Lindsay Lohan, Vicky Pattison and other celebrities are confirmed to be safe in Dubai amid the ongoing Iranian strikes – with many taking refuge in basements while stuck in the country.
Iran hit the United Arab Emirates and its neighbours on Saturday (28 February) in retaliation to the United States and Israeli forces’ attack on Iran shortly before, which resulted in the death of Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Kahmenei.
Among those taking refuge from the attacks are British and American celebrities holidaying in the country, with many taking to social media to speak out about the global crisis.
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Freaky Friday actor Lindsay Lohan, who lives in Dubai with her husband Bader Shammas and their son Luai, announced on Sunday (1 March) that she was safe in the city. “Praying for peace,” she wrote on Instagram. “Stay safe everyone. God bless us all.”
Fellow resident Kate Ferdinand – who is married to ex-footballer Rio Ferdinand – also revealed on Sunday that their family was safe after sleeping in the basement of their home. The couple relocated to Dubai last year with their young children.
Screengrab taken from the Kate Ferdinand Instagram account. (Kate Ferdinand /Instagram/PA Wire)
“Thank you for all of your messages and sorry for the silence, i haven’t wanted to worry you all I just haven’t been able to find the words. We are safe,” she said on Instagram.
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“The government are doing an amazing job of keeping it that way and despite my nerves I feel we are in very safe hands. We are hoping for calmer evening tonight, last night was very scary. Although Cree and Shae loved it as they couldn’t believe we all got a sleepover in the basement.”
She added: “This whole experience is very eye opening & I am praying for anyone affected. Lots of love to everyone.”
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Strictly Come Dancing star Vicky Pattison, who was holidaying in Dubai with her husband Ercan Ramadan, was forced to stay in the country after her flight to Sydney was cancelled due to the attacks.
“Ercan and I were due to fly to Sydney this evening. But like many others our flight was cancelled and we are now effectively stuck in Dubai,” she wrote on Instagram. “We’re receiving a lot of messages from people asking if we’re ok- which we are.
Vicky Pattison is among the Brits who are stuck in Dubai amid the strikes (PA Wire)
“We are currently in our hotel and have been assured we’re safe. We are aware that the situation that is unfolding is scary and I’m also aware that there’s a lot of videos circulating on social media which are understandably concerning.”
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She added that they are trying their “best to stay calm” and thinking of everyone “feeling unsettled and unsafe right now”.
Luisa Zissman , a former star of The Apprentice, revealed that her home in the UAE city was shaken by “massive bangs”, forcing her and her family to retreat to the basement also.
“Keeping the kids entertained and indoors,” she wrote on Instagram. “We got itchy feet and went to take them to the park and literally as we went to step foot out the door we heard 2 massive bangs that shook the house, we retreated and then heard another 2. So now movie time in the basement.
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“So surreal and scary. I do have faith that UAE defence will keep us all safe.”
Zissman is not the only reality star who is trying to stay safe in Dubai amid the strikes – with Love Island 2023 winner Sammy Root struggling in the city while on holiday. “First ever day in Dubai, get me out of Dubai immediately,” he wrote on social media.
While series two star Kady McDermott spoke out about “scary times” in the UAE after watching missiles fly above her head. “The UAE government are doing an amazing job at keeping everyone safe by intercepting the missiles. Everyone stay inside and stay safe through this scary time,” she wrote.
The Independent has contacted the representatives of Lohan, Pattison, Ferdinand, Zissman, Root and McDermott for comment.
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.
Footage shows the Air Canada Express plane slamming into a Port Authority fire truck on the runway, where the emergency vehicle was responding to an issue on another plane late Sunday night.
The pilot and copilot were killed after landing in New York from Montreal with 72 passengers and four crew onboard. The crash destroyed much of the front cockpit area of the plane, which was operated by Jazz Aviation.
An audio recording revealed air traffic controllers were in a panic moments before the deadly collision. “Stop, stop, stop!” an air traffic control dispatcher is heard saying. A voice later adds: “I messed up.”
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About 40 passengers and crew members were taken to nearby hospitals, some with serious injuries. Most had been released Monday morning, authorities said.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said Monday that the deadly collision served as a reminder to “wear your seatbelts.”
LaGuardia reopened one runway at 2 p.m. Eastern Monday, though officials warned of continued delays and cancellations as a result of the crash.
The delays exacerbate ongoing extended wait times at U.S. airports, which have resulted from the partial government shutdown and a shortage of TSA agents.
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Recap: Air Canada passenger plane in deadly collision with fire struck at LaGuardia Airport
If you’re just joining us, here’s everything you need to know:
An Air Canada passenger plane from Montreal with 76 people on board collided with a fire truck on the runway at LaGuardia Airport, New York, Sunday night
The pilot and co-pilot of the plane, arriving from Montreal, were killed
41 passengers were taken to hospital. Most had been released by Monday morning, authorities said
LaGuardia remained closed until 2 p.m. ET Monday as more than 500 flights were cancelled
Joe Sommerlad23 March 2026 10:48
LaGuardia crash comes at sensitive time for U.S. air travel
Sunday’s late-night crash at LaGuardia comes at a time of considerable strain on the U.S. air travel system.
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The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees the airport-focused Transportation Security Administration, has gone without funding for weeks amid an ongoing partial government shutdown.
Josh Marcus23 March 2026 21:55
Port Authority IDs individuals in truck that collided with plane
Two people who were in a fire truck that collided with an incoming Air Canada jet at LaGuardia on Sunday have been identified.
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The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which oversees New York City-area airports, named the individuals as Sgt. Michael Orsillo and Officer Adrian Baez.
“Both were taken to New York Presbyterian Hospital,” Port Authority Executive Director Kathryn Garcia said during a press conference on Monday. “We expect one to be released later this afternoon, and the other to be kept overnight for observation.”
Josh Marcus23 March 2026 21:35
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‘Hero’ pilots died saving passengers, survivor of LaGuardia crash says
“I wish I could tell their families how thankful I am. They are heroes.”
That’s how one survivor of last night’s runway crash at LaGuardia is processing the collision, which killed both pilots and injured scores of passengers.
Shweta Sharma, Paul Farrell, and Jasmine Fernández have the latest details on the incident.
Josh Marcus23 March 2026 21:19
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Josh Marcus23 March 2026 21:05
Transportation Secretary says he has asked Congress for more money for air traffic control
Much-needed modernizations for air traffic control systems can’t happen without more money from Congress, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said during a Monday news briefing.
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“We’ve been modernizing our system, but we can’t fully modernize it until Congress gives us the additional money,” he said.
“It’s not a partisan issue, both Democrats and Republicans agree, but they have to have the will to finish the funding,” he continued.
Duffy added: “I’m not saying the crash would have been prevented if we had all the equipment deployed, but it’s important if we care about air travel safety, we care about having a brand new air traffic control system, the best in the world, with the best equipment virtually all of it developed here in America.”
Isabel Keane23 March 2026 20:45
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LaGuardia Airport runway 4 will be closed until Friday morning
Runway 4 at LaGuardia Airport will be closed until 7 a.m. Friday, following the deadly collision between an Air Canada plane and a fire truck, the FAA said.
LaGuardia was closed through much of Monday, but reopened a single runway around 2 p.m.
Isabel Keane23 March 2026 20:19
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One of the pilots killed identified by family
One of the two pilots killed in the crash at LaGuardia Airport has been identified as Antoine Forest.
Forest’s family confirmed his death to the Toronto Star on Monday.
The pilot was originally from Coteau-du-Lac, a small city in southwestern Quebec, Canada. He first started flying planes when he was just 16, his great aunt, Jeannette Gagnier, told the Star.
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Forest, a first officer at Air Canada Express, had been co-piloting the plane that crashed on Sunday. He and his co-pilot, who has not been publicly identified, were declared dead while several passengers were injured.
“It’s a very bad day for me,” Gagnier, who acted as a grandmother to Forest, told the newspaper.
Forest’s LinkedIn page lists him as a first officer for Jazz Aviation since December 2022.
Isabel Keane23 March 2026 20:08
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Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy says LaGuardia is a ‘very well-staffed airport’
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said that LaGuardia Airport “is a very well-staffed airport.”
Duffy said they have 37 air traffic controller positions, 33 of which are currently staffed. Seven more controllers are going through training, he said.
Isabel Keane23 March 2026 19:59
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Collision was first incident resulting in death at LaGuardia Airport in over 30 years
The collision involving an Air Canada plane and a Port Authority fire truck was the first incident resulting in death at LaGuardia Airport in over 30 years, officials said during a Monday press briefing.
Kathryn Garcia, the head of the Port Authority, which operates all major New York area airports, said it’s been 34 years since there has been an incident resulting in death at the airport.
“This could have been an even broader tragedy if everyone had not responded as quickly as effectively as they did,” Garcia said.
Jesy Nelson says it’s ‘bittersweet’ to see progress made towards SMA screenings outside England (Picture: Instagram)
Former Little Mix singer Jesy Nelson has admitted it’s ‘bittersweet’ seeing progress being made in the fight for babies to be screened for spinal muscular atrophy (SMA).
It has been announced that Scotland will be the first part of the UK to screen babies for the rare muscle disease that Jesy’s daughters also have.
The 34-year-old star and her now ex-fiance, Zion Foster, announced earlier this year that her twins, Ocean Jade and Story Monroe, were diagnosed with the rare genetic condition known as SMA, which causes progressive muscle wasting.
She has since campaigned for all babies to be screened for it, as early treatment can help avoid some of the most devastating effects.
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In a post on her Instagram Story on Monday, the Boyz hitmaker said: ‘Today my heart feels super heavy. It’s a very bittersweet moment knowing that Scotland had become the first UK nation to screen babies for SMA.
‘We’re so close yet so far.
She released a statement after the news that Scotland would begin screening babies for the rare muscular disease (Picture: Instagram)
‘I will never be able to understand why we still do not test for it here in England.’
According to the NHS, the condition causes muscle weakness, movement problems, breathing and swallowing difficulties, muscle tremors, and bone and joint problems.
Jesy said in January that her babies’ diagnosis would mean they are unlikely ever to be able to walk or regain their neck strength.
Her twins have had treatment, a one-off infusion that puts a missing gene back into their bodies to stop other muscles from dying; however, it does not help regain any muscles that have already died.
She continued: ‘To know that my girls lives and so many other children in England could look so different if this had been here for them.
Jesy is a proud mum to twins Ocean Jade and Story Monroe (Picture: Instagram)
Earlier this year, she was told that it was unlikely her daughters would ever walk (Picture: Instagram)
‘But nevertheless I will keep fighting and pushing for change because nobody should ever have to go through this heartache.’
From today, all parents in Scotland will be offered SMA screening for their newborns, on about day four after birth.
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After Jesy’s twins’ diagnosis, she launched a petition to get screening for SMA added to the newborn blood spot screening test, also known as the heel-prick test, which screens for serious health conditions.
The petition secured more than 100,000 signatures, which means it will be considered for a debate in the House of Commons.
Continuing her activism, she also became a patron of the charity Spinal Muscular Atrophy UK after meeting Health Secretary Wes Streeting earlier this year to speak about the life-changing impact early detection of the condition could have had on her twins.
Announcing her new role last month, the pop star wrote on social media that she felt ‘incredibly proud’ and it meant ‘so much to [her]’.
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Jesy shares her children with ex-partner Zion Foster (Picture: Ken McKay/ITV/Shutterstock)
She has vowed not to stop speaking out until ‘something changes’ (Picture: Amazon Prime Video)
‘I’ve been deeply touched by the SMA community from the strength of the children, the resilience of the families, and the love that surrounds them every single day,’ Jesy penned.
‘I’ll be using my voice to keep raising awareness not only for my girls, but to support families going through the same experiences, and campaigning for the SMA test to be added to the newborn screening heel-prick test so more babies can get the help they need as early as possible.’
Jesy has made it known that she is ‘not going to stop’ talking about SMA until ‘something changes’ and has been inundated with well-wishes since taking Ocean and Story’s diagnoses public.
Symptoms of SMA
As explained by the NHS, symptoms of spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) affect everyone differently but can include:
muscle weakness – such as floppy or weak arms and legs
movement problems – such as difficulty sitting up, crawling or walking
problems with breathing or swallowing
twitching or shaking muscles (tremors)
bone and joint problems – such as an unusually curved spine (scoliosis)
These symptoms are most often noticed in babies and toddlers, but they can also start in teenagers and adults.
SMA does not affect intelligence or cause learning disabilities.
On The Smallzy Show, Leigh-Anne, who has her own twin daughters, said recently that she and the other two members ‘obviously’ all reached out to Jesy when the news broke in January.
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‘I think she’s really incredible for spreading that awareness,’ the Don’t Say Love singer added.
Jesy’s ex-bandmates – Perrie Edwards, Leigh-Anne Pinnock, and Jade Thirlwall – have all ‘reached out’ to her this year following their feud (Picture: Ibl/Shutterstock)
Jesy also confirmed to Alison Hammond and Dermot O’Leary on This Morning that it was ‘lovely’ to hear from them.
‘They’re your sisters, aren’t they?’, Dermot asked.
‘Of course!’, Jesy agreed. ‘We were genuinely best friends, and things happen in life; it doesn’t always go how you think it’s going to, but three of us are mums now, I think we’ve all had time to heal; it’s been five, nearly six years, and I think it’s just one of those things that takes time.’
‘Who knows what will happen,’ she said of the possibility of reuniting, having left the group in 2020. ‘But since they’ve been reaching out, it’s lovely. It’s definitely healed a part of me, for sure.’
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The DWP, HMRC and Social Security Scotland have confirmed some people will receive their payments early due to the Easter bank holidays
Linda Howard Money and Consumer Writer
21:00, 23 Mar 2026
The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has confirmed that some individuals due to receive State Pension or benefit payments over the Easter weekend will see the money deposited into their bank accounts early. This year, Easter falls on Sunday, April 5, which means scheduled payments set to be made on Good Friday or bank holiday Monday will be issued on Thursday, April 2.
HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) and Social Security Scotland have also confirmed that payments due on those days – Friday, April 3, or Monday, April 6 – will be made early. The DWP also stated that Jobcentre Plus Offices and phone lines will be closed on Friday, April 3 and Monday, April 6, but will open as usual on Tuesday, April 7.
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It’s crucial to note that if your upcoming payment does not fall on either of the Easter holidays, it will be paid as normal. Below is a full list of DWP, HMRC and Social Security Scotland payments which could be affected by the Easter bank holiday weekend.
If your benefit or payment is not listed, it will not be affected by the Easter bank holiday weekend, reports the Daily Record.
DWP payment dates over Easter weekend
Payments due to be made on Friday April 3 or Monday April 6 for the benefits listed below will be paid on Thursday, April 2.
Payments affected:
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Attendance Allowance
Carer’s Allowance
Employment Support Allowance (ESA)
Income Support
Jobseeker’s Allowance (JSA)
Pension Credit
Personal Independence Payment (PIP)
State Pension
Universal Credit
HMRC payment date changes over Easter weekend
Payments due to be made on Friday April 3 or Monday April 6 for the benefits listed below will be paid on Thursday, April 2.
Payments affected:
Child Benefit
Guardian’s Allowance
Social Security Scotland payment dates over Easter weekend
Payments scheduled for Friday, April 3, or Monday, April 6, for the benefits listed below will be made on Thursday, April 2.
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’
22:23, 23 Mar 2026Updated 22:28, 23 Mar 2026
Iran threatened to target tourist sites across the world – and a map shows which locations may be within reach.
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.
On March 19, Ras Laffan, the largest liquified natural gas (LNG) terminal in the world, supplying one-fifth of the world’s super-chilled fuel, was hit by Iranian missiles and drones. The Qatari terminal suffered substantial damage in the strikes – fires were raging across the gas-to-liquids facility within the complex, which covers 295 square kilometres – the size of a large city.
Investments worth tens if not hundreds of millions of dollars disappeared into thin air. Damage was estimated to be so extensive that QatarEnergy’s CEO, Saad Sherida al-Kaabi, said the company may have to declare a “force majeure” (non-fulfilment of orders due to circumstances outside their control) on long-term contracts. He said this could affect LNG supplies to Italy, Belgium, Korea and China “for up to five years”.
Similar to oil, gas exports from the Persian Gulf supplied about 20% of world demand. But gas (mostly methane) is a very different fuel from crude oil. To move it in liquified form, methane must be chilled to below -162°C.
But at these temperatures steel becomes brittle and shatters. So storing and transporting LNG in ships is expensive and very energy-intensive. Liquefaction and transportation of methane can easily consume 15% of the initial natural gas extracted.
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It also means that the infrastructure that enables a highly flammable and explosive fuel to be handled at these extreme conditions has to be complex and consequently very expensive. Ras Laffan, for example, was built over decades and in several phases, costing tens of billions of dollars.
No quick fix
Interestingly, Qatar’s North Field and Iran’s South Pars gas field are part of the same massive geological structure, separated only by a maritime border in the Persian Gulf. Together, they form the world’s largest natural gas field.
So, Iran and Qatar are essentially exploiting the same gas reservoir the same way two people would use straws to drink from the same bottle. The US president, Donald Trump, now appears to have retreated from his threats to blow up “the entirety” of the Iranian gas field – but this geological fact had always made his comments quite ridiculous.
While Qatar exports most of its production, Iran uses the bulk of its gas domestically (although some exports go via pipeline to Turkey and Iraq).
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Iran’s South Pars gas field is separated from Qatar’s North Field only by the maritime border in the Persian Gulf. EPA/ABEDIN TAHERKENAREH
But the damage to the complex has been done, and it affects some 17% of the country’s LNG infrastructure. Repairing it will take a long time, precisely because of the complexity of LNG projects.
The plant must be warmed up slowly before repairs and cooled down slowly after. Rapid temperature changes can cause pipes to bend or even snap. And parts of the plant are bulky and hard to transport. The main heat exchangers can be more than 50 metres long, and compressors, turbines and liquefaction trains can easily weigh 5,000 metric tonnes. Storage tanks must be built of special alloys with double walls and customised insulation.
In other words, gas is very different to oil. Recent events have shown just how vulnerable the LNG supplies from the Gulf region are. They are going to affect Asia most, as about three-quarters of Qatar’s LNG ends up there – particularly China, India, Taiwan, South Korea and Pakistan, as well as others.
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Most of the rest ends up in Europe – Italy, Belgium, Poland and a small amount to the UK (the UK imported only about 1% of its supply from Qatar last year). The majority of the UK’s imports come from its own UK production in the North Sea and imports from Norway and the US.
However, LNG is a part of the global energy market and the shortfall in production will result in higher prices globally. Gas will end up with the highest bidder, while some nations will probably go back to using coal. This may especially be the case with India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and a few other Asian countries that are very sensitive to high fuel prices.
Some European countries may even see coal as a cheaper option. Following the events in the Gulf, this “spark spread” (the profit margin from gas-fired electricity generation) has fallen, narrowing the gap in Europe with the “dark spread” (profit from generating power using coal).
The benchmark for European gas prices, the Dutch Title Transfer Facility, has more than doubled since mid-January. Coal prices have picked up due to higher demand, but not as much. Unlike oil, the LNG shortage has turned from a logistical problem – the closure of the strait of Hormuz – into a structural one. The damage to the Qatari production facility may take several years to repair. This means that gas prices – already high – are likely to remain elevated for some time.
Arsenal boast a nine-point lead at the top of the table but are aware City have a game in hand and a home match against them to close the gap.
Rooney doubts the Carabao Cup final will have a huge impact on the title race, however, and is still backing Arsenal to lift the Premier League trophy for the first time in 22 years.
Asked how big an impact Man City’s win will have on the title race, Rooney said on his BBC podcast: ‘I don’t think it will.
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Manchester City beat Arsenal in the Carabao Cup final (Picture: Getty)
‘Arsenal are still in a very good position, as good a position as you can be at this stage of the season.
‘For Man City to catch them I think they have to win every game and Arsenal drop seven points. City will need to beat them at home as well.
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‘So I think it’s a tough ask. You never know but I just think Arsenal need to dust themselves down and move on from this quickly.
Arsenal’s squad after the Carabao Cup final (Picture: Getty)
‘I’m sure they will go back to winning games and see the title out. I just think Arsenal are too good, too efficient and too strong defensively to let it slip from here.’
Asked whether he felt Arsenal could ‘bottle’ the Premier League title, the Manchester United and England legend added: ‘I think this team is different. From all the things I have seen, they look mentally stronger.’
Jamie Carragher also still expects Arsenal to beat Manchester City to the Premier League title despite the Carabao Cup final blow.
‘Man City have let themselves down with a couple of results of late, and there’s enough breathing space for Arsenal right now [for this to] not affect them too much mentally,’ he said on Sky Sports.
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‘In terms of the Premier League, they’ve got a great lead. Yes, if they lose at Man City, it could be on. Of course, it could be, but if [the gap] was a lot tighter it would play into it a little bit more.
‘Arsenal have been the best team in the league. They’ve only lost four games out of 50 [in all competitions], let’s not get too carried away, let’s not forget that.
‘And in the Champions League, they’re on the right side of the draw, and they’ve got a great opportunity [to reach the final].
‘But what we saw today, and one of the criticisms I have of Arsenal as a team… is that they lack something really special in the attack.
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‘They lack a world-class talent who could have just turned that game forward. They definitely lack that.’
After a lengthy gap Arsenal return to Premier League action on April 11 against Bournemouth, while Man City visit Chelsea the following day.
Cinderella has been kicked out of the dance early for the second straight season.
Following a madness-promising first day of upsets, the NCAA Tournament has turned into a high-major affair.
The Sweet 16 invite is for power-conference programs only.
Advocates for fewer automatic qualifiers and bracket expansion will have a field day with this one.
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“I think parity is great for the game, but things change,” said Arizona coach Tommy Lloyd, who spent 21 seasons as an assistant at Gonzaga.
The Big Ten is the big conference on the block, pushing through a league-record six teams into the Sweet 16 — three in the same region.
The SEC has four Sweet 16 teams, the Big 12 three, the Big East two, the ACC one.
Mid-majors: zero for the second straight season.
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East Region
The top three seeds made it through the East.
St. John’s is the Darling.
The fifth-seeded Red Storm (30-6) blew a 12-point lead against Kansas, but Dylan Darling, who hadn’t hit a shot all day, scored at the buzzer for a 67-65 win that sends St. John’s to the Sweet 16 for the first time since 1999.
Next up for the Johnnies is a date with Duke on Friday in Washington.
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The Blue Devils (34-2) and star freshman Cameron Boozer had an opening 1-vs.-16 scare against Siena but took it out on TCU with an 81-58 win to reach the Sweet 16 for the third straight season.
The second regional semifinal likely will leave both teams bruised and battered.
UConn (31-5) lost in the second round last season following consecutive national championships but clamped down on UCLA to earn a Sweet 16 return.
Michigan State (27-7) is in the Sweet 16 for the 17th time under coach Tom Izzo, led by the dynamic duo of Jeremy Fears Jr. and Coen Carr.
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South Region
No. 2 seed Houston avoided having to play reigning national champion Florida — Iowa made sure of that — and will be playing at home for the South Region.
The Cougars (30-6) will be surrounded by Big Ten teams, starting with a 2-mile trip from campus against Illinois on Thursday.
The Illini (26-8) are big — bigger than any team in the country.
They used that size to their advantage, clobbering Penn and VCU to reach the Sweet 16 for the second time in three seasons under coach Brad Underwood.
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The second East semifinal will be the battle of the corn.
No. 4 seed Nebraska (28-6) is the closest thing the Sweet 16 has to an underdog — only because it had never won an NCAA Tournament game prior to this season.
Michigan has looked every bit a top seed, winning its first two games by an average of 22 points.
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Next up is a showdown with No. 4 seed Alabama on Friday in Chicago.
The Crimson Tide (25-9) washed away Texas Tech by raining down 19 3-pointers in a 90-65 thrashing to reach the Sweet 16 for the fourth straight season.
No. 2 seed Iowa State took a big hit when All-America forward Joshua Jefferson sprained his ankle in the Cyclones’ opener and didn’t play against Kentucky.
It did little to slow them down; the Cyclones (29-7) spun away from Kentucky 82-63 to reach the Sweet 16 for the third time under coach T.J. Otzelberger.
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Iowa State hopes to have Jefferson back for Friday’s game and will likely need him against Tennessee.
The No. 6 Vols (24-11) have been Sweet 16 regulars under coach Rick Barnes and made it four straight by outlasting Virginia 79-72.
West Region
The West has an SEC team disguised as Cinderella.
Texas has a world of resources and plays in the SEC yet found itself in Dayton, Ohio, as a No. 11 seed.
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The Longhorns (21-14) pulled it together at just the right time in their first season under coach Sean Miller, knocking off No. 3 seed Gonzaga to become the sixth First Four team to reach the Sweet 16.
That earns them a spot in the West semifinals against No. 2 Purdue on Thursday in San Jose, California.
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The showdown between No. 1 Arizona and No. 4 Alabama will be an NBA scout’s delight.
John Calipari set the standard for recruiting NBA lottery picks at Kentucky, and it’s been no different in his second season in Fayetteville. Fabulous freshman Darius Acuff Jr. was the star in Arkansas’ 94-88 win over High Point, scoring 36 points as the Razorbacks secured their second straight Sweet 16 berth.
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Peter Magyar, left, is hoping to beat Victor Orban, right, to become Hungary’s new prime minister (Picture: Getty/Metro)
The UK’s most recent general election in 2024 certainly contained its share of drama – think Rishi Sunak’s D-Day blunder, or Nigel Farage’s dramatic return to the fray.
But for truly bizarre politics, Hungary really takes the Dobosh.
On April 12, the eastern European nation will go to the polls for its first parliamentary elections since 2022.
Last time around, incumbent Prime Minister Viktor Orbán – a strong ally of Donald Trump with a distinctive centre-parted haircut – achieved a romping victory for his party Fidesz.
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He’s spent the last four years yanking his country further to the right and doing his best to stop support being sent to Ukraine in its fight against Russian invaders.
However, a worsening Hungarian economy has hampered his chances of scoring a fifth term as PM.
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Polls suggest his party has been overtaken by a relatively new challenger called Tisza, which has rocketed in popularity since Orbán critic Péter Magyar took over in July 2024.
Magyar – whose surname literally translates to ‘Hungarian’ – was once a loyal member of Fidesz, but resigned in February 2024 with a blistering attack on Orbán’s record.
Unsurprisingly, there is no love lost between the two men, which may explain why the latest election has become a little… messy.
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Peter Magyar speaking in Hungary during the campaign (Photo by Janos Kummer/Getty Images)
Even before campaigning had fully kicked off, Magyar attracted international headlines with claims his opponents were plotting to blackmail him with a sex tape.
The opposition leader said Fidesz was ‘planning to release a recording, recorded with secret service equipment and possibly faked, in which my then-girlfriend and I are seen having intimate intercourse’.
The accusation stemmed, he said, from a picture of a bedroom that had been shared with journalists, captioned ‘coming soon’.
Fidesz denied any involvement in such a plot, and no such video appears to have been published.
Vladimir Putin and Viktor Orban, who is considered one of the European leaders closest to the Russian president (Picture: Sean Gallup/Getty Images)
Then, on Sunday, the Washington Post published an explosive story suggesting the stakes in the election were being felt far beyond Hungary’s borders.
As mentioned above, Orbán has made a name for himself as a rare voice opposing support for Ukraine within the European Union and Nato.
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That has endeared him to Moscow, who allegedly offered some help to tip the scales of the election in his favour – with extraordinarily melodramatic methods.
Citing an internal report for Russia’s foreign intelligence service the SVR, the US newspaper said officers considered a strategy they called ‘the Gamechanger’.
It involved, bluntly, ‘the staging of an assassination attempt on Viktor Orbán’.
Orban, who has led Hungary for 16 years, sits on Donald Trump’s Board of Peace (Picture: Fabrice COFFRINI / AFP via Getty Images)
Their alleged plan may have been inspired by the impact of the attempted killing of Donald Trump during the 2024 US presidential election, which resulted in an iconic picture and rallied support.
This report was dismissed by Hungarian foreign minister Péter Szijjártó as ‘insane conspiracy theories that are beyond imagination’.
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Questions have also been asked about the decision to appoint a former interpreter for Vladimir Putin to a top role monitoring the parliamentary election.
Daria Boyarskaya will help co-ordinate the work of the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe overseeing the democratic process next month.
But in a previous life, she worked for years in Russia’s foreign ministry and helped to interpret meetings including one between Putin and Donald Trump in 2019, according to the Guardian.
Daria Boyarskaya beside Vladimir Putin at a meeting with Donald Trump (Picture: East2West)
The choice was criticised by rights group the Hungarian Helsinki Committee, but OSCE secretary general Roberto Montella said Ms Boyarskaya retains his ‘full trust and confidence’.
A spokesperson for the group added: ‘The Russian government does not pay Ms Boyarskaya’s salary, nor has it done it so in the past.’
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Meanwhile, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk accused Orbán’s team of ‘inform[ing] Moscow about EU Council meetings in every detail’ in an X post on Sunday.
Political news site Politico reported the EU was limiting the amount of confidential material passed to Hungary’s leaders out of concern it would end up in the hands of the Kremlin.
János Bóka, the Hungarian Europe Minister, described the story as ‘fake news’.
And Russia is not the only source of foreign support for Orbán and his government ahead of the crucial elections – President Trump has his back too.
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In a video message shown at a conference on Saturday, Trump said: ‘He’s a fantastic guy and it’s such an honour to endorse him.’
In less than two weeks, we’ll know whether that had an impact – but who knows what could happen before then?
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