Giving you an entire library of books at your fingertips, the paperwhite is perfectly compact for throwing in my bag to power through some pages on the commute. Equally excellent for flights, long train journeys and reading in bed without disturbing your partner, thanks to the built-in light, the Kindle paperwhite is a game-changer for reading in every scenario.
Officers are looking for help in contacting these people
Police want to speak to these people following an alleged robbery in Longsight. Police say a victim was pushed into a railing with force before their headphones were stolen on Stockport Road.
Advertisement
The incident is believed to have occurred at 6:15pm on Tuesday 16th June. Officers would like to speak with the five people pictured as they believe they can assist with enquiries.
Click here to get the biggest stories straight to your inbox in our Daily Newsletter
GMP said: “Officers are appealing for information after an alleged robbery on Stockport Road.
“The incident is believed to have happened at around 6.15pm on Tuesday 16th June. The victim was pushed into a railing with force and had his headphones stolen.
Advertisement
“Officers would like to speak with the five people pictured as they believe they can assist with enquiries.”
Any info? Call 101 and quote log 3256-16062026. Alternatively, contact Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.
The late drama was caused by a big crash for Verstappen, who lost control going into the high-speed downhill right-hander and spun across the gravel into the barrier.
Ferrari and McLaren did their runs early enough to complete their laps before Verstappen, but the Mercedes drivers were running behind the Dutchman on track.
Until Russell’s unexpected improvement, the crash had seemed to secure a front row for Ferrari, who had not looked like pole contenders until the end of qualifying.
Leclerc was 0.059 seconds faster than Hamilton, who had been the quicker Ferrari driver all weekend.
Advertisement
Hamilton made a mistake on his first run in Q3, locking a brake at Turn Three, and had to abort the lap.
That left him having a different risk-reward balance on the final lap and he did not have quite enough to beat his team-mate.
Antonelli backed off completely on his final lap on the approach to Turn Nine, and was nearly two seconds slower than his final run.
Verstappen’s first lap, which was third fastest behind Antonelli and Russell, was good enough for fifth place.
Advertisement
The McLaren drivers both improved on their final runs, but Norris ended up just 0.027secs slower than Verstappen, Piastri 0.009secs further behind.
Red Bull’s Isack Hadjar and the Racing Bulls of Liam Lawson and Arvid Lindblad completed the top 10.
Mohmed Bax, 45, of Eden Street, has been charged with possession with intent to supply cocaine.
Greater Manchester Police (GMP) said he has also been recalled to prison.
The charge relates to a stop search carried out by officers from the Bolton North Neighbourhood Team on Eden Street on Friday (June 26).
Advertisement
Bax was remanded in custody and is due to appear at Manchester and Salford Magistrates’ Court today (June 27).
According to an earlier report, police made the arrest after attending a quarterly Partners and Communities Together (PACT) meeting, where residents reported suspected drug activity on Old Road.
A spokesperson for GMP in Bolton said: “The PACT meeting is an opportunity for the community to raise concerns about crime in their area with the police, local councillors and the council.
“One concern raised by the community was around people supplying drugs on the street in the Old Road area of Astley Bridge.
Advertisement
“After the meeting, officers from the Bolton North Neighbourhood Team searched a man on Eden Street, off Old Road, suspected to be involved in supplying drugs in the area.”
‘If he does end up in Number 10, the country will get the same Andy Burnham I am privileged to call my friend’, Mayor of the Liverpool City Region Steve Rotheram writes
16:16, 27 Jun 2026Updated 16:17, 27 Jun 2026
I’ve known Andy Burnham for a long time. We’ve stood shoulder to shoulder through campaigns, rows with governments of different colours, and more than a few battles for the North.
On Monday night, amidst all the political frenzy and speculation, we managed to find time for a drink far from the madding crowd. It didn’t feel like I was chatting with someone who might be about to take the helm of a G7 country. It was just two mates putting the world to rights, catching up on family, football, politics, the state of the country, of battles won and those to come.
I found myself thinking that, for all the noise about what kind of Prime Minister Andy might be, he’s still the same person I first met nearly two decades ago.
Advertisement
For him, what matters has always been people, places and how power can be used to make life better. The truth is that a lot of people have fallen out of love with politics altogether. You can hardly blame them.
For years they’ve watched living standards stagnate, public services come under pressure and promises come and go without much changing in their day-to-day lives.
Meanwhile, politics has become dominated by people telling us who to blame. Migrants. Civil Servants. Benefits claimants. Young people. Older people. Pick a target and somebody will try to build a political movement around it. The grifter Nigel Farage has made a career out of it.
Advertisement
But I’m not convinced most people wake up in the morning looking for somebody to be angry with. I think they’re looking for reasons to feel optimistic. A decent job. A secure home. The chance for their kids and grandkids to do better than they did. The confidence that things are moving in the right direction.
Labour’s challenge is holding together the coalition needed to win and keep power. Reform’s rise reflects a frustration that is real. Dismissing that won’t make it disappear.
Andy gets that. He knows that people want politicians who listen – and then act. That’s why I think he could unite progressive voters, while also winning back people who have drifted away from us.
Not through the politics of gimmicks or grievance but by offering a commodity that has been in short supply for far too long: hope. And after putting the world to rights over a pint on Monday night, I came away more convinced of that than ever.
Advertisement
If he does end up in Number 10, the country will get the same Andy Burnham I am privileged to call my friend. And I reckon we’d be all the better for it.
‘Delivering Hillsborough Law isn’t finished yet’
There are some promises that carry more weight than others. For people in Liverpool, the Hillsborough Law is one of them.
The families of the 97 have spent decades fighting not just for the truth – but for justice too. They should never have had to endure what they did or had to fight so hard to uncover the truth.
Keir Starmer deserves real credit for bringing us closer than ever to making the Hillsborough Law a reality. But this isn’t a job that’s finished yet.
Advertisement
I know how much this means to Andy. He understands that this law is bigger than any single tragedy. It will forever rebalance the scales of justice and ensure no grieving family ever goes through the same struggle. A fitting legacy for the 97.
‘Grandparent the best job of my life’
Six weeks ago, we welcomed a beautiful new arrival to our family and I became a grandparent. I’ve become completely besotted.
People always tell you it’s different when it’s your grandchild. They were right. It’s given me a new perspective and a reminder of what really matters.
I’ve had many jobs over the years – Bricklayer, Builder, Councillor, MP, Mayor – but I’m assured that this is the best I’ll ever have!
Advertisement
‘How far can England go?’
I’ve watched football long enough to know better than to get carried away. But of course, we will anyway.
That’s the curse of being a football fan: hope gets the better of reality every time.
There’s real talent in this England side and, if they play with freedom, who knows how far they will go?
Every time the UK experiences a heatwave, many ask the same question: why does the heat in Britain feel so unbearable when people seem to cope with it in Spain, Greece, or India?
Humidity is part of the answer. But Britain’s housing, long summer days, and lack of experience with extreme heat also make hot weather worse.
The geography of the British Isles, surrounded by seas and on the edge of the North Atlantic, frequently exposes the region to moist air, making the weather more humid than many inland European locations. A 35°C day in Madrid might have relative humidity of around 20%, for instance, whereas in London it could easily exceed 40% – meaning roughly twice as much moisture is being held in the air.
This matters because humidity means sweat evaporates more slowly, and sweating is the main way our bodies cool themselves. Sweat does not cool us simply because it is wet. It cools us because it evaporates. Evaporation takes energy, removing heat from the skin and helping keep body temperature within safe limits.
The combined effect of temperature and humidity can be understood through “wet-bulb temperature”, used in the calculation of relative humidity. It measures how far evaporation can cool a surface, given the temperature and moisture of the air. On its own, wet-bulb temperature can be used to assess the risk of humid heat stress.
During the current heatwave, wet-bulb temperatures in southern England might reach around 25°C – that’s well below theoretical survival limits, but high enough to put older people and other vulnerable groups at risk.
For your body to experience similar stress in much drier air, the actual air temperature would need to be considerably higher, typically 40°C or more.
Advertisement
Built to survive winter, not summer
But humidity is not the whole story. There is also the question of acclimatisation.
In hotter countries, daily life is often organised around avoiding the worst afternoon heat. Outdoor activity is reduced. Buildings are designed to minimise heat gain. Shutters, external blinds, thick walls and shaded streets help keep indoor temperatures lower. Air conditioning is also far more common and is treated as a necessity rather than luxury.
External shutters are common in countries with a longer history of extreme heat. Sue Winston / unsplash, CC BY-SA
Most people in Britain simply have relatively little experience of prolonged extreme heat. For hundreds of years in the past, the UK has been designing homes to retain heat during winter. Many types of buildings, including concrete high-rise flats and typical brick-walled, tile-roofed houses, act as thermal batteries, absorbing heat during the day and releasing it slowly overnight.
Advertisement
When heat arrives suddenly
The seasonal progression of heat in these regions also differs from Britain. Across large parts of India, for example, temperatures typically rise gradually through spring. This gives people, infrastructure, and institutions time to adjust ahead of many consecutive days above 40°C.
In contrast, British heatwaves often arrive abruptly following much cooler weather. May 2026 saw temperatures swing from frosts and chilly evenings to a record-breaking heatwave within a matter of weeks. Such rapid changes leave far less opportunity for acclimatisation.
The UK is scrambling to adapt to the new normal. ZUMA Press / Alamy
Long days, sleepless nights
Britain’s long summer days also contribute to the discomfort. During June and July, strong sunshine persists well into the evening, allowing buildings, roads and urban surfaces to continue absorbing heat long after the hottest part of the day has passed. While it can still stay warm in the tropics after sunset, nearly half of each day is consistently spent in the respite of darkness.
Nighttime plays a crucial role in the risks during heatwaves. One of the greatest dangers comes from the so-called “tropical night” where temperatures stay above 20°C. The body needs cooler conditions to recover from daytime heat exposure.
Advertisement
For now, tropical nights remain relatively uncommon in the UK. They are more likely in urban areas due to the “heat island” effect as buildings and roads let out stored heat built up during the day. Humidity often remains high overnight in general, which further impairs the body’s ability to cool itself during tropical nights. These conditions are affecting parts of the UK during the current heatwave.
Temperatures exceeding 40°C and humid tropical nights once seemed almost unimaginable in the UK, until they became reality. But the heat and humidity themselves aren’t the only problem. The country is still adapted – in its routines, its infrastructure, its buildings – to a cooler climate. And as heatwaves become more extreme and humid, that mismatch will continue to make hot weather feel even more uncomfortable and dangerous.
Hezbollah’s leader on Saturday criticized a framework agreement that Israel and Lebanon signed a day earlier to end months of conflict between the militant group and Israel, raising concerns about its effectiveness.
Lebanon and Israel signed the deal in Washington on Friday without Hezbollah. The agreement links Israel’s withdrawal from Lebanon to the Iran-backed militant group’s disarmament, something Hezbollah rejects.
Several previous ceasefire agreements that Lebanon has negotiated with Israel since the outbreak of the latest Israel-Hezbollah war were never implemented on the ground.
In a statement Saturday, Hezbollah leader Naim Kassem said his group will keep fighting until Israel is forced to leave Lebanon. The group’s supporters protested in the streets of Beirut following the announcement of the agreement.
Advertisement
Despite the deal, the Lebanese state news agency reported an Israeli drone strike near the southern city of Nabatiyeh.
It also reported that the Israeli military released three Lebanese and three Syrian workers who were taken near the southern village of Ain Arab on Friday.
The deal calls on Israel to withdraw but only if Hezbollah disarms
Details of the deal that the U.S. State Department released Saturday state that Lebanon and Israel aim to eventually end the state of war between them that began when Israel was created in 1948.
Advertisement
The deal says Israel will withdraw from Lebanon provided Hezbollah disarms.
It calls for Israel to initially withdraw from two small areas — called pilot zones. It did not say where those two initial zones will be. The Lebanese army will gradually assume full security responsibility over those areas. The two countries will agree to future pilot zones for Israel’s withdrawal in the future, the agreement says.
The deal has a security annex that includes the details of the deployment of the Lebanese army and redeployments of Israeli troops. The security annex was not made public.
As part of the deal, Israel stresses that the disarmament of Hezbollah throughout Lebanon and additional security measures to be agreed upon between the two countries will eliminate any future need for Israeli army’s military action or presence in Lebanon.
Advertisement
The talks between Israel and Lebanon were separate from the interim deal that was signed earlier this month by the leaders of the U.S. and Iran to end the fighting in the Islamic Republic.
Hezbollah’s leader rejects the deal
From Hezbollah’s point of view, the deal is nonexistent, Kassem said Saturday.
He called the agreement a “humiliation,” adding that linking Israel’s withdrawal to Hezbollah’s disarmament as a “very dangerous suggestion.”
Advertisement
The deal prompted one of the group’s officials, Hassan Fadlallah, to warn that it could result in civil war because Hezbollah won’t give up its weapons and will resist any measures taken by the Lebanese army.
Judge Ahmed Rami al-Hajj, Lebanon’s top public prosecutor, on Saturday told the heads of the country’s security agencies to take measures to prevent riots.
Some Israelis and Lebanese are skeptical that the deal will last
The deal states that both Lebanon and Israel recognize that the restoration of security in southern Lebanon through the deployment of the Lebanese army, the safe return of its civilian population, and the security of Israel’s northern communities, are essential to long-term stability and peace.
Advertisement
“Personally, I don’t think it will be lasting because the Lebanese military cannot really stand a chance against Hezbollah,” said Israeli citizen Ronit Belson while visiting the town of Metula along the border with Lebanon.
In Lebanon, people were divided with Rabie Sammour, a resident of the southern city of Sidon saying: “People just want to rest for good. I support the Lebanese authorities in the decision” taken.
Another Sidon resident, Khaled Ghannoum, said the deal “legitimized Israel’s occupation.”
In an apparent reference to Iran, that has sent billions of dollars in cash to Hezbollah over the past four decades, the deal states that Lebanon and the United States commit to preventing funds from flowing to any entity, organization, or individual affiliated with non-state armed groups and to take available legal measures to proscribe the activity of any such entity, organization or individual.
Advertisement
The deal states that the Lebanese government explicitly commits to prevent reconstruction funds from flowing to non-state armed groups and connected entities.
_____
Mor reported from Metula, Israel. Associated Press journalist Ibrahim Hazboun contributed to this report from Jerusalem.
Club: Universidad de Concepcion, Chile Age: 35 Position: Forward Caps: 57 Goals: 15
The veteran forward became known to a wider audience last year after celebrating his stoppage-time winner against the USA in the Concacaf Nations League by climbing on to a TV studio platform and embracing his idol,, external Thierry Henry.
“He was there, and it came out of my heart to go hug and celebrate with him. It was totally natural,” Waterman says.
His emotions also took over in the build-up to the England game when he pushed and shoved team-mate Jose Luis Rodriguez during a disagreement on Friday.
Advertisement
Waterman had to be restrained by other players as he continued to take issue with Rodriguez, though head coach Thomas Christiansen played down the incident.
Waterman went six years without a cap from 2013 but has been a squad regular in recent years and is competing with Jose Fajardo for a place in the side.
Waterman started against Ghana and came on as a substitute during the defeat by Croatia.
This article is the latest from BBC Sport’s Ask Me Anything team.
The driver was sadly pronounced deceased at the scene
12:10, 27 Jun 2026Updated 12:14, 27 Jun 2026
A man in his thirties has sadly died after a single-vehicle collision in Co Antrim. Emergency services attended the scene in the Green Road area of Ballyclare at around 6.45pm on Friday, June 26.
Detective Inspector Stewart, from the PSNI Collision Investigation Unit, said: “Police received a report at around 6.45pm on Friday of a black Audi A5 car which had crashed and overturned in the Green Road area.
Advertisement
“Officers, along with colleagues from the Northern Ireland Ambulance Service and Northern Ireland Fire and Rescue Service, attended, however, sadly the driver was pronounced deceased at the scene.
“The Green Road, which was closed for a time, has since reopened.
“Our enquiries are continuing and we would appeal to anyone who witnessed the collision, or who may have any information which could assist with our investigation – including dash-cam or other footage – contact the Collision Investigation Unit on 101, quoting reference number 1619 of 26/06/26.”
A man has been found dead on a residential street in Kirkby, Liverpool, with Merseyside Police having launched an investigation into the ‘unexplained’ discovery
Patrick Edrich, Rebecca McCarthy and Zahra Khaliq News Reporter
15:39, 27 Jun 2026Updated 15:46, 27 Jun 2026
Police have launched a probe after a man in his 30s was found dead on a residential street in Liverpool.
Merseyside Police said he was discovered on Kersey Road in Kirkby at around 12.50pm today. Officers are currently treating the death as “unexplained”.
Witnesses told how they had seen a man “lying on the floor” before a cordon and a number of white tents were erected at the scene.
Advertisement
One man living next to the cordon said his friend’s daughter found the man, who had facial injuries and did not have shoes on, reports the Liverpool Echo.
A Merseyside Police spokesperson said: “We can confirm that an investigation is underway following the death of a man in Kirkby.
“At around 12.50pm this afternoon, Saturday 27 June, we received a report from North West Ambulance Service that a man in his 30s was found deceased on Kersey Road.
Advertisement
“A police cordon is in place on Kersey Road and his death is being treated as unexplained whilst enquiries remain ongoing to establish the full circumstances of what happened.
“Anyone with information should contact Merseyside Police social media desk via X or Facebook @MerPolCC. You can also report information via our website, or by calling 101 quoting log 513 of Saturday 27 June.
“Alternatively, contact the independent charity Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111, or via their website here.”
Their aim is to prevent incidents linked to the football and other events happening this evening, including Becky Hill’s performance at York Racecourse.
They are also continuing their crackdown on drug and drink driving.
A North Yorkshire Police spokesman said: “If you’re heading out to watch the game, or to one of the many events that’s taking place make sure your journey home is sorted in advance. Arrange a lift, book a taxi, or plan to stay over – but do not take the risk of driving after drinking or taking drugs.
Advertisement
Drink or drug driving puts lives at risk. Let’s make today about supporting England safely.”
The county-wide operation includes high visibility and targeted patrols that will cover York city centre, town centres and rural routes.
You must be logged in to post a comment Login