The players’ campaign, which began in late 2025, is being spearheaded by former WTA chairman and chief executive Larry Scott.
The American will be in Paris on Friday for a meeting with French Open tournament director Amelie Mauresmo and FFT president Gilles Moretton.
Meetings are also planned with representatives of the All England Club (AELTC) and the US Tennis Association later in the fortnight.
The players’ action is designed to put pressure on the AELTC, with prize money for Wimbledon not due to be announced for another three weeks.
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Last year, the Wimbledon prize fund rose by 7% to £53.5m – double the amount on offer a decade earlier.
Players look enviously, however, at the revenues generated by the Grand Slams and feel entitled to a larger slice of the cake.
The AELTC’s financial statement for the year to July 2025 showed revenue of £427m and profit after tax of £39.7m.
Players have asked the Slams to pay 22% of their revenue in prize money by 2030.
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They are also asking that tens of millions of dollars are paid towards pension, healthcare and maternity benefits, and that they are consulted more widely on scheduling and other key decisions.
At this month’s Italian Open, world number one Aryna Sabalenka said she believes players will “at some point” boycott one of the majors.
World number three Iga Swiatek felt that would be a “bit extreme”, but defending French Open champion Coco Gauff said she would support strike action “if everyone were to move as one and collaborate”.
Men’s world number one Jannik Sinner also claimed players are not getting the respect they deserve when it comes to prize money at the majors.
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An FFT statement on Wednesday read: “We regret the players’ decision, which impacts all of the tournament’s stakeholders: the media, broadcasters, the FFT and the entire tennis community, all of whom follow each edition of Roland Garros with great enthusiasm.
“The French Tennis Federation recognises the importance of the players’ contribution to the tournament’s success, and wishes to maintain close ties with them.”
The French Open takes place from 24 May to 7 June.
James Chapman (Butchers) Ltd achieved recognition in the Ribeye Steak category.
James Chapman (Butchers) Ltd have struck gold with their standout products for Summer 2026.
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The Wishaw-based butcher enjoyed success at the recent Scottish Craft Butcher Awards, achieving recognition in the Ribeye Steak category.
The competition was judged at Forth Valley College, Stirling, earlier last month.
Following a rigorous judging process, the team secured a gold award for their Ribeye Steak, highlighting the quality, craftsmanship, and innovation behind their offering.
The awards were presented at a regional meeting held in Garfield House Hotel, Stepps, organised by Scottish Craft Butchers.
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Scottish Craft Butchers Executive Manager Gordon King praised the standard of entries this year.
He said: “The Speciality Burger competition attracted a wide variety of innovative and imaginative products, with craft butchers from all over Scotland thinking outside the box to deliver exciting new flavours and concepts for their customers.
“The Best Ribeye Steak category demonstrated all the traditional skills of maturation and craft butchery for which our members are justifiably recognised all around the world.”
Colin Hewitson, of C&K Hewitson, sponsors of the Speciality Burger category, continued: “This prestigious Scottish Craft Butchers competition has attracted tasty and exciting entries from across the whole of Scotland.
“We are proud to be associated with such a high standard of competition and innovation and congratulate those achieving awards.”
Jason Ward, General Manager of John Scott Meat, sponsors of the Ribeye Steak category, added: “A personal favourite, the classic ribeye steak is up there with the finest cuts of beef available.
“We’re proud to sponsor the Best Ribeye Steak Competition and congratulate all the Scottish butchers who showcased their exceptional produce.
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“It’s a true testament to the outstanding quality available at your local butcher, where quality, provenance, and traceability come as standard.”
This latest success reinforces James Chapman (butchers) Ltd’s reputation for excellence and commitment to delivering premium products to the local community.
About 40% of Brits hadn’t finished a book in the 12 months between 2024-2025, YouGov reported.
Of those who had, 30% listened to an audiobook; 18% had ticked titles off their list through headphones, without ever picking up a physical book.
Some people think that shouldn’t “count,” though. For instance, author Nathan Bransford said in his blog, “Consuming an audiobook is a fundamentally different activity than reading. We already have a word for it: LISTENING”.
He also argued that reading from a page engages the brain differently. But not everyone agrees.
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What does science say?
In 2016, Dr Beth Rogowsky, a professor specialising in language learning styles from Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania, co-authored a study comparing comprehension rates for people listening to audiobooks to those who read from an e-reader page and another group who did both.
It tracked how much they remembered right after taking in the information and two weeks later.
Speaking to NPR, Dr Rogowsky said, “We found that there was no significant difference between reading a book using a Kindle or listening to a book or doing both – listening and reading simultaneously.”
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Of course, that was only for adults who already knew how to read; the professor said physical books might be more helpful to children who can’t yet read.
But, to be fair, the “do audiobooks count?” debate does not rage among three-year-olds so much as it does those with Goodreads accounts and access to Reddit.
OK, but what about the word “reading”?
Fine, you might take in information from listening to an audiobook. But that isn’t the definition of the word reading – is it?
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Well, major dictionaries don’t seem to agree about that.
Merriam-Webster defines “to read” as “to receive or take in the sense of (letters, symbols, etc.) especially [but not exclusively!] by sight or touch”.
Another definition – “to learn from what one has seen or found in writing or printing” – does not technically preclude listening.
Cambridge Dictionary, however, puts the first definition as “to look at words or symbols and understand what they mean,” and Collins Dictionary puts “look” in their main definition too.
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TBH – who cares?
A very compelling article, written by visually impaired author James Tate Hill for Literary Hub, reads: “It was hard to say if the words read with my ears reached my brain differently from everything I had read with my eyes”.
For instance, he said, the narration of audiobooks placed a new layer on top of the experience – but it took “minutes” for the author’s words to override the narrator’s voice.
He identified as a “reader” thanks to his love of audiobooks, and added it “didn’t matter if I was reading or listening” to his favourite titles; “the words in my ears were the same words other people saw when they held a book in their hands.”
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I have to agree. The strongest argument I can find against calling listening to audiobooks “reading” is a (disputed) semantic nuance, but I don’t find that compelling enough to stop someone calling themselves a reader if they want to (side note: self-identifying as a reader is linked to increased happiness).
It’s true that you can’t fold laundry while you’re rifling through War and Peace, and accents and pace changes are more in your control when you read from a page.
Helen Green was jailed for seven months after pleading guilty to dishonestly failing to notify the Department for Work and Pensions of a change in circumstances, having claimed £25,244 in PIP benefits
A woman who pocketed £25,000 in benefits after claiming she was housebound has been brought to justice after photographs surfaced showing her completing a demanding 10k race and kicking an opponent during her combat session.
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Helen Green successfully defrauded the Department for Work and Pensions out of the substantial amount after claiming Personal Independence Payment, a tax-free welfare benefit for individuals requiring assistance with additional costs arising from a long-term physical or mental health condition or disability.
However, the fraudster, who claimed to suffer from severe rheumatoid arthritis, was exposed after video material emerged of her exercising at the gym and images of the 49-year-old participating in the race were submitted to investigators. She had informed the DWP she could scarcely feed herself, let alone venture outdoors and was unable to walk for more than five minutes without crutches.
Yet, photographs from a 10k race revealed her competently covering the distance without any crutches. Ms Green was also captured on security cameras at the gym participating in Zumba, Body Combat, Body Pump, Core Blast and Spin classes after the DWP was alerted to her deception through a tip-off to their fraud line.
She has appeared at Shrewsbury Crown Court and was accused of falsely claiming £42,013 but her guilty plea related to an amended charge of £25,244. She was sentenced to seven months’ imprisonment after pleading guilty to dishonestly failing to notify DWP of a change in circumstances. Green dishonestly informed the DWP she required help with washing, bathing, dressing, preparing meals, eating and drinking in her claim between January 2020 and March 2023, reports the Mirror.
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She even declared in her PIP paperwork her condition was permanent and anticipated to deteriorate over time. However, Green was caught out following a tip-off and an investigation was promptly initiated. Video evidence released by the DWP revealed a montage of Green exercising at the gym, as well as her smiling and gesturing during a combat class where she was seen kicking another participant.
Labour’s Minister for Transformation, Andrew Western said: “This is a slap in the face to taxpayers and the genuine claimants who depend on PIP to live their lives.
“Helen Green wasn’t just burning calories at the gym, she was also peddling lies and our investigators caught up with her.
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“Let this be a warning – you can’t outrun the DWP.” Mandy Tobias of the Crown Prosecution Service added: “Helen Green pretended she had limited movement, but instead was a regular runner and active in gym classes.
“She did this for her own greed and lined her pockets with fraudulently obtained money.
“The Crown Prosecution Service presented strong evidence thanks to the investigation work of the DWP showing Green’s deception, resulting in her guilty plea.”
Stephen Guard explains why it is so “important” for him to attend Iraq15 organised by the Royal British Legion to honour those who served during the conflict.
A former soldier says he will be attending the Royal British Legion’s Iraq15 event on Friday to honour his fallen colleague who died after bravely stepping forward to volunteer.
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Former Fusilier Stephen Guard, 44, from Rugby ,told The Mirror: “It could have been me. I was right next to him in that line. We were all standing there when they asked for two volunteers.
“The two new guys, they went. They were young and keen and stepped forward. One came back and one didn’t. It always seemed to be the people who volunteered or who stayed a bit longer.”
His friend who stepped forward was Fusilier Stephen Robert Manning, 22, from Erith in Kent, who was killed alongside Fusilier Donal Anthony Meade, from south east London, aged 20.
They died in Iraq on September 5th 2005, after a roadside bomb detonated while they were out on patrol in the Basrah province. They were both acting as ‘top cover sentries’ in the first of two vehicles when they were struck by the improvised explosive device, a terror for every soldier sent out on patrol in Iraq.
“They were in my platoon. They asked for volunteers and the two new guys volunteered and I thought I’m not going to volunteer because I think I’ve been there a bit longer and we’re going to be going next year anyway,” Stephen told The Mirror.
“If I had stepped forward that could have been me. That’s why it’s important I go on Friday. That’s why I’m going to honour them. I could have been the one that didn’t come home. It was a lottery and there was quite a high chance you wouldn’t come back.”
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Now a window fitter and reservist Stephen will be attending the Royal British Legion event to mark the 15th anniversary of the Iraq War with a service at the National Memorial Arboretum.
The RBL will lead commemorations marking 15 years since the end of Operation TELIC, paying tribute to all who served, their families, and the bereaved. There 1500 veterans and their families are expected to attend.
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It will be a poignant day and even more so for Stephen, who will lay a wreath at the service, when he finds the names of his fallen comrades etched on the Armed Forces memorial wall.
Tragically they were among the 179 British Armed Forces personnel who lost their lives in the conflict and more than 6,000 who were injured.
Stephen was 24 years old when he went to Iraq in 2006, a year after his pal’s death. He survived but his platoon suffered devastating losses.
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“I left. I knew I had been lucky during my time out there and I didn’t want to push my luck further. But my other mates stayed on and went to Afghan and a lot of them didn’t come back.
“I did feel guilty. I felt like I’d let them down. In 2009, about 11 died from my battalion, it was a bad year. You feel guilty that you’ve left and you should be helping them. I was gutted hearing the names of people I was close to.”
It was not only overseas they suffered losses, as his platoon were struck by the tragedy that shocked the nation, the murder of Lee Rigby, who was killed in 2013 on the streets of London.
“He was a bit younger than me so I didn’t know him well but I knew the name. He was in my battalion. I was leaving and he was just getting in.
“I just remember looking for him one day when he was supposed to be on guard and he wasn’t. I think he was at home, I just remember the name, and saying ‘where is he? He’s supposed to be on guard today.’
“Then five years later I heard his name again all over the news when he got killed. It made my blood boil to hear it was happening on our own streets.”
Stephen knows only too well how lucky he is to escape with his life, having had “three or four” near misses including just after he arrived in Iraq.
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“I’d been out in Jordan on an exercise for a few months and I think the army was stretched so half of us went to Iraq and half to Afghanistan. At that time they were both as bad as one another.”
He recalls:“We’d gone to the main place called the ‘A-pod’ in Basra Iraq but then we all separated and went to smaller bases, flying in at night.
“We were just following the moonlight on the river and it was swaying left and right. It felt like it was a scene from the Predator with red lights in the helicopter, when special forces are hunting for missing people.
“All the alarms were going off, something had locked onto our helicopter. So we started deploying these flares, and we were all looking at each other as if we were kind of excited but scared at the same time.”
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Stephen and his 15 colleagues survived the landing and ended up in a British camp based around a hotel complex. They were targeted by mortars at first light and then last light.
“It seemed to be a pattern. At first we just got on the floor and hoped for the best but then they ordered a load of big blocks and we put them around our bed. We’d make a sort of brick wall underneath our bed and crawl through a little gap. The mortar blast kind of goes up in a fountain shape. As long as it doesn’t land on top of you, you should be alright.
“One morning when the mortars were very close, you could hear the detonations go off about a mile away and then the explosions land closer and closer. You’d sometimes hear ten in a row and then wait for them to arrive.
“One hit our tent entrance, 30 metres from where we were sleeping. A few guys got lacerations and blown up, it wasn’t a good day. We’d all hidden under our little coffin type beds whilst it was going off and the siren was blaring. We then heard the sergeant shouting ‘medic’ so you know someone had been hurt. “
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Two guys had been struck, including one casualty from another regiment who ‘didn’t look great’. Stephen said: “I had three or four close calls like that, things blowing up near me. It kind of made me get my faith back.
Stephen has been married now for nearly 10 years, with two boys, one’s 16 doing GCSEs and the other is eight. “It might never have happened with one step forward or I could have stepped in the wrong spot, it could have been me that never came home. This is why it is important for me to be there on Friday, to remember those who didn’t.”
“What my team will do with the focused leadership of Jenny Gilruth as Deputy First Minister, Ivan McKee as the Cabinet Secretary for Public Sector Reform, working right across Government to make sure that we are reforming the public sector, we will be taking the steps, and it should be seen as a very clear signal from the announcements that I have made today of a Government that’s focusing on ensuring fiscal sustainability and meeting the needs of the public.”
In a 2026 study I conducted with colleagues on people with peripheral arterial disease, one participant described how leg pain had disrupted his golf for years. It forced him to stop mid-round, shake his leg and apologise to his playing partners while he waited for the pain to pass. He found it mortifying. Then he tried a small electrical device that delivered gentle pulses through pads stuck to his skin. He still had pain. But he could get round the course.
When we measured his walking on a treadmill, we found no improvement. He had not noticed. That was not the outcome that mattered to him. Before the study ended, he had already gone out and ordered his own device.
A different participant reached the opposite conclusion. The pain was still there when he used the device, he said. It had not done him any good. And he was right, in a narrow sense. The device had not eliminated his pain. What it had done was reduce its intensity and delay its onset, allowing him to walk measurably further. His expectation of complete relief meant that genuine, partial relief felt like failure. He concluded the treatment did not work.
The study did not tell a simple story of success or failure. For some participants, standard treadmill measures did not capture what had changed in daily life. For others, measurable improvements still failed to feel meaningful because they fell short of what the person had hoped for. The difference was not only the treatment, or the severity of their condition. It was what each person had been led to expect.
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Recognising relief
Both men were living with peripheral arterial disease, a condition caused by a build-up of fatty deposits inside the arteries that supply the legs. It affects an estimated 236 million people worldwide. Its hallmark symptom is a cramping pain in the calf during walking that eases with rest. Over time, it can shrink a person’s world, limiting independence and increasing the risk of serious cardiovascular problems.
The recommended first-line treatment is supervised exercise therapy: structured exercise sessions led by trained professionals. But in many countries, access to supervised exercise therapy remains patchy and under-resourced. That gap is fertile territory for the wellness market.
Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation, or Tens, delivers small electrical impulses through electrode pads on the skin to interfere with pain signals travelling to the brain. There is evidence that it can help with some kinds of pain, and it is used in hospital pain management settings. It is not a wellness product. In our study, we explored what happened when people with peripheral arterial disease used TENS independently at home, outside the controlled conditions of a clinical trial.
The findings point to something standard clinical tests rarely capture. Expectation can shape whether useful relief is recognised as useful.
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That finding matters well beyond this particular device or condition. The global wellness industry is worth over a trillion dollars and operates with minimal regulatory oversight. People living with painful long-term conditions are among its most heavily targeted consumers. Companies sell electrical stimulation devices, supplements and wearable gadgets to people in chronic pain, using influencer testimonials in place of evidence and social media algorithms to reach people who are frightened, frustrated or in pain.
When a product fails to deliver the transformation it promised, patients rarely conclude they were misled. They conclude that nothing can help them. In conditions where reduced physical activity carries real health consequences, that conclusion is not merely disappointing. It is dangerous.
Poor communication can hinder treatment results
This is where the study speaks to a much wider problem. Whether a person is using a clinical device, a wearable gadget or a supplement sold online, they are often asked to judge it against expectations they did not set for themselves. Even legitimate, clinically tested treatments can be undermined by poor communication about what to expect.
The golfer’s experience illustrates this clearly. He valued an outcome that no clinical trial had thought to measure: the ability to play a round of golf without humiliation. Once he understood the device could offer that, it worked for him. His fellow participant was never given the chance to find his equivalent.
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A market built around selling hope is poorly equipped for that kind of honesty. But the same danger can appear even when the person giving advice has medical credentials. Research shows that even medically qualified doctors who become prominent wellness influencers on social media are subject to many of the same pressures as their unqualified counterparts: to build a personal brand, produce content constantly, stand out from competitors and make advice sound more certain than it really is. Having a medical degree does not make someone’s Instagram post better at managing a patient’s expectations. It just makes it more convincing.
What actually helps requires something platforms cannot provide: time, a genuine clinical relationship and communication that is not contingent on making a sale. It requires asking a patient not just whether their pain has reduced, but what they were hoping to do that pain had been stopping them from doing. It requires explaining that partial relief is still relief and that the outcome worth measuring might not be the one on the form.
That kind of honesty does not feature in any influencer’s discount code, medical degree or otherwise. But for the person who just wants to get round the golf course, it might be the most important part of the treatment.
The Council Chambers site on Front Street in Stanley is Grade II listed and was first built in 1911.
The building, which previously housed Stanley Urban District Council, has been included in Historic England’s Heritage Investment Prospectus in the hope that it can be sold.
Inside, the building remains largely intact with an elegant staircase and hall, and an ornate council chamber.
The former Stanley Council Chambers on Front Street. (Image: Historic England)
The property is considered suitable for a wide range of uses, including residential, commercial, retail, leisure, community or mixed-use development (subject to planning).
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The site has also been the subject of pre-application discussions and feasibility work, which indicate it is suitable for a range of potential uses, including residential, retail or commercial, food and beverage, or community-based functions.
Stanley is currently benefiting from substantial regeneration activity, including £20 million of Pride in Place funding from the Government and major investment by housing provider Karbon Homes on the former Board School site.
Initial options for the site proposed by the developer in 2023 included creating a youth hub, housing, a business and community hub, or a community cafe. A mixed-use venue hosting pop-up events and traders was also proposed.
The former Stanley Council Chambers on Front Street. (Image: Historic England)
Historic England said: “This is strengthening the location’s appeal and reinforcing long-term confidence in the town centre. The building is part of a community that has demonstrated strong involvement in shaping local priorities through the Stanley Strategic Place Plan, with heritage emerging as a key theme.
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“With excellent access, strong local amenities and a supportive policy and investment context, the property offers an exceptional opportunity to contribute meaningfully to the ongoing regeneration of Stanley.”
The Heritage Investment Prospectus showcases historic sites and buildings across England, where owners are actively seeking investment partners or buyers.
Only Freiburg stand in his way. The German side finished seventh in this year’s Bundesliga and have impressed throughout this campaign, beating the likes of Braga, Celta Vigo, Lille and Nice en route to the final. They were playing second-tier football in Germany just a decade ago but have hardly looked back since winning the 2. Bundesliga in 2016, and today face their first-ever European final.
The highlight of 2005, after 13 barren years, came when Hampshire won silverware by defeating Warwickshire in the C&G Trophy Final at Lord’s. Since they also finished runners-up to County Champions Nottinghamshire, it was a successful season although the Championship conclusion brought frustration.
Bayliss lied to the victim’s workplace and said she had stolen drugs and was involved in money laundering.
A man who said he would ensure his victim “doesn’t have another relationship” has been jailed. Christopher Bayliss, 44, of Caroline Hart Walk, Cambridge, threatened to kill himself after finding out his former partner had started dating again.
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He hacked into her dating and social media accounts with his behaviour getting worse when she started a new relationship. On November 15, he showed up at the victim’s home and demanded money.
The victim initially refused but later sent £25 to make him leave. At around 4am the following day, he returned and banged on the door threatening to kill himself.
In two days, Bayliss sent 92 WhatsApp messages, left 71 voicemails, and made 32 unanswered calls. He also contacted the victim’s daughter and told her it was her mother’s fault that he turned to drugs and said he would “make sure she doesn’t have another relationship to destroy another man”.
In another call, Bayliss asked the daughter to pass the phone to her mum. He then told her “you need to get the dog; I am going to kill myself” and threatened to destroy her job “so she doesn’t have her friends”.
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He went on to blackmail the victim and demanded £50, threatening to contact her employer with false allegations that she had been stealing cash and drugs. He later emailed her workplace and claimed she had stolen drugs and was involved in money laundering.
In four days at the end of November, Bayliss sent over 200 messages and made more than 60 calls and voice messages to the victim. On December 2, he sent a message that he was monitoring her movements and said he assumed she had been suspended as he could see she was not at work.
The victim had left her home and had been staying elsewhere, in fear for her own safety, and parked her car out of sight so he couldn’t find her. Bayliss was arrested later that day.
Bayliss was sentenced to two years and seven months in prison after pleading guilty to stalking involving serious alarm or distress, harassment without violence, and blackmail at Cambridge Crown Court on Thursday, May 14. A charge of controlling or coercive behaviour in an intimate or family relationship, along with a further stalking offence, was ordered to lie on file.
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He was also made subject to a ten-year restraining order.
Detective Constable Abbie Ellis, who investigated, said: “Bayliss’ behaviour was relentless, manipulative and deeply distressing for the victim and her family. He used threats, intimidation and harassment in an attempt to control her life even after their relationship had ended.
“Stalking is a serious offence that can have a devastating impact on victims. I would encourage anyone experiencing similar behaviour to report it to police – you will be taken seriously and supported.”
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