Located at the southern end of Druridge Bay, the sandy beach attracts families, dog walkers and nature lovers looking for space, scenery and a slower pace compared to busier seaside destinations, but not just from the North East, with people travelling from across the UK to get there.
Part of a nine-mile stretch of coastline, Cresswell Beach is particularly striking at low tide, when the sand stretches far out towards the North Sea.
Cresswell Beach (Image: NORTHERN ECHO)
Reviews regularly mention the space, with visitors noting that even during peak periods it rarely feels overcrowded.
One visitor described it as “a huge, open beach where you can always find a quiet spot,” while another said it was “ideal for long walks with the dog, flat, sandy and peaceful.”
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Cresswell sits on the Northumberland Coast Path, making it a regular stopping point for walkers and cyclists exploring the Druridge Bay area.
The nearby Cresswell Foreshore nature reserve is also well regarded, with visitors pointing to the rock pools and birdlife as unexpected highlights.
Nature-focused reviews often mention seeing wading birds and marine life close to shore, with one visitor calling it “a brilliant spot for wildlife without needing specialist knowledge.”
Cresswell Beach (Image: NORTHERN ECHO)
Visitor feedback consistently highlights the convenience of nearby food and drink options.
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Cresswell Ices is frequently mentioned in reviews as a must-stop, particularly for families and walkers finishing a beach stroll.
Across from the beach car park, The Drift Café also receives positive comments for its “homemade food and relaxed atmosphere”.
One reviewer summed it up by saying: “You’ve got everything you need within a few minutes, beach, coffee, ice cream and fish and chips.”
For those looking to stay overnight, Cresswell Towers Holiday Park, located close to the beach, is often referenced by visitors as a convenient base with sea views and easy access to the coast.
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Reviews from holidaymakers staying locally frequently mention the appeal of waking up close to the beach and using Cresswell as a starting point for exploring Druridge Bay and the wider Northumberland coast.
While it may lack the arcades and attractions of larger resorts, that’s exactly what many visitors say they like about Cresswell Beach.
As one review puts it: “There’s nothing flashy here, just a beautiful beach, fresh air and space to relax.”
Bothwell in Lanarkshire, has become known as Britain’s “firebomb capital”.
Fed-up residents on Celtic legend Henrick Larsson’s former street have launched a neighbourhood watch scheme in response to an organised crime spree in their posh village.
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The area in Bothwell, Lanarkshire, has become known as Britain’s “firebomb capital” after more than 30 targeted attacks thought to be linked to underworld gangs.
The latest saw two cars torched in separate incidents in Baillie Drive last month.
Police are keeping an open mind as to whether they were linked to the series of fires that have plagued the leafy village which is a favourite for Old Firm stars.
Locals are alarmed over the spate of brazen arson and so far unsolved attacks on restaurants, homes and luxury cars since 2019.
Now residents on the street where Larsson lived for seven year have come together in an attempt to protect their community.
Grieve Croft Neighbourhood Watch, has been set up in response to “a number of recent incidents affecting our estate and the surrounding area”.
The group said: “These included attempted break-ins within Grieve Croft, the removal of nearby CCTV infrastructure, and a series of fires at domestic and commercial premises in the wider neighbourhood.
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“The Watch was established by residents with a shared aim – to look out for one another, identify risks early and help keep Grieve Croft a safe and welcoming place.”
They say their objectives are to improve awareness of local security and safety risks, while acting as a “visible and positive deterrent to potential criminal or anti-social behaviour”.
It comes as Police Scotland data showed there were 27 attacks between 2021 and October 2025, with three others in 2019.
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Fire attacks include 16 on private property, including cars and nine on commercial properties including restaurants.
Arsonists struck four restaurants with the two most recent The Cut and Nel & Co – both linked to the same family – set ablaze in September and October.
All four were forced to close after suffering extensive blaze damage.
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Bothwell residents are also demanding improved security with calls for CCTV surveillance and Automatic Plate Recognition cameras to ramp up security within the village.
South Lanarkshire councillor Kenny McCreary backs calls for cameras amid concerns over public safety following one incident where residents had to be evacuated.
McCreary said: “Residents above Nell and Company restaurant had to be evacuated when it was set on fire. It was really scary for them and showed these fires present a risk to life.”
Chief Inspector Sarah McArthur said: “We understand these incidents in Bothwell may be worrying for the local community, but I want to offer reassurance that we believe these fires were targeted and there is no wider risk to the public.
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“The investigation into these wilful fires is ongoing with detectives carrying out extensive enquiries to trace those involved.”
The record-breaking weather statistic has many wondering if it is now time to build an ark.
As Britain’s big wet continues forecasters have warned there is “no end in sight” as the UK enters a record-breaking 38 consecutive days of rain.
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Greater Manchester is on flood watch amid a wave of warnings across the country. As rivers continue to respond to persistent rainfall, officials are warning that land, roads, and properties in the North West could be at risk.
While the most severe warnings are focused on the South West of England, the Environment Agency (EA) has confirmed that localised flooding from rivers and surface water is possible for parts of the North West over the next 48 hours.
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With the ground already soaking wet, even moderate rainfall may cause immediate run-off, threatening to overwhelm local drainage systems, small watercourses, and could cause some flash flooding.
As yet another wet Sunday sets in, England’s Environment Agency has issued nearly 90 high-level flood warnings and more than 230 flood alerts across England, Greater Manchester residents are urged to stay alert this Sunday with several waterways being monitored for flooding.
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Waterways to watch:
The Upper River Derwent: Levels are being monitored closely as rain continues to fall on the hills.
The River Foulness and Market Weighton catchment: Alerts remain in place as water levels rise.
River Trent and River Idle: Significant alerts are active for these major systems in the neighbouring regions, which could impact travel for those heading east or south from Manchester.
The scale of the wild weather is evident across the UK, with the South West currently bearing the brunt of the weather. Significant flooding is deemed as probable for Somerset and Dorset, where dozens of Red warnings are in place.
The River Severn has seen also seeing minor flooding, and warnings have been issued as far east as the River Glen in Lincolnshire. In total, there are currently 89 flood warnings (where flooding expected) and 232 flood alerts (where flooding possible) active across England.
Forecasters have warned that while the rain may ease sporadically, the risk remains “possible but not expected” from Monday through to Wednesday. However, for today and tomorrow, the message is clear: be prepared.
A spokesperson for the Environment Agency said: “Localised flooding from rivers and surface water is possible more widely today for parts of England due to further rain falling on wet ground. Land, roads and properties may flood and there may be travel disruption.”
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Met Office meteorologist Dan Stroud gave little hope when telling Britons that the gloomy conditions are set to continue. He said, earlier in the week: “Unfortunately, there’s no end in sight.”
Russia, Ukraine and the US met for a second time this week for trilateral talks to discuss a possible cessation of hostilities. Once again little was resolved apart from a prisoner swap, something that has happened several times over the four years of the full-scale conflict between the two countries.
The lack of any substantive breakthrough was fairly predictable, given the circumstances. This week’s meeting got off to the same depressing start as the first one had the week before. On February 3, the night before the three sides gathered in Abu Dhabi, a massive barrage of 521 drones and cruise missiles once again targeted critical civilian infrastructure in Ukrainian cities, including the capital, Kyiv.
And while the talks were in full swing, Russia followed up on its nighttime strikes by deploying cluster munitions against a market in Druzhkivka, one of the embattled cities in what remains of Ukraine’s fortress belt in the Donetsk region.
Not the most auspicious start to talks that aim to stop fighting between the two sides. Add to that the fact that the basic negotiating positions of Moscow and Kyiv remain as far apart as ever, and any prospect of an imminent breakthrough to peace in Ukraine quickly evaporates.
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The more technical discussions on military issues, including specifics of a ceasefire and how it would be monitored, appear to be generally more constructive. Apart from a prisoner exchange, no further agreement was reached. But even such small confidence-building steps are useful. And even where no agreement is feasible for now, identifying likely issues and mapping solutions that are potentially acceptable to Moscow and Kyiv is important preparatory work for a future settlement.
However, without a breakthrough on political issues it does not get the conflict parties closer to a peace deal. These political issues remain centred on the question of territory. Russia insists on the so-called “Anchorage formula”. Ukraine withdraws from those areas of Donetsk it still controls and Russia agrees to freezing the frontlines elsewhere.
Kyiv has repeatedly made clear that this is unacceptable. US mediation efforts, to date, have been unable to break this deadlock.
The political impasse, however, clearly extends beyond territory. Without naming any specific blockages to a deal, Yury Ushakov, a key advisor to the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, recently noted that there were other contested issues holding up agreement. Very likely among them are the security guarantees that Ukraine has been demanding to make sure that Russia will not renege on a settlement.
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These future security guarantees appear to have been agreed between Kyiv and its European and American partners. They involve a gradual escalating response to Russian ceasefire violations, ultimately involving direct European and US military involvement.
Potholes in the road to peace
The Kremlin’s opposition to such an arrangement is hardly surprising. But it casts further doubt on how sincere Putin is about a durable peace agreement with Ukraine. In turn, it explains Kyiv’s reluctance to make any concessions, let alone those on the current scale of Russian demands.
Representatives from Ukraine, Russia and the US meet in Abu Dhabi for a second round of face-to-face talks. WAM/Handout via Xinhua
What complicates these discussions further is the fact that the US is linking the provision of security guarantees for Kyiv to Ukrainian concessions on territory along the lines of the Moscow-endorsed Anchorage formula.
This might seem a sensible and fair compromise, but there are some obvious problems with it. First, it relies on the dependability of the US as an ultimate security backstop. But (particularly European) confidence in how dependable US pledges actually are has been severely eroded during the first 12 months of Donald Trump’s second term in the White House.
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Second, Europe is moving painfully slowly to fill the void left by the US decision to halt funding to Ukraine. The details of a €90 billion (£78 billion) loan agreed in principle by EU leaders in December, have only just been finalised.
Doubts – as voiced by Nato secretary-general, Mark Rutte – also persist about whether, even in the long term, Europe has a credible prospect of developing sufficiently independent military capabilities outside the transatlantic alliance.
Few incentives to reach a deal
As a result, there are few incentives for Kyiv to bow to US pressure and give up more territory to Russia in exchange for security guarantees that may not be as ironclad in reality as they appear on paper. Likewise, it makes little sense for Moscow to accept even a hypothetical western security guarantee in exchange for territory that the Kremlin remains confident it can take by force if necessary.
Contested territory: Russia wants Ukraine to give up the remainder of the Donetsk region it currently occupies. Institute for the Study of War, FAL
Following Xi Jinping’s public affirmation of Chinese support for Russia in a video call between the two countries’ presidents on the anniversary of the declaration of their “no-limits partnership” in February 2022, Putin is unlikely to feel any real pressure to change his position.
Putin will feel further reassured in his position by the fact that there is still no progress on a new sanctions bill in the US senate – four weeks after Trump allegedly “greenlit” the legislation. In addition, Trump’s top Ukraine negotiators – Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner – are now also engaged in negotiations with Iran. This further diminishes US diplomatic capacity and is only going to reinforce Moscow’s intransigence.
Any claims of progress in the negotiations in Abu Dhabi are therefore at best over-optimistic and at worst self-deluding. And if such claims come from Putin’s envoy Kirill Dmitriev, they once more underscore that US mediation between Russia and Ukraine serves the primary purpose of restoring economic relations between Moscow and Washington. Like Kushner and Witkoff, Dmitriev is first and foremost a businessman.
Not only does this parallel track of Russia-US economic talks explain Trump’s reluctance to put any meaningful pressure on Putin, it also betrays the deep irony of the US approach to ending the war. As Europe painfully learned over more than two decades of engagement with Putin’s Russia, economic integration does not curb the Kremlin’s expansionism but enables it.
A female teacher was injured at a school in Wales on Thursday
A 15-year-old boy has been remanded into custody after appearing in court charged with the attempted murder of a teacher at a school in west Wales.
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Swansea Magistrates’ Court heard on Saturday that the school pupil, who cannot be named for legal reasons, allegedly attacked the female teacher with a kitchen knife after asking for help with work at Milford Haven Comprehensive School on Thursday afternoon.
Appearing in court the teenager spoke only to confirm his name, address, and date of birth.
He was charged with attempted murder, grievous bodily harm, and possession of a bladed article on education premises.
He is alleged to have attacked a female teacher with a kitchen knife while she was going through his work with him in a classroom shortly after 3pm on Thursday. Don’t miss a court report by signing upto our crime newsletter here.
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Magistrates heard the woman was left with injuries to her head, finger, and back for which she received treatment in hospital.
The boy’s family were in court to watch proceedings on Saturday.
He was remanded into youth detention over the weekend and will appear at Swansea Crown Court on February 9.
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UK ‘threatens to seize’ Russia-linked shadow fleet tanker
The United Kingdom has threatened to seize a Russia-linked oil tanker in an escalation of tensions between the two countries over shadow fleets.
Military options to capture a rogue ship had been identified in discussions involving Nato allies, British defence sources told The Guardian.
The news comes weeks after the UK supported a US operation to seize a Russian-flagged tanker in the North Atlantic.
Alisha Rahaman Sarkar8 February 2026 07:30
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Russia says man suspected of shooting top general has been detained
Russia’s Federal Security Service said this morning that the man suspected of shooting senior Russian military intelligence officer Vladimir Alexeyev in Moscow has been detained in Dubai and extradited to Russia.
Alisha Rahaman Sarkar8 February 2026 07:20
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Ukraine businesses struggle to cope
t is pre-dawn in the historic Podil district of the Ukraine capital, Kyiv, and warm light from the Spelta bakery-bistro’s window pierces the darkness outside. On a wooden surface dusted with flour, the baker Oleksandr Kutsenko skilfully divides and shapes soft, damp pieces of dough. As he shoves the first loaves into the oven, a sweet, delicate aroma of fresh bread fills the space.
Seconds later the lights go out, the ovens switch off and darkness envelops the room. Kutsenko, 31, steps outside into the freezing night, switches on a large rectangular generator and the power kicks back in. It’s a pattern that will be repeated many times as the business struggles to keep working through the power outages caused by Russia’s bombing campaign on Ukraine’s energy grid.
“It’s now more than impossible to imagine a Ukrainian business operating without a generator,” said Olha Hrynchuk, the co-founder and head baker of Spelta.
Alisha Rahaman Sarkar8 February 2026 07:00
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Ukraine faces acute power crisis amid a freezing winter
A car drives on a street during a power blackout after critical civil infrastructure was hit by night’s Russian missile and drone attacks, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine February 7, 2026. REUTERS/Gleb Garanich (REUTERS)
A car drives on a street during a power blackout after critical civil infrastructure was hit by night’s Russian missile and drone attacks, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine February 7, 2026 (REUTERS)
Alisha Rahaman Sarkar8 February 2026 06:30
Ukrainian missilies strike Russian energy facilities
Ukraine struck Russia’s Bryansk Oblast with Neptune missiles and High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems, targeting energy infrastructure, governor Alexander Bogomaz said.
“The Armed Forces of Ukraine attacked our region using long-range Neptune missiles and HIMARS multiple rocket launcher systems,” Bogomaz said.
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“As a result of the attack, power supply was disrupted in seven municipalities. Special and emergency teams are working to restore power supply.”
Alisha Rahaman Sarkar8 February 2026 06:00
Why the end of the New START treaty doesn’t necessarily mean another nuclear arms race
A treaty that prevented the US and Russia from expanding their nuclear weapons arsenals expired on Thursday, dismantling a major guardrail against a renewed arms race between the rival powers.
Advertisement
The Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, commonly known as New START, required the two countries to restrict their nuclear warheads to 1,550 and missiles and bombers capable of delivering them to 700. These included weapons deployed and ready for use.
The US and Russia together hold nearly 85 per cent of the world’s strategic nuclear weapons and the expiration of the treaty, signed in 2010, threatens to launch the kind of unconstrained arms race that defined the Cold War. It may also prompt other nuclear and nuclear-adjacent nations to expand their arsenals at the very moment the world is engulfed in a series of escalating conflicts and trigger-point tensions.
Alisha Rahaman Sarkar8 February 2026 05:30
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Orban declares Ukraine as ‘enemy’ state
Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orban declared Ukraine an “enemy” of Hungary at an anti-war rally.
Orban said Ukraine was persistently lobbying Brussels to sever Hungary’s access to Russian energy, which he warned would drive up household utility bills across the country.
“Anyone who says such a thing is an enemy of Hungary, so Ukraine is our enemy,” Orban said.
His comments followed the Council of the EU’s decision to approve a ban on Russian gas purchases from 2027 — a move Hungary and Slovakia have challenged at the European Court of Justice.
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Alisha Rahaman Sarkar8 February 2026 05:00
Zelensky reveals US deadline for Ukraine and Russia
The United States has issued a June deadline for Ukraine and Russia to finalise a peace agreement, aiming to conclude the nearly four-year conflict, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky has revealed.
Should this deadline not be met, the Trump administration is expected to intensify pressure on both parties to secure a resolution.
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Speaking to reporters on Friday, in comments embargoed until Saturday morning, Mr Zelensky stated: “The Americans are proposing the parties end the war by the beginning of this summer and will probably put pressure on the parties precisely according to this schedule.”
Alisha Rahaman Sarkar8 February 2026 04:30
UK ‘threatens to seize’ Russia-linked shadow fleet tanker in escalation of tensions
The news comes weeks after the UK supported a US operation to seize a Russian-flagged tanker in the North Atlantic.
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Maira Butt8 February 2026 04:00
China takes big step towards developing ‘Starlink killer’ weapon with compact high-power microwave
Chinese scientists have developed a compact ultra-powerful energy generator, paving the way for next-generation weapons that could one day be turned on satellite swarms like SpaceX’s Starlink constellation.
High-power microwave weapons have gained traction in recent years as a low-cost alternative to missiles and guns due to their near-unlimited firing capacity.
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Researchers in the US, Russia, and China in particular have all been investigating whether the technology could be developed into directed-energy weapons that can disrupt satellites.
As Hugo Ekitike walked off to the adulation of the Anfield crowd last Saturday and took his seat on the bench, Alexander Isak simply patted his Liverpool team-mate’s hair from behind. A finisher recognises a finisher.
Isak’s chance will certainly come again, but while the record £125m summer signing is sidelined with a broken leg, all he can do is watch and admire his fellow forward. So far, there is plenty to admire.
It is testament to the way Ekitike has adapted to life in the Premier League that no-one has suggested Liverpool have missed or need Sweden international Isak back in a hurry.
The numbers alone are impressive – 15 goals and four assists in all competitions since his £79m move from Eintracht Frankfurt in the summer.
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When the 23-year-old netted in the FA Cup last month, he became only the second Liverpool player to score in five different competitions during their debut campaign, alongside Kenny Dalglish. Talk about good company.
Yet beyond the numbers is a dynamic forward who has serious pace, reads the game intelligently, can link up well and above all, can finish.
In recent weeks, Ekitike has been compared to Fernando Torres, arguably one of the best finishers Liverpool have had in the 21st century, and received high praise from Alan Shearer and Wayne Rooney.
Shearer described Ekitike’s second goal against Newcastle as “world class”, while Rooney said the Frenchman was “one of, if not the best signing in the Premier League” this season.
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“He’s the type of player I like to watch. He’s not a number nine, he’s not a number 10. He drifts out wide, gets on the ball, brings players into the game and he can score goals. He’s got a bit of everything really,” added Manchester United’s record goalscorer on his podcast.
What makes Ekitike so impressive is the range of scenarios he thrives in due to his expansive skillset. An unusual toe-poked finish for that goal against Newcastle sparked conversation, but it’s a deliberate tool he has in his locker.
In a behind-the-scenes training video from July, Ekitike scored in an identical manner. For both goals, his shooting leg barely swings back, which prevents keepers from being able to read the kind of shot he will take.
Paired with the uncommon nature of the strike, he is able to catch opponents off-guard more often with these goals – drawing comparisons with legendary Brazilian forward Romario, who was famed for his toe-poked finishes.
t is pre-dawn in the historic Podil district of the Ukraine capital, Kyiv, and warm light from the Spelta bakery-bistro’s window pierces the darkness outside. On a wooden surface dusted with flour, the baker Oleksandr Kutsenko skilfully divides and shapes soft, damp pieces of dough. As he shoves the first loaves into the oven, a sweet, delicate aroma of fresh bread fills the space.
Seconds later the lights go out, the ovens switch off and darkness envelops the room. Kutsenko, 31, steps outside into the freezing night, switches on a large rectangular generator and the power kicks back in. It’s a pattern that will be repeated many times as the business struggles to keep working through the power outages caused by Russia’s bombing campaign on Ukraine’s energy grid.
“It’s now more than impossible to imagine a Ukrainian business operating without a generator,” said Olha Hrynchuk, the co-founder and head baker of Spelta.
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Alisha Rahaman Sarkar8 February 2026 07:00
Ukraine faces acute power crisis amid a freezing winter
A car drives on a street during a power blackout after critical civil infrastructure was hit by night’s Russian missile and drone attacks, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine February 7, 2026. REUTERS/Gleb Garanich (REUTERS)
A car drives on a street during a power blackout after critical civil infrastructure was hit by night’s Russian missile and drone attacks, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine February 7, 2026 (REUTERS)
Alisha Rahaman Sarkar8 February 2026 06:30
Ukrainian missilies strike Russian energy facilities
Ukraine struck Russia’s Bryansk Oblast with Neptune missiles and High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems, targeting energy infrastructure, governor Alexander Bogomaz said.
Advertisement
“The Armed Forces of Ukraine attacked our region using long-range Neptune missiles and HIMARS multiple rocket launcher systems,” Bogomaz said.
“As a result of the attack, power supply was disrupted in seven municipalities. Special and emergency teams are working to restore power supply.”
Alisha Rahaman Sarkar8 February 2026 06:00
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Why the end of the New START treaty doesn’t necessarily mean another nuclear arms race
A treaty that prevented the US and Russia from expanding their nuclear weapons arsenals expired on Thursday, dismantling a major guardrail against a renewed arms race between the rival powers.
The Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, commonly known as New START, required the two countries to restrict their nuclear warheads to 1,550 and missiles and bombers capable of delivering them to 700. These included weapons deployed and ready for use.
The US and Russia together hold nearly 85 per cent of the world’s strategic nuclear weapons and the expiration of the treaty, signed in 2010, threatens to launch the kind of unconstrained arms race that defined the Cold War. It may also prompt other nuclear and nuclear-adjacent nations to expand their arsenals at the very moment the world is engulfed in a series of escalating conflicts and trigger-point tensions.
Alisha Rahaman Sarkar8 February 2026 05:30
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Orban declares Ukraine as ‘enemy’ state
Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orban declared Ukraine an “enemy” of Hungary at an anti-war rally.
Orban said Ukraine was persistently lobbying Brussels to sever Hungary’s access to Russian energy, which he warned would drive up household utility bills across the country.
“Anyone who says such a thing is an enemy of Hungary, so Ukraine is our enemy,” Orban said.
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His comments followed the Council of the EU’s decision to approve a ban on Russian gas purchases from 2027 — a move Hungary and Slovakia have challenged at the European Court of Justice.
Alisha Rahaman Sarkar8 February 2026 05:00
Zelensky reveals US deadline for Ukraine and Russia
The United States has issued a June deadline for Ukraine and Russia to finalise a peace agreement, aiming to conclude the nearly four-year conflict, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky has revealed.
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Should this deadline not be met, the Trump administration is expected to intensify pressure on both parties to secure a resolution.
Speaking to reporters on Friday, in comments embargoed until Saturday morning, Mr Zelensky stated: “The Americans are proposing the parties end the war by the beginning of this summer and will probably put pressure on the parties precisely according to this schedule.”
Alisha Rahaman Sarkar8 February 2026 04:30
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UK ‘threatens to seize’ Russia-linked shadow fleet tanker in escalation of tensions
The news comes weeks after the UK supported a US operation to seize a Russian-flagged tanker in the North Atlantic.
Maira Butt8 February 2026 04:00
China takes big step towards developing ‘Starlink killer’ weapon with compact high-power microwave
Chinese scientists have developed a compact ultra-powerful energy generator, paving the way for next-generation weapons that could one day be turned on satellite swarms like SpaceX’s Starlink constellation.
Advertisement
High-power microwave weapons have gained traction in recent years as a low-cost alternative to missiles and guns due to their near-unlimited firing capacity.
Researchers in the US, Russia, and China in particular have all been investigating whether the technology could be developed into directed-energy weapons that can disrupt satellites.
Vishwam Sankaran reports:
Maira Butt8 February 2026 03:00
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US wants Russia-Ukraine peace deal secured by next month
The United States is aiming to secure a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine as early as next month, according to new reports.
Ukrainian negotiators and US officials discussed the ambitious target during discussions in Abu Dhabi this week, three sources told Reuters.
However, the timeline is likely to be delayed as both sides disagree on the key issue of territory, the report continued.
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President Volodymyr Zelensky told reporters that the Americans “want to do everything by June” in comments on Friday that were embargoed until Saturday morning.
“The Americans are proposing the parties end the war by the beginning of this summer and will probably put pressure on the parties precisely according to this schedule,” he said.
“And they say that they want to do everything by June. And they will do everything to end the war. And they want a clear schedule of all events.”
Maira Butt8 February 2026 02:00
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Watch: Zelensky says Ukraine is preparing for ‘next trilateral meetings’ after Abu Dhabi talks
Zelensky says Ukraine is preparing for ‘next trilateral meetings’ after Abu Dhabi talks
The Environment Agency (EA) updated its alert notice this morning (February 6) for the Upper and Lower River Derwent, asking residents in Elvington, Pocklington, Samford Bridge, Wilberfoss and Wressle to be prepared.
In York city centre overnight, the EA also published an alert for possible floods from the River Ouse today to riverside paths and low-lying land including King’s Staith, Queen’s Staith, and South Esplanade, and as far south as Naburn Lock.
Close to Elvington yesterday, River Derwent levels were high and flood plains were full after days of rain (Image: Kevin Glenton)
Met Office forecasts for York over the next few days are for light rain and cloudy overcast skies.
Yesterday afternoon, flood plains close to the River Derwent bridge in Elvington were full and this morning, on the A1079 in Kexby Bridge over the river, road surfaces were half-covered by standing water.
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At the Elvington Sluices the River Derwent level measured at 8.15am, stood at 6.39 metres and steady, above its normal range of 6.1 metres.
Close to Elvington yesterday, River Derwent levels were high and flood plains were full after days of rain (Image: Kevin Glenton)
The highest recorded level here was 7.12 metres in November 2000.
The EA says low-lying land flooding is possible above 6.25 metres.
A flood alert – meaning flooding is possible – is usually issued between two and 12 hours before flooding, the EA said.
At the Foss Barrier close to the confluence of the two principal rivers in York, the level at 8.15am was 7.28 metres and rising, below the top of the normal range of 7.9 metres.
The highest level recorded here was 10.2 metres on November 4, 2000.
The agency’s advice in a flood alert – which means flooding is possible – is to avoid walking, cycling or driving through any flood water and highlights other at-risk areas such as fields, recreational land and car parks, minor roads, farmland and coastal areas affected by spray of waves overtopping.
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All areas are being assessed by the Environment Agency, it said.
Mark Sommerville will be joined by 100 supporters to demand more help, funding and awareness of the rapidly progressive life-limiting disease.
A dad with MND will protest outside Holyrood on Wednesday to demand more funding to help find a cure.
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Mark Sommerville will be joined by 100 supporters to demand more help, funding and awareness of the rapidly progressive life-limiting disease.
The dad of four, from Uddingston, Lanarkshire, was given his MND diagnosis in October 2024 and told he had 18 months to live.
The 45-year-old has since set up the Mark Sommerville Foundation to fund research, but says a letter to First Minister John Swinney begging for help has gone unanswered and believes the government is not doing enough to help fund new treatments.
The foundation will meet Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar before the protest.
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Mark said: “Those diagnosed with MND don’t have time to wait. We urgently need more funding imminently, more research put into finding a cure for this horrendous condition.
“This protest is to highlight the lack of funds, also the lack of awareness from the Scottish Government.
“The SNP have been in charge for 19 years but they are not doing enough. People with MND, their lives matter and I just feel they don’t care.”
Mark was praised by PM Keir Starmer in Westminster in 2024 for his fundraising and told: “We stand with you in this fight.” However more than a year on, he believes the UK Government is also not doing enough to fund research into treatments.
The campaigner has also teamed up with pharmaceutical firm Nevrargenics, which is behind a drug which it believes not only stops the impact of MND but reverses the damage already done.
Starmer recognised Mark’s work and that of rugby league star Kevin Sinfield, who has raised a million for sufferers of MND, which took his best friend Rob Burrow’s life in June, aged 41.
It also took Scotland rugby legend Doddie Weir in 2022, aged 52.
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Labour’s Jackie Baillie said: “John Swinney should meet Mark to hear his case, rather than turning his back.”
Public health minister Jenni Minto said: “I fully understand and support the Mark Sommerville Foundation’s desire for any new and ground-breaking medicines to be made available as soon as possible.”
It’s an early weekday morning in east London. The city around him is slowly waking up, but Danny* has yet to go to sleep. When he finished his shift working front of house at a popular Borough Market restaurant last night, he bought a gram of cocaine and finished it in his flat, alone.
He opens his banking app, the balance reads zero. Next, he flicks through his credit cards; the debt his lifestyle has amassed totals £10,000. “This was rock bottom,” the 31-year-old recalls of this point in December 2024. For nearly four months he used the class-A drug around five times a week, typically during and after work. “I numbed myself to the point where I didn’t feel anything.”
Maybe you’ve spotted the dilated pupils and clenched jaws that dart all over the Square Mile. Perhaps it’s the buzz you can sense in the pub — loud, animated conversations, sniffs coming from the toilet cubicles. Whether you’ve noticed it or not, it’s hardly a secret that Londoners love cocaine.
Back to humans, and the media has historically painted the UK’s typical coke user as one of three: the supermodel or pop star with a partying problem, the football-loving Tommy Robinson sympathiser foaming at the mouth for a brawl, or the “woke coke” snorting, high-flying businessman who lives by the motto “live fast, die young” (series four of Industry is currently airing, in unrelated news).
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These personas may very well exist, but the reality is that in 2026, cocaine is no longer a drug ruled by class or background. “Compared with years ago, use is less concentrated in a narrow socio-economic group and spread across communities,” Robin Pollard, head of policy at drug and mental health charity We Are With You, tells me. “Cocaine is a far more diverse drug than people realise.”
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Why? It’s more accessible than before, available at an instant via social media and WhatsApp. It’s cheaper, thanks to higher production and yield (according to a United Nations World Drug Report, production increased by 34 per cent between 2022 and 2023). It’s also stronger — that same report details that cocaine in Europe had an average purity of 60 per cent in 2023, compared to 35 per cent in 2009. Consequently, demand has risen.
But how we consume it has also switched a gear. “A key message we hear from staff and clients is that cocaine has become increasingly normalised across society,” Pollard says. “More and more, it’s seen as a normal part of a night out, going hand in hand with drinking.”
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The charity’s support service has seen an uptick in the number of clients from all backgrounds seeking help for their use. Often, they claim their weekend use has become daily, or their work-life patterns normalise its use in the week — especially in industries like construction, hospitality and sales.
Cameron* very quickly realised that cocaine was just “part and parcel” of his recruitment job in the city. “You have to be strong-willed for it not to. It’s so egged on and normalised by senior members of the team,” he explains. He tried it for the first time at university and takes it occasionally at the weekend with friends, but says his use has soared since joining the industry.
“My work involves a lot of networking, and lines eventually get racked up”
Baggies left on desks, colleagues sleeping in the office after coke-fuelled benders, it’s all a part of the “work hard, play hard” culture of the job, the 27-year-old says. “My week involves a lot of networking — socials, lunch clubs, events — where drinking is heavy and lines eventually get racked up. It’s just the done, regular thing.”
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Danny’s addiction started when he worked in a famous pub in north London, where he labels the top-down cocaine culture as “cult-like”. “Everyone knew it was going on, but nobody ever had a discussion,” he says.
Dealers were regularly present around the establishment, while staff would take it together in blind spots and toilet cubicles: “It was like our way of showing camaraderie.” As well as eye-watering debt, Danny’s addiction strained relations with family and friends, caused romantic relationships to end, and took a toll on his mental and physical health, leaving him unable to leave his bed on days off.
Employers — especially in industries where long hours, high-pressure and demanding work create a culture where cocaine can thrive — have a responsibility to support their employees, and specific charities and initiatives like Hospitality Action do exist. But alongside their work cultures, both Cameron and Danny have something else in common: their gender.
In the UK, men are twice as likely to report using cocaine as women. They also made up nearly 80 per cent of the deaths involving the drug in 2024 (a figure which has increased consecutively each year for the past 13, attributed to the rise in cocaine’s purity, making it easier to overdose). In both men’s experiences, inside and outside of work, it’s men who do cocaine the most. Studies have shown that men are more likely to engage in high-risk behaviours, but surely there must be more to why blokes love coke so much?
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Journalist David Hillier has been writing about drugs for over a decade, and sought to answer this question via his drug culture newsletter, WHAT ARE YOU ON. After speaking to nine men, he found most use cocaine because of the perception that it “sobers” them up and helps them drink more, for longer. It explains why coke has bumped pork scratchings and pool tables as a pub staple in the past decade. “As a guy in his late twenties, it’s quite rare to have a night of drinking where you don’t get a bag in,” Cameron admits.
Referencing Fiona Measham’s Swimming with Crocodiles, which outlines the history of the UK’s heavy episodic drinking culture, Hillier explains that drinking became the reason why people went out in the 2000s. “Coke is such a big part of pub culture because pub culture is such a big part of British culture,” he says.
It’s impossible to have a conversation about trends in drug use without discussing the climate it takes place in. A cost-of-living crisis plagues life in the UK. Society is fractured politically, socially and economically. Life can be hard. “People are looking for escape routes from reality — and for many, alcohol is the key,” Hillier explains. “Then cocaine is enabling them to drink for longer.”
“One of the main reasons I use cocaine is because it lets me chat openly. I definitely go deeper when I’m on gear, even with friends I’ve had for years”
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But there’s another theory, specific to men, that Hillier believes may explain why they love cocaine so much: it makes them talk (like those pub chats I mentioned earlier). A stimulant, cocaine skyrockets the level of dopamine in the brain, creating intense feelings of self-confidence and diminished social inhibitions. For men, who have historically struggled to talk about their inner thoughts and feelings, a cocaine high offers a window to air them. “One of the main reasons I use it is because it lets me chat openly,” Cameron explains. “I definitely go deeper when I’m on gear, even with friends I’ve had for years.”
In Hillier’s view, the stereotypical cocaine user — boorish, argumentative, navel-gazing — isn’t reflective of many who use the drug. “My experience is that most of the time men took it, they were sitting around having sweet conversations,” he explains. “Suddenly, they start talking about their parents’ break-up or something going on in their personal lives… It’s a shame they can’t access that without using cocaine, but we should have sympathy for the fact they do.”
Misconceptions surrounding cocaine users are a huge problem — they only serve to stigmatise and shame those who use it, and they’re having a knock-on effect. “We often find that people who use cocaine often are more hesitant in accessing support,” Pollard says, adding that they’re also less likely to self-refer into physical services.
“Coke is so widespread now, people are always going to use it,” Danny says, and he has a point. Outlawing cocaine and slapping on severe punishments for possessing it hasn’t stopped its use (lifetime use in the UK has doubled since 2001). London’s snowstorm isn’t calming any time soon — so what is the solution? How do we reduce the deaths linked to coke, and help men to stop relying on it?
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Bringing people down off the high
While he hopes the popularity of therapy with younger men reduces their emotional reliance on cocaine, Hillier also calls for legislative changes. “If people feel criminalised for taking it, they’re never going to come forward for help,” he says, referencing the legalisation and medicinal uses of other recreational drugs around the world. On an immediate level, Pollard wants to see awareness of the harms of cocaine boosted via non-stigmatising and targeted public health campaigns.
For instance, if more knew that cocaethylene — the toxic psychoactive substance our liver produces when alcohol and cocaine are mixed — is far more potent and harmful to the cardiovascular system than cocaine alone, they may feel less inclined to get a bag in when they’ve had a pint.
Both Pollard and Hillier stress the importance of harm reduction information being widely available and financial investment into treatment services. “There’s a presumption that treatment centres are geared towards heavy drinkers or users of drugs like heroin or crack,” Hillier explains. “Through conversations I’ve had, there’s a gap for what you could call the recreational user.”
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“Cocaine is part of the culture in London, but I’d also flip it on its head — in terms of accessing recovery sources, there’s nowhere better to be,” Danny says. After switching jobs (“I told the owner that if I carried on there, I’d be dead in a few months”) and with the support of an industry mentor and Narcotics Anonymous meetings, he’s now one year clean of cocaine. Recently, he shared his story at an industry-wide mental health event in the hopes of inspiring others.
“I’m feeling really reflective about the milestone,” he says, a smile detectable in his voice. His career is flourishing and he’s recognised how consistent and dependable he’s become again.
“I’m in a position where I can be surrounded by people on cocaine and it sends a shiver down my spine. But I don’t judge them, and nobody else should, either. Because what does anyone gain from that?”
If you or someone you know is struggling with cocaine, contact We Are With You’s support service; wearewithyou.org.uk