An autopsy revealed the twin girls died of dehydration and were underweight
Simon Hamalienko Publishing Lead and Olivia Bridge Reporter in Live News Network
21:02, 02 Jul 2026
A mother and father have been charged after two 15-month-old twin girls were found dead in their bed while another child is in critical condition in hospital.
At around 1pm on Monday (June 29), emergency services scrambled to Beuvrages, near Valenciennes (Nord), in north France, to reports the two girls were unresponsive.
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The mother and father, who live in social housing at the Société immobilière du Grand Hainaut (SIGH), had reportedly made the call that they found the girls unresponsive. An autopsy, performed on Tuesday (June 30), confirmed the girls died of dehydration and were also underweight, reports The Daily Star.
Their four other children in the house, aged three, four, five and six, were also found to be suffering from dehydration. According to RTL, one of the siblings has been airlifted from the home and remains in a critical condition in hospital.
The parents reportedly found the twins dead in bed and were allegedly in a state of rigor mortis, sources in France have claimed.
Valenciennes prosecutor’s office said the parents were formally charged and remain in custody. The siblings of the deceased twins have all been taken into care by Child Welfare Services.
According to LeParisien, the prosecutor’s office stated that the family “was not under the supervision of a juvenile court judge” and no report had been filed.
The parents reportedly told police that they had put the girls to bed on Sunday evening (June 28) at around 7pm. They were next found dead 18-hours later.
According to the mayor of Beuvrages, the family had recently moved in about two months ago.
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Mickey Blank, a celebrity photographer who has been working in New York for over 10 years, told BBC Newsbeat that Madison Square Garden is currently surrounded by members of the press but there’s not actually much to see.
Despite rumours of a red-carpet reception for the expected A-list guests, Blank said she’s not expecting a parade of big-name arrivals.
“It’s like Pentagon-level secrecy,” she said.
“You cannot go in, you cannot see anything.”
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The arena boasts underground parking that allows people to arrive in almost secrecy, but the BBC spotted a large white canopy tent being set up in front of the arena where many guests are expected to arrive.
Many VIPs though, including Swift and Kelce, are expected to enter through the underground entrance for privacy.
“Your chances of seeing Taylor Swift are, like, lower than zero,” she said.
She added that one of the biggest challenges facing those preparing the venue will be all the recent events that just were hosted there. event that was just staged there.
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Blank attended a darts championships at the arena earlier this week, filled with beer-drinking fans, many dressed in costume.
“The floor was so sticky, I could barely move,” she said.
Days before that, the arena hosted a concert for the rock band the Bleachers. Earlier last month, the arena also hosted parties and basketball games when the New York Knicks won the NBA Championship.
Transforming the arena into a wedding venue will be a feat.
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“I cannot imagine the preparation that goes into that,” Blank said.
The owners of Johnsons of Old Hurst near Huntingdon have spoken out for the first time since the crocodile enclosure incident
Catherine MacKinlay SEO Writer and Kirstie McCrum Deputy Head of News, Live News Network
18:43, 02 Jul 2026
The proprietors of a zoo where a three-year-old boy was attacked by a crocodile after reportedly being thrown into its enclosure by a stranger have released a heartbreaking statement.
Andy and Tracey Johnson, who operate Johnsons of Old Hurst near Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire, described the incident as “one of the most distressing” their family and staff had ever faced. The couple have broken their silence on the incident for the first time, expressing gratitude to emergency services, visitors and their own team for their rapid response on June 18, while confirming their thoughts remain with the young boy and his family as he continues to recover.
The youngster remains at Addenbrooke’s Hospital in Cambridge following serious injuries sustained when he was reportedly thrown approximately 15ft into the crocodile enclosure within the zoo’s Tropical House. He suffered a broken arm and a fractured pelvis after landing on a concrete walkway before falling into the water, reports the Express.
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In a statement posted on social media, Andy and Tracey said: “A fortnight ago, our family and team at Johnsons of Old Hurst experienced one of the most distressing incidents in our history. We were alerted to reports that a child had allegedly been thrown into one of our crocodile enclosures in the Tropical House.
“Everyone who was on site that day acted with incredible speed and determination. Within minutes of the first radio call, the child had been rescued from the enclosure and was receiving first aid.”
“The emergency services arrived very quickly, supported by the MAGPAS Air Ambulance, and we cannot thank them enough for their professionalism, compassion and dedication in such difficult circumstances.
“We would also like to express our heartfelt thanks to the visitors who stepped forward to help, including off-duty paramedics and police officers, whose calm and immediate actions made a real difference. We are immensely proud of our own staff, who responded without hesitation and did everything they could to help and support the child until the emergency services took over.”
The couple went on to express their gratitude for the kindness shown by the local community and people across the country, describing the outpouring of support as “overwhelming”.
They added: “Every message of support, every kind word and every expression of concern has meant a great deal to our family and our team during an incredibly difficult time. Thank you for standing with us. Above all, our thoughts remain with the young boy and his family.
“We continue to hope and pray for his speedy recovery and ask that they are given the privacy, compassion and support they need at this time.”
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Cambridgeshire Police confirmed the toddler remains in a stable condition at Addenbrooke’s Hospital, though faces a lengthy recovery ahead. His family described his rehabilitation as “extremely challenging” and extended their thanks to both the zoo and members of the public for their ongoing support.
A 30-year-old man from Norfolk was arrested on suspicion of attempted murder in connection with the incident, before subsequently being released on bail until 18 September while detectives continue their enquiries. The man, who has no known connection to the victim, was reportedly assessed as not being fit for interview.
The Tropical House welcomed visitors back on Saturday, nine days following the distressing incident. The attraction had shut its doors “out of respect to the family”.
As the United States celebrates its 250th anniversary, there is a tension between those who want to remember an uncomplicated past and those who would remember that freedom is a constant struggle. It’s a right that must be fought for and defended.
And amid all the hoop-la over the celebrations, the nation risks forgetting that since the War of Independence, African Americans have played a crucial role defining and expanding American liberty.
The Declaration of Independence promised “all men are created equal”. And yet when Thomas Jefferson – himself an enslaver – penned those words, there were around half a million enslaved people living in the 13 colonies.
Black Americans saw the contradictions at the heart of the Revolutionary era, and they sought to redefine liberty. During the Revolutionary War, thousands of enslaved Americans sought freedom – sometimes by joining the British, and sometimes by serving the Patriot cause.
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They often used the pen, as well as the sword, to link the nation’s fight for freedom to their own. The poet Phillis Wheatley, born in west Africa and enslaved in Boston, published a poem in 1772 comparing her enslavement to tyrannical British rule. A group of Black Bostonians presented petitions to the Massachusetts legislature calling for the abolition of slavery, using the language of natural rights and words and phrases from the Declaration of Independence.
Ultimately, Black patriots were betrayed by a new nation that was founded on competing visions of freedom. For Black Americans, liberty did not just mean self-government and freedom from British rule. It also required emancipation, citizenship, and equal rights. While there was gradual abolition in northern states, in the south slavery expanded and the institution was seemingly protected by the federal constitution.
But African Americans refused to accept an interpretation of freedom which excluded them. At Colored Conventions across the country, activists asserted they were true defenders of the Revolution’s principles and, as such, their treatment was a betrayal of those ideals. “The Constitution is Anti-Slavery”, one such convention concluded.
The great orator and formerly enslaved abolitionist, Frederick Douglass, on the anniversary of Independence in 1852, asked: “What, to the American slave, is your 4th of July?” Speaking to his white audience, he explained: “This Fourth July is yours, not mine. You may rejoice, I must mourn.”
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To the slave, commemorating independence revealed the limits of America’s vaunted liberty and equality.
Frederick Douglass escaped slavery to become of the most important figures in America’s early civil rights movement. Here Now/Shutterstock
After emancipation, African Americans used revolutionary principles to demand full citizenship rights. In 1870, Black men were given the vote by the 15th Amendment, and African Americans were afforded the protections and privileges of citizenship. But again they were betrayed, and these rights were dismantled through violence and the erosion of those constitutional protections.
As the strictures of segregation tightened around them, African Americans continued to use memories of American liberty. Black people had always defended American democracy, explained civil rights leader Mary McLeod Bethune in a 1939 speech. “We have given our blood in its defense – from Crispus Attucks on Boston Commons to the battlefields of France,” she said, invoking the spectre of the Black hero of the War of Independence. And yet, for Bethune, Black people fought not for what America was “but for what we know she can be”.
Martin Luther King: cashing the check of justice
It was this belief in a better America that drove many in the Black freedom movement. Standing on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, 100 years after Emancipation, Martin Luther King Jr not only remembered the slain president’s proclamation, but also the founders who preceded him.
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The Constitution and the Declaration of Independence were a “promissory note” that guaranteed all people their inalienable rights, he said. And while the country had defaulted on its promise, King refused to believe “that the bank of justice is bankrupt,” and so he and thousands of others had “come to cash this check”.
The cheque was cashed, for at least some of the balance, with the passage of the Civil Rights Act in 1964 and the Voting Rights Act a year later.
Martin Luther King: US constitution was a ‘promissory note to which every American was to fall heir’.
But as America marks its 250th anniversary, the “bank of justice” is looking increasingly short of funds. There is a concerted effort to forget the contradictions of American liberty. The Trump administration is curating a commemoration that emphasises unity and patriotism, with an uncomplicated retelling of the nation’s history, that downplays slavery and racial division.
The founding fathers are unreservedly celebrated, with no acknowledgement that some were slave owners. While an exhibit highlights Douglass’s Fourth of July speech, it doesn’t discuss his condemnation of the hypocrisy of celebrating freedom while millions were enslaved.
Black rights under threat
Now the US is poised for another celebration of American exceptionalism. But it’s one that ignores the complexities and contradictions of the nation’s founding. And it’s taking place as the hard-won achievements of the Black freedom struggle are being rolled back, as the Voting Rights Act is gutted, and Black political representation in the south comes under attack.
Just as in the antebellum era of the 1800s, at the height of Reconstruction in the late 19th century, and during the nadir of Jim Crow in the 20th, it is essential that America’s founding is remembered as the beginning of an unfinished struggle for liberty.
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And it is important to remember that when they fought in the Revolutionary War (and all the wars that followed), wrote petitions, made proclamations and organised protests, African Americans gave meaning to the nation’s founding principles and documents.
As historian, Annette Gordon-Reed argues, what matters is not Jefferson’s intentions when writing the Declaration, but what others have done to give those words purpose and life.
If the founders did not mean to include them in the Constitution’s preamble, then through their tireless labour, activism, and remembering, African Americans have fought to make sure they too are contained in “We the people”.
Questions have also been raised around whether there was an awareness that Donaldson was allegedly engaged in behaviour in his private life that, although legal, was at odds with positions he adopted publicly.
21:54, 02 Jul 2026Updated 22:02, 02 Jul 2026
A review commissioned by the DUP into the behaviour of Jeffrey Donaldson will be “unprecedented” in Northern Ireland, party leader Gavin Robinson has pledged.
Mr Robinson said he would not currently comment on who would lead the independent investigation.
Former DUP leader Donaldson was last week convicted of 18 sex offences, including one count of rape, relating to abuse of two women when they were children.
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Subsequent media reports have raised questions about how much was known within the DUP about Donaldson’s wider conduct in the period prior to his 2024 arrest over sex abuse allegations.
BBC Spotlight has reported that some senior DUP figures were aware of another woman, who was not involved in the recent court case, who had raised concerns about Donaldson’s behaviour.
Questions have also been raised around whether there was an awareness that Donaldson was allegedly engaged in behaviour in his private life that, although legal, was at odds with positions he adopted publicly.
The DUP has commissioned an independent review into issues raised since Donaldson was convicted.
During a press conference at Hillsborough Castle, Mr Robinson was asked to confirm who would be leading the review.
He said he would provide more information when he was “in a position to do so”.
Mr Robinson added: “As you know, I have been as transparent as possible on this process.
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“And let me remind you, before you hear more detail about this review, it is unprecedented in Northern Ireland political terms.
“There is no other political party in our history that has ever taken a step like this, and there are many other parties, in even the most recent past, that have had similar issues beside them that hasn’t led to as much scrutiny, or at least the willingness to have as much introspection.
“I don’t shy away from the challenges and I will give you the details when I’m in a position to do so.”
Mr Robinson has previously said there were current and former members of the DUP who had information about the behaviour in Donaldson’s private life which was not formally shared with the party.
He said: “I am not going to answer what the outcome to a review may be before it starts.
“We have, for a myriad of reasons, for a whole host of reasons and accusations, and some smears, and some politicking along the way too, we have taken the unprecedented step of commissioning a review, so that we can answer these questions.
“Not a reluctance on my part to give you any further detail now. It’s actually a sign of our integrity and the importance with which we place on these issues, that we are going to deal with them seriously, sensibly.
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“Bring somebody independent in to do something unprecedented in Northern Ireland political terms.”
A councillor has told how he rushed to help the teenager who had been stabbed before emergency services arrived.
Tuli Zefi, Reform councillor for Langley Ward, was driving past when he witnessed the incident on Market Street, Oldbury.
Winding down his window, Cllr Zefi says he shouted at a group to ‘pack it in’ before they ran off and left the 19-year-old who had been stabbed, reported BirminghamLive.
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He said: “Today (July 2), on my way to the Council House, I witnessed something that no one should ever have to see. At first, I thought a group of young lads were just messing around. I wound my window down and shouted for them to pack it in.
“A group of them ran off, and when I asked the remaining young man if he was okay, he told me he thought he’d been stabbed. I got out of my car, saw the injury, and did what I could to help until the ambulance arrived. I stayed with him, tried to stop the bleeding, and kept talking to him to reassure him.”
Gary Poland drove Axel Rudakubana to the scene where the teenager murdered three children at a dance class but waited 50 minutes to call police
The taxi driver who left the scene of the Southport stabbing attack and waited 50 minutes before calling 999 has been stripped of his licence.
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Gary Poland took Axel Rudakubana to the scene where the teenager murdered three children; Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, Bebe King, six, and Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, and attempted to murder 10 others on July 29 2024.
Mr Poland witnessed children flee the dance studio, the Hart Space on Hart Street but waited 50 minutes to then call the police. It was found he ‘did not meet the appropriate standards’ to hold his taxi licence.
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A Sefton Council spokesperson said in a statement: “This individual no longer holds a taxi driver licence following a review by the local authority.
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“A decision was taken that this individual did not meet the appropriate standards set out in Sefton Council’s taxi licensing policy.”
In his evidence to the Southport Inquiry in September 2025, Mr Poland said he drove away despite seeing screaming children running ‘like a stampede for their lives’ because he thought he heard gunshots.
Mr Poland, then a driver for One Call Taxis, did not call emergency services until 50 minutes after hearing screams coming from the Hart Space studio, having picked up another fare and returned home first.
Mr Poland also told the inquiry, held at Liverpool Town Hall, he had threatened to call the police when Rudakubana ignored his requests to pay his fare, but thought he had gone to get money when he went into the building where a Taylor Swift-themed dance class was being held.
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Nicholas Moss KC, counsel to the inquiry, asked the witness: “Do you accept, as you drove away, children were fleeing alongside your car. And you can be seen looking in the rear view camera?”
“That’s correct,” Mr Poland said, adding: “I did not know anybody was injured. I did not see anybody injured.”
In a statement, Mr Poland said in hindsight he wished he had called police earlier. He said: “I regret not helping the children. Their screams were harrowing and I can still hear them when I think back to that day.”
Among the statements in Sefton Council’s taxi licensing handbook is a call for drivers to dial 999 if they feel a child or young person is in serious danger of immediate harm.
Brits were left gobsmacked when they realised who was actually singing to them in the street
British tourists were left completely floored when they realised who was actually singing to them in the street as they enjoyed an evening in Spain.
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The Brit Award-winning musician started belting out one of their global hits live in Seville as visitors enjoyed drinks in a public square. It didn’t take long before listeners clocked exactly who it was.
It was none other than Robbie Williams, belting out his song ‘Angels’ as a guitarist tried to keep up with him in the background. People were seen excitedly running from their tables and filming upon realising it was the real former Take That member in the flesh.
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One of the people lucky enough to see it with their own eyes was TikTok user @cierancasey2609, who posted a video, captioning it: “Robbie Williams in Seville.” The clip has since amassed 195,000 views.
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People were seen singing along and dancing in the street as Robbie, originally from Stoke-on-Trent, serenaded them while dressed in a casual all-black outfit and a cap. He performed an acoustic rendition of the song, which came out in December 1997.
He appeared to show the guitarist, who was the actual busker, the chords on a mobile phone before his rendition. As members of his audience danced together and sang, he joked, “You know it!”
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He then quipped: “Obviously [it’s] not very famous here” as he struggled to keep up with the guitarist.
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At the end of the chorus, he shouted into the mic: “I’m off!” and walked away from the crowd with his hands raised as crowds cheered and clapped.
Viewers online were left just as stunned by the shock performance. “Absolutely nuts,” one person wrote, followed by: “Timing is everything, could not buy that moment in time.”
“No because I’d CRY,” commented another, as a fourth wrote: “Imagine sitting there, casually having a drinky drink and THE Robbie Williams strolls by.”
The Rock DJ hitmaker was in the Spanish city on June 30 performing at the Iconica Santalucia Sevilla Fest. This was before heading to Morocco for Jazzablanca on Thursday (July 2).
When Caleb Miligan (William Ash) decided to try and restore his criminal edge in Emmerdale, he had absolutely no idea that his plan would lead him to discovering something very dangerous.
As Bear Wolf (Joshua Richards) watches on from the break area, Caleb and Kerry discover a label sewn into one of the shoes that reads ‘help me’.
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Caleb gets money hungry (Picture: ITV)
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Horrified, Kerry urges Caleb to do the right thing and go to the police about the label.
A while later, Kerry finds Bear in the office examining the shoe with the label. She’s taken aback by his furious reaction to the news that Caleb still hasn’t contacted the authorities. Reminded of his own past where he was made to live and work as a slave on a farm, Bear has plenty to say to Caleb about what he’s doing.
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Caleb tells Kerry that he’s told the police, but is later intrigued when Kammy Hadiq (Shebz Miah) gives him the lowdown about the markup on branded vs non-branded car parts.
Telling Kerry what he’s learned from Kammy, Caleb becomes convinced they could make a fair few quid selling car parts.
Kammy shares some information that leave Caleb intrigued (Picture: ITV)
Caleb suggests that Kerry thinks about the idea, but she’s sceptical.
The situation with the counterfeit shoes has caused problems already – will the same thing happen if they turn their attention to selling another dodgy product?
‘She’s had a taste for it now, and she’s quite good at it’, star Laura Norton said, confirming that the stakes are going to be raised once again in this story.
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‘She knows how to impress somebody of Caleb’s stature. Will and I have really enjoyed working together and we’ve said that we need to find another opportunity for a story like this again, because it’s when you put two characters that you wouldn’t normally put together, in the same world, it makes the scenes so interesting to watch.’
Dot Bagels, based on Chillingham Road in Newcastle, has been nominated for the Uber Eats Restaurant of the Year title.
The awards, now in their tenth year, celebrate the best small and independent food businesses across the UK and Ireland.
Dot Bagels is known for its New York-style bagels, freshly baked each day and served with a wide range of fillings.
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Meacha Brown, brand manager at Dot Bagels, said: “We know how popular Dot Bagels is and that people appreciate the fact that they’re not only freshly made every day, but we have such an exciting and imaginative selection of fillings available.
“To have had this recognition is fantastic for all of the team and we just hope everyone will get behind us.”
An Uber spokesperson said: “The nomination recognised the exceptional food you create, the passion behind your business and the unforgettable experiences you deliver to customers every day.”
Having made it to the regional nominations, Dot Bagels now hopes to secure enough public votes before the deadline of July 30 to advance to the next stage.
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The winner will then go into the national heat where they will have to present their bagels to a panel of judges.
The recognition comes four years after the business changed ownership and began its current run of success.
In addition to its flagship store, Dot Bagels also operates a branch on Acord Road in Jesmond, and supplies bagels to Claremont Teahouse at Eldon Place.
Customers can pick from six types of bagels, including sesame, garlic and herb, plain, cheddar and onion, and the ‘Heatwave’ – a cheddar and jalapeno option.
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Dot Bagels is also known for its creative fillings, such as the classic bagel and lox, The Reuben, and more unusual offerings like Salt On Chili Road, made with fried chicken, pickled sesame slaw, and gochujang mayo.
The menu includes globally inspired options like shredded hoisin duck and chipotle chicken, as well as regional favourites.
Supporters of Dot Bagels can vote for them online at ubereatsawards.com before July 30.
Spain vs Austria – World Cup last 32 LIVE: Two-goal hero Mikel Oyarzabal nets goals either side of Pedro Porro’s header as European champions show why they are contenders
Follow Daily Mail Sport’s live coverage of the latest updates as Spain take on Austria in the last 32 of the World Cup in Los Angeles.
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