The man set numerous cars alight across Cambridgeshire
A man torched several cars across Fenland and destroyed victims’ possessions. Rolandas Fedorenko, 25, set fire to a Nissan Juke in Furrowfields car park, Chatteris, in the early hours of April 1, 2025.
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He lit a toilet roll and plastic and put it under the bumper, leaving the vehicle to burn out and also damaging a nearby van and fence. Later in the year, he began starting fires again, according to Cambridgeshire Police.
On November 1, in a car park in Palmers Place, Wisbech, he set fire to a cap and put it under the wheel arch of a Mini Cooper. This damaged the car and a nearby van.
On November 25, behind Market Place, in Wisbech, he set fire to a sock and put it under the wheel arch of another Mini Cooper.
Detective Sergeant Leeza McCormick said: “The victims of these fires had valuable possessions destroyed and were left without their normal means of transport. It is also fortunate the fires did not spread to any nearby buildings and put people at risk.”
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The force has confirmed the fire did not spread in the second attack and the damage was minor. He was arrested a few hours after the offence behind Market Place.
Fedorenko, of Waterlees Road, Wisbech, admitted the six counts of arson and was jailed for 14 months at Cambridge Crown Court on Friday, July 10.
After the fire on the Eleventh Night gutted her family home, Ashleigh said: “I owe my life to that man, he saved my daughter”
A mum from Co Antrim has praised her “hero” neighbour for saving her daughter after a fire on the Eleventh Night gutted their family home.
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A row of terraced houses in the Knockleigh Walk area of Greenisland caught fire on the Eleventh Night as a result of the embers from a bonfire lit nearby.
At the height of the operation, the Northern Ireland Fire & Rescue Service had 45 personnel in attendance at the scene, including six pumping appliances, a command support unit, and an aerial ladder. Five firefighting jets were also in use alongside an aerial water tower.
Ashleigh McCleanaghan, 40, was on holiday in Blackpool at the time, while her eldest daughter and son were at home. As embers from the bonfire started moving into their back garden, a refurbished shed her 17-year-old daughter uses as her bedroom caught fire.
Their back garden was completely destroyed, with their oil tank also catching fire, while their kitchen, a bedroom, and their bathroom also suffered damage.
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Speaking to Belfast Live, Ashleigh said: “The bonfire was lit on the Eleventh Night. My daughter Alex was in the house watching the bonfire and the embers were covering over above the house. You could clearly see the size of them; she was at the front of the house.
“Our neighbour, Davy, battered the door to say the back garden was on fire and when the both of them went out, Alex turned on the hose and Davy went to soak the place.
“The embers were coming down that quickly, the fire began to spread, and before we knew it the shed was completely up. The two fences either side and the oil tank also went.
“I got the first boat back from Blackpool and came up home. The back of our house was destroyed, everything outside in the garden including Alex’s room, and everything in it completely gone. The kitchen was damaged, the boys’ bedroom damaged and the bathroom.”
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Ashleigh has praised the quick efforts of her neighbour, David (Davy) Haighton, who rushed to her home to help her children.
“All I was worried about was my daughter. The fact that if it hadn’t had been for Davy next door, it could have been so different. Alex may not be here. I owe my life to that man, he saved my daughter,” she said.
“I told him he was my hero, that man got burnt and there was blood all down his arms from him and Alex trying to put out the fire. He took the hose, he wouldn’t let her do it. He’s lived beside us all for a long time, my children all love him and his wife Esther.”
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Amid the blaze, where two houses were gutted and two others were damaged in the terrace, Davy’s house was destroyed, leaving him and his wife with nothing.
Ashleigh said: “We got off lightly with the fire – Davy’s house is completely gutted. All his memories of 50 years living in that house, all his medals from when he was in the Territorial Army (TA).
“I will always be in awe of that man and everytime I see him I tell him he will never know how much it means to us. He keeps playing it down but the other day he said to me if there was anything we needed to let him know.
“He has nothing, we’re going to be able to get back into our house they’re hoping. He has absolutely nothing, but he’s more worried about us and the kids.
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“It’s very hard to take in that things could have been a lot worse, and if it wasn’t for him, Alex could be gone. That’s what gets me through what has happened. You’re walking around talking to people at the minute like you’re just numb from everything.”
The Northern Ireland Fire and Rescue Service said the most probable cause of the fire is thought to be accidental and investigations remain ongoing.
You can donate to a fundraiser set up by Ashleigh’s friend to help the family get back on their feet by clicking here.
Fire engines and specialist wildfire resources have been scrambled to the national park after the blaze broke out on Wednesday afternoon.
Nick Forbes, Danyel VanReenen, Neil Pooran and Ruth Suter Chief Live News Reporter
18:47, 15 Jul 2026Updated 18:51, 15 Jul 2026
Residents in the Highlands have been evacuated after a huge wildfire at Cairngorms National Park. The blaze broke out at the beauty spot on Wednesday afternoon – sending large volumes of smoke towards nearby towns.
Four fire engines and specialist wildfire resources have been scrambled to the incident at Ryvoan Bothy, near Nethy Bridge. There are no reported injuries.
Duncan Ferguson lives in Glenmore, a village near Aviemore. He said police came to his house during the afternoon, telling residents to “leave your pets and go”. Mr Ferguson, who is operations manager at the Spey Fishery Board, said a nearby campsite had not yet been evacuated.
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He said the fire could become severe and affect property unless it was contained quickly, telling the Press Association: “It’s going to be bad, it’s going to be major unless they get hold of it. It’s heathland at the minute, but it’s started to burn in the upper area of the regeneration of the Caledonian pine forest.
“Once it comes down into there, it’s dry, dry ground, with a real load to burn. It’s just going to get hotter and hotter.”
Glenmore Lodge, a nearby outdoors centre, said it was within the evacuation zone and advised travellers to avoid the area. The Scottish Fire and Rescue Service (SFRS) told residents in Aviemore, Glenmore and the surrounding communities to keep their doors and windows closed.
Group commander Raymond King said: “We are currently in attendance at a large fire in the open near to Ryvoan Bothy within the Cairngorms National Park. Operations control were first alerted at 11.49am and we have mobilised four fire appliances and specialist wildfire resources to the area.
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“There are no reported casualties. Due to large volumes of smoke travelling towards populated areas nearby, residents in Aviemore, Glenmore and the surrounding communities should keep their windows and doors closed.
“If you are within this area and can see or smell smoke, please follow the same advice. While we want people to enjoy the good weather, we ask that anyone in the Cairngorms National Park near to Aviemore and Glenmore avoid the area.
“This part of the Cairngorms National Park is popular with hillwalkers, and we ask that people remain vigilant while active firefighting continues.”
A spokesperson for the Cairngorms National Park Authority said: “The ongoing incident near Ryvoan Bothy is deeply concerning, and we are grateful to all those who are working to tackle the fire. We would echo the advice of SFRS to avoid the area while firefighters and partners work to bring this blaze under control.
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“This incident – alongside wildfires we are seeing across the UK this week – serves as a stark reminder of the risks that periods of drier, hotter weather can pose.”
Firefighters are also battling a gorse fire at Garry Park Wood at Lochore Meadows Country Park in Fife. Videos seen on social media showed flames and smoke rising from the park.
The SFRS said they were alerted to the blaze at about 3.15pm on Wednesday, and mobilised one appliance to the scene. Parts of Scotland are at very high risk of wildfire over the next few days and the fire service has warned people to “stay vigilant” and act responsibly.
The SFRS, in conjunction with the Scottish Wildfire Forum, had earlier issued wildfire warnings for the central Highlands, southern and eastern Scotland. The alert, warning of a very high risk of wildfire, is in force from Wednesday until Monday.
It follows days of hot and dry weather in many parts of the country. The fire service said anyone who sees a large outdoor fire should call 999 immediately, giving the location and any other relevant information.
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A prolific TV starlet of the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s emerged on a rare public outing in Los Angeles over the weekend.
Instead of her recognizable auburn hair, the 83-year-old is now rocking short gray hair.
She first appeared on television in 1966 with a role in a popular Western series after years of theater work.
She went on to land countless guest-starring roles on hit shows like Gunsmoke and Hawaii Five-O.
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Along with her TV success, the actress nabbed major film roles that saw her star alongside Hollywood greats such as Dean Martin and Peter Falk.
Can you guess who she is?
A prolific TV starlet of the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s emerged on a rare public outing in Los Angeles over the weekend
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Instead of her recognizable auburn hair, the 83-year-old is now rocking cropped gray hair
The mystery star is Katherine Justice.
The actress was spotted stocking up on essentials at a local Costco store last Friday.
She was dressed comfortably in a white linen shirt layered over a navy blue graphic tee and tan work pants.
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Amid the scorching heatwave in Southern California, Justice sported a wide-brimmed hat and sunglasses as she strolled through the store’s parking lot with her cart.
She is a recognizable face to many as she appeared in over 60 TV shows and movies over the course of her 50-year career.
Born and raised in Ohio, Justice began pursuing acting while earning a degree from Carnegie Tech Drama School.
After her 1964 graduation, Justice quickly immersed herself in the world of theater.
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In 1965, she joined a touring company performing Nobody Loves an Albatross after starring in several productions at Front Street Theater in Memphis, Tennessee and Arena Stage in Washington, DC.
The mystery star is Katherine Justice
She is a recognizable face to many, as she appeared in more than 60 TV shows and movies over the course of her 50-year career. Above, with Dean Martin in 5 Card Stud (1968)
The actress was spotted stocking up on essentials at a local Costco store last Friday
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Amid the scorching heatwave in Southern California, Justice sported a wide-brimmed hat and sunglasses
Justice made the move to television in 1966 when she got a guest role on the hit ABC Western series The Big Valley.
This helped kick her Hollywood career into high gear.
Shortly after nabbing The Big Valley, she was offered a part in the 1967 film The Way West, which saw her act alongside Kirk Douglas, Robert Mitchum and Sally Field.
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Her first major leading film role was in the popular made-for-TV film Prescription: Murder.
She played the glamorous Joan Hudson opposite Columbo icon Peter Falk.
The film, released in 1968, spawned the long-running Columbo TV series.
Justice’s other notable film roles include the Western flick 5 Card Stud, which saw her reunite with Mitchum and work with icon Dean Martin in 1968.
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She also appeared in ABC’s made-for-TV movie Dead Man on the Run with Peter Graves in 1975.
Justice (center) in 5 Card Stud (1968)
Justice in the 1967 TV film The Way West
While Justice’s film resume is impressive, her biggest claim to fame is her memorable guest roles, which she continued to book until she retired from acting in 2015. Above, in 1967
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She notably worked with four-time Golden Globe nominee Sally Struthers in the 1981 made-for-TV thriller A Gun in the House on CBS.
While Justice’s movie resume is impressive, her biggest claims to fame are her TV guest roles, which she continued to book until she retired from acting over a decade ago.
She has starred on Days of Our Lives, Dallas, Alien Nation, TJ Hooker, Falcon Crest, and Quincy, ME, among other major shows from the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s.
Justice last acted in the web-based TV series The Nevermore Chronicles in 2015.
Police appeal for witnesses after the horrific attack in a seaside town
Husna Anjum Senior Reporter and Maxine Denton
18:32, 15 Jul 2026
Police are on the hunt for a man who ‘punched’ a seagull for stealing his food. The bird was also grabbed and ‘stuffed through a fence’ leaving it with broken wings.
The horrifying attack happened by the harbour in Porthleven, Cornwall on Monday afternoon (July 13). CornwallLive reports a witness on social media alleged that a man attacked a seagull at the Harbour View Café after it tried to steal his food.
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He is then said to have “stuffed it through a fence”, where it was left with broken wings.
The witness said: “This man brutally and repeatedly smashed a seagull against the wall of the Harbour View Café because it tried to steal some food. He then stuffed the seagull through the fence onto the road, where it floundered with two broken wings.
“This was in front of numerous people and children who were hugely upset.”
Police are now investigating the incident and are appealing for anyone with relevant footage or information to come forward.
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A spokesperson for Devon and Cornwall Police said: “We have been made aware following a report of a seagull being injured by a man by the harbour in Porthleven on the afternoon of Monday, July 13.
“It was reported the suspect grabbed and punched the seagull leaving it injured. Enquiries into the matter are ongoing.
“Anybody with any relevant footage or information is asked to call 101 or visit our website quoting 50260183379.”
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Peter Wright, star of Channel 5’s The Yorkshire Vet, told a packed audience at the Great Yorkshire Show that he was unsure about the programme’s potential when it was first pitched to him.
He said: “I didn’t think it would work at first, but has been the most unusual but most rewarding job.”
Mr Wright explained he eventually agreed to take part after realising the series could shine a light on real farm work, the challenges facing rural communities and the bond between people and animals.
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Now in its 22nd series, the show has become a staple of British television, following vets as they treat pets, livestock and wildlife across North Yorkshire and beyond.
Crowds gathered early around the stage, with families and viewers queuing for photos and autographs and many telling him they had watched the series since it first aired.
The event continues to draw huge numbers, with 37,500 people attending on Wednesday and a total of 150,000 expected over the four days.
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Organisers say tickets for Thursday and Friday sold out in advance, as visitors flock to see livestock classes, machinery displays and celebrity appearances.
Elsewhere at the show, conversations turned to the future of farming and the growing pressures to balance food production with environmental and energy demands.
Paul Tompkins, deputy president of the National Farmers’ Union, emphasised the union’s position that high‑quality farmland should remain focused on food rather than being diverted to large‑scale renewable energy schemes.
Mr Tompkins said: “Farmers do have to diversify and adjust to the renewable energy game, but it has to be done in the right way.
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“Land should be prioritised for food production, and arguments about renewable energy should be balanced with concerns for landscape, tourism and communities.”
He called on farmers, farming groups and the government to have an “open dialogue” when it comes to renewable energy and land use, warning that decisions taken now will shape the countryside for decades to come.
As The Yorkshire Vet continues to celebrate the everyday stories of rural life, show leaders said debates over food, energy and the environment will be central to the future of the farms and animals that viewers see on screen.
A 14-year-old boy has been charged with offences linked to “extreme right-wing terrorism” in connection with an alleged plan to target two mosques in Sutton, south London, the Metropolitan Police said.
The child was initially arrested on suspicion of criminal damage to a vehicle. Officers searching an address then found “a number of documents of concern”, a Met spokesperson said.
He has also been charged with damaging property belonging to another without lawful excuse, intending to damage such property, namely a car window. The offence was racially aggravated, the force added.
This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh the page for the fullest version.
Andy Burnham’s first Labour Cabinet in chaos before he even starts work as Ed Miliband fights Shabana Mahmood and Yvette Cooper for keys to No11 as chancellor
Andy Burnham‘s new Cabinet has become embroiled in chaos before even being created as senior Labour figures fight to become his chancellor.
Ed Miliband, Shabana Mahmood and Yvette Cooper are embroiled in a major briefing war as they all put forward their claim to the senior financial post.
With just days to go until Mr Burnham replaces Sir Keir Starmer, reports suggest he has yet to decide who to appoint to run No11.
Mr Miliband, the environmentally conscious Energy Secretary, appears to be the choice of Labour members, but has been opposed by figures around the incoming Prime Minister over his run-ins with business and trade unions.
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Ms Cooper, who was a Treasury minister almost 20 years ago under Gordon Brown, and Home Secretary Ms Mahmood, a former shadow Treasury minister, have now been linked with the post.
Ms Mahmood is unpopular with the party Left because of hardline immigration reforms, and a move would allow Mr Burnham to shake things up.
One veteran Labour MP on the Left of the party told the Daily Mail: ‘I don’t think Miliband will get No 11. He would be too big a risk.’
Mr Miliband was seen as the least market-friendly candidate in a poll by Bloomberg, while he has also clashed with unions over North Sea oil jobs that could be affected by the push for green power he champions.
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Speculation had been rife that Mr Miliband, a former party leader who is now Energy Secretary, would replace Rachel Reeves in No11 on Monday
But allies of the incoming PM say he has yet to make up his mind about who would control the nation’s finances, with Shabana Mahmood, the current Home Secretary, also an option
It comes after Mr Burnham said people’s everyday living expenses are ‘the issue of our times’ as he was quizzed on his plans for government.
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Speaking to reporters in Parliament last night he said: ‘I’ve been setting out plans that I believe will bring some much-needed change in terms of people’s everyday living expense. I think that is the issue of our times.
‘If we want to connect politics better with people, well, let’s deal with some of the pressures people are under in terms of the everyday cost of transport, the bills that they’re paying. I heard it so often on doorsteps in the campaign.’
‘You know, life has changed for people, and it’s not necessarily got better’, he added.
‘And I think we just need to be relentlessly focused on that.
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‘I have talked about more public control of the basics, and then through that control, cutting the cost. I did that with buses in Greater Manchester, and I carry that same principle forward.
‘To me, the cost of living and reducing it is everything, and I think we need to regain the confidence in the public that we’ve got a credible plan to do that and make life better.’
Earlier this month a YouGov poll of Labour members found 69 per cent believed Mr Miliband would do a good job, compared to 30 per cent for Ms Mahmood.
But he has been the source or ire for some trade unions over his lack of backing for the North Sea oil and gas industry as he tries to make UK power greener.
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In March, Unite’s Sharon Graham said he should not ‘let go of one rope before having hold of another’.
‘We all know that whatever happens the UK will still need oil and gas for decades to come and the war in Iran is just the latest reminder that when we rely on overseas production our energy security is at the mercy of global events,’ she said.
Reports this week suggested Mr Miliband might be prepared to U-turn on North Sea oil and gas if made chancellor.
He is said to be keen to give the go-ahead to the Jackdaw gas field in order to show he is not a Net Zero ‘zealot’ and to calm jitters about his possible appointment at the Treasury.
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Mr Miliband is reported to have privately signalled his willingness to grant consent for Jackdaw, but cannot confirm the move until a consultation closes next month.
It came as the PM-in-waiting was accused of ‘running scared’ after MPs were denied the chance to quiz him until after the summer.
He will become Prime Minister on Monday but the House of Commons rises for its summer break on Thursday so he will be spared scrutiny for six weeks.
The Conservatives have been calling for one extra day next week so Mr Burnham could give a statement – and face questions – and planned to put pressure on the Government by holding a vote on Wednesday.
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But on Tuesday in an unprecedented move ministers cancelled the Opposition Day debate, saying the time was needed to discuss Iran instead.
It means Mr Burnham, who won so many backings no rival candidate can now be nominated, will not answer questions from MPs until September 1.
Tory leader Kemi Badenoch led the outrage, saying: ‘In an unprecedented move, Labour have scrapped the Conservative vote to force Andy Burnham to come to Parliament to answer questions when he becomes PM on Monday.
‘Labour are running scared because they know the honeymoon will be over the minute he has to tell us his plans.’
Universal Studios will have high hopes for the film at the box office, after Oppenheimer took $975m (£723m) globally.
However, Oppenheimer enjoyed a huge audience boost from the Barbenheimer phenomenon, the 2023 viral trend that prompted movie fans to buy tickets to see Barbie and Oppenheimer on the same day.
“The scale and scope here is, frankly, jaw-detaching,” he said. “It is filmmaking at a magnitude few modern directors could ever realistically imagine, demand, or execute.”
The UK Space Agency and space startup Vast just signed an agreement to send Paralympic sprinter and below-knee amputee John McFall into orbit as early as 2027. Most coverage framed it as a victory for inclusion. As a space health researcher, I think something far more interesting happened.
For 70 years, spaceflight has assumed a rigid archetype: a healthy white man with a military background. The assumption was that physical uniformity minimised risk. As we prepare for Mars, the evidence increasingly suggests the opposite.
Star Trek understood this decades ago: exploration rewards difference. The further you travel into uncertainty, the more kinds of human experience you need. It debuted in 1966 with a Black female communications officer, a Japanese helmsman, a Russian navigator, a biracial Vulcan, and a captain who made mistakes and felt his humanity down to the last drop.
What strikes me now as a scientist is not how idealistic that vision was, but how practical. Despite decades of spaceflight, we still cannot reliably predict how one person’s health will change in space. Consider Mars 500, a 520-day simulated isolation mission between 2007 and 2011 where six male crew members in identical conditions diverged dramatically in psychological resilience. Two participants remained stable; three developed severe sleep disturbances; and one suffered persistent depression.
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Additionally, around 17% of astronauts experience significant physical deterioration in spaceflight despite following identical exercise regimes. Disability does not necessarily introduce uncertainty into spaceflight; uncertainty is already the norm.
Who performs best in space?
Sometimes those excluded perform better. In 1961, several female pilots outperformed the men of Mercury 7 programme, the first US astronauts. Jerrie Cobb scored in the top 2% of all candidates ever assessed by NASA. Several of the women outperformed the men on cardiovascular endurance. And the late Wally Funk remained in an isolation tank for over ten hours while the male Mercury astronaut record was just over three. But the women never flew. NASA insisted on military jet pilot experience as an entry requirement, while simultaneously barring women from flying military jets.
About a decade earlier, NASA recruited eleven deaf men to study motion sickness, a condition affecting 60 to 80% of astronauts in their first days of weightlessness. Motion sickness happens when conflicting inner-ear signals cause nausea and disorientation severe enough to impair performance. Most of the eleven men had lost vestibular function (the inner-ear balance system) following childhood meningitis. In rotating rooms and on rough seas, as experienced test pilots were sick around them, the deaf participants played cards. The trait that excluded them from military careers made them unusually tolerant of the environments that undid everyone else.
Researchers are finally investigating this issue: like asking whether amputees, who carry less mass and respond differently to microgravity, offer advantages in space. People with lower-limb mobility impairments or vascular differences may be naturally adapted to the headward fluid shifts of weightlessness that cause brain swelling and vision changes in around 70% of astronauts.
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When a cooling leak filled Italian astronaut Luca Parmitano’s helmet with water during a 2013 spacewalk, it left him nearly blind and deaf to mission control. He survived by navigating back to the airlock using touch alone. On Mars where dust storms reduce vision to near-zero, blind people would have an advantage here as they are dependent on other senses.
There is no perfect astronaut
The myth of the perfect astronaut has always been just that – a myth. Chuck Yeager, celebrated as the gold standard of what an astronaut should be, broke two ribs the night before he broke the sound barrier in 1947. He concealed the injury, improvised a way to seal his cockpit door using a broom handle, and flew anyway. The right stuff was never about physical perfection. It was about adaptation.
In 1985, Soviet cosmonauts Vladimir Dzhanibekov and Viktor Savinykh manually docked with the dead and uncontrolled Salyut 7 station and spent a week manually rewiring it in freezing pitch-black conditions to bring it back to life. For many people in the disability community, navigating broken infrastructure, sensory issues and isolation is an everyday reality. Disabled people spend their lives adapting to environments designed for somebody else. That makes us experts at navigating the unknown.
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The real “right stuff” is interdependence: being creative together with your crew when a plan fails. When Apollo 13’s oxygen tank exploded in 1970, the crew came home not because of perfect engineering, but because people depended on each other under pressure. A Mars mission, years from home and communication delays of 20 minutes each way, will demand it. Astronauts will face problems nobody could anticipate, because that is the nature of exploration.
Disability is an extreme environment
Every person who lives long enough will experience disability at some point. It is my normal. In my research career, I have improvised creative solutions to inaccessible equipment, and learned to pace my energy carefully. Even getting into the building or having access to a bathroom could be my engineering problem for the day.
The author at Space Park Leicester, University of Leicester. Zoe Swann Baillie/University of Leicester, Author provided (no reuse)
I’ve been told using a mobility aid is unprofessional and for years, even doctors dismissed my symptoms. When they finally had an answer, it came with a caveat: there is no cure and no treatment pathway. The medical system had reached its limit. I had not. These experiences forced me to monitor my own health, adapt and advocate for myself. On a Mars mission, millions of miles from the nearest specialist, every astronaut will need exactly that skill.
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Perhaps the most undervalued asset the disability community brings to space is its relationship with joy. Disabled people do not survive extreme environments through stoicism alone. They survive through humour, putting flowers on their wheelchairs (like mine), and deeply loving communities. On a three-year Mars mission, that may be the most critical thing of all.
Design can be better too. Deaf pilot Sheila Xu described in June 2026 at the United Nations how she designed a colour-changing light signal system to use instead of auditory cues during parabolic flights, aircraft that fly a steep arc to produce brief periods of weightlessness, used in astronaut training. It improved safety for everyone on board, deaf or not, when engine roar made verbal commands impossible. This is the “curb cut effect”: solve for the margins, and you make the system better for everyone.
The good news is we are seeing a paradigm shift. In 2021, Hayley Arceneaux spent three days in orbit on SpaceX’s Inspiration4, becoming the first person with a prosthetic bone to reach space. In 2025, ESA engineer Michaela Benthaus became the first wheelchair user on a suborbital commercial flight. McFall’s selection marks the first time a major space agency has cleared a disabled astronaut for long-duration scientific work in orbit.
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Progress does not come from excluding each other, but from discovering what becomes possible when the universe’s criteria finally replace our own.
The goal, then, should not be simply to send one disabled astronaut to space and call it progress. It is to involve disabled thinkers, engineers, and designers at every stage of mission planning. The systems they would help build would be demonstrably better for it.
Adaptation, more than perfection, may turn out to be what matters most.
August wore a stylish black dress, trendy Doc Martens, and knee-high socks, while Jackson donned an off-the-shoulder look with black wedges.
Theron, meanwhile, stunned in a white bow-adorned mini dress with strappy heels, a gold choker necklace, and bold red lip.
Charlize Theron had her daughters August and Jackson with her at the premiere of The Odyssey in New York City on Tuesday
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It marked a rare public appearance for Jackson and August, who Theron adopted in 2012 and 2015, respectively.
Adoption was always an avenue Theron wanted to pursue when it came to her family.
‘I don’t feel like I’m missing out on something,’ she she explained during a 2018 interview with Chelsea Handler for Elle. ‘This was always my first choice, even when I was in a relationship.
‘I was very honest with my partners that I was open to having my own biological kids but that adoption had to be a part of my life. I felt that strongly about it.’
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Theron’s daughters have enjoyed A-list experiences with their mother over the years, going to runway shows and now the premiere of her new action film.
Theron plays portrays Calypso in the Christopher Nolan movie, an adaptation of Homer’s ancient Greek epic the Odyssey.
The story follows the titular Greek King embark on a perilous journey home after the Trojan War in a bid to reunite with his beloved wife Penelope.
Despite the film being in the trusted hands of Oscar-winning director Nolan, fans haven’t quite got to grips with the casting yet.
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Theron guided her daughter Jackson through the premiere hustle and bustle, placing a gentle hand on her waist
In what has been dubbed his ‘most extreme project to date’ alongside an incredibly starry cast – the pressure for Nolan to win over critics is like no other.
Already known for his impressive art and high-budget fare, Nolan’s latest film could prove to be his most ambitious yet, with the $250million budget the most expensive of his career, his first shot entirely on IMAX 70mm cameras.
Lead stars Matt Damon is starring as the titular hero Odysseus, while Devil Wears Prada icon Anne Hathaway plays his devoted queen, who is forced to fend off potential suitors in her husband’s absence.
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Yet, the film has received heaps of attention for all the wrong reasons – sparking backlash over its ‘bizarre’ casting, being accused of fuelling ‘brutal repression’ and sending Elon Musk into meltdown.
Nolan recently defended his decision to cast Kenyan-Mexican actress Lupita Nyong’o in the movie after Musk called the casting ‘historically inaccurate.’
The star let her children enjoy a school night out to celebrate her big movie
The star-studded film boasts a cast featuring Anne Hathaway, Lupita Nyong’o, Zendaya, and Samantha Morton
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Theron plays portrays Calypso in the Christopher Nolan movie, an adaptation of Homer’s ancient Greek epic the Odyssey
Nyong’o, 43, is set to play Helen of Troy’s sister Clytemnestra, and was named People Magazine’s ‘Most Beautiful Woman’ in 2014 following her triumphant Best Supporting Actress Oscar win for 12 Years A Slave.
Nolan defended his castings, saying: ‘Hopefully they’ll enjoy the film, even if they don’t agree with everything. The oldest depictions of Homeric characters tend to be depicted in the manner of people living in Homer’s time…
‘So there’s a pretty strong case there for portraying things that way because that’s the way the first audience received the story.’
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Musk was called out for his remarks about the casting in January by The View host Sunny Hostin.
She said: ‘Anyone can portray a fictional character. It doesn’t have to be a white person that plays this part.’ She added: ‘I think we have to call a thing a thing when we’re talking about someone like Elon Musk… We know what this is.
‘He is a white supremacist. In my view, he is a racist.’
Emmy-winner Alec Baldwin has since weighed in on Musk’s anti-woke campaign against Nolan’s movie.
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In a public display of support for Lupita and Nolan, Baldwin wrote on Instagram: ‘Dear Elon… but she IS the most beautiful woman in the world…Alec.’
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