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NewsBeat

Former hostage negotiator and prison officer’s skills a perfect fit for new Welsh politics role

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Wales Online

In his former career he dealt with riots, hostage situations, violence and now he says those skills will all help him in the Senedd

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In 20 years as a prison guard, it’s safe to say there’s little Paul Marr didn’t see. But at the age of 53 he has a new career where he has switched the corridors of a prison for the corridors of power, as one of the new intake of Reform Senedd members in Cardiff Bay.

One of three boys, he’s originally from Bristol, and aged 20, he joined the prison service. One of his siblings was in the RAF, the other the police. “Uniform was kind of in our blood,” he says.

In his career he worked all over the prison estate, from youth offenders, to the most serious category A prisoners, and a year on a mother and baby unit.

He was riot trained and a hostage negotiator, sent to prisons in the moments reinforcement was needed most.

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In 2013, then 40, he was medically discharged after a diagnosis of multiple sclerosis.. And since then has worked in the NHS as a manager of drug treatment services in police custody.

He ended up in Wales after meeting his wife, from Pembrokeshire, and is a dad to grown-up children, and now, in 2026, he is an elected politician in a building he had never set foot in until he was told to attend to take his oath in the days after May 7’s historic Welsh election.

He always wanted to be a prison officer, he says, and spent his career travelling around the prison estate working in a range of sectors.

In his time he worked with drug and alcohol users, women and youths. He dealt with self-harm, violence, and suicide. In 2008, his name appeared in court reports after he was bitten on his inner left forearm by a prisoner.

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“There were elements of the job that I loved and those elements were being role models to people.

“When I left the prison service I went on to be manager of drug treatment services in police custody. So again, not being able to get away from custody is one thing, at least there’s no bars here.

“But at least I felt like I was helping people at the lowest point and often people who had been forgotten about in society and often felt neglected,” he says.

His year long spell on the mother and baby unit is something that sticks with him.

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“It was really hard because I’ve got daughters myself, and a lot of the women in jail have a horrendous backstory in terms of where they’ve been treated and everything else, and I just found that very difficult.

“The back stories are all unique, but they have a common thing, usually manipulation and coercion,” he says.

“The assaults and everything else, prisons are violent places, they’re volatile places and sometimes people, if you don’t give people the answer they want, then they’ll resort to those sorts of behaviours.

“But prison for me, it wasn’t just about dealing with those incidents there and then, it was about taking that incident and then supporting that person that’s done it, or hoping that the prison service would support that person who’s done that, to understand that it’s wrong and there’s consequences and they learn from that behaviour and change, ultimately.”

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There were, within that time, huge success stories.

“I worked on the relapse prevention unit. Prisoners, when they want to get themselves drug-free, they go through the detox unit and then they come onto the relapse prevention unit (RPU).

“I spent a lot of time on RPUs and just seeing that transformation in people, going from career criminals, primarily funded to feed their drug addiction, to actually understanding through better health and being drug-free that they can contribute.

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“That if you say simple things to people, like ‘look how well you’ve done, you’ve got yourself drug free, you’re back in the gym, you’re looking really good and now if you apply the same logic to life, getting a job, helping people, it will pay you back in same way and it’s a light bulb moment, you see people just kind of switch on’.

“You’re never gonna be that person to everybody, but if you’re that person somebody, then it makes a difference,” he says.

“In my 20 years there wasn’t one day in the prison service that was the same, so you can be attending an incident where you’ve cut somebody down or somebody’s been seriously assaulted, you go away and do the paperwork and then you go straight into another incident where somebody’s committing self harm or somebody has been sent a Dear John letter [a breakup letter] and they need somebody to speak to. There’s so many different hats you have to put on in the prison service.”

The prison estate in Wales particularly, Parc, is something that has had a lot of media attention in recent years. It’s somewhere he went on both hostage and riot incidents but he says for the staff there, each incident reported isn’t the only story from that prison.

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“We have a death in the prison and the press are all over it in terms of what did the prison do wrong, ‘could they have saved that life’, ‘could they have done this’ and yes every service expects to be under scrutiny every public servant expects to under scrutiny but I’ve lost count of the amount of people I’ve cut down that have been hanging given mouth-to-mouth to and then gone on and done my job.

“That never, ever, gets highlighted. The prison service is the forgotten service, it’s the fifth emergency service.”

“There are very good reasons why the public don’t hear everything that goes on in prison, and it’s because it wouldn’t be palatable when you’re having your breakfast over the paper,” he says.

I tell him I raised an eyebrow when I saw him say his riot training and hostage negotiator skills were things he thought were transferable to the Welsh Parliament.

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“The way I see it, everybody that’s in this building is in a privileged position where they represent the Welsh people and yes we have very differing views to Plaid on a lot of things, we’re singing on from the same hymn sheet we would just do it in a different way.

“If I think about the hostage negotiation, everything about that was about getting the right outcome for everybody. It’s the same thing here.

“You’ve got two people in that situation. You’ve got the perpetrator, who’s got a completely different outcome to me. My outcome is to make sure people are safe. Their outcome is an agenda, they want something. So it’s about finding that common ground, and that’s what I hope to be able to bring here, he says.

In the weeks since being elected, he has been into Parc along with another Reform UK MS, Gareth Thomas.

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“What I would say is, I left the prison service in 2013, so we’re talking 13 years on. Now, there was always a bit of rivalry between Parc and what we call black and white prisons, HMP prisons, because one’s publicly funded, the other one isn’t.

“But what I would say, is yes, Parc prison has come under a lot of scrutiny, and probably rightly so, in some circumstances.

“The same thing can be said for every prison in the country, nowhere is perfect. But what I would say is, the work that I saw that the officers there were doing and the governor and people like that is absolutely fantastic.

“I know it’s different funding and there may be different arguments, maybe a bit of banter going backwards and forwards around who provides the best service, but at the end of the day it’s the same people doing the same sort of job.

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“They’re dealing with the same issues and the levels of dedication, commitment and compassion that I saw at Parc were unrivalled and I think for me, when I joined as a 20-year-old if I could have picked up what they had going on in Parc and transferred it back to them…” he says.

I presume his background and early visit to a prison means he will be using his time in the Senedd to campaign, maybe not, he says.

“It’s not a devolved power of justice, but I can see pros and cons for it. From a Reform/Plaid perspective, we’ve got very different views on the sort of devolved powers around crime.”

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He does not support decriminalising illegal substances. “(If) you do something like that in a prison environment, you’re going to lose the prison that day, because drug-related crime and violence would go through the roof, and prison officers will have no tools to combat it. Same with the police, same with the National Health Service, you know, so we have very different views.

“But that said, I’m confident that if, if and when it becomes a devolved power, the minister that will be responsible for it, I’ll be able to work with him,” he says.

He left the prison service after being medically retired after his MS diagnosis.

He has relapsed and remitting MS. “The way it affects me can differ from time to time. Mobility can be an issue, stairs, but it all depends a lot of it.

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“Fatigue is one of the main elements within it. So if I can control the fatigue side of things, then the other bits tend to follow. I know it sounds weird, but I’ve been very fortunate. It could have been a lot worse,” he says.

He brings his time in the NHS too. When someone arrives in custody, if they have a drug issue, they are offered interventions and support.

He wrote the Drug Education Programme for Bristol, which was implemented across the south West and that was about early intervention and diverting people from future offending custody.

But his entry into politics – his first party, his first election – was because after 20 years in prisons, 13 years with the NHS, “I just got fed up with the decline in public services”.

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“I’m affected by it, you’re affected by, and just because I put a uniform on and I went into that area of work doesn’t mean to say that I wasn’t affected by this.

“I saw that decline, but I still saw people with the same amount of passion wanting to do the very best they possibly could being hindered by bureaucracy and being told ‘sorry, we haven’t got the money’.

“Well, when you’re talking about saving lives, that shouldn’t come into it, what should come into it is the fact that we’re going to do everything we can, we’re going to throw every resource in.”

It was Reform that tempted him, and, from Milford Haven, he was placed second on their list in Ceredigion Penfro.

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“Everybody’s going to try and find a party that’s most aligned to them and I think, certainly for me, one of the main things that attracted me to Reform was there was just this no kind of, no ambiguity, no messing around type approach to it.

“You look at a manifesto, it’s fully costed., we try and back things up with evidence, make sure it’s evidence based and I grew up, I was a latchkey kid, I grew in the 70s and 80s and I just want Britain to go back to those times where people are safe,” he says.

He tells me the night before, walking from his apartment through the Bay he found a man, 73, who had been assaulted.

“I don’t want that for this country, I would have been perfectly, not perfectly safe, maybe not, maybe I’m naive, but we’d have been a lot safer back in the late 70s, early 80s to be walking around than it is now.

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“So for me, it’s about restoring traditional values, making sure that the police are given the proper support to do their job and the authorities are given the proper to do the job, and right through to nursing and everything else, just making sure those public services are properly supported,” he says.

Being elected and arriving at the Senedd for the first time was, he says, “overwhelming” and “really quite emotional”.

“I think when you come here and you can see everything that goes on here, there’s a tremendous weight of responsibility and that hit me the first day that I came here and it’s just not something that I’ll ever take lightly.

“I just see it as a privileged place to be in terms of getting things done hopefully,” he says.

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We meet before he speaks in a Reform UK debate about water quality, an issue all around Wales, but it is the beaches of Pembrokeshire which attracted him to Wales – White Sands is his favourite – and he wants people to be able to enjoy them safely.

“For me, whilst it’s great to be in the Senedd, the real work for me is in the constituency, they’re the people that put me there, so I want to do the right job for them,” he says.

One of the first emails in his inbox was from Surfers Against Sewage and it’s something that he wants to tackle.

“I’ve met with local professors that have been testing the water quality, a local citizens group, and it’s just the rising levels of E-coli.

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“If you take Broadhaven Beach for example, we’ve got three tributaries going into the ocean. The tributaries aren’t classed as bathing water, but they still attract children all year round to be playing in that water, and that water still ends up going into the sea.

“For me it’s about accountability around things like that.

“The obvious question for me is, you know, this has been going on for so long, people’s health, people are dying, Heather Preen in 1999, [an eight-year-old girl who contracted E-Coli on a Devon beach and died].

“I don’t think enough is being done about it, there’s not enough urgency.

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“The Welsh Government is looking at a review I think in 2030, for me that doesn’t reflect the urgency. We’ve got a responsibility to our children, our grandchildren, the future generations, if they’re using our waterways that they’re safe,” he says.

Other things on his list include antisocial behaviour in schools, intercepting escalating behaviour at the earliest point.

“We’re seeing rising incidents of children carrying knives in schools. I want to be meeting with educational authorities, head teachers, to understand one of the questions I’m going to be raising in the chamber over the next few days is what the Welsh Government is going to do to tackle anti-social behaviour in school.

“For me it’s all about early intervention, age group for me it’s key to understand where they’re coming from and to educate them on the consequences,” he says.

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Tanker comes out of Strait of Hormuz on Oman route despite Iran threat

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Tanker comes out of Strait of Hormuz on Oman route despite Iran threat

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — A Liberian oil tanker made its way out of the Strait of Hormuz on Thursday despite threats to shipping from Iran’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard and using a new route close to Oman’s shore that has been promoted by a U.N. maritime agency.

The transit of the Stoic Warrior and the threats come as tensions rise between Iran and the United States over the terms of their interim accord aimed at permanently ending the Iran war. From getting ships through the narrow mouth of the Persian Gulf to the future of Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium, the two nations are increasingly debating the terms of the deal signed last week.

Through the signing of the memorandum of understanding, the U.S. and Iran agreed to a 60-day period to iron out these and other details. Until that happens — during private talks — leaders from both countries will also continue to negotiate in public, raising the risks of derailing the shaky ceasefire in the region.

A major threat to the deal is the flareup of fighting in Lebanon between Israel and the Iranian-backed militia Hezbollah. On Wednesday. Israel launched an airstrike that killed two people in southern Lebanon, the country’s state-run news agency said. It was Israel’s first airstrike on Lebanon since the latest ceasefire took effect on Saturday.

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Tanker sails through Strait of Hormuz

The Stoic Warrior — signaling that it planned to transit the Strait of Hormuz — took off early Thursday morning on a trip that saw it hug the coast of the United Arab Emirates and then Oman.

The vessel then traveled around Oman’s Musandam Peninsula fairly close to the shore, part of a route that Oman laid out alongside the International Maritime Organization, an agency of the United Nations that oversees shipping at sea.

North of the route is the Traffic Separation Scheme, the route in the center of the strait that for decades ships moved through freely. The route is used for transport of about a fifth of all the world’s oil and natural gas.

However, there has been the report of at least one mine sighted in the water after the Guard said that it mined the passage during the war that started on Feb. 28 with U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran. The threat of mines shut off the route.

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The naval arm of the Revolutionary Guard, apparently reacting to Oman and the IMO’s route, gave an angry warning Thursday, carried by Iran’s state-run IRNA news agency.

“A few hours ago, without notice or coordination with the Islamic Republic of Iran, some authorities announced a new route for ship traffic in the Strait of Hormuz, which is unacceptable and completely dangerous,” the Guard said.

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“It is hereby notified to all that the only authorized route for passing through the Strait of Hormuz is the one declared by the Islamic Republic of Iran,” the Iranian force said. “Vessel traffic outside these routes is extremely dangerous and prohibited.”

It added: “Violators will be dealt with,” without elaborating.

There were no immediate reports of any incidents in the strait as the Stoic Warrior passed. Several ships trailed behind it, according to ship-tracking data.

Anwar Gargash, a senior Emirati diplomat, warned Iran on Thursday over trying to impede the strait or put fees on vessels plying its waters.

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“New geopolitical facts cannot be imposed on the Arab Gulf states as a result of a treacherous aggression against them,” Gargash wrote on X. “It sows new seeds of discord and conflict for the future. And this is precisely what applies to the Strait of Hormuz.”

Lebanon remains a flashpoint

Israel’s military said on Thursday that a reservist soldier was killed and another hurt in southern Lebanon, where troops are occupying swaths of the country. At least 37 soldiers have been killed in Lebanon or northern Israel during the fighting, as well one civilian defense contractor. Two civilians in northern Israel have also been killed.

Over 4,000 people in Lebanon have been killed in Israeli strikes since this latest Israel-Hezbollah war began in March, two days after the Iran war started and when the Lebanese militant group fired at Israel.

Iran has insisted that fighting in Lebanon be stopped and that Israel give up the land it occupies there to reach a permanent deal with the U.S. on the Mideast war. Israel insists it must maintain a freehand to counter Hezbollah attacks as pressure from the U.S. on its campaign grows.

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Associated Press writer Julia Frankel in Jerusalem contributed to this report.

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How Scotland can qualify for World Cup 2026 knockout stage

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How Scotland can qualify for World Cup 2026 knockout stage

Scotland face a very nervous wait to see if their World Cup hopes end or extend after losing to Brazil in their third group game.

Another poor start from Steve Clarke’s men saw Brazil take an early lead on the way to a routine 3-0 win.

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Inmate speaks out on Preston Davey’s murderer’s life inside high-security prison

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Manchester Evening News

A former high-security prisoner has spoken out on what awaits ‘horrid monster’ Jamie Varley

A former prisoner who served his sentence in a high-security jail has shared what he believes child killer Jamie Varley is facing behind bars. Earlier this month, Varley was convicted of sexually abusing and murdering his adopted 13-month-old son, Preston Davey, receiving a whole life order, ensuring he will never be released.

He subjected Preston to horrific physical, sexual and emotional abuse. Varley, who maintained the baby had accidentally drowned in the bath, was convicted following an eight-week trial at Preston Crown Court.

Varley’s partner, John McGowan-Fazakerley, received a 25-year sentence after being found guilty of child cruelty, sexual abuse and allowing the death of a child.

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Varley has reportedly stayed inside the infamous West Yorkshire jail, HMP Wakefield, often referred to as “Monster Mansion”, where he is said to have encountered a “traditional prisoners’ welcome” and reportedly spent his initial night “sobbing and quaking.”

Now, Ricky Killeen, who previously served time in the same facility as Soham murderer Ian Huntley, has revealed details about the torment he believes lies ahead for the “horrid monster”, reports Lancs Live.

He disclosed on his Behind Bars TV channel on YouTube: “He will spend the rest of his sorry days, sh*****g himself, petrified, waiting for that fateful day when karma comes a-knocking and looking for him.”

Ricky claimed Varley would have been placed on an ACCT (Assessment, Care in Custody and Teamwork) – the process used to support prisoners considered at risk of suicide or self-harm.

He said: “When Varley asks for help, and he starts talking to the screws out the door, then obviously they’ve got a duty because he’s on an ACCT to make sure he doesn’t do anything to himself.

“So they have got to talk to him and mother the little wrongun and make sure he doesn’t do anything to himself. But he is going to be living in misery for the rest of his life. He will be feeling despair, anxiety, hopelessness.”

Ricky suggested that he’d be having “sleepless nights” and would be “watched round the clock”, while also receiving “abuse” from fellow inmates. He added: “So they will be tormenting and torturing him and giving him the utmost of grief.”

But Ricky said it isn’t just the threat of violence Varley would face. He added that there were “more ways to skin a cat” than being openly aggressive.

He added: “There’s ways where they can irritate him, banging little things outside his door and getting under his skin. He is going to live out the rest of his life in a sick, sorry world where he belongs.”

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A source has also commented on the killer’s fate, previously telling The Daily Star: “There’s a bounty on his head, everyone wants to be the one to hurt him first, and he was made very aware of that as he entered the prison.

“The other prisoners knew he was coming and they waited for him. They want him scared and they want to make his time inside as awful as they can – and now he knows he has a lot of time inside to serve.

“He is never getting out, there is no way out of this hell for him.”

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Dad dies after reportedly being restrained by passengers on Jet2 Manchester flight

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Daily Record

Callum Kerr, from Warrington, boarded the Jet2 flight from Larnaca in Cyprus with his girlfriend on June 21. He was restrained by fellow passengers after he reportedly became ‘disruptive’ during the flight, and later died in hospital.

A father and bareknuckle fighter has passed away after being rushed from an aircraft at Manchester Airport in a life-threatening state. Callum Kerr, from Warrington, had embarked on the Jet2 service from Larnaca in Cyprus alongside his girlfriend on June 21.

However, eyewitnesses reported the man, aged in his 30s, grew ‘disruptive’ mid-flight following what was described as substantial alcohol consumption prior to boarding. Authorities were summoned regarding an alleged assault aboard the aircraft after Callum had purportedly turned ‘aggressive’.

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Police boarded the plane following its arrival at Manchester Airport in the early hours of June 22, discovering that fellow travellers had subdued Callum. Footage and images circulated online captured the moment officers entered the aircraft before discovering he had stopped breathing.

They promptly commenced CPR and requested a defibrillator, before Callum was transported to hospital having fallen ‘critically ill’. His death has now been confirmed by relatives to the Manchester Evening News, reports the Manchester Evening News.

Heartfelt tributes have flooded social media following Callum’s passing. “Can’t believe I’m writing this RIP Callum Kerr wtf,” one mourner wrote, while another posted: “God bless mate we’ll catch up again.

“I thought I was dreaming when I seen someone write it last night.. goodnight godbless cal,” another person penned, with a fourth commenting: “Gunna miss that cheeky grin of his.”

A Greater Manchester Police spokesperson previously stated: “An investigation is underway after a man became critically ill following reports that the same individual had been aggressive and disruptive towards a passenger and crew members on a flight heading into Manchester Airport”.

“At around 2.25am we were called to reports of an assault that had taken place on a flight from Larnaca, Cyprus. Officers attended and located a man who had been restrained. The man – in his 30s – was taken to hospital due to his condition. He remains in a hospital in a stable but critical condition. Enquiries are ongoing.”

A Jet2 representative also commented: “We can confirm that flight LS966 from Larnaca to Manchester requested a priority landing on (Monday 22nd June), due to a disruptive passenger incident.

“We can confirm that a passenger has been taken to hospital. As an investigation is underway, it would be inappropriate for us to make any further comment at this time.”

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Two arrested after dawn raid at property in The Haulgh

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Two arrested after dawn raid at property in The Haulgh

Two men have been arrested on suspicion of drug offences.

The two were arrested on Bradford Park Drive, The Haulgh.

Officers from Greater Manchester Police’s North Neighbourhood Team executed a warrant under Section 8 of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act at an address on the drive.

The warrant, carried out with support from the force’s Tactical Aid Unit, was in response to intelligence about suspected criminal activity.

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(Image: GMP)

Greater Manchester Police (GMP) said via social media: “Officers actively work on all intelligence that is received from members of the public, assisting in executing warrants such as this one today, and with your help we can deter and prevent criminal offences.”

Both men remain in police custody for questioning.

The raid is the latest on properties in Bolton.

Two were conducted in Halliwell only last week which resulted in arrests.

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Ward councillor Rabiya Jiva told The Bolton News at the time that tackling drugs in Halliwell remains a priority, with residents bringing the issue up at meetings.

Residents with any innformation can do this via Crimestoppers anonymously

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Bodies found in ‘advanced deterioration’ at under-fire Nottingham trust

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Split pic. On the left is a young fashion influencer in a white summery dress posing for the camera. On the right is a close-up of two Dachshunds wearing blue cooling jackets.

Problems with after-death care came to light after the parents of Harriet Hawkins, who was stillborn at NUH in 2016, discovered her body had been allowed to decompose so badly that it had to be triple-bagged for her funeral.

A subsequent investigation found 17 areas of concern and prompted an examination by the independent maternity review into the after-death care provided to 16 other babies and one mother.

They found that one early gestation baby had been disposed of as clinical waste, the wrong baby had been passed to funeral directors and a mother who died had deteriorated so badly that her family were advised not to see her prior to her funeral.

“The Review found evidence of recurring examples of failure to protect the dignity of the deceased… including inadequate arrangements for undertaking paediatric post-mortems,” Ockenden said in her report.

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The problems prompted the Human Tissue Authority (HTA), which regulates mortuary care in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, to examine the trust’s services.

In an unannounced inspection, external in March it found three critical, six major and one minor shortfalls against its standards at the two hospitals run by the trust, the QMC and City Hospital.

The HTA found lack of freezer space at both Nottingham hospitals meant some bodies had been put in a refrigerated area instead.

Eight of the bodies were showing “advanced deterioration” because they had not been transferred to a freezer in time.

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Instead of being conducted in a post-mortem suite, some baby post-mortem examinations were carried out in a lab that was inadequately ventilated, with support staff who had not been trained in mortuary care, the HTA found.

An accompanying audit found just more than half of the 145 recorded incidents that should have been escalated to the regulator were not.

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Tintwistle Moor wildfire breaks out as ‘avoid area’ warning issued

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Manchester Evening News

The blaze broke out at around 10pm on Wednesday evening

Fire crews are tackling a blaze on moorland near Glossop with people urged to avoid the area.

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The wildfire broke out on Tintwistle Moor at around 10pm on Wednesday evening (June 24). Large flames and plumes of smoke could be spotted from the Woodhead Pass as the fire raged on into the early hours of this morning.

People were urged to avoid the area and residents nearby were urged to keep their windows and doors shut. The Derbyshire Fire and Rescue Service said crews Glossop and New Mills were sent to the scene.

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They left the area just after 2am ‘for safety reasons due to failing light’. This morning crews are back on the scene working to manage the wildfire.

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Plumes of smoke can still be seen on the moorland. The fire service is continuing to urge people to avoid the area.

In a statement last night, a Derbyshire Fire and Rescue Service spokesperson said: “Firefighters are currently dealing with a wildfire on Tintwistle Moor, above Woodhead Road in Glossop. Crews from Glossop and New Mills are in attendance. Thank you to everyone who has called 999 and made us aware of the incident.

“If you can see or smell smoke, please keep your windows and doors closed. Please avoid the area.”

In an update at 7.30am this morning, the spokesperson added: “Firefighters are continuing to tackle to wildfire on Tintwistle Moor. Crews left the scene shortly after 02:00 hours this morning (Thursday 25 June 2026) for safety reasons due to failing light.

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“Firefighters from Chapel-en-le-Frith, Buxton and Hathersage were then mobilised at 04:00 hours and remain on scene. Please continue to keep windows and doors closed if you can see or smell smoke, and avoid the area.”

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Arsenal FC make Morgan Rogers their top transfer priority with first bid expected

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Arsenal FC make Morgan Rogers their top transfer priority with first bid expected

Rogers is keen on moving to north London and it is believed that personal terms will not be an issue. While Villa accept the player’s career ambitions, they see the England attacker as one of their key players and their clear preference is for the 23-year-old to be involved in their Champions League campaign during the 2026-27 season.

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Mysterious interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS could be twice as old as the Sun | News Tech

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Mysterious interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS could be twice as old as the Sun | News Tech
This series of images from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope of the fragmenting comet C/2025 K1 (ATLAS) was taken over three days (Picture: NASA, ESA, Dennis Bodewits (AU)/Cover Images)

An interstellar comet that passed through the Solar System last year may be up to 12 billion years old – far older than the Sun.

Scientists used the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope to examine Comet 3I/ATLAS after it visited our galaxy in late 2025.

As the comet moved away, heat from the Sun transformed its ancient ice into a glowing cloud of gas, allowing researchers to analyse its chemical composition in unprecedented detail.

The findings, published in the journal Nature on June 22, suggest the object originated in a distant planetary system during a period known as the Universe’s ‘cosmic noon’, when star formation across the galaxy was at its peak.

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Researchers say the comet could have formed between 10 and 12 billion years ago, making it significantly older than the Sun, which is around 4.5 billion years old.

Comet 3I/ATLAS is only the third confirmed interstellar comet ever detected. Its name reflects both its status as the third known visitor from beyond the Solar System and the NASA-funded ATLAS (Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System) telescope that first spotted it.

The Juice spacecraft’s view of 3I/ATLAS (Picture: NASA, ESA, Dennis Bodewits (AU)/Cover Images)

Using Webb’s Near-Infrared Spectrograph (NIRSpec), scientists measured chemical signatures unlike those seen in any known Solar System comet.

Among the most striking discoveries was an exceptionally high concentration of deuterium, a heavier form of hydrogen. The levels were around 30 times greater than those found in comets originating within the Solar System.

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The researchers say this points to the comet having formed in an extremely cold environment early in the Milky Way’s history. The material that eventually became part of 3I/ATLAS appears to have remained deeply frozen for billions of years. The telescope also detected only trace amounts of carbon-13 compared with the lighter carbon-12 isotope.

Because galaxies gradually become enriched with carbon-13 as successive generations of stars live and die, the low levels found in the comet provide further evidence of its ancient origins.

‘This was a unique opportunity to study an ancient object from the distant Galaxy, probably pre-dating our Sun and Solar System,’ said astro-chemist Martin Cordiner of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center and lead author of the study. ‘On the one hand, we get direct insight into that distant time and place, and on the other, we learn something about how unusual our own Solar System may be.’

The James Webb Space Telescope can map specific chemical and molecular signatures, as seen here in its three images of comet 3I/ATLAS (Picture: NASA, ESA, Dennis Bodewits (AU)/Cover Images)

Astronomers from a range of disciplines collaborated to observe the comet during its brief journey through the Solar System. The team secured permission to interrupt Webb’s planned observing schedule in order to study the object. A separate study led by Cyrielle Opitom of the University of Edinburgh, using the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope, also examined the comet’s chemical makeup, focusing on forms of carbon and nitrogen contained in cyanide.

Scientists believe such observations could help answer broader questions about the origins of life in the Universe.

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‘For us as scientists, finding these rare isotopes is fascinating, but the bigger picture here is looking at the possibilities of prebiotic chemistry elsewhere in the galaxy,’ said Stefanie Milam of NASA Goddard, a co-author of the study.

‘So far, we know of only one place in the vast cosmos where chemical ingredients led to life – our Solar System, our Earth. Analysis of these interstellar objects is a major step towards learning how common, or uncommon, the conditions for the evolution of life are in the Universe.’

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Wimbledon and BBC Sport extend partnership to 2033

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Iga Swiatek holding the Wimbledon women's singles final trophy

BBC Sport will continue to broadcast Wimbledon until 2033 after signing a new deal with the All England Club.

The agreement means the Grand Slam tournament will remain free to air for audiences in the UK across BBC television, radio and digital platforms.

Alex Kay-Jelski, Director of BBC Sport, said: “Wimbledon holds a truly special place in the hearts of audiences across the UK and this new agreement means we can continue our longstanding and deeply valued partnership with the All England Club well into the next decade.

“This is about celebrating one of the world’s greatest sporting events while continuing to evolve how we bring it to audiences.

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“With new technology, fresh storytelling, new voices and innovative ways to connect with fans across television, radio, online and social media, we are excited to build the future of Wimbledon coverage together and bring audiences even closer to The Championships than ever before.”

Next year’s tournament will mark 100 years since the BBC first broadcast Wimbledon in 1927.

Under the new deal, audiences will continue to enjoy comprehensive live coverage of the Championships across BBC TV, BBC iPlayer, BBC Radio 5 Live, BBC Sounds, and the BBC Sport website and app, as well as across BBC Sport’s extensive social channels.

The 2026 tournament gets under way on Monday with champions Jannik Sinner and Iga Swiatek defending their singles titles.

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This year’s Wimbledon coverage will usher in a fresh new editorial and creative approach from BBC Sport, featuring new voices and personalities, deeper storytelling, enhanced analysis, and technology across TV, radio, online and social platforms – all designed to bring audiences closer to the Championships than ever before.

The announcement follows record-breaking digital audiences for Wimbledon on BBC platforms last summer.

In 2025, the tournament generated 69.3 million online requests across BBC iPlayer, the BBC Sport website and app – the highest digital engagement for the Championships ever recorded.

That figure surpassed the previous record of 54.3 million set in 2023 and marked a significant increase on the 50.1 million online requests recorded in 2024.

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