In his latest outburst against Nato allies on Truth Social, the US president said: “Now that fight is Militarily WON, with very little danger for them, they complain about the high oil prices they are forced to pay, but don’t want to help open the Strait of Hormuz, a simple military maneuver that is the single reason for the high oil prices. So easy for them to do, with so little risk,” he wrote.
Stevie Ross, 66, was out walking Ollie at Mill Farm in Livingston on Saturday when he suddenly slipped down an embankment and into the high water of the River Almond.
A father and son have been left heartbroken after their dog was swept away in a fast-moving river – but the pair are continuing their determined search following a potential sighting.
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Stevie Ross, 66, was out walking Ollie at Mill Farm in Livingston on Saturday, March 14, when he suddenly slipped down an embankment and into the high water of the River Almond. The 15-year-old springer spaniel is completely deaf, has a weak back leg, and is showing signs of early-onset dementia – and, nearly a week later, the dad is fearing the worst.
Stevie and son Corey, 24, have been out daily looking for him and the pair have even bought a drone to search further afield. Stevie told Edinburgh Live: “He fell down an embankment into the water, which was quite high. Because he’s 15 now and got a weak back leg, he’s not the strongest swimmer. I couldn’t get to him because of all the foliage and trees, and he just disappeared in seconds.”
“I’m devastated, because he’s my best friend. He gets all my problems. I tell him when I come home at night what I’ve been doing and talk to him constantly. Him and Corey are also inseparable. We’ve had him since Corey was 10, so he’s absolutely heartbroken as well.”
The pair have had support from Muzzle Mutts, a volunteer search crew for lost dogs, who arranged for a tracker dog, drones and thermal imaging cameras to search areas around the river, which eventually runs into the Firth of Forth at Cramond.
Stevie added: “Our feeling is he’s possibly got out of the river and he’s wandering about goodness knows where. We’ve been up and down the river, in the water with waders. We need to find him.
“I’ve got to the point now that even if I found his wee body, at least I’d have some closure. But I’m hoping that’s not the case, we’re not giving up. We had a sighting near Blackburn last night, so we’ve been out there today. We had another one as well not long after he went in, and were fairly sure it was him, but we couldn’t find him.”
Ollie is described as a black-and-white springer spaniel. He was wearing a black harness with white reflective strips and a label reading “Security”. Stevie has warned people not to approach him in case he becomes frightened – instead advised them to contact the “Hazel Muzzle Mutts” page via Facebook.
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The schoolboys, who were accused of carrying out the offences when they 12, 13 and 14, broke down in tears in court after being found not guilty of rape this week
‘Clapping’ noises were heard and a voice telling the girl to ‘s*** it’ in harrowing footage played during a trial of three teen boys accused of raping a 13-year-old girl.
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The boys, who were accused of carrying out the offences when they 12, 13 and 14, broke down in tears in court after being found not guilty this week.
Jurors were asked to determine whether the third boy, now aged 14 and previously deemed unfit to stand trial, had committed the acts near Newbold tram stop in Rochdale in February 2024, and whether he had encouraged the other boys.
After a fortnight-long trial at Manchester’s Minshull Street Crown Court , the now 16 year old and the now 15 year old were both acquitted of rape, with all three cleared of two ‘joint enterprise’ counts.
The three boys denied the charges and said at trial it was ‘consensual’.
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Tears and audible sighs of relief were seen throughout the courtroom as the jury foreperson announced the verdicts, reports Manchester Evening News, with one exhausted voice heard saying: “Jesus.”
Mobile phone footage of the incident was played to the jury in which ‘clapping’ noises could be heard, along with a voice telling the girl to ‘s*** it’. This footage had been ‘circulated’ among the boys and ‘others’, prosecutors said.
Jurors were told that ‘some’ of the incident was recorded on a mobile phone. The girl was ‘not asked if she consented to filming’, the court heard
Earlier in the trial, the jury was informed that the girl was ‘physically pushed and bent over forward’ during the incident. Prosecutor Kim Whittlestone stated that the boys then ‘all swapped’. She said it ‘would have been obvious’ that she ‘did not want this to happen’.
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“It would have been clear that she was not consenting,” she told the jury. A friend accompanying the girl ‘intervened to halt what was happening’ and the now 15 and 16-year-olds fled from the scene, it was heard.
In closing statements from the defence, Rachel Shenton, who represented the now 16-year-old, said consent was ‘more nuanced’ than ‘please may I do this to you? Yes’. She added: “It starts with banter, and flirting, with someone walking into bushes. They are not middle aged people, these are adolescents.
“[The alleged victim] herself said ‘I didn’t say yeah’. Is that enough?” Ms Shenton said the girl had been ‘untruthful’ and said she flirted on the tram. The evidence, she told jurors, showed the girl had been ‘inconsistent’.
“[Her friend] told them to f*** off,” Ms Shenton added. “I asked [the alleged victim] if she told them to ‘f*** off’. She did not. She went into the bushes. I’m not seeking to throw shade at her. She is a young girl… immature. Why didn’t she shout? Why didn’t she scream?”
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Ms Shenton said the girl had been embarrassed about being called a ‘sl*g’ by two strangers who walked past. She added: “How does she react? ‘I was raped’. It is a get out of jail free card. This was not a rape, it was a shameful encounter.”
Peter Gilmour, representing the now 15-year old-said: “These are children. We must not judge children by the standards of adults.”
He said his client was 13 at the time and had never had sex before, adding: “She was flirting with him on the tram. They talk on the tram about ‘sh**ging’. Over in the bushes she doesn’t shout or scream or push anyone away.
“If there was a point she had second thoughts, she didn’t give any indication. And she immediately regretted that and says to her friend she had been raped. She went into the bushes, she went willingly. Her answer was ‘I never said yeah’. How was he supposed to know?”
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Following 9 hours and 46 minutes of deliberations, the jury found all three boys not guilty on all counts.
When police raided Callum Briggs’s home they recovered cocaine, cannabis and cash after he pointed them in the right direction.
Teesside Crown Court heard how the 26-year-old told officers where they could find his stash of Class A and Class B drugs.
Tabitha Buck, prosecuting, said Briggs maintained that he turned to dealing after he racked up drug debts of his own and was selling to fund his own habit.
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She said officers recovered drugs from a North Face manbag and inside a set of drawers in the kitchen where cocaine was discovered and cannabis was found in an upstairs room.
A specialist officer estimated that the drugs had a street value of up to £3,000 in cannabis and up to £4,500 in cocaine.
Briggs, of Laurel Avenue, Thornaby, pleaded guilty to possession with intent to supply cocaine and cannabis, and possession of criminal property – the £1,635 in cash – seized during the raid on November 6 last year.
Albany Kidd, mitigating, said her client was compliant with the police when they entered his property and pointed them in the direction of the stashed drugs.
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She added: “He suffered the bereavement of his father around two years ago in very difficult circumstances.
“He turned to illicit substances as a coping mechanism and quickly accrued a debt with the dealers.”
Recorder Ayesha Smart sentenced Briggs to two years in custody, suspended for two years.
“You were in substantial debt with dealers and you were struggling for money to feed your own habit, so you engaged in the sale of drugs to pay off the debt,” she said.
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“What is clear is that you were directed by someone higher up the chain and your involvement was limited to street dealing.”
Briggs was also ordered to attend 25 rehabilitation activity requirement days and carry out 120 hours of unpaid work.
The other victim also delivered a victim impact statement in court, addressing Bubb directly: “You tried to convince me that I could not speak up because your job was to keep the public safe, you had solidified that by threatening to make yourself unsafe and end your own life if I dared to speak up about your abhorrent behaviour.”
Carers Plus Yorkshire, a charity that has supported unpaid carers for 30 years, will put on sessions for those aged eight and above.
With funding from Broadacres Housing Association, the sessions will empower young carers to manage their own mental health alongside caring responsibilities.
Charlene Saunders, Young Carer Worker with Carers Plus Yorkshire, said: “For some young people being a carer is an experience they really enjoy whilst for others it can be difficult and very stressful.
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“This session will help them understand what the person they are caring for is going through, to recognise the conditions and also to manage their own mental health wellbeing.”
The sessions, joint-funded through £350 from Broadacres’ Community Development Fund, which supports local organisations, groups, and projects in areas where Broadacres has homes.
Ms Saunders said: “We support young people across North Yorkshire and do not have the core funding to organise groups sessions.
“That’s why this Broadacres grant is so welcome because it allows the young carers to share experiences with peers and to realise, they are not alone.”
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These unpaid carers often juggle family life, work or education and financial pressures, all with very little recognition or support.
The Broadacres Community Development Fund is currently closed for applications for the 2025/26 financial year.
Young carers and families interested in the group can find more details at www.carersplus.net.
Information about future funding opportunities from Broadacres can be found at www.broadacres.org.uk.
Met Office weather forecasters say snow could fall in parts of the UK this weekend – despite many facing sunny skies and rising temperatures on Saturday
Snow is expected in some parts of the UK this weekend, the Met Office has said.
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That is despite Saturday bringing sunny conditions for many, with temperatures climbing into the mid-to-high teens as high pressure dominates.
Manchester and Edinburgh could reach 16C and 15C respectively on Saturday, while Bristol and London will enjoy highs of 15C and 14C across the weekend. Meanwhile, normally sun-soaked southern European cities such as Athens and Madrid are forecast to see clouds and cooler highs of 12C and 13C on Saturday.
However from Sunday, a band of cloud and patchy rain will push southeast across the country, followed by sunny spells and scattered showers in the north. Some of these showers could fall as snow.
Met Office Chief Forecaster Steve Willington said: “While the early part of the period brings warm sunshine for many, it’s not unusual to see colder spells and even some wintry showers in March.
“As we head into next week, a shift to a cooler north‑westerly flow will bring a drop in temperature and more unsettled weather, including some hill snow in the north and brisk winds at times. This pattern is entirely typical for the time of year.”
BBC Weather states: “Tomorrow will see areas of mist and fog slow to clear in the morning, leaving sunny spells and variable cloud for most. Cloudier in north-western Scotland with patchy rain lingering.
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“On Sunday, cloudy and breezy in the north with light rain clearing, and showers in the north-west later. Bright spells and areas of low cloud and fog to start in the south. Cloudier later.”
Early next week, a more mobile Atlantic pattern is expected, with rain spreading into northern and western areas on Monday and Tuesday, occasionally turning to snow over the Scottish mountains. Stronger winds are likely in the north, with coastal gales possible.
By Wednesday, a cooler and more unstable north-to-northwesterly flow will bring frequent showers, some heavy and wintry over higher ground. Snow could even reach lower levels in the north later in the day. Temperatures are expected to be near or slightly below average.
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Towards the end of the week, higher pressure is expected to build from the west, reducing showers and easing winds. However, temperatures are likely to remain on the cooler side and some overnight frost is possible.
Man Utd arrive on the south coast with an opportunity to move six points clear in third and four behind rivals Manchester City, who are not in Premier League action this weekend, in second place. Lisandro Martinez could return from injury, meaning Carrick has a near full strength squad to choose from for an important fixture.
Trump ‘considers risky ground offensive to free Strait of Hormuz’ after branding Nato ‘cowards’
Under the plan, the US military would occupy or blockade Iran’s Kharg Island, a crucial transport hub 15 miles from the country’s mainland, which processes 90 per cent of Iran’s crude oil exports, in order to pressure Iran to reopen the Strait, Axios reported.
Oil and gas prices retreated on Friday after Thursday’s painful cost spikes, with Brent crude dropping to 108 dollars a barrel. The surge in prices is a direct result of Tehran’s refusal to allow the world’s oil tankers to pass through the Strait.
Dan Haygarth20 March 2026 17:15
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In pictures: The tail section of an Iranian ballistic missile fired from Iran, sticks out of the ground at a vineyard in Golan Heights
(Getty)
(Getty )
Bryony Gooch20 March 2026 17:00
Thousands of additional US Marines and sailors heading to Middle East, reports
The United States is deploying thousands of additional Marines and sailors to the Middle East, three US officials told Reuters on Friday.
No decision had been made to send troops into Iran itself, two of the officials said, but they will build up the capacity for potential future operations in the region.
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The deployments of the USS Boxer, an amphibious assault ship, along with its Marine Expeditionary Unit and accompanying warships, come after Reuters reported that President Donald Trump’s administration was considering deploying thousands of U.S. troops to reinforce its operation in the Middle East.
Trump told reporters on Thursday that he was not putting troops “anywhere,” but that if he were to do so, he would not tell journalists.
The sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss future deployments, did not say what the role of the additional troops would be.
One of the officials said the troops were departing the West Coast of the United States about three weeks ahead of schedule. The expeditionary unit has about 2,500 Marines.
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The White House referred questions to the Pentagon, which did not immediately respond to a request for comment, Reuters said,
The additional deployments will add to the 50,000 U.S. troops already in the Middle East and would bring two Marine Expeditionary Units to the region.
The first MEU, which was dispatched from the Indo-Pacific, is expected to arrive in the Middle East next week.
Dan Haygarth20 March 2026 16:50
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Shipping firm ‘paid Iran $2 million’ to let boats through Strait of Hormuz
A shipping firm paid Iran $2 million to secure the safe transit of one of its ships through the Strait of Hormuz, according to a report, as Tehran moves towards a “selective” blockade of the waterway.
Dan Haygarth20 March 2026 16:30
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Inflation outlook ‘rarely been more uncertain than it is now’
UK inflation is expected to have been broadly steady last month but experts warn of another “twist” to the cost-of-living story in the months ahead, as war in the Middle East is set to send energy bills soaring.
The rate of Consumer Prices Index (CPI) inflation has been gradually easing back towards the Bank of England’s 2 per cent target level since last summer.
Some analysts are expecting CPI to have held relatively steady in February, or dipped slightly, from the 3 per cent level recorded in January.
Official figures for last month will be published on Wednesday.
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Economists for Deutsche Bank and Pantheon Macroeconomics said they are anticipating CPI to hold steady at 3 per cent in February, with lower fuel and services inflation being offset by higher clothes prices and air fares.
Edward Allenby, senior economist for Oxford Economics, said he thinks CPI inflation fell to 2.8 per cent in February, largely thanks to a predicted fall in petrol prices and slower inflation in the services sector.
Analysts for Barclays said they are expecting the headline rate to dip to 2.9 per cent also partly because of lower pump prices during the month.
But Sanjay Raja, Deutsche Bank’s chief UK economist, said the inflation outlook has “rarely been more uncertain than it is now”.
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Dan Haygarth20 March 2026 16:17
Netanyahu foreign policy advisor says cooperation between US and Israel a first in ‘history of human conflict’
Foreign policy adviser to Benjamin Netanyahu Ophir Falk has responded to questions about whether the Israeli strikes have been coordinated with the US, saying that the level of cooperation between Trump and Netanyahu is a first in “the history of human conflict”.
He said on CNN News Central: “I can’t speculate on what The New York Times says, and I’m not going to get into that. What I can tell you is that never in the history of human conflict has there been such coordination and cooperation between two great world leaders, prime minister Netanyahu and president Trump.
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“They’ve had great cooperation and coordination. On this specific strike, we struck – we hit them alone. We hit them alone. It’s their gravy train. We hit them hard. We were asked not to hit them again. And we’re holding off on that. But it’s important to see that we’re well ahead of our war objectives.
“Our objective is to remove the existential threat posed by this genocidal ayatollah regime. The best way of doing that is to remove the Ayatollah regime. Another way of doing that is to hit their capabilities, to decimate their nuclear and ballistic missile capabilities.
“And we’re doing that along with the United States day in, day out, day after day, harder and harder. And we’re going to continue to do that until we get the job done.”
Bryony Gooch20 March 2026 16:00
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Watch: Iranian man arrested with woman after ‘attempting to enter UK nuclear naval base’
Iranian man arrested with woman after ‘attempting to enter UK nuclear naval base’
Bryony Gooch20 March 2026 15:45
In pictures: A damaged building at an impact site in Israel, following a barrage of missiles launched from Iran
(Reuters)
Bryony Gooch20 March 2026 15:30
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Iran Supreme Leader names new year ‘resistance economy’, denies role in attacks on Turkey, Oman
Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei released a message on Friday marking the start of Persian New Year which he named the year of a “resistance economy under national unity and national security.”
In the statement, released on his Telegram channel, Khamenei said that attacks against Turkey and Oman were not carried out by Iran or its allied forces.
Bryony Gooch20 March 2026 15:20
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US to deploy of thousands of additional troops to the Middle East, officials say
The US will deploy three more warships, and roughly 2,500 more Marines to the Middle East, an official has said.
One of the officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said that the USS Boxer, along with the Marie Expeditionary Unit aboard, were departing the West Coast of the United States about three weeks ahead of schedule.
Alfie Jake Mullans was 18 was he died of meningitis B. His mother Marrissa Mullans, 46, from Manchester has been campaigning for a Government funded vaccination programme for all 16 to 23 year olds. Her Change.org petition launched in 2024 and has gained renewed momentum this week, with around 13,000 more signatures in the last three days.
Hatton – one of Greater Manchester’s most-loved sporting sons – was said to have been around twice the legal drink-drive limit, with wine found around the pool table.
The inquest also heard a pathologist found evidence of Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE) – a neurodegenerative disorder which is thought to be connected to repetitive head injuries. In Hatton’s case, it was said to be at the ‘milder end of the spectrum’, but it was referenced by the coroner in her conclusion.
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Alison Mutch, a senior coroner, recorded a narrative verdict, saying Hatton had made ‘significant future plans’ and that no notes were found. She said as a result, she wasn’t satisfied he intended to take his own life.
Ms Mutch said: “Therefore, it is not possible in law for me to conclude suicide. I have concluded a narrative verdict. His intention remains unclear as he was under the influence of alcohol and the neuropathological post-mortem found evidence of chronic traumatic encephalopathy and that’s the conclusion I draw.”
Dr Neil Papworth, who carried out the post-mortem examination, said analysis of Hatton’s brain showed ‘degenerative changes’ associated with people older than the boxer, and often associated with Alzheimer’s disease.
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He said overall the changes seen were suggestive of CTE associated with repeated trauma to the brain, but at the milder end of the spectrum, resulting in memory loss and cognitive impairment. None of the damage to Hatton’s brain, however, could be said to have contributed to his death, the pathologist said.
The court heard that several samples of his brain were analysed. While ‘no macroscopic abnormalities’ were identified, there was a ‘degree of chronic neuronal loss which is the loss of nerve cells’ in the ‘microscopic’ analysis of the brain, according to Dr Papworth.
He noted that as a boxer, Hatton ‘received repeated blows to his head’ over his career, but he said it was ‘not possible’ to determine the process by which Mr Hatton was affected by CTE.
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According to the NHS, Chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) is a brain condition thought to be linked to repeated head injuries and blows to the head. It slowly gets worse over time and can lead to dementia. The NHS says people who have suffered ‘repeated blows to the head’ or concussions over many years have a higher chance of getting the condition.
Contact sports – including boxing and football – are referenced on the NHS website. It cannot be cured, but symptoms can be managed. It was once known as ‘punch-drunk’ syndrome.
Dozens of former footballers and their families are currently suing the FA, the Football Association of Wales and the English Football League over claims they were ‘negligent and in breach of their duty of care’ to the former players who all developed the condition. They include the family of former Manchester United and England midfielder Norbert ‘Nobby’ Stiles, who won the 1966 World Cup with England.
Stiles died in 2020 after suffering from dementia and was also found to have chronic traumatic encephalopathy.
The FA, however, has told the High Court it has ‘not been established by science’ that heading a ball or ‘occasional’ concussion can lead to permanent brain damage.
Lawyers for the former players and their families have previously said that the bodies knew or should have known that repeatedly heading a ball in training and during matches was likely to cause brain injuries, and that the risks were known for decades.
In 2020, the FA announced it would introduce updated guidance for heading balls for all age groups between under-six and under-18, which was followed by further guidance for all levels of the sport in England in 2021.
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Then, in 2022, it became the first national association to adopt the International Football Association Board’s trial to remove deliberate heading from grassroots matches for players under the age of 12. The association said in 2024 that it was investing and supporting “multiple research projects” to “gain a greater insight and understanding of this complex area”.
The widow of one former footballer – Jeff Astle – has called for the Government to recognise neurodegenerative conditions among footballers as industrial disease.
Her call came after a coroner ruled heading a football was “likely” to have contributed to a brain injury which was a factor in the death of former Manchester United and Leeds defender Gordon McQueen. His death due to pneumonia was owing to frailty, found to be through a combination of vascular dementia and chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE).
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McQueen – who was capped for Scotland 30 times between 1974 and 1981, and played for both Manchester United and Leeds United during a 16-year career – died at his home in North Yorkshire in June 2023, aged 70.
It was another landmark ruling for those campaigning for greater protection for current players and improved support for past generations, following on from the verdict of death by industrial disease recorded for former England striker Jeff Astle in November 2002.
In a narrative conclusion, the coroner said: “It is likely that repetitive head impacts sustained by heading the ball while playing football contributed to the CTE.”
After the hearing, McQueen’s Sky Sports TV presenter daughter Hayley McQueen and her sister Anna Forbes, spoke about the dangers of heading. Ms McQueen said: “It should have been a turning point many, many years ago when we learned the same thing with Jeff Astle and not much has happened between that time and now.”
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Mrs Astle, in her role at the Professional Footballers’ Association, continues to lobby the Industrial Injuries Advisory Council to officially recognise sports-related or sports-caused neurodegenerative diseases, including CTE, as industrial diseases, with the family of former England captain Dave Watson is also challenging the Department of Work and Pensions over the same issue.
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