MADRID (AP) — Pope Leo XIV’s trip to Spain will bring the American pontiff to a traditional center of European Christianity, where the Catholic Church has a complex legacy and the Socialist-led government is in the midst of a political crisis.
Leo’s weeklong visit begins Saturday in Madrid, where upon landing he was greeted by the country’s Catholic monarchs, King Felipe VI and Queen Letizia, and Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez. His first day ends with a prayer vigil with young people, many of whom will be witnessing their first pope on Spanish soil.
In a sign that the clergy sexual abuse crisis continues to overshadow papal trips, the Vatican confirmed late Friday that Leo would meet with survivors during his visit. The Spanish Catholic hierarchy is belatedly reckoning with decades of abuse and cover-up in the once-staunchly Catholic country.
The visit, the first by a pope in 15 years, signals Leo is returning papal attention to Europe and its Christian roots. Pope Francis largely stayed away from the traditional centers of European Christianity in favor of smaller Catholic communities farther away.
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Pope Leo XIV arrives at Adolfo Suarez-Madrid Barajas Airport in Madrid, Spain, Saturday, June 6, 2026, at the start of a seven-day pastoral visit to mainland Spain and the Canary Islands. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez)
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Pope Leo XIV arrives at Adolfo Suarez-Madrid Barajas Airport in Madrid, Spain, Saturday, June 6, 2026, at the start of a seven-day pastoral visit to mainland Spain and the Canary Islands. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez)
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But with the Spain trip — and a day trip to Monaco in March, a quick stop in San Marino in August and a four-day visit to France planned for September — Leo is seemingly keen to bring his message of peace, unity and human dignity to a continent in the throes of Russia’s war in Ukraine, the fallout from the U.S.-Israeli war in Iran and anxiety over artificial intelligence.
Leo acknowledged Saturday as he headed to Spain that he’s competing with another VIP in Madrid this weekend.
Puerto Rican sensation Bad Bunny is performing two shows of his 10-concert Spanish tour this weekend in the Spanish capital.
“When confronted with the question ‘Do I go see Bad Bunny or do I go to see the pope?’ I think many will go to see Bad Bunny,” Leo said. But he said he believed others would go to see him.
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Pope Leo XIV is welcomed by Spain’s King Felipe VI and Queen Letizia upon his arrival at Adolfo Suarez Madrid-Barajas International Airport in Madrid, Saturday, June 6, 2026, marking the start of his seven-day apostolic journey to mainland Spain and the Canary Islands. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)
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Pope Leo XIV is welcomed by Spain’s King Felipe VI and Queen Letizia upon his arrival at Adolfo Suarez Madrid-Barajas International Airport in Madrid, Saturday, June 6, 2026, marking the start of his seven-day apostolic journey to mainland Spain and the Canary Islands. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)
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A first-ever papal speech to the Spanish Parliament
The highlight of Leo’s visit to Madrid will be his speech Monday to both chambers of the Spanish Parliament. Even though St. John Paul II visited Spain five times and Pope Benedict XVI three, no pope has ever addressed Las Cortes Generales, as the Parliament is known.
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Such speeches are rare and often become one of the most important of a pontificate.
But Leo will find a legislature that is highly polarized, with the ruling Socialist party hammered by a series of corruption scandals. Conservative parties including the Popular Party and far-right Vox have called for Sánchez to step down before elections in 2027, and have roundly criticized his government’s migration policies.
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Visitors pose for photos beside a sign bearing the name of Pope Leo XIV in Madrid, Spain, Saturday, June 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)
Visitors pose for photos beside a sign bearing the name of Pope Leo XIV in Madrid, Spain, Saturday, June 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)
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The papal visit will be hard to miss in Madrid. Leo’s face has been plastered across subway cars, billboards and ads in metro stations in the Spanish capital. On display at some souvenir shops are posters and magnets of Leo and other papal knick-knacks. Bakeries are selling limited edition pope cakes and pastries.
Despite some expected protests of Leo’s visit — the trip is costing some 15 million euros ($17.2 million) — his speech to Parliament in particular is something of a milestone for Spain’s Catholic Church. Shaped by the anticlerical violence of the country’s 1936-1939 civil war, more recently, it has dealt with a credibility crisis over revelations of decades of clergy abuse and cover-up.
While much of Europe has secularized in recent decades, Spain stands out after it underwent a religious crisis following the 1975 death of Gen. Francisco Franco. A staunch Catholic, Franco viewed his reign as something of a religious crusade against the anticlerical anarchist, leftist and secular tendencies in Spain.
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As Spain transitioned to a democracy, the percentage of Spaniards who declared themselves Catholics fell from 90% in the 1970s to just 55% in 2025, according to polling data collected by Spain’s state opinion agency. Of that group only 19% say they regularly attend Mass.
And yet there are signs of renewed interest in all forms of spirituality, Christian and otherwise, especially among young Spaniards, said sociologist Narciso Michavila Núñez, president of the GAD3 consulting firm that polls young people about their faith, among other things.
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Pilgrims walk through Madrid ahead of Pope Leo XIV’s visit to Spain, Saturday, June 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)
Pilgrims walk through Madrid ahead of Pope Leo XIV’s visit to Spain, Saturday, June 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)
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In recent surveys, he said, pollsters are registering newfound interest in faith among Gen Z Spaniards. Michavila and others cite the popularity of Spanish pop star Rosalía’s new hit album “Lux,” which is overtly spiritual.
“The truth from a common view is not that God is in fashion. What is new in this moment, in this visit of the pope, is that God in the Spanish society is not a tattoo anymore,” he said.
A Mass at Sagrada Familia and migration message
After Madrid, the other highlights of the trip include Leo’s visit midweek to Barcelona, where he will celebrate Mass in the Sagrada Familia basilica on the centenary of the death of its famed architect, Antoni Gaudí. While Catalonia’s beloved native son is on the path to possible sainthood, no announcements on his canonization are expected during the trip, Bruni said.
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During the June 10 Mass, Leo will inaugurate the soaring central spire of the basilica, the Tower of Jesus Christ, which when it was moved into place earlier this year made Sagrada Familia the tallest church in the world.
Leo will also fulfill a wish of Francis by ending his visit with a two-day stop in the Canary Islands, the Spanish archipelago that is closer to Africa than the Iberian peninsula and a key destination for migrants leaving West Africa.
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Antoni Gaudí’s Basilica of the Sagrada Familia stands at dusk in Barcelona, Spain, Saturday, May 30, 2026, ahead of Pope Leo XIV’s visit to Barcelona in June. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti)
Antoni Gaudí’s Basilica of the Sagrada Familia stands at dusk in Barcelona, Spain, Saturday, May 30, 2026, ahead of Pope Leo XIV’s visit to Barcelona in June. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti)
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Leo will meet with migrants and the humanitarian organizations providing care for them. He is expected to toss a wreath of flowers into the sea, in memory of migrants killed during the treacherous Atlantic crossing. He’ll do so from the port in Las Palmas that in 2020 earned the nickname the “Dock of Shame” because thousands of migrants were forced to sleep in the open for weeks on end during a spike in arrivals.
Francis had made reaching out to migrants and refugees a hallmark of his papacy and Leo has followed suit by demanding dignified treatment of migrants, especially in his native United States.
“For those of us who are immigrants and find ourselves in this situation of having family far away, someone like the Pope — who is an important figure for the entire world — coming here is truly something that makes me say ‘wow,’” said Constantina Nchama, an immigrant from Equatorial Guinea in Madrid days before Leo’s visit.
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“It’s something that happens once in a lifetime,” she said. “I’m very, very excited about that, truly.”
Spain’s Socialist-led government has bucked a general trend in Europe and the U.S. by announcing it will grant legal status to potentially hundreds of thousands of immigrants living and working in the country without authorization. Sánchez has highlighted the benefits of legal migration to the country’s economy with an aging workforce and low birthrate.
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Migrants disembark at the port of “La Estaca” in Valverde on the Canary island of El Hierro, Spain, Aug. 26, 2024. Emergency services said the migrants arrived by boat after a 13-day voyage from Senegal. (AP Photo/Maria Ximena, File)
Migrants disembark at the port of “La Estaca” in Valverde on the Canary island of El Hierro, Spain, Aug. 26, 2024. Emergency services said the migrants arrived by boat after a 13-day voyage from Senegal. (AP Photo/Maria Ximena, File)
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Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.
Since starting his career on CITV, he has presented the likes of Dancing on Ice, Britain’s Got More Talent, Catchphrase and Deal Or No Deal.
But he’s not just a TV host – Stephen has appeared in pantomimes (where he met an ex-girlfriend – more on that later), performs magic, and has built up a property portfolio worth over £4m according to company filings.
The ITV star is good friends with Ant McPartlin and Declan Donnelly, and has regularly collaborated with the I’m A Celebrity hosts – most recently on a new series of Accidental Tourist.
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His show with the Geordie duo sees the beige-food-loving Stephen trying new tastes and experiences in locations across the world.
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After the success of season one which took him to South Korea, the channel has commissioned another three specials in more foreign surroundings.
Stephen is the unofficial third member of Ant and Dec’s relationship (Picture: David M. Benett/Dave Benett/Getty Images)
He has filled the shoes of Noel Edmonds as Deal or No Deal’s new host (Picture: ITV)
Where is Stephen Mulhern from?
It all started for Stephen in Stratford, East London.
The You Bet! host was born on April 4 1977 in the borough of Newham and grew up with his market trader parents and three siblings, Vinny, Christopher and Susie.
His late father was into magic and would perform a trick rather than a bedtime story, he told The Sun.
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This had a big influence on Stephen, who developed a passion for and belief in the craft from an early age.
At the age of 16, he was scouted at a Butlin’s talent show, where he holidayed with his family, and went on to become one of their Redcoat entertainers, as he had always wanted.
He’s still performing the stuff now and will star on board the P&O cruise ships this summer with his new magic show.
Stephen is a performer by origin (Picture: David Lodge/FilmMagic)
What was the breakthrough of his TV career?
After earning his stripes at the family resort, Stephen went on to have a successful career a children’s TV presenter.
His first big break came in 1998, when he began presenting for CITV alongside Danielle Nicholls.
It was on that channel that Stephen met some of his current TV colleagues, like Holly Willoughby, with whom he fronted a chaos-filled Saturday morning show.
After this, he went on to become the face of spin-offs of popular talent shows like Dancing on Ice: Defrosted and Britain’s Got More Talent, where Stephen gave viewers behind-the-scenes action and exclusive access.
His goofy persona lent itself well to the prankster energy that was needed for interactions with judges like Simon Cowell and the silliness required to chat with some of the more unusual acts on the extra BGT show.
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The presenter isn’t afraid to poke fun at himself (Picture: Eamonn McCormack/Getty Images)
Stephen and Holly started off presenting together in the noughties and recently hosted Dancing On Ice as a pair (Picture: Kieron McCarron/ITV/Shutterstock)
Stephen shut down rumours he was dating fellow ITV colleague, Josie (Picture: Ken McKay/ITV/Shutterstock)
Speaking to This Morning about the media frenzy that followed, Stephen said to Cat Deeley: ‘Listen, she didn’t show up to rehearsals, I held her hand, and I showed her where to stand. That is it!’
What has he said about his love life?
Throughout his career, Stephen has remained tight-lipped about his private life, including any romantic connections.
Back in 2014, Stephen made a statement about not having a partner and wanting kids in an interview with The Mirror.
The magician hasn’t ever said much about any romantic endeavours (Picture: Ken McKay/ITV/Shutterstock)
He remarked at the time: ‘Do I miss having a partner? Not really, and I think that’s because I’m very busy.’
Stephen continued: ‘There’s plenty of time for that yet, and would I like kids one day? Absolutely. Of course.’
The In for a Penny host then went on to refer to his former boss Simon, who became a first-time dad aged 54: ‘Simon is an example of that.’
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Stephen still has half a decade left if he’s continuing to work to the same time frame!
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After yet another tumultuous week in politics, Brian Reade says if Starmer had a makeover that turned him into The Thick Of It’s Malcolm Tucker, the calls for his resignation would soon disappear
IS it any wonder most people currently find British politics a more depressing sight than a pool of cold dog sick on a new rug?
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The bald, kilted fund-robber with his two £350 hairdryers, the rage-baiter and his dubious five million quid “reward”, and the latest dump of Mandelson files, which had TV political editors breaking into hot flushes of expectation over something that turned out to be a nine-inch pile of nothingness. I dump more interesting food packaging into my recycle bin. And I’m a vegetarian.
Ooh, Wes got a bit hysterical over Gaza, Pat hates backbenchers interfering over benefit cuts, Darren told Mandy he was sorry he was sacked and the biggie: Keir Starmer lacks (drum roll…wait for it)…“verve”.
Is that it? We have splurged a million quid on 1,500 pages of redacted word salad which insults the phrase tittle-tattle. The only thing worthy of note was Peter Mandelson comparing the chaos inside Keir Starmer’s government to the BBC’s political satire The Thick Of It. Not because it was original but because it reminded me that if Starmer’s government was more like The Thick Of It then he might stand a chance of survival.
How many times have you heard ministers bemoan the fact that Labour is doing great things but can’t get its message across? Bridget Phillipson was at it this week, arguing that they’ve scrapped the two-child benefit limit, expanded free school meals and brought in free childcare but nobody seems to know about it.
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Well whose fault is that if it’s not your government’s timid messaging? If Starmer had a makeover that turned him into The Thick Of It’s Malcolm Tucker the calls for his resignation would disappear.
Imagine if he’d said this to Tony Blair after his mealy-mouthed intervention last week (and I have censored Tucker’s swearing): “You’re not a grandee, you’re a bland-ee. You’re political mist – no substance, no weight. You have all the charm of a rotting teddy bear by a graveside.”
Or this to Kemi Badenoch at PMQs: “You’re an omnishambles. You’re like that coffee machine, you know, from bean to cup, you f**k up.”
How high would you punch the air if he said to Robert Peston: “Feet off the furniture you Oxbridge tw*t, you’re not in a punt now.” Or this to a Daily Mail sketchwriter who fancies himself as a wordsmith: “I enjoyed your novel… way of writing a f***ing awful story.” Imagine the applause if Starmer told Lee Anderson: “You sound like a hairy-arsed docker after 12 pints. You’re so dense that light bends around you.”
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Or this to Robert Jenrick: “I’ve never seen anyone look so ugly with just one head. Who did your media training, Myra Hindley? All these hands all over the place. You were like a sweaty octopus trying to unhook a bra.”
And how high would Labour have soared in the polls if, after Nigel Farage had cynically called for “pure, cold rage” following the tragic death of Henry Nowak, Starmer had turned and said: “You want cold rage? How about I tear your skin off, wear it to your mother’s birthday party, and rub your nuts up and down her leg while whistling Bohemian f***ing Rhapsody?”
If you want to get your “verve” back, Prime Minister, then get your Malcolm Tucker head on.
This Labour Communist doesn’t support democracy in Britain by the very fact that she is a Communist left-wing MP, because that is what the Labour party is and has always been, Communist socialists; they destroy any belief in a democratic society, as is the case with the Labour party that currently holds power in Britain.
If you look back over the past fifty years, you will see that the communist labour party always uses the word “Democracy” democracy ” when what it really means is we don’t like what you’re saying or doing, and we intend to stop you by any means possible, lawful or as we decide is lawful in your best interests.
So everyone who doesn’t support our Left-wing Communist socialist ideology and aims is ultra right wing, even the 95-year-old granny down the road is a threat and must be neutralized
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There is no DEMOCRACY in the United Kingdom now, any belief in democracy is only held by the likes of liberals and the mentally retarded, as obviously, this MP like all Labour and liberal MPs are.
Parliament should be knocked down or turned into a home for migrants, as Democracy in that house is long dead, never to rise again, as the politicians believe in housing and supplying all migrants’ needs before the people of Britain.
This has one political end: the diversification and destruction of everything white British, including its religion and cultural assets, as witnessed by the vandalism of The National Trust, a woke organization that is doing its best to destroy British heritage while calling itself a charity. Stop supporting it.
The blob is an organization run by left-wing supporting traitors who would give up all freedoms in Britain to rejoin the EU dictatorship.
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The laws are made for people to follow in a society that respects the freedom of its citizens, that’s gone in the Britain of today buy the very fact that the politicians ignored the people’s vote to leave the EU, Britains vote was to leave the EU but that hasn’t happened most of the laws of the EU are still in place and being used in Britain, Every politician knows you can do nothing to stop the boats and the invasion of Britain by Islamists and criminals all calling themselves asylum seekers which they are not they are economic migrants with no other interest in britain except earning money any way they can and they certainly dont respect our laws or its people.
Case in Point were a member of a religious sect is allowed to say i carry a knife as part of my religion and the corrupt law allows it on Britain’s streets, but if you were a white British person, you would be arrested for carrying an illegal weapon. But hey, that’s okay, they are only white British.
The police are no longer your friends and neighbours, they are the new communist Stasi The Stasi (Ministerium für Staatssicherheit) was the official state security and secret police service of East Germany (GDR) from 1950 to 1990. Known as one of the most repressive surveillance agencies in history, it employed tens of thousands of staff and a vast network of civilian informants to crush dissent and monitor the population, as is happening in Britain today under the Communist Regime of Labour. Do not support this organisation, turn your back on them and offer no help.
Now the Donkey of the North Andy Burnham sees his opportunity to run the country into the ground with his version of Communist ideology, and that will finish Britain for good, but hey all you who vote Labour and have voted for communism all your lives, don’t complain when there is no money for your pensions, or your benefits as all the money has been spent and business no longer wants to be in britain think not just look at all the businesses going bankrupt and closing because of the communist government you elected or were stupid enough not to vote to keep them out same will happen in the Makerfield by election those who vote for Communism will get communism.
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But don’t forget the media you support with your money or viewing, they don’t support you, the people they support communism and the EU values, and their own political ends, most of them and the reporters who work for them, especially the BBC, now wouldant know a truthful story if it jumped up in front of them, thats why you see the headlines right wing, they dont care if your 2 years old your still right wing it makes a better story, no truth but who cares about truth they and there reporters dont.
The Four in a Bed contestant was left in tears as she admitted “I get really emotional”.
Meghna Amin Screen Time Reporter
14:40, 06 Jun 2026
The contestant was left in tears moments in the episode(Image: Channel 4)
A Four in a Bed contestant was left in tears moments into the episode.
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Father-daughter duo Dennis and Holly were taking part in the competition, which aired a repeat episode on Saturday.
The pair had been the first to welcome their competitors to their Norwich B&B, leaving them impressed with the cleanliness and Holly’s breakfast skills.
So impressed that when the final stage came around, Holly and Dennis received such high praise that she was left in tears.
On payment day, the duo received feedback from Kent hosts Harry and Sarah, Oxfordshire B&B owner Dawn, and Ollie, who owns a boutique hotel in Kent.
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While Ollie paid Dennis and Holly exactly what was owed for his stay, Dawn underpaid by £10 due to a lack of wardrobe in her room and dirty windows.
Reflecting on her comments, Dennis admitted: “I’m genuinely disappointed by [the windows] because our standards should be much higher and generally are, so apologise for that. Not good enough.”
He later added to the camera: “Taking the money off was arguably a bit harsh, but I get it. We can’t complain too much, although it was uncomfortable.”
Dawn, meanwhile, said: “I stand by my payment because I believe that a wardrobe is a facility that should be in a B&B. And the window not being clean, everything should be spotless.”
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However, Harry and Sarah took a vastly different view, and even overpaid Holly and Dennis for their stay.
After handing over a £12 overpayment, Harry praised: “We had an amazing stay at your place. Everything you needed and more.”
Breaking down in tears at hearing his comments, Holly said: “Thank you, sorry I get really emotional!”
Sarah, also becoming tearful, replied: “You’ll get me going!”
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“It means a lot,” Holly added, while Harry later added to the camera: “They ticked every box,” as Sarah said: “They rival some of the best hotels that I’ve ever stayed in.”
Holly went on: “It means so much for us, and we’ve put so much into the business.”
Not long later, it was revealed that Harry and Sarah’s overpayment had left Holly and Dennis the winners.
“I’m delighted,” Dennis said, as Holly added: “It’s the best feeling.”
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He quipped in front of the others: “We are all winners, but we’re the best winners.”
Dennis then added to his daughter: “I’m very proud of Holly,” as she told him: “It wouldn’t be possible without you!”
Three tunnels form part of the complex under the city
The tunnel runs right under a European city.
A European city has an extensive network of tunnels beneath it. The Blanka Tunnel Complex is the longest city tunnel in Europe and runs for a total length of 5,502 meters.
The tunnel sits under Prague and is the longest road tunnel in the Czech Republic. It connects the area west of Prague Castle with the Trója district in the North-east of the city.
Three tunnels, consisting of the Bubenečský, Dejvický, and Brusnický, make up the complex, which was designed to relieve heavy traffic from the history city centre. In its first 49 months since opening, it was used by 139 million cars.
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Today, it is estimated that 88,000 vehicles use the tunnel every day. The Blanka Tunnel Complex opened on September 19, 2015, but it was a long time coming.
Construction launched in 2006, but it was planned since 1993. The tunnel was due to open in 2011, but the biggest and most expensive project in Prague was delayed by four years.
It cost 43 billion crowns, which is £1.5 billion today and doesn’t include all construction costs. During the construction of the tunnel complex, there were three landfalls.
The incident occurred twice in the Stromovka park, creating a hole measuring 15 to 25 meters. Another landfall happened in the garden area of the Ministry of Culture in Hradčany.
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Since opening, the Blanka Tunnel Complex has undergone continuous maintenance. There is 24/7 monitoring by a dedicated control centre that works night shifts to service lights, ventilation systems, cabling and drainage.
Last year, the tunnel marked its 10th anniversary. Prague Daily News said: “It relieved congestion in the city centre, reduced journey times, and took vehicle traffic underground.
“Since its opening, around 780 million vehicles have passed through the tunnel.
“The Dejvický Tunnel has borne the greatest load with more than 271 million vehicles, followed by the Brusnický Tunnel with almost 266 million and the Bubenečský Tunnel with 236 million vehicles.
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“Although Blanka has been in regular operation for years, the approval process for part of the project is still not fully concluded.
“A formal decision by the Administrative Court has meant that the relevant section continues to operate only under provisional use.
“Observers, however, expect a final acceptance soon.”
The crash happened at around 2.20pm on Friday (June 5) at the junction of Campbell Street and Harper Green Road.
Greater Manchester Police confirmed the incident involved four vehicles and said there were no serious injuries or arrests.
A spokesperson for the force said: “It was a four-vehicle collision at around 2.20pm on June 5.
“No serious injuries or arrests were made.”
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Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service also attended the scene, where a temporary police cordon was put in place while emergency crews dealt with the aftermath of the crash.
Firefighters worked to make the area safe before sweeping and clearing debris from the road.
One of the vehicles involved, a BMW, suffered severe damage to its front and front-left side, with an airbag deployed during the collision.
The road was reopened after emergency services completed their work and the scene was made safe.
The decision to leave the EU has “not withstood the test of time” and is blamed for making immigration and the economy worse, says Professor Sir John Curtice.
Writing in Sir Anthony Seldon’s book, The Brexit Effect, which is being serialised in The Independent, Prof Curtice says: “The 2016 referendum has failed to resolve the debate about whether Britain should be inside or outside the EU. The country now finds itself outside an institution of which a modest majority at least would like to be a member.
“For the time being at least, a significant body of voters have decided that being outside the EU is not worth it.”
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The serialisation is part of a new campaign by The Independent on how Britain can rebuild its shattered links with Europe. The campaign – Europe: The Way Back – will consist of news, analysis, interviews and live events examining the impact of Brexit and what our relationship with Europe should look like.
Prof Curtice says support for Brexit has “changed markedly” according to 500 polls conducted since 2016.
In the last five years there has been “a decisive and consistent shift away from Brexit”. He writes: “As a result, the success of the 2016 ballot as an exercise in direct democracy can be disputed.
“For many it has come to be regarded as having proved markedly worse in practice than they had anticipated.”
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Similarly, there was an expectation that immigration would be lower if Britain left the EU. However, while immigration from other EU nations fell, there had been a sharp increase in immigration from non-EU countries.
“Voters seem to have reacted to this unexpected experience by blaming Brexit,” says Prof Curtice.
Brexit was widely thought not to have made much practical difference to the country’s ability to make its own decisions, according to the pollster.
“All in all, then, Brexit has proven a disappointment for many voters. Most thought immigration would fall as a result of leaving the EU. In practice, many now believe it has resulted in higher levels.
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“While some always had doubts about the economic consequences of leaving, there is now a widespread view that the economy is worse off as a result.”
There was also a belief that Britain now has less influence in the world, he said.
“Brexit has largely failed to live up to Leave voters’ expectations. This suggests it is unsurprising that support for being outside the EU is much lower now than it was when a narrow majority voted in 2016 to Leave.”
Prof Curtice concludes: “The narrow vote in favour of Brexit has not withstood the test of time particularly well. Within a year, the balance of opinion was already beginning to swing against the decision, and by the time the UK left, there was a clear if narrow majority against.
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“Within a couple of years of leaving, that lead had widened into a double-digit one.
“On this issue, the hopes that Leave voters once had of Brexit appear to have been thoroughly dashed.”
Claims that Brexit would lead to Britain regaining its sovereignty were also judged to have been proved untrue, says Prof Curtice.
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So far June has been rather chilly, but that could change later this month
Warm weather should return later this month(Image: WXCharts)
As June gets off to a chilly start weather maps show when a heatwave will return to the UK later this month. The latest weather maps show when temperatures will climb above 30C in parts of the UK after a cold snap.
A surge of hot air will begin pushing into southern Britain on June 17 before peaking on June 18, according to the latest WXCharts. The forecast isn’t quite as extreme as the record-breaking heat seen in May, it does suggest temperatures could reach 31C in parts of England, the Express reports.
The warmer weather comes following a dramatic period of weather swings. Earlier forecasts indicated temperatures could plunge to just 1C in parts of Scotland on June 11, with much of the UK seeing overnight lows of between 5C and 8C. Even the normally warmer South East was forecast to struggle to reach double figures on the coldest day.
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Following chilly interlude, weather maps show temperatures rebounding sharply, with parts of southern and eastern England turning red on forecasting charts as warmer continental air spreads across the country. According to the June 18 temperature map, the hottest conditions are expected across East Anglia, the South East and parts of the East Midlands.
Greater London and South East experience the highest values on the map, with temperatures up to 30C. According to the map, temperatures in those areas actually span a wider range, starting from as low as 18C along the Welsh coast and reaching up to 28C in the Midlands and South West, and 29C in the North East.
However, forecasters caution that the warmth may be short-lived. Previous charts have suggested temperatures could fall by nearly 10C within days of the peak, highlighting the highly changeable nature of June’s weather.
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The Met Office’s long-range forecast for June 10 to June 19 states: “Changeable early in this period with Atlantic low pressure systems affecting the UK. These will bring showers or longer spells of rain at times. The wettest conditions will be in the northwest, with more in the way of drier interludes in the southeast.
“Strong winds may affect parts of the UK at times, especially the northwest. Later in the period, higher pressure and more settled conditions may begin to become more prevalent, especially in the south. There will probably still be some showers or longer spells of rain though. Temperatures are likely to be near to or a little above normal overall.”
Areas forecast to see temperatures of 27C or higher include:
EXCLUSIVE: Convicted twice and acquitted twice of murder, Amanda Knox describes the miscarriage of justice against Andrew Malkinson, who was wrongly branded a rapist, as “absolutely horrifying.”
Amanda Knox says misogyny was used to make her look guilty (Image: Variety via Getty Images)
Convicted twice and acquitted twice of murder, Amanda Knox describes the miscarriage of justice against Andrew Malkinson, who was wrongly branded a rapist, as “absolutely horrifying.”
Ms Knox says of Mr Malkinson, 59, who served 17 years in prison for a rape he did not commit: ’It also sounds like a very typical wrongful conviction case, where authorities got tunnel vision. They went after the wrong person and then, all of these years later, after somebody has had their entire life derailed, they actually find the true perpetrator.”
This week, father-of-six Paul Quinn, 52, was given a 24 year sentence for the rape, which Mr Malkinson – a security guard working in Salford when he was arrested – has dubbed an “insult.”
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Recalling her own first night in jail, Ms Knox – who served nearly four years in an Italian prison after her wrongful conviction for the 2007 murder of her roommate Meredith Kercher, 21 – says: “I imagine that [Malkinson] had the very same feeling that I had, which is ‘oh my god, this is a huge misunderstanding. ‘My innocence will ultimately become clear.
“I lived for years with the feeling like, ‘okay, there’s this crazy story that’s being put out there, but there are these institutions that I trust and there’s truth beyond a reasonable doubt.’”
Now married to US author and podcaster Christopher Robinson, 43, with whom she has a daughter, Eureka Muse, 5, and a son, Echo, 3, Amanda, 38, also believes misogyny was “absolutely 100%” involved in her own wrongful conviction.
Speaking to Tom Swarbrick on LBC radio, she says there was a “hyper focus” on her. Claiming she was portrayed as a “femme fatale,” she adds that the focus on “my appearance, my behaviour, [was] as an attempt to make me seem guilty.”
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She feels the same misogyny has been faced by Lucy Letby, the 36-year-old former neonatal nurse, serving life for the murder of seven infants and attempted murder of seven others between June 2015 and June 2016 at the Countess of Chester Hospital.
Ms Knox says she was seen as having “the face of an angel but is really a demon inside.” Now host of Doubt: The Lucy Letby Podcast, Ms Knox “leans in the direction” of Letby’s innocence.
She has written to her and says, if they ever speak, she won’t sugar-coat the fact that wrongly convicted people do die in jail. She says: “What I can guarantee her is that her life is worth living.
“No matter what circumstances we arrive at in life, we can find a way to find meaning out of them.”
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Ms Knox, who lives in Seattle, USA, says she still thinks about Meredith, who she lived with in Puglia, Italy, where they were exchange students, every day, but that her parents “never seemed to want to speak to me.”
She says of Meredith, who came from Coulson, south London: “She has left an indelible mark on my life. She was a real person who I knew. Especially now that I’m a mother, I think about my daughter entering a world that is not fair and not kind and is not safe for women. She [Meredith] changed the course of my life.”
*Amanda Knox was speaking on LBC’s Drive with Tom Swarbrick and is availableon Global Player and the LBC App.
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