The death toll from a suicide attack on a security post in north-west Pakistan rose to 14 police officers, authorities said on Sunday morning.
A self-proclaimed breakaway group of the Pakistan Taliban has claimed responsibility for the attack.
A suicide bomber and several gunmen detonated an explosives-laden vehicle near the post in Bannu, a district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province bordering Afghanistan, late on Saturday, said senior police official Sajjad Khan.
The attack triggered an intense shootout, with some officers being killed in the exchange, while others died later after the building collapsed.
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Rescuers conducted a search operation for hours using heavy machinery to retrieve bodies from under the rubble, Khan said, adding that three police officers were wounded in the attack.
Security forces have also launched an operation to track down the perpetrators.
14 police officers have been killed (AP)
A newly formed militant group, Ittehad-ul-Mujahideen Pakistan, claimed responsibility for the attack in a statement sent to reporters.
While the group claims it was formed by splinter factions of the Pakistani Taliban, known as Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, authorities have accused it of being a front for the TTP.
Pakistan has witnessed a surge in militant violence in recent years, much of it blamed on the TTP, a separate group but an ally of the Afghan Taliban, who returned to power in Afghanistan in 2021.
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Islamabad often accuses Afghanistan’s Taliban government of providing sanctuary to the TTP, a claim that Kabul denies.
Tensions between the two neighbours have persisted, and both sides have engaged in fighting that has killed hundreds of people since late February.
In early April, Afghan and Pakistani officials held peace talks mediated by China. However, despite the talks, sporadic cross-border clashes have continued, though at a lower intensity than before.
In late April, Afghanistan accused Pakistan of committing “war crimes” after missile strikes were launched on northwestern Afghanistan.
Jordan, 30, is running 33 marathons in 33 days to raise funds and awareness of dementia, with support from physio brother Cian, 25.
Bairbre Holmes, Press Association
10:38, 10 May 2026Updated 10:43, 10 May 2026
The Prince of Wales has sent a message of support to two brothers undertaking an all-Ireland marathon challenge, describing them as “inspiring”.
Jordan and Cian Adams have been diagnosed with a rare gene which causes early-onset frontotemporal dementia (FTD), which means they are likely to develop the condition in their 40s.
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Their mother Geraldine died from FTD at the age of 52.
Jordan, 30, is running 33 marathons in 33 days to raise funds and awareness of dementia, with support from physio brother Cian, 25.
William wrote that he is “incredibly impressed with your inspiring journey and ambitious challenge”.
The siblings, from Redditch, Worcestershire, have raised over 1.3 million euro (almost £1.2 million) to support the Alzheimer Society of Ireland and the work of their non-profit organisation, the FTD Brothers Foundation.
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The challenge started with Jordan running the London Marathon on April 26 while carrying a 25kg fridge on his back.
The brothers then immediately travelled to Ireland where Jordan is running a marathon a day in each of the island’s 32 counties.
The royal letter was read to the pair by their father Glenn on Sunday morning.
William wrote: “Taking on such a demanding challenge, to honour your mother’s memory and raise awareness of frontotemporal dementia, speaks to your remarkable strength.
“You are inspiring people far beyond those who stood along the marathon route here in London, and those who will no doubt be cheering you on along the roads of Ireland.
“It takes great courage and generosity to turn such personal adversity into hope for others.
“By sharing your story so openly, you are helping to change understanding of dementia and giving countless families strength, comfort, and a sense that they are not alone.
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“I hope you are both proud of all you have accomplished so far and wish you both every success for the road ahead.”
The letter came on day 14 of the fundraiser as they travelled though County Leitrim.
It is a poignant moment for them as the county was home to many of the 12 Irish relatives they have lost to FTD.
The brothers are scheduled to finish the challenge in Dublin on May 28.
Passengers are being evacuated from the MV Hondius cruise ship after a hantavirus outbreak, with Britons set to be flown home to isolate at Arrowe Park Hospital on the Wirral. A total of eight cases, including three deaths, have been reported linked to the ship.
11:48, 10 May 2026Updated 11:59, 10 May 2026
Passengers are being removed from a cruise liner struck by a hantavirus outbreak this morning, after the MV Hondius docked in Tenerife.
British travellers aboard are now set to be flown back to quarantine at the UK’s original coronavirus > Covid isolation facility. The MV Hondius reached Tenerife on Sunday morning, with Spanish authorities commencing evacuations organised by passengers’ nationalities.
The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) confirmed that British passengers will be transported to an isolation facility at Arrowe Park Hospital on the Wirral, Merseyside, following their return to the UK via a chartered aircraft. Representatives from the UKHSA and Foreign Office were expected to meet the MV Hondius upon its arrival in Tenerife, one of Spain’s Canary Islands, with British passengers undergoing hantavirus testing prior to disembarkation.
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Those who test negative and show no symptoms will be escorted directly to a specially chartered repatriation flight, equipped with medical staff and personal protective equipment including face masks.
In a social media update on Sunday morning, World Health Organisation (WHO) director-general Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said: “The disembarkment of the first group of MV Hondius passengers has started. WHO experts on the ground are working with the Spanish Health Ministry on the epidemiological assessment of the passengers and coordinating charter flights with the Interior Ministry.” Upon their return to the UK, passengers will be accommodated in a dedicated block at the Arrowe Park site, situated away from the hospital’s public-facing areas, where they will undergo clinical assessments and testing as a precautionary step. The facility previously served as Britain’s first Covid quarantine centre, with blue tarpaulin fencing surrounding accommodation blocks being installed on Sunday morning, reports the Irish Mirror.
Emergency services across the North West of England indicated that passengers are anticipated to remain in the “managed setting” for as long as 72 hours. They emphasised that the NHS Trust and hospital continue “operating as normal” with no danger posed to patients, visitors or staff, stressing that “people should continue to come forward for care as usual”.
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After their period of isolation, public health experts will determine whether passengers may self-isolate at home or another appropriate venue depending on their domestic circumstances. British nationals returning to the UK will remain in self-isolation for 45 days and will be prohibited from using public transport to reach their residences.
The WHO confirmed on Saturday that no symptomatic passengers were aboard the MV Hondius, while the UKHSA maintained the risk to the public “remains very low”. The UN health body reported six confirmed hantavirus cases connected to the MV Hondius, with four patients presently receiving hospital treatment. The agency confirmed that eight cases in total had been recorded, including three fatalities, with one previously suspected case now ruled out after testing negative for hantavirus. According to the UKHSA, three of the eight cases involve British nationals – two confirmed hantavirus infections and one suspected case.
The two confirmed British patients are receiving treatment in hospitals in South Africa and the Netherlands, while the third British national with a suspected infection is receiving support on Tristan da Cunha, the British overseas territory where they reside.
A team comprising six paratroopers, an RAF consultant and an Army nurse from 16 Air Assault Brigade were parachuted onto the remote South Atlantic island, alongside oxygen supplies and medical equipment dropped onto Tristan da Cunha, which is typically only reachable by sea.
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The Ministry of Defence (MoD) confirmed this marked the first occasion medical personnel had been parachuted in to deliver humanitarian assistance.
NEW YORK (AP) — “The Lost Boys” and “Schmigadoon!” each earned a leading 12 Tony Award nominations Tuesday, as nominators also made June Squibb the oldest Tony-nominated actor in history at 96. Danny Burstein is now the most-nominated male actor in Tony history.
“The Lost Boys,” an adaptation of a 1987 teen movie vampire thriller, and “Schmigadoon!,” an adaptation of an Apple TV series that gently mocks Broadway musicals, were followed by a revival of “Ragtime,” a big, soaring musical celebrating early 20th-century America, with 11 nominations, and “Death of a Salesman,” Arthur Miller’s masterpiece that looks at the unraveling of the American Dream, starring Nathan Lane, which nabbed nine nods.
Twenty-four shows got at least one nomination across the 26 Tony categories, a revival of “Chess,” the Cold War-set love triangle between two chess grand masters and the woman who loved both, and “Cats: The Jellicle Ball,” which reimagines Andrew Lloyd Webber’s classic feline musical into a celebration of queer ballroom culture.
“I’m over the Jellicle moon about this!” said Bill Rauch, who secured his first Tony nomination for co-directing the reimagined “Cats.” “I’ve spent my whole career trying to connect the dots between classics and the place and time we’re living in, and so to have ‘Cats’ have this life on Broadway right now just really feels like an affirmation of everything I’ve been trying to do for decades.”
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AP AUDIO: ‘The Lost Boys’ and ‘Schmigadoon!’ earn 12 Tony nominations each to lead the field
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AP correspondent Julie Walker reports on the Tony nominations and the two musicals dominating.
Best new musical and play nominees
Christiani Pitts, left, and Sam Tutty appear during a performance of “Two Strangers” in New York on Oct. 31, 2025. (Matthew Murphy via AP)
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Christiani Pitts, left, and Sam Tutty appear during a performance of “Two Strangers” in New York on Oct. 31, 2025. (Matthew Murphy via AP)
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The best new musical crown will be between “The Lost Boys,” “Schmigadoon!,” “Titanique,” a camp musical comedy that reimagines the 1997 megahit movie “Titanic,” and “Two Strangers (Carry a Cake Across New York),” an opposites-attract rom-com set during a New York City weekend.
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Ali Louis Bourzgui, nominated for best featured role in a musical playing a seductive vampire in “The Lost Boys,” took a bite on why his show was so well received: “I think that people, including myself, love a villain that they can care for,” he said. “Some of my favorite performances are technically villains on paper, but the person who’s playing them actively makes them a full 3D person that you can root for. I think that’s the most interesting kind of character.”
The best new play nominees are the John Lithgow-led “Giant,” which explores accusations of antisemitism against children’s author Roald Dahl; “Liberation,” about a consciousness-raising women’s group in 1970s Ohio that won the Pulitzer Prize for drama on Monday; “The Balusters,” a wry comedy about a small-town neighborhood association that descends into chaos over whether to install a stop sign; and “Little Bear Ridge Road,” about a struggling writer who returns to his rural hometown to settle his dead father’s estate.
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Ken Ard appears in “Cats: The Jellicle Ball.” (Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman via AP)
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Ken Ard appears in “Cats: The Jellicle Ball.” (Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman via AP)
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Playwright Mark Rosenblatt conceived of “Giant” in 2018 and started writing it in 2020, and it seems remarkably relevant in 2026, following the fallout from the war in Gaza and the spotlight on antisemitism in America.
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“The ideas in the play, the concerns in the plays, the pain in the play, is perennial,” he said. “But I could never have imagined that it would, when it finally was produced, would be playing against the backdrop of what’s happening now.”
“The Fear of 13,” the true story of a man who spent more than two decades on death row, didn’t get any acting nods, despite starring Adrien Brody and Tessa Thompson in their Broadway debuts. Former “Glee” star Lea Michele will still be seeking her first Tony nomination after having missed out for her work on “Chess.”
Squibb is now the oldest Tony-nominated actor in history, besting the record set by Lois Smith, who was 89 when she was nominated in 2020 for “The Inheritance.” Squibb’s Broadway resume reaches back to a stint in the original production of “Gypsy” in 1960 with Ethel Merman, and she recalls rehearsing a musical by dancing on a concrete floor. It is her first Tony nomination.
In Jordan Harrison’s play “Marjorie Prime,” a widow played by Squibb is brought an artificial companion who looks precisely like her dead husband. Premiering in 2014, the work in 2026 capitalizes on the recent frenzy over technological advancements like ChatGPT. Squibb said she saw the original, but only now fully comprehends the implications of things like AI.
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As for her age, she said she doesn’t really think about it: “I can’t ignore my body is different than it was when I was young. And when I read a script now, I have to think can I physically do what they’re asking me to do. And that’s about it,” she said. “As long as it’s not dancing on concrete floors.”
Burstein becomes the most-nominated male actor in Tony history with nine nods after his work in “Marjorie Prime,” beating the record set by Jason Robards. Kelli O’Hara got her ninth career nomination for a revival of the comedy “Fallen Angels,” tying her with Rosemary Harris for third on the all-time acting nominations list.
Who lost out?
A trio of actors from the hit TV series “The Bear” struck out in their Broadway debuts this season — Ayo Edebiri in a revival of “Proof” and Jon Bernthal and Ebon Moss-Bachrach who both appeared in “Dog Day Afternoon,” an adaptation of Sidney Lumet’s 1975 bank robbing drama.
Others who missed out this year include Bobby Cannavale, who starred in a revival of “Art” with Neil Patrick Harris and James Corden that was snubbed by the nominators. “Bill & Ted” stars Keanu Reeves and Alex Winters reuniting for a revival of “Waiting for Godot,” were also left off, although Brandon J. Dirden was nominated for a featured role. Laurie Metcalf was in a position to earn two but will have to settle with a featured role nod for “Death of a Salesman.”
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Nominations include a return
The best play revival category is stacked with well-received work: “Every Brilliant Thing”; “Death of a Salesman”; “Oedipus,” a modern retelling of Sophocles’ classic tragedy set on election night in a modern campaign office; “Becky Shaw,” Gina Gionfriddo’s dark comedy about a newlywed couple who decide to play matchmaker; and “Fallen Angels,” Noël Coward’s alcohol-fueled competition between two upper-crust ladies over the attention of a former lover.
Daniel Radcliffe secured a nomination for “Every Brilliant Thing,” a one-person show that explores the antidotes to depression.
Rose Byrne, the “If I Had Legs I’d Kick You” star who plays one of those upper-crust ladies in “Fallen Angels,” secured a nomination for best actress in a play, becoming the 22nd actor in history to be Oscar- and Tony-nominated in the same year. In addition to Byrne and O’Hara, Lesley Manville secured a nod for “Oedipus,” Susannah Flood for “Liberation” and Carrie Coon for her work in her husband Tracy Letts’ play “Bug.”
O’Hara — winner for the 2015 “The King and I” revival — said there will be no chill descending between her and her co-star: “I’m moving with great bravery because of someone who’s brave right next to me. And if she takes home that prize, it would mean we both win.”
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David Manis, left, and John Lithgow in “Giant.” (Joan Marcus via AP)
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David Manis, left, and John Lithgow in “Giant.” (Joan Marcus via AP)
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Lithgow, who has two Tonys already, will get his third if he beats leading actor in a play nominees Lane, Radcliffe, Mark Strong in “Oedipus” and Will Harrison from “Punch,” which looks at restorative justice following the death of a man from a physical punch.
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Best actor in a musical nominees include Joshua Henry and Brandon Uranowitz, both from “Ragtime,” Sam Tutty in “Two Strangers,” Nicholas Christopher in “Chess” and Luke Evans from “The Rocky Horror Show.”
On the women’s side, the nominees are: Caissie Levy from “Ragtime,” Marla Mindelle for “Titanique,” Christiani Pitts from “Two Strangers,” Sara Chase from “Schmigadoon!” and Stephanie Hsu in “The Rocky Horror Show.”
The nominations also seemed to be an official welcome back to producer Scott Rudin, who scored nods for “Death of a Salesman” and “Little Bear Ridge Road.” In 2021, Rudin said he was stepping back after allegations of bullying.
The Tony Awards will be handed out June 7 at Radio City Music Hall during a telecast hosted by Pink. The awards will air live on CBS and stream on Paramount+.
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Last year’s show — hosted by “Wicked” star Cynthia Erivo — drew 4.85 million viewers to CBS, its largest broadcast audience in six years, according to Nielsen.
Running from Saturday, May 16 to Sunday, May 24, the national campaign invites people to explore the personal histories behind Commonwealth war graves through free guided tours.
Elizabeth Smith, public engagement coordinator at the Commonwealth War Graves Commission, said: “War Graves Week is an opportunity for people to see familiar places in a new light.
“Across the North East of England, there are stories of courage, loss and resilience that are part of the community’s history yet often go unnoticed in everyday life.
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“We are encouraging everyone to explore local CWGC sites in the area and share their own stories to connect the North East to our shared global history.”
In the North East, the Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC) maintains thousands of graves belonging to individuals who served in both world wars.
Some of those individuals came from the region, while others were from across the Commonwealth.
In Tynemouth Cemetery, visitors will find the graves of 26 men from HMS Patia, a ship sunk off the Northumberland coast during an air attack in April 1941.
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Stonefall Cemetery in Harrogate is the final resting place of Sergeant Joseph Raymond Pollon of the Royal Canadian Air Force, who died in a training accident at just 17-years-old, only weeks after arriving in Britain.
During War Graves Week, free tours will be held at Preston Cemetery in Tynemouth, Linthorpe Cemetery in Middlesbrough, Stonefall Cemetery in Harrogate, and Ripon Cemetery.
Members of the public are encouraged to visit these sites, attend an event, or share their own stories online.
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More information and event details can be found at www.cwgc.org/war-graves-week.
We are taking you back to the year 2001 and sharing photos of new starters at a range of schools across York and Ryedale too.
To jog your memory of the time, in 2001 Tony Blair was the Prime Minister, Sven-Göran Eriksson became manager of the England football team, and York’s new Millennium Bridge opened to the public.
This gallery of photos accompanies one we shared last week, also of school starters in 2001.
Today’s article with its photo gallery will be one of a series we will be running in coming weeks.
Children in these photos will now be in their 20s – can you spot anyone you know?
New pupils at Clifton Green School. Class of 2001
Where are they now? What are they doing?
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Please leave an update in the comments section below.
Share more nostalgia
If you love delving into York’s past and seeing photos and reading stories from yesteryear then make sure you check The Press every day for its regular nostalgia stories. And don’t miss our eight-page nostalgia supplement every Wednesday in the paper.
We also have more than 3,000 members in our online nostalgia group on Facebook, Why We Love York – Memories. It is free to join and you will find us at www.facebook.com/groups/yorknostalgia/.
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Read more:
It would be great to see your old photos of York – and they don’t have to be from centuries ago. We all love seeing old photos from our recent past, and some of our more popular stories with readers date from the 70s, 80s and 90s.
Westlife took to the stage during the third semi-final of talent contest BGT – but one member was missing.
Westlife paid tribute to Britain’s Got Talent judge Simon Cowell as they made a guest appearance on the show. The band performed some of their biggest hits ahead of their 25th anniversary tour during the third semi-final of the talent contest last night.
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The heartfelt message saw bandmates Shane Filan, Nicky Bryne, and Kian Egan thank Cowell for being instrumental in their success. However, they remain without Mark Feehily, the fourth member of the quartet, who won’t appear on the tour.
On stage, Nicky said: “It’s been a long time since Simon Cowell suggested standing up from our stools on a key change.” Kian went on to pay tribute to Simon and said they wouldn’t have been there without him, reports the Mirror.
Stand-up comedian Ted Hill and foot juggler Liwei Yang took the plaudits during the semi-final and will now contest the Britain’s Got Talent final on Saturday, May 30.
Last year, Westlife confirmed that Mark, who has been battling a number of health issues since August 2020, would not be able to take part in the tour.
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In a statement, they said: “Sadly, Mark will be unable to join the celebrations. We hope he can join us back on stage when he is ready and able. He sends his love and positivity to you all as always.”
Mark announced he would be taking a break from Westlife just days before first ever tour of America in 2024. At the time, he shared: “Hello and much love to you all! It’s Mark here.. Most of you are aware that I have had some health challenges over the past while.
“It actually all started 3.5 years ago in August 2020 when I had surgery. Within a few days of this surgery I was in severe pain and was rushed into A&E.
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“I eventually ended that awful day in ICU (Intensive Care Unit) where I was informed that due to a complication with the surgery, I had developed severe ‘Sepsis’, a life-threatening infection that would require immediate emergency surgery to rectify the problem and basically save my life.”
He explained that he was in hospital for months during lockdown, and was later told he needed more surgery.
“It was physically and mentally a very difficult time, not to mention traumatic having to spend so long in ICU. In late 2021, I became very ill in Newcastle before a concert and ended up back in A&E, this time being told I had pneumonia. I was told I had to go straight home to recover and regrettably miss the rest of the concerts that December,” he said.
Speaking about Mark missing their big anniversary tour, Kian said: “We’re devastated he won’t be joining us on this tour. We’ll be missing him every night just as much as the fans will. But he’s given us his full support. This is the 25th anniversary, it’s something that we all felt needed to be celebrated. We hope as soon as he’s ready he’ll be back with us and we look forward to that moment.”
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Up to 15 people have been injured in an explosion on a charter boat in a Miami holiday spot (Picture: WSVN 7)
Two young children are among more than a dozen people injured after an explosion rocked a tourist boat in Florida.
At least 11 people have been taken to the hospital following the blast on a charter boat in Biscayne Bay, a popular holiday spot near Miami.
One of the children caught in the explosion was scorched by serious burns in their body.
Another adult sustained burns to 30 per cent of his body, the Sun reported.
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Emergency crews were called to the scene at 12.50pm on Saturday, where they rescued passengers left in the water in lifeboats.
Other US outlets reported that as many as 15 people were caught in the blast.
Emergency crews attended Biscayne Bay just after midday on Saturday and rescued several people from the water (Picture: WSVN 7)
The incident occurred at the Haulover Sandbar, a shallow shipping area known for hosting parties at North Miami Beach.
An investigation into the explosion has been opened by the area’s conservation commission.
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The cause remains unknown; however, one person onboard the vessel who was not injured suggested the blast was the result of a gas leak.
The Miami Herald reported that fire crews were studying the boat’s fuel tank as a possible source of ignition.
Patrick Lee, a local business owner, said he saw people sent flying after a ‘puff of smoke’.
He told NBC: ‘Somebody pulled up and dropped a bunch of people on that boat, and when we looked back out, we saw three people flying off of the boat and a puff of smoke.
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‘It was pretty obvious what it was.’ Mr Lee added he had seen 12 stretchers carrying burnt victims leaving the scene.
Last year, an 18-month-old toddler was left with ‘life-changing burns’ after a fire on a boat in the River Thames that injured nine people.
The boat exploded on the banks of the river in the town of Lechlade, on the edge of Wiltshire, in June.
The toddler was airlifted to Bristol Royal Hospital for Children for urgent medical care, according to Wiltshire999s.
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Eight others were taken to the hospital in the aftermath of the blaze, with one airlifted to the John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford.
Directed by Orban Wallace, Our Land explores the countryside access debate in England and Wales through interviews, pastoral shots, lavish illustrations and a walk in the country where the sun always seems to shine.
Our Land follows the path of earlier activists such as Marion Shoard and Tom Stevenson who once advanced the access campaign through their experiences and storytelling. Here, the documentary’s star is naturalist and conservationist Nadia Shaikh.
Shaikh explores the teaching power of the English countryside by leading a group of trespassers on a nature walk. She describes her own complex and deep-felt attachment to the countryside as a place of education and personal identity.
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Our Land is a title with two meanings – private land ownership for the landowners v the campaign for shared rights in land. The film explores different attitudes to ownership as well as the physical borders between landowners and, in the words of access campaigner and contributor Guy Shrubsole, “the peasants”.
Francis Fulford fills the role of aristocratic landowner and pantomime villain in Our Land. MetFilm
The documentary was filmed during the Darwall v Dartmoor (2023) legal dispute. Landowner Alexander Darwall successfully challenged and outlawed the longstanding right to wild camp on Dartmoor National Park in the High Court. Later overturned by the Court of Appeal and Supreme Court, the High Court ruling in favour of the landowner caused ripples of protest among walkers and campers. They temporarily lost the right to wild camp in Dartmoor – the only place in England where this was allowed by law.
Hedge fund manager Darwall is the most controversial landowner to feature in Our Land, but he is not interviewed in person. Instead, veteran documentary star Francis Fulford (he’s appeared in nine shows, including one about his estate and family) fills the role of aristocratic landowner and pantomime villain.
Fulford provides an insight into the landowner outlook: proud of his family’s place in English and colonial history as well as its roots on the Great Fulford estate. Fulford describes his family as having owned the estate since “time immemorial” and his love of the English countryside is unquestionable.
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Indeed, many of the landowners interviewed have a paternal view of the countryside in which they view themselves as temporary guardians. Where opinions differ is how the countryside is best preserved and the extent to which the public should be allowed access to it.
For instance, campaigning author Nick Hayes crosses the fences of the Drax estate in Dorset to deliver a copy of his Book of Trespass. He discusses the colonial history of the great estates and the role of wider access as a response to the decolonisation movement.
Campaigning author Nick Hayes. MetFilm
The documentary explains how the English and Welsh culture of access differs from that of close neighbours like Scotland. The Land Reform (Scotland) Act (2003) is celebrated, and contrasted with the exclusionary laws of England and Wales. Shrubsole stands over the border with one foot trespassing in England, the other “lawfully” in Scotland.
The Land Reform Act provides a much wider right to roam the Scottish countryside than the Countryside and Rights of Way Act in England (2000). It has a presumption in favour of public access and only minor exclusions such as private gardens and some industrial land. By contrast, the English “right to roam” supplements our existing network of footpaths, but extends only to mountain, moor, heath, down and common land. Great swathes of land are left inaccessible to the public.
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Campaigners walking in Kendal, in the Lake District. MetFilm
The law is a central character in the access debate but exists only in the background of this documentary. We learn about the Norman conquest and enclosure of the commons in the 12th to 19th century. It was a process of consolidating, privatising and fencing off shared agricultural land (common land) in Britain, transforming it into individually owned, fenced fields. This change abolished traditional communal rights for grazing and farming.
However, there is less about the mixed success of earlier attempts to open countryside such as the Access to Mountains Act (1939), post-war National Parks Act (1949) or the Countryside and Rights of Way Act. English legislative failures might be able to teach us as much as Scotland’s successes.
Disagreement and concession
As the documentary draws to its conclusions there are some limitations to the format of landowners and campaigners being interviewed separately. We hear from both sides of the access debate but there are few opportunities to see the two sides in conversation.
Fulford is goaded from behind the camera on his views about sharing his land with visitors, but no representatives from either side have the opportunity to join one another in debate.
Fulford’s estate. MetFlim
This leaves some assertions unchallenged, such as those of the affable Hugh Inge-Innes-Lillingston, owner of the Thorpe estate in Staffordshire. On the topic of rewilding, he contends that land cannot be truly rewilded if public access is allowed. But this reductive position ignores the nuanced ways that visitors and wilderness can coexist.
Throughout, many of the featured landowners and access campaigners agree on the artificial nature of landownership, their individual powerlessness to effect change and on the social and legal constructs that trap us all in an uncomfortable standoff.
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As the documentary closes with trespassers talking and singing around a fire, I was left wishing that the cast of landowners could have joined them in their conversation.
The climate crisis has a communications problem. How do we tell stories that move people – not just to fear the future, but to imagine and build a better one? This article is part of Climate Storytelling, a series exploring how arts and science can join forces to spark understanding, hope and action.
Sky has upgraded its Ultimate TV and Sky Sports bundle to now include HBO Max, Netflix, Disney+, discovery+ and Hayu, as well as 135 channels and full Sky coverage of the Premier League and EFL.
Sky broadcasts more than 1,400 live matches across the Premier League, EFL and more with at least 215 live from the top flight alongside Formula 1, darts and golf.
Millions of Britons occasionally or habitually bite their nails, a practice often linked to stress, anxiety and even boredom.
And while some may see it as a relatively harmless habit, it can create dental issues that can make you appear older than you actually are.
Dr Tony Taunk of dental solutions experts Implant Perfection said: “Lots of people bite their nails and it’s an incredibly common habit, but many of them won’t realise the long-term damage it can do.
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“The pressure of biting down on the nail can damage the front teeth, wearing down its enamel and leading to misalignment and gaps over time.
“It is also linked to teeth-grinding, which wears down teeth and can contribute to headaches and jaw problems.
“Older people tend to have more worn-down teeth thanks to decades of chewing and biting while younger people don’t tend to have the same level of natural wear and tear.
“Another natural effect of getting older is our teeth tend to get more discoloured thanks to years of enamel thinning and more exposure of dentin, the yellowish tissue that’s at the core of teeth.
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“Nail biting can certainly accelerate enamel damage, leading to a smile that looks older than it is.”
Nail biting, otherwise known as onychophagia, is often referred to as an impulse control problem, a behavioural condition which makes it difficult to resist an urge or temptation.
Many people do it without thinking, and stress is considered one of the most significant causes.
It can also be a frustrating habit to have, given the health problems it is linked to, as well as a potentially negative perception of a person’s appearance.
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Dr Taunk added: “Our smiles are one of the key features people notice about us, and even the smallest issue can make a difference to our appearance.
“As we get older, our gums naturally recede and this can cause the tooth’s root to be more visible when we smile.
“Nail biting can accelerate enamel damage, natural wear and tear and receding gums, so it’s certainly an everyday habit that can make us look older.”
“Aside from the appearance aspect, biting our nails can also lead to serious illnesses and, of course, long-term damage to the nail.
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“Bacteria gets transferred from the fingertips and nails to the mouth, and this heightens the risk of issues such as stomach bugs, colds and salmonella.”
Implant Perfection is one of the UK’s leading specialists in dental implant solutions, combining precision, innovation and experience to achieve a healthier smile.
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