A survey of 779 children by parkrun found that 76% felt happier after completing a junior parkrun event.
The weekly 2km runs, held on Sunday mornings, are open to children aged four to 14 and are part of the Keep Moving This Summer campaign.
Children who take part in junior parkrun ‘feel happier’ after
James Thomas, junior parkrun impact and engagement manager, said: “junior parkrun offers something really simple – somewhere to go on a Sunday morning that is free, friendly and good for you.
“We hope even more families will give it a try this summer.”
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Of the 1,375 families surveyed, 84% said the runs had boosted their child’s sense of achievement and 68% reported an increased enjoyment of physical activity.
Dame Rachel de Souza, children’s commissioner for England, said: “These findings reinforce what children have told me time and again: being outdoors, exploring their communities and spending time with friends and family plays a vital role in their wellbeing.
“I look forward to joining young runners at a junior parkrun this summer.
“Every child should have the opportunity to enjoy the benefits of outdoor play and activity during the school holidays, regardless of their family’s circumstances.”
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Sports minister Stephanie Peacock added: “Summer should be all about getting outside, enjoying the good weather and keeping active.
“junior parkrun gives families the chance to do all of those things together, in a friendly environment and for free.
“It is vital that every child has the chance to enjoy the benefits of sport and physical activity, both at school and beyond.”
What is parkrun?
Parkrun is a free, weekly, community event where people walk, jog, run, or volunteer.
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The main events are 5-kilometre (5k) courses held in parks and open spaces every Saturday morning.
There are also 2k events for children aged 4 to 14 on Sunday mornings.
It is completely free, but you must register online before your first event.
Have you ever taken part in a parkrun event? Let us know in the comments.
Police have said the the incident is not being treated as hate motivated.
19:42, 13 Jul 2026Updated 19:50, 13 Jul 2026
A woman has been arrested after objects were thrown at a parade in East Belfast today.
The incident took place in the Beersbridge Road area of the city on Monday, July 13, when items were thrown at a parade that was passing through the area. Police have said videos of the incident have been circulating online.
A 42-year-old woman has since been arrested and remains in police custody at this time.
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Police have said they are not treating it as “hate motivated”.
A PSNI spokesperson said: “A 42 year old woman was arrested on suspicion of common assault and public order offences, following reports of items thrown towards parade participants at the Beersbridge Road area of East Belfast on Monday 13 th July. She remains in police custody at this time.
“Police are aware of recordings of this incident circulating online and the incident is not being treated as hate motivated.
“Enquiries are continuing and police would appeal to anyone with any information in relation to this matter, to contact them on 101 quoting reference number 516 13/07/26.”
JK Rowling’s women-only rape support centre has hit back after being branded an ‘anti-rights organisation’ by Amnesty International, describing the claim as ‘deeply offensive’.
Beira’s Place, the Edinburgh-based service founded by the Harry Potter author in 2022 to support female survivors of male violence, issued its first public response after Amnesty was forced to remove its report, A Growing Threat: The Anti-Rights Movement in the UK, due to the growing backlash.
The report had included Beira’s Place among more than 100 organisations it claimed were working against the rights of LGBT+ people, prompting criticism from several of those named.
Chief executive Lesley Johnston said Amnesty’s decision to include the centre was ‘inexplicable’.
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She said: ‘Beira’s Place was established in 2022 to address an unmet need for a single-sex support service for female survivors of male violence.
‘We are proud of our work and we know how much our service means to the women who have used it.
‘It is inexplicable that Beira’s Place has been listed as an “anti-rights organisation” in a report published last week by Amnesty International.
‘This is deeply offensive to Beira’s Place staff who work day in, day out to support survivors, and to the women who need and use our service.
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Harry Potter author JK Rowling founded Edinburgh-based rape support centre Beira’s Place in 2022
Ms Johnston added: ‘We will continue to focus on the needs of the women who come to us and… we remain committed to a vision where women and girls can live in a world free of sexual violence.’
Beira’s Place provides support exclusively to biological women who have experienced sexual violence.
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The centre was established by Ms Rowling after controversy surrounding the Edinburgh Rape Crisis Centre, where former chief executive Mridul Wadhwa said survivors who objected to being supported by a transgender woman should ‘reframe’ their trauma.
An Amnesty International report claimed the support centre was working against the rights of LGBT+ people
Ms Rowling said at the time there was an unmet need for a women-only service for victims of sexual violence.
Amnesty’s report said there had been a significant decline in LGBT+ rights across the UK and listed more than 100 organisations it called ‘anti-rights’, including Beira’s Place, For Women Scotland, Murray Blackburn Mackenzie, LGB Alliance and Labour Women’s Declaration.
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Following widespread criticism, Amnesty removed the report from its website over the weekend pending an internal review.
Amnesty has not apologised for naming Beira’s Place. Instead, a spokesman said: ‘We regret that this briefing was uploaded to our website without going through the established internal review processes that are in place to ensure consistency, accuracy and alignment with Amnesty International UK’s positions. Its use of language does not reflect the position of Amnesty International UK, which is why it was promptly removed.’
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JK Rowling rape support centre brands Amnesty’s anti-rights accusation ‘deeply offensive’
It then announced in May that it had plans to move to Merthyr Tydfil in South Wales, which could affect 158 employees. The Unite union announced on Monday (July 13) that around 250 members at Marshall Aerospace are balloting for strike action in a dispute over pay.
The workers considering strike action are engineers who maintain the C-130 Hercules aircraft and manufacture auxiliary fuel tanks for the Boeing P-8 Poseidon maritime patrol aircraft.
Unite regional officer Neil Moore said: “Quite frankly, Marshall Aerospace needs to treat these workers better if it doesn’t want to see disruptive strike action and an exodus of highly skilled employees to companies offering better pay and greater job security.
“That means putting forward a pay offer that recognises the value of this workforce and gives people a reason to stay. Unite remains available for negotiations at any time, and there is still every opportunity to resolve this dispute through meaningful talks.”
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Workers rejected the company’s offer of a 4.5 per cent increase in pay offer. Since 2020, pay has fallen by around 16 per cent at Marshall Aerospace, according to the union.
The ballot to vote on strike action closes on July 21. Any strike action that takes place could have an impact on the support provided to allied military aircraft programmes, including the maintenance of the C-130 Hercules aircraft, Unite said.
Marie Maitland, a 16th-century Scottish gentlewoman, has for centuries been recognised as the likely scribe of the Maitland Quarto. This important manuscript, now held in the Pepys Library of Magdalene College, Cambridge, is an anthology of Scottish poetry by members of the noble Maitland family and their associates.
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Maitland’s name appears twice on the first leaf and is also found in a partial anagram in the opening sonnet (“maid ane immortall”). By way of emphasis the anagram is repeated beneath the poem.
In recent years, researchers have acknowledged the probability that Maitland not only copied and curated the manuscript, but that she also composed some of the poems.
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This includes, most notably, Poem 49, a lyrical exploration of one woman’s desire for and commitment to another. This is an erotic as well as an emotional poem. At the end of the second stanza, the speaker submits to her lover:
Douglas contends that Maitland included within the manuscript two further sapphic poems: Poem 72, which she argues was written by Maitland’s unidentified married woman lover and Poem 89, composed by Maitland herself. Douglas suggests that the three poems, read together, tell the story of their relationship and its unhappy ending. Another verse, which may have been written either for Maitland by another woman or about herself, compares her to Sappho, the famous lesbian lyrical poet of ancient Greece.
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Reclaiming lesbian history
Digging deep into the archives to find long overlooked records, Douglas discovered that Maitland was born in the late 1540s. She remained unmarried until after the death of her father, the courtier Sir Richard Maitland, which occurred when she was in her late thirties.
Up to this point, Maitland enjoyed considerable financial independence. Douglas convincingly argues that her father did all he could to ensure that this would be maintained after his death. This was likely a reward for her serving as his scribe after he lost his sight. Unfortunately, the plan didn’t work. When her brother John (the future Lord Chancellor of Scotland) became head of the household, for reasons of political and financial expediency, Maitland was quickly married off to a much younger man. She died just ten years later, possibly in childbirth.
According to Douglas, Maitland should be recognised as a “new Anne Lister”. Lauded as the “first modern lesbian”, Lister – a member of the Yorkshire landed gentry – enjoyed an unusually autonomous life in the first half of the 19th century.
In this respect, I would suggest, Maitland’s verses anticipate more closely the late 17th-century poetry of Katherine Philips and her circle, which depicts intensely amorous friendships between women in platonic terms.
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Douglas, however, rejects describing the desire for women expressed in Maitland’s poetry in terms of friendship on the grounds that such labelling renders historical lesbianism invisible.
It is certainly the case that the burden of proof seems much higher when it comes to sexual relations between women. Without the sort of detailed firsthand accounts found uniquely in Lister’s diaries, or the vanishingly rare evidence from court cases or other official records, the default assumption is often that women in the past did not have sex with each other.
Tthe burden of proof seems much higher when it comes to sexual relations between women. Le Sommeil (The Sleepers) by Gustave Courbet (1866). Musée des Beaux-Arts, Paris
This assumption is made even when the women are known to have shared a home (the British Museum, for example, is equivocal about the nature of the relationship between the Ladies of Llangollen, who famously eloped and lived together and even shared a bed). But what is perhaps most remarkable about Lister’s diaries is that they reveal that so many women in her social circle, whether they were single, married or widowed, had relationships – and sex – with her.
If we didn’t have Lister’s diaries, we simply wouldn’t know about this aspect of their personal lives. With this context in mind, the possibility that, two centuries earlier, the young Maitland had a sexual relationship with another woman, seems perfectly plausible.
Between 2019 and 2022, the television series Gentleman Jack portrayed Lister (played by Suranne Jones) as a highly intelligent, charismatic, sexually liberated and gender non-conforming lesbian in search of commitment in late Georgian England.
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Douglas represents Maitland as Lister’s sapphic forebear – an educated, intellectual and self-determining woman who found (and, sadly, lost) her love, and much of her liberty, in the repressively patriarchal and conflict-riven environment of Reformation Scotland. In this respect at least, Maitland could be considered the new Gentleman Jack.
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The distant sound of marching bands echoed across the town as forensic officers worked behind the cordon where the bodies of three members of the same family had been discovered.
The unmistakable sound of Lambeg drums rolled across Ballymena as thousands of people made their way home from Twelfth celebrations in the blistering heat.
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Just streets away, behind blue-and-white police tape on the Old Cullybackey Road, detectives continued their painstaking examination of a house where three members of the same family had been found dead.
The Twelfth parades had been held on Monday after 12th July fell on a Sunday, drawing crowds into the town from early morning. Yet as the festivities continued elsewhere, police remained at the scene of a tragedy that has left the local community reeling.
The only sounds on the cordoned-off streets were the occasional hum of police vehicles, officers speaking quietly among themselves and, every so often, the distant music of another marching band drifting across the rooftops of the detached properties before disappearing once again into stillness.
Throughout the afternoon, forensic officers could be seen making repeated journeys between the house and a waiting van as investigators continued to piece together what had happened.
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Police officers maintained their positions in the sweltering heat as temperatures climbed under cloudless blue skies.
The cordon ended beside a nearby supermarket and filling station, one of the few places still busy on the bank holiday. Most shoppers collected what they needed before quietly heading on with their day. A handful paused briefly to look towards the police tape before moving on. Others emerged carrying bottles of water, handing them to officers who had spent hours standing guard in the summer sun.
For many in Ballymena, news of the deaths of the male and two females spread while locals were watching the Twelfth parades, as conversations that had begun with the day’s celebrations quickly turned to the tragedy unfolding only a short distance away.
North Antrim DUP MLA Paul Frew said the prevailing emotions were “shock and then sadness.”
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“It is a day of celebration in the town,” he said. “The parade routes [were] filled with people celebrating the Twelfth. People are coming to terms with and only finding out about this tragedy on the parade route, talking to their neighbours, talking to the people beside them on the parade route, so it’s one of shock and then one of sadness.”
Mr Frew said the most important message from the police was that there was no wider risk to the public while detectives carried out their investigation.
Sinn Féin MLA Philip McGuigan described the deaths as “absolutely heartbreaking.”
“The local community are obviously and clearly in shock and devastated by what has happened here today,” he said.
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“My condolences go out to the wider family, but also to the local community here who will be in absolute shock about the events that have happened here in Ballymena today.”
He urged people not to speculate while police established the circumstances surrounding the deaths.
“I don’t think it’s helpful to speculate about the tragic circumstances of this,” he said.
“I think it’s important to allow the police the time and space to do their investigation.”
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TUV leader and North Antrim MP Jim Allister said the incident had shaken “a very settled part of Ballymena.”
“The sense of shock that such a thing would happen here is palpable,” he said.
“The day that’s in it, a lot of people are away coming back to discover what has happened, and it truly is very upsetting and very shocking.”
As the afternoon wore on, the music of the Twelfth continued to drift intermittently as a private ambulance removed the bodies from the scene. But on the Old Cullybackey Road, this bank holiday will be remembered not for sunshine or celebration, but for the profound silence that settled over a community coming to terms with an unimaginable loss.
A murder investigation has been launched by police after three people were found dead in a house.
Supt William Calderwood said the bodies of a male and two females were found inside a home in the Cullybackey Road in Ballymena, County Antrim, at about 09:00 BST on Monday.
He said the cause of death had not been formally established and that post-mortem examinations would take place later.
He added that police did not believe there was an ongoing risk to the public and detectives are not seeking anyone else in relation to the deaths.
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“Our thoughts this evening are very much with the family and friends of those who have died,” Calderwood said.
He appealed for people to avoid speculating about the incident.
North Antrim MP Jim Allister said the deaths had caused great shock in the community.
“Though details remain scant, clearly there are family and friends who have suffered huge loss,” the Traditional Unionist Voice leader said.
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Sinn Féin assembly member Philip McGuigan said speculation about what had happened was not helpful.
He said anybody who could help police should come forward.
Ulster Unionist Party leader Jon Burrows said the entire town was devastated and police should be given “patience and time” to complete their investigation.
“The more information the police can get out the better, because there is a community in shock,” he said.
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Alliance Party assembly member Sian Mulholland also urged anyone with information to contact the police and said her thoughts were with everyone affected.
Westminster might not know what’s hit it when Luke Charters addresses his peers during a debate on regional accents on Wednesday.
The Labour MP for York Outer has taken to social media to issue a rallying cry to locals to send him their best Yorkshire phrases ahead of the debate so he is armed with a crowd-sourced glossary of the county’s finest words rather than the usual policy papers.
The Westminster Hall debate is on Regional accents and social mobility, and will be led by Jo Platt, MP for Leigh and Atherton who says her accent is as much a part of her identity as her values or politics.
York MP Luke Charters asks locals for Yorkshire words – Jo Platt MP is leading the debate on Wednesday on regional accents. (Image: Submitted)
Taking to Facebook, Mr Charters wrote: “I reckon Yorkshire has some of the best words and phrases going. So, what’s your favourite Yorkshire word or saying? Whether it’s “nowt”, “summat”, “ginnel”, “mardy”, “tha knows” or something a bit more obscure, stick it in the comments.
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“I’m hoping to sneak as many as I can into my speech, so let’s show Parliament how Yorkshire really talks!”
Within hours of his post, replies flooded in, including a mix of classics and possibly some lesser-known gems, from “Having a fuddle”, and ‘fettling’ to “nowt” and “summat”, “ginnel”, “mardy” and “tha knows”.
If Mr Charters follows through on his promise to include as many as possible, MPs could soon find themselves navigating a sentence that sounds more like a chat in a York pub than a Commons debate.
To help him out, we’re asking Press readers to give him their own favourite York and/or Yorkshire words and phrases – simply add them in the comments below (with an explanation if they’re particularly obscure!).
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For York and Yorkshire folk, it’s more than just a bit of fun – it’s a chance to put regional identity front and centre, and remind Westminster that accents aren’t something to be smoothed out, but celebrated.
Whether Mr Charters manages to slip in a handful of phrases or delivers a full-blown Yorkshire-infused speech remains to be seen. One thing’s certain: if he pulls it off, Hansard could make for a particularly entertaining read.
A former Huntington School student, Mr Charters lives in his constituency with his wife and two children, and was elected in 2024, having first contested the seat in 2017.
David Beckham has insisted wife Victoria was ‘celebrating inside’ after a clip of her muted reaction to England’s nail-biting World Cup quarter-final clash went viral. The ex-Three Lions captain and his children Romeo, 23, Cruz, 21, and Harper, 15, all went wild when Jude Bellingham fired home the equaliser against Norway.
But a photo of the moment showed unmoved Victoria, 52, still seated, expression-free with her chin resting on her hand. Fans turned it into an instant meme which swept round the world.
Stand-up comedian Jenny Johnson wrote online: “There’s nothing like cheering your heart out for England from home, then they cut to Victoria and we see that classic Posh Spice smile! It’s so infectious!’
“I used to think I got animated while watching sports, but Victoria blows my enthusiasm out of the water!
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“Each time I see her I shout, ‘SPICE UP YOUR LIFE!!!!’ because her energy is electric!!!”
David, 51, fired back a string of crying laughing emojis. He wrote: “She was celebrating inside I promise her reactions were slightly slower than mine.”
Victoria did warm up to the energy inside Miami Stadium and was later seen getting into the spirit by clapping along as England won the match 2-1 after extra-time to set up tomorrow’s (wed) semi-final against Argentina.
The former Spice Girl has admitted she was not fan of football when she met David at a Manchester United match in 1997. Ever the doting wife, she ensured she attended every game she could but confessed she did not enjoy the sport because she did not feel ‘wanted’ when she was pitchside.
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But she claims she had recently had a change of heart since David hung up his boots and set up his own club Inter Miami in the US. She told the Financial Times: “I never enjoyed watching football. I never felt necessarily wanted. I’m not saying this as in, poor me, but it was never the fun that it is now. Now, when we’re in Miami, I feel wanted. I’m friends with the families of the players.”
After England’s victory over Norway shared images in her socials including some of her hugging David. She wrote: “Special moment tonight in Miami with my family and for our country xxxx.”
Michael Stone, who was convicted of killing them, is currently serving three life sentences. He has always protested his innocence
A DNA sample will be taken from serial killer Levi Bellfield after he claimed to be responsible for the murder of a mum and her daughter three decades ago.
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The 58-year-old, who is serving life imprisonment, reportedly admitted the murders of Lin Russell, 45, and her daughter Megan, six. They were found dead in Kent on July 9, 1996, months after they had moved to the area from Wales.
Michael Stone, who was convicted of killing them, is currently serving three life sentences. He has always protested his innocence. Stay in the know by making sure you’re receiving our daily newsletter.
The Criminal Cases Review Commission is now re-examining evidence following Bellfield’s confession, with a sample to be taken from him.
We previously reported how a fresh DNA sample was due to be taken from Stone.
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A CCRC spokesperson said: “We intend to obtain a sample from Mr Bellfield. No date has been set for this.”
The murders took place on July 9, 1996, after six-year-old Megan and her sister Josie, nine, had attended a swimming gala.
Their mother Lin, 45, and the family’s white terrier Lucy picked them up from their school in the Kent village of Goodnestone. They had recently moved to the area from Gwynedd.
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They took a shortcut through cornfields and a small wood towards Nonington where they lived in a cottage with the girls’ father Shaun.
At about 4.25pm a man passed them in a car, got out, and approached carrying a hammer.
He forced them into a small clearing, tied them up, and subjected them to a “sustained, severe, repeated and vicious assault”. Lucy, the terrier, was also beaten to death.
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Lin and Megan were left lying on their backs a few feet apart. Josie had been blindfolded and tied to a tree. No money or belongings were stolen. Nor did forensic experts find any evidence of a sexual motive.
Father Shaun raised the alarm when he got home from work and found the house empty before police officers found the shocking scene later that night.
At first they thought Josie was dead too but an hour later she was seen to move and was rushed to hospital. Miraculously she survived nine hours after the attack took place.
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While the cause of death has yet to be established and post-mortem examinations are to take place, police have said that they are not seeking anyone else in relation to the deaths.
20:17, 13 Jul 2026Updated 20:24, 13 Jul 2026
The PSNI have launched a murder investigation after three bodies were discovered at a property in Ballymena this morning, 13th July.
Officers were called to the scene on the Old Cullybackey Road in the town at around 9am after the bodies of two females and a male were found.
While the cause of death has yet to be established and post-mortem examinations are to take place, police have said that they are not seeking anyone else in relation to the deaths.
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Mid and East Antrim District Commander, Superintendent William Calderwood, said: “The bodies of a male and two females were discovered at a home on the Old Cullybackey Road at around 9 am this morning, Monday 13th July. “The cause of death has not yet been formally established, and post-mortem examinations will take place in due course. As such, it would be inappropriate to comment further at this time, and I would ask that the public avoid speculation. “However, I want to reassure the public that we do not believe that there is any ongoing risk, and at this stage we are not seeking anyone else in relation to the deaths. “Our thoughts this evening are very much with the family and friends of those who have died.”
Speaking to Belfast Live at the scene, North Antrim MP Jim Allister said that the tragedy occurred in a “very settled part of Ballymena.”
“Families have lived here for years, so the sense of shock that such a thing would happen here is palpable.
“For the day that’s in it, a lot of people are away coming back to discover what has happened, and it truly is very upsetting and very shocking, and our thoughts and prayers are with the relatives and friends of those who are now bereaved.”
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