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Iran’s threat to bomb holiday hotspots as list of places within range revealed

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Daily Mirror

A new map shows areas believed to be within range of Iranian missile strikes after Tehran’s threat to target ‘parks, recreational areas and tourist destinations’

Iran threatened to target tourist sites across the world – and a map shows which locations may be within reach.

Iran’s top military spokesperson, General Abolfazl Shekarchi, warned on Friday that “parks, recreational areas and tourist destinations” worldwide will not be safe for the country’s enemies after the US and Israel launched their war against Tehran.

That same day, two Iranian missiles tried to target the joint US-UK military base in Diego Garcia, which lies in the Indian Ocean about 2,500 miles away from Iran. Defence Secretary John Healey said one failed and one was shot down.

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It is not clear what kind of missiles were used but Sidharth Kaushal, from the London-based think tank the Royal United Services Institute, told the BBC it could have been a version of Iran’s Khorramshah missile, which is based on a single-stage North Korean model and has a range of more than 1,200 miles.

Iranian missiles are generally assessed to have a range of about 1,240 to 1,860 miles, with Israeli estimates suggesting they could reach up to 2,485 miles, according to the BBC. A map shows the countries which are within a 1,200-mile range of Iran, the Express reports.

Countries within 1,200-mile range of Iran:

  • United Arab Emirates (UAE)
  • Cyprus
  • Egypt
  • Turkey
  • Israel
  • Lebanon
  • Syria
  • Iraq
  • Turkmenistan
  • Saudi Arabia
  • Yemen
  • Oman
  • Afghanistan
  • Tajikistan
  • Uzbekistan
  • Kyrgyzstan
  • Georgia
  • Pakistan
  • Russia
  • Kazakhstan
  • Jordan
  • Kuwait
  • Bahrain
  • Qatar
  • Ukraine

More than 1,500 people in Iran have been killed in US-Israeli strikes since February 28. In Lebanon, more than 1,000 people have been killed in Israeli strikes, and more than one million people have been displaced, according to the Lebanese government. UN peacekeepers in southern Lebanon report “intense gunfire and explosions” as Israeli ground forces fight Hezbollah militants.

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Fifteen people have been killed in Israel, and 13 US service members have been killed in combat, along with a number of civilians on land and at sea in the Gulf region.

It comes after US President Donald Trump claimed in a Truth Social post on Monday that his country and Iran held “productive conversations” about a “complete and total resolution” to the war in the Middle East. Several outlets reported that Trump’s special envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner have been negotiating with Iran’s parliament speaker, Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf.

However, Ghalibaf branded reports of talks between the US and Iran as “fake news”. “No negotiations have been held with the US, and fakenews is used to manipulate the financial and oil markets and escape the quagmire in which the US and Israel are trapped,” he said.

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Leonid Radvinsky, owner of OnlyFans adult platform, dies at the age of 43 | UK News

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Leonid Radvinsky

Leonid Radvinsky, a Ukrainian-American entrepreneur who was the owner of the adult content platform OnlyFans, has died.

In a statement, the company confirmed his death from cancer at the age of 43.

A spokesman for OnlyFans said: “We are deeply saddened to announce the death of Leo Radvinsky.

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“Leo passed away peacefully after a long battle with cancer.

“His family have requested privacy at this difficult time.”

Mr Radvinsky acquired Fenix International ⁠Limited, the parent company of OnlyFans, in 2018 and served ‌as its director and majority shareholder.

He also ran Leo, a venture capital ‌fund he founded in 2009 that focuses primarily on investments in technology companies.

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OnlyFans, founded in 2016 by British entrepreneur Tim Stokely, ⁠surged in popularity during the ​COVID pandemic as lockdowns drove creators ​and consumers online.

It turned the subscription-based ​platform into a mainstream source of ⁠income and entertainment globally.

In January, the Reuters news agency reported that OnlyFans was exploring the sale of ⁠a majority stake to ​investment firm Architect Capital in a deal ​valuing the company at about $5.5bn (£4.1bn), including debt.

Read more from Sky News:
Iran war: Further fuel price hikes ahead
Scotland’s busiest train station to fully reopen

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The strong financial performance by the platform led to significant cash windfalls for Mr Radvinsky.

Last August, it was revealed Mr Radvinsky was paid £522m in dividends in 2024.

The streaming site had also seen its user numbers jump by almost a quarter.

OnlyFans reported that the total number of creator accounts producing content for the site grew by 13% to 4.6 million as more people used it as an opportunity to make a living.

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Huw Edwards fall from voice of a nation to downfall and disgrace

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Wales Online

He was one of the country’s best-loved broadcasters, but is now a convicted criminal

Huw Edwards was the face of the nation and the man the BBC entrusted to broadcast almost all the major news events to hit the United Kingdom.. He announced election results, covered royal deaths, and he famously never missed an opportunity to promote Wales and the Welsh language.

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However, his fall from being the BBC’s highest-paid journalist and a British National Treasure, was mighty. Born in Bridgend, the now 64-year-old TV presenter saw his life very publicly unravel when allegations about his conduct emerged in the national press, and ended up in him appearing in court in July, 2024.

He admitted having 41 indecent images of children, which were sent to him by another man on WhatsApp. They included seven category A images, the most serious classification. As the charges were read to him in Westminster Magistrates’ Court, he replied “guilty” three times.

Police said officers started looking into Edwards after seizing a phone as part of an unrelated investigation, which revealed his participation in a WhatsApp conversation with convicted paedophile, Alex Williams.

Williams, now 27, from Merthyr Tydfil was sentenced to a suspended 12-month jail sentence in March 2024 after he shared indecent images of children with Edwards.

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At the time, Westminster Magistrates’ Court was told that, on February 2, 2021, Williams asked whether what he was sending was too young, to which Edwards asked him not to send any underage images. A final indecent image was sent in August 2021 – a category A film featuring a young boy. The man told Edwards the boy was quite young looking, and that he had more images which were illegal, the court was told.

Edwards told him not to send any illegal images. No more were sent, and the pair continued to exchange legal pornographic images until April 2022.

Aside from the criminal conviction, his private life has been laid bare, he has lost the career he had built up over decades, and he has already lost and is likely to further lose, a number of honours he had been awarded.

This is the story of the downfall of Huw Edwards. For the latest TV and showbiz gossip sign up to our newsletter

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Huw grew up in Llangennech, near Llanelli, with his sister. His father, Hywel Teifi Edwards, was a Plaid Cymru and Welsh-language activist, author, and academic who taught at University College in Swansea. His mother, Aerona Protheroe, was a teacher at Llanelli’s Ysgol Gyfun y Strade for 30 years.

He graduated with a first-class honours degree in French from Cardiff University in 1983, and then studied a postgraduate course, also in Cardiff, before becoming a reporter for local radio station Swansea Sound and then joining the BBC as a trainee in 1984.

His career saw him become a staple in Westminster as a political correspondent and he progressed to becoming the BBC’s highest-paid newsreader.

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He presented a range of programmes on television and radio including documentaries on classical music, religion, and the Welsh language, on a range of channels, including S4C and in both English and Welsh.

At his peak Edwards earned between £550,000 to £599,999 as a BBC presenter but when gender pay differences came to light he voluntarily took a paycut.

Huw, a dad to five children, married TV producer Vicky Flind in 1993. It was her who took the decision to name Edwards as the man at the centre of allegations which first came to light in July 2023. At that stage The Sun ran a story that an unnamed but well-known BBC presenter had paid a teenager more than £35,000 since they were 17 in return for images. The story was based on allegations by the mother and stepfather of the teenager.

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Days of speculation followed about who the presenter was including false allegations about who it was on social media.

Five days after the story broke Edwards’ wife named him as the subject of the allegations “primarily out of concern for his mental wellbeing and to protect our children”.

She said he was in the midst of a serious episode of depression and was receiving in-patient care. Huw had spoken openly about his depression since 2002.

Shortly before Edwards was named the Metropolitan Police investigated and said it had found no evidence of crime and said it would not investigate further.

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It later emerged that two months before that story a family member of a young person attended a BBC building seeking to make a complaint about the presenter and a day later contacted BBC Audience Services who referred a complaint to the corporation’s investigations team.

The BBC Director General at the time, Tim Davie, and executive directors were only made aware of the case once it had made the national press. Three days after the news report Edwards was suspended.

A report from an inquiry carried out by the BBC was given to Edwards in November 2023. That has never been made public and there are growing calls for that to now happen. Five months later, in April 2024, he resigned from the corporation on “medical advice”.

In February 2024, the BBC apologised to the parents of the young person who made a complaint about Edwards and admitted the broadcaster should have acted more quickly. Auditors Deloitte had detailed how the family’s complaint had not been brought to senior managers’ attention and there was “insufficient” documentation of attempts to contact the family.

The BBC launched a review into its complaints procedure after the scandal in July 2023. It led Mr Davie to admit it had been “clearly damaging” and while there could be “learning” he stood by his corporate investigation team.

It has now emerged that in November 2023, the Met told the BBC corporation Edwards had been arrested and was being investigated for serious offences but the detail about how many images there were, the ages of those in the pictures, and how he received them was not disclosed by police.

The criminal matter became public knowledge on July 29, 2024 when the Met Police said it had charged Edwards. It has further emerged the Met gave the BBC corporation, not the news team, a 30-minute warning that it would confirm in an answer to a journalist that Edwards had indeed been charged. His former colleagues, including many friends, at the BBC did not receive any advance warning about the charge.

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Two days later Edwards arrived at Westminster Magistrates’ Court with a crowd of journalists and photographers surrounding him as he made his way inside. Once he was asked how he intended to plead he confirmed he was guilty of making indecent images of children.

He admitted to having 41 indecent images of children that had been sent to him at his request by another man on WhatsApp. They included seven category A images, the most serious, showing abuse including penetrative sexual activity, two of which showed a child aged between about seven and nine.

The police confirmed on the day Edwards appeared in court the indecent image charges were not connected to the original complaint raised with the BBC but a separate investigation.

After his court appearance the BBC issued a statement about what it was told in November 2023. A statement read: “At the time no charges had been brought against Mr Edwards and the BBC had also been made aware of significant risk to his health.”

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It added that the BBC would have sacked him if he had been charged, saying: “If at any point during the period Mr Edwards was employed by the BBC he had been charged the BBC had determined it would act immediately to dismiss him. In the end at the point of charge he was no longer an employee of the BBC.”

As Edwards left court, knowing he has around six weeks until he finds out his sentence, the aftershocks continued. His former colleague and co-presenter Sophie Raworth, during a live news segment, confirmed she and her colleagues were only made aware of his arrest when police issued a statement.

Speaking on BBC News at Six a the time, she told viewers: “We here at BBC News are editorially independent when reporting on the corporation and we only learnt about his arrest and the charges when the rest of the media did on Monday.”

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BBC staff received a message signed by senior management saying they were “appalled” and there is “no place for such behaviour”.

The note continued: “Some of you may feel shocked and saddened by this news and some of you will have worked closely with Huw Edwards over the years. Many of you will be working on this story and we want to thank you for your professionalism in carrying on with your jobs in difficult circumstances.”

The organisations which Edwards had worked closely with began distancing themselves. Cardiff University, where Edwards is honorary professor of journalism, said it was “actively reviewing” his fellowship. He later resigned from his honaroary posts. The National Churches Trust axed him as vice president. He was later expelled from the Gorsedd of the Bards.

After such a long and distinguished career it is no surprise he had many friends in the world of journalism. Adam Boulton, the former Sky News political editor, described Edwards, and his wife Ms Flind, as friends. He told Newsnight he agreed with all those who said they were shocked. He said he not had any contact with Edwards since the story broke in July last year but said for Edwards personally, and also his family, it was “disastrous”.

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Huw and his wife, Vicky Flind, have since separated following the revelations and she filed for divorce in October 2024. Their family home in Dulwich, London was promptly put up for sale in 2024, but it doesn’t seem to have sold and has dropped in price by nearly £1m.

The entire scandal put the BBC under increased pressure. Within hours of Edwards’ pleas the then Director General Mr Davie was summoned to a meeting with the culture secretary Lisa Nandy. There are questions why, having been told in November 2023, Edwards was facing serious offences he was allowed to quit and continued to be paid by taxpayers in between.

The BBC made it clear in its statement it had a duty of care to Edwards whose mental health had caused serious concern. Lord Falconer, a former Lord Chancellor, told Newsnight it was “inconceivable” that having been told about the allegations, even without the detail, the BBC did not take action.

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It had already highlighted the tricky position the BBC has between being a corporation and employer with responsibilities to their employees and also a journalistic enterprise. It was widely reported in 2023 that BBC journalists including Victoria Derbyshire had been “taking initial soundings” in relation to claims against Edwards in the days before The Sun released its original story.

Other questions emerged about the atmosphere within the corporation. Edwards’ former colleague Sir Craig Oliver said the former presenter could be a “very, very difficult and complicated” man who “clashed with staff”.

He said: “There were also, I think, a number of people who were worried about his behaviour within the BBC – was he actually throwing his weight around and behaving well enough to other staff? But I don’t think anybody suspected that there was child abuse imagery in his private life in any way, shape, or form.”

Aside from how it looks publicly it has affected internal relations too. Former BBC journalist Jon Sopel, now host of The News Agents podcast, said he had “been struck by how many of my former BBC colleagues, some very senior, have been in touch to express their anger and dismay at their own coverage of this”.

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There are further questions about whether the complaints process was adequate. The family who originally raised concerns have criticised the handling of their complaint to the BBC.

It has, inevitably, led to calls from its critics outside the newsroom too.

Rebecca Ryan, campaign director of Defund the BBC, said: “What were the BBC thinking in continuing to pay someone arrested for such heinous crimes? Defund the BBC often accuses the broadcaster of being out of touch. On this occasion ‘out of touch’ does not begin to describe it. The BBC has extremely serious questions to answer on this.”

The BBC tried to claw back some of the salary he earned after being arrested in November 2023. Speaking at a House of Lords committee in September 2024, Tim Davie said: “We’ve made the formal request and I can’t go into too much detail but discussions are under way. The money should be returned and we made the request.”

Asked by the communications and digital committee’s chair Baroness Stowell whether the BBC had set Edwards a deadline, Davie said no. He added: “But we do expect to make progress and get an answer.”

Huw Edwards was publicly asked to hand back part of his BBC salary from the five months he was under arrest. The BBC chairman, Samir Shah, confessed they had repeatedly asked him to hand back over £200,000 and called for the disgraced star to “give it back”.

Talking on Times Radio on Saturday, May 3, 2025, Samir said: “Frankly, if Huw is listening to this: Give it back Huw, just give it back. Really, just give it back. You know you should and you should do it.

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“We’ve been asking him and asking him and asking him … we’re getting legal advice on it.”

You can watch Power: The Downfall of Huw Edwards on Channel 5 from 9pm on Tuesday, March 24.

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Iran says Trump has ‘backed down’ after he postpones energy attacks | World News

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The Kharg Island oil terminal. File pic: Abedin Taherkenareh/EPA/Shutterstock

Donald Trump has said he has postponed attacks against Iranian power plants and energy infrastructure after “very good and productive conversations” with Tehran.

The US president said the pause would last for five days and depended on “the success of the ongoing meetings and discussions”.

He had previously given Iran a 48-hour ultimatum that warned the US would “obliterate” its power plants unless it stopped blocking the Strait of Hormuz – a deadline that was set to expire just before midnight UK time.

Iran war latest: Tehran says US has ‘backed down’

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But Mr Trump struck a more positive tone in his Truth Social post on Monday.

He said the US and Iran had been talking over the last two days about a “complete and total resolution of our hostilities in the Middle East” and he had told officials to “postpone any and all military strikes” against its power network.

Iran had warned it would float mines in the Persian Gulf and attack regional power plants if the US followed through.

Image:
The Kharg Island oil terminal. File pic: Abedin Taherkenareh/EPA/Shutterstock

State media framed the latest development as a victory – with a TV banner reading: “US president backs down following Iran’s firm warning.”

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It’s not yet known who was involved in the talks or how they took place.

The Strait of Hormuz – the narrow waterway used to transport about a fifth of global oil and liquefied ⁠natural gas – effectively remains shut due to the threat of Iranian attacks.

Oil prices have spiked and the economic effects are already being felt. Petrol prices have increased and there’s a warning energy bills, inflation and interest rates could go up if the war drags on.


Is Britain prepared for the economic cost of the Iran war?

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However, Mr Trump’s update raised hopes that tensions could be easing – oil prices dipped 10% and natural gas fell 6% in the wake of his post.

The president’s more upbeat tone comes after a major escalation last week when Iran caused significant damage to a liquefied natural gas site in Qatar in retaliation for an Israeli strike on its own South Pars gas field.

For now, peace in the region still appears some way off.

In a familiar pattern in the month-long conflict, Israel said this morning it had launched “wide-scale” strikes on Iran, while Tehran fired missiles at the UAE and Saudi Arabia.

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Iran war day 23: Videos from the ground

Authorities say more than 2,500 people have died; some 1,500 in Iran and more than 1,000 in Lebanon as Israel attacks the country’s paramilitary Hezbollah group.

Lebanon‘s president has claimed Israel is preparing for a “ground invasion” after it struck bridges in the south.

Fifteen Israelis and 13 US military personnel have also so far died in the war.

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Huge fire erupts in Stockport with road closed and major emergency response

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Manchester Evening News

Flames were seen billowing from the roof of the premises in Edgeley

A huge fire erupted at a premises in Stockport which prompted a major emergency services response and a road closure to be put in place.

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Police and fire crews were called to the scene on Castle Street in the Edgeley area at around 5.30pm on Monday (March 23). Videos posted on social media showed smoke billowing from the roof of the property.

Emergency services remained in attendance for a number of hours throughout the evening dampening the flames. Gas company Cadent were also called to the scene.

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Castle Street was also taped off by fire crews as investigations were carried out. The roof of the building was seen visibly scorched following the incident. The cause of the blaze has not yet been confirmed.

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The Stylist Hair Studio, a salon nearby, posted on social media that the fire involved an empty building. The owner posted: “Unfortunately an empty shop on Castle Street is currently on fire.

“I am writing this post to reassure everyone whose been messaging me with concerns that thankfully it’s not my salon. We hope nobody is in that building and everyone is ok, especially the firefighters who are working hard.”

A spokesperson for Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service (GMFRS) said: “Just after 5.30pm this evening (Monday 23rd March), seven fire engines from Cheadle, Offerton, Wythenshawe, Oldham and Marple fire station, along with the Command Support Unit from Hyde, Hydraulic Platform from Oldham and Technical Response Unit from Ashton, were called to reports of a building fire on Castle Street, Stockport.

“Crews arrived quickly at the scene. Firefighters wearing breathing apparatus are using hose reel jets, a short extension ladder, thermal imaging cameras, and positive pressure ventilation fans to extinguish the fire. Firefighters have been in attendance for around two hours and are still at the scene.”

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Stress levels drop among Lagan Valley council staff

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Belfast Live

“There are always things we can do to help and we continue to engage with our staff.”

Council sick day statistics in Lagan Valley show a dramatic drop in stress levels.

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Lisburn and Castlereagh City Council’s recent corporate committee was provided with an updated report for the year ending December 30, 2025, showing a total of 10,318 days lost to illness from January 2025.

Stress is consistently the number one cause of absence, but the figure has fallen by a third in the last quarter from 997 to 651 days lost, supported by a two pronged counselling approach.

READ MORE: Hilden ‘landmark’ decision saves Lisburn heritage from ‘bulldozer’.

READ MORE: Councillor hits out over department not removing ‘illegal’ speed signs.

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Castlereagh South Alliance councillor Jamie Harpur said: “It is worthwhile noting that stress, mental health and depression is down this quarter.

“I also notice that musculo-skeletal levels are down – 572 days, but they are still quite high.

“Is there anything we, as a council, can do to think outside the box in how we can tackle this?”

He added:”I am just trying to understand that if we have Usel service, why do we already tender out counselling services ourselves?”

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Usel is a provider of employment support for people with disabilities or health conditions in Northern Ireland and is connected to the Department of Communities.

Council initiatives to lower absence levels have also included introducing craft events for employees to lower stress levels as well as lunchtime Pilates to tackle muscle and joint pains and movement problems.

A council officer said: “There are always things we can do to help and we continue to engage with our staff.

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“The council maintains its partnership with Usel, a government based organisation that supports employers in managing absences related to physical impairments and mental health challenges.

“Their services, including physiotherapy and counselling are provided at no cost to the council, but there is only a limited amount of people they can help at any given time and requires a direct referral.

“Whereas our counselling service is completely confidential and available to all our employees.

“As you can see mental health and stress continues to be the main cause of absence but it is reducing and counselling is one of the key ways to prevent absence in the first place as well as to support employees on their return to work.”

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For all the latest news, visit the Belfast Live homepage here and sign up to our daily newsletter here.

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Military plane carrying 125 people crashes in Colombia | World News

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People gathered to help at the wreckage site. Pic: AP

A military transport plane carrying 125 people has crashed in Colombia killing at least one person.

The country’s defence minister Pedro Anulfo Sanchez said on Monday the Lockheed Martin Hercules ‌C-130 plane had “suffered a tragic accident”.

Mr Sanchez said he hoped the prayers of Colombians would help alleviate the “pain” of the families of the victims.

77 people have been rescued and taken to hospital, leaving around 40 individuals unaccounted for, authorities said.

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Colombian Air Force Commander Fernando Silva said in a video posted on social ‌media that the plane was carrying 114 passengers and 11 crew, and that officials were still investigating the cause of the crash.

Early reports said that many on board were soldiers.

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President Gustavo Petro also commented – criticising those blocking his plans to modernise the military.

Colombia began buying C-130 planes as far back as the 1960s.

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Some of those injured in the crash were taken to hospital on a different military plane. Pic: AP

Mr Petro said in a post on X: “I hope there are ⁠no fatalities in this horrific accident that should never have happened.

“I will grant no further delays; it is the ‌lives of our young people that are at stake.

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“If civilian or military administrative officials are not up to this challenge, they must be removed.”

The aircraft was taking off from an airport deep in Colombia’s southern Amazon region, on the border with Peru.

The crash occurred just two miles from a busy urban centre, local media BluRadio claim.

Footage purporting to show the crash shows a military plane taking off over dense rainforest, before slowly descending back towards the ground.

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Another clip shows locals transporting injured soldiers to safety on the back of their motorbikes.

Mr Sanchez said, in a translated X post: “With deep sorrow, I report that a Hercules aircraft from our [Colombian Aerospace Force] suffered a tragic accident while taking off from Puerto Leguízamo (Putumayo), while transporting troops from our Public Force.

“Military units are already at the scene; however, the number of victims and the causes of the accident have not yet been precisely determined.

“All protocols for assisting the victims and their families have been activated, as well as the corresponding investigation.

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“I express my sincerest condolences to the families of those affected and, out of respect for their grief, I urge everyone to avoid speculation until official information is available.

“This is a profoundly painful event for the country.”

The Lockheed Martin C-130 Hercules is used by militaries across the world.

They were first launched in the 1950s and Colombia acquired its first models ⁠in the late 1960s.

Last month, another C-130 belonging to the Bolivian Air ​Force crashed in the city ​of Alto, killing 20 and injuring another 30.

Banknotes from the plane’s cargo scattered around the city – prompting clashes between residents and security forces.

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It is also the second plane crash to make headlines in Colombia this year – back in January a small passenger plane crashed in the north of the country.

All 15 people on board, including a congressman, were killed.

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Pentagon to issue new press credentials but remove media offices

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Pentagon to issue new press credentials but remove media offices

The U.S. Defense Department will issue new press credentials but remove media offices from the Pentagon after a judge sided with The New York Times in a lawsuit regarding limits on reporters’ access to the building, a department official announced Monday.

Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell said the agency disagrees with the ruling and will appeal. U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman in Washington, D.C., last week sided with the newspaper and ruled that the Pentagon’s new policy illegally restricts the press credentials of reporters who walked out of the building rather than agree to the new rules.

Parnell said the reporters will be able to work from an “annex” that will be on the Pentagon grounds but outside the building. He said the new facility “will be available when ready” but did not say how long that would take.

Journalists will still have access to the Pentagon for press conferences and interviews arranged through the department’s public affairs team, but they will have to be escorted, Parnell wrote on X.

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The Times sued the Pentagon and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth in December, claiming the credentialing policy violates the journalists’ constitutional rights to free speech and due process.

The current Pentagon press corps is comprised mostly of conservative outlets that agreed to the policy. Reporters from outlets that refused to consent to the new rules, including from The Associated Press, have continued reporting on the military.

The AP, meanwhile, is awaiting a decision by a three-judge panel of the U.S. District Court of Appeals on its separate lawsuit against President Donald Trump’s administration. The AP contends that Trump’s White House team punished it by reducing its access to presidential events because the outlet hasn’t followed his lead in renaming the Gulf of Mexico.

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Urgent search launched to find woman last seen 10 days ago who may be in Manchester

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Manchester Evening News

Natasha Walker was last seen on March 13

An urgent search has been launched to find a woman who was last seen ten days ago and may now be in Manchester.

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Police are searching for Natasha Walker and have urged anyone with information to get in touch. The 34-year-old was last seen in Whalley, Lancashire, on March 13 but has links to East Lancashire and Manchester.

Lancashire Police said she was last seen in the Mitton Road area at around 4pm on the day she was reported as missing. Natasha is described as a white female, about 5ft 5ins tall, of a medium build with brown hair and blonde extensions.

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She was last seen wearing a Stitch hoodie, white skirt and yellow crocs. She potentially also has a black coat with her and a small, black, furry bag.

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“We are concerned for her whereabouts and have been looking for her for some time and now we are asking for your help,” a spokesperson for Lancashire Police said.

If you have any information call police on 101 (999 in an emergency), quoting log number LC-20260313-0969.

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UK snow maps show 18 regions to face blizzards amid -4C Arctic freeze – see full list

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Daily Mirror

Striking weather maps show wintry conditions will kick in from midnight on Wednesday March 25, with Scotland most affected before snow moves into eastern England by the evening

These striking weather maps show the UK is set for a dramatic shift — with temperatures to plunge and snow to fall across at least 18 regions.

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Snowfall is likely in the coming days across multiple areas, including Essex and Suffolk in the south, Powys in the west and the Scottish Highlands in the north. The maps, created by WXCharts using Metdesk data, depict several large white and grey patches across different parts of the nation, expected to arrive early on Wednesday March 25.

The wintry conditions are predicted to start as early as midnight on Wednesday and persist into the evening. Scotland appears to be the most impacted area, with a forecast for 3am showing council areas including Aberdeenshire, Argyll and Bute, and Perth and Kinross bracing for snow in the early hours. Temperatures are also anticipated to plummet to lows of -4C.

Parts of northern England, such as Northumberland and North Yorkshire, will also witness snow in the early hours, before it dissipates by evening and shifts into the East of England. By 6pm, lighter snow is forecasted to blanket parts of Suffolk, Cambridgeshire, Essex and Norfolk, whilst depths across Scotland are predicted to rise to up to four inches.

READ MORE: Best hot and sunny holidays in April including hotspots less than 4 hours from UKREAD MORE: Man climbs Snowdon at 4am and will ‘never get over’ what he saw at top

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Rainfall is also expected throughout the day, with many areas likely to see sleet build-up at some point. The Met Office also predicts a sudden shift in weather patterns this week, reports the Express.

Steven Keates, Met Office deputy chief forecaster, stated: “After a spell of mild and brighter weather, the UK will become increasingly unsettled in the coming days. A series of weather fronts will bring bouts of rain, strong winds and much colder air by midweek. Wednesday could be quite a shock to the system.”

It will be a huge change to the recent balmy weather. For instance, the mercury hit 16C in Cardiff and 15C in Ross-on-Wye, Herefordshire on Sunday. It was a particularly sunny day too, with 8.3 hours of sunshine recorded in Hurn, which is in Dorset.

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But Jo Farrow, a meteorologist with Netweather, wrote on its blog: “For the new working week, the trend is to colder conditions with mention of snow showers from the northwest. It will become windy as the settled weather under the current high pressure is shoved aside by an Atlantic low pressure.

“This low pressure will bring rain and blustery winds to northwest Scotland on Monday, then slide south of Iceland towards the Norwegian Sea. Its cold front will bring rain down over central Britain and Northern Ireland, with the plunge of cold Arctic air following for the middle of this week.”

List of areas expected to see snow on Wednesday

  1. Aberdeenshire
  2. Angus
  3. Argyll and Bute
  4. Cumbria
  5. Cambridgeshire
  6. Glasgow
  7. Gwynedd
  8. Essex
  9. Highland
  10. Moray
  11. Northumberland
  12. Norfolk
  13. North Yorkshire
  14. Orkney Islands
  15. Perth and Kinross
  16. Powys
  17. Scottish Borders
  18. Shetland Islands
  19. Suffolk

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Who gets priority in a potential UK fuel rationing plan?

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Who gets priority in a potential UK fuel rationing plan?

Conflict in Iran and supply issues on the Strait of Hormuz have caused petrol and diesel prices to go up.

The International Energy Agency (IEA) has warned that the disruption is the largest in the history of the global oil market.

The RAC shares that unleaded petrol has gone up 14.4p since the start of the Iran conflict, while diesel has gone up by 28.8p.

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The government has stated that there is no shortage of fuel in the UK, with advice being to continue filling up as normal.

There are contingency plans in place under the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ) if fuel rationing were needed.

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In that scenario, some people might be curious to see what services would get priority.

What services would get priority in a UK fuel rationing plan?

The National Emergency Plan for Fuel was last updated by the DESNZ in April 2024.

Emergency and critical service vehicles would receive priority access to fuel in this scenario.

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Utilities such as gas and electricity suppliers and water companies would have the next priority, followed by public transport vehicles.

Commercial vehicles would be up next, specifically ones fulfilling duties such as delivering food to supermarkets and making health-related deliveries.

Meanwhile, private drivers would face restrictions on how much fuel they could buy per filling station visit, and pumps could be closed overnight.

In an extreme scenario, the Government has the power to allocate how crude oil and other imported oil products are distributed across the UK entirely.

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These measures would only be activated in a severe national shortage.

The Guardian shares that further elements of contingency plans could see speed limits cut by up to 10mph on some roads to lower fuel consumption.

This could be implemented on some motorways, where signage is also adjusted electronically on major routes.

However, the DESNZ is understood to be confident that the UK has a diverse and resilient fuel supply.

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Jack Cousens, the head of roads policy at the AA, said: “Drivers should be assured that there are good fuel supplies and people should not change their fuelling habits.

“Nevertheless, advice to drive as efficiently as possible is something that drivers could adopt at all times to save both fuel and money.

“Reducing speed and braking less harshly are beneficial.

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“Similarly, linking journeys together contributes to saving fuel.”

How much have fuel prices gone up in your area? Let us know in the comments.

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