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General Sir Michael Jackson, 1944-2024

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Prince William jokes with General Sir Michael Jackson at the passing-out Sovereign’s Parade at Sandhurst Military Academy

The world had not been this close to nuclear conflagration since the cold war, according to Viktor Chernomyrdin, Russia’s special envoy to Serbia. It was June 1996. The scene was Pristina airport, in the immediate aftermath of the Kosovo war. A column of Russian troops had just made a surprise grab of the airfield, in a gesture of solidarity with their traditional allies the Serbs. Wes Clark, the US supreme commander of Nato, fearing that Moscow was about to fly in reinforcements, ordered General Sir Mike Jackson, who led the alliance’s peacekeeping forces in the field, to block the runway.

Jackson, who has died aged 80, held a different view. His grizzled visage, lidded eyes and granite voice testified to months of late-night diplomacy spent with Balkan warlords over drinks and cigars. But his “Prince of Darkness” mess-room nickname also masked a finely honed military mind.

“Sir, I am not going to start World War III for you,” Jackson told his superior officer. Clark repeated the order. Jackson replied in characteristic, no-bullshit style: “Sir, I am a three-star general, you can’t give me orders like this. I have my own judgment of the situation and I believe that this order is outside our mandate.” Clark countered: “Mike, I am a four-star general, and I can tell you these things.”

In the end, the situation was defused — helped by a hip flask of whisky that Jackson shared with his Russian counterpart. Clark was soon after moved on from his Nato post. And the reputation of “Macho Jacko”, as the British tabloids christened him, was sealed with a Distinguished Service Order medal.

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Michael David Jackson was one of Britain’s highest-profile, post-second world war generals. Born in Sheffield in 1944, 10 weeks before his father went into action during D-Day, his first memory was of sailing on a troop ship with his mother to Libya to join his father who had been stationed after the war in Tripoli. At Stamford boarding school back in England, Jackson amused himself making Airfix models, reading Eagle and Hotspur comics, and became a boy scout and then a cadet. Aged 17, he successfully applied to Sandhurst military academy and then earned a degree in Russian studies from Birmingham university while serving in the Intelligence Corps before transferring to the Parachute Regiment in 1970. It was the beginning of a varied and illustrious military career. “I am a soldier. I have held every rank in the British Army from officer cadet to four-star general . . . I remain a soldier at heart,” as he wrote in his forthright 2006 memoir Soldier.

Jackson served three tours in Northern Ireland: in the first, as a junior adjutant during Bloody Sunday, when British troops killed 13 Catholic men during a civil rights march in Londonderry in January 1972; in his last, in the early 1990s, as one of the UK’s three brigade commanders there. He also had stints at the Ministry of Defence in London. The first, in 1982, meant he missed the Falklands War; the second in 1992, as head of personnel services, meant he missed the first Gulf war. Jackson, with his marked sense of humour, liked to describe that apparently humdrum role as being all about B’s: “bands, belts, berets, badges, buttons, banners, bars (medals), bars (booze), burglary, bullying, barbiturates, bosoms, babies, bonking and buggery.”  

Prince William jokes with General Sir Michael Jackson at the passing-out Sovereign’s Parade at Sandhurst Military Academy
Prince William jokes with General Sir Michael Jackson at the passing-out Sovereign’s Parade at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst © Anwar Hussein/Getty Images

Happier in the field than among civil servants, Jackson returned to active duty in 1995 with his first Balkans tour. In 2000, back in England, he was promoted to full general and, in 2003, a month before the Iraq invasion, made chief of the general staff, head of the British Army.

Ironically, given the controversies about British participation in the second Gulf war, one of Jackson’s stormiest moment as CGS followed a hugely unpopular army reorganisation that subsumed several famous regiments, such as the Royal Scots. Jackson maintained it was the right thing to do, arguing that if the British army never accepted the need for change it would “still be in red coats and fighting in squares”. Twice married, with three children — two of whom joined the armed forces — Jackson retired in 2006, one month short of 45 years of service.

To his regret, Jackson never took an active role in a conventional war: all his tours of duty involved peace-supporting operations. After the fall of the Berlin wall, he also worried that the UK had extracted an excessive peace dividend from military spending. But in contrast to his reputation of being a hard-drinking solider’s soldier, Jackson was no warmonger.

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He always insisted that wars were a continuation of politics by other means — the Clausewitzian adage he first read as a teenager — and was adamant that some struggles, especially the “war on terror”, could never be solved by military means alone. He also criticised the lack of US postwar planning in Iraq, calling secretary of defence Donald Rumsfeld’s assertion that the US did not “do nation building” as “intellectually bankrupt” and “nonsensical”.

Rupert Smith, a celebrated former British general who worked alongside Jackson, described him as a natural commander, whose “intelligence and breadth of view, his ability to analyse the issue in hand, to identify its essence and the necessary action to deal with it, was very clear . . . human and moral factors always figured in his thinking”.

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NWF and bank duo join forces to deliver £1bn for social housing retrofit

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Rightmove urges REA to submit ‘best and final’ offer as it rejects £6.2bn bid

The funding has been enabled by financial guarantees of up to £750m provided by the National Wealth Fund

The post NWF and bank duo join forces to deliver £1bn for social housing retrofit appeared first on Property Week.

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Alleged hacker Googled ‘signs the FBI is after you’

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Getty Images A laptop with financial graphs on it and a phone with the Bitcoin logo on it.Getty Images

“What are some signs the FBI is after you” is one of the alleged hacker’s searches, according to court documents

A man arrested in connection with a hack of the US markets regulator’s X account searched “how can I know for sure if I am being investigated by the FBI,” according to court documents.

Eric Council Jr, 25, of Athens, Georgia, is also alleged to have searched for “signs that you are under investigation by law enforcement… even if you have not been contacted by them”.

He is accused of being part of a group which hacked the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) social media in January to make a fake post about Bitcoin, causing the cryptocurrency to surge in value.

The regulator previously admitted a key security step to access its X account had been removed.

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The post sent by hackers on the SEC’s X account made the false claim the regulator had allowed Bitcoin to be part of mainstream investment funds.

This caused the price of the cryptocurrency to rise by about $1,000 (£770), according to the US Department of Justice, before falling by $2,000 when it was found to be untrue.

Despite the confusion caused by the hack, the SEC later approved Bitcoin to be a part of mainstream investment, through what are known as spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds.

According to court documents, Eric Council Jr went under the aliases Ronin, Easymunny, and AGiantSchnauzer online, and searched “SECGOV hack” and “Telegram sim swap”.

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He is also alleged to have searched “federal identity theft statute” and “how long does it take to delete Telegram account”.

Telegram is a messaging app with more than 950 million monthly active users.

How was the SEC hacked?

The SEC has confirmed its account was compromised by a Sim swap attack.

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This is when someone fraudulently gets a mobile phone carrier to apply an existing telephone number to a new Sim card.

In this case, the alleged perpetrator is accused of creating a fake ID with the details of an SEC employee which were passed on to him by co-conspirators.

He is then alleged to have used these details to get the employee’s mobile number transferred to a new Sim.

Co-conspirators are alleged to have used access codes sent to the phone to login to the SEC’s X account.

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This was made easier due to a lack of adequate protection on the account.

SEC staff had asked X in July 2023 to suspend multi-factor authentication (MFA), a security measure used to help verify the person logging in.

It subsequently re-enabled MFA after the hack.

Eric Council Jr is charged with one count of conspiracy to commit aggravated identity theft and access device fraud.

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If found guilty, he could face up to five years in prison.

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A lesson in why recording rationale is key to staying on the right side of the regulator

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Simon-Collins

Simon-CollinsThe Financial Conduct Authority has made it clear its approach to enforcement is changing.

It says it’s a change to increase public confidence in financial services and will require cooperation and commitment across the industry “to stop market abuse, keep our markets clean and build trust. This is how we will attract talent to our sector, bring investment to our shores and grow our economy.”

Quite the challenge but one that is necessary.

After almost 40 years of experience in the industry, I fundamentally believe there is now a strong professionalism underpinning the provision of financial advice and wealth management.

However, there are some reoccurring themes I see which undermine this positivity, including the fact there are still a number of people who struggle to really grasp why the FCA felt a need to introduce Consumer Duty.

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For example, one of my colleagues was recently speaking to a senior manager within a wealth firm that had been struggling with its annual suitability review function for its clients. Their timescales were under pressure, with a lack of sufficiently proactive and competent advisers motivated enough to undertake appropriate reviews in a timely manner.

The firm needed to act promptly, not wait to see if the FCA would intervene to address the issue.

Its operational function began to look at artificial intelligence (AI) solutions and, through robust research and a strong testing approach, developed a review solution that reduced the time per client suitability review from three hours to 75 minutes, including adviser time to provide a summary of any recommendations.

However, this led the firm to fall down on its fair value assessment undertaken ahead of July.

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The assessment acknowledged the improved efficiency it had achieved and the use of the improved technological solution but it had not taken into account the reduced management/adviser time required to undertake each client review and whether that should have an economic impact on the fee the firm charged to the client for its ongoing services.

It could be the case that the lack of actual adviser time on reviewing the portfolio is compensated by increased time in client meetings or conversations both adviser and client find more beneficial. Increased efficiency doesn’t necessarily mean the cost for the service provided should be reduced.

But the critical aspect here is that there has to be consideration. There needs to be evidence of a rationale as to why the service is value for money, fair and that the client genuinely understands what they are paying for.

Sadly, based on what we see at times, the communication is often lacking or convoluted, and the client finds themselves struggling to really understand what they are getting in terms of service.

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Simon Collins is managing director, regulatory, at Konexo, a division of Eversheds Sutherland

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Boohoo chief to step down as fast-fashion group launches strategic review

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Line chart of Share price, pence showing Boohoo has struggled for the past three years

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Boohoo Group’s chief executive will step down and the company is to launch a strategic review of its operations, the fast-fashion retailer said on Friday, as it announced a £222mn debt refinancing.

Boohoo, which owns brands including PrettyLittleThing, Karen Millen and Debenhams, the former department store chain, said its board believed the group remained “fundamentally undervalued” and had “decided to undertake a review of options for each division to unlock and maximise shareholder value”.

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It said chief executive John Lyttle would step down having served for five years, but would work with its leadership until a successor is found.

Boohoo shares have lost more than 90 per cent of their value since their peak in mid-2020 when it was buoyed by a boom in online shopping during the pandemic. Since then, it has had to contend with more subdued demand and higher day-to-day costs such as returns.

Line chart of Share price, pence showing Boohoo has struggled for the past three years

The retailer is also under threat from relatively new entrants such as online fast-fashion player Shein, whose UK operations surpassed £1.5bn last year, ahead of Boohoo, and similar to Asos, despite only starting selling in the UK in earnest in the past few years.

Boohoo’s gross merchandise value after returns fell 7 per cent in the six months to the end of August to £1.2bn, the company said on Friday, while adjusted profits dropped by £10mn to £21mn. It added that it expected performance to improve in the second half of the year compared with the previous six months.

Boohoo was founded by Mahmud Kamani and Carol Kane in 2006 in Manchester to sell fashionable clothes online straight to shoppers, cutting out the retail middlemen.

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Nick Bubb, an independent retail analyst, said that one option for the struggling group would be to break itself up, adding there were “no prizes for guessing which bit Mike Ashley will want”.

Ashley’s Frasers Group is a shareholder in Boohoo, as well as rival Asos.

The sportswear billionaire battled with Boohoo for control of Debenhams after the department store’s collapse in 2019.

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Frasers also gatecrashed Boohoo’s deal to buy ailing fashion rival Missguided in 2022, and bought competitor I Saw It First, set up by Kamani’s brother.

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Huge inheritance tax rule changes planned in the Budget as thousands more families could be hit with bills

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Huge inheritance tax rule changes planned in the Budget as thousands more families could be hit with bills

INHERITANCE tax and stamp duty are both set for a hike at this month’s “painful” Budget.

In a bid to fill a £40bn black hole in the public purse, Rachel Reeves is also eyeing up a raid on vape duties.

Rachel Reeves is eyeing up a raid on inheritance tax and stamp duty as part of the October 30 "painful" Budget

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Rachel Reeves is eyeing up a raid on inheritance tax and stamp duty as part of the October 30 “painful” Budget

Inheritance tax is currently charged at 40 per cent on the homes and cash of somebody who has died, if their belongings are worth £325,000 or more.

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Currently only 4% of UK adults pay what has been dubbed the “death tax”.

But the amount they are charged could grow as Ms Reeves considers raising the inheritance tax headline rate – though it isn’t yet known by how much.

Meanwhile, house buyers will be charged up to £2,500 more in stamp duty from next year as the Chancellor ends a £2bn discount introduced by the Tories.

Ms Reeves will move the nil rate threshold back down to £125,000 from £250,00.

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For first time buyers the the threshold for paying stamp duty will move from £450,000 to £300,000.

The move is set to save the Treasury £1.8bn.

In a major blow for e-smokers, Treasury mandarins are also looking to vapes as another possible product for a tax raid.

The Chancellor is also expected to slash £3bn from the welfare bill in the Budget – with £1.3bn of that coming from disability benefits.

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The changes, first introduced by the Tories, will tighten access to sickness benefits through tough new rules under the Work Capability Assessment.

A spokesman for the Treasury said: “We do not comment on speculation around tax changes outside of fiscal events.”

The Chancellor submitted her final Budget plans to Britain’s economic watchdog, the Office for Budget Responsibility, earlier this week.

She also wants to build up a buffer to help keep the country better protected against economic shocks.

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One close ally of the Chancellor said: “If we are having to raise taxes, we want to put the money into the people’s priorities.

“The NHS is the number one priority.”

Predictions for the Autumn Statement

The Sun’s Head of Consumer Tara Evans reveals the top predictions for the Autumn Statement:

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Winter Fuel Payments

Chancellor Rachel Reeves has already announced that Winter Fuel Payments will be limited to those receiving pension credit and certain benefits. The benefit is worth up to £300 per year and currently is available to everyone over state pension age and those on certain benefits.

No rises to some taxes

Keir Starmer promised there would be no rises to National Insurance, Income Tax, Corporation Tax or VAT as part of Labour’s manifesto in the election race.

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Inheritance Tax

It has been predicted that the Chancellor Racheal Reeves will make changes to inheritance tax rates or thresholds. One suggestion is the potential shortening of the gift period before death for tax exemptions.

Pensions

Pensions featured very high up in the King’s Speech, was this a hint at how high on the agenda it will feature in the budget? Experts say there are a number of options, including reintroducing the lifetime allowance cap. Ms Reeves has previously campaigned to reduce the tax relief that higher earners get on their pensions and to  introduce a flat rate of 33% instead. Another possible option is changing the rules around pensions and inheritance tax.

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Capital Gains Tax (CGT)

There is speculation that the £3,000 tax-free allowance could be scrapped or there may be an extension of CGT to other assets.

Business Rates

There are rumours of reforms to support small businesses, possibly basing rates on land value.

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Fuel Duty

Possible rise in fuel duty, reversing the freeze since 2011 and impacting household costs. The Sun has backed drivers as part of its Keep It Down campaign since the start of 2011.

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Jet2 launches holiday packages to two new Christmas destinations with £2 beers and honey wine

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Jet2 has launched package holidays to Bratislava (pictured) and Malmo for the festive season

THE country’s largest tour operator is launching new package holidays to two festive destinations in Europe.

Brit holidaymakers will now be able to book package holidays to Bratislava and Malmo with Jet2.

Jet2 has launched package holidays to Bratislava (pictured) and Malmo for the festive season

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Jet2 has launched package holidays to Bratislava (pictured) and Malmo for the festive seasonCredit: Alamy
Brit holidaymakers will be able to book Jet2 breaks to Malmo (pictured)

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Brit holidaymakers will be able to book Jet2 breaks to Malmo (pictured)Credit: Alamy

The tour operator has confirmed it will be launching package holidays to the city break destinations following strong demand from UK holidaymakers.

Jet2 will operate flights from Manchester Airport and Birmingham Airport to Vienna Airport in Austria.

From Vienna, it’s an hour’s drive to Bratislava where holidaymakers can book into a range of four star hotels located in the heart of the city.

Package holidays to Bratislava from Manchester and Birmingham airports go on sale today (October 18) until May 19, 2025.

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Jet2 will also add extra services to Vienna from several UK airports, including Bristol, East Midlands, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Leeds Bradford and London Stansted.

These flights will operate in November and December for the festive period.

Bratislava in Slovakia is a relatively small for a European capital, but it has a lot for visitors to explore along its streets.

Chief among them is its incredibly affordable beer selection, with pints averaging around £1.60.

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Beer isn’t the only popular drink in the city either, with honey wine a special local tipple, and it’s usually sold at Christmas markets, where it’s often drunk hot.

Nuremberg Christkindlesmarkt takes place in the Hauptmarkt, the central square of Nuremberg’s old town.

Visitors to the city can go to the Medovina distillery where the honey wine is brewed, so they can taste it and learn more about the bees and the brewing process.

The best place to enjoy a drink in Bratislava is the city’s old town, which is described as an “historic neighbourhood filled with charming narrow lanes, burgher’s houses and nobles’ palaces”.

It’s also the perfect part of the city in which to try local dishes like bryndzové halušky, described by Flash Pack as “gnocchi-like dumplings served with sheep cheese and a sprinkling of bacon”.

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One person previously wrote: “Very beautiful. Especially charming during Christmas market, where you can feel the holidays atmosphere, to taste delicious food, sausages, beer, boiled wine, desserts etc.”

Other attractions include Bratislava Castle, the Slovak National Museum and the highly Instagrammable Blue Church.

Jet2 will also be launching package holidays to Malmo in Sweden.

Bratislava Castle is a one of the city's top attractions

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Bratislava Castle is a one of the city’s top attractionsCredit: Alamy
Squares in Malmo are transformed for the festive season

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Squares in Malmo are transformed for the festive seasonCredit: Alamy

Christmas market getaways to Malmo will run from November 29, 2024 until December 23, 2024.

Flights will operate from Leeds Bradford Airport and Newcastle International Airport.

Brit holidaymakers will fly from the UK to Copenhagen before taking a direct train over the Oresund Bridge that links Denmark and Sweden.

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Twice weekly services will operate every Monday and Friday from Leeds Bradford and Newcastle International Airport this winter.

Holidaymakers can bok to stay in a range of hotels in Malmo through Jet2 City Breaks.

Just like Bratislava, Malmo is another popular Christmas market destination thanks to the wooden market stalls selling festive treats and local delicacies like gløgg and saffron buns.

However, unlike Bratislava food and drink in Malmo is a little pricier, with a pint of beer costing around £5.80.

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Located in the city’s largest square, Gustav Adolfs Torg market is adorned with twinkling lights and shopping stalls.

Other attractions in the square include an ice rink, choir singers and a carousel.

Jet2 boss, Steve Heapy, said: “City and Christmas market breaks are continuing to grow in popularity, so we are delighted to be going on sale with two brand-new destinations for Winter 24/25. 

“Bratislava and Malmo are fantastic destinations, and we are expecting these new city and Christmas market packages with Jet2CityBreaks to be very popular with both customers and independent travel agents.  

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“We are always listening and reacting to feedback from holidaymakers, and this latest expansion of our Cities and Christmas Markets programmes for this winter is just another example of that.

“With the addition of Malmo and Bratislava to our already huge winter programmes, customers are spoiled for choice when it comes to discovering a new city or experiencing a European Christmas market this season.”

Hand luggage rules for UK airlines

We’ve rounded up how much hand luggage you can take on UK airlines when booking their most basic fare.

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Ryanair

One personal bag measuring no more than 40cm x 20cm x 25cm

EasyJet

One personal bag measuring no larger than 45cm x 36cm x 20cm

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Jet2

One personal item that fits underneath the seat in front and one cabin bag no larger than 56cm x 45cm x 25cm weighing up to 10kg

TUI

One personal item that its underneath the seat in front and one cabin bag no larger than 55cm x 40cm x 20cm weighing up to 10kg

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British Airways

One personal bag no larger than 40cm x 30cm x 15cm and one cabin bag no larger than 56cm x 45cm 25cm weighing up to 23kg

Virgin Atlantic

One personal item that fits underneath the seat in front and one cabin bag no larger than 56cm x 36cm x 23cm weighing up to 10kg

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Meanwhile, this new European airline is set to launch flights this summer.

And this lesser-known airline has new flights from two UK airports.

Packages to the city break destinations are already on sale

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Packages to the city break destinations are already on saleCredit: Alamy

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