, or didn’t want to, so I’ll be accepting the award on his behalf,” Succession star – and last year’s Best Supporting Actor winner – Kieran Culkin quipped after opening the golden envelope.

So where was Penn on one of the biggest nights of his acting career? According to a report from the New York Times, the actor, who previously earned Oscars for Mystic River in 2004 and for Milk in 2009, chose to skip the ceremony in order to head to Europe.

Penn won best supporting actor for his performance as Colonel Steven J Lockjaw in ‘One Battle After Another’

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Penn won best supporting actor for his performance as Colonel Steven J Lockjaw in ‘One Battle After Another’ (Warner Bros)

His plan “as of late last week”, anonymous sources told the paper, was to visit Ukraine, although they “did not specify what he would be doing there or where precisely within the country he would be going”. On Monday, an AFP reporter spotted Penn leaving a car in Kyiv, and he has since been photographed in a meeting with president Volodymyr Zelensky.

Swapping a glitzy Hollywood party to spend time in a country torn apart by war – it’s not exactly your usual A-list behaviour, but it is certainly quite typical of the unusual turn that Penn’s life and work has taken in recent years.

This is, after all, the man who lent one of his Oscar statuettes to Zelensky, promising that it should remain in the capital city of Kyiv until Ukraine wins the war against Russia – and who previously debated melting down his two little gold men to make “bullets they can shoot at the Russians”.

Penn met up with Zelensky after being awarded another Oscar

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Penn met up with Zelensky after being awarded another Oscar (Ukrainian Presidential Press Service)

What is perhaps particularly notable is, where other celebrities’ activism has notably waned in the years since Russia invaded in 2022, replaced by other splashier and more of-the-moment causes, Penn has remained stalwart, persisting as one of America’s loudest voices in the defence of Ukraine.

So how did Penn, the star who was once best known for his tumultuous marriage to Madonna in the late Eighties, become such a passionate supporter of Zelensky? It’s worth noting that this is not the first cause that Penn has taken up. Far from it.

Sean Penn was photographed in Kyiv on Monday

Sean Penn was photographed in Kyiv on Monday (Genya Savilov / AFP via Getty Images)

His activism has roots in his family’s liberal politics. His father, the actor and director Leo Penn, was blacklisted from Hollywood in the Fifties after refusing to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), the organisation designed to root out alleged Communist sympathisers.

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Penn Jr, meanwhile, emerged as one of the film industry’s most outspoken activists in the early Noughties, when George W. Bush went to war in Iraq in the wake of the September 11 attacks. Penn, sceptical of the existence of “weapons of mass destruction”, took out an ad in The Washington Post in 2002, in which he called on the then-president to change his mind.

Months later, he travelled to Baghdad “to personally record the human face of the Iraqi people so that their blood – along with that of American soldiers – would not be invisible on my own hands”, as he put it in a powerful statement to the press.

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A few years on, he operated a rescue boat during the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, managing to pick up survivors who had been trapped in their homes. Then, in 2010, following the devastating earthquake in Haiti, he set up and ran what would become one of the country’s biggest refugee camps. It was an endeavour that, unlike many celebrity brushes with humanitarianism, won praise from experienced aid workers for making a tangible difference, and Penn was later named as an ambassador-at-large for Haiti to recognise his hands-on work.

Sean Penn has a long history of political and humanitarian activism

Sean Penn has a long history of political and humanitarian activism (Getty Images)

Not all of his ventures have been as well received, though. Penn has been criticised for his past defence of controversial South American leaders such as Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez, with whom the actor became close friends, and Cuban president Raul Castro. And in 2015, he embarked on a bizarre trip to Mexico to interview the drug lord El Chapo for Rolling Stone magazine; the circus surrounding the venture overshadowed Penn’s aim to “contribute to this conversation on the war on drugs”. “I have a terrible regret,” he later reflected on the whole debacle.

His work has also attracted many of the usual barbs prompted by A-list activism, namely that his ventures are prompted less by genuine altruism and more by a desire to be at the heart of the story, like some sort of real-life Hollywood hero (who can pop home to Malibu for a bit of rest and relaxation whenever he fancies).

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His involvement in Ukraine initially began when he was searching for a lighter directing project to pursue, after planned documentaries about the exiled Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad and the assassination of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi didn’t pan out.

The story of Zelensky – an actor and comedian who had starred in a TV series about an ordinary bloke who ends up as president after his rant about government corruption goes viral, and had then himself successfully won a presidential election on an anti-corruption platform – seemed like good material for a film.

“We thought we’d follow this kind of interesting story that would have been a light-hearted take,” Penn said at the time.

The Covid pandemic meant that filming ended up being delayed, and it wasn’t until late 2021 that Penn finally headed to Ukraine. He and Zelensky eventually met on 23 February 2022; their initial encounter wasn’t filmed, the actor has said, so that the politician could figure out whether he could trust him or not.

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What neither of them could have predicted was that on that night, Russia would invade Ukraine. The following day, which the pair had agreed would mark the start of filming, would be the first day of the war.

Sean Penn presented Vlodymyr Zelensky with one of his Oscar trophies in 2022

Sean Penn presented Vlodymyr Zelensky with one of his Oscar trophies in 2022 (Ukrainian Presidential Press Office)

Inevitably, the project moved in an entirely different direction. What had been intended as a lightly comic portrait of a celebrity-turned-politician would morph into a depiction of a nation thrown into conflict. Zelensky, though, kept his planned appointment with Penn on 24 February.

It seems as if this second meeting stoked an abiding admiration on the American’s side. “I saw a very big change in him from one day to the next,” Penn recalled. “At that moment, he was the significant target. But he wasn’t going anywhere. That day, he found out that he was born for this.”

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The fact that Zelensky chose to stay in the capital city, rather than accepting offers to leave his country for his own safety, seemed to especially impress Penn. “President Zelensky and the Ukrainian people have risen as historic symbols of courage and principle,” he said in a statement released a few weeks later. “Ukraine is the tip of the spear for the democratic embrace of dreams. If we allow it to fight alone, our soul as America is lost.”

Penn’s documentary Superpower premiered at the Berlin Film Festival the following year. The unabashedly pro-Zelensky movie – “If it’s propaganda, I’m proud,” he told one audience – shows the star traipsing through the rubble and meeting with civilians who have had their lives turned upside down.

The response was mixed. While The Independent’s Geoffrey Macnab praised Penn and his co-director Aaron Kaufman for their “sprawling and uneven but also heartfelt and inspiring” effort, other critics questioned the star’s apparent need to place himself at the heart of the story once again.

The Guardian’s two-star review described it as “a queasy-making examination of the celebrity-blighted news cycle where somebody like Penn is the de facto messenger of tragedy”. Was the film more concerned with Sean Penn, real-life action hero, than it was with the heroism of the Ukrainian people? Or was the actor doing vital work in keeping the Ukraine conflict front of mind for American viewers?

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The president and the actor have struck up a friendship over the years

The president and the actor have struck up a friendship over the years (Ukrainian Presidential Press Office)

Penn, perhaps to his credit, kept up his friendship with Zelensky long after the cameras stopped rolling. In late 2022, he made headlines for handing over his Oscar statuette to the president, telling him to bring it “back to Malibu” after a Ukrainian victory. “It’s just a symbolic silly thing, but if I know this is here with you then I’ll feel better and stronger for the fight,” the actor said. Zelensky, in response, presented him with a very different accolade: Ukraine’s Order of Merit.

Then in 2025, following a tense moment between president Donald Trump and Zelensky during a White House meeting, Penn doubled down on his praise for his friend, hailing him as “constantly, extemporaneously genuine” in his desire to secure freedom for Ukraine. “I think the last significant moment that we [Americans] were bridging a division was in support of Ukraine and its head of state,” he said. “And if we lose track of that, we really have to ask ourselves if we’re losing track of the value of democracy.”

Just a few weeks later, Penn headed to Ukraine to meet with special forces, and at the Cannes film festival in May, he posed on the red carpet with soldiers, along with U2’s Bono and The Edge.

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With his latest visit to Kyiv, the latest member of the Oscars’ three-timers club shows no erosion of his own unique form of activism. Where other actors might have opted to pledge support for Zelensky in their winner’s speech (and be praised for their “powerful” words on social media), Penn clearly prefers a more hands-on approach.

“It’s his personal visit, that’s how he sees it, that he needs to be in Ukraine,” a senior Ukrainian official told AFP on Monday. “He just wants to support Ukraine.” Whether he offers up his latest trophy to Zelensky remains to be seen.

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New checks for railcard passengers coming in April 2026

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New checks for railcard passengers coming in April 2026

The move, expected to save around £20 million a year, is part of wider reforms under the upcoming Great British Railways (GBR), which will oversee Britain’s rail network and train operations.

Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander said: “These changes will ensure taxpayers’ money goes toward freezing fares and upgrading services, rather than lost to fare dodgers.”

From the second half of 2026, passengers buying discounted tickets from machines will need to:

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  • Scan their railcard or
  • Enter railcard details, such as the number and their name

Those purchasing via a website or app with a registered account will only need to input this information once, allowing automatic validation for future purchases.

Refund rules tightened for customers

At the same time, refund rules for flexible tickets are being tightened. Starting next month:

  • Off-Peak and Anytime tickets will only be refundable until 11.59pm the day before travel (unless services are disrupted).
  • Exceptional circumstances, like medical emergencies, will still be considered.

Currently, passengers can return unused tickets within 28 days of expiry without giving a reason, a loophole that has led to refund abuse costing around £40 million annually.

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Delay Repay compensation made simpler

The DfT also plans to streamline Delay Repay claims, allowing passengers to claim compensation directly from wherever they buy their ticket, instead of contacting the train operator.

Online ticket retailer Trainline estimates passengers currently miss out on £80 million per year because one-click claims are limited to tickets bought directly from operators.

Under GBR, compensation systems across 14 different operators will be merged to make claiming refunds quicker, simpler, and less confusing.

What passengers need to do ahead of the changes

Passengers can prepare by:

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  1. Knowing their start date – if your turnover is above £50,000, ticket validation begins in mid-2026.
  2. Choosing recognised software or apps – including free and paid options, with bridging software for those who still prefer spreadsheets.
  3. Signing up early – don’t wait until the last minute to ensure smooth travel and refund claims.

Jacqueline Starr, CEO of the Rail Delivery Group, said: “The consolidated Delay Repay service will make it easier for all customers to request compensation, regardless of where they bought their ticket, with a more consistent process.”

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Last Drop Inn and The White Bear are York Camra’s top pubs

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Last Drop Inn and The White Bear are York Camra's top pubs

The move is to better reflect the wide range of pubs in both the city and the vast, rural area the 1,100-member branch covers.

The City Winner is the Last Drop Inn in Colliergate and the White Bear in Stillington is the Country Pub of the Year, beating around 450 others in York Camra’s patch

Branch chairman Chris Tregellis told the Press: “For a modestly sized pub in a modestly sized village the White Bear certainly punches well above its weight.

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“The regular beers are consistently excellent but it’s the commitment to frequently changing guest beers which takes this up a notch and makes every visit a treat.

“The commitment to the autovac system ensures that every pint emerges fresh and sparkling. The food in the restaurant bar is also something not to miss.” 

The White Bear is currently on the market but since 1995 has been run by Phil and Sue Robinson. The pub has won the seasonal award three times but this is their first annual success.

York Camra’s Chris Tregellis outside the White Bear in Stillington (Image: Pic supplied)

Chris added of the couple: “They have never put a foot wrong. A worthy winner.”

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The presentation evening will be Friday May 1.

The Last Drop Inn in Colliergate was once owned by the York Brewery, then the Black Sheep brewery, and now Paul Kemp, and is going on from “strength to strength.”

Like the Robinsons, Paul has also placed  his pub on the market, but York Camra says “as with the White Bear, the Last Drop stands out because of quality and choice.”

Paul Kemp of the Last Drop Inn (Image: Darren Greenwood)

Chris continued: “There is always something new to try. Sitting in the front bar is a great place to watch the envious glances of tourists and locals as they pass down Colliergate.”

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The Last Drop will be celebrating during its presentation night on Friday April 17.

Paul Kemp who took over the pub in 2023 says he is “absolutely made up” to be an annual winner.

He told the Press: “When we started this project, this award was one of the things we wanted to achieve.”

The pub has been a seasonal winner, it got listed in the Good Pub Guide and this latest award sees it competing regionally.

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Paul has been praised for bringing the pub back ‘from the dead’, which he credits on traditional pub values of well-maintained beers, rotating guest beers, and recognisable permanent beers in a friendly and pleasant environment.

“Now it’s about staying there and trying to repeat it,” he said.

And to any potential buyer, Paul added this latest award “shows the potential of gaining a real ale flagship in the centre of York.”

Phil Robinson told the Press he is “ectatic, overwhelmed” to win after 30 years at the White Bear and 40 years in the trade.

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Sue and Phil Robinson of the White Bear with Chris Tregellis at an earlier York Camra presentation (Image: Pic supplied)

Phil thanks their wonderful staff and customers for their support, adding he is doing his bit to keep traditional pubs going, which he says are disappearing.

Phil continued: “We support the community in return through sponsorships to the local football, cricket, squash and bowls teams. Other local charities get our support through our monthly charity qub quizzes (last Sunday of the month).

“We offer some great beer, with 5 casks, including our own White Bear Bitter (a 4% traditional ale lovingly brewed by Craig at Rudgate Brewery), Leeds Pale Ale from Kirkstall Brewery and three rotating guest beers from different local breweries; always including a stout, porter, or mild.”

Phil added: “To complement our beer we serve home cooked seasonal food prepared by my wonderful wife Sue and chef Dan.

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“We hope this award will bring more business not just to The White Bear but to the village as a whole as we all need support to keep going in these testing times.”

York Camra will officially be announcing its other 2026 award winners later.

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Two British tourists hurt after hot air balloon crashes into power cables in Mexico | News World

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Two British tourists hurt after hot air balloon crashes into power cables in Mexico | News World
The passengers suffered burns from electric shock after the tourist balloon crashed into power lines in Mexico

Two holidaymakers from London were injured after their hot air balloon crashed into power cables before landing on a football pitch.

The passengers have been named locally as Claire Wolstenholme, 43, and her partner, Nicholas Wright, 49.

Claire is said to be in a critical condition after suffering burns from an electric shock.

The crash was reported before 9am yesterday in the Teotihuacan Valley around 25 miles north-east of Mexico City after the pilot allegedly lost control of the balloon.

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The couple were treated at the scene before being taken to the hospital.

People at the scene of a hot air balloon crash in Mexico.
The balloon ended up on a nearby football field after landing on the power cables inTeotihuacan Valley

The company that took the two Brits out in the hot air balloon has been named by investigators as Happy Puerto.

The pilot, named locally as Santiago Torres, was taken in for questioning by state prosecutors with one unconfirmed report saying he had been arrested.

An investigation into the accident, which left people living near to the football pitch without electricity, was ongoing this morning.

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Mexico’s Federal Civil Aviation Agency said in a statement late yesterday: The Federal Civil Aviation Agency (AFAC) reports that at 8.40am this morning, in the municipality of Teotihuacan, State of Mexico, an incident was reported involving a hot-air balloon coming into contact with power lines.

‘Two people were travelling in the aircraft, registered as XA-OZY and operated by Happy Puerto, who suffered burns from an electric shock.

‘They were transferred to Mexico City for treatment at a private hospital.

‘The AFAC is launching an administrative investigation into the incident.’

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Hot air balloons have been involved in fatal accidents.

In June last year a hot air balloon caught fire and crashed in Praia Grande in the southern Brazilian state of Santa Catarina, killing eight of the 21 people on board.

In April 2023 a married couple burnt to death and their 13-year-old daughter was injured in a hot air balloon accident over the pre-hispanic ruin site of Teotihuacan close to where yesterday morning’s drama occurred.

The pair killed were named as Jose Nolasco, 50, and his wife Viridiana Becerril, 39.

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Footage of the incident taken by an onlooker showed the hot air balloon deflating as flames engulfed the basket below where the Mexican family were enjoying their ride.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.

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Meningitis B confirmed as strain behind outbreak that has left two dead

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Meningitis B confirmed as strain behind outbreak that has left two dead

Trish Mannes, UKHSA regional deputy director for the South East, said: “Our investigations have identified that some cases visited Club Chemistry in Canterbury and it is important that anyone who visited the club between March 5 and March 7 now comes forward for preventative antibiotic treatment as a precaution, as well as those offered antibiotics at the university – these students are being contacted directly through the university.”

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Special guests attend Bolton Wanderers Ramadan event

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Special guests attend Bolton Wanderers Ramadan event

The Iftar, a fast-breaking ceremony observed by Muslims during Ramadan, was hosted by Bolton Wanderers and Bolton Wanderers in the Community on Wednesday evening.

Special guests and around 250 attendees from across the community from all faiths and none had arrived to take part at the Toughsheet Stadium.

Bolton North West MP Kirith Entwistle said: “It’s great to see our football club doing what they can to ensure all communities from all different faiths and backgrounds feel included.

“At a time when there is so much division in the world, it’s really important to come together, to celebrate our shared values, and to remember what unites us all.

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Chief Inspector Helen Critchley, Cllr Rabiya Jiva and Reverend Hannah Lane (Image: Public)

“Wanderers belong to everyone, and we should always make sure our diverse town is represented.”

Ms Entwistle attended the event alongside other distinguished guests like Wanderers chairman Sharon Brittan, Bolton GMP district commander Chief Inspector Helen Critchley.

Bolton South and Walkden MP Yasmin Qureshi attended the event as did Vicar of Bolton the Reverend Hannah Lane and Wanderers CEO David Ray.

The event featured a speech from Imam Imran Muhammad and a performance from pupils from St. Michael’s Church of England Primary School in Bolton

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Bolton Council cabinet member for stronger communities Cllr Rabiya Jiva said it was a “real honour” to attend the event.

Cllr Rabiya Jiva speaking at the event (Image: Public)

She said: “To see our football club continuously open its doors for an occasion like this speaks volumes and says something important about our town.

“It says that Bolton is a place where people are welcomed, where communities are valued, and where our shared spaces belong to everyone.

Cllr Jiva said the event was about more than breaking a fast.

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She said: “It was about bringing people together, about strengthening communities

and it is about celebrating the values that unite us.

“For Muslims across the world, Ramadan is a sacred month, a time of fasting, reflection, discipline, gratitude and charity.

“It reminds us to slow down, to think of others, and to recognise the responsibilities we all share to care for those around us.

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“But the lessons of Ramadan reach far beyond the Muslim community.

“Compassion, service and responsibility to others.

“These are not only religious values, they are the values of a strong society.”

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Rescue crews dig through rubble after deadly airstrike in Afghan capital kills hundreds

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Rescue crews dig through rubble after deadly airstrike in Afghan capital kills hundreds

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — Rescue crews were still digging bodies out of the rubble of a drug rehabilitation hospital in the Afghan capital Tuesday morning, after officials there said an overnight Pakistani airstrike killed at least 400 people at the facility.

Pakistan has denied Afghanistan’s accusation that it targeted a hospital, saying its strikes, which were also conducted in eastern Afghanistan on Monday, did not hit any civilian sites.

The strikes late Monday night mark a dramatic escalation of a conflict that began between Afghanistan and Pakistan late last month and has seen repeated cross-border clashes as well as airstrikes inside Afghanistan. International calls for a ceasefire have gone unheeded.

In a late-night post on X, Afghanistan’s deputy government spokesperson Hamdullah Fitrat said the airstrike had hit the Omid Addiction Treatment Hospital, a 2,000-bed facility in Kabul, at about 9 p.m. local time. He said large sections of the facility had been destroyed, and that the death toll had “so far” reached 400 people, while about 250 people had been reported injured. There was no updated official death toll early Tuesday morning.

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Local television stations posted footage on X showing security forces using flashlights as they carried out casualties while firefighters struggled to extinguish flames among the ruins of a building.

Cross-border fire

The strike came hours after Afghan officials said the two sides exchanged fire along their common border, killing four people in Afghanistan, as the deadliest fighting between the neighbors in years entered a third week.

Afghan government spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid condemned the strike on X, accusing Pakistan of “targeting hospitals and civilian sites to perpetrate horrors.” He said those killed were “innocent civilians and addicts.”

“We strongly condemn this crime and consider such an act to be against all accepted principles and a crime against humanity,” he said in a separate post on X.

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Pakistan dismisses the allegations

Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s spokesperson, Mosharraf Zaidi, dismissed the allegations as baseless, saying no hospital was targeted in Kabul.

Pakistan’s Information Minister Attaullah Tarar posted on X in the early hours Tuesday that the Pakistani military had “carried out precision airstrikes” targeting military installations in Kabul and the eastern province of Nangarhar. He said “technical support infrastructure and ammunition storage facilities” at two locations in Kabul were destroyed.

“All targeting has been done with precision only at those infrastructures which are being used by Afghan Taliban regime to support its multiple terror proxies,” he wrote.

Pakistan’s Ministry of Information said earlier that Mujahid’s claim was “false and misleading” and aimed at stirring sentiment and cover what it described as ”illegitimate support for cross-border terrorism.” It said Pakistan’s targeting was “precise and carefully undertaken to ensure no collateral damage is inflicted.”

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UN calls on Afghanistan to combat militants

The strike came hours after the U.N. Security Council called on Afghanistan’s Taliban rulers to immediately step up efforts to combat terrorism. Pakistan accuses Kabul of harboring militant groups, particularly the Pakistani Taliban, which it says carry out attacks inside Pakistan.

The Security Council resolution, adopted unanimously, didn’t refer specifically to attacks carried out in Pakistan but condemned “in the strongest terms all terrorist activity including terrorist attacks.”

Pakistan’s government accuses Afghanistan of providing safe haven to the Pakistani Taliban, which is designated as a terrorist organization by the United States, as well as to outlawed Baloch separatist groups and other militants who frequently target Pakistani security forces and civilians across the country. Kabul denies the charge.

The latest conflict

The fighting — the most severe between the two neighbors — began in late February after Afghanistan launched cross-border attacks in response to Pakistani airstrikes inside Afghanistan that Kabul said killed civilians. The clashes disrupted a ceasefire brokered by Qatar in October after earlier fighting killed dozens of soldiers, civilians and suspected militants.

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Pakistan has declared it is in “open war” with Afghanistan. The conflict has alarmed the international community, particularly as the area is one where other militant organizations, including al-Qaida and the Islamic State group, still have a presence and have been trying to resurface.

On Saturday, Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari said Afghanistan’s Taliban administration crossed a “red line” by deploying drones that injured several civilians in Pakistan last week.

___

Ahmed reported from Islamabad, and Becatoros from Athens, Greece. Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations contributed.

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Meningitis B strain behind some cases in deadly Kent outbreak

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Meningitis B strain behind some cases in deadly Kent outbreak

UK Health Security Agency doctor confirms Meningitis B behind Kent outbreak

The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) is investigating a meningitis outbreak in Kent, with 13 cases reported since 13 March, including two fatalities.

Some cases have been confirmed as meningitis B, and the UKHSA is advising anyone who visited Club Chemistry in Canterbury on 5, 6, or 7 March to seek preventative antibiotic treatment.

The owner of Club Chemistry, Louise Jones-Roberts, stated that over 2,000 people visited the venue on those dates and need tracing for antibiotics, with one staff member confirmed to have meningitis.

Two individuals, a Year 13 pupil in Faversham and a University of Kent student, have died as a result of the outbreak.

The UKHSA has issued advice to 16,000 staff and students at the University of Kent, where antibiotics are also being offered, and Club Chemistry has closed until further notice.

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Afghanistan claims 400 killed by Pakistan in strike on Kabul ‘drug treatment hospital’ | World News

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Afghanistan claims 400 killed by Pakistan in strike on Kabul 'drug treatment hospital' | World News

Afghanistan has claimed 400 people have been killed in a Pakistan strike which Kabul said hit a hospital that treats drug addicts.

Pakistan had earlier dismissed the claim it had attacked a hospital in the capital, saying its strike in Kabul and other strikes in eastern Afghanistan on Monday had not hit any civilian sites.

The Taliban’s deputy spokesman Hamdullah Fitrat said that 400 were killed, and 250 others were injured.

Sharafat Zaman, the country’s health ministry spokesman, earlier gave the death toll as more than 200 during an interview with state TV, posted on X, and claimed all parts of the drug treatment facility had been destroyed.

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He added that in total, 3,000 drug users were under treatment at the centre during the attack.

Afghan television stations posted footage showing firefighters struggling to extinguish flames among the ruins of a building.

Mosharraf Zaidi, Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s spokesman, has denied the claims and said the strikes did not hit any civilian sites.

Pakistan’s information ministry also said in a statement that the military’s strikes “precisely targeted military installations and terrorist support infrastructure, including technical equipment storage and ammunition storage of Afghan Taliban” and other militants in Kabul and Nangarhar.

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It added that the facilities were being used against innocent Pakistani civilians, and also said “false and misleading” claims that the site was struck were intended to stir sentiment and cover “illegitimate support for cross-border terrorism”.

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Afghanistan-Pakistan violence: What’s behind it?

Read more from Sky News:
Tehran is dotted with the scars of war
Trump: US will ‘do what we have to’ over Cuba

Pakistan declared that it was in “open war” with Afghanistan on 27 February, almost a week after its military carried out limited airstrikes on 21 February.

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Pakistan declare ‘open war’

Islamabad often accuses Afghanistan, where the Taliban seized power again in August 2021, of harbouring militants who carry out terror attacks. The Taliban denies this.

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Horwich 201 Sandwich Shop finalist in Bolton awards

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Horwich 201 Sandwich Shop finalist in Bolton awards

But for owner Kim Ferrington, the real achievement has been the community she has built over the past 13 years.

The 57-year-old has run the 201 Sandwich Shop alongside her daughter, 29, and another colleague Beth, 27, also working in the shop.

Kim said: “I can’t believe we’ve been nominated as a finalist – it’s a bit mad really.”

While the nomination is a proud moment, Kim says what matters most is the loyalty of customers who have been coming through her doors sin

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ce the day she opened.

“A lot of people have been coming since I first opened. I must be doing something right,” she said.

Over the years, Kim has watched schoolchildren grow into adults, many of whom still pop in regularly.

She said: “I used to see lads come in when they were in high school at 14, and now they’re coming back in their twenties after work.

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“Some of the kids who used to come in have left school, got jobs – it’s lovely to see.

“You really get to know people.

“You see them through different stages of their life.

“It’s such a nice sense of community.”

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Despite not being in Horwich town centre, the shop has built a steady following, with regulars ranging from local workers to tradespeople who take advantage of the homemade soups and popular breakfasts.

She added: “We’re not in the centre and we’re not near anything else, but people still come.

“We’ve stuck to what people like and what they know.”

That means hearty breakfasts, homemade favourites and generous portions.

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The full English and the “mega” breakfast are among the best-sellers, alongside cold sandwiches piled high with salad at no extra cost.

Everything is made with care by Kim, from homemade soups to cakes and sweet treats, while Carrs pasties, grillers and pies are also firm favourites.

And customers can wash it all down with coffee from a proper coffee machine.

“It’s family-run – me and my husband own it, and my daughter works here too. It makes it easier when you’re family,” Kim added.

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After 13 years, Kim says she has no plans to change the formula.

“I’ve just stuck to what I’ve always done,” she said.

And with generations of customers continuing to return, it’s clear that for this Horwich sandwich shop, being part of people’s daily routine is just as important as any award.

To vote pick up a copy of today’s paper.

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Wendi McLendon-Covey Missed Oscars Bridesmaids Reunion After ‘Neck Lift’ Surgery

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Wendi McLendon-Covey Missed Oscars Bridesmaids Reunion After 'Neck Lift' Surgery

Bridesmaids actor Wendi McLendon-Covey has shared the real reason she didn’t join her former co-stars at the Oscars over the weekend.

Over the weekend, the Bridesmaids cast took part in a skit at the Academy Awards to commemorate the film’s 15th anniversary.

However, fans quickly noticed that the group was one bridesmaid down, with Wendi not joining Kristen Wiig, Maya Rudolph, Melissa McCarthy, Rose Byrne and Ellie Kemper at the event.

At the time, director Paul Feig claimed: “I just heard that she was not available. She might even be travelling, I’m not sure. But we will miss her terribly, because I love Wendi.”

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Melissa McCarthy, Rose Byrne, Kristen Wiig, Maya Rudolph and Ellie Kemper on stage at the 2026 Oscars

Since then, Wendi has set the record straight on her absence, revealing that she actually couldn’t attend as she is recovering from cosmetic surgery.

“In response to some of the DMs I’m getting: I had a neck lift last week because I’m tired of looking like a melting candle. So I had to skip the Academy Awards,” she told her Instagram followers.

“No drama. Everything is fine.”

In the years since her break-out performance as Rita in Bridesmaids, Wendi has appeared in hit shows like The Goldbergs and St. Denis Medical.

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Rose Byrne attended this year’s Oscars as a nominee, off the back of her much-lauded performance in the dark comedy If I Had Legs I’d Kick You.

Meanwhile, One Battle After Another was the big winner at the 2026 Academy Awards, written and directed by Maya Rudolph’s long-term partner, filmmaker Paul Thomas Anderson.

Upon its release in 2011, Bridesmaids was nominated for two Oscars, with Melissa McCarthy receiving an acting nod in the Best Supporting Actress category, and screenwriters Kristen Wiig and Annie Mumolo also landing a Best Original Screenplay nod.

You can check out the Bridesmaids reunion at Sunday night’s Oscars for yourself in the video below:

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