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She’s taken on some of the toughest criminal cases in Wales. Her latest challenge may be even bigger

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She successfully prosecuted child killer Mark Bridger as one of Wales’ leading barristers. Now Elwen Evans faces an altogether different type of case to resolve

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On almost any metric the university sector is changing. Declining participation rates, rising costs, and changes in policy relating to international students have hit the sector from multiple directions.

Higher education bosses have warned no institution is immune to pressures. That is being shown in participation numbers particularly in Wales. The 2025 cycle saw the second-smallest proportion of 18-year-olds applying to university from Wales.

Early indications are that this has flatlined in the current year, bucking the UK-wide trend for increased participation rates. The gap in 18-year-old participation between Wales and the rest of the UK is, sector authorities say, a very significant concern.

Hundreds of jobs have been cut at universities across Wales triggering fears about their sustainability but also the offer to students.

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Students themselves will, from September, face fees of £9,790 for undergraduate courses plus the cost of housing and expenses.

One of those tasked with solving not only her own institution’s approach to all those problems, but now as a spokesperson for all nine Welsh universities, is Elwen Evans. Formidable is probably the only appropriate word with which to introduce her.

She is regarded as one of the UK’s leading criminal barristers. During her legal career she was involved in some of the most high-profile criminal cases in Wales in recent years including prosecuting Mark Bridger, the murderer of April Jones, and defending the owner of the Gleision mine where four men died.

As King’s Counsel, a Recorder, she has been a bencher of Gray’s Inn since 2006. Between 2002 and 2015 Ms Evans was the head of Iscoed Chambers in Swansea.

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In 2015 she combined legal work with being head of the College of Law and Criminology at Swansea University. She then became the institution’s pro-vice-chancellor before becoming vice-chancellor of the University of Wales Trinity Saint David.

In 2015, when she entered the world of higher education, universities were still expanding. Few places was it more evident than in Swansea with the boom of the Bay Campus changing even the physical appearance of the city. By August last year when she took over as chair of Universities Wales, tasked with representing the interests of Wales’ nine universities, the climate was radically different.

Since taking over she has been clear that while universities should be, and are, an integral part of Welsh life the changes are, in her words, complex and urgent.

Wales will need an additional 400,000 graduates by 2035. While recent UK figures, though, show there were 619,360 applicants – a record high – and 40.7% of 18-year-olds applying for university the percentage in Wales was much lower. Here only 32.1% of 18-year-olds were making an application.

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Only the northeast of England performs worse on that measure. The mature market – classed as those aged 25 and over – also continued to decline.

In Wales the gap in higher education participation between the most and least disadvantaged is wider than elsewhere in the UK.

With those warning signs on the horizon, and given her career to date and reputation, why, I ask, did she made the decision to move away from practising law?

She admits she had “kept her hand in” when she was head of Swansea’s law school but when she became pro-vice-chancellor the workload, and perception of two high-profile jobs, meant she felt she had to stand back.

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She retains her practising certificate just in case, she says. “I still can’t quite sort of bring myself to sort of stop that identity. Because I think once you’re a lawyer, a trial lawyer, you’re always a lawyer.

“Strangely enough some elements of being a lawyer have been quite useful in the sort of new role.

“I enjoy [the new role] because you really feel you are potentially making, if it goes right, a difference that impacts on your students, your staff, your places. So that’s a real privilege to be doing that.

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“If you get it wrong then it’s quite a responsibility but one’s working with fabulous teams of people, whether it’s Universities Wales [or] whether it’s within one’s own university.

“There are some wonderful people working in the sector and it’s really great to be working with them to try and make that difference.

“In a trial you’re really only, if it goes right [or] if it goes wrong, you’re impacting on that case. In the context of universities it’s possibly a different sort of impact.

“I think it’s been clear that the sector has faced challenges for some time, and it’s become increasingly evident, but it’s a great sector to be in because at the end of the day education is absolutely at the heart of any community, any country.

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“So for me at least trying to have some role in helping to understand what those challenges are, but more significantly, what the steps forward may be that bring sustainability, that enhances social cohesion, social mobility, participation, trying to play however small that role is, I think, is a real privilege.”

She says her own journey, from west Wales to renowned barrister, is proof of what education can do to change lives.

Coming from a first-language-Welsh farming family her father, now 94, was an apprentice carpenter while her mother, 96, left grammar school at 14 to go home to help run the farm, holding a certificate in dairy farming.

She, however, got a double first at Cambridge.

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“I never plan. I have not planned my life. I’ve just tended to sort of go… I went to Cambridge, did my Bar finals in London because you had to do them then. In London there was only one place you could do them. Then did my pupillage in London and then came back to Wales,” she says.

When I ask if her motivation is to give the same chance sto the next generation of Elwen Evanses she replies with a smile: “Well I wouldn’t wish a next generation of Elwen Evans is on anyone. But for that next generation of young people so that they can have those opportunities to take decisions that sometimes are not the expected ones.

“I’ve taken a lot of decisions that are not the obvious sort of career choices and I think I’ve been able to do that because of the power of education.

“So it sounds a bit twee but, ultimately, it is the power of education, whatever type suits you, that really gives you the ability, I think, to thrive in your chosen world of operation.”

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But one of the questions facing the students of today is whether the expense is worth it – particularly in light of a changing work world along with the growth of AI and subsequent changes in job prospects in particular fields.

“The sort of levels of debt that some students are experiencing you can see that that becomes a real question mark in their heads. ‘Is this really what I want to be doing?’

“I think that’s become more acute more recently but it was clear, I think, that there were some big questions that needed to be asked and addressed.

“And it’s an entirely non-political point but if one looks for example at the current government in Wales they’ve commissioned a significant piece of work, ‘The future of tertiary education in Wales five challenges and a call for evidence’, and they’ve identified areas of participation in equality, financial sustainability, demographic change, economic delivery, competition, and collaboration as areas that need to be the subject of a call for evidence.

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Plaid Cymru has said that they would look at a review of the funding model, sustainability of the funding model not just of course for the institutions but also for the students, and how are you going to maintain the students?”

Aside from a change in the makeup of the Senedd, and the political groupings, a non-Labour-led government for the first time in devolution could well change an awful lot more after May 7.

Careful throughout our conversation to walk the pre-election tightrope of not sharing any opinion at such a volatile time she says: “My sense is that all of the parties, in whatever combinations and whatever colours, recognise the significance of education and so I think being able to work and seek to help influence and shape policy and any policy changes that may be considered appropriate from day one.”

So what, I ask, could be done to make the sector sustainable.

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“I think what we’re looking for is a structure in place and an operationalisation of what we are doing that is financially sustainable by which I would mean thrives for the future. So that you’ve got places where your students can go and have that fantastic experience that higher education gives but it’s part of a really big ecosystem of education and of course of prosperity and nation-building and all of those things that would I hope help underpin Wales’ future under whichever colour of government we get.

“We’ve been quite careful in positioning our asks in the manifesto. We’re asking for that independent review of university funding student support, an independent review of degree apprenticeships, an independent commission on participation.

“We don’t want to come to the table saying: ‘We think we’ve got the answers to this and we know what the solutions are’.

“We want to convene and be part of a convening a conversation about what the options are.

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“I think there’s a wide range of possibilities but an awful lot of that will depend on the policies of the next government in Wales.

“It’s an unbelievably complicated landscape because of that jagged edge between England and Wales because although we are devolved as education in Wales as a sector we obviously have an awful lot of cross-border involvement and engagement and of course global involvement as well.”

Does she think the worst, in terms of redundancies, has now passed for Welsh universities? “I can’t comment on individual universities because that’s very much within the patch of those individual vice-chancellors and their governing bodies and so on and the decisions that they need to be making.

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“But for me success is ensuring that we get to a place where all of us as a sector are thriving and not having to put energy and time and focus into: ‘What are we doing in this year?’. Let us look at that medium-, longer-term horizon.

“In a world where there is so much change going on, whether it’s in Wales or broadly globally, and after the pandemic we owe it to the students of today and the future to try and ensure that there is a stable, secure environment within which they can look to achieve their ambitions.

“It was education that gave me, I think, a wonderful life and a range of opportunities. It is what unlocks the door to a lot of life chances isn’t it? And I think we need to be looking at the ways we can ensure that all of the young people in Wales have that opportunity.

“I do have a thing around hierarchy. It’s not all about academic success is it? It’s not all about going to university and it’s making sure that there are opportunities for all the young to achieve their objective.” For our free daily briefing on the biggest issues facing the nation, sign up to the Wales Matters newsletter here.

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The point has been made that universities have become too focused on their approach as businesses, rather than their role in places or to their students. Is that fair?

“I understand the point but the reality is that is where policy has driven them because you can only operate if you are financially sustainable and so that has become an inevitability. I don’t think any of us find that the space where we would have chosen to be,” she says.

“It’s a real challenge at the moment and I hope I don’t sound too trite in saying this but the time of challenge also gives the opportunity to look at things differently and I think that’s a part of the landscape that having a review into these different things may help shape because you can’t assume that what we did 10 years ago is necessarily going to be the shape of the future.”

As if to demonstrate just how interwoven higher education is when we meet in central Cardiff, from the windows surrounding us, two universities and a higher education college are within our eyelines.

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Does she have faith in the future however it will look? “I absolutely have faith in the future because we have to have faith in the future and people will always be wanting to achieve their ambitions and have the opportunity to reach their dreams won’t they? Whether it will look the same way it looks now? Probably not.

“I think things will look different but in a sense that’s why we’ve got a different sort of structure in Wales, the tertiary sector.

“Universities will absolutely be at the heart of that future but it has to be at the heart and the future of our graduates but also of Wales. To be a strong, this isn’t a political point at all, but I think to be a strong country into the future we need strong universities, we need successful education, we need to drive prosperity, we need research and innovation that is going to position us where we should be.”

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Kai’s journey from homelessness to independence with Centrepoint

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Kai's journey from homelessness to independence with Centrepoint

Kai, now 29, was just 12 when his parents separated and he moved in with his father.

Around the same time, his father was diagnosed with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), leaving Kai to juggle school with increasing caring responsibilities.

From attending hospital appointments to helping with day‑to‑day care, much of the responsibility fell on him. “I grew up fast,” he recalls.

As his father’s health deteriorated, Kai became his full‑time carer. Then, months before his 18th birthday, his father died, leaving him alone and, because he was not named on the tenancy, without anywhere stable to stay. The loss forced him to handle grief, housing uncertainty and sudden independence with limited support.

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Eventually, he was offered a place in a Centrepoint Independent Living Programme home, which caps rent at a third of a resident’s earnings and provides support to help young people manage money, maintain employment and sustain a tenancy. 

He recognises how challenging the decade since has been, including the loss of his father and the transition into living independently. Throughout, he has tried to rely on what he calls a “positive mental attitude”, focusing on accepting his circumstances and finding ways to move forward rather than dwelling on setbacks.

Kai says the early period of living in his one-bedroom flat was a major adjustment as he adapted to living on his own for the first time. Centrepoint provided practical support, including food vouchers, which he says made a significant difference in his first year.

Determined to build a future, he trained in security and CCTV through youth employment programmes and later secured work in building security.

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At 26, he moved into his own home, a milestone he describes as life‑changing. Having a place of his own allowed him to focus on stability, routine and long-term plans.

Now Kai sits on Centrepoint’s lived experience advisory board, helping shape the charity’s support for homeless young people.

Reflecting on his journey, he says he has grown stronger and more resilient. “It’s not been easy, but I kept pushing forward. Pressure makes diamonds,” he says.

His story comes amid a wider housing crisis. Centrepoint’s 2024/25 Move On report shows more than 130,000 young people are on social housing waiting lists, and at the current rate it could take over six years to meet demand even if no new applications were made. 

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Bradford Teens Premiere Self-Made Film Monster on the Big Screen

Eight Bradford teenagers saw their hard work come to life this week when their self-made short film, Monster, premiered to a local audience.

The film tells the story of how one action can ripple through a community, showing how negative experiences can spread – but also how a single positive choice can change everything. 

Over several weeks, the group learned practical skills in storytelling, teamwork, and film production and handled every aspect of filming themselves, writing the script, directing, acting and editing the final cut.

At one stage, the young filmmakers met Oscar-winning winning actor Daniel Day-Lewis and his son Ronan, who offered tips on crafting stories and making films.

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The premiere also marked the completion of Bronze Duke of Edinburgh Awards for the eight participants. Three others are working towards Silver, with two more aiming to finish Bronze this year.

Matthew Sampson, Centrepoint’s Bradford operations manager, said the young people had shown creativity and determination throughout. The project was supported by Into Film, a charity that helps young people learn through film, and Pocket Projects, which guided the group through technical production skills.

“It’s exciting to see something we made on the big screen,” one participant said. “It shows that if you stick with it, you can make something real.”

For the teenagers, Monster was more than a film. The screening gave them a chance to share their story with family, friends, and the wider community- and see what they could achieve when they worked together.

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Housing Shortages Leave Young People With Fewer Options, Data Shows

Centrepoint(Image: Centrepoint)

A new report from the charity Centrepoint, funded by Nationwide Building Society, highlights growing pressure on England’s housing system, with young people facing increasingly limited options in both social and private rented accommodation. 

“The report highlights how hard it has become for many young people to find somewhere they can truly call home.” Charlotte Kensett, Director of Social Impact and Customer Experience at Nationwide said, “By working closely with Centrepoint, we want to help young people find a place where they feel safe and where they can start to rebuild their lives with confidence.”

Social homes demand remains high relative to supply, with around 130,000 households on the housing register, although the shortfall between main duty and allocations has closed. One barrier is the lack of right-sized properties: just a quarter (24%) of homes are one bedroom, despite nearly half of young applicants needing this size.

“The government are making the right noises when it comes to prevention and support for people experiencing homelessness,” Ella Nuttal, Centrepoint’s Research Manager said, “but it’s increasing the level of housebuilding, including suitable social homes, that will transform things.”

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Affordable private options are narrowing too. Alongside wider reporting of private landlords leaving the sector, the research found that the number of Houses in Multiple Occupation, often an affordable option, has fallen by 10% since 2019/20. 

Ella warns that, without more housebuilding, “Too many young people will continue facing homelessness and find themselves excluded from stable housing and the opportunity to move forward with their lives.” You can read the full report at https://centrepoint.org.uk/move 

Discrimination Leaving Young Renters Struggling for a Home

A new report from Centrepoint has found that young people across England are struggling to rent privately. Soaring rents costs have been well-documented in recent years – but the leading youth homelessness charity’s new report reveals young people felt discriminated against by landlords and letting agents when trying to access tenancies.

In a survey of young renters, one in three felt they experienced this sort of discrimination, with Employment status (37%) and ethnic or racial background (35%) reported as the main reasons.

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“Young people should be able to take safe, stable housing for granted.” says Ella Nuttall, who led the research for Centrepoint “It’s the foundation for everything else in life. Without it, the risk of repeated homelessness, poor mental health, and long-term disadvantage increases.

The report urges government and councils to expand the supply of suitable social homes and improve access to private rentals for young people.

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Derry v Monaghan: Live stream and TV information, throw-in time, betting odds and all you need to know ahead of today’s Ulster Championship clash

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Derry face Monaghan in the Ulster Senior Football Championship semi-final – here’s the kick-off time and how to watch on TV

Derry meet Monaghan this weekend in the semi-final of the Ulster Senior Football Championship.

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Derry launched their Ulster championship campaign with a winning display against Antrim. They faced pressure during certain spells of that encounter though, and must raise their standards as they confront a Monaghan outfit that represent a significantly higher calibre.

Here’s what you need to know about the game:

Where is the game being played?

Celtic Park, Derry, reports the Irish Mirror.

What time is throw-in?

The game is set to begin at 5pm on Saturday, May 2.

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Can I watch the game on TV?

Yes – the match will be shown live on BBC Two NI, with streaming available via BBC iPlayer and BBC Sport online.

GAA+ is also streaming the game.

Betting odds

Derry – 1/3

Draw – 10/1

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Monaghan – 10/3

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Sinn Fein accused of ‘spoofing’ over delivery of A5 road

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Belfast Live

DUP leader Gavin Robinson accused Sinn Fein of being contradictory

Sinn Fein has been accused of “spoofing” over the delivery of the new A5 road. The scheme to turn the road which links Londonderry with Aughnacloy in Co Tyrone has been held up by legal challenges and uncertainty over funding. There has been a strong campaign for the new road, with the current road having seen more than 50 deaths since 2006. Sinn Fein president Mary-Lou McDonald referenced the A5 road in her speech to the party’s annual Ard Fheis last week, saying it will save lives, and that stopping this road is not acceptable. DUP leader Gavin Robinson accused Sinn Fein, which holds the Stormont Infrastructure portfolio that has responsibility for roads, of being contradictory. In his weekly letter to DUP party members, Mr Robinson claimed Sinn Fein is holding the road back.

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“Sinn Fein championed that road for years. It was their flagship. Now, bound to their own net zero targets so rigid they cannot flex even where lives are at stake, they are the ones holding it back,” he said.

READ MORE: Man charged with attempted murder over car bomb attack outside Dunmurry police stationREAD MORE: Stormont leaders slam ‘deliberate’ Mournes wildfires as lives put at risk

Referencing a quote by Sinn Fein vice president Michelle O’Neill accusing the DUP of “spoofing” over claims Sinn Fein was not supporting the PSNI as fully as it should last week, Mr Robinson said her party is “spoofing” over the A5. “Those who have campaigned for that road – some for decades – do not need anyone to explain the irony of Michelle O’Neill accusing others of spoofing,” he said.

“They see Sinn Fein spoofing every single time they say they want this road delivered.” Mr Robinson also accused Sinn Fein of “renewing noise” around a border poll in a “familiar and tired pattern”. He said powersharing “remains the only show in town”. “Powersharing was never meant to be easy. It asks people with fundamentally different visions for this place to sit across from one another, to negotiate, to compromise, and to govern – day after day, even when trust is thin and patience thinner,” he said. “That is the design. For all its frustrations, it remains the only show in town. “But it only works if the relationships within it are taken seriously. Delivering the A5. Cutting waiting lists. Fixing roads. None of that happens without honesty, maturity, and a willingness to prioritise the people being governed over the politics or populist crusade of the moment.

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“The budgets are tight. Waiting lists are long. Families are stretched. A border poll would not change any of that. It would not fix a pothole or call a patient off a waiting list. It is not an answer. It is a distraction. “Powersharing is not perfect. But it is where decisions are made, where progress happens, and where people’s lives are improved. Not in threats. Not in divisive border polls. In the hard work of governing.”

Sinn Fein has been approached for a response.

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Man Utd told 15-year-old ‘crazy talent’ can play for them next season | Football

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Man Utd told 15-year-old 'crazy talent' can play for them next season | Football
United have another remarkable young talent on their hands (Picture: Getty)

Wes Brown believes there is a good chance Manchester United sensation JJ Gabriel is involved in the first-team next season.

Gabriel only turned 15 in October but has made a huge impression at Under-18 level this season and is regarded as one of the most exciting prospects in world football.

The teenager has scored 25 times in 27 appearances across the Under-18 Premier League and FA Youth Cup this term, frequently training with the first-team with growing expectation he will be ready for what would be a record-breaking debut sooner rather than later.

Max Dowman made his competitive debut for Arsenal aged 15 in August with Gabriel eligible to play in the Premier League from next season.

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United have already had to fight tooth and nail to keep the versatile forward in Manchester with Barcelona among the host of clubs across Europe eager to lure him away.

Brown, an academy graduate himself who went onto win five Premier League titles, two FA Cups and two Champions Leagues with United, is among those who have watched Gabriel’s rise with increasing excitement.

The former defender has no doubts over Gabriel’s talent, suggesting the only dilemma facing United is at what point in the season they choose to bring him in next term.

Derby County U18 v Manchester United U18: U18 Premier League
Gabriel has made remarkable progress with the Under-18s (Picture: Getty)

Pointing to the impact Lamine Yamal had at Barcelona after making his debut just shy of his 16th birthday, Brown believes it will happen sooner rather than later for Gabriel.

‘The talent is there. Crazy talent,’ Brown told Metro via BetMGM.

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‘It is about timing with JJ Gabriel. For United, it is about getting him in in at the right time where he can do well where he will be appreciated.

Just how good is JJ Gabriel?

Gabriel is considered to be the most exceptional young talent to progress through United’s youth ranks in recent years and across the game at youth level, is regarded as the best player in the country born in 2010.

In addition to those Neymar comparisons, his ability to effortlessly take the ball on the turn has seen him likened to Phil Foden, who progressed through the youth academy over the way at Manchester City.

Football is littered with stories of unique talents failing to make the step up to men’s football. Angel Gomes, who currently holds the record of United’s youngest player in history, has carved out a fine career for himself in France having also been recognised at international level, but made just 10 more appearances for United after his debut. United’s next youngest debutant Shola Shoretire is currently playing for Dutch club Zwolle, on loan from Greek outfit PAOK.

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The situation with Gabriel feels different though and United’s biggest problem will appear to be keeping holding of him. Barcelona’s interest is well-documented and the teenager holds an Irish passport through his dad, former Republic of Ireland intranational Joe O’Cearuill, meaning any move abroad would be free of any Brexit red tape.

United will be counting the days until he is eligible to sign his first professional contract at 17.

Tony Mogan, live sports editor

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‘The best example is with what Barcelona have done with Lamine Yamal. The talent was there, we know that now.

‘If you bring him in too early and it doesn’t work out the door can shut a little bit. Everyone knows how talented you are but the opportunities can become less.

‘What I will say, watching Gabriel is, he is fearless, he is always trying to make something happen. The way he glides past players is unbelievable.

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‘Next season he will definitely be in the conversation but it will be about timing. Not to put him under pressure and telling him “we need you” because you don’t need that at that sort of age.

‘He just needs to enjoy his football and when his opportunities comes, enjoy it. But it will happen for him.’

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Florida traffic stop turns weird as police discover 13 live zip-tied iguanas hidden in truck

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Florida traffic stop turns weird as police discover 13 live zip-tied iguanas hidden in truck

Thirteen live, zip-tied iguanas were found in the back of a man’s truck during a traffic stop in central Florida, according to reports.

The reptiles were discovered after Florida Highway Patrol troopers pulled over 32-year-old Rendon Casildo-Acdiel in Winter Haven, Florida, early Thursday morning, according to FOX 13 News. Winter Haven is located about 50 miles east of Tampa.

Casildo-Acdiel was stopped because he didn’t have a light for the license plate on his trailer, the state highway patrol told FOX 13. But after searching his truck and trailer, troopers said they found 13 live iguanas, along with five containers of iced tilapia.

Pictures from the scene show a haphazard pile of iguanas with their feet zip-tied in the back of a truck. The iguanas were reportedly taken to a local shelter afterward.

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More than a dozen live iguanas were discovered in the back of a man's truck during a traffic stop in Florida, reports said
More than a dozen live iguanas were discovered in the back of a man’s truck during a traffic stop in Florida, reports said (AFP via Getty Images)

Casildo-Acdiel was arrested and now faces a charge of driving with a suspended license, according to FOX 13. It remains unclear if he’ll be charged in connection with the reptiles.

Casildo-Acdiel told troopers he was visiting Florida to get coconuts from Miami and fish from Polk County before heading back to North Carolina, according to Fox 13.

It’s unclear if Casildo-Acdiel has obtained an attorney. The Independent was unable to identify his attorney for comment.

Iguanas aren’t native to the state and are considered an invasive species, according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. It’s illegal to introduce nonnative species into Florida.

The 13 zip-tied iguanas were reportedly taken to a local shelter after the traffic stop
The 13 zip-tied iguanas were reportedly taken to a local shelter after the traffic stop (Florida Highway Patrol)

Iguanas are often spotted falling from trees during cold spells in the Florida because low temperatures can temporarily paralyze them.

The reptiles can also bite both people and pets. Their bite wounds often require stitches, and bacteria found in iguanas’ mouths can sometimes cause severe infections, according to Critter Control.

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A permit is required to “possess live captured green iguanas for eradication and control purposes,” the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission’s website states. Those who want to keep iguanas as pets are also required to obtain a permit through the state.

The Independent has contacted the Florida Highway Patrol and Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission for comment.

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North East screen sector leaders benefit from new programme

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North East screen sector leaders benefit from new programme

Into the Lead, delivered by Screen Alliance North, supported 17 leaders from small and medium-sized enterprises in the North’s scripted screen sector.

Participants gained new skills and connections in areas such as developing original IP, exploring innovative formats, and securing funding.

Penny Hall, partnerships lead at Screen Alliance North, said: “Into the Lead has been a gamechanger for the scripted screen indies in the North, empowering leaders to dream bigger and act bolder and encouraging them to build a more sustainable future, one that embraces innovation and puts people, and the environment first.

Richelle Schuster delivering an Into the Lead session (Image: Andy Matheson Photography)

“Collaboration is no longer just a buzzword – it’s the driving force behind our brightest creative breakthroughs.”

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The group also built a lasting peer network, which they described as “a powerhouse of advice, opportunity and unwavering support”.

One participant said: “This programme has arrived at exactly the right time, offering me space to reflect, not just on projects but on how to lead people and ideas in a shifting industry.”

Another added: “I can already see how the peer network created through this training will be an important source of support, insight and collaboration going forward.”

Delivered by Under The Moon Ltd and Creaticity Ltd, the programme ran from January to March this year and was funded by Screen Alliance North, a BFI Skills Cluster, supported by the BFI awarding National Lottery funding.

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The training included an in-person networking event and six learning modules featuring presentations, industry speakers, and collaborative challenges.

It focused on upskilling business leaders in good working practice, sustainability and inclusivity and helping them respond to shifting commissioning models, longer development cycles and growing pressure to diversify income.

Ruth Pitt, programme director, said: “Strong companies need strong leaders. Programmes like this are the lifeblood of creative business – powering survival, adaptation and dynamic growth.”

Sessions were delivered in partnership with BAFTA Albert and the BFI’s Workwise for Screen Programme.

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Glasgow’s bill for BnBs triples as council plead for support over growing refugee crisis

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Daily Record

The amount spent last year by Glasgow on hotels and bed and breakfast for the homeless was the highest ever.

Glasgow City Council spent a record sum of almost £70 million last year providing hotel and bed and breakfast accommodation to homeless people, mainly refugees.

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Shock new figures released under Freedom of Information (FOI) show spending has more than tripled in the last four years. In the last financial year, 2025/26, the hotel and B&B bill was £67,815,500, compared to 45,292,346 in 2024/25, £26,724,422 in 2023/2 and £20,368,474 in 2023/23.

The same Glasgow City Council figures also show that 2773 homeless people are currently in hotel and bed and breakfast accommodation, of which 2030 are refugees.

The increase in spending has been blamed on a surge in migrants being given leave to remain after applying for asylum in the UK, after the Conservatives failed to process applications when they were in power.

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Refugees have a legal right to be housed in Scotland that does not exist in England.

The FOI figures also show that 109 families with children are currently living in hotels and B&B and 2990 homeless people were refused temporary accommodation of any type last year.

The information was obtained by the Scottish Tenants Organisation (STO) who are calling instead for the money to be used to build modular prefabricated homes and more council housing.

The STO claim last year’s £67.8 million could instead build 1500 of the prefabs at £45,000 a time.

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Campaign co-ordinator Sean Clerkin said:”These latest homeless statistics reveal that we are in the middle of a housing and homeless catastrophe in Glasgow where the profiteers of homeless misery got nearly £70 million from Glasgow City Council in 205/26.

“The number of refugees with the right to remain is still very high and Glasgow cannot cope with this without help.

“The only beneficiaries of this scandal are the owners of the hotels used to house the homeless.”

The STO are also calling for a summit involving the Home Office and the Scottish Government to come up with a proper plan for the homeless and to treat Glasgow as a special case.

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Shelter Scotland Director, Alison Watson added;”It is the lack of social housing driving up homelessness costs as it forces councils to keep relying on expensive temporary accommodation.

“Building more would save money and prevent cuts to local services. Unless more social homes are built, the housing emergency will only get worse and local authorities cannot tackle it alone.

“The next government must provide more support to the areas that need it most.

“Everyone deserves a home, whether they are fleeing violence abroad or from a partner. Yet people in Glasgow have been failed for many years.”

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One 55 year old woman, who asked not to be named, said she had lived in 15 different hotels and B&B in Glasgow in the last 14 months, after being made homeless last year.

The woman, who has a degree in Design and has worked as a college lecturer, says the standards of accommodation is poor and has been exposed to drugs, violence and other criminality.

She said:”I have asthma and the living conditions have made that worse.

“I have been offered crack cocaine and some of the women residents are targeted by kerb crawlers and men looking for sex.

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“It can be quite a terrifying experience being in these places.”

As well as hotels and B&B homeless people can also be placed in furnished flats and shelters.

A Glasgow City Council spokeswoman said: “We are very aware of the rising cost of our hotel accommodation bill which has tripled over the past few years.

“A proportion of emergency accommodation costs are recouped via housing benefit and dialogue with Scottish Government remains ongoing in seeking possible longer-term solutions.

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“Routine efforts are made to share the burden across Scotland however due to demand, we have been required to expand the use of bed and breakfast accommodation to meet our statutory duties.

“Anyone who finds themselves unintentionally homeless has the right to apply for help from any local authority in Scotland.

“Glasgow’s historic reputation for helping support refugees makes us an attractive city and why many are travelling here to build a new life.”

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Blackpool Preston Davy murder trial hears of text messages

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Blackpool Preston Davy murder trial hears of text messages

Jamie Varley, 37, a minute later sent a second text to his boyfriend, John McGowan-Fazakerley, 32, saying: “Jokes. Just give me a call when done.”

The defendants had adopted 13-month-old Preston Davey at their home in Blackpool in April 2023, Preston Crown Court heard.

Varley, from Grimsargh, is accused of the murder of the child and McGowan-Fazakerley of allowing the death of the child, with both accused of sexual abuse, the trial, now in its second week, has heard.

The text messages were sent on July 10, just four days after Preston had been admitted to Blackpool Victoria Hospital for a third time, after earlier visits in May and June.

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Preston Davey (Image: Lancashire Police)

On the morning of July 6 2023, Varley took Preston to hospital with an injury to his elbow.

He told hospital staff he was lowering the baby into his cot the night before when the child jumped or kicked his feet and he heard a pop or click in his left elbow.

An X-ray confirmed a small fracture and his arm was put in a cast.

Later the child’s social worker, Amy Shepherdson, who had been in contact with the hospital, texted Varley to say: “Just to reassure you they said they had absolutely no concerns.

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“U absolutely did the right thing.”

Ms Shepherdson visited their home later that day, noting that Preston looked pale and was not himself, adding: “He tried to smile several times but then this changed to a very sad face and a little cry.”

Jurors were also shown a text exchange between Varley and his friend, Tanya Tingle, telling her: “We did it we think…not on purpose but caught him when falling.”

A day later the family had a home visit from Helen Magee, an independent reviewer from Oldham social services.

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In her report of the visit, apparently addressed to the baby, she wrote: “You were happy there with both your daddies. And this made me ponder a little as to whether there was a problem that I couldn’t see. I decided there wasn’t an issue…”

Dr Alberto Elbo, an orthopaedic surgeon, treated Preston at the fracture clinic the following week, when Varley brought him in.

Jurors were shown notes from the meeting he had dictated which said he was told the injury to the arm was from Preston being placed and strapped in a car seat and nothing to do with a cot.

Peter Wright KC, prosecuting, asked Dr Elbo about this explanation involving a car seat.

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Dr Elbo said: “That’s what dad told me. What I understood from that day was he was being strapped in his car seat. That’s all I had in my mind when I dictated that letter.”

Nick Johnson KC, defending Varley suggested to the witness he had been told the injury came about due to a “cot” not a “car”.

“I don’t think so,” Dr Elbo replied.

Preston was born on June 16 2022, immediately taken into care by Oldham Council, and placed with foster parents at five days old.

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After undergoing an assessment and familiarisation process in early 2023 he was adopted and began living with the defendants on April 1 at their home.

Varley took a year off work as head of year and as a design and technology teacher at a local high school, South Shore Academy, to look after the child, but struggled as a new parent with a baby who frequently woke during the night and with his partner working long hours, the court heard.

During the four months the baby was under their adoption he was allegedly routinely ill-treated, had indecent images and videos taken of him, was sexually abused and physically assaulted.

On July 27 2023 Preston was again brought in to the hospital by the defendants, unconscious and in a state of cardiac arrest, and medics could not revive him.

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Varley told police the child accidentally drowned in a bath, but this was inconsistent with the post-mortem examination which discovered the child had suffered 40 traumatic injuries, the court heard.

Varley denies murder, manslaughter, two counts of assault by penetration, five counts of cruelty to a child, grievous bodily harm, sexual assault of a child, 13 counts of taking indecent photos or videos of a child, one of distributing an indecent photo of a child, to his co-accused, and one of making an indecent photo.

McGowan-Fazakerley denies allowing the death of a child, three counts of child cruelty and one count of the sexual assault of a child.

The trial was adjourned until Tuesday next week.

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Former 19th-century chapel could become health centre under new plans

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A cafe and treatment rooms are amongst the features set out in the proposal

A former chapel which dates back to 1803 could become a health and wellness facility under new plans. The Crescent Wellness Club has submitted an application to convert a Grade II Listed building, formerly Wesleyan Chapel and The Masonic Hall, on The Crescent in Wisbech into a health and wellness centre and cafe.

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The applicant said it is is seeking to restore a historic building to its “full potential as a vibrant community hub focused on wellbeing, connection, and shared use.”

The developer added: “The Crescent Wellness Club (applicant’s business name) is a wellbeing and community-focused space in Wisbech, bringing a historic building back into active use while preserving its character. The space will provide a welcoming and inclusive environment supporting physical, mental, and emotional wellbeing, alongside community and creative use.”

The application also wants to use the health facility as a community space. The centre would host mental health and wellbeing workshops, therapy and group support sessions, seasonal and community events and creative activities. Occasional event days are proposed to “bring people together”, with part of the profits proposed to be reinvested into local community projects.

If approved, the basement would be used for yoga, Pilates, reformer Pilates, and sound healing meanwhile the ground floor would feature a reception, a cafe offering locally sourced food and therapy and treatment rooms. On the first floor, dance and fitness classes, creative workshops and group wellbeing and therapy sessions are proposed.

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If successful, the building would be open between 7am and 9pm on weekdays and from 8am to 6pm on weekends. The cafe would operate between 9am and 5pm and the therapy rooms would remain open between 9am and 5pm.

A heritage statement for the proposals states that the development seeks to “structurally strengthen elements, remove modern un-sympathetic alterations, erect new elements to increase the building footprint and in-turn its usability and reinstate original features”.

The proposals will be considered by Fenland District Council.

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Inoue vs Nakatani: Date, fight time, undercard, prediction, ring walks and latest odds

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Inoue vs Nakatani: Date, fight time, undercard, prediction, ring walks and latest odds

Pound-for-pound great Inoue makes the seventh defence of his undisputed super-bantamweight world titles against his domestic rival in arguably the biggest bout in the history of Japanese boxing.

It is a massive showdown that has been a long time in the making as two highly-decorated and undefeated, 32-0 fighters finally go head to head after no shortage of build-up in recent years.

‘The Monster’ Inoue, the fearsome knockout artist, is looking to further cement his legendary legacy after twice becoming undisputed and winning world titles across four different weight divisions, though he could face the sternest test of his illustrious career so far against a three-weight world champion in Nakatani, who most recently reigned as the unified bantamweight champion.

After picking up titles at flyweight and super-flyweight, Inoue went on to become undisputed at both bantamweight and super-bantamweight, completing the latter set of belts with wins over Stephen Fulton and Marlon Tapales before successfully dispatching all of Luis Nery, TJ Doheny, Ye Joon Kim, Ramon Cardenas and Murodjon Akhmadaliev.

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He last fought in Riyadh in December, when he outclassed Mexico’s Alan David Picasso to win on points after Nakatani had earlier defeated Sebastian Hernandez by unanimous decision in a tricky test on the same bill on what was his debut up at super-bantamweight.

Like Inoue, southpaw ‘Big Bang’ Nakatani also won world titles at flyweight and super-flyweight before becoming a unified champion at bantamweight and then vacating his belts to make another step up in preparation to meet Inoue.

Inoue vs Nakatani fight date and venue

Inoue vs Nakatani takes place on Saturday May 2, 2026 at the sold-out, 55,000-capacity Tokyo Dome in Japan.

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Inoue vs Nakatani fight time and ring walks

Inoue and Nakatani are expected to be in the ring for Saturday’s main event at approximately 1pm BST, which is 9pm local time. That is 8am ET and 5am PT in the United States.

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