Out of 75 councillors, 49 are Conservative, nine Liberal Democrat and Independent Group, six Labour, one Reform, eight in the the Non-Aligned Group (2 Canvey Island Independent Party, 2 Residents for Uttlesford, 1 Independent Loughton Residents Association, 3 Independents), as well as two vacancies.
I HAVE recently had to report a rouge trader to York police and trading standards as a relative had a large amount of money taken by deception but neither authority were interested.
Both advised that it should be a civil case and we should proceed down that route.
Both the trader and both authorities know that the civil case route would cost my relative more money as the trader would simply declare themselves bankrupt and set up again under another name which he has done four times before.
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It seems to me that both sets of authorities are either not bothered and don’t know how to deal with this sort of case and as such are giving him carte blanche to carry out his criminality, or they are frightened to deal with him.
I once had to ring the police as a person (of no fixed abode) was seen and caught on camera urinating in a public street and was advised by the police not to do anything as there could be repercussions, how sad is this.
Name and address supplied
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What a player!
WHAT’S the matter with these professional football wusses?
I am referring to Manchester City bellyaching over professional footballers expected to play three games over an eight-day period – they are wusses.
Roy of the Rovers used to work down the pit for 12 hours, and after a sponge bath, would eat two helpings of fish and chips, washed down with four pints of beer, smoke ten full strength cigs then, after missing the bus, cycle 40 miles to the match using borrowed kit and go on to score the winning goal.
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The certainly don’t make football players of that standard anymore!
D M Deamer,
Penleys Grove Street,
Monkgate, York
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A question
NOW the first class cricket season has started, selection of players good enough to play for England is a subject for discussion in many cricket clubs country wide.
One point often comes to the fore, why do we need a Kiwi with not the finest of CVs to coach our national team, particularly when he is rarely to be seen on the county circuit watching the potential talent available.
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Peter Rickaby,
Moat Way,
Brayton
What do you think?
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Feel strongly about an issue? Write us a letter. Please write no more than 250 words and you must provide your full name, address and mobile number. Send your views by email to: letters@thepress.co.uk
A crew attended and found a fire involving a container
Firefighters were called to a road in a Cambridgeshire village after receiving reports of a fire breaking out on Friday, May 1. Cambridgeshire Fire and Rescue Service were called at 6.29pm to reports of a fire in the open on Furlong Way in Caldecote.
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A crew from Cambridge attended and arrived to find a fire involving a container. The firefighters worked to tackle the fire using hose reels before returning to their station. A spokesperson for Cambridgeshire Fire and Rescue service has confirmed that the cause of the fire is believed to be deliberate.
Volunteers have been asked to help clear the debris on Saturday (May 2) by a local. The local claims the container had equipment inside believed to have been “destroyed” by the fire.
For children with autism spectrum disorder and with an intellectual disability, the options for improving communication and social skills are limited.
Talking therapies and behavioural programmes can help some children develop these skills, but they depend on specialists who are in short supply – even in wealthy countries.
That gap motivated us to test a different kind of intervention: using brief, targeted magnetic pulses to stimulate specific parts of the brain. The technique, known as non-invasive brain stimulation or neuromodulation, involves no surgery, no anaesthetic and no drugs.
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A device held close to the scalp generates a rapidly changing magnetic field that passes harmlessly through the skull and stimulates the activity of neurons underneath. It has been used for years to treat depression, and researchers have increasingly been exploring whether it might also help with the social and communication difficulties that are a key symptom of autism.
The version we tested uses a technique called theta-burst stimulation, which delivers pulses in rapid clusters rather than one at a time. This makes each session much shorter than conventional approaches, which is a significant practical advantage when you are asking young children to sit still and cooperate.
In our study, published in the BMJ, each session lasted only a few minutes, and the full course ran over just five days. One group of children received real stimulation, another received a sham version. In the sham treatment, the equipment was applied in the same way and delivered vibrations, but no active pulses were delivered. That way, we could compare results without either group knowing what they’d received, which helps keep the findings reliable.
One hundred and ninety-four children took part, with an average age of around six and a half years. Roughly half had IQ scores below 70, which is typically described as the low-functioning range, though all scored above 50 – the minimum needed to ensure a reliable diagnosis and meaningful participation in the study.
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Parents filled in a questionnaire about their child’s social communication, before the treatment, right after, and again a month later.
The improvements seen after five days were still there after a month, and the size of the effect was large by the standards of clinical research. Children also showed gains in language ability.
No serious side-effects were reported and all minor side-effects resolved without treatment.
Communication improved. Krakenimages/Shutterstock.com
Early days
Children were recruited from multiple sites by advertisements posted in outpatients clinics and through local clinical registries. All legal guardians gave written consent.
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Children with intellectual disability are so often left out of trials of this kind that the evidence for treating them has remained seriously lacking. That this trial included them at all – and in significant numbers – is itself noteworthy. But it is only a first step.
It is still unclear how long the benefits last beyond a month, how many sessions would be needed to maintain them, or how the approach would work when moved from a research setting into an ordinary clinic.
Brain stimulation is not a replacement for behavioural support, and the equipment needed is not cheap or universally available. But conventional approaches – where they exist at all – often require daily sessions over several weeks with a professional, which carries its own costs in time, money and specialist input.
A five-day course is a different proposition. For families who are already stretched, even modest and durable gains in a child’s ability to communicate could matter enormously to them and their families and greatly improve their wellbeing and quality of life.
Zandari went onto win gold in two Paralympics after losing his legs (Picture: Getty)
Alex Zanardi, the former Formula One star who lost both legs in crash, has died at the age of 59.
The Italian driver passed away ‘suddenly’ surrounded by his family on Friday.
Zandari made his F1 debut in 1991, losing both his legs in an accident in September 2001. He then turned his attention to hand cycling, winning four gold medals and two silver medals at the 2012 and 2016 Paralympics.
In 2020, Zanardi suffered another serious accident while competing in a handbike event, leading to severe head injuries which saw him placed in a medically-induced coma.
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‘It is with deep sorrow that the family announces the passing of Alessandro Zanardi, which occurred suddenly yesterday evening, 1 May,’ Zandari’s family said in a statement.
‘Alex died peacefully, surrounded by the affection of those closest to him.’
As Starmer acknowledged, it is balancing act that strikes at the heart of what freedom and democracy is all about – including the right to protest, while addressing the deep hurt, anger and fear the repeated protests cause for many in the Jewish community. Plenty of the Prime Minister’s critics, in opposition parties and beyond, say they are tired of what they see as warm words and platitudes about antisemitism and want to see concrete action.
The attacker was already serving a life sentence for murdering his friend and stabbing a 16-year-old boy
A convicted killer broke the jaw of a Jewish chaplain visiting a Cambridgeshire prison in an attack motivated by racial hate. Joseph Gynane, 41, was already serving a life sentence for murdering his friend and stabbing a 16-year-old boy when he shouted “Allah Akbar” as he attacked the chaplain visiting HMP Whitemoor on September 14, 2025.
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The chaplain had been speaking to prisoners on the top floor landing of the prison when Gynane attacked him from behind at just before 2.30pm on September 14. Gynane punched the man to the back of the head with such force that he was knocked to the floor and continued punching him.
The convicted killer continued even while being sprayed with PAVA (a chemical spray designed to incapacitate attackers) by a prison officer. He eventually stopped the attack, and the chaplain was taken to a different part of the prison where he received medical treatment.
He later visited Peterborough City Hospital, where medical checks revealed he had suffered a broken jaw and a broken thumb. The chaplain told officers he believed the attack was religiously motivated due to him being Jewish and wearing a black skull cap at the time.
Gynane was moved to the prison’s segregation unit and covered his cell in graffiti, including the phrases “free Palestine” and “Death to the IDF”. He was charged with racially aggravated assault inflicting grievous bodily harm (GBH) and admitted the offence at a court hearing in March this year.
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On Friday, May 1, he was sentenced at Cambridge Crown Court where he was handed 11 years (six years plus an extended five years on licence) on top of his existing life sentence. His life sentence holds a minimum term of 30 years, meaning Gynane will not be eligible for release until at least 2055.
Sentencing, Judge Andrew Hurst said chaplains provided support for prisoners and were “valuable, cherished and should be protected”. He noted that Gynane converted to Islam in 2007 and it was clear he held “antisemitic, florid and ideologically disturbing” views.
Judge Hurst said Gynane had a “long record for serious violence, including stabbings”. He also held an “appalling record for violence within prison”, with the highest number of assaults to his name at HMP Whitemoor.
He said the attack was a “serious assault motivated by racial hatred”. He noted his concern about a “very high risk of future assaults” from Gynane, who “will seek to harm innocent members of Jewish community”.
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Detective Constable Emma Purser said: “Gynane was already serving a life sentence for murder, but I am pleased he has now had his sentence extended by quite some time and has faced justice for his actions – which were shocking and despicable.
“The Jewish chaplain involved in this case was providing a valuable service and no-one deserves to be attacked in this way, with such strong violence – and especially not because of their religion.”
Mikel Arteta’s side are set to be without Jurrien Timber and Kai Havertz, while Odegaard is a minor doubt for the game after his withdrawal in the secodn half against Atletico Madrid.
The Norwegian midfielder has had an injury-affected campaign, which has seen him able to start just 15 league games so far this season.
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But former Arsenal midfielder Wilshere believes the Odegaard has to start against Fulham if fit, such is his importance to the side with and without the ball.
‘With Arsenal, I think Odegaard is key,’ Wilshere told talkSPORT. ‘He’s a player who takes risks. He’s a player who, even out of possession, sets everything.
‘I think he’s had a few injuries this season, maybe lost a bit of form at times. When Martin’s playing, it’s a different team. It’s a different team, and they look braver.’
Martin Odegaard is a minor doubt for Saturday’s match with Fulham (Picture: Getty)
But Wilshere, who was part of Arsenal’s academy coaching set-up under Arteta before moving to Norwich and then Luton Town, said he would like to see his former side get back to a more free-flowing style of football.
‘When Mikel first came in, it was about playing,’ he said ‘It was a big focus on build-up, on finding the free play, and they were really, really good at it.
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‘I think then, as a coach and as a team, you always have to look for ways to evolve, to look for ways to change a little bit how you’re playing, because teams will start to work you out. I thought Mikel’s done that really well.
‘I think over the last few years, there has been a little bit of a change in style, but this is also not just Arsenal, right? You look at City and bringing Haaland in, and how they played into him a little bit more.
‘I remember playing against City in a cup final at Wembley, and then the goalie kicking it over all of us, and Aguero scoring. It’s been around for a while.
‘Mikel has obviously thought that this is the best way to win the league. They’ve fallen short over the last few years against the Liverpool team, against the City team that like to dominate the ball.
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‘And Arsenal couldn’t get it done. He obviously sees this as the way forward. At times, I would like to see them play a little bit more as well.’
Looking to capitalise on any slip-up from the Tractor Boys is third-place Millwall, who host relegated Oxford as they look to book their place in the Premier League for the very first time. A point behind them is Middlesbrough, on the road at Wrexham with a tough task to end a top-tier exile that has lasted for almost a decade. Only one of those teams can go up this afternoon, with the other two having to pick themselves up quickly for the lottery of the play-offs, where Southampton are already guaranteed a place.
The bout sees Nakatani (32-0, 24 KOs) fight in a division that is relatively new to him, as the former three-weight champion competes at super-bantamweight for just the second time. The 28-year-old moved up in December, scraping past Sebastian Hernandez Reyes to set up this bout with Inoue.
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Naoya Inoue during his win over Alan Picasso (Getty)
On the same night, Inoue (32-0, 27 KOs) outclassed Alan Picasso to uphold his end of the Nakatani deal, which now brings the “Monster”, 33, one of his most-intriguing tests ever.
Here’s all you need to know:
When is the fight?
Inoue vs Nakatani will take place on Saturday 2 May at the Tokyo Dome in Tokyo, Japan. Coverage is due to begin at 10.40am BST (2.40am PT / 4.40am CT / 5.40am ET), with main-event ring walks expected at 1pm BST (5am PT / 7am CT / 8am ET).
How can I watch it?
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The action will stream live exclusively on DAZN, with plans starting at £15.99 per month. The fight card has not been announced as a DAZN pay-per-view event, meaning it is available to any DAZN subscriber.
Latest Odds
Inoue is a heavy favourite with all the major UK betting sites, with Nakatani a best price of 7/2 to emerge victorious.
Inoue – 1/4
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Nakatani – 7/2
Draw – 16/1
Odds via Betfred. The Independent vets betting sites for usability, security and responsible gambling tools. You can claim free bets to use across a range of sports. Please read the terms.
Fight card in full
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Subject to change; ‘C’ denotes champion
Junto Nakatani was put through the ringer by Sebastian Hernandez Reyes (Getty)
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Naoya Inoue (C) vs Junto Nakatani (undisputed super-bantamweight titles)
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Takuma Inoue (C) vs Kazuto Ioka (WBC bantamweight champion)
Toshiki Shimomachi vs Reiya Abe (featherweight)
Sora Tanaka vs Jin Sasaki (welterweight)
Kosuke Tomioka vs Shogo Tanaka (flyweight)
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Deok No Yun vs Yuito Moriwaki (super-middleweight)
Yoshiki Takei vs Dekang Wang (super-bantamweight)
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On 30 April, the US embassy in Beirut suggested a meeting between Lebanon’s President Joseph Aoun and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu would give Lebanon “the chance to secure concrete guarantees on full sovereignty, territorial integrity, secure borders, humanitarian and reconstruction support, and the complete restoration of Lebanese state authority over every inch of its territory”.
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