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Pigwa International Grocery Little Hulton alcohol licence hearing

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Pigwa International Grocery Little Hulton alcohol licence hearing

Salford council issued the licence to Pigwa International Grocery, based at 141-143 Manchester Road East in Little Hulton, during a hearing on March 25.

The applicant, Hoshiar Karimi, was joined at the hearing by his designated premises supervisor, Beata Filipek.

They told councillors that the majority of their customers are residents from Poland and other parts of eastern Europe.

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They said they want to open from 8am to 10pm Monday to Saturday, and 10am to 8pm on Sundays.

The applicants said: “We’re a small family shop, it’s more like a Polish shop, we have products such as dairy, meat, vegetables.

“We’re asking for permission for a licence which would be a small part of the shop. It’s for the clients coming to the shop who want to buy the products.

“We have challenge 25, we will have a CCTV camera, everywhere where we have the alcohol.”

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They added: “This is a Polish store so we need Polish alcohol as well for the community.”

An objection was made at the hearing by Daryoush Adineh, a shopkeeper in the area for more than 20 years.

He said there is an informal agreement between his shop and Bargain Booze not to sell any alcohol before 11am.

He went on: “There are some very vulnerable people there, I remember 15 years ago at 7 o’clock in the morning before I opened the shop, there were four or five alcohol dependent people waiting for me to sell them cheap cider.

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“Me and my wife decided to stop selling alcohol before 11 o’clock just to help those vulnerable people.

“Even if you can mix bleach with water and sell it to them, they would buy it from you.

“My license starts from 6 in the morning but we don’t sell alcohol until 11o’clock, the same for Bargain Booze, because of those vulnerable people.”

The applicant and objector had the chance to give statements and ask questions during the licensing hearing.

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The hearing was chaired by Cllr Chioma Mgbeokwere, who was joined by councillors Yolande Ghola and Michael Pevitt.

The objector added at the hearing: “My concern is selling alcohol at 8 o’clock in the morning, 9 o’clock, 10 o’clock, there are some very vulnerable people there.

“They break into people’s homes to steal money just to pay for alcohol, I don’t want our local community to be part of that, I have heard of those people for the past 20 years.

“There is nothing against that particular shop, but please do not destroy what we built, me and Bargain Booze, for the past 20 years.

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“We stick to that promise we made to each other, I won’t sell alcohol before 11 o’clock.”

Summarising, he said: “I am asking you, please do not allow a shop to sell alcohol in our area from eight o’clock in the morning.”

Before making a decision on the application, Cllr Mgbeokwere said: “From what I’ve heard about what you’ve said, it’s about community.

“It’s protecting that community and working together, there is space for everybody.

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“With your 21 years’ experience there’s always room to help smaller businesses to show this is the way it works in the community.

“It’s all about supporting each other. Having said that, we’ve listened to you and everything that you’ve had to say.”

The panel decided to grant the premises licence to Pigwa International Grocery.

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Life and legacy of Paul Bradley celebrated at his funeral

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Life and legacy of Paul Bradley celebrated at his funeral

Hundreds gathered at St Paul’s Church, in Holgate Road, shortly after 10.15am on Friday (March 27) for to remember Paul Bradley,

Moving tributes to Mr Bradley, who lost his battle with Motor Neurone Disease (MND), aged just 35, were led by Rev Matthew Woodcock.


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They included a beautiful poem from Paul’s family, a Bible passage read out by his step-daughters that had been read at Paul and his wife Emma’s wedding, and another reading from his family about the life he led and the legacy he leaves behind.

Mourners listened to Paul’s favourite music and heard stories from his full and vibrant life – captured in photos on screen.

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Paul and Emma pushed forward their wedding in 2023, marrying at St Paul’s with a service led by Rev Woodcock (Image: Supplied)

Speaking during the service, Rev Woodcock said: “I know that this is not going to be easy for any of us.

“To lose such a treasured, life-giving person at such a young age is devastating, and it’s confusing and it’s traumatic.

“I know that the weight of grief has been so hard to bear for many of you.

“And my hope and my prayer is that this time together will be a healing time, a time to celebrate and give thanks for the man that Paul was, the joy that he brought and the generosity of spirit and the legacy he leaves behind.”

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Emma and Paul with their family (Image: Submitted)

Paul had received his devastating diagnosis of MND in 2023.

He died on Thursday (March 5), leaving behind Emma, their son and his two step-daughters.

Over the years, Paul and Emma – who were married at St Paul’s by Rev Woodcock in December 2023 – raised thousands of pounds for the MND Association.

Their generosity touched many and was noted by Sir Kevin Sinfield, the former Leeds Rhinos teammate of Rob Burrow CBE who himself has raised over £11 million for the cause – who wrote to Emma after Paul’s death.

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Jack (left) set up a fundraiser to help Emma and their family after they were left in a “difficult” financial situation (Image: Supplied)

As The Press reported, a fundraiser was set up for Emma and the family by Paul’s friend, Jack Pullen, after they were left in a difficult financial situation following his death.

It comes after Jack said Emma had to give up her job to become Paul’s primary carer following her husband’s diagnosis.

Things were made harder owing to Paul being unable to get life insurance due to his complex medical history.

‘Paul’s death is tragedy enough’

The funeral heard how Paul had received a kidney and a liver transplant at the age of seven, before a further two kidney transplants.

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At the time, Jack said: “On top of grief, Emma and the family are left with a mortgage, bills, no transport and no income, adding: “Not everyone is lucky enough to have extra money to put aside just in case.

“It’s not a case of being responsible. It can be financially impossible.

“Like most people, Paul wanted nothing more than his family to feel safe, secure and loved,” Jack said.

Speaking to mourners, Rev Woodcock said: “Paul’s death is tragedy enough.

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“We all need to make sure that the family have time to grieve without worrying about money because of an injustice.”

A minute silence was held for Paul at 11am.

Rev Woodcock said that the number eleven had been an important one to the 35-year-old, who had been born on November 11.

Songs played included some of Paul’s favourites: Sullivan by Beluga Lagoon, Elegy by Leif Vollebekk and Santiago by Einaudi – a song that was played on his wedding day.

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You can contribute to the GoFundMe set up to provide his family with financial support by visiting www.gofundme.com/f/the-bradley-family-jmpmj?.

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Pro-Iranian group claims it hacked FBI director’s personal account

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Pro-Iranian group claims it hacked FBI director's personal account

WASHINGTON (AP) — A pro-Iranian hacking group claimed Friday to have hacked an account of FBI Director Kash Patel and posted online what appear to be years-old photographs of him, along with a work resume and other personal documents dating back more than a decade.

“Kash Patel, the current head of the FBI, who once saw his name displayed with pride on the agency’s headquarters, will now find his name among the list of successfully hacked victims,” said a message posted Friday from the group Handala.

The message was accompanied by a collection of photographs of Patel, including ones of him standing beside an antique sports car and another with a cigar in his mouth. The group also said that it was making available for download emails and other documents from Patel’s account. Many of the records appeared to relate to his personal travels and business from more than 10 years ago

“The FBI is aware of malicious actors targeting Director Patel’s personal email information, and we have taken all necessary steps to mitigate potential risks associated with this activity,” the FBI said in a statement. “The information in question is historical in nature and involves no government information.”

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The FBI statement did not identify the hackers believed responsible for the breach, but it noted that the Trump administration is offering a reward of up to $10 million for information leading to the identification of members of the Handala hacking group — an entity it said “has frequently targeted U.S. government officials.”

It was not clear when the hack claimed by Handala might have occurred. News reports from December 2024, before Patel was confirmed as director, said that Patel had been informed by FBI that he had been targeted as part of an Iranian hack.

Handala is a pro-Iranian, pro-Palestinian hacking group that earlier this month claimed credit for disrupting systems at Stryker, a Michigan-based medical technology company. Handala said the attack was in retaliation for suspected U.S. strikes that killed Iranian schoolchildren. They’re a prominent example of the proxy groups that carry out cyber attacks on behalf of Iran.

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Associated Press writer David Klepper in Washington contributed to this report.

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Nostalgic period drama streaming for free is ‘like Downton Abbey but better’

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Daily Mirror

Some things simply can’t be beat

A classic period drama, one that popularised the genre globally, is still regarded as one of the finest to ever grace our screens. Period drama enthusiasts will be familiar with the show in question — Upstairs, Downstairs.

Upstairs, Downstairs laid the groundwork for Downton Abbey with a story that will be familiar with fans who have only seen the modern sensation. As the definitive period dramas of their era, the parallels between Upstairs, Downstairs and Downton Abbey are self-evident.

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Both shows portray the personal struggles of an aristocratic family and their servants against a backdrop of social and political upheaval on an overlapping timeline.

Like Downton Abbey, it spans three decades, covering both World Wars and the roaring 20s through to the Great Depression. The classic show chronicled the turbulent lives of the aristocratic Bellamy family and their servants in the early 1900s.

They diverge in numerous ways, however, and one is immediately apparent.

The seventies programme is less high-end, a quality that can taken as nostalgic or a dealbreaker. Upstairs, Downstairs premiered in 1971 and ran for five years, predating Downton Abbey by a good 50 years.

In fairness, Downton’s setting is inherently more luxurious. The Bellamy family inhabit a London townhouse, a far cry from the Crawley family’s lavish country estate that was a character in its own right.

And while Downton’s visuals proved a triumph, a frequent criticism from audiences is that the programme descended into melodrama. In contrast, Upstairs, Downstairs has been likened to a stage play for its more understated visuals and plotlines.

Fans of both period dramas shared their preferences. One viewer sparked a debate on Reddit, asking: “If you have seen both shows, which show do you think is better?”

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Upstairs Downstairs without question,” replied one viewer decisively. Another agreed: “I like Downton Abbey better, but Upstairs, Downstairs is the better show.

“I have tried watching the Upstairs/Downstairs remake multiple times and I always end stopping after about two episodes,” commented a third. “It just doesn’t grab me like Downton.”

Upstairs, Downstairs is available to watch on ITVX.

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Police seize 20 mopeds in south London immigration raid

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Police seize 20 mopeds in south London immigration raid

One Pakistani national was arrested as an overstayer during the operation, and one Indian national was arrested for breach of immigration bail, while the mopeds and electric scooters were seized for allegedly being stolen, with others said to have been used in the theft of other vehicles.

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New discoveries are showing how human anatomy is far from settled

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New discoveries are showing how human anatomy is far from settled

Leaf through a textbook, watch a wellness influencer or listen in at the gym, and it can feel as though the human body has already been mapped to exhaustion. Every muscle named, every nerve traced. Everything understood and readily available.

Most people recognise at least a few anatomical terms – “traps”, “glutes”, “biceps”. After centuries of dissection, microscopy and medical imaging, it seems reasonable to assume the work is done. Surely anatomy, as a discipline, must be complete?

It isn’t. Not even close.

Since the publication of De Humani Corporis Fabrica by Andreas Vesalius in 1543 – the first comprehensive anatomy book based on direct observation of human dissection – anatomy has carried an air of authority. Vesalius famously corrected centuries of inherited error, challenging the ancient physician Galen through direct observation of the human body. His work helped establish anatomy as an evidence-based science.

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Three hundred years later, Gray’s Anatomy by Henry Gray reinforced the impression that the body had finally been catalogued, indexed and neatly organised – a system mapped and fully explained.

But textbooks create a misleading sense of certainty. They present the body as stable, universal and fully agreed upon. Real anatomy is messier than that.

The illusion of completeness

Much of early topographical anatomy – the careful mapping of structures in relation to one another – depended on cadavers obtained through grave robbery.

“Resurrectionists” – body snatchers – exhumed the recently buried, disproportionately targeting the poor, the institutionalised and those without family protection or the financial means to guard graves. These bodies were then sold to anatomists, who relied on them for dissection and teaching.

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Working conditions for early anatomists were difficult, and the limitations considerable.

Lighting was poor. Bodies were often malnourished or diseased. Post-mortem change had already altered tissue planes. Sample sizes were small and opportunistic. Demographic information was largely absent, beyond what could be inferred from appearance. The bodies of women were sometimes dissected but rarely reported.

Yet it was under precisely these conditions that anatomists produced the observations that became the foundation of classical anatomical topography.

The anatomical “norm” that emerged from these studies was therefore constructed from a narrow and socially stratified sample.

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None of this diminishes the extraordinary technical skill of early anatomists. Their observational ability was remarkable. But the conditions under which they worked inevitably shaped what they saw – and what they missed.

Complete? Far from it.
VintageMedStock/Alamy

So when we ask whether anatomy is finished, we might also ask a more uncomfortable question: was it ever truly complete in the first place? This question matters scientifically as well as ethically.

For much of the 20th century, anatomical investigation slowed dramatically. By the 1960s, relatively few cadaveric studies were being published worldwide. The assumption was simple: the human body had already been mapped.

Medical education continued, of course, but much of it focused on teaching established knowledge rather than generating new anatomical observations. That apparent stability masked a deeper problem: much of the knowledge had been inherited rather than tested.

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Improved imaging techniques, renewed cadaveric research and a growing awareness of anatomical variation have triggered something of a renaissance in anatomical study. Structures once overlooked or poorly described are being re-examined.

Far from being finished, anatomy is rediscovering just how incomplete its map of the human body may be.

Beyond the ‘standard’ human body

One of the most important shifts in modern anatomy has been recognising that variation is the rule rather than the exception. Textbooks present a “typical” body for teaching, but real human anatomy sits along a spectrum.

Human anatomy varies across several dimensions at once. Differences exist between males and females, across the lifespan as the body develops and ages, and between populations shaped by genetics and environment.

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Beyond these broad patterns lies enormous individual variation: blood vessels may follow different routes, muscles may be absent or duplicated, and even the folding patterns of the brain differ from person to person. The “standard” anatomy shown in textbooks is therefore best understood not as a universal blueprint, but as a simplified reference point within a wide biological range.

This variation matters far beyond the operating theatre. Differences in nerves, vessels and joints can alter how diseases reveal themselves, influence how scans are interpreted and shape patterns of movement and injury.

Subtle differences in joint alignment may affect the risk of conditions, such as osteoarthritis, while variations in vascular anatomy can influence susceptibility to stroke or aneurysm. Understanding anatomical diversity is therefore central not only to surgery, but also to diagnosis, medical imaging, biomechanics and the study of disease itself.

Even after centuries of study, the human body continues to yield new anatomical insights. Structures once overlooked – from previously unrecognised lymphatic vessels around the brain to overlooked ligaments in the knee – are being re-examined. Familiar tissues are being understood in new ways, and the map of the body is still being revised.

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People should know more about their bodies. Greater understanding helps people advocate for their own health and engage more confidently with care. But it is worth remembering that the canonical anatomy presented in textbooks is best understood as a teaching model, not a perfect representation of biological reality. The more closely we study the human body, the more we realise there is still much to learn.

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Austria vs Ghana LIVE: International friendly result, latest updates and fan reaction

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Austria vs Ghana LIVE: International friendly result, latest updates and fan reaction

Kevin Danso headed into Jonas Adjetey arms from close range, and Marcel Sabitzer converted from 12 yards after the referee pointed to the spot. That goal was the only difference come half-time, but Austria ran riot when they reemerged. Goals from Michael Gregoritsch and Stefan Posch put the result beyond doubt, before Jordan Ayew secured some consolation with a well-hit solo effort, but even that was matched as Nicolas Seiwald hit an even more impressive fifth from range for the hosts.

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Pregnant women and cancer patients ‘at risk’ because of sonographer shortage

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Pregnant women and cancer patients ‘at risk’ because of sonographer shortage

A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said: “We recognise the pressures facing diagnostic services, including the sonography workforce, and we are taking action to ensure the NHS has the skilled staff it needs to meet rising demand and deliver timely care to patients.

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Free Easter card – plus free delivery from Moonpig

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Daily Mirror

Brighten up someone’s day with a card full of you – for every reader

As Easter is getting closer, spread some smiles with this great offer. We have teamed up with Moonpig, to give every reader a FREE standard Easter card plus free delivery!

That’s not all – you can personalise your card with your favourite photos, fun Easter stickers, and a heartfelt message to make it extra special. Want to send it straight to their door or hand it over yourself? Either way, we’ve got you covered.

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And Easter isn’t the only reason to reach out this month. With lighter evenings, bank holiday plans and more reasons to get together, it’s a great time to send a little something just because. A thinking-of-you for a friend, or a note to say “see you soon”, because sometimes the smallest gesture makes the biggest impact.

And if you’d like to make their surprise even sweeter, explore our huge range of gifts and tasty treats – perfect for turning a simple card into a moment they’ll remember.

How to claim: click here and use the code APRILJOY at the checkout to claim your free card and free delivery. It’s easy! The offer is valid from 12am March 28 until midnight on April 1, 2026.

Make this Easter extra sweet, one free card at a time.

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Terms and conditions

  • The offer entitles the reader to a free standard Easter card plus free delivery.
  • The offer is valid from Saturday March 28 until Wednesday April 1, 2026.
  • The offer is subject to availability. Redemptions limited to 50,000 cards.
  • For full terms and conditions log on to reachforms.co.uk/moonpig

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Washington DC area airports face ground stops over odor at air traffic control tower

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Boy, 15, arrested for attempted murder after armed attack on school teacher

The Federal Aviation Administration has issued ground stops for several airports in the Washington, D.C., area over an apparent odor in an air traffic control tower, according to Reuters.

The impacted airports include Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, Dulles International Airport and Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport, according to the FAA’s website.

The odor prompted the evacuation of Potomac Consolidated ​Terminal RADAR Approach Control in Virginia, Reuters reports.

This is a breaking news story. Check back for updates.

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Hunt for man after Cambridge pub worker left with facial injury after attack

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Cambridgeshire Live

Police are looking to speak with this man in connection to the incident

Police are looking to speak with a man following an assault on pub door staff in Cambridge. Police say that the assault on a member of door staff took place outside The Cambridge Tap, St Andrews Street.

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The incident happened just before 11.30pm on February 12. The victim was left with a facial injury.

It has also been reported that the attacker ran away. Police are now looking to speak with the man photographed in connection with the assault.

Anyone with information should call police on 101 quoting 35/11343/26 or visit www.cambs.police.uk/report. Alternatively, contact Crimestoppers, anonymously, on 0800 555111 or via www.crimestoppers-uk.org.

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