Connect with us
DAPA Banner
DAPA Coin
DAPA
COIN PAYMENT ASSET
PRIVACY · BLOCKDAG · HOMOMORPHIC ENCRYPTION · RUST
ElGamal Encrypted MINE DAPA
🚫 GENESIS SOLD OUT
DAPAPAY COMING

NewsBeat

Replica Locomotion No.1 steam rides to start at Darlington

Published

on

Replica Locomotion No.1 steam rides to start at Darlington

Hopetown Heritage Railway, based at the 1861 Shed, is marking its second birthday with a programme of steam services running from July through September.

For the first time, passengers will be able to journey behind Replica Locomotion No.1, travelling in the Experiment coach that featured during the S&DR200 festival celebrations.

Organisers describe it as a “rare opportunity” to ride behind historic steam locomotives on a new heritage railway line celebrating Darlington’s pioneering railway story and the legacy of the Stockton & Darlington Railway.

Earlier dates will see trains hauled by Andrew Barclay Works No.2134, known as W.T.T, pulling a restored 1910 luxury Edwardian-style London & South Western Railway No.1520 passenger carriage in salmon and brown livery.

Advertisement

Rides operate between 10.30am and 3.30pm on running days, with the last train departing at 3pm.

Stockton & Darlington Railway. (Image: The Northern Echo)

Services leave every 30 minutes, with each trip lasting around 20 minutes over a 2km stretch of track.

The celebrations build towards the 201st anniversary of the Stockton & Darlington Railway, with Replica Locomotion No.1 leading services on several September weekends.

On Sunday, September 27, one of the nation’s best-known steam locomotives, 60163 Tornado, will take charge of the train, with the modern icon expected to draw enthusiasts from across the region.

Advertisement

Tickets for rides behind W.T.T and Replica Locomotion No.1 are £7.50 per passenger, with a flat fare applying to all passengers including children, toddlers and carers.

There are no concessions, and prices for the Tornado rides are still to be confirmed.

Only guide and assistance dogs are permitted on board, and all passengers must carry a valid ticket and present it at the attraction entrance and again to the ride operator.

Steam rides are scheduled on selected dates from July 18 through to September 27, and visitors are advised to check the latest timetable and booking details before travelling, as arrangements are subject to change.

Advertisement

You can find more information here: Hopetown – Steam Rides

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

NewsBeat

James Corden and his wife Julia Carey return to Beverly Hills as they enjoy dinner date near their old neighbourhood after quitting LA life for the UK

Published

on

James Corden and his wife Julia Carey have been enjoying some time together in their old home city of Los Angeles, heading out for a romantic dinner date this week

Advertisement

James Corden and his wife Julia Carey have been enjoying some time together in their old home city of Los Angeles, heading out for a romantic dinner date this week.

The couple were spotted strolling to celebrity-favorite pasta restaurant Funke in Beverly Hills.

The TV star, 47, looked dapper in a black shirt and jeans whilst his wife of 14 years looked chic in a white coord set and sandals.

The couple used to live just five miles from Beverly Hills in a vast family home in the exclusive Brentwood Park neighbourhood.

Advertisement

They sold the seven-bedroom estate in 2023 for $17.1 million after James quit his US series The Late, Late Show to relocate back home to the UK.

Lately though the star has been back Stateside, returning to US broadcasting to host the World Cup after show for Fox, with ex-England captain Rio Ferdinand and comedian Ian Karmel, formerly co-head writer on The Late Late Show.

James Corden and his wife Julia Carey have been enjoying some time together in their old home city of Los Angeles, heading out for a romantic dinner date this week

Advertisement

‘Soccer is a massive part of my life,’ he explained when his new venture was announced. ‘In the eight and a half years that I lived in Los Angeles, I would go and watch Galaxy games with Zlatan Ibrahimović when he was playing, and I saw the rise of LA.’

‘It really feels like now is an incredible time for North America to be hosting this tournament and we’re going to really try and have some fun.’

James and Julia, who married in 2012, share three children, Max, 13, Carey, 10, and Charlotte, seven, and he has admitted it has been ‘hard’ on his family to split their time between their home in the UK and US for James’ work since their relocation.

The actor was also working in the US last autumn, starring in the Broadway musical Art.  

Advertisement

He explained to People.com back then how his family had been flying back and forth.

‘It’s hard, but very lucky we were here for the whole time of rehearsals and they’ll be back out for a couple of weeks in October,’ he said. ‘I get to go home, actually, this weekend because I had something I was already booked to do before this arrived, so … it’s okay, we’re getting through it.’

James quit his job hosting The Late Late Show after eight years to spend more time with his family.

It aired its last episode in April 2023, and James subsequently moved back to London with Julia and their three children.

Advertisement
The couple were spotted strolling to celebrity-favorite pasta restaurant Funke in Beverly Hills three years after relocating from LA to the UK

The couple were spotted strolling to celebrity-favorite pasta restaurant Funke in Beverly Hills three years after relocating from LA to the UK 

Explaining his decision to Extra, he said: ‘My kids are getting older, their grandparents are getting older, and it perhaps just felt like the right time for us as a family to be freer in our decisions.’

Speaking to Drew Barrymore about his exit, James admitted: ‘Look it’s not easy in any way to walk away from something that is so, I mean, I’ll never work in a better environment than the one I work in now.

‘Nothing about leaving the show was to do with not enjoying it. I love it. But the truth is it became a very easy decision because I always knew it was an adventure and I never, ever considered it to be the final destination.

Advertisement

‘But I will know, at my core, that the best thing for me and the best thing for us as a family is to put down some roots in London, and it feels absolutely right in every single way.’

Advertisement

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Girl, 4, dies in crash as ‘devastated’ family pay tribute to ‘sassy and funny’ sister

Published

on

Wales Online

Olive Farrow was tragically killed after being hit by a car in Nottinghamshire on Sunday

The family of a four year old girl who tragically died after being struck by a vehicle have described her as a “cheeky, funny and sassy little girl” who was excitedly looking forward to beginning primary school.

Emergency services were called to Nottingham Road in Gotham at 2.28pm on Sunday after reports that Olive Farrow had been involved in a collision, according to Nottinghamshire Police.

The force confirmed that the youngster sadly died in hospital shortly afterwards. A 59-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of causing death by dangerous driving and has subsequently been released on bail, reports the Daily Star.

Advertisement

In a moving tribute issued by the police on Friday, Olive’s family stated: “Olive was a cheeky, funny and sassy little girl, who may have been tiny in size, but she certainly made up for it with her big personality.

“Not a day went by without Olive singing and dancing her way round the house and spreading her affection; always kissing and cuddling and going out of her way to be kind to everyone.”

“Olive’s memory will live on with all the colourful paintings we have around the house. Quite often she would take herself off and come back with a beautiful work of art as she was so creative.”

They added that she was “inseparable” from her two brothers Teddy and Sonny, whom she “looked up to with so much love”.

Her family continued: “Olive was due to join Sonny at primary school, having had her taster sessions. She was so excited to be joining her brother there.

“No words can express the loss and pain felt across the family and all that knew Olive, we are utterly devastated to think we can no longer hold her in our arms.

“We would like to thank the community for coming together to support us through this difficult time. It has helped greatly to see the outpouring of love with the messages and flowers laid on Nottingham Road.”

Advertisement

The family has organised a vigil at St Lawrence’s Church in Gotham on Friday for friends, relatives and members of the local community, and have requested that media representatives do not attend.

Sergeant Paul Clark, from Nottinghamshire Police, said: “This is a deeply tragic incident, and our thoughts continue to be with Olive’s loved ones at this unimaginably difficult time.

“The circumstances of her death are being investigated, and we would ask people not to speculate on social media. I would also ask the privacy of the family is respected as they come to terms with what has happened, including at today’s vigil.”

Anyone with information is asked to contact the police quoting incident 424 of July 12.

Advertisement

Ensure our latest news and sport headlines always appear at the top of your Google Search by making us a Preferred Source. Click here to activate or add us as Preferred Source.

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Essex crash death: George Dennis’s heartbroken mother pays tribute to ‘kindest’ 11-year-old who died in lorry collision

Published

on

Essex crash death: George Dennis’s heartbroken mother pays tribute to ‘kindest’ 11-year-old who died in lorry collision

An 11-year-old who died after a collision with a lorry was “a bright light” in the lives of his family and friends, his grieving mother says.

George Dennis was seriously injured in the incident on Ongar’s Epping Road on 10 July, about 4.20pm.

He was rushed to hospital but later died.

Essex Police said that the driver of the lorry was arrested on suspicion of causing death by dangerous driving.

Advertisement

The 48-year-old man, from Derbyshire, has been bailed until mid-September while officers continue their investigation.

George’s mother Emma has now paid tribute to him in a statement released through police.

George, 11, was an avid football fan
George, 11, was an avid football fan (Essex Police)

Her son “had his whole life ahead of him”, she wrote.

“George was a bright light in our lives.

“He had the kindest heart, a cheeky smile, and a personality that was truly one of a kind.

Advertisement

“He was full of life, always making people laugh, and brought so much happiness to everyone who knew him.

“He leaves behind a special group of friends whose lives have been changed forever.

“They have lost not just a classmate, but a loyal friend, teammate, and someone who made every day brighter, even though they all supported different teams.”

George was ‘loved beyond words’, his mum says
George was ‘loved beyond words’, his mum says (Essex Police)

She said her son was about to leave primary school and was “so excited for the next chapter of his life”.

She added: “George was absolutely football mad and a devoted Tottenham Hotspur supporter.

Advertisement

“Football was his passion, and it brought him so much joy and happiness.

“Always so passionate, shouting at the telly watching every game when his beloved Spurs scored.

“A noise I will miss for a lifetime.”

She said that George had been “loved beyond words by his whole family”.

Advertisement

Police are appealing for witnesses and anyone driving in the vicinity at the time who may have captured footage on dashcam to contact them, quoting incident 1045 of 10 July.

Information can be reported on the force’s website, through the live chat service or by calling 101.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Youri Tielemans praises unsung hero involved in his transfer to Manchester United

Published

on

Manchester Evening News

Man Utd announced the signing of Belgium international Youri Tielemans from Aston Villa earlier this week.

Youri Tielemans has revealed Jonny Evans played a small role in his transfer to Manchester United. On Tuesday, United announced the signing of Tielemans for £35million from Aston Villa.

Advertisement

Villa did not want to lose Tielemans this summer, but he expressed a desire to move to Manchester. He signed a five-year contract and will join up with the squad for pre-season after enjoying a post-World Cup break.

Tielemans arrives with bags of Premier League experience, having previously played for Leicester City before his stint with Villa.

Evans played alongside Tielemans at the King Power Stadium. The pair both started in Leicester’s 2021 FA Cup final win over Chelsea, when Tielemans scored from distance to secure a 1-0 victory.

Northern Irishman Evans returned to United on a free transfer when his Leicester contract expired. He retired from playing last summer and now works as a first-team coach on Michael Carrick’s backroom staff.

Tielemans also played with Harry Maguire at Leicester, but it was Evans who played a small role in his transfer.

“I haven’t spoken to Harry yet, but yeah, Jonny, he’s been a big influence,” Tielemans told United’s in-house media. “He spoke with the manager about me, my character, and my personality. I’ve always kept in touch with Jonny. He’s such a great guy.”

Tielemans discussed his move in more detail, adding: “I’m very happy, very excited to start, meet the teammates, and be on the pitch together.

Advertisement

“I’m looking forward to working with the manager. As a midfielder, he can give me a lot of tips, and I can learn from him. So I’m really looking forward to learning and, obviously, linking up with my teammates.

“The second part of last season, they went on a really good run of wins with this manager, and the players have always been the same, big quality inside the team, smart signings last season.

“To play with them is going to be really good. I’m ready to push on, I’m ready to make the next step in my career, and that’s why this is the perfect club for me. And I feel like the club is ambitious in that as well. They want to win and be really good on the pitch. That’s why I chose to come here.”

Speaking about Old Trafford, he added: “I’m yet to experience it as a home player, but as an away player, it’s a tough ground to come to. You can feel the atmosphere straight away once you come into the stadium; the history is there. To play for the home team is going to be nice.”

Advertisement

Tielemans captained Belgium at the World Cup this summer. He started every match at the tournament, scoring twice, until he missed his nation’s quarter-final clash with Spain after picking up a knock in the pre-game warm-up.

The 29-year-old also stepped up to wear the armband in his final season at Leicester.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Service charge tipping point for flat buyers as soaring costs lead lenders to refuse them a mortgage

Published

on

Crunch point: Some lenders won't offer a mortgage if the service charge exceeds 1% of a home's value

Flat owners are facing a service charge tipping point that could render their homes unsellable and unmortgageable.

In recent years, service charges have risen sharply while the price of flats has fallen. 

Now, mortgage brokers say they are seeing increasing numbers of people having their mortgage applications rejected due to this disconnect. 

Some banks have tightened their rules and now won’t offer mortgages on flats where the annual service charge exceeds 1 per cent of the property’s value. 

Advertisement

This is because a high service charge could have an impact on how easily a lender could sell the property were it to be repossessed. 

In 2025, some 37 per cent of flats had an annual service charge exceeding 1 per cent, according to property firm Hamptons, up from 28 per cent a decade earlier. 

It means a mortgage application on a flat valued at £300,000 with an annual service charge of £4,000 could be refused by some lenders.

Advertisement

Crunch point: Some lenders won’t offer a mortgage if the service charge exceeds 1% of a home’s value 

While some lenders may refuse the mortgage outright, many will make a call based on the opinion of their surveyor or valuer. 

William Coe of mortgage broker Cleerly says: ‘We are seeing an increase in mortgage applications stalling or failing purely due to spiralling service charges.

‘When a flat’s service charge approaches or hits that 1 per cent mark, many mainstream lenders will indeed defer to the surveyor. 

Advertisement

‘If the surveyor decides the fee is onerous or completely out of step with the local market, the property is flagged as unsuitable security, and the mortgage is declined flat out.’

Rising service charges and falling flat prices

Rising service charges combined with falling or flatlining values is a dangerous combination. 

Across England and Wales, flat values have risen 16 per cent on average over the last 10 years, according to Land Registry data. But in London, where flats make up more than half of the housing stock, the average price of a flat hasn’t moved in the last decade.

William Coe of mortgage broker Cleerly

William Coe of mortgage broker Cleerly

Advertisement

Meanwhile, the average service charge has risen 55.6 per cent over the last decade, according to Hamptons. 

This is Money readers have reported hikes of 50 per cent or more within the last five years alone.

The average leaseholder’s service charge bill now ranges from £1,525 a year for the cheapest 10 per cent of buildings to £8,680 for the top 10 per cent, according to the latest research by the Property Institute.

Last year, the average flat had an annual service charge equal to 0.9 per cent of its value, according to Hamptons – perilously close to the 1 per cent that some lenders are using as their line in the sand. 

Advertisement

Mortgage broker Aaron Strutt of Trinity Financial says: ‘If we have not already hit the tipping point then we are pretty close. 

‘People are worried about buying flats at the moment because of the fees and ongoing unknown costs.’

Recent analysis for This is Money by analytics firm PropertyData found some areas where service charges are way out of kilter with flat prices.

In the BD1 postcode in Bradford city centre, service charges averaged £2,023 while the average asking price for these properties was £68,050. It means the typical service charge equates to 3.13 per cent of the asking price.

Advertisement

The same could be seen in L2, in Liverpool’s city centre. Service charges there were £2,910 per year when the average asking price was £122,374. That means the service charge is 2.58 per cent of the asking price.

Advertisement

Valuations a ‘frequent hurdle’ 

When buying with a mortgage, the lender will always commission an independent valuation of the property.

Many buyers will view it as a formality, but just as a lender can decide not to lend to a certain individual, so too can it decide not to lend on a particular property.

The valuer or surveyor may also value the property at less than the sales price agreed, which means the buyer cannot proceed unless they cover the shortfall.

At a time when flat prices are falling in many areas, valuers are becoming nervous about flats because they can ultimately be sued by lenders if they get it badly wrong. 

Advertisement

Coe says: ‘We have seen a noticeable uptick in surveyors down-valuing flats against the agreed purchase price compared to this time last year.

‘Where we used to see occasional pushback, it is now a frequent hurdle with surveyors regularly cutting valuations by between 5 and 10 per cent of the agreed purchase price.’

Not all lenders have a hard cap 

If a flat does have a service charge of 1 per cent or more, the lender will need to make a call on whether to hand the buyer a mortgage. 

For some it will be a simple decision, as certain lenders have explicit, hard caps written into their lending criteria.

Advertisement

Lender Gen H states annual service charges must not exceed 1 per cent of the property’s purchase price or valuation, while others like MPowered Mortgages cap the combined service charge and ground rent at 1.5 per cent.

High Street lenders can be more flexible in some instances. 

Steph Lyke, partner at SAS Daniels

Steph Lyke, partner at SAS Daniels

Coe says: ‘Lenders like Santander or Barclays don’t necessarily apply a blunt percentage cap (like 1 per cent) to the property value. 

Advertisement

‘Instead, they treat the service charge strictly as a monthly financial commitment—exactly like a student loan or car finance.’ 

The reason the charge is so high will often be investigated. 

Steph Lyke, a partner in the residential property team at law firm SAS Daniels, says: ‘The breakdown of the service charges will need to be investigated, it could well be that the costs relate to a one off major works project, which generally the valuer would accept this as it is an indication of good property management. 

‘If the costs are unproportionate and due to poor management, or includes high management fees, then the lender will likely decline.’

Advertisement

Lenders may also instruct the surveyor to assess the service charge against the local market.

For example, a £4,000 annual service charge on a £300,000 flat which is 1.3 per cent of the home’s value might be rejected in a regional town where standard fees are £1,200. 

However, that same fee might be passed by a surveyor in London or Cambridge if the block includes a concierge, lifts, and complex building systems, as it reflects the ‘market norm’ for the area. 

Why lenders are wary of rising service charges

Lenders like certainty. A monthly loan or credit card repayment is a fixed, known commitment over a set period, making it straightforward to model in an affordability calculator.

Advertisement

The inherent danger with service charges is the total lack of control over future costs. 

Cleery’s Coe says: ‘A managing agent or freeholder can hike fees dramatically with very little recourse for the leaseholder.

‘For a lender’s risk committee, that word ‘could’ is a major red flag. 

‘If a bank has to take back a property, their primary objective is to recover their funds quickly through a swift resale. If the service charge has spiralled to a point where the next buyer cannot secure a mortgage on it, the property becomes illiquid.’

Advertisement

Rising service charges are also in some cases restricting how much buyers are able to borrow.

This is because they must be factored in to the borrower’s monthly outgoings when assessing affordability.  

Coe says: ‘Over the last two years, building insurance premiums, maintenance costs, and cladding-related expenses have driven service charges up significantly and it is no longer unusual to see modest two-bedroom flats with fees exceeding £3,500 per annum. 

‘When this is plugged into a lender’s affordability calculator, it eats into the applicant’s maximum borrowing capacity, turning a previously viable mortgage offer into a decline.

Advertisement

Best mortgage rates and how to find them

Mortgage rates have shot up again due to inflation triggered by the conflict with Iran reversing hopes that the Bank of England would cut rates. This means those remortgaging or buying a home face higher costs.

That makes it even more important to search out the best possible rate for you and get good mortgage advice, whether you are a first-time buyer, home owner or buy-to-let landlord.

This is Money’s partner L&C can help you with its fee-free mortgage service.

Advertisement

> Compare mortgage rates

> Find the right mortgage for you 

To help our readers find the best mortgage, This is Money has partnered with the UK’s leading fee-free broker L&C.

This is Money and L&C’s mortgage calculator can let you compare deals to see which ones suit your home’s value and level of deposit.

Advertisement

You can compare fixed rate lengths, from two-year fixes, to five-year fixes and ten-year fixes.

If you’re ready to find your next mortgage, why not use This is Money and L&C’s online Mortgage Finder. It will search 1,000’s of deals from more than 90 different lenders to discover the best deal for you.

> Find your best mortgage deal with This is Money and L&C 

Mortgage service provided by London & Country Mortgages (L&C), which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (registered number: 143002). The FCA does not regulate most Buy to Let mortgages. Your home or property may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage. 

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Subtle warning signs of deadly pneumonia everyone MUST know: Yet another celebrity is killed by suffocating disease that can go unnoticed for months – and people of all ages are at risk

Published

on

Sam Neill, who starred in the Jurassic Park films, died from pneumonia on Monday aged 78

The ‘sudden and unexpected’ death of Jurassic Park star Sam Neill has been attributed to pneumonia – the lung disease that kills some 25,000 people in Britain every year.

The passing of the 78-year-old may come as somewhat of a surprise to fans, given that he announced his remission from blood cancer in April and was ‘cancer-free’ when he died, according to his agent.

But Neill is not the first noteworthy figure to fall victim to pneumonia over the past few years. 

It was named on the death certificate of both Val Kilmer and Diane Keaton last year, who died aged 65 and 79, respectively.

Advertisement

And in December, Ibiza-based lothario Wayne Lineker, 63 – brother of football pundit Gary – revealed that he too almost became a casualty of the disabling respiratory condition. He told fans that he had been hospitalised after a virus he picked up in Dubai left him fighting for his life in hospital, adding that his recovery could take months. 

Now, experts have told the Daily Mail that the condition is not just an affliction of the elderly; it was once coined the ‘old man’s friend’ in reference to the peaceful and painless death it offered.

In fact, many sufferers may have very few symptoms, meaning it goes undetected and untreated, potentially causing long-term lung damage.

Here, doctors reveal the need-to-know warning signs of the condition and whether you could be vulnerable. 

Advertisement

Sam Neill, who starred in the Jurassic Park films, died from pneumonia on Monday aged 78

Diane Keaton, whose acting career spanned more than five decades, died from bacterial pneumonia at the age of 79 last October

Diane Keaton, whose acting career spanned more than five decades, died from bacterial pneumonia at the age of 79 last October

According to Professor Paul Hunter, a virus expert at the University of East Anglia, pneumonia is an infection ‘in the deep part of the lungs where oxygen and carbon dioxide transfer between your blood and the atmosphere’.  

Advertisement

There are two main types: viral pneumonia and bacterial pneumonia.

Viral pneumonia – caused by viruses such as influenza, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and Covid – is generally milder, although it can sometimes be severe.  

Meanwhile, bacterial pneumonia – when bacteria enter and infect the lungs – is often more serious and may require treatment.

Untreated bacterial infections like pneumococcal pneumonia ‘can have quite a high mortality rate’, Professor Hunter said.

Advertisement

In rarer cases, pneumonia can develop after food, drink or vomit enters the lungs instead of air. This is known as aspiration pneumonia. 

More people die from pneumonia in Britain than anywhere else in Europe, according to lung charity Asthma and Lung UK.

Meanwhile in the US there are around 42,000 deaths per year.

Those with weakened immune systems, such as patients undergoing cancer treatment, elderly people or babies, are more vulnerable to pneumonia, Professor Hunter says.

Advertisement

Not only are they more likely to contract an infection that triggers the condition, their body may struggle to stop it progressing and reaching the lungs.

However, pneumonia can affect anyone – and can be life-threatening at any age.

It is the leading cause of death among children under five, killing more than 700,000 children per year.

‘People can get pneumonia throughout their life. It’s more lethal at the extremes of age in the very young and the very old,’ he said.

Advertisement

‘Globally, deaths from chest infections, most of which are pneumonia, are one of the more common causes of deaths in children, and most of those are in low income countries.

‘But you can get pneumonia throughout life and you can actually die from it throughout life.’

Perhaps the most difficult-to-spot type of the disease is so-called silent pneumonia, sometimes called ‘walking’ pneumonia due to its low impact on patients’ daily lives. 

In other words, those with the condition can go to work, do exercise and generally go about their daily lives while experiencing little more than a mild cough.

Advertisement

But experts say if a cough or cold symptoms have continued for more than three weeks it’s important to seek medical help. 

While most healthy people will eventually clear silent pneumonia without treatment, those with respiratory conditions like asthma may struggle – and the longer the lung inflammation persists, the higher the risk of long-term damage.

Many with ‘walking’ pneumonia may also still be harbouring a contagious infection which can be easily passed on to vulnerable friends and family.

If a GP suspects pneumonia they may offer antibiotics or refer patients for scans of the lungs to confirm the diagnosis and assess potential damage. 

Advertisement

For more obvious cases, symptoms include a cough that produces mucus, shortness of breath, a high temperature, chest pain and body aches. 

Fatigue, loss of appetite and wheezing are also common.

Babies suffering the condition will make grunting noises when breathing, experts advise. Elderly people, meanwhile, may also become confused. 

Val Kilmer died from pneumonia aged 65 last April having previously suffered throat cancer

Val Kilmer died from pneumonia aged 65 last April having previously suffered throat cancer

Advertisement

Professor Hunter said the main symptoms to watch out for are ‘coughing and breathlessness’. 

It is possible to check if you’re likely to be suffering the illness by testing your blood oxygen levels, he adds – this indicates how efficiently oxygen is travelling from your lungs to your bloodstream. 

This is done using a tool called a pulse oximeter – a device which, when clipped to the end of a finger, shines light through the skin to measure oxygen in the blood.

Professor Hunter advises that these are available to buy from many high street pharmacies, and were made popular during the Covid lockdowns with thousands investing in them for peace of mind. 

Advertisement

Readings of around 92 per cent or lower should prompt people to seek medical attention, he warned.

Fortunately most people who develop pneumonia will not become seriously ill. And of those who do end up hospitalised, roughly 15 per cent die within a month of admission.

This figure rises to around 30 per cent if a patient is admitted to the intensive care unit.

People treated in hospital are usually given antibiotics, fluids and sometimes steroids to help fight the infection, as well as oxygen if they are struggling to breathe.

Advertisement

Professor Hunter says there are highly effective ways to protect yourself from pneumonia – for example, by staying up to date with pneumococcal, flu, RSV and Covid vaccines.

Stopping smoking can also dramatically reduce the risk.

Just 25 per cent of adults in the US have received the pneumococcal vaccine, while almost three quarters of Britons over 65 have taken the jab. 

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

8 best expert-approved products and treatments worth the splurge

Published

on

8 best expert-approved products and treatments worth the splurge

“The future of aesthetics is about smarter treatments, not more aggressive ones. That’s why I introduced RedTouch Pro into my clinic. I’d been waiting for a technology that doesn’t just treat the visible signs of ageing but also addresses the biological cause. It encourages the skin to produce new, high-quality collagen, rather than simply resurfacing the skin.”

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Andy Burnham Vows To ‘Fix The Big Things’ In First Speech As Labour Leader

Published

on

Andy Burnham Vows To 'Fix The Big Things' In First Speech As Labour Leader

Andy Burnham will announce his plan to “fix the big things that politics has neglected” in his first major speech as Labour leader today.

The Makerfield MP will be announced as the winner of the race to replace Keir Starmer during a special conference in London.

Burnham ran uncontested with the support of the vast majority of Labour MPs.

He will become the prime minister on Monday, although much of the detail of his plans for government remain a mystery.

Advertisement

Speaking on Friday, Burnham will say Labour needs to give people across Britain “the hope that we will make this country the best it can be”.

He will criticise the government of the 1980s for centralising political power in Westminster and giving economic power to private companies, and argue the country needs “a new path to the one we’ve been on for the last 40 years”.

After Starmer was accused of not staying true to Labour values, Burnham will promise a more “authentically Labour” programme including a focus on economic renewal, more public control, re-industrialisation and power back in the hands of local communities.

Burnham will also pledge to make his party more united and focused on practical solutions instead of internal division, and more open to cross-party consensus.

Advertisement

He will commit to being a leader “for the North and the South, for Scotland, for Wales and for Northern Ireland, and for every town and every city in every nation and region of this great country”.

He is set to pay tribute to Starmer too, for managing to get the party back in government after its catastrophic loss in the 2019 general election.

During the outgoing prime minister’s final TV interview as Labour leader on Thursday, Starmer told Sky News he is ending his time at his party’s helm “knowing that I leave the country in a better state than I found it”.

He also claimed it is he who laid the “foundation for Labour to win the next general election”, while acknowledging that many of his own MPs no longer thought he was the right person to lead them into such a public vote.

Advertisement

Listen to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Vahid Aberi charged with assisting Iran’s intelligence service

Published

on

The frontage of Westminster Magistrates' Court

A 39-year-old man has been charged with assisting Iran’s intelligence service.

Vahid Aberi, of Liverpool, was arrested in Birmingham on Wednesday following an investigation by Counter Terrorism Policing.

Aberi was taken to a police station in West Midlands with detectives later carrying out searches at properties in Birmingham and Liverpool as part of their investigation.

He has since been charged with assisting a foreign intelligence service under the National Security Act 2023 and is due to appear at Westminster Magistrates’ Court later.

Advertisement

Commander Helen Flanagan, Head of Counter Terrorism Policing London, said: “We have seen a significant and sustained increase in the tempo of our work in national security investigations in recent years.

“This case is yet another example of where we’ve intervened to disrupt suspected activity linked to foreign intelligence services.

“While we can’t comment in detail around the allegations now that a man has been charged, I do want to reassure the public that we have not identified any direct threat to them nor any threat towards a community or individual in connection with this investigation.”

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Geely EX2 arrives in Britain… but China’s best-selling car costs three times as much here

Published

on

China's best-selling car is officially coming to the UK in a matter of weeks - but the £7,000 price tag in its home market will be massively inflated for British showrooms

China’s best-selling car is officially coming to the UK in a matter of weeks – but Britons will have to pay a lot more for one than Chinese drivers do.

Geely’s electric EX2 – called the Galaxy Xingyuan in its home market – was China’s most popular new model in 2025.

The brand – which set up in the UK only last year and already sells the electric EX5 and Starray EM-i plug-in hybrid SUVs – shifted 465,775 examples in its home market last year.

To put that number into perspective, that’s almost a quarter of all car registrations in the UK in 2025 and more than eight times the number of units sold by Britain’s most popular model, the Ford Puma (55,488 registrations).

Advertisement

So, what’s making it such a hit in China? One of the main reasons is price; the electric supermini costs just £7,000 new.

How is it so cheap? Partly due to supply chain control, with every component produced in China, cutting out any middleman premiums. But it is also thanks to government subsidies and a fierce price war between brands.

It’s the case for all models sold in both China and the UK: the BYD Dolphin, for instance, starts from £30,230 in our showrooms but in its domestic market rings in from ¥99,800 – just £11,000. 

The bad news for drivers in Britain is that the EX2 won’t have the same bargain-basement price tag it has at home – and that could be a major stumbling block. 

Advertisement

China’s best-selling car is officially coming to the UK in a matter of weeks – but the £7,000 price tag in its home market will be massively inflated for British showrooms

Starting at £20,990, it’s competing with seriously strong competition backed by years of heritage in Britain – think the Renault 5 E-Tech, Citroen e-C3 and Peugeot e-208.

It too is a massive £9,000 more expensive than the cheapest electric car sold in Britain, the Dacia Spring, which is likely to limit its showroom appeal.

Advertisement

The car maker says the ‘modern compact all-electric’ EX2 is ‘designed to make advanced electric mobility more attainable for UK customers’.

It’s likely to be among the roomiest electric superminis on the market, much larger than a Fiat Grande Panda or VW ID.Polo.

But its £21,000 price tag won’t get you very far… literally.

The entry-level version is the Pro model, with a relatively puny 35kWh battery and an 81bhp electric motor sending power to the rear wheels.

Advertisement

Based on official tests, Geely reckons it will be capable of 155 miles between charges – though in the real world, that figure is likely to be somewhat lower.

To put that into perspective, the cheapest Renault 5 currently costs £21,495, inclusive of the Government’s lower tier Electric Car Grant (ECG) of £1,500.

Yet the funky French hatchback has a 40kWh battery and a claimed range of 190 miles, easily gazumping the Geely for an extra £500 up front.

Thankfully, the EX2’s mid-spec Max and Ultra trim levels have the larger 47kWh battery linked to a 114bhp e-motor, returning a claimed 214 miles on a full charge – a distance most buyers shopping in this segment should find acceptable.

Advertisement

Yet with prices of £23,490 and £25,490 respectively, this is no match for the range-topping Renault, which for £23,945 (inclusive of the upper tier £3,750 ECG) has a 52kWh battery pack and can travel 252 miles between charges.

All variants of the EX2 feature DC rapid charging at up to 80kW and a 6.6kW onboard charger. Using a public fast charger, owners can replenish the battery from a 30 per cent state of charge to 80 per cent in around 25 minutes.

Starting at £20,990 in the UK, it is £9,000 more expensive than the cheapest electric car in the UK, the Dacia Spring and three times what it costs in China

Starting at £20,990 in the UK, it is £9,000 more expensive than the cheapest electric car in the UK, the Dacia Spring and three times what it costs in China

The EX2 will be one of the roomiest small electric hatchbacks on the market, much larger than a VW ID.Polo or a Renault 5 E-Tech

The EX2 will be one of the roomiest small electric hatchbacks on the market, much larger than a VW ID.Polo or a Renault 5 E-Tech

Advertisement

While the EX2 won’t set any pulses racing with its performance and range, it is brimming with gadgets and equipment.

Even the entry model features a 14.6-inch touchscreen infotainment system, a secondary 8.8-inch digital driver’s display, Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, keyless entry and start, and LED headlights.

The safety kit is pretty comprehensive too; adaptive cruise control, autonomous emergency braking, lane-keeping assist, blind-spot detection, rear cross-traffic alert and a driver monitoring system are all standard equipment.

Oddly, the mid-spec Max trim includes no additional features, only the larger battery pack and more potent electric motor.

Advertisement
As is the case with most Chinese brands, the Geely EX2 will be very well equipped, featuring a mass of big car safety and luxury features as standard

As is the case with most Chinese brands, the Geely EX2 will be very well equipped, featuring a mass of big car safety and luxury features as standard

For the top-spec model - which costs £25,490 - the only optional extra is this white interior finish, which costs just £200 more

For the top-spec model – which costs £25,490 – the only optional extra is this white interior finish, which costs just £200 more

Geely is another of a dozen Chinese newcomers to arrive in the UK. It launched late last year with the Starray EM-i plug-in hybrid SUV (middle) before the arrival of the electric EX5 (right) in 2026. The EX2 takes the range to three cars across two segments

Geely is another of a dozen Chinese newcomers to arrive in the UK. It launched late last year with the Starray EM-i plug-in hybrid SUV (middle) before the arrival of the electric EX5 (right) in 2026. The EX2 takes the range to three cars across two segments

The range-topping Ultra adds two-tone paint, a power tailgate and a 360-degree parking camera.

Advertisement

It also comes with a few luxuries usually reserved for larger premium cars, including ambient lighting, heated seats, a heated steering wheel and an upgraded sound system.

It seems the only optional extra customers can choose is a white interior, which comes at a £200 premium – much less than you’d typically pay for a different cabin colour elsewhere.

Michael Yang, general manager at Geely Auto UK, says the EX2’s arrival ‘represents an important step in our mission to make intelligent electric mobility accessible to more customers across the UK’.

The big question is: how comfortable will British car buyers feel about paying £21,000 for a new car that costs a third as much in another market? Time will tell when it hits UK showrooms next month.

Advertisement

Daily Mail and This is Money will be driving one in August to find out if it can compete with established EV rivals around its UK price point.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025