EUROVISION 2026 has been rocked by another scandal – this time after BBC bosses were forced to secretly axe the planned UK act.
The Sun can reveal that the BBC were left with no choice but to drop the person after routine checks flagged a string of major concerts relating to historic comments made online.
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The BBC has axed this year’s Eurovision entrant over historic comments made onlineCredit: Getty
Bosses hauled the act – who is a solo artist – into a meeting where they were dramatically told they would no longer be representing the UK.
As well as the performer, the song was also ready to go – with the track being played to a number of industry high-flyers to gauge the reaction.
It means that for the past month staff have been desperately trying to find a replacement act in time for the impending submission deadline.
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A source said: “The BBC can’t take any chances with Eurovision being such a pressure cooker this year.
“Routine checks brought up past behaviour that just didn’t line up.
“It was brutal but they were dragged into a meeting and told they could no longer represent the UK. “Naturally the person was mortified and devastated.
“It’s been a mess ever since the start of the year trying to find a new act.”
The BBC says: “A rigorous due diligence process is always undertaken before an Act is offered the opportunity to represent the United Kingdom at Eurovision. We will be announcing this year’s chosen act shortly.”
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The Sun understands the discovery isn’t linked to the Middle East Conflict, and a new act was hurriedly picked this week.
It comes after a rough few months for Eurovision.
In December, multiple countries threatened to boycott the competition after Israel was green-lit to compete.
A planned vote by the EBU resulted in five countries quitting.
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This year’s competition will take place in Vienna, Austria.
The final grand final is slated for May 16.
Last year the UK were represented by girlband Remember Monday.
Sadly they failed to repeat the success of Sam Ryder in 2022 and suffered the same fate as 2023 act Mae Muller and 2024 act Olly Alexander.
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Remember Monday represented the UK last yearCredit: Getty
John McCabe, chief executive of the North East Chamber of Commerce believes the cap, which was lifted today (April 6), will make a “tangible difference to families”.
An estimated 450,000 children will be lifted out of poverty as a result of the scrap – with data revealing that 28 per cent of children across the North East live in deprivation (DWP).
First introduced by the Conservatives in 2017, the policy restricted child tax credit and universal credit (UC) to the first two children in most households.
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Chancellor Rachel Reeves announced the cap would be lifted on April 6 when she delivered the budget in November, after months of pressure from Labour backbenchers.
Mr McCabe added: “The abolition of the two-child benefit cap is welcome and will make a tangible difference to families across the North East.
“Our members have long argued that this is one of the most powerful levers available to tackle the unacceptable rates of child poverty across the region.
“As our Unlocking the North East Economy 2025–2027 policy plan makes clear, tackling poverty is fundamental to improving educational outcomes, widening access to opportunity and supporting people into good quality work.
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“Every day, I hear from business leaders who need people with the right skills and stability to drive their organisations forward. Reducing child poverty is how we build that pipeline.
“If we want the North East to compete on the global stage, we must start by ensuring every child can thrive.
“We will continue to work with our members to press for meaningful regional and national action to tackle child poverty and its wide-ranging impacts on North East communities and our economy.”
The Prime Minister said lifting the cap was one of a number of steps the Government has taken amid an increased focus on cost-of-living pressures caused by the war in Iran.
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Sir Keir Starmer said: “No matter the global uncertainty, my Government will always be on the side of the British people in bearing down on the cost of living.
“I will never lose sight of how restless people are for change, and I am proud that today we are lifting nearly half a million children out of poverty, boosting support for pensioners, and delivering the biggest upgrade to workers’ rights in a generation.”
He added: “I know families across the country are concerned about the conflict in Iran and what it means for the cost of living.
“We are working closely with international partners to push for a de-escalation in the Middle East and the re-opening of the Strait of Hormuz.
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“This is the most effective way to ease the pressure on the cost of living.
“I am clear that our response to the current global situation will define us for a generation, which is why we are taking the right long-term decisions now to ensure we emerge from this as a stronger, more secure nation.”
Writing in the Guardian newspaper, the Prime Minister described the raft of measures as “one of the proudest moments of this Labour Government”.
Sir Keir added: “Because it will lift nearly half a million children out of poverty. It means fuller cupboards, less anxiety at the end of the month, and a fairer start in life for children who had no say in the circumstances they were born into.
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“And it tells you something fundamental about this Government – when faced with a choice, we act.”
Christina Koch was first to speak after Artemis II emerged from behind the Moon, ending a 40-minute blackout as the mission broke Apollo 13’s 55-year distance record.
Michael D. Carroll and Callum Hoare
01:09, 07 Apr 2026
Orion reappeared from behind the Moon as planned and radio contact was restored – bringing an end to a 40-minute blackout that had left Mission Control waiting in silence.
Mission specialist Christina Koch was first to speak.
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“Houston, Integrity, comm check,” she said. “It is so great to hear from Earth again.”
With no signal available on the lunar far side, the capsule had been operating entirely independently. Computers aboard Orion fired the engines at exactly the right moment to swing the spacecraft onto a homeward path – a procedure carried out beyond the reach of any ground controller.
When the connection returned, relief swept through Mission Control. Engineers observed data beginning to fill their screens; moments later, Koch’s voice came through.
Uncertainty is an ever-present factor in crewed spaceflight – regardless of how routine a mission may seem, nothing is guaranteed until the crew is heard from once more. Family members who had gathered to observe spent the communications blackout reviewing briefing documents, deliberately keeping their focus away from the clock.
A backlog of stored information is now being transmitted to Earth, reports the BBC. Everything Orion captured on the far side – sensor readings, flight data, imagery – is being downloaded via NASA’s Deep Space Network, with mission teams set to spend the coming days examining the findings.
Amongst the images already arriving are what seem to be the clearest photographs ever captured of the Moon’s far hemisphere. The crew lost no time in marking the milestone, before swiftly returning to the task at hand.
Prior to the communications blackout, Glover delivered what proved to be a poignant farewell – drawing on the teachings of Jesus, including the call to love your neighbour as yourself, before signing off with words that carried a deeper resonance.
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‘We will see you on the other side,’ he said.
The blackout rounded off a mission that has already made history. At 1.57pm ET, Orion carried its crew to 252,757 miles from Earth – a distance no human had ever previously reached.
The record that was broken had belonged to Apollo 13, whose crew was pushed to 248,655 miles from home during their harrowing emergency return in 1970 – a record that had remained unbeaten for 55 years.
“The Cowleys were different as after years of bargain basement managers we actually went out and did the research and found them,” said Whiley.
“The excitement was there and I remember the event where they first met the fans they were cheered into the room.
“We can look at this season and see promotion to the Championship as the best thing the club has done, but those three seasons, two promotions, FA Cup quarter-final, winning a trophy at Wembley. That changed it all.
“They brought a buzz back that we hadn’t seen since Keith, and they were like Keith in that they would find players on the way up, scour non-league and find the future stars.
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“The fact is, that even after the Cowleys left to join Huddersfield, the energy stayed.
“It sticks with me that Danny said to me he didn’t want to see kids in Lincoln wearing the shirts of Premier League clubs, he wanted to see them kicking a ball in the park wearing a Lincoln City shirt.
“The success, the work that was done means that is a reality. I see it all the time when I go round the city, people wear their colours with pride.”
While Mark, Leigh and myself have covered parts of Lincoln’s recent history, one man who has been the stalwart has been BBC Radio Lincolnshire’s Michael Hortin.
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His first game was in 1999, and he was there in the commentary box as Lincoln gained promotion to the Championship.
“This promotion is the culmination of a long-term plan,” said Hortin. “This is about a chairman and board who have been thoughtful with their investment.
“Lincoln’s FA Cup run earned them a lot of money and they did not spend it on players, they spent it on a whole new training set-up.
“The Cowleys were the start of a transition from the old way of doing things, to a set-up that is very much part of the modern game.
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“Under them a sporting director was brought in to support recruitment and player development and now we really do have a true ‘head coach’ in Michael Skubala.
“It is about finding those raw players, developing them, selling them, and it is paying off as it has allowed them to secure players on better deals.”
Lincoln have, as Hortin describes, recruited ‘experience’ to the squad. Their head coach, though, is a man who had limited time in the professional game, but Hortin said Skubala’s ability to learn and adapt has been impressive.
“I remember the first game Skubala took was against Stevenage, and it was a bit of a shock, but he was quite cool and his reaction was more ‘huh, this is what it is about’, and he learned,” said Hortin.
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“The way the team has adapted and what Skubala has done is create a team that is hard to beat.”
A team that is hard to beat. A club that has been learning, developing, recruiting, all building up to where Lincoln are now. But what next?
Hortin is confident that the club will remain realistic. “The first goal will be survival, but the thing is they had a plan to become an established League One club, and now they will be working on another plan for what comes next.
“The one thing is that new owner Ron Fowler will likely go about it the same as Clive Nates. It will be done in a quiet, steady, thoughtful way. That has become the Lincoln way.”
Peter Reid will host ‘An Evening with Peter Reid’ at the Roker Hotel on Saturday, June 6, two weeks before his 70th birthday.
Reid managed Sunderland AFC from 1995 to 2002, and his transformation of the club in that time has made him one of Wearside’s most treasured figures, and often makes regular visits to the Stadium of Light.
Sunderland legend Peter Reid. (Image: GOOFY MEDIA)
After a sell out event last year, marking 30 years since he took charge at Roker Park, Ried is hoping the night will be filled with memories of “magical moments”.
He said: “The fans have been unbelievable to me, and I love my regular visits to be with them and support the current team and team boss Regis Le Bris.
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“What we built all those years ago is something really special, and it’s great to see the club continuing to move forward.
“As time evolves, we’re still sharing magical moments and memories, and it will be a joy to be with everyone during my birthday month of celebrations.
“With it falling just ahead of Father’s Day, it promises to be a special night surrounded by special people.”
He added: “We had a wonderful night last June and made loads of memories.
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“People such as Bryan Robson, Tony Mowbray, Kevin Phillips and others made it memorable with their lovely tributes, video recollections and recalling great times with the fans—it really was unforgettable.”
During Reid’s time at the helm, the Black Cats were battling relegation in the first division.
Peter Reid with fans at last years event. (Image: GOOFY MEDIA)
But thanks to his leadership, the club stayed up, were crowned the winners of the championship the year after and were promoted to the Premier League.
In 1996, he was even made the subject of a song named ‘Daydream Believer (Cheer Up Peter Reid)’ to the melody of Monkees hit Daydream Believer.
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It peaked at 41 in the UK singles and album chart.
Speaking of his connection to the club, Reid added: “I always look forward to getting back up to Sunderland — it means a great deal to me.
“The connection I’ve got with Sunderland AFC and the fans is something I’ll carry with me forever.
“As time passes, it’s a real joy to see Sunderland back in the Premier League — it still gives me a proper buzz watching them, and I couldn’t be prouder of what the club is achieving.”
With scores of culinary treasures both inside the walls and beyond, the latest in our ‘Best Of’ competitions for 2026 is sure to whet the appetite.
We’ve counted up your personal choices for favourite places and whittled them down to a shortlist of ten.
York Press readers sent us their favourites at the start of the competition and the top ten shortlist can now be revealed (Image: Newsquest)
Starting tomorrow (Tuesday, April 7) we will feature each of those you’ve selected in a short profile, both online and in the newspaper, alongside a voting slip.
In order to make your mark and select an overall favourite, simply put a cross next to your favourite and sent it off to the address provided before the closing date.
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We will announce the overall winner from reader votes in the week beginning April 27.
Over the years, The Press has featured thousands of stories about restaurants and gastro pubs, and our reporters have sampled the food and drink on offer in reviews of what’s on offer.
The culinary experience in York sees independent operators sit alongside big names, giving an impressive range to choose from.
From modern British bistros championing local Yorkshire produce to smart small‑plate spots and relaxed street‑food style venues, there is plenty for diners to explore.
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Many former ‘locals’ now serve polished, chef‑led menus while keeping the character of a proper pub, with real ales, good wine lists and Sunday lunches.
Neighbourhood venues beyond the city walls are increasingly matching the quality found in the centre, helping spread the food offer into local communities.
At the same time, York’s long‑standing favourites continue to thrive alongside newer openings, supported by strong visitor trade and loyal local custom.
In alphabetical order, the shortlist of the top ten restaurants or gastro pubs as voted by Press readers is:
However, wet and windy weather will return by the end of the week
After a windy weekend for many parts of Wales due to Storm Dave, the weather is expected to be more settled with temperatures soaring for some days this week. Met Office weather maps show that temperatures could reach up to 23C this week.
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Warm days are forecast in parts of Wales on Tuesday and Wednesday will quickly turn by the weekend when wet and windy weather could return. For the biggest stories in Wales first sign up to our daily newsletter here
The forecast for Tuesday in Wales states: “A sunny start to the day, although high cloud will gradually build in from the west making the sunshine hazy by lunchtime. Feeling warm, especially in the sunshine. Maximum temperature 23 °C.”
Tuesday will be the hottest day this week according to the Met Office weather maps where temperatures will reach 20°C or hotter in many areas including Caernarfon, Carmarthen, Swansea, Cardiff and Llandovery. Wednesday, April 8, will stay dry across Wales with sunny spells like the rest of the UK and cloud only partially covering parts of the west.
Bangor and Aberystywth could see highs of 23C on Tuesday, April 7, Cardiff could be 21C on both Tuesday and Wednesday, according to the Met Office.
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Swansea would see temperatures between 20C and 21C on both days.
The weather will change throughout the week with the Met Office forecasting the weather for Wednesday to Friday stating: “Staying largely fine and warm on Wednesday, but rain will move in from the west later. Cooler and showery on Thursday. Likely turning wet and windy on Friday.”
Rain will make its return to Wales on Thursday with showers expected around the early afternoon before clearing in the evening. Temperatures will stay mild, still in the double digits but it will feel much cooler than the start of the week.
Heavy rain will sweep Wales on Friday throughout the day along with windy conditions. Areas along the coast of Wales are expected to see gusts of around 40 to 50mph.
Wet weather is expected to continue into the weekend across the UK with longer spells of rain affecting some regions.
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The Met Office UK wide long range forecast for Saturday, April 11, until Monday, April 20, says: “It will likely remain rather changeable during the first part of this period with showers or occasional longer spells of rain affecting many areas.
“Whether this takes the form of successive weather systems pushing in from the Atlantic or a more slowly evolving weather pattern is rather more unclear. Some drier, brighter interludes will also occur and when winds are light, it should feel quite warm, despite temperatures most likely being close to normal for most.
“Beyond mid-month, high pressure may become rather more dominant, bringing more in the way of drier and perhaps warmer weather, though this will be determined by the location and proximity of where any high is positioned relative to the UK.”
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Darwin’s Paradox – seagulls are a bigger danger than aliens (Konami)
In the tradition of indie classics such as Limbo and Inside, comes a new action adventure starring a cartoon octopus caught up in an alien invasion.
We don’t actually play that many video games that are truly awful, since there’s usually nothing of note about them to make a review worthwhile. There’re occasional exceptions, like the mind-bogglingly terrible Code Violet and the baffling MindsEye, but most of the worst games are just worthless slop of the sort Sony is currently trying to clear out from the PlayStation Store.
The majority of video games aren’t unusually good or bad, they’re somewhere in the middle. And so it can be difficult to know which are worthy of further investigation, given there are dozens of new indie games released every week, even at quiet times of the year.
We’re not familiar with French developer ZDT Studio, since this seems to be their debut game, but since the graphics for Darwin’s Paradox looked good, the publisher is Konami, and octopuses are cool we decided to give it a go. In the end we wish we hadn’t, not because it’s terrible but because it’s so deeply average.
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Maybe average isn’t entirely fair. The graphics are really good for an indie game and on paper your octopus powers are all very neat, including the ability to camouflage yourself; shoot out ink to cover your escape; and walk along any surface, including the ceiling, like a spider (which we’re pretty sure octopuses can’t do, but whatever).
Darwin’s Paradox is, rather randomly, named after Charles Darwin’s discovery that tropical seas don’t seem to contain enough nutrients to sustain coral reefs, despite the fact they’re teeming with life. That has nothing to do with the game, other than the octopus you control is called Darwin, whose friend is captured by secret aliens running a food processing company and planning to invade Earth.
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What this translates to in gameplay terms is a 2D platformer influenced by the likes of Limbo and Inside, but swapping melancholic mystery for cartoon silliness. Darwin spends a surprising amount of time on dry land but whether he’s hiding from guards or trying not to get eaten by a moray eel everything works in the same general way.
His camouflage ability is basically a cloak of invisibility and as long as you activate it in time you become completely invisible to enemies. Although it does take a while to complete, so you spend a lot of time slowly inching your way across the screen, spending more time going into camouflage than moving or hiding.
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Spraying ink is only good for masking your movement underwater but the gob of liquid you shoot out can be aimed quite precisely and so ends up getting used to activate switches and machinery when you’re on land. Although you don’t have any offensive abilities at all.
The game doesn’t press our buttons (Konami)
The climbing on any surface gimmick is used a surprising amount and while it seems quite clever at first it’s fiddly and inconsistent. Not enough to be a total wash but certainly enough to irritate, with sticky and slow movement that makes you constantly wish you could just get back in the water, where you’re much more mobile. The worst thing, though, is the game is filled with trial and error traps that often cannot be foreseen.
The checkpointing is generous enough that you don’t usually have to repeat too much but it’s still frustrating getting caught out by something you couldn’t have anticipated, especially as it happens so often. Even without this, the puzzles just aren’t interesting enough to engage you, as the solution is usually instantly obvious but pushing items where you want them or getting a pixel perfect jump just right is frequently more difficult than it should be.
As the scope of indie gaming begins to grow wider, from tiny games made by a single person to those whose scale begins to rival low-end games from traditional publishers, it’s becoming increasingly difficult to judge how fair their price tags are.
Darwin’s Paradox is relatively expensive and it’s only around six hours long and yet you can see where all the money went, as the cartoonish visuals are excellent and mixed in with almost photorealistic backdrops. That said, it’s never actually funny, no matter how often Darwin’s googly eyes try to emote as he’s being pecked to death by birds or squished by alien machinery.
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Despite its attempts to provoke a reaction we found it impossible to hold any strong feelings about Darwin’s Paradox. It’s competently made, very pretty, and almost completely uninteresting. The dull and long-winded puzzles are the biggest problem and give the impression that the whole game was designed around the visuals, with everything seemingly having been worked back from there.
That’s never been a good way to make a video game and while this is an acceptable enough way to waste away a rainy Sunday afternoon, that’s about as positive as we can be about it.
Darwin’s Paradox review summary
In Short: A more family friendly attempt to mimic the likes of Limbo and Inside but while the graphics are impressive the gameplay feels stolid and poorly paced.
Pros: The visuals are fantastic, in terms of both the main characters and the backdrops. Interesting array of abilities, especially the wall-crawling and ink-spitting.
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Cons: Everything in the game has been seen and done better before, with dull and long-winded puzzles and tedious stealth sections. The graphics are cute but there’s no real jokes and a weak ending.
Score: 5/10
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Formats: PlayStation 5 (reviewed), Xbox Series X/S, Nintendo Switch 2, and PC Price: £19.99 Publisher: Konami Developer: ZDT Studio Release Date: 2nd April 2026 Age Rating: 7
Being published by Konami means free Metal Gear references (Konami)
Middlesbrough, who went into the Easter weekend in the top two, still had the opportunity to end it there with victory at Swansea City in the 17:30 BST game.
Alex Bangura set them on their way with a 12th-minute goal but, after two Zan Vipotnik penalties put the Swans in front, Boro needed a Tommy Conway spot-kick to rescue a point.
Boro are floundering with two wins in their past 10 matches and while they scored more than once for the first time in five games, the feeling remains they are a frustrating and inconsistent proposition in front of goal.
Manager Kim Hellberg said after the match there would be more “twists and turns” to come in the fight for promotion – after a day of such similar rollercoaster emotions.
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“You’ve got three teams on 72 points – Ipswich have some games in hand, so they’re in a better position than the other two, but we are in a better position than Millwall because of our better goal difference,” he told BBC Radio Tees.
“There will be twists and turns. No team will just go and win games. It’s difficult and you need to just try in this period to get those points and wins.
“We have to keep fighting. It’s tough we didn’t win, because we thought we were good enough in the game to win, but then you have to do it.
“The easy answer at the moment is that we’re not being clinical enough or smart enough in different ways.”
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With a four-point deficit to Ipswich, and a vastly inferior goal difference, plus the games in hand the Tractor Boys hold, Hull can be considered the outsiders in this race.
But the Tigers showed against Coventry they can match anyone in the division and once again reaffirmed the fantastic job Sergej Jakirovic has done in his first season in English football under a transfer embargo.
Although when asked about what that point means in terms of the wider context of Hull’s season, Jakirovic was talking more play-offs than automatic promotion.
“Somebody said it is 73, 74, 75 [to reach the play-offs] but God knows how many. Until we are in this position we will just look at ourselves and try to take points in every game,” Jakirovic told BBC Radio Humberside.
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“Norwich are coming, Derby is there, Southampton… but, no matter, we must look at ourselves.”
A popular Japanese restaurant has secured a new Belfast City Centre location.
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Ragin’ Ramen currently specialises in “Japanese ramen with a Belfast twist”. On top of ramen on the menu, there are sides like Twister Fries, plus a selection of cocktails and beers.
Signage for the new restaurant has been spotted on Ann Street in the former Trespass store, which relocated to Castlecourt Shopping Centre in 2025.
Ragin’ Ramen already has a Belfast City Centre location on Church Lane, which opened in December 2022. There is no confirmation yet on whether this location will close once the new one opens.
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Their menu currently has 6 different types of ramen with quirky names like ‘Astro Boy’ and ‘Sailor Moon’. Customers can also choose between ramen noodles, udon noodles and flat rice noodles.
The first tranche of these – 1,000 of them – were meant to be created this summer. But the government has now withdrawn those after the BMA announced it was taking strike action. It comes after 30,000 applicants applied for 10,000 jobs last summer, although some of these were foreign doctors.
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