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The day Darlington’s ‘white elephant’ station quietly opened its doors

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The day Darlington’s ‘white elephant’ station quietly opened its doors

“The Central station, Newcastle, may be a more magnificent pile (who can say otherwise?), but Newcastle claims to be the northern metropolis.

“York station may be more extensive, so it ought to be for a number of railway systems converge at that point.

“Hull station, with its huge hotel, may present a far more imposing appearance, but then that great outlet of the Yorkshire and Lancashire manufacturers contributes nearly one-third of the entire revenue of the North Eastern Railway.”

On the platform at Bank Top station shortly after it was completed (Image: Darlington Centre for Local Studies)

For all the weekly newspaper’s enthusiasm for the station, Bank Top was regarded as a small, drab building, and within 30 years was completely rebuilt.

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Demand was growing for passengers to be able to access Teesside from the main line station – it was previously only possible from the Stockton & Darlington’s North Road station and so when, in the 1880s, a loop line was planed connecting Bank Top to Middlesbrough and Stockton, it was clear passenger numbers were going to increase.

Much to the despair of some directors of the NER, who didn’t think more money should be lavished so soon on Darlington, the company asked its new chief architect, William Bell, to plan a new station.

A fabulous picture from John Askwith of Bank Top station under construction, by a couple of men and their dog (Image: John Askwith)

Mr Bell, from York, had joined the NER architect’s department aged 14 and spent his entire 57 year career in it. He was largely responsible for stations at Hull, Newcastle, Leeds and Scarborough, and while working on Bank Top, he also built Sunderland and Thornaby stations.

Bell’s work was overseen by the NER’s chief engineer, TE Harrison, who was at that stage a big fan of “island stations” – which is why Bank Top is such a weird, back-to-front sort of a station with a fabulously grand entrance that no one uses as everyone sneaks in the side, tradesmen’s entrance.

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Island stations have all their offices and waiting rooms on a central island with the up and down railways tracks flowing on either side of them.

The plans increased the size of the station by two-thirds, and 20 houses and three pubs in Station Street, plus Bank Top school, were bought and demolished to accommodate it.

The clay and topsoil excavated for its foundations and for the new cutting in Parkgate, so bridges could take the tracks, was deposited on the fields to the south of Victoria Road – the streets between Bedford Street and Clifton Road were later built on top of this clay. Waverley Terrace, named after the Edinburgh station, was the first and Victoria Embankment soon followed.

Work began in 1885, and was delayed three months by the winter of 1885 and a further two months by the winter of 1886.

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An amazing picture from the archive of the North Eastern Railway Association showing Bank Top under construction in about 1886. That dog, by the way, appears to be sitting on the roof of the low building in the foreground (Image: NERA)

It was to have three arched train sheds. The western two are 62ft wide while the eastern one is 66ft wide because it follows the footprint of the 1861 station, including incorporating part of its eastern wall. Mr Bell helpfully put “oculi” – rounded openings – into his extended walls for ventilation but they also show which stretches of wall are later.

The grand Victoria Road clocktower and portico of Bank Top station (Image: Chris Lloyd)

Mr Bell also designed a grand main entrance at the top of Victoria Road. It had an elegant 80ft clocktower, in the French Renaissance style, and a tall and broad portico. Cabs entered the portico through one elegant arch, dropped off their passengers in the dry, and then exited by another elegant arch.

Inside the portico of the station’s grand Victoria Road entrance which not many people now use (Image: The Northern Echo)

Access, though, was not so easy for the passengers who now had to get across the north-bound tracks to reach the booking office and waiting rooms in the centre of the island.

Two tunnels were dug beneath the tracks for foot passengers and two shafts were sunk for hydraulic lifts for those who couldn’t manage the stairs.

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“But,” says Bill Fawcett, the absolute expert in North Eastern Railway architecture, “an extraordinary piece of petty meanness intervened and, having built shafts for them, the directors left out the lifts, arguing that these would entail the full-time services of a porter.”

In fact, they would have had to employ at least two lift operatives to ensure the lifts were working 24/7.

And then they decided that no one would be use the main entrance because it was too inconvenient.

Henry Tennant, the station general manager, predicted that most people would drive up the goods ramp from Parkgate straight onto the platforms’ island because they would regard it as preferable to “see your luggage taken to the train than use the subway or lift at the west entrance and lose sight of your luggage which might go astray”.

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The goods entrance to Bank Top station has now become the main entrance. This picture taken by John Boyes in about 1964. What is that strange shaped lorry facing him? Picture: JW Armstrong Trust (Image: JW Armstrong Trust)

So the southern subway at the Victoria Road entrance was dug but never opened to the public. It was, for a while at least, used as a service tunnel – but it, and the lift shafts, must still be there somewhere.

Just to give Bank Top a further vice-versa feel, shortly after it was opened, a horse-drop was built on Park Lane, near the portico. Cattle and sheep were also unloaded here, convenient for the market, so the Victoria Road entrance quickly started to look as if it were the goods entrance.

A further embarrassment was that soon after Sir ED Walker, “the WH Smith of the North”, had started the clock in the tower, it stopped and needed repairs. Once going, residents in the new streets complained that its chiming kept them awake at night, and so it was silenced forever.

One councillor condemned the station as a “gross extravagance” and a “white elephant”, while the chairman of the railway, John Dent Dent, said the company had “built a much larger station…than there was any occasion for”.

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Bank Top station shortly after it opened on July 1, 1887. Picture: North Eastern Railway Association (Image: NERA)

Bank Top station shortly after it opened on July 1, 1887. Picture: North Eastern Railway Association (Image: NERA)

Perhaps because of this, the station slipped into service on July 1, 1887. The Northern Echo reported the following day: “The new station at Bank Top, Darlington, was yesterday opened for traffic without any formal ceremony.”

This was the day that NER’s summer timetable came into operation, so the station had to be operational, ready or not. The first train to leave it was the 5.30am to Middlesbrough and Saltburn, pulled by engine number 1099 and driven by James Allen. It was, of course, 22 minutes late because of a delay with the mail.

Dinsdale station was opened at the same time as Bank Top as new loop line connected Bank Top with Teesside (Image: The Northern Echo)

The first train into it was the 5.40am from Middlesbrough, which was also the first train to use the station on the new loop line at Dinsdale, where a smattering of people on a new bridge gave it a cheer as it went over celebratory fog signals (mini-explosives strapped to the tracks).

Bank Top obviously wasn’t quite ready for the big day, but The Northern Echo was impressed by what it saw.

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“Even yet the finishing touches are to be given,” it said, “but the building is sufficiently near completion to show that it is among the largest and most notable of its kind in the country.

The refreshment rooms at Bank Top on the London-bound platform (Image: Chris Lloyd)

“The first class waiting room is amongst the handsomest – perhaps the handsomest – of the kind in England. It is large, lofty, and light, and the roof is richly panelled with elaborate and artistic mouldings. In the centre of the ceiling is a large coloured glass light. The walls have a dado, about 3ft 6ins high, of panelled and polished teak. The buffet is a handsome piece of furniture of the same wood, with plate glass backs, with a counter in front of polished granite standing on teak panelling.”

Bank Top station in the days of steam (Image: The Northern Echo)

There was even, overlooking platforms two and three, a room dedicated to footwarmers. Until the 1920s, trains were unheated and a long journey on a cold winter’s day could be very challenging. From the 1850s, the railway issued passengers with footwarmers – initially brass or metal tins filled with boiling water but then metal tubes were devised with chemicals inside that, if shaken vigorously, would set off a reaction and heat up.

A busy summer’s day at Bank Top station in 1962 (Image: The Northern Echo)

The failings of railway footwarmers – they either leaked everywhere, quickly went cold, or melted the soles of shoes – were a source of jokes throughout the Victorian railway age, and it was often said that a footwarmer which made everything in the carriage wet would “break the ice” and get the strangers talking.

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The Silver Jubilee service departs from the south end of a snowy Bank Top in late 1936. Picture: JW Armstrong Trust (Image: JW Armstrong Trust)

In those early days, Bank Top handled 148 trains every 24 hours, including most of the passenger traffic which had been handled at North Road.  “The North Road station loses all its importance, and so far as a chief station is concerned, it passes out of existence, and will be carried on only as a roadside or calling statin for trains passing to and from the west only,” said the North Star newspaper.

A porter at work on Bank Top station in the 1960s (Image: The Northern Echo)

Bank Top also consigned the station at Fighting Cocks to the history books, as the new loop line bypassed it and instead went through Dinsdale.

Bank Top had cost £100,000 to build. The purchase of its land had cost another £30,000 and the construction of the loop line and Dinsdale station had cost a further £80,000, making it a £24.5m project in today’s values.

Waving a train off at Bank Top station. Picture: Rodney Wildsmith (Image: Rodney Wildsmith)

Despite the chaos on opening day, despite all the criticisms over its extravagance, and despite all the eccentricities over its entrances, the layout of the island station has remained largely unchanged since 1887 – which makes the £150m enlargement of 2026 such an enormous moment in its 140-year history.

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Emergency services called to A1(M) Southbound after crash

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Emergency services called to A1(M) Southbound after crash

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Wales breaking news plus weather and traffic updates (Friday, June 12)

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Wales Online

Thousands of music fans are heading to Cardiff this summer to enjoy live music.

With Take That and Metallica taking the stage at the Principality Stadium, as well as the return of Blackweir Live featuring Lewis Capaldi and Pitbull, and a packed summer of events at Cardiff Castle, Transport for Wales has advised that train services are expected to be significantly busier than usual throughout June and July.

TfW has strengthened capacity on key routes and scheduled later services to accommodate attendees.

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Post-event queuing systems will be in place at both Cardiff Central and Cardiff Queen Street stations.

The following station arrangements will be in place:

  • Principality Stadium concerts (Take That & Metallica): Passengers heading to the Valleys or to the Vale of Glamorgan will be directed to Cardiff Queen Street, while a mainline queueing system will be at Cardiff Central. Queueing will start from 9.45pm at both stations.
  • Blackweir Live and Cardiff Castle concerts: While services will still be busy, Valleys and the Vale of Glamorgan passengers can use either station for their journey home.
  • For all Blackweir Live concerts, Cathays station and the station bridge will close at 10pm. Passengers will be directed to either Cardiff Central or Cardiff Queen Street stations.

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Monaco Grand Prix: Pierre Gasly regains third place after Alpine successfully appeal against penalties

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Alpine's Pierre Gasly pictured at the Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix

Pierre Gasly has been returned to third place in the Monaco Grand Prix after his Alpine team successfully appealed against a penalty for pit-lane speeding.

The Frenchman was demoted to seventh place after the race by a five-second penalty for exceeding the pit lane speed limit by 0.1km/h.

He was one of five drivers to be penalised for this during the race, an unusually high number.

A ‘right of review’ hearing requested by Alpine established that cars could legally drive a shorter distance in the pit lane than officials had used in their calculations.

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The stewards accepted Alpine’s argument, backed up by data, that Gasly had never exceeded the 60km/h limit.

The decision is a blow to Mercedes driver George Russell, who was given a drive-through penalty for pit-lane speeding which dropped him from third place at the time to 13th at the finish.

Russell’s Mercedes team, as well as the teams of the other drivers who were penalised, did not object to the decisions, even though they believed their drivers had not exceeded the limit.

Gasly committed two ‘offences’. The other drivers in addition to Russell were McLaren’s Oscar Piastri, Ferrari’s Lewis Hamilton and Gasly’s team-mate Franco Colapinto.

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Hamilton’s penalty did not affect his second place as Ferrari managed to serve it in a way that did not penalise him in terms of track position during a safety-car period.

Piastri, who has been dropped to fifth by Gasly’s reinstatement, lost three places in serving his penalty.

The verdict published by the stewards into the right of review hearing said that they had questioned the number of penalties for speeding when the third one occurred.

The statement said: “Race control promptly came back to the stewards stating it had made enquiries of the official timekeepers and was told that there was no issue and that the data was therefore accurate.”

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The pit-lane speed limit is measured by using a series of timing loops and the time taken to travel a specific distance along the pit lane.

The report said that changes to the pit lane this year had meant that the shortest possible route between the loops was 77 centimetres less than the distance used to calculate the limit.

Five of the six offences were by cars calculated to be doing 0.1km/h over the limit. The other was 0.4km/h over.

As a result the stewards decided Gasly had not exceeded the pit-lane speed limit.

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Trump’s support among independents has fallen, poll analysis shows

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Trump's support among independents has fallen, poll analysis shows

WASHINGTON (AP) — Independents have grown increasingly unhappy with President Donald Trump during his second term, a new AP-NORC polling analysis finds, particularly those without a college degree.

The analysis from researchers at The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research shows that while about half of independents without a college education had a positive view of Trump around the 2024 election, his approval with that group fell to about one-quarter this spring. That shift has erased the large education gap that existed among independents in the months before Trump took office for his second term, with independents now holding similarly negative views of the president regardless of their level of education.

The analysis was conducted by aggregating nearly two dozen AP-NORC polls conducted between July 2024 and April 2026, allowing for a deeper look at how support for Trump changed during several distinct periods, including the last six months of 2024, the first 100 days of Trump’s presidency, the summer of 2025 when the Big Beautiful Bill passed, last fall’s government shutdown and the beginning of the Iran war.

The compiled polling shows a steady decline among independents throughout Trump’s second term. His standing has also dropped among several small but important groups that moved toward him in the 2024 presidential election, including Black and Hispanic independents.

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More Americans than ever consider themselves independents, and they are among the groups that shifted toward Trump in the 2024 presidential election. Any erosion in that support could signal trouble for Trump and Republicans headed into the midterm elections, which are often seen as reflection of how voters feel about their governing party.

Tafari Torres, a senior research associate at NORC who co-authored the analysis, noted that while Democrats’ and Republicans’ views of Trump have held largely steady in his second term, independents’ opinions are still moving. “Independents are, broadly, the people who are reacting to the events and dropping in their support,” he said.

Dramatic declines during Trump’s first 100 days

Trump’s return to the White House was fueled, in part, by independent voters who saw him as the stronger candidate on key issues like the economy. The new analysis, which looks at Trump’s favorability and presidential approval ratings, shows that once he took the helm, their views soured quickly.

Independents without a college degree had a much more positive view of Trump than college-educated independents did during and just after the 2024 election, but that shifted in the first few months of his term. Positive views of Trump among independents without a college degree fell from 48% in the months before he returned to office to 31% in polling conducted during Trump’s first 100 days back in office. Those warm views declined even further, to about one-quarter, during the government shutdown and the early months of 2026.

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Only about 3 in 10 college-educated independents, by contrast, had a positive view of Trump before he returned to office, making their drop to about one-quarter much less dramatic.

“The decline among no-college independents was steeper and it was greater than the slight decline in college independents,” said Sean Collins, a research associate at NORC who co-authored the analysis. “That was surprising, especially given, when you think of Trump’s coalitions, those without college degrees is usually one of the ones that that stands out.”

Hispanic, younger independents grow disenchanted

Americans without a college degree have long been a key part of Trump’s coalition. But Trump also won in 2024 by making gains among groups that tend to support Democrats, including Hispanic adults.

About 4 in 10 independent voters — 42% — voted for Trump in 2024, up from 37% in the 2020 presidential election. Independent voters without a college degree were a little more likely to back Trump over former Vice President Kamala Harris in the last election, according to AP VoteCast, and Hispanic independents were about evenly split between the two.

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The picture looks much bleaker for the president now.

Nearly half of Hispanic independents — 46% — saw Trump favorably in the polling conducted around the presidential election. His approval among these adults dropped quickly in his second term, falling as low as 15% during last fall’s government shutdown before landing around one-quarter in the spring.

Younger independents also became less supportive of the president, while independents age 60 and older remained mostly stable. Other AP-NORC polling has pointed to Trump losing ground among younger Republicans over inflation concerns and Hispanic Americans growing increasingly discontented.

“The gains Trump appeared to make during the election, I don’t know if they’re sticking around. He’s experienced some significant shifts among those people,” Torres said. ”From our research, they don’t appear to be permanent gains.”

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The economy is frustrating many independents

Polling suggests that the economy as at the root of many Americans’ frustrations with Trump, including independents.

About half of independents who supported Trump in 2024 said inflation was the single most important factor for their vote, AP VoteCast found, and most expressed high levels of concern about the cost of food and gas.

More than a year into Trump’s second term, inflation remains high, fueled by gas prices that remain elevated as the Iran war continues. An AP-NORC poll conducted in April found that about 3 in 10 independents were “extremely” or “very” concerned about being able to afford groceries in the last few months, and a similar share were worried about being able to afford gas.

The analysis found that Americans’ views of the U.S. economy tend to align with their view of the president. Those with negative views of the country’s economy tended to have negative views of Trump, and about 8 in 10 independents described the U.S. economy this spring as poor.

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The latest AP-NORC polling from May found that only about 3 in 10 independents approve of how Trump is handling the economy, in line with the roughly 3 in 10 who said that at the beginning of his second term. The April poll found only about 1 in 10 independents — 12% — approved of how Trump was handling the cost of living.

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This AP-NORC analysis of 4,836 independents was conducted over 21 AP-NORC surveys, blocked into five time periods before and during President Donald Trump’s second term. Independents are classified as panelists who do not select that they identify with or lean toward either the Democratic or Republican Party.

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Ex-Millwall and Wolves boss Kenny Jackett dies aged 64 | Football

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Ex-Millwall and Wolves boss Kenny Jackett dies aged 64 | Football

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British man, 28, dies in ‘tragic accident’ on moped in Thailand

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Manchester Evening News

Liam Anelay had been in the country for three weeks before he died in a tragic accident

A British man died in a “tragic accident” while travelling in Thailand with a group of friends. Liam Anelay, from Liverpool, is understood to have been approximately three weeks into a trip around the Asian country with friends when he passed away on January 28 this year.

An inquest into his death, held at Gerard Marjella Courthouse in Liverpool on Tuesday, June 11, heard how the 28-year-old had been riding a moped to meet his friends in Phuket when a car performed a u-turn in the road. It was heard how the driver is believed to have been unaware of Liam approaching on the vehicle before performing the manoeuvre.

The driver remained at the scene and “cradled” Liam until emergency services arrived. Liam was subsequently rushed to Chalong Hospital, where he was pronounced dead that afternoon.

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The court heard how he sustained multiple fractures throughout his body, including to his skull, ribs and legs. His cause of death was recorded as multiple injuries as a result of a road traffic collision, reports the Liverpool Echo.

Area coroner Helen Rimmer told the court: “Liam died on the 28 January, 2026, in Thailand. Liam was travelling on a moped in Thailand when he was hit by a car that was completing a u-turn.

“The driver of the car remained with Liam until emergency services arrived. Liam suffered multiple injuries as a result of the road traffic collision.”

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The coroner concluded that Liam’s death was the result of a road traffic collision. Ms Rimmer told the court: “I would be grateful if my condolences could be forwarded to all of Liam’s family after the tragic accident that led to his death.”

At the time of his death, Liam had been residing south of the city centre and was employed as a production line operator.

In a heartbreaking tribute posted on social media, his mother Christina wrote: “How the hell can this even be possible me writing this but my baby boy, my heart is so badly shattered into a million pieces, it still can’t sink in to my brain that I have lost you.

“My life will never be the same ever, I realy don’t know how I can do this Liam.

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“My baby boy please keep shining down on me, untill we meet again my beautiful gorgeous smiling boy, I love you so much and my heart will ache for you untill I see you again, keep looking after Shaun please love. My beautiful boy.”

Liam’s cousin, Jason Ding, also paid tribute on social media following Liam’s passing earlier this year. He said: “R.I.P little Liam, I will always remember your cheeky smile as kid, all the way to you becoming a gentleman.

“You’re a credit to the whole family and especially your mum and dad. We will meet again mate. Our Shaun will take care of your mum, dad and the rest of the family. Fly high my little curious cousin.”

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Northern Ireland teenagers to get one-off MenB vaccine from next month

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Belfast Live

The vaccination offers protection against serious illness such as IMD, meningitis, and sepsis

Teenagers in Northern Ireland will be offered a one-off Meningococcal B (MenB) vaccine next month, in line with announcements across the UK.

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The announcement comes after multiple cases of invasive meningococcal disease (IMD) were identified in South East England earlier this year. The Men-B vaccination offers protection against serious illness, such as IMD, meningitis and sepsis.

From mid-late July, a targeted programme, aimed at protecting those who are considered to be at the highest risk of Men-B, will be rolled out. The Department of Health said further details on how the programme will be delivered will be announced in due course.

The eligible cohorts include:

  • All of the current school year 14 age group (i.e. those currently aged 17-18 with a date of birth between 2 July 2007 to 1 July 2008); and
  • Anyone, up to 25 years of age, who will be attending Higher Education or a Residential Further Education Institution for the first time in autumn 2026 (including international students).

Everyone with a date of birth between July 2, 2007, and July 1, 2008, will be invited for vaccination, while those aged up to 25 years of age attending Higher Education or a Residential Further Education Institution for the first time in autumn 2026, will be encouraged to seek vaccination.

Health Minister Mike Nesbitt said: “MenB is a serious illness and can cause serious health implications amongst young people. The vaccination offers good protection and will help prevent serious harm among those who are most vulnerable.

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“I strongly recommend those young people who are eligible to take up the offer of a vaccination, particularly those planning to go to Higher Education or a Residential Further Education Institution for the first time this autumn. I also would ask that parents and guardians speak with their teenagers and young adults to encourage them to take up the offer of a vaccination to help protect them from MenB.

“It is expected that this programme will be introduced by mid to late July to ensure those at highest risk from this disease have the opportunity to be fully vaccinated before going to University or other residential higher education for the first time.”

Chief Medical Officer Professor Sir Michael McBride added: “As we have seen in recent outbreaks elsewhere in the UK, MenB can have a devastating and disruptive impact. Immunisation is one of the most effective ways of preventing illness from infectious disease. This vaccination programme will have significant public health benefits for young people who receive the vaccine, and the wider population. Put simply, if you are not vaccinated, you are not protected.”

Dr Joanne McClean, Director of Public Health at the Public Health Agency (PHA), said: “We welcome this announcement and are working with health service colleagues on the delivery of the programme during the summer. I encourage everyone who is eligible to take this opportunity to help protect themselves against this disease.”

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Cardiff shop owner caught selling vapes to children

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Jihad Abass Subhan, of Corner Mini Market on Cowbridge Road East, failed to show up at court for his sentencing hearing this week

A Cardiff shop owner has been caught selling vapes to children. Jihad Abass Subhan, of Corner Mini Market on Cowbridge Road East in the Canton area of the city, was caught as part of a Trading Standards sting operation.

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Trading Standards officers used volunteer children to enter the shop and request vapes and other harmful nicotine products, and Trading Standards found children were repeatedly allowed to purchase the products.

In March 2025, Subhan, of Cowbridge Road East, received a warning from officers of the Shared Regulatory Service after failing a test purchase, and he was given a warning letter and guidance.

However, the shop owner continued to sell harmful nicotine products to children and was caught again the following month. Never miss a Cardiff story by signing up to our daily newsletter here

When officers returned to the store after the test purchase in April last year, Subhan apologised and claimed he had been distracted as he was on the phone at the time of the sale.

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He was then questioned by officers about the checks required, including Challenge 25, but he was unable to explain the basic procedures.

Subhan and his company were sentenced at Cardiff Magistrates’ Court on Tuesday, June 9. Subhan, who failed to turn up to his sentencing hearing, was fined £2,000 in his absence and was also ordered to pay an £800 victim surcharge and £426 in costs.

The company, Corner Mini Market, for which Subhan is the sole director, was also fined £2,000 and ordered to pay an £800 victim surcharge and £426 in costs.

Cllr Ed Stubbs, cabinet member with responsibility for Shared Regulatory Services at Cardiff Council, said: “Mr Subhan was warned not to continue selling nicotine products to children and, despite this advice, chose to carry on. Nicotine products are harmful to people’s health, which is why laws are in place to restrict their sale.

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“All shop owners are legally responsible for the products they sell, so this significant fine should send a clear message that proper checks must be carried out before selling nicotine products to customers.”

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Kenny Jackett death: Ex-Wolves and Millwall manager beloved by several EFL clubs dies aged 64

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Kenny Jackett death: Ex-Wolves and Millwall manager beloved by several EFL clubs dies aged 64

Former Millwall, Wolverhampton Wanderers and Watford manager Kenny Jackett has died at the age of 64.

The League Managers Association announced the news on Friday, with chief executive Richard Bevan praising him as “one of the most respected managers to have plied their trade in the English Football League”.

Jackett took charge of Watford, Swansea City, Millwall, Wolves, Rotherham United and Leyton Orient across a 25-year managerial career.

One of his former clubs, Millwall, said: “Millwall Football Club is extremely saddened to announce the passing of former manager Kenny Jackett at the age of 64.

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“Kenny managed over 300 games during his time with the club, leading The Lions to promotion from League One and to an FA Cup Semi-Final.”

Jackett arrived at Wolves in 2013 and led the club from League One to the Championship. “Wolves are devastated to learn of the passing of our former manager Kenny Jackett,” the club said.

“Kenny led the club to its incredible record-breaking League One title and laid the foundations for the club as we know it today. The thoughts of everyone at Wolves are with Kenny’s family and friends at this time.”

Wolverhampton Wanderers' manager Kenny Jackett celebrates their promotion as champions
Wolverhampton Wanderers’ manager Kenny Jackett celebrates their promotion as champions (PA)

Jackett started his playing career with Watford, making 428 appearances for the Hornets, before moving into coaching with the club. He also earned 31 caps for Wales.

His final role in the game was as director of football at Gillingham before he stepped down for medical reasons in November 2024.

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“It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of our former player and manager Kenny Jackett,” Watford said.

“A true club legend and one of our own, Watford-born Kenny was instrumental in some of our greatest successes as a player before going on to serve as coach and then manager. Our thoughts are with his family and friends at this difficult time.”

The EFL shared: “The EFL is deeply saddened to learn of the passing of Kenny Jackett, who has died at the age of 64.

“Kenny managed over 750 games in the EFL, achieving promotions at the helm of Wolves, Millwall and Swansea. Our thoughts and condolences go out to Kenny’s family and friends at this difficult time.”

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Man who hit federal officer with rock during Portland ICE protest gets hefty prison time

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Man who hit federal officer with rock during Portland ICE protest gets hefty prison time

A man who threw a rock that struck a federal officer during protests outside a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement building in Portland has been sentenced to 30 months in prison, federal officials said Thursday.

Robert Jacob Hoopes pleaded guilty under a plea deal to aggravated assault of a federal employee with a dangerous weapon.

Prosecutors said Hoopes hurled a rock during a protest last June, hitting an officer in the head and causing a gash above the eye.

A man accused of assaulting a federal officer during protests at the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement building in Portland, Oregon, has been sentenced to 30 months in prison
A man accused of assaulting a federal officer during protests at the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement building in Portland, Oregon, has been sentenced to 30 months in prison (Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

U.S. District Judge Adrienne Nelson also sentenced Hoopes to three years of supervised release and ordered him to pay more than $8,000 in restitution.

“Today’s message is clear — violence is not protest,” said Scott Bradford, U.S. attorney for the District of Oregon. “When you cross the line and assault a federal officer, you will be prosecuted.”

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Hoopes’ attorney did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Federal agents, including members of the Department of Homeland Security, Border Patrol, and the police, arrest a protester outside a downtown U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility on October 05, 2025 in Portland
Federal agents, including members of the Department of Homeland Security, Border Patrol, and the police, arrest a protester outside a downtown U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility on October 05, 2025 in Portland (Getty Images)

The case is one of several arising from protests at the Portland ICE facility, which has been a frequent flashpoint over federal immigration enforcement.

Demonstrations there have continued for months, at times escalating into clashes with law enforcement, according to court records and officials.

Federal prosecutors have pursued a range of charges nationwide in cases involving assaults on officers during immigration-related protests, including in cities such as Chicago and Los Angeles.

Rep. Robert Garcia (D-CA) speaks while referencing a photo of Deputy White House Chief of Staff Stephen Miller during a public forum on violent use of force by Department of Homeland Security (DHS) agents
Rep. Robert Garcia (D-CA) speaks while referencing a photo of Deputy White House Chief of Staff Stephen Miller during a public forum on violent use of force by Department of Homeland Security (DHS) agents (Getty)

In Portland, other defendants have also faced prison sentences for protest-related activity.

One man was previously sentenced to 18 months for arson after prosecutors said he threw a lit flare that caused damage at the ICE facility.

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Some related cases have been dismissed, while others have gone to trial or ended in mistrials or probation sentences, according to court records.

Hoopes is one of the few defendants in the Portland cases to plead guilty to assaulting a federal officer with a dangerous weapon.

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