The thriller, featuring Shaun Evans, Romola Garai, Zahra Ahmadi and Nikki Amuka-Bird, examines trust, truth, and the personal price of secrets within today’s intelligence community.
This compelling four-part thriller unfolds within MI5’s world, delving into the delicate, complex network of human connections where loyalty and betrayal intersect.
A synopsis reads: “At the heart of the story is John Hughes (Shaun Evans), a mid-career MI5 officer navigating a rapidly evolving intelligence landscape while struggling to keep his personal life intact. On a hunch John meets a British Iranian man with links to the Stockport gangland who claims he has intelligence about a plot on UK soil.
“Before he can share intel, the informant is executed, and John kills the assassin in self-defence. John soon finds himself under internal investigation, facing scrutiny from his superiors, including Simone Grant (Nikki Amuka-Bird), while his partner Claire (Romola Garai) grapples with the secrecy that defines his world.
“John’s efforts to save his marriage are complicated by his inability to let the case go. And when he meets Mehreen Askari-Evans (Zahra Ahmadi), an intelligence operative who is tasked with taking over John’s duties, he finds an unlikely ally. As John becomes increasingly convinced of the involvement of a hardline faction of the Iranian regime, he also starts to worry there are enemies closer to home. But can he identify the target and avert the attack before it’s too late?”
Betrayal takes place in Liverpool, with filming locations spanning Liverpool and Manchester, and numerous cast members have praised both cities and their breathtaking scenery, reports the Liverpool Echo.
Discussing the experience of shooting locally, Shaun Evans, who portrays intelligence officer John Hughes, commented: “I spend a lot of time in Liverpool because my family are all there, so to be up north was brilliant. They were a really funny, hard-working crew, and to be seeing parts of Liverpool in a way that I hadn’t seen them, having access to certain parts of the city, that was just amazing. A very special time in my life.”
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Romola Garai shared similar enthusiasm: “I had a very nice little apartment right by the docks, so I’d go on walks and go to all the museums, which was great. It was a city I don’t know very well, so it was a real treat to explore the food scene and galleries.”
Zahra Ahmadi, who portrays intelligence operative Mehreen Askari Evans, has also discussed the striking architecture and rich musical heritage she discovered whilst filming her scenes. Speaking about shooting in Liverpool and Manchester, she said: “I loved it. I’d worked in Manchester before for quite a considerable amount of time and I’m a big fan, but I had only ever been to Liverpool once (and only for a week) before Betrayal I was working that whole time, so I didn’t get to know it at all really. But what I do remember fro that week was how every single Scouser I met was really engaged, eloquent and energised which I loved.
“This time round however, I got more time to explore, and I’d never realised what a beautiful city it was. The architecture is stunning, and then of course there’s the musical history and the food scene too, which is incredible. I ate the most amazing cauliflower dish that blew my mind – Maray’s Disco Cauliflower – you need to try it..”
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Betrayal starts on ITV1 and ITVX at 9pm on Sunday, February 8.
Eight co-defendants will be sentenced alongside Lai on Monday after pleading guilty to a charge of conspiring to collude with foreign forces.
They include six former Apple Daily executives — publisher Cheung Kim-hung, associate publisher Chan Pui-man, editor-in-chief Ryan Law, executive editor-in-chief Lam Man-chung, and editorial writers Fung Wai-kong and Yeung Ching-kee.
Cheung, Chan and Yeung had earlier testified against their former boss in return for reduced sentences.
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The remaining two are former activists Andy Li and Chan Tsz-wah, linked to the international lobby group Stand with Hong Kong, who also testified for the prosecution in exchange for lighter sentences.
Alisha Rahaman Sarkar8 February 2026 22:30
Jimmy Lai to be sentenced at 10am on Monday
Hong Kong media tycoon Jimmy Lai will be sentenced on Monday at 10am local timein a closely watched national security trial that has drawn international criticism, including from the US and Britain.
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The 78-year-old Briton was found guilty in December of two charges of conspiracy to collude with foreign forces under a China-imposed national security law, as well as a charge of conspiracy to publish seditious material.
Jai, a pro-democracy campaigner and founder of the now-shuttered pro-democracy Apple Daily newspaper, has denied all wrongdoing but faces life in prison.
Alisha Rahaman Sarkar8 February 2026 21:30
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Xi Jinping gives ‘strong support’ for Jimmy Lai conviction
Chinese president Xi Jinping has expressed strong support for the jailing of British media tycoon Jimmy Lai in Hong Kong, amid mounting international condemnation.
Xi’s first reaction to Monday’s verdict comes just weeks before Sir Keir Starmer is due to travel to Beijing for an important trade visit.
Lai’s trial was closely watched abroad and his conviction has been met with intense criticism by Western governments and rights groups who called it “politically motivated” and “a disgraceful act of persecution”.
Alisha Rahaman Sarkar8 February 2026 20:30
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‘Free Jimmy Lai’ message projected onto London landmarks as Keir Starmer visits China
A message calling for the release of Jimmy Lai has been projected onto the side of the Houses of Parliament and Tower Bridge.
78-year-old Jimmy Lai, a Hong Kong pro-democracy campaigner and British national, has been in detention for more than five years having been arrested in 2020 under Hong Kong’s new national security law.
A message calling for the release of Jimmy Lai has been projected onto the side of the Houses of Parliament and Tower Bridge. 78-year-old Jimmy Lai, a Hong Kong pro-democracy campaigner and British national, has been in detention for more than five years having been arrested in 2020 under Hong Kong’s new national security law. The Committee for Freedom in Hong Kong Foundation projected messages urging Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer to “be the hero” and “bring Jimmy home”. It comes as Starmer began a three-day visit to China on Wednesday (28 January) as he attempts to continue building bridges with Beijing.
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Alisha Rahaman Sarkar8 February 2026 19:30
Starmer under fire for not securing release of Jimmy Lai during China trip
Sir Keir Starmer has been accused of failing to secure an assurance that British citizen Jimmy Lai would be released, despite going to China “with the title deeds to a mega-embassy in the back pocket”.
Lord Alton of Liverpool, who had previously been sanctioned by the communist regime, criticised the Prime Minister in Parliament on Monday.
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Foreign minister Baroness Chapman of Darlington argued Mr Lai should be freed immediately but said the government would not “get everything we want with one visit”.
Sir Keir headed to China after the government gave the go-ahead to Beijing’s proposed new super-embassy in London, despite security concerns.
During his trip, the Prime Minister raised Mr Lai’s case with Chinese President Xi Jinping.
Alisha Rahaman Sarkar8 February 2026 18:30
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Top judge warned that calls to free Jimmy Lai prematurely would undermine the city’s rule of law
Chief Justice Andrew Cheung, Hong Kong’s top judge, recently said that calls to free Lai prematurely would undermine the city’s rule of law.
“Such demands not only circumvent the legal procedures established to ensure accountability under the law, but also strike at the very heart of the rule of law itself,” he said.
Alisha Rahaman Sarkar8 February 2026 17:30
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My father Jimmy Lai’s Hong Kong imprisonment is not justice – Britain must act now
My father, Jimmy Lai, was ludicrously found guilty in a politically motivated trial in Hong Kong of trying to destroy the city he made his home in and which he loves.
His vocal dedication to democracy and human rights has been twisted into a violation of the city’s vague and draconian national security law.
As the owner of the largest pro-democracy newspaper in Hong Kong, he was an obvious target for the Chinese Communist Party-backed government, which viewed him as a symbol of what it feared most: dissent.
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One of the longest trials in Hong Kong’s history was an unjust legal process; there was no jury, and he was denied the lawyer of his choosing. The law was passed in the summer of 2020, and my father was arrested within weeks, with prosecutors pointing to things he’d done years before.
We knew that this verdict was coming. But we also know that this is not the end of the story. This is the beginning of a new chapter in the campaign for his release.
The jailing of a British citizen under a draconian national security law should halt any pretence of ‘normal’ relations with China, says Sebastien Lai, son of political prisoner Jimmy Lai. Silence is no longer an option.
Alisha Rahaman Sarkar8 February 2026 16:30
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Who is Jimmy Lai?
Sir Keir Starmer has landed in China for the first trip to the country by a UK leader in eight years, telling reporters that he will “raise the issues that need to be raised” with president Xi Jinping.
The prime minister has come under pressure from human rights groups to press for the release of British national Jimmy Lai, a former media tycoon and pro-democracy activist.
Mr Lai is facing a life sentence in prison after a Hong Kong court found him guilty of national security offences last December. He has already spent five years behind bars for his role in Hong Kong’s 2019 pro-democracy protests.
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Alisha Rahaman Sarkar8 February 2026 15:30
Inside the Hong Kong newsrooms stifled by fear after Jimmy Lai’s conviction
When police raided the Apple Daily newsroom in 2021, journalists across Hong Kong understood they were watching more than the collapse of a newspaper. They were being shown the future.
A little over four years later, the conviction of the paper’s founder Jimmy Lai on sedition charges has merely formalised that state of affairs. The real impact has long since settled in, embedded in daily decisions about what can be written, who can speak, and how far the press can push in their pursuit of the truth.
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What remains of journalism is editors identifying invisible red lines, protecting staff and ensuring their reporting does not expose journalists or sources, while reporters engage in self-censorship to escape harassment and intimidation by the government.
Alisha Rahaman Sarkar8 February 2026 14:30
Jimmy Lai’s marathon trial ran for 156 days
Jimmy Lai’s marathon trial began in December 2023 and ran for 156 days. In 2020, Beijing imposed a sweeping national security law upon the Asian financial hub following mass and sometimes violent pro-democracy protests in 2019.
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Among the allegations, Lai was found guilty of using Apple Daily as a platform to conspire with six former executives and others to produce seditious publications between April 2019 and June 2021, as well as to collude with foreign forces, including the US, between July 2020 and June 2021.
He was accused of conspiring with activist Andy Li, paralegal Chan Tsz-wah and others to invite foreign countries to impose sanctions, blockades and other hostile activities against Hong Kong and China.
Vitaly Janelt (Brentford): Heobviously gets a goal – wonderful header – but I actually thought he was just the best player on the pitch in the 3-2 win at Newcastle. I agree with Jordan Henderson in the sense he should have had the man of the match but he played well, kept it simple, broke up the game, broke forward when he needed to. A real solid midfielder’s performance.
Bruno Fernandes (Manchester United): What a difference a manager makes – being able to be free, get on the ball, go wherever he wants and be creative. I think Michael Carrick takes a lot of credit for that but again, another goal for him against Spurs, another win for United – he has to go in.
Rayan (Bournemouth): He was fantastic in the draw with Aston Villa. We have to look at Lucas Digne defensively but everything he did, running forward with pace, power, direct. He caused problems throughout the day. He’s a big strong boy that gets his team up the pitch and he gets at the opposition – and Digne had no answers for him.
Dominik Szoboszlai (Liverpool): We’re going to put him in the 10 even though he played right-back, but when you score a goal like that you’re in. Unbelievable free-kick against Manchester City with pure technique to slice across the ball to make it swing from left to right and leave Donnarumma stranded.
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Cole Palmer (Chelsea): His first start back under Liam Rosenior, talking about getting his fitness back up.He loses a few points because he was against a very bad Wolves team. However fantastic, a hat-trick, goals, penalties, confidence. The most important thing is he’s smiling again – that’s great for Chelsea and great for England so he deserves that, as does Rosenior for giving him that.
NURSERIES must stop making parents pay sneaky extra charges to use their “free” childcare hours, the Government has warned.
Ministers are cracking down on hidden fees which can cost families hundreds of pounds per year.
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Parents have reported being hit with extra costs – including top-up fees, upfront registration fees and charges for things like books and craft materialsCredit: PA
Children aged nine months to four years can get between 15 and 30 hours per week of Government-funded childcare during school term-time, often called “funded” or “free” hours.
Nurseries are not meant to force parents who use funded hours to pay extra charges on top, but parents have reported being hit with extra costs – including top-up fees, upfront registration fees and charges for things like books and craft materials.
Now new guidance issued by the Government is making clear exactly what nurseries can and cannot charge.
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The update makes clear nurseries must not charge parents any “top-up” fees to make up the difference between their private rates and the funding they receive from the Government for funded hours.
They also cannot force parents to buy extra paid-for hours, if they only want to use the free 15 or 30 hours. But if parents want more hours, they are allowed to charge for these at a private rate.
Parents using funded hours must not be charged non-refundable deposits or registration fees to secure a place for their child. Nurseries can charge deposits but these must be refunded, unless parents do not take up the space.
Nurseries are also banned from charging parents for essential learning items, like toys, books, craft supplies, crayons, paper and musical instruments.
They must also not pass on the costs of cleaning, staffing, rent, insurance or fuel bills to parents – or charge for any extra SEND support for children with additional needs during the funded hours.
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‘I know how complicated childcare is for parents… they should not be pressured into paying extra’
Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson tells The Sun:
“A child’s early years shape so much of their future – but I know how complicated childcare can be for parents.
“When you’re juggling work, family life and household bills, you don’t always have the time to pore over every line of small print or question whether a charge is really optional or not.”
“Parents are saving up to £7,500 a year thanks to our 30 hours of funded childcare, and they should not have the value of these savings quietly chipped away at by small charges building up week after week.
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“Every pound matters when money is tight. That’s why we are tightening up guidance and making it clearer what parents should and should not be charged for.
“Funded hours must be delivered without hidden costs, and parents should not feel pressured into paying extra.
“If parents notice a charge they weren’t expecting, they should feel comfortable asking their childcare provider to explain it clearly.
“If concerns remain, they can speak to their local authority, which oversees funded places and has powers to act if the rules are being broken.”
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The Government is also cracking down on what it calls “vague” charges for things like “sustainability”, “enhanced ratios” or “enrichment”.
It said all extra charges must be clearly explained and itemised on invoices, so parents know exactly what they’re paying for.
The Sun previously revealed how parents were being stung by extra nursery fees to cover food and admin costs, at the same time free childcare hours was being expanded by the government.
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Nurseries can charge for some optional extras – but only if parents can choose to opt out of these without losing their free place.
These include nappies, suncream, snacks and meals. Parents must have the option to supply their own nappies, creams or packed lunches and snacks.
Nurseries can also charge for other optional extras like trips, events and special classes like music or foreign language classes.
The Department for Education said the updated guidance would “stop quiet, recurring charges from chipping away at childcare savings” and make bills easier to understand.
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It said parents who think they are being overcharged should ask their nursery to explain and itemise charges. If the issue is not resolved, parents can contact their local council, which has the power to investigate.
WASHINGTON (AP) — A leading U.S. health official on Sunday urged people to get inoculated against the measles at a time of outbreaks across several states and as the United States is at risk of losing its measles elimination status.
Oz, a heart surgeon, defended some recently revised federal vaccine recommendations as well as past comments from President Donald Trump and the nation’s health chief, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., about the efficacy of vaccines. From Oz, there was a clear message on the measles.
“Not all illnesses are equally dangerous and not all people are equally susceptible to those illnesses,” he told CNN’s “State of the Union.” “But measles is one you should get your vaccine.”
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FILE – Matt Caldwell, left, a Lubbock Fire Department official, administers a measles, mumps and rubella vaccine to Clair May at the Lubbock Health Department, Feb. 26, 2025, in Lubbock, Texas. (AP Photo/Mary Conlon, File)
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FILE – Matt Caldwell, left, a Lubbock Fire Department official, administers a measles, mumps and rubella vaccine to Clair May at the Lubbock Health Department, Feb. 26, 2025, in Lubbock, Texas. (AP Photo/Mary Conlon, File)
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An outbreak in South Carolina in the hundreds has surpassed the recorded case count in Texas’ 2025 outbreak, and there is also one on the Utah-Arizona border. Multiple other states have had confirmed cases this year. The outbreaks have mostly impacted children and have come as infectious disease experts warn that rising public distrust of vaccines generally may be contributing to the spread of a disease once declared eradicated by public health officials.
Asked in the television interview whether people should fear the measles, Oz replied, “Oh, for sure.” He said Medicare and Medicaid will continue to cover the measles vaccine as part of the insurance programs.
“There will never be a barrier to Americans get access to the measles vaccine. And it is part of the core schedule,” Oz said.
But Oz also said “we have advocated for measles vaccines all along” and that Kennedy “has been on the very front of this.”
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Questions about vaccines did not come up later in a Kennedy interview on Fox News Channel’s “The Sunday Briefing,” where he was asked about what kind of Super Bowl snack he might have (probably yogurt). He also said he eats steak with sauerkraut in the mornings.
Critics of Kennedy have argued that the health secretary’s longtime skepticism of U.S. vaccine recommendations and past sympathy for the unfounded claim that vaccines may cause autism may influence official public health guidance in ways contrary to the medical consensus.
Oz argued that Kennedy’s stance was supportive of the measles vaccine despite Kennedy’s general comments about the recommended vaccine schedule.
“When the first outbreak happened in Texas, he said, get your vaccines for measles, because that’s an example of an ailment that you should get vaccinated against,” Oz said.
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The Republican administration last month dropped some vaccine recommendations for children, an overhaul of the traditional vaccine schedule that the Department of Health and Human Services said was in response to a request from Trump.
President Donald Trump greets Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz after en event about TrumpRx in the South Court Auditorium in the Old Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White House campus, Thursday, Feb. 5, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
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President Donald Trump greets Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz after en event about TrumpRx in the South Court Auditorium in the Old Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White House campus, Thursday, Feb. 5, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
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Trump asked the agency to review how peer nations approach vaccine recommendations and consider revising U.S. guidance accordingly.
States, not the federal government, have the authority to require vaccinations for schoolchildren. While federal requirements often influence those state regulations, some states have begun creating their own alliances to counter the administration’s guidance on vaccines.
U.S. vaccination rates have dropped and the share of children with exemptions has reached an all-time high, according to federal data. At the same time, rates of diseases that can be protected against with vaccines, such as measles and whooping cough, are rising across the country.
Kennedy’s past anti-vaccine activism
Kennedy’s past skepticism of vaccines has come under scrutiny since Trump first nominated him to lead the Department of Health and Human Services.
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During his Senate confirmation testimony last year, Kennedy told lawmakers that a closely scrutinized 2019 trip he took to Samoa, which came before a devastating measles outbreak, had “nothing to do with vaccines.”
FILE – Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. visits University of Utah to discuss Utah’s new fluoride ban and food additives legislation, April 7, 2025, in Salt Lake City. (AP Photo/Melissa Majchrzak)
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FILE – Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. visits University of Utah to discuss Utah’s new fluoride ban and food additives legislation, April 7, 2025, in Salt Lake City. (AP Photo/Melissa Majchrzak)
Samoan officials later said Kennedy’s trip bolstered the credibility of anti-vaccine activists before the measles outbreak, which sickened thousands of people and killed 83, mostly children under age 5.
Mixed messaging on autism, vaccines
Oz’s comments mark a broader pattern among administration officials of voicing discordant and at times contradictory statements about the efficacy of vaccines amid an overhaul of U.S. public health policy.
Officials have walked a fine line in criticizing past U.S. vaccine policy, often at times appearing to express sympathy for unfounded conspiracy theories from anti-vaccine activists, while also not straying too far from established science.
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During a Senate hearing Tuesday, Jay Bhattacharya, the director of the National Institutes of Health, said no single vaccine causes autism, but he did not rule out the possibility that research may find some combination of vaccines could have negative health side effects.
But Kennedy, in Senate testimony, has argued that a link between vaccines and autism has not been disproved.
He has previously claimed that some components of vaccines, like the mercury-containing preservative thimerosal, may cause childhood neurological disorders such as autism. Most vaccines for measles, mumps and rubella do not contain thimerosal. A federal vaccine advisory board overhauled by Kennedy last year voted to no longer recommend thimerosal-containing vaccines.
Administration public health officials often cite the need to restore trust in public health systems after the coronavirus pandemic, when vaccine policy and the general public health response to the deadly pandemic became a highly polarizing topic in American politics.
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Misinformation and conspiracy theories about the public health system also spread during the pandemic, and longtime anti-vaccine activist groups saw a swell in interest from the wider public.
Kennedy, who for years led the anti-vaccine activist group Children’s Health Defense, has been criticized for ordering reviews of vaccines and public health guidelines that leading medical research groups have deemed settled science.
Public health experts also criticized the president for making unfounded claims about highly politicized health issues. During a September Oval Office event, Trump asserted without evidence that Tylenol and vaccines are linked to a rise in the incidence of autism in the United States.
With Alisson marooned upfield for a set-piece as Liverpool searched for a late equaliser, Rayan Cherki kicked the ball towards an empty net from just inside his own half.
Haaland gave chase and was clearly going to outpace Dominik Szoboszlai.
The City striker had overtaken Szoboszlai 25 yards from goal and looked certain to win the race – but he was pulled back.
It was a clear foul which referee Craig Pawson identified, but he played an advantage.
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As the ball rolled towards the goal with the same two players still jostling to reach it, Liverpool‘s Hungary international was about to slide in and clear it off the line.
Before Szoboszlai could do so, however, Haaland pulled him back, and that stopped the home player from keeping the ball out of the net.
The first pull on the Norway striker muddies the waters. After all, it seemed Haaland was definitely going to score.
But they are two distinct situations. You have to separate the first foul by Szoboszlai and the subsequent offence from Haaland.
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Would Szoboszlai have prevented the goal had he not been fouled? There is a high chance.
On that basis it is impossible for the goal to stand.
Remember that Pawson played advantage. Had Szoboszlai been allowed to successfully keep the ball out, the play would have been brought back and he would have been sent off.
The end result would be the same as the outcome of the VAR intervention: no goal and Szoboszlai sent off for denying an obvious goalscoring opportunity.
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If you take out the first pull on Haaland, it is hard to see how anyone could have a problem with the goal being disallowed.
This is not the first time, or the last, that the VAR has correctly disallowed a goal and people really struggle to stomach it.
Yes, the goal could be important for Manchester City at the end of the season. But the goal conceded could also turn out to be vital for Liverpool.
The owner of more than 100 Burger King franchises in Wisconsin has been ordered to pay more than $1 million in fines after officials found over 1,500 violations of child labor laws.
Cave Enterprises, LLC, has been ordered by Wisconsin officials to pay $237,000 to child workers and a $828,000 penalty to the state, Fox 6 Now reported.
Wisconsin officials launched an investigation into Cave Enterprises, LLC, after 33 separate complaints were filed from 2023 to 2025, alleging violations of child labor and wage laws, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported.
Cave Enterprises, which operates 105 franchises of the fast food chain across the state, was found to have violated Wisconsin child labor laws at least 1,656 times.
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At least 600 kids were involved in the company’s infractions.
The owner of over 100 Burger King franchises in Wisconsin has to pay a hefty fine after officials found nearly 2,000 child labor law violations (Getty/iStock)
“It was still shocking even to our investigators to see that out of 105 locations around the state, violations were found at 103 locations, involving over 600 minor workers,” said Amy Pechacek, the Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development Secretary.
“This is the largest case that we have seen of youth working violations in modern history. We have quite honestly not seen anything to the depth and breadth of what this audit uncovered,” Pechacek added.
The state says it found that 593 children ages 14 and 15 were allowed to work at the Burger King franchises without a child labor work permit, which is required by the state.
The investigation also found that 627 teenage employees worked shifts of six hours or longer without a meal break, violating state law.
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The state found violations at locations in Menomonee Falls, Oak Creek, Oconomowoc, Waukesha, West Bend, West Allis, Kenosha, Beaver Dam and Racine, according to Fox.
Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers, a Democrat, blamed Republican lawmakers for eroding child labor laws in the state.
“After years of Republican lawmakers working to get rid of Wisconsin’s basic child labor law protections, I’m proud my administration is working to do the opposite by making sure bad actors are held accountable for taking advantage of kids in the workplace,” Evers said in a statement.
The Independent has contacted Cave Enterprises for comment.
A PAIR of contestants on Ant and Dec’s Limitless Win went home without a single penny after incorrectly answering a question about a chocolate bar.
Friends Abbi and Amy entered the show hopeful to take home some money to spend and save for the future.
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A pair of contestants on Limitless Win went home almost immediatelyCredit: ITVThey were absolutely stumped by a Twix questionCredit: ITV
But their enthusiasm was rapidly dashed as they failed to stay on the ladder after only the second question.
Fuelled by the motivation of getting their first easy question right – what’s the maximum number a person can roll on two standard dice – the ladies looked up at the screen as the killer chocolate question popped up.
Read aloud by Dec, he asked them: “If the two chocolate bars in a standard 50g pack of Twix were laid end to end, what would the total length be in centimetres?”
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As early on quiz show questions go, this one was incredibly tough.
Abbi and Amy looked to one another baffled, and commented on how the size of Twix bars keeps shrinking so it’s hard to keep up.
One of them noted that they had actually measured the size of a KitKat before, which they were trying to mentally envision to use as a point of comparison.
“The KitKats were around 11 centimetres, I feel like it’s a bit bigger than that,” they discussed, agreeing 11 sounded too small.
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Dec added pressure, reminding them: “Remember, one over and it’s game over. Exact answers bank you cash.”
After not knowing what else to think and beginning to second guess themselves the duo locked in 22, estimating 11 centimetres per Twix.
Abbi and Amy had only £1k in the bank as they waited with anticipation to see if they got the answer correct.
They were gutted when they saw they got the answer wrongCredit: ITV
But the studio’s lights flooded with red, and they were both sent home empty handed.
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“Ah, you’ve gone over so it’s game over,” said a shocked Ant.
“What was the answer, what was the exact answer please,” he continued, asking for the correct answer to appear for all to see.
The correct answer was 19 centimetres.
Voicing how they were “gutted”, the audience gave them a round of applause before they left the stage.
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Would you have got it?
Limitless Win is airs at 8pm on ITV.Ant and Dec felt rather sorry for themCredit: ITVThe audience clapped as they left the showCredit: ITV
Manchester City have not won a Premier League game at Anfield in front of fans since Pep Guardiola’s appointment in 2016, but in the eyes of many they need to change that record today to keep the title race alive.
Arsenal’s victory over Sunderland yesterday leaves City staring at the prospect of finishing the weekend nine points adrift. In a Premier League where gimme fixtures are scarce, and with 13 games to go, it would probably be premature to declare it done and dusted but City’s chances would be remote.
City’s form is just as worrying as the points deficit to Arsenal. They have won just one of their last six league games, fading badly in second halves and conceding leads, with two points thrown away at Spurs last Sunday.
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Pep Guardiola could welcome back Ruben Dias to add some ballast to his defence, but it would be a risk to return from injury in a game of this magnitude.
There is plenty riding on the game for Liverpool too, who watched Chelsea and Manchester United win yesterday in the race for Champions League football.
Arne Slot’s team have scored 15 goals in their last four games in all competitions, with Hugo Ekitike and Florian Wirtz beginning to strike up a fruitful partnership.
Dominik Szoboszlai will deputise at right-back, something City could look to exploit with Antoine Semenyo. The key selection decision for Slot is whether to bring Curtis Jones into a true midfield three, or stick with a 4-2-3-1 shape with a front four of Mohamed Salah, Ekitike, Wirtz and Cody Gakpo to tear into a vulnerable City defence.
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Goals have been in short supply for Erling Haaland of late, and there have been suggestions that City should start him on the bench for this one. Surely not?
Image: Lindsey Vonn crashes 13 seconds into her run. Pic: AP
The fall may have been softened by the mandatory safety airbag that inflated after losing control, but screams could be heard from Vonn after landing awkwardly at high speed.
And in a repeat of the scenes witnessed nine days earlier in Crans-Montana, she was taken to hospital on a stretcher dangling from the bottom of a helicopter.
Image: Vonn is airlifted away after the crash. Pic: AP
Medics will now be assessing the long-term damage caused following surgery on her broken left leg.
It could be a dramatic and horrific end to the career of one of the most successful female skiers of all time.
A generation of Manchester City supporters had not experienced a winning feeling at Anfield – but all that changed on a highly dramatic Sunday evening.
Trailing 1-0 to Liverpool in the 84th minute, it was turning into a theme familiar for the Citizens faithful until captain Bernardo Silva and the ice-cool Erling Haaland both netted in the dying stages to hand Pep Guardiola’s side a memorable victory.
It mattered little as they stayed well after the final whistle to celebrate their side’s triumph – only a third in the league since 1981.
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It was also result that keeps City in the title race. Just.
Boss Pep Guardiola joked afterwards about their last victory at Anfield five years ago, which came behind closed doors during Covid restrictions, saying: “That doesn’t count, right?”
But this brilliant turnaround meant City are only six points adrift of leaders Arsenal with 13 games to play, having been staring at a nine-point deficit in the closing stages.
“It is so difficult, Anfield is Anfield – the tradition, the history and the crowd,” added Guardiola. “It always looks smaller, tighter here and the pitch doesn’t look like Etihad Stadium – and the players that they have, and everything.
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“Of course we would be disappointed and all the questions would be over and over [about the title race] but six points is better than nine. It is still a lot considering how strong Arsenal are in all departments.
“The last 10 games, from my experience, it is so difficult. The important thing is to try to be there and improve because the second half was not good enough again.
“All we can do is breathe down the neck of Arsenal and being there, try if they go slip [up] and use it.”