Weather maps show sustained heavy snow for 16 cities around the UK later this month when Arctic air moves southwards and mixes with low pressure systems from the Atlantic
Brits are set to be hit by a brutal 78 hours of snow with 16 cities in the firing line for another Arctic blast later this month.
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Fresh projections from the ECMWF weather model show the freezing air plunging south from Scandinavia while low pressure stalls close to the country – a pattern capable of producing repeated waves of snow rather than a single passing storm.
And the maps from WXCharts indicate the sustained snow arriving at around 6pm on February 26, and continuing over the coming days. Some regions are likely to see on-and-off snowfall for several days, raising the risk of icy roads, hazardous driving and travel disruption, particularly across northern areas.
The first showers are expected to reach Scotland on the evening of February 26 with a stronger band pushing south the following and turning to snow across colder northern areas and higher ground.
Wintry showers then continue through February 28 and until midnight the following day as cold air remains in place, leaving northern regions most exposed.
Southern England stays closer to milder Atlantic air with rain or sleet more likely, though brief overnight wintry bursts cannot be ruled out. The maps show snow finally leaving the UK at around.
The weather pattern shown on the maps resembles a cold northerly setup, with low pressure lingering near the UK while Arctic air feeds southwards instead of a single storm passing through.
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Higher ground in Scotland are most likely to see the deepest accumulations, while lower-lying towns may experience temporary coverings followed by icy conditions. And so there are 16 locations which are in danger of seeing plenty of snowfall.
A prediction from the Met Office of the period from February 20 to March 1 suggests plenty of wet weather “with snow probable at times”.
It reads: “Showers or longer spells of rain, as well as occasional strong winds, are most likely at first as Atlantic low pressure systems dominate in the vicinity of the UK. Some heavy rain is likely in places, with some snow probable at times, mainly on high ground in the north.
“Temperatures varying from around, or a little above, average especially in the south to cold at times, mainly in the north. Although unsettled weather is likely to dominate at first, there will be some drier interludes between weather systems. These drier interludes will become increasingly likely and perhaps more prolonged through the period.”
First, Pakistan reversed their boycott. Then, the Colombo rain stayed away. Finally, India’s fixture with Pakistan in the 2026 Twenty20 World Cup – the game that international cricket cannot afford to be without – took place.
After all the tumult, the match fit within the trend of the meetings between these two foes in global events: a crushing Indian victory, on this occasion by 61 runs. The result added to the history of what is, given the hype, perhaps the most underwhelming rivalry in all international sport. Across the T20 World Cup and ODI World Cup, India and Pakistan have now met on 17 occasions. Sixteen times, the result has been an Indian win.
Thirty years ago, before the 1996 ODI World Cup, the greatest stars from India and Pakistan, Sachin Tendulkar and Wasim Akram among them, assembled in Colombo. They were there to represent a joint Indian-Pakistani team against Sri Lanka, in a special match arranged to prove that the country was safe to stage World Cup matches, following a recent terrorist atrocity.
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“This proves to the world we’re all together,” India captain Mohammad Azharuddin said in Sri Lanka. “There’s nothing wrong as far as sport is concerned.”
Alas, no one watching this year’s clash would have got the same impression. India’s meetings with Pakistan have long taken on the feel of being less a cricket match than a grim contractual requirement. This was the 12th consecutive time in a major men’s global event that the two sides have been drawn together. The guaranteed annual clash is worth perhaps one-tenth of the International Cricket Council’s $3.1bn (£2.3bn) broadcasting deal from 2024-28.
Rather than an antidote to geopolitical tensions, this fixture now exacerbates them. Players from the two sides did not shake hands before or after the game.
Speaking at a special meeting of Bolton Council’s cabinet on Monday (February 9), the council’s business rates manager explained the relief pubs would receive.
He said the 40 per cent retail relief scheme for retail, hospitality and leisure businesses would be ending this year, but other support will be put in place.
These will limit increases of business rates, capping increases at either £800 per year or an applicable percentage – most likely to be 15 per cent for most businesses in Bolton.
For the following two years, business rates will “only increase by the level of inflation” which the officer said would likely be “of more value” than the additional 15 per cent relief.
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The 15 per cent added relief announced by the government last month will be applied after the cap – and will only apply to pubs and live music venues.
‘Still not good enough’
Cllr Nadim Muslim (Image: Bolton Council)
Cllr Nadim Muslim, leader of the Conservative Group, said he appreciates that “this is not anything that you can control from council”, but that the support “still isn’t good enough”.
He said hospitality businesses are struggling with not just business rates, but increases in the minimum wage and national insurance.
He said: “We should look at as many options as possible where we can be doing more to support those in the hospitality sector because, as it stands, more will continue to go out of business.”
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Cllr Nick Peel, leader of the council, said the transitional relief scheme – which does not include the added 15 per cent relief – is a £4.5bn investment and “significant amount of money”.
‘Need to ensure businesses are aware’
Cllr Nick Peel (Image: Bolton Council)
He said: “We need to ensure that businesses in Bolton who are worried about the revaluation are aware of the transitional relief scheme.
“These are significant amounts of money and that’s even before we get into the relief from the discount.
“It’s very complicated, perhaps we should do some basic online questions and answers somewhere to point people towards to get the basic stuff.
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“And if there’s anything more complex, they can move on to have a face-to-face.”
In a joint letter published in the Guardian and German newspaper Die Welt, the pair of senior soldiers said they were speaking “not merely as the military leaders of two of Europe’s largest military spenders, but as voices for a Europe that must now confront uncomfortable truths about its security”.
Water covers over 70% of our planet, so it’s no wonder that it flows through our storytelling. Biblical rain offered divine judgement either in the form of a blessing and rewards, or retribution and vengeance. In Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night, Feste the fool issued the melancholic refrain: “For the rain it raineth every day.” It reminded the audience of the persistence of suffering in life.
Filmmakers worldwide have revered the visual beauty and the metaphorical value of rain on screen, letting it augment many a classic scene, sequence or speech. Technically, rain intensifies mise-en-scène (the overall visual presentation on screen, combining set design, lighting, props and more): it catches backlight and renders air itself visible, creating depth and shimmer.
And as our global weather patterns undergo changes, media researchers have suggested that engagement with cinematic weather conditions like rain can allow for an “ecological meta-narrative” that connects humans (both on and offscreen) with their environment.
Whether depicting solitude, decay, adversity or romantic destined love, rain in movies emotes as much as a character would. Here are ten key moments where rain took a starring role in film – just perfect for watching on a wet day.
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1. Singin’ in the Rain (1952)
The famous scene from Singin’ in the Rain.
Few scenes invert bad weather more joyfully than Gene Kelly’s iconic number. After a night of salvaging their disastrous film project, The Duelling Cavalier, actor Don Lockwood (Gene Kelly) realises that he has fallen for the bubbly singer Kathy Selden (Debbie Reynolds). On his ebullient walk home, a legendary song and dance number turns the perceived bad weather on its head with the cheerful refrain: “Come on with the rain, I’ve a smile on my face.”
Kelly reportedly performed the sequence while running a fever, and the scene’s exuberance reframes rain not as obstacle but as liberation. The uplifting choreography sees Kelly splashing through puddles that reflect streetlights, making the urban space of the set design feel elastic and alive.
2. Seven Samurai (1954)
Rain heightens the brutal physical clashes in filmmaker Akira Kurasawa’s Seven Samurai. As the Samurai face their final battle, the rain (which has been used throughout to add mood and tone) is as cruel and violent as any of the antagonists, amplifying the pressure with its muddy, disorientating and visceral presence in the conflict.
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Kurosawa was meticulous about weather effects, using wind, dust and rain to choreograph movement within the frame. The downpour turns the battlefield into sludge, erasing clear footing and underscoring the film’s meditation on chaos, class struggle and the cost of collective defence.
3. Breakfast at Tiffany’s (1961)
The downpour in Breakfast at Tiffany’s.
The final reunion scene of Breakfast at Tiffany’s raises the emotional stakes with its unrelenting rain. In a taxi to the airport, Holly Golightly, played by Audrey Hepburn, tries to run away and abandon her emotional commitments to struggling writer Paul Varjak (George Peppard) and the stray cat she’s adopted.
After an incensed Paul watches her throw the cat out into the rain, he exits, determined to rescue the soggy feline. As she tearfully joins him, her character arc is complete. The storm forces Holly quite literally to stop running, confronting the emotional commitments she has tried to evade.
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4. Network (1976)
In Network, a New York rainstorm provides the ultimate backdrop for anchorman Howard Beal’s (Peter Finch) unhinged and rain-drenched live rant. The drumming of rain against studio windows suggests a world outside the sealed, commodified space of television as, in a renowned monologue, he berates the news channel’s manipulation and society’s disintegration with the famous line: “I’m as mad as hell, and I’m not going to take this any more.”
5. Point Break (1991)
Point Break’s final rain scene.
In Point Blank, rookie FBI agent Johnny Utah (Keanu Reeves) confronts Bodhi, a bank-robbing surfer played by Patrick Swayze, in the rain. The weather ultimately enables him to evade capture by allowing him to ride one last big wave; something both know he will never survive.
Here, rain acts as a redemptive force. Bodhi seeks exoneration through the only thing he respects – nature.
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6. The Shawshank Redemption (1994)
In prison drama The Shawshank Redemption, Andy’s (Tim Robbins) Raquel-Welch cell poster hides a hidden escape shaft, years in the making while he endured time for a crime he didn’t commit.
Wading through a sewer tunnel he finally emerges to a torrential downpour, holding out his arms and facing the heavens in a symbolic act of cleansing, salvation and freedom. Rain here washes away not guilt, but injustice.
7. Four Weddings and a Funeral (1994)
The rain Carrie ‘doesn’t notice’ in Four Weddings.
Rain doesn’t always have to represent high drama. In the Richard Curtis-penned film Four Weddings and a Funeral, American Carrie’s (Andie MacDowall) famously cheesy line, “Is it still raining, I hadn’t noticed?” puts the seal on her romance with bumbling but charming British Charles (Hugh Grant) and secures the star-crossed lovers a future.
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The actors were reportedly freezing during the rain rigged shoot. Rigs often rely on using cold water and multiple takes.
8. Magnolia (2000)
Magnolia’s frenzied collective experience of a thunderstorm of frogs will forever capture the imagination of the more surreally minded. In this scene, rain symbolises the universal chaos of life and binds disparate characters into a shared reckoning.
9. The Notebook (2004)
The rainy reunion of The Notebook.
The physical brutality of heavy rain underscores heartbreak, loss and forgiveness in decades-spanning The Notebook as Ryan Gosling and Rachel McAdams’ separated lovers Noah and Allie reunite after family has dictated their separation.
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A sweepingly romantic scene in a sleeper hit turned cult favourite, the downpour legitimises emotional excess – tears indistinguishable from rain.
10. Blade Runner (1982)
The demand of three of the most challenging filming elements – smoke, night shoots and rain – had the crew of Ridley Scott’s futuristic dystopian Blade Runner christen the film “Blood Runner” as 50 nights of filming in constant artificial rain took a physical, mental and logistical toll.
Whether depicting disorder or harmony, life-enhancing joy or unprecedented destruction, rain remains a valuable visual medium and narrative tool for filmmakers.
What’s your favourite rain scene in cinematic history? Let us know in the comments below.
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Like the Welsh Conservatives, who are also committed to reversing the legislation, Reform UK have identified frustration with the 20mph limit in Wales as a widespread and emotive issue that it hopes will help to propel the party to seat gains in the election. It is currently second in the polls, behind the centre-left Welsh nationalist party Plaid Cymru.
Reform said it will scrap the “blanket approach” to the speed limit, but would still have it around schools and hospitals. Welsh Labour have also said that some roads will return to 30mph under its plans.
Meanwhile, the Wales Green party leader Anthony Slaughter suggested that the party could push for extensions to 20mph coverage in local government, speaking to the BBC Radio 4 Today programme in January.
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Polling by More in Common shows that the 20mph limit is the best known of the current Welsh government’s policies, with 90% of respondents confirming awareness, but also the second most unpopular. Some 55% of people polled considered that the change reflected negatively on Welsh Labour, compared with 21% who viewed it positively.
Yet, for others the 20mph limit is a flagship achievement. Lee Walters, the former transport minister who introduced the legislation, has admitted mistakes in the way it was introduced, but told BBC Wales: “The data and evidence shows that it will save lives, and in time it will settle down.”
The history of 20mph limits
The legislation reduced the default speed limit on so-called “restricted roads” in Wales (essentially roads in built-up areas) from 30mph to 20mph.
Part of the aim was to reduce the number of collisions and injuries from road collisions (as well as the cost to the National Health Service of treating these casualties), encouraging walking and cycling, and improving health and wellbeing.
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As elsewhere in Britain, 20mph zones already existed in high-risk sites such as outside schools. Exceptions also applied to the 20mph default, with local authorities identifying roads where a 30mph limit would remain.
There’s a division of opinion over 20mph speed limits in Wales.
Overall, the 20mph limit currently applies to 37% of the road network in Wales. The policy featured in both the Labour and Plaid Cymru manifestos for the 2021 Senedd (Welsh parliament) election. It was also supported by the sole Liberal Democrat Senedd member, when introduced.
Conservative Senedd members voted against the legislation. The measure was controversial, with noisy opposition from sections of the public.
A lack of consistent polling makes it difficult to track public opinion on the issue. Polls in October 2023 and July 2024 recorded 54% and 72% of Welsh voters opposed to the 20mph limit respectively, but no more recent poll has directly asked about the policy.
However, a softening of attitudes over time was identified by an analysis of posts on the social media platform X at implementation in September 2023 and six months later. Not only did comments become less negative towards the change, but the content also evolved. Right after implementation, tweets focused on politics, especially criticisms of Welsh government.
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Six months later, discussion shifted toward everyday impact: improved safety around schools and residential streets, benefits for pedestrians and cyclists and urban mobility such as buses and traffic flow. Although political criticism remained, misinformation decreased and conversation became more grounded in lived experience, with safety, especially for children and communities, more prominent.
Psychologists refer to this movement as the Goodwin Curve: when behaviour people are anxious about doesn’t materialise, their attitudes soften and they become more accepting of policy change.
Early reports on the impact of the 20mph speed limit were anecdotal. More than two years after implementation, however, there is a growing body of objective evidence on its effects, especially around speed and collision data. The most recent figures show that average speeds for road traffic in Wales have fallen by 3.3 mph.
Relatedly, there has been a marked reduction in both collisions and casualties on roads where the speed limit changed from 30mph to 20mph. In 2024, the first full year after the change, collisions on 20mph and 30mph roads combined were down 23.5% compared with 2022, and casualties were down by 25.8%.
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Evidence of environmental and social impacts is less conclusive. Early monitoring shows no material change in air quality (NO₂, PM₁₀ or PM₂.₅) in pilot areas up to April 2024, and analysis of CO₂ emissions is still ongoing. Impacts on walking and cycling also remain unclear, as post-implementation active travel data has not yet been reported.
Speed and the Senedd
So, why are speed limits back on the election agenda? Reform and the Conservatives both cite the cost of the policy, estimated at £32 million. Yet, as journalist Will Hayward points out, this spend has already happened and returning to 30mph would also be expensive.
The significance of 20mph to Reform and the Conservatives is about setting the tone of the election. It is an issue that speaks to the continuing scepticism of some of the Welsh electorate towards devolution.
What’s more, the issue encapsulates different visions for Welsh society. For the rightwing parties, opposition to the 20mph limit reflects a championing of individualism and “common sense” against the perceived intrusive paternalism of the left. As Farage told journalists in Newport: “It’s an example of government saying we know what is best for you, and you must comply with us.”
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Reform UK has targeted car drivers as a potential voting base before. Reform-led councils in England have vowed to dismantle low-traffic neighbourhoods, for instance, even in areas that didn’t actually have them.
For some leftwing politicians, on the other hand, the 20mph speed limit is emblematic of a devolved Welsh government taking bold, pioneering action for health and environmental wellbeing. Reductions both in collisions and in motor insurance premiums could be presented as evidence of delivering benefits to Welsh people.
Labour and Plaid Cymru are unlikely to want the 20mph speed limit to be a major topic in the election, and would prefer to focus on issues around jobs, education, health care and public transport. Whether they can achieve a swing to those issues as the primary topic of discussion will be down to the public’s interest, and possibly media coverage.
“Knowing that Charlotte Bankes is behind me – such an incredible rider – kind of loosens me up,” he said. “And I know that when I’m loose, I can ride really well.” As well as the physicality of an event that involves descending more than 150m in altitude while dealing with 24 turns and obstacles, Bankes also showed vast calm shortly before the semi-final.
With the clock counting down, she got hold of a screwdriver herself to help change the binding – the part that attaches the ski-boots to the snowboard – after a breakage in the previous round. “It put a bit of stress on the coaches and the wax techs, but they were great as well to let me change it,” she said.
Bankes and Nightingale had previously also won the world mixed snowboard title together in 2023, with Olympic gold the one major medal missing from Bankes’s stellar career. Born in Hemel Hempstead to British parents Mark and Kate, the family moved to the southern Alps when she was only four and she competed for France in two Olympics until 2018 before switching allegiance to the country of her birth.
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Nightingale had also honed his craft in the Alps, moving with his parents from Bolton when they opened a B&B in Westendorf, some 15km from the legendary Kitzbühel slope. His parents, Clive and Christine, were overcome with emotion at the bottom of the piste in Livigno. A group of his best friends from Westendorf also certainly made themselves heard at the bottom of the slope.
“I cry at anything,” said his tearful father Clive. “Long Lost Families, Steve McQueen getting caught in barbed wire in the Great Escape, but this is indescribable.”
His mother Christine added: “Huw played a blinder today. He wasn’t just playing safe. He really attacked.”
It added up to Britain’s greatest Olympic performance on snow following previous peaks of bronze medals by Morgan, Jenny Jones and Izzy Atkin. All 13 other previous Winter Olympic golds had been won on ice, with Team GB having now surpassed their record gold-medal tally, and trying to get past their best overall medal haul of five at a Winter Games in both 2014 and 2018.
Staff and punters were delighted to see him drop in ahead of his Talking Sopranos show at the Waterfront
A very special visitor stopped by The Garrick Bar in Belfast this weekend while on his UK tour.
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Staff were delighted to see The Sopranos star Michael Imperioli drop in on Saturday ahead of his Talking Sopranos show at the Waterfront Hall on Sunday.
Imperioli, who played Christopher Moltisanti, and Steve Schirripa, who starred as Bobby Baccalieri, are bringing their hugely popular podcast to the Belfast stage to enthral fans of the hit HBO series, with tales from behind the scenes and insights into how it was made.
But before that Imperioli thrilled bar staff and punters at the busy Chichester Street bar when he made a surprise appearance.
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Posting on social media earlier today, The Garrick said: “Great to see @realmichaelimperioli popping in yesterday ahead of his @talkingsopranos show tonight after we visited his bar @scarletloungenyc last year in NYC!”
They added: “Did you know the late great James Gandolfini visited the Garrick around 97/98. He was trying to pick up the Belfast accent for a Broadway play so he sat in the comer of the bar for a few hours drinking half pints and taking notes.
“The Sopranos hadn’t come out here at that stage so he was able to blend in with some anonymity. He’s pictured here alongside previous managers Daryl McGuinness and Bernard O’Niell, by all accounts he was a nice guy taking the time to talk to the staff.”
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Israeli airstrikes have killed at least 11 people in Gaza, local officials say, including in a blast at a tent encampment housing displaced families.
The IDF said the action was in response to ceasefire violations by Hamas.
A fragile ceasefire between Israel and the militant group has existed since October, but more than 570 Palestinians have been killed since then, according to Gaza’s Hamas-run health ministry.
The latest strikes come just days before the first meeting of President Donald Trump’s controversial Board of Peace.
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Medics in Gaza said an Israeli strike on a tent encampment killed at least four people.
Meanwhile, health officials said another strike killed five people in Khan Younis in the southern part of the territory
Airstrikes also targeted what was thought to be a commander of the Islamic Jihad group, an ally of Hamas, in the Tel Al-Hawa neighbourhood in Gaza City.
An IDF official called the strikes “precise” and in accordance with international law, claiming that Hamas had repeatedly violated the October ceasefire.
Hamas spokesperson Hazem Qassem accused Israel of committing a new “massacre” against displaced Palestinians.
Israel and Hamas have repeatedly traded blame for alleged violations of the ceasefire deal.
In other news: Palestine Action ban ruled unlawful
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Meanwhile, Nasser Hospital in Gaza has condemned a decision by Doctors Without Borders to pull out of operations over concerns about armed men.
Also known as MSF, the medical organisation said security breaches posed “serious” threats to its teams and patients.
The hospital said the increase in armed men was due to a civilian police presence aimed at protecting patients and staff.
“They had to pay for the bullet that killed their son,” Nasrin says with a mix of anger and disbelief.
She’s telling me the painful details of the day her nephew, Hooman, was killed during recent protests in Iran.
The 37-year-old had joined demonstrations against the regime in Lahijan, in the north of the country, when his family says he was fatally shot by government forces in early January.
“Hooman took to the streets without a weapon. He didn’t even have a small rock in his pockets to defend himself, but he was shot with a military bullet,” his aunt says.
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Her distress is palpable.
Throughout the interview she oscillates between heartbreak and utter exhaustion at her powerlessness.
Now living in Germany, Nasrin explains it isn’t safe for her to return to Iran so she cannot hold her family as they grieve.
All she has left of Hooman is a framed photo which she kisses as she cries.
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Following her nephew’s death, she explains his relatives went to collect his body but were told it had been moved to the city of Rasht, a place where authorities are also accused of a violent crackdown on protesters.
Image: Nasrin has laid bare the painful details of the day Hooman was killed during recent protests
Image: A picture of Hooman is prominent in Nasrin’s home
Nasrin says a friend in the city told her that the bazaar was set on fire and when protesters ran from the flames, security forces opened fire.
After the blaze, government-backed Iranian state TV aired drone footage of the aftermath which it said showed the scene “three days after the terrorist incident of the Rasht bazaar fire”.
Image: Protests began in Tehran in December over economic grievances, before spreading across Iran
Nasrin says when her family finally arrived at the place where Hooman’s body was being stored many other grieving families were already there.
“They saw so many people crying, all screaming, suffering in every way possible,” she explains.
“There were several containers. They said the body was in the containers. When they opened the doors, there were several corpses stacked on top of each other. They had to look for their son.”
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She claims her relatives were told to bury Hooman immediately and had to sign a document when they left saying that they couldn’t talk about what had happened.
“They had to pay money for the bullet that killed their son,” she adds.
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Hooman had been married for three years when he died.
His young wife is now a widow.
Image: Hooman was 37 when he was killed
In a post on social media his friend said an hour before Hooman was shot, he’d said if he didn’t return, he’d died so others could be free.
“Who do you think is responsible for his death?” I ask Nasrin.
“The Iranian government, the Mullahs. They’re all murderers, they all have the blood of the Iranian people on their hands,” she quickly replies.
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“They shoot the young people and then they demand money for the bullet. Are these the people in power or are they murderers?” she adds.
Image: Nasrin has described her family’s grief after her nephew was killed
The exact death toll following the mass protests which began in late December is difficult to verify.
Iran’s government has released the names of around 3,000 people it says were killed, including civilians and security forces.
It blames rioters and foreign interference for fuelling the violence.
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‘I have no hope about Donald Trump’
Following the crackdown, US President Donald Trump has sent warships towards Iran and repeatedly threatened to use force to make them reach a deal on their nuclear programme, but Nasrin says it’s not enough.
Protests in London against Iranian regime
“I have no hope about Donald Trump. They could already help many other Iranian people. They could do sanctions,” she says.
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“The people of Iran can get rid of this government, but we need to help them. They don’t need war.“
I ask whether she would support foreign powers going into the country to overturn the regime, or if she believes lasting change can only happen from within.
“From within,” she replies, “From outside, they just want war, they want to destroy our country. We don’t want that.”
Powerless to push for change inside Iran – Nasrin has joined thousands of other Iranians at protests in Germany demanding democracy and justice for the dead; both demands may fail.
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Sky News put the allegations made against the Iranian regime in this interview to the Iranian Embassy in London.
At the time of publication, we had not received a reply.
Notions Vintage is moving from the first floor of 22 Colliergate to a larger standalone site 300 metres away in Aldwark Mews, and is set to open on Wednesday, February 18.
Owner Cath Dickinson spoke to The Press at the new premises ahead of the move about plans for expansion of the vintage clothing company and introducing other pre-loved ranges to the shop.
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She said: “There are three separate rooms here and hopefully, we’ll be adding to the range of vintage designer gowns, affordable jewellery, rare sportswear and original band t-shirts.
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“We’re starting out with a small interiors range and are developing a line of gifts with a sustainable theme where possible.
“I think we’re also the only shop in York to have a distribution deal with Donegal Socks – the family are in their third generation staying true to the traditional manufacturing skills of their forefathers.
“If I can prise my husband’s hands off some of our duplicate vinyl albums we’ll have an expanded record range as well as CDs and cassettes.
“It’s great to see people wanting music they can touch as well as listen to again.
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“We’re also planning to have artwork and prints in the shop.”
Cath Dickinson has also curated an exhibition of works in York Cityscreen from two late artists from York including JP Warriner (Image: Supplied)
Cath is currently juggling the shop move with her curation of a free exhibition of the works of two late York artists – Penny Marrows and JP Warriner in the bar and upstairs gallery of Cityscreen York in Coney Street, which runs until March 6.
She said she’s been collecting works of John Warriner for five years and some of his works will be available for sale at Notions Vintage.
Cath said she’s excited about showing everybody the new space and expanded range (Image: Kevin Glenton)
Returning to the shop in Aldwark Mews – the former Touch Tuina treatment centre – Cath was going over the finishing touches to the new shop ahead of the new opening.
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She said: “I know I’m leaving a busy street, but the large proportion of people who visited 22 Colliergate did not come up to the first floor – we were hidden in plain sight to some extent and there was confusion over whether it was one shop.
“I wanted to be completely independent and create a space for Notions in its own right.
“This building gives me a great template with the wonderful curved windows, the aspect, the light and even the parquet flooring.
“The business model works and it needs more people coming through the door.
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“It’s really nice people coming in the shop in pairs and seeing something vintage and remembering when they owned a similar piece, and I smile when I overhear them saying ‘I remember that Fila tracksuit’, or ‘I wish I’d kept that sheepskin’.
“I’ve made so many friends from being here and they always come in and say hi, so I’m so excited about showing them, and everybody, the new space and the expanded range.”
Notions Vintage is moving from 22 Colliergate to 6 Aldwark Mews and opens on Wednesday, February 18.