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Motherwell town centre property up for sale with potential to convert into flats

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Daily Record

The Brandon Street site is on the market with a guide price of £72,000 and is set to go under the hammer at an online auction on April 29.

A Motherwell town centre property is up for sale with potential to convert into flats.

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The Brandon Street site is on the market with a guide price of £72,000 and is set to go under the hammer at an online auction on April 29.

The property is being managed by Town & Country Property Auctions, based in Chester and is being shown on property website, Rightmove.

Writing on the website, Town & Country Property Auctions state: “There is strong potential for conversion into four 2-bedroom flats and one 1-bedroom flat, with layout feasibility supported by architectural input, giving confidence in the development opportunity (subject to planning).

“Alternatively, the property may suit residential units or continued use as office suites.

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“From an income perspective, four 2-bedroom flats are estimated to achieve £750 per month each, with the 1-bedroom flat achieving £600 per month, generating a total of £3,600 per calendar month (£43,200 per annum).

“For serviced accommodation, each unit is projected to generate approximately £24,000 per annum based on a £98 average daily rate and 68% occupancy, equating to a total potential income in excess of £120,000 per annum across five units.

READ MORE: Scooter enthusiasts swoop over to Wishaw hospital to hand over whole host of Easter eggs

“The asset is well suited to a range of strategies including flat conversion, HMO, or commercial use (subject to planning).

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“Located on Brandon Street, the property is within walking distance of the high street, supermarkets, schools, and colleges, with excellent transport links via the M74 and M8.

“Motherwell is currently benefiting from approximately £19 million of investment focused on town centre regeneration, new housing delivery, infrastructure improvements, and public realm upgrades across areas including Forgewood and North Motherwell, all of which are driving increased demand and long-term growth.

“A low entry price with significant upside makes this an ideal opportunity for investors and developers seeking strong returns.”

More information is available on the Rightmove website.

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READ MORE: Airdrie driver badly hurt when his car ploughed into back of lorry on motorway

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Keir Starmer ‘not going to yield’ as he responds to Donald Trump’s latest criticism

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Manchester Evening News

The US president threatened that he could change the terms of the US-UK trade deal as he hit out again at the UK

Sir Keir Starmer said he is ‘not going to yield’ over the Iran war after Donald Trump’s latest criticism of the Prime Minister.

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It comes after the US president threatened that he could change the terms of the US-UK trade deal as he hit out again at the UK during an interview with Sky News.

Speaking at Prime Minister’s Questions in the House of Commons, Sir Keir addressed Mr Trump’s overnight comments.

He told MPs: “My position on the Iran war has been clear from the start. We’re not going to get dragged into this war. It is not our war.

“A lot of pressure has been applied to me to take a different course, and that pressure included what happened last night.

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“I’m not going to change my mind. I’m not going to yield.

“It is not in our national interest to join this war, and we will not do so. I know where I stand.”

“The monarchy is an important reminder of the long-standing bonds and enduring relationship between our two countries, which are far greater than anyone who occupies any particular office at any particular time.”

Relations between the British and American leaders have deteriorated after Sir Keir rejected the prospect of UK involvement in the Middle East conflict.

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In an interview to Sky News the US president hit out at Sir Keir Starmer for making “tragic” mistakes on winding down drilling in the North Sea and on migration, and suggested the terms of the UK-US trade deal brokered last year could be changed.

He told the broadcaster that while he liked the Prime Minister, he had made a “tragic mistake in closing the North Sea oil”, as well as “a tragic mistake on immigration”.

Asked for his thoughts on the special relationship, Mr Trump replied: “With who?”

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Sky then clarified they meant with the UK, to which the president reiterated his disappointment that Britain and other Nato allies had not joined the war with Iran “when we needed them”.

He then said that America had given the UK “a good trade deal, better than I had to”.

In what appeared to be a threat to the agreement with Britain, Mr Trump suggested the deal “can always be changed”.

He also told Sky News an agreement to end the war with Iran is “very possible”.

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The president has reportedly said talks to end the conflict could resume in the next “two days”.

American vice-president JD Vance took part in negotiations in Islamabad, Pakistan, over the weekend aimed at ending the war, which concluded without any major breakthrough.

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Police Investigate Ruby Rose’s Sexual Assault Allegation Against Katy Perry

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Police Investigate Ruby Rose's Sexual Assault Allegation Against Katy Perry

Australian police officers have said they are looking into an allegation of sexual assault made by actor Ruby Rose against the singer Katy Perry.

On Sunday, the former Orange Is The New Black cast member responded to a social media post about the California Gurls singer, commenting on Threads: “Katy Perry sexually assaulted me at Spice Market nightclub in Melbourne. Who gives a shit what she thinks?”

Rose went on to accuse Perry of seeing her “‘resting’ on my best friend’s lap to avoid her”, claiming she then “bent down, pulled her underwear to the side and rubbed her disgusting vagina on my face until my eyes snapped open and I projectile vomited on her”.

The Batwoman star claimed: “I told the story publicly but changed it to be a ‘funny little drunk story’ because I didn’t know how else to handle it.

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“Later, she agreed to help me get my US visa. So I kept it a secret.”

A representative for Perry has already denied the accusation, insisting: “The allegations being circulated on social media by Ruby Rose about Katy Perry are not only categorically false, they are dangerous, reckless lies.

“Ms. Rose has a well-documented history of making serious public allegations on social media against various individuals, claims that have repeatedly been denied by those named.”

On Wednesday morning, The Guardian cited a spokesperson for Victoria Police, who said: “Melbourne sexual offences and child abuse investigation team (SOCIT) detectives are investigating [an alleged] historical sexual assault that occurred in Melbourne in 2010.

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“Police have been told the incident occurred at a licensed premises in Melbourne’s CBD.

“As the investigation remains ongoing, it would be inappropriate to comment further at this stage.”

Rose said on Tuesday that she was giving her followers one “last update” on the matter, which read: “As of this afternoon, I have finalised all of my reports. This means I am no longer able to comment, repost, or talk publicly about any of those cases, or the individuals involved.

“This is a standard request from the police and in many ways, quite the relief. I can start the healing process now. And [temporarily] move forward.”

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HuffPost UK has contacted Ruby Rose and Katy Perry’s teams for additional comment.

Back in 2010, the Australian press reported on a night out Katy Perry and Ruby Rose were both on, including a visit to the Spice Market nightclub.

Rose spoke out against Perry in 2017, around the release of her single Swish Swish, perceived by many as a “diss track” in response to Taylor Swift’s song Bad Blood.

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Inside the fake asylum industry

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Inside the fake asylum industry

For a fake gay claim, “the kind of evidence they provide includes membership in different clubs, taking you to different clubs, since in the asylum interview you will be asked which clubs you attend and similar questions. You will also be given a partner, and that partner will provide a letter saying that ‘yes, he was my partner’.

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EasyJet passengers say they’re being ‘set up to fail’ by new hand luggage trial

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EasyJet passengers say they're being 'set up to fail' by new hand luggage trial
EasyJet has been trialling a new style of hand luggage sizers (Picture: Getty Images)

EasyJet passengers are divided over a new method for checking hand luggage dimensions at the boarding gate.

A passenger flying from London Gatwick claimed their cabin bag ‘fit perfectly’ in the airline’s standard sizing cage.

But when they arrived at the gate, staff ‘suddenly switched’ to a handheld sizer which ‘almost guarantees’ that bags won’t slide in cleanly.

‘It honestly felt like passengers were being set up to fail,’ the passenger wrote anonymously in a post on Facebook.

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‘Especially since this sizer only appeared at the gate after [EasyJet’s] display sizers everywhere at the airport fit just fine.’

The passenger accused ground staff of being uninterested in helping travellers comply with sizing rules and said they were only interested in payment.

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This photo shows a ground handler using a handheld sizer to measure a cabin bag at London Gatwick (Picture: Facebook)

‘We were a group and had bags with plenty of spare space overall, some of us even had large cabin/priority. We clearly suggested just reshuffling items between bags to comply if they are so insistent, which should be the obvious first step, but staff ignored that and kept insisting on extra charges,’ they wrote.

It is not clear when the incident took place.

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However, an easyJet spokesperson told Metro that the handheld sizers were part of a limited trial on ‘a small number of flights at Gatwick’, and that the dimensions were the same as standard sizers.

The airline told us: ‘This was a limited trial on a small number of flights from London Gatwick and there are no plans to roll it out across our network.

‘Ground crew check bags to ensure they fit safely onboard and in fairness to customers who have paid to bring additional bags.

‘Only if a bag is outside a customer’s booked allowance will they be charged and we remind customers of their bag allowance, including dimensions, before they travel.’

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EasyJet allows all passengers to bring one small cabin bag for free, measuring a maximum of 45 x 36 x 20cm, including handles and wheels.

The bag must fit underneath the seat in front of you and weigh no more than 15kg.

If your hand luggage exceeds your booked allowance at the boarding gate, you will be charged a fee to have it placed in the hold. 

This fee is generally £48 per bag, though it can vary depending on the route.

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Should people be charged for bringing oversized hand luggage on planes?

In July 2025, a leaked email revealed that airport staff are earning cash bonuses for every easyJet passenger they spot travelling with an oversized bag.

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Staff at Swissport, an aviation company that operates passenger gates at airports, are ‘eligible to receive £1.20 (£1 after tax) for every gate bag taken’, according to the message sent to staff at seven airports in the UK and the Channel Islands, including Birmingham, Glasgow, Jersey and Newcastle.

The payments are to ‘reward agents doing the right thing’, according to the email explaining the ‘easyJet gate bag revenue incentive’ scheme.

It also emerged that ground handlers employed by another aviation firm, DHL Supply Chain, at Gatwick, Bristol and Manchester airports are also paid extra for identifying non-compliant easyJet bags. 

Swissport ground handlers earn about £12 an hour. One former passenger service manager, speaking on condition of anonymity, said they had no choice but to police the line on oversized baggage.

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And while some criticised easyJet for their strict luggage rules, many saw things from the airline’s point of view.

‘It pisses me off when people try to take hand luggage that’s larger than allowed. You are given the measurements before travelling, it’s not that difficult,’ one person wrote.

Another said: ‘Stop cramming too much in your flight bag. Just pay to put it in the hold.’

Others noted that when one passenger brings excessive hand luggage, it causes trouble for everyone else.

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‘Passengers with heaps of hand luggage drive me mad!’ one woman wrote.

‘It takes an age for them to fit their bags in the overhead, and often it’s not above their seat so it blocks boarding. I’m all for this [new policy], don’t bring massive bags as carry on.’

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168 children killed in Israeli strikes in Lebanon during war with Hezbollah

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168 children killed in Israeli strikes in Lebanon during war with Hezbollah

BEIRUT (AP) — Jawad Younes, 11, and his cousins were playing soccer in the lot between their houses, as they often did. His little brother, 4-year-old Mehdi, had joined them but grew tired, so Jawad took him home and handed him off to their mother before returning to the game. Minutes later, an Israeli strike came.

The target was Jawad’s uncle’s home. The blast shook neighboring buildings and threw Jawad’s siblings at home to the ground. As their mother, Malak Meslmani, scrambled to help them up, she could think only of Jawad.

“I was pulling my children off the floor in the house, but as I was running to pick them up, I screamed, ‘Jawad,’” she said. ”My heart told me.”

Her son was instantly killed in the March 27 Israeli strike in Saksakieh. So was one of his cousins — so close they were more like brothers. Several other children were wounded.

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Jawad’s uncle also was killed. He was an interior design engineer; Jawad wanted to be an engineer like him. Meslmani called him a civilian. But like many Shiite families in southern Lebanon, the family were loyal supporters of the militant group and political party Hezbollah, which formed in the 1980s to fight Israel’s occupation of the area.

Jawad and his cousin are among 168 children killed — of more than 2,100 people in all — by Israel’s strikes in the six weeks of renewed war between the country and Iran-backed Hezbollah.

Israel has often struck alleged Hezbollah militants or officials in their homes without warning, frequently in areas far from the front line when they are with their families, in apartment buildings surrounded by uninvolved neighbors. The Israeli military rarely names the targets of its strikes but says it takes measures to minimize civilian casualties — including children — and blames Hezbollah members for mixing with the general population. The families of children killed accuse Israel of committing war crimes because of the large number of civilian casualties.

At least two Israeli civilians — both adults — and 13 soldiers have been killed in the current war with Hezbollah, according to figures from Israel. One of the civilians was killed by mistaken Israeli fire.

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In response to Associated Press questions, the Israeli military didn’t deny that children have been killed in its Lebanon strikes but said it has targeted Hezbollah facilities and militants. The army says it’s killed hundreds of Hezbollah operatives but has provided little evidence to support the claim.

Under international law governing armed conflict, it’s never legal to directly target civilians, but collateral damage — harm to civilians when striking a military target — is allowed if it is proportional to the anticipated military gains of any given strike.

The Israeli military told AP in a statement that its strikes follow the law, including “the principles of distinction, proportionality, and the taking of precautions.”

Charles Trumbull, an assistant University of South Carolina law professor who studies the law and ethics of armed conflict, said it’s difficult to assess whether the proportionality threshold was met without knowing the strike targets and whether the military knew children were present.

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“To the extent that they knew that children were likely to be harmed or killed in these strikes, and as an ethical matter, absolutely I think that should affect the calculus,” he said. “Just because certain strikes might not violate the law on conflict doesn’t mean that they’re not concerning or problematic or that they are morally justified.”

Children crushed under their own homes

At 2 a.m. March 12, Taline Shehab — who would have turned 4 last month — was sleeping when missiles tore into an apartment above hers in the family’s building in Aramoun, about 20 km (12 miles) south of Beirut, causing it to collapse. Taline and her father died; her mother was critically wounded.

Aramoun is a religiously mixed area that was generally considered safe, though it had been targeted by airstrikes in the previous Israel-Hezbollah war, in 2024.

Taline’s father, Mohamad, was a drone operator and video producer who often worked with the Lebanese army and on high-profile television productions. He and his wife, Nathalie, ran a fashion company; Taline appeared regularly on its social media.

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“They were a very close family. Their daily life revolved around their daughter,” said Ali Shehab, Mohamad’s brother.

Taline “was full of personality,” he said. “She was very attached to her father. She loved being around him and didn’t like to share him with anyone.”

He comforts himself with the thought that “maybe Mohammed and Taline, because they are so attached to each other, God chose them both.”

Dr. Ghassan Abu Sitta, who’s worked extensively in Gaza and Lebanon and runs an initiative treating some of the most seriously war-wounded children at the American University of Beirut Medical Center, said that, like Taline, most of the cases he has seen are “children being crushed underneath the rubble of their own homes.”

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A lifetime shadowed by war and loss

Ten-year-old Zeinab al-Jabali used to tag along wherever her father went: the corner store, the mountains around their village in Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley.

Now, he sleeps in the Beirut hospital where doctors are treating his wife and three older daughters, all wounded in the strike that killed Zeinab.

War has shadowed most of Hassan al-Jabali’s life. In 1982, his brother — then 10, like Zeinab — was killed by an Israeli missile.

Al-Jabali made a living selling mouneh, or preserved foods such as raisins and dried herbs, and worked for his cousin’s factory producing laban, or yogurt.

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On March 5, al-Jabali’s wife and daughters were preparing for iftar, the meal ending the daily fast during the holy month of Ramadan, at his wife’s sister’s house when the airstrike hit it.

Al-Jabali acknowledged his brother-in-law — who was killed — “in the past was with the resistance,” referring to Hezbollah.

“But they struck him at home, in a house full of children, full of girls,” said al-Jabali, who heard the blast from elsewhere in the village and found a scene of carnage when he rushed to check on his family.

He said his wife still doesn’t know Zeinab is dead; he’s afraid the grief would endanger her recovery.

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Families grieve: “I remember everything”

In response to questions about the strikes that killed Jawad, Taline, and Zeinab, the Israeli military didn’t give details about the intended targets beyond that they were related to Hezbollah.

The military’s statement said Israel regrets any civilian harm but that it’s operating against Hezbollah, “which attacked the State of Israel under Iranian backing.”

Many Lebanese have blamed Hezbollah for pulling their country into the war when it fired missiles across the border March 2, two days after the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran. But for others, the devastation from Israeli strikes has strengthened their support.

“We are now holding onto the resistance more than any time before,” said Meslmani, Jawad’s mother.

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Despite Israeli army notices for residents in large swathes of southern Lebanon to flee, many in their town of Saksakieh stayed. Displaced people from farther south took refuge there. Life felt almost normal before the strike that killed Jawad.

Now, Meslmani visits his grave in a small cemetery overlooking a mountain vista, where she can hear warplanes roar overhead.

“I remember everything,” she said. “How he used to eat and drink, how he used to play, how he would get dressed and fix his beautiful hair.”

Since he was killed, the planes no longer bother her.

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“The most precious thing, my heart, is gone,” she said. “What more can they do?”

___

Associated Press journalists Malak Harb in Beirut and Koral Saeed in Abu Snan, Israel, contributed to this report.

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What ‘Gurt’ Really Means And It Isn’t What You Think

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What 'Gurt' Really Means And It Isn't What You Think

Most days, you feel like you need a translator to understand half of what kids are saying.

Thanks to the popularity of social media sites like TikTok, every week children and teens are finding new phrases and memes to share and say to each other – much to the befuddlement of their parents.

From the latest baffling trend of saying “and a Black Santa napkin!” to the rise of “six-seven” and the bizarre world of brainrot characters like Ballerina Cappuccina, it can be exhausting work for parents and teachers trying to keep up with what it all means.

One of the other expressions kids are coming out with currently is “gurt”.

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But what does ‘gurt’ mean?

In some parts of England, gurt means very large or great. But this isn’t what kids mean when they’re saying it.

In his weekly videos on the words kids are using in class, school teacher and TikTok creator Philip Lindsay said the meaning of gurt is “confusing”, as people seem to use it in two different ways.

The first way refers to a joke where someone says “Yoghurt” and a character called Gurt replies: “Yo”.

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According to Know Your Meme (KYM), this actually dates back to 2012, but only recently took off thanks to videos on TikTok.

Mr Lindsay explained in his TikTok explainer that “in this scenario, the proper response to someone saying ‘gurt’ is ‘yo’ and vice versa, if somebody says ‘yo’ you say ‘gurt’”.

So, kind of like a greeting. Makes sense.

But that’s not where this all ends. The teacher explained that the term seems to have evolved, however, and now has “more meaning to it”.

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There’s a series of videos known as “What They’re Doing Is Very Smart But Also Very Dangerous” which show cute animals “doing something very smart but also very dangerous”, as per KYM.

For example, penguins jumping from high off a massive iceberg into the sea.

So now, according to Mr Lindsay, “the meaning of gurt or gurting is to do something smart yet dangerous”.

Ultimately, though, there’s no agreed meaning.

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The teacher continued: “There are a bunch of definitions flying around right now on the internet about what gurt actually means, so we’ll see how this unfolds in the coming months.”

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The 10-minute method to fix your pesky back pain

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The 10-minute method to fix your pesky back pain
One osteopath has a 10-minute method for easing back pain (Picture: Metro)

About 80% of Brits will get back pain at some point in their lives. For context, that equates to roughly 55 million men and women.

And yet, most of this back pain isn’t due to any serious damage. It’s from slouching at our desks or being couch potatoes, according to renowned osteopath James Davies.

‘Most of the back pain I see is lifestyle driven, minor, and very fixable – I see it everyday in clinic,’ he tells Metro.

It’s so rampant among his clients that James has developed a 10-minute method to transform your back. This 10-minute block needs to be repeated for 10 days straight and at the end of it, you should notice a difference.

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Given we have 144 10-minute blocks in our day, and this requires you to give up just one of them, it’s hardly a sacrifice for most.

‘I only have two hands, I can’t treat everyone,’ James explains. ‘I wanted to give people something they could do for themselves.’

A quick disclaimer

Before attempting James’ method, there are certain types of back pain that will need more serious medical attention.

‘The 10-minute method is for mild to moderate, lifestyle-related pain,’ he says. ‘If your pain is eight out of 10 or higher, or stopping you from moving, get it checked.

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Mature man working from home. He suffers from back pain
A lot of our back pain stems from sitting for long periods of time (Picture: Getty Images)

‘If you have numbness, tingling, weakness, or pain travelling down the leg, don’t ignore it. If there’s loss of bladder or bowel control, or numbness in the saddle area, that’s urgent. If it came from a fall or injury, or it’s getting worse and not improving, speak to a professional.’

Identify your pain

The most common pain is muscle related, which refers to the tight, achy lower back you can wake up with for feel after a long day.

‘This usually comes from sitting too long, not moving enough, or doing more than your body is ready for,’ James explains.

You might feel you have postural pain. ‘This one creeps up on you,’ he adds. ‘Hours at a desk, looking down at your phone, slouching on the sofa. It’s not one big moment, it’s what you do every day.’

Joint stiffness is another big one. The osteopath explains that if you’re not moving your back enough, it will tighten up. That’s why you feel stiff when you stand up after sitting for a long time.

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Lastly, there’s mild disc irritation. ‘The name sounds scary, but most of the time it isn’t,’ James says. ‘It’s just your spine under pressure from poor movement or posture over time, and it improves when you start moving properly again.’

The 10-minute method

If you tick any of the above boxes, set your timer, and follow James’ instructions closely.

Start with 2–3 minutes of movement.

Lie on your back and gently bring one knee into your chest, then the other. Add small twists side to side or any light movement that feels comfortable. This helps take stiffness out and prepares your back.

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Then move into 2 minutes of decompression.

Lie on your back with your legs up on a chair or sofa, or hug both knees into your chest. Slow your breathing and let your back relax. This takes pressure off the spine.

Next, spend 3 minutes on strength.

Keep it simple. Hold a plank if you can, or lie on your back and lift your hips off the floor. You can also go onto your hands and knees and lift opposite arm and leg. This builds support around your spine.

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Finish with 2 minutes of release.

Gently massage your lower back or hips with your hands, or just lie still and take slow breaths. This helps reduce tension and reset your body.

Then simply repeat this for 10 days.

Woman in home office suffering from back pain sitting at computer desk
Back pain tends to build up over time, rather than suddenly developing overnight (Picture: Getty Images)

Don’t have back pain? Here’s how to prevent it

As James explains, back pain doesn’t just appear overnight, it tends to build up gradually. If you haven’t fallen victim to a sore back, there are ways to keep it at bay too.

‘Prevention is everything,’ he explains. ‘Firstly, move your body every day. Your back is built to move. The biggest issue I see is people staying in one position for too long, whether that’s at a desk, on the sofa, or in the car.

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‘You don’t need a full workout, just get up, walk, stretch, and change positions regularly. That alone goes a long way.’

The next step is to strengthen your spine. ‘It’s not just about your back,’ James adds. ‘Your glutes, core, and hips all support it. If they’re weak, your back ends up doing too much.

‘A few simple strength exercises done consistently will protect your back long term.’

Lastly, you need to be paying attention to the small things. This means being conscious of how you sit, sleep, carry your bag and even how you use your phone.

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For example, scrunching up your shoulder towards your ear and bending your neck for a prolonged period of time to hold the phone in place hands-free is never going to bode well for your poor back.

‘Most people don’t realise their daily habits are slowly feeding into back problems,’ James adds.

Do you have a story to share?

Get in touch by emailing MetroLifestyleTeam@Metro.co.uk.

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Belfast’s Jamie Dornan to play Aragorn in LOTR spin-off as fans make same comment

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Belfast Live

Belfast actor Jamie Dornan will play Strider/Aragorn in The Lord of the Rings: The Hunt for Gollum, releasing December 2027, with fans all making the same comment about the casting on social media

Film enthusiasts were already eagerly awaiting The Lord of the Rings: The Hunt for Gollum. However, excitement has soared even higher following the announcement of the cast for the upcoming picture.

Set for cinema release on December 17, 2027, the film is understood to fill the narrative space between The Hobbit and The Fellowship of the Ring. It’s believed to centre on the concurrent quests of various significant groups attempting to track down Gollum, whose understanding of the One Ring renders him the most perilous figure in Middle-earth. While numerous specifics are still coming to light, a number of major cast roles have been verified or formally revealed.

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Andy Serkis will not only direct the production but will also return as the title character, Gollum.

Ian McKellen is set to reprise his part as the wizard Gandalf, while Elijah Wood will once again portray Frodo Baggins.

Lee Pace is also coming back as the Elvenking of Mirkwood, yet the revelation that’s particularly thrilled LOTR devotees is that Jamie Dornan will take on the role of Strider, who’s subsequently unveiled as Aragorn in the original novel.

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Following this week’s cast announcement, Lord of the Rings supporters took to Reddit with glowing praise for Dornan, 43, and his acting abilities.

Dornan, hailing from Holywood in Northern Ireland, has enjoyed a varied spectrum of roles throughout his career, spanning intense psychological thrillers and period dramas to more lighthearted comedies.

While broadly recognised for the Fifty Shades franchise, his performances in television dramas such as The Fall and films including Belfast have garnered considerable critical praise and substantial award nominations.

One enthusiast raved following the announcement: “Genuinely, the man is excellent. Go watch The Tourist for an idea of his range. He’s way more than 50 Shades and I’m a dude who doesn’t like 50 Shades type stuff haha. I feel awesome about these castings.”

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Another concurred: “He was fantastic in The Tourist, hope it gets a third season.”

A third contributed: “He was impressive in The Fall also, that’s where I first became aware of him,” while someone else reflected: “He was also hauntingly good in The Fall. If he can channel that same intensity and quiet brooding into a younger, more ‘hunted’ Strider, he might actually pull this off.”

Offering additional commendation, another LOTR devotee penned: “I’m alright with this, hope he pulls it off,” as someone else responded: “He will, he has so much depth as an actor. He was great in Robin Hood, The Fall, The Tourist, Fifty Shades trilogy, and The Siege of Jadotville, and he’s not hard to look at either, girls.”

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One more remarked: “That’s actually not a bad choice at all. It has renewed my faith.”

The film was initially scheduled for release this year, but the project has been pushed back to accommodate a thorough six-to-seven-month pre-production phase ahead of filming commencing in New Zealand this May.

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Ryanair and easyjet bag rules could be about to change

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Wales Online

Big changes could be coming to airlines like Ryanair

Passengers flying with airlines like Ryanair and easyJet may soon see changes to cabin baggage rules. New EU proposals aim to give passengers more generous and standardised hand luggage allowances at no extra cost.

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If the EU law is fully adopted, expected to be finalised by mid-2026, it will standardise minimum free allowances across all EU-based airlines, such as Ryanair, easyJet, and Wizz.

This means budget airlines like Ryanair, which usually charge for extra cabin bags, will have to let passengers bring two free cabin bags starting in mid-to-late 2026, if the law is approved.

In January 2026 the European Parliament voted for new rules that guarantee all passengers can bring both a personal item and a small cabin case for free.

Ryanair has already increased the size of its free personal item to match these new standards. However, the rule for a second free bag still needs final approval from EU member states, which could happen by mid-2026.

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At the moment, if you book a standard fare with airlines like Ryanair and Easyjet, you can only bring one small underseat bag measuring 40 x 30 x 20 cm.

This bag, like a handbag, backpack, or laptop bag, must fit under the seat in front of you. If it is too big, including wheels and handles, it may be refused at the gate or put in the hold for a fee. Bringing an extra cabin bag for the overhead locker also costs extra and prices vary by airline.

Ryanair’s previous cabin bag sizes were smaller than those of easyJet and Wizz Air allowances; however, after changes to EU law, Ryanair had to allow larger personal bags.

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The new rules allow passengers to bring hand luggage up to 40 x 30 x 20cm, which is 20 per cent larger than Ryanair’s old limit of 40 x 20 x 25cm.

More EU rule changes could soon let travellers bring both a cabin bag up to 100cm and a personal bag for free. In January the European Parliament strongly supported allowing all passengers to carry a small case and a free underseat bag for no extra cost.

The new proposals would allow passengers to bring a personal item and a small piece of hand luggage for free, provided the combined dimensions are up to 100 cm, and the combined weight is up to 7 kg.

These changes still need approval from the European Council, likely by mid-2026, before they take effect. They would affect anyone flying to or from an EU airport on an EU airline, including most short-haul flights from the UK.

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However, this change could have an unexpected effect on passengers. Airlines have said that allowing people to bring free cabin bags beyond a small underseat item takes away a key source of income and could lead to higher ticket prices.

While this would remove surprise fees, travellers who usually bring only a free personal item might end up paying more for tickets than they do now, affecting low-budget travellers.

The proposed changes, which require approval from the European Council to become law, have not yet taken effect, so for now, you should follow your chosen airline’s current baggage rules, which are typically listed on its website. Make sure to follow our senior travel reporter, Portia Jones, on TikTok for the latest travel news.

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Work in progress. What to expect in the new issue of Positive News magazine

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Work in progress. What to expect in the new issue of Positive News magazine

I came of age when tuition fees were negligible, jobs felt abundant and a night out didn’t cost the equivalent of a month’s rent. Working-class heroes created Britpop and the Young British Artists movement, and it felt like anything was possible as I looked out from high school to the optimistic and democratic world in front of me.

Taking the first steps from the sanctuary of school to the big wide world has always been unnerving, but I am sure for those taking their first steps into the outside world today, it is even more daunting.

We hear it constantly – that the young are losing faith. Polls suggest that growing numbers feel disillusioned with democracy with some polls even saying they would rather see strong, authoritarian leadership. University fees remain daunting, degrees no longer carry the certainty they once did, graduate schemes are thinning out, and more than a third of UK teenagers worry that artificial intelligence will shrink the job market before they have even entered it.

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The Apr-Jun issue of Positive News magazine is about the long, uneven journey from childhood to adulthood and the people and ideas helping to light that path.

In schools, there are projects that go beyond teaching the mechanics of democracy and instead encourage pupils to practise it. Having a say. Disagreeing well. Understanding that a voice carries responsibility as well as rights. Alongside this are programmes that widen horizons early – overseas volunteering, community arts initiatives, mentoring schemes – initiatives to enable people not shy away from the outside world but to engage with it in a constructive and positive way.

It’s surely no coincidence that we are seeing a return in popularity of the most traditional of businesses in the age of AI. Market stall retail is re-emerging as an appealing career path for youngsters, one that engages with the inner entrepreneur. And with 34% of 16 to 24-year-olds reportedly running a side hustle, this generation is proving remarkably entrepreneurial. For some, a trestle table and a card reader are the first steps towards independence.

Creativity, too, is at a crossroads. Funding pressures, rising living costs and the rapid advance of AI risk turning the arts into a pursuit only the financially secure can afford. Our cover story looks at schemes across Europe offering a form of universal basic income to artists – not as charity, but as recognition that creative work needs time and stability to develop.

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We are all at different stages of that journey, but wherever we sit it is important that we don’t just protect our own futures and that there is support for the next generation. To not just ensure they are contributing to society but to help it grow, flourish and blossom into one we want to live in.

Cover image: Denis Vahey

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