All of the MacBook models featured in this guide have been used for at least two weeks to determine which is the Best Buy overall, as well as the Best Value and the best MacBooks for specific disciplines.
I compared each MacBook’s RAM (the short-term memory, an indicator of speed), their CPUs (central processing units, in this case, either Apple’s M3, M4 or M5 chips), their GPUs (graphics processing units), their storage in gigabytes, screen resolutions and their screen display technologies, which affect colour, contrast and brightness.
I ran the same tasks on each MacBook, ranging from picture and video editing to streaming content, browsing the web and everyday office work. To complete my testing, I took each MacBook on public transport to get an indication of battery life and see how its dimensions and weight affected its suitability when commuting, travelling or when being used in more restrictive spaces.
Kent-based solo artist and YouTube star Look Mum No Computer has been announced as the singer representing the UK in this year’s Eurovision Song Contest.
The news was announced on the Scott Mills Breakfast Show on BBC Radio 1 on Tuesday morning (17 February), ahead of the competition, which is taking place in Vienna, Austria, in May 2026.
The musician, born Sam Battle, said in a statement: “I find it completely bonkers to be jumping on this wonderful and wild journey. I have always been a massive Eurovision fan, and I love the magical joy it brings to millions of people every year, so getting to join that legacy and fly the flag for the UK is an absolute honour that I am taking very seriously.
“I’ve been working a long-time creating, writing, and producing my own visions from scratch, and documenting my process. I will be bringing every ounce of my creativity to my performances, and I can’t wait for everyone to hear and see what we’ve created. I hope Eurovision is ready to get synthesised!”
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Battle previously fronted the indie-rock band ZIBRA, who performed at Glastonbury in 2015 for BBC Introducing. Since then, however, he has pursued a solo career with a more electronic and synth-based sound, releasing a string of singles, EPs and full-length albums.
He also holds a Guinness World Record for building the world’s largest drone synthesiser.
His surname is certainly appropriate given the UK’s patchy performance history at Eurovision in recent years. Last year’s entry, country-pop trio Remember Monday, crashed into 19th place (out of a possible 26) following their performance of original song “What the Hell Just Happened?”.
It was a similarly poor result in 2024 when pop singer Olly Alexander competed with his song “Dizzy”, coming in 18th place, and again in 2023 with Mae Muller singing “I Wrote a Song”, landing a dismal 24th place out of 25.
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The most successful entry in recent years was Sam Ryder, who dazzled with his Freddie Mercury-emulating rock song “Space Man!” in 2022, coming in second place after Ukraine’s winning entry, Kalush Orchestra.
Look Mum No Computer will represent the UK in the 2026 Eurovision Song Contest (LOOK MUM NO COMPUTER)
Battle, who will perform at Eurovision under his Look Mum No Computer moniker, was chosen as the UK’s representative following a search led by the UK’s Eurovision project director David May, along with BBC Studios North executive producer Andrew Cartmell.
The musician is best known for his popular YouTube channel, aunched in 2016, in which he builds and plays eccentric electronic instruments. Examples include organs crafted from Furbie and Game Boy toys, synthesizer bicycles and flame-throwing keyboards.
Beer cans were found in a car stopped by police in a Cambridgeshire village. Cambridgeshire Police stopped a driver on Sunday (February 15) after officers saw some “questionable driving”.
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When officers stopped the driver, they found several beer cans in the car. The driver carried out a roadside breath test and blew 104, nearly three times the legal limit of 35. The man was arrested and is due to appear in court next month.
A police spokesperson said: “A vehicle caught the attention of our officers in Eaton Socon after some questionable driving around an industrial estate. When the driver was stopped, officers spotted several beer cans inside the car.
“He insisted he’d “only had one” — but the roadside breath test told a different story. He blew 104 (the legal limit is 35).
“The man was arrested at the scene and now has a date with HM Courts next month. We’ll continue to take drink driving seriously to keep our roads safe. If you suspect someone is driving under the influence, please report it.”
But his investment is already being measured against the standard set in the north. Wrexham’s celebrity-fuelled rise has seen them make a meteoric leap from the National League to the Championship via three straight promotions, setting a high bar that some believe will be harder to clear at the Swansea.com Stadium.
Former Premier League midfielder Jeff Hendrick knows exactly what it takes to survive in the upper echelons of the British game. The 79-cap Republic of Ireland international, who recently hung up his boots after a career spanning the top flight and the Championship, believes the superstar arrival is a massive win for the league’s profile, but warns the rapper is in for a shock.
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Speaking to Fruity King, he said: “Publicity-wise, you see clubs and consortiums, including ex-NFL players, artists, and different people, getting involved and trying to buy clubs or be part-owners.
“This is great for English football, as it brings media coverage and hype to certain clubs like Snoop Dogg has. It also attracts players because they will join clubs backed by big-name stars, knowing there will be financial backing. It can only be a positive thing.
“When you look at English football with its relegation and promotion, especially for American people who don’t have that in their country, the highs and lows are a real pull. The financial benefits of reaching the play-offs or the Premier League are massive.
“However, it’s also a wake-up call for those who might have thought they could just put their name to a club, attract players, and move up the leagues, like Wrexham. He’s probably gone in at higher stakes and is getting to see what English football is all about.”
Meanwhile, anticipation is rising for Snoop Dogg’s first visit to Swansea next Tuesday, February 24. As part of the star’s visit, he will appear pitchside before the game to greet supporters.
The four-time Emmy winner also plans to head into the community to meet fans and experience the city first-hand.
Announcing his visit, he said: “I know it has been a long time coming, but I cannot wait to finally make my first visit to Swansea City and be among all the YJBs for our game against Preston.
“From the moment we talked about me becoming an owner, I have been looking forward to the chance to be with you all at the Swansea.com Stadium. I have heard so many great things about the atmosphere, especially when we play under the lights.
“When I watched the Wrexham game, where we showed we are the capital of Welsh football, the noise in the stadium sounded incredible even from over 5,000 miles away. I can’t wait to be a part of it.”
Brentford beat Macclesfield to end their magical FA Cup run that saw them knock out the holders Crystal Palace in the biggest upset in the competition’s history
08:29, 17 Feb 2026Updated 08:30, 17 Feb 2026
The Macclesfield heroes stood together, soaking up the adulation from the Moss Rose supporters after being edged out by Premier League side Brentford.
Despondent and dejected, but undoubtedly immensely proud of the gargantuan effort that they put in over the course of the 90 minutes against a Brentford side, who came from behind to draw with Arsenal six days earlier, while some would argue it was a game that they could have won.
The stadium announcer expressed how everyone associated with the Silkmen felt. He said: “You did us so proud,” while factions of the supporters showed their affection to one of the key men behind the run, John Rooney. The chants soon shifted to Robert Smethurst, the businessman who brought the club back from the ashes.
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The millionaire resonated with many for the emotional scenes during the FA Cup third-round win over Crystal Palace and for the incredible story of a drinking session that led to the purchase of Macclesfield, some months after the club was wound up by the High Court.
Commemorative half-and-half scarves, tin-foil FA Cup trophies and even tributes to Palace-slayer Paul Dawson after he displayed a Terry Butcher-esque bloodied head bandage in the previous round.
After the relentless media train and 90 minutes of nail-biting and pulse-raising moments, an exasperated Smethurst emerged into the boardroom.
“Jesus, hello,” he said. “I’m absolutely b*********.”
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To the surprise of no one, the Macclesfield players were too. Not just for the 96 minutes against the Bees, or the 100-plus against Crystal Palace, but this FA Cup journey began in August, when three second-half goals from Sean Etaluku, Ethan McLeod and D’Mani Mellor saw off the challenge of Atherton Laburnum Rovers, who ply their trade in the North West Counties Premier Division and the 10th tier of English football.
Marine and Tamworth are the recent success stories, teams that have broken the status quo and progressed into the proper rounds of the competition, both staging glamour ties against Tottenham Hotspur.
Macclesfield went one better, and if they’d taken advantage of first-half pressure, it could have been two.
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Never in manager John Rooney’s wildest dreams did he think this would happen. It’s easy to forget that he only took the reins days before pre-season when Robbie Savage joined Forest Green Rovers, accelerating from new-campaign preparations to retirement overnight.
He said: “Something we spoke about early on the season was to try, make the playoffs and have a good FA Cup run.
“Did we think we’d get to the fourth round? I didn’t, I certainly didn’t.
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“But for what the lads, myself and the coaching staff have achieved, the people behind the scenes in the office, everyone comes together, it’s a real community club, so for us to go on this journey and do it all together has been something I’m so proud of.”
The memories, infinite. The money, reportedly £400,000 for Monday night alone, is period-defining. But with the cash influx for the Silkmen and its endless benefits, there is an underlying issue in non-league football that is putting future incredible stories, like Macclesfield’s, into serious jeopardy.
For non-leaguers, managers and board members up and down the country, their pre-season objective is either “Survival and a good FA Cup run,” or “playoffs and a good FA Cup run.”
The common goal? The financial reward that only the FA Cup brings. Clubs are being forced to withdraw from leagues midway through the season, while gestures of goodwill from supporters and local communities are needed to keep the lights on, and even GoFundMe campaigns are being established to help clubs survive until the end of the season.
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Silverware and cash windfalls are commodities; sustainability is the prize that non-league clubs desperately crave.
The FA Cup brings its own magic. While some of the joy has been sucked out of it, it is non-league clubs and part-time outfits that add the sparkle to the competition everyone loves and craves.
An exhibit about nine people enslaved by George Washington must be restored at his former home in Philadelphia after President Donald Trump’s administration took it down last month, a federal judge ruled on Presidents Day, the federal holiday honoring Washington’s legacy.
The city of Philadelphia sued in January after the National Park Service removed the explanatory panels from Independence National Historical Park, the site where George and Martha Washington lived with nine of their slaves in the 1790s, when Philadelphia was briefly the nation’s capital.
The removal came in response to a Trump executive order “restoring truth and sanity to American history” at the nation’s museums, parks and landmarks. It directed the Interior Department to ensure those sites do not display elements that “inappropriately disparage Americans past or living.”
U.S. District Judge Cynthia Rufe ruled Monday that all materials must be restored in their original condition while a lawsuit challenging the removal’s legality plays out. She prohibited Trump officials from installing replacements that explain the history differently.
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Rufe, an appointee of Republican President George W. Bush, began her written order with a quote from George Orwell’s dystopian novel “1984” and compared the Trump administration to the book’s totalitarian regime called the Ministry of Truth, which revised historical records to align with its own narrative.
“As if the Ministry of Truth in George Orwell’s 1984 now existed, with its motto ‘Ignorance is Strength,’ this Court is now asked to determine whether the federal government has the power it claims — to dissemble and disassemble historical truths when it has some domain over historical facts,” Rufe wrote. “It does not.”
She had warned Justice Department lawyers during a January hearing that they were making “dangerous” and “horrifying” statements when they said Trump officials can choose which parts of U.S. history to display at National Park Service sites.
The Interior Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the ruling, which came while government offices were closed for the federal holiday.
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The judge did not provide a timeline for when the exhibit must be restored. Federal officials can appeal the ruling.
The historical site is among several where the administration has quietly removed content about the history of enslaved people, LGBTQ+ people and Native Americans.
Signage that has disappeared from Grand Canyon National Park said settlers pushed Native American tribes “off their land” for the park to be established and “exploited” the landscape for mining and grazing.
Last week, a rainbow flag was taken down at the Stonewall National Monument, where bar patrons rebelled against a police raid and catalyzed the modern LGBTQ+ rights movement. The administration has also removed references to transgender people from its webpage about the monument, despite several trans women of color being key figures in the uprising.
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The Philadelphia exhibit, created two decades ago in a partnership between the city and federal officials, included biographical details about each of the nine people enslaved by the Washingtons at the home, including two who escaped.
Among them was Oney Judge, who was born into slavery at the family’s plantation in Mount Vernon, Virginia, and later escaped from their Philadelphia house in 1796. Judge fled north to New Hampshire, a free state, while Washington had her declared a fugitive and published advertisements seeking her return.
Because Judge had escaped from the Philadelphia house, the National Park Service in 2022 added it to a national network of Underground Railroad sites where the agency pledged to “honor, preserve and promote the history of resistance to enslavement through escape and flight.”
Rufe said the removal of materials about Judge “conceals crucial information linking the site” to the network.
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Only the names of Judge and the other eight enslaved people — Austin, Paris, Hercules, Richmond, Giles, Moll and Joe, who each had a single name, and Christopher Sheels — remained engraved in a cement wall after federal employees took a crowbar to the plaques on Jan. 22.
Hercules also escaped in 1797 after he was brought to Mount Vernon, where the Washingtons had many other slaves. He reached New York City despite being declared a fugitive slave and lived under the name Hercules Posey.
Several local politicians and Black community leaders celebrated the ruling, which came while many were out rallying at the site for its restoration.
State Rep. Malcolm Kenyatta, a Philadelphia Democrat, said the community prevailed against an attempt by the Trump administration to “whitewash our history.”
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“Philadelphians fought back, and I could not be more proud of how we stood together,” he said.
‘I bought them wholesale’ (Picture: J Ritchie/Hotsauce/Shutterstock)
Ever ordered a box of 100 cheap sex toys from America to hand out to paying audience members at your live shows? Perhaps that’s only a story Desiree Burch can tell.
The comedian and actress, 47, is famously candid when it comes to such matters – you probably only need to know she’s the voice of hit Netflix series Too Hot To Handle to realise that.
So, when asked what her ‘most ridiculous purchase’ has ever been, it’s unsurprising that she had a colourful answer.
Appearing on the Spent podcast, the British-American star dived right in, responding to Matt Edmondson with: ‘The one that leapt to mind was a box of cheap sex toys.’
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Checking if she is allowed to ‘say dildo’ (she’d already said it), she continued: ‘They were technically dildos. They were not vibrators. That would have been a price that I could not afford.’
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Admitting that she’s ‘definitely expensed’ the NSFW items, she, thankfully, was able to provide context, having ordered the silicone toys for a show she was doing.
Comedian Desiree Burch had a very interesting answer when asked what her most ‘ridiculous purchase’ has been (Picture: RMV/Shutterstock)
Upon bringing her material to the UK, she had to be prepared for every show (Picture: J Ritchie/Hotsauce/Shutterstock)
‘This was the time that I was coming over to do the Camden Fringe Festival. I’d already done Edinburgh one year, and then I wanted to perform in London.
‘I was bringing the show that I was touring at the time before I moved here, called 52 Man Pickup.’
The comedy show involved plenty of audience participation (it wasn’t a gig for anyone remotely prudish), as Desiree opened up with a deck of cards and went through discussing sexual encounters from her past, sharing what she learned from each.
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Desiree said that the show was always random, and it was ‘interactive with the audience’, as she’d encourage fans to also speak frankly about their bedroom antics.
‘It was great, because people were like, “How do you get people to participate?” And it’s like, all you have to do is show vulnerability. And then people were like, “I want to do that”.’
She described it as an ‘immensely fun’ routine, particularly while performing it in the US and UK, where there seemed to be an element of ‘sexual repression that wants to be released’.
She did a bulk order of 100 cheap dildos (Picture: Spent)
…it’s safe to say Spent podcast host Matt Edmondson didn’t know how to react to her confession (Picture: Spent)
As for the relevance of the sex toys, one of her games involved asking male audience members to be the ‘physical embodiment’ of descriptions of her past partners, while women had to guess ‘who the high card should be’.
‘I had two different women do it, and whoever won got the dildo.’
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She needed them for every show to make the segment work, though, obviously, which meant taking the wholesale route to stock up ahead of the run.
‘I had to order a box and get them shipped from the States over here,’ she recalled, explaining how it became 17 or 24 dildos during her Fringe stints, but before that, she was going into three figures.
‘I think I got in a box of 100 or whatever. Because obviously, you buy in bulk, so I went direct. I bought them wholesale. Which, if you don’t have a business…’
‘Also, like, these were not dildos that I would ever sell. Do you know what I mean? They weren’t great,’ she laughed. ‘They were just there and pink and penis-shaped, because that’s all they needed to be, and kind of jiggly in order for the gag to work… because I feel like you either get one good sex toy or 100 subpar ones? And, I chose the second, of course.’
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The actress is best known for her stand-up gigs, plus voicing Too Hot To Handle on Netflix (Picture: Tom Dymond/Shutterstock)
Podcast host Matt was somewhat lost for words following her tale, stating that it was, indeed, quite the unusual purchase.
‘The fact that they came from America, through customs… that poor X-ray person,’ he remarked.
‘You say that,’ Desiree retorted, ‘but this is a kinky country.
‘This cannot be their first or last… I imagine they’re seen daily.’
Desiree Burch’s episode of the Spent podcast is now available.
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Brentford narrowly beat Macclesfield 1-0 in the FA Cup on Monday night and manager Keith Andrews earned plaudits for his behaviour, in contrast to the non-league side’s previous opponents
Brentford needed a second-half own goal to get past Macclesfield 1-0 and into the fifth round on Monday. It meant the end of the road for John Rooney’s side of the National League North, who had to qualify for the FA Cup and then overcame AFC Totton, Slough and Palace to reach the fourth round.
Andrews was magnanimous in victory, taking the time to go into the Macclesfield changing room to compliment them after a hard-fought game. “[It was] an unbelievable touch,” Rooney told TNT Sports. “I spoke to him before the game and he came in and said a few words and he spoke really highly of us.
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“That’s a Premier League manager coming and saying that to you. They took us really seriously and prepared like they would for the Premier League.”
Asked what Andrews said, he added: “He just spoke highly of us, myself, the players, the thing he’d seen was the real togetherness we had about us, but that’s something we work on all the time, you know, with a close-knit group.”
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Macclesfield striker Danny Elliott told BBC Radio 5 Live: “Keith Andrews came into our dressing room and told us he was relieved and paid a lot of respect to us.
“For a Premier League manager to do that is nice. It shows the gap isn’t necessarily massive. We should be so proud of ourselves. The run highlights the club nationally and it’s nice that a Premier League manager was pretty scared of us!”
That experience is quite different to the one Macclesfield got from Palace in the previous round. Oliver Glasner’s side arrived at Macclesfield on January 10 in poor form and with captain Marc Guehi about to leave for Manchester City and there was a lot of negativity around the Premier League side, who were FA Cup holders.
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“There wasn’t belief until I met their captain Marc Guehi and their assistant with the referee before the game,” Macclesfield captain Paul Dawson later recalled.
“Francis Jeffers, our assistant, turned around to Marc Guehi and goes: ‘Is the pitch alright for you?’ He [Guehi] goes: ‘It’s not a bit of me that’. I went into the changing room and put a bit more belief into the boys.”
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Macclesfield won the game 2-1 to add another huge upset to the FA Cup history books and Jeffers recently revealed the extent of the issues in the opposition dressing room.
Speaking on The Wayne Rooney Podcast, he said: “I will say it and I don’t know if I should be saying it but Marc Guehi and Glasner are going at it in the tunnel at half-time. I’m walking past them and I thought, ‘I like that’. There is an edge to that.”
When he was asked if he informed the Macclesfield players of that, Jeffers replied: “I did. I said, ‘Look, there’s big disagreements there between the manager and the captain’. So you’ve clearly rattled their cage.”
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Sky Sports discounted Premier League and EFL package
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Sky has slashed the price of its Essential TV and Sky Sports bundle ahead of the 2025/26 season, saving members £336 and offering more than 1,400 live matches across the Premier League, EFL and more.
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Sky will show at least 215 live Premier League games this season, an increase of up to 100 more.
A man has been killed and two others severely injured in a “random” stabbing attack on a busy high street in suburban Sydney, police said.
Officers arrived at the scene in Merrylands, around 25km west of Sydney’s central business district, at 10am to attend to reports that a man stabbed multiple people before fleeing the area on foot.
A man was later arrested from a nearby street and taken to the Granville Police Station, police said.
Two of the victims were stabbed inside a high street shop, while the third was attacked on the street outside.
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One victim, a man aged in his thirties or forties, was declared dead at the scene. Paramedics attended to two others – a 22-year-old man and a 47-year-old woman – with serious injuries before they were taken to hospital in critical condition.
A knife about 25cm long was used in the stabbings, superintendent Simon Glasser said.
Two of the victims were stabbed inside a high street shop, while the third was attacked on the street outside (Youtube/ABC News)
“It’s very early in the investigation. Police are unaware at this point what the motive was. However, it appears it was a random attack,” Mr Glasser told a news conference.
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“The alleged offender is known to police for petty crime and a number of mental health incidents,” he said. “He is not linked to the address he was located at. However, he is a local to the area.”
Mr Glasser said the victims were by themselves on Merrylands Road when the incident occurred and the three were not related to each other.
He said there were a lot of people in the area at the time of the attack.
“It’s a horrible offence to have taken place in Merrylands just prior to lunchtime with lots of people around,” Mr Glasser said of the “highly confronting” scene.
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“It’s very reassuring to see members of the community come and help other members of the community that needed immediate assistance.”
Witnesses said they heard screams and later a large number of police, as well as helicopters, ambulances and police cars, arriving at the scene.
“We walked outside to see what’s happening. We seen a bunch of people, like a massive crowd, and then there was just a lady in front of the shop … and there’s just a bit of blood on the floor,” an eyewitness told ABC news.
Another eyewitness reportedly said he saw a woman with a neck injury as she was coming out of a convenience store.
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Joseph Roussini, 59, said he called the emergency services after he saw a woman “screaming for her life”, according to theSydney Morning Herald. He said he saw a “man and a lady coming out of the shop, and the man was holding the lady by the neck to try and stop the bleeding”.
The sons of Imran Khan have voiced concerns over their father’s deteriorating health in a Pakistan jail.
They are urging authorities to grant them access to Pakistan’s former Prime Minister after more than two years apart.
Last week, Khan’s lawyer informed Pakistan’s Supreme Court that the ex-cricketer had suffered significant vision loss in his right eye while in custody.
However, a medical board stated on Monday that swelling had reduced following treatment and his vision had improved.
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Speaking from London, where they reside, Khan’s sons, Kasim, 26, and Sulaiman, 29, expressed uncertainty regarding the medical report.
They managed to speak to their father on Thursday, marking their first conversation since September.
During the call, their father, who typically avoids discussing his health, conveyed frustration, stating he had “been denied treatment for his eye for a few months”.
Khan’s sons were able to speak to him for the first time since September (AFP via Getty Images)
“It’s hard not to feel low at times because we’ve been away from him so long,” Kasim said of his father, whom he and his brother call ‘Abba’, adding that he should be moved to a proper medical facility and have access to his private doctors.
Authorities say medical procedures are under way and reject opposition claims of neglect. The Supreme Court has sought details of his treatment.
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Jailed since August 2023
Khan, 73, has been jailed since August 2023 after convictions he and his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party call politically motivated.
Since his 2022 ouster in a no-confidence vote, he has faced multiple cases, including over state gifts and an unlawful marriage. Some convictions have been suspended or overturned, with appeals pending. He denies wrongdoing.
Kasim and Sulaiman were raised in Britain after Khan’s divorce from their mother, British socialite and filmmaker Jemima Goldsmith. They have not seen their father since November 2022 after he survived an assassination attempt. They said they applied for visas last month but have yet to receive a response.
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“Maybe the establishment is worried that if we go and see him it would create more noise, and just more attention to his situation,” Sulaiman said, when asked why there could be a delay.
The Pakistani embassy in London and Pakistan’s foreign ministry did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Kasim said their immediate concern was his health, but there were other pressing issues, including “his freedom, abiding by correct human rights processes and also the rule of law and just ensuring that he’s allowed a proper, fair trial”.
Broadcast outlets have been restricted from airing Khan’s name and speeches or even showing his image. Only a single court photograph has been publicly available since his imprisonment.
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PTI swept to power in 2018 and retains a large support base across key provinces.
For four days, PTI supporters have blocked major highways linking Khyber Pakhtunkhwa to Punjab, stranding thousands of vehicles and affecting fuel and food supplies in some areas.
Asked if they had a message for Khan’s supporters, Kasim asked them to “keep faith and keep fighting”, adding: “It’s the same kind of message we’re trying to hold on to.”
Denice Finnigan asked a judge to jail her saying it was the ‘best place’ for her
A mum asked a judge to be jailed after she tore clumps of a woman’s hair out at a taxi rank. Denice Finnigan was also part of a gang who launched bricks at a shopkeeper after he retrieved a stolen bottle of wine from her and emptied it down the drain.
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However, rather than pleading to be released from Styal prison, she “believes it is the best place for her” whilst she attempts to address her drug addiction and “become a better mother”. And a judge granted her wish, telling her that he “hopes she can make a fresh start” when she’s eventually released.
Liverpool Crown Court heard yesterday, Monday, that police attended Bath Street in Southport on August 5, 2024, after receiving reports of fighting, which erupted after Finnigan stole a £6.99 bottle of pinot grigio from nearby Coronation News. Shop owner Jamie Lodge was said to have attended the area following the theft and taken the alcohol from the 37-year-old, of Manchester Road in the town, before emptying it down the drain.
But Zara Kayani, prosecuting, described how Finnigan responded by threatening to “smash his head in”. A group of up to seven people in her company then began threatening Mr Lodge and a second man, Anthony Baird, with bricks before the latter was shoved to the floor by several women and kicked by a man, leaving him “covered in blood” as a result of injuries to his head and face.
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Both subsequently had bricks hurled towards them before they managed to retreat to their van. However, their attackers prevented them from leaving, with the windscreen being smashed as a result of a further brick being thrown at the vehicle, reports the Liverpool Echo.
Then, on April 18 last year, Rachel Rose and her partner had been on a night out in Southport and were walking to a taxi rank on Lord Street when Finnigan’s boyfriend began whistling at them. When the victim’s boyfriend took exception to this, the man was said to have told him: “Go back to where you’ve come from.”
The male then added to Ms Rose that his girlfriend was “going to kill her and do her in” and began “getting in her face, goading her”. It was at this stage that the defendant ran down the road and grabbed the other woman by her hair, dragging her to the floor.
While the couple were able to escape into a taxi, both Finnigan and her partner began kicking at the vehicle, causing a dent to a rear door. Ms Rose was thereafter dragged from the car and kicked to the back of her head, causing a lump.
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The complainant detailed in a statement, which was read out to the court on her behalf, that clumps of her hair were also pulled out during the assault while she further had her fingernails ripped out. She added: “This was the most distressing experience I’ve ever been through. I felt completely helpless and terrified.
“After being discharged from hospital, the children witnessed my return home in an injured and distressed state. Seeing their reaction to my injuries was deeply upsetting. Since the incident, I avoid going out and feel extremely anxious in public spaces. Situations that once felt normal now cause me fear and pain. I want the court to understand that this was a serious and violent assault.”
Finnigan has 19 previous convictions for 38 offences, including assaults on emergency services personnel and 21 related to matters of theft. Olivia Belle, defending, told the court: “Unusually, Ms Finnigan wants to remain in custody. This was a defendant living a very chaotic lifestyle, addicted to crack cocaine and heroin and heavily misusing alcohol.
“She has been diagnosed with bipolar and post-traumatic stress disorder and suffers from depression and anxiety. She has only been medicated since coming into custody. She wishes to remain in custody to get the help that she desires. I understand that she is completing a hairdressing course and a catering course in custody.
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“I am instructed to ask for a custodial sentence in this case, as it is Ms Finnigan’s view or personal feeling that, if she were to be released into the community at this time, although she would receive help, her drug use is very extreme. She believes that the best place for her to remain abstinent is in custody.
“She tells me that, for the last five weeks that she has spent on remand, she has taken to staff and other inmates very well. She sees herself starting these courses so that, when she is released, she has a brighter future for herself and her daughter. She is 12 years old. Given her drug and alcohol use, she is only allowed phone contact at present. She wishes to become a better mother and become clean of class A drugs. She believes that the best place for her, at present, is in custody.”
Finnigan admitted assault occasioning actual bodily harm, assault, criminal damage, theft and failing to surrender to custody in relation to a date in October last year where she did not attend court. Appearing via video link to HMP Styal wearing a black and grey Under Armour tracksuit top and sporting long brown hair, she was jailed for 10 months.
Sentencing, Recorder Mark Ainsworth said: “You have a poor record, both with regards to dishonesty and offences of violence. I say that to place these events into context.
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“You stole a bottle of wine from a shop. When you were confronted by an owner and somebody else, there was an altercation. The victim was pushed to the ground by you. Others joined in. There were kicks and punches. There were references to bricks being used. It is clear that the complainant sustained injury as a result of what happened.”
Turning to the April 2025 assault, Recorder Ainsworth added: “Rachel Rose had been out with her partner. There was a discussion with them which was taken to be banter, but it seemed to provoke some sort of altercation. It is clear that, during the course of that altercation, Ms Rose was seriously assaulted. She was grabbed by the hair, she was pulled to floor, she was kicked.
“Plainly, these are serious matters. I am told something of your background in mitigation. It is said that you have a chaotic lifestyle, which I readily accept. I am told that you have a 12-year-old daughter, who is currently living with her father. I am told, in the past, that you have had difficulties with drugs, including crack cocaine. I am also told that you have mental health difficulties.”
The judge then said of the “progress made while being held at Styal prison”: “That is a significant factor and something that is commendable. It seems that you are free from drugs, you are receiving assistance for your mental health issues and you are undertaking courses in respect of hairdressing and catering.
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“In the circumstances, given the progress that you are making at Styal, I am going to accede to that request. What I am hoping is, however we have got to this point, we have reached a point where you can draw a line and, on your release, make a fresh start, hopefully in a much better position and, hopefully, having gained the skills that you have identified Styal prison. Quite what happens on your release will be a matter for you.”