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Aldi asks Tyne and Wear shoppers for new store locations

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Aldi asks Tyne and Wear shoppers for new store locations

The discount supermarket wants customers in Tyne and Wear to suggest areas where they would like to see a new Aldi open as part of its nationwide expansion plans.

With over £370 million earmarked for new stores this year, Aldi is working towards its goal of reaching 1,500 locations across the UK.

Jonathan Neale, managing director of national real estate at Aldi UK, said: “We know how important it is for people to have access to affordable, high-quality food close to where they live, which is why we’re asking our shoppers to help us identify the communities that would benefit most from a new Aldi store.

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“Opening new stores in these areas means we can bring great value to more customers, while also creating jobs and offering industry-leading pay.”

Last year’s campaign highlighted London, Merseyside, and Oxfordshire as priority areas, with new stores already in progress near Pendle Drive in Liverpool and in the London areas of Hanworth and Willesden.

To put forward a suggestion, customers can email NextNewStore@aldi.co.uk, listing their chosen town in the subject line.

Submissions are open until Thursday, June 18, 2026, with Aldi set to announce the next round of priority locations later this year.

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The expansion is part of Aldi’s commitment to improving access to affordable food and supporting communities through job creation.

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Games Inbox: Is PlayStation right to abandon the PC?

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Games Inbox: Is PlayStation right to abandon the PC?
Only multiplayer games will be going to PC in the future (Sony Interactive Entertainment)

The Wednesday letters page is intrigued by Yoshi And The Mysterious Book, as a reader dreams of a big budget Transformers game from Hasbro.

Games Inbox is a collection of our readers’ letters, comments, and opinions. To join in with the discussions yourself email gamecentral@metro.co.uk

Slow realisation
So it’s pretty hard not to take the news about Sony abandoning the PC as anything but good news. For starters it’s an acknowledgement that it was a dumb idea in the first place, to remove a big reason for buying a PlayStation 5. For second, it implies they’re also moving back from live service games and concentrating more on single-player.

I know they didn’t say that exactly (they’d see it as showing weakness, even if it is true) but if even Hasbro can realise that chasing live service games is a fool’s errand then it’s about time Sony woke up as well.

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I’m going to be the millionth person to say it, but they’ve wasted this generation with their nonsense and it’s only because Xbox has failed harder that they haven’t been punished for it. Just go back to making games like you did on the PlayStation 4 and stop thinking you can make the next Fortnite. That’s not what fans want, they want the next The Last Of Us and God Of War – and I don’t mean actual sequels but games of equivalent quality.
Clem

Sloppy lies
Every time I hear Xbox running their mouth about big changes and amazing innovation all I can think of is AI. I can’t think of anything else they could possibly do that would change anything and considering it’s Microsoft… it’s definitely going to be AI. And it’ll be awful.

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In short, I don’t believe a word they’re saying about anything. There is no way they’re going back to having exclusives, even though they keep pretending they will, and as much as they say they understand people not liking AI slop I don’t believe that either. Or they wouldn’t have employed all those people who were AI experts and know nothing about games.
Limpton

One good game
Having over 1,000 pokémon is crazy but I do kind of admire it as well. I don’t recognise any but a fraction of them nowadays but I find that kind of cool, because it means there’s so many that come as a surprise, even beyond the new ones they add with each new sequel.

After enjoying Pokopia, I’m feeling surprisingly enthusiastic about Winds and Waves, especially as the trailer looked good, with some nice graphics. Even if you don’t care anything about Pokémon, it’s useful proof that there’s nothing wrong with a struggling franchise that can’t be solved by a good game. Halo and co. should bear that in mind.
Tridangle

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Time travel
The visuals, sound, and driving is pretty much faultless on Forza Horizon 6. Turning up the Japanese radio station and entering those over-the-top, crazy events is the closest feeling I’ve had to being in an arcade in the 90s since being in an arcade in the 90s.

I thought it’s going to be much of the same and it is in a way, but it doesn’t feel like it for some reason, absolutely more refined, no doubt.

The loading is notably quicker between driving and menus, having cars appear as roadside bargains always makes me stop what I’m doing to see what it is and how much.

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Tokyo city itself, now I’ve gone round it a little bit more, seems like a mix of Metropolis Street Racer and Need for Speed Underground 2, they’re the vibes it’s giving me with how the road layouts are. It’s ticking all the boxes for me.

I’m not sure what they’d do to improve it apart from getting rid of all the Horizon festival nonsense. It’s the weakest part for me but I know it holds the whole game together. Been playing it since it’s early release last week and it’s very impressive.
Nick The Greek

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Roll out
I can only imagine how happy GC is about the idea of big budget Transformers. I’d say I don’t believe it, because it just seems too much money for what is not quite big enough a franchise, but $1 billion is a lot of money for Hasbro to be investing.

Actually, reading the guy with the unfortunate surname’s comments he sounds completely on the ball, especially in terms of saying no to live service games. It seems that lesson is finally being learnt, even though it should’ve just bene common sense. But better late than never, eh?

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Let’s hope we get an annoucement of something cool this summer or at The Games Awards.
Gantz

Great shot kid, that’s one in 300 million!
One of my favourite arcade games ever was mentioned by Grackle on Tuesday, so I thought it was about time I showed off mine! I collect vintage arcade machines from the golden age of arcades. I have 12 in my flat, including Space Invaders, Pac-Man, Defender and Star Wars, which cost me a fortune and continues to do so!

Classic arcade machines were not built to last. They were meant to make money for an arcade operator/chip shop owner/pub landlord, etc. for a year or four and then be skipped, burnt on a bonfire, or pushed off the end of a seaside pier into the sea! Yes, that did actually used to happen! So it takes a lot of skill and effort to keep these old machines working.

I can do the very basics, testing voltages with a multimeter, pushing down on chips that might have become unseated, cleaning the edge connectors, etc., but if anything else goes wrong you have to send your PCB, or monitor, or the whole machine off to an expert to repair them. When I bought Star Wars it was working, when it left the seller, but by the time it was delivered to me by a courier it had developed a fault. Every time I turned it on it tripped my fusebox.

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After trying several things suggested by the seller, I eventually gave up and hired a courier to take it to a company to repair. They couldn’t sort it, so I had to get the courier to take it back to the seller who repaired it for me for nothing, which was fantastic, but it was costing me £90 each time I used the courier. I got it home and enjoyed playing it for a good few months until the PCB developed a fault. I sent it off for repair and got it back in working order again soon after. Last year it got another fault on the PCB and I have now had it repaired again.

So you see, owning these machines is a dream for some, myself included, but the initial cost isn’t the only cost. If you want to relive your youth and play Atari Star Wars again, they have the cockpit and upright versions at Arcade Club Bury, AC Leeds, and AC Blackpool. I loved the game so much that when I was a kid I would make a 16 mile round trip to an arcade in Tamworth on my bicycle to play the cockpit version.

My friend Robert Mruczek, who was in the film The King of Kong, is a world record holder on Star Wars. In 1984, he scored over 300 million points! It took 49 hours. Obviously, you can’t pause an arcade machine. He told me that he didn’t go to the toilet at all during those 49 hours!
Tim Keeling

Atari Star Wars cabinet
Look at the size of that thing (Tim Keeling)

Dark horse
Interesting review of Yoshi And The Mysterious Book. I had forgotten the game even existed but it’s got an 81 on Metacritic, which is really good. It seems that Nintendo is doing well with these less anticipated games, especially Pokémon Pokopia, but it’s the ones with all the expectation on them that they’ve struggled with.

I don’t know if that’s going to be a thing going forward but if there’s one thing Metroid Prime 4 and Mario Kart World proved, it’s that no matter how long a game has in development or how big the name is you can still get a disappointing game. Nobody was going to be disappointed by Yoshi, just surprised if it turned out good.
Zeiss

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Endless Horizon
Forza Horizon 6 is here. It’s been a long wait. I pre-ordered. That’s something I very rarely do these days, but I couldn’t resist. Is it worth it, though ?

Where to start? Well, the game looks great, runs great on Xbox Series X. 60fps. I had a frame rate problem the one time I used quick resume, otherwise no issues; smooth. The car handling, excellent. The amount of stuff to do (race events, stunt events, collectibles, barn finds, and much more) is mind-boggling; a bit overwhelming if you’re a Forza Horizon newbie.

Over 500 cars at launch, expect this figure to rise up to 900 or more in the coming months. It doesn’t break the Forza Horizon mould; it’s evolution, with some new stuff added, rather than revolution. But, the real star of the show this time around is the map. It is huge! The design is absolutely incredible! Awesome!

A few new game modes will be added to the evolving world of Forza Horizon 6 in the future; the festival playlist starts on May 21st, offering the chance to win rare cars and provide more longevity. I’m expecting several hundred hours of playtime from this game.

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So, the answer to the question ‘Is it worth it?’ is, of course it is. Definitely. But then, I never expected it not to be. Having played the previous five games and loved them all (1,105 hours, single-player, out of Forza Horizon 4) it was never in doubt.

9.5/10. Possibly a 10.
Paul C.
PS: Arcade racers are a bit of a dying breed these days. All the big name franchises seem to have fallen by the wayside. A shame, that is. Would love to see a new Project Gotham Racing and a new Burnout. There’s still a big market for this type of racer. The Horizon series is proof of that.

Inbox also-rans
If there is not a Nintendo Direct in June, in the usual slot or close to it, that will be absolutely crazy. When is Nintendo going to tell us about their big Christmas game? Christmas Eve?!
Jonno

Am I the only one that doesn’t like the Ghost Of Tsushima games? People talk about Assassin’s Creed being bland but I got bored of both these games in a couple of hours (I only borrowed the second one).
Qwent

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The small print
New Inbox updates appear every weekday morning, with special Hot Topic Inboxes at the weekend. Readers’ letters are used on merit and may be edited for length and content.

You can also submit your own 500 to 600-word Reader’s Feature at any time via email or our Submit Stuff page, which if used will be shown in the next available weekend slot.

You can also leave your comments below and don’t forget to follow us on Twitter.

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What Keir Starmer got wrong about Zionism and antisemitism

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What Keir Starmer got wrong about Zionism and antisemitism

Police are investigating an attack on a Jewish man in Golders Green, London, just weeks after two Jewish men were stabbed in the area. These are the latest in a series of violent attacks on Jewish people and institutions. They have also given fresh impetus to a long-running debate about the extent of antisemitism in the UK.

My research explores how the law approaches the thorny question of where political critique of Israel ends and antisemitism begins. This is a sensitive topic, which events like this have brought to public attention once again.

In a statement, Prime Minister Keir Starmer identified three causes of what he described as a “crisis for all of us”. First, he cited “hate preachers” and “charities that promote antisemitic extremism”. Second, Starmer referred to “the malign threat posed by states like Iran,” after a group with Iranian links was investigated in relation to arson attacks on Jewish charity Hatzola ambulances in Golders Green.

The third was more controversial: the prime minister pointed the finger at those who “diminish” the antisemitism faced by Jews today. Standing alongside those who chant “globalise the intifada” at marches is, according to Starmer, “calling for terrorism against Jews”.

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À lire aussi :
Why banning pro-Palestine marches is a risky response to antisemitic violence


“Intifada” is an Arabic term used to describe Palestinian uprisings against Israel in the late 1980s and early 2000s – the latter involving suicide bombings aimed at civilian targets in Israel. Starmer went as far as saying that people who approvingly use that phrase should be prosecuted.

Responses from some of the British Jewish community seemed to back Starmer up. Many expressed a sense of vulnerability and isolation, exacerbated by betrayal at a perceived lack of solidarity from anti-racist activists.

Similar feelings surfaced after the Hamas atrocities of October 7, 2023. For many Jews, a lack of empathy – at best – for the victims and the scale of the trauma testified to an “indifference to Jewish death … across the world”. Throughout the subsequent war in Gaza, many felt that the military threat posed by Hamas was routinely erased from public debate.

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King Charles recently met members of the Jewish community in Golders Green.
ZUMA Press/Alamy

The rising popularity of zero-sum arguments pitting Israeli “settler colonialism” against Palestinian “indigeneity” further squeezed the space for dialogue. This led to a defensive hardening of positions. Even British Jews sceptical of – or appalled by – the war’s conduct felt unable to express that opposition, for fear that it might be used to delegitimise Israel’s existence and encourage antisemitic reprisals.

But it also contributed to the widespread adoption of a new critique of “antizionist ideology”. While recognising that some of the more outlandish claims about Israeli conduct can draw on an older repertoire of anti-Jewish conspiracies, in its more crude variations this ends up classing almost any accusation of Israeli wrongdoing as a “libel”.

The claim that Israeli actions in Gaza could amount to genocide, for example, is regarded as akin to the “blood libel” – the antisemitic fantasy that Jews kill Christian children for religious rituals. Often, no distinction is made between, say, the careful analysis of an Israeli scholar and the wild-eyed rantings of a social media provocateur.

There are diverse modes of opposition to Israel, ranging from Islamist rejections of the concept of Jewish sovereignty, to sober reports of Israeli human rights abuses. In the current framing of antizionism, these are reduced into a singular, undifferentiated ideology, which is then inflated into an existential threat to “the west”.

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This mirrors the equally reductive characterisation of Zionism by some of the pro-Palestinian movement: a single, innately malign ideology that is “the enemy of world peace”, responsible for climate change, and a danger to the world.

At its worst, this new movement against antizionism denies Palestinian suffering in much the same way as those who refuse to “open their eyes to Jewish pain”, as Starmer put it.

Jewish identity and Israel

Starmer’s claim that slogans like “globalise the intifada” should be simply understood as “terrorism against Jews” owes something to this reductive approach. It is true that some Jews interpret such phrases in this way, particularly in light of the sometimes casual attitude to political violence among protesters. And there are clearly times when they could be hate speech – if directly targeted at Jewish people, communal buildings or even pro-Israel protesters for instance.

But there are other rational interpretations for its non-targeted use – using “intifada” as substitute for “revolution”, perhaps, or as an attempt to link the Palestinian cause to wider opposition to global capitalism. Regardless of how convincing one finds such explanations, such uses of the word cannot be automatically classed as calls for antisemitic violence.

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To insist that this is the only meaning is to eradicate any distinction between Jews in general and Israel in particular. This is troublingly similar to those who call for violence against Jews in retaliation for Israeli actions – albeit for very different reasons.

Conflating Jews and Israel, from whatever direction, simplifies the complex historical relation that exists between modern Jewish identity and Israel. The two are certainly not identical, as confirmed by the rising number of Jews who are rejecting any connection, or warning of an impending clash between “Jewish values” and an Israel controlled by far-right factions.

Yet it is also too easy to pretend that they have nothing to do with each other. Like other 19th-century nationalisms, Zionism sought to revive and transform older modes of (Jewish) collective belonging. Meanwhile, the post-Holocaust reconstruction of Jewish identity was inextricably linked to the establishment of Israel as a Jewish-majority state.

The connection might vary from person to person – from the belief that Israel is needed to guarantee Jewish safety, to national, religious, cultural and familial reasons. But the significance of Israel to the majority of Jews cannot be lightly skipped over by repeating truisms like “not all Jews are Zionists” – even if it categorically does not mean Jews are politically responsible for what the Israeli government does.

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But neither is Israel a simple extension of Jewish identity, in the way that Starmer suggests. The risk is that – as shown by the misguided proscribing of the Palestine Action group – pouring police resources into arresting those who chant indeterminate slogans will divert attention away from protecting communities like Golders Green.

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Cooper leads ‘international mission’ to tackle violence against women and girls

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Cooper leads ‘international mission’ to tackle violence against women and girls

Ms Cooper said: “We obviously have a UK domestic mission to halve violence against women and girls over the next 10 years, but what we’re now trying to do is to build an international mission on ending violence against women and girls, and working closely with Spain, but also with other countries, including Jamaica, South Africa, Morocco, Australia, countries from across the world.”

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The York Dungeon to hold celebration for 40th anniversary

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The York Dungeon to hold celebration for 40th anniversary

The York Dungeon, which opened on July 3, 1986, seeks to place its first staff members at the heart of a celebration to mark its 40th anniversary.

The event will kickstart with a grand opening at 10am on Friday (July 3) this year.


Recommended reading:

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The company has also urged former workers to get in touch with “interesting stories” about working at the Dungeon over the years.

A spokesperson said: “They may be funny, they may be scary, they may be both!

“If you do, then we would love to hear from you.”

The York Dungeon was originally opened by Sir Fred Pontin, the founder of the Kunick Leisure Group and was the second of the Dungeon attractions to open, following the London Dungeon in 1974.

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To share your stories, or if you worked there back when the York Dungeon first opened in 1986, please send an email to yorkguests@merlinentertainments.biz

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My precious: The Lord Of The Rings coin celebrates 25 years since film release

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My precious: The Lord Of The Rings coin celebrates 25 years since film release

Designed by Royal Mint coin designer Thomas T Docherty, the reverse or “tails” side of the 50p also features the Elvish lettering and Black Speech inscribed on the Ring, representing the words: “One Ring to rule them all, One Ring to find them, One Ring to bring them all and in the darkness bind them.”

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Huge Access to Work backlog to see DWP hire 480 staff

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Cambridgeshire Live

The Department for Work and Pensions has pledged to “fix the inherited backlog by September 2027” as around 60,000 applicants await a decision on the disabled people’s support scheme

Campaigners have welcomed efforts to address a backlog in a support programme designed to help disabled people enter or remain in employment as a “positive step”. The UK Government has committed to recruiting 480 additional case managers and caseworkers to process applications under the Access to Work scheme, pledging to “fix the inherited backlog by September 2027”.

The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) confirmed that those recruited will strengthen the existing workforce of 658 staff. A report released earlier this year revealed that disabled people had experienced average waiting times exceeding 100 days for their applications to be processed under the programme.

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The National Audit Office (NAO) report, released in February, highlighted “delays and backlogs” in handling applications to the Access to Work scheme, which was established in 1994 and operates throughout Scotland, England and Wales.

Individuals with a physical or mental health condition or disability can apply for a grant to cover practical support, assistance with managing mental health in the workplace, or funding for communication support during job interviews. Demand for the programme has “increased significantly” in recent years, the NAO observed, with total applications more than doubling from 76,100 in 2018/19 to 157,000 in 2024/25, reports the Daily Record.

The DWP stated that demand for the scheme had “surged in recent years” and that it had inherited a backlog from the previous administration, meaning approximately 60,000 applicants are currently awaiting a decision. The department stated that newly appointed case managers would receive “extensive training to handle complex applications, ensuring disabled people receive timely support to secure and sustain employment”.

Applications from those due to commence work within four weeks will also be given priority. The new staff members will take up their positions between September and December this year, with the aim of clearing the backlog by the end of September next year.

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Work and Pensions Secretary Pat McFadden said: “Access to Work is a lifeline for disabled people and those with health conditions, helping them to start and stay in work, but when I came to the DWP it was clear there was a major issue with people waiting for a decision.

“That’s why I’m taking action to clear the backlog, because we know that the right support can change lives. This is part of our wider commitment to move from a welfare state to a working state, building an economy that works for everyone.”

Jon Sparkes, chief executive of learning disability charity Mencap, welcomed the recruitment drive, adding that delays are currently “putting enormous pressure on disabled people who rely on this vital support to get into and stay in work”. He added: “People with a learning disability can be fantastic employees, but many will need the right support to thrive in the workplace.

“Access to Work is one of the best ways to support disabled people in work, for example funding dedicated job coaches who help people with a learning disability to develop their skills in the workplace, build confidence, and sustain paid employment. This recruitment drive is a positive step in tackling the systematic delays and bogged down administration that has threatened this vital programme.

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“If Access to Work runs as intended, it will help reduce the disability employment gap and get more people with a learning disability into paid work. We look forward to seeing this announcement translate into real, lasting improvement.”

James Taylor, director of strategy at disability equality charity Scope, said it was “good to see the Government taking steps to get a grip of the situation”, adding that “cutting the backlog and reducing delays will stop disabled people being left in limbo, giving them the support they need to get in to and stay in work”.

The Government stated that the latest measure forms part of its ongoing commitment to “move from a welfare state to a working state”.

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Tottenham relegation fight: Fine margins leave Spurs fighting for survival on final day

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The bottom of the Premier League table

Richarlison had given Robert de Zerbi’s disappointing side hope, after Enzo Fernandez and Andrey Santos gave the hosts a deserved two-goal advantage, when Chelsea‘s combative left-back Marc Cucurella unceremoniously dragged Spurs defender Micky van de Ven to the floor.

It came as Mathys Tel prepared to take a corner and Spurs demanded a penalty that never came, their disbelief doubled when Cucurella was cautioned over the incident.

Video assistant referee (VAR) checks detected his foul came seconds, maybe even one second, before the ball came into play, meaning a penalty could not be awarded.

Referee Stuart Attwell could only take action against Cucurella with a yellow card, and once VAR confirmed the ball had not been kicked there was no room to initiate a review and subsequent spot-kick.

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Former Chelsea and England striker Daniel Sturridge told Sky Sports: “One second difference and it is a guaranteed penalty. Cucurella is so lucky.”

It was the tightest of calls.

Spurs boss De Zerbi refused to dwell on it, but said the Everton game was arguably “more important” than the club’s Europa League final against Manchester United last season, which they won in Bilbao.

He added: “It is not my business. My business is to focus on preparing the next game and to get the points we need because Sunday is the final for us.

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“This game is important, more than playing for a trophy. Last season ended with playing for a trophy. We play for something more important than a trophy because of the pride and history of the club.

“You can win a trophy but it does not change anything. The most important thing is the pride and dignity of the club, so that we can go on holiday, in the Premier League.

“We have to stay alive. Sunday against Everton is a big day for us.”

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NI council to tackle ‘scourge’ of scramblers and E-scooters amid fatality and drug run concerns

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Belfast Live

“Certainly, working with the parents would be key to all of this.”

A NI council is to crack down on the illegal use of scramblers due to public safety fears and the sinister use of youths for “drug runs” in the district.

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Newry, Mourne and Down District Council’s active and healthy committee this week approved a strategy to tackle the “scourge” of off-roaders, including E-scooters and quad bikes.

New joint patrols of PSNI officers and community volunteers could look to confiscate the vehicles in order to prevent a further fatal tragedy such as that of Dublin teenager Grace Lynch earlier this year.

READ MORE: Council CEO reacts to claims of ‘slow’ responses to the media.

READ MORE: NI council to combat ‘horrendous’ online abuse of councillors.

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Bringing forward the motion, Newry Sinn Féin councillor Aidan Mathers said: “This council will actively engage with policy and the community to enforce this policy.

“It calls on the council to develop and enforce an implementation plan in collaboration with the PSNI and local stakeholders.

“This includes regular joint patrols in known hotspot areas and clear reporting pathways for residents to raise concerns.

“He added: “There is a very real and growing concern across our district.

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“We are all aware of the widespread anxiety caused by illegal and dangerous use of scramblers and other off-road vehicles.

“They are causing fear and intimidation and people are afraid to speak out.

“There is a very real risk to public safety, which we see throughout Ireland and recently in Dublin with Grace Lynch, who lost her life after being hit by a scrambler.

“I’ve witnessed the driver of a scrambler in Newry speeding without a helmet and, more alarming, a passenger no older than 12 with no safety gear on.

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“The potential of a real tragedy doesn’t bear thinking about.

“As we head into the summer months this issue is only going to increase, so we need to tackle it now. These vehicles should be confiscated when possible.”

Grace Lynch, 16, died in January after being hit in Finglas, Co Dublin, with her family campaigning for stronger laws in her name.

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In March, Grace’s Law came into effect to ban scramblers from all public spaces in the Republic of Ireland.

In Northern Ireland, scramblers are mostly illegal on public roads and spaces, but are not subject to a blanket ban.

Mournes Alliance councillor Jill Truesdale said:”I do think we are playing catch-up with this.

“I was talking to the police as we have scramblers being used to do drug runs, it is young adults, it is not kids.

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“But the problem the police have is that they can’t run the risk of chasing the person in case it is a child and there ends up being an accident.

“And nine times out of 10 they have to give back the vehicle and cannot confiscate them, which is very frustrating.

“We know the Justice Minister ( Naomi Long – Alliance) is currently working on closing legislative gaps and strengthening powers.

“We all need to work with the police, but maybe there is something higher up we can do about how these vehicles are getting into Northern Ireland, they are an absolute scourge.”

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Rowallane DUP councillor Jonathan Jackson added: “We do have to focus on the age of a lot of these kids involved in this activity.

“And we need to look at how we can educate some of the parents of these people and make them realise what they are doing is obviously breaking the law.”

Newry SDLP councillo r Doire Finn said: “From speaking to the PSNI, this is a problem where some of the parents are purchasing these vehicles for their children who are using them.

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“How are we going to communicate with these parents?”

A council officer responded: “We are aware that a lot of these scooters are being bought and there is not a full understanding of where they can or can’t be used.

“We will liaise with our marketing department on a campaign to target all of the areas on education and awareness.

“Certainly, working with the parents would be key to all of this.”

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UK inflation rate set to fall as lower household energy bills offset fuel surge

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UK inflation rate set to fall as lower household energy bills offset fuel surge

Victoria Scholar, head of investment for Interactive Investor, said April’s lower energy price cap will “go some way towards helping offset higher petrol, airline and other prices impacted by the elevated global oil price backdrop” with Brent crude oil trading at an average of around 120 US dollars a barrel during the month.

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Friendship or geopolitics? BBC breaks down Xi and Putin relationship

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Friendship or geopolitics? BBC breaks down Xi and Putin relationship

Chinese leader Xi Jinping and Russian president Vladimir Putin are meeting in Beijing for bilateral talks. The BBC’s China correspondent Laura Bicker, and Russia editor Steve Rosenberg, break down their relationship and answer this key question – are they best friends, or is it just geopolitics?

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