The Sign of the Times singer is performing in Manchester tonight for ‘one night only’
Global superstar Harry Styles is performing in Manchester this evening on the day of his latest album launch – and he has issued a heartfelt message to his fans.
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The former One Direction star broke his performing hiatus last week at the Brit Awards, which took place at the Co-op Live, where he played Aperture – a track from his new album Kiss All The Time, Disco Occasionally.
Kiss All The Time, Disco Occasionally was released in full today (March 6), and his special Manchester gig is expected to include every song from the new album. Fans were treated to affordable £20 tickets as well as a ticket request system rather than a standard first come first serve ticket sale.
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For Harry’s ‘one night only’ Co-op Live gig, organisers have issued a rare no phones policy, meaning that nobody inside the venue is allowed to take pictures or videos for the duration of the night.
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In a message shared on the Co-op Live website, it warns: “Phones will be secured in a recyclable bag, kept on your person upon entry to the event, and will still be able to be used in a normal way including all communication functions but without the camera.”
It continues: “All other recording devices will not be permitted in the building. At the end of the night your phone will be removed from the bag and the bag will be recycled. Please note that anyone using a digital recording device during the performance will be asked to stop and if they do not, they may be asked to leave.
“We hope you will take this opportunity to enjoy the show fully and allow yourself to be fully immersed in the experience.
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“Each pair of tickets sold will receive a disposable camera on the night so you can still capture your own special moments and share them after the show.”
One fan has shared an image on X, formerly Twitter, of their disposable camera alongside a note which reads: “It’s really great to be home. Thank you for really being here with me. Dance with all your friends.”
When Keir Starmer briefed the House of Commons on the situation in Iran, the UK’s prime minister ended with a clear message: “We all remember the mistakes of Iraq, and we have learned those lessons.”
Tony Blair’s decision to bring British forces into the Iraq war in March 2003 has long loomed over the Labour party and British foreign policy. In 2011, then prime minister David Cameron was keen to stress to parliament that any action in Libya would “not [be] another Iraq”.
Two years later, the same reassurance was provided for intervention in Syria – only this time, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, led the opposition to block military action.
For the current prime minister, the lessons from the events of 2003 were to ensure the legality of any military intervention, and that a clear plan for the future was in place.
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It is unsurprising that he has picked up on the question of legalities, given his previous career. However, Starmer also specifically campaigned against action in Iraq. On the eve of the war, he wrote to The Guardian warning against military action: “Engaging in armed conflict in breach of international law is a precarious business.”
In the case of Iran, legalities remain just as sticky. There was no United Nations Security Council resolution to support US-Israeli activities, and it remains unclear how the current intervention relates to individual or collective self-defence.
When Starmer decided to instigate the use of British military assets in the region, and allow the US to use British bases for actions against missile sites, the language used in his statement was careful and specific. It focused on Iran’s “indiscriminate attacks” and “unlawful strikes”, allowing the UK to argue its position under international law as acting in self-defence.
There does not appear to be a “phase 4” – a post-combat plan for Iran. Nor is it clear what the US’s objectives are before combat operations can end.
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Donald Trump has explicitly stated that he would like to see regime change. But whether a different leadership is sufficient, or if the full roots of the Islamic Republic have to be removed, remains unknown.
Lessons from the Iraq inquiry
Iran is not Iraq. There are many key differences in their political situations, geography and people, not to mention the amount of time to plan the military operation (despite pre-deployment at the beginning of the year and assets already in the area).
There are also differences in the intelligence situations, the recent diplomatic progress that has been made over nuclear issues, and the fact that the war in Iran is not an ideological pursuit akin to the neoconservative agenda of the 2000s.
However, both wars are ones of choice, and it is clear that Starmer intends to take a different approach to Blair. He would do well to return to some of the key lessons identified by the formal inquiry into events surrounding Britain’s role in the Iraq war.
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In 2016, the results of the public inquiry – comprising 12 volumes and 2.6 million words – were published. Inquiry chair John Chilcot’s key points (as Starmer has alluded) were that “the circumstances in which it was decided there was a legal basis for UK military action were far from satisfactory” – and that “the planning and preparations for Iraq after Saddam Hussein were wholly inadequate”.
However, more issues remain relevant today. In particular, the ongoing Operation Epic Fury is a US military operation. It will not be possible for the UK to exert any significant influence in its planning. Any participation will be – as it was in Iraq – in subordination to the US.
As the Iraq inquiry report noted: “The US and UK are close allies, but the relationship between the two is unequal.” Despite the UK providing significant military assets and personnel to Iraq, it failed to exert any significant influence on US decisions.
Starmer has said he remembers the ‘mistakes of Iraq’. Tolga Akmen/EPA-EFE
Chilcot also reflected on the UK-US relationship in general. He stated that prime ministers will always exercise their political judgment in how to handle the US, depending on personal relationships and the issues under discussion. He also recognised there is no standard formula for this relationship.
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Trump has made no secret of his frustration with the prime minister, telling journalists: “This is not Winston Churchill that we are dealing with.” Nonetheless, Starmer has so far refused to be pressured into a different approach.
The prime minister would do well to remember one of Chilcot’s points: that “the UK’s relationship with the US has proved strong enough over time to bear the weight of honest disagreement. It does not require unconditional support where our interests or judgments differ.”
While this may be challenging in the short term when dealing with the Trump administration, it will remain true in the long term.
Chilcot offered one final point that rings true today: “Above all, the lesson is that all aspects of any intervention need to be calculated, debated and challenged with the utmost rigour. And when decisions have been made, they need to be implemented fully.”
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Thus far, Starmer is following this advice, and should continue to do so.
A transmission issue means his Audi car has sparked out. And given he didn’t quite make it into the pits, he’s been wheeled away from the pits and theere’l be just nine cars in the Q3 shootout!
Kieran Jackson7 March 2026 05:56
Bortoleto stops in pit-entry
Gosh, almost a huge crash after Q2!
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Lindblad speeds into the pit-entry, avoids teammate Lawson but Bortoleto stops in the pit-lane, having qualified P10!
From May 10, the West Auckland Farmers & Indie Market will take place at The Manor House Hotel and Spa, running from 10am until 2pm on the second Sunday of every month.
The free, dog-friendly event will be organised by Naomi Katze of Gather North Events, who also runs the well-established Farmers and Indie Market at Middleton-in-Teesdale’s Middleton Mart.
That market, which launched in May 2024, regularly attracts about 80 traders and has built a loyal following of shoppers from across the region.
The Manor House Hotel in West Auckland (Image: file)
Now, Naomi is expanding the Gather North brand with a second monthly market – this time in West Auckland – promising the same carefully curated mix of high-quality food, drink, arts and crafts.
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About 50 local independent businesses are expected to take part in each West Auckland event, with stalls both inside and outside the hotel grounds.
Visitors can expect everything from artisan bread, rare breed meats and fresh fish to local cheeses, seasonal fruit and vegetables, chutneys, jams and handmade pies and pastries.
There will also be sweet treats, including cakes, patisserie, chocolate and fudge, alongside vegan and gluten-free options.
Drinks producers are set to feature too, with local ales, spirits, cider and apple juice among the offerings.
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Alongside the traditional farmers’ market produce, the ‘Indie’ collection will showcase artists, illustrators and designers, as well as handmade jewellery, ceramics, candles, textiles, woodwork and eclectic collectables.
The coffee van At Middleton-in-Teesdale Market (Image: naomi katze)
Street food and specialist barista coffee will be available, serving breakfast, brunch and lunch, while visitors are also encouraged to make use of The Manor House Hotel’s on-site café and restaurant.
Free entry and free parking will be available for all dates.
Announcing the expansion on social media, Naomi said she was “absolutely delighted” to be bringing the Gather North Farmers & Indie Market to a new location.
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“You’ll see many of your familiar favourites, some fantastic new traders, and we’re so excited to welcome a whole new community through the doors too,” she said.
“Our same format. Our same high standards. The same, very special Gather North Events vibe, just a new location.”
The West Auckland Farmers & Indie Market will take place on:
May 10
June 14
July 12
August 9
September 13
October 11
November 8
December 6 (first Sunday of the month)
The Manor House Hotel and Spa is located in West Auckland, DL14 9HW.
For more than three decades, Iran tried and failed to silence Women Without Men (Zanan bedun-e Mardan in Persian). Shahrnush Parsipur’s novella exposed the brutality of Iranian patriarchy with rare clarity. It did so long before global audiences recognised that violence.
Published in 1989, the book was banned almost immediately and Parsipur was imprisoned twice for writing openly about women’s sexuality and autonomy – an act of artistic courage the Islamic Republic deemed intolerable.
Women Without Men follows five women who flee violent marriages, stifling social expectations, and political chaos. Together, they build a sanctuary in a garden outside Iran’s capital, Tehran.
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The book is now available in translation by Faridoun Farrokh in the UK for the first time. It still reads as a fierce, mystical act of feminist refusal, echoing the Woman, Life, Freedom movement – a Kurdish slogan that became a rallying cry for women’s rights when it was adopted during the 2022 Iranian protests. The book also lays bare, yet again, how violently regimes react when women claim the right to live unbounded.
When history tried to silence women but failed
Set against the turmoil of 1953, the novella unfolds in a charged political landscape. That year, a US- and UK-backed coup toppled Iran’s democratically elected prime minister, Mohammad Mosaddegh, and reinstalled the shah, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, to protect western oil interests. That event reshaped Iran’s future and remains one of its most consequential political ruptures.
Penguin International Writers.
In the years leading up to the coup, Iranian women had been inching towards greater legal and social equality. But the political chaos and regime change set the stage for decades of instability. The tensions paved the way for the revolution 25 years later, and the Islamic Republic’s tightening grip on women’s lives. While these seismic events stay outside the novella’s frame, their presence is palpable in the background.
It is in the shadow of the 1953 coup that Parsipur exposes the intimate humiliations that patriarchy inscribes onto women’s bodies. Virginity becomes a weaponised measure of worth. Menopause is recast as an insult. Sexuality is monitored, contained and punished. Women’s desires are treated as destabilising forces that must be disciplined. Each character carries a different wound from this system.
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Munis resists a brother who would rather kill her than allow her freedom. Faizeh absorbs the misogyny that confines her, and turns it inward. Zarrinkolah escapes a life in which her body is endlessly bought, sold and consumed. Mahdokht, pushed beyond the limits of social expectation, seeks literal rebirth as a tree. Farrokhlaqa endures an affluent marriage that strips her of dignity.
The women’s retreat to the garden outside Tehran is not an escape, but a feminist rupture that marks a refusal to live within a world that insists on defining them. It is a choice to build, however precariously, a space where those rules collapse.
Through mysticism and magical realism, the women’s transformations gain political force. Each metamorphosis becomes an act of resistance: women reclaiming autonomy, dignity and possibility in a society intent on erasing them.
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A demonstrator holds a sheet showing photos of victims at the anniversary of the death of Mahsa Jina Amini in 2023. Clemens Bilan/EPA
From 1953 to Woman, Life, Freedom
The global cry of “zan, zendegi, azadi” (Woman, Life, Freedom) carries the same insurgent energy that animates Parsipur’s Women Without Men. The slogan rose during the 2022 uprising, after the death of Mahsa Jina Amini in police custody.
The beginning of this spirit of resistance can be seen in Parsipur’s narrative, decades earlier. Her novella advanced a vision of women actively confronting and exceeding patriarchal limits decades before the slogan gained global force.
Reading the book today, it is clear how accurately Parsipur mapped the machinery of state violence, gender policing and systemic oppression – the same forces now driving women into the streets in Iran.
What anchors the novel’s contemporary relevance is its central idea: women imagining and constructing a world outside patriarchal control.
The five women of Parsipur’s story carve out a space where they are no longer defined by violence or expectation. Their garden becomes a blueprint for refusal, one that aligns directly with the ethos of Woman, Life, Freedom: not to endure patriarchy but to reject it, rewrite it, and build a life entirely beyond its reach.
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Iran is once again engulfed in turmoil. Women Without Men enters the UK at a moment when Iranian exiles, scholars and activists are issuing urgent warnings about escalating state violence. Public awareness of the daily repression faced by Iranian women is higher than ever, and global literary circles are increasingly spotlighting works that confront authoritarianism with resistance.
In this context, the novella’s English-language publication operates as a bridge between past and present. It makes visible how the structures that constrained women’s lives in the 1950s continue to shape Iran’s political realities today.
This is not simply a reissue. The UK publication marks a hard‑won return for a work that has outlasted bans, by a writer who has survived incarceration and forced displacement. Its re‑entry into global circulation arrives precisely when its analysis of gendered domination carries heightened relevance.
A mum’s worst nightmare began when she found her daughter’s bed empty except for ransom notes – sparking days of trauma before a horrifying discovery in Shropshire
Emilia Randall GAU Writer
05:00, 07 Mar 2026
In a typical Shropshire family home, a mother’s worst fear was about to unfold.
Dorothy Whittle discovered a terrifying ransom note on her daughter Lesley’s bed, marking the start of days filled with dread and distress.
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Back in 1975, Staffordshire was held in the grip of fear by a man named Donald Nielson, who later earned the chilling label of the Black Panther. Originally a builder from Bradford, Neilson went on to commit four brutal murders.
Half a century on, the community remains haunted by these horrific killings. The abduction of Lesley Whittle has left an indelible mark on the residents of Highley, Shropshire.
On January 14, Lesley’s mother found her daughter’s bed empty. Three ransom notes were left on the bed, along with a warning not to involve the police, found in her sitting room, reports the Mirror.
The Whittles were a well-known local family, and Lesley was a cherished member of the community.
Tragically, her body was later discovered in a drainage shaft. Neilson was subsequently given four life sentences for his heinous crimes.
Andy Wright, a reporter for the Shropshire Star at the time, recalled: “People were absolutely astounded. They just couldn’t comprehend what had gone on.”
Researcher Dave Waterhouse told the BBC that it’s crucial to remember this case. He said: “Many people have actually said ‘let it lie, the past, move on’.
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“Anybody born pre-1970 will have memories of what happened here in little old Kidsgrove. Tributes keep coming year in year out….it’s part of our local history and the impact it had is unquestionable.”
Waterhouse characterised Neilson as “very much a loner”. His mother passed away when he was 10.
He said: “He had very few friends. He went into the military, spent a couple of years there, which he loved. He was not successful in anything that he did except for burglaries – 400 burglaries and he never got caught.
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“But he’d have every job from a taxi driver, from a joiner, from salesmen – and failed at every one.”
He noted that numerous people speculated Lesley’s mother was the intended target, rather than her daughter. He explained: “The Whittles had got a coach company – 70 coaches, based over in Shropshire at Highley and everybody in the area knew the family.
“When the father died, Lesley became known as the heiress and people knew her as that.”
Multiple mistakes occurred before Nielson’s capture. Waterhouse continued: “The first night they had to abort – there was error after error.
“The BBC released on the 20:00 GMT news on the radio that it was going to be dropped off at the Swan Centre in Kidderminster and it never happened.
“They decided to go again the next night and it was going to be a drop at Dudley Zoo but the security guard caught Neilson on the premises and that security guard was shot.
“Then that evening the rules changed. Tape recordings were sent to the Whittle family by Neilson saying the drop’s got to be tonight at Kidsgrove.”
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Sylvia Dymond, who was attending school when Lesley died, was left devastated after police discovered the teenager’s body in the Kidsgrove woodland.
She told the BBC: “This is where as children we’d come down and play through the summer.
“We practically lived down here. It’s horrific when you think about it, because she must have been terrified.”
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The ransom handover never happened after Neilson spotted a courting couple and fled in fear.
Waterhouse explained: “He thought he’d been betrayed. Evidence suggests he came from where he was waiting and he aborted.
“But before he aborted he came back to Lesley and threw her off the shaft.”
Neilson was ultimately apprehended after being spotted behaving suspiciously outside a post office near Mansfield, Nottinghamshire.
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Imprisoned in July 1976 for her murder alongside three sub-postmasters, who were killed during armed robberies in Harrogate, North Yorkshire, Accrington, Lancashire and Langley in the West Midlands.
Throughout the police inquiry and subsequent trial, Neilson maintained his innocence. He died behind bars in 2011.
The Hoops are embroiled in an epic title battle with Hearts and Rangers and have a Scottish Cup quarter-final against Rangers at Ibrox on Sunday
Martin O’Neill reckons the genuine silverware threats Celtic are encountering this campaign ought to serve as a “wake-up call” for the Parkhead outfit.
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The Bhoys have secured 13 of the past 14 William Hill Premiership crowns alongside countless cup triumphs during an extraordinarily prosperous era, yet this term has proved turbulent.
The Northern Irishman is undertaking his second temporary managerial stint this season, having previously led Celtic from 2000 to 2005, and now finds himself caught up in a dramatic championship race.
Celtic trail pacesetters Hearts by five points whilst holding a slender one-point advantage over Rangers ahead of Sunday’s Scottish Gas Scottish Cup quarter-final clash with the Ibrox side.
“The overall picture is I think that it should be a wake-up call for the football club,” remarked the 74-year-old, who confirmed left-back Kieran Tierney requires assessment following a foot problem picked up during the 2-1 victory over Aberdeen in midweek, whilst experienced shot-stopper Kasper Schmeichel, who received a shoulder injection after illness, will also be evaluated.
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“You could say that in recent years fans have maybe been spoiled, no real challenges in many aspects.
“Being able to coast home in the last six or seven games of a season, which is great because you’ve done that. But the challenge has not been strong.
“Here it is. Here Hearts have arrived on the spot maybe a few years before they thought they would do.
“Rangers have come strongly and spent some money getting good players in at the football club.
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“So it’s been a challenge all season and certainly been the challenge in my couple of spells in here, where you’re winning some matches and you’re still trying to peg teams back.
“But we’re in with a chance anyway, that’s the point.
“I don’t think it (Sunday’s game) would have a serious bearing (on title), but in terms of confidence building, of course, those things always matter.
“But for the league, I’m not sure. It’s down now to what, nine games left.”
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O’Neill wants Celtic to replicate the performance they produced in the closing stages of last week’s encounter with Rangers when they visit Ibrox.
The Hoops were completely overwhelmed during the opening 45 minutes of their league meeting and trailed 2-0 at half-time, leaving them with a mountain to climb.
However, the defending champions responded impressively to that setback, with strikes from Tierney and Reo Hatate securing a well-earned 2-2 draw for the away side.
The ex-Leicester, Aston Villa and Nottingham Forest manager said: “If we if we play like we did in the first half, we shouldn’t turn up then.
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“But the second half gave us great confidence, and the ability to know that we can fight back. I think it was testament to the player’s character as much as anything else.”
On fitness matters, O’Neill said: “The injury Kieran’s had to his foot is clearing up. He’s just generally sore in every aspect, so we’ll see how he is tomorrow.
“Kasper trained today for the first time since the injection, so we will see how he is tomorrow.”
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Irish politician Thomas Gould has become a bit of star in the Caribbean after a video of him speaking in the Irish parliament drew comments for the surprising similarity of his Cork accent to the Jamaican one.
His viral speech is a powerful reminder of the shared histories of Ireland and Jamaica, which date back to the mid-17th century and lasted for the next 200 years. During this period Jamaica became an important destination for Irish people.
In the 1650s, Oliver Cromwell, Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England, Scotland and Ireland, was on a mission to expand the British empire. Having completed the conquest of Ireland in 1653, he captured Jamaica from Spain in 1655.
During the later 1650s, the Cromwellians transplanted hundreds of Irish Catholics to Jamaica where they worked as indentured servants. This form of labour involved an investor who covered the cost of the indentured servant’s passage, food, clothing and shelter on the plantations in return for up to seven years of contracted labour (ten years in the case of convicts).
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On termination of the indenture, masters were legally bound to offer “freedom dues”, roughly £10 to £12, in the form of a small parcel of land and a sum of money or its commodity equivalent. Unlike enslaved people, indentured servants had some legal rights, even if it proved difficult to exercise them. However, during the period of indenture the person was, like an enslaved person, at the mercy of their master.
During the 1660s, Irish men and women relocated from elsewhere in the Caribbean to Jamaica on the promise of up to 20 acres of land on the condition that they re-indentured themselves for two or three years.
The Irish poet, Seán Ó Conaill, memorialised these transplantees in The Dirge of Ireland when he wrote in a poem “Transport, Transplant go to Jamaica”.
Relegated to marginal areas in the interior of the island, these poor Irish were vilified and perceived to be unruly, rebellious and loyal to the French because of their Catholicism. They worked as domestic servants or as labourers cultivating sugar, indigo, cotton, cocoa and other commodities. Living in a tropical climate, where hurricanes and other natural disasters occurred regularly, and where deadly diseases were rife shortened life expectancies. Only one in three children reached the age of five.
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William O Brien, the second Earl of Inchiquin was governor of Jamaica from 1690 till 1692. Wikimedia
By 1690 Irish men and women, Catholic and Protestant alike, formed a significant part of the white population, which numbered between 10,000 and 12,000 with around 40,000 enslaved people. While Catholic indentured servants laboured, Protestants from Ireland owned plantations and governed.
When Governor William O’Brien, second earl of Inchiquin, died of “the flux” (dysentery) in 1692, Coleraine-born John Bourden, who owned a plantation in the parish of St. Catherine, filled his shoes. Others included Sir George Nugent (1801 to 1804), Eyre Coote (1806 to 1808); and the earl of Belmore (1828 to 1832).
Migration from Ireland to Jamaica continued well into the 18th century. In 1731, the governor of the island complained that “native Irish papists … [were] pouring in upon us in such sholes [shoals]”. Some Irish remained on the margins, but others prospered as modest planters or as artisans, coopers, carpenters and merchants in Port Royal, Jago de la Vega (Spanish town), Irish town and Kingston.
Jane Fitzgerald, a garment trader, was listed in an inventory, as were Irish men like Michael Farrell, a millwright, John Casey, a tavern keeper, Michael Hanigan, a tailor, and Conn Connelly, a bricklayer and builder. The survival of a census dating from 1679 for St. John’s parish, Jamaica, shows that men with Irish names headed three (of 49) households: “Teag Macmarrow” with two white servants and eight enslaved Africans (including three children); Thomas Kelly with two enslaved Africans; and Gilbert Kennedy with a wife and two children, four white servants, and ten slaves (including four children).
Some left wills when they died. These paint pictures of close-knit Irish communities comprised of extended family members and reinforced by intermarriage. Many were upwardly mobile and well connected.
Elizabeth Kelly inherited her family’s grand estates and sugar mills. Wikimedia
One of the best examples of an Irish family succeeding in Jamaica is the Kelly family, whose grand estates and sugar mills were painted by Isaac Mendes Belisario in 1740. Edmund Kelly became attorney general of Jamaica in 1714. Elizabeth Kelly, his granddaughter and heir, owned plantations of 20,000 acres and 360 enslaved Africans when in 1752 she married Peter Browne of Westport.
The Brownes became Ireland’s premier absentee (run from abroad) plantation owners in the Caribbean. When slavery was finally abolished in 1830s, around 400 people from Jamaica had Irish connections, including many who owned enslaved Africans.
Today Irish surnames – Kelly, Lynch, Murphy, McCarthy, O’Brien, O’Connor, O’Reilly, and O’Hara – are common on the island. Placenames also testify to the presence of early Irish settlers: Irish town, Irish Pen, Irish Road, Sligoville, Bangor Ridge Square, Leinster Road, Leitrim Avenue, Antrim Crescent, Longford Road, Kinsale Avenue, Waterford, and Portmore. Shared speech patterns, especially accents from Munster, are also common.
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So with Jamaicans being surprised to hear aspects of their own accents in Thomas Gould’s it’s an opportunity to think about the culture’s complicated shared history and the lasting legacy of the Irish in Jamaica,
Both he and his wife, Hilary, who are mentioned in the files multiple times, have denied any wrongdoing in relation to Epstein. In particular, Clinton has ridden on Epstein’s private jet at least 26 times.
In Sunday’s episode of the recently-rebooted Mock the Week, host Dara O’Briain and the panel discuss the Clinton deposition, with comedian Ahir Shah offering a scathing takedown.
He told his fellow panellists – including Rhys James, Angela Barnes, Milton Jones, Sarah Keyworth and Glen Moore – that ‘Bill Clinton is sort of the one guy you’re like, it would be weirder if he hadn’t been [in the Epstein files].’
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As the studio erupted into laughter, he continued: ‘You find out Stephen Hawking was there and you’re like: “Sorry, what?” and then someone finds out Clinton was there and you’re like: “Oh yeah, the sex president, that makes sense.’
Mock the Week tackled the Clinton hearing about Epstein with a takedown (Picture: TLC/Mark Johnson)
Former President Bill Clinton attended a hearing over his links to Jeffrey Epstein (Picture: Department Of Justice/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock)
Clinton, who notably had an affair with then-White House intern Monica Lewinsky during his Presidency, has had his personal life dissected in the public forum for decades.
O’Briain joined in on Shah’s jab, quipping: ‘Yeh the guy who had sex in The Oval Office, how would he not have been there, Epstein would be in Clinton’s files.’
During the hearing, Clinton also came to his wife Hilary’s defence.
He said: ‘Before we start, I have to get personal. You made Hillary come in. She had nothing to do with Jeffrey Epstein. Nothing.
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‘She has no memory of even meeting him. She neither travelled with him nor visited any of his properties. Whether you subpoenaed 10 people or 10,000, including her was simply not right.’
Former President Bill Clinton attended a hearing over his links to Jeffrey Epstein (Picture: REUTERS)
Ahead of the hearing, James Comer, the chair of the House Oversight Committee, called out the people ‘of great power and great wealth from all across the world [that] have been able to get away with a lot of heinous crimes’ and who ‘haven’t been held accountable’.
The hearing came shortly after both Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and Peter Mandelson were arrested (and later released on bail) on suspicion of misconduct in a public office after their names appeared in the files.
As for the long-running comedy panel show that touches on the biggest headlines from the past week, it has not shied away from provocative discussions since its return.
This included a strange tale about Russell Howard’s ‘mum grinding up against Greg Davies for an hour’ and Ed Byrne poking fun at Posh Spice’s ‘weird’ pose.
Mock The Week continues Sundays at 9pm on TLC, or catch up for free on discovery+
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Elddis, part of the Erwin Hymer Group (EHG) and based in Consett, revealed on Tuesday (March 3) that it was carrying out a ‘strategic shift’ amid a drop in demand for caravans.
Despite manufacturing caravans for around 60 years, Elddis said that part of its plans was to cease production at the Consett site, due to “declining caravan registrations and increased demand for camper vans and motorhomes in the UK.”
Elddis, Erwin Hymer Group (Image: GOOGLE MAPS)
Consett MP Liz Twist has said she is “shocked” by the company’s update and would work with the firm to try and protect as many jobs as possible.
“I was shocked to hear the news that Elddis caravans may cease production in Consett with the possible loss of jobs,” she said.
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“Elddis is an iconic brand among caravans, widely known and respected in the UK and beyond. I very much hope that, as it goes through this consultation exercise, there will be a real opportunity to look forward and save jobs and production at the Consett site.
“I stand ready to work with the company and the EHG group at this time to that end.”
Meanwhile, earlier this week, Cllr Darren Grimes, Deputy Leader of Durham County Council, called the decision from Elddis a “real blow for the town”.
He said: “We are disappointed to learn of the decision by Erwin Hymer to cease production at its Consett site.
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“This is a real blow for the town and wider county, especially with potential job losses. We have reached out to the company to offer our support and to let them know how we can help any affected staff.
“This situation is a stark reflection of the wider economic pressures facing manufacturers across the UK, and the urgent need for stronger national support to protect jobs and industries in regions such as ours.
“Communities should not have to suffer the consequences of economic uncertainty or policy inaction.”
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The company said that any changes would be subject to consultation.
Chris Short, managing director of EHG UK, said: “The new motorhome and campervan ranges will be specified and designed by Elddis, utilising specialised production sites of our parent company EHG.
“This relocation of production gives Elddis unlimited access to the EHG high-performance production network, increasing speed to market and strengthening our product portfolio with high-quality products tailored to the needs of UK customers.”
Liz Twist MP (Image: PARLIAMENT)
Elddis said that it was “assessing its manufacturing options” and confirmed that a decision would be made by the end of April.
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Mr Short added: “We know the consultation process is deeply personal and unsettling for many; however, due to the market conditions, we need to explore strategic changes for the best future for Elddis.
“It is thanks to the work, dedication and professionalism of our employees at Consett that we have built our reputation and made the Elddis brand what it is known for today.
“This proposal is not being shared lightly, and it follows careful consideration of how we best secure the long-term future of Elddis.”
Mr Short clarified that “no employment decisions have been finalised and won’t be until the consultation is complete”, adding: “Our ultimate priority is our people, where we are committed to handling this situation with empathy, respect, and transparency.
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“Where applicable, redeployment opportunities within EHG will be available to impacted employees.”
This weekend is looking quite mixed. Scotland and Northern Ireland will have a fine day with some sunshine on Saturday. After a cold and frosty start for some, it should feel quite pleasant in the afternoon sunshine. It will turn cloudier on Sunday with the best of any sunshine in northern areas.
England and Wales will have a mainly cloudy weekend with the prospect of some patches of rain on Saturday and probably some mist and fog into Sunday morning.
The cloud is likely to break up in south-east England by Sunday afternoon with some spells of sunshine developing.
Temperatures this weekend will range between 11-14C, but in any sunshine in the south-east on Sunday temperatures could reach up to 18C.
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Next week is looking much more unsettled with spells of rain and at times it will become windy. The wettest and windiest weather will be across western areas.
It will turn colder through the week so we may even see some hill snow returning by the end of the week to Scotland, Northern Ireland, north England and perhaps Wales too.