As millions across the world celebrate the footballWorld Cup, one region remains cut off from the festivities.
With ongoing military attacks, intermittent access to electricity and infrastructure that has been all but devastated by a brutal war, Palestinian football fans in Gaza try to watch the ongoing tournament with an air of fear and sobriety.
The situation is especially severe for those with disabilities.
Haitham Al-Saqqa, a 38-year-old footballer and humanitarian worker with Medical Aid for Palestinians (MAp), told The Independent of the life-changing impact that the war has had on his life and his ability to enjoy his passion of football.
Advertisement
Having set up Palestine’s first national football team for people of short stature, he searched across Gaza for players and made his dream of becoming a footballer a reality.
‘I want to enjoy the World Cup like the rest of the world’ says Haitham (Medical Aid for Palestinians / Haitham Al-Saqqa)
At three foot seven inches, he identifies as a person of short stature (of which there around 400 conditions) but he is unable to name his specific condition as there are no genetic tests of the kind that could help in Gaza.
But when the war broke out in October 2023, his dreams of travelling abroad for tournaments was shattered. Amid the devastation the group were unable to travel to Morocco for a regional tournament and several members were killed in Israeli strikes.
Two of his teammates from the national team, Ahmed Awad and Salah Shaalan were killed along with their entire families in northern Gaza during the war. There were others too including Dr Adnan Al-Bursh, an orthopaedic surgeon and member of the Palestinian Football Association, who was killed during the war.
Haitham himself witnessed people killed as he tried to watch a Champions League match in November 2023. The old football stadium they played in is now a displacement shelter.
Advertisement
Two of the team were killed in Israeli strikes (Medical Aid for Palestinians / Haitham Al-Saqqa)
“Their loss affected me profoundly,” he said. “They were friends, teammates, and partners in a dream we had spent time building together.”
Since the deaths of his friends and teammates Ahmed and Salah, he has tried to bring the old team together, but he says people are too occupied with the struggle to survive, which is especially hard for those with disabilities.
“My home is not far from the yellow line, it’s less than one kilometre,” he explains about the deadly zone that has led to the deaths of several Palestinians. “This makes us afraid to walk in the street, especially at night after 9pm when the matches are starting. I’m afraid to go to the cafe or restaurant to watch the games with my friends. If I do decide to watch one, the electricity regularly cuts out.”
Haitham will not allow his son to watch football matches with him if it involves leaving the house, for fear he will be killed (Haitham Al-Saqqa)
Haitham, a Liverpool, Real Madrid, and Al Ahly Egypt fan, has been able to watch 20 games using a mixture of methods. But the father-of-three refuses to allow his son to join him. Since the ceasefire, over 1,000 Palestinians have been killed, creating a climate of terror among civilians who fear they could be next. Last week, one of Haitham’s neighbours was also killed.
As the UN concluded this week that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza by deliberately and “intentionally” killing Palestinian children, Haitham fears his four-year-old son may not be spared. Israel denies claims of genocide and insists its military operates within the bounds of international law.
“My son, Nahedh begs me: ‘Please I want to go with you, I want to watch a match.’ But I can’t do that. I tell him we can stay home and watch the summary on YouTube if the electricity keeps up,” he explains. “Because, to be honest, I’m afraid to lose him on the outside. We may still get killed in our home, but I would feel worse if they went out and it happened.”
Advertisement
Haitham Al-Saqqa and his family (Haitham Al-Saqqa)
The fears are real, with footage shared in The Guardian showing the moment an Israeli strike hit a children’s school in the middle of a football match. And it is not the first time. In 2015, nine Palestinians watching a World Cup match in a cafe were killed in Israeli strikes.
With up to 92 per cent of all infrastructure destroyed in Gaza, Haitham says children regularly play in the rubble, painting goal posts on to wreckage, and have been injured as a result.
Before the war, he describes feelings of festivities around the World Cup with streets decorated with flags and cafes packed with people.
Occasionally, when people are able to break through the tight Israeli control that restricts free movement in and out of Gaza, Haitham says that the news of football and the outside world are much welcomed.
”During the war there were small moments of humanity that reminded us of our connection to the outside world,” he says. “Doctors and colleagues who came to Gaza spoke with us not only about war and suffering, but also about football and life.
Advertisement
Haitham was gifted a signed t-shirt by Liverpool star Mohammed Salah (Haitham Al-Saqqa)
“One moment I will never forget was when a friend brought me a Liverpool shirt signed by Salah. It may seem like a small gesture, but it meant a great deal to me. It reminded me that our friends from outside Gaza still saw us as human beings with things to love and cheer about, not just as victims of war.”
Haitham says his dream is very simple: “My hope is to go outside in any stadium and to watch and to play football.”
He says he wants his family, which includes his wife Besan, four-year-old twins including a son and daughter, and older eight-year-old daughter, his parents and siblings, to be safe. He hopes his children can get suitable healthcare and a proper education.
A Palestinian football player moves with a ball between tents sheltering displaced Palestinians at the war-damaged Khan Yunis Services Club in Khan Yunis, Gaza Strip, on June 22, 2026 The Khan Yunis Services Club, once one of southern Gaza’s main sports clubs, has been turned into a shelter for displaced families after sustaining major damage during the war. (AFP/Getty)
“Football is not just a game to me. It is part of who I am. It has always been a source of hope, belonging and joy,” he says. “I want to enjoy the World Cup like the rest of the world. It is time to show Israel the red card.”
Rohan Talbot, MAP’s director of advocacy and campaigns where Haitham works, said: “Our colleagues, such as Haitham, shouldn’t have to deliver humanitarian aid under bombardment. What we’re seeing in Gaza right now is a ‘ceasefire’ in name only,”
“Palestinians continue to be killed in Israeli military attacks, and aid restrictions mean hospitals are still dangerously short of supplies and power. The UK government cannot claim to support a ceasefire while failing to take any meaningful action to enforce it.”
Wimbledon is the biggest fortnight of the year for tennis bettors as UK betting sites roll out their best offers for the All England Club event.
The volume of free bet offers, price boosts and money back promotions all go up for SW19, so The Standard has taken a look at what online bookmakers have to offer for this year’s edition of the Grand Slam.
Wimbledon free bets and betting offers for 2026
Advertisement
We’ve picked out our favourite betting sites and their Wimbledon betting offers. All bookmakers reviewed on this page are compliant with the latest UKGC January 2026 compliance note.
Bookmaker
Welcome offer
Key feature(s)
Advertisement
Bet365
Bet £10, get £30 in free bets
Tennis retirement rule – If a player retires after the first set, bets are still settled
BetMGM
Advertisement
Bet £10, get £40 in free bets
Early payouts on tennis matches
Betfred
Bet £10, get £50 in free bets
Advertisement
Tennis Grand Slam free bet offer
Betway
Bet £10, get £40 in free bets
Free bets club & in-play insurance
Advertisement
BOYLE Sports
Bet £10, get £40 in free bets
Early tennis payouts and free accumulators
Sky Bet
Advertisement
Bet £0.05, get £30 in free bets
Wimbledon odds boosts
UKGC license number
55148
Advertisement
App rating (iOS)
4.7/5
App rating (Android)
4.6/5
Advertisement
Standard score
4.7/5
Estimated withdrawal speed
Instant via Apple Pay, 1-4 hours other methods
Advertisement
Bet365’s tennis retirement rule makes the bookmaker a standout choice for Wimbledon betting.
With Bet365, if a player retires after the first set has been completed, bets are settled on the result at that point. This is particularly relevant at Wimbledon where grass-court injuries and retirements are common.
On top of this retirement rule, Bet365 also offers winnings boosts of up to 100 per cent on successful tennis accumulators. The boost kicks in at 2.5 per cent for doubles and only Wimbledon accumulators featuring match winner, first set winner and set betting markets bets are covered
The bet365 welcome offer can be used to claim up to £30 in free bets, all of which can be used to wager on Wimbledon.
Advertisement
Tennis retirement rule
Tennis accumulator boosts
Deepest tennis market range of any UK bookmaker
Welcome bonus can be wagered on Wimbledon
Interface can feel large and complex – occasional bettors who only bet on Wimbledon may find the layout daunting
Limited free bet options
UKGC license number
39198
App rating (iOS)
4.6/5
App rating (Android)
Advertisement
4.2/5
Standard score
4.5/5
Estimated withdrawal speed
Advertisement
1-3 business days
BetMGM are offering early payouts as part of their Wimbledon betting offers. To qualify, bettors will need to wager on the match result of any Men’s or Women’s singles matches. Should their selected player win the first set 6-0, 6-1 or 6-2, BetMGM will settle the bet as a winner.
There’s the chance to scoop a £10 free bet or 50% profit boost by playing the Golden Spin during the Wimbledon championships. The game is free to play and available daily.
Finally, BetMGM offer tennis bet builders, which mean the entiriety of their welcome bonus can be used as Wimbledon free bets. Sign up, deposit £10 and wager £10 or more at odds of evens or greater to receive £40 in free bets, split into free sports bets and free bet builder bets.
Advertisement
Early payouts on all Men’s and Women’s singles matches
Free-to-play Golden Spin
£40 in free tennis bets with welcome offer
No tennis odds boosts
Accumulator winnings boosts don’t apply to tennis accas
UKGC license number
39544
App rating (iOS)
4.6/5
App rating (Android)
Advertisement
4.4/5
Standard score
4.5/5
Estimated withdrawal speed
Advertisement
1-4 hours
Betfred stands out at Wimbledon with its tennis Grand Slam free bet offer. Typically, Betfred specifically runs free bet promotions tied to Grand Slam events – including Wimbledon.
Betfred are also known for running bet and get offers during major tennis tournaments. These require a bettor to wager a certain amount in-play on a Wimbledon match to recieve a free in-play bet.
Combined with a welcome offer that features £50 in free bets, Betfred have a strong three-pronged option for Wimbledon bettors. The welcome offer features £30 in free sports bets that can be staked on tennis and £20 in free bet builders, which can’t be used as Wimbledon bets.
Advertisement
Free in-play tennis bets
£30 in free bets to wager on Wimbledon from welcome offer
No tennis bet builder tool to use part of Betfred welcome bonus
UKGC license number
39372
App rating (iOS)
4.6/5
App rating (Android)
Advertisement
4.4/5
Standard score
4.3/5
Estimated withdrawal speed
Advertisement
2 to 24 hours
Tennis bettors can claim Wimbledon free bets across the fortnight by using the Betway free bets club. Opt in and stake £25 or more on trebles or bigger with at least three selections and in return, Betway will credit bettors with £10 in free bets.
Betway are also offering in-play insurance on Wimbledon bets. Stake at least £10 on Wimbledon games in-play and Betway will refund 10 per cent of all losses as a free bet at the end of the week. There’s a maximum free bet refund of £20 on this offer.
Betway also do some of the best odds boosts available during Wimbledon, while the Betway welcome bonus features £40 in free bets, half of which can be used for tennis accumulators.
Advertisement
Free bet refunds on tennis losses
Free bets club great for tennis acca users
Strong selection of Wimbledon odds boosts
Half of the Betway welcome offer is reserved for bet builders
The majority of free bets tied to multi-bet types
UKGC license number
39469
App rating (iOS)
3.6/5
App rating (Android)
Advertisement
2.9/5
Standard score
4/5
Estimated withdrawal speed
Advertisement
1-3 business days
Favourite backers will be pleased to see the BOYLE Sports odds boost for Wimbledon this year, with the operator boosting the price on Jannik Sinner and Aryna Sabalenka to both win the Men’s and Women’s singles from 6/1 to 9/1.
Wimbledon bettors can also benefit from early payouts at BOYLE Sports if their selected player wins the first set, while there’s a great range of accumulator offers that include money back if one leg doesn’t win, winnings boosts and a free acca after placing 5 x £5 accumulators.
The BOYLE Sports welcome offer features £40 in free bets, all of which can be used to wager on Wimbledon. Bettors can qualify for the offer by placing a £10 bet on tennis, or any other sport, at evens.
Advertisement
Super Wimbledon odds boosts
Multiple offers for Wimbledon accumulators
Free bets expire after seven days
What to consider with Wimbledon betting offers
Picking a Wimbledon betting offer can differ from other sports. There are tennis-specific factors that make a bookmaker worth using across two weeks of Wimbledon, not just the value of the welcome offer, although that’s a good place to start:
Welcome offer: Not every welcome offer from UK bookmakers can be used to wager on Wimbledon, and this year, tennis bettors have to contend with a wave of World Cup free bet offers muddying the waters further. Check to see if some or all of the welcome bonus can be used to wager on tennis, and whether qualifying for the bonus via a tennis bet is possible.
Free bet restrictions: Look at how the free bets that come with any Wimbledon betting offer can be used. Several are linked to accumulators, with minimum legs and odds specified, while only certain tennis markets are eligible to be placed in an acca.
Acca promotions: During the first week of Wimbledon, tennis accumulators are popular, so check to see which bookmakers might enhance the value of any multiple with a winnings boost or a free bet for placing a certain number of accas.
Advertisement
Retirement rule coverage: Tennis retirement rules are in place to make sure any bets are settled correctly, but they can differ from one bookmaker to the next. With several Wimbledon offers potentially scuppered by voided bets, make sure to read up on the retirement rules with your chosen bookmakers.
Expiry date: Most free bets come with a shelf life. Most will be valid for seven days from being credited, but others expire sooner so make sure to check, or risk losing a Wimbledon free bet.
How to claim a Wimbledon betting offer
1. Register with one of the UK-licensed bookmakers on this page.
Advertisement
2. Verify your ID via the bookmaker’s process.
3. Deposit via debit card or supported method. Credit cards have been banned since 2020, whilst some e-wallets are not accepted for welcome offers.
4. Opt in to the welcome offer or use a promo code if required.
5. Place a qualifying bet on a Wimbledon match at the minimum odds in the welcome offer terms.
Advertisement
6. Free bet tokens are credited on settlement of the qualifying bet. Check the expiry date and use them before they run out.
Wimbledon free bets – frequently asked questions
Which bookmakers offer Wimbledon free bets?
All six bookmakers in this comparison offer free bets valid on tennis, including Wimbledon matches. Betfred also additionally runs a tennis Grand Slam-specific free bet promotion, again including Wimbledon. Make sure to check the comparison table for the best Wimbledon free bets offers.
Advertisement
Can I watch Wimbledon on a betting site?
No UK bookmaker holds live streaming rights for Wimbledon. The Championships are broadcast exclusively by the BBC in the UK and is free to watch on BBC One, BBC Two and iPlayer.
What is a tennis retirement rule at betting sites?
Some bookmakers – most notably Bet365 – will settle bets if a player retires after the first set has been completed, rather than voiding them.
Advertisement
Bettors should be aware that terms will vary by bookmaker – check the retirement rule before placing a bet.
What are the best Wimbledon tennis betting tips?
Grass is a specialist surface that suits serve-and-volley players and big servers – meaning that grass form is different from hard-court or clay form. As such, punters should specifically check head-to-head records and recent form on grass.
It should also be noted that early rounds often produce upsets from big servers ranked outside the top 30. However, whilst upsets happen, chasing the biggest odds can lead to problem gambling.
Advertisement
We aim to offer every online gambler and reader of The Standard a safe and fair platform through unbiased reviews and offers from the UK’s best online gambling companies.
Gambling can be addictive, always play responsibly and only bet what you can afford to lose. Gambling sites have a number of tools to assist you to stay in control, including deposit limits and time outs. If you think you have a problem, advice and support is available for you now from BeGambleAware or Gamcare.
Any offers or odds listed in this article are correct at the time of publication but are subject to change. Terms & Conditions apply to all offers.
This show examines how Frida Kahlo evolved from a celebrated Mexican painter into one of the most recognisable cultural figures of modern times. Rather than functioning as a conventional retrospective, the exhibition explores the creation of Kahlo’s public image, her artistic legacy and the diverse communities that have embraced her as a symbol of resilience, identity, feminism, disability advocacy and cultural pride.
“Iconic”, I have been told by countless editors, is a word that should never be used to describe an artist, but Frida Kahlo is a rightly venerated exception to that rule. This is a woman who, out of a challenging life story, constructed an eccentric persona and unmistakable look, eliciting a devoted response from generations of followers who have made thousands of images in her likeness.
Advertisement
Memory, the Heart by Frida Kahlo which features in the Frida: The Making of an Icon exhibition at the Tate Modern
PA
Yet it is Kahlo the person we are greeted with on entering this exhibition, which opens today having already pre-sold more tickets than any other show in the museum’s history. There are intimate and rarely seen works: family photographs and a small retablo of Kahlo and the muralist Diego Rivera, with whom she had two tempestuous marriages, painted in 1944 to mark their wedding anniversary. Their faces are spliced together, joined by intertwining roots, surrounded by a frame Kahlo painstakingly made from pearlescent clam shells.
Among the exhibition’s quiet revelations is a luminous self-portrait from 1926, painted a year after the bus accident that left her with life-changing injuries. Dressed in a loose bathrobe, Kahlo appears composed, almost ethereal. Elsewhere, she confronts the trauma more directly. The references to childhood and an end of innocence are deeply unsettling.
Advertisement
From obscurity to cult hero
In the next gallery, we are shown the tools of Kahlo’s transformation from relatively unknown local painter to cult phenomenon: the traditional south Mexican dress she adopted in around 1934, the gold and turquoise jewellery, the hair arrangements and staged photoshoots that show her going from camera shy to master of the gaze in a few short years. If Surrealism attempted to Europeanise Kahlo, here we are emphatically reminded of how she came to align her identity with her mother’s mestiza heritage, rather than her father’s European-German origins.
Though she rejected the Surrealist label, this period bore some of Kahlo’s most thought-provoking and imaginative works, but key masterpieces are missing (perhaps a sign of the costs and complications of borrowing blue-chip works now in private hands). Instead, the Tate has sourced a handful of unusual pieces — part paintings, part objets trouvés —that were shown in Paris in 1939 by the Surrealist founder André Breton. In one self-portrait dedicated to fellow artist Jacqueline Lamba, Kahlo depicts herself within the thorax of a metal butterfly; in another Kahlo painted her image onto a sheet of aluminium framed in glass, which the artist was drawn to for its existing bird and flower motifs. Like objects, identity can also be found and repurposed, Kahlo reminds us.
Self-portrait with Velvet Dress by Frida Kahlo which features in the Frida: The Making of an Icon exhibition at the Tate Modern
PA
Advertisement
Sadly, it is here, about halfway through and all too soon, that the show begins to depart from Kahlo’s work, pivoting to lesser-known female artists working in a Surrealist vein. There are still some gems: Kahlo’s painting of the suicide of actress Dorothy Hale, Girl with Death Mask and the infinitely recognisable self-portrait of Kahlo with a hummingbird. Beyond that, the exhibition descends into tribute act. There are cartoon homages, Day of the Dead shrines and droves of self-portraits of other artists as Kahlo. Some are successful, others less so.
Frida Kahlo’s Untitled [Self-portrait with thorn necklace and hummingbird]
Nickolas Murray Collection of Mexican Art
Kahlo’s contribution to queer and disability activism should not be underestimated, and the Tate’s inclusion of some of the rigid orthopaedic corsets and built-up boots she turned into bold fashion statements offer a far more vivid sense of her spirit than many of the works in the second half of the show. We are mercifully, if only briefly, returned to Kahlo via one of her final self-portraits, which shows her in a wheelchair looking fixedly out at the viewer. Next to her is an easel with a painting depicting Dr Farill, a surgeon Kahlo credited with saving her life.
The phenomenon known as “Fridamania” reaches fever pitch in the final gallery, which is filled with merchandise ceaselessly bearing Kahlo’s image — Converse trainers, tote bags, hairbrushes and bottles of tequila. During her lifetime, Kahlo wittingly sold her own image — a move that has been interpreted as feminist.
Advertisement
“I will never accept money from any man till I die,” she is quoted as saying in the exhibition catalogue. But this just feels gimmicky.
Kahlo only made around 200 paintings in her lifetime; but with a slender 36 on show at Tate Modern, visitors might feel short-changed by what ends up feeling more tribute than deep dive. If “Fridamania” eclipsed the artist in our collective unconscious, she is also at risk of being eclipsed in this exhibition. And that is hardly fitting of an icon.
There is major rail disruption this afternoon including on services to Manchester after a person was tragically struck by a train.
There is disruption to services between Stoke-on-Trent and Macclesfield today (Sunday June 28), with lines closed currently while emergency services attend to the scene.
It is impacting East Midlands Railway (EMR), Avanti West Coast and CrossCountry services including those to Manchester Piccadilly. Disruption is expected until at least 6pm.
Advertisement
It was confirmed by East Midlands Railway on X that their services were impacted due to someone being hit by a train on the line. No other details have been confirmed.
A CrossCountry spokesperson said: “Due to the emergency services dealing with an incident between Stafford and Stockport some lines are blocked. Train services running through these stations may be cancelled, delayed by up to 30 minutes or diverted.”
A specialist team of British crisis-response volunteers are assisting in the operation in Venezuela where more than 1,400 people have now been confirmed dead following the quakes
Newborn baby pulled from rubble after devastating Venezuela earthquakes
Footage captures the incredible moment a newborn baby pulled out alive from beneath the rubble of a collapsed building following two earthquakes in Venezuela.
But tales of hope have emerged amid the devastation, including the rescue of children trapped under rubble. A newborn baby was even pulled free of debris some 32 hours after the first earthquake, and their mother was also lifted free several hours later.
Video shared on social media shows crowds cheering and clapping as a young man weeps with joy and hugs the child close. The baby was carried out — wrapped in a pink blanket — from the remains of a damaged house in the city of La Guaira.
Advertisement
Engineers and other experts said the back-to-back earthquakes on Wednesday were among the most intense to hit the country in more than a century, collapsing buildings. La Guaira, in northern Venezuela, was one of the worst hit regions and has been declared a disaster zone.
But locals there were shocked as the baby was rescued from the rubble. Rescuers were also in tears after an 11-year-old boy was pulled alive from under debris in the disaster zone. At this sight, one visibly emotional man said: “[We are] working together with love, because life is the important thing we have.”
Advertisement
The first earthquake hit northern Venezuela at a strength of 7.2 magnitude and the second – just 39 seconds later – struck the region at a 7.5 magnitude level.
Marcos Ferreira, a geophysicist and researcher at the Geological Survey of Brazil, said the destruction in Venezuela was compounded by the back-to-back quakes, known as a doublet. A similar incident took place in Turkey and Syria in 2023, killing almost 60,000 people.
The expert said: “It is as if I am screaming and then someone starts screaming, too. That amplifies the vibration and adds to the potential hazard.”
Advertisement
International rescue teams have poured into Venezuela to aid the hunt for survivors with the UK government sending £2million in humanitarian aid.
Seventeen flights carrying more than 1,600 foreign rescuers have landed in Venezuela in recent days. The first 48 to 72 hours are critical for saving lives – but locals say the government has mobilised too slowly.
A woman moved thousands of miles to be closer to the ITV star several years ago
15:35, 28 Jun 2026Updated 15:37, 28 Jun 2026
The Chase star Anne Hegerty has said that ‘it was like Baby Reindeer’ after a woman moved to Manchester to be closer to her.
Known as ‘The Governess’, the 67-year-old quizzer has been working on the Bradley Walsh programme since 2010. The series sees a group of strangers having to take on the chaser in hopes of winning prize money.
According to statistics, Anne is the most successful out of all the chasers, including Mark Labbett, Shaun Wallace and Paul Sinha. Appearing in over 500 episodes, Anne has managed to beat the contestants on over 400 occasions.
Advertisement
Click here to get the biggest stories straight to your inbox in our Daily Newsletter
Away from The Chase, Anne was a contestant on the 2018 series of the ITV reality show I’m a Celebrity. She was the fifth famous face eliminated in the series which was ultimately won by former football manager Harry Redknapp.
Anne has been a long-time resident of Manchester, having moved to the city in the 1980s. She initially worked in the city centre as a journalist before becoming a household name on The Chase.
Speaking to The Sun in a new interview, Anne revealed that a woman moved hundreds of miles to be closer to her. The incident occurred in 2012 when she became friends with a woman from London.
Advertisement
“There was a woman who I was being friendly with and got her wires crossed and the next thing I knew she packed up her home in London and moved to Manchester to live three streets away.
“I gradually fended her off and she got the message. I don’t want to hurt her feelings, but I have to be careful with people who I befriend.
“Nobody knew who we were at first, I was trying to be nice. But people can overstep, especially if you’re not used to having to set boundaries. It was similar to Baby Reindeer, but not as bad,” she said.
Advertisement
Despite fearing that things may have gone too far, Anne confirmed that she is still friends with the woman on Facebook. For those who haven’t seen it, Baby Reindeer is one of streaming giant Netflix’s most successful ever original shows.
Premiering back in 2024, the series was created and starred Richard Gadd. Based on Richard’s life, the series followed aspiring comedian Donny Dunne (Gadd) as he attempts to deal with a woman (Jessica Gunning) who begins stalking him after a single act of kindness.
Fans praised it for how it handled themes of sexuality, abuse, identity and mental health. Baby Reindeer won six Primetime Emmy Awards, including Outstanding Limited or Anthology Series, Outstanding Writing, Outstanding Lead Actor for Richard, and Outstanding Supporting Actress for Jessica.
Meanwhile, Anne broke down how much she and her fellow Chasers get paid for their work on the ITV series. With ITV recently pausing filming for a year due to having many episodes already recorded, Anne noted that she and her co-stars get paid per appearance.
Advertisement
“I won’t make money from the daytime Chase for a year. But the thing is I’ve got money in the bank and I’m doing panto again so I’ll be fine,” she noted.
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — NASA is racing to save an aging telescope from falling back to Earth with a daring rescue mission.
The $30 million salvage operation gets underway as soon as this week with the planned launch of a robotic lifesaver.
NASA hired startup Katalyst Space Technologies to boost the Swift Observatory to a higher orbit where it can continue hunting for some of the universe’s biggest explosions. A three-armed spacecraft built by Katalyst will chase after Swift once it takes off from an atoll in the Pacific’s Marshall Islands aboard an airplane-launched Pegasus rocket. Liftoff could occur as early as Tuesday.
Scanning the cosmos since its launch in 2004, Swift has been sinking faster and faster because of recent intense solar activity. It needs to get to a higher, more stable orbit as soon as possible to survive.
Like Swift, Hubble is losing altitude as the sun erupts with one flare after another. Katalyst Space CEO Ghonhee Lee said his company’s next-generation robot, still in development, could save the day for the much bigger Hubble in a couple years.
Only China has attempted a mission like the upcoming one, successfully boosting a satellite into a higher graveyard orbit four years ago.
“This is the first American space robot to go up and do anything like this,” Lee told The Associated Press. “NASA has all these big senior observatories … all of them can benefit from a service like this. So what we’re proving with this mission is this is a new play in the playbook that’s available.”
Advertisement
It will take Katalyst’s autonomous spacecraft, named Link, about a month to rendezvous with Swift and catch it, and another couple months to raise its orbit from the current 224 miles (360 kilometers) to the desired 373 miles (600 kilometers).
The 1.6-ton (1.4-metric ton) gamma ray observatory must be above 185 miles (300 kilometers) for the rescue to work. It’s expected to reach that point of no return in October, according to the latest estimates.
Roughly the size of a small kitchen refrigerator with a 40-foot (12-meter) solar wingspan, Link sports three arms with a reach of just over 3 feet (1 meter). Each arm has two finger-like pinching grippers that resemble the hands of a Lego mini figure.
If all goes well, Swift could be back in business by September, according to Lee.
Advertisement
Worth hundreds of millions of dollars, Swift was never designed to be repaired, let alone retrieved by hands — human or otherwise. That’s what makes this so challenging, according to company officials, who stress there is no guarantee it will work.
NASA signed a contract with Katalyst last September with only two requests: It has to be a rush job, but please don’t make things worse. Nine months later, the company is ready to rumble.
“I have to be honest. No one thought it was going to be possible. No one thought we would get as far as we’ve already gotten today,” said Shawn Domagal-Goldman, NASA’s astrophysics director.
NASA has bought a little more time for Swift, turning off all scientific instruments to slow its descent. Observations ceased in February.
Advertisement
NASA’s science mission chief Nicky Fox said it’s worth the effort.
“If we let Swift reenter, we would lose that telescope. We would lose a lot of capability,” she said. “We don’t currently have the budget to build another one to replace that.”
While everything cannot be saved in space, Swift is special, said Domagal-Goldman.
True to its name, Swift is designed to pivot quickly to capture late-breaking astronomical events such as gamma ray bursts and exploding stars. With more discoveries expected by the Webb Space Telescope and soon-to-launch Roman Space Telescope, Swift, if saved, would be busier than ever as “NASA’s first responder.”
Advertisement
Katalyst sees Swift as the jumping-off point for a new repair business in space. The company’s next-generation robotic rescuer, scheduled to fly next year, will tackle satellites as high as 22,300 miles (35,800 kilometers) up. Lee envisions hundreds of robots in orbit one day, not only fixing and hoisting satellites but also refueling them and building solar farms, data centers and other platforms.
Thirty-six-year-old Hubble, which received repeat servicing by spacewalking astronauts during the shuttle era, could follow in 2028 with a life-extending Katalyst boost.
“It’s a national treasure,” Fox said. “People love Hubble.”
___
Advertisement
This story corrects spacecraft name to Link.
___
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
A popular zoo where a toddler was seriously injured after ‘ending up’ in a crocodile pen has reopened to the public. Johnsons of Old Hurst zoo in Huntingdon welcomed visitors back on Saturday (June 27).
The whole site has reopened, including the crocodile enclosure. It comes nine days after a three-year-old boy was hurt in the crocodile pit.
Fans of the attraction said they were pleased it had now fully reopened after the incident on June 18. One person said it was “great news” and they “hope to visit again really soon”. Another said the centre is “full of wonderful staff and the attraction is a credit to the area”.
Advertisement
The boy, from Cambridgeshire, is now in a stable condition in hospital. He was allegedly thrown into the pit and attacked by at least one crocodile. He was taken to hospital, where he was initially described as being in a critical condition.
A man, 30, from Norfolk, was arrested on suspicion of attempted murder but later bailed after being “assessed as not being fit for interview”. The suspect reportedly has learning difficulties and had been on a trip with carers.
The boy was said to have sustained “serious injuries” in the enclosure but was reportedly saved by the Johnson family, who jumped into the pit to save him.
An investigation has been launched after the medical records of the boy were accessed by around 40 members of hospital staff. Cambridge University Hospitals (CUH) has referred itself to the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) and is investigating whether all the workers had a legitimate reason for looking at his information.
Rita Seymour has moaned that the alternative supermarket in her area is ‘too far away’
A great-grandmother who is banned from every Sainsbury’s in the UK has pleaded to be allowed back in – because her nearest alternative store is ‘too far away’. Rita Seymour was informed she was no longer welcome at the supermarket chain following a “number of incidents over time” at her local branch in Hook, Hampshire.
Advertisement
However, the 79-year-old insists she is “not that sort of person” and wants the ban overturned. She says the Sainsbury’s near her is just a five-minute walk from her home, compared to a 20-minute trek to her second option, Tesco, reports the Mirror.
Rita is a mum-of-one, grandmother-of-four and great-grandmother-of-two. She said: “I’m not interested in money. However, I live five minutes away from the shop, and I would like this ban lifted.”
The pensioner, who has lived in Hook since 1981, says she visits the nearby branch to do her weekly shopping and would typically spend between £80 and £100.
During a visit earlier this month Rita, who worked in customer services, reportedly became involved in a dispute with a staff member while attempting to purchase a EuroMillions ticket. The gran claims she had to request a lottery ticket four times before receiving a response from the employee.
Advertisement
When she eventually answered, Rita claims the staff member said she had been rude and summoned the management team, who accused her of insulting staff and ‘pinching food’.
Rita said: “She went to take a picture of me, and I pushed her camera out of her face. I said, ‘I’ve done nothing wrong here, you’re not taking pictures of me’. She was flinging her arms about.”
Rita returned the following day, but claims she was refused entry to the shop. She says she was also handed a letter informing her that she had been banned from Sainsbury’s and Argos stores nationwide.
Advertisement
A Sainsbury’s spokesperson said: “We want everyone to feel welcome when they shop with us, and our colleagues work hard to create a positive in-store experience. We take any form of abusive and inappropriate behaviour seriously.
“Following a number of incidents over time, a decision was taken to withdraw this individual’s right to shop at our Hook store. This action was not taken lightly, but the safety and well-being of colleagues and customers always come first.”
Rita, whose husband is disabled, completely denied that any previous incidents had ever taken place. She said: “I’m not that sort of person, I never cause trouble, I never do any trouble – they’re saying it to get out of everything. I want to clear my name.”
Advertisement
What does it take for someone to get banned from a supermarket?
Since supermarkets are privately owned, they have the authority to deny service and prohibit entry to their stores for almost any reason, as long as the ban does not violate laws against discrimination based on protected characteristics. Typical reasons for a ban can include theft, shoplifting, or trying to leave without paying.
Advertisement
Additionally, abusive, aggressive, or threatening actions directed at employees or fellow customers may result in a ban. Engaging in antisocial behaviour, like causing major disruptions, tampering with merchandise, or vandalising property, is also a common reason for being banned.
Get more Daily Record exclusives by signing up for free to Google’s preferred sources. Click HERE.
Galway and Dublin round off the weekend’s All-Ireland SFC quarter-final action at Croke Park after Louth and Monaghan contest the opening game of the day.
Saturday’s double-header saw Kerry edge an epic encounter with Tyrone, as Armin Heinrich’s late goal secured victory for the reigning champions. Earlier, Mayo booked their place in the semi-finals with a five-point success over Cork.
Throw-in for Sunday’s clash is at 4pm. The match will be broadcast live on RTÉ 2 and can also be streamed via the RTÉ Player.
Advertisement
Dublin produced one of the standout results of the championship in Round 3, knocking last year’s All-Ireland finalists Donegal out of the competition to book their place in the quarter-finals.
After a late Michael Murphy two-pointer tied the match, Dublin came out on top in extra-time with the teams starting at 13-a-side following a scuffle after the full-time whistle.
Ger Brennan’s side lost their opening All-Ireland fixture 4-18 to 1-24 to Louth before keeping their campaign alive with a 1-24 to 0-16 win away to Cavan.
Meanwhile, Galway went straight through to the last eight with two opening wins, their first coming at home to Kildare in a convincing 3-21 to 0-17 display and they followed that with 3-21 to 2-21 victory at home to Westmeath.
Advertisement
Galway team
Content cannot be displayed without consent
Hello and welcome!
Advertisement
Hello and welcome to live updates from Dublin’s All-Ireland SFC quarter-final with Galway today at 4pm. We’ll have team news and more ahead of throw-in shortly.
You must be logged in to post a comment Login