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NewsBeat

Delays in replacing eyesore gap on High Street branded ’embarrassing’

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Cambridgeshire Live

Fenland District Council’s cabinet said it was ‘not acceptable’ the building was left ‘rotting for 20 years’

A delay in plugging an eyesore gap on Wisbech High Street has been branded “embarrassing” after the council were not told about issues with the plans.

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Fenland District Council’s Conservative cabinet were told a full planning application was submitted for 11-12 High Street, two properties which were demolished in 2020 after lying vacant for years.

Cllr Samantha Hoy, of Wisbech South, said: “I’m sorry, it’s just really not acceptable – this building has sat there decaying for 20 plus years and this district council is responsible. It’s under our ownership and we must not let it carry on.”

She said it had also taken “so long” to redevelop 24 High Street and they “need to get the work started”.

Cllr Steve Tierney, also of Wisbech South, said it is “just not acceptable for this building to have sat rotting for 20 years”. He said if the work is not complete before the council is abolished after local government reorganisation, it “will be remembered, rightly, as a failure of ours”.

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He said: “It’s not good enough, we should be getting it done by summer like we said we would.”

Cllr Christopher Seaton, the portfolio holder for Wisbech High Street projects, said the new mayor had asked for a “proper business case”, done by real estate agents Avison Young.

He said: “In all honesty, the officers said to me they did not have the sufficient experience to put forward a business case.”

Cllr Hoy said it had been “ten weeks” since the application was validated on May 13, after being received on April 10 and said “the whole thing is embarrassing”.

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She said: “I know there’s a process, but we’ve had other applications – more controversial applications – that have not only been validated but decided and a decision notice issued in six weeks. When we want to do things within the time frame, we can, and this has sat there for ten weeks and we are not any further along on this at all.”

Cllr Dee Laws said the planning application had been rejected and there was an “issue regarding the bat survey, and we can’t overrule ecology”. She confirmed the proposal would be put before September’s planning committee.

Cllr Tierney said: “Having just been told that officers didn’t feel they had enough experience to write a business plan for this building – I think most members of the public watching this meeting will say, what sort of officers are we employing if they can’t make a business plan for something like that?”

Cllr Boden said: “My disappointment is that we’re only now, as members of the cabinet including the portfolio holder, hearing about this bat survey problem and what happened. I’m amazed it hasn’t been referred back to us prior to this.”

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Cllr Seaton said: “I’m extremely concerned to find out during a meeting that the planning application is in this position because I haven’t been told that information. That is, to me, extremely bad – it makes me look stupid and it makes us all look a little foolish about it.”

Council leader Chris Boden said it was “astonishing” that there had been a failure to communicate “over such a long period of time”.

He said: “We must have an explanation about how this has ended up happening. It’s embarrassing to the council, to be quite honest, that we should be put in this position.”

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Seaton Carew tragedies: Hero who died on beach gave phone to wife saying ‘I’ll be back in a bit’

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Daily Record

Dad Wayne Taylor bravely entered the water alongside Ian Pascoe, 62, who was out walking, in a bid to save Mr Taylor’s son and daughter at Seaton Carew beach when they sadly lost their lives

A father who drowned trying to rescue his children and a brave passerby who also lost his life in the seaside tragedy have been hailed as heroes.

Dad-of-three Wayne Taylor bravely entered the sea alongside Ian Pascoe, 62, who had been out walking on Seaton Carew beach with his wife and family. The two men went into the water in a bid to save Mr Taylor’s children. Tragically, both Mr Taylor and Mr Pascoe died before they could reach the nine-year-old boy and his younger sister.

The children both survived the ordeal. The RNLI rushed to the scene at Seaton Carew, near Hartlepool, County Durham, on Sunday at around 3.45pm and brought the men’s bodies back to shore.

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Following the tragedy, the heartbroken families of Mr Taylor and Mr Pascoe have both backed the Mirror ‘Save Lives For Sam’ water safety campaign, which aims to tackle the UK’s growing drowning crisis. The campaign calls for the introduction of water safety lessons in schools alongside a nationwide public awareness initiative, reports The Mirror.

Paying an emotional tribute to his dad, Ian’s son Dan, 30, said: “He was the kind of person who has always done the right thing. He stood up for what he thought was right and took action when other people might have stood by and watched. He always lived his life like that, and I am so proud of him and so proud to call him my dad.”

Dad-of-two Mr Pascoe had recently returned from a job in Saudi Arabia to spend more time with his family. He was walking along the beach when he saw the children, handed over his phone and jumped into the water.

“It was a Sunday afternoon walk at the beach for some fish and chips and ice cream,” added Dan. “He was with my mam and my daughter, his granddaughter. We are so happy that the children who were in difficulty survived, and so sad that they lost their dad. My dad did not hesitate when he saw the children in difficulty.”

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Dan added: “He passed his phone to my mum and said, ‘Here, hold this for me, I will be back in a bit.’ He was never one to hold back; he would never witness, he would always act. And he went in to try and save them. I know that he would do it 10 times over if he thought that he was going to save a child’s life. And that’s why we are so proud of him.”

Mr Pascoe worked as a trainer in the UK. He had returned from Saudi Arabia two years ago, after working there for 17 years. Dan added: “He did not do anything for recognition or glory. He was just a really good man.

“He was a big advocate for action and so am I. So we back your campaign for action and to raise awareness of water dangers. We don’t want to talk about things, we need to do things. Something has to be done to improve water safety. Then his death will not be in vain.”

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A member of Wayne’s family told how his partner and the mother of his children had been criticised on social media. She added: “We back your campaign, there is a real need to get the message out there.

“The mum did nothing wrong, and she does not deserve this criticism. She needs to be able to grieve with her children without this in their lives. It is like a hate campaign, has she not suffered enough? We are so sorry for the family of the man who tried to save the children and lost his life.”

Hartlepool MP Jonathan Brash said the town had suffered “a heartbreaking tragedy”. He added: “Two men went into the sea to help children in difficulty at Seaton Carew. Those children were saved. The two men who went to help did not come home.

“No words can lessen the pain their families, friends and loved ones are now experiencing. My thoughts are with them all, and I know the whole town will be holding them close in our hearts at this tragic time.”

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Jess Cole, the cousin of 14-year-old Matthew Sherrington, who drowned in July 2021 after getting into trouble near Steetley Pier, said: “My heart goes out to the two men who sadly lost their lives at Seaton Carew.

“It’s two days until the anniversary of our Matthew Sherrington’s death and the news I read made my heart sink. It made me feel physically sick and brought back so many horrendous memories. Thinking of the families at this time and how heartbroken they must be.”

Another resident said: “RIP to the two heroes that saved these kids’ lives, but sadly lost their own, their poor families are in my thoughts.” Eyewitness Keith Smith, 74, told of the huge rescue operation, with hundreds watching from the sea front.

Davey Short, who also went into the water to bring the children out, said: “The children’s mother was on the beach, she was hysterical and asking if I could help because she couldn’t swim. Her eldest son had gone into the water as well to try to rescue his brother and sister but they were still out there. I managed to get hold of the boy.”

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Backed by MPs, Olympic champions, national water safety organisations and bereaved families, the Mirror campaign is calling for urgent action to make our waters safer. That includes compulsory water safety lessons in schools, better life saving equipment at high-risk waterways, the introduction of Sam’s Law, and a dedicated Minister for Water Safety.

A fundraiser has been set up to support Mr Taylor’s family, click here to find out more.

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‘Masterpiece’ police drama with Buffy The Vampire Slayer star added to Netflix

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Manchester Evening News

The acclaimed series aired a staggering 246 episodes over 12 seasons

A ‘masterpiece’ police drama with a Buffy The Vampire Slayer star has been added to Netflix.

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Premiering all the way back in 1997 and running until 2003, Buffy the Vampire Slayer tells the story of an American teenager attempting to live a normal life. Sadly she discovers her destiny is to battle vampires, demons and other evil entities.

Starring Sarah Michelle Gellar, How I Met Your Mother’s Alyson Hannigan, Nicholas Brendon, Charisma Carpenter and James Marsters, Buffy is considered to be one of the most influential shows of the 1990s.

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It’s been a difficult time for fans of the series, with actress Michelle Trachtenberg found dead at her home in Manhattan on Wednesday, February 26. The death of the 39-year-old actress, who played Buffy’s sister Dawn, was ruled as of natural causes due to complications from diabetes mellitus.

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Fans were also left upset in March when the revival series, Buffy: New Sunnydale, was scrapped. Set to be directed by Oscar winner Chloe Zhao, pilot was going to centre on an introverted high school pupil, played by Ryan Kiera Armstrong, who becomes the chosen one, following in Buffy Summers’ footsteps.

Sarah recently said of the news: “We had an executive on our show who was not only not a fan of the original, but was proud to constantly remind us that he had never seen the entirety of the series and how it wasn’t for him.

“That’s very hard when you’re taking a property that is as beloved as Buffy, not just to the world, but to me and Chloé. So that tells you the uphill battle that we had been fighting since day one, when your executive is literally proud to tell you that he didn’t watch it. Chloé and I are feeling the same things. ‘Disappointment’. We don’t want to let the fans down. That hurts.”

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Thankfully due to Buffy having such a big cast, there’s no shortage of projects from various of its stars to choose. Netflix have just added one that’s perfect for either a first time watch or your thousandth rewatch.

Starring David Boreanaz, who played Buffy’s boyfriend Angel and had a spin-off series, Bones aired from 2005 until 2017. Airing 246 episodes over 12 seasons, the series is an ideal binge watch.

The series is based on forensic anthropology and forensic archaeology, with each episode focusing on an FBI case file concerning the mystery behind human remains brought by FBI Special Agent Seeley Booth (Boreanaz) to Temperance ‘Bones’ Brennan (Emily Deschanel), a forensic anthropologist.

Fans adored the chemistry between Boreanaz and Deschanel, who recently appeared in Devil in Ohio. Starting off as friends, fans spent literal years rooting for them to get together.

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Airing on Fox, Bones is based on the life and novels of forensic anthropologist Kathy Reichs, who also produced the show. In a very fun nod, Brennan writes successful mystery novels across the series featuring a fictional forensic anthropologist named Kathy Reich.

Filling out the rest of the main cast is Yellowstones’ Michaela Conlin, Something’s Gotta Give’s T. J. Thyne, Curb Your Enthusiasm’s Eric Millegan, Last Man Standing’s Jonathan Adams, Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.’s Tamara Taylor, Freaks and Geeks’ John Francis Daley, and 24’s John Boyd.

While it didn’t pull in juggernaut ratings, the Bones fandom was so large that it became one of the longest running programmes of the century. Many fans have taken to Reddit to explain what Bones means to them.

@space_anthropologist said: “I watched every season religiously as it aired. It is still my comfort show. I actually very rarely even write or read fanfiction for this show, because I love canon for what it is.” @sweetpeapickle added: “I loved it. But you need to watch it for the characters. If you don’t like them…”

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@Cool_Jelly_9402 wrote: “This is by far my most rewatched show. I was never a show repeater before I rewatched this.” @Dry-Dot-3004 stated: “The show is so good i promise, especially if you like procedurals, normal drama stuff, comedy, etc.”

@GoalHistorical6867 commented: “I have always enjoyed watching Bones. It’s my go-to series to binge watch when I don’t have anything else to watch.” @xoxoforeverblessed posted: “Rewatching it again from the beginning now and it is just as good.”

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Racist, misogynistic and paramilitary graffiti in South Belfast condemned

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Belfast Live

The graffiti appeared following The Twelfth celebrations in the area

Racist, misogynistic, and paramilitary graffiti that has appeared in South Belfast following The Twelfth parades in the area has been condemned.

The graffiti has appeared in the Sandy Row and Donegall Road areas following the parades and bonfires over the weekend and features a message of support for convicted French rapist and husband of Gisele Pelicot, Dominique.

Gisele Pelicot was drugged by her husband and raped by dozens of men over a 10 year period. Other displays include paramilitary graffiti, as well as ‘Stop the Boats’ slogans on businesses that had been ran by immigrants.

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Belfast Live has been contacted by concerned local business owners who have said the attacks on the immigrant community are “disgusting” and that they “feel so sorry for the ethnic communities there trying to set up a life in that area.”

South Belfast Alliance MLA Paula Bradshaw has said it is “extremely disappointing and alarming” and the graffiti was simply “racial hatred”.

She said: “It is extremely disappointing and alarming to see such hate displayed in such a form against people running businesses in the area.

“This has nothing to do with ‘legitimate concerns’ and everything to do with a racial hatred which the leading parties are not tackling with sufficient urgency.

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“This is the latest example of why the First and deputy First Minister must do more than a tame ‘framework’ to address racist attitudes in our society at source.”

South Belfast SDLP MP Claire Hanna said: “This isn’t ‘just graffiti’. It reflects attitudes that are still far too common and far too often shrugged off.

“When misogyny is normalised in public spaces it tells women and girls something about what is tolerated. When it’s mixed with racist abuse it becomes an attempt to intimidate whole sections of our community. We should never minimise that or look the other way.

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“Gisèle Pelicot has become an international symbol of dignity and courage in the face of unimaginable abuse. Millions of people have drawn strength from her example. To respond by celebrating her abuser is as disturbing as it is cowardly.

“Too many women still experience harassment, abuse and violence, and too many people from minority communities continue to face racism. That doesn’t happen in isolation. It starts with attitudes that are normalised, excused or dismissed.

“Misogyny, racism and hate have no place in Belfast or anywhere else across Northern Ireland. We all have a responsibility to challenge those attitudes wherever we see them.”

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A PSNI spokesperson said: “Police received a report of graffiti having been sprayed in the Wellwood Street and surrounding areas of south Belfast at shortly before 11am today, Tuesday 14th July.

“Officers attended and the graffiti has since been removed.

“Enquiries are ongoing, and anyone with any information that can assist with this investigation is asked to contact police using our witness appeal form at https://reporting.psni.police.uk/appeals quoting 649 of 14/07/26 or call us on 101.

“Alternatively, you can report online at https://reporting.psni.police.uk/appeals or in confidence through Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111 or online at http://crimestoppers-uk.org.”

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For all the latest news, visit the Belfast Live homepage here and sign up to our daily newsletter here.

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Southport victim’s dad accuses ambulance staff of breaching trust

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A woman with dark hair pulled back from her face points to a plaster on her arm

The father of a girl seriously hurt in the Southport attack has accused North West Ambulance Service (NWAS) of a “complete breach of trust” as it emerged it was investigating whether staff inappropriately accessed victims’ medical records.

He described the possible breaches as “appalling” and alleged some ambulance staff “just wanted to satisfy their own morbid curiosity”.

It comes after it emerged in May that dozens of workers at Aintree Hospital, where some of the injured were treated, had looked at the records with no good reason.

NWAS chief executive Salman Desai said it was investigating after it had “identified concerns about potential inappropriate access to patient records”.

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Three young girls – Alice da Silva Aguiar, Bebe King, and Elsie Dot Stancombe – were murdered in the attack, while 10 others were physically injured.

The father of a girl who was 13 when she was injured but survived the attack said: “It is a complete breach of trust in our darkest hours as a family and dampens how you feel about the amazing work they do to save lives.

“It was already incredibly difficult to think that staff at Aintree hospital had needlessly pried into our daughter’s condition.”

The man, who cannot be identified due to an anonymity order protecting his daughter, had been helping to supervise the dance class before she was stabbed in the back and arm.

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Solicitors acting for the girl and for another 21 of the 23 girls who survived the attack are calling for a full-scale review by NHS England into the guidance and disciplinary procedures for staff who inappropriately access patient data.

The calls come after another trust, NHS University Hospitals of Liverpool Group (UHLG), admitted in May that nearly 50 staff members at Aintree Hospital had looked inappropriately at the medical records of some of the injured victims in the days after the attack.

Fletchers Solicitors, which is already investigating this breach, said the family were reviewing documents given to them by UHLG about the breaches at Aintree, when they saw information that said staff from North West Ambulance Service might have also accessed their daughter’s records without cause.

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Why Iran shut the Strait of Hormuz after decades of holding back

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Why Iran shut the Strait of Hormuz after decades of holding back

US forces have struck hundreds of Iranian targets – including in the southern port city of Bandar Abbas – over three consecutive nights in a bid by the US president, Donald Trump, to regain some modicum of control over the Strait of Hormuz.

Trump has also inscribed the US as the “guardian” of the vital waterway. He has revived a naval blockade of Iranian ports and briefly demanded a 20% charge on all cargo passing through. His own secretary of state, Marco Rubio, had ruled out such a toll just two weeks ago.

Iran, meanwhile, has escalated by striking two tankers in the strait, killing a crew member. It has also hit US bases across the Gulf. Tehran’s brazen attempt to frustrate the US, and by extension the world economy, by targeting commercial vessels in the strait is indicative of the leverage it holds in this war.

But amid this cycle of tit-for-tat strikes, a key question is why Iran has decided to menace the strait in the current conflict when it has possessed the capacity to do so for decades.

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Iranian fishermen steering a boat past ships stuck in the Strait of Hormuz, near Bandar Abbas in southern Iran, in June 2026.
Amirhossein Khorgooei / ISNA News Agency / EPA

For four decades, the threat to close the Strait of Hormuz represented a match that was never lit. Even at the height of the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s, where more than 400 vessels were attacked in the Gulf, Tehran demonstrated conspicuous restraint.

It never attempted to seal the strait itself, not even after a US warship – the USS Vincennes – mistakenly shot down an Iranian passenger plane in 1988, killing 290 people.

Back then, Tehran’s logic dictated that closure of the strait would undermine its own oil revenue and invite retaliation. As political scientist Caitlin Talmadge put it in 2008: it would amount to “the military equivalent of cutting off its nose to spite its [enemies] face”.

The Strait of Hormuz served as a key instrument of Iranian coercive diplomacy. Tehran leveraged the prospect of closure as a deterrent and bargaining tool, without resorting to its implementation.

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In 2011, Iran’s vice-president at the time, Mohammad Reza Rahimi, threatened that “not a drop of oil will pass through the Strait of Hormuz” if western sanctions on its petroleum exports went ahead. Yet Tehran ultimately acquiesced and allowed the embargo to take effect without closing the strait.

Through every round of escalation prior to 2026, this pattern of bluffing endured. That Tehran has chosen to act upon its threats in the current conflict makes the decision especially telling.

Accepting more risk

This about-turn speaks to a shift in Iran’s psychological risk perception, rather than material capability alone. Here, prospect theory offers a compelling answer. The theory holds that decision makers do not weigh risks consistently or rationally.

People are less likely to accept risk when operating within a frame of gains – preferring the certainty of what they hold over any gamble. But when leaders read a situation as one of loss, the logic reverses and they take greater risks to recover those losses.

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The clearest window into this shift is the first statement attributed to the new Iranian supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei. In a March 12 statement, two weeks after the assassination of his predecessor Ali Khamenei, he declared:

The revenge we have in mind is not just because of the martyrdom of the illustrious leader of the revolution. Every member of the nation martyred by the enemy is a separate case that demands we seek revenge … the leverage of closing the Strait of Hormuz must definitely continue to be utilised.

The statement presented each death not as a tragic cost of war, but a sacred debt that the US and Israel owe through retributive action. And the Strait of Hormuz was presented as the answer. Khamenei’s insistence that its leverage “must definitely continue to be utilised” transformed the strait into the mechanism through which accumulated losses are regained.

This narrative has been echoed well beyond Tehran. In an address delivered facing the strait itself in mid-April, Iranian cleric Hojjat al-Islam Jafar Rastakhiz stated that “for 47 years the criminal America has sanctioned us” and now “the Strait of Hormuz, because of the atrocities of America, has been closed”.

Ali Khamenei’s funeral, which recently took place across Iran during a week of mass processions, turned the regime’s losses into a public ritual. Mourners were heard chanting: “Our word is one! Revenge! Revenge!”

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Aerial shot of a crowd in the city of Mashhad displaying a banner reading: 'Hey Trump, we will kill you'.
Crowds in the city of Mashhad taking part in the burial of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei unfurl a banner reading: ‘Hey Trump, we will kill you’.
Iranian Supreme Leader Office / EPA

This rhetoric reveals how the regime now narrates its own position. It has portrayed Iran as a state burdened by an accumulation of military, political and symbolic losses that demand recovery. In doing so, it has created the very conditions under which greater risk acceptance becomes conceivable.

In all of this, there is an uncomfortable implication for the US. Trump’s decision to commit to further strikes on Iran, while defending commercial vessels in the strait, may be subsidising the psychological conditions that sustain Tehran’s risky behaviour.

Effective deterrence presumes an adversary weighing what it stands to lose. But against a regime that believes it has already lost, each strike simply deepens the deficit it is gambling to recover. The fight is now being waged on ground that Tehran has defined.

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16-year-old killed in motorbike crash in Pontefract

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16-year-old killed in motorbike crash in Pontefract

West Yorkshire Police are appealing for witnesses after a teenager was killed in a fatal road traffic incident in Pontefract yesterday evening (July 13).

Officers were called to an alley at rear of Eastbourne Terrace in Pontefract after a 16-year-old male had come off a motorbike.


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A spokesperson for the force said: “The 16-year-old boy was provided with medical treatment by police and paramedics but sadly died at the scene.

“Following enquiries officers later located a second teenage boy, aged 13, suspected to have been on the bike at the time of the collision. He was arrested on suspicion of causing death by dangerous driving.”

Due to prior police contact with the bike before the crash, the force says a mandatory referral has been made to the IOPC.

Anyone who saw or has footage which could assist enquiries is asked to contact the Major Collision Enquiry Team on 101 or online at https://www.westyorkshire.police.uk/livechat

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Please reference police log 1352 of 13 July.

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‘It’s just a visible sign of how cities change. Deansgate Locks’ owners need to tackle an eyesore’

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Manchester Evening News

Bev Craig, who’s running for Greater Manchester Mayor, said the city has ‘never been as vibrant’ as she called for accountability from the owners over the strip’s demise.

Deansgate Locks’ owners have been slammed for ‘allowing decline’ and leaving the area an ‘eyesore’. Bev Craig, who’s running for Greater Manchester Mayor, said the city has ‘never been as vibrant’ as she called for accountability over the strip’s demise.

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Both Popworld and Ark at the former nightlife hub on Deansgate Locks will close on Sunday, July 19. The closure of the two venues will bring to an end decades of entertainment along the stretch which once used to be the place to be.

The Locks, former railway arches, sit on the stretch of Whitworth Street West between Deansgate and Albion Street. Throughout the noughties, Deansgate Locks was known as Manchester’s most famous nightclub strip, packed with revellers and taxis bumper to bumper down the street into the early hours.

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In recent years though, it has become a shell of its former self.

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A shift in nightlife habits, pressures on the hospitality industry, and the cost of living crisis have all been cited as reasons why the strip has struggled in the last few years. Issues with damp in the Grade II-listed structure have also been raised and previously plans were submitted to Manchester City Council to carry out repair works.

Asked about the end of an era and what she thinks should be done, Labour’s candidate for Greater Manchester Mayor and city council leader Bev Craig told the Manchester Evening News: “I think it’s just a visible sign of how cities change.

“Manchester’s nightlife sector has never been as vibrant. We’ve got more venues and businesses now for bars and hospitality across the city centre than we have had for a long time so it’s a sign of how things are changing.

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“People when I moved to Manchester went to Deansgate Locks for a night out. When I came here in 2003, that was the place that you went to in town for a night out.

“Now people go all over the city centre, neighbourhoods, and local towns. I think what does need to happen in Deansgate Locks is the owners of that building have allowed decline there for quite some time.

“I’ve been working as the council leader with local councillors around a bit of accountability in not allowing those buildings to sit empty. I think there’s some great things with the right level of will and the right level of appetite from landowners they could do there and I think you could make that thriving.

“It needs the owners of those buildings to recognise things change. When was the last time many people went for a night out on Deansgate Locks and contrast that with the last time they went for a drink or a night out?

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“It’s not that people have stopped drinking or having a night out. It’s that people have stopped going to Deansgate Locks. I think the sad demise of Popworld means there’ll have to be a new future and the owners of that building need to crack on because at the moment it’s a bit of an eyesore.”

She added: “We’ve never seen a city centre as busy from tourist numbers, footfall numbers, night out numbers, and the amount of spend that Manchester bars receive per head of the population. The night time economy is much stronger than London’s.

“On average, Manchester residents spend more income going out. It’s not that the city centre has seen a demise.

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“It’s that a little strip of four bars have changed and I wouldn’t read too much into Deansgate Locks when a private company owns a couple of units they could simply do up and rent out for another business use.”

The owners of Deansgate Locks are listed as “SWIPACS1” in planning documents. The LDRS understands this is Scottish Widows, the insurance giant which deals with pension funds and property management.

The LDRS has attempted to contact the owners but so far have had no response. Stonegate Group are the leaseholders for Popworld and Ark and are not the owners.

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The best theatre shows in London (and beyond) to book in 2026

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The best theatre shows in London (and beyond) to book in 2026

Hannibal Lecter was named the greatest villain in American cinema thanks to Anthony Hopkins’s chilling performance in the 1991 film. Now, Gina Gionfriddo adapts Thomas Harris’s multi-million-selling novel for its world stage premiere. When FBI trainee Clarice Starling is sent to interview a cannibalistic murderer, it’s hoped that his brilliant mind will help her to catch a sadistic new serial-killer, Buffalo Bill. But there’s nothing straightforward about Lecter, as we know. Casting tbc.

Curve, Leicester, Aug 1-15, then touring the UK and Ireland

Tickets: silenceofthelambsplay.com

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Our Friends in the North

The BAFTA-winning 1996 TV phenomenon returns to Newcastle, the city where it’s set, in a new stage adaptation by the series’ original creator Peter Flannery, with Jack McNamara, artistic director at local playwriting powerhouse Live. The focus of this fresh theatrical version is two episodes in which Nicky, Mary, Tosker and Geordie (played in the series by Christopher Eccleston, Gina McKee, Mark Strong and Daniel Craig) come of age in the city during the turbulent early Thatcher years (1979-1984).

Newcastle Theatre Royal

Booking: Oct 15-24

Tickets: theatreroyal.co.uk

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Police hit property with closure order after anti-social behaviour

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Police hit property with closure order after anti-social behaviour

On Friday, Wigan and Leigh Police were granted a Partial Closer Order by a court to serve to a property on Conway Close.

This was following ongoing reports of anti-social behaviour linked to the address, with evidence submitted to the court demonstrating ‘persistent anti-social behaviour’.

Officers stated that the property had been having ‘a significant negative impact’ on residents and the wider community.

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The order, which is designed to prevent further nuisance, disorder and criminality,  restricts access to the property for named individuals.

It also provides police and partner agencies with additional powers to address the issues that have been impacting the area.

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Welsh Government set to lose budget vote as parties refuse to back Plaid spending plans

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Wales Online

The Plaid Cymru minority government in Cardiff Bay looks destined to lose its first major Senedd vote this evening.

Labour has now ruled out supporting the Welsh Government’s proposed supplementary budget, which will allocate £411m of spending that was unallocated in the main budget earlier this year.

Plaid needs at least six other votes in the Senedd to pass its spending plans and, as of Tuesday afternoon, appears not to have won the support of any other group in the chamber.

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It would be a significant symbolic loss for Rhun ap Iorwerth’s administration which shows how challenging it will be to run a minority administration for the next four years.

On Tuesday morning the Tories and Reform UK made it clear they will not support Plaid’s budget as it stood then, but Labour’s Senedd members were meeting to discuss a last-ditch offer from Plaid Cymru which was sent by the First Minister on Monday (July 13).

Plaid offered Labour an extra £120m for additional learning needs education over the next three years to win the party’s support.

But on Tuesday afternoon interim Welsh Labour leader Ken Skates said he had written to First Minister Rhun ap Iorwerth asking him to withdraw the supplementary budget, saying it was not enough.

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“In all our discussions funding for additional learning needs (ALN) has been a top priority for Welsh Labour,” said Mr Skates.

“Yesterday both the school leaders’ unions in Wales, NAHT Cymru and ASCL Cymru, notified the cabinet minister for education and the Welsh language that they are formally declaring a trade dispute with the Welsh Government.

“This is both unprecedented and deeply regrettable.

“Less than 100 days into government Plaid Cymru find themselves in chaos, unable to work collaboratively.

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“By withdrawing the budget today we hope that they will resolve these issues with teaching unions and bring back another supplementary budget in the summer with £100m allocated for ALN.”

Following the news Labour would block the budget a Plaid Cymru source said: “By voting against the supplementary budget Labour will vote against £145m to cut NHS waiting lists, £120m for children with additional learning needs, £55m to expand funded childcare, and £15m for free school meals for secondary pupils most in need. In doing so Labour has abandoned its progressive values.

“Despite inheriting £333m of in-year pressures in the NHS the Welsh Government worked quickly to put a £120m proposal on the table to build a more sustainable ALN system.

“Labour have walked away from that offer – a move that will rightly be questioned by parents and teachers.

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“By voting against the supplementary budget Labour are not only voting against more money for children with additional learning needs, money to cut waiting lists, and money to fund childcare, they will also be teaming up with the Tories and Reform.

“It is clear that they have learnt nothing from their humiliating election defeat in May. Wales rejected Labour in May but that doesn’t mean Labour should reject the priorities of the people of Wales.”

The debate on the budget is scheduled for 6pm if it is not withdrawn. Before it, at 1.30pm, is First Minister’s Questions where Rhun ap Iorwerth will be quizzed on a range of topics including cost savings, NHS waiting times, and whether he thinks there will be an impact of the UK Government’s defence investment plan on Wales.

He will also use a statement to lay out the first legislation his party plans to take through the Senedd. That includes a bill to strengthen the rights of people living in private rented accommodation, creating a community right to buy scheme, and a law that ensures the needs of people in rural areas are considered in policy-making.

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Also in the Senedd today deputy first minister Sioned Williams will give further details on her party’s childcare plans and constitution minister Dafydd Trystan Davies will face questions.

We’ll be with you live from the Senedd throughout the afternoon with updates below:

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