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Stormont urged to address ‘catastrophe’ in hospital emergency departments

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Belfast Live

In 2025, some 1,032 excess deaths were associated with waits of 12 or more hours in EDs while awaiting admission.

Stormont has been urged to address the “catastrophe” unfolding in Northern Ireland’s hospital emergency departments (EDs).

A report by the Royal College of Emergency Medicine (RCEM) stated that, in 2025, some 1,032 excess deaths were associated with waits of 12 or more hours in EDs while awaiting admission.

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The body’s State of Emergency Medicine in Northern Ireland report found that, while the overall death figure for 2025 is slightly lower than in 2024 (1,122) and 2023 (1,063), the estimated mortality figure has more than doubled over five years.

READ MORE: The number of accidental deaths and hospital admissions
in a single year in Northern Ireland
READ MORE: ‘I’ve survived two open heart surgeries and a stroke at just 24 years old’

In 2020, the estimated mortality figure was less than half of what it was in 2025 – at 461. A decade ago, in 2016, there were 60 excess deaths attributed to long waits.

The report also contends that overcrowding and long waits in EDs are not the result of an increase in demand, and that the numbers attending departments has “barely changed”, while the number of long waits, and deaths, have “skyrocketed”.

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It found that in 2025, one in 12 (8.3%) patients waited 24 hours or longer, while a RCEM survey conducted in December 2025 found that one ED recorded a wait time of over 124 hours – more than three days.

The report makes a number of recommendations for the Northern Ireland Executive.

These include ending corridor care and mortality associated with long waits in ED by the end of the decade, adopting a “whole-system approach to ending ED overcrowding”, with responsibility for performance spread across the entire patient pathway.

The recommendations also include ensuring accountability for ending overcrowding and to implement measures to make excess deaths associated with long waits in ED to be treated with the same seriousness as deaths in other medical specialties.

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Dr Michael Perry, Northern Ireland vice president for the Royal College of Emergency Medicine, urged that the situation is treated like the “catastrophe in need of redress that it is”.

“Behind these numbers are stories of families ripped apart by avoidable deaths which have happened because successive governments have failed to grab the ED crisis by the horns,” he said.

“We must not let the slight reduction on the previous year give us false assurance that the problem is being fixed. Such a glacial pace of progress is not good enough.

“Our health service has the highest rates of long waits in EDs, and deaths per capita resulting from them, of any UK nation. That statement should shock our policymakers to the core.

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“Politicians and system leaders need to treat this like the catastrophe in need of redress that it is.”

Dr Perry said it is a “fixable problem”.

“While, sadly, we cannot help the loved ones who have already experienced a bereavement at the hands of a broken system, we know what measures can prevent future heartbreak,” he said.

“Our report contains the answers. Accountability, a whole-system approach to patient flow and targets to ending corridor care and deaths associated with long waits will make the difference.

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“We look forward to hearing from policymakers eager to put these measures in place.”

A Department of Health spokesperson said: “The minister and department acknowledge the continued pressures on our emergency departments.

“This is a complex problem with no quick fix but the only medium to long term solution is to reduce demand and manage demand differently.

“That means reducing the number of people coming through ED doors, as well as getting people out of hospital as soon as they are fit for discharge to free up beds.

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“Our reset plan is attempting, over the next three years, to refocus our work towards earlier support and intervention, prevention, providing neighbourhood-based care and encouraging people to take more responsibility for their own health on a routine basis.

“We are also looking at how we can care for our frail elderly patients better by providing more care closer to home and preventing avoidable admissions to hospital.

“However, we recognise that this will take time to have an impact and it is not helped by the very challenging financial position.

“In the interim, we will continue to manage the quality of care we are able to provide to the best effect ensuring the needs of our patients and staff remain our priority.

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“The minister has discussed patient flow and hospital discharge issues with HSC chief executives, and all agreed the need to increase community capacity was the most important single change that is required.

“This is consistent with the reset plan towards a neighbourhood model of delivery.”

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Keir Starmer to meet Wes Streeting as leadership crisis divides Labour

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Keir Starmer to meet Wes Streeting as leadership crisis divides Labour

Signing off her letter, Phillips added: “I want a Labour government to work and I will strive as I always have for its success and popularity, but I’m not seeing the change I think I, and the country expect, and so cannot continue to serve as a minister under the current leadership.”

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A decade on, the US president returns to a stronger and more assertive China

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A decade on, the US president returns to a stronger and more assertive China

This week’s reception promises to be just as grand, including a stop inside Zhongnanhai, the rarefied compound where China’s top leadership lives and works. The agenda too will be just as thorny, with Iran being a new source of tension, alongside trade, technology and Taiwan.

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Sean Duffy’s show charged companies his department regulates up to $1M for reality TV sponsorship, leaked documents show

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Sean Duffy’s show charged companies his department regulates up to $1M for reality TV sponsorship, leaked documents show

Corporations were reportedly asked to fork up as much as $1 million to sponsor Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy’s forthcoming America-themed road trip reality show, according to leaked documents.

The top $1 million package includes being featured on a stop of Duffy’s Great American Road Trip, plus “branded activations and product showcases at multiple destinations,” according to slides obtained by Politico.

The steep price tag doesn’t appear to have stopped sponsors from hitching their wagons to the show, which is set to be released this summer as part of the American 250th anniversary celebrations.

Top-tier corporations, including Toyota and Boeing, are listed as sponsors of The Great American Road Trip, Inc.m the non-profit of the same name producing the show.

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“The Great American Road Trip Inc. is an independent non-profit with three key pillars: 1. To celebrate America’s 250th birthday; 2. To promote travel and tourism and; 3. To bring a focus the transportation, infrastructure and ingenuity that built America over the past 250 years and will build America over the next 250 years,” Tori Barnes, executive director of the group, told The Independent via email when asked about the reported sponsorship packages. “We are supported by partners who share these goals and believe in encouraging Americans to rediscover the people, places, and experiences that define our country.”

Sponsors of Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy’s forthcoming reality show were allegedly asked to pay up to $1 million
Sponsors of Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy’s forthcoming reality show were allegedly asked to pay up to $1 million (Getty)

The Independent has contacted the Transportation Department, Toyota, and Boeing for comment.

Critics alleged that major corporations with potential business before transit regulators shouldn’t be sponsoring a media project involving the nation’s top transit official.

“One has to wonder whether the decision to prominently feature Toyota in this project is because Toyota paid for a sponsorship or because the secretary actually thinks that promoting Toyota is in the best interest of the American public, American automakers and the people that work for that industry,” Donald Sherman, president of the watchdog group Citizens for Ethics and Responsibility, told NPR.

The group has filed a complaint with the DOT’s inspector general, asking for an investigation into whether Duffy violated federal gift and travel rules.

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“Production costs were paid for by the Great American Road Trip Inc., not taxpayers,” Duffy wrote last week on X. “Zero taxpayer dollars were spent on my family…Neither myself nor my family received a salary or production royalties. The five part series will be freely accessible by the public on YouTube.”

Taxpayer funds were not involved in producing the show, according to Duffy
Taxpayer funds were not involved in producing the show, according to Duffy (Getty)

Outside of ethics concerns, critics have alleged the sight of Duffy taking a made-for-TV road trip is insensitive, given the ongoing spike in oil prices because of the Trump administration’s decision to wage war on Iran.

“The conflict of interest here is glaring,” The View panelist Ana Navarro said recently. “I don’t know how many Americans, how many average Americans, will be able to go on a road trip when I’m paying $5.99 for a gallon of gas. It just seems that the tone deafness has no limits.”

Trump himself brushed off such Iran-related affordability concerns on Tuesday.

“I don’t think about American financial situation — I don’t think about anybody,” he told reporters. “I think about one thing: We cannot let Iran have a nuclear weapon.”

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High-priced corporate donations have flowed to other Trump-related entertainment projects, including the White House ballroom and the upcoming UFC fight at the White House.

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Scooter rider taken to hospital with ‘serious’ injuries after crash in Cambridge

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Cambridgeshire Live

Police are appealing for any witnesses or dashcam footage

A scooter rider has been taken to hospital with “serious” injuries following a crash in Cambridge. Officers and paramedics were called at about 9.25am this morning (May 12) to Queen Edith’s Way, at the junction with Wulfstan Way, to the crash.

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The collision involved a grey Hyundai Tucson and a white Piaggio MP3 three-wheeled scooter. A spokesperson for Cambridgeshire Police said: “The scooter rider, a 55-year-old man from London, was taken to Addenbrooke’s Hospital with serious injuries.”

The Hyundai driver, a 44-year-old woman from Milton Keynes, was uninjured and arrested on suspicion of causing serious injury by careless driving and driving while unfit through drugs. She remains in custody.

Police have asked for any witnesses or anyone who has dashcam footage to report it. You can do this through the force website by quoting reference 35/35105/26, or Operation Bodmin. Anyone without internet access should call 101.

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VAR is ‘flip of coin’, says Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola

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Roberto de Zerbi slumps to his knees during Tottenham Hotspur's draw at home to Leeds United

But Guardiola says it is up to the players to take VAR out of the equation.

“When this happens it is because we have to do better, not the referees or VAR,” he continued.

“I never trust anything since I arrived a long time ago. Always I learned you have to do it better, do it better, be in a position to do it better because you blame yourself with what you have to do, because (VAR) is a flip of a coin.”

Guardiola was speaking before Wednesday’s meeting with Palace, which they need to win to cut Arsenal‘s lead at the top of the table to two points.

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That would still leave Arsenal needing to drop points in their remaining two games – against relegated Burnley and Palace – for City to have any chance of winning the Premier League title.

“Of course it is not in our hands in the Premier League. Always I say to the players, ‘Do it, do it, do it better’,” Guardiola added.

“The only thing we can do is do it better, that is only in your control.”

Guardiola’s side will play in their third FA Cup final in three seasons when they meet Chelsea at Wembley on Saturday.

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‘Starmer and Streeting set for showdown’ and ‘Crisis? What crisis?’

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'Starmer and Streeting set for showdown' and 'Crisis? What crisis?'
The headline on the front page of the Financial Times reads: “Starmer throws down gauntlet to rivals as turmoil rattles gilts market”.

For the second day in a row, every paper leads on the future of Sir Keir Starmer’s premiership. “Starmer throws down gauntlet to rivals” says the Financial Times, reporting the prime minister was still “clinging to power” on Tuesday evening, after he challenged his rivals to mount a leadership bid on a day of ministerial resignations. The paper adds that Sir Keir’s supporters believe he has headed off a challenge from Health Secretary Wes Streeting who, it says, has not gained the support of the 81 MPs needed to launch a rival bid.

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North Yorkshire retired police dogs require surgery

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North Yorkshire retired police dogs require surgery

An appeal has been launched German Shepherds Miki and Kenai, who both served with North Yorkshire Police and retired just months apart, who each require major operations costing more than £2,500.

The Thin Blue Paw Foundation, a charity supporting working and retired police dogs across the UK, hope to raise £5,000 to cover the full cost of their treatment.


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Kieran Stanbridge, founder of The Thin Blue Paw Foundation, said: “Miki and Kenai both served with enthusiasm and commitment during their time with the police, but the job has taken a toll on their bodies and they’ve been left in daily pain due to arthritis and hip dysplasia.

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“Now they both need surgery to repair these major injuries so they can run and play again. We’re incredibly proud to be there for Miki and Kenai, but we need your help, so please donate if you can – every single pound will go to good use.”

Six-year-old Miki, who lives in Northallerton, served as a general purpose police dog from March 2021 until his medical retirement in October 2025.

Miki at full health (Image: Thin Blue Paw)

He was diagnosed with spondylosis, hip dysplasia, and a ruptured cruciate ligament and now, his other cruciate ligament has ruptured meaning he needs further TPLO (Tibial Plateau Levelling Osteotomy) surgery.

Miki lives in North Yorkshire with his former handler Claire Starkey, her husband and their 12 other dogs – including Claire’s working search and detection dog, spaniel PD Jax.

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She said: “Miki was so much more than a police dog to me, he is very much my best mate.

Miki with his owner and handler Claire Starkey (Image: Thin Blue Paw)

“Miki was a pleasure to work with and we had some fantastic results; tracking suspects from vehicles, finding vulnerable missing people, locating missing children, and also finding key items of property discarded from burglaries. 

“Miki has been my superhero at work and deserves the very best of health in retirement. He is enjoying retired life; he gets to run through the countryside, albeit slowly, and he can have a ball whenever he wants.”

Kenai, a seven-year-old who served as a general purpose and firearms support dog, retired at the end of last year, but on Saturday (May 9), he broke his leg while playing fetch – less than a month into life with his new owners.

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Kenai at the vets (Image: Thin Blue Paw)

His owner, Ashley, said: “As soon as we met him, we fell in love. From day one, it’s like he’s always been with us. He’s such a good dog; he’s like a big puppy. He’s really soppy and soft; you’d never believe that he’d been a police dog trained to bite when needed.

“We’re trying to give him the best retirement we can; every weekend we take him somewhere new to explore so we can introduce him to a normal pet life.

“We were playing fetch and as he caught the ball and turned he suddenly yelped. We rushed him to the emergency vets who carried out x-rays and discovered he’d fractured his elbow.”

Kenai at full health (Image: Thin Blue Paw)

Kenai underwent surgery on May 11 and is now recovering at home.

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The Thin Blue Paw Foundation supports more than 180 retired police dogs across the UK with financial assistance for veterinary care, therapy, and medication and also campaign for Pensions for Police Dogs so the cost of their care doesn’t fall solely on their new owners.

To donate to Miki and Kenai’s fundraising appeal please visit www.justgiving.com/campaign/north-yorkshire-police-dogs and to donate to the Thin Blue Paw Foundation, please visit https://donate.thinbluepaw.org.uk/.

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Some of UK’s most popular sandwiches contain ‘alarmingly high’ levels of salt

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Some of UK’s most popular sandwiches contain ‘alarmingly high’ levels of salt

There were also “clear examples of companies getting it right”, including every product surveyed from Pollen + Grace, The Gym Kitchen, and Urban Rajah, which all met calorie and salt reduction targets, had no red warning labels on front of pack, and none of their sandwiches were classed as high in fat, sugar or salt (HFSS).

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Tourist left to die in wheelchair day before birthday after arriving on dream holiday

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Daily Mirror

Melissa Kerry Samnath, 37, died from blunt force trauma injuries while on a birthday trip to Jamaica. Before her death, she sent her family a desperate text message urging them to ‘call the cops’.

A woman has tragically died following severe blunt force trauma sustained during a holiday in Jamaica. In a disturbing twist, her relatives first learnt of the tragedy through a phone call from the mother of her alleged murderer.

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The victim’s family in New York received a telephone call from a woman informing them that Melissa Kerry Samnath had been killed while in Jamaica.

Just weeks earlier, they had received a chilling text message from Samnath, sent shortly before 11pm on the evening of her arrival from Queens Village in New York.

The message stated, “I need you to call the cops. … Look at my location … It is a pink house.” It arrived just over an hour before what would have been her 37th birthday, marking the final communication her family received from her.

Last Wednesday, Samnath’s niece was required to formally identify her body ahead of a post-mortem examination, which determined she suffered fatal blunt-force trauma injuries to her head.

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According to a statement from the Jamaica Constabulary Force, officers were notified on 29 April that Melissa Kerry Samnath had died shortly after being dropped off at Cornwall Regional Hospital in St James.

“She didn’t deserve that,” her niece told The Jamaica Gleaner, using the pseudonym Janice Wynter. She described her aunt as “one of the most loving persons ever”.

“My aunt was very helpful and family-oriented. When my grandfather died – her father – she was the one taking care of my other aunt and grandma,” Wynter remarked. “It has been hard on us. We can’t understand why he did this to her. She wasn’t an evil person. She was the baby of our family. Now we have to bring her body back to bury.”

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Officers suspect Samnath connected with her alleged murderer through the internet before travelling to Jamaica to mark her birthday. Authorities eventually traced her to the suspect’s residence in Norwood, St James, though he had already fled the scene.

Investigators reportedly found significant bloodstains and several of Samnath’s possessions within the male’s dwelling. Despite evident signs of violence, neighbours claimed they heard no screams or indications of distress during the evening of the killing, leading detectives to consider whether Samnath may have been silenced.

Authorities have reviewed CCTV footage capturing the suspect transporting Samnath’s luggage while she followed behind from her Airbnb accommodation.

“His mother called to tell us she got a phone call from him saying he killed her and dropped her off in a wheelchair at the hospital. He didn’t even have the audacity to take her into the hospital,” Wynter said angrily.

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“There is a murderer on the run, and he is clearly in an area with a lot of tourists. He is dangerous. Women need to be careful because they don’t know what he is capable of.” A GoFundMe page has been launched to assist with covering the costs of the funeral.

The page reads: “Melissa was a strong, loving, and unforgettable woman whose warmth touched everyone around her. She loved traveling, exploring new places, and spending time with the people she cared for most. Her loss has left a deep pain in our family that words cannot fully express.”

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Trump weighs in on Starmer as Prime Minister faces Labour rebellion

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Daily Record

Donald Trump has once again taken aim at Sir Keir Starmer

Donald Trump has taken a swipe at Sir Keir Starmer as he fights to keep control of a fracturing Labour Party.

Four ministers, including Safeguarding Minister Jess Philips, have resigned while more than 80 MPs have called on him to quit. However, more than 100 backbenchers have backed Starmer to continue as leader.

President Trump, already a persistent critic of Downing Street’s stance on the conflict with Iran, used a brief appearance outside the White House to issue his latest rebuke.

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Preparing to depart for a high‐stakes state visit to Beijing, Mr Trump was asked whether he had any guidance for the British leader, reports the Express.

“My advice has always been: open up,” he said, urging the UK to exploit its North Sea reserves and accusing the Government of squandering “one of the great oil finds anywhere in the world”. He coupled the demand with a call for a far tougher line on immigration, warning that Europe was being “very, very hurt” by current levels.

When pressed on whether Sir Keir ought to step down, Mr Trump answered: “That’s up to him.”

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The US President proceeded with his tirade concerning what he characterised as unexploited energy reserves from North Sea oil deposits, declaring: “You’re getting killed on windmilling your country to death.”

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Just days earlier, Starmer acknowledged there exists increased “tension” between Trump and Europe. The Prime Minister issued a warning about strained relationships during last week’s European Political Community summit in Armenia, which was largely focused on the conflicts in Ukraine and Iran.

Addressing the summit, Sir Keir stated: “We cannot deny that some of the alliances that we have come to rely on are not in the place we would want them to be.”

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Before setting off for his journey to China, Trump also informed reporters at the White House that he would have a “long talk” with Xi Jinping about the Iran war but added “we have Iran very much under control” so he wouldn’t require the Chinese President’s assistance. The visit, set for May 13-15, will represent the first journey to China by a sitting US president in nearly a decade.

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