Politics
Ping-pong and pool won’t fix lawless London
The announcement followed hot on the heels of two nights of rioting in Clapham, in a so-called ‘link-up’ between young people. So serious was the unrest that it required the deployment of 100 police officers, four of whom were assaulted. More soberly, four young people were killed over the Easter weekend in London in violent attacks. One was a 14-year-old shot dead in Woolwich. Another was a 21-year-old film student fatally stabbed on Primrose Hill. He had been at the picturesque spot, in the daytime sunshine, testing out a new film camera recently gifted to him for his birthday.
Will the new youth clubs do anything to avert tragedies like these? It seems unlikely. While there is little agreement on whether knife crime is increasing in London, what we do know is that 29 per cent of all knife offences take place in the capital. So we need to do something.
Khan claims, ‘I’ve seen from my own experience growing up in south London the difference youth clubs made to me and my brothers, with somewhere to not just play table tennis and pool and do boxing, cricket and football, but also in providing a safe space for us to go’. Likewise, Labour MP for Stratford and Bow, Uma Kumaran, welcomed the news, claiming it would help young people in her patch of east London, ‘after years of austerity which closed youth clubs and cut services to the bone’.
But a quick Google search will show you there’s no shortage of free activities already on offer in Newham, one of the borough’s covered by Kumaran’s electorate. There are free sports classes. There’s the optimistically-named Fight for Peace. There’s an array of activities at Royal Wharf Community Dock. There are evening events at Newham Libraries. And there’s a brand-new, state-of-the-art, £8million ‘Youth Zone’, which opened just two years ago.
The same is true in Clapham. Presumably, the young people recently ransacking shops were not doing it in protest at the planned chess tournament being cancelled and the local library’s insufficiently extensive collection of Jane Austen. In Clapham, there are two youth clubs within a short walk of the Common – the Clapham Youth Centre and the Devas Club. What’s more, Khan’s announcement came just days after the UK government opened its first wave of ‘Youth Futures Hubs’, in areas of high knife crime and anti-social behaviour, including in London’s Tower Hamlets.
Clearly, there are plenty of places in London for young people to spend time in a warm and safe environment. Indeed, the number of such places is far higher than it is outside the capital. You know where it is safe and enjoyable? London’s galleries and museums. And they are increasingly open late – the Barbican is open every single day until 11pm. It’s free, too.
The left will howl that, of course, youth clubs aren’t the only solution, but we should surely welcome them as part of the answer. Perhaps. Despite everything, I am not intrinsically opposed to youth clubs – if they can be run competently. Khan’s scheme is reminiscent of the 1990s ‘midnight basketball’ initiative in inner cities in the US, and there are studies that suggest it was successful. Some of these, notably a 2024 report for the Institute for Fiscal Studies, have suggested that youth clubs do have benefits for educational performance and in reducing youth crime. Though the study in question failed to differentiate between a strict environment offering boxing classes, say, and an ill-disciplined free-for-all with a few ping-pong tables, which surely makes a large difference.
Besides, the £30million pledged by the London mayor has to come from somewhere. Is it really a good use of money if it comes at the expense of boosting detention capacity or police numbers? And what if the clubs themselves, rather than providing a safe and neutral space, become places of violence, or cause well-behaved kids to get in with the wrong crowd? Or, indeed, become places for drug dealers to find customers, and phone snatchers to sell their loot? If you really want to give young people a sense of purpose and something to do, then fix the economy so they can get a job. Or, even better, encourage them to start their own business.
The biggest problem with the focus on youth clubs, however, is the deflection. Deflection, that is, from the real causes of violent crime: joblessness, absent fathers, failures of migrant integration, weak policing, a lack of strict discipline in schools, an abdication of parental responsibility and a societal turn against self-discipline. And, for that matter, the failure to put in place proper protections for police officers so they do not fear losing their jobs from bogus accusations of racism should they seek to get tough on perpetrators.
Youth clubs feel like the thing you resort to when you’ve run out of ideas. Now, who’s up for a game of ping-pong?
Ameer Kotecha is a former diplomat and now the CEO of the Centre for Government Reform.
Politics
Angela Rayner Holds Secret Meeting With Andy Burnham
Angela Rayner had a secret meeting with Andy Burnham on Friday night, according to new reports.
The Sun on Sunday shared photos of the Greater Manchester mayor arriving at the former deputy prime minister’s constituency home in Ashton.
Their summit adds to mounting speculation the two soft-left Labour figures might be considering launching a joint coup.
Their encounter came hours after Keir Starmer furiously defended his premiership amid fresh developments in the Peter Mandelson scandal.
It was revealed by the Guardian this week that the ex-Labour peer failed security vetting, but still secured the top job as the UK’s ambassador to the US.
Starmer has since insisted that he was not told Mandelson had failed and only found out on Tuesday night.
He then sacked the chief of the Foreign Office, Olly Robbins, on Thursday night.
As scrutiny over Starmer’s judgement grows once again, technology secretary Liz Kendall sent a message to the PM’s potential opponents this morning.
She said: “Any politician that focuses more on their future and their job, not people’s future sand their jobs, will lose the public support. That is why I back Keir Starmer.”
Burnham was blocked by Labour’s executive body from running for parliament earlier this year amid fears he would try to overthrow Starmer once safely set up with a seat in the Commons.
Rayner is allegedly also considering a run at the top job, but may still be hampered from any power grab by the ongoing HMRC investigation into her tax affairs.
She had to step down from the cabinet last year after underpaying on stamp duty when buying an £800,000 property.
Labour is expected to endure major losses at the elections in May, when Holyrood and the Senedd are up for re-election along with hundreds of local authorities in England.
Insiders have told HuffPost UK any leadership challenge to Starmer will likely come after the elections so any successor can avoid taking responsibility for the bloodbath.
Subscribe to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.
Politics
Trump Threatens To Strike Iran Infrastructure
Donald Trump has threatened to strike Iranian infrastructure after accusing Tehran of breaching their ceasefire agreement.
The US president claimed Iran fired bullets in the Strait of Hormuz at a “French ship and a freighter from the United Kingdom”.
In a furious post on TruthSocial, the US president said there was going to be “no more Mr Nice Guy” – even though America “loses nothing” over the ongoing chaos.
He also called Iran’s decision to close the strait “strange”, claiming the US blockade had already closed it.
He said Iran should take the “very fair and reasonable” deal the US negotiators put forward on Monday while meeting with their Iranian counterparts in Pakistan – or the US “is going to knock out every single Power Plant, and every single Bridge, in Iran.”
Trump claimed his military would “come down fast, they’ll come down easy”, adding: ” IT’S TIME FOR THE IRAN KILLING MACHINE TO END!”
Tehran has also accused the US of breaching the ceasefire deal by imposing a naval blockade on Iranian ports.
No traffic is currently moving through the major shipping lane, the Strait of Hormuz, due to the conflict in the Middle East.
Tehran retaliated to the strikes from the US and Israel at the end of February by effectively closing the Strait by targeting any ships which pass through it.
That triggered a global economic shock because the waterway transports around a fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas, with around 140 ships passing through in either direction.
After frantic negotiations, Iran claimed the waterway was reopened for commercial vessels on Friday – but only if ships go through an inspection by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy, and in some cases, pay a toll.
Iran then seemed to close the waterway again on Saturday, saying it will remain shut until the US ends its blockade on Iranian ports.
Trump’s full post reads:
“Iran decided to fire bullets yesterday in the Strait of Hormuz — A Total Violation of our Ceasefire Agreement! Many of them were aimed at a French Ship, and a Freighter from the United Kingdom. That wasn’t nice, was it? My Representatives are going to Islamabad, Pakistan — They will be there tomorrow evening, for Negotiations. Iran recently announced that they were closing the Strait, which is strange, because our BLOCKADE has already closed it. They’re helping us without knowing, and they are the ones that lose with the closed passage, $500 Million Dollars a day! The United States loses nothing. In fact, many Ships are headed, right now, to the U.S., Texas, Louisiana, and Alaska, to load up, compliments of the IRGC, always wanting to be “the tough guy!” We’re offering a very fair and reasonable DEAL, and I hope they take it because, if they don’t, the United States is going to knock out every single Power Plant, and every single Bridge, in Iran. NO MORE MR. NICE GUY! They’ll come down fast, they’ll come down easy and, if they don’t take the DEAL, it will be my Honor to do what has to be done, which should have been done to Iran, by other Presidents, for the last 47 years. IT’S TIME FOR THE IRAN KILLING MACHINE TO END!
Subscribe to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.
Politics
Labour Peer Calls For Keir Starmer To Resign
A Labour peer has called for Keir Starmer to resign over the Peter Mandelson scandal.
Maurice Glasman has become the most senior figure within the party to urge the prime minister to resign, claiming he “cannot conceivably continue” in the job.
It comes after it emerged Mandelson – Starmer’s pick to be the UK’s ambassador to the US – failed security vetting last year.
The Foreign Office then overrode the security advice not to hire the ex-Labour peer and gave Mandelson the plum job in Washington.
Mandelson was sacked over his long-running friendship with convicted paedophile last September, but the decision to hire him continues to haunt Starmer.
The PM insists he was not aware Mandelson failed the vetting process and is blaming Whitehall for keeping him in the dark.
But questions over Starmer’s judgement continue to grow and there is speculation other Labour figures – Angela Rayner and Andy Burnham – could be looking to overthrow him.
Glasman told the Telegraph: “He cannot conceivably continue as a credible prime minister any longer. And that’s all because he cannot say ‘I made a mistake, I’m sorry’.
“If you can’t own your mistakes, you can’t move.
“All he needed to say was ‘we made an error’.
“But he’s completely stuck in saying he hasn’t done anything wrong, so this can’t go away.”
Glasman, known for championing the Blue Labour movement, also warned that his party is facing a bloodbath in the May elections when voters select their candidates for Holyrood, the Senedd and hundreds of local authority seats across England.
He said: “May 7 is going to be another debacle. I can’t see how he [Starmer] carries on after the May elections.
“He could limp on to the summer but the point is we’re doing all this while there’s a war in Iran, there’s a war in Ukraine and where is the political leadership?”
Technology secretary Liz Kendall publicly defended Starmer amid this increase in pressure on Sunday morning.
she told Sky News: “Keir Starmer is my favourite to be the prime minister, to take us into the next election.
“Let me tell you right now, with the cost of living crisis that people are facing and with the world so uncertain, and that’s deeply frightening to people, any politician who focuses more on their future and their job, not on people’s futures and their jobs, will lose the public support. That is why I back Keir Starmer.”
Subscribe to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.
Politics
Unite escalates strike action against below-inflation pay for Scottish university workers
On 20 April, Unite the Union announced that more than 1,100 workers at five Scottish universities will stage a 24-hour strike. The industrial action is scheduled for 24 April to dispute an imposed real-terms pay cut.
Unite members at Glasgow, Strathclyde, Glasgow School of Art, Edinburgh Napier and Heriot Watt universities will take part.
At 12:30pm on the same day, 24 April, Unite will also hold a Pay and Fair Funding Rally. The assembly will take place at the top of Buchanan Street, next to the Concert Hall and Donald Dewar statue.
The announcement marks an escalation of previous Unite action at Glasgow, Strathclyde and Edinburgh Napier universities on 10 April. Likewise, staff members at Strathclyde also staged a strike from 16 to 22 March over proposed job cuts.
‘No option but to fight back’ says Unite
As the Canary previously reported, the higher education (HE) sector across the country has already suffered under 15 years of substandard pay awards. Compared to 2010, the below-inflation ‘rises’ have left most staff with a real-terms cut of around 30%.
The current dispute centers on the fact that the universities are imposing a pay offer of just 1.4% for 2025/26 on the Scottish workforce. For context, retail price index (RPI) inflation currently stands at 3.6%. However, it looks set to climb far higher due to the repercussions of Trump/Netanyahu’s illegal war on Iran.
Alison MacLean, Unite’s lead officer for higher education, said:
Thousands of Unite members working in higher education have faced years of real-terms pay cuts. Our members have no option but to fight back against repeated threats of compulsory redundancies, and cuts to their terms and conditions. This funding crisis has also come about as a result of gross financial mismanagement and incompetence at some universities.
The latest round of strikes is part of Unite’s campaign to ensure that higher education is fully funded, and its workers are fairly rewarded. We can no longer accept more cuts and derisory pay awards which is why our members are fighting back.
‘Workers are facing another cost of living crisis’
Trade unions across the HE sector are already engaged in negotiations for the 2026/27 pay award. The next meeting is scheduled for 13 May.
The unions are demanding either a pay offer of RPI + 3%, or a £3,000 increase – whichever is higher. On top of that, they’re also arguing for a £15/hr minimum basic pay. These changes would impact 138 higher education institutions across the UK.
Unite general secretary Sharon Graham said:
University workers deserve far better from higher education institutions. For years they have had real terms pay cuts imposed on them which is unacceptable. Inflation throughout this time has soared and now workers are facing another cost of living crisis.
Unite will fully support our higher education members. We won’t tolerate them having to face attack upon attack on their jobs, pay and conditions.
Time and again, we’ve watched as the lowest-paid in our society have been forced to absorb the greatest impacts of inflation and financial crisis.
The fact that UK universities are imposing yet another below-inflation pay offer, with full knowledge that worse is round the corner, is simply intolerable. However, as the escalation of industrial action at these five Scottish universities has shown, the workers will not take these imposed cuts without a fight.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Energy Secretary Calls Trump A ‘Creative Negotiator’
White House Energy Secretary Chris Wright called President Donald Trump a “creative negotiator” when asked about his threats to “knock out every single” power plant and bridge in Iran.
As peace talks between the United States and Iran appear to be at a stalemate amid a tenuous ceasefire agreement and continued jockeying over control of the Strait of Hormuz, the president demanded Iran accept America’s terms or face his full wrath in a Sunday morning Truth Social post.
“NO MORE MR. NICE GUY!” Trump declared, calling the US’s diplomatic offer “very fair and reasonable.”
Asked if the president’s intimidation tactics could “complicate” negotiations with Iran during an appearance on “Fox News Sunday” just hours later, Wright said he had full confidence in Trump.
“The president is using every way he can to get leverage over the regime and bring this conflict to an end,” he told host Shannon Bream. “He’s a creative negotiator, he uses pressure in different ways.”
“He uses uncertainty in different ways and I think as you’ve seen in the last 16 months, generally it leads to good results,” the cabinet member went on. “I don’t think we’ll see any surprises here.”
Wright envisioned reaching a “nice end to this conflict,” which he said would rescue Iran’s regional neighbors from “constant terror” and also guarantee a free “flow of goods” through the Strait of Hormuz.
“Imagine a nuclear armed Iran, not far away from that reality,” he said. “This is going to put an end to it.”
Wright stuck by his support for Trump’s strategy in a separate Sunday interview on CNN, where host Jake Tapper asked the secretary if he was worried strikes on civilian infrastructure could “constitute a war crime.”
“The president is looking for maximum leverage,” he said, later adding, “No, I’m not worried about that.”
Earlier this month, Trump triggered international panic with a near-identical ultimatum, telling Iran to “open the fuckin’ Strait” of Hormuz within two days or find themselves “living in hell” via Truth Social.
After upping the ante with a post warning “a whole civilization will die tonight” just hours before his 8pm April 7 deadline, a two-week ceasefire was announced.
Politics
Argentines eat donkey as president takes selfies with Netanyahu
There are two startling stories coming out of Argentina right now. The first is that under far-right libertarian president Javier Milei, Argentines have had to start eating donkey meat. The second is that Milei is meeting Israeli war criminal Benjamin Netanyahu:
Argentinian President Javier Milei gets emotional while meeting his hero, Benjamin Netanyahu.
This took place after he finished kissing the Western Wall in Israel. pic.twitter.com/5pvTCMQZSb
— Shadow of Ezra (@ShadowofEzra) April 19, 2026
Milei
Milei is the South American leader you see wielding a chainsaw:
Inflation in Argentina is 32.6%.
Javier Milei's chainsaw was always for Argentinians. pic.twitter.com/hX5NGZ2lLt — BladeoftheSun (@BladeoftheS) April 17, 2026
As we reported on 15 February:
Javier Milei is the libertarian leader of Argentina. If you’re unfamiliar with ‘libertarianism’, it’s the childlike belief that everyone can just get their own way all the time, and that people shouldn’t look out for one another – just for themselves.
In practice, libertarianism means cutting ‘red tape’ for businesses so they face no restrictions on how poorly they can treat their workers. This is how that’s currently working out in Argentina (complete with quotes from the UK leaders who wish to emulate this chaos):
Nigel Farage on Milei "Doing all the things he’s done, that’s leadership, he is amazing"
Kemi Badenoch "Javier Milei would be ‘template’ for my government"
He just cut holiday days to 0, employers can pay in food and 12 hour work days. The result: pic.twitter.com/WgoFxN9EX9
— Jake

(@ToryWipeout) February 14, 2026
A country can create short-term prosperity by selling off its assets.
Milei, it seems, is failing to create short-term anything.
Anything besides chaos, anyway.
Milei: let them eat donkey
According to reports, Argentines have switched to donkey because beef is too expensive.
On the one hand, you could ask if the donkey meat thing matters. We’ve never eaten it, but we can see more than one source describing it as a delicacy.
We’ve seen commentary like the following, but the commenter is probably reading a lot into this (it could also just be poorly cooked):
Argentina’s beef under Milei has become so expensive that people are turning to donkey meat. Here you see a reporter from a right wing news channel attempting to eat it, struggling to chew it, & pretending to enjoy it as cope. What Milei’s government has reduced our country to. https://t.co/jJZ1VeUYUa
— Thomas Kennedy (@tomaskenn) April 19, 2026
Beyond the taste, WebMD report:
Compared to other types of meat that might otherwise be regarded as suitable for human consumption, such as sheep or cow, previous studies have indicated that donkey meat contains a higher percentage of protein and essential amino acids. Additionally, it is lower in fat, cholesterol, and calorie content. Much more tender than beef, donkey meat contains the same levels of protein and is rich in iron, calcium, and phosphorous.
Given this, it’s not unrealistic to think we could one day live in a world in which health influencers describe donkey as a ‘supermeat’ (unless the lab grown alternatives take off, anyway).
Besides the taste and benefits, there’s obviously a cultural element to this. If people are used to eating certain meats, they’ll consider alternatives outside their consumption habits odd.
We’re sure many of you eat chicken, but would you eat seagull?
For all you know, seagull could be the most delicious and nutritious bird there is, but if you saw it on the menu at KFC, you’d probably think ‘Kentucky fuck that‘.
All this is to say that although Argentines aren’t suffering by switching from beef to donkey, that doesn’t mean they won’t feel like they’re experiencing a downgrade. And this is a problem. Because Milei was supposed to fire up the economy and make everyone rich.
Under certain political projects, you can make a case that people need to endure hardships to secure a better future for their children. You can’t make that argument under a hyper-libertarian project like Milei’s, in which the mission is to sell everything that isn’t nailed down for short-term gains.
Where are the short-term gains, Javier?
And worse than that, why are you parading around with genocidal monster Benjamin Netanyahu?
As Argentines eat donkey meat and dumpster dive to survive, their demonic market fundamentalist schizo-president snuggles up to modern day Hitler Satanyahu https://t.co/lHAktzjIFv
— Secular Talk (KyleKulinskiShow@bsky.social) (@KyleKulinski) April 19, 2026
Netanyahu
Under Milei, Argentina has become part of what you might call the All New Axis of Evil:
Today the U.N. General Assembly adopted a resolution to condemn the trafficking of Africans in bondage and the transatlantic slave trade.
Only three states voted against it. The USA, Argentina and Israel.
— Lowkey (@Lowkey0nline) March 25, 2026
As a reminder, Israel has perpetrated a genocide against the Palestinian people since 2003, with backing from the US and countries like Britain. Recently, Israel launched a war on Iran, and has extended its ethnic cleansing mission into Lebanon. This is part of an expansionist policy the nation refers to as the ‘Greater Israel’ project.
In other words, you cannot support Israel in this moment without supporting the worst crimes imaginable.
As part of his visit, Milei posted a picture of himself at Israel’s Wailing wall:
En el Muro… pic.twitter.com/AD3cLUoYY4
— Javier Milei (@JMilei) April 19, 2026
Pressed up against the wall, he looks like a flattened cowpat.
Netanyahu, meanwhile, posted the following:
— Benjamin Netanyahu – בנימין נתניהו (@netanyahu) April 19, 2026
Much like the rest of him, Netanyahu’s thumbs are crooked and bent.
Milei, meanwhile, is posed as if imagining the handcuffs he may one day be wearing.
All for what?
Milei is delivering none of the gains he promised while swanning around with a genocidal monster. In other words, he never had his people’s interests in mind, and he never will.
Eventually, the Argentines will wake up to this reality. And when they do, they’re going to make donkey meat out of the guy.
Featured image via X/Twitter
By Willem Moore
Politics
I’m A Celebrity Hosts Ant And Dec Address David Haye Controversy
“It’s not a nice watch,” Ant McPartlin claimed, citing the way David “just kind of picks and picks at” his fellow contestants.
Ant continued: “Adam has had a bit of a tough time and he’s not coping well. Clearly, the banter has got too much. But David won’t stop.”
Declan Donnelly agreed: “It’s kind of crossed the line from banter. I don’t find it comfortable to watch.”
“He broke me in there, he pushed me to my limits, and I’ve told David this and he’s apologised and that’s that!” the Emmerdale star wrote. “I’ve moved on now, am not one to hold a grudge.
“But thank you for all your lovely messages and all the kind words. We all face people and situations that try to break us, but sometimes those moments are what rebuild you stronger than ever. Be kind.”
Politics
More Kanye West Shows Cancelled After Wireless Festival Controversy
Earlier this month, it was announced that Ye – formerly known as Kanye West – would headline all three nights at Wireless in London’s Finsbury Park this coming July.
Since then, it’s been revealed that Ye’s upcoming gigs in Poland and Switzerland have now been axed, too.
“FCB received an enquiry and considered it,” they said in a statement. “However, after thorough review, we have decided not to proceed with the project, as we cannot, in accordance with our values, provide a platform for the artist in question within this context.”
In January 2026, Ye – who was diagnosed with bipolar disorder a decade ago – issued a public apology for his behaviour in a full-page magazine ad, addressed “to those I’ve hurt” with his antisemitic outbursts, claiming they occurred during a months-long manic episode in which he had “lost touch with reality”.
Last week, he also announced he was postponing a show in Paris following reports that the French government was considering options to block him from performing in the city.
Politics
London Underground Tube Map Shows Where The Most Haunted Stations Are
London Underground is now over 150 years old and stretches over 250 miles of track, but what lays beneath those rails is said to be more sinister indeed.
For our beloved Tube network is said to house an endless array of ghosts, spectres, spirits and phantoms dating back to its grand opening in 1863.
These are the most haunted, complied in a graphic made by Brilliantly British…

LIVERPOOL STREET
Spooky tales of Liverpool Street have emerged, which is unsurprising considering it is built on top of a burial site, with an estimated eight bodies per cubic meter laying underneath its foundations.
In 2000, a man was reportedly spotted on CCTV after hours, dressed in white overalls and patrolling the deserted platforms, as if waiting for a train. When a member of station staff went to go search for the man, he was no where to be found. His colleague, watching the scenes on camera, claims to have seen the man standing next to the station worker. When the pair returned to the scene, they allegedly found a pair of white overalls.
BETHNAL GREEN
Horrifying screams can be heard echoing in the corridors of Bethnal Green, station staff report. The haunting sounds said to have emerged after 173 people died in a crush at the station during an air raid test in the Second World War.
The station became a safe haven for civilians during the blitz, with room for 5,000 bunks with full capacity stretching up to 7,000 people. Tragically the station also became the site of a huge disaster, as people were crushed whilst attempting to flee from the impending bombing, after hearing sirens.
Women and children’s cries of terror allegedly haunt the chambers of the underground network to this day. One of the first reports of the sounds came from a worker who had finished his shift, locked up the station and went down into the underground to finish some paperwork.
Sat alone in the dark, he then reportedly heard children’s cries, followed by screams and sounds of suffocation and struggle. He said the ordeal lasted from ten to 15 minutes.
BANK
The legend of ‘the Black Nun’ haunts the chambers of Bank station. Historically dating back to 1811, the mysterious circumstances are enough to frighten even the hardest of souls.
It all began back in the 1800′s when Philip Whitehead, who was reportedly the ‘Black Nun’s’ brother, was executed for committing forgery. Legend has it that the Nun waited outside of where Bank station now sits for his return, but he never came. She was rumored to have spent 40 years, dressed in black, waiting to see him again.
Her myth arose when Bank station was being built and some workers reportedly disturbed her sleeping spirit. She is still said to be roaming the platforms in search of her brother, dressed all in black.
COVENT GARDEN
Opened back in April of 1907, Covent Garden tube station serves the Piccadilly Line but according to myths that’s not all that lies beneath its tracks.
The station is said to be haunted by the apparition of a tall man wearing white gloves, a top hat and a frock coat and grey suit. According to ghostly lore, his figure has been reported many times since the 1950’s although more recent sightings are uncommon.
He is believed to be the ghost of a murdered actor who used to frequent the baker which was knocked down to make way for the station.
SEE ALSO:
KING’S CROSS
The infamous fire of King’s Cross in 1987 is believed to be the cause of a supernatural incident, featuring a supposed victim of the great tragedy.
Sightings of a frightening apparition, described as a cosmopolitan young woman with brown hair, is said to haunt the corridors of one of London’s busiest stations. Reports say that the lady screams loudly with her arms outstretched – but when people come to her aid, she disappears into thin air.
The supposed first sighting the woman was back in 1988, when a commuter saw a woman appearing distressed and walked over to comfort her – only to pass right through her when he reached her.
ELEPHANT AND CASTLE
Home to it’s fair share of paranormal activity, Elephant and Castle station might be one of London’s most haunted. Reports of footfalls and rapping have been often heard in the station when it is closed – but on investigation, no source can be found.
Another myth attached to the historic station claims the last train of the night is haunted by a lone girl who walks from the last carriage to the tip of the train, vanishing as she reaches the engine.
The sighting of the woman in the station has so far been unexplainable, with no obvious clues to the appearance in the station built on 18 December 1890.
SOUTH KENSINGTON
A spooky scenario at South Kensington was first witnessed by a passenger on the last train of the evening, who claimed to have heard an unnerving high-pitched whistle, followed shortly by the arrival of another train with an unexpected passenger.
A spectral figure in a peaked hat and coat hanging from the side of the train was claimed to have last been seen in 1928, almost a century ago.
FARRINGDON
Known locally as ‘the Screaming Spectre of Farringdon’, this unseen apparition has been terrifying passengers for years, her piercing screams sending shivers down the spine or anyone unfortunate enough to be within hearing distance.
Dating back to the early days of the Tube, this supernatural phenomena is reported as often now as it’s ever been, with hundreds of witnesses confirming the horrific sounds.
Some believe that this phantom is the ghost of young Anne Naylor, an 18th Century orphan who was killed by her employer at a London workhouse aged just 12. Her body was dumped where the station now stands, explaining the pained screams which continue to pass through Farringdon’s corridors.

A woman tests the shutters at Liverpool Street Underground Station
ALDGATE
Built on the site of a plague pit that was the final resting place for an estimated thousand victims of the Bubonic Plague in 1665, Aldgate Station was opened in 1876. Since its construction, the station has had so many reports of ghostly sightings that there is now an official log book for paranormal sightings at the station.
One of the most known of the appellations comes from the story of an electrician, who slipped onto a live rail knocking himself unconscious and sending over 20,000 volts through his body. Much to everyone’s amazement, he emerged unscathed.
Colleagues of the man insist that prior to his fall they saw a luminous figure of an old lady kneeling next to the stricken worker, stroking his hair. The tale of the ‘Elderly Angel’ goes back over a century, although a precise date has never been confirmed.
BRITISH MUSEUM STATION
The British Museum Station has been abandoned since the 1930s, so it isn’t really much of a surprise that its played host to a plethora of reported supernatural happenings.
Legend has it that the disused station is haunted by the ghost of Amun-ra, an Ancient Egyptian God, dressed in traditional Egyptian loincloth and headdress – and a couple of years after the station’s closure, two women vanished from nearby Holborn station, with witnesses claiming they heard ghostly moaning around the time of their disappearance.
To explain the mysterious situation, It has long been rumoured that there is a secret tunnel stretching from Holborn station to the British Museum’s famous ‘Egyptian Room’.
HIGHGATE
In scenes of a more bizarre scenario, Highgate station happenings have left locals perplexed for years. A disused extension of the Northern line left one section of the railway disused, with the rails removed. However it hasn’t stopped the the sound of trains passing through the night.
The Northern line extension project was shelved at the end of the 1940s following the renovation of Highgate station, with the unexplained train noises occurring ever since.
Politics
Air Frying Is The Superior Way To Bake Cookies
I am pretty fussy about cookies. I like them to have that bakery-level softness while maintaining a satisfyingly crisp exterior; I want thick, gooey cookies, ideally eaten warm with melted chocolate and sea flakes.
There are, of course, steps you can take to ensure these features. Resting cookie dough overnight helps to prevent the biscuits from spreading in the oven, which I find leaves them too thin.
And adding some inverted sugars, like golden or maple syrup, alongside granulated kinds goes a long way to keeping them sumptuously soft.
Personally, I swear by the New York Times’ recipe, though I replace about 10g of the brown sugar with maple syrup.
I’ve been making a batch on the weekend, freezing the dough, and baking one in the oven nightly for the past couple of weeks. But recently, partly because baking takes so long and partly because I hated using that much energy on a single biscuit, I switched appliances.
The results were gooier, crisper, faster, and easier to make; I haven’t gone back since.
An air fryer gave me much better results

Though I was happy with the results from my oven, I found that the air fryer left a much crisper top layer on the brownies with a truly gooey underneath. It makes them a little like a very good brownie.
When I bake them in the oven, meanwhile, they often end up getting a little caught and chewy on the ends. My oven probably heats up too slowly, which would explain the thin, lacy edges, where sugar melts into a slightly too hard layer, and the heat doesn’t blast the fat quickly enough to prevent spreading.
Not so with the air fryer, which cooks the cookie much faster (I put a frozen cookie in at 150°C for about 11 minutes, vs the oven’s 20 minutes plus preheating time).
And because air circulates in a much smaller area in my air fryer than it does in the oven, I feel it makes the craggy parts of my cookie crunchier and more golden while still maintaining a fudgy middle.
Perhaps it’s no wonder that baking legend Jane’s Patisserie likes the trick, too.
Are air fryers always a better choice?
I wouldn’t go that far. I’m in a specific situation here: I cook one or two cookies at a time, and I much prefer warm cookies to cooled ones. I also make taller cookies, and I think a thinner one could run a little too crisp quite quickly.
If you’re less interested in gooeiness and/or are cooking a lot of cookies at once, an oven will almost certainly be your best bet. I would not, for instance, use this for a bake sale.
But I probably would lob a huge scoop of cookie dough into my air fryer for something like a movie night dessert or a post-dinner cookie cake for friends (just be sure to carefully line your basket with baking paper: this is mandatory, of course, no matter what size cookie you’re making).
And I have stuck to the appliance every night since I first tried it. It’s faster, easier to clean, makes it much easier to check the doneness of your cookies, and makes mine taller, gooier, crisper, and more delicious.
-
NewsBeat7 days agoTrump and Pope Leo: Behind their disagreement over Iran war
-
Fashion3 days agoWeekend Open Thread: Theodora Dress
-
News Videos6 days agoSecure crypto trading starts with an FIU-registered
-
Sports4 days agoNWFL Suspends Two Players Over Post-Match Clash in Ado-Ekiti
-
Crypto World7 days agoSEC Proposes Certain Crypto Interfaces Don’t Need to Register as Brokers
-
Business1 day agoPowerball Result April 18, 2026: No Jackpot Winner in Powerball Draw: $75 Million Rolls Over
-
Crypto World3 days agoRussia Pushes Bill to Criminalize Unregistered Crypto Services
-
Politics3 hours agoGary Stevenson delivers timely reminder to register to vote as deadline TODAY
-
Politics3 days agoPalestine barred from entering Canada for FIFA Congress
-
Business4 days agoCreo Medical agree sale of its manufacturing operation
-
Politics2 days agoZack Polanski demands ‘council homes not luxury flats for foreign investors’
-
Entertainment7 days agoBrand New Day’ Footage Reveals the Devastating Impact of ‘Now Way Home’
-
Crypto World3 days agoRussia Introduces Bill To Criminalize Unregistered Crypto Services
-
Tech2 days agoAuto Enthusiast Scores Running Tesla Model 3 for Two Grand and Turns It Into Bare-Bones Go-Kart
-
Tech5 days ago‘Avatar: Aang, The Last Airbender’ Leaked Online. Some Fans Say Paramount Deserves the Fallout
-
Tech6 days agoMicrosoft adds Windows protections for malicious Remote Desktop files
-
Entertainment7 days agoKarol G’s ‘Ultra Raunchy’ Coachella Set Gave ‘Satanic Vibes’
-
Tech7 days agoWhat was the first ransomware attack to demand payment in Bitcoin?
-
Crypto World6 days agoX Launches New Cashtag Feature for Stocks and Crypto: X
-
Sports6 days agoYounger Than Sachin Tendulkar: Vaibhav Sooryavanshi Set To Make Historic India Debut

You must be logged in to post a comment Login