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NewsBeat

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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Stargazing events return to the Sutton Bank Star Hub

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Stargazing events return to the Sutton Bank Star Hub

The Sutton Bank Star Hub, near Helmsley, will once again host public events after a summer pause, offering visitors a chance to explore the night sky from one of the darkest locations in the UK.

Richard Darn of Go Stargazing said: “The North York Moors is beautifully dark, which is why it was designated as an international dark sky reserve in 2020.

“We want to keep it that way by sharing our passion for the night sky and inspiring people to help protect it.”

The specially designed facility has welcomed hundreds of visitors since opening in 2021, offering telescope viewing and planetarium-style presentations.

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Astronomer Richard Darn prepares for action at the Sutton Bank Star Hub (Image: Richard Darn)

A new series of events will begin on August 12 to coincide with the Perseid meteor shower, with nearly 20 sessions scheduled through the season.

Mr Darn added: “The Hub is a fantastic venue and last year we had record numbers taking part in events.

“We saw the sky in all its majesty and pushed the limits by looking at distant galaxies.

“It’s the ultimate outward-bound activity.”

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Sessions are suitable for adults and children aged six and over.

The hub is wheelchair accessible, and tickets are priced at under £20, available from: https://tinyurl.com/uux8hert

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Transfer news LIVE: Arsenal ‘in talks’ for Rogers, Man Utd bid expected, Julian Alvarez offer

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Manu Kone had an impressive World Cup for France

Club Brugge manager Ivan Leko has confirmed Christos Tzolis is on his way to Arsenal. The Greek international looks set to move to the Emirates Stadium after a phenomenal campaign last season.

Leko confirmed the news, saying: “It’s one fantastic example, someone who was first coming on the training base, last training was like game for him, giving so much for his career.

“Then you get to go to sign for one of the biggest clubs in Europe, big thing for him, big thing for Club Brugge and big thing for Belgian football Good lesson for all young boys that in football you need to work, stop to talk, work, try to do everything to improve yourself day by day.

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“On one side I’m very happy for him but very sad for me as we are losing a top player. I am convinced that he will have his minutes that he will show on highest level in Premier League and Champions League that he will show he’s a top player and that he absolutely deserves to be there.”

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Free urban farm and petting zoo with cafe only a 25 minute drive from Belfast

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Belfast Live

A perfect family day out which also supports a fantastic charity

The words ‘hidden gem’ are often thrown about too flippantly these days – but when it comes to a family day out, this urban farm truly is just that.

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Carrickfergus Urban Farm was established in 1998 by Kilcreggan Homes, an independent charity based that provides housing, day and employment opportunities for adults with a Learning Disability, an autistic spectrum condition or an acquired brain injury.

Considered the “best kept secret” in the area, groups, individuals and families can visit Carrickfergus Urban Farm and Garden centre for free to see up close the pet goats, pigs, pony, poultry, waterfowl, geese and small pets.

The farm was the idea of Linda Bennett, who was a tenant at Kilcreggan, after she discovered that spending time caring for animals made her feel good.

Knowing others would benefit too, she was motivated to create the much-loved community space where service users can engage in therapeutic activities and demonstrate their skills, passion, and knowledge for what they do.

The farm space was originally an old, derelict site but was improved and made more accessible following a successful grant from Ulster Garden Villages for £70,000.

It was then passed to Kilcreggan by Carrickfergus Council for a peppercorn rent of £1 per year for 100 years.

Open Monday to Saturday from 9:30am to 4pm, it is only a short 25-minute drive in the car from Belfast along the shores of Belfast Lough.

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If a free, fun, family day out with plenty of lovely animals to pet and meet isn’t enough, the site also features buzzing social enterprises, including a beautiful garden centre and delicious cafe for a lovely browse or a bite to eat.

The Dancing Goat Cafe, located onsite, is a perfect spot to refuel after a busy day on the farm and also support the fantastic work the charity does with people with learning difficulties in the area.

You break the bank to make special memories this summer, so why not add Carrickfergus Urban Farm and Garden Centre to your list – not only for the free family magic, but also to support the amazing work that Kilcreggan do.

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To find out more about the farm, see here

For all the latest news, visit the Belfast Live homepage here and sign up to our daily newsletter here

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Two cars set on fire in Cambridgeshire suburb in under an hour

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Cambridgeshire Live

The fires are believed to have been deliberate

Two cars were set alight within an hour in an area of Peterborough. Cambridgeshire Fire and Rescue were called to the first car in flames on Green Lane in Millfield, Peterborough at 3.38am on Wednesday, July 15.

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A crew from Dogsthorpe attended. Firefighters wearing breathing apparatus used hose reels to fully extinguish the fire and returned to their station by 4.25am.

At 4.28am on the same day, less than an hour after the first blaze, firefighters were called to a report a separate incident on Green Lane. The crew from Dogsthorpe arrived to find a second car engulfed in flames spreading to a second vehicle.

Wearing breathing apparatus, firefighters used a hose reel to extinguish the fire. They returned to their station by 5.10am. A spokesperson for Cambridgeshire Fire and Rescue confirmed the fires are believed to have been deliberately started.

The spokesperson added: “Anyone with information should contact police by visiting www.cambs.police.uk to submit an online report or call Crimestoppers on 0800 555111.”

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Sonam Wangchuk: Indian activist on hunger strike for 20 days forcibly taken to hospital

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Activist Sonam Wangchuk continues his indefinite hunger strike for the nineteenth consecutive day in solidarity with the Cockroach Janta Party (CJP), demanding the immediate resignation of Union Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan following unprecedented paper leak irregularities during the national NEET-UG 2026 medical entrance examinations, at Jantar Mantar, on July 16, 2026 in New Delhi, India.

Indian activist and educationist Sonam Wangchuk, on hunger strike for the past 20 days in Delhi, has been forcibly removed from his protest site.

The 59-year-old had been protesting in support of an online satirical movement called the Cockroach Janta Party (CJP) who are seeking educational reforms. The protesters had planned a march to India’s parliament on Monday.

Wangchuk was sitting on hunger strike in the scorching summer, consuming nothing but salt and water. He had lost more than 9kg and was in a lot of pain.

CJP founder Abhijeet Dipke has now begun an indefinite fast in his place. He says the march to parliament will go on and has called for Prime Minister Narendra Modi to resign.

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Dipke told the BBC he had gone to a friend’s house in the morning to freshen up when policemen turned up and refused to let him leave.

Videos from the protest site on Saturday showed chaos erupting just before 07:30 local time (02:00 GMT) when dozens of police and paramilitary personnel swooped in on the stage where the activist was lying down. Protesters who tried to stop them were pushed away.

They covered him with curtains of bedsheets before removing him from the stage. Minutes later, an ambulance was seen speeding away.

The activist’s wife Gitanjali Angmo later posted on X that she was “at Safdarjung hospital where he has been admitted”.

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“Nothing should be administered to him orally or intravenous[ly] without taking consent from me, his family and his doctors who have been monitoring his health for the past 20 days,” she wrote, external.

Dr Charu Bamba, Medical Superintendent of Safdarjung Hospital, later told news agency ANI that Wangchuk was “fully alert and stable”.

“He is somewhat weak due to prolonged fasting and is experiencing mild dehydration; otherwise, all his vital parameters are stable. He is being continuously examined and monitored, and his treatment is under way,” she said.

A top police official told reporters that Wangchuk had been moved “in compliance with [a court] order, and based on health conditions and medical advice”.

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“Sonam Wangchuk has been moved to a government hospital for much-needed medical intervention and is currently under medical supervision,” said Sachin Sharma, Deputy Commissioner of Police.

He was referring to a Delhi High Court order from Thursday asking the federal government to monitor Wangchuk’s health regularly and provide necessary treatment if needed.

Wangchuk had refused to end his indefinite hunger strike despite growing calls for him to do so. Despite his frail health, he had been insisting that he would participate in Monday’s march to the parliament.

“I’ve grown weak from the outside but I’m strong from within,” Wangchuk told the crowd gathered at the protest venue, Jantar Mantar, a 300-year-old observatory, a couple of days back. His statement was met with cheers and applause.

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Full list of Manchester Airport flight delays or cancellations

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Full list of Manchester Airport flight delays or cancellations

Among the worst affected departures was easyJet flight U22145 to Dalaman, which was due to leave at 3.50pm but was delayed by one hour and 50 minutes until 5.40pm.

Another easyJet flight to Geneva, scheduled for 11.10am, was pushed back by one hour and 22 minutes, while the airline’s 4.40pm service to Enfidha was delayed by 43 minutes.

Several Ryanair services were also affected.

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The airline’s 9am flight to Brussels Charleroi was delayed by 25 minutes, while departures to Rome Ciampino, Faro, Paris Beauvais and Krakow were each delayed by around 25 minutes.

A number of Jet2 and TUI flights, including services to Palma de Mallorca, Tenerife, Antalya and Paphos, were also running more than 20 minutes behind schedule.

Arriving passengers also experienced lengthy delays.

Virgin Atlantic’s flight from Atlanta, due to land at 8.50am, was delayed by one hour and 46 minutes until 10.36am.

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IndiGo’s service from Mumbai was running 47 minutes late, while Ethiopian Airlines’ flight from Marseille was delayed by 47 minutes.

Corendon Airlines’ flight from Heraklion was delayed by 20 minutes.

Two flights were cancelled altogether.

Scandinavian Airlines cancelled its 9.35am departure from Manchester to Copenhagen, while the airline’s scheduled 8.55am arrival from the Danish capital was also cancelled.

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The cancellations were not limited to SAS services.

Riyadh Air’s 8.40am departure to Riyadh from Terminal 2 was also cancelled.

Flight delays can happen for a range of reasons, including poor weather, air traffic control restrictions, technical issues with aircraft, late arrivals of incoming flights and operational pressures during busy holiday periods.

During the summer getaway season, even small delays can have a knock-on effect throughout the day as aircraft operate multiple routes.

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Passengers due to travel today are being advised to check the status of their flights with their airline before leaving for the airport, as schedules may continue to change throughout the day.

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Burnham to announce plans for new North Sea oil and gas drilling

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Andy Burnham looks directly forward, his lips are purse and he wears tortoise shell glasses. His suit jacket is navy and his shirt is white. The background is blurred grey.

Andy Burnham will announce plans for new oil and gas drilling in the North Sea when he becomes prime minister on Monday, the BBC has been told.

The Labour Party’s 2024 manifesto – which the new leader said he would follow – had pledged to not issue new licences but to honour existing ones.

At the heart of the debate are two oil fields in Scotland – Rosebank and Jackdaw – which regulators approved in 2022 and 2023 under the then Conservative government, but were overturned in 2025 after a legal challenge.

The announcement will form part of a flurry of policy measures from Burnham, including plans to take water and energy companies under public control and a new council house-building programme.

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While details of the new oil and gas plans are not clear, the North Sea row has become increasingly divisive as Labour figures debate the party’s future direction over energy policy.

Some Labour MPs have urged the government to take a more liberal approach, warning that the transition away from oil and gas must protect jobs and the cost of energy bills.

Others have backed the government’s existing approach, arguing that expanding renewable energy is key to improving energy security and reducing the impact on climate change.

Current Energy Secretary Ed Miliband – who is likely to get a senior cabinet role under Burnham – has been a staunch supporter of Labour’s manifesto position, and previously described the licence issued to Rosebank as “climate vandalism”.

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Earlier this week, before the leadership nominations deadline, Burnham was issued with a letter from the oil and gas industry and trade unions calling on him – and all other Labour MPs – to “back North Sea oil and gas”.

It stated that support for the oil and gas industry is “a signal that the country remains committed to producing, building and manufacturing.

“It is a signal that government backs the people and places that have powered this country for generations,” the letter added.

Burnham, who returned to Parliament a month ago in a by-election, cemented his status as the sole leadership candidate after being backed by 379 Labour MPs, as well as all 11 trade unions affiliated to the party, earlier this week.

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The new Labour leader has said he is finalising his top cabinet jobs before he takes over from Sir Keir Starmer on Monday.

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Millions of drivers face extra hammering at petrol pumps as incoming PM Andy Burnham looks for cash to fund his rush to build more council houses, it is feared

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Mr Burnham revealed little about his tax and spend plans during a speech installing him as the new Labour leader today

Millions of drivers face an extra hammering at the pumps as Andy Burnham looks for cash to fund his rush to build more council houses, it is feared.

Sources close to the Prime Minister-in-waiting repeatedly refused to rule out his incoming Government hiking fuel duty in the New Year and increasing it annually by linking it to inflation.

By contrast, Mr Burnham has pledged to stick to Labour‘s manifesto commitment not to increase income tax, National Insurance or VAT.

It has increased fears that Mr Burnham, who has so far revealed little detail about his tax and spend plans and refused to take questions at press conferences from journalists, will look to raid motorists.

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He has already admitted he might ‘ask for a little more’ tax from people, despite the tax burden hurtling towards record levels. 

Mr Burnham has pledged to embark on the biggest council house-building initiative ‘since the post-War period’, but has failed to say how this would be funded.

He has also pledged to overhaul social care, but is also yet to set out how he will pay for it.

Fuel duty is currently frozen until January, having not risen for more than a decade, meaning Mr Burnham’s incoming administration faces the choice of whether to continue the freeze.

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Mr Burnham revealed little about his tax and spend plans during a speech installing him as the new Labour leader today

Sources close to Mr Burnham repeatedly refused to say whether he would continue to freeze fuel duty or reverse a 5p a litre cut in the levy introduced by the Tories in 2022, which is set to expire on 1 January

Sources close to Mr Burnham repeatedly refused to say whether he would continue to freeze fuel duty or reverse a 5p a litre cut in the levy introduced by the Tories in 2022, which is set to expire on 1 January 

The average cost of filling up remains £10 more expensive than before the Iran war, piling more pressure on family budgets

The average cost of filling up remains £10 more expensive than before the Iran war, piling more pressure on family budgets 

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The Tories’ shadow transport secretary, Richard Holden, said: ‘Labour’s Christmas fuel tax hike will hurt businesses and hammer hardworking families already stretched to breaking point.

‘It’s time for Andy Burnham must rule out a fuel duty tax hike.’

Tory shadow transport minister Greg Smith said: ‘We are already massively over taxed at the pumps.

‘Labour needs to understand that driving isn’t some luxury – it is vital for everyday life. Hammering people at the pumps helps no one.’

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Howard Cox, founder of the FairFuelUK campaign, said: ‘Frankly, I don’t trust Labour to support drivers or to reduce fuel costs in a sensible way to fight inflation and support economic growth.

‘Their traditional short-termism, in fleecing drivers, remains at the heart of their fiscal DNA.’

Sources close to Mr Burnham repeatedly refused to say whether he would continue to freeze fuel duty or reverse a 5p a litre cut in the levy introduced by the Tories in 2022, which is set to expire on 1 January.

The Mail asked his press team twice this week but they refused to comment on both occasions.

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If Mr Burnham’s government allows it to expire, it would add more than £3 to the cost of a fill-up and raise billions of pounds for the Treasury.

They also refused to say whether he would look to link the levy to inflation so that it increases every year.

Fuel duty, currently charged at 52.95p a litre, should increase in line with inflation annually but it was frozen by successive Tory chancellors between 2011 and 2024.

Rachel Reeves, outgoing PM Sir Keir Starmer’s Chancellor, also chose to freeze it and extended this until 1 January to help out drivers amid sky-high pump prices sparked by the Iran war.

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But Mr Burnham, who was installed as Labour leader today but won’t get the keys to No 10 until Monday, has indicated he will need to raise taxes to fund his spending plans, raising fears he will target fuel duty as well as other levies.

During a speech today announcing him as the new Labour leader, Mr Burnham didn’t reveal any detail about his tax and spend plans.

He has faced growing criticism about the little scrutiny he has opened himself up to despite being just days away from being handed the keys to No 10.

He also won’t have to face MPs in Parliament for several weeks after it broke for the summer recess this week.

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Average pump prices were 152.54p a litre for petrol today and 167p for diesel.

They dipped after a US-Iran ceasefire was announced in June. But after it broke down this month, prices have been on the rise in recent days.

Before the Iran war, they were 132.83p a litre and 142.38p respectively, meaning a fill-up is still £10 more with both fuels than before the conflict broke out. This adds more than £100 to the average family’s annual petrol bills.

Simon Williams, the RAC’s fuel guru, said: ‘Sadly for drivers – many of whom will be about to depart for a much-needed break [as schools close for the summer] – prices at the pump are on the rise again.

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‘Since hitting a three-month low on 6 July, petrol has already gone up 2p while diesel has jumped 2.5p in just over a week.’

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Moscow area on fire after huge drone attack as depot burns and hospital evacuated

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Daily Mirror

Dramatic images show huge plumes of black smoke rising into the sky after a massive overnight drone attack reportedly set an oil depot ablaze in Russia’s Moscow region.

The Moscow region has been hit by a massive drone strike that has left an oil refinery burning and led to the evacuation of a maternity hospital and apartment block, according to the area’s Governor.

The attack, believed to be a long range assault from Ukraine, caused multiple explosions with 28 reportedly injured.

Andrey Vorobyov, Governor of the Moscow Region, said a total of 48 drones were shot down over the area overnight.

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Eyewitnesses shared footage showing flames and explosions at an oil depot in Noginsk. The facility contains 24 storage tanks with a combined capacity of 11,500 cubic metres.

Videos shared online appear to show huge plumes of black smoke rising above the depot as flames engulfed the site.

The depot is understood to be one of the Moscow region’s key fuel storage and logistics hubs, with traders and fuel companies using the site to store and transport petroleum products.

This is a Breaking News story. You’ll be more likely to see our stories when any big news breaks in future by simply by clicking this link. You can also join The Mirror’s WhatsApp Community or follow us on Google News, Flipboard, Apple News, TikTok, Snapchat, Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and Threads – or visit The Mirror homepage.

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The Rise Restaurant named one of the best in the UK

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The Rise Restaurant named one of the best in the UK

OpenTable has revealed that 40% of Brits have booked a hotel specifically for its restaurant and has released a list of the top 50 hotel restaurants in the UK for 2026.

The Rise Restaurant at The Grand made it onto the list thanks to its open kitchen that helps to create an “immersive” experience for guests.

The restaurant offers an afternoon tea featuring scones, finger sandwiches, and dainty cakes that you can enjoy while taking in the views of the city.

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What is The Rise Restaurant at The Grand like?

The restaurant’s website says: “The Rise Restaurant, Terrace & Bar offers modern British cuisine with locally sourced and freshly prepared dishes.

“The open kitchen and spacious setting creates an immersive and social dining experience for guests.

“Committed to serving the best seasonal and ethically sourced ingredients, Afternoon Tea and Dinner see British favourites offered with a Yorkshire twist from our expert chefs.

Diners can also expect local beers and ales, a hand-selected wine offering, and signature cocktails.”

The restaurant serves breakfast for its guests, including a breakfast buffet with a range of pastries, omelettes, and traditional fry-up items available to choose from.

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You could also go for one of the à la carte dishes such as eggs Benedict, French toast, and oatmeal porridge.

The evening menu offers a variety of mains such as pork cutlet, baked stone bass, and tandoori-spiced monkfish tail alongside a few pasta dishes and burgers.

There are also plenty of desserts for those wanting something sweet, like tiramisu, cheesecake, and sticky toffee pudding with suggested wine pairings.

What do customers of The Rise Restaurant at The Grand think?

On Tripadvisor, one reviewer said: “We were lucky enough to eat at the fabulous Rise restaurant twice during our stay at the Grand.

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“What a truly wonderful setting with excellent food, wine and up there with the most attentive / polite staff particularly Quinn and Tyler who both really looked after us.

“Worth a visit and we will certainly be back.”

Another reviewer said: “An impulse booking on the basis that it was 3 minutes from our hotel, which turned into a wonderful evening.



“We had 3 à la carte courses culminating in a tiramisu made at the table, which was outstanding.

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“All of the staff were friendly and attentive. I cannot recommend this restaurant highly enough.”

Have you ever been to The Rise Restaurant at The Grand? Let us know in the comments.

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