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Ramsbottom Chocolate and Cheese festival full details

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Ramsbottom Chocolate and Cheese festival full details

The annual Chocolate and Cheese festival will be welcomed once again to Ramsbottom Civic Hall around the urn and church gardens in celebration of two dairy-based delights.

The event will be held on Sunday, March 29, from 11am to 4pm with a selection of food traders offering a wide variety of chocolate and cheese.

Alongside them will be a selection of local makers with more savoury and sweet options.

Ramsbottom Chocolate and Cheese Festival (Image: Danny Crompton)

In addition, the day boasts a calendar jam-packed with entertainment such as live music within the Civic Hall and a roaming magician who will perform in and around the town centre.

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Organisers say the festival aims to bring people into the town for a relaxed day out while supporting independent businesses such as chocolatiers and cheesemongers.

The event is expected to attract visitors from across Greater Manchester and further afield and adds to the town’s growing programme of community events.

A spokesperson for the event said: “It’s about creating something simple that brings people into Ramsbottom and supports local traders.

Ramsbottom Chocolate and Cheese Festival (Image: Danny Crompton)

“There’ll be a good mix of food and a bit of entertainment across the day, so people can come down, have a wander and enjoy the town.”

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Entrance will cost £1 per adult.

Last year’s event, held in April, proved to be a sweet success and attracted crowds of hundreds to the town.

Visitors came from as far as Leeds and Sheffield for the occasion, eager to try new and quirky flavour combinations of salty and sweet.

The crowd-pulling event began in 2009 as solely a chocolate festival.

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It then evolved to incorporate other foods before its current focus on chocolate and cheese.

The pandemic saw it being put on hold for a couple of years before a very welcome return in 2023.

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Three things we learned from Arsenal FC loss as Mikel Arteta makes huge mistake

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Three things we learned from Arsenal FC loss as Mikel Arteta makes huge mistake

The Gunners arrived at Wembley with their eyes on a first trophy since 2020, one that would have set the stage for bigger things to come and sent quadruple talk into overdrive.

Arsenal were limp and lacking in any ambition. This was a performance of a side fearing defeat rather than wanting to grasp the prize in front of them.

The Gunners now have to reset before a reinvigorated City come at them again after the international break. Play like this during the run-in and there will be more miserable afternoons to come.

Painful questions return for Arsenal

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While his players fly off on international duty, the Arsenal manager has plenty of thinking to do and answers to find to ensure his side’s season does not run out of steam at the worst possible moment.

Instead, familiar questions are back. Can they deliver when it really matters? Do they really believe they are better than Man City? Could a season that teased four trophies end without any?

It would be unfair to use this one performance to suggest the Gunners could end the season empty-handed, but they do now face a major test of their character.

City’s season has just had a huge burst of impetus. Arsenal still have to go to the Etihad Stadium and after this display, City will be relishing that.

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New solar farm could be built in Burwell countryside

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Cambridgeshire Live

The proposed solar farm could cover 24 hectares of agricultural land

A new solar farm could be built in a Cambridgeshire village. AGR Renewables proposes to build a solar development with battery storage on land off Ness Road in Burwell.

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In total, the site will be around 24 hectares. It will include solar panels up to 3m high, battery storage, a control building, security fencing, CCTV cameras, access tracks and other related infrastructure.

If approved, it would be up for 40 years. This would then be decommissioned and the site would return to agricultural use.

In its EIA screening request, the developer said: “The proposed development would facilitate the generation of renewable energy and this would conserve natural resources that would otherwise be used to generate power.

“Whilst the solar panels, frames and ancillary equipment would use natural resources during construction this would not be in significant quantities that could have wider significant environmental impacts, with many of the components such as the panel supports and the glass of the photovoltaic panels constructed from recyclable materials.”

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If approved, the solar farm would not produce “significant waste” during its construction or operation. The proposed site is also not near homes. East Cambridgeshire District Council has approved previous plans for energy-related applications next to the Ness Road site.

The closest, which is around 2.6km away, is part of the “nationally significant” Sunnica Energy Solar Farm project. This solar farm will cover around 2,500 acres of solar panels and battery storage.

Energy secretary Ed Miliband approved plans for this solar farm in summer 2024. It is proposed to be across four sites, including Mildenhall and West Row, Freckenham and Worlington, and in East Cambridgeshire, close to Newmarket.

Do you want more of the latest Cambridgeshire news as it comes in from across the county? Sign up to our dedicated newsletter to make sure you never miss a big story from Cambridge or anywhere else in the county. You can also sign up to our dedicated Traffic and Crime newsletters for the latest updates on the topics you are most interested in.

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UFC fighter Paddy Pimblett sends message to schoolboy, 12, brutally attacked in Dundee

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Conner McGowan was left bruised and bleeding after stepping in to protect a pal from a gang of yobs.

UFC fighter sends message to teen attacked in Dundee

UFC fighter Paddy ‘The Baddy’ Pimblett has sent out a message of support to a schoolboy after he was set upon by a teen gang in Dundee. Conner McGowan, 12, intervened to protect his female friend after they had made a trip to the city from Fife.

The brave lad was allegedly then threatened with a knife and hit over the head with a bottle and had his head stamped on. The young lad sustained facial injuries as well as cuts to his legs and head following the brutal attack near Dundee’s High Street on Friday night at around 9pm.

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Conner is a massive UFC fan and idolises Pimblett so when his hero heard what happened he sent the lad a video message.

It said: “Yes Conner, mate. I heard about your amazing bravery. Well in for defending your mate. And I hope that you get well soon, mate, and recover soon. Lots of love from the Baddie.”

Pimblett also gave the youngster VIP tickets to attend the Cage Warriors event in Glasgow next month. Fife Flyers ice hockey club have also invited the 12-year-old along to a match as a special guest.

A spokesperson said: “Incidents like this should never happen, and we stand firmly with Conner and his family as he continues his recovery. To lift his spirits, we’d love to invite Conner along to a Fife Flyers game as our special guest.

“Captain Garet Hunt, Ethan Somoza, and the team would be proud to meet him and show him around the dressing room. We’re sending our very best wishes and hope to see you soon Conner!”

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Conner’s mum, Lori Roache, told the Record that her son and his two pals decided to travel through to the city from their hometown in Springfield, Fife.

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The 30-year-old said: “The three of them were just minding their own business when they were approached by a gang of about 20 boys and girls.

“The girl Conner was with was singled out by the crowd so he stepped in and told them to leave her alone and the three of them tried to leave the area.”

Unfortunately, the incident didn’t end there. Lori claims the group were “like a pack of animals” and they “could have killed” her son.

She said: “Suddenly, a gang of twelve boys aged between 15-17 surrounded my son. One of them held a knife up to Conner’s face and then another smashed a bottle over his head.

“Once he fell to the ground they were on him like a pack of animals, punching him and stamping down on his head. He is really badly injured but I am just glad he is alive. They could have very easily killed him by kicking his head like that.”

Conner was meant to have been home at 8.30pm but his phone had run out of battery and at the time of the attack, Lori was driving around looking for him.

While she was in the car one of her son’s fiends sent her a message to say what happened and she immediately raced to Dundee and took him to Ninewells Hospital. The lad was given treatment and allowed home but has been left extremely distressed.

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The mum-of-four said: “After learning what happened I was screaming and bawling the full way there and can barely even remember the 20-minute drive.

“I put Conner in the car and took him to the hospital where he was given treatment and discharged in the early hours of the morning.

“He has to go back in a week to have the stitches removed and get more X-rays to check there is no lasting damage. He was running on adrenaline last night but it has hit home today how serious this is and he is really traumatised.

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“I am scared to let him out the house now. He’ll obviously need to go back out one day but I’ll make sure he isn’t straying far away like that ever again. These thugs who attacked him can’t get away with it and need to be tracked down before they kill someone.”

Police Scotland confirmed they have launched a probe into the attack. They are working to trace those involved.

A spokesperson for the force said: “Around 9pm on Friday, March 20, police received a report of a disturbance involving a group of youths in an alleyway, near the High Street, Dundee.

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“Two males, aged 12 and 14 and a 17-year-old female were injured in the incident. Enquiries are ongoing to trace those involved.”

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‘My son almost died of meningitis but this saved his life’

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'My son almost died of meningitis but this saved his life'

Gaynor Simpson faced every parents’ worst nightmare when her son Ross Simpson was left fighting for his life with sepsis and meningitis three years ago.

The 54-year-old received a phone call from Ross to say that he was feeling unwell, prompting him to come home from university the following day.

However, quick-thinking Gaynor recognised her son’s symptoms were similar to that of meningitis and rushed him to hospital.

(Image: KennedyNews/GaynorSimpson)

However, quick-thinking Gaynor recognised her son’s symptoms were similar to that of meningitis and rushed him to hospital.

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The 21-year-old student, who also developed sepsis, spent the next 10 days in intensive care before his condition thankfully began to improve.

The killer bug has sparked widespread concern this week after 20 meningitis cases have been reported in Kent in what’s since been declared by the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) as a national incident.

The vast majority of young people are not protected against bacterial meningitis as the jab has only been offered to babies since 2015, but Gaynor believes the vaccine should be rolled out to young people too.

Gaynor, who lives in Glasgow, said: “Ross had phoned me on the Tuesday evening to say he wasn’t feeling particularly well. He felt a bit off colour and didn’t have an appetite.

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“He’d been an absolutely fine. Then on the Wednesday evening he said he was awake a lot on the night and had a bit of a headache, which was gone now.

“I asked him if he wanted to come home and I could keep an eye on him, and we’re very thankful that he did.

“He took paracetamol and went for a sleep. Then it was about 7ish and Ross told me that he thinks he might need to go to the doctor.

“He was sat in his bed with his head in his hands and said he couldn’t stand the pain in his head.

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“Then he was sick over the side of the bed. I asked him if he had a stiff neck and he said yes, then asked him why the light was off in his room and he said he couldn’t stand the light in his eyes.

“Then I said I think this is meningitis.”

Gaynor rushed Ross to the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital in Glasgow where he was taken to ICU after becoming unresponsive.

Later that night, Ross was placed on life-support and a lumbar puncture confirmed he had contracted meningitis and later sepsis.

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Ross remained in intensive care for 10 days before his condition began to improve and he was discharged home.

Gaynor said: “The first three days were really uncertain. We were told it was very possible that he might not make it.

“He was incredibly ill. He was on life support for five days then he managed to turn a corner.

“It was a long road to recovery. We’re very lucky. It’s the worst thing that any parent can possibly go through. You’re not the same person again after that.

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“It’s a cruel and very unforgiving disease. It’s terrifying how quickly it can move. It’s so important that people know the symptoms.

“Ross had been to a party about a week before and there was a girl at that party who also ended up in hospital.

“We only knew about this other case after Ross ended up in hospital. He probably did get it at the party, you just don’t know.

“It’s just unlucky they both ended up developing it and thankfully both survived.”

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What is meningitis? The key symptoms to look out for


Gaynor believes many parents may not be aware that it is possible to pay for the MenB vaccine privately for young adults aged 16-24, known to be a ‘high risk’ age group.

Now, Gaynor is urging others to remain vigilant of meningitis symptoms after the recent outbreak reported in Kent.

Gaynor said: “It is infuriating and heartbreaking in equal measure that we almost lost our son who’s in a high-risk group and we didn’t know anything about this vaccine.

“This vaccine should be offered to that high-risk group. People have no idea there’s another vaccine out there.

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“When the news broke about this outbreak, I was just utterly heartbroken because I know exactly how those parents feel.

“It brought it all back for me. You realise you were so close to a very different outcome.

“It’s just about being aware of the symptoms. We don’t want people to have health anxiety, but it’s really important that people have these symptoms in the back of their mind and get to hospital as quickly as they can.”

How to check your vaccination record on the NHS app

  • Go to The NHS App
  • Open the GP Health Record tab – read and click through the security warning
  • Open the Immunisations tab
  • Scroll down through your list of vaccines and related information

If you do not see a meningitis vaccination, that does not mean you have not already had one. There are a number of reasons why the NHS app may not have all your immunisations records, including:

  • Old records – vaccinations from many years ago may not be recorded on the app
  • Overseas jabs – vaccinations received abroad are not automatically added to the app
  • GP record gap – if your doctor has not updated their records, there will be a gap in the app
  • Access rights – you may need to ask your GP to enable your ‘detailed coded record’

Your GP or a pharmacist will be able to see your full NHS Summary Care Records (SCR), so if in doubt speak to one of them.

Meningitis symptoms

  • a high temperature
  • cold hands and feet
  • vomiting
  • confusion
  • breathing quickly
  • muscle and joint pain
  • pale, mottled or blotchy skin (this may be harder to see on brown or black skin)
  • spots or a rash (this may be harder to see on brown or black skin)
  • headache
  • a stiff neck
  • a dislike of bright lights
  • being very sleepy or difficult to wake
  • fits (seizures)

And in babies:

  • refuse feeds
  • be irritable
  • have a high-pitched cry
  • have a stiff body or be floppy or unresponsive
  • have a bulging soft spot on the top of their head

Different types of meningitis 

Viral

  • Viral meningitis  is the most common form. It is rarely life-threatening but can still cause serious illness. It tends to resolve on its own, though can leave infected feeling very unwell during recovery.
  • Mollaret’s meningitis  is a rare and recurring form of the disease. Mollaret’s is a chronic condition, most often linked to infection with the Herpes Simplex virus type 2. 

Bacterial

  • Bacterial meningitis  is a serious and fast-moving condition that requires urgent hospital admission and prompt treatment with antibiotics to prevent life-threatening complications.
  • Meningococcal disease.  This term covers two major illnesses, meningitis and septicaemia (blood poisoning), which can occur independently but more often together, making it especially dangerous.
  • Pneumococcal meningitis  is a life-threatening infection that causes inflammation of the protective layers around the brain and spinal cord, it requires swift medical intervention.
  • TB meningitis  is caused by the Mycobacterium tuberculosis bacteria. This form of the disease is linked to tuberculosis and can be difficult to diagnose due to its gradual onset.
  • Group B streptococcal (GBS) meningitis  is the leading cause of meningitis in babies, and can cause septicaemia and pneumonia, making it a significant concern in newborns.
  • Neonatal meningitis  affects newborns and is divided into “early onset” and “late onset”, depending on how soon after birth the condition develops.
  • E. coli meningitis  is the second most common bacterial cause of meningitis in newborns. E. coli meningitis is a serious condition primarily affecting the very young.
  • Hib meningitis  is like pneumococcal meningitis, and is a life-threatening disease causing inflammation around the brain and spinal cord – though it has become much less common due to vaccination.
  • Listeria meningitis  is caused by Listeria bacteria found in certain foods like unpasteurised soft cheeses, pâté, and shellfish. This form can lead to potentially fatal complications.

Other 

  • Fungal meningitis  is a very rare form of the disease and shares similar symptoms but typically develops more gradually rather than suddenly.
  • Chemical meningitis  is unlike most other forms because it is not caused by an infection. Instead, it is triggered by exposure to a particular substance or chemical that causes inflammation.
  • Parasitic meningitis  is extremely rare and occurs when certain parasites infect and inflame the meninges, the protective membranes surrounding the brain and spinal cord.
  • Cryptococcal meningitis  is caused by a fungus found in soil and bird droppings, and is most commonly seen in people with weakened immune systems.
  • Non-infectious meningitis.  Not all meningitis is the result of an infection; this variety is triggered by non-infectious causes like certain medications or other medical conditions.
  • Malignant/carcinomatous meningitis  is a serious condition when cancer cells spread to the meninges. It is associated with advanced cancer and presents significant treatment challenges. 

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Three things we learned from Tottenham loss as fans vote with their feet after show of support

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Three things we learned from Tottenham loss as fans vote with their feet after show of support

The sleepwalk towards relegation continues for Tottenham.

It seemed they may have turned a corner after their 1-1 draw at Anfield and first victory under Igor Tudor in beating Atletico Madrid on Wednesday, and yet they are now back to square one and facing the drop with just seven games remaining.

Goals from Igor Jesus, Morgan Gibbs-White and Taiwo Awoniyi punished Spurs in their own back yard.

Brutal defeat stings for Spurs

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Right from the moment around 10,000 Spurs fans lined up on the High Road to greet the team bus on a momentous day in the sunshine, it was unmistakably clear that this was a match where the result mattered far, far more than the performance.

How wrong it all went for Tottenham.

They were playing well and had been the better team when they fell behind to Igor Jesus’s header from an unmarked position from a corner as half-time approached. It knocked the stuffing out of a nervy Tottenham Hotspur Stadium where the anxiety was palpable but the atmosphere had been good.

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Tottenham fans were out in force to welcome the team bus ahead of their defeat by Nottingham Forest

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The second half was far worse. Spurs looked out of ideas and cripplingly short of a cutting edge. A Tottenham player taking too long to move the ball on would be met with groans — and that happened all too often.

When Awoniyi made it three on 87 minutes, queue the mass exodus as fans headed for the exits. In truth, though, that had begun before the 70th minute on an afternoon where Spurs needed to be front-footed but were instead one-paced, toothless, and leaky.

Half-time tactical switch backfires

It made plenty of sense to start with a back four and Richarlison and Dominic Solanke in a front two following the win over Atletico, and Spurs had been the better team at half-time despite trailing.

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Why, then, Tudor felt he needed to switch things up at the interval is anyone’s guess. It didn’t work out at all.

Lucas Bergvall and Destiny Udogie came on for Micky van de Ven and Djed Spence but both were error-prone and guilty of looking off the pace.

Tottenham Hotspur v Nottingham Forest - Premier League - Tottenham Hotspur Stadium

Off the pace: Lucas Bergvall

Bradley Collyer/PA Wire

On one promising run forward by Cristian Romero, Bergvall got in his way. Udogie, meanwhile, looked rusty following injury and was miles off it.

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Banksy ‘unmasking’ by media raises questions about art and identity

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Banksy 'unmasking' by media raises questions about art and identity

LONDON (AP) — Years before the rise of Instagram, Banksy figured out that the key to real influence lay in not being famous, exactly, but in being anonymous.

The mystery of his identity has long been part of the value of his art, which for decades and across continents defied authority from public walls and self-shredded on the auction block. Now, Banksy’s apparent unmasking by the Reuters news agency has generated talk about whether the works themselves retain their cultural and financial value.

It also raises the question: Why pop the red balloon of his mystique in the first place? Many Banksy fans mourned the loss of the mystery and lashed out at the news outlet. One said it was like being told without warning that Santa Claus doesn’t exist.

“I feel like they are telling me how a magic trick is done,” said Thomas Evans, a Denver-based artist on Instagram. “Sometimes I just want to enjoy the magic trick.”

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But some art experts say the murals and the message will survive Banksy’s naming because his appeal wasn’t driven solely by his anonymity. He and his works — mischievous and also dark — stand as witnesses to injustice, oppression and inequality around the world, from the artist’s native England to walled-off Bethlehem and war-ravaged Ukraine. Subtract his anonymity, they say, and the work still inspires reflection and discussion.

“People buy his works because they absolutely love it,” said Acoris Andipa, director of the Andipa gallery in London. “The main feedback that I get is that they really, frankly, don’t care if they know who he is.”

Naming the ghost — and the backlash — is engagement, too

Banksy, long thought to have been born Robin Gunningham around 1972, grew out of a tradition of street artists who viewed the undercover act of posting their art in public as a subversive form of expression. The postindustrial landscape of his native Bristol was his canvas and gallery. The walls of London, New York and elsewhere gave him a global stage just before the rise of social media.

Banksy’s apparent identity has been an open secret among protective fellow artists, and long been easy to find online for those who wanted to know. The Daily Mail reported in 2008 “compelling evidence suggesting” that was the artist’s birth name. It has been published by other news outlets, including by The Associated Press in 2016, as part of their coverage of the detective work.

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Reuters reported last week that after The Daily Mail’s story, Banksy changed his legal name to David Jones — the second most-popular name in Britain. It’s also the given name of another rock star, the late David Bowie, whose Ziggy Stardust avatar inspired a 2012 Banksy painting of Queen Elizabeth II.

Bansky’s lawyer didn’t respond to a request for comment, and the artist’s spokeswoman declined to participate in this story.

Reuters pieced together that a David Jones traveled to Ukraine with a well-known associate of Banksy’s in late 2022 — just before the artist’s work began appearing on buildings that had been bombed by Russia. Banksy later confirmed that he’d created seven murals in the war zone, including one of a child flipping over a grown man who is wearing a black belt. Russian President Vladimir Putin practices judo.

There’s evidence that even some in the establishment he was protesting have accepted Banksy. They didn’t arrest him, for example, after the Royal Courts of Justice removed a Banksy stencil depicting a judge in a traditional wig and gown beating an unarmed protester with a gavel. Some street artists groused that they might be arrested for creating such graffiti — but when it’s a Banksy, it’s art.

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Robin Gunningham wasn’t always so elusive

On Sept. 17, 2000, a Robin Gunningham was arrested for defacing a Marc Jacobs billboard atop a building on Hudson Street in New York.

In a handwritten signed confession, he described the work on the night in question: “I had been out drinking at a nightclub with friends when I decided to make a humorous adjustment to a billboard on top of the property,” he wrote in court records unearthed by Reuters and confirmed by the AP. “I painted eyeshadow a new mouth and a speach(sic) bubble” on the photo of a male model. He was charged with a misdemeanor.

The artist doesn’t need an alleged naming to make news. He created multiple works just in London in 2025, and grabbed headlines elsewhere for having his art sold or auctioned for millions. But Banksy has courted a public image centered around morality, justice and guerrilla tactics — he’s often likened to Robin Hood or Batman.

“Banksy woz ere,” he wrote with his animal murals at the London Zoo, which were removed in 2024.

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Still, along with the sadness, there’s ample speculation in the art world and on social media that the artist himself orchestrated this round of naming. He didn’t deny the Reuters story.

That “would be very much in line with his practice of stunts and satire,” observed Madeleine White, the senior sales and acquisitions consultant at London’s Hang-Up Gallery, “As they say, ‘all publicity is good publicity.’”

She noted, however, that the backlash is directed at the media — not the artist, or the potency of his work. Reuters says it opted to publish some, but not all, of the information its reporters uncovered about Banksy’s identity, because he is a public figure, whatever his name — and he’s had an outsized influence on public events and discourse. What’s more, much of his work has been done on other people’s property.

Banksy’s star power is about far more than anonymity

Named or not, Banksy’s stardom lives, art experts say.

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It endures in the wonder of his ability to erect new art under the noses of authorities well into the age of closed-circuit television and social media. It appeals because his spectacle and wit draw people in and the settings — the hulk of bombed buildings, for example, or Israel’s towering wall at the border of the West Bank — invite them to reflect. Now, fans are on the lookout for how and whether he’ll respond to the news of Robin Gunningham and David Jones.

Joe Syer, a Banksy expert and founder of MyArtBroker, said that the artist has always responded to world events. “And that’s where the real relevance, and value, sits.”

“If anything, Banksy’s anonymity has functioned less as a celebrity device and more as a way to keep the work universally accessible, detached from personality, ego, or biography,” he said in an email. “It allows the work to sit in public space, politically and culturally, without being anchored to an individual in the way the mainstream press often frames it.”

Christopher Banks, founder of the New York-based Objects of Affection Collection, reads Banksy’s naming “not as a biographical event, but as a structural stress test” of the artist’s system of managing his absence.

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“Banksy’s best works carry their meaning without the author. He was there,” Banks wrote, citing the artist’s murals in Ukraine and his solidarity with the war’s victims.

“The name matters less than the presence. The presence was always what the work was about.”

___

Michael Sisak contributed to this report from New York.

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Price of your food shopping could go up within weeks thanks to Iran war | News UK

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Price of your food shopping could go up within weeks thanks to Iran war | News UK
Food prices could rise within weeks as a result of the conflict in the Middle East, the NFU has warned (Picture: Getty Images)

The conflict in the Middle East is likely to push up the cost of food in the UK within weeks, a union boss has warned.

Tom Bradshaw, president of the National Farmers’ Union (NFU), said the whole food supply chain could be affected by the war, with the cost of some crops rising within six weeks.

Rising costs in fuel and fertiliser are some of the effects of Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, which handles around 20 per cent of the world’s natural gas.

Mr Bradshaw warned that a protracted conflict in the Middle East wouldhave a ‘dramatic impact’ and turn the world’s supply chain’s ‘upside down’.

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He told BBC Radio 4 that the price of tomatoes, peppers cucumbers could increase next month, as those crops rely on greenhouse production.

The cost of other items such as milk and meat could rise within three to six months.

Farmers of wheat and barley would be better protected as they buy their fertiliser in advance.

Ministers are set to convene an emergency meeting to discuss the impact of the war on the cost-of-living.

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Customer choosing fresh peppers and vegetables from supermarket display. Concept of healthy eating, fresh food choices, mindful food shopping, and sustainability.
The cost of greenhouse-produced crops such as peppers and tomatoes will likely be the first to increase (Picture: Getty Images)

The NFU chief added that the government needed to take the threat to food production ‘seriously’.

He said: ‘Amidst this volatile backdrop, it is more important than ever that government keeps other inflationary pressures within its control to a minimum to protect household.’

While retailers and farmers may bear some of the cost of rising fuel, some of the burden is likely to be passed on to consumers, the NFU warned.

The availability of some goods can also be hit by the disruption to shipping routes, the British Retail Consortium (BRC) said.

It added that retailers were working to mitigate the cost for consumers and are ‘adept’ at managing disruption to supply chains.

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Angela Eagle, the farming minister, said she was monitoring the impact of the conflict on the industry.

There have also been concerns over the cost of red diesel, with the Competitions and Markets Authority having committed to monitoring its pricing.

An extended conflict could also threaten several other sectors, including travel.

Airline bosses have warned that fares could be hiked if the war is extended much further.

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Cargo ships in the Gulf, near the Strait of Hormuz, as seen from northern Ras al-Khaimah, near the border with Oman???s Musandam governance, amid the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, in United Arab Emirates, March 11, 2026. REUTERS/Stringer REFILE - CORRECTING
The ripple effects of Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz will be affected across multiple sectors in the UK (Picture: Reuters)

While most carriers have ‘hedged’ or locked in fuel costs for the summer months, passengers could feel the pinch beyond then if the Strait of Hormuz remains blockaded.

The UK is particularly vulnerable as it imports up to 90 per cent of its jet fuel.

EasyJet CEO Kenton Jarvis said while there were no ‘immediate issues’, airlines were reliant on Gulf refineries.

The budget airline would not introduce a fuel surcharge, but passengers were likely to notice a gradual increase linked to ‘supply and demand’.

He told the Independent’s Simon Calder: ‘My expectation is that prices will go up.

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‘The industry has no choice. It’s a low-margin, highly competitive sector. We make about £7 per seat. If fuel goes up £10, you have to respond.’

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

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Gary Neville makes Premier League title claim after Man City beat Arsenal | Football

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Gary Neville makes Premier League title claim after Man City beat Arsenal | Football
Man Utd legend and ex-England defender Gary Neville (Picture: Sky Sports)

Gary Neville believes Manchester City ‘landed a major blow’ on Premier League title rivals Arsenal by winning the Carabao Cup final.

After a cagey and goalless opening hour at Wembley, two goals in four second-half minutes from Nico O’Reilly saw Man City take control against their Premier League title rivals.

The first came from what Neville described as a ‘howler’ from Arrizabalaga – who kept his place in the team ahead of Arsenal’s No. 1 David Raya – as he spilled Rayan Cherki’s cross into the path of a grateful O’Reilly.

The England international headed home again just four minutes later to leave Man City in dreamland and Arsenal stunned.

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Arsenal, seeking their first major trophy since 2020, tried to get back into the game but were frustrated by Man City, who gave Pep Guardiola his fifth victory in this competition.

Neville slammed Arsenal goalkeeper Kepa Arrizabalaga not only for his mistake in the final but also his play leading up to the opening goal.

Arrizabalaga dawdled over the ball often in the second half after Arsenal were marginally the better side in the opening 45 minutes – at one point taking 36 seconds to release the ball.

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Arsenal v Manchester City - Carabao Cup Final
Arsenal goalkeeper Kepa Arrizabalaga (Picture: Getty)

‘Kepa has got to get rid of the ball because it’s not helping them this,’ Neville said on Sky Sports. ‘All it’s doing is getting the crowd up.

‘It’s not helping Arsenal at all. He hasn’t helped himself, not just with that [his error], he was drawing Man City onto him, rolling his foot on the ball.

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‘And then this, it’s a really bad one from the goalkeeper. Kepa, it’s a real howler in a massive moment.

Arsenal v Manchester City - Carabao Cup Final
Nico O’Reilly scored twice at Wembley (Picture: Getty)

‘Arsenal have shrunk in this game. What’s happened to them? Mikel Arteta’s team have gone missing, what’s happened to them in this second half?

‘Goalkeepers have got to stop doing that, they take the momentum out the game and you send a message to the opposition that you haven’t got any idea. It’s a nonsense.’

While Arsenal’s quadruple dream is over, they are still favourites to win the Premier League, boasting a nine-point lead over Man City.

‘They’ve landed a major blow, Manchester City,’ Neville said after the full-time whistle.

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‘The impact that might have… Man City needed something to lift them and they’ve just got it.

‘Arsenal need to recover but Pep Guardiola will be so proud because his team have delivered. They’ve got time to recover, Arsenal, but Mikel has a big job on his hands now.’ 

More to follow…

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Ronnie O’Sullivan refuses to make song and dance as snooker ace addresses ‘hiding’ head on

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Daily Mirror

Snooker icon Ronnie O’Sullivan was swiped aside in snooker’s World Open final by a stunning comeback from Thepchaiya Un-Nooh, who recorded a 147

Ronnie O’Sullivan refused to make excuses and admitted that he got a ‘good hiding’ in the World Open final, but is happy to be in a much better place than earlier in the month. Thepchaiya Un-Nooh, 40, produced a majestic performance to win just his second ranking title in a 10-7 victory over the Rocket.

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O’Sullivan led the final in Yushan, China, 4-0 before Un-Nooh found his groove to play some bewildering snooker. The Thai snooker star recorded a 147 in the penultimate frame of the showpiece event as Un-Nooh won six consecutive frames to claim an impressive comeback.

Seven-time world champion O’Sullivan was in search of his first title win since January 2024 but could only watch on as his opponent clocked significant breaks at the decisive moment. The 50-year-old, who made history earlier in the tournament with the sport’s first 153 break, could not hide how impressed he was with Un-Nooh and his journey.

“I just want to say well done to Thepchaiya today – unbelievable snooker,” said O’Sullivan, “I watched him last night against Judd [Trump in the semi-finals], and I was like, ‘Wow.’ Judd’s obviously the No.1 in the world and he made him look second best. I was hoping that he didn’t play like that again today but he did.

READ MORE: Huge amount of money Ronnie O’Sullivan has missed out on despite making historyREAD MORE: Judd Trump declares he’s homeless after quitting UK – ‘I don’t really think I can go back’

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“He gave me a good hiding really. I was sitting in that chair for quite a long time. But well done to Thepchaiya, brilliant, amazing talent.”

The tournament’s 41st seed was ‘far too good’ O’Sullivan claimed. Nevertheless, the Rocket believes reaching the final showed he was now in a much better place, though he is taking each day as it comes.

“I just want to say well done to Thepchaiya today – unbelievable snooker,” said O’Sullivan.

”I watched him last night against Judd [Trump in the semi-finals], and I was like, ‘Wow.’ Judd’s obviously the No.1 in the world and he made him look second best. I was hoping that he didn’t play like that again today but he did.

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“He gave me a good hiding really. I was sitting in that chair for quite a long time. But well done to Thepchaiya, brilliant, amazing talent.”

He added: “Thepchaiya was flowing and had every shot in the book. I have to accept that is how it is.

“If I found that bit extra I could have made it tougher than him. I am in a much better place than I was even two weeks ago. I’m taking each day as it comes.”

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Un-Nooh, who pocketed £175,000 for taking the victory, emphasised how much of an honour it was to beat a player of O’Sullivan’s calibre.

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“It is like a double dream final now,” he said. “This has always been my dream, to lift the title against Ronnie O’Sullivan in the final. For the rest of my life this is something I’m not going to forget.

“I went to the practice room in the interval, spoke to myself and managed my emotions. After being sat on my chair watching Ronnie make three centuries, I told myself this is a great final and to enjoy it. I don’t know how what happened after the interval came true.

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“I can’t believe it. I’m still stunned with my performance. How did I do that? Sometimes snooker is one-way traffic. To make a 147 in the final against Ronnie O’Sullivan in a final is a great honour. “

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GOP sheriff in California seizes ballots as he runs for governor

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GOP sheriff in California seizes ballots as he runs for governor

RIVERSIDE, Calif. (AP) — A California sheriff running for governor has seized more than half a million ballots cast in a November special election from county election officials, saying he’s investigating a ballot count discrepancy.

County elections officials have disputed the claims by Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco, a Republican. California Attorney General Rob Bonta, a Democrat, called Bianco’s move unprecedented and says it is designed to sow distrust in elections.

Bianco held a news conference Friday saying his office had launched the investigation after receiving a complaint from a local citizens group about the ballot count from a November 2025 special election on redistricting.

In the special election, voters approved a measure to redraw congressional district lines to favor Democrats in the upcoming midterm election. The measure passed in the county by a margin of more than 80,000 votes.

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Bianco seized ballots in Riverside County, the inland California county of 2.5 million people where he has twice been elected sheriff. He called the effort “a fact-finding mission.”

“This investigation is simple: Physically count the ballots and compare that result with the total votes reported,” he said Friday.

Bianco is one of two prominent Republicans running for governor in a crowded June primary that includes more than half a dozen Democrats. California runs a top-two primary system that puts all candidates on the same ballot, regardless of party, and sends the two candidates who get the most voters onto the November general election.

Leading California Democrats are worried that their party has so many candidates, they risk splitting the vote and sending Bianco and Steve Hilton, another top Republican, onto the general election. That would be a stunning outcome in the heavily Democratic state.

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Bianco said the investigation had “absolutely nothing to do” with his campaign for governor.

“I have a duty to investigate alleged crime in Riverside County,” he said.

The effort came as President Donald Trump has repeatedly disputed the results of the 2020 election, citing unsubstantiated instances of fraud. His administration recently seized ballots and other documents from an election office in Georgia. Some Republicans have mirrored Trump’s rhetoric on voting in their states.

Bonta has repeatedly sent letters to Bianco’s office over the last two months saying his staff is not qualified to conduct a recount. In one of the letters, Bonta wrote that the ballot seizure was “unacceptable” and “sets a dangerous precedent and will only sow distrust in our elections.”

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The letters said Bianco seized nearly 1,000 boxes of ballots and elections materials from the county’s elections office with a warrant in February. At issue, Bianco said, is a discrepancy a citizen group reported between the handwritten ballot intake logs and the number of votes reported to the state.

Bianco said the alleged discrepancy amounted to about 45,800 votes — a difference elections officials have refuted at county meetings, saying the machine count and the final count submitted to the state differed by about 100 votes. They argue the handwritten rolls, which were not relied on to check the count, were being kept by temporary elections workers who had worked long days and may have made mistakes.

Bianco said Friday that the count had started and stopped, but would now resume under the supervision of a special master appointed by a judge.

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