Holidaymakers can now book direct flights with EasyJet to Seville, with operations starting on August 2, 2026.
Flights are scheduled to run twice weekly on Thursdays and Sundays, serving both city break enthusiasts and holidaymakers seeking stays of a week or more.
Noted for its flamenco heritage, sun-soaked plazas, iconic orange tree-lined streets, and rich festival calendar, the Andalusian capital presents travellers with an array of attractions.
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This new route comes as part of EasyJet’s ongoing expansion efforts around Liverpool.
The airline is adding another aircraft to its Liverpool base, leading to greater flexibility for passengers booking flights and package holidays across Europe and North Africa.
EasyJet’s new direct flights to Seville push their portfolio to 41 destinations in 18 countries, offered from Liverpool.
An Only Fools and Horses favourite appeared on Alan Titchmarsh’s show to discuss the 45th anniversary documentary
Joe Crutchley Screen Time reporter
12:08, 29 Mar 2026Updated 12:09, 29 Mar 2026
An BBC Only Fools and Horses icon has spoken frankly about her involvement in an upcoming documentary.
The cherished sitcom marks its 45th anniversary this year, having originally aired between 1981 and 1991 across seven series, with a further sixteen specials broadcast intermittently until 2003.
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U&GOLD recently unveiled a brand-new two-part documentary series, Only Fools and Horses: The Lost Archive, to commemorate the milestone anniversary.
The television special will feature previously unseen footage, conversations with cast and crew members, and long-lost archive material. On Sunday (March 29), Tessa Peake-Jones appeared on Love Your Weekend with Alan Titchmarsh, where she spoke about the forthcoming documentary.
The actress portrayed Derek ‘Del Boy’ Trotter’s romantic partner Raquel Turner in the much-loved BBC sitcom, a role she inhabited from 1988 through to the programme’s conclusion in 2003, reports the Mirror.
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Yet, according to the television star, she found making the new Only Fools documentary challenging. In a poignant admission, Tessa, who also appears as Mrs Maguire in the ITV drama Grantchester, confessed: “It’s very odd looking at yourself.
“20, 30 years ago you’re a very different person then, you’re in prime, you’ve got the world ahead of you, and now at our age, we’re looking back at it.” Alan then interjected: “But you only see what you could have done better.”
Tessa responded: “And that’s why I don’t watch myself. Some people can watch playback when they’re filming things and they learn and they go ‘oh I’ll do that next time’. I just see the awfulness of it all, it doesn’t do me any good whatsoever.”
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Earlier this year, Tessa made an appearance on ITV’s Lorraine where she talked about the Only Fools documentary. Speaking to stand-in presenter Christine Lampard, she revealed: “They found unseen footage in a drawer at the BBC and they’ve put together two or three episodes.
“Cut scenes, some of it are scenes were things went wrong. They put it all together and got us to watch the various scenes. It was very odd though, and David Jason was very, very poignant about it all.
“There was one bit he watched and he said ‘Oh we were so young and successful back then,’ so it was quite depressing. But I know what he meant, seeing yourself decades ago, it was peculiar.”
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Love Your Weekend with Alan Titchmarsh airs every Sunday at 9:30am on ITV1.
The Americans who blazed the trail to the moon more than half a century ago were white men chosen for their military test pilot experience. This first Artemis crew includes a woman, a person of color and a Canadian, products of a more diversified astronaut corps.
None of them were alive during NASA’s storied Apollo program that sent 24 astronauts to the moon including 12 moonwalkers. They won’t land on the moon this time or even orbit it, but the out-and-back journey will take them thousands of miles deeper into space than even the Apollo astronauts ventured, promising unprecedented views of the lunar far side.
Here’s a look at the Artemis astronauts whose mission aims to pave the path for future moon landings:
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Commander Reid Wiseman
Leading the nearly 10-day mission is a widower who considers solo parenting — not rocketing to the moon — his biggest and most rewarding challenge.
Wiseman, 50, a retired Navy captain from Baltimore, was serving as NASA’s chief astronaut when asked three years ago to lead humanity’s first lunar trip since 1972. His wife Carroll’s death from cancer in 2020 gave him pause.
He’d spent more than five months at the International Space Station in 2014, and his two teenage daughters, especially the older one, had “zero interest” in him launching again.
“We talked about it and I said, ‘Look, of all the people on planet Earth right now, there are four people that are in a position to go fly around the moon,” he said. “I cannot say no to that opportunity.”
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The next day, homemade moon cupcakes awaited him, along with his daughters’ support. The toughest part isn’t leaving them — “it’s the stress that I’m putting on them,” he said.
Open with his daughters about everything, he recently told them where he keeps his will.
Pilot Victor Glover
As one of NASA’s few Black astronauts, Glover sees his presence on the mission as “a force for good.”
The 49-year-old Navy captain and former combat pilot from Pomona, California, makes it a habit to listen to Gil Scott-Heron’s “Whitey on the Moon” and Marvin Gaye’s “Make Me Wanna Holler” from the white-dominated Apollo era.
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“I listen to those for perspective,” he said. “It captures what we did well, what we did poorly.”
The ability for him now to offer hope to others is “an amazing blessing and a privilege.” Despite having one spaceflight behind him — an early SpaceX crew run to the International Space Station — he finds himself in new personal territory. His four daughters are in their late teens and early 20s, “and I spend as an much time and thought preparing them as NASA does preparing me.”
He’s hyper-focused on running “our best race so that we can hand the baton off to the next leg” — a 2027 practice docking mission in orbit around Earth between an Orion crew capsule and one or two lunar landers. The all-important moon landing would follow in 2028 with yet another set of astronauts.
Mission specialist Christina Koch
The last time Koch blasted into space, she was gone almost a year, so she’s not sweating a quick trip to the moon and back.
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The 47-year-old electrical engineer from Jacksonville, North Carolina, holds the record for the longest single spaceflight by a woman — 328 days. She took part in the first all-female spacewalk during her lengthy stay at the space station in 2019.
More than any one individual, “it’s about celebrating the fact that we’ve arrived to this place in history” where women can fly to the moon, she said.
Before she got called up by NASA, Koch spent a year at a South Pole research station. Between that and her space stint, she feels she’s “inoculated” most of her family and friends.
“So far, I haven’t gotten too many nerves from folks. Maybe my dog, but I’ve reassured her that it’s only 10 days. It’s not going to be as long as last time.”
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Her and her husband’s rescue pooch is named Sadie Lou.
Canadian Space Agency’s Jeremy Hansen
The Canadian fighter pilot and physicist is making his space debut, stressful enough, but also serving as his country’s first emissary to the moon.
“Maybe I’m naive, but I don’t feel a lot of personal pressure.”
Hansen, 50, grew up on a farm near London, Ontario, before moving to Ingersoll and pursuing a flying career. The Canadian Space Agency selected him as an astronaut in 2009, and he was named to the Artemis crew in 2023.
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He realizes only now how much effort it took to send men to the moon during Apollo.
“When I walk out and I look at the moon now, it looks and feels a little bit farther than it used to be,” he said. “I just understand in the details how much harder it is than I thought it was watching videos of it.”
Dangers still loom — something he’s shared with his college-aged son and twin daughters. “The most likely outcome is that we will come back safe. There’s a chance we won’t, and you will be able to move through life even if that happens,” he assured them.
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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
The Insolvency Service announced this week that Sundas Ali, who’s last known address was in Great Lever, has been banned from running companies for four years.
The service said that Ali, 32, had breached her duties as a director of New Zak Services Ltd by failing to abide by The Immigration, Asylum and Nationality Act 2006.
A statement said: “Sundas Ali has breached her duties as a director of New Zak Services Ltd by failing to ensure that it complied with legislative requirements in that company did not comply with its statutory obligations under The Immigration, Asylum and Nationality Act 2006, resulting in the employment of one illegal worker.
The Insolvency Service issued a ban (Image: Newsquest)
“Home Office Immigration Enforcement (HOIE) after investigating the company issued a Notification of Liability for a Civil Penalty of £10,000 in respect of the employment of these illegal workers, payment of which was due on or before September 15, 2023.
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“Company has paid £2,222.24 of the fine due to HOIE.
“Sundas Ali was an appointed director of the company at the time of the breach of the Immigration, Asylum and Nationality legislation.”
According to Companies House, the business was mainly a retailer that focused on food, drink and tobacco.
A winding up notice on Companies House said that New Zak Services Ltd’s trading address was found on Springfield Road in Kearsley, where it traded as MHP News.
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The registered office was moved to The Copper Room Deva City Office Park, Trinity Way, Manchester, as part of the liquidation process.
Companies House shows that New Zak Services Ltd was first incorporated on April 18, 2017.
It was dissolved on March 2 this year, with its last accounts made up to April 30, 2023, and its last confirmation statement dated July 8, 2023.
The Insolvency Service says that Ali had been a director of the company at the time the breach happened.
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It says her ban from being a company director will start from March 27, 2026 and will remain in force for the next four years.
Huge ‘No Kings’ protests against Donald Trump and the far-right have swept across the US.
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People opposing Trump’s policies, like the Iran war, ICE and rising prices, gathered in major cities yesterday, with banners and effigies against the US president, JD Vance and other government top brass.
Organisers of the protests said they hoped the latest No Kings outing could attract millions of people.
While most of yesterday’s action is believed to have been peaceful, in West Palm Beach, Florida, tensions were high after Trump supporters engaged in verbal altercations with No Kings protesters.
A woman dressed as the Statue of Liberty was apprehended by the police in Los Angeles (Picture: AFP/Getty Images)
A protester is knocked to the ground by an LAPD mounted police horse as officers evacuate the area following clashes near the Metropolitan Detention Center during the ‘No Kings’ rally (Picture: AFP/Getty Images)
The protesters came face to face with competing flags and signs, with swearing and shouting until the police intervened, CNN reports.
In the metropolitan Los Angeles region alone, 40 protests were planned, including at the police detention centres.
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Some clashes were reported between the demonstrators and the police, with officers launching tear gas at the people near the Metropolitan Detention Center, a federal prison, according to the LA Times.
Protesters carried a large baby Trump blimp at the protests (Picture: Reginald Mathalone/NurPhoto/Shutterstock)
In London, an estimated half a million people gathered in London for ‘the biggest demonstration ever against the far right’, organisers said.
Protesters carrying placards saying ‘No to racism, no to Trump’, and ‘Refugees welcome’ marched through the capital to Whitehall amid a heavy police presence, with officers lining the streets.
Organisers said their estimates showed they had successfully outnumbered the Tommy Robinson-led Unite the Kingdom rally in London in September.
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To get the latest news from the capital, visit Metro’s London news hub.
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Thousands marched in California’s Huntington Beach, Orange County, against Trump (Picture: Ron Lyon/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock)
That demonstration – organised by right-wing activist Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon – was attended by between 110,000 and 150,000 people, while about 5,000 were involved in an anti-racism counter-demonstration.
There were several incidents of violent disorder which left some police officers injured on that occasion, and the event was condemned at the time by Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, who said it had left people feeling ‘more scared than they were before’.
On Saturday, organisers said people had gathered for a ‘peaceful’ demonstration against ‘hatred and division and racism’.
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Rally co-organiser Kevin Courtney, chairman of the coalition, told crowds gathered on Whitehall: ‘Our estimate is now that there are half a million people on this demonstration – the biggest demonstration ever against the far right.
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Protesters demonstrate during the ‘Together Against the Far Right’ protest in London (Picture: EPA)
‘And it gives us all confidence to carry on. Thank you very much.’
Speakers included former Labour MP Diane Abbott, who now sits as an independent in Parliament.
She told a cheering crowd: ‘The turnout today is the largest anti-racist march that I have seen in my lifetime, and you should all be proud of yourselves for coming out in such numbers today.’
Demonstrators carry a figure depicting US President Donald Trump (Picture: Reuters)
Sabby Dhalu, who is joint secretary of the Together Alliance and co-convenor of Stand Up To Racism, said the UK is seeing an ‘unprecedented growth’ in support for far-right organisations – but that she believed the size of attendance on Saturday had ‘intimidated the far right’ away from a counter-protest.
Speaking before the event, she said: ‘The Tommy Robinson-led Unite the Kingdom demonstration back in September 2025 was the biggest far-right mobilisation in British history.
‘We believe that the majority of British people stand against the hatred and division and racism that was being encouraged at that demonstration and by these types of organisations, and it’s time to act.’
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People take part in a Together Alliance march through central London (Picture: PA)
Organisers said their estimates showed they had successfully outnumbered the Tommy Robinson-led Unite the Kingdom rally (Picture: PA)
Asked if she was concerned about potential counter-protests and disorder, Ms Dhalu said: ‘We’re confident that the size of our mobilisation here today has actually intimidated the far-right, and I think they feel that they are not confident enough to stand against us because they know that we’re going to be out in big numbers.’
Singer Billy Bragg, who ahead of the march criticised US president Donald Trump as ‘a constant reminder of the cruel realities of the politics of division’, performed some protest songs onstage at Whitehall.
He said while concerns some have about migration might be justified, ‘their solutions are not justifiable in any way or sort’.
A person carries a placard as demonstators gather prior to a march against far-right extremism from Park Lane to Trafalgar Square (Picture: Reuters)
He added: ‘Re migration, the forced deportation of our fellow citizens, we’ve seen what that looks like in the United States of America.
‘And if it does come to that in this country then we will have to be as courageous as the people of Minneapolis who stood in the streets to deny (deportations).’
“It’s a lovely wool rug. Lovely to look at and lovely to walk on.”
Eleanor Fleming Regional Content Editor
11:34, 29 Mar 2026
This article contains affiliate links, we will receive a commission on any sales we generate from it. Learn more
Adding a rug to a space can be a great finishing touch – whether it’s for extra colour, style or cushioning. At Dunelm, there is currently 50% off selected items, including one rug that shoppers are praising as ‘lively to look at and lovely to walk on’.
Dunelm’s half-price Elements Wave Natural Border Wool Rug is currently available from Dunelm for £49 to £229, depending on the size chosen. It is crafted from 100% wool for ‘a warm underfoot feeling’, and there are hand-carved scalloped edges for a ‘premium finish’.
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Dunelm’s Elements Wave Natural Border Wool Rug features a neutral central colour, with bolder colours on the scalloped edges, making it a standout piece. To care for it, Dunelm recommends using a suction-type vacuum to ensure that rotating brushes don’t damage the wool pile.
Or, in the case of an accidental spillage, shoppers should ‘blot with a clean and dry cloth’. It is also worth noting that due to the woollen composition of the rug, there might be some fibre loss, but shoppers can trim any loose fibres with household scissors.
For those with more traditional tastes, Dusk has the Zahra Persian Style Machine Washable Rug in the colour natural, which is ‘arriving soon’ and costs £35. This comes in two sizes and four colours, and is described as having a ‘modern take on classic Persian style’, with a detailed pattern and warm, earthy tones.
Or at Habitat, part of the Sainsbury’s Group, there’s the Habitat Scalloped Stripe Beige Flatweave Rug (120 x 170cm) for £48.75, down from£65. This features a ‘striking pattern’ and it is made from hardwearing natural fabrics, making it ‘neutral and timeless’, the site says.
But back to the Elements Wave Natural Border Wool Rug from Dunelm, shoppers have left an average overall 4.1 out of five rating. One said: “Good rug and good value, pleased with thickness and design, looks more expensive than it was.”
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A second said: “It’s a lovely wool rug. Lovely to look at and lovely to walk on.”
While a third wrote: “We bought this rug for our lounge and we love it, it’s just as described and good material, have received lots of compliments.” Others left some feedback, with one writing: “So chic and looks so expensive… has a lot of wool shed at the beginning which is pretty normal of a rug this price – but looks great.”
Someone else said: “It’s a soft and cushioned underfoot rug. Only thing you should be prepared (for is) that wool rugs naturally shed, so it’s shedding a lot… but as it was only a “not polyester” option, we knew and bought it.”
Paige Rose, founder of creative agency Hapn Creative, rebuilt her brand after bricks were thrown through the window of her home, where she lives with her five-year-old son.
She said: “Last year brought a situation no business owner or parent should have to face, when my home where my young son lives was targeted.
“It was deeply unsettling, but I made a conscious decision not to allow that moment to define either myself or the business I had built with such care.
“Instead, I chose to move forward with clarity and resilience.
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“It was deeply unsettling, but I made a conscious decision not to allow that moment to define either myself or the business.”
Instead, she used the experience as fuel to drive her business forward.
Over the past four years, Hapn Creative has grown from a one-woman operation into a multi-award-winning agency with a team of seven.
The company now serves clients across the UK and internationally.
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Hapn Creative has also gained national recognition, winning the title of The Best Social Media Strategy in the UK by Business Awards UK earlier this month.
That brought its total to eight awards, alongside a recent nomination for a Wigan Business Award.
Rose explained: “What began as a solo venture four years ago has since evolved into a refined creative agency working with a team and clients across the UK and internationally, and receiving national recognition for our work is a moment I’m incredibly proud of.
“For me, this journey represents more than growth.
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“It’s about building something with strength, integrity and intention, regardless of the challenges faced along the way.”
Hapn Creative now serves clients across the UK and internationally, helping clients achieve more than 184 million views on Instagram reels. (Image: Supplied)
Hapn Creative has delivered notable results for its clients, helping them achieve more than 184 million views on Instagram reels and generating significant ROI through social media strategy.
The agency has worked on high-profile international projects, including collaborations with global brands such as Temu, Brainzyme, and The Productivity Method.
It has also produced branding and creative work for businesses in Milan and Paris, helped a London office brand fully occupy a building through digital marketing, and produced content for Isle of Man TT riders – going on to receive recognition and appreciation from TT rider Davey Todd.
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In addition to running the agency, Rose has built a network of business professionals through Ignition Networking, most recently hosting entrepreneur Vicky Owens as a keynote speaker.
She was also featured on Ms Owens’ podcast, currently ranked in the top 10 business podcasts in the UK, where she spoke about the brick attack.
As the business continues to expand, Rose said her focus remains on delivering work that is “commercially impactful and creatively elevated” while building a brand that represents a more considered, global standard within the industry.
Everything you need to know as car crashes off the M6 into water shutting motorway for over nine hours – Manchester Evening News
Need to know
One casualty was rescued by firefighters
The empty southbound carriageway of the M6 in Cheshire this morning during the closure
M6 closed for hours after car crashes into water near Greater Manchester
A stretch of the M6 in Cheshire was closed for more than nine hours this morning (Sunday, March 29) after a car left the motorway and landed partially in water
The serious crash was reported at around 12:40am between junction 19 for Knutsford and junction 18 for Middlewich and Holmes Chapel.
Cheshire Fire and Rescue Service said they were responding to “a road traffic collision where a car has left the M6 south carriageway and come to rest on the edge of a brook with the rear of the vehicle partially in the water.”
One casualty was rescued around 45 minutes later and handed over to paramedics. Their condition is not yet known.
A fire service technician was deployed into the water to help rescue the casualty and stabilise the car, which was then winched to a fire engine.
The carriageway was shut for more than nine hours whilst the vehicle was recovered and repairs carried out to the barriers before it eventually reopened at around 10:30am
The iconic character was first the hero of children’s books before making it onto television
Over the generations, there have been numerous iconic children’s TV shows, stories, and characters – like Iggle Piggle, Postman Pat, SpongeBob SquarePants or Bob the Builder. Each of these famous characters really takes people from all ages on a trip down memory lane and back to the good old days when our biggest concern was whether Bob the Builder could really fix it.
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One small village, nestled in the middle of some lovely countryside, happens to have played a part in creating a very popular children’s character. Elsworth is a small village located around nine miles southeast of Huntingdon.
At first glance, it may look like any other village in the county, but it has a unique claim to fame. It is not only home to some gorgeous cottages but it also played a part in creating a much loved children’s character, Thomas the Tank Engine.
Reverend Wilbert Awdry OBE, was born in Hampshire but had later moved to the village in 1946 when The Railway Series, featuring iconic Thomas, was published. Reverend Awdry served as a rector from 1946 to 1952.
According to Cambridge Past, Present & Future, Awdry had just become rector of the parish of Elsworth when the success of his first two books led the publisher to ask Awdry to write a new book for the Railway Series every year. He did so for the next 24 years, writing five titles at Elsworth before moving to serve another parish.
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A blue plaque commemorating the Reverend was unveiled in December 2020 to mark the 75th anniversary of his first children’s books. Cambridge Past, Present & Future put the plaque on the old rectory to mark the books he wrote there.
You may be wondering what else makes the village so special. Well, a pub, two schools, and a church are just a few reasons why Elsworth is lovely.
The George and Dragon, situated on Boxworth Road, is a popular gastropub with a focus on fresh fish and seafood from local suppliers as well as high-quality meats such as dry aged beef.
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The village is also home to two schools – Elsworth C Of E Primary School, and Elsworth Pre School – making it an ideal location for families with young children.
The village, complete with many thatched cottages and farmhouses, is home to a 14th century church, the Holy Trinity Church (where Awdry was a rector), along with a local shop run by villagers to offer the basics including fresh bread, sweet treats, and meat.
According to Rightmove, properties in this village had an overall average price of £707,500 over the last year. The majority of properties sold in Elsworth during the last year were detached properties, selling for an average price of £781,000. Semi-detached properties sold for an average of £340,000.
What followed was an unlikely journey. He went to film school, spent time in India chasing creative opportunities, then returned to the UK. He also helped a YouTube channel grow to 70,000 subscribers in just a year. In a more unexpected turn, he found himself running a surgical supply company after a surgeon discovered his content online.
Doting mum Segen Ghebrekidan’s 17-year-old son Solomon was brutally murdered. She tells of his bravery, his heroism, and how he’s not just another victim of knife crime
When a 17-year-old lad from the next road gave Segen Ghebrekidan a hug as she returned home at midday, something felt strangely unsettling. The teenager had happily tucked into a Sunday roast with her family before now and mucked around on the PlayStation with her 18-year-old son, Solomon. But as he walked back to his house on August 15, 2019, Segen, 41, recalls: “I had a strange feeling something wasn’t right.” Her intuition was spot on, as less than two hours later, her life changed forever.
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Until her encounter with the youth, Segen’s day had been full of hope. After years working as a carer, she had just completed the final registration process to start a four-year course in health and social care – hoping to build a brighter future for herself, Solomon and his sister Angel, who was just three at the time. She says: “I had an interview that day and everything seemed positive.”
But Segen never got to start that course. For, at around 1.30pm, Solomon was walking through Brixton, where they lived in south west London, with a female friend, when they passed the same lad near a kebab shop. Exchanging a fistbump greeting, before leaving him and turning into another street, they realised the teenager was following them.
Catching Solomon and his friend up, the youth confronted them, leading to an argument that turned violent. Protective over his female friend, Solomon tried to shield her – pulling the lad away. But, as they struggled, the 17-year-old pulled out a knife and stabbed him repeatedly — six times in the chest, neck and arms. Three witnesses watched in horror as Solomon collapsed onto the pavement and a friend raced to fetch his mother.
Segen doted on Solomon, who was born on June 26, 2001 at St George’s Hospital in Tooting, south west London, a few years after she moved to Britain from Eritrea. Sociable and caring, he made friends easily. Segen says: “He lit up any room he walked into. People just loved him.”
A devoted Manchester United fan, Solomon loved playing football and hanging out with friends on their estate. Studying painting and decorating at nearby Lambeth College, he hoped to have a career in the trade. Raised as a Rastafarian, following the beliefs of his father, who lives in Ethiopia, Solomon was active in the Ethiopian World Federation and regularly helped out at his church.
Segen says: “He played the drums during gatherings, helped prepare food and drinks and was always volunteering. He did charity work and was very well known in the community. He would come with me to community events and help people. If neighbours needed shopping carried upstairs, he would help them. Everyone spoke well of him. He was respectful, kind, always smiling and he adored his little sister. He would do anything for her.”
But as Segen raced to Solomon’s side that August day, she could see that she was losing him. Surrounded by paramedics and police officers, all fighting to save him, Segen recalls: “They were pumping blood into him. There were ambulances, police cars and even a helicopter.”
Doctors worked frantically for 45 minutes, performing emergency treatment behind red medical screens. But his injuries were too severe and he died at the scene. “My world stopped,” Segen whispers. “Half of my heart went with my son that day.”
The killer fled, but was tracked through CCTV and DNA evidence recovered from burnt clothing discovered during police searches. Five days later, on August 20, the 17-year-old handed himself in to police, accompanied by his mother. During interviews he repeatedly answered “no comment”.
But the girl Solomon had protected – who now lives under witness protection – testified in court. And six years ago, in March 2020, following a trial at Woolwich Crown Court, a jury found him guilty of murder. His identity protected because of his age, he was sentenced to detention at Her Majesty’s Pleasure – the juvenile equivalent of a life sentence – with a minimum of 14 years before becoming eligible for parole.
Angela Moriarty from the Crown Prosecution Service said: “Solomon was the victim of a violent and unprovoked attack.” Semen says: “My son died a hero. He stepped between the blade and the girl walking beside him, shielding her as violence erupted.
“’Run,’ he told her. She escaped. Solomon did not. That bravery has never really been acknowledged, but I am so proud of him. He was so selfless.” Since Solomon’s death, Segen has been forced to refute rumours that he was part of gangland culture. She says: “That simply wasn’t true. He had friends everywhere, but he wasn’t part of that life.”
To her horror, Solomon’s grave has been vandalised repeatedly, and threatening videos linked to gang culture appeared online, mocking his death. “It was incredibly disrespectful,” she says. In fact, Segen was so worried about knife crime and the risk of her son becoming involved that she regularly searched his room and pockets. She says: “He used to joke and call me ‘the police officer’.”
Nine days after his murder, Segen organised a memorial gathering at Brixton Town Hall for Solomon, attended by 500 people. Galvanised by her grief, since her son’s murder, Segen has poured all her energy into fighting knife crime. According to the latest government statistics, in the year ending March 2025, there were just over 50,000 police-recorded knife offences in England and Wales – 205 of them were murders.
A voracious campaigner, she organises marches against knife crime, under the banner ‘Brixton Says No to Knife Crime’ and has protested outside Scotland Yard. She’s also created support groups for women whose lives have been shattered by youth violence.
Through community fundraising events and selling donated clothes and books at stalls, she has raised thousands of pounds, funding several bleeding control kits, which are installed around the community in places like shops and chip shops, to help treat victims of knife crime or accidents. She says: “I even carry one myself now. I show people how to use them. If it saves just one life, then something good has come out of this tragedy.”
At the Baytree Centre – a social inclusion and educational charity in Brixton – she runs weekly workshops for women and girls whose families have been touched by knife crime, offering everything from exercise and baking classes to open discussions about grief and trauma.
She says: “It’s a safe space where women can talk about what they’ve been through. Before this, nothing like it existed.” Where knife crime is concerned, Segen believes education is key, as the police cannot stamp it out alone. She says: “The police cannot control everything. Parents and communities need to be involved.”
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Meanwhile, Segen says the home she shares with Angel, now nine, feels empty without Solomon. She says: “He was brave. He thought about someone else before himself. My son was a hero. He was not just another victim of knife crime. And I will spend the rest of my life making sure people remember that.”
*Follow Segen’s campaign on Facebook at Solomon Legacy, and on Instagram at Solomon_Legacy_18
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