The NHS also said you may have to call 111 or 999 in more serious cases
Sophie Buchan Money and Lifestyle Writer
03:30, 11 Feb 2026
The NHS has said that anyone who feels “thirsty” may need to “call 111”. Taking to social media, the health service said if ignored, it could be “fatal.”
In its post, it took to X, formerly Twitter, and said: “Do you know the signs of type 1 diabetes? They can happen at any age, and if left undiagnosed, it can be fatal.”
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With this in mind, it urged people to learn the four T’s. “The most common symptoms are the 4 Ts: Toilet, Thirsty, Tired, Thinner”, it explained.
What is Type 1 diabetes?
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Type 1 diabetes is a condition in which your body cannot make the hormone insulin. This causes the level of glucose (sugar) in your blood to get too high.
The NHS adds: “If you have type 1 diabetes, you’ll need to take insulin every day to manage your blood glucose levels. There’s currently no cure for type 1 diabetes, but it can be managed by checking your blood glucose regularly, tracking what you eat and drink, and adjusting how much insulin you take.”
Four T’s
According to the NHS there are four Ts to remember. These are:
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Toilet – “going for a wee more often, especially at night”
Thirsty – “being constantly thirsty and drinking more than usual”
Tired – “being very tired and having less energy.”
Thinner – “losing weight without trying to or looking thinner than usual”
Call 111
After sharing these common signs, the NHS warned: “Ask for an urgent GP appointment or call NHS 111 if you think you or your child has type 1 diabetes.”
According to the NHS website, other signs of type 1 diabetes include:
blurred vision
breath that smells sweet or fruity (like nail polish remover or pear drop sweets)
cuts and wounds taking longer to heal
getting frequent infections or infections that do not get better, such as thrush or nappy rash
The NHS warns: “The symptoms develop quickly, over a few days or weeks.”
Call 999
The NHS adds that if you should call 999 if you or your child has been peeing more, feeling very thirsty and tired, and:
your symptoms are getting worse quickly
you have stomach pain, diarrhoea, or you’re feeling or being sick
you’re feeling sleepy or confused
you’re breathing faster and more deeply than usual
“These could be signs of diabetic ketoacidosis, which can be life-threatening if not treated quickly”, it cautions.
Diabetes UK has a free helpline that’s open from 9am to 6pm, Monday to Friday. You can call 0345 123 2399 or email helpline@diabetes.org.uk for support and advice.
When Iranian and US officials met for talks in the Omani capital of Muscat on February 6, many journalists and analysts were speculating as to whether diplomacy will fail and whether war will inevitably follow. But that framing misses the deeper reality of this moment. The more important question is why both sides have returned to the negotiating table at all, despite years of hostility, sanctions, proxy conflict and open threats.
The anxiety that has surrounded the talks is understandable. Washington warned its citizens to leave Iran hours before the talks took place, fuelling speculation about military strikes. US officials outlined sweeping demands that go far beyond wanting to curb Iran’s ambition to possess nuclear weapons. And recent history offers no shortage of examples where negotiations have collapsed into violence.
But treating the talks as a countdown to conflict misunderstands diplomacy and the balance of power in the Middle East today. Negotiations are not a single test of resolve, nor a one-off gamble on peace. The talks in Oman were not a final reckoning but an opening move. They reflect a shared recognition in Washington and Tehran that 15 years of coercion, pressure and force have failed to produce decisive outcomes, and that escalation now would be vastly more dangerous than before.
Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, arrives in Muscat for talks with the US on February 6. Iranian Foreign Ministry / EPA
As diplomacy scholar Geoffrey Berridge has long argued, the first stage of any serious diplomatic process is the establishment of common ground on key points. Only once this groundwork is laid can substantive negotiations begin. The talks in Oman should thus be understood as an opening phase rather than a decisive round.
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The purpose was to clarify positions, communicate red lines and test whether a workable diplomatic pathway exists. Iranian officials described the atmosphere as constructive, noting that the two sides communicated their concerns and views through their host, Oman’s foreign minister Badr Albusaidi. This is precisely how diplomacy begins, not how it ends, and Iranian and US officials have both subsequently called for talks to continue.
For Tehran, engaging a US delegation in talks is significant. Iran has consistently sought recognition as a legitimate regional player rather than a state to be coerced or isolated. The willingness of Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, to attend the talks personally signals how seriously Iran views this moment and how invested it is in a diplomatic outcome that confers mutual respect.
For Washington, the incentives are equally clear. Over the past 15 years, the US has applied nearly every available tool of pressure against Iran. These have included sanctions, cyber operations, targeted strikes, the killing of senior Iranian figures, the degradation of Iran-aligned groups across the region and direct support for Israel during its brief 2025 war with Iran. Yet none of this has delivered regime change, capitulation or lasting regional stability.
Sanctions have devastated the Iranian economy and Tehran’s regional network has been weakened. Hezbollah has faced mounting pressure and economic strain in Lebanon, Hamas has been severely battered in Gaza and Houthi forces in Yemen have been constrained by international military patrols. Even so, Iran’s core political system remains intact.
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Domestic unrest has also failed to produce collapse. Recent protests, met with intense and often violent repression, did not topple a regime that has been deliberately built to survive external pressure since 1979. This highlights a central paradox: Iran may be weaker than at any point in recent decades, but it is not as fragile as many external observers assume.
Washington’s negotiating position
Statements from US officials insisting that talks should encompass Iran’s ballistic missile programme, its regional alliances and its domestic governance represent the high end of any negotiating position.
This is not unusual. In diplomacy, opening demands are often maximalist by design. They are intended to create leverage rather than define an achievable endpoint, something the US president, Donald Trump, is known for. The risk lies in treating these demands as simultaneously attainable.
From Tehran’s perspective, these issues are not equivalent. Iran has consistently signalled that nuclear weapons are the only area it is prepared to engage meaningfully over. This is because its nuclear programme has already been internationalised through treaties, inspections and prior agreements.
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Iran’s leadership has also repeatedly pointed to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s religious decree declaring the production and use of nuclear weapons forbidden under Islamic law. Western policymakers are sceptical of the decree’s legal enforceability. But it nonetheless provides Tehran with an ideological framework that allows nuclear restraint to be framed domestically as principled rather than imposed from outside.
In contrast, Iran views the existence of its ballistic missile arsenal as non-negotiable. In a region where Iran faces nuclear-armed adversaries and an overwhelming conventional military imbalance, missile capabilities are central to its deterrence strategy. Likewise, Iran’s regional alliances are not simply tools of influence. They are an extension of this defensive posture that has been shaped by decades of war, sanctions and isolation.
Domestic governance is even more sensitive. No Iranian negotiating team could accept external constraints on how the Islamic Republic governs itself without calling into question the legitimacy of the system they represent. Attempts to fuse diplomacy with demands for internal political reform are therefore perceived not as bargaining positions, but as existential threats.
Bundling nuclear limits, regional retrenchment and internal transformation into a single negotiating framework thus risks overreach. Progress is far more likely through sequencing: addressing the nuclear issue first, building confidence through verification and reciprocity, and only then exploring narrower forms of deescalation elsewhere. Understanding this helps explain why talks can proceed despite sharp rhetoric and military signalling.
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Iran views the existence of its ballistic missile arsenal as non-negotiable. Abedin Taherkenareh / EPA
Mutual risk, mutual opportunity
Araghchi’s description of the talks in Muscat as a “good beginning” where both sides were able to convey their interests and concerns, as well as his subsequent expression of hope for further negotiations, suggests that diplomacy remains preferable for Iran. The same probably applies for the US.
Military intervention has rarely produced stable outcomes in recent Middle Eastern and North African history. The removal of Saddam Hussein in Iraq, Muammar Gaddafi in Libya and the collapse of state authority in Syria did not bring immediate peace or genuine democracy. They produced power vacuums, proxy wars, mass displacement and chronic instability.
Iran is larger, more institutionalised and more deeply embedded in regional dynamics than any of those cases. A conflict involving the Islamic Republic would be longer, more destructive and far harder to contain.
The real danger is not that diplomacy between Iran and the US will fail, but that it will be dismissed too quickly. Negotiations are incremental, often frustrating and rarely linear. But in this case, they may reflect the only viable strategy available to both sides.
Iran avoids an unwinnable war. The US avoids another Middle Eastern quagmire. And the region gains a fragile but vital opportunity to move away from permanent crisis. In that sense, the talks themselves may already represent the most meaningful progress possible.
Around 17 January a blocking area of high pressure developed in Scandinavia and it’s still there to this day.
This has prevented areas of low pressure from moving beyond the UK, so they’ve become slow-moving, bringing very wet weather, with south-west winds to the south of the UK and south-easterly winds to the north of the UK. This wind pattern is responsible for the distribution of rain.
It’s worth pointing out that it hasn’t been wet everywhere.
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North-west England and west Scotland had a much drier January than normal, and parts of the Highlands have only recorded 1mm of rain so far this month.
The Scandinavian blocking area of high pressure is finally going to budge this week, allowing our weather to turn colder with some hill snow in the north later this week.
Next week our weather patterns will become more typical for the time of year with the Atlantic jet stream returning to the north-west of Scotland, rather than taking an unusual position near Morocco.
There will still be rain around as we’d expect in winter, but some of the wettest weather will return to west Scotland. The rain won’t be as extreme in east Scotland. In the southwest of England, it won’t rain every single day, there will be drier and sunnier days between our weather systems.
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Heading towards the end of February, there are hints that an area of high pressure may visit our shores, bringing some more settled weather conditions. It’s a long way off, but it’s the least we deserve given just how wet and dull it’s been over recent weeks.
PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — Republican Sen. Susan Collins announced her reelection bid Tuesday, betting that she can hold onto her coveted Maine seat despite a renewed Democratic effort to oust her in a race that could determine control of the U.S. Senate.
The campaign will test Collins’ political survival skills. The 73-year-old has won five terms by casting herself as a reflection of Maine’s independent spirit, occasionally clashing with President Donald Trump while also largely supporting his agenda.
“I have always worked across the aisle to solve problems. Maine needs experienced, steady leadership that focuses on getting things done,” Collins said in a Tuesday statement.
As she seeks a sixth term, Collins faces outrage over immigration enforcement tactics that could become a political liability for Republican candidates across the country. A recent operation in Maine led to hundreds of arrests but also criticism that people were being rounded up even if they didn’t have criminal records.
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Collins has taken credit for stopping the surge of federal agents in Maine after she spoke directly with Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem.
However, Democrats accused Collins of not going far enough, pointing to her refusal to call for Noem’s ouster and her vote in favor of a bipartisan Homeland Security funding bill. The party needs to net four seats to retake the Senate majority, and they are aiming to do that in Maine, North Carolina, Alaska and Ohio.
Gov. Janet Mills and oyster farmer Graham Platner are among Collins’ top Democratic challengers. While many establishment Democrats and influential left-leaning groups have backed Mills, Platner has gained traction with his anti-establishment image and economic equality message. He’s campaigned aggressively while facing revelations of problematic social media posts and having to cover up a tattoo resembling a Nazi symbol.
Mills has accused Collins of governing “without any courage” shortly after the Republican voted in favor of funding the DHS and several other agencies in January. She repeated that charge Tuesday.
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“Seniority without a backbone is just tenure, and after decades in Washington, Senator Collins has failed to demonstrate the leadership required in this dangerous moment in history,” she said in a statement.
Platner has demanded that Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which is part of DHS, be dismantled and said he did not believe Collins or the Trump administration’s promise to leave Maine. He said Tuesday in a post on the social platform X that Collins should have kept her promise to serve just two Senate terms.
“That’s just one of a hundred reasons she doesn’t deserve a sixth term,” he wrote.
Platner recently outraised both Mills and Collins, according to the latest federal filings. The first-time candidate collected nearly $4.6 million, while Mills raised $2.7 million. Collins, who had not yet officially launched her campaign during the filing period, had more than $8 million in cash on hand at the end of 2025.
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Collins, who has said she didn’t vote for Trump in 2016, voted to convict the president after his 2021 impeachment over his role in the Jan. 6 Capitol riot. After Collins joined a handful of Republican colleagues in backing a failed effort to limit the president’s ability to unilaterally use force in Venezuela, Trump said on social media that they “should never be elected to office again.”
But Collins has also broadly backed Trump’s agenda, including his tax and spending bill, and his nominees.
She has faced down tough challenges before. Democrat Sara Gideon raised $69 million in 2020, outspending Collins in a bid to help take back the Senate during a presidential election year when the Democrats won the top of the ticket. Collins defeated Gideon by more than 8 points.
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Collins has remained in office despite Maine becoming increasingly blue. The proportion of registered Democrats has increased since her last reelection campaign, when “unenrolled” independent voters outnumbered Democrats in 2019 but now trail them in 2026. Republicans have trailed both groups for years.
Louise Stabler will appear at Durham Crown Court later this month for sentencing after pleading guilty to bringing drugs into a prison, in Barnard Castle.
The serial shoplifter admitting an array of theft offences, most in breach of a criminal behaviour order (CBO) put in place by magistrates last May. The 37-year-old, of Shinwell Crescent in Thornley, admitted 29 thefts and 26 breaches of her CBO.
She will also be sentenced for trying to bring/throw drugs into a prison.
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Stabler admitted trying to pass alprazolam tablets over on a visit to HMP Deerbolt, near Barnard Castle, on May 17 last year.
She was seen on CCTV handing over a package, found to contain the Class C drugs, to a prisoner.
Stabler was taken into custody, shown the CCTV and replied no comment in interview.
But having now admitted the offence, she will be sentenced along with all other matters at the crown court, on Thursday February 26.
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PC Rob Booth, of Barnard Castle neighbourhood policing team, said: “This is a great result, demonstrating that we will take action and target anyone involved in the supply of drugs in and out of prisons.
“We’re working closely with our prison partners to keep drugs out by dismantling illegal activity and ensure those responsible are held accountable, like Stabler.”
He urged anyone aware of any form of criminal activity, or with concerns, to contact police on 101.
The Press has approached Labour MPs in the region as to whether or not they support the Prime Minister.
In their responses yesterday, neither Luke Charters or Rachael Maskell expressed direct support for Sir Keir with Ms Maskell saying she would wait to hear what the PM would say to Labour MPs that evening.
Earlier that day both Selby MP Keir Mather and Scarborough and Whitby MP Alison Hume said they were backing Sir Keir staying on as PM.
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This afternoon, Rachael Maskell told the Press: “I was pleased that the Prime Minister spoke with Members of the Parliamentary Labour Party yesterday, to own the decisions that he took and to show regret of the reprehensible behaviours of Peter Mandelson and the repugnant abuse of the women survivors of Jeffrey Epstein.
“Rightly there was deep scrutiny as the stakes are so high for Labour to get governing right. There was optimism raised over the change that must now happen to prevent further occurrences and to reform the operations of the Labour Party.”
“Luke (Charters) continues to support the Labour Government led by Keir Starmer as Prime Minister.” (Image: Pic supplied)
The statement from Ms Maskell, who represents York Central, continued: “He now has got to propel this confidence across the country.”
“I will be backing Labour every step of the way to succeed, because if we do not change as a result, we let down the very people we are here to fight for, the survivors of sexual abuse; and those gaslit by powerful men.
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“Harriet Harman was right to call this out, as I did last week, and to call for candour. I am glad the Prime Minister heeded that call.
“He now needs to change the culture of the Labour Party so it is open, transparent and inclusive; as accountability prevents such errors reoccurring.”
A spokesperson for York Outer MP Luke Charters told the Press this afternoon: “He would not be giving a daily commentary on leadership matters. Luke continues to support the Labour Government led by Keir Starmer as Prime Minister.”
As previously reported, Mr Starmer told Labour MPs last night: “Every fight I’ve been in, I have won.”
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In extracts shared by Downing Street, he also said: ‘I’m not prepared to walk away from my mandate and my responsibility to my country, or to plunge us into chaos, as others have done.”
He added: “I’ll tell you this, as long as I have breath in my body, I’ll be in that fight, on behalf of the country that I love and I believe in, against those that want to tear it up.
“That is my fight, that is all of our fight, and we’re in this together.”
However, Thirsk And Malton Conservative MP Kevin Hollinrake told ITN on Monday that Sir Keir’s position is ‘untenable’ after the PM’s advisor Morgan McSweeney resigned.
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Mr Hollinrake, who is Conservative Party Chairman, also told BBC Breakfast Sir Keir is “living on borrowed time” and his “tenure is coming to an end.”
The MP also posted on X an interview with LBC radio where he said: “Politics doesn’t like a weak leader and Starmer is the weakest we’ve seen for a long, long time.”
Senator Mark Kelly has blasted Donald Trump’s “outrageous abuse of power,” after a grand jury in Washington reportedly refused to indict him and other Democratic lawmakers in connection with a video in which they urged U.S. military members to resist “illegal orders.”
“It wasn’t enough for Pete Hegseth to censure me and threaten to demote me, now it appears they tried to have me charged with a crime — all because of something I said that they didn’t like. That’s not the way things work in America.”
At the urging of U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro, the DOJ had reportedly opened an investigation into the video featuring Kelly, as well as Michigan Senator Elissa Slotkin and four other Dems, who urged service members to follow established military protocols and reject orders they believe to be unlawful.
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Senator Mark Kelly has blasted Donald Trump’s ‘outrageous abuse of power,’ after a grand jury in Washington reportedly refused to indict him and other Democratic lawmakers in connection with a video in which they urged U.S. military members to resist ‘illegal orders’ (Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)
All the lawmakers previously served in the military or at intelligence agencies, and included Representatives Jason Crow, Maggie Goodlander, Chrissy Houlahan and Chris Deluzio.
“Donald Trump wants every American to be too scared to speak out against him. The most patriotic thing any of us can do is not back down,” Kelly added in his post.
Prosecutors had sought to persuade the civilian members of the grand jury that the lawmakers violated a law that does not allow interfering with “the loyalty, morale or discipline of the U.S. armed forces,” The New York Times reported.
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The Independent has reached out to the DOJ and Pirro’s office for comment.
In her own lengthy post, Slotkin wrote: “Today, it was a grand jury of anonymous American citizens who upheld the rule of law and determined this case should not proceed. Hopefully, this ends this politicized investigation for good.
At the urging of U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro, the DOJ had reportedly opened an investigation into the video featuring Kelly, as well as Michigan Senator Elissa Slotkin and four other Dems, who urged service members to follow established military protocols and reject orders they believe to be unlawful
“But today wasn’t just an embarrassing day for the Administration. It was another sad day for our country.”
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She added: “Because whether or not Pirro succeeded is not the point. It’s that President Trump continues to weaponize our justice system against his perceived enemies. It’s the kind of thing you see in a foreign country, not in the United States we know and love.”
Crow, a former Army Ranger wrote, “Donald Trump’s DOJ just tried—and failed—to indict me in front of a grand jury. We will continue to fight back against their rising tyranny. Don’t Give Up the Ship.”
California Senator Adam Schiff, who was not named in the investigation, wrote: “That the DOJ would even contemplate such an action demonstrates what a repressive regime is now running this country.”
Grand jurors in Washington declined to sign off on charges in the latest of a series of rebukes of prosecutors by citizens in the nation’s capital, a source told The Associated Press.
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It wasn’t immediately clear whether prosecutors had sought indictments against all six lawmakers or what charge or charges prosecutors attempted to bring.
A group has come together in an attempt to buy the property, with one member saying that “it feels like now or never”
A campaign group in a Cambridgeshire village hopes to buy a former pub and Indian restaurant. Save The Hoops – a group of residents in Little and Great Eversden – has come together to “protect the future” of The Hoops.
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The award-winning restaurant, Cam Spice, formerly known as The Hoops Tandoori, in Great Eversden, closed its doors last year. The property has since been listed on Rightmove for sale as an Asset of Community Value (ACV).
The community has until the middle of April to submit a bid to the owner. An ACV protects local assets from being sold or redeveloped without the community having a chance to bid.
Paul Trivett, a member of Save The Hoops, has lived in Great Eversden for around seven years. He said: “We don’t have a shop, we don’t have a post office, we don’t have anything that’s open on a regular basis.
”So, this seems to be our last opportunity to have such a thing,” he said. “Once lost, a pub is almost irreparable to replace, with a permanent impact on village life.”
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Save The Hoops has launched a website asking people to put pledges in for when the community share offer opens. This is to help strengthen their bid and unlock grant funding, as the group aims to raise £700,000. Around 20 people have come together to raise the funds, including marketing professionals, gardeners, builders, surveyors, and roofing contractors.
Abigail Newnham is a parish councillor for Little and Great Eversden, and a member of the Save The Hoops group. She said: “It feels like now or never. So we either sit back as a village and show no interest in this, or we see what is possible.”
She added: “It is about making sure we don’t lose this community asset, however it might operate in the future, whether that is a pub, a restaurant, a café or shop.”
Another member of the group, Alan Woods, has lived in Great Eversden for 45 years. He said that protecting the pub is important to him because it is “the main centre of the village”. He added: “I have lived here 45 years and there’s more things that go on at the pub than anywhere else.”
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The group aims for the community to purchase the property and lease it to a hospitality operator. This would keep it as a community asset without expecting the community to work shifts.
At least nine people have been killed in a mass shooting involving a school in British Columbia Tuesday and dozens more are injured, Canadian police say.
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police said in a news release the nine victims and the suspected gunman are dead after the shooting that took place across multiple locations in Tumbler Ridge.
Six people were found dead inside Tumbler Ridge Secondary School and another died when being taken to a hospital, according to RCMP. Two more people were found dead in a home in the community, police said.
The suspected shooter was also found dead with “what appears to be a self‑inflicted injury” inside the school, police say. The identities of the suspected shooter and victims are unknown at this time. A motive for the shooting was not immediately clear.
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Police said they received a report of an active shooter at the Tumbler Ridge school at around 1:20 p.m. MT Tuesday.
At least nine people have been killed in a mass shooting involving a school in British Columbia Tuesday, Canadian police say (Google Earth)
“The alert was officially canceled at 5:45 p.m. as police do not believe there are any outstanding suspects or ongoing threat to the public,” RCMP said.
Aside from those killed in the shooting, two more victims were airlifted to a hospital with “serious or life‑threatening injuries,” according to police.
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RCMP said about 25 others were being treated for “non-life-threatening” injuries. The rest of the students and staff were “safely evacuated” from the school, police said.
Authorities said they are searching other homes and properties for more victims or people “otherwise linked to today’s events.”
“This was a rapidly evolving and dynamic situation, and the swift cooperation from the school, first responders, and the community played a critical role in our response,” Superintendent Ken Floyd, North District Commander, said in a statement.
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Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney offered his ‘prayers and deepest condolences’ to ‘the families and friends who have lost loved ones to these horrific acts of violence’ (Fabrice Coffrini/AFP via Getty Images)
“Our thoughts are with the families, loved ones, and all those impacted by this tragic incident. This has been an incredibly difficult and emotional day for our community, and we are grateful for the cooperation shown as officers continue their work to advance the investigation,” Floyd continued.
The local school district said in a statement that the Tumbler Ridge secondary and elementary schools will be closed for the rest of the week “due to the tragic events that unfolded.”
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said he was “devastated” by the shooting and offered his “prayers and deepest condolences” to “the families and friends who have lost loved ones to these horrific acts of violence.”
“I join Canadians in grieving with those whose lives have been changed irreversibly today, and in gratitude for the courage and selflessness of the first responders who risked their lives to protect their fellow citizens,” Carney wrote on X.
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B.C. Premier David Eby called the shooting an ‘unimaginable tragedy’ (REUTERS/Bhawika Chhabra)
B.C. Premier David Eby called the shooting an “unimaginable tragedy.”
“Our hearts are in Tumbler Ridge tonight with the families of those who have lost loved ones,” Eby wrote. “Government will ensure every possible support for community members in the coming days, as we all try to come to terms with this unimaginable tragedy.”
Bob Zimmer, a member of Parliament for Tumbler Ridge, also expressed his condolences, writing, “My sincere thoughts and prayers go out for the victims still in hospital and for those Tumbler Ridge families who have lost loved ones today.”
The NHS has also warned people that they may need to dial 111 or 999 in some circumstances
Sophie Buchan Money and Lifestyle Writer
03:30, 11 Feb 2026
The NHS has warned anyone feeling unusually “tired” to see their GP. However, in some cases, you may need to dial 111 or 999, as a “fatal” situation can develop quickly.
On social media, the health service highlighted the signs of type 1 diabetes, which can appear at any age. It urged people to remember the four T’s.
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Listing “Toilet, Thirsty, Tired and Thinner” as four common signs to look out for, it said that if any of these symptoms come on suddenly, or they are unusual for you, it is time to seek help.
In its post, it took to X, it warned: “Do you know the signs of type 1 diabetes? They can happen at any age, and if left undiagnosed, it can be fatal.”
Type 1 diabetes – explained
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Type 1 diabetes is a condition where the body cannot produce insulin, causing blood sugar levels to rise. People with type 1 diabetes need to take insulin daily and manage their blood glucose through regular monitoring, diet, and insulin adjustments. There is no cure, but it can be managed effectively.
Remember the 4 T’s
It advised people to remember four words – each starting with the letter T. These are:
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Toilet – “going for a wee more often, especially at night”
Thirsty – “being constantly thirsty and drinking more than usual”
Tired – “being very tired and having less energy.”
Thinner – “losing weight without trying to or looking thinner than usual”
Dial 111
After sharing these common signs, the NHS warned: “Ask for an urgent GP appointment or call NHS 111 if you think you or your child has type 1 diabetes.”
According to the NHS website, other signs of type 1 diabetes include:
blurred vision
breath that smells sweet or fruity (like nail polish remover or pear drop sweets)
cuts and wounds are taking longer to heal
getting frequent infections or infections that do not get better, such as thrush or nappy rash
The NHS warns: “The symptoms develop quickly, over a few days or weeks.”
It may be time to call 999
The NHS warns you should call 999 if you or your child has been peeing more, feeling very thirsty and tired, and:
your symptoms are getting worse quickly
you have stomach pain, diarrhoea, or you’re feeling or being sick
you’re feeling sleepy or confused
you’re breathing faster and more deeply than usual
“These could be signs of diabetic ketoacidosis, which can be life-threatening if not treated quickly”, it cautions.
Diabetes UK has a free helpline that’s open from 9am to 6pm, Monday to Friday. You can call 0345 123 2399 or email helpline@diabetes.org.uk for support and advice.
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump’s top immigration officials appeared before Congress Tuesday for the first time since the shooting deaths of two American citizens in Minneapolis, seeking to defend their officers’ actions as their agencies face intensifying scrutiny over nationwide immigration enforcement operations.
Todd Lyons, who is the acting head of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, came in for some of the sharpest questioning during a more than 3-hour-long hearing in front of the House Homeland Security Committee. He appeared alongside Rodney Scott, who heads Customs and Border Protection, and Joseph Edlow, who leads U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services.
Lawmakers asked them about issues that have dominated the public discourse since Trump launched his mass deportations agenda at the start of his second term. Here are some of their answers.
Defending officers after 2 Americans were killed in Minneapolis
Lyons and Scott faced scrutiny over the killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti but they repeatedly declined to answer questions, citing active investigations.
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Lyons was asked if he would apologize for the way some Trump administration officials characterized Good as an agitator, which he declined to do.
“I welcome the opportunity to speak to the family in private. But I’m not going to comment on any active investigation,” Lyons said.
Lyons said he had seen the video that captured Pretti’s shooting but said he could not comment because of the ongoing investigation.
Masks worn by immigration officers
Democrats painted masked officers as lawless and unaccountable. Republicans said masks are needed to protect officers from doxing.
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Asked if he would commit to making his officers take off their masks and requiring them to wear “standard uniforms with identifiable badges,” Lyons answered with one word: “No.”
Lyons has said repeatedly that he supports officers who feel that they need to wear masks to protect their identities and their families.
Body cameras being deployed to officers
Lyons and Scott said thousands of federal immigration officers are already outfitted with body cameras, with more to come.
Lyons said the body camera footage caught in Minneapolis would be released to the public.
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“That’s one thing that I’m committed to is full transparency. And I fully welcome body cameras all across the spectrum in all of our law enforcement activities,” Lyons said.
Lyons denies 5-year-old boy was used as bait
The case of Liam Conejo Ramos, who was wearing a bunny hat and Spider-Man backpack while he was surrounded by immigration officers, has sparked controversy over the administration’s crackdown in Minnesota.
The boy and his father, Adrian Conejo Arias, who originally is from Ecuador, were detained in a Minneapolis suburb on Jan. 20.
Asked about the case, Lyons denied that the boy was used as bait to get one of the parents out of the house, as neighbors and school officials have alleged.
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“He was obviously upset. We comforted him. The officers actually placed him in one of our vehicles, played his favorite song, favorite music. Then they took him to McDonald’s,” Lyons said.
A DHS funding lapse will threaten the country’s security, officials said
The congressional hearing took place in the shadow of a looming government shutdown that would only affect the Department of Homeland Security.
Republican Rep. Michael Guest of Mississippi blamed Democrats for a possible shutdown and asked the agency heads whether such a shutdown would make the country less safe. They all answered that it would.
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“It will have a great impact,” said Lyons. He said a shutdown would particularly harm the department’s task forces on transnational crimes and terrorism.
ICE at the World Cup
Lyons was asked if he would agree to pausing ICE operations during this year’s FIFA World Cup.
A Democratic lawmaker said visitors were concerned by ICE’s tactics. But Lyons declined to commit to a pause.
“ICE is dedicated to ensuring that everyone that visits the facilities will have a safe and secure event,” Lyons said.
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Questions over guarding voting precincts
With Trump’s call for the federal government to “take over” elections, the ranking member of the committee, Democrat Bennie Thompson of Mississippi, asked the officials to answer if they are involved in any efforts to guard voting precincts, with the midterms set for later this year.
“You’ve not been asked to start deploying people for areas anywhere?” Thompson asked.