It’s the end of a 36-year journey on the professional tour for Ken Doherty (Picture: Getty Images)
Ken Doherty will no longer compete on the professional snooker tour, but it’s fair to say he has made the most of his 36 years taking on the best players on the planet.
‘It’s been coming for a while,’ the 1997 world champion told Metro. ‘I was sad initially that I’m not going to be competing on the main tour anymore, but it’s probably relief as well. The time is right.’
One of the finest players in the world for much of the 90s and 00s, Doherty’s game started to slip after 20 years on tour and he says he has been hoping to rediscover the magic for a long while now.
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‘I was trying to search for something, thinking maybe things will improve,’ he said. ‘I played with a new cue to maybe get a bit of confidence, but no, it’s just not there anymore.
‘You just come to realise you can’t play the way you used to and it becomes frustrating. You feel a bit embarrassed sometimes with your performances and I don’t want to go through that again.
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‘I’ll say thank you, I’ve had a great time, great memories. I’m delighted to have won the things I’ve done. Disappointed to lose some of the matches and finals that I’ve lost, but winning the World Championship was the greatest day of my life as far as being a snooker player’s concerned. And to do it with a £2 cue and against one of the greatest of all time was the icing on the cake.’
Doherty has already been a popular pundit and commentator for many years (Picture: Shutterstock)
The 1997 World Championship win over Stephen Hendry was one of six ranking titles on Doherty’s CV, but he had a number of other close calls in big events.
Two more Crucible finals, three at the UK Championship and two at the Masters, with the Darlin of Dublin experiencing the vast difference between winning and losing those huge matches.
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‘When I won it in ’97, I came home on an open-top bus, 250,000 people lining the streets. Then the following year after losing in the final to John Higgins, came back to Dublin airport the next day and I had to get a f***ing taxi home! That’s the difference between winning and losing in a final! But that’s life.’
Doherty made his Crucible debut in 1991 against Steve Davis (Picture: Getty Images)
Crafty Ken duked it out with legendary names for years, experiences that will live for him forever.
‘Playing all the greats: [Ronnie] O’Sullivan, [John] Higgins, Hendry, Jimmy [White], [Steve] Davis, playing all those great players, some of the greatest players that will ever play the game, that was a joy,’ he said.
‘That was a joy to compete against them and play them in big matches. And overcome them, not all the time, but I did overcome them through my career, I beat them all.’
The most testing opponents are of little surprise, with Doherty saying: ‘Stephen and Ronnie, John Higgins and Williams, they were the toughest.
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Doherty taking on Ronnie O’Sullivan at the 2003 Masters (Picture: Getty Images)
‘They were the ones I loved to have battles with, funnily enough, even though they were the toughest. Whether it be at the Masters or the UK or the World Championship, playing those guys at those championships, they were great occasions. And that’s what I miss. Those big, big matches against the big players.
‘I think the best one was I played Ronnie in the final of the Irish Masters at Goffs [in 1998]. He beat me, he played really well. The atmosphere was electric, it was just amazing.
‘But of course he failed a drugs test, there was marijuana in his system, so he had to hand me the trophy and the cheque for an extra 30 grand. It was the most expensive joint that he ever smoked in his life! He never spoke to me for about six months afterwards.’
Outside of the most obvious nightmare foes, Doherty remembers one of his punditry colleagues being a serious test.
‘I tell you who was really tough and he was such a clever player who I loved playing against, because it was a battle of strategies, was Alan McManus,’ he said.
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Alan McManus and Doherty met at the 2014 World Championship (Picture: Getty Images)
‘He was he was such a wonderful player, he knew every inch of the snooker table. They called him Angles because his safety was was second to none, he was brilliant. It was a great battle of mind games against him, he was a quality player.
‘Although he won the Masters, which was great, he doesn’t get the proper recognition that he probably deserves. But he was a top player for a long, long time.’
The 1997 Sheffield final will never be topped, but there are plenty of other contests that stick in the mind of the Irishman.
‘There’s a few finals,’ he remembers. ‘I beat John [Higgins 9-8] from 8-5 down in Malta in the final. And then both got so drunk we got thrown off the plane and we’re on the front pages and the back pages when I got home!
‘The Williams World final that I lost 18-16 in 2003, the semi-final against Paul Hunter from 15-9 down to to win 17-16. That was probably one of the greatest matches and greatest comebacks I’ve ever had. The UK final I lost 10-9 to Williams. That was in the same season, 2002-2003. He pipped me in two of the major finals that year. There’s been lots of great matches.’
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Don’t worry, getting thrown off a plane with John Higgins the morning after the 2006 Malta Cup final does not pass by without explanation, as the two created a little slice of scandal.
‘We went out to a nightclub,’ said Doherty of hitting a Maltese town with Higgins after edging him in the final. ‘I got back at 5 o’clock in the morning. The taxi was already waiting for me outside the hotel when I staggered back in to to get my cue and suitcase.
‘I came downstairs, got into the taxi, we were driving to the airport and John was staggering up the road and he was on the same flight as me, the 7 o’clock flight.
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‘I checked in and went up to the hotel bar and had another drink. Then John was last to check in, he made it and had another drink with me and then we got on the bus. His cue got stuck in the doors, and everybody started laughing, including me, but you know what my laugh is like, I don’t think people appreciated my laugh at 7 o’clock in the morning.
‘He was last on the plane. I managed to get on and sit down and the captain stopped him as he was staggering up the stairs and said he’s not travelling. I got up to defend him and say, “oh, he’ll be okay, just let him sit down, he’ll be fine.” But he said, “no, he’s not travelling and neither are you. You’re getting off with him!”
‘We got on a flight to Heathrow that night and there were three paparazzi waiting for us as soon as we get off the plane! We were on the front and back pages. Rock n roll.’
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Some of that night in Malta might be a haze, but snooker has provided unforgettable moments away from the table for the Dubliner.
‘I think one of the favourites was when Alex Ferguson rang me up and invited me to Old Trafford to parade the trophy,’ he recalls. ‘First of all, I told him to f**k off because I thought it was one of my mates winding me up! He says, “Kenny, this is Alex Ferguson, and I’m not going to f***ing ask you a second time!”
‘So I got there and he took me down to meet the players. Eric Cantona came over and shook my hand. I went out on the pitch and my legs were like jelly carrying the cup. All the United fans singing “there’s only one Kenny Doherty” and all the West Ham fans in the away end singing “there’s only one Ronnie O’Sullivan!”
World champion Doherty walked out at Old Trafford (Picture: Shutterstock)
‘Playing a frame with George Best, shaking Muhammad Ali’s hand at the Sports Personality of the Year in 1999.
‘The Edge, tapped me on the shoulder once, when I was talking to Bono after one of their concerts. I was with Michael Stipe and Roger Taylor. The Edge says, “Ken, Ken, you wouldn’t do me a favour, would you? You wouldn’t come over and say hello to me mother and her two friends?” She had no interest in talking to Michael Stipe, Roger Taylor or Bono, but her and her friends absolutely loved snooker.’
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As his professional playing days come to an end, there is a tinge of disappointment of how it has come about.
Doherty has been playing on an invitational tour card in recent years and he has no issue with that no longer being offered, but feels he could have been informed earlier than he was.
Doherty landed six ranking titles over his career (Picture: Getty Images)
‘I don’t think the option was there anyway. They weren’t going to give me a card, so they sort of made my mind up for me, you know?’ Doherty said of retirement.
‘It would have been nicer to find out a little bit earlier, then I could have maybe planned something at the World Championship. The timing could have been a bit better, but it is what it is. I’m happy.’
Doherty’s final match proved to be a 10-5 defeat to Patrick Whelan in the first round of World Championship qualifying, which felt like the end even before the decision was made.
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‘I think after this year’s World Championship I knew anyway,’ he said. ‘I tried to practice to have a good year and a decent run, but it just wasn’t there. I felt this could be my last game.
‘I knew it was coming, but I was putting it off, hoping, but in the end I probably could have done it a few years ago.
‘It’s just my love for the game, I wanted to keep on and keep searching for something and that will never die, your love for the game.
Doherty won matches in four ranking tournaments in his final season (Picture: Getty Images)
‘I’ll still play snooker because I love it and I will play exhibitions and I’ll still do shows and I’m still playing the seniors and I love that as well, but it’s not as much pressure, I can just relax. The time is right.’
Doherty will never be far from big time snooker, as a prominent pundit and commentator on major tournaments and still ready to play seniors events.
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He remains and will continue to be one of the sport’s most popular figures and greatest ambassadors, and someone snooker should be grateful for.
‘Well, listen, it’s given so much to me, it really has,’ he said. ‘It changed my life and I’m just so humbled by the amount of support that I’ve had over the years, and not just from fans all over the world, but also the snooker community themselves.
‘I will cherish that. I’ll always try to promote the game as best as possible and I’ll continue to do that.’
The overnight closures will mean daytime access remains unaffected.
Overnight repairs to a road in Hamilton are to take place from next week.
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Carriageway resurfacing works will take place from 8pm until 6am on Almada Street, from Douglas Street to Peacock Cross, from Monday, June 8.
The works are expected to last four consecutive nights and be completed by 6am on Thursday, June 11.
The overnight closures will mean daytime access remains unaffected.
During the overnight works, a diversion route will be in place.
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For eastbound traffic the alternative route will be Burnbank Road, Clydesdale Street, Douglas Street, Caird Street, Bothwell Road and Almada Street.
For westbound traffic the alternative route will be Muir Street, Palace Grounds Road, Blackswell Lane, Low Patrick Street, Duke Street, Brandon Street and Union Street.
South Lanarkshire Council’s head of Roads, Transportation and Fleet Services, Colin Park, said: “We have scheduled these works to take place overnight in a bid to minimise disruption, but we also apologise for any inconvenience that may occur during these essential road improvement works.
“We would request that all road users allow additional time for all journeys which involve the use of Almada Street during the times indicated and that they plan their journey accordingly.
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“We are sure everyone will appreciate the improved condition of the road when the works are complete.”
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Actress Zawe Ashton has urged young female stars to speak up if they’re uncomfortable filming sex scenes for TV or movies, comparing it to a form of ‘prostitution’
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Fresh Meat star Zawe Ashton has said actresses can feel pressured into filming sex scenes or risk being labelled “prudish” in their bid to get ahead in the industry. The 41-year-old actress, who is engaged to Tom Hiddleston, compared some intimate on-screen scenes to a form of “prostitution” and urged younger actresses to say “no” if they feel uncomfortable.
In a candid discussion on a topic rarely spoken about publicly, Ashton also revealed she was once given alcohol for “Dutch courage” before filming an intimate scene. Reflecting on her experiences, she said: “I’ve been in not nice situations on sets with sexual scenes, where you go, ‘Do you know what, I feel like a strong person and I can get myself over the threshold of this behaviour.’ There’s an element of survival there.”
“But sometimes younger actresses are made to feel as though they have to do these things. You’re in contractual conversations where you’re made to feel that if you don’t do it, you’re prudish, you’re not open, you’re not going to become the actress or have the career you really want.
“If you’re not comfortable, just say no. In life and art, no scene is worth taking over your mental health.” Ashton, who is also known for her role in The Marvels film franchise, said actors are often forced to compromise their own comfort in order to make sex scenes appear realistic on screen, revealing she had worn stick-on prosthetics while filming.
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She said: “If you’re asking me what it’s been like to make sex look real on screen, I will tell you it is a little bit like prostitution, not that I know what that’s like.
“You’d like to have a bonus for the scene. Often you’re covered in glycerin because it’s a sustainable way of creating sweat. Often you are at a pretty good level of nakedness. In my experience, I’ve had everything from a nude thong to a stick-on pair of jelly boobs, which is pretty exposing.”
The TV and film actress also recalled being so nervous before filming intimate scenes with Jake Gyllenhaal in the 2019 film Velvet Buzzsaw that she drank prosecco beforehand to calm her nerves.
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Speaking on the Miss Me podcast with Miquita Oliver last month, she said: “I was so nervous before this scene and some very kindly people on the production gave me a couple of mini bottles of prosecco in my trailer.
“It was a night shoot and I was feeling quite tipsy. But the prosecco is not just about the Dutch courage, it’s to quiet the noise when you walk away from the scene -a bit like when you walk away from a hook-up and think, ‘What just happened there?’”
Ashton met Hiddleston while starring together in the West End production of Betrayal, which later transferred to Broadway. The pair became romantically linked soon afterwards.
In 2022, it was revealed the couple were engaged after Ashton was seen wearing a large diamond ring shortly after the birth of their first child in October that year. In January 2025, they welcomed their second child.
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They recently appeared together on the red carpet at the Laurence Olivier Awards in London.
The FBI stormed a building in Bakersfield, California, to end a nearly 16-hour standoff during which the suspect had tied up hostages and claimed he strapped explosives to them and himself
21:01, 03 Jun 2026Updated 21:07, 03 Jun 2026
A man has been shot dead after taking 10 school employees hostage and claiming he had strapped explosives to himself.
Authorities stormed the building in Bakersfield, California, overnight, ending a nearly 16-hour standoff during which the suspect tied up half the hostages and also said he had put explosives on them and himself, police said.
The hostages – employees of the Kern County Superintendent of Schools – were found unharmed inside the building that also houses a Chase bank, said Bakersfield Assistant Police Chief Jeremy Blakemore.
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“Throughout the night, their families questioned whether or not they would be seen again but we are very grateful for the outcome,” Blakemore said during a news conference Wednesday.
Anthony Scott Searles-Harris, 41, was shot and killed around 4:20am, according to Sid Patel, special agent in charge in the FBI’s Sacramento office. Authorities said he was an Army veteran who was dishonourably discharged, had a history of trouble with law enforcement and was a registered sex offender.
Searles-Harris told police he had a bomb after barricading himself within the second floor of the building, Blakemore said. Authorities were testing the devices that Searles-Harris said were explosives, but Patel said they do not appear to be a concern.
One of the hostages was able to communicate with law enforcement using her phone until her battery died, Patel said. She was diabetic and didn’t have her medicine so officials knew she was at risk, he said.
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“I’m sure there’ll be mental scars that they’re living with, and we’ll have our victim specialist to help them,” Patel said.
While authorities declined to discuss a motive in the standoff, Blakemore said some of the demands Searles-Harris made involved asking for materials from an earlier case.
“He had concerns related to how his previous case had been handled and what the aftermath of that was, the sentencing and those kinds of things,” Blakemore said, without specifying details.
California Department of Justice and court records show Searles-Harris was on the state’s sex offender registry due to convictions in 2014 for sex crimes related to a child under 14 years of age. Those records show he was released from prison in 2018.
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FBI officials said Searles-Harris served about a year in the Army before being dishonourably discharged in 2007 for going AWOL.
Court records in Kern County, California, show Searles-Harris filed a petition to prevent domestic violence, and was involved in divorce proceedings that began in 2009 and note a young child, as well as a fight for guardianship years later in which he was listed as an objector.
During the news conference, Blakemore said he was aware of videos Searles-Harris had apparently posted criticising the sheriff’s office and claiming he was innocent of his previous sex crimes convictions. He said the videos were being reviewed but the department had no plans to investigate the claims of innocence.
It wasn’t clear why Searles-Harris targeted the school district office. “What unfolded was undoubtedly a terribly frightening and unsettling experience, and the composure our employees demonstrated throughout the 16-hour ordeal was extraordinary, John Mendiburu, the county schools superintendent, said in a statement.
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The standoff began early Tuesday afternoon, when officers responded to a call of a bomb threat at the Chase Bank building, a four-story office building with dark-tinted glass windows in Bakersfield, a city of about 380,000 residents about 100 miles northeast of Los Angeles.
The police department’s crisis negotiation team talked with Searles-Harris by phone and he released two hostages Tuesday night. Buildings nearby, including City Hall and the police headquarters that are just a block away, were evacuated and some roads were closed during the hostage situation.
More than 100 FBI personnel assisted, including two SWAT teams, bomb technicians and crisis negotiation teams, Patel said. A hostage rescue team was deployed from its headquarters on the East Coast, he said.
Jacob Davidson, a livestreamer known as Dad’s Gone Live, was a block from the building when he started receiving calls about the bomb threat. He watched police enter the back of the building, and his livestream captured through a window a woman rocking back and forth before crouching below the window. Later, two hands could be seen waving.
Plenty of adults think of themselves as readers. They remember the books they loved as children, the novels they stayed up late to finish, and the periods of life when reading felt natural and routine. Yet many have not finished a book in months, or even years.
The National Year of Reading 2026 has placed reading firmly back in the public conversation. Across the UK, libraries, literacy organisations, publishers and cultural institutions are working to encourage reading for pleasure and rebuild reading habits.
This renewed focus matters. At a time when concerns about declining reading are widespread, celebrating reading as joy, immersion and connection remains important.
Yet these conversations often make me think less about books themselves than about the type of reader they focus on. Much discussion around reading for pleasure begins with people who already possess a relationship with books: their favourite novels, formative reading experiences and longstanding habits. This presumes they already have the confidence to see themselves as readers.
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Less visible are those for whom reading stopped feeling natural much earlier. This matters because much of the current conversation around reading decline still treats the problem primarily as one of enthusiasm: how to persuade people that books are pleasurable, enriching or culturally valuable. But for some adults, the problem is rebuilding a relationship with reading that stalled years earlier.
Research suggests many adults are not resisting reading because they dislike books. They are struggling because reading no longer feels manageable within the conditions of their lives.
Reading in prisons
My colleague Josephine Metcalf and I research adult reading re-engagement through a digitally delivered book club for readers and writers across more than 90 prisons in England and Wales.
While prisons may seem an unusual place to explore reading habits, they offer important insights into the factors that encourage or discourage reading engagement, including confidence, autonomy and previous experiences of education.
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One finding appears repeatedly: struggling to engage with reading often precedes finding pleasure in reading. Before enjoyment comes interrupted concentration, prolonged effort, embarrassment, and memories of reading associated with judgment or failure.
Research from prison-based reading groups similarly suggests that disengagement is frequently linked not to disinterest in books themselves, but to earlier experiences of reading as performance, exposure or inadequacy.
This may help explain why reading initiatives often reach people who already possess some relationship with books, while adults whose reading habits fractured years earlier remain harder to engage. The barriers are frequently more practical and behavioural than ideological.
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Recent census data published by The Bookseller reinforces this point. While attitudes towards reading remain broadly positive, many adults who identify as readers rarely read regularly. The obstacles are familiar: distraction, exhaustion, reduced concentration and competition from digital entertainment.
Creating the conditions for reading
Our own work suggests that adults return to reading under very particular conditions: privacy, autonomy, short forms, strong narrative momentum, self-paced engagement and the removal of performative pressure. Reading habits are often rebuilt gradually through repetition, accessibility and emotional safety before reading confidence fully returns.
This has implications far beyond prisons. If the National Year of Reading aims to produce lasting change, the challenge may not simply be encouraging people to value books more highly. It may involve paying greater attention to the conditions that allow reading habits to recover after long periods of disruption.
Reading campaigns, book recommendations and public celebrations of reading remain important, but they are unlikely to reach everyone equally. Re-engagement often depends upon quieter forms of infrastructure: accessible pathways back into reading, opportunities for private participation, and environments where reading can develop without judgement.
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Prisons make this visible in concentrated form. When autonomy, privacy and appropriate structure are present, adults who disengaged from reading long ago often begin reading again.
The shift rarely happens because literature’s cultural importance has suddenly become persuasive. More often, it happens because the surrounding conditions have changed sufficiently for reading to feel possible.
Research into prison reading groups has shown that reading can support confidence, reflection and discussion. More recent work has highlighted the value of combining reading with creative writing activities that encourage readers to engage actively with texts.
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Many adults who no longer read regularly do not need to be convinced that books matter. They already know that. The larger challenge is ensuring that conversations about reading also reach those who no longer feel reading belongs to them.
If we want to understand the future of reading, we may need to spend less time asking why people have stopped reading, and more time creating the conditions that help them start again.
Statistics released by the Private Healthcare Information Network (Phin) show about 54,000 admissions to private settings in 2025, an increase of six per cent.
Two Lanarkshire MSPs have spoken out following new stats revealed the number of private healthcare admissions in Scotland hit record levels.
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Statistics released by the Private Healthcare Information Network (Phin) show about 54,000 admissions to private settings in 2025, an increase of six per cent.
Some 29,470 people were admitted using their private medical insurance, an increase of five per cent.
The number of people paying to go private increased by seven per cent.
Scotland saw the sharpest increase in private healthcare use in the UK, with Wales increasing by 1.8%, England by 0.6% and Northern Ireland reducing by 4.8% between 2024 and 2025.
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Cataract surgery was the most popular procedure for those going private, with more than 9,000 people seeking treatment last year, 7,335 of those self-funding their procedures.
Hip replacements, endoscopies, colonoscopies and knee arthroscopy made up the top five procedures.
Central Scotland Conservative MSP Meghan Gallacher said: “A record number of Scots are now turning to private healthcare, paying out of their own pockets for routine treatment because of the SNP’s mismanagement of our NHS.
“A multi-million pound delayed discharge backlog is leaving patients who are fit to go home stranded in hospital beds, preventing others from accessing the care they need.
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“GP services remain under immense pressure, while the walk-in clinic election gimmick is more focused on winning votes than improving patient outcomes.
“Our NHS should be modern, efficient and local, delivering timely care for everyone, not forcing more people to go private just to receive the treatment they need.”
Fellow Central Scotland MSP, and co-leader of the Scottish Greens, Gillian Mackay added: “Behind the statistics are thousands of personal stories and people forced to make difficult choices.
“Nobody should be forced into costly private sector operations because of waiting lists.
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“Our NHS workers are doing a fantastic job every day, but if we are to meaningfully cut waiting lists and ensure people can get appointments when they need them then we need to back them and invest in medical staff.
“In the longer term there is a lot we need to do on prevention and early intervention to support people to live well and do what we can do to reduce future lists.”
Richard Wells, the director of technology and insights at Phin, said: “Private hospital admissions in Scotland continue to increase year-on-year.
“This shows the importance some patients place on the choice offered by the private sector.
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“The total number of admissions still represents less than 1% of the population in Scotland, with the majority of people still being treated by the NHS.
“Both private medical insurance and self-pay admissions were at record levels. Our data shows though that there are distinct differences between the type of procedures people have, depending on how it is being funded.”
A Scottish Government spokesperson said: “Scotland continues to have a substantially lower rate of take up of private healthcare compared to England.
“It is also important to note that the number of private admissions represents a very small proportion of acute hospital activity carried out by the NHS.
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“We are expanding access to the NHS in Scotland – exceeding the target to deliver 150,000 extra appointments and procedures and reducing long waits for new outpatients by 76.5 per cent and inpatient/ day case waits down by 47.4 per cent since July 2025.”
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Street Food Carousel will take place in Bishop Auckland Market Place on Friday (June 5) from 4pm to 9pm.
As well as a fantastic selection of street traders, the event will also include live music and games including live bingo and play your cards right.
Piggy Blinders are one of the confirmed traders (Image: PIGGY BLINDERS)
(Image: Piggy Blinders)
Bishop Auckland Town Council said: “We look forward to welcoming residents and visitors into the town centre for another great evening.”
Visitors to the event can expect everything from loaded burgers and crispy chicken to cakes and desserts, with organisers promising there will be “plenty to enjoy”.
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Unlocking Treasures, Darlington (Image: SARAH CALDECOTT)
As well as food, there will also be jewellery traders and pet stands.
Clay is not Sabalenka’s strongest surface even though she has won three times in Madrid, where the high altitude makes the conditions similar to a hard court.
Nor did she have a good build-up to Roland Garros. Six match points were squandered in a quarter-final defeat by Hailey Baptiste in Madrid in April, before she let a set and a break lead slip against Romanian veteran Sorana Cirstea in Rome.
But, given her quality and pedigree compared to the other Paris quarter-finalists, it is hard not to think another golden opportunity has slipped through Sabalenka’s fingers.
Sabalenka’s four Grand Slam singles titles – two Australian Open and two US Open triumphs, all on hard courts – are more than most people can dream of.
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But she has also lost four finals and six major semi-finals, despite a consistency on the biggest stages that is unrivalled among her peers.
Sabalenka has the proud record of not losing before the quarter-finals of a Grand Slam since the start of the 2023 season.
However, she has not always dealt well with the pressure of the latter stages – particularly during the period where she has clearly been the best player in the world.
Sabalenka was the heavy favourite to beat underdog Madison Keys in the 2024 Australian Open final, but came unstuck. Twelve months later, she reached another Melbourne final – and a flurry of mistakes saw her squander a break lead in the deciding set against Elena Rybakina.
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At last year’s French Open Sabalenka played what she described as the “worst final” of her life, hitting 70 unforced errors in windy conditions as she lost from a set up.
Against Shnaider, Sabalenka looked in control at 6-3 4-1 up before losing 12 of the final 13 games.
“I just think that there is something in specific moments during the match [where] I lose control,” said Sabalenka, whose 57 unforced errors outweighed her 46 winners.
A rolling road block was put in place by South Wales Police on the M4 while the demolition took place
Residents said their homes “shook” after a loud bang was heard in Port Talbot on Wednesday evening. It came from the Tata Steel site where a demolition was carried out on one of its now redundant coke ovens gas holder.
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It ceased operation together with the site’s heavy-end in September 2024. A rolling road block was put in place by South Wales Police on the M4 between junctions 37 Pyle and 38 Margam at 6.30pm as the demolition took place.
But some in the local area claimed they had no idea it was going to happen. Stay informed on everything Neath Port Talbot by signing up to our newsletter here.
One woman wrote online: “Would have been nice if residents had been informed, my whole house shook.”
A second added: “You could of warned us, my patio door shook and my animals were scared as well as myself.”
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And a third wrote: “A day’s notice would have been nice. My daughter is terrified now.”
A statement from Tata Steel reads: “People working and living in the Port Talbot area may have just heard a loud noise emanating from the Port Talbot steelworks.
“This was the result of the planned demolition of the empty, redundant coke ovens gas holder, which has been completed safely as part of the ongoing engineering works on the site.
“The gas holder ceased operation with the closure of the site’s heavy-end in September 2024.
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“This demolition was required to make space for future raw materials handling areas for the new three million tonne per year capacity electric arc furnace.
“Our thanks goes to the whole team involved from Tata Steel and our contractor partners Thompson of Prudhoe and PDC, in what was a complex programme of work. We apologise for any inconvenience caused.”
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The ministry also said that two paramedics were killed and a third was seriously wounded when Israeli forces “directly targeted an ambulance” in the Chehour area, which is about 14km (9 miles) to the east. The ambulance belonged to the Risala Scouts Association, which is affiliated with the Amal movement, an ally of Hezbollah.
John McGowan-Fazakerley says he never questioned Jamie Varley’s devotion Preston Davey
Rachel Smith Court reporter and James Holt Senior Live and Breaking News Reporter
20:03, 03 Jun 2026
A man accused of allowing the death of his 13-month old adopted son told a jury his trust in his murder accused partner was ‘misplaced’. John McGowan-Fazakerley, 32, said he never considered Preston Davey was at risk of physical or sexual abuse from 38-year-old Jamie Varley.
Mr Varley is also on trial, and is accused of murdering the young child. On July 27, 2023, Preston was carried into Blackpool Victoria Hospital in cardiac and respiratory arrest. He died at 7.20pm.
A post mortem concluded Preston died from upper airways obstruction with experts stating he had been physically, psychologically and sexually abused in the four months he lived with the couple in Staining Road, Blackpool, the court heard.
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Peter Wright KC, prosecuting, said the risk to Preston was ‘foreseeable and indeed foreseen’ by the defendant four days earlier when it is alleged both men sexually abused the toddler in his cot, LancsLive reported.
A series of photos recovered from Mr Varley’s phone showed Preston ‘suspended’ over his cot bars. His lips were turning gradually blue in what the prosecution say was the aftermath of a serious sexual assault, the court was told.
Mr McGowan-Fazakerley denied any form of sexual involvement with Preston and said he only saw the baby ‘fleetingly’ when he was called upstairs to see the ‘funny position’ Preston was in.
He said he told his partner to lie Preston down before returning downstairs to cook Sunday dinner. He only saw the photos when he was questioned by the police two years later, he said.
On his second day in the witness box, McGowan-Fazakerley said he ‘never questioned Mr Varley’s devotion to their adoptive son’. Mr Wright KC, prosecuting, showed a series of photos and videos which he suggested showed Mr Varley treating the tot as ‘a plaything.’
Mr McGowan-Fazakerley said: “I feel as if there’s information, messages, videos, pictures, that I wasn’t aware of. I feel at times that he’s prevented me from protecting him and doing something about it.”
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When asked about a video recorded hours before Preston’s death, which showed the baby seriously unwell, he said: “Preston’s life was like an iceberg and there are things under the water that I didn’t know about.
“I feel… I feel that on the 27th July, that when Jamie took the video of him being poorly, I feel like if that was me and I saw that I would have acted, I would have took him to hospital….”
He said Mr Varley was his ‘best friend’ and he always felt they were honest with their thoughts and feelings. He said he did not see any signs of depression and was not aware of any ‘dark thoughts’ of drowning or suffocating the baby, as reported by a work colleague of Mr Varley’s earlier in the trial.
Mr Wright KC said: “I’m going to suggest what happened to that little boy was both foreseeable by you and indeed foreseen. That’s the truth, isn’t it? Mr McGowan-Fazakerley replied: “No it isn’t. If I could have foreseen that happening and foresaw that happening it wouldn’t have happened. I would have took that little boy out.”
Asked by his own barrister, Anne Whyte KC whether he felt his trust in his partner of eight years was misplaced, the defendant replied: “Yes, I do feel like my trust in Jamie has been misplaced.”
Mr Varley, 38, is accused of murder; manslaughter; sexual assault of a child under 13; inflicting grievous bodily harm; five counts of child cruelty; and further counts of making, taking and distributing indecent images.
Mr McGowan-Fazakerley is accused of causing or allowing the death of a child; two counts of child cruelty; and sexual assault of a child under 13. Both men deny all the charges against them.
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