Tristan Shae Kerr was killed on Thursday, February 5, and police have charged four people with his murder
Tannur Anders and Clara Margotin, Press Association
01:25, 09 Feb 2026Updated 01:40, 09 Feb 2026
Four people have been charged with murder after a teenager died in a South Wales village.
Three men aged 18, 24 and 26 and a 24-year-old woman were remanded into custody over the death of Tristan Shae Kerr. The four people will appear at Newport Magistrates’ Court on Monday, February 9, Gwent Police said.
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Gwent Police attended to reports in the 5,500-population village in Caerphilly, South Wales about 5.45pm on Thursday, February 5. The 17-year-old was pronounced dead at the scene.
Police said a 28-year-old woman from Hereford, who was arrested on Friday, February 6 on suspicion of assisting an offender, was released under investigation.
Tristan, who played for Senghenydd Saints RFC, was described by the club as: “A cheeky chap around the club, with an infectious smile and personality to boot.”
“Tristan will be sorely missed by us all,” the club added.
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Detective Chief Inspector Jitka Tomkova-Griffiths said ask people not to speculate about the identities of those involved.
“We understand that there has been a great deal of interest in this investigation,” Detective Tomkova-Griffith.
Detective Tomkova-Griffith anyone with information to speak to officers or contact the force, which can be contacted on 101, by direct message on social media or on the website, quoting log reference 2600038325.
Information can also be provided to Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555111.
Playfully mocking colleague Vernon Kay in the BBC Radio 2 studio, Jeremy held up a photo of Vernon sporting a slicked-back hairstyle, remarking: “Here he is.”
The camera then pans to Vernon with a more tousled bedhead look, prompting Jeremy to dryly say: “Oh.”
Vernon laughed off the comparison, replying: “What do you mean ‘oh’?
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“It’s Monday morning. It’s bedhead.”
The video was captioned: “Publicity photo vs Monday morning reality.”
Vernon, 51, first found fame after being spotted by a modelling agency at the BBC Clothes Show Live in Birmingham in 1996.
He went on to win Model of the Week on Channel 4’s The Big Breakfast, launching a successful television career.
Vernon now hosts the mid-morning show on BBC Radio 2, a role he began in May 2023.
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Known for his trademark thick hair, he recently surprised fans by switching to a shorter style and embracing his natural grey tones.
In rural Palestine, where olive trees have long sustained livelihoods and identity, a growing replanting movement is bringing farmers a renewed sense of hope
Tens of thousands of olive saplings are taking root in the conflict-scarred West Bank, funded by customers of the UK-based fair trade company, Zaytoun.
Olive trees have been the lifeblood of rural Palestine for millennia, but in recent decades they’ve also become a potent symbol of resistance. Since 1967, settlers and Israeli authorities have uprooted an estimated 1m trees amid the ongoing seizure of West Bank land.
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“It’s a systematic act aimed at destroying a way of life and forcing Palestinians from their homes,” explains Zaytoun’s Palestinian director, Taysir Arbasim, who estimates around 25,000 families have been driven out of olive farming as a result.
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The Palestine Fair Trade Association – the country’s largest fair trade union – has been working to revive both livelihoods and landscape since 2006 through its ‘Trees for Life’ programme, which replaces lost olive, carob, fig and almond groves.
The initiative also supplies landrace seeds and promotes intercropping with fava beans, peas and clover – regenerative farming techniques which enrich soil health and boost future olive harvests. Olive saplings are grown in nurseries and distributed to farmers when they reach two or three years old. It can take another five years before they begin bearing fruit and the trees reach maturity at 15.
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Zaytoun has sponsored over 300,000 trees since 2011. Donations for the 2025-2026 planting season topped £190,000 – enough to fund 40,000 saplings.
Trees for Life has provided hundreds of thousands of saplings to Palestinian farmers in the conflict-scarred West Bank. Image: Palestine Fair Trade Association
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Under local laws, cultivated land is, in theory, protected from confiscation by Israeli authorities. “For Palestinians, agriculture is more than just a means of livelihood, it is deeply intertwined with their history, identity and resistance,” said a PFTA spokesperson.
“Farming holds profound spiritual and cultural significance, serving as a powerful act of defiance against the ongoing Israeli efforts to sever the connection between farmers and their land. Through cultivation, Palestinians assert their right to reclaim their lands, sustain their communities and fight for their freedom.”
Olive trees are considered part of the family, so it’s like getting a new family member
Despite the long wait for the trees to mature, planting brings an instant lift for farmers, as well as a sense of optimism, said Arbasim.
“You can see the happiness in their eyes,” he told Positive News. “Olive trees are considered part of the family, so it’s like getting a new family member.
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“We have a famous saying: they planted for us to eat, and we will plant for them to eat. We are planting for the next generation. We are planting for hope.
Main image: Palestine Fair Trade Association
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The former socialist leader has been followed by TV cameras for almost a year for a BBC-comissioned show about his controversial career as a left wing politician.
The former socialist leader has been followed by TV cameras for almost a year for a BBC-comissioned show about his controversial career as a left wing politician.
And just days after Sheridan announced he was standing for a new pro-indy alliance, he believes the film crew could be there to capture his return to Holyrood.
The 62-year-old – who was jailed for perjury in 2010 after claims he attended swinging parties – said: “The production company approached me in August last year and have been filming since then.
“I’m 62 and they’re going through my whole life, so it’s taking a while.
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“They suggested two one-hour documentaries, which looks at the social political history of Scotland through my eyes.
“I was involved in the miners’ strike and the poll tax. I was elected a councillor from prison in 1992 after being jailed for for defying a court order banning me from a warrant sale.
“They’re looking at all the things I’ve been involved in and what it says about Scotland’s political history.”
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Tommy is standing in the Glasgow regional list as number one candidate for the Alliance to Liberate Scotland, which formed in February.
His wife Gail also a candidate on the party’s Glasgow list.
The move came after it was announced the late Alex Salmond’s pro-indy Alba Party is to wind up and deregister after being left financially unviable amid a police probe into alleged financial “irregularities”
.
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Sheridan had been part of a group bidding to take over leadership and save Alba.
But he says his future is now firmly with Alliance.
A poll conducted by Find Out Now, a member of the British Polling Council, has predicted eight per cent of voters being ‘definitely’ or ‘very likely’ to consider voting for the party.
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List MSPs have been elected in the past on six per cent support in Glasgow, but usually at least seven per cent is required.
People who voted SNP at the last Holyrood election were the most likely to say they’d consider backing the Alliance. In the national poll, 1 in 7 (14%) said they’d be ‘definitely’ or ‘very likely’ to consider it.
Sheridan said: “This opinion poll shows clearly we can win enough support to be elected and the people of Glasgow know I can do the job. I proved that during the eight years I represented the city and championed the abolition of warrant sales and the introduction of free and healthy school meals.
“I’m more equipped now than ever to lead the charge for Scotland’s independence from the parasitical chains of the corrupt Westminster Parliament which robs Scotland blind and then accuses us of being incapable of standing on our own two feet.
“The days of Westminster misrule are numbered. I am determined to wage war on poverty, low pay and the chronic underfunding of our NHS and local council services. The only way to do that is with the economic powers of an independent nation.
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“People are realising the voting system has to be understood and giving the SNP a list vote in Glasgow is simply giving a vote to the right wing. It’s giving it to Reform and to the Tories.
“What that poll shows is that my victory will be a defeat for the Tories.
“Unionists aren’t going to vote for me. I know that. But in terms of the vast number of SNP and independence supporters, they are willing to use their vote if they think it’s going to be effective.”
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Drivers are now only entitled to 30 minutes of parking before charges kick in
Business owners on a busy Cardiff high street are feeling the repercussions of a huge change to car parking rules. Cardiff council rolled out new parking charges to some of its car parks across the city in December 2025, including some in Canton and Riverside.
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Instead of getting two hours of free parking, drivers are now only entitled to 30 minutes before charges kick in. Businesses on Cowbridge Road East have now said that they have noticed fewer shoppers coming in than before, while Cardiff council said the move followed a consultation period.
Yagub Jalloh, 40, manager of Jah Beauty, said: “Thirty minutes is not enough to come and browse and look for what you want.
“I don’t know why they made the changes, but I do know it is not a good change for businesses around here.” Jah beauty is a beauty supply store right in front of two car parks, Severn Road and Grey Street.
“When people can spend more time here, they spend more,” said Mr Jalloh. “Now they will just run away.” Never miss a Cardiff story by signing up to our daily newsletter here
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Mike Ashwin, manager at The Toolbox Canton, said: “Customers used to come in for hours to browse, not so much now.
“They could do a coffee while they wait for a key to get cut, they are not able to do that anymore.”
He also explained it is a logistical nightmare for their deliveries. “It takes more than half an hour for our trucks to deliver our stock,” he said. “And now they have to double park or we open the back for them if we can.”
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Zohaib Hussain, 39, is the owner of Zero Plus Fish and Chips, and is the chair of the Cowbridge Road East Traders Association. He said: “No one’s going to pay more for parking than the product they are coming for.”
Mr Hussain said the traders association will “carry on the fight” to ask the council to revert their decision. “We are doing everything we can,” he said. “Not one business with us agrees with these changes”.
A spokesperson for Cardiff council said: “As part of setting the Council’s 2024/2025 budget, the council consulted on proposals to remove the free parking period in district car parks – 6,130 responses were received and over half supported the change.
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“Following this, a statutory consultation under the Traffic Regulation Order (TRO) process was carried out in early summer 2025. Based on feedback, we revised the proposals and re-consulted in autumn 2025.
“The updated plan retains 30 minutes of free parking in district car parks, allowing drivers time to visit local businesses or amenities while ensuring the council can cover the costs of operating the car parks.
“After the free period, charges apply – starting at 50p for the first hour. These rates remain significantly lower than those in comparable cities and are not considered a barrier to use.”
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Victoria Hamilton leads The Teacher season 3 on Channel 5, joined by soap stars from Coronation Street, EastEnders and Hollyoaks – here’s the full cast list
Channel 5’s school-based anthology, which initially premiered in 2022 with Sheridan Smith in the starring role, arrives two years following the second season featuring Kara Tointon.
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Victoria, recognised for Unforgotten, Doctor Foster, Life and The Crown, portrays Helen Simpson, a teacher with three decades of experience, who dismisses what she considers woke ideologies of the younger generation.
Discussing how he’s progressed the narrative, director Dominic Leclerc said: “Each series of the Teacher is a study of character, with thriller elements. We look at complex ideas and constantly evolve the form to adapt to the theme.”
Victoria is joined by The Madame Blanc Mysteries and Benidorm star Steve Edge, Line of Duty’s Rochenda Sandall, Coronation Street’s Peter Ash and EastEnders star Navin Chowdhry. Here’s everything you need to know about the cast, according to The Mirror.
Victoria Hamilton plays Helen Simpson
Viewers will recognise Victoria for her numerous television roles, including portraying Anna Baker in the BBC hit Doctor Foster and Belle in its spin-off Life.
Victoria is also recognised for playing Ruby Pratt in Lark Rise to Candleford and Queen Elizabeth in The Crown.
In recent years she has appeared as Anna Marshall in COBRA, Juliet Cooper in Unforgotten and Dodie Gimball in the Apple TV+ hit Slow Horses.
Steve Edge plays Terry Simpson
Steve portrays Helen’s estranged husband Terry. Audiences will recognise Steve from his role as Billy Dawson in Benidorm and more recently starring as Dom Hayes in the Channel 5 drama The Madame Blanc Mysteries.
Steve is also recognised for The Cup, Star Stories, Phoenix Nights, All at Sea and Starlings, where he portrayed Fergie.
Rochenda Sandall plays Tessa Stewart
Rochenda portrays teacher Tessa Stewart. Rochenda is recognised for playing Vanessa Warren in Criminal: UK, Azure in Doctor Who and Lisa McQueen in Line of Duty.
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Audiences might also recognise her for her roles as Anna in Love, Lies and Records, Lucy in Deceit, Kate Miller in Hijack and Cat Braithwaite in The Rig.
More recently she starred as Fi in the popular series Amandaland.
Olly Rhodes plays Sam Simpson
Olly portrays Helen’s son Sam. Soap enthusiasts will recognise Olly for playing Joseph Holmes in Hollyoaks, and Billy in Waterloo Road.
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He has also featured in The Last Kingdom as Osbert and All Creatures Great and Small as Private Briggs.
Peter Ash plays Sebastian Blake
Peter portrays faculty member Sebastian Blake, who interviewed for Helen’s position. Peter is best recognised for playing Paul Foreman on Coronation Street, a role he held between 2018 and 2024. Prior to Coronation Street he also portrayed Keith Jowell on Casualty and Ron in Hollyoaks.
Outside of the world of soaps Peter is recognised for playing Darius Fry in the series Footballers’ Wives between 2003 and 2006.
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Navin Chowdhry plays Simon Cookson
Navin is perhaps best recognised for his roles as Kurt in Teachers, DC Asap Qureshi in A Touch of Cloth, and Nish Panesar in EastEnders. Audiences will also know him from his appearances in Trying, Our Girl and Next of Kin.
The Teacher also features Alice Grant, who portrays Cressida Bancroft. She is widely known for her role as Susan Villiers in Mary and George, alongside Sex Education star Shak Benjamin, who takes on the role of Leo Dalton.
Malek Alkoni, recognised for G’wed and Vigil, portrays Miles Crawford, while Red Rose and Gentleman Jack actress Natalie Gavin plays DS O’Brien. Ellis Jupiter plays Dee Rainford-Thomas in their debut televised role.
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Reflecting on the cast, director Dominic said: “Casting is everything; you have to have the right people in front of the lens. I admire Victoria Hamilton’s work so much, I’ve wanted to work with her for years. She set the bar for the whole series, surrounded by a cast of teenagers who bring life, vitality and very distinct personalities into the mix.
“At the centre of the show is a relationship between Helen and a character called Cressida. We saw lots of people for Cressida, but Alice Grant blew us away with her delivery that was charming, but with a slight unknowingness behind the eyes. Then we have Shaq Benjamin as Leo. I directed him in Sex Education but I didn’t even recognise him in his self-tape for this, he immediately got to the heart of the character, with his unique energy and style. Ollie Rhodes, for me, was a slam dunk. That character’s almost hiding in plain sight and suddenly becomes very, very big as the show goes on.
“There’s a quality in Ollie as an actor that I knew would take us on that journey. Ellis Jupiter was likewise immediately perfect for the role of Dee. Their wit, quiet spark and sensitivity captured Dee’s spirit with flair. Rochenda Sandall, Steve Edge, Peter Ash, Navin Chowdhury, and Natalie Gavin give the show depth and true Northern authenticity.”
The Teacher season 3 starts on Channel 5 at 9pm on Monday, March 30.
David Howard had lived on John Street, Worksop, for 11 years when the massive explosion reduced the property to rubble on April 12, 2025, killing him and his dog
16:13, 30 Mar 2026Updated 16:13, 30 Mar 2026
A man’s home blew up after he told his friend he’d “pulled off the gas pipes” when his landlord put up the rent by £80.
David Howard had lived at the Nottinghamshire property for 11 years before a massive gas explosion destroyed the house and killed him and his dog.
On April 12, 2025 he received a letter from his landlord saying she was putting up his rent, which was mostly paid by the local council, by £80 to £540.
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Friends told how at around 3pm that afternoon Mr Howard started telling several people he was going to “blow the house up”, saying “you wait until the end of the day”, an inquest into Mr Howard’s death was told today.
DC Daniel Akehurst read to the court from an account by one of Mr Howard’s friends, she had told cops that on the day Mr Howard was “p****d off and could not cope anymore” due to his rent going up.
Shanelle Williams described how Mr Howard was “in a mood and depressed”. The woman was then called by Mr Howard at around 3pm, when he told her “he had pulled the pipes” and made comments about “blowing up the house”.
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In another call at 3.29pm, Mr Howard told Ms Williams “I’ve done it, I’ve pulled the pipes off the gas. It’s going to go with a bang.”
The latter call lasted 42 seconds and was ended by Mr Howard before Ms Williams could say anything. Before this, Mr Howard had told friends he had been up for three days with no sleep and was “very upset” about the rent increase”.
A friend tried to give him advice but he wasn’t listening, with Mr Howard saying, “You watch”, “You wait until the end of the day” and “You wait to see what happens”.
The inquest was told Mr Howard had made similar comments before April 12.
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Around 3pm, Mr Howard locked the doors to the property he was renting after two of his friends left to go to a shop, which was described as “strange”.
Upon returning, the two friends were told by Mr Howard to “go, I don’t want anyone else to get hurt. Please just go”.
Asked by his friends if they could at least take his dog, Roxy, Mr Howard said: “Roxy is staying with me.”
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Another friend then went to the property and tried speaking to him but was told to “f*** off”. The same person said she could smell gas.
Another then told Mr Howard through the locked door: “You are being stupid, there are kids next door. You are a f****** idiot.”
The hearing wasn’t told any of the friends made any attempts to notify emergency services of the events.
A call was then received by the police at 7.39pm to say an explosion had occurred at 26 John Street.
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DC Akehurst described how the house had “fully collapsed” by the time emergency services arrived to the “chaotic” scene and a major incident was declared.
The hearing was told up to 200 people were “milling around” the street, with these residents then evacuated.
DC Akehurst said the explosion was “large and powerful” and its force had also damaged the adjacent properties, as well as some opposite.
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A statement from a first responder read out in the hearing said Mr Howard was still conscious when emergency services arrived and reported having significant difficulty breathing and “was slowly being crushed” as he was “trapped under a significant amount of rubble”.
Crew couldn’t get to him, however, due to the difficulty of the scene and he was pronounced dead at 9.58pm.
Christopher Trendowicz, fire investigator at Nottinghamshire Fire and Rescue Service, told the hearing that the explosion happened on the ground floor of the property, with its upper floor collapsing on top.
The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) instructed gas company Cadent to investigate any possible leaks from outside the property but this was not the case.
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The gas meter, boiler and piping were also tested and found to be safe.
The only abnormality found was damage to the cooker, owned by Mr Howard, which had its flexible gas pipe “stretched to capacity”.
Mr Trendowicz said this was the likely cause of the gas leak, with the likely cause for the ignition being the capacitator of the fridge/freezer in the property being “ripped out”.
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The fridge/freezer was found away from where it would be ordinarily, the hearing was told.
Coroner Nathanael Hartley concluded Mr Howard’s cause of death as 1a asphyxia whilst entrapped beneath collapsed building debris and 2 heroin and cocaine use.
Mr Howard had low levels of the two drugs and alcohol in his blood at the time of his death, which could have led to “mild cognitive impairment”.
He had a history of mental health issues, having been diagnosed with PTSD and moderate depression in 2021, as well as a substance abuse misuse history, which he first reported in 2012.
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Mr Howard’s two daughters, Keely and Lauren Howard, both attended the hearing but refused to comment on their father’s mental health or to describe him as a person when asked by coroner Hartley.
No notes were recovered from the property during the investigation, coroner Hartley said.
The coroner said: “Having heard the evidence from the fire service about the damaged gas pipe cooker and the evidence that David had informed his friend that he had ‘pulled the pipes, was going to blow the house up and it was going to go with a bang’, I find that David caused the damage to the gas cooker intentionally.
“It’s possible that David did not appreciate the dangerousness of the situation. With that in mind, I do not find that David intended to end his life when he did. I find that David’s intentions cannot be established.”
Tropical forests are hot, steamy places. But when large numbers of trees are cut down, they get even hotter. Our recent research shows that clearing large areas of the rainforest exposes hundreds of millions of people to higher temperatures, increasing heat stress (when the body’s way of controlling temperature fails) and, in some cases, contributing to death.
Apart from the shade that the rainforest canopy provides, trees also cool their surroundings by pumping water from the soil into the atmosphere – a process known as evapotranspiration. Like sweat evaporating from our skin, this uses energy and cools the air.
A single large tropical tree provides as much cooling as several air conditioners running continuously. Across the billions of trees in the Amazon or Congo, this “sweating” cools entire regions.
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People living in or near tropical forests recognise these cooling benefits. When villagers in rainforest regions in Kalimantan, Indonesia, were interviewed about the benefits tropical forests provide, the most common answer was their ability to keep local temperatures cool.
Despite these benefits, tropical forests are being destroyed at an alarming rate. In 2024, more than 6 million hectares of primary tropical forests (nearly the size of Panama) were destroyed, the fastest rate since records began.
Nike Doggart, CC BY
Tropical deforestation reduces the cooling effect forests provide, leading to local warming – a pattern well documented by previous studies. But how is this warming affecting the lives of people living near tropical forests?
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Deforestation is amplifying heat
To answer this, we used satellite data to track how deforestation has affected temperatures over the past 20 years. Over this period, large areas of forest in the Amazon, Congo and south-east Asia were cleared. We compared temperature changes in deforested regions with nearby areas that retained their forests. Tropical regions that retained their forest cover warmed by an average of 0.2°C. In nearby areas where forests were cleared, temperatures rose by 0.7°C – more than three times as fast. This shows that deforestation results in a dramatic regional amplification of climate warming.
An illustration showing temperature rises based on data collated by the researchers. Author’s own research., CC BY-SA
To understand the impact on local people, we mapped this warming onto information on where people live across the tropics. We found that more than 300 million people were exposed to higher temperatures caused by deforestation. Exposure occurred right across the tropics: 67 million people in Central and South America, 148 million people in Africa and 122 million people in south-east Asia were exposed to warming.
Some countries with rapid rates of deforestation were particularly affected: 49 million people in Indonesia, 42 million people in the Democratic Republic of Congo and 22 million people in Brazil were exposed to hotter temperatures caused by deforestation.
We combined information on the number of people exposed to deforestation-induced warming with region-specific heat vulnerability information and non-accidental death rates. We used this to estimate that the heating from deforestation is linked to around 28,000 heat-related deaths each year across the tropics. This means that over the past 20 years more than half a million people have died from heat-related causes as a result of deforestation.
It is well known that tropical deforestation releases carbon dioxide and this contributes to global climate change. Indeed, arguments for reducing deforestation are often focused on carbon. But despite numerous international pledges, tropical deforestation continues to accelerate.
Recognising the public health impact of deforestation could help broaden support for forest protection. Although the local warming effects of deforestation are well recognised by local people, communities and decision-makers often lack precise data on how much deforestation is increasing temperatures in their area. To address this, we developed an online tool that provides information at province level on the warming linked to deforestation. We hope this locally relevant data will help communities and decision-makers make more informed decisions about managing their forests.
There are some promising new initiatives that recognise the value of tropical forests. Brazil is setting up a new fund that will pay tropical nations to keep their forests intact. It recognises the public services provided by tropical forests – including their ability to regulate local climate – and it rewards countries for protecting them. Some European countries supported the development of this facility but other than Norway, few have yet committed substantial funding. Perhaps given the current global crisis they think it is too far away to affect them, or are prioritising other areas. In doing so they are ignoring potential effects on migration flows, global air quality, loss of biodiversity and food supply chains.
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For many years, tropical deforestation has been viewed as an environmental issue. Our research shows that it is also an urgent public health issue. Protecting tropical forests is not just about conserving nature or storing carbon. It is about protecting the health – and lives – of hundreds of millions of people.
Tens of thousands of people gathered in central London on Saturday for a peaceful protest described as one of the largest ever demonstrations against the far right in the UK.
The march took place amid growing evidence of democratic backsliding under right-wing governments – as highlighted in a report published today by the Civil Liberties Union for Europe.
High-profile figures including actor Sir Lenny Henry, singer Paloma Faith and comedian Steve Coogan were among those taking part the march, which was organised by the Together Alliance – a coalition of more than 500 organisations campaigning for unity over division.
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Together Alliance said that more than half a million people took part in the march, although police estimates put the figure at nearer 50,000. The demonstration, it added, was in response to last September’s far-right ‘Unite the Kingdom’ march, which saw crowds of more than 100,000.
“We believe that the majority of British people stand against the hatred and division and racism that was being encouraged at that demonstration,” said Sabby Dhalu, joint secretary of the Together Alliance. “It’s time to act.”
With anti-racism placards in hand, demonstrators marched from Park Lane to Trafalgar Square, via Whitehall. Along the way were performances by Self Esteem, Jessie Ware and UB40. Politicians also addressed crowds, among them Green Party leader Zack Polanski, Your Party leader Jeremy Corbyn and Diane Abbott, a former Labour MP now sitting as an independent.
People want a different vision of society – one which places dignity, compassion and human rights at its heart
One attendee, a member of the campaign group Cut the Ties to Fossil Fuels, came wearing the grim reaper costume, and said that he’d come as the oil industry. “Big oil are one of the major funders of Reform UK,” he told the Guardian. “We’re here to make that link that we need to cut the ties to fossil fuels.”
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The Metropolitan Police said that two protesters were arrested on suspicion of criminal damage and causing a public nuisance after allegedly attempting to climb pillars near Trafalgar Square. Separately, 18 people were arrested at a demonstration outside Scotland Yard on suspicion of supporting Palestine Action. The UK government proscribed the pro-Palestine group as a terrorist organisation in 2025 – a move ruled as unlawful by the High Court in February. The government is appealing.
The human rights group Amnesty International UK described Saturday’s march as a “historic demonstration”, adding that protesters were calling for “a different vision of society – one which places dignity, compassion and human rights at its heart”.
Main image: Shutterstock
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Give once from just £1, or join 1,800+ others who contribute an average of £3 or more per month. Together, we can build a healthier form of media – one that focuses on solutions, progress and possibilities, and empowers people to create positive change.
Paapa Essiedu has faced cruel threats ahead of appearing in HBO’s new Harry Potter series
Hannah McGreevy, Assistant Editor for Screen Time
15:51, 30 Mar 2026
Paapa Essiedu has been dominating headlines following his casting in HBO Max’s forthcoming Harry Potter series, which is anticipated to premiere on the platform in December this year.
The Shakespearean performer, 35, has previously featured in numerous prominent films, television programmes and theatrical productions. This evening, he appears on The One Show to discuss the poignant new BBC drama Babies with his co-star Siobhán Cullen.
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He also created history in 2016 as the first Black performer to portray Hamlet for the Royal Shakespeare Company, securing the Ian Charleson award.
Furthermore, Paapa has worked alongside BAFTA Award winner Michaela Coel and performed opposite legendary actress Saoirse Ronan.
The London-born performer will already appear familiar owing to his remarkable acting portfolio, but where might you have encountered him previously?
Who is Paapa Essiedu playing in HBO’s new Harry Potter series?
Paapa will portray Severus Snape in the new Harry Potter series for HBO, continuing the legacy of the late Alan Rickman, who embodied the first on-screen version of the character between 2001 and 2011.
Disturbingly, the performer has encountered racist abuse and death threats following the casting revelation, telling USA Today: “If I look at Instagram, I will see somebody saying, ‘I’m going to come to your house and kill you.’”
Despite enduring backlash before his character has even materialised on screen, Paapa stated the experience had only reinforced his dedication to the part, declaring: “The abuse fuels me.”
Get HBO Max free with Sky
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Sky is giving away free subscriptions to HBO Max with its £22 Ultimate TV bundle, which also includes Netflix, Disney+, discovery+, Hayu, and around 135 channels at no extra cost.
Where have you seen Paapa Essiedu before?
Paapa secured numerous prominent theatrical roles after joining the Royal Shakespeare Company in 2012, notably portraying the lead in Hamlet and Edmund in King Lear.
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The performer achieved his breakout television role in 2020, appearing as Kwame in Michaela Coel’s I May Destroy You, reports the Mirror.
He has additionally featured in well-known programmes including Gangs of London, The Lazarus Project, Black Mirror and Channel 5’s Anne Boleyn.
Paapa made his cinema acting debut as a police officer in Kenneth Branagh’s 2017 film, Murder on the Orient Express.
Since then, he has featured in highly praised films such as 2024’s The Outrun, performing alongside Saoirse Ronan, and the 2022 horror production Men.
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Paapa Essiedu’s life off-screen including famous wife
Paapa was raised in Walthamstow, London, and studied at the esteemed Guildhall School of Music and Drama, where he encountered and collaborated with Michaela Coel.
The performer heartbreakingly lost both parents during his youth, discussing his father’s passing when he was 14 and his mother’s death when he was 20 in a conversation with The Guardian.
When questioned about what he regarded as his greatest accomplishment, he recalled: “After losing my mum still managing to finish drama school, because that was really difficult. I lost her in the first year.”
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Away from the cameras, Paapa is also wed to actress and comic Rosa Robson, 34, who was part of the Cambridge Footlights. ITV audiences may recognise Rosa from her portrayal of Ashley in the ITV2 comedy series Buffering, and she has additionally featured in programmes including Inside No. 9 and Disney Plus’ Extraordinary.
Paapa also revealed a brush with death he experienced in 2016, when his agent telephoned to inform him he’d landed the role of Hamlet for the Royal Shakespeare Company.
He told the aforementioned publication: “While I was on the phone, I looked to my left and turned to the right, and a bus whizzed by and the wing mirror was so close to me that it knocked my hat off.”
Catch Paapa Essiedu on The One Show tonight at 7pm and in Babies at 9pm on BBC One.
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