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My murdered son’s football is still in the garden, his clothes are on the ironing pile – why I’ll never be able to move on

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My murdered son’s football is still in the garden, his clothes are on the ironing pile - why I’ll never be able to move on

It’s a bright spring Tuesday morning, the time is 11am.

“I’m sorry, I’m still laid in bed right now,” explains the mother of murdered schoolboy Harvey Willgoose, as she answers my telephone call. “It’s horrendous getting up every morning because I dream about him [Harvey] and wake up every time with a pain in my stomach, I can’t move.”

It’s now 421 days since Caroline got the life-changing call at work from her mother-in-law to tell her something serious had happened to her 15-year-old son at school.

She remembers how a police car swiftly arrived, and she began a journey under blue lights to hospital to be by Harvey’s bedside. When the patrol car dropped down to normal speed and the flashing lights were turned off, she thought he was “alright”.

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But the grim reality was her son had slipped away.

Harvey had been stabbed through the heart with a 13cm hunting knife by fellow pupil Mohammed Umar Khan, also 15, who launched his fatal attack outside the canteen at All Saints Catholic High School in Sheffield in front of children and teachers.

“I think about that day all the time,” says Caroline. “The hope my boy is ok, the shock of finding out and then the mix of rage and sadness. No mother, no parent should ever have to go through it, because it never ends, you can’t move on from it.”

Caroline Willgoose with Harvey before his murder last year
Caroline Willgoose with Harvey before his murder last year (Supplied)

Shortly after his death, the heartbroken mother paid tribute to her son, describing Harvey as “caring, loving and a funny young man”. She shared happy pictures on social media of him at a festival and others with her on holiday in Tenerife and Greece.

Then, days later, when the football team he supported, Sheffield United, played in the city, Caroline and Harvey’s father, Mark, joined supporters in a march before the game. At the 15th minute of the match, emotion broke out inside the stadium as the crowd, joined by players, delivered a standing applause to celebrate Harvey’s life.

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Today, in the back garden of his home, where he would play football with friends, the nets are still up, and the ball is on the grass. Inside the three-bedroom house, his school shoes are still out, his clothes are in an ironing pile, and his bedroom remains untouched.

“His dad sometimes goes in [the bedroom] to have a cry because it still smells of him, everything inside has remained the same,” Caroline says.

“We’ve got a dog, a cockapoo, which was born just the day he [Harvey] passed, and he won’t even go that room, he knows there’s something. His [Harvey’s] shoes, clothes in the ironing pile and balls and nets in the garden…. I just can’t get rid of them.

“It’s also simple things like I find an old drawing he’s done from primary school, and things like that. Mother’s Day cards, too. You don’t want to move those things, and they just remain static for you, because you never want to leave your son behind.”

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Caroline Willgoose speaks alongside her husband and Harvey’s father Mark at a press conference following the year anniversary of Harvey’s death
Caroline Willgoose speaks alongside her husband and Harvey’s father Mark at a press conference following the year anniversary of Harvey’s death (PA)

The despair over Harvey’s death has, at times, escalated into frustration and anger over the past year of immense grieving for the family.

Earlier this year, an independent review into Harvey’s death, which was commissioned by the academy trust that runs his school, found “several missed opportunities” to address behaviour and manage risk before the stabbing.

According to the family lawyers Irwin Mitchell, the review, which was not published, showed records were not requested or reviewed before Khan’s move from another school, where there had been incidents involving violence, weapons references and anger.

Also, despite an investigation into a knife allegation on the day of Harvey’s death, the law firm said the report found Khan was allowed into school “unsearched and without any completed assessment”.

The criminal trial, which saw Khan convicted of murder and detained for at least 16 years, heard tensions were running high at the school in the week before the attack, with a lockdown declared on one day after an unproven claim that a pupil in a fight had a knife.

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Harvey had stayed off for most of the week, texting his father: “Am not going in that school while people have knives.”

Screen grab taken from CCTV issued by South Yorkshire Police of Mohammed Umar Khan (green tag) and Harvey Wilgoose (blue tag) in the corridor at school before Khan killed fellow pupil Harvey
Screen grab taken from CCTV issued by South Yorkshire Police of Mohammed Umar Khan (green tag) and Harvey Wilgoose (blue tag) in the corridor at school before Khan killed fellow pupil Harvey (South Yorkshire Police)

“I feel guilty because we urged him to go into school,” says Caroline. “I felt like we led him into the lion’s den. He didn’t want to go. But then also, where was the protection for my son? Where were the checks by the school?

“If they’d even looked at his [Khan’s] phone they’d have realised he was heading down a dark road with an unhealthy interest in weapons. He was out to kill somebody; there were so many missed opportunities.”

The school trust did release the report’s 10 recommendations, saying it would help implement them. They included mandatory record sharing of any pupil school move with senior sign-off confirming safeguarding and behaviour records have been reviewed before a pupil starts.

The trust also said a number of “robust measures” had been introduced since Harvey’s death – although Caroline says they haven’t gone far enough.

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Following her son’s death, an MP, on behalf of the family, asked the school if it would introduce a knife metal detector, known as a knife arch, at its entrance. It responded by saying handheld knife detectors are already in use, she said.

The Independent understands the school took advice on options for security after Heavey’s death and has since brought in other changes including bleed kits, enhanced staff training and updated search policites.

The knife used by Mohammed Umar Khan to murder Harvey Willgoose
The knife used by Mohammed Umar Khan to murder Harvey Willgoose (South Yorkshire Police)

Caroline, who offered a donated knife arch to all schools in the Sheffield area, says: “Schools are more worried about reputation and not scaring the parents, I’ve even heard some say [knife arches] they look frightening. But by not having the arches, they are putting children at risk.

“It’s a sad matter of fact that if there was one at All Saints on the day Harvey was murdered, he would still be here today.”

Caroline is also calling for stricter punishment for children caught with knives, claiming school leaders avoid suspensions “because it looks bad on school targets”. It comes on the day The Independent reveals there were more than 700 incidents of knife crimes in schools in England and Wales last year.

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“Doing this, trying to raise awareness and push schools to take action, helps me continue with my life,” she says. “It’s all in the name of Harvey – I just know he would want me to be doing this.”

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Award-winning outdoor sauna seeks permanent home in popular Welsh resort

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Wales Online

Hwyl Outdoor Sauna has become a valued wellbeing facility that benefits both residents and visitors

Plans have been lodged with the national park to permanently site an acclaimed outdoor sauna in a Pembrokeshire seaside village. In June 2024, Pembrokeshire Coast National Park’s development management committee approved a temporary two-year permission for a mobile wood-fired sauna at Saundersfoot harbour.

Now, Kerry Evans of Hwyl Outdoor Sauna has submitted a fresh application to national park planners seeking to make the arrangement permanent.

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A supporting statement notes that since its arrival, the sauna has “become a popular and valued amenity for both residents and visitors, offering a space focussed on health, wellbeing and community connection”.

The statement continues: “The overall sentiment within the village has been strongly supportive, with many residents recognising the sauna as a valuable asset that enhances the amenities in Saundersfoot,” before adding: “Hwyl Outdoor Sauna has received positive attention in regional and national press helping to promote Saundersfoot as a destination for coastal wellbeing and outdoor experiences.

“Media coverage has highlighted the sauna as an example of the increasing popularity of sea swimming and sauna culture around the UK coastline.

“Hwyl Outdoor Sauna has been featured in two books on the best saunas in the UK.” Stay in the know by making sure you’re receiving our daily newsletter

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It adds: “The business has also been recognised through tourism and hospitality awards, further demonstrating the quality of the experience provided and the positive contribution it makes to the local visitor offer.”

In February, the enterprise, founded by former superyacht worker and mother-of-two Kerry, secured Sauna of the Year 2026/27 at the Wales Prestige Awards.

Kerry reflected at the time: “I could not be more proud of what I have achieved with Hwyl. I am so grateful to my wonderful team, who have made this journey not only possible but genuinely so much fun.”

Kerry invested an inheritance from her cherished late father into establishing a seafront sauna in Pembrokeshire.

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The planning application seeking permanent status for the facility stated: “Through the Welsh Government I have been able to secure the funds to install a cold-water shower on Saundersfoot Harbour, which will be open year-round. This will be achieved via Hywel Outdoor Sauna and a weather proofing fund, from the Welsh Government. This facility has also a GoFundMe to raise the remaining costs.”

The submission concluded: “Hwyl Outdoor Sauna has established itself as a valued wellbeing facility that benefits both residents and visitors. It enhances the amenities available in Saundersfoot, supports the local economy by encouraging additional visitor activity, and contributes positively to the community through charitable support and engagement.

“The permanent siting of the sauna would allow this successful local small business to continue operating and provide these benefits to the village in a stable and sustainable way.”

Park planners will consider the application for a permanent facility at a future date.

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Dubois vs Harper: Caroline Dubois on family rift & wanting to heal relationship with brother Daniel

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Caroline Dubois poses with her WBC lightweight title

To understand why Dubois felt she needed to find her voice, you must look at how she started. Long before she was a world champion, she was a nine-year-old girl pretending to be a boy named Colin.

In a world that did not always see a future for female boxers, she tucked her hair into a headguard and lived a lie for months.

“I think it was obviously a reflection of the time, but the thing I find most sad is that they actually thought I was a boy. I mean, that’s devastating,” she quips. “But at the time, I was full Mulan… enjoying it, I didn’t care.”

That “Mulan” spirit served her well. She spent years walking into gyms known only as “Daniel’s little sister,” but soon carved out her own reputation, winning Youth Olympic gold, European gold and qualifying for the Olympics at just 19.

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When both siblings were climbing the professional ranks, it was hailed as a family success story. But by the time Caroline beat Maira Moneo in 2024 to become WBC ‘interim’ champion, the relationship had already soured.

Daniel was not there to see his younger sister’s crowning moment. Caroline, meanwhile, was not at Wembley Stadium when Daniel delivered his career-defining knockout of Anthony Joshua, nor was she at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium when he lost his belt to Oleksandr Usyk.

For Caroline, the distance has been a necessary means of self-preservation.

“I haven’t been able to watch him fight – in person or on TV – since I moved out,” she says.

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“I don’t watch him as a friend, I watch him as a sister. It is hard if you’re not there to speak to him and check in on him, go up to him afterwards and either console him or give him a slap on the back. It’s been very hard.”

BBC Sport has contacted representatives of Daniel Dubois, who did not want to speak on behalf of father Dave Dubois. He has previously said family “doesn’t always go as smoothly as you would like it to”.

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Rose and Crown pub, Ainsworth car parking update shared

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Rose and Crown pub, Ainsworth car parking update shared

The Rose and Crown pub shared an update with customers last week, saying it has become “increasingly difficult” for patrons to park outside its venue on Cockey Moor Road.

The Greene King venue, which describes itself on Facebook as being at the “heart and soul of Bury”, said it has been working hard to keep the car park exclusively for customers.

However, people struggling to access parking has begun to impact its business, meaning a new parking system will soon be introduced for “genuine patrons”.

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It says customers will need to register their car upon arrival, “with no risk at all”, which the pub hopes will sustain trade “in the current climate”.

In a Facebook update, the pub said: “Over the past six years, we’ve worked hard to keep our car park available for our customers.

“Recently, however, it’s become increasingly difficult, with many visitors struggling to find a space – and it’s starting to impact our business.

“To protect parking for genuine patrons, we’ll soon be introducing a car park management system.

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“Customers will simply enter their registration number on arrival and park with no risk at all.

“This wasn’t an easy decision, but in the current climate, we can’t sustain costs for a facility that doesn’t serve our customers.

“Thanks for understanding and supporting your local.”

The move was supported by customers in the comments, who said they often see people using the Rose and Crown car park and “going to the other pub or houses across the road”.

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One said: “About time. Stop people parking in yours and going over the road.”

Another person agreed, saying: “About time, I’ve often driven up and turned round as there are no spaces.”

A third person also said it’s “about time”, adding: “I’ve been saying this for ages.”

A fourth person added: “I’ve often gone elsewhere because we can’t park.”

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SarahPhotogirl publishes The Sleepless Nights of the Boy.

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SarahPhotogirl publishes The Sleepless Nights of the Boy.

Since the time of Britpop, Sarahphotogirl has been well known in the music world, taking pictures of bands and artists such as Blur, Noel Gallagher, Radiohead and The Darkness.

Her work has featured in band biographies, on TV, and in many mainstream magazines and newspapers including the NME and Q.

Now, Sarahphotogirl, who lives near Whitby, has swapped the tour bus for a typewriter, with her first book, The Sleepless Nights of the Boy with No Eyelids.

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A collection of dark and fiendishly funny stories the book is beautifully illustrated throughout.

If you delve inside, you will find Roy, a boy with no eyelids who is haunted by all kinds of unsavoury nightly visitors; Herbert, who is addicted to sherbet and Moira who is afflicted by a strange and fast-spreading mould.

Sarah said: “In the age of Instagram and TikTok, the written word doesn’t seem to stand a chance, so I wanted to make my book as different as possible to captivate young readers.

“As a mother myself, I wanted to write something that parents could read to their children and that children would want to read to their parents.

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Sarah added:” It’s not the kind of book you will fall asleep reading. The final story is entitled ‘Children’ and was written with parents in mind.

“It’s a devilishly hilarious look at the value of parenthood. I’ve always been a writer – once, backstage with Paul Weller, I had to apologise while I diverted from his photoshoot to scribble down the original idea for this very book.”

Already, there is a video of the title story of the book on social media platforms and students at Edinburgh and Bournemouth Universities are busy making the stories into animated short films as part of their coursework.

Available through independent bookshops, The Sleepless Nights of the Boy with No Eyelids is already starting to take off, all backed up by a social media campaign.

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Writing under the name of Marmalade Atkinson, Sarah said she wanted to make the divide between her photography and her writing, and being a big fan of Paddington Bear, Marmalade was an easy choice.

Signed hardback copies of The Sleepless Nights of the Boy with No Eyelids, complete with a limited edition matching bookmark, are now available to buy or order from The Whitby Bookshop, The Poetry Pharmacy in York, plus Old Town Books and Mighty Lancer Games in Bridlington. If you can’t get to any of these, they can also be bought direct from the author via social media and eBay.

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Donald Trump statement in full after ‘daring’ rescue of downed US airman in Iran

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Wales Online

A major search and rescue mission was launched after an F-15 fighter jet was shot down in Iran on Friday

Donald Trump has spoken out after the US military successfully pulled off a major search and rescue operation to find a missing service member.

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Iran shot down an F15-E Strike Eagle fighter jet on Friday, with one service member getting rescued while a frantic search was launched for the second crew member. It has since been confirmed that the missing airman has been located, but the rescue team must still successfully navigate their way out of Iranian territory to safety.

The US crew member is injured but safe following the “daring” rescue, Mr Trump said.

He also hailed him as a “Brave Warrior!” who found himself behind enemy lines, reports the Mirror.

Posting on Truth Social, Mr Trump declared: “WE GOT HIM! My fellow Americans, over the past several hours, the United States Military pulled off one of the most daring Search and Rescue Operations in U.S. History, for one of our incredible Crew Member Officers, who also happens to be a highly respected Colonel, and who I am thrilled to let you know is now SAFE and SOUND!

“This brave Warrior was behind enemy lines in the treacherous mountains of Iran, being hunted down by our enemies, who were getting closer and closer by the hour, but was never truly alone because his Commander in Chief, Secretary of War, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and fellow Warfighters were monitoring his location 24 hours a day, and diligently planning for his rescue.

“At my direction, the U.S. Military sent dozens of aircraft, armed with the most lethal weapons in the World, to retrieve him. He sustained injuries, but he will be just fine. This miraculous Search and Rescue Operation comes in addition to a successful rescue of another brave Pilot, yesterday, which we did not confirm, because we did not want to jeopardize our second rescue operation.

“This is the first time in military memory that two U.S. Pilots have been rescued, separately, deep in Enemy Territory. WE WILL NEVER LEAVE AN AMERICAN WARFIGHTER BEHIND! The fact that we were able to pull off both of these operations, without a SINGLE American killed, or even wounded, just proves once again, that we have achieved overwhelming Air Dominance and Superiority over the Iranian skies. This is a moment that ALL Americans, Republican, Democrat, and everyone else, should be proud of and united around. We truly have the best, most professional, and lethal Military in the History of the World. GOD BLESS AMERICA, GOD BLESS OUR TROOPS, AND HAPPY EASTER TO ALL!”

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This followed Trump’s earlier statement on Truth Social claiming US forces had ‘terminated’ several of Iran’s military leaders, accompanied by footage that appeared to depict an airstrike eliminating senior IRGC commanders.

The war began with joint US-Israel strikes on February 28 and has killed thousands, shaken global markets, cut off key shipping routes and spiked fuel prices.

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US aviator rescued after being shot down in Iran

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US aviator rescued after being shot down in Iran

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Authorities say a fire has broken out at a petrochemicals plant in the United Arab Emirates following an attack on Sunday.

Abu Dhabi authorities responded to multiple fires at the Borouge petrochemicals plant. They say the fires were caused by falling debris following successful interceptions by air defense systems, but production at the plant has halted.

The plant is in Ruwais, near the UAE’s western border with Saudi Arabia. The plant is a joint venture of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. and Borealis of Australia.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. AP’s earlier story follows below.

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WASHINGTON (AP) — A U.S. service member who has been missing since Iran shot down a fighter jet has been rescued, President Donald Trump wrote in a social media post early Sunday.

A frantic U.S. search-and-rescue operation unfolded after the crash of the F-15E Strike Eaglejet on Friday, as Iran also promised a reward for anyone who turned in the “enemy pilot.” “This brave Warrior was behind enemy lines in the treacherous mountains of Iran, being hunted down by our enemies, who were getting closer and closer by the hour,” he wrote.

A second crew member was rescued earlier.

“This brave Warrior was behind enemy lines in the treacherous mountains of Iran, being hunted down by our enemies, who were getting closer and closer by the hour,” Trump wrote.

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Trump said that the aviator is injured but “will be just fine,” adding that the rescue involved “dozens of aircraft” and that U.S. had been monitoring his location “24 hours a day, and diligently planning for his rescue.”

The fighter jet was the first U.S. aircraft to have crashed in Iranian territory since the conflict in late February.

Trump said last week that the U.S. had “decimated” Iran and would finish the war “very fast.” Two days later, Iran shot down two U.S. military planes, showing the ongoing perils of the bombing campaign and the ability of a degraded Iranian military to continue to hit back.

Drones hit Gulf energy infrastructure

In Kuwait, an Iranian drone attack caused significant damage to two power plants and put a water desalination station out of service, according to the Ministry of Electricity. No injuries were reported from the attack, the ministry said.

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In Bahrain, the national oil company said that a drone attack caused a fire at one of its storage facilities, which was extinguished. It said the damage was still being assessed and no injuries had been reported.

The war began with joint U.S.-Israel strikes on Feb. 28 and has killed thousands, shaken global markets, cut off key shipping routes and spiked fuel prices. Both sides have threatened, and hit, civilian targets, bringing warnings of possible war crimes.

The other jet to go down was a U.S. A-10 attack aircraft. Neither the status of the crew nor exactly where it crashed was immediately known.

Trump renews threat

Trump renewed his threats for Iran to open up the Strait of Hormuz, a crucial waterway for global energy shipments that has been choked off by Tehran, by Monday or face devastating consequences, writing Saturday in a social media post: “Remember when I gave Iran ten days to MAKE A DEAL or OPEN UP THE HORMUZ STRAIT. Time is running out — 48 hours before all Hell will reign down on them.”

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“The doors of hell will be opened to you” if Iran’s infrastructure is attacked, Gen. Ali Abdollahi Aliabadi with the country’s joint military command said late Saturday in response to Trump’s renewed threat, state media reported. In turn, the general threatened all infrastructure used by the U.S. military in the region.

But Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson, Tahir Andrabi, told The Associated Press that his government’s efforts to broker a ceasefire are “right on track” after Islamabad last week said that it would soon host talks between the U.S. and Iran.

Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, said that Iranian officials “have never refused to go to Islamabad.”

Mediators from Pakistan, Turkey and Egypt were working to bring the U.S. and Iran to the negotiating table, according to two regional officials.

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The proposed compromise includes a cessation of hostilities to allow a diplomatic settlement, according to a regional official involved in the efforts and a Gulf diplomat briefed on the matter. They spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss closed-door diplomacy.

Iran threatens to disrupt traffic in second key strait

Iran’s parliamentary speaker, Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf, issued a veiled threat late Friday to disrupt traffic through a second strategic waterway in the region, the Bab el-Mandeb.

The strait, 32 kilometers (20 miles) wide, links the Red Sea with the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean. More than a tenth of seaborne global oil and a quarter of container ships pass through it.

“Which countries and companies account for the highest transit volumes through the strait?” Qalibaf wrote.

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More than 1,900 people have been killed in Iran since the war began.

In Gulf Arab states and the occupied West Bank, more than two dozen people have died, while 19 have been reported dead in Israel and 13 U.S. service members have been killed. In Lebanon, more than 1,400 people have been killed and more than 1 million people have been displaced. Ten Israeli soldiers have died there.

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Jon Gambrell in Dubai, United Arab Emirates; Samy Magdy in Cairo; Munir Ahmed in Islamabad; Dasha Litvinova in Tallinn, Estonia; and Seung Min Kim, Will Weissert, Michelle L. Price, Lisa Mascaro and Ben Finley in Washington, contributed to this report.

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This year’s line-up for Bishop Auckland Food Festival

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This year's line-up for Bishop Auckland Food Festival

The free festival will take place on Saturday, April 18 and Sunday, April 19 in Bishop Auckland town centre and is organised by Durham County Council.

Thousands of visitors are expected to attend across the two days, with more than 140 traders selling a wide variety of food and drink, from pulled pork to pancakes, fudge to fried chicken, and craft beer to bubble tea.

Bishop Auckland Food Festival 2025. (Image: Sarah Caldecott)

A number of well-known chefs and television personalities will appear across the weekend, offering cookery demonstrations and sharing their expertise with festivalgoers.

Appearing on the Sunday will be Lumberjaxe, Jasmine Mitchell and Briony May Williams.

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Lumberjaxe is made up of brothers Brendon and Jaydon Manders, who together came up with a seasoning and sauce brand, with the purpose of making preservative free products that are lower in salt and sugar.

The brothers, who share a love of outdoor cooking, appeared on BBC Dragons’ Den in February 2025, successfully securing investment from global business leader Emma Grede. Their pitch was described as “one of the most powerful moments in Dragons’ Den history.”

Also appearing on the Sunday line-up is Jasmine Mitchell, the winner of last year’s Great British Bake Off. During her time on the BBC programme she openly shared her journey with alopecia and chose to bake without a wig, a powerful statement of confidence that drew a huge response from viewers.

Briony May Williams, who appeared on series nine of Bake Off in 2018 and finished fourth, will also appear on Sunday. She now presents BBC One’s property series Escape To The Country and is one of the presenters of BBC One’s Morning Live.

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Her other television credits include Pointless Celebrities, House Of Games and The Weakest Link. Her first cookbook, The Retro Recipe Society, was published earlier this year.

Celebrity chef Phil Vickery, pictured at the 2023 Bishop Auckland Food Festival will headline the event this year, it has been announced (Image: Supplied)

Saturday’s line-up will feature chef Phil Vickery, Shivi Ramoutar and Aaron Mountford-Myles.

Phil Vickery has appeared on This Morning for over 22 years and returns to the festival having been part of the line-up in 2023.

He has also had two series of his own on ITV, Phil Vickery’s Pudding Club and Save Money: Good Diet, and has appeared on BBC programmes including Holiday, Ready Steady Cook and Proof of the Pudding. He is also a prolific cookery author, having written 19 books which sell worldwide and have won many awards.

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Shivi Ramoutar can regularly be found cooking her tropical fare on television, including appearances on Saturday Kitchen, James Martin’s Saturday Mornings and This Morning, as well as on her own series Jimmy and Shivi’s Farmhouse Breakfast.

Bishop Auckland Food Festival 2025. (Image: Sarah Caldecott)

Aaron Mountford-Myles shot to the nation’s attention last year when he reached the final of Channel 4 series The Great British Bake Off.

Hosting the festival across both days will be Chris Bavin, who returns to the role he has held in previous years. Chris is co-presenter of BBC One’s Eat Well for Less? and has also presented Tomorrow’s Food with Dara O’Briain and The Truth about Meat.

He is also co-presenter of BBC One’s Food: Truth or Scare with Gloria Hunniford, was the presenter for two series of BBC Two’s Britain in Bloom and served as a co-judge on BBC One’s Britain’s Best Home Cook. He is also a regular guest and reporter for The One Show and Morning Live.

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Bishop Auckland Food Festival 2025. (Image: Sarah Caldecott)

Chocolate lovers will also be able to take part in workshops run by chocolatier Paul A. Young across both days of the festival.

Paul, who was raised in Trimdon Station and went to Wellfield Community School and New College Durham, will host hour-long Perfect Truffles Masterclass and Adventures with Chocolate sessions.

Bishop Auckland Food Festival is attended by tens of thousands. (Image: Sarah Caldecott)

Cllr Karen Allison, Durham County Council’s Cabinet member for leisure, tourism, regeneration and high street, said: “We’re really looking forward to Bishop Auckland Food Festival.

“We know how important food and drink are to visitors to County Durham and how many jobs they sustain here, supporting our economy in the process. It’s therefore fitting that we can organise events such as Bishop Auckland Food Festival that recognise and celebrate all that food and drink contribute to our area.

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“We can’t wait for everyone to come along and enjoy an amazing selection of food with us.”

Further information about the festival and booking details for the chocolate workshops can be found on the Bishop Auckland Food Festival website.

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RSPCA rescue wild rabbit stuck in pipe outside Cambridgeshire home

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Cambridgeshire Live

The rabbit could have been stuck down the narrow pipe for hours before he was rescued

The RSPCA had to rescue a rabbit from a Cambridgeshire home after it got stuck in a pipe. The resident spotted the rabbit in a pipe at the end of his driveway in Gamlingay, South Cambridgeshire, at around 3.30pm on Sunday, March 29.

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The resident, along with a neighbour, was unable to reach the rabbit and so he called the RSPCA. The Animal Rescue Officer, Nicole Scott, was able to attend to the scene.

Nicole said: “The rabbit was about down the narrow pipe and unable to get himself free – it must have been scary for him. The pipe had previously been covered by a small piece of slate, which had blown off at some point since the previous evening – so he could have potentially been stuck there for hours before he was finally discovered.

“Thankfully, I was able to hook my fingers around his back legs and support his belly as he wriggled up out of the pipe. He seemed OK, other than a sore patch on his nose where he’d rubbed all the fur off – but otherwise unscathed.

“As we weren’t sure how long he’d been there we took him to a local vet for a once-over and to make sure he didn’t have any ill effects from balancing on his head all day, or go into shock.”

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After being rescued from the pipe, the rabbit has made a full recovery and seemed “bright and happy” the next day. He was collected from Henlow Vets in Bedfordshire by the homeowner, who helped release the rabbit back into the wild.

Nicole added: “This was a fantastic example of teamwork between the RSPCA, members of the public and local vets – this must have been very distressing for the poor rabbit, and we’re so pleased he made a full recovery and was able to hop back home for Easter.

“We’d always encourage people to check for and cover any open drains or pipes to help protect wildlife, especially as they become more active in the spring months. This particular rescue needed some specialist help, but there are lots of small wildlife and pets which the public can safely help, and the fastest way to do this is by taking them to a local vet.”

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The RSPCA has released advice online on how people can help sick or injured wildlife. The charity is calling on people to become a Local Animal Hero by watching its training video that features RSPCA ARO Emma Baker showing how people can help small wild animals and pets in need and how to create their own rescue box.

The public can also sign up to become an RSPCA Wildlife Friend, which is a volunteering scheme aiming to change the lives of animals for the better. You can sign up to the scheme via the RSPCA website.

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Ukraine-Russia war latest: Drone strike on market kills five as Zelensky fears losing Trump support due to Middle East conflict

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Ukraine-Russia war latest: Drone strike on market kills five as Zelensky fears losing Trump support due to Middle East conflict
Seven injured in Russian drone strike on Sumy as Zelensky warns of ‘Easter escalation’

Russian drone strikes killed five people and wounded 19 in Ukraine after forces targeted a street market in the Dnipropetrovsk region.

Firefighters worked to extinguish a blaze caused by the attack, which damaged market stalls and a shop in the city of Nikopol on Saturday.

Another attack, in the city of Sumy, targeted houses, cars, and utility networks, and wounded 11 people, the National Police said.

It comes after Volodymyr Zelensky accused Russia of an “Easter escalation”, with Russian forces firing 286 drones at Ukraine overnight.

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Ukrainian air defence forces destroyed or jammed 260 drones in the country’s north, south, east and centre, with hits recorded in 10 locations.

The Ukrainian president had proposed a ‌halt in strikes for Easter, telling Russia it would reciprocate if it stopped attacks on the energy sector.

In a post on social media, Zelensky said: “Not a single hour of peace for our people, and this is Russia’s response to our proposal for an Easter ceasefire. Essentially, the Russians have only intensified their strikes, turning what should have been silence in the skies into an Easter escalation.”

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Slovak PM calls on EU to lift Russian oil and gas sanctions to tackle Iran war energy crisis

Slovak prime minister Robert Fico has called on the European Union to end sanctions on Russian oil and gas imports and restore flows through the Druzhba pipeline, arguing the bloc needs to draw on all available energy sources to address the supply crisis triggered by the US-Iran war.

Fico made the call in a statement after a call with Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán on Saturday, saying the EU should renew dialogue with Russia and ensure member states could access gas and oil from all sources, including Russian ones. “It is not enough to deal with the energy crisis only at the national level,” he said.

Hungary and Slovakia are outliers in the EU for maintaining relations with Moscow, and were the only two member states still importing Russian oil when a Russian drone strike hit pipeline equipment in Ukraine in January, disrupting Druzhba flows. Budapest and Bratislava have accused Ukraine of deliberately delaying repairs to resume the pipeline, triggering a political dispute that has seen Hungary block an EU loan to Kyiv. Ukraine says it is fixing the damage as quickly as possible.

Oil prices have surged since US and Israeli strikes on Iran began on 28 February, creating what the International Energy Agency called the biggest oil supply disruption in history. The EU had cut Russian oil imports to just one per cent of its total supply by the final quarter of 2025 following Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

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Stuti Mishra5 April 2026 07:15

Oil pipeline at Russia’s Primorsk port damaged in Ukrainian drone attack

A Ukrainian drone strike has damaged an oil pipeline at Russia’s Baltic Sea port of Primorsk, local governor Alexander Drozdenko said on Sunday.

No injuries were reported.

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The pipeline was shut down and a fire was safely burning out, Drozdenko said on Telegram. Ukraine has stepped up attacks on Russia’s Baltic Sea ports over the past month.

Stuti Mishra5 April 2026 06:12

Ukraine deploys firefighting robot to extinguish blaze

Ukrainian soldiers deployed a firefighting robot to extinguish a blaze in the Kramatorsk region following a Russian strike on a house.

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After discovering that gas canisters were stored at the scene of the fire, the fire brigade decided to use the robot to prevent putting soldiers at further risk.

“With its help, the fire was extinguished and prevented from spreading to neighbouring homes,” the brigade said.

“Ukrainian [ground robots] prove their uniqueness and effectiveness not only on the battlefield, but also in civilian life.”

The “Zmiy Firefighting” ground robotic systems are created by Ukrainian defence tech company RoverTech and are designed to operate in high-risk environments.

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The system can be remotely controlled at distances of up to 3,000 meters, according to the company.

Zmiy firefighting robot in Donetsk Oblast
Zmiy firefighting robot in Donetsk Oblast (State Emergency Service of Donetsk Region)

Harriette Boucher5 April 2026 04:00

Seven injured in Russian drone strike on Sumy as Zelensky warns of ‘Easter escalation’

Seven injured in Russian drone strike on Sumy as Zelensky warns of ‘Easter escalation’

Harriette Boucher5 April 2026 03:00

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Russia warns citizens against travelling to dozens of countries

Harriette Boucher5 April 2026 02:00

Ukraine rescues eight children from occupied territories

Ukraine has brought back eight children and teenagers from occupied territories, a Ukrainian humanitarian NGO has announced.

Mykola Kuleba, the founder of Save Ukraine, said they had all been living in conditions of pressure and fear, and their lives were under constant threat.

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One 14 year old, Zoryana, was among those rescued. Mr Kuleba said she had been separated from her father by Russians, who was stripped of his documents and deported.

The girl was forced to study in a Russian school, where she was told about the greatness of Russia and taught to use weapons, he said.

Mr Kuleba wrote: “They are all in our Hope and Recovery centers and are receiving psychological support, documentation assistance, housing, and care — everything to help them regain a sense of security and start building a future.

“But thousands of children still remain under occupation. They are forced to be silent, conformed, and prepared for war. But we are not stopping.”

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Harriette Boucher5 April 2026 01:00

Russia offers huge payments to students to join its drone forces in Ukraine

This recruitment drive is further evidenced by documents indicating that companies in Russia’s central Ryazan region have been given quotas to enlist workers for the army.

Top officials also deny any shortage of recruits, despite Ukrainian claims – dismissed by Moscow – that Kyiv is eliminating Russian troops faster than they can be replaced.

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Harriette Boucher5 April 2026 00:00

Five dead after Russian drone hits street market

Ukraine said three women and two men were killed in a Russian drone attack on a market in the city of Nikopol in the Dnipropetrovsk region.

Another 19 people were injured in the attack, the prosecutor general’s office said.

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A strike also wounded 11 people in the city of Sumy, not far from the border with Russia.

A street market hit by a Russian drone strike
A street market hit by a Russian drone strike (via REUTERS)

Harriette Boucher4 April 2026 23:52

Russia suffers record losses in March, Zelensky says

Nearly 34,000 Russian soldiers have been killed or seriously wounded in March, the highest level since the start of the war, according to Volodymyr Zelensky.

Another 1,363 Russians were “eliminated” in artillery and other strikes over the month, bringing Russian losses to more than 35,000 in March.

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“Importantly, the results in the destruction of Russia’s air defence systems have also significantly increased, with 274 such systems hit in March alone,” Ukraine’s leader wrote on social media.

“There have also been tangible results in the destruction of Russian depots and military logistics. The Ministry of Defence, together with the Armed Forces, will present a detailed report to the public for March – data that may be made public.”

Harriette Boucher4 April 2026 23:00

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Stress from Russian bombardment causing premature birthrates in Ukraine, UNFPA warns

Stress from Russian bombardment causing premature birthrates in Ukraine, UNFPA warns

Harriette Boucher4 April 2026 22:00

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10 cases before the courts this past week

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Your latest round up of cases heard between March 30-April 3.

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Despite many courts being in recess for Easter, some cases were still heard this past week. They included a Northern Ireland music teacher in court over allegations he trafficked and drugged a child for sex.

Also a transgender woman avoided jail over a homophobic attack on a neighbour, calling him a ‘fa***t’.

Meanwhile a man also avoided jail after being caught engaging in what a judge called a ‘disgusting’ sex act at a train station by a young boy.

And a man appeared in court in Dublin on Good Friday after an extradition request following the murder of Robbie Lawlor in Belfast six years ago.

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Here is your latest round up of cases before the courts between Monday, March 30 and Friday, April 3.

Victim was ‘stabbed seven times’ in ‘frenzied and brutal attack’

A Lithuanian man accused of murdering a man in a Portadown flat has told a court that he was acting in self-defence.

Rolandas Kvederis, 49, died after sustaining seven stab wounds to his neck and lower back inside the property in Ranfurley Road on Thursday, March 26.

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Ruslanas Kovalkovas, 51, appeared in the dock of Lisburn Magistrates’ Court on Monday charged with his murder.

Kovalkovas, who was living at the Ranfurley Road apartment at the time of the incident, was denied bail and remanded in custody.

At the outset of the remand hearing, when asked whether he understood the charge he was facing, Kovalkovas – wearing a grey track suit – spoke through an interpreter to deny murder.

“I did not kill him, I was defending myself,” he told district judge Rosemary Watters.

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Man in 40s charged with murder of Denis Donaldson

A man has been charged with murder as part of the investigation into the killing of Denis Donaldson nearly 20 years ago.

Mr Donaldson was shot dead in Co Donegal in 2006, months after admitting his role as a police and MI5 agent over 20 years.

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Antoin Duffy, aged in his 40s and of no fixed abode, appeared before a Dublin court charged with the murder of ex-Sinn Fein official Donaldson in Co Donegal in 2006.

He was arrested earlier in the day at Casement Aerodrome following his extradition from Scotland on foot of a European Arrest Warrant.

Appearing before the Special Criminal Court on Monday afternoon, he was charged with the murder of Mr Donaldson at Cloghercor, Doochary on a date unknown between April 3 and 4 in 2006.

READ MORE HERE

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Snapchat pervert who pestered girls for sexual images back in jail

A convicted sex offender has appeared in court facing multiple allegations of breaching court orders.

Appearing at Coleraine Magistrates Court by video link from police custody on Tuesday, 38-year-old Gary Savage was charged with a total of seven offences, alleged to have been committed between 1 September last year and 28 February 2026.

Savage, originally from Ballynahinch but now of no fixed abode, Newtownabbey, faces six charges of breaching a Sexual Offences Prevention Order and one of breaching the requirements of the sex offenders register.

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The SOPO, an order designed to protect the public and potential victims from further offending, was first imposed as long ago as 2018 when Savage was sentenced for sexual communication with a female child “for the purpose of obtaining sexual gratification” and attempting to cause her to engage in sexual activity.

Since then, Savage has repeatedly been before the courts for a multitude of SOPO breaches and further offending.

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Man avoids jail after engaging in ‘disgusting’ sex act at busy NI train station

A man whose partner performed a sex act on him in full view of a busy train station, including a 13-year-old boy, has been handed a four-month prison sentence on Tuesday, suspended for two years.

Sentencing Martin McMillan at Antrim Magistrates Court, sitting in Ballymena, District Judge Nigel Broderick told the 40-year-old: “This was a disgusting act to be engaged in.”

He added that as well as multiple other people on the opposite platform, there had also been a 13-year-old boy witnessing the offending by him and 48-year-old Lisa O’Neill.

Last week O’Neill, with an address at Maple Crescent in Dunmurry, was put on probation for nine months after she admitted an offence of indecent behaviour.

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McMillan, with an address on Gallows Street in Dromore, admitted the same charge and re-opening the facts of the case on Tuesday, a prosecution lawyer said it was the teenage schoolboy who contacted police about the incident at Antrim Train Station, around 8pm on 14 December last year.

O’Neill, the court heard, “was performing a sex act” on McMillan (40), on the platform at the train station.

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Man accused of domestic abuse granted bail but excluded from part of Belfast

A west Belfast man awaiting trial for charges including domestic abuse and assaulting his partner was granted bail on Wednesday.

As part of the conditions for his release, Robert Martin Braniff has been banned from contacting the complainant either directly or indirectly.

The application to release the 41-year old, from Norglen Road, was made and granted at Belfast Crown Court and he attended via a videolink with HMP Maghaberry.

Braniff is awaiting trial on four charges he denies dating back to March 3, 2025 – namely possessing a knife with intent, assaulting a female, stealing two of her phones and engaging in a course of behaviour that was abusive to her and likely to cause her to suffer physical or psychological harm.

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As his pending trial has been exempted from the current industrial action, it is listed to proceed later this month.

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Transgender woman avoids jail over homophobic attack on neighbour

A transgender woman who subjected a neighbour to homophobic abuse when she assaulted him has been handed a suspended prison sentence.

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District Judge Amanda Brady told Michelle James she was satisfied “that the custody threshold has been crossed,” particularly given the fact the offence was aggravated by reason of hostility.

Imposing a four-month prison sentence, Judge Brady told the 64-year-old that given her guilty plea, she would suspend the sentence for 18 months.

Appearing at court on Wednesday by video link from the women’s prison, James, with an address on Main Road in Cloghy, entered a guilty plea to a single charge of common assault, arising from an incident on 2 December 2024.

Opening the facts of the case, the prosecution counsel told the court it was just after 2.30 that afternoon when the victim reported that James had assaulted him.

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He told police that having put rubbish in the bins, he was in the communal stairwell when an “intoxicated” James called him “a f****** fa***t” and threw a punch at him.

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Man accused of sending threatening messages to MLA faces court

A man has appeared before court accused of sending threatening messages to DUP MLA Trevor Clarke.

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Andrew Moran, 30, of Grange Lane, Newtownabbey, faces seven charges in total.

They include sending threatening electronic messages, possession of cannabis and breaching a restraining order.

There is also a charge for intimidation of a witness on March 29 2026 for allegedly threatening Mr Clarke for speaking with police, and for allegedly harassing Mr Clarke between March 27 and April 1.

Following a brief mention at Ballymena Magistrates’ Court on Thursday morning, Moran was remanded into custody after the case was adjourned on request of the defence because it was not ready.

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Teacher in court over allegations he trafficked and drugged a child for sex

A music teacher and the manager of a youth orchestra has appeared in court charged with supplying drugs and exploiting a child for sex.

Appearing in the dock of Belfast Magistrates Court on Thursday, 48-year-old Robert James Briscoe confirmed his identity and that he understood the eight charges against him.

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On an indictment covering a time period between 30 September 2025 and 10 March 2026, Briscoe faces two counts of human trafficking of a child, and single offences of paying for the sexual services of the child, administering a substance to the complainant in order to overpower or stupefy them to facilitate a sex offence and attempting to pay for sexual services.

The 48-year-old, with an address at Seamount in Belfast, faces three drug charges, accusing him of possessing and intending to supply Class A methamphetamine and simple possession of Class B nandrolone.

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Street preacher ‘subjected Belfast’s deputy Lord Mayor to foul-mouthed rant’

A street preacher allegedly subjected Belfast’s deputy Lord Mayor to a foul-mouthed rant outside City Hall, the High Court heard on Thursday.

Prosecutors claimed Councillor Paul Doherty had to retreat amid fears Colin Houston would assault him during last week’s confrontation.

Houston, 61, is also accused of swearing at council security staff who asked him to take down a Jesus flag and then injuring two PSNI officers.

The Christian pastor, of Forthriver Way in Belfast, faces charges of common assault, three assaults on police, disorder behaviour and resisting arrest over the incidents.

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He was granted bail but barred from returning to the city centre.

Houston allegedly became abusive while standing at the gates of City Hall with a loud speaker and flag on March 23.

It was claimed that he initially shouted at an elderly member of the public: “Shut your mouth you f***ing c**t’.”

Mr Doherty, an SDLP councillor and current deputy Lord Mayor, alleged the street preacher then directed his aggression at him during a confrontation in the grounds.

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Man appears in court over murder of Robbie Lawlor in Belfast

A man has appeared before the High Court as he faces extradition over the murder of Robbie Lawlor in Belfast.

Jonathan Gill, 44, with an address at Malahide Road, Clontarf, appeared before Judge Barry O’Donnell on Friday on the foot of a warrant in Northern Ireland for him to be charged with the murder of Lawlor, which occurred in the Ardoyne area of Belfast on April 4, 2020.

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He is also to be charged with possession of a 9mm pistol on a date unknown between April 2nd and April 5th 2020.

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