The Prince of Wales has visited a nature reserve on the final day of his first tour of Saudi Arabia to learn about a programme reintroducing endangered species.
The future king toured the Sharaan Nature Reserve in the east of the country to hear about ongoing conservation initiatives aimed at protecting and reintroducing native species such as gazelles and the Arabian oryx.
He was also told about a flagship programme to bring back the critically endangered Arabian leopard.
The prince planted an acacia tree at the reserve as he was given details about ongoing efforts to protect its natural wildlife and landscape.
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Image: William plants an acacia tree at the reserve. Pic: Reuters
Image: William speaks with a member of the RCU’s Habitat and Restoration team. Pic: Reuters
William is also spending part of the day visiting the old town of AlUla, which features more than 900 mud‑brick houses and a historic citadel.
The town has a network of narrow alleyways that formed a thriving settlement on the ancient incense road, the trade route that carried spices, textiles and aromatics across Arabia for centuries.
Image: The Prince of Wales and Prince Badr bin Abdullah bin Farhan Al Saud. Pic: PA
Image: Pic: PA
The prince is also meeting local farmers during a tour of AlUla’s Oasis and EcoGardening farm.
The farmers were giving details to the prince about their belief in sustainable farming and on efforts to preserve their region’s agricultural history.
Image: The Prince of Wales meets rangers at the Sharaan Nature Reserve. Pic: PA
Image: William at the Sharaan Nature Reserve. Pic: Reuters
The trip has been overshadowed by the allegations surrounding Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Andrew denies any wrongdoing in relation to Epstein.
The Prince and Princess of Wales attempted to make their position clear on the scandal on Monday when they issued their first public statement about it.
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A Kensington Palace spokesperson said they were “deeply concerned by the continued revelations”, and “their thoughts remain focused on the victims”.
The revamped Sky Ultimate TV will include streaming subscriptions from HBO Max, Netflix, Disney+ and Hayu. These subscriptions are on basic ad-supported tiers, and here’s what you’d pay if you subscribed outside of Sky:
HBO Max – £4.99 (Basic with ads)
Disney+ – £5.99 (Standard with ads)
Netflix – £5.99 (Standard with ads)
Hayu – £5.99
The combined value of all of these services is £22.96, so at a surface level, Sky Ultimate TV at £24 seems good value for money, especially if you already subscribe to all of these.
Sky Ultimate TV also includes access to UK terrestrial services (BBC, ITV, Channel 4 and Channel 5) as well as catch-up services like BBC iPlayer. There’s also a wide range of other Sky channels, free-to-air channels, as well as Discovery+. For many, it will be accessed through a Sky Stream box (included in the cost) or a Sky Glass television (which costs extra).
It’s worth noting that the price of Sky packages fluctuates from time to time, so check before you buy. Currently, Sky Ultimate TV costs £22, so it might be worth signing up before the £24 a month price hits in March.
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Sky Ultimate TV: The winners
Existing Ultimate TV customers will have Disney+, HBO Max and Hayu added to their package, so that’s definitely a win. Those who are already Disney+ subscribers will be able to add that to Sky’s billing, so they will benefit from the £5.99 subscription, which is essentially discounting the price they already pay.
New subscribers to Ultimate TV also stand to benefit if they want all those subscriptions. There’s no avoiding that this is a way to save money by bundling up TV services to get access to some of the top streaming content available.
Existing Sky Q customers with Sky Signature, Sky Entertainment and other eligible packages will also get Disney+, HBO Max and Hayu, so they’re winners too.
VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) — Canadians were in shock Wednesday after authorities said seven people were killed at a school in remote British Columbia and two others were killed at a nearby home in one of the country’s deadliest mass shootings.
A woman who police believed was the shooter was found dead, apparently from a self-inflicted wound, police said. The motive remained unclear.
More than 25 people were wounded Tuesday in the attack in the small mountain community of Tumbler Ridge, including two with life-threatening injuries who were airlifted for medical care, police said.
The village of 2,700 people in the Canadian Rockies is more than 1,000 kilometers (600 miles) northeast of Vancouver, near the provincial border with Alberta. The provincial government website lists Tumbler Ridge Secondary School as having 175 students in grades 7 to 12.
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“Parents, grandparents, sisters, brothers in Tumbler Ridge will wake up without someone they love. The nation mourns with you, and Canada stands by you,” an emotional Prime Minister Mark Carney said as he arrived in Parliament.
Carney said flags at government buildings will be flown at half-staff for seven days and added: “We will get through this.”
School shootings are rare in Canada, which has strict gun-control laws. The government has responded to previous mass shootings with gun-control measures, including a recently broadened ban on all guns it considers assault weapons.
The attack was Canada’s deadliest rampage since 2020, when a gunman in Nova Scotia killed 13 people and set fires that left another nine dead.
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Carney’s office said he would suspend a planned trip to Halifax, Nova Scotia, and Munich, Germany. He had been set to announce a long-awaited defense industrial strategy in Halifax on Wednesday before heading to Europe for the Munich Security Conference.
British Columbia Premier David Eby told reporters that police reached the school within two minutes.
A video showed students walking out with their hands raised as police vehicles surrounded the building and a helicopter circled overhead.
Police found six people dead, Royal Canadian Mounted Police Superintendent Ken Floyd said. A seventh person died while being transported to a hospital, and two more were found dead at a residence that authorities believe was connected to the attack.
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Floyd told reporters that investigators had identified the suspect but would not release a name. He said police were investigating the connection between the shooter and the victims.
Tumbler Ridge Mayor Darryl Krakowka said it was “devastating” to learn how many had died in the community, which he called a “big family.”
“I broke down,” Krakowka said. “I have lived here for 18 years. I probably know every one of the victims.”
The Rev. George Rowe of the Tumbler Ridge Fellowship Baptist Church went to the recreation center where victims’ families were awaiting more information.
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“It was not a pretty sight. Families are still waiting to hear if it’s their child that’s deceased and because of protocol and procedure, the investigating team is very careful in releasing names,” Rowe said Tuesday.
Rowe once taught at the high school, and his three children graduated from there.
“To walk through the corridors of that school will never be the same again,” he said.
The school district said the high school and elementary school will be closed for the rest of the week.
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Eby on Tuesday said he had spoken to the prime minister about the “unimaginable tragedy.”
“I know it’s causing us all to hug our kids a little bit tighter tonight,” he said. “I’m asking the people of British Columbia to look after the people of Tumbler Ridge tonight.”
Toto Wolff has installed Red Bull as the new “benchmark” team for 2026, claiming Max Verstappen was able to go “a second a lap” faster than everyone else on the straights on the opening morning of testing in Bahrain on Tuesday.
Mercedes had been widely considered the favourites for the upcoming season based on the fact their power unit was said to be best in class, thanks to exploiting a ‘loophole’ in compression ratio rules.
However, while the argument over those rules continues to rage – Wolff on Wednesday called on the FIA and FOM, who have to sign off on any changes, to avoid siding with the “gamesmanship” of rival manufacturers – the Austrian said he had revised his opinion on the pecking order, describing Red Bull as “very much the benchmark”.
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Speaking during the lunch break in Bahrain testing, after Red Bull’s Max Verstappen and Mercedes’ George Russell had engaged in a long run head-to-head on the opening morning, Wolff said the compression ratio loophole was worth no more than “a few horsepower, maybe 2-3bhp”.
Red Bull’s superior energy deployment, on the other hand, was worth far more. “They [Red Bull] are able to deploy far more energy on the straights than everybody else,” Wolff said. “I mean, I’m speaking a second per lap, over consecutive laps.”
Speaking to a local journalist afterwards, the man – who identified himself only as “Carlos” – said he was a delivery driver who had never heard of Guthrie .
“I might have delivered a package to their house but I never kidnapped anybody,” he said.
As the search continues, FBI Director Kash Patel told Fox News Tuesday evening: “We are looking at people who, as we say, are persons of interest.”
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The development came shortly after new surveillance photos and video was released showing a masked person outside Guthrie’s Arizona home on the night she was abducted.
New videos show ‘armed’ masked man at front door of Savannah mother’s home (Pima County Sheriff’s Department/FBI)
Police believe Guthrie, the mother of Today co-host Savannah Guthrie, was taken from her home in a quiet neighborhood near Tucson at some point between the night of January 31 and the morning of February 1.
The black-and-white images released by the Pima County Sheriff’s Department show the sinister figure apparently trying to tamper with Guthrie’s doorbell camera.
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Police said it has been working to recover “lost, corrupted or inaccessible” footage related to Guthrie’s disappearance.
“Over the last eight days, the FBI and Pima County Sheriff’s Department have been working closely with our private sector partners to continue to recover any images or video footage from Nancy Guthrie’s home that may have been lost, corrupted, or inaccessible due to a variety of factors – including the removal of recording devices,” the Pima County Sheriff’s Department said in a statement posted to X.
“The video was recovered from residual data located in backend systems.”
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New surveillance footage shows a masked person approaching the front door of Nancy Guthrie’s home on the night she disappeared (Pima County Sheriff’s Department)
“Working with our partners, as of this morning, law enforcement has uncovered these previously inaccessible new images showing an armed individual appearing to have tampered with the camera at Nancy Guthrie’s front door the morning of her disappearance,” the statement continued.
Patel also released additional photos and videos recovered from the same door camera.
One video shows the masked suspect approaching the front door and messing with the camera with his gloved hand. The person then walks away and appears to pick up something off the ground. Another video shows the individual using what appears to be a branch with leaves to obstruct the camera as they tamper with it.
Savannah Guthrie shared the new footage on her Instagram, writing: “We believe she is still alive. Bring her home.” The new photos were released a day after she posted a video on Instagram on Monday, begging for the public’s help in finding her mother as an alleged ransom deadline passed.
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A missing person poster for Nancy Guthrie describes her physical appearance as the search continues (Pima County Sheriff’s Department)
In the video, she said her family believed her mother was “still out there” and asked for the public’s help in finding her, saying that they were “at an hour of desperation, and we need your help.”
Guthrie’s family reported her missing around noon on February 1 after she did not show up for church. Her disappearance set off a massive search involving state and federal law enforcement agencies.
DNA tests showed blood on Guthrie’s front porch was a match to her, and her doorbell camera was disconnected in the early hours of Sunday morning, Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos has said.
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Multiple news outlets have received alleged ransom letters during the past week. Local CNN affiliate KGUN reports it received a ransom note demanding $6 million by Monday, a deadline that passed with no update. Meanwhile, the FBI has said it’s not aware of communication between the Guthrie family and the suspected abductors.
The FBI has offered a $50,000 reward for information.
Here’s what we know so far.
Who is Nancy Guthrie?
Nancy, 84, lives in Catalina Foothills, an affluent community adjacent to the desert just north of Tucson, Arizona.
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She is described as a white female, approximately 5ft 5in tall, weighing about 150 pounds, with brown hair and blue eyes. It’s not known what clothing she might be wearing.
Her daughter, Savannah, is a co-host on NBC’s Today show, and her mother has occasionally appeared on the program in segments alongside her.
Savannah Guthrie pictured with her mother Nancy. She posted a video Monday saying she believed her mother was ‘still out there’ (NBC Universal)
How long has she been missing?
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Nancy Guthrie was last seen around 9:30 p.m. on the evening of Saturday, January 31, at her home near Skyline Drive and Campbell Avenue, the Pima County Sheriff’s Department said.
She spent Saturday night eating dinner and playing games with family members before one of them dropped her off at her home that sits on hilly, desert terrain, the sheriff said.
She was reported missing the next day, on Sunday, February 1, after she didn’t attend her regular church service.
Sheriff Nanos revealed a more detailed timeline during the most recent press conference on Thursday.
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He said Guthrie ordered an Uber and left her home at 5:32 p.m. Saturday to go to the family dinner. She returned at 9:48 p.m.
“We did speak to a driver, because Nancy, we learned, had been taken the Uber to the family residence, the daughter for dinner,” Nanos said. “And we located that driver and spoke with them.”
Her garage door opened at approximately 9:48 p.m. and closed two minutes later, which investigators believe marks the time she arrived home.
Her doorbell camera was disconnected at 1:47 a.m. Sunday. But Guthrie did not have an active subscription so the company was unable to recover any footage.
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Software data recorded movement at the home minutes later, at 2:12, the sheriff said, acknowledging that the motion could have come from an animal.
At 2:28 a.m., Guthrie’s pacemaker disconnected from her phone.
Family members went to check on Guthrie at 11:56 a.m. Sunday and were unable to locate her. A 911 call was made at 12:03 p.m., and deputies arrived about 10 minutes later.
How is Nancy’s health?
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Nancy Guthrie is considered a “vulnerable adult” due to her age, and Nanos said at a press conference just days after her disappearance that she was “very limited in mobility.”
“We know she didn’t just walk out there, that we know,” the sheriff said, adding that her health challenges were only physical.
“Nancy Guthrie is of great sound and mind, this is not dementia-related. She is as sharp as a tack. Her family wants everybody to know, this is not somebody that just wandered off.”
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Nancy Guthrie, 84, pictured with her daughter, Today co-host Savannah Guthrie (Instagram/@savannahguthrie)
She also takes medication that, if she does not have in 24 hours, “could be fatal,” Nanos said.
In a video shared last week, Savannah Guthrie said her mother’s health is “fragile.”
“Our mom is a kind, faithful, loyal, fiercely loving woman of goodness and light. She has grandchildren that adore her and crowd around her and cover her with kisses. Her health, her heart is fragile,” she said.
“Nancy has high blood pressure, a pacemaker and cardiac issues,” the dispatcher said.
What do authorities think happened?
Police believe that Nancy Guthrie was a victim of a crime.
“At this point, investigators believe she was taken from the home against her will, possibly in the middle of the night. Taken against her will includes possible kidnapping or abduction,” Nanos said earlier this week.
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There were signs of forced entry at the home in the Catalina Foothills neighborhood.
NewsNation released video of dried droplets of blood on stone slabs outside her front door, leading away from the house. DNA tests later revealed belonged to Guthrie.
NewsNation released video of dried droplets of blood on stone slabs outside her front door, leading away from the house (NewsNation)
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Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos says authorities believe Nancy Guthrie was taken against her will. (Pima County Sheriff’s Department)
Who might have abducted her?
On Tuesday it was reported that a “person of interest” had been detained for questioning over Guthrie’s disappearance.
Authorities are now preparing to search a location south of Tucson which is associated with the individual, the sources said, but added that the person had not been charged.
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Speaking to Fox News Tuesday night, Kash Patel said the Bureau was looking into “persons of interest,” adding that authorities were undergoing a process of elimination with their investigations.
Patel added that “there might be persons of interest in and around the area related to this event,” and reiterated that the FBI’s first priority was finding Guthrie. “Right behind that is to find anyone and any others involved in this kidnapping case to make sure they’re brought to justice,” he said.
Despite his remarks, police have yet to publicly identify any potential suspects.
“We’ve submitted all kinds of samples for DNA, and we’ve gotten some back, but nothing to indicate any suspects,” Nanos told reporters Tuesday.
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The sheriff said investigators have believed from the beginning that Guthrie was targeted, but they don’t know whether that was because her daughter is one of television’s most visible anchors.
Earlier this week, multiple media outlets reported receiving ransom notes demanding millions of dollars in Bitcoin for Guthrie’s return.
FBI Phoenix Special Agent in Charge Heith Janke said Thursday there has been “no contact” since the ransom notes were sent to media outlets.
“The family wants to be contacted,” Janke said. “They know time is of the essence. And if those that may have Nancy are watching this, the family is ready to talk, get proof of life, because there has been no contact after that ransom note went to the media.”
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However, none of the letters contained proof of life, he said. Janke said the notes contained references to a deadline and a monetary demand, as well as mentions of “an Apple Watch” and “a floodlight,” but declined to provide further details.
On Thursday, a man was arrested in Los Angeles for allegedly texting Guthrie’s family members asking about the Bitcoin that was demanded in a ransom letter sent to media outlets, according to NBC News.
This comes after an FBI agent announced officials had arrested one person in connection with an “imposter” ransom demand.
The criminal complaint, which was reviewed by NBC News, says Derrick Callella sent the family members messages after hearing about Nancy’s disappearance on TV. Callella allegedly told officials he was just “trying to see if the family would respond,” according to the complaint.
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Former FBI special agent Nicole Parker, a Fox News contributor, told Hannity that Nancy had likely been taken by someone with a “deep grievance”.
“I do believe that it was someone who likely knows her, knows her very well, or knows the structure of the home very well, knows that she lived alone, had their eye on her, and had the entry and exit points of the home, and is quite familiar,” Parker said.
It was clear, Parker added, that “the home itself is the crime scene,” and investigators were withholding some details to avoid compromising the ongoing case.
“There is something about it that is very strongly driving this investigation. Law enforcement has kept that quite confidential and quiet, but there is something that they have seen that is driving the sense of urgency on this.”
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New photos show the masked and “armed” individual approaching Nancy Guthrie’s front door (FBI)
The masked person was ‘armed,’ police say (FBI)
On February 10, the sheriff’s department released several photos and videos from surveillance footage obtained from the doorbell camera outside Nancy Guthrie’s home.
The photos were of an “armed” suspect who appeared to have tampered with Nancy Guthrie’s doorbell camera.
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FBI Director Kash Patel then released additional photos and videos recovered from the same camera.
The first video is 27 seconds long and shows the masked suspect — who police have said was “armed” — approaching the front door and interacting with the camera with his gloved hand. The individual then walks away and appears to pick up an object off the ground nearby.
Another 14-second video shows the individual using what appears to be a branch with leaves to obstruct the camera.
President Donald Trump reacted with “pure disgust” when he viewed the newly-released surveillance footage, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said.
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“His initial reaction, of course, as all Americans, is just pure disgust. And again, it’s heartbreaking to see now this footage really bring to life a story we’ve all been reading about,” Leavitt said.
“Again, we’re just praying for the safety of Nancy Guthrie and that she will return home soon, and the president directed me to please encourage all Americans with any information to call the FBI. We hope that this case will come to a positive resolution as soon as possible,” she added.
The person was wearing gloves and a full face mask as they tampered with the camera (Pima County Sheriff’s Department)
A massive search effort
Initial search efforts covered the Catalina Foothills area, using drones, aircraft, ground crews and dog teams. The sheriff’s department said the FBI had offered assistance on the case and the U.S. Border Patrol had also assisted with dogs.
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The area has seen sunny weather in recent days, though temperatures have dropped to between 40 and 50 degrees Fahrenheit at night, according to AccuWeather.
Nancy’s $1 million home, located on a residential street, appears to be in a secluded area. Photos of her home show it’s surrounded by shrubbery on all sides, and some plants appear to partially block the view of her front door from the street. Her property also has a large outdoor area and a pool.
For days, law enforcement officers canvassed the home and property of Nancy Guthrie (AP)
But after just two days, large-scale search efforts were called off, with Nanos noting: “Right now, we don’t see this as a search mission, as much as we do a crime scene.”
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Nanos said Nancy lives in an area that’s “not well lit.” He described it as a “very suburban, rural area of the Tucson area, in a very mountainous side of town where vegetation is extremely thick.”
Deputies returned to the house multiple times in the past week for what the sheriff called a “follow-up” after the property had already been released back to the family.
What are neighbors saying?
Locals have reacted with shock and rallied to help search for Nancy.
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“I just saw her two days ago [on Saturday] checking her mail,” one neighbor told Us Weekly. “She was always smiling and always asking about our family and neighbors. She was very engaged with the community. … It’s very concerning.”
Another neighbor, Morgan Brown, told the magazine that there had been “a lot of dark vans with blacked out windows” in the suburb since Nancy’s disappearance.
“There were a lot of cop cars there at first, and then it was vans, so I assumed that maybe they came across something.”
One neighbor told The Arizona Republic that officers went door to door to talk to people, asking to see any surveillance videos they had and to look through people’s backyards.
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Resident Jan Henry, who lives nearby, serves as neighborhood watch lead and has been coordinating a volunteer rescue group.
“We sent out an alert to all the neighbors in our neighborhood so we could be looking for her,” Henry told local news channel KGUN 9.
A sign outside Nancy Guthrie’s home that reads, ‘Dear Guthrie family, your neighbors stand with you’ (Reuters)
Who is her daughter, Savannah?
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Nancy’s daughter, 54-year-old Savannah Guthrie, is a co-host on NBC’s Today show and was previously a White House correspondent.
Savannah was born in Victoria, Australia, where the family was living at the time while her father worked for an Arizona-based mining company. They returned to the U.S. two years later and settled in Tucson. Savannah’s father died when she was entering her senior year at high school.
She attended the University of Arizona thanks to her mom, who had taken a job there in order to secure tuition-free education for her children.
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Nancy’s daughter, 54-year-old Savannah Guthrie, a co-host on NBC’s Today show, grew up in Tucson (AP)
Savannah has spoken often about how her mother supported her in her dreams of parenthood, reassuring her that it would happen when the time was right. She now has a daughter, Vale, and a son, Charley, with her husband, Michael Feldman, whom she married in 2014.
How is the family coping?
Savannah Guthrie has asked for help to “bring her home” in the wake of her mother’s disappearance, posting a faith-based message on Instagram on February 2 to her 1.2 million followers.
“Thank you for lifting your prayers with ours for our beloved mom, our dearest Nancy, a woman of deep conviction, a good and faithful servant,” she wrote. “Raise your prayers with us and believe with us that she will be lifted by them in this very moment.”
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In a video posted two days later, Savannah and her siblings – Annie and Camron Guthrie – acknowledged the reports of a ransom note and made a direct plea for proof their mother is alive. They said they were “ready to talk” and asked whoever has their mother to provide evidence of life.
“We need to know without a doubt that she is alive and that you have her. We want to hear from you and we are ready to listen. Please reach out to us,” Savannah Guthrie said while fighting off tears.
Today show host Savannah Guthrie and her siblings plead for their mother’s safe return after she disappeared from her home in Arizona (instagram/savannahguthrie)
With her voice cracking, she addressed her mother directly, saying the family was praying for her and that people were looking for her.
“Mamma, if you’re listening, we need you to come home. We miss you,” Annie Guthrie added.
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One day later, Camron posted his own video on behalf of his family asking the suspected kidnappers to contact them.
“Whoever is out there holding our mother, we want to hear from you. We haven’t heard anything directly,” he said in the video. “We need you to reach out and we need a way to communicate with you so we can move forward. But first, we have to know that you have our mom. We want to talk to you and we are waiting for contact.”
Then, on Friday, the family posted another message acknowledging that contact had been made with a suspected kidnapper.
In the video, Savannah Guthrie says that her family has “received your message” and “will pay” for their mother’s safe return.
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“We received your message and we understand,” the Today anchor said.
“We beg you now to return our mother to us, so that we can celebrate with her,” Guthrie said. She added that her mother is “very valuable to us” and “we will pay.”
Annie is a writer and jeweler living in Tucson, according to her biography on the Arizona Commission on the Arts website. She published Instant Gratification, a book on jewelry making, in 2001. Fourteen years later, she published The Good Dark, a book of poems.
Camron is a retired military pilot, according to a social media post Savannah shared in 2018.
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“I have never been more proud of my big brother. He has flown for our country for 26 years, and continues to serve proudly in the ‘Green Mountain Boys’ – the Vermont Air National Guard,” she wrote at the time.
Savannah has been absent from the Today show all week and will not be traveling to Milan, Italy, to host the 2026 Winter Olympics opening ceremony.
She had also reportedly planned to stay in Italy for a week to record NBC’s morning program with her former co-host Hoda Kotb. The Winter Olympics in Milan and Cortina d’Ampezzo are set to run from February 6 to 26.
An NBC Sports spokesperson said in a statement shared with The Independent, “Savannah will not be joining us at the Olympics as she focuses on being with her family during this difficult time. Our hearts are with her and the entire Guthrie family as the search continues for their mother.”
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Craig Melvin, who was also supposed to host Olympic Late Night from Milan from Saturday to Monday, will be staying in the U.S. as well.
L-R: Craig Melvin, Al Roker, Hoda Kotb and Savannah Guthrie pose on the Today set with Team USA Olympians on August 5, 2024 in Paris, France. (Getty)
What is the public reaction?
People across the U.S. are voicing their support for Savannah Guthrie and her family.
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President Donald Trump spoke to Savannah Guthrie directly, offering his support. He shared a Truth Social post last week detailing his phone call.
“I spoke with Savannah Guthrie, and let her know that I am directing ALL Federal Law Enforcement to be at the family’s, and Local Law Enforcement’s, complete disposal, IMMEDIATELY. We are deploying all resources to get her mother home safely. The prayers of our Nation are with her and her family. GOD BLESS AND PROTECT NANCY! PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP,” he wrote.
New York’s Cardinal Timothy Dolan also offered words of support during an appearance on the Today show.
“Savannah, I am asking the Good Shepherd to find this lost sheep,” he said.
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Current and former colleagues of Savannah have also offered their support, with Today co-host Al Roker urging the public to help find Nancy.
“We are praying for Savannah and her family and the return of their beloved Mom, Nancy,” Roker wrote on Instagram.
NBC News’ Kristen Welker has said she is “praying” for the family. Hoda Kotb, Savannah’s former Today co-host, shared a photo of Nancy on Instagram, including the sheriff’s department’s phone number, writing: “If you know anything.. pls help.”
NBC Sports Anchor Mike Tirico similarly voiced his support for the family, adding that “this is a time for caring about the people in your family, and we are holding Savannah near and dear to our heart, and we are praying for all of them.”
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Fans also sent Savannah love on Instagram after she made her emotional plea for help.
“Praying for your lovely mom and your family. God is Almighty. Almighty is God,” one fan wrote.
Another wrote: “Sending you so much love and prayers.”
“We’re all praying for your beautiful Mom to return safely. Sending you and your family strength. We love you, Savannah,” a third said.
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The Pima County Sheriff’s Department said anyone with information should contact 1-800-CALL-FBI, 520-351-4900, 88-CRIME or visit tips.fbi.gov.
The A1 60163 Tornado, built in 2008 following an original design by Arthur Peppercorn, will visit the East Lancashire Railway (ELR).
It will journey to the station for its third Legends of Steam event from April 10 to 12.
The Tornado is the only member of its class in existence.
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Lee Kenny, general manager of the ELR, said: “We are absolutely delighted to welcome Tornado to the East Lancashire Railway for Legends of Steam.
“It is a truly iconic locomotive and one that always draws huge interest from enthusiasts and families alike.
“We are extremely grateful to the A1 Locomotive Trust for allowing this remarkable engine to visit and share in what promises to be a fantastic celebration of steam.
“We would also like to thank the Swanage Railway and Southern Locomotives Ltd for their support in allowing No. 34070 Manston to visit us.”
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Tornado will be joined by fellow guest locomotive Battle of Britain class No. 34070 Manston, courtesy of the Swanage Railway and Southern Locomotives Ltd.
This will be alongside other mainstays from the ELR’s operational fleet.
Completed in 2008, Tornado was the first new-build steam locomotive for the British main line since 1960.
It serves as a tribute to the past while incorporating modern manufacturing techniques.
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Visitors will have the opportunity to ride behind Tornado.
There will also be a limited number of seats available in the brake van for a more immersive experience.
You can book tickets here: https://www.eastlancsrailway.org.uk/events-activities/legends-of-steam
Keir Starmer could have blocked the peerage of his former spin doctor over his links to a convicted paedophile even after it was announced, it has emerged.
The prime minister is at the centre of a fresh crisis over his decision to put Matthew Doyle into the House of Lords last month.
On Tuesday, Labour suspended Doyle, who was the No.10 director of communications until last March, after it emerged he campaigned for Sean Morton, who had been charged with having indecent images of children.
Six months later, Morton, a former Labour councillor, admitted the charges.
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Doyle’s peerage was announced on December 10, and the Sunday Times revealed he campaigned for Morton on December 27.
He formally became Baron Doyle of Great Barford on January 8 in a process known as having his “letters patent sealed”.
Downing Street sources admitted that the PM became aware of the full extent of Doyle’s links to Morton on December 27, but his spokesman insisted there was “no precedent for withdrawing a peerage nomination after the announcement stage”.
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“That’s why we’re undertaking wider reform to both vetting and appointment processes”, he said.
But the House of Lords later appeared to blow a hole in No.10′s argument.
A Lords spokesman said: “We cannot comment on specific confidential advice given by parliamentary officials.
“However our understanding is that under the Life Peerages Act 1958 a Peerage is created when the letters patent are sealed.”
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That means Starmer could have acted to prevent Doyle becoming a peer before it became official on January 8.
The row has clear parallels to the scandal surrounding Peter Mandelson, who Starmer made the UK’s ambassador to Washington despite his known links to the convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein.
When further details emerged of the extent of Mandelson’s friendship with the billionaire financier became known seven months later, the PM sacked him.
Mandelson is now facing a police probe over allegations he passed market sensitive information to Epstein when he was business secretary in the wake of the global financial crash.
David Dickinson was forced to step in on his ITV programme Dickinson’s Real Deal following a major show first
Joe Crutchley Screen Time Reporter
16:23, 11 Feb 2026
A guest on Dickinson’s Real Deal was left wiping away the tears following an emotional moment on the ITV programme.
The beloved show returned to screen on Thursday afternoon (February 5) with David Dickinson back at the helm. For the instalment, the programme paid a visit to Cirencester.
But things took an emotional turn when a guest broke down in tears following a show first. On the programme, Anna and Rachel brought in a huge meat platter to show dealer Henry Nicholls, to see how much it was worth.
When asked how they acquired the item, the guests – who work at the Dogs Trust charity – explained: “It came two years ago to the charity. It was very difficult to sell in the shop, so we decided to bring it here to you and see how much we can get.”
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Henry Nicholls replied: “You’ve brought it to the right person because it’s my favourite charity!” The guests added: “So many dogs need rehoming. We’re trying to help with behaviour training and vet assistance.”
Henry then looked over the 200-year-old item and explained: “It was made by a very famous manufacturer called Spode. Now, Josiah Spode started the factory in the late 18th century and they produced all manner of different types of patterns, depicting different scenes, neoclassical scenes etc.
“This one is a standard Spode what they call Blue Italian. But there is one thing that puts this into a different league from any other Spode piece you will see from this period.”
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He said: “And there we go,” before turning the platter over to reveal a mark that confirmed it was printed in August 1816. Henry added: “The mark on the back here is probably the rarest Spode mark that you will ever get.”
It was then time for Henry to offer some cash for the meat platter. His first offer was £200, but he continued to put down the notes on the table. Eventually, he made his final offer of £500.
“We’re getting close,” the guest cheekily quipped before Henry got David in to hear his thoughts. David said: “I’ve just been having a word with our experts and this is a very rare piece of Spode with that mark on the back. The estimation from my independent values is £150 to £300.”
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David then shared that they have had a look at two Spode items that previously sold in an auction, in which one went for an eye-watering £900. David said: “It really is an antique collector specialist piece, so it could do quite well. But it’s all ‘could’ and ‘maybe’.”
Henry added: “I think pretty much that’s what it’s worth,” while David declared: “Come on, out a bit more!” Henry then revealed his plan: “What I’m wanting them to do is to accept my £500.
“Then, because it’s my favourite charity, I’m going to do something that people would consider me mad to do. If you accept my £500, as a donation to the Dogs Trust I’m going to match that £500. I will be donating £500 to my favourite charity.”
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The guests were left over the moon at Henry’s offer. David said: “I think that’s a done deal,” as one of the guests immediately went to shake Henry’s hand and said: “Thank you!” A stunned David added: “An extraordinary offer! Never been known on the show before.”
Henry then started putting down the extra £500 down on the table while one of the guests broke down in tears, before wiping her eyes. David quipped: “I tell you what, I think you deserve a kiss here for that one,” before stepping on to kiss Henry on the forehead.
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After, the guests said: “Just thank you so much, that was an amazing deal!” Meanwhile, Henry shared: “I am over the moon to own this platter. It’s so rare and what a delightful deal that was. Everyone’s a winner!”
Dickinson’s Real Deal airs Monday to Friday at 2pm on ITV1.
Something I have noticed about my inner circle hitting our mid-thirties to early-forties is that we now speak very, very fondly about what were most definitely our most chaotic days.
A huge thing we just can’t seem to get our heads around is all the energy we once had. For example, when I was 21, I could work a full retail shift, go home, get changed, then go on a night out until 3-4am, grab a quick sleep and be in work for 9am. I would do this several times a week.
I don’t think I’m exaggerating when I say that 15 years later, if I tried that nonsense, I’d be hospitalised.
How did we ever live like this?! We lived as if we were invincible and it was probably because we felt like we were.
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These days, we need routine. We need to be keeping a regular sleeping pattern, taking our daily vitamins and making sure that we fix exercise and a good diet into our lives to ensure we feel half alive.
We’re all a lot more tired than we were back in our booze-soaked glory days.
However, fatigue is most prevalent in our 40′s
Yep. If you find yourself having a tired-off with colleagues after a particularly rough nights’ sleep, you may want to consider if age is a factor in yours or your colleague’s tiredness.
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Writing for The Conversation, Michelle Spear, a Professor of Anatomy, University of Bristol explains: “In your 20s, poor sleep or stress could be buffered. In your 40s, inefficiency is exposed. Recovery becomes more “expensive”.
“Sleep also changes. Many people still get enough hours, but sleep fragments. Less deep sleep means less repair. Fatigue feels cumulative rather than episodic.
“Hormones don’t disappear in midlife – they fluctuate, particularly in women. Variability, not deficiency, disrupts temperature regulation, sleep timing and energy rhythms. The body copes better with low levels than with unpredictable ones.”
There are also lifestyle factors, too. Many of us find ourselves in leadership and caring roles, not to mention the pressures of parenthood and ageing parents which can take a huge toll on our physical and mental reserves.
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It’s not all bad news, though
While we often look at our lives and bodies as things that gradually decline, Spear assures that it levels out significantly by our 60s and adds: “Across adulthood, energy shifts in character rather than simply declining. The mistake we make is assuming that feeling tired in midlife reflects a personal failing, or that it marks the start of an unavoidable decline. Anatomically, it is neither…
“The hopeful message is not that we can reclaim our 20-year-old selves. Rather, it is that energy in later life remains highly modifiable, and that the exhaustion so characteristic of the 40s is not the endpoint of the story. Fatigue at this stage is not a warning of inevitable decline; it is a signal that the rules have changed.”
Looking forward to meeting the energetic 60-year-old me.
In 2024 to 25, almost 6,700 notices were issued in the county, mainly for unauthorised family holidays. That equates to 556 fines per 10,000 pupils, a 35 percent drop from the 10,300 issued the previous year. The figure is also down from 9,500 in 2022 to 23 and lower than the 8,700 recorded in 2018 to 19 before the pandemic.
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Parents in the wider Cambridgeshire council area were slightly more likely to be fined than those in Peterborough, with 560 fines per 10,000 pupils compared with 549.
Nationally, however, fines continue to climb. A record 459,000 penalty notices were issued across England in 2024 to 25, equal to more than 620 per 10,000 pupils. That compares with 116,000 in 2016 to 17, rising to 288,000 in 2018 to 19, 356,000 in 2022 to 23 and 443,000 in 2023 to 24.
The highest rates are in the North of England, where councils issued 817 fines per 10,000 pupils last year, compared with 665 in the Midlands and 550 in the South. Barnsley recorded the highest rate in the country at 1,700 per 10,000 pupils, followed by Oldham, Blackpool, Hartlepool, Leicester, Rotherham and St Helens.
Penalty notices are issued when parents fail to ensure their child attends school. In 2024 to 25 the fine was £80 if paid within 21 days, rising to £160 after that. A second notice within three years is charged at £160. Most fines, around 93 percent, are for unauthorised term time holidays.
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Commenter Terry B says: “Teachers can strike or hold scheduled training days through the authority or union, and those days still affect pupils’ learning. If a teacher or student is off sick for a period, learning is disrupted too, yet pupils still manage to achieve. I understand the need in some cases, but is it really essential?
Marty S agrees: “Yet no fines are imposed on teachers when strike action forces parents to keep their children at home from school.”
Liz D asks: “Are the fines actually lower than the steep price hikes during school holidays that cash in on families? It almost feels like the school calendar creates a guaranteed stream of business.”
Amyalan1958 replies: “It’s cheaper to pay the fines than to pay peak school holiday prices; other sanctions are needed.”
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Tomasz D complains: “This is a pure penalisation of parents for their parental duties. How many other countries have those fines in place? Answers anyone?”
Rhodabike thinks: “This is just another excuse for schools to extort money off parents. Our education system has numerous issues, but kids missing a few days a year for a holiday isn’t one of them.”
WelcomeToTheFuture writes: “We never did it when my kids were at school, but I can understand it makes sense, the prices go up wildly in the summer holidays so paying a fine is a drop in the ocean compared to the savings you would make for a family of 4, it could easily be thousands of pounds saved.”
Timbiscuit suggests: “Expel them. Then watch as the parents discover how difficult it is to find a placement. Going on holiday during term time is ridiculous!”
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With fines falling locally but rising sharply nationwide, is the current approach to term time holidays really working? Have your say in our comments section.
Everything to know about snow warning for Greater Manchester – Manchester Evening News
Need to know
The Met Office has issued several snow and ice warnings
Snow and ice warnings issued by the Met Office (Image: Met Office)
Everything to know about snow forecast
The Met Office has issued a yellow weather warning for snow and ice across Greater Manchester, starting at 9pm on Thursday (February 12 )and lasting until midday on Friday (February 13). This warning covers parts of Bury, Rochdale, Oldham, Tameside, Stockport, and Manchester, as well as large areas in the North West, North East, Midlands, Yorkshire & Humber, and Scotland.
Forecasters predict up to 10cm of snow could settle in some higher areas, especially above 300 metres, with 2-5cm possible above 200 metres. Lower levels may also see snow as temperatures drop sharply across the UK, bringing wintry conditions.
The Met Office warns that rain, sleet, and snow are likely to create icy surfaces, increasing the risk of slips and falls. Untreated roads, pavements, and cycle paths could become hazardous, potentially causing travel disruption and longer journey times for road, bus, and train services.
Weather maps show lighter flurries of snow overnight into Friday morning, with light snow forecast in Bolton, Bury, Rochdale, Oldham, Tameside, and parts of Stockport by 6am. The snow and ice are expected to clear south during the early hours of Friday as skies clear and temperatures fall further, increasing the risk of ice.
Another snow and ice warning is in place for most of Scotland from Thursday afternoon until Friday midday, with 1-2cm of snow possible widely and up to 10cm on higher ground. More snow is expected in Greater Manchester on Sunday (February 15), as a large band of snow moves eastwards, bringing moderate to light snowfall across the region through the early morning hours.