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The worst GPs in Cambridgeshire as rated by patients

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Cambridgeshire Live

The worst rated surgery in Cambridge received a overall score of under 50%

The lowest-rated GP surgeries in Cambridgeshire have been revealed, according to a national NHS survey. It is bad news for one GP in Cambridgeshire which has received the lowest percentage for patients’ overall experience of the surgery.

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The results come from a NHS patient survey, which is sent to patients every year about the care they receive at their surgery. In Cambridgeshire, the worst-rated surgery is the Willow Tree Surgery in Bushfield, Peterborough.

The Peterborough-based surgery was given a score of 46% for patients overall experience at the surgery. A spokesperson for Willow Tree said: “We are aware of the results from the latest NHS GP Patient Survey, including the score relating to overall patient experience at Willow Tree Surgery.

“We take all patient feedback seriously and always want to learn from the experiences our patients share with us, whether that comes through national surveys, our own feedback channels, or direct conversations with the team.

“Willow Tree Surgery serves a large and diverse community and are always looking to make improvements to our services and patients’ experience of our service and this is something the whole team is committed to.

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“Patient surveys are one of several measures used to assess general practice, and we would encourage anyone with concerns about their own care to speak to us directly so we can address them personally.”

Botolph Bridge Community Health Centre in Sugar Way, Woodston, Peterborough, was the second worst with a score of 49%.

The other surgeries among the worst in Cambridgeshire are:

  • Bretton Medical Practice, Rightwell, Bretton, Peterborough – 51%
  • Waterbeach and Cottenham Surgeries, Bannold Road, Waterbeach – 53%
  • New Queen Street Surgery, Whittlesey – 53%
  • Nene Valley and Hodgson Medical Practice, Clayton, Orton Goldhay, Peterborough – 56%
  • Park Medical Centre, Park Road, Peterborough – 57%
  • Monkfield Medical Practice, Sackville Way, Cambourne – 58%
  • Nightingale Medical Centre, Damson Drive, Peterborough – 59%
  • Thorpe Road, 64 Thorpe Road, Peterborough – 59%
  • Parson Drove Surgery, Main Road, Wisbech – 61%
  • George Clare Surgery, Swan Drive, New Road, Chatteris – 64%
  • Cherry Hinton Medical Centre, 34 Fishers Lane, Cherry Hinton – 64%
  • Jenner Healthcare, Wisbech Road, Thorney – 64%
  • Boroughbury Medical Centre, Peterborough – 66%
  • East Barnwell Health Centre, Ditton Lane, Cambridge – 68%
  • Lakeside Healthcare St Neots, Huntingdon Street, St Neots – 69%
  • Clarkson Surgery, De Havilland Road, Wisbech – 69%
  • Thomas Walker Westgate Healthcare, Princes Street, Peterborough – 69%
  • Thistlemoor Medical Centre – 6-10 Thistlemoor Road, Peterborough – 69%

The data for this year’s NHS survey was collected between the start of January and end of March. Across England, over three-quarters of patients said their overall experience was “good”.

A total of one in 10 said their experience was poor or very poor. The lowest rated surgery in England was the Medicus Select Care Blmk Ccg in Enfield, London, with an overall score of 15%.

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Shocking footage shows plain-clothed ICE officers violently pinning down an Australian man at Las Vegas Airport as he cries out for help

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Australian citizen Phu Nguyen (pictured) was detained by two ICE agents on Monday in the middle of Las Vegas international airport

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The shocking moment an Australian citizen was pinned down by US immigration agents on the floor of Las Vegas airport has been caught on camera.

A US traveller was walking through terminal three at Harry Reid International Airport on Monday when he saw the incident and started to record.

In footage shared by the bystander on social media, the man, identified as 57-year-old Phu Nguyen, can be heard shouting: ‘Let me go!’

‘I don’t know what they’re doing,’ Mr Nguyen said. 

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A male plain-clothed Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer pinned Mr Nguyen’s arm behind his back while a female agent placed handcuffs on his other wrist. 

The male agent attempted to hide his face when he saw the bystander filming.

An airport employee then stepped in front of the camera as the two ICE officers quickly walked away, pulling their hoods over their faces.

Mr Nguyen could be seen struggling to get to his feet and collect his backpack, with a handcuff still hanging from one wrist, before police arrived. 

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Australian citizen Phu Nguyen (pictured) was detained by two ICE agents on Monday in the middle of Las Vegas international airport

A US traveller was walking through terminal three at Harry Reid International Airport when he saw the incident

A US traveller was walking through terminal three at Harry Reid International Airport when he saw the incident

ICE Los Angeles said Mr Nguyen (pictured) has overstayed his visa

ICE Los Angeles said Mr Nguyen (pictured) has overstayed his visa

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A spokesperson for Australia’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) told the Daily Mail they were seeking answers on the incident.

‘The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade is making urgent enquiries following reports of an Australian citizen detained in the United States,’ the statement said.

‘The Department stands ready to provide consular assistance to any Australian citizen, should it be requested.’

The Daily Mail has contacted the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) for comment.

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ICE Los Angeles published a photograph of Mr Nguyen on its X account on Thursday.

‘Nguyen overstayed his visa and, despite attempts by agitators to help him evade ICE officers at Las Vegas airport, was taken into custody as soon as he landed in Los Angeles,’ it said.

The DHS also confirmed the attempted arrest was carried out by ICE agents and described Mr Nguyen as ‘an illegal alien and citizen of Australia’ who was born in Vietnam.

‘As officers attempted to arrest Nguyen, a crowd of anti-ICE agitators surrounded officers,’ a statement to ABC News said.

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Mr Nguyen is understood to be detained at the Adelanto ICE Processing Centre in California (Pictured, ICE agents patrol Dulles International Airport in Virginia)

Mr Nguyen is understood to be detained at the Adelanto ICE Processing Centre in California (Pictured, ICE agents patrol Dulles International Airport in Virginia)

In the video, only the bystander could be seen approaching the ICE agents during the attempted arrest.

As the agents walked away, travellers could be heard shouting at them while a woman followed behind. Police then ushered the bystander away after officers arrived at the scene. 

Mr Nguyen is understood to be detained at the Adelanto ICE Processing Centre in California. 

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The DHS said he had entered the US legally on a visa in May 2013 with permission to remain until May 2015.

‘Nguyen refused to depart in violation of our nation’s laws,’ the statement said.

‘He will receive full due process and remain in ICE custody pending the outcome of his removal proceedings.’

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How many episodes in Ride or Die and are there more to come?

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Wales Online

Prime Video fans have been bingeing their way through Ride or Die and are keen to know if the story continues.

WARNING: THIS STORY CONTAINS SPOILERS FOR RIDE OR DIE.

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Ride or Die fans are already begging for more episodes after bingeing their way through the Prime Video hit.

Stars Hannah Waddingham and Octavia Spencer lead the action thriller as international assassin Judith and Debbie Claybourne respectively.

The series follows the two best friends as they are forced on an international cat and mouse adventure, seeing their lives put at risk at every turn.

Judith had concealed her real identity from Debbie, who was married to MP David Claybourne (Jamie Parker), after the pair were chased by armed men connected to Debbie’s husband, who had embezzled millions from an Albanian criminal organisation.

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Judith and Debbie found themselves travelling across the world to locate the stolen funds, but is their adventure set to continue?

How many episodes are in Ride or Die?

Season 1 of Ride or Die is made up of eight episodes, will all eight dropping at the same time on Prime Video on July 15.

With this in mind, there are no more episodes expected to drop as part of the show’s current run.

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At the end of the series, Judith and Debbie were finally able to live out their dreams following their successful escape from the Albanian mob and their triumph in getting rid of Judith’s nemesis Ana (Sylvia Hoeks).

While Debbie chose to go travelling, Judith set her sights on beginning afresh in Cambodia.

Unbeknownst to them, someone had been monitoring them both on their journey, leaving audiences questioning the duo’s ultimate fate.

Has Ride or Die been renewed for Season 2?

At present, the programme hasn’t been commissioned for a second series, with Prime Video presumably evaluating audience figures before greenlighting another run.

Nevertheless, given the series concluded with numerous unanswered questions, it seems the show’s creators are optimistic about a potential second series.

Fans took to X, formerly Twitter, to share their thoughts on the show’s future.

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One said: “Great 1st season!! I need to know what that ending was about. So bring on Season 2 #RideOrDie.”

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A second added: “I’m going to need a Season 2 as soon as possible, please and thank you #rideordie.”

While a third commented: “If yall don’t find a way to bring him back for Season 2, ima be p***** #RideorDie.” [Sic]

Ride or Die is on Prime Video.

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The monster in our midst: GUY ADAMS on Shabir Ahmed, the paedophile Rochdale grooming gang leader recently freed to a hostel just 15 miles from his old hunting ground

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Rochdale grooming gang leader Shabir Ahmed who was jailed in 2012 for dozens of rape and child-sex offences

Highfield House is a large Victorian mansion on the edge of a nature reserve half a mile uphill from the centre of Accrington in Lancashire. 

Built for the family of a wealthy mill owner, the sprawling property has been repurposed by the Government as an ‘approved premises’ to house male criminals deemed ‘higher risk’ on their release from prison.

In practice, that makes it a sort of half-way house for some of the North-West’s most notorious sex offenders.

Recent residents include Ashley Barratt, a noted paedophile who boasts 70 convictions including 25 for child sexual abuse material offences, and Peter Swann, a sex offender who was in 2022 described as ‘the world’s worst fraudster’ after being jailed over a plot to steal sandwiches worth £760. 

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It has also been home to Patrick Ryan, a man dubbed ‘Britain’s most prolific crook’ after clocking up 468 convictions for 667 offences, including hundreds of thefts and at least one sexual assault.

This month, Highfield House was saddled with its most notorious guest yet, in the shape of Shabir Ahmed, the 73-year-old ringleader of the Rochdale grooming gang.

Ahmed was jailed in 2012 for dozens of rape and child-sex offences, following what have arguably become two of the most consequential trials in the history of the British justice system.

The first, at Liverpool Crown Court, saw him given a 19-year sentence for leading a group of eight Pakistani men and one Afghan who abused 47 girls, some of them as young as 12. The offences took place under the nose of the authorities over a period of more than five years.

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Rochdale grooming gang leader Shabir Ahmed who was jailed in 2012 for dozens of rape and child-sex offences

The second, in Manchester shortly afterwards, saw him convicted by a jury of 30 more rape charges, this time concerning an Asian girl who he abused from the age of three until she was an adult. He was given another 22-year sentence, to run concurrently.

That should, in theory, have kept Ahmed behind bars until 2034, were it not for the Labour Party’s Criminal Justice Act of 2003.

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This mandates the release of even the most serious offenders (aside from those given life sentences) after serving half of their custodial sentence.

Although the tariff was increased to two-thirds by Boris Johnson’s Tories in 2020, it remained mandatory. Which in turn means that the thrice-divorced father of four, who came to the UK from the Pakistani city of Gujrat in 1967 aged 14, was allowed to leave HMP Wakefield on July 2.

Shabir Ahmed’s fate has been the subject of a heated diplomatic row ever since.

The Government wants to deport him to the land of his birth. But Pakistan is unwilling to take him, saying (correctly, as it happens) that he’s a ‘foreigner’ who renounced his citizenship many years ago. 

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The country’s foreign minister pointed out this week that the UK was where he ‘grew up, was raised, groomed and, unfortunately, spoiled’.

Andy Burnham is having none of that. ‘I want this vile criminal out of the country,’ he said on X last week. 

‘I will ask the home and foreign secretaries to review all possible options – and they should consider nothing is off the table.’

Yet he appears on paper to be powerless to act, thanks to a loophole in the 1971 Immigration Act which prevents Commonwealth citizens who arrived in the UK prior to 1973 from being removed.

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And yesterday the Daily Mail revealed that the Government has signed off a £153million aid package to Pakistan despite the fact it is refusing to take him back, thereby giving up a substantial piece of potential leverage.

At the centre of this political mess is Highfield House, where Ahmed arrived in a police car on the day of his release.

The leader of the Rochdale grooming gang is pictured for the first time since leaving prison - at a bail hostel just 15 miles from the scene of his vile crimes

The leader of the Rochdale grooming gang is pictured for the first time since leaving prison – at a bail hostel just 15 miles from the scene of his vile crimes

Situated at the end of a long drive, protected by iron gates, it’s surrounded by leafy grounds which contain everything from a duck pond to an outdoor gym and a small football pitch. Outside the front door is a sign advertising cookery and baking classes, plus a sheet of ‘house rules’ written in both English and Arabic.

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Entry is controlled by a ‘facial recognition’ doorbell, whose operator refused to answer questions about Ahmed and instead asked me to leave. In the garden is a small collection of gnomes, plus a notice which warns against driving too quickly, to avoid running over the facility’s pet ducks.

The atmosphere is part bucolic, part dystopian. Yet the setting also felt deeply incongruous. For one only needs a passing knowledge of the Rotherham grooming gang scandal to realise that Highfield House was a spectacularly inappropriate place to house this famous child rapist.

For one thing, it’s a short walk from one of Accrington’s most popular parks and children’s playgrounds, and within a mile radius of no fewer than seven schools.

That’s important because Ahmed, a former takeaway driver known to victims as ‘Daddy’, sourced many victims directly from school gates. He would pick up girls in their uniform before trafficking them to flats in Rochdale, Oldham and Bradford, where they would be abused by groups of up to five men at a time.

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For another, the place is less than 15 miles (as the crow flies), or half an hour’s drive, from the rapist’s former stomping ground. That’s a proximity which terrifies the rapist’s victims, many of whom remain in the local area. 

‘I’m horrified, as I know the survivors will be,’ is the verdict of Maggie Oliver, a former police officer from Greater Manchester who resigned in order to blow the whistle over the force’s failure to protect Ahmed’s victims.

‘To know that he is literally in their backyard beggars belief… it really is the lunatics running the asylum. If I had been making this decision I would have put him at the other end of the country.’

Further adding to the insanity of housing Ahmed at Highfield House is the fact that it sits in the middle of an almost identical community to the one his Rochdale grooming gang terrorised for so many years. 

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The child rapist, who was dubbed a ‘violent, hypocritical bully’ by a judge, preyed largely on vulnerable white working-class teenagers.

Tahir Andrabi, the Pakistani Foreign Office spokesperson, blamed Britain for 'spoiling' the Rochdale grooming gang leader

Tahir Andrabi, the Pakistani Foreign Office spokesperson, blamed Britain for ‘spoiling’ the Rochdale grooming gang leader

His modus operandi was to meet them on the streets in deprived areas of the former mill town, invite them back to his Asian takeaway for free food, then ply them with drugs and alcohol so they could be ‘passed around’ for sex with his mostly middle-aged accomplices.

You don’t have to spend very long in Accrington (which is also a historic mill town) to realise that it contains many such neighbourhoods.

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In fact, one is adjacent to Highfield House, which is surrounded by hilly, potholed streets where tumbledown terrace houses change hands for as little as £70,000.

Billeting him here has, predictably, gone down badly with community leaders. The local MP, Labour’s Sarah Smith, said his release will ‘bring back unimaginable trauma’ to the women he raped and declared herself ‘disgusted’ that he was placed in the town. 

‘I am calling for a much wider exclusion zone so that he is not placed in Lancashire or the North-West,’ she added. ‘He must be deported as soon as possible.’

Muslim community leaders from the town have also expressed outrage at his presence, calling it ‘a serious error of judgment by the relevant authorities’.

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In a letter to the local police chief, Kamran Mahmood, the General Secretary of Accrington’s Ghausia Rizvia mosque, which is a short walk from Highfield House, said on Wednesday that it ‘has caused significant distress, fear and anger within our community. Parents are deeply worried about the safety of their children and there is a real risk that these legitimate concerns will lead to rising community tensions’.

Rumours about Ahmed’s presence had in fact begun circulating late last week, when locals noticed that the imposing metal gates of the premises, which are normally left open, had been closed, while two security guards were being employed to stand guard on the driveway 24 hours a day.

One tipped off the Daily Mail about this unusual development. We were then able to speak to several sources within the criminal justice system who confirmed that the notorious rapist was being housed on the premises. One provided a photograph showing him venturing into the garden for exercise.

A fellow resident of the halfway house told me that the ‘old man’ was spending almost his entire time in a room, leaving only for meals and a daily walk around the grounds in late afternoon. He added that Ahmed always dressed in cheap sportswear with a white or black prayer hat.

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¿I want this vile criminal out of the country,¿ Andy Burnham said on X last week about Shabir Ahmed

‘I want this vile criminal out of the country,’ Andy Burnham said on X last week about Shabir Ahmed

A second resident, who agreed to speak out anonymously, added: ‘He came here just after he left prison but never left the hostel. In fact, he rarely left his room. We knew who he was because he was given a police escort when he arrived. There’s maybe 16 or so men here and we can all come and go but have to be back for a certain time, depending on our curfew, and we have to sign in and out.

‘Nobody attacked him – even though we’d have liked to – because we didn’t want to breach the terms of our licence and be recalled to prison.’ On Tuesday afternoon, while we were still attempting to confirm Ahmed’s presence, an anonymous post on a local Facebook Group, Hyndburn Community Chat, claimed Ahmed was at the property.

Within hours, a small group of demonstrators had descended on the premises and he appears to have been whisked away in a police car to an undisclosed location that night.

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To understand the level of anger Shabir Ahmed’s presence here – or indeed anywhere – is likely to spark, one need only wind the clock back to his trial, which exposed in spine-chilling detail how his gang treated the teenage girls it recruited as though they were, in the words of the judge, ‘worthless and beyond any respect’. One of their victims was raped 20 times in a single night, while drunk.

As a series of public inquiries, TV dramas and probing news reports would eventually lay bare, the gang’s activities took place under the nose of local authorities, who for years failed to properly intervene out of fear – many critics claim – of exacerbating racial tensions.

Ahmed, a former member of the local Labour Party who had for almost two decades been employed by Oldham Council as a ‘welfare rights officer’ helping migrants at a Pakistani community centre to access benefits, was therefore able to orchestrate his appalling crimes with staggering impunity.

Even in the dock, he was utterly unapologetic, smearing the children he’d abused and accusing the authorities who belatedly came to their aid of racism. Throughout the court cases, he behaved like a man who believed he was somehow untouchable.

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Transcripts of proceedings, made by the Daily Mail’s reporter during the 2012 trial at Liverpool Crown Court, still make utterly unnerving reading.

They tell how, at various points, he called the judge a ‘racist bastard’ and blamed his crimes on degenerate white parents who had been ‘training’ their daughters to drink and take part in sexual activity, and had negligently allowed them to ‘parade in the streets’ where they could be preyed upon by older men.

In a bizarre tirade, in which he appeared to overlook the fact that victims were almost all under the age of consent, he also attempted to claim that the teenagers his gang raped were prostitutes, who had freely agreed to provide sexual services to him in exchange for cash.

‘They were clever girls,’ he told the jury. ‘If they had gone on Lord Sugar’s Apprentice programme, they would have won… they knew what they were doing. They were earning good money.’

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The second case was similarly grim. This time, he couldn’t moan about courtroom racism, because he was appearing before a judge named Mushtaq Khokhar. Instead, on receiving the verdict, he informed Khokhar: ‘You are talking s**t. It’s all lies concocted by the police…. you will all rot in hell.’ Even after being thrown in jail, Ahmed remained utterly without shame. In February 2016, he appealed to the European Court of Justice, saying his convictions were the result of a conspiracy to ‘scapegoat’ Muslims.

Jurors had been in cahoots with the BNP (the far-Right British National Party), the rapist argued, saying the prosecution had been ‘tailored by police to fit an anti- Muslim prejudice’.

The judges were unimpressed: they threw out his claim in September 2016. By then, Ahmed’s taxpayer-funded lawyers were also ploughing a lucrative furrow fighting efforts to deport him.

In a court hearing that year, the grooming gang leader attacked the then Home Secretary Theresa May, saying: ‘She says all her trouble is coming from Muslims, yet she’s the biggest trouble causer in the world.’ Ahmed had been convicted by ‘11 white jurors’, he moaned, adding: ‘It’s become fashionable to blame everything on Muslims these days.’ The judge, Mr Justice McCloskey, described the conduct of his case as ‘cavalier and unprofessional’.

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Be that as it may, solicitors for four members of the Rochdale gang facing deportation had by this point clocked up legal aid bills of £1,009,645. The figure included £249,707 for Ahmed.

At HMP Wakefield, Ahmed’s behaviour was scarcely any better than it had been in court. In 2016, a 71-year-old fellow inmate named James Palmer had responded to the Brussels terror attacks by saying that the men responsible ought to be ‘eradicated’.

Ahmed overheard the remark, threw Palmer to the floor, stamped on his head, broke his nose and threatened to kill him ‘if you insult Muslims again’. As a result, his sentence was in 2017 increased by a year.

Fast forward to 2022 and, during a parole hearing, it emerged that the child rapist had now been appointed as an ‘equalities representative’ in the maximum-security jail, with responsibility for ensuring that guards were properly catering to the needs of Muslim inmates.

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How was a child sex offender who blames Western society for his appalling crimes handed this role? The answer is anyone’s guess. As, of course, is Shabir Ahmed’s current location.

For the truth is that the Rochdale grooming gang’s violent ringleader has to live somewhere. And for as long as Pakistan refuses to take him back, that somewhere could be a town near you.

Additional reporting: James Fielding and James Tozer

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Where to watch Man Utd vs Wrexham: TV channel and live stream for pre-season friendly today

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Where to watch Man Utd vs Wrexham: TV channel and live stream for pre-season friendly today

Man Utd travel to the Olympic Stadium in the Finnish capital of Helsinki for a first test of the summer against Championship opposition, ahead of further friendlies to come against Rosenborg, Atletico Madrid, Paris Saint-Germain, Leeds and AC Milan, which will see them head to Norway, Sweden, the Republic of Ireland and Poland.

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City centre office block could be turned into 90 new flats

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Cambridgeshire Live

The building currently houses a theory test centre and recruitment agency

A city centre office block could be turned into 90 new flats. MJS Construction (March) LTD seeks to turn the Churchgate building in New Road, Peterborough into 90 new flats, accompanied with 95 car spaces and 58 cycle spaces.

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The office building currently houses a number of different organisations, including the DVSA Theory Test Centre and recruitment agency Reed in Partnership.

The building stretches over 5,955 sqm of floor space. If approved, the 90 flats will be split over four floors.

There flats would be split up as follows:

  • Ground floor – nine flats in total. This includes eight one-bedded flats for one person and a single one-bedded flat for two people.
  • First floor – 23 flats in total. This includes 13 one-bedded flats for one person, four one-bedded flats for two people and six two-bedded flats for three people.
  • Second floor – 23 flats in total. This includes 13 one-bedded flats for one person, four one-bedded flats for two people and six two-bedded flats for three people.
  • Third floor 23 flats in total. This includes 13 one-bedded flats for one person, four one-bedded flats for two people and six two-bedded flats for three people.
  • Fourth floor – 12 flats in total. This includes a single one-bedded flat for one person, three one-bedded flats for two people and eight two-bedded flats for three people.

The proposals also include some changes to the courtyard area. These are to add eight new windows within the internal courtyard and three AOVs (automatic opening vents) in the pitch of the existing roof.

The applicant said these are “limited alterations”. The applicant added: “Their siting within the internal courtyard limits wider public visibility and avoids any material change to the overall scale, massing or architectural character of the building.

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“The three AOVs are functional elements associated with the smoke ventilation strategy. They are located within the pitch of the existing roof in order to minimise visual impact.”

The change of use for the building doesn’t need a new access point created to get in or out of it. Therefore the flats are not proposed to “result in a material worsening of peak-hour traffic conditions”.

To see all the planning applications, traffic diversions, road layout changes, alcohol licence applications and more in your area, enter your postcode below or visit the Public Notice Portal HERE

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LOUIS DE BERNIERES: The truly bizarre bonfire accident that made me understand Joan of Arc’s agony as she was burned at the stake

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Louis de Bernieres, the creator of Captain Corelli, says a bonfire accident has made him understand Joan of Arc's agony when she was burnt at the stake

On May 31, I set alight a bonfire that had been intended for the previous year’s firework night. It was extremely large, and my son and I had to stand a long way back to avoid the heat.

There is something exciting and wonderful about bonfires, but they are also sinister and dreadful. Without fire there is no cooking, no warmth in winter, no metal, no civilisation, but, as we all know, this creative power has a sinister, diabolical, destructive shadow. 

Whenever I stand by a bonfire, I find it impossible not to think of the countless thousands who were burned at the stake by righteous fanatics who sincerely believed (perhaps) that they were thereby saving a soul from burning forever in Hell.

In Sir Thomas Malory’s Le Morte d’Arthur one unexpectedly discovers that burning was the medieval punishment for unfaithful wives; Queen Guinevere has to be rescued at least twice.

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I once did a tour of the Cathar towns and castles of the Languedoc in France, where thousands of ‘heretics’ were burned alive by good Christians who had been told by their commander not to be bothered by whether or not a victim was really a heretic. ‘Kill them all, God will know His own,’ declared Simon de Montfort.

I have stood tearfully in the square in Rouen where poor, naïve Joan of Arc was killed. Anyone with a strong imagination finds themselves appalled, sickened and overwhelmed by the thought of death by fire, especially if it is inflicted on purpose. I often think that such an act exposes the human race as so despicable that it scarcely seems worth preserving.

When my bonfire had burned down, I began to shovel the ash. Suddenly my foot sank into the ground, and for a second or two I thought nothing of it. Perhaps there had been a rabbit hole there. Then I felt the teeth of the most intense pain suddenly bite into me, and realised that my boot had filled with cinders.

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Louis de Bernieres, the creator of Captain Corelli, says a bonfire accident has made him understand Joan of Arc’s agony when she was burnt at the stake

There are different kinds of pain, and it would be hard to compile them into any kind of list in order of severity. Women know the extreme agonies of childbirth; my older sister once described it to me as ‘like s****ing a cannonball’.

In my own case, I once completely snapped a bone in my leg in a motorcycle accident, and when I tried to stand up it was like being struck with a sledgehammer, and I cried out and fell back down. In the hospital I begged them to cut my precious motorcycling boot off me, because having it pulled off was unendurable.

Another time I woke up in the morning and wondered how I had managed to break every bone in my foot while I was asleep. It was a pain so intense that even the cat brushing past made me wince; my ex took me to A&E and I was embarrassed to discover that it was only an attack of gout.

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When I realised I was being burned, I shouted at the top of my voice and struggled to undo my lace, but it had turned into a granny knot, and I was in too much pain to focus. I ran to the rain barrel on my tool shed and filled my boot with water from its tap.

I am thankful that I was wearing bamboo socks. Any artificial fibre would have melted into my flesh. In the kitchen I removed the boot and the sock and sat for an eternity with my foot in a washing up bowl of cold water. With some interest, I watched the blisters bubble up and join together. Eventually my girlfriend came in and found me.

I know I should have gone to A&E, but I was in no mood to go all the way to Lowestoft in Suffolk and wait the usual three or four hours to be attended to, so I decided that I would deal with the problem myself.

I found a large gauze pad, soaked it in aloe vera gel, and bound it on. It was deliciously cooling. The next day I replaced it with a gauze soaked in antiseptic cream. That evening I actually drove to my book club, feeling perfectly well.

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On the third day I decided to leave the dressing off overnight to let the wound dry out a bit, and the following day I saw that my foot and lower leg had reddened and swollen, and I began to feel a little weird.

My three worst burns were ‘debrided’, which is a nice way of saying that all the dead and infected flesh was removed. Then my own offcuts of skin were both stapled and sewn in place

My three worst burns were ‘debrided’, which is a nice way of saying that all the dead and infected flesh was removed. Then my own offcuts of skin were both stapled and sewn in place

So I spent my three hours in A&E anyway, and experienced the first of many agonising interventions as a young doctor tried to snip away the dead skin. Photographs were sent to Broomfield Hospital in Chelmsford, the burns centre for my area of England, and I was duly summoned.

Fortunately I have some grubby old NHS crutches from a heap of scrap that I once found in a field when I was walking somebody else’s dog, so the next morning I went by train to Chelmsford, accompanied by my son.

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I was admitted immediately and put on an antibiotic drip, because they could not perform skin grafts on infected flesh. A few days later I was wheeled to theatre. A rectangle of skin was removed from my thigh, and my three worst burns were ‘debrided’, which is a nice way of saying that all the dead and infected flesh was removed. Then my own offcuts of skin were both stapled and sewn in place.

A few days later I was out, and was returning to the hospital by train every few days. I have experienced many kinds of pain; a whole day of twinges and spasms, days of a burning sensation, strange stingings and stabbings, the feeling of having a golf ball embedded in the sole of my foot.

Every time I go, my unwrapped foot looks a tiny bit less gross, but to me it still resembles the decomposing flesh of a corpse.

My visits are becoming less frequent at the time of writing. Half the time I am allowed to change the dressing at home. I can almost walk without crutches, but the donor site is healing quite slowly, and no one knows why.

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The strangest thing about all this is that I have enjoyed almost all of it. Hospitals are noisy and bustling places even at night, and I would have hated it if I had not been too sick to be bothered, but it felt like being a working part in a huge healing machine.

I can certify that hospital doctors and surgeons are from an alien species of superior, highly intelligent, interesting and tender souls.

I have read that when Joan of Arc began to burn, she burst out into one heart-rending and interminable scream of ‘J-e-s-u-s!’

I have read that when Joan of Arc began to burn, she burst out into one heart-rending and interminable scream of ‘J-e-s-u-s!’

The nurses have their own strong opinions about the best way to clean and dress wounds. They are all charming, efficient, energetic and positive, despite the exhaustion of their long hours and unsociable shifts.

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The cleaners, the people who bring the food trolleys, the ones who take your blood pressure for no apparent reason in the middle of the night, can be quirky and entertaining.

Among the patients there is constant banter. I was next to an explosives expert who had had his hand inexplicably shredded by his own sniffer dog. In outside life, our paths would never have crossed. The dog was being sent to Iraq, as if to be punished by hard labour in exile.

Opposite me was a man who had become a vocal expert on his own diabetes, who propped his toeless feet up for general display, as if they were a trophy. ‘Oh, there they aren’t,’ I said.

The most striking thing about an NHS hospital is that the staff come from all over the world, all with their own story of how and why they left home.

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One of my doctors was Burmese, my surgeon was Egyptian, and there were nurses from all over Africa and Asia.

Some of the more humble workers speak very little English; one day I listened to an African talking to an Asian, and realised that they had evolved a simple patois that they spoke to each other. It made me reflect anew about multiculturalism.

I think we all know that in civil society, multiculturalism really does not work at all well, because people naturally tend to mix only with their own kind. In an NHS hospital, however, it works perfectly well, because every single person there has a common purpose: to heal and console the sick.

Between the insulated parallel worlds of civil society outside, there is no common purpose whatsoever, and in some cities Society with a capital S hardly exists at all.

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When I became a father I discovered that looking after others made me happier. My girlfriend Bridget, who has looked after me so well, says that this has brought her a deep satisfaction, and vanquished her squeamishness.

The experience of my affliction has made one thing quite clear to me, which is that many people seize an opportunity to be kind.

When I was half-way up the stairs at Chelmsford station, a young woman ran up to tell me that there was a lift I could use. On the train once, the trolley lady told the people who were occupying the disabled seats to move on, and then fetched me a glass of water and a cup of coffee, without charge.

I got on the bus and someone offered me their seat by the door, moving away to find another one. People open doors for me, offer to carry things, tell me to go and sit down, ‘I’ll bring your coffee’.

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Others stop, as if a little shocked, look at my crutches and bandages, and say, ‘What happened to you?’

They genuinely want to hear the story, and I seem to go everywhere caressed by the sympathy and consolation of complete strangers.

I would go so far as to say that most people think of an unexpected opportunity to be kind as a gift, a privilege, as something for which to be grateful, especially when it has not been demanded of them.

I am grateful for all the mercies and acts of compassion that have come my way in the last month, particularly those received from the burns department at Broomfield Hospital.

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It may seem perverse, but I am also grateful for the tiny insight into what it would have been like to have experienced martyrdom by fire. It was an agony beyond description or comprehension. I have read that when Joan of Arc began to burn, she burst out into one heart-rending and interminable scream of ‘J-e-s-u-s!’.

My burns only amount to a piffling 2 per cent, but now I know why she cried out as she did.

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Suffolk conman targeted elderly to defraud them out of millions

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An elderly woman and man smile at the camera as they sit in armchairs. The woman has short grey hair and wears a light blue cardigan and a white top underneath with grey and black stripes on it. The man wears a white shirt with a collar and a grey jumper over the top.

Long was arrested in April 2018 and in December 2018 jailed for eight months for contempt of court when he failed to provide information to help track down his clients’ missing money.

At a High Court hearing he claimed he had little more than the clothes on his back and a push bike.

He was later charged with two counts of fraud by abuse of trust after he had caused 115 victims financial losses totalling £11,577,762.

Long pleaded guilty to the offences in March at Southwark Crown Court and on Friday was jailed for eight years and fours months.

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His business associate, Raymond Simpson, who is believed to be in Portugal, was also jailed for five and a half years after being tried and convicted in his absence of two counts of fraud, one between 1 January 2014 and 23 April 2018 and the other between 1 May 2015 and 23 April 2018.

During the sentencing at Southwark Crown Court, Judge Gregory Perrins considered 37 victim impact statements, excerpts of which were read by the prosecution.

The court heard how Long had left some of them with feelings of “guilt and shame” while others said they hoped their late relatives would forgive them.

When jailing Long, Judge Perrins said: “Your offending has taken a very heavy toll on the lives of so many and you should feel deeply ashamed.”

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He added that he had “abused the trust” of particularly vulnerable people “to keep your business running and so you and your family could enjoy all the trappings of wealth”.

Judge Perrins said Simpson had assisted Long by using money taken from trust accounts to “invest in a series of increasingly reckless investments”.

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The 8 roads with major works in Darlington this weekend

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The 8 roads with major works in Darlington this weekend

Here are the eight roads in and around the town you should know about this weekend (July 18-19):

Edinburgh Drive

Temporary traffic lights are in effect on Edinburgh Drive due to gas main work.

Restrictions are set to remain in place until 5pm on September 9.

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The work affects both directions between A67 Coniscliffe Road and Teesdale Avenue, and drivers should expect delays.

Exeter Drive

Traffic is taking turns on Exeter Drive due to electricity work.

The restrictions are scheduled to remain in place until midnight on July 20.

This affects both directions at Winchester Way, so motorists should plan for possible hold-ups.

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Ely Close

Ely Close is also experiencing traffic taking turns due to electricity work.

The restrictions are expected to remain in place until midnight on August 28.

This affects both directions at Exeter Drive, and drivers should be cautious.

Gordon Close

Traffic is taking turns on Gordon Close due to electricity work, with restrictions set to remain until midnight on July 20.

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The work affects both directions at Rossway, causing potential delays for drivers.

West Powlett Street

West Powlett Street is facing traffic taking turns due to telecoms work.

The restrictions are scheduled to remain in place until 5pm on July 23.

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This affects both directions at Powlett Street, so plan accordingly.

A67 Coniscliffe Road

Temporary traffic lights are in place on A67 Coniscliffe Road due to gas main work.

Restrictions are set to remain until 5pm on August 26.

This affects both directions between Coniscliffe Mews and Edinburgh Drive, leading to expected delays.

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Brinkburn Road

Brinkburn Road is under temporary traffic lights due to roadworks.

The restrictions are expected to remain in place until midnight on July 30.

This affects both directions between Auckland Avenue and Pierremont Road, so drivers should be prepared for delays.

Faverdale

Faverdale is experiencing temporary traffic lights due to roadworks.

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Restrictions are set to remain in place until midnight on September 7.

This affects both directions after A68 West Auckland Road, leading to potential delays for motorists.

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Man facing terrorist charges has bail varied to go on family holiday in Donegal

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Belfast Live

Barr was accused of attending two meetings of the IRA Executive/Army Council where “very serious matters of great concern” were discussed.

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A Derry man facing terrorist charges arising from an undercover surveillance operation had his bail conditions varied today (Friday) to allow him to attend a family holiday in Donegal.

Whilst Joseph Patrick Barr was not granted permission to stay overnight in Donegal, his bail was varied to allow him to travel from Derry to Donegal every day then return home.

From Cecilias Walk, the 38-year old is one of a number of defendants facing trial following a covert surveillance operation conducted by the PSNI and MI5.

The investigation centred on two meetings allegedly held by the New IRA in two properties Co Tyrone in February and July 2020 which were bugged as part of ‘Operation Arbacia.’

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Barr has been charged with seven offences, including directing a terrorist organisation and conspiring to direct terrorism, which he denies.

Last month, he was acquitted of two charges arising from the riot in the Creggan area of Derry in April 2019, which claimed the life of Lyra McKee.

The application to vary Barr’s bail was made at Belfast Crown Court by his solicitor Gavin Booth and was objected to by the Crown due to concerns of risk of flight and further re-offending.

Telling Judge Laura Ievers KC the variation was to allow Barr to stay overnight in Donegal from July 19 to 22, Mr Booth addressed the concerns of flight and pointed out that both Barr’s passport and driving licence have been surrendered to the PSNI.

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Mr Booth said that at all times Barr would be in the company of his family who are “people of good character” and there was “no way” Barr would risk breaching his bail.

The solicitor also told Judge Ievers that a total of £85,000 cash sureties have been lodged on Barr’s behalf

Mr Booth said Barr has been on bail since July 2022 and in those four years there have been no breaches.

Regarding the long-running trial centring on Ms McKee’s murder, Mr Booth said Barr attended the hearing “every single day” and has demonstrated “time and time again that he will abide by conditions and turn up to court.”

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Objecting to the variation, Crown barrister Michael McAleer KC said that in 2000 Barr was alleged to have been “an active member of a Republican terrorist organisation, otherwise self-styled as the New IRA.”

Mr McAleer said Barr was accused of attending two meetings of the IRA Executive/Army Council where “very serious matters of great concern” were discussed.

The prosecutor added that the ‘Operation Arbacia’ case was “complex” and that as an “alternative” to remanding Barr and his co-accused “very strict bail conditions were imposed.”

Saying there were no police objections to Barr travelling to Donegal, Mr McAleer said “they do wish him to attend back at his home in the evening where his bail conditions required that he should reside.”

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Mr McAleer said that if convicted, Barr faced a “lengthy prison sentence” meaning police would be “concerned about flight” and also expressed concerns about re-offending given Barr was viewed as a “senior member of the IRA” in 2000.

Mr McAleer also pointed out some similar applications made by Barr’s co-accused to leave the jurisdiction overnight have been refused in the Crown Court.

Reacting to the Crown’s objections, Mr Booth rejected suggestions that the case against Barr was strong and said it was the defence’s view that the meetings were a “set up” by a state agent.

A detective constable was then called to the witness box and was asked by Judge Ievers if there was any issue with flexibility which would allow Barr to spend time with his family in Donegal then return home to Derry each night.

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Confirming opposition to Barr being allowed overnight stays, the officer said the curfew could be varied and police would be “agreeable to daily travel.”

Following this, Mr Booth again asked for Barr to be granted overnight stays as he said his client having to travel over four hours every day of the holiday would “take away from family time.”

After listening to all oral submissions, Judge Ievers said she was not allowing Barr to stay overnight in Donegal.

She did, however, amend his bail to allow him to cross the border each day.

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In addition, Barr’s current curfew of 9pm to 6am was varied and will be from 6am to midnight between July 19 to 22 to allow him to travel to Donegal and return home each evening.

This, Judge Ievers said, would allow for “extensive family contact”.

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Now DONALD TRUMP slams Thomas Tuchel’s ‘unusual’ tactics: US President bizarrely takes aim at England boss for playing ‘great guy’ Harry Kane ‘in defence’

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Donald Trump (left) has criticised Thomas Tuchel's 'unusual tactics' in England's defeat by Argentina this week
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United States President Donald Trump has chimed in on England‘s World Cup elimination, tearing into Thomas Tuchel for his ‘unusual’ tactics.

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Trump has taken centre stage on more than one occasion this World Cup, none more famously than when he intervened to have Folarin Balogun’s red card suspended via a chat with FIFA president Gianni Infantino.

He had also spoken about playing a round of golf with England captain Harry Kane, and went on to analyse the forward’s positioning against Argentina in the Three Lions’ semi-final defeat.

Trump said, speaking on Friday at a FIFA reception at Trump Tower: ‘You have a great player in England, who I played golf with – Harry, who’s been fantastic. I think they perhaps made a mistake when they made him a defensive player.

‘What do I know about soccer? They took the lead, and they took their best player and put him in defence.’ At that point, Infantino, who was laughing along by Trump’s side, sarcastically clapped.

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The President continued: ‘We have got to be a little offensive, right? But what do I know about coaching? It was unusual, but Harry is a great guy, actually.’ 

Donald Trump (left) has criticised Thomas Tuchel’s ‘unusual tactics’ in England’s defeat by Argentina this week

Trump questioned why Tuchel (centre) had 'put him (Kane) in defence' in the closing stages

Trump questioned why Tuchel (centre) had ‘put him (Kane) in defence’ in the closing stages

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Kane confirmed last week that he played golf with Trump, describing the experience as ‘pretty surreal’.

Trump has revealed that the pair had previously played a round together, telling reporters: ‘I think Kane is a great player. I played golf with him and I like him a lot. He’s a good golfer too. He’s really great.’

England’s star player, who said that the round happened 18 months ago in Florida, admitted he is envious of Trump’s impressive golf game at the age of 80.

‘I played alright to be honest, but 18 months ago he invited me to play when I was down in Palm Beach,’ Kane, 32, said ahead of England’s win over Norway.

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‘So when the President invites you somewhere, it was a pretty surreal experience just to meet him and obviously play golf with him.

‘His golf is pretty good, to be honest with you. I hope I can play golf as good as him when I’m his age, that’s for sure. A unique experience, but I was just grateful that he invited me to play.’

Trump waxed lyrical about the England captain after he played a pivotal role in the Three Lions’ historic 3-2 win over Mexico in the round of 16, scoring what proved to be the winner from the penalty spot.

Hours before the US President flattered him in the Oval Office, he posted on social media: ‘Harry Kane of England is a GREAT player!!!’

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Kane confirmed last week that he went for a round of golf with the President 18 months ago

Kane confirmed last week that he went for a round of golf with the President 18 months ago

But he didn’t seem too impressed by the defensive attitude England had against Argentina after going ahead.

Thomas Tuchel has received backlash for his approach and substitutions after Anthony Gordon had opened the scoring, later blaming the result on England’s ‘DNA’.

Kane, though often drops deeper when England are in possession, found himself with plenty of defending to do in the closing stages – something the President didn’t seem to agree with. 

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