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Breakfast food recalled from Tesco, Sainsbury’s & Waitrose over mouse contamination risk

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Daily Mirror

A new food recall has been issued at major UK supermarkets

Earlier this month, MOMA Foods initiated a recall on various porridge pots and sachets. These pots and sachets are available in supermarkets such as Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Waitrose and Morrisons. The firm stated the recall was due to potential “mouse contamination” at the production site.

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This recall has been expanded today to encompass more best-before dates. If anyone possesses these items, they are encouraged to return them to the supermarket where they were bought for a complete refund. This food recall is specific to England, Northern Ireland and Wales.

This update broadens the recall to all products with a best-before date between 24 April 2026 and 12 March 2027, and excludes the 8-pack size for the MOMA Almond Butter & Salted Caramel Porridge pot 55g, which was mistakenly included in the original notice, reports the Express.

Product details:

MOMA Almond Butter & Salted Caramel Porridge Pot 55g

Pack size: 1pk, 12pk

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Best before: All dates from 24 April 2026 to 12 March 2027

MOMA Apple, Cinnamon & Brown Sugar Porridge Pot 65g

Pack size: 1pk, 8pk

Best before: All dates from 24 April 2026 to 12 March 2027

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MOMA Cranberry & Raisin Porridge Sachets 6x40g

Pack size: 1pk, 5pk

Best before: All dates from 24 April 2026 to 12 March 2027

MOMA Cranberry & Raisin Instant Porridge Sachets 70g

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Pack size: 5pk, 30pk

Best before: All dates from 24 April 2026 to 12 March 2027

MOMA Plain No-added Sugar Instant Porridge Sachets 65g

Pack size: 5pk, 15pk, 30pk

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Best before: All dates from 24 April 2026 to 12 March 2027

MOMA Jumbo Oats 450g

Pack size: 1pk, 6pk

Best before: All dates from 24 April 2026 to 12 March 2027

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MOMA Raspberry & Apple Overnight Oats 400g

Pack size: 1pk, 6pk

Best before: All dates from 24 April 2026 to 12 March 2027

MOMA Banana & Peanut Butter Protein Porridge 65g

Pack size: 1pk, 8pk

Best before: All dates from 24 April 2026 to 12 March 2027

MOMA Blueberry & Vanilla Porridge Pot 65g

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Pack size: 1pk, 8pk

Best before: All dates from 24 April 2026 to 12 March 2027

MOMA Cranberry & Raisin Porridge Pot 70g

Pack size: 1pk, 8pk, 12pk

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Best before: All dates from 24 April 2026 to 12 March 2027

MOMA Golden Syrup Porridge Pot 70g

Pack size: 1pk, 8pk, 12pk

Best before: All dates from 24 April 2026 to 12 March 2027

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MOMA Plain No-Added Sugar Porridge Pot 65g

Pack size: 1pk, 12pk

Best before: All dates from 24 April 2026 to 12 March 2027

MOMA Almond Butter & Salted Caramel Porridge Sachets 6x40g

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Pack size: 1pk, 5pk

Best before: All dates from 24 April 2026 to 12 March 2027

MOMA Apple, Cinnamon & Brown Sugar Porridge Sachets 7x40g

Pack size: 1pk, 5pk

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Best before: All dates from 24 April 2026 to 12 March 2027

MOMA Blueberry & Vanilla Porridge Sachets 7x40g

Pack size: 1pk, 5pk

Best before: All dates from 24 April 2026 to 12 March 2027

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If you have purchased the above products, the Food Standards Agency (FSA) advises that you “do not eat them”.

Some of the affected products are available at Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Morrisons, and Waitrose. Be sure to look where you made your purchase.

Rather, return them to the place of purchase for a full refund. For additional details, drop an email at getintouch@momafoods.co.uk.

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What’s behind Pakistan’s war with Afghanistan’s Taliban government?

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What’s behind Pakistan’s war with Afghanistan’s Taliban government?

Pakistan has been at war with Afghanistan’s Taliban regime for just under one month. Yet the conflict, which was officially declared by Pakistan the day before the US and Israel launched their strikes on Iran, has been overshadowed by events in the Gulf.

Pakistan and the Taliban have made widely differing claims regarding the numbers of people killed on either side. The rising casualty toll only briefly captured global attention when a Pakistani airstrike hit a drug rehabilitation centre in Kabul on March 16, killing more than 100 people.

But the three weeks of fighting, with a brief pause for the Eid al-Fitr holiday between March 20 and 23, confirm for anyone who still doubted it, that the schism between Pakistan and the Taliban is real. Of course there are complex geopolitical and regional interests at play. India provides some support for the Taliban while China tries to balance its alliance with Pakistan and its more tentative relationship with the Taliban. But the conflict tells us more about the politics of the Taliban movement itself and its relationship with Pakistan.

The Taliban are happy to exploit the spectacle of the conflict with Pakistan as their latest bid for legitimacy. They pose to the Afghan population as defenders of national sovereignty. And they believe that their guerrilla tactics give them an advantage in ground fighting against what they disparagingly refer to as the “Punjabi army”. Meanwhile, their ideology, which is based on religious zeal tinged with nationalism, plays to historical Afghan ideas around resisting foreigners, including the defeat of the British Army of the Indus in the 1838-42 war, is a potent recruiting tool.

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Pakistani militants

The Pakistani Taliban (TTP) are the key factor behind the breakdown in Afghanistan’s relations with Pakistan. The TTP are a group of Pakistani militants, inspired by the Afghan Taliban, but with their own leadership and structure. The Afghan Taliban have provided a haven in Afghanistan to the TTP that mirrors the refuge they themselves received in Pakistan until 2021.

In the run up to the latest war, the TTP escalated their insurgency against the Pakistan state. Now TTP leaders have declared themselves a part of the Taliban’s emirate. They claim to be fighting to impose the Taliban version of the emirate on the whole of Pakistan, not just the tribal areas of the frontier, where the TTP originated.

This may help Pakistan persuade other regional powers that the Taliban pose a threat to stability analogous to that posed by Iran – but with IEDs and suicide bombers instead of ballistic missiles and drones. The problem for the Pakistan army is that neither previous efforts at containment of the Taliban nor the current limited aerial campaign against them has made the extremist regime amenable to cooperation.

Building grievance

For years, the Taliban were widely denigrated as a proxy force that had been created and supported by Pakistan and served Islamabad’s interests. This is simply wrong. The Taliban as a movement is rooted in Afghan culture and history, dominated by conservative Sunni clerics and madrassah (Islamic school) students from the Kandahari branches of Afghanistan’s Pashtun tribes. It was these tribes’ 18th-century rebellions against their Persian overlords which led to the emergence of modern Afghanistan. For three decades the movement has pursued a vision of imposing the Taliban’s Islamic system on Afghanistan.

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They only accepted safe haven in Pakistan because they saw it as their best chance of outlasting the US intervention in Afghanistan.

The Taliban never felt much gratitude towards their hosts. Instead they accumulated grievances against their benefactors during the safe haven period. These grievances started soon after 9/11, when Pakistan helped the US detain numerous Taliban leaders. By August 2021 the Taliban had a pantheon of senior figures whose deaths they blamed on Pakistan – such as their former defence minister Obaidullah Akhund in 2010 and their second leader Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Mansoor in 2016.

Pakistani families carry photos of relatives killed in a 2014 attack by TTP fighters on Peshawar’s army public school.
AP Photo/Muhammad Sajjad

When the Taliban leaders and security chiefs returned to government in Afghanistan in 2021, they were still nursing these grievances. As a result they have adopted policies to reduce Pakistan’s influence in their country. Taliban with families and assets in Pakistan were pressurised to repatriate them to Afghanistan. They have also redirected Afghanistan’s trade so that, by 2025, Iran had replaced Pakistan as the main source of Afghanistan’s imports. Meanwhile India has replaced it as the main destination for Afghan exports.

Since taking power, the Taliban have built their insurgent fighters into coherent national security forces – but forces that are subject to intense religious indoctrination. Anticipating the current conflict, they built a series of underground storage facilities for weaponry and to shelter their leaders if required. For now, they rely on vehicle-mounted heavy machine guns as air defence, but they continue trying to acquire more advanced capabilities, for example by showing up at Russian arms exhibitions.

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Risk of escalation

If the Taliban were dancing to Islamabad’s tune, they would have answered Pakistan’s call to help deal with the TTP insurgency. Instead, the Taliban has sheltered the TTP allowing them to conduct attacks against Pakistan, despite repeated Pakistani protests and airstrikes against TTP targets in Afghanistan.

But in the fighting since the end of February, Pakistan has escalated from bombing the “guests”“ – TTP targets in Afghanistan – to bombing the “hosts” – the Afghan Taliban. So Afghanistan’s Taliban government has escalated by openly sending Afghan fighters across the border.

The war in the Persian Gulf rapidly overshadowed the Taliban’s war with Pakistan. But that does not diminish the potential for serious consequences from the latest twist in Afghanistan’s conflict. By openly allying themselves with a movement which seeks the overthrow of Pakistan’s government, the Taliban pose a threat to the stability of the second most populous Muslim majority state – a country with a nuclear arsenal.

And this, in turn, increases pressure on the Pakistan army to expand its campaign against the Taliban, contemplating regime change if the regime cannot be reformed. But regime change would require an alternative to the Taliban, which does not currently exist. This suggests that achieving Pakistan’s objectives will require more ambition than yet seen in the air campaign.

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Piece by piece: Inside the rapid rise of competitive jigsaw puzzling

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Piece by piece: Inside the rapid rise of competitive jigsaw puzzling

Hunched over a table in a hotel conference room, 42-year-old Yvonne Feucht snaps the final blue jigsaw piece into place, revealing a vibrant, beachy collage of San Diego landmarks. It took her just 54 minutes and 41 seconds to complete. Instead of the quiet satisfaction that usually ensues after finishing a jigsaw, the room erupts in cheers as Feucht raised her hands over her head, letting out a sigh of relief. The Los Angeles-based TV and film camera operator had just become the inaugural champion of the 2022 USA Jigsaw Puzzle Nationals — America’s first-ever major competitive puzzling tournament.

This weekend, Feucht returns to try to reclaim her championship title at the 2026 edition of the Nationals. Hosted by the USA Jigsaw Puzzle Association, the three-day event, taking place in Atlanta from March 27 to 29, will welcome hundreds of puzzlers from around the world and just as many zealous spectators. Consisting of three events: individuals, pairs and teams of four, the competition sees contestants race to complete unreleased 500-piece and 1,000-piece puzzles.

Jigsaw puzzles have been around for centuries, believed to have been invented in 1770 by British cartographer John Spilsbury as an educational tool to teach geography to children. During the Great Depression of the 1930s, they saw a massive surge in popularity as an affordable escape thanks to the introduction of cheaper, die-cut cardboard puzzles. Since the new millennium, their popularity dipped slightly with the rise of television and video games.

However, the once-solitary pastime is now undergoing a quiet but transformative reimagining — as a highly competitive sport, with national and global competitions and a rapidly expanding fan base.

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Yvonne Feucht became the inaugural USA Jigsaw Nationals champion in 2022
Yvonne Feucht became the inaugural USA Jigsaw Nationals champion in 2022 (Courtesy of Yvonne Feucht)

I first discovered speed puzzling on Instagram — time-lapse videos of people assembling puzzles at lightning speed, pure kryptonite for my ADHD. The biggest star on the platform is Karen Puzzles, a 35-year-old from New Jersey with more than 550,000 followers across YouTube and Instagram.

“I think a lot of people never considered [speed puzzling] as an option,” Karen Kavett, the creator behind Karen Puzzles, tells me over Zoom. “Even if they enjoy puzzling, they didn’t know events like this existed.”

Kavett began posting puzzle content in 2018, when speed puzzling and puzzling in general had little online presence. However, fueled by the 2020 pandemic — and thanks in part to Kavett’s videos — interest in the hobby-turned-sport has grown exponentially.

Karen Kavett, 35, is one of the sport's most well-known figures
Karen Kavett, 35, is one of the sport’s most well-known figures (Courtesy of Karen Kavett)

“I found out about speed puzzling because of Karen Puzzles,” says Jen Ferris, a third-grade teacher in South Florida. Ferris, 36, had always loved jigsaw puzzles as a child, but drifted away from the hobby in adulthood — particularly during a difficult and unhealthy marriage. She eventually stumbled across a TikTok of Kavett’s appearance at the 2024 World Jigsaw Puzzle Championship.

Ferris remembers thinking, “What is this? This is speed puzzling? This is a thing?” It wasn’t until she finally left her marriage that she picked up some jigsaws and tried her hand at speed puzzling. “I do feel like I was able to lean on this hobby and go back to [something] I used to love. That, honestly, I forgot that I loved,” she reflects. “It was kind of like finding myself [and] learning to love myself again. It helped me heal, but it also helped me find my purpose again in life and find my people.”

Jen Ferris will compete in her first USA Jigsaw Nationals this weekend
Jen Ferris will compete in her first USA Jigsaw Nationals this weekend (Courtesy of Jen Ferris)

Speed puzzling has only recently been recognized as a sport. The World Jigsaw Puzzle Federation was founded in 2019 and hosted the world’s first jigsaw puzzle championship later that year in Valladolid, Spain. The following year, the USAJPA was created and held the country’s first premier national championship in San Diego.

Feucht and Kavett have competed in both competitions several times, with Kavett coming in second just behind Feucht at the 2022 Nationals. Looking back on her victory four years later, Feucht remains just as stunned as she was at the time. “I couldn’t believe it,” she recounts. “I had to double-check that I’d actually won.”

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Nationals is a high-energy, knockout-style event, where individuals, pairs, and teams are steadily whittled down through multiple elimination rounds before a final showdown crowns the fastest puzzlers. At the starting signal, competitors rip open their bags and frantically flip pieces face-up, scanning for patterns amid the chaos. Some stick to the classic method — building the border first, then working inward — while others plunge straight into assembling whatever fragments they can find.

Strategy, however, only goes so far. As Feucht puts it, the real advantage lies in memory and an instinctive feel for color — skills that allow the best competitors to recognize, sort, and place pieces at remarkable speed.

It’s no fortune, but first-place winners receive a cash prize of $1,500 in the individual division, $1,000 each for pairs, and $750 each for teams, for a total of $6,500 in cash prizes. The winnings are intended to help fund participants’ travel to other speed-puzzling events in the U.S. and abroad.

As a result of her standout performance at Nationals, Feucht became a notable figure in the puzzling community. Like many, she has fond memories of completing puzzles with her mother as a child. She later returned to the activity as an adult after coming across the popular speed-puzzling website speedpuzzling.com.

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Kavett has posted puzzling content online since 2018
Kavett has posted puzzling content online since 2018 (George Feucht)

For Feucht, speed puzzling has opened the door to new friendships. More broadly, the practice has helped ease her social anxiety and deepen her connections with family. “I like to dump out a puzzle during holidays, and I feel like a lot of people come and join me,” she says. “It’s lovely, because normally people don’t sit down and talk for that long — but when there’s a puzzle and a shared goal, people come, they sit, and they talk.”

Compared to the first Nationals, which featured 33 teams of four, 93 pairs, and 99 individual puzzlers, this year’s competition saw registration skyrocket, more than quadrupling to 200 teams of four, 400 pairs, and 800 individuals.

“It’s very exciting to see speed puzzling grow so that more people can discover it,” USAJPA founding member Valerie Coit tells me in an email. “We’ve heard many stories from USAJPA members that they’ve ‘found their people’ and that getting involved in the community has changed their lives for the better.”

That was certainly the case for 36-year-old Emma Landgraf, who discovered puzzling just over a year ago during a period of intense stress from a demanding job. “I was so stressed and burned out that I needed something to grab on to that was joyful,” the Chicago-based data strategist said.

Landgraf put herself to the test last April, competing in her first Nationals in Washington, D.C. This year, she’s eager not only to compete but also to volunteer.

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Emma Landgraf (left) returns this weekend for her second USA Jigsaw Nationals
Emma Landgraf (left) returns this weekend for her second USA Jigsaw Nationals (Courtesy of Emma Landgraf)

“This is a very passionate group that wants to make sure they take part in making it happen,” she says. “And you really want to be a part of that.”

Landgraf recalls the overwhelming passion on display at last year’s Nationals, where nearly every team arrived in matching team shirts, head-to-toe puzzle ensembles, and even handmade crochet puzzle tops — a true celebration of the community’s creativity. “There’s just a lot of excitement over something that, in theory, is kind of silly and niche and boring,” she says. “It’s puzzles, it is what it is, but it’s a really warm, loving group of people.”

What was once a solitary pastime has quietly transformed into a global phenomenon. Yet despite its surging popularity, puzzling remains rooted in something more enduring: a shared challenge, a source of joy, and a growing community coming together, one piece at a time.

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The best of the major phone networks

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The best of the major phone networks

As noted above, it’s existing Virgin Media customers who get the best value from O2, with bundle deals that are much cheaper than the SIM-only deals you’ll see in our table below. If you’re already a Virgin Media customer, log in to the Virgin Media website, select upgrades in your contract menu and check the ‘Volt benefits’ on offer.

If you’re buying SIM-only and you’re not typically a heavy data user, O2 isn’t great value. Its cheapest tariff is £15 per month on a two-year deal, whereas our best-value network, Lebara, will offer you a decent dollop of data for £4.50 per month. However, at the top end, O2’s £21 per month fee for unlimited data is up there with the best, although be aware that annual price increases are baked into the contract.

Take care if you’re planning to buy a phone and SIM together. When I priced up a deal for an iPhone 17 Pro and a 50GB monthly contract, the cheapest I could get the airtime plan was £30 per month (O2 prices the phone and airtime separately). If you buy a SIM-only 50GB plan from O2, you can get it for half that price.

It seems this is because O2 offers different tiers of 50GB plan, with the “Plus” tariff offered with the iPhone, including benefits such as data rollover, extended roaming and more. However, these benefits don’t seem worth double the cost, in my view, so you may be better off buying a phone and airtime separately.

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Speed

Score: 3.5/5

The O2 customers we surveyed seemed largely content with the performance of the network, with 73 per cent satisfied with the data speeds on offer. As noted previously, award winners Tesco Mobile and Giffgaff also piggyback on O2, and their customers were also happy with the speeds (both registered 89 per cent satisfaction), which is a good sign.


Reliability

Score: 4/5

Reliability appears to be solid with O2, with 84 per cent of the customers we surveyed satisfied with the reliability of the network. Again, high scores from the customers of Tesco Mobile and Giffgaff (93 per cent and 95 per cent) boost confidence levels. Text and voice reliability is particularly strong, with 95 per cent of O2 customers happy. The best scores of any network on test.

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Customer service

Score: 3/5

Customer service scores are a drag on O2’s overall performance. A middling 63 per cent of customers said they were happy with how easy it is to reach O2’s customer service team, while 62 per cent were satisfied with the quality of support. Tesco Mobile was the standout leader for customer service, with scores of over 90 per cent on both of those metrics.


Roaming

Score: 3.5/5

You need to check carefully with O2’s roaming offering, as it varies depending on which tariff you’ve chosen. The standard ‘Classic’ plans that are offered on a SIM-only basis include EU roaming, but up to a limit of 25GB per month. The more expensive ‘Plus’ tariffs include roaming in 75 countries, including the USA, while the top-tier ‘Ultimate’ tariffs boost the number of roaming countries to 123. Check the lists of supported countries carefully before you travel.

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In our survey, 73 per cent of O2 customers were satisfied with the value of the roaming deals. Again, this is middle of the pack.


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Katie Price warns ‘you can’t keep me away’ in brutally honest update on daughter Princess

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Katie Price has set the record straight on her relationship with daughter Princess Andre, after making an unexpected appearance on her ITV2 show, The Princess Diaries

Katie Price finally made her debut on 18-year-old daughter Princess Andre‘s show via a FaceTime call, after previously claiming she’d been “banned” from appearing on the ITV2 series. The 47-year-old former glamour model has now revealed how she truly feels about the situation in a candid chat with her sister Sophie on their podcast, The Katie Price Show.

Sophie began the discussion by saying: “You actually made an appearance on FaceTime! How did it feel?” Sensing a sarcastic tone in her sister’s voice, Katie, who recently got married for the fourth time to Dubai-based businessman Lee Andrews, replied: “I love your sarcasm, Soph! Yes I made an appearance on the show, wahey!

“Look, it’s Princess’ show and I think, because of the first show, there was a lot of stick because it was pretty obvious I wasn’t in it,” to which Sophie replied: “I think the first show went down like a tonne of lead!”

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Katie agreed: “Literally, yes. Because whether people love it or not, like it or hate it, I am Princess’ mum and you can’t keep me away or keep the fact that I am associated to Princess, because I am her mother. And they use my name, I’m not saying ‘they’, but my name is always used against her show to create headlines.”

The mum-of-five, who shares Princess and her older brother Junior, 20, with ex-husband Peter Andre, 53, insisted that although she has mixed feelings about the show, “there’s no scandal” behind her not being very present on the programme.

She told listeners: “Now, I don’t understand, there’s no scandal, I speak to Princess every day, she lives at mine and Pete’s.”

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However, the reality star did admit that she “wished she was there” when Junior and Princess were filmed taking their half-brother Harvey Price, who suffers from a rare genetic condition known as Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS), out for the day.

Katie shared: “I wish I was there with Harvey on that, because I always do everything with Harvey, and it was nice for Junior and Princess to take Harvey out on his own.

“It was the first time they took him out, so when I was watching that bit, I was interested to see how Harvey would behave, and it’s weird because where Harvey is so used to me, he’s more bantery. So he must have been on the fritz a little bit,” the star said, before further explaining that her son seemed a bit more reserved on camera.

Katie didn’t rule out another cameo on the series, even suggesting that she and Princess’ dad Pete could be appearing more frequently on the reality show in the future.

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She remarked: “Look, good for Princess doing her show. I don’t care what anyone says, and it’s my daughter at the end of the day and I support her, always will.

“Now, if she does her third show, I reckon me and Pete might make an appearance, I’m not saying together, but separate. It is her show anyway, but it would be nice for people to see mother and daughter stuff because me and Princess do stuff all the time. Sometimes I just feel like I’m kept out…”

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“Well, we know you are,” Sophie chimed in, prompting Katie to clarify that “in real life, it’s not like that”, as she spends a lot of time with Princess normally, but the ITV2 show is filmed at her dad’s house.

Despite her sadness over aspects of the series, Katie was keen for fans to know that she’s “at peace with everything” and wants her eldest children to focus on their careers, rather than negative rumours about her and Pete.

Katie’s remarks come after she and ex Pete jointly announced in February that after a war of words spanning several years following their 2009 split, the two have “both legally and personally” confirmed they “will not speak negatively about the other going forward”.

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Fundraising campaign to secure future of New Earswick pool

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Fundraising campaign to secure future of New Earswick pool

The Friends of New Earswick Swimming Pool, a volunteer-led charity, is seeking £500,000 to replace the much-loved facility’s roofs, which need to be due to persistent leaks and structural deterioration.

The campaign, termed “Buy a Tile,” invites supporters to purchase virtual tiles in bronze, silver, or gold tiers, for £20, £50, and £100, respectively.


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The money will be used specifically for replacing the pool and changing room roofs and a series of sustainability upgrades, including new insulation, solar panels, and battery storage, to lower energy costs significantly.

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Planning permissions and redevelopment plans are already in place with contributors and fundraising activities having raised £205,000 towards the target.

A spokesperson said that the fundraising initiative reflects the community’s part in securing the pool’s future for decades to come.

New Earswick Pool today (Image: Provided)

They added: Many people in York learned to swim there, and countless people rely on it for exercise, rehabilitation, and social connection.

“The pool is also a vital resource for disabled swimmers, offering warm water, accessible sessions, and a welcoming environment.”

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To buy a tile, go towww.friendsofnewearswickpool.co.uk/buy-a-tile or you can send a cheque to FoNESP c/o 3 Meadowfields Drive, York YO31 9HW (include your email address or phone number).

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A strong combination of fast speeds, great value and a helpful online community

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A strong combination of fast speeds, great value and a helpful online community

Value is definitely one of Giffgaff’s strong suits, and although it doesn’t score as highly with customers as Tesco Mobile or Lebara, there’s little to complain about here. Giffgaff’s cheapest tariff starts from £6 a month, and that includes 2GB of data with unlimited minutes and texts. However, it’s worth pointing out that Lebara’s cheapest deal is £1.50 per month cheaper and offers more data.

If you’re more data hungry or you’ve got Spotify/TikTok/YouTube-gobbling teenagers to feed, the 25GB and Unlimited tariffs are also reasonably priced, if once again undercut by Lebara.

Giffgaff does offer deals that include phones as well as SIM-only tariffs, and it’s worth noting that the company also sells refurbished phones, which are much cheaper than buying new. If your kids insist on having iPhones, it’s one of the cheapest ways to pick them up, provided they aren’t screaming for the latest model.


Speed

Score: 4.5/5

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Given that it’s owned by Virgin Media O2, it will come as no surprise that Giffgaff runs on the O2 network. That’s by no means a bad thing, with overall winner Tesco Mobile doing the same, and customers seem to have few complaints about the network’s performance.

A healthy 89 per cent of the Giffgaff customers we surveyed said they were happy with the speeds on offer from the network, which is why it shares our speed award with Tesco Mobile.

O2’s 5G outdoor coverage is pegged at between 70-76 per cent by regulator Ofcom, which isn’t as comprehensive as that of EE (86-89 per cent).


Reliability

Score: 5/5

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Giffgaff customers are highly satisfied with the robustness of the network. Overall, 95 per cent of those surveyed said they were happy with reliability, while 88 per cent said they were satisfied with the consistency of data speeds and the latency (or responsiveness) of the network.

That means Giffgaff is the joint winner of our most reliable mobile network award, alongside Tesco Mobile and Lebara.


Customer service

Score: 3.5/5

If there’s a slight downside to Giffgaff’s offering, it’s customer service. As we mentioned previously, Giffgaff puts a lot of emphasis on community support, with customers helping other customers through the firm’s online forums. But there are some issues (such as billing) that only a company representative can sort and that may be where Giffgaff falls short.

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For example, only 66 per cent of Giffgaff customers were happy with the ease with which they can reach the customer support team, a distinctly mid-table score. When it comes to the quality of support, only 72 per cent of Giffgaff customers said they were happy.


Roaming

Score: 4/5

Like many other networks, Giffgaff does include EU roaming in its plans, but there are limits. For example, even if you’re on an unlimited plan or, say, 25GB per month, the EU roaming data allowance is capped at 5GB. That should still be enough for a holiday, but others, such as Lebara, let you use your full data allowance while you’re in the EU.

Giffgaff customers seem reasonably happy with the situation, though, with 77 per cent saying they were happy with the roaming value.

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Pope Leo visits glitzy Monaco where there are nearly as many casinos as churches | News World

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Pope Leo visits glitzy Monaco where there are nearly as many casinos as churches | News World

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Pope Leo XIV has called on the world’s mega-rich to use their wealth to help those in need during a visit to Monaco.

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Leo flew in on a helicopter for the one-day trip to the world’s second-smallest state, the first papal visit there in nearly 500 years.

The Vatican said he wanted to show that small countries can make an outsized impact on the world stage.

The glitzy enclave on the French Riviera is known as a haven for billionaires and their luxury yachts

Pope Leo XIV aboard his helicopter flying past the coastline of Monaco before his arrival in in Monte Carlo (Picture: Vatican Media/AFP via Getty)
epa12856180 A handout picture provided by the Vatican Media shows Prince Albert II of Monaco welcomes Pope Leo XIV as he arrives for an one-day trip, in Monaco, 28 March 2026. Pope Leo XIV is on apostolic journey to Monaco. EPA/VATICAN MEDIA HANDOUT HANDOUT EDITORIAL USE ONLY/NO SALES
Prince Albert II of Monaco welcomes Pope Leo XIV as he arrives for an one-day trip (Picture: EPA)
TOPSHOT - This photograph taken by Vatican Media and made available on March 28, 2026, shows Pope Leo XIV with Albert II of Monaco and Charlene of Monaco looking out from the balcony of the Prince's Palace of Monaco in Monte Carlo, Monaco. Pope Leo XIV heads to the Mediterranean principality of Monaco on the French Riviera that is the pontiff's surprise pick for the first western European trip of his papacy. The US-born pope, a former missionary critical of the wealthy elite, will helicopter in for a day in the world's second-smallest state, best known for its casinos, luxury yachts and Michelin-starred dining. (Photo by Handout / VATICAN MEDIA / AFP via Getty Images) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / VATICAN MEDIA" - HANDOUT - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS
Pope Leo XIV with Albert II of Monaco and Charlene of Monaco looking out from the balcony of the Prince’s Palace (Picture: Vatican Media/AFP via Getty Images)

Speaking in French shortly after his arrival, Leo condemned what he termed the widening ‘chasms between the poor and the rich’.

Leo, the first American-born pope, was greeted at the Monaco heliport by Prince Albert and Princess Charlene.

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At the palace, members of the royal family stood in the courtyard waiting for Leo, the women dressed in black and with lace head coverings.

Charlene wore white — a protocol privilege granted by the Vatican to Catholic royal sovereigns when meeting popes, known in diplomatic terms as ‘le privilège du blanc’.

In his opening greeting from the palace balcony, Leo urged Monaco – which has the highest concentration of billionaires per capita in the world – to use its wealth, influence and ‘gift of smallness’ for good.

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Pope Leo XIV attends a meeting with young people and catechumens outside the Church of Saint Devota, as part of a one-day trip in Monaco, March 28, 2026. REUTERS/Guglielmo Mangiapane
Pope Leo XIV attends a meeting with young people and catechumens outside the Church of Saint Devota (Picture: Reuters)
MONACO, MONACO - MARCH 28: Pope Leo XIV during the Pope Leo XIV visit to Monaco on March 28, 2026 in Monaco, Monaco. Pope Leo XIV's visit to Monaco is the first in nearly 500 years since Pope Paul III in 1538. During this one day visit Pope Leo XIV will be welcomed by Prince Albert and Princess Charlene of Monaco. He will also meet with the Catholic community in the cathedral and host a Mass at the Monaco Stadium. (Photo by Stephane Cardinale - Corbis/Corbis via Getty Images)
Pope Leo XIV’s visit to Monaco is the first in nearly 500 years since Pope Paul III in 1538 (Picture: Corbis via Getty Images)
epa12856306 Pope Leo XIV blesses a child as he leaves the Cathedral of Monaco after attending the 'Prayer of the Liturgy of the Hours' in Monaco, 28 March 2026. Pope Leo XIV is on apostolic journey to Monaco. EPA/SEBASTIEN NOGIER
Pope Leo XIV blesses a child as he leaves the Cathedral of Monaco (Picture: EPA)

It was important, he said, ‘especially at a historical moment when the display of power and the logic of oppression are harming the world and jeopardising peace’.

Later in the cathedral, Leo urged Monaco’s Catholics to spread their faith ‘so that the life of every man and woman may be defended and promoted from conception until natural death’.

Such terms are used by the Vatican to refer to Catholic teaching opposing abortion and euthanasia.

Monaco is one of the few European countries where Catholicism is the official state religion.

A coastal playground for the rich and famous, Monaco is also renowned as much for its tax-friendly incentives and Formula 1 Grand Prix as its glamorous royal family.

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The principality’s casinos – four – are only narrowly outnumbered by its five churches.

Leo’s events in Monaco were marked by all the usual protocol and pomp of a papal tour abroad.

epaselect epa12856135 Pope Leo XIV waves from the popemobile as he leaves the Prince's Palace after a welcoming ceremony, in Monaco, 28 March 2026. Pope Leo XIV is on apostolic journey to Monaco. EPA/SEBASTIEN NOGIER
Pope Leo XIV waves from the popemobile as he leaves the Prince’s Palace (Picture: EPA)
Pope Leo XIV arrives to meet with youths and catechumens at the Church of Sainte-Devote in Monte Carlo, Monaco, on March 28, 2026. Pope Leo XIV heads to the Mediterranean principality of Monaco on the French Riviera that is the pontiff's surprise pick for the first western European trip of his papacy. The US-born pope, a former missionary critical of the wealthy elite, will helicopter in for a day in the world's second-smallest state, best known for its casinos, luxury yachts and Michelin-starred dining. (Photo by Frederic DIDES / AFP via Getty Images)
Pope Leo XIV arrives to meet with youths and catechumens at the Church of Sainte-Devote in Monte Carlo (Picture: AFP via Getty Images)
Pope Leo XIV greets youth and catechumens as he leaves the Church of Sainte-Devote in Monte Carlo, Monaco, on March 28, 2026. Pope Leo XIV heads to the Mediterranean principality of Monaco on the French Riviera that is the pontiff's surprise pick for the first western European trip of his papacy. The US-born pope, a former missionary critical of the wealthy elite, will helicopter in for a day in the world's second-smallest state, best known for its casinos, luxury yachts and Michelin-starred dining. (Photo by Frederic DIDES / AFP via Getty Images)
Pope Leo XIV heads to the Mediterranean principality of Monaco on the French Riviera that is the pontiff’s surprise pick for the first western European trip (Picture: AFP via Getty)

Crowds, however, were relatively thin.

Few lined the streets as he toured the 0.8 square mile country in an open-air popemobile.

Leo was elected in May to succeed the late Pope Francis as head of the 1.4-billion-member Church.

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His visit to Monaco is only his second outside Italy, but opens what is expected to be a busy year of travel.

Leo, 70, is relatively young and in good health for a pope.

He will undertake an ambitious, four-country tour of Africa in April, and is also due to make a week-long visit to Spain in June.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

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I had breakfast at a former RAF base used as an operations hub in World War Two

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It was nice to see how much respect was paid to those who fought in World War Two

Breakfast at The Watch Office in Alconbury Weald

Cambridgeshire has a strong RAF history, with many former bases now seeing new lives as museums or housing developments. At a former RAF base, a restaurant pays homage to those who once served at the base.

Recently, I visited Alconbury Weald, a 10-year-old housing development where new homes are still being built. Although it only had one shop, there was an interesting restaurant I wanted to check out. This was The Watch Office.

What made it stand out is it served as an operational hub for RAF Alconbury during the Second World War. The restaurant resembled a bunker, and its current camouflage decoration harks back to the days when the building was used by the military.

As I stepped inside, I was faced with more decoration inspired by the war and the RAF, with different planes painted on the walls, alongside their names. It was endearing to see the respects paid to the former RAF base, with the history of the area part of the fabric of its incarnation today.

It was when I stepped into the main restaurant I realised how much the RAF was respected. On the back wall of the building was a mural painted with two soldiers looking to the skies as planes fly above them. I sat down and scoured the menu.

For a small place, I was impressed with the large selection they had on offer. Seeking a warm drink, I firstly ordered a hot chocolate topped with marshmallows and cream.

When my drink arrived, it was a welcome sight. It was smothered in cream and covered in marshmallows, with a nice surprise of cinnamon sprinkled on top.

As I sipped, the cream melted in my mouth, while the marshmallows were soft and squishy. Once I got through the heap of cream, the hot chocolate itself had a creamy and silky taste.

For food, I opted for the breakfast sandwich. This contained a sausage patty, crispy bacon, and chimichurri fried egg, all in a garlic buttered bun. It was served with two hash browns.

I was very impressed with the hash browns, due to their crispiness and large size. However, they were very salty.

I took one big bite of my burger to get all of the toppings in, as there was a lot packed into this bun. As I bit in, the crispy bacon stood out. The rashers gave an indulgent savoury taste. The sausage patty was flat and grilled to a nice standard.

Despite being so much packed into the bun, the sandwich was easy to eat and not as messy as I thought. The only thing was there was a lot of salt on all of the toppings – I would have liked to be able to season it to my taste.

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Overall, I admired the RAF-inspired decor at The Watch Office, and found it sweet that so much respect was paid to the history of the place.

All of our food reviews are paid for by the writer. The establishments do not know we will be reviewing their food, allowing us to make fair judgements on each place.

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Who are the Houthis? Yemen’s rebels joining war against the US in the Middle East | News World

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Who are the Houthis? Yemen's rebels joining war against the US in the Middle East | News World

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Yemen’s Houthi rebels have joined the conflict in the Middle East, launching a missile bound for Israel.

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It marks the first time the country has involved itself in the war, which began one month ago today after the US and Israel launched Operation Epic Fury.

Strikes have covered the region ever since, with Trump targeting Tehran while Iran launches strikes at US military bases.

Now, a military spokesman for the Houthis said they are prepared to join the war on behalf of Iran after the US and Israel targeted power and nuclear sites.

This is not the first time they have involved themselves in conflict in the region.

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Two years ago the breakaway faction repeatedly launched drones and missiles against commercial vessels, claiming to be attacking Israeli ships in support of Palestine.

It accused the West of ‘blatant aggression’ and after airstrikes on Friday hit dozens of targets, vowing to respond with ‘punishment or retaliation’.

Britain has walked a tightrope over Yemen’s civil war for the last decade – keep reading to find out who’s involved and why some fear the situation could escalate into a full-blown war in the region.

Who are the Houthi rebels?

Thousands of people gather at Sabeen Square, under the control of the Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen, to protest the killing of Iran’s leader Ali Khamenei (Picture:Mohammed Hamoud/Anadolu via Getty Images)

The Houthi movement is a political and military group that follows a minority strand of Islam called Zaydism, and draws its name from an ancient Arab tribe from northern Yemen called the Houthis.

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Following rising instability in the wake of the Arab Spring, they seized control of the Yemeni capital of Sana’a in 2014, sparking one of the deadliest civil wars in recent history – which is still ongoing today.

Yemen’s official government, recognised by most countries including the UK, is backed by a Saudi-led coalition which Britain has supplied with weapons.

Both sides are widely believed to have carried out war crimes and atrocities against civilians, overseeing some of the worst humanitarian conditions in the world.

The Houthis are currently in control over almost all of northern Yemen, although much of the country has been devastated, with a death toll of over 150,000.

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Newly recruited Houthi fighters hold up firearms during a ceremony at the end of his training in Sanaa, Yemen January 11, 2024. REUTERS/Khaled Abdullah
The Houthis are locked in one of the deadliest conflicts in recent history (Picture: Reuters)

Have the Houthis been involved in conflict before?

Houthi forces launched dozens of drone and missile strikes on commercial vessels two years ago following the Israel-Hamas war on October 7.

The faction’s goal was ‘prevent Israeli ships from navigating the Arab and Red Seas in support of the oppressed Palestinian people’.

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In reality, though, almost all the targets were international trading ships – some making port in Israel, many simply passing through to other parts of the world.

HMS Diamond and US jets shoot down biggest wave of drone and missile attacks in Red Sea on container ships
HMS Diamond and US jets shot down the biggest wave of drone and missile attacks in the Red Sea on container ships (Picture: MOD)

One of the first incidents – when the Houthis hijacked what they claimed was an Israeli cargo ship in November – actually involved a British-owned ship run by a Japanese firm and staffed by crew from all around the world.

More recently, a Houthi spokesperson said any ship destined for Israel is a ‘legitimate target’. The UN’s shipping watchdog has since confirmed that the Houthis are continuing to attack ships with no links to Israel whatsoever.

Who supports the Houthis?

Yemeni men brandish their weapons and hold up portraits of Huthi leader Abdul Malik al-Houthi during a protest in solidarity with the Palestinian people in the Huthi-controlled Yemeni capital Sanaa on January 5, 2024, amid the ongoing battles between Israel and the militant Hamas group in Gaza. Heavy air strikes pounded rebel-held cities in Yemen early on January 12, 2024, the Huthi rebels' official media and AFP correspondents said. The capital Sanaa, Hodeida and Saada were all targeted, the Huthis' official media said, blaming "American aggression with British participation". (Photo by MOHAMMED HUWAIS / AFP) (Photo by MOHAMMED HUWAIS/AFP via Getty Images)
Yemeni men brandish weapons and portraits of leader Abdul Malik al-Houthi (Picture: AFP)

Yemen’s Houthis are backed by Iran, which began increasing its aid to the group in 2014 as the civil war broke out.

Iran’s theocratic government follows the Shia branch of Islam, of which the Houthi’s Zaydist belief system is a strand.

Iran has given the militants training and an array of sophisticated weapons and military technology, with the alleged help of Lebanon’s Hezbollah terrorist group.

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The West has accused Iran of involvement in the Red Sea attacks two years ago and ordering the Houthis and other Middle Eastern militias to carry out their attacks on Israel, which Iran denies.

The UN Panel of Experts on Yemen previously found that Iran has ‘failed to take the necessary measures to prevent the direct or indirect supply, sale or transfer’ of various ballistic missiles that the Houthis have deployed against all the vessels.

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Bus driver and passengers rushed to hospital after crash with campervan and car on A77

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Two other people involved in the crash were also taken to the hospital as a precaution after the incident on Friday.

A bus driver and three passengers were rushed to hospital after horror crash in Ayrshire. Emergency crews raced to the scene at the junction between the A77 and B7034 near Minishant at around 5.15pm on Friday March 27.

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The three-vehicle crash also involved a campervan and a car. The driver of the bus and three passengers were taken to hospital but no information is available on their condition at this stage.

Two other people involved in the incident also attended hospital as a precaution. The A77 was closed in both directions after the crash and motorists were urged to avoid the area.

Police Scotland confirmed on Saturday morning the road has reopened. A spokesperson for the force said: “The A77 at the junction with the B7034 near Minishant, Ayr, has re-opened following a three-vehicle crash.

“The crash happened around 5.15pm on Friday, 27 March, and involved a bus, a car, and a campervan. The driver of the bus and three passengers were taken to hospital for treatment.

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“Two further people have also attended hospital as a precaution. Enquiries are ongoing.”

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