Trent Alexander-Arnold starts for the home side tonight with Jude Bellingham on the bench. 18-year-old Thiago Pitarch is given a start in midfield. With no Thibaut Courtois available tonight, Ukrainian Andriy Lunin starts in goal.
The visitors are boosted by the return of Harry Kane, who is fit to start after an ankle knock. He forms part of a dangerous attacking quartet for Bayern alongside Luis Diaz, Serge Gnabry and Michael Olise.
The comfortable Skechers women’s sandals have been reduced from £54 to £37 as the nation prepares for warmer weather
Emily Sleight Affiliate Content Editor
10:44, 09 Apr 2026
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A comfortable pair of sandals is a must-have addition to your spring and summer wardrobe, and Amazon has currently reduced the price on a popular Skechers style. The Skechers Women’s Go Walk Flex Sandal Sublime, originally retailing at £54, has been discounted to £37.05, in the taupe textile and navy textile colourways. The level of comfort they offer has been likened to “wearing slippers” and they are available in sizes 2 to 10, with many sizes coming with a wide-fit option.
It sounds like a good deal to us, especially as the summer will be with us soon and comfortable sandals are essential for warmer weather and holidays, especially when heading to the beach or exploring a new city. Please be aware that pricing varies across different colours and sizes, and is subject to change.
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One holidaymaker was particularly delighted with her Skechers sandals, saying: “I’ve now been to Greece for a week, worn them every day, including a 10-mile hike in 35°C, absolutely magnificent, rubbed nowhere, not a blister to be seen.”
“Ridiculously comfy. So chuffed.”
The complete product description states: “Skechers Women’s GO WALK Flex sandals are lightweight, breathable, and highly cushioned walking shoes designed for maximum comfort and convenience. Key features include breathable mesh uppers, responsive ULTRA GO cushioning, Flex Pillars for stability, and many models feature Hands Free Slip-ins technology with a supportive Heel Pillow.”
Shop the Skechers Women’s Go Walk Flex Sandal Sublime
The Skechers sandals come in taupe, black, sage, navy, light blue and mauve. They range from size 2 up to 10 and most sizes are available as a wide fit.
Features of the sandals include:
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River sandal design with adjustable ankle strap
Flexible traction outsole
Lightweight, responsive ultra go cushioning
Contoured goga mat (responsive cushioning) comfort footbed
It is worth mentioning that a number of reviewers on Amazon advised potential buyers to size down to find the perfect fit.
Returning to the Skechers sandals reviews, one customer commented: “Really comfortable, perfect for long summer walks. The range of sizes meant I could find the perfect fit. Great quality too.”
A second customer wrote: “This is my second pair of these sandals, they are so comfortable to walk in and they’re very light. Straps are easy to adjust, they look good on (go well with jeans) and they give me good arch support.”
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A third enthusiast commented: “Items arrived promptly, my wife loves them. Roll on summer.”
A fourth buyer remarked: “Very comfortable. Like wearing slippers.”
However, it’s worth noting that several customers reported sizing concerns. One review highlighted this issue, stating: “Bought my usual size five but they were enormous.
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“More like a size six. Definitely need to downsize. Returned and received a refund.”
The ceasefire between the US, Israel and Iran is in a tough spot (Pictures: Getty/Reuters/AP)
The US and Iran both claimed victory after reaching a fragile ceasefire, even as more drones and missiles hit Iran and Gulf Arab countries yesterday.
The US president said he would suspend his threats to end an ‘entire civilisation’ if Iran agreed to reopen the critical Strait of Hormuz waterway, and a tentative ceasefire was then reached.
Yet, the agreement is already hitting roadblocks. Iran appears to have closed the Strait of Hormuz, after US leaders claimed it had been reopened as part of the ceasefire.
Key issues for both nations remain unresolved, including the scope of the truce, Iran’s rights to nuclear enrichment and ballistic missiles, as well as access to the Strait of Hormuz.
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Dr Katayoun Shahandeh, of SOAS, University of London, told Metro the ceasefire is more fragile than it is secure.
‘It may hold in the very short term because all sides have reasons to pause, but it is not yet a stable settlement,’ she said.
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Why did Israel attack Lebanon, and is it a breach of the ceasefire?
182 people were killed yesterday in Lebanon by Israeli strikes (Picture: AFP)
The elephant in the room is the continued Israeli strikes into Lebanon.
Israel has intensified attacks in Lebanon, killing at least 182 people in the highest single-day death toll in the Israel-Hezbollah war, according to Lebanon’s health ministry.
‘There seem to be conflicting messages over whether Lebanon is covered, which is exactly the kind of ambiguity that can unravel a deal fast. There is also a growing divergence between U.S. and Israeli objectives,’ Dr Shahandeh said.
Washington has declared the ceasefire as a ‘victory’, Dr Shahandeh said, but Israel’s current posture points towards a continued military campaign, rather than a diplomatic resolution.
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‘There is a real fear that this is not peace so much as a pause, as it is a chance for Washington and its allies to regroup and, if talks fail, strike harder. That may not be the stated intention, but it is one plausible reading of a ceasefire whose terms remain contested and whose basic points of agreement still seem very far apart,’ she said.
‘Already, it does not look as though all sides are fully adhering to it.’
What happens if the ceasefire conditions are broken?
Only two vessels have travelled through the Strait (Picture: Getty)
If the ceasefire is broken, Trump would have a few options – but would likely begin with escalation in strikes and potentially putting US troops on the ground in Iran.
‘Trump has said U.S. military ships and aircraft will remain around Iran and that if Tehran does not comply, the “shootin’ starts” again,’ Dr Shahandeh explained.
‘The most likely U.S. response would be renewed strikes, more coercive pressure over Hormuz, and an attempt to force Iran into harsher terms from a position of overwhelming military superiority. But that would deepen the bind he is already in: walking away risks looking weak, while escalating further risks a more unpopular and expensive war.’
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Dr Bamo Nouri, senior lecturer in International Relations at the University of West London, told Metro: ‘If it breaks, Trump has already signalled a return to coercive escalation – maintaining US forces in the region, increasing military pressure, and potentially authorising further strikes to restore deterrence.
Iran’s options if the ceasefire is broken are different. Despite sustaining heavy damage, the country has retained power over the Strait of Hormuz and could easily resume missile and drone attacks and pressure on global shipping.
Israeli strikes have continued to pummel Lebanon and raised questions of if Israel violated the truce (Picture: Reuters)
As for Israel, the option is to continue its air strikes in both Iran and Lebanon if it believes the ceasefire to be broken.
‘Israel, for its part, is likely to be the least patient actor, having already signalled readiness to resume high-intensity operations if it judges the ceasefire to be constraining its strategic objectives,’ Dr Nouri said.
Despite agreeing to suspend its bombing campaign in Iran, the US and Israel differ on their positions as to whether the ceasefire stretches to Lebanon, where Israel argues it is striking Iranian-backed Hezbollah groups.
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‘Israel agreed to suspend its bombing campaign on Iran, but that U.S. and Israeli positions differ sharply from Iran’s (and Pakistan who brokered the deal) over whether Lebanon is part of the ceasefire framework.
‘That means Israel could become the most immediate trigger for collapse if it continues treating other theatres as separate while Iran treats them as linked,’ Dr Shahandeh said.
What happens next?
The most likely U.S. response to breaking the ceasefire would be renewed strikes (Picture: Getty)
It’s hard to say. Iran, Israel and the United States are not operating from a shared understanding of what’s been agreed in the ceasefire agreement.
Dr Nouri explained: ‘The US frames it around limiting Iran’s nuclear activity and securing maritime stability in the Strait of Hormuz, while Iran insists on its enrichment rights and links the deal to broader regional conditions, including Israeli operations in Lebanon.’
In order for the ceasefire to hold, the three countries must quickly clarify terms to stop any misunderstandings.
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‘Without a quickly accepted framework, this ceasefire becomes a short-lived bargaining interval rather than a stable resolution, with all sides already preparing for renewed escalation,’ Dr Nouri said.
Dr Shahandeh believes three things need to happen for the ceasefire to hold.
‘The parties need clear written terms, not just public declarations: what is covered geographically, what counts as a violation, and who verifies compliance,’ she said.
‘Second, there has to be a practical de-escalation mechanism around Hormuz, because Reuters reports there is still little sign that the Strait is operating normally, and Iran is still asserting control there.
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‘Third, the ceasefire must become a political process, not just a pause in bombing. The ceasefire can hold, but only as a bridge to a more detailed agreement. If it remains vague, it is unlikely to last.’
Thousands of people in north-east Glasgow are expected to hear loud sirens on Thursday morning as part of a routine test carried out by a nearby gas works site
10:17, 09 Apr 2026Updated 10:24, 09 Apr 2026
Thousands of Scots have been warned that they may hear sirens blaring today.
Residents living in north-east Glasgow are likely to hear the loud alarms as part of a routine test at a nearby gas works site. The alarm will sound at 10am on Thursday morning and is expected to last for an hour.
SGN, a gas network company, said it will carry out the test at its liquefied natural gas (LNG) site on Blochairn Road in Provan. During the test, “warning” and “all-clear” sirens will be activated several times, the firm said.
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SGN spokesperson Dan Brown said: “We carry out these tests every six months because the safety of the Provan community is really important to us.
“While the test scheduled at 10am on Thursday 9 April is routine and nothing to be concerned about, it’s important nearby residents and businesses are familiar with the sound of the siren and know what they need to do in case a real incident ever takes place.”
The firm carries out the exercise every six months and notifies residents and businesses in advance. The test is required under the Control of Major Accident Hazards (COMAH) Regulations 2015.
Clarkson’s Farm is on the cusp of returning for a brand new season – but its producer has opened up about the show’s legacy, addressing the reason why it will one day end.
Looking ahead, producer Andy Wilman, Clarkson’s long-time collaborator, has confirmed that the Prime Video series has a finite life and will only continue as long as Clarkson wants it to.
The show’s deal with the streaming platform is done on a “rolling basis”, meaning the team is only contractually obliged to complete the season they’re currently filming, which will ensure the show goes out on a high.
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“You can’t have that thing where you have done one series too many and people say, ‘That’s bollocks now, it’s a busted flush,’ Wilman told Extraordinary Life Stories podcast. So you have to discipline yourself to say, ‘We end this now while we still have an audience.’”
Wilman said that “every series we have is a bonus”, adding: “If Jeremy can’t think of anything to do or say, then that would be the end of it – it hasn’t happened yet, but that’s the agreement he has with Amazon.”
The fate of ‘Clarkson’s Farm’ is in Jeremy Clarkson’s hands (Prime Video)
He continued: “This is our third big show – Top Gear kind of got ended for us, I can’t say that was a plan.
“The Grand Tour, we brought that to an end, we planned that – we thought we have to land the plane while we’re still in the air and dignified and we’ve still got an audience.”
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However, The Grand Tour will return with new hosts, YouTubers Thomas Holland and James Engelsman, best known for their motoring content, as well as social media star and train enthusiast Francis Bourgeois.
Willman said of all the shows he’s worked on with Clarkson, it’s Clarkson’s Farm that’s “the most joyous thing to edit”.
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However, the new season will feature its most heartbreaking scenes yet, with episodes expected to focus on the outbreak of bovine tuberculosis, which struck the Cotswolds farm in October 2025.
Jeremy Clarkson hosted The Grand Tour’ with James May and Richard Hammond (Getty)
This outbreak of bTB was a huge setback in 2025 and saw Clarkson’s Diddly Squat farm face a year of climate-driven disasters. The presenter called it the “worst year ever”, citing a “shocking” harvest due to heatwaves and drought in the UK.
Clarkson bought the now-famous land in 2008 and, after the villager who ran the farm retired in 2019, he decided to see if he could run it himself – a venture tracked in Clarkson’s Farm.
It has become one of Prime Video’s most-streamed TV shows and in July 2024, Clarkson extended his business empire by taking over rural country pub The Windmill in Asthall – a “village boozer” on five acres of countryside near Burford.
The US and Iran have agreed a two-week ceasefire in a deal brokered by Pakistan, which will see Iran open the Strait of Hormuz to shipping while negotiations continue for a more permanent settlement.
The US president, Donald Trump, announced the agreement on his TruthSocial platform less than two hours before the deadline of 8pm EST on April 7. Hours earlier he had posted: “A whole civilisation will die tonight, never to be brought back again. I don’t want that to happen, but it probably will.”
Talks are due to begin in Islamabad on April 10, where the two sides will discuss a ten-point plan presented by Iran on April 6. The plan offers to open the Strait of Hormuz in return for a permanent end to attacks by the US and Israel. Other conditions include lifting all primary and secondary sanctions, US withdrawal from the Middle East and Iranian control of the Strait of Hormuz, with plans for a US$2 million fee for ships transiting the strait in future to be shared between Iran and Oman. Fees collected by Iran would be used for reconstruction.
The office of Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, has said that it supports the ceasefire but that the deal does not include Lebanon. But both Iran and Pakistan have said that Lebanon is part of the deal. This point of contention is likely to affect negotiations from the start.
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An important issue to consider as all parties to the conflict continue to react to each other’s attempts at diplomacy is the level of trust involved. On March 31, Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, told Al Jezeera that Iran had “zero trust” in the US. He added that: “Twice – last year and now this year – we negotiated and the result was an attack by them. And so we don’t have any faith that negotiations with the US will yield any results.”
Iran has ‘zero trust’ in the US: foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi.
With Mark Saunders at the University of Birmingham and Chiara Cervasio at the British American Security Information Council (BASIC), I’ve been looking into the relationship between trust and distrust in international relations. The first thing to note is the importance of distinguishing between the absence of trust and the presence of distrust. In a situation where the parties involved neither trust nor distrust each other, they remain open to the possibility that negotiations could reach a state where trust develops. Where there is distrust, by contrast, at least one of the parties is sure that the other has hostile intentions.
Araghchi’s language of “zero trust”, then, is best understood as an expression of active distrust. This reflects a clear belief on the part of Iranian decision-makers that diplomatic engagement with Washington will be exploited and not reciprocated.
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From Tehran’s perspective, the US has repeatedly acted in bad faith. It carried out its Operation Midnight Hammer on Iran’s nuclear facilities while engaged in active negotiations over Iran’s nuclear programme. Again, on February 28, when the US commenced Operation Epic Fury in concert with Israel, mediators had reported that negotiations were proceeding well and reliable sources suggested that a deal was in the making.
Vital role of trust
In his interview with Al Jazeera, Araghchi mentioned that the US and Iran had been able to reach a deal “one time, years ago”. This was the Joint Comprehensive Programme of Action (JCPOA) negotiated with Iran in 2015 by the Obama administration with the UK, France, China, Russia and Germany as co-signatories. The agreement significantly rolled back Iran’s enrichment programme and set up a regime of inspections which – until the Trump administration pulled the US out of the agreement in 2018 – Iran was reportedly complying with.
The JCPOA agreement only became possible because of trust at the highest levels of US-Iran diplomacy. But this has clearly now hardened into active distrust on Iran’s part.
US secretary of state, John Kerry, and Iranian foreign minister, Javad Zarif during negotiations for the 2015 nuclear deal. Abbas Araghchi, now Iran’s foreign minister, is at the far right of the group. 506 collection/Alamy Live News
Trust requires a willingness to be vulnerable based on positive expectations about the intentions of others. So when states enter into negotiations they have to believe in the other side’s good faith and a commitment to using diplomacy to find a deal that will satisfy the interests of all sides. This requires a “presumption of trust”: a willingness to treat the other side as potentially trustworthy.
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There’s an interesting historical parallel in the Cuban missile crisis of 1962. The episode, which brought the world to the brink of a nuclear confrontation, occurred during a period where the US and the Soviet Union deeply distrusted each other. But both the US president, John F. Kennedy, and the Soviet leader, Nikita Khrushchev, came to recognise their shared vulnerability in the face of the destructive power of each side’s nuclear arsenal. This recognition enabled them to develop a bond that allowed a path to de-escalation. But in this instance both leaders believed that the other understood the stakes and the importance of trustworthiness in reducing tensions.
Araghchi’s recent statement suggests that Iran has no such presumption of trust in the US. By communicating that Iran believes negotiations will be exploited by Washington rather than reciprocated, Araghchi is indicating that the basic condition for diplomacy, and with it the promise of trust, no longer exists.
If Trump is serious about negotiations, he will have to convince Iranian leaders that US diplomacy is not a cover for further military action. The lesson is not that trust is necessary for diplomacy to begin but that it cannot operate when one or both sides think they are going to be betrayed.
We’ll be bringing you the very latest updates, pictures and video on this breaking news story.
Two men and two women have died after attempting to cross the English Channel in a small boat, the prefect of Pas-de-Calais Francois-Xavier Lauch said.
Lambiase, currently Red Bull’s head of race engineering, will become the third senior Red Bull figure to join McLaren in recent years.
Rob Marshall joined as chief designer at the start of 2024, and former Red Bull head of race strategy Will Courtenay became McLaren’s sporting director in January this year.
Red Bull have also lost chief technical officer Adrian Newey and sporting director Jonathan Wheatley since the start of 2024. They both left before former team principal Christian Horner was fired in July 2025.
Lambiase will join a McLaren race-operations support structure that already includes Courtenay and his boss, racing director Randy Singh.
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The plan is for Lambiase’s new position to allow Stella more freedom to focus on the leadership aspects of his role.
Stella is already doing two jobs – alongside being team principal, he is effectively also technical director.
The team’s engineering structure sees the three technical directors Peter Prodromou, Mark Temple and Neil Houldey – who are responsible in turn for aerodynamics, performance and engineering – as well as Marshall report into Stella when it comes to car design.
Lambiase will fit in by taking strain off Stella on the racing and trackside part of the business.
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Reports that the recruitment of Lambiase is a precursor to Stella leaving to join Ferrari are said by McLaren insiders to be incorrect.
Lambiase is known for his close relationship to four-time world champion Verstappen, with whom he has worked since the Dutchman joined Red Bull for the 2016 Spanish Grand Prix.
Four people have died after a small boat carrying migrants attempting to cross the Channel capsized off the coast of France, French local authorities have said.
Officials in Calais said in a statement: “A taxi-boat sinking occurred today.
“The situation is still being assessed and remains subject to change.”
Traffickers have increasingly used motorised dinghies, known as ‘taxi-boats’, along the northern French and Belgian coastlines to pick up migrants over the past year.
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Rescue vehicles and medical units gather on the beach to treat victims after an attempt to cross the English Channel illegally turned tragic with several migrants found in cardiac arrest, in France’s Pas-de-Calais northern coastal city of Equihen-Plage (AFP/Getty)
About 2,200 migrants crossed the Channel, one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes, to Britain in the first two months of 2026.
Around 41,500 people made the crossing in 2025, according to the University of Oxford’s Migration Observatory.
A nine-year-old boy from Cardiff is stuck in Romania after UK border control denied him boarding at Milan airport despite being born in Wales
09:27, 09 Apr 2026Updated 09:28, 09 Apr 2026
A nine-year-old boy from Cardiff is stuck abroad after his distraught family were told he was not able to return home to the UK after a routine family trip.
David Toropu and his mum are now stranded in Romania waiting to find out when they might be able to return home following a recent UK government rule change.
David, his mum Christina, and her husband and stepson had been on a rugby tour to Venice in the first week of the Easter holidays. After a four-night stay the family then arrived to check in at Milan airport on Thursday (April 2) for their return flight to London Gatwick.
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They expected to travel smoothly through all the airport checks, as they had done on the way out, but were met with an unexpected problem – they were told David could not board a flight to the UK as the UK border control held no record of his UK residency.
Despite being born in Cardiff and spending his entire life in Wales, David holds a Romanian passport, with his parents having relocated to the UK a year before his birth. His mum explained that both she and David’s father are Romanian nationals – his father holds settled status while his mother has pre-settled status.
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Christina said: “I wasn’t aware that I needed to apply for his own status because since he was born in 2016 after seven years of continuous residency he was supposed to get automatic British citizenship.
“Because I thought that was given automatically to him he wouldn’t need to have his own settled or pre-settled status since he would have dual citizenship. However, the rules have changed since Brexit and I wasn’t aware of that.”, reports Wales Online.
With her son unable to return home, Christina had to stay in Italy with him while her stepson and husband returned to the UK to allow him to go to school and her husband to return to work. The mum and son spent two further nights in Italy before travelling to Romania, where they are staying with family until David is able to travel home.
Christina said: “The UK border said they didn’t hold any record of David ever being in the UK but he goes to school, he’s enrolled in many public things like football, his GP is in the UK, his whole life is over there. He’s only left the UK once when he was two years old for two weeks.
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“Since he was denied I’ve had multiple panic attacks, I’m losing my head and I can’t stop crying. He’s used to his routines, his comfort in his house and everything that is his normal life. He heard the whole conversation of him being refused at the border and he was asking what was going to happen to him. In his mind he was thinking they were going to take me back to the UK and leave him in Italy.”
At the airport, Christina tried to rectify the situation by applying for an electronic travel authorisation (ETA) but because the visa is intended for travel to the UK rather than residency and his registered address is in the UK, immigration officials insisted he was unable to return.
Christina is now worried that resolving the situation could result in David missing substantial amounts of school and her missing vital health appointments in the UK. She is also concerned about the substantial costs she has faced as a result of the mix-up, having spent around £2,000 on hotel rooms, flights and applications in less than a week.
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She said: “We have made a really big dent into our savings and the rugby team my stepson plays for has created a gofundme to try and help us with the costs. In the Italian hotel we had the cheapest and smallest room and it cost £157 a night by itself.”
David’s constituency MP, Alex Davies-Jones, told Wales Online: “I’m really concerned to hear about David’s situation, and I’ve been in contact with his family to offer support. This is clearly a very distressing experience for both David and his mum.
“My office is doing everything we can to assist the family in resolving this as quickly as possible, and I will continue to support them in any way I can to help bring David home safely.”
In February, the UK government rolled out a new travel system changing the rules for many visitors and dual nationals entering the UK. The system means dual nationals are required to either show a British passport or a new digital version of the certificate of entitlement to the right of abode or they risk being denied entry.
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Dual nationals used to be able to travel to the UK without such a certificate using their non-British passport. Certificates of entitlement are not automatically issued meaning some people have spent decades living in the UK and have never needed to apply for them before.
The government is therefore urging dual nationals to apply for either a British passport, which costs around £100 for an adult, or a certificate of entitlement, which carries a fee of £589.
A spokesperson from the Home Office said the necessary documentation has now been granted.
Una Crown was found dead in her bungalow after a ‘ferocious’ knife attack, but her death was not initially treated as a murder
A popular Channel 4 show is set to feature a Cambridgeshire cold case involving a ‘ferocious’ knife attack on an elderly woman. Two episodes of 24 Hours in Police Custody follow Detective Superintendent Iain Moor and his colleagues at the Major Crime Unit after they re-opened the case of the 2013 murder of Una Crown.
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The body of the retired postmistress was discovered by family members and a neighbour in her bungalow in Magazine Lane, Wisbech. Una, 86, had died from stab wounds to her neck and chest.
Her clothing had been set alight by the killer to hide her injuries and destroy the evidence. The two-parter called “The Last Roll of The Dice” follows the detectives as they try to piece together more than a decade’s worth of evidence and uncover new information to catch her killer.
They show how new forensic techniques revealed male DNA under Una’s fingernails, protected under her body, and in her clenched fist when she fell to the floor. The DNA matched a man, David Newton, who was now in his 70s and still lived close to her bungalow.
Detectives had to rule out other male relatives in Newton’s paternal line by travelling over the country and piecing together the DNA breakthrough with new evidence to form a strong prosecution case. Newton was sentenced to life in prison with a minimum of 21 years in February last year.
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Judge Justice Neil Garnham said Newton had launched “a ferocious and sustained knife attack on a defenceless old lady in her own home”. The two episodes of 24 Hours in Police Custody: “The Last Roll of The Dice” will be shown on Channel 4 on Monday and Tuesday (April 13 and 14).
Det Supt Moor said: “For more than a decade David Newton thought he had gotten away with this most horrendous crime. He was hiding in plain sight, but jurors saw through his lies and as this programme highlights, you cannot hide forever.
“Also demonstrated in the two episodes is the police commitment to continually reviewing unsolved cases and seeking new lines of enquiry. No unsolved murder case is ever closed.
“When I joined the Major Crime Unit, the first thing my wife said to me was, ‘you’ve got to solve this murder’. I’m immensely proud of bringing Newton to justice after more than a decade, and finally getting justice and closure for Una’s family. Una, by the actions she took on that night, solved her own case as she fought her attacker.”
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