The chief executive of British Airways (BA), Sean Doyle, has warned that flight prices will soar if jet fuel costs remain high.
Speaking to the Financial Times (FT) at the International Air Transport Association (IATA)’s yearly meeting, Doyle said “there’s no getting away from [the reality that] if fuel goes up, fares have to go up”.
According to The Guardian, at the same meeting, IATA’s director general, Willie Walsh, said: “High oil prices will inevitably mean higher ticket prices… There’s just no way to avoid that.”
Jet fuel costs have reportedly doubled since the closure of the key shipping route, the Strait of Hormuz, as a result of conflict in the Middle East.
Speaking to the FT, Doyle said that longer-haul flights might be more affected should price increases go ahead.
“When people’s purpose to travel is business and doing deals … those price increases are kind of peripheral to the reason they’re travelling,” the airline boss said.
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“A brand like BA, which has got a lot of long-haul, a lot of corporate, a lot of premium, we’d expect maybe to have more pass-through of prices than maybe a carrier who’s solely competing for leisure short-haul.”
Still, he noted, plane ticket prices haven’t risen in line with inflation and have generally stayed around ’90s levels in some cases.
“We had fares in 1995 of Barcelona for £60 one way. You can go on BA.com and probably get Barcelona for not too much more than that off-peak,” he claimed.
One study found that between 1990 and 2016, the price of plane tickets dropped by 40% per mile when adjusted for inflation.
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The BA chief executive added that the airline’s flights to the Gulf and Dubai are set to return
Doyle also said that the airline will resume flights to the Gulf, which have been paused after the outbreak of the Iran war, in the coming months.
And he said British Airways will also restart its routes to Dubai, though he doesn’t expect this to begin again until October 2026.
Other airlines have expressed similar cost concerns
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Cathay Pacific Airways is considering cutting flights after the 2026 summer season if jet fuel costs continue to soar, Bloomberg reported.
And the following airlines that service the UK have previously said they plan to run fewer flights after ballooning costs:
KLM
Air Canada
Asiana Airlines
Delta Airlines
Lufthansa
SAS.
Meanwhile, some bosses, like Ryanair CFO Neil Sorahan, said they aren’t worried about jet fuel shortages yet.
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He recently remarked: “Do we have plans for some kind of Armageddon situation? Of course, we do, but I don’t see that coming to pass. As things stand, we’re operating a full schedule this summer and plan to operate a full schedule into the winter period.”
The 2026 World Cup is about to kick-off, and that means we are about to bear witness to the greatest array of international football shirts ever seen.
For the first time, 48 nations will take part in the men’s tournament, so we have reviewed every home and away shirt to make a 96-strong list of sartorial delights and disappointments in North America this summer.
It has been another strong showing from Adidas and Puma, while the good people at Jako deliver a surprise entrant into our top 10.
Why are Ghana wearing a spider web? What is that on Haiti’s hip? Why have Croatia made us angry? And which kit has won our highly coveted top spot? Please do tell us where we’ve gone badly wrong in the comments below.
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So, from worst to best, from the visually upsetting to the optically arousing, here are our World Cup 2026 kit rankings.
96. South Korea home: We have to start somewhere, and we’re starting with this ugly pattern. Are they hills, volcanoes, clouds? Over to Nike, who explain: “The head-to-toe camo print embodies an ambush of tigers striking together at any moment.” No it doesn’t.
96. South Korea home (Nike)
95. Switzerland away: It’s like a toddler wielding a highlighter pen got hold of the designs of an otherwise acceptable shirt. This is fine for goalkeepers, but otherwise, no thanks. Although as always with Switzerland, the crest is a big plus.
95. Switzerland away (Puma)
94. Australia away: A very bold fade from pink to green, and we’re not having it.
94. Australia away (Nike)
93. Argentina away: Garish, in a bad way.
93. Argentina away (Adidas)
92. Paraguay home: Torn over whether this is a child’s crayon drawing or just a great shirt, and after much deliberation we’ve come down on the side of nursery artwork. Which, as we all know, goes straight in the bin.
92. Paraguay home (Puma)
91. Bosnia and Herzegovina home: Welcome to the game, Kelme. And what have we got here? Two bold blue lines over the top of a dragon motif? That’s… that’s not a great start.
91. Bosnia and Herzegovina home (Kelme)
90. Croatia home: This is the only shirt on the list that makes us angry. Croatia is a great kit that doesn’t need reimagining, yet every tournament it gets fiddled! This time, someone at Nike has etch-a-sketched out the middle of a very attractive, near perfect Croatia shirt. And we’re unhappy about it.
90. Croatia home (Nike)
89. Netherlands home: The Dutch shirt should not be hard to get right but the fluorescent edge to this one is too much. The big central crest looks a bit village too.
89. Netherlands home (Nike)
88. Japan home: Probably a bit harsh to place this 88th in a list of 96 shirts. But it’s a bit odd, and it’s here now.
88. Japan home (Adidas)
87. Cape Verde away: A bit bland. Like eating dry toast. These lads flew to the World Cup signing and dancing on the plane. They deserve more.
87. Cape Verde away (Tempo)
86. Ghana home: Sorry, Ghana. We’ve really tried to love this shirt. We’ve tried turning it around, upside down. We’ve squinted at it. We’ve read about the mythical spider in Ghanaian folklore it is meant to invoke. But ultimately, it is a bit of a mess.
(Puma)
85. Uruguay away: Sorry but that’s a USA shirt and we won’t be taking any questions on the matter.
85. Uruguay away (Nike)
84. England away: The central crest gives it a slight Pro-Evo feel, which is not a good thing, and the background is a bit… weird.
84. England away (Nike)
83. DR Congo away: Colour fades generally don’t work but this one is not bad, although it’s less DR Congo and more San Marino. Side point: it’s not dissimilar to the home colour, and being dissimilar really is the raison d’etre of any away shirt.
83. DR Congo away (Umbro)
82. France home: The lighter blue French shirts will always be better, and the zig-zag background is a bit much.
82. France home (Nike)
81. Mexico away: Not colourful enough to feel Mexican – it seems like something Germany should be wearing.
81. Mexico away (Adidas)
80. Netherlands away: A bit better from the Netherlands, this, but not much.
80. Netherlands away (Nike)
79. Norway away: We like simplicity, but is this too simple? “The stripped-down, striking visual honours the country’s viking history and celebrates the squad’s raw, Norse confidence,” claims Nike. Sorry, we’re not having it.
79. Norway away (Nike)
78. Saudi Arabia home: Makes us want to play Tetris.
78. Saudi Arabia home (Adidas)
77. Egypt home: It’s giving a vibe of not actually having the image rights to the pyramids, like when the early versions of Pro Evolution Soccer didn’t own naming rights and players were called things like Ruud van Nistelstrom.
77. Egypt home (Puma)
76. Qatar away: There’s clean and simple, and then there’s just bland.
76. Qatar away (Adidas)
75. Bosnia and Herzegovina away: Kelme are back for more, and this one is less of an assault on the iris, which is something. Or would that be the pupil, technically? Suppose really the retina is doing the heavy lifting, image-wise. Anyway, it’s unremarkable.
75. Bosnia and Herzegovina away (Kelme)
74. Curacao home: A little uninspiring, which is a shame, because as we will discuss later, the away shirt is a beauty.
74. Curacao home (Adidas)
73. Turkey home: Quite a lot to dislike here. The strange pattern, the horizontal block line, the centralised crest. It’s just not working.
73. Turkey home (Nike)
72. Switzerland home: A bit odd but broadly fine. And the crest is a big plus.
72. Switzerland home (Puma)
71. Uzbekistan home: Into the fray step 7Saber, with a similar blocky style to Saudi Arabia. The collar’s quite fun but the rest of it, we can take or leave.
71. Uzbekistan home (7saber)
70. Uzbekistan away: Pretty similar.
70. Uzbekistan away (7saber)
69. Brazil away: Vinicius and company will make this look good, we’ve no doubt, but it does look a bit like someone’s had a spillage.
69. Brazil away (Nike)
68. New Zealand home: It’s a little plain but the subtle fern-inspired background is pleasant enough. And black shirts are almost always cool, so that helps.
68. New Zealand home (Puma)
67. Paraguay away: Psychedelic.
67. Paraguay away (Puma)
66. Scotland home: Classic, solid, no mistakes here. But a bit… safe?
66. Scotland home (Adidas)
65. Australia home: A little plain.
65. Australia home (Nike)
64. Iran home: We would usually question the aesthetic benefit of printing the ghost of a big cat’s face on a football shirt, but given it is there to raise awareness of the plight of the Asiatic cheetah, we approve. The sleeve print is a nice touch, too.
64. Iran home (Majid)
63. Sweden home: A touch boring, maybe, but broadly acceptable.
63. Sweden home (Adidas)
62. Turkey away: A bit better than the home shirt.
62. Turkey away (Nike)
61. Argentina home: It looks great from a distance. But look closely and the faded, blocky stripes are a little ugly.
61. Argentina home (Adidas)
60. Egypt away: We’ve just noticed Puma are putting Pumas on all of their shirt shoulders and we can’t stop noticing it now.
60. Egypt away (Puma)
59. Iran away: Much the same as the home edition, but better.
59. Iran away (Majid)
58. Panama away: Panama’s third shirt is absolutely lovely – Scotland Euro 96 vibes – but we are only allowing home and away kits into these rankings or we’d not have time to see our family, and unfortunately the away shirt is a little underwhelming.
58. Panama away (Reebok)
57. Jordan home: This is a bit better from Kelme, upping their game with a fun shoulder pattern and some subtle striping down the body.
57. Jordan home (Kelme)
56. Jordan away: Much the same but in reverse.
56. Jordan away (Kelme)
55. Tunisia home: Kappa, welcome! This one is absolutely OK.
55. Tunisia home (Kappa)
54. Tunisia away: Likewise. Thanks, Kappa.
54. Tunisia away (Kappa)
53. Canada home: The maple leaf motif is a little gimmicky, but we’re feeling generous.
53. Canada home (Nike)
52. Cape Verde home: Jazzy.
52. Cape Verde home (Tempo)
51. Croatia away: This one works slightly better than the home shirt but we’re still thinking about it.
51. Croatia away (Nike)
50. England home: Sharp trim, fine lines, classic colours. A solid effort.
50. England home (Nike)
49. South Korea away: Korea’s purple flowers are a big room-splitter, and we’ve toyed with putting this shirt at the very bottom of our rankings. But no, it’s daring and original, and Korea already have one shirt down there, so we’re giving this one The Independent’s official stamp of mediocrity.
49. South Korea away (Nike)
48. New Zealand away: That background pattern symbolises “the four winds that bring the country together”, say Puma. We don’t mind it, and we like the white sleeves and collar which gives this kit a clean look. Though if we’re being picky, which we are, the black Puma and white fern are slightly jarring together.
48. New Zealand away (Puma)
47. Algeria away: The red trim elevates this shirt with some smart detail.
47. Algeria away (Adidas)
46. Austria home: Good solid colours, bold blocks, hard lines. Very Austrian.
46. Austria home (Puma)
45. Belgium home: Feels like classic Belgian fare, and we’re happy with it.
45. Belgium home (Adidas)
44. Qatar home: Funky pattern. Don’t mind it.
44. Qatar home (Adidas)
43. Ecuador home: Perfectly nice. We move on.
43. Ecuador home (Marathon)
42. Morocco away: We love the background pattern here. The sleeves just need a little something.
42. Morocco away (Puma)
41. Czechia home: Absolutely fine, middle of the road, a solid football shirt. The button is a nice detail.
41. Czechia home (Puma)
40. Portugal home: Wavy. Uncomplicated.
40. Portugal home (Puma)
39. South Africa home: Yep, smart pattern here, good colours, distinctly South African feel.
39. South Africa home (Adidas)
38. Ivory Coast home: Orange, in a good way.
38. Ivory Coast home (Puma)
37. Czechia away: It’s quite bold to dabble with gold when you’re anyone other than Brazil or Germany, basically – deep World Cup heritage. But fair play to Czechia, who’ve gone for it anyway, lifting what is otherwise a pleasant shirt.
37. Czechia away (Puma)
36. Iraq home: The good people at Jako tend to pull out the odd banger and the away version of this shirt is particularly eye-catching. But we like the design on the home shirt too.
36. Iraq home (Jako)
35. Germany away: The three little diamonds make for a neat pattern and the colours are sharp. It’s a lovely aesthetic.
35. Germany away (Adidas)
34. Spain home: This shirt doesn’t say a lot in isolation, but the sleeves tie in nicely with the shorts and there’s a yellow strip on the shoulders which we also enjoy. Perhaps not one of Spain’s great World Cup shirts but a good effort.
34. Spain home (Adidas)
33. Brazil home: Sometimes a simple, classic design works best, especially for nations with aura embedded in the crest. There are shades of 2002 here in the green trim down the sides and around the neck line.
33. Brazil home (Nike)
32. Colombia home: Inspired by magical realism, says Adidas, whatever that is. But we like this shirt: good solid Colombian colours, a neat background pattern, a pleasant shoulder trim. Well done to all involved.
32. Colombia home (Adidas)
31. Haiti home: OK, nice little collar, bold blue body, a powerful scene depicting silhouettes of Haiti’s independence heroes triumphantly raising the national flag, smart red sleeve trim… Hold on, what?
Now, if basically any other country had done this it would be an abomination, but a quick Google tells us the Haitian Revolution is widely regarded as the only successful large-scale slave revolt in human history, creating the first Black republic in the world, so we say bravo.
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31. Haiti home (Saeta)
30. Haiti away: This one is even more pleasing than the home shirt, given the way the flag’s colours stand out.
30. Haiti away (Saeta)
29. Panama home: A nice colour, a nice collar. Nice.
29. Panama home (Reebok)
28. Portugal away: This could be quite Marmite but we’re feeling generous. Like the colour, like the waves, just about like the V.
28. Portugal away (Puma)
27. Saudi Arabia away: Almost all of the Adidas away kits are superb and this is another. It’s quite simple and yet really sharp and clean. We need to again call out the use of gold, which should be reserved for football royalty, but other than that it’s a lovely entrant.
27. Saudi Arabia away (Adidas)
26. Algeria home: Creamy. The pattern is nice and subtle.
26. Algeria home (Adidas)
25. Ghana away: The pattern is based on Accra’s Makola Market, says Puma, and why not. A sunny shade, too. All together a pleasing edition.
25. Ghana away (Puma)
24. Sweden away: We really like the design but the issue here is that it’s not very Swedish. It’s Brazilian, maybe, or Colombian, perhaps. Even so, it’s a lovely thing.
24. Sweden away (Adidas)
23. Ivory Coast away: This was briefly in the ‘terrible’ pile but we reconsidered and decided it is actually so bold and mad that it’s great. It’s in the ‘excellent’ pile and it’s not moving.
23. Ivory Coast away (Puma)
22. Morocco home: Collar of the tournament.
22. Morocco home (Puma)
21. Senegal away: Yeah we like this a lot. Slightly running out of things to say about football shirts at this point if truth be told. If you’re still with us, thanks, great stamina. We’re on the home straight…
21. Senegal away (Puma)
20. South Africa away: Another away belter from Adidas, although – and maybe this is just because we know it’s South Africa – we can’t stop thinking this is a Cricket World Cup shirt from some time in the 2010s. Still, there’s a lot to like here.
20. South Africa away (Adidas)
19. United States away: This is pretty great, with the faint black stars in the background and the thin red trim over the shoulders. Black shirts are almost always cool and this one is a doozy.
19. United States away (Nike)
18. United States home: Setting aside the USA’s obsession with its flag, this is just objectively a great shirt. It is very American, which is important, it’s distinctive, it’s bright and it’s pretty to look at. Much better than some of the bland stuff they’ve worn before. Oh, and we just got it – two shirts, stars and stripes. Very good.
18. United States home (Nike)
17. Canada away: Is it a constellation or a light dust of icing? Either way, this looks great.
17. Canada away (Nike)
16. DR Congo home: Umbro’s sole entrant to the World Cup is DR Congo, and it’s a belter. Is it blue fire? Is it the back of a large frog? We’re not sure.
16. DR Congo home (Umbro)
15. Japan away: We love a pinstripe, as previous World Cup kit rankings will attest, and even though this one looks like it’s been done by a four-year-old with a box of crayons, we approve this effort by Japan.
15. Japan away (Adidas)
14. Norway home: We see what you’ve done here, Norway: you’re wearing a big flag. We like it, and Erling Haaland is going to look majestic in this thing. We’re not sure how far Norway will go in the World Cup but their shirt is a big plus! Cheers, all.
14. Norway home (Nike)
13. Scotland away: What a shade. Salmon, terracotta, coral? Whatever it is, we like it.
13. Scotland away (Adidas)
12. Ecuador away: Now, this we like this from the good people at Marathon. It’s a deep, moody shade of blue with a great collar, and Moises Caicedo will make some authoritative tackles in this thing.
12. Ecuador away (Marathon)
11. Spain away: We really like this. It’s simple but neat and crisp, like a Xavi pass.
11. Spain away (Adidas)
10. Austria away: One of Puma’s best this summer – the watercolour splodges work somehow, and we like the faint gold pattern on top. We called Czechia out for dabbling with gold and it is risky, but Austria have got away with it.
10. Austria away (Puma)
9. Iraq away: Here’s the Iraq away shirt we mentioned earlier, and it’s a cracker.
9. Iraq away (Jako)
8. Uruguay home: A picture of elegance. The sort of shirt you want to wine and dine at a high-end restaurant on a first date. Darwin Nunez is going to look incredibly sharp hitting the post from a variety of ranges wearing this thing.
8. Uruguay home (Nike)
7. Belgium away: Inspired by Belgium’s surrealist movement, says Adidas. Garish, in a great way. It’s perilously close to being awful, but we love it.
7. Belgium away (Adidas)
6. France away: Well this is lovely. The mint green, the subtle tricolour sleeve trim, the understated neckline. Overall it doesn’t feel very French (Portugal, away, maybe?) but it’s a very fine shirt.
6. France away (Nike)
5. Senegal home: This could just be quite a nice T-shirt. But it makes a really great football shirt.
5. Senegal home (Puma)
4. Mexico home: Mexico have topped our kit rankings in years gone by with an Aztec pattern similar to this one, and this summer’s home shirt is a very cool version on the same theme.
4. Mexico home (Adidas)
3. Germany home: We love a throwback and this has nostalgic shades of Italia 90 and USA 94, both elite Germany shirts, while standing on its own as a fine design. Hopefully Germany go far just so this shirt has its own bit of football legacy.
3. Germany home (Adidas)
2. Colombia away: Yes, Colombia! This pattern has a distinct World Cup flavour with notes of summer, samba and South America. If the home shirt is the heart of Colombia, the away kit is a little slice of Caribbean coast. You could wear this to a summer barbecue and be the coolest person there. Though worth noting that if someone else was also wearing the same shirt at said barbecue, you’d both look a bit tragic. We don’t make the rules.
2. Colombia away (Adidas)
1. Curacao away: It’s perfect. The soft yellow tone, the bold blue sleeves, the old-school Adidas logo, the shoulder stripes. Even the collar is exquisite, and the bright colours writing out “Curacao” over the shoulder blades hint at a nation in North America for a good time, not a long time. We have our king.
1. Curacao away (Adidas)
Thanks for reading. Please do tell us where we’ve gone badly wrong in the comments below…
Police were called to reports of criminal damage to a cash machine at a store on Sunday, June 7. Cambridgeshire Police received reports at 7.30am of an ATM that had been damaged on Hargate Way in Peterborough.
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A crime has been raised and investigations are ongoing. A picture shows the damage caused to the ATM. Cambridgeshire Police has confirmed that no arrests have been made at this time.
A spokesperson for Cambridgeshire Police said: “We were called at about 7.30am on Sunday (7 June) with reports of criminal damage to an ATM at a store on Hargate Way, Peterborough.
“A crime has been raised and investigations are ongoing. No arrests at this time.”
Thomas McMahon admitted bringing painkillers to his son Joseph Peers
11:50, 08 Jun 2026Updated 11:52, 08 Jun 2026
A man tried to pass drugs to his imprisoned murderer son hidden in a crisp packet.
Prison staff caught dad Thomas McMahon making the move when visiting Joseph Peers in HMP Full Sutton.
Peers was the getaway driver involved in the murder of 28-year-old Ashley Dale.
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McMahon, 64, admitted bringing in the prohibited painkillers into the Yorkshire prison on June 22 last year.
It holds some of the country’s most dangerous and high-risk prisoners in the country, including serial killers and terrorists.
Julia Baggs, prosecuting, told Hull Crown Court how McMahon and two women were visiting Peers, who was convicted for the murder of Ashley Dale, but during the visit staff noticed McMahon moving his mouth before putting an item inside a crisp packet.
Identical crisp packets were on a table in front of the group and they were “rotated” and moved around several times. This aroused suspicion and CCTV pictures showed McMahon’s crisp packet being moved on the table.
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Staff found that there were 14 white, oval-shaped tablets inside it. “Custodial settings are notoriously rife with controlled and uncontrolled drugs”, said Miss Baggs.
“It’s a high net-worth currency. All matters involving the transportation of prohibited items into prison are very serious but this is not any sort of large-scale operation.”
McMahon was arrested and claimed his son had been suffering back and knee pain and that he was worried about him. The tablets were to help his son with this.
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The prosecution did not accept this explanation but did not seek to challenge it, the court heard.
“It was a prescribed medication for pain relief but it is abused and is bought and sold on the black market,” said Miss Baggs.
McMahon had convictions for 23 previous offences, most recently in September 2023 for being over the drug limit for cannabis. He had returned from a trip to Amsterdam at the time, Hull Live reports.
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Billy Torbett, mitigating, said that McMahon’s previous conviction for drug-driving in 2023 came after he took a trip to Amsterdam because of the stress of his son’s murder trial. When he returned, there was still cannabis in his system while driving.
Father-of-four McMahon had no previous convictions for drugs possession or supply. He brought the drugs into Full Sutton Prison because his son was suffering pain from an injury.
The painkillers had previously been prescribed for himself to treat chronic pain but he had not used them. “He knows he has made a significant error in judgement, to say the least”, said Mr Torbett.
“He is immensely remorseful for his actions. He understands that he has made a significant error here, an error which he regrets.
“It was the simple passing of pain management drugs to his son. He is under no illusions about the seriousness of it.
“He has largely remained out of trouble for 34 years apart from that driving conviction in 2023.” McMahon was still banned from visiting his son at the prison and this had caused emotional problems for him.
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Recorder Taryn Turner told McMahon: “This is serious offending. This was in a custodial environment where there has to be the maintenance of order.
“Drugs equals currency, in monetary terms perhaps not, but nevertheless. You brought in a quantity of tablets, concealed from view.
“These tablets, you well knew, were prohibited items. The risk created is substantial. You were visiting your son, who is serving a sentence for murder.
“This was a serious lapse in your judgement.” Drugs in prisons fuelled violence, intimidation and debt, said Recorder Turner.
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McMahon, of Dunchurch Road, Knotty Ash, was given a six-month suspended prison sentence, ordered to do 120 hours of unpaid work and 15 days of rehabilitation activity requirement days.
Peers was the getaway driver on the night of Ashley’s murder on August 21, 2022, with the care worker being shot in the abdomen with a Skorpion sub-machince gun at her home in Leinster Road as part of a plot to kill her boyfriend Lee Harrison.
Peers, then aged 29, was said to have been the getaway driver for a gunman, James Witham, who had discharged a hail of bullets in Ashley’s dining room as she fled through the back door of her home.
On November 22, 2023, Peers was sentenced to life with a minimum term of 41 years for the murder of Ashley Dale, conspiracy to murder Lee Harrison, and conspiracy to possess a prohibited weapon with intent to endanger life.
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He will be 70 years old before he is eligible for release.
Katie has so far been unsuccessful in her attempts to visit Lee behind bars
Katie Price has said when she’ll be ‘done’ with her husband Lee Andrews as he finally admitted to being subject to a travel ban after sparking suspicion when he failed to appear in the UK for his first TV interview with his new wife.
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The former glamour model confirmed that her husband was being held at Dubai’s notorious Al Awir prison after being arrested and detained on suspicion of espionage.
It came after she previously claimed that Lee had been kidnapped after she received a string of concerning messages before he was due to board a flight from the United Arab Emirates, where he lives in Dubai, with a plan of appearing on Good Morning Britain alongside Katie for their first joint interview.
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“He has a travel ban, he did eventually tell me. I said to him, ‘No one will b****y care if you’ve got a flight ban. It’s not a big deal!’” she toldThe Sun. “The big deal is, you keep videoing, saying you’re at the airport, and you’re coming to England, and you don’t turn up.”
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Katie has so far been unsuccessful in her attempts to visit Lee behind bars, but once she does get to speak to him and has subsequently vowed to end their marriage if she isn’t happy with what he has to say.
She told thenewspaper: “I’m not a mug and when I finally see Lee, I’m going to question him. And if the answers I get aren’t right, that’ll be it, I’ll be done. That’s it. And I’ll just get on with my life… and not find a man on Instagram.”
Katie added: “My eyes have been opened. I just need some time to think. I still cannot end things with Lee until I’ve spoken to him but that was a lot.”
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Also in her first interview regarding the whole saga, she insisted that despite rumours that it was all a ploy for publicity, it was all a genuine situation that she had found herself in. She said: “This is real, this is real life; this is my life.
“It has been a tough few weeks, don’t get me wrong. But I’ve still stayed strong through it all, and I have a smile on my face. So, in this situation, I’m doing what I want to do, and I’m out here in Dubai, because I’m here to help Lee.”
She’s also spoken to former partners of Lee. Katie said: “I am not ignoring these women… One day, who knows, if I’m not with Lee, I would meet up with them. Just for clarity. But right now, I’m sticking up for myself. He’s got a side of the story, so have these women.
“So I think it’s really unfair as well, just to listen to what these women are saying because there’s always two sides to every story. I cannot just walk away from my marriage without seeing him again. He is, surely, entitled to his say.”
A previous planning agreement meant that the restaurant could open 24/7 for two years before it had to seek further permission
Darren Calpin, Local Democracy Reporter
09:55, 08 Jun 2026Updated 10:03, 08 Jun 2026
A popular fast food outlet near a city centre retail park is looking to maintain its around-the-clock opening hours.
The McDonald’s Drive Thru restaurant at Morrisons supermarket next to Brotherhood Retail Park has requested permission to maintain its current 24/7 trading hours from Peterborough City Council.
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Documents submitted to the council’s Planning Services department on behalf of McDonald’s by Savills real estate services state the application has been made “in order to enable the restaurant to operate 24 hours a day, seven days a week.”
The application has been made to offset previous planning permission requirements agreed two years ago.
In 2024, a planning agreement granted around-the-clock opening with a condition (Condition 4) which stipulated the restaurant would revert back to non-24/7 opening times.
It said: “Within 24 months of the date of this decision the site shall cease operating 24 hours, 7 days per week.”
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The current application seeks “continued use of the [Lincoln Road] site, without compliance with Condition 4 of the 2024 Permission”.
The application states that the Lincoln Road restaurant’s capability to successfully operate around-the-clock has been evident.
“Over the course of the 24 months, members of the public and the Council have not raised any issues with regard to the additional hours of trading during the temporary period,” Savills noted.
“As such, the 24/7 operations have not caused any disturbance relating to noise or anti-social behaviour.”
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The document concludes by saying the proposed extension will “ensure that the restaurant is better able to meet the demands of its established customer base and enhance its overall efficiency”.
The roads have been closed while the bus is recovered from the area.
A number of roads have been closed after a bus crashed into a garden near Glasgow.
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The incident happened on Mill Road in Clydebank this morning, Monday, June 8, at around 6am. It is not believed anyone was injured but a number of passengers were checked over by paramedics at the scene.
Police closed down several road in the area to allow for the bus to be recovered.
Pictures show a number of uniformed police officers standing on the road behind the bus. Debris from the crash can be seen under the bus, which lies deep in a hedge inside a residential garden.
Police Scotland confirmed four roads have been closed this morning following the collision.
A spokesperson for the force said: “Mill Road in Clydebank is closed following a single vehicle crash, involving a bus, which happened around 6am on Monday, 8 June.
“Emergency services attended and passengers were checked by paramedics at the scene. “Closures are in place from the train station, Millburn Avenue, East Barns Street and Yoker Mill Road, to allow for vehicle recovery.”
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Rory McIlroy finished in a tie for 12th at the Memorial Tournament but the Northern Irishman is focused on improving ahead of the US Open at Shinnecock Hills
11:12, 08 Jun 2026Updated 11:21, 08 Jun 2026
Rory McIlroy has acknowledged feeling “limited” with his driving at present and conceded he needs to improve before next week’s US Open.
While he believes most aspects of his game are in solid shape ahead of the third major of the year, which begins on 18 June, McIlroy expressed his disappointment with his driving performance at Muirfield Village.
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He managed to hit just 30 of 56 fairways during the tournament, though the six-time major champion is drawing comfort from the fact that conditions at Shinnecock Hills should prove more manageable off the tee.
“Off the tee still wasn’t where I want it to be. I feel limited at the minute. Thankfully the fairways at Shinnecock are a little wider than they are here.
“I need to work on how I’m hitting it off the tee. But everything else, (my) putting felt pretty good for the most part and my iron play and wedges were pretty nice.
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“I’ll just try to keep getting a little bit better each and every day heading into Shinnecock.”
McIlroy flew back to the UK on Sunday night and plans to return to the United States this weekend, heading straight to Long Island in New York, where the US Open will take place.
“Overall, (it was) not a bad week, got some good stuff out of it, and I’ve got a week to prep and get ready for Shinnecock,” he added.
MIAMI (AP) — Tropical Storm Boris formed Monday and is expected to bring heavy rain, flooding and possible mudslides to parts of southern Mexico’s Pacific coast, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said.
Boris was located about 85 miles (135 kilometers) southeast of Acapulco and 50 miles (80 kilometers) southwest of Punta Maldonado, according to the Miami-based weather center. The storm had maximum sustained winds of 40 mph (65 kph) and was moving northeast at 5 mph (7 kph).
Boris was expected to make a turn to the north, bringing rainfall of 4 to 10 inches (10 to 25 centimeters) to coastal portions of the states of Guerrero and Oaxaca through Monday night.
“This rainfall may produce life-threatening flooding and mudslides, especially in areas of steep terrain,” the center said.
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A tropical storm warning was in effect from Laguna de Chacahua in Oaxaca to Tecpan de Galeana in Guerrera, with tropical storm conditions expected in the area within 24 hours.
Boris is the second named storm of the Pacific hurricane season, which started May 15. Tropical Storm Amanda formed June 3 far out to sea, posing no threat to land.
The Atlantic hurricane season began June 1, but no cyclones have formed in that basin yet this year.
The band had previously set their sights on securing their first number with new single, Fever, but guitarist Turnbull Smith said they were “absolutely buzzing” to land the fourth spot.
“We’re absolutely buzzing to be in at number four in the UK official vinyl charts and number five in the physical charts,” he said. “What an achievement.”
Fever by Skylights charted at number four in the official vinyl single charts (Image: Supplied)
Fever was the first single to be released by Skylights since the band announced they would be releasing music independently.
They partnered with Vinyl Eddie in Tadcaster Road to produce the vinyl, which was pressed at Vinyl Press in Monks Cross and recorded at Young Thugs Studio in Southbank.
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Skylights were kept off the number one vinyl spot by pop giant Ariana Grande whose new single, Hate That You Made Me Love You, peaked at number one during its first week.
Grande was followed in the official vinyl single charts by Dinner Party by Niall Horan at number two and Down Below by Jayler at number three.
Skylights did, however, chart ahead of rock legends the Rolling Stones whose new single, In the Stars, dropped to number six in the vinyl charts in the song’s third week of release.
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