A fresh wave of blasts was heard in Dubai and in the Qatari capital of Doha for a second day on Sunday as defence forces intercepted missiles headed their way in response to US and Israeli attacks on Saturday.
The UAE’s ministry of defence said that 165 ballistic missiles, two cruise missiles and 541 drones had been launched from Iran towards the country so far. Three people have been killed and 58 injured, the authorities said.
JS Anand, founder and CEO of Leva Hotels, which has a flagship hotel in Dubai, told The Independent that the attacks had caused panic and uncertainty among residents and guests.
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He explained: “I think everybody was caught unawares in the city, because obviously Iran was targeting the bases and missiles were going over us. Sometimes they were intercepted, so there were really loud sounds, and some places got hit. So obviously that resulted in cancellations and a lot of people being uncertain about their flights.”
Mr Anand, who was speaking from Leva Hotel Mazaya Centre, which is near the Burj Khalifa, the tallest skyscraper in the world, added: “It caused a lot of panic, uncertainty, and there was an emergency message that came out in the night.
“It said there was a barrage of missiles coming in, everyone came to the lobby and basement, worried about what was going to happen, so we had to take care of them. Most of them have extended their stay because there are no flights and no certainty on when the airspace is going to open up.”
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The Fairmont The Palm building in Palm Jumeirah, which was damaged by an Iranian attack (Reuters)
He continued: “Some guests came to the airport from another hotel, and have decided to come to ours. Some were even staying in the Burj Khalifa, and they didn’t want to stay in a higher building. They wanted to come to a low-rise, and we are just three floors.”
He said that around 140-150 rooms at the hotel were occupied with guests and that the UAE’s department for economy and tourism had told hoteliers that the government would cover expenses for guests unable to pay for their extended stays.
He added: “It’s obvious that right now there is no clear indication of what is in store and what is going to happen next.”
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Smoke rises from the port of Jebel Ali following a reported Iranian strike in Dubai (AFP via Getty)
Mira Thönnessen, 36, a German national who was staying at the hotel, told The Independent she did not feel safe leaving and planned to stay inside.
Her flight home to Berlin was scheduled for Monday evening, but it is looking unlikely that it will go ahead. She said: “On Saturday morning at breakfast we got the news of the attack. Then my plan was to go straight to the hotel and get my stuff, and go to the airport. By the time we had got to the hotel, they were already closing off the airspace”.
Passengers stranded by the closure of Dubai International airport wait for assistance (AP)
She added: “I came here to visit my best friend, who is going through a divorce, and I came to support her. I’m thinking about going to Oman with friends of friends to go to the airport there. But I think I will probably end up staying here and hoping that it doesn’t escalate further. I’m keen to get out as quickly as possible.”
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Ms Thönnessen, who is a midwife, said she has had to cancel the appointments she has due to being stuck in Dubai. “I do home births, and a lot of the women I look after are due around now, so I’ve had to pass them on to colleagues. For the antenatal and postnatal check-ups, I’ve explained to them that I’m currently stuck and I don’t know when I will be back.”
Smoke and flames rise from The Palm in Dubai (AFP via Getty)
Asked if she felt safe to go outside the hotel to walk around, she replied: “No. No, we’re staying very much in the hotel. The hotel is attached to a mall and has a restaurant.
“My financial resources are dwindling because I didn’t expect to have to stay for so long. But I don’t feel like I would want to go outside, no.”
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Are you a British national impacted by the escalations between Iran, the US and Israel? Get in touch at holly.bancroft@independent.co.uk
Broadcaster and journalist Isabel Oakeshott, speaking from Dubai Marina, said on Sunday morning: “The authorities have clearly done a very good job indeed of intercepting a lot that is coming our way. This is far from a normal morning here. It is extremely quiet on the streets”.
In a video posted to X, she added that there were “periodic quite regular sounds of munitions”. She said that there was a “very unnerving moment in the early hours of the morning when we all received emergency alerts to take cover”.
Two people were injured in Dubai after shrapnel from drones fell on two houses when they were intercepted, a Dubai Media Office statement said, and state media has reported that shrapnel from an Iranian missile attack on the UAE killed one person.
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A man jogs on a beach in Dubai, with the Burj Al Arab hotel in the background (AP)
Debris from aerial interceptions caused fires at the city’s main port and on the facade of the iconic Burj Al Arab hotel. Four people were also injured in an incident at Dubai International airport on Saturday.
The former Rangers and Liverpool manager Graeme Souness was also among travellers caught up in flight cancellations on Saturday. He posted two videos on Instagram from Zayed International airport in Abu Dhabi as he attempted to return to the UK.
“I’m hearing some pretty loud bangs go off and that is anti-missiles taking out missiles that have been fired at some American bases,” wrote Souness in the first video.
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An update followed, with the 72-year-old writing: “Flight’s been cancelled, still hearing explosions so we’ve given up, we’re just going to check into a hotel for a couple of nights and see where we are.
“Hopefully, things will settle down, and we’ll get back on the flight. You get grumpy when you get delays and stuff at airports but I think we should think of people that maybe this time are dying.”
One person has been killed at Zayed International airport, with others also injured there and at Dubai International airport, while thousands of flights remain grounded.
On Sunday, an adviser to theUAE’spresident said Iran “missed its target” with its attacks on the Arab Gulf states.
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“Your war is not with your neighbours,” Anwar Gargash wrote on X, addressing Tehran.
“Return to your senses, to your surroundings, and deal with your neighbours with reason and responsibility before the circle of isolation and escalation widens.”
Multiple people were injured after an incident at Dubai International Airport (AP)
Claire Gleave, who moved to Dubai with her husband and three sons in August, said the situation on Saturday was “quite a strange, surreal feeling and frightening as well”.
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She expected attacks overnight, but was surprised to see them continue on Sunday, she said.
“We were woken up along with the rest of Dubai at 1am with one of these phone alerts that came out saying to get shelter.”
Mrs Gleave, who lives 30 minutes from The Palm Hotel, which was struck on Saturday, said: “You do tend to overanalyse everything you hear, if a car door slams, or the air conditioning comes on.”
Her husband and son were due to fly back to the UK on Sunday, but had their flights cancelled after Dubai closed its airspace. They have booked another flight for Monday evening, but she says it is unlikely it won’t be cancelled as well.
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Her children have been told not to attend school for the next three days, she said.
It is an image that will haunt very many people across Israel. A corner of Beit Shemesh, flattened by an Iranian missile; a synagogue destroyed; people killed while they sought refuge in a bomb shelter.
If you wanted proof that war, even this war, is not just about aerial defences and surgical strikes, this was it. A ghastly vista of sudden death.
When we arrived on the scene, we were told, repeatedly, that this was just a place where people lived, prayed and got taught. No military base, no hardware, not even a government office.
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“Why would this be a target,” said one person. “There is no excuse.”
What we saw when we arrived was a chaotic aftermath. What we heard was a horror story.
Dozens of residents had gone to the bomb shelter after receiving an alert on their phone and then hearing an air raid siren. It is the sort of behaviour that is, at once, disconcerting and also normal.
Thanks to previous conflicts, including the 12-day war just eight months ago, Israelis are accustomed to getting such warnings.
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The shelter was supposed to be their sanctuary. Instead, it became a tomb in a matter of moments.
Image: The aftermath of the strike in Beit Shemesh, Israel. Pic: AP
The missile somehow evaded Israel‘s formidable air defences.
“Nothing can be one hundred percent effective,” said one Israeli military official to me. “We cannot stop every single missile. We can try, but we know that eventually one will get through.”
And so it did, devastatingly. We watched as huge diggers were brought in to try to clear the rubble, and as search and rescue teams worked out how to look for survivors. There were soldiers, emergency workers, local residents, police and politicians.
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We spoke to one of them, Amichai Eliyahu, Israel’s outspoken culture minister. He was surveying the destruction, his head shaking. This, he said, was an embodiment of why Israel needed to fight Iran.
“What did these people here ever do to them? What did these babies do to harm them?” he said to me.
“They have never done anything bad to Iran, we don’t even share a border with Iran. This was done for no reason at all, except pure hatred for the sake of hatred. So I’m asking all those who defend them in the world, who are you defending? Monsters, Monsters want to kill us.”
Lieutenant Colonel Yochay Manoff was more sanguine, when we spoke on a ridge overlooking the scene. He is a company commander in Israel’s National Rescue Unit, accustomed to difficult situations and traumatic problems.
But, for him, this one was difficult to accept.
“Just for reference, this is one missile that hit and affected so many buildings and so many lives,” he told me. “Think about the amount of missiles that were on the way from Iran to Israel over the last two days. The damage could be immense.”
Could be, but hasn’t been. Israel puts so much store by its aerial defence systems that sometimes its citizens can appear complacent, so confident are they in the military technology.
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But this was proof that nothing works perfectly, all of the time.
Every now and then a missile will get through the array of defence systems that guard Israel’s airspace, and sometimes they strike with horrific impact. This corner of Beit Shemesh offered grim evidence of that.
Sir Keir Starmer said the UK will allow the US to use British bases after Britain, France and Germany together said they would help ‘destroy Iran’s capability to fire missiles and drones at their source’
21:24, 01 Mar 2026Updated 22:17, 01 Mar 2026
The UK has agreed to a US request to use British military bases to strike Iranian missile sites, Sir Keir Starmer has confirmed.
But the UK Prime Minister said the UK “will not join offensive action” in Iran, adding: “We all remember the mistakes of Iraq and we have learned those lessons.”
It comes as Iran continues its assault on the Middle East in revenge attacks for the joint US-Israeli operation yesterday which saw missiles rain down on Tehran, Mirror reports.
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A joint statement between UK, France and Germany said: “We will take steps to defend our interests and those of our allies in the region, potentially through enabling necessary and proportionate defensive action to destroy Iran’s capability to fire missiles and drones at their source.
“We have agreed to work together with the US and allies in the region on this matter.”
In an update this evening, Mr Starmer said it “remains the case” that the UK is not involved with the strikes on Iran, but Britain will allow the US to use British bases to support its operation.
He said “partners in the Gulf have asked us to do more to defend them”, adding that “it’s my duty to protect British lives.”
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“We have British jets in the air as part of coordinated defensive operations. Which have already successfully intercepted Iranian strikes. But the only way to stop the threat is to destroy the missiles at source. In their storage depots or the launchers which are used to fire the missiles,” Mr Starmer continued.
“The US has requested permission to use British bases for that specific and limited defensive purpose. We have taken the decision to accept this request. To prevent Iran firing missiles across the region, killing innocent civilians, putting British lives at risk and hitting countries that have not been involved.
“The basis of our decision is the collective self-defence of longstanding friends and allies, and protecting British lives.”
The PM said while the UK is “not joining these strikes”, Britain “will continue with our defensive actions in the region.”
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“And we will also bring experts from Ukraine together with our own counter drone expertise, to help our Gulf partners shoot down Iranian drones attacking them.”
He concluded: “We all remember the mistakes of Iraq and we have learned those lessons. We were not involved in the initial strikes on Iran, and we will not join offensive action now.
“But Iran is pursuing a scorched earth strategy, so we are supporting the collective self-defence of our allies and our people in the region, because that is our duty to the British people.
“It is the best way to eliminate the urgent threat and prevent the situation spiralling further.
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“This is the British government – protecting British interests and British lives.”
A Manchester park was taped off this evening (March 1) with a police helicopter scouring the scene following reports of a ‘serious assault’ in the area.
An injured man was found at the scene and was taken to hospital for treatment, the force said. Photos from the scene showed multiple police cars in attendance outside the takeaways on Stockport Road.
There were also several cordons in place along Stockport Road and East Road, which run to the north and west of the park. Multiple accounts on Facebook reported seeing a police helicopter in the area and over the park.
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A spokesperson for GMP said: “At around 5.35pm today (1 March) officers responded to reports of a serious assault at Crowcroft Park, Stockport Road.
“A man has been taken to hospital for treatment and enquiries are currently ongoing.”
Arsenal are going to have to navigate the tension of the title race with just nine matches left in their bid to win a first league title since 2004.
And when asked by BBC Sport if they have had to go to another level with their work on set-pieces due to the work other sides are doing, Arteta agreed.
“Yes but every team is to be fair,” he said. “Look where they are in terms of the amount of goals that they score.
“We hadn’t scored set-pieces for a few weeks now, but we scored so many in open play.
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“Today was an option to score from this kind of situation. We’ve done it so well and we conceded as well.”
Chelsea were starting to grow into the game before Timber’s crucial goal, while they needed goalkeeper David Raya to produce some excellent saves to deny the sixth-placed Blues a point.
“I didn’t think there was an awful lot between the two teams, but Arsenal came out on top and at this stage of the season that’s vital, isn’t it?,” added Arteta’s former Everton team-mate Osman.
“If your strengths are pacy wide men that create things all the time, you give them the ball all the time.
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“If your strength is set-pieces, you try to win set-pieces and score from them and they’re very good at it, very effective.
“And ultimately that was that was the difference between the teams, but Arsenal won’t care because it’s another three points.”
According to Osman, Arsenal can be criticised for their style of play and are often compared to title winners of the past but if they win the title, that is all that matters.
“Many people watching want to see beautiful football or purists want to see open play great goals back to front.” he said.
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“That’s not how football’s always played. Football is about being effective in both penalty areas, finding a way.
“I think whatever happens in between can be pleasing, can be enjoyable, can be exciting.
“But ultimately, it’s less important than what happens in both penalty areas because that’s where games are won and lost.”
Our columnist asks what he would like Wales and Welshness to be know for
22:16, 01 Mar 2026
It’s one of those questions that people think they know the answer to until they try to write it down because being Welsh isn’t about a flag, a rugby shirt or a childhood memory of rain on a caravan window in Tenby, it’s a living identity shaped as much by what we’ve had done to us as by what we’ve chosen for ourselves.
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And if we’re honest as we celebrate St David’s Day in 2026, Welshness is caught between two powerful instincts of being culturally confident and economically cautious. Yes, we are a nation that has never lacked a voice – against the odds, we’ve kept a language alive that history tried to suffocate and produced artists, athletes, and scientists who have done far more than our scale should allow.
When Wales is at its best, it has a kind of intensity where talent and community sit close together, and you’re never far from someone who will help you, introduce you, or just put the kettle on for a panad (cup of tea).
But we are also a nation that too often behaves as if economic success will only happen elsewhere, and to me, that is the tension at the heart of modern Welsh identity.
If we want to understand what it means to be Welsh today, we need to recognise that a nation of just over three million people does not get many “free hits,” and that every year of under-performance matters. So, when Wales has consistently been below the UK average on productivity, wages and economic output since devolution in 1999, those aren’t just another bunch of statistics but a situation that is shaping national confidence, narrowing the horizon of ambition, and quietly rewriting our Welsh identity from “we can” to “we cope”.
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Welshness has always contained resilience, and we have endured industrial collapse, political marginalisation, and decades of being talked about as a problem to be managed rather than a place to be built. But resilience is not the same thing as ambition and modern Welshness, if it is to mean anything beyond nostalgia, has to be deliberate in deciding that’s how we will shape our economic future.
That we will not just host economic summits that discuss investment but actually go out and create it; not just train the talent of the future but retain it in our communities; and not just talk about innovation but use it to create companies that scale and stay rooted in their communities.
This is where the conversation usually becomes uncomfortable because it forces a harder question for the economic future of this nation: do we truly believe Wales can build globally significant businesses that dominate their sectors, anchor high-value jobs and recycle wealth into the next generation of founders?
To date, Wales has not normalised that kind of ambition and in fact we treat it as exceptional by celebrating the odd outlier rather than building a pipeline to make it happen.
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And that’s why belief matters: small countries with a deep, repeated pattern of scale build a different psychology by producing founders who pitch bigger, firms that recruit for global growth, and policymakers who design programmes to support success.
Let me make it unequivocal – I have always believed Wales has talent, ingenuity and innovation in spades, but what we have lacked repeatedly is the conversion mechanism namely the capital, institutional muscle and the cultural permission to think outrageously big without constantly being told to “be realistic”.
Too often, the aim is preservation through metrics such as businesses supported or jobs safeguarded, and whilst those things matter, they are not the same as creating employment, growing firms and building national prosperity. In other words, we have become a development economy obsessed with avoiding failure, and the inevitable consequence is that the Welsh story has become one of survival rather than success.
This is not about demanding that every business becomes a unicorn, but about understanding that a small nation needs high value wins to change its trajectory as the mathematics of economic development are unforgiving. Simply put, you cannot build prosperity on low productivity and low value-added and instead, need firms that invest, export and grow.
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That then brings us to the deeper question: what do we want Wales to be known for? Obviously not another romanticised version of coal and choirs, but do we know what the modern Welsh proposition is in a world of AI, clean energy and deep tech?
Because being Welsh shouldn’t be simply about looking backwards, but about choosing what comes next, and if we want an identity that is proud, modern and confident, then we all need to embrace an economic narrative rooted in better performance.
That requires institutional courage, such as serious mechanisms to turn research into investable companies, development finance that knows when to protect and when to go for it, and a political culture that stops mistaking announcements for outcomes. Until we fix that, Welshness will remain proud of what we have kept but uncertain about what we can create.
So, back to the question of what does it mean to be Welsh in 2026? We will have different answers but to me, it means refusing to accept underperformance as a national personality trait. It means celebrating community but not letting it become a comfort blanket. And it means being proud of what we have whilst constantly demanding better.
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But most important of all, Welshness should never be reduced to grievance, nostalgia, or sentimentality, as it needs a modern identity in a modern economy with modern choices. Yes, a small nation does not need to dominate everything, but it should be expected to dominate something, and when we start acting as if we believe that calling in our institutions, our companies, and our culture, the question “what does it mean to be Welsh?” will have a completely different kind of answer.
Fortunately, Sister Veronica has had Geoffrey, played by Christopher Harper by her side for support. The pair have even moved in with another and in Sunday’s episode (March 1) Geoffrey attempted to give Sister Veronica a makeover.
But now, with the Series 15 final just around the corner, fans can’t help but think a spin-off could be in the works for Sister Veronica and Geoffrey.
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On X, one person declared: “Give me a whole series of Geoffrey and Beryl living their lives together.” Another added: “Please Please can we have a Jeffrey and Beryl spin-off. Best flatmates ever.”
A third penned: ”Geoffrey and Beryl are just the perfect friendship.” Echoing their thoughts, someone else wrote: “Beryl and Jeffrey spin off or they get married, and have a baby, and have to navigate two worlds.”
Meanwhile, opening up on what it’s like working with the actor, Sister Veronica actress Rebecca previously revealed: “Christopher Harper has become a pal over the years, and it’s really lovely to play scenes with him.”
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She continued: “He and Sister Veronica have an ease with each other and a deep friendship, and they have a lot of fun. He takes the mickey out of her and she likes that, and I’ve really loved building that relationship with him.”
**For the latest showbiz, TV, movie and streaming news, go to the new **Everything Gossip** website**
It comes as Call the Midwife is set to air its Series 15 finale next week, with the sad death of Sister Monica Joan likely to take place then. The character’s physical and mental wellbeing has been declining across recent series and was recently diagnosed with chronic kidney disease.
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And according to actress Helen George – who plays Trixie – the audience will be a “mess” watching the series finale.
“There’s this scene, I won’t really go into detail, but it sort of encompasses all of the characters that we’ve had on the show over the last 15 years,” she told Radio Times. Helen added: “So if I was a mess – and I’m heart of steel – then the audience will be a mess as well.”
While Renee Bailey, who plays Joyce, described the finale: “It makes you laugh, it makes you cry. It’s a hug and it’s also heartbreaking. It’s a mix of everything, but I think audiences are going to love it.”
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Call The Midwife airs every Sunday at 8pm on BBC One.
Mercedes have a new driver on their books – and remarks he made in the past may not sit too well with George Russell or Kimi Antonelli
George Russell has a new teammate at Mercedes – and the outspoken young driver has not been shy about sharing his views on Kimi Antonelli in the past. Earlier this week, the Silver Arrows confirmed the signing of former Formula 2 champion Theo Pourchaire, who claimed the F2 title in 2023.
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The Frenchman joins Mercedes in a development role and will act as reserve driver to Russell and Antonelli, who are set to begin their second season as Formula 1 teammates next weekend. This marks Pourchaire’s third stint as an F1 reserve.
He previously served in the same capacity for Sauber in 2024 and Alfa Romeo in 2023, although he is still waiting to make his race debut in the competition.
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During the 2024 campaign, Pourchaire argued that it was “unfair” for drivers who had not won the F2 championship – such as Antonelli and Haas driver Oliver Bearman – to be promoted to F1 ahead of those who had secured the title.
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“I did my best on track,” Pourchaire told MotorSport. “Sure, some people say I won the championship in my third year of F2 and it doesn’t sound great, but I won it when I was 20. I’m the youngest race winner in F2 and F3, so I have nothing to prove. I just need an opportunity, that’s all.”
Just one of the last four F2 champions have succeeded in securing a seat in F1, with 2024 winner Gabriel Bortoleto being signed by Audi Revolut ahead of the 2026 season.
The most recent F2 champion to successfully establish themselves in F1 was 2021 champion Oscar Piastri, who was subsequently signed by McLaren as a reserve driver before landing a permanent seat with the team in 2023.
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“From the outside, for sure, if you’re in my shoes, it seems unfair,” Pourchaire added. “Like I think it’s unfair for [2022 F2 champion Felipe] Drugovich, for example, who won the title. That’s how it is, that’s the world of F1. I’m just happy to be in the paddock again. And like I said, I really hope to get my chance one day. I’m ready to give everything.”
Pourchaire finished runner-up in F3 in 2020 and replicated the achievement in F2 two years later. In 2023, he went one step further by claiming the F2 title.
However, as a member of Sauber’s junior programme at the time, he was unable to obtain a place on the F1 grid for the following season. Having been barred from continuing in F2 as a former champion, Pourchaire sought alternative avenues to further his career, joining Team Impul in Japanese Super Formula.
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His time there proved brief, however, as he stepped away after just one round when an IndyCar opportunity came knocking.
He subsequently turned his attention to the World Endurance Championship, taking part in last year’s 24 Hours of Le Mans. For the time being, though, his sights are firmly set on Mercedes – and on finally achieving his long-awaited F1 breakthrough.
Breaking into the race seat at Mercedes could prove an enormous challenge, with both Russell and Antonelli delivering impressive performances last season.
Russell finished fourth in the Drivers’ Championship – matching the finest result of his career – whilst Antonelli claimed seventh place, just six points behind Lewis Hamilton, the man he succeeded following the Brit’s headline-grabbing switch to Ferrari.
Antonelli’s campaign was widely considered one of the most outstanding debut seasons in recent Formula 1 history. This further highlights the enormity of the task confronting Pourchaire should he harbour hopes of forcing his way into the Silver Arrows’ line-up.
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In response to the strikes, Iran has launched retaliatory missile and drone attacks across the region, with explosions reported in Israel and Gulf states. Airspace has been closed in multiple countries, including Iran, Iraq, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, causing widespread disruption to international flights.
Britain, France and Germany have issued a joint statement threatening to ‘destroy Iran’s capability to fire missiles and drones at their source’
Husna Anjum, Olivia Bridge and Husna Anjum Senior Live News Reporter
21:54, 01 Mar 2026
The UK will help the US in its military action to bomb targets in Iran, but Prime Minister Kier Starmer stressed they will “not join offensive action”. This follows a US request to use British military bases to strike Iranian missile sites.
The UK Prime Minister said in a statement on Sunday evening: “We all remember the mistakes of Iraq and we have learned those lessons.”
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Mr Starmer said it “remains the case” that the UK is not involved with the strikes on Iran, but Britain will allow the US to use British bases to support its operation.
He said “partners in the Gulf have asked us to do more to defend them”, adding that “it’s my duty to protect British lives.”
“We have British jets in the air as part of coordinated defensive operations. Which have already successfully intercepted Iranian strikes. But the only way to stop the threat is to destroy the missiles at source. In their storage depots or the launchers which are used to fire the missiles,” Mr Starmer continued.
“The US has requested permission to use British bases for that specific and limited defensive purpose. We have taken the decision to accept this request. To prevent Iran firing missiles across the region, killing innocent civilians, putting British lives at risk and hitting countries that have not been involved.
Advertisement
“The basis of our decision is the collective self-defence of longstanding friends and allies, and protecting British lives.”
The PM said while the UK is “not joining these strikes”, Britain “will continue with our defensive actions in the region.”
“And we will also bring experts from Ukraine together with our own counter drone expertise, to help our Gulf partners shoot down Iranian drones attacking them.”
He concluded: “We all remember the mistakes of Iraq and we have learned those lessons. We were not involved in the initial strikes on Iran, and we will not join offensive action now.
Advertisement
“But Iran is pursuing a scorched earth strategy, so we are supporting the collective self-defence of our allies and our people in the region, because that is our duty to the British people.
“It is the best way to eliminate the urgent threat and prevent the situation spiralling further.
“This is the British government – protecting British interests and British lives.”
In a joint statement with France and Germany, the UK suggested it could join attacks on Iranian soil for the first time.
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The statement read: “We will take steps to defend our interests and those of our allies in the region, potentially through enabling necessary and proportionate defensive action to destroy Iran’s capability to fire missiles and drones at their source.”
“We have agreed to work together with the US and allies in the region on this matter.” Iran continues its assault on the Middle East in revenge attacks for the joint US-Israeli operation yesterday which saw missiles rain down on Tehran, Star reports.
Additionally more than 96,000 Brits stranded in the UAE and other Gulf hotspots have already signed up with the government for help, with numbers expected to soar into the hundreds of thousands. Most are holidaymakers or passing through, and with airspace still shut, officials are telling people to stay put for now.
However, plans are being drawn up for a huge evacuation through Saudi Arabia if flights remain grounded. The Foreign Office is reportedly in talks with all major airlines as it faces its biggest-ever operation to track and assist British nationals abroad.
This comes as a major humanitarian crisis is unfolding in the Middle East after US and Israeli military strikes against Iran on Saturday (February 28) triggered a rapid escalation of conflict across the region. In retaliation, Iran has launched a barrage of missile attacks targeting US military bases and cities throughout the Gulf, including the UAE, Bahrain, Qatar, and Kuwait.
“At the moment people are being told to stay put but the government is working on plans to evacuate people through Saudi Arabia if the airspace remains closed for a prolonged period,” The Times’ Steven Swinford shared today (March 1) on X (formerly Twitter).
The political editor added: “The government is also in contact with all the main airlines in the region. The scale of the FCDO operation is unprecedented – never before has it registered so many people in so many countries.
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“And it’s only just beginning.” An estimated 250,000 UK citizens are believed to be living in or visiting the region.
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When scrolling through auction lots soon to go under the hammer there are the expected rundown houses in need of renovation, empty commercial buildings looking for new purpose, chapels and churches that have lost their congregation, and plots of land too.
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But some auction lots are much more unusual and likely to produce a stall in the scrolling for most people, and surely this one in Merthyr Vale is one of them.
Have a rummage around google maps and a plot of land on a main street leading to the village trains station and for years it has been a concrete five-a-side football pitch with basketball hoops positioned above the goals. For more property stories sent to your inbox once a week sign up to the property newsletter here.
But an opportunity for the facility to have a rebirth into something else, and maybe just as much fun, is possible as it is going to auction with full planning permission for a padel court project ready for development, designed to meet the fast-growing demand for padel facilities.
The auction sale includes the concept, layout, and full development potential of a modern padel court, ideal for private clubs, sports centres, hotels, resorts, or standalone commercial use and more details can be found via planning application P/25/0335 submitted to Merthyr Tydfil County Council .
Padel combines social play, accessibility, and fast learning curves, making it attractive to all age groups. The sport is currently experiencing an explosive rise in popularity across the UK, with Wales emerging as a key hotspot for new, large-scale developments in Cardiff and Swansea. Read about the development of padel in Cardiff here.
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According to figures published by the Lawn Tennis Association (LTA) more than 400,000 adults and juniors across Great Britain played padel at least once in 2024. That’s up from 15,000 in 2019, 89,000 in 2021, and 129,000 in 2023.
Gemma Vaughan, of Paul Fosh Auctions who are selling the property, says: “With padel rapidly becoming one of the world’s fastest-growing sports, this project offers strong commercial appeal and long-term revenue potential as demand continues to outpace supply in many regions, positioning this project as a high-growth investment with excellent scalability.
“This is a blank-canvas opportunity: the buyer can customise finishes, branding, and surrounding amenities to match their target market.”
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The auction house goes on to state that the positive aspects of the sale include that the site is suitable for indoor or outdoor installation if a cover is put over it.
The court might lend itself to memberships, hourly rentals, coaching programs, and tournaments with low operating costs with high usage potential and could be a tempting auction lot for first-time investors or expansion of an existing sports business.
The plot of pad with padel potential is going to online auction with Paul Fosh Auctions starting at 12 noon on Tuesday, March 10 and ending from 6pm on Thursday, March 12, call 01633 254044 to find out more. For more property, renovation, and interior design stories join our Amazing Welsh Homes Facebook group here.