Will AI be the end of video game consoles? (Metro)
The Thursday letters page is unsurprised God Of War: Sons Of Sparta was unremarkable, as one reader is enamoured by fan remakes of Pokémon Red/Blue.
Games Inbox is a collection of our readers’ letters, comments, and opinions. To join in with the discussions yourself email gamecentral@metro.co.uk
Console apocalypse So, um… all this stuff about memory and electronic components getting bought up by AI companies seems pretty bad, right? Like, really, really, bad? This guy talking about potentially a decade of problems presumably knows what he’s talking about, given his position, and that is going to be a nightmare for gaming. Never mind smartphones and everything else.
Do we even know if Sony and Nintendo are safe? They’re not gigantic companies like Microsoft and electronics is pretty much all they do beyond games. Maybe all three will go third party at the same time! I’m not really sure what companies he’s hinting at that could go under, as I’m not sure who counts as a smaller business, but it’s clearly not good news, no matter what happens.
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There’s so much going wrong with the games industry, and the world in general, at the moment and yet it seems like it could still get much worse and very quickly. In the worse case scenario you’re talking about consoles, and gaming PCs, being impossible to manufacture for several years.
Whether that would last for a whole decade I don’t know but that’s an industry ending problem. I hope you’re all into retro games, because that might be all we have soon! Oz
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Monkey paw So I guess one of the big victims of these memory shortage problems is going to be all those PC handheld gaming devices from companies I’ve never heard of. If even Steam Deck has only sold a few million I hate to think what some of these others are pushing. Even the Xbox Ally one, which I have literally not heard mentioned again even once since it came out.
That’s going to affect the rumoured Xbox portable and the PlayStation one too, to the point where they might just cancel them completely, because I imagine they involve a lot of custom chips – even more than if it was just a home console.
I’m sure no one but them knows the full details but this is all very bad news and yet… if you didn’t want there to be a next generation so soon your prayers have been answered. But you know the problem with being careful what you wish for, since now the PlayStation 6 might not arrive until 2036! Korbie
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Next in line Like a lot of readers I’m looking forward to hearing abut the third Final Fantasy 7 remake game but I’m also wondering what might get the remake treatment after that is all finished up with. Do they even consider Final Fantasy 7 Remake to be a success is the first big question and I’m not sure what the answer is, other than there’s a good chance it might be ‘not really’.
They definitely seemed to have cooled on the idea of a Final Fantasy 9 remake, as there were rumours like crazy around that for a while. That was only meant to be a lower budget remake too, so that might be an indication they’ve already had it with triple-A remakes.
For me the obvious choices for Final Fantasy are 6 or 10, although personally I’d prefer 12. Final Fantasy 6 would require a completely new game, so I don’t think that will get the treatment. 10 is going to be a big job too, so I’m not honestly sure any of them will get remakes.
I’d love Chrono Trigger, but I think that’s the same problem as Final Fantasy 6, and so I think maybe the most likely is Kingdom Hearts, especially with a new game coming up to promote. Or maybe the answer is none of them. If a big budget Final Fantasy 7 remake only sells okay, what chance does anything else have? Ochreblue
Fan suggestion I agree that this year is Game Freak’s big chance to turn around Pokémon in terms of the quality of the games and the technology behind them. I don’t know how likely it is, but if they don’t try this time I’m not sure they ever will.
Although most people imagine some kind of amazing high-tech open world I prefer the idea of something closer to the HD-2D style, that’s a mix between modern and retro graphics. There have been a lot of fan mock-ups with this idea over the years and while I don’t think any of them are perfect I’d rather go with something like this but keep it more of a top-down view.
Unless Nintendo is going to spend GTA 6 style money on it I don’t think there’s any point making Pokémon 3D. It’s got to be stylised and it’s got to be more like the wonder of the original Game Boy games. We might get that for a future remake but I’m afraid the next mainline game will just be another low-tech, janky knock-off. Taylor Moon
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You can dig it Great Reader’s Feature about A Game About Digging a Hole at the weekend. I instinctively knew I would get some form of enjoyment out of it. Digging, collecting ore, selling it, upgrading equipment, and digging deeper? Absolutely all over it for £3.64.
Spaced out on Tramadol for a back issue last night, played for over two hours and it was an almost religious experience. Well not quite, but highly recommended to all other readers, especially for the price. Whiskeyjack11
Fighting multiverse RE: Lee Dappa. The closest you’ll get to playing all versions of Street Fighter 2 in one place, as one game, is not on the 30th anniversary collection of Street Fighter 2 but actually on the 35th anniversary collection labelled as Capcom Fighting Collection.
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This release features Hyper Street Fighter 2: The Anniversary Edition. You can choose fighters from all versions of the Street Fighter 2 editions in one package.
Choosing World Warrior Ken from the original will give him extra strength, no super move, and he will be a palette swap of Ryu. Choosing Ken from Street Fighter 2 Turbo: Hyper Fighting will give him his longer range dragon uppercut and air whirlwind kick and still no super move.
Choosing Street Fighter 2 Turbo’s Ken will give him his flaming dragon punch but less damage, and thus more reliant on combos. But he will have his super move to use and the power bar for it at the bottom of the screen. This would apply to all characters across the games so you can have World Warrior E. Honda vs. Street Fighter 2 Turbo’s version of Blanka, for instance. Nick The Greek
Online ban I always wondered why companies don’t just lock a game out until the day it’s released, to avoid all these leaks you always get. It’s literally every game but they never seem to care. But surely it could just work like pre-loading, where you have the game but you’re not allowed to start playing it until the right time.
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I guess you could buy the disc and then purposefully keep the console offline, and get around it that way, but who wants that much trouble? And besides, most games don’t seem to work without a day one patch anyway. At the very least a timer would cut the problem down, but the companies don’t even seem to try. Flint
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What it looks like I know they say you shouldn’t judge a book by its cover but God Of War: Sons Of Sparta was an out of the blue shadow drop, it had what looked like terrible graphics, and it immediately looked inferior to about a 100 other Metroidvanias you could get instead. And as a bonus it was by some developer I’d never heard of, who’s biggest game was a Five Nights At Freddy’s spin-off.
I feel you have to be very optimistic given all that, to the point where I could probably sell you some magic beans. It’s not a question of whether it’s rubbish or not but if you want to spend a fair amount of money and a lot of time beating it, and I definitely don’t want to. Talk is cheap but time is not and at the moment I haven’t time for 10/10 blockbusters, let alone deeply average Metroidvanias.
I feel there’s plenty of interesting things an indie dev could’ve done with a low budget God Of War game and a 2D Metroidvania with Young Kratos seems like the absolute least exciting option. You could’ve had a game where you played as one of the Valkyries, you could have had a literal god game where you’re populating Midgar with humans, you could’ve had an archery thing with Arteus, heck you could’ve had a sledding simulator and it still would’ve been more interesting that what we got.
I know it was the safe option, but when the best option was probably not making a spin-off at all there’s no point going for the boring and obvious choice. Campbell
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Inbox also-rans So Highguard has outlasted Concord, but by the sound of it it’ll be lucky see the weekend, so it’s really only going to beat it by a matter of days. Goops
I really hate that Microsoft switched the buttons round on their controller compared to Nintendo’s. Why do so silly a thing and make it so difficult to switch (no pun intended) between the two consoles. I can never remember which is which way round. Mobert
GC: They were copying Sega, who they were very cosy with in the initial years of the Xbox.
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An 18-year-old boy was arrested in Camden yesterday (Picture: Justin Griffiths-Williams)
Making his way home from school in London, a 13-year-old boy was dragged down a flight of stairs, beaten and robbed.
A crowd of teenagers surrounded and attacked him during rush hour at Swiss Cottage train station last month, demanding he hand over his phone and his watch.
The thieves flashed a zombie knife at him, before leaving him terrified and injured on the floor without any of his valuables.
And he is just one of hundreds of victims robbed on the London’s transport network.
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But British Transport Police have had enough.
Police Sergeant Brendan Lamb told Metro: ‘Although being robbed at knife-point almost sounds low-level nowadays, it is incredibly impactful and can change the lives of victims.
‘After crimes like this, victims understandably can become very nervous about what used to be their ordinary life. We want them to be able to feel comfortable again.’
And Metro joined them on their hunt to catch the criminals responsible for ruining so many journeys home.
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Police at one of the addresses today (Picture: Justin Griffiths-Williams)
The attack
On January 17 at 5pm, the 13-year-old victim was at Swiss Cottage Underground Station where he was attacked.
A group of boys were ‘lying in wait’ before they approached him, dragged him down stairs before kicking and punching him.
As it happened during rush hour, there were multiple witnesses, including a woman who tried to intervene.
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But the group of attackers managed to flee, with the victim’s phone and fake Rolex watch.
He was taken to hospital after suffering facial bruising and swelling to both eyes – and police were determined to catch those responsible.
Knocking on doors
Some of the occupants were unwilling to reveal where the suspect was (Picture: Justin Griffiths-Williams)
There were three targets for the yesterday’s arrests. Two 18-year-old boys, and one 15-year-old.
They were suspected of being part of the gang who surrounded the young victim, with two others, aged 16 and 17, already arrested on the day.
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The first address proved to be a completely unoccupied building, with neighbours saying only workmen being seen entering and leaving the premises.
The second property, in a newly built block of flats with floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking Swiss Cottage, proved frustrating for officers. Three people – all siblings of one of the suspects -insisted they had no idea where their younger brother was and ‘had not seen him in weeks’.
‘But we will just keep going back here’, BTP Sergeant Danny Douglas said. ‘We are not just going to give up looking for these people.’
In the third and final property, an 18-year-old suspect was arrested and brought out. His terminally ill mum shouting out in frustration at the amount of police present.
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‘Knives during robberies are still rare’
Police are determined to catch robbers on the train network (Picture: Justin Griffiths-Williams)
And according to the latest data, the work of officers on the UK’s transport network is pushing crime levels in the right direction – down.
Between October 2024 and September 2025, BTP recorded 361 offences involving a knife or sharp instrument, according to the Office for National Statistics.
Sergeant Lamb said: ‘Robberies involving a knife are not as common as you think, which is why it is vital we catch these criminals.’
But this is down by 26% compared to the previous year, as 487 incidents were recorded.
And as knife crime continues to involve youths, the half-term week struck as the perfect opportunity to launch a concentrated number of arrests as the teenagers involved will be at home.
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‘Lives can be changed by crimes like this,’ Sergeant Lamb added. ‘Especially when the victim is so young.’
He said: ‘Just arresting one person, can lead to further lines of enquiry, and have a domino effect where we manage to catch more criminals.’
The film, from Saltburn director Emerald Fennell, is a loose adaptation of the classic gothic novel by Emily Brontë and stars Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi as Cathy and Heathcliff.
Margot Robbie as Catherine Earnshaw (Image: Warner Bros)
Bridestones Moor, which sits above Todmorden, provided the setting for the movie and accommodated a crew of more than 200 people shooting scenes in the remote landscape.
A VisitCalderdale spokesperson said: “The well-loved Bridestones Moor, above Todmorden, provided a wonderfully wild setting for the movie – and we can see why.
“For one day in March 2025, Bridestones Moor accommodated a crew of over 200 people shooting scenes in this beautifully remote landscape.”
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The story has inspired film, stage, and television adaptations over the years, cementing its status as one of the greatest Gothic novels of all time.
First published in 1847, it is the only novel by the English writer and tells the forbidden love story of Catherine Earnshaw and Heathcliff, set against the bleak backdrop of the Yorkshire moors.
The film also stars Shazad Latif as Edgar Linton, Alison Oliver as Isabella Linton, Hong Chau as Nelly Dean and Martin Clunes as Mr Earnshaw.
Complete with a soundtrack by British singer Charli XCX, the cast and creative team hope the film will bring Brontë’s classic novel to a whole new generation of readers.
“If anyone watches this film and then wants to go and read the book, I think we’ll feel like we’ve done our job,” said director Emerald Fennell, 40.
“I truly believe it’s the greatest book ever written, and I think she is a transcendent genius.”
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Fennell, who won an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay for her 2020 film Promising Young Woman, says her first priority when making Wuthering Heights was its emotional resonance.
“The first thing is that everything has an emotional resonance,” she explains.
“Whether it’s the performances, the buildings, the textures, or the food, everything has an emotional reason.
“I was lucky not only to work with an amazing cast, but also an incredible crew who were all working on that same emotional frequency.
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“So it’s not just, ‘What period are we in?’ It’s more like, ‘How does this make us feel?’”
Wuthering Heights was released in UK cinemas on February 13.
Barratt Homes, currently building its nearby Knights Gate development, gifted the equipment to the Friends of Huntington Cemetery to support the upkeep of headstones.
A spokesman for the Friends group said: “We are extremely grateful to Barratt Homes for their generous donation of power washers.
“This equipment will make a real difference to the ongoing care and upkeep of the cemetery, helping our volunteers maintain the headstones and surrounding areas with dignity and respect.
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“Support like this is invaluable to us, and we would like to thank Barratt Homes for recognising the importance of preserving this historic and much-loved community space.”
Barratt Homes’ Knights Gate development is located in New Lane.
Paul Hogan, sales director at Barratt Homes Yorkshire East, said: “We are pleased to donate equipment to the Friends of Huntington Cemetery to support the ongoing maintenance of the headstones.”
As the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics in Italy play out, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) is once again insisting that any sport under its flag must remain politically neutral. The Olympic charter grounds this position in its fifth “fundamental principle of Olympism”, which states that sports organisations within the Olympic movement “shall apply political neutrality”.
Yet in recent years, athletes from Russia and Belarus have been excluded or tightly restricted, and calls have also been made to ban Israelis, Americans, and others. This raises the question: what, exactly, does “political neutrality” mean in today’s Olympic Games – and what purpose does it serve?
To start with, it’s obvious to most that the IOC cannot be “neutral” in the everyday sense of never getting involved. In 1992, athletes from the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia were not allowed to compete as Yugoslavia because of UN sanctions, and those who did compete did so under the Olympic flag as independent Olympic participants.
But the US faced no Olympic-wide ban after the 2003 invasion of Iraq, widely argued to be illegal under international law. If political neutrality means never making political decisions, then the IOC couldn’t work by definition, because deciding which countries are recognised and eligible to compete is inherently political.
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The real question is not whether the IOC makes political decisions, but why it keeps insisting it does not take sides in political conflicts when, to many observers, its actions suggest otherwise.
Countries and organisations sometimes claim neutrality on principled grounds. In the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games, for example, 65 countries boycotted in response to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Four years later, the Soviet Union and most of the Eastern bloc retaliated by boycotting the 1984 Los Angeles Games, citing political hostility and security concerns.
In both of these cases, the Games still went ahead. The IOC presidents at the time, Lord Killanin in 1980 and Juan Antonio Samaranch in 1984, appeared willing to bear the costs of lower attendance, prestige and fanfare in order to uphold the organisation’s claim to political neutrality, amongst other things.
Today, political neutrality increasingly serves a different role. Rather than expressing a clear position that the organisation is prepared to defend, neutrality is used to keep decisions deliberately vague. Instead of clear criteria that say what neutrality is, when it is required, and when it should be abandoned, the IOC responds to each crisis case by case, without explaining why similar conflicts produce different outcomes.
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Sport and politics in the real world
This vagueness reduces the need to justify decisions, accountability and responsibility, all while arguing that it takes a principled position of neutrality. Ironically, “political neutrality” is so loosely defined that it is flexible enough to take sides in political conflicts, a strategic ambiguity not uncommon in international politics.
Admittedly, this may be a smart strategy from an organisational point of view. In early March 2022, the International Paralympic Committee (IPC), within 24 hours of saying Russian and Belarusian athletes would be allowed to compete at Beijing 2022 as neutrals, reversed course after several countries warned they would not compete.
A poster by an artist calling himself Badiucao, protesting the violation of human rights in China at the Beijing Winter Olympics in 2022. CTK / Alamy
The IPC probably lost some authority, and perhaps even legitimacy, from this reversal. Yet it begs the question where this leaves the concept of political neutrality and values in general, today.
Sport is often seen as a microcosm of society. Whatever happens in sport reflects society at large – and these Winter Olympic Games are no different. In this sense, neutrality in the IOC reflects a broader pattern we see in daily life – one law for the few, and another for the many, with “political neutrality” a convenient mask for taking sides while claiming not to. It appears to be “neutrality” when it benefits the right countries, and “politics” when it does not.
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In these Winter Games, the IOC will speak the words of neutrality but think in terms of politics. Neutrality will be invoked to justify restrictions on some delegations or athletes, like Russia and Belarus, while resisting restrictions on others, like Israel and the US, and deflecting responsibility for explaining the difference.
After a week of competition, this double standard is evident. Russian and Belarusian athletes compete only as vetted “individual neutral athletes” without flags or anthems. Meanwhile, athletes from countries facing well-documented accusations of violating international law and human rights, like Iran, Israel, China, the US and others, participate under full national symbols.
The result is that these Winter Games, like many before them, are a stage where political conflict is managed in practice. Political neutrality today does not remove politics from sport; it is simply another way of reinforcing it.
Families on low incomes could be entitled to support
Millions of families on low incomes are being encouraged to check whether they could receive up to £1,200 in free bonus cash from the Government. HMRC has confirmed its Help to Save scheme is now permanent.
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From April 2028, up to 1.5 million more families will become eligible under expanded criteria. This means additional support for people on Universal Credit, including those with caring responsibilities, who could see their savings boosted by a substantial 50% Government bonus.
In a social media post, HMRC said: “Help to Save is here to stay – and more families can benefit. The scheme has been made permanent, and from April 2028, up to 1.5 million more families will be eligible thanks to expanded criteria.”
How the scheme works
Help to Save is a Government-backed savings account targeted at working households on low incomes. It pays a bonus of 50p for every £1 saved over four years – effectively a 50% return funded by taxpayers.
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Savers can deposit between £1 and £50 a month, up to a maximum of £2,400 over four years. The maximum bonus available is £1,200.
Key limits at a glance.
Maximum monthly saving £50.
Maximum total saving (4 years) £2,400.
Bonus rate 50%.
Maximum total bonus £1,200.
All savings in the scheme are backed by the Government, meaning deposits are secure.
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Who can apply?
You can open a Help to Save account if:
You are receiving Universal Credit.
You (or you and your partner) had take-home pay of £1 or more in your last monthly assessment period.
You live in the UK
Couples claiming Universal Credit can each open their own account, but they must apply individually. Importantly, if you cease claiming benefits after opening the account, you’re still able to continue saving until the four-year term concludes.
Will it impact your benefits?
For numerous households concerned about exceeding savings limits, there’s reassurance. If you or your partner have £6,000 or less in personal savings, this won’t affect the amount of Universal Credit you receive. This includes funds held in Help to Save. The bonuses themselves also don’t influence Universal Credit payments.
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The same £6,000 threshold applies to Housing Benefit, and Help to Save bonuses aren’t counted against it.
Warning about withdrawals
Savers are permitted to withdraw money at any time – however, doing so could diminish the bonus they receive. Withdrawing cash makes it more challenging to accumulate the “highest balance” used to calculate the 50% bonus.
If you close the account prematurely, you’ll forfeit your next bonus and won’t be able to open another Help to Save account.
What’s changing in 2028?
From April 2028, eligibility will expand, making up to 1.5 million additional families able to apply. The move makes the scheme permanent, ending previous uncertainty over its long-term future.
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For households juggling rising bills, the scheme offers one of the most generous guaranteed returns available anywhere – a Government-backed 50% boost that would be impossible to match in the normal savings market.
Dogs love sleeping in their owners’ beds for three heartwarming reasons that has left people emotional to learn – and it’s more than just wanting to being comfortable
Alice Sjoberg Social News Reporter
05:06, 19 Feb 2026
Dogs really are a man’s best friend, and you can usually gauge just how much your four-legged companion adores you by the way it behaves around you as its owner. Our dog friends demonstrate affection in numerous ways, from enthusiastic welcomes and physical displays such as leaning against you or licking, to constantly wanting to be near you and presenting you with their favourite toys.
They may also reveal their devotion through sustained eye contact, tail wagging, and even quietly copying your movements like yawning. But there are additional behaviours your furry friend might exhibit that you may not realise stem from how deeply they care for you and crave your company, including their desire to share your sleeping space.
“Dogs love sleeping in their owners bed for these three reasons,” a voice can be heard announcing before getting into the list of explanations.
1. It makes them feel secure
“First of all, you need to understand that for a dog, you are much more than just an owner. You are their anchor, their family, their entire world,” the voice detailed.
Due to this profound connection, they frequently feel protected in your presence and yearn to be beside you during their most vulnerable moments, particularly while sleeping at night.
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The voice clarified: “Sleeping close to you gives them a deep sense of security and strengthens the emotional bond they feel.
“It’s their way of saying ‘I love you and I feel safe with you’,” they concluded.
2. It helps keep them warm
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“Secondly, dogs love warmth,” the video continued.
Similar to humans, dogs enjoy snuggling into a comfortable and cosy bed to maintain warmth during chillier periods. The experience becomes even more appealing when they can sense your body heat beside them.
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“Your presence turns the bed into the perfect cocoon for a restful night. To them, you’re like a living blanket – warming and reassuring at the same time,” they explained.
3. They want to protect you
“The third reason goes a bit deeper,” the video said before it went on to reveal the third reason.
“Finally, all dogs have a built in pack protection instinct. Even when they sleep deeply, they remain alert,” they said.
They continued: “By sharing your bed, they feel like they’re guarding you just as much as you’re caring for them. This protective role is deeply rooted in their nature. And it’s yet another way your bond grows stronger.”
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The video’s caption added: “Your dog isn’t just your pet – they see you as family and their whole world. Sleeping next to you gives them security, warmth, and a chance to protect their pack.”
Viewers quickly flooded the comments section with their reactions, with numerous people expressing support for allowing their dogs to share their beds.
“Dogs love sleeping in their owners bed for these three reasons,” one person wrote, while another shared: “I end up on the edge of the bed while my dog is stretched out.”
“I don’t know how anyone could reject a dog sleeping on the bed with them,” one individual expressed.
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Yet, another viewer countered: “Never let your dog sleep in your bed at night.”
Ulster Unionist MLA Doug Beattie said that the system for deporting criminals “isn’t as robust as it should be and certainly isn’t transparent”
An Ulster Unionist MLA has hit out at the system in place to deport foreign criminals who are jailed for serious crimes in Northern Ireland.
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This comes as Justice Minister Naomi Long revealed that 145 custodial sentences were handed out to 138 foreign prisoners in Northern Ireland in the last five years.
The figures were revealed after Doug Beattie asked the Minister to detail the number of foreign nationals that have received a custodial sentence of one year or more, in the last five years; the number of those who received a custodial sentence of one year or more and were reported by the Northern Ireland Prison Service to the Home Office Foreign National Offenders Returns Command for deportation, on completion of the custodial element of their sentence; and the number that were unable to complete their licence element of their sentence, as monitored by the Probation Board Northern Ireland, because they were deported.
In her response, Justice Minister Naomi Long said: “The Home Office is responsible for any deportation of foreign nationals. The Northern Ireland Prison Service (NIPS) is responsible for holding those in their custody as directed under the warrant of committal issued by the sentencing court.
“The NIPS is responsible for informing the Home Office of all sentenced foreign national offenders within ten working days of sentencing: thereafter, the Home Office investigate the case and all decisions pertaining to the individual’s immigration and deportation status are a matter for them.”
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In recent weeks, the system for deporting criminals has come under greater scrutiny following the case of murdered Ballymena man Victor Hamilton in July 2022. Two foreign nationals, Mario Menezes and Michael Hanrahan were each sentenced for withholding information relating to the murder.
Michael Hanrahan was released back into the community on license only to be returned to prison on breach of his license, and Mario Menezes was not returned to prison following sentencing due to time served.
Ulster Unionist Justice Spokesperson Doug Beattie, MC MLA, commented: “The case surrounding the murder of Victor Hamilton in Ballymena has raised several concerns. This stems from the sentences handed out to two foreign nationals that should, under Home Office rules, have been deported as they were sentenced to one year or more. In one case, the individual was sentenced to six years for the manslaughter of Victor, served three years, then should have been deported. However, this individual was released into the community on license only to be returned to prison on breach of that license. “A second individual involved in the murder of Victor Hamilton was given a two-year sentence, a year to be served in prison. However, due to time served, he was released on sentence by the judge and released back into the community. At no stage was the family of Victor informed of what was happening with either man by anyone within the criminal justice system. “It is clear that the Home Office, through the Foreign National Offender Returns Command, is responsible for deportation orders of foreign nationals. Yet they must be triggered by the Northern Ireland Prison Service, and it seems the system isn’t as robust as it should be and certainly isn’t transparent. These figures provided by the Justice Department should create a realisation that for every case there is a victim, and these victims need to be kept better informed.”
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Most of the policies it looked at covered personal possessions away from the home with cover limits in the thousands of pounds, rather than hundreds and all included certain gadgets such as mobile phones, laptops and tablets. Most also covered cash, although with lower limits than for other possessions.
Arsenal blew a two-goal lead to draw 2-2 with Premier League basement boys Wolves, who had just nine points from 26 games before the game.
Saka, captaining the Gunners in the absence of the injured Martin Odegaard, fired Arsenal ahead inside five minutes with a glancing header from Declan Rice’s cross.
Despite not being anywhere near their best, Arsenal doubled their lead after half-time through Piero Hincapie and looked to be cruising towards another win.
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Three points would have taken Arsenal seven clear of second-placed Manchester City but Wolves produced an unlikely comeback.
Hugo Bueno gave the relegation-doomed side hope with a superb strike on the hour mark before Tom Edozie’s injury-time strike earned Wolves just their 10th point of the season.
Saka faced up to the media after Arsenal’s desperately disappointing draw, admitting the Arsenal dressing room was ‘very flat’.
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Bukayo Saka during Arsenal’s draw at Wolves (Picture: Getty)
‘It’s very flat,’ he told Sky Sports. ‘I’m very disappointed with the result and especially how we played in the second half, it’s far from the level that we’ve set this season.
‘It’s time for us to reflect on the few performances and just fix the issues immediately so we can get back to winning games and going on a run and build momentum because we’ve lost that a bit right now.’
Asked whether he and his teammates were ‘feeling the pressure’ as Arsenal chase a first Premier League title in 22 years, Saka added: ‘No, I don’t think about all of that.
‘I just think we need to just get back to our level, just do the basics right. And we’ve got more than enough quality in this team to win games, especially the games where we’ve been dropping points recently.
‘We just need to fix that and that’s all our focus is right now.’
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Arsenal legend Martin Keown said he ‘couldn’t disagree with anything’ Saka said during his post-match interview.
‘I can’t disagree with anything that he’s saying but what he’s also saying is they’re not giving up,’ Keown said on Premier League Productions.
‘I think he will be giving more in his next performances because they have to stand up.’
Wolves stunned Arsenal with a late comeback (Picture: Getty)
But Tottenham legend Hoddle criticised Saka’s interview, saying: ‘That’s interesting, that, because he was the skipper tonight.
‘For me, he was very honest, very honest there saying they need to do better… blah blah blah. But his demeanour for me wasn’t right.
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‘Your demeanour needs to be a little bit more up, he was very flat, very flat.’
Discussing the game as a whole and Arsenal’s wobbling title charge, Hoddle added: ‘I look at Arsenal against Brentford and Wolves and I just feel they’re starting to doubt themselves.
💬 “We are frustrated because it’s down to us, and now we have to pick ourselves up.”An opportunity to respond on Sunday ✊
‘A few months ago they weren’t doing that, they were authoritative and were saying, “we’re Arsenal and we’re going to win the title”.
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‘But they’re doubting themselves and now they’re under pressure and it’s all about the mentality, they need to be strong and together to come again.
‘It’s not a crossroads for Arsenal but they need to start again, go again. They’ve got to go again but there’s a doubt in their minds now, there’s definitely a doubt and they’ve got a huge couple of games ahead for them.
‘Unless they get a result at the weekend they will be in trouble.’
Arsenal’s next assignment is a huge north London derby against Tottenham, who sacked Thomas Frank following their last game.
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Speaking after the Wolves draw, Gunners boss Mikel Arteta said: ‘Incredibly disappointed that we gave two points away. I think we need to fault ourselves and give credit to Wolves.
‘But what we done in the second half was nowhere near our standards that we have to play in order to win a game in the Premier League.
‘There are certain things, certain basics that today we are very far from our level, and when you don’t perform you can get punished, and we got punished and we have to accept the hits because that can happen when you are on top.
‘Certain basics we have to do we did them so poorly one after the other. And then you have no dominance, no control in the game.’
The six accessible supported bungalows form a new residential scheme in Ryhope, Sunderland, for people with physical and learning disabilities.
Taking its name from the church that once stood on the site, the development is now known as St Cuthbert’s Close.
The six accessible supported bungalows form a new residential scheme in Sunderland for people with physical and learning disabilities. (Image: Sunderland City Council)
The properties have been built as part of Sunderland City Council’s ongoing efforts to increase supported, accessible housing across the city.
Kevin Johnston, Cabinet Member for Housing, Regeneration and Business at Sunderland City Council, said: “I’m delighted to see work complete on these six new bungalows, delivering more accessible properties for those who need them in the city and making use of assistive technologies to enhance independence and improve quality of life.
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“This is all about enabling our residents to live as independently as possible and supporting them to live in comfortable homes that meet their needs.”
The bungalows are designed to be accessible throughout. (Image: Sunderland City Council)
The scheme is supported by £660,000 in funding from Homes England.
It forms part of a wider council-led strategy to expand specialist accommodation for vulnerable residents, including disabled individuals.
Each unit is equipped with 5G infrastructure to support future assistive technology tailored to residents’ needs.
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One of the new kitchens (Image: Sunderland City Council)
St Cuthbert’s Close includes three two-bedroom and three three-bedroom bungalows, following similar developments in Washington and Hylton Road.
Matthew Wright, Manager – Affordable Housing Delivery, at Homes England, said: “As the Government’s housing and regeneration agency, increasing the supply of quality affordable homes remains one of our key objectives and we are committed to supporting ambitious housebuilders of all sizes to build those homes and communities.
“This investment through the Affordable Homes Programme does just that, enabling Sunderland City Council to build much needed new homes the people of Sunderland can be proud of.”
The development has been built by North East based T Manners and Sons
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Derek Collinson, Contracts Manager at T Manners and Sons, said: “Delivering these bungalows has required close collaboration and a strong focus on accessibility to ensure every home meets the needs of future residents.”