NewsBeat
Labour split as Rachel Reeves poised to back third runway at Heathrow in bid for economic growth
Labour is split over plans to back a hugely controversial third runway at Heathrow as Rachel Reeves scrambles to boost the UK’s flatlining economy.
The chancellor is poised to support the expansion of the London airport, a move long opposed by her cabinet colleague Ed Miliband.
On Tuesday the Labour mayors of London and greater Manchester hit out at the plans, which one Labour peer described as “madness”.
The government could even face legal action from London mayor Sadiq Khan, after it emerged he said last week that if Heathrow came back “with plans for a new runway that was supported by the government, I wouldn’t hesitate to launch, with partners and colleagues, another legal challenge’”.
As well as publicly endorsing Heathrow’s much-postponed plan for a third runway, the government is reportedly set to approve a second runway at Gatwick and an application for Luton airport to double its capacity.
Cabinet ministers including Sir Keir Starmer, Mr Miliband, the energy secretary, and Steve Reed, the environment secretary, have all previously opposed Heathrow’s expansion.
But last week Ms Reeves said the rising cost of borrowing and falling value of the pound underlined the need for ministers to go “further and faster” in search of economic growth.
As well as a cabinet clash, the move would set Ms Reeves on a collision course with climate campaigners, who have consistently rallied against a third runway.
Mr Burnham hit out, saying the decision would help “overheat” the economy. He warned: “It’s a model for an ever overheating UK economy rather than a more balanced, levelled up economy, which is what we would argue for. Manchester Airport has two runways and it doesn’t operate at full capacity.”
A spokesman Ms Khan said he had a “long-standing opposition to airport expansion around London – linked to the negative impact on air quality, noise and London’s ability to reach net-zero by 2030.”
Labour peer Lord Sikka said a third runway would be “madness”, was “bound to lead to environmental degradation” and protests and was a “vote loser”.
Former shadow minister Rosena Allin-Khan, who represents a London constituency, told The Independent: “Heathrow will never go through as it’ll be stuck in judicial reviews forever. Gatwick could and should be expanded.”
Ruth Cadbury, a Labour MP and Heathrow sceptic who chairs the transport select committee, told the Telegraph ministers were “jumping the gun” in seeking to push through three airport projects at the same time. “Expanding three airports in the South East would also do nothing for regional economies that are already left behind, and you have to question where it would leave our climate policy,” she added.
In 2018 Mr Miliband tweeted: “We owe it to future generations not just to have good environmental principles but to act on them. That is why I will be voting against the third runway at Heathrow.”
Last month, Gatwick boss Stewart Wingate told The Independent he was pleading for permission from transport secretary Heidi Alexander to bring his airport’s standby runway into permanent use.
He warned: “London’s airports are already reaching capacity and demand is forecast to grow by more than 30 million passengers by 2030. We are already full at peak times.”
And he joined long-standing calls from a series of Heathrow bosses including incumbent Thomas Woldbye, who has said the plan for a third runway at Britain’s busiest airport is contingent on government support.
Both bosses have warned that by not approving the plans, the government is missing out on an opportunity to boost growth. Amid growing fears about the state of Britain’s economy, with Ms Reeves expected to push through deep cuts when it publishes its upcoming spending review, she has ordered ministers to come up with ideas to boost growth.
Chair of the Labour Growth Group Chris Curtis backed calls for a third runway at Heathrow, saying: “We are determined to do everything that we can in order to get [the economy] fixed, and in my view, that does include building a third runway at Heathrow.
“We talked about the importance of living in an interconnected world, I think, having more airport capacity, including at Heathrow, is a really important part of that”.
On Tuesday, Ms Reeves sidestepped a question about Heathrow expansion but added: “What I would say is this government is absolutely committed to growing our economy and making this a great place for businesses to invest and trade in.”
A government spokesman refused to comment on speculation, but added: “We are determined to get our economy moving and secure the long-term future of the UK’s aviation sector.
“All expansion proposals must demonstrate they contribute to economic growth, while remaining in line with existing environmental obligations.”
Heathrow boss Mr Woldbye has told The Independent that plans for a third runway are being revived, but has also warned that they will not submit proposals unless the government is fully onboard.
Speaking at the Airlines 2024 conference, he said: “We need to get around the table and say, do we want this? And we need to do that relatively fast because we cannot keep spending money.
“That requires discussion. It’s not just Heathrow, it’s the airlines, it’s the Government, it’s Parliament, it’s everybody around this.
“We can’t do that just as a single company. We are the tactical executors on the plan but transportation strategy is a government issue.”
Plans to allow Gatwick to use its second runway for departures are also expected to be approved, which would double passenger numbers to around 80m a year. And Labour is also set to accept the expansion of Luton airport’s capacity from 18m a year to 32m a year.
NewsBeat
Convicted US Capitol rioter Pam Hemphill turns down Trump pardon
One of the people who served jail time for taking part in the US Capitol riot four years ago has refused a pardon from President Donald Trump, saying: “We were wrong that day.”
Pamela Hemphill, who pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 60 days in prison, told the BBC that there should be no pardons for the riot on 6 January 2021.
“Accepting a pardon would only insult the Capitol police officers, rule of law and, of course, our nation,” she said.
“I pleaded guilty because I was guilty, and accepting a pardon also would serve to contribute to their gaslighting and false narrative.”
Hemphill, who was nicknamed the “Maga granny” by social media users – in reference to Trump’s “make America great again” slogan – said she saw the Trump government as trying to “rewrite history and I don’t want to be part of that”.
“We were wrong that day, we broke the law – there should be no pardons,” she told the BBC World Service’s Newsday programme.
Trump’s decision to pardon or commute the sentences of nearly 1,600 people involved in the attempt to violently overturn the 2020 election came just hours into his presidency.
In a news conference on Tuesday at the White House, he said: “These people have already served years in prison, and they’ve served them viciously.
“It’s a disgusting prison. It’s been horrible. It’s inhumane. It’s been a terrible, terrible thing.”
However, the move has drawn an uneasy reaction from some Republican politicians.
Senator Thom Tillis, from North Carolina, said he “just can’t agree” with the move, adding that it “raises legitimate safety issues on Capitol Hill”.
Another Republican US senator, James Lankford from Oklahoma, told CNN: “I think we need to continue to say we are a party of law and order.”
He added: “I think if you attack a police officer, that’s a very serious issue and they should pay a price for that.”
Also among those pardoned was one of the riot’s most recognisable figures, Jacob Chansley, the self-styled QAnon Shaman, who was released from jail in 2023 after serving 27 months of his 41-month jail sentence.
He told the BBC that he heard the news from his lawyer while he was at the gym.
He added: “I walked outside and I screamed ‘freedom’ at the top of my lungs and then gave a good Native American war cry.”
NewsBeat
Elephants can't pursue release because they are not people, court rules
A court has ruled that five elephants being held in a Colorado zoo do not have the legal right to pursue their release, because they are not human.
NewsBeat
‘Danger to life’: Amber weather warning issued for parts of UK as Storm Eowyn approaches | UK News
An amber wind alert has been issued for parts of the UK on Friday, with the Met Office warning there could be “a danger to life” due to flying debris.
Parts of northern England and Scotland are expected to be affected by the storm from 6am through to 9pm on Friday.
Storm Eowyn is expected to bring “very strong winds and widespread disruption on Friday,” according to the Met Office.
Forecasters predict “injuries and danger to life” from flying debris and large waves.
Meanwhile a rare, red warning has been issued by Ireland’s weather service ahead of the arrival of Storm Eowyn, threatening to bring “severe, damaging and destructive gusts”.
The powerful storm is predicted to bring gale force southerly winds “of up to 130kmh [80mph] widely, with even higher gusts for a time”, according to Met Eireann.
Ireland’s weather forecasters have set a wind warning to “status red” for counties in Clare, Cork, Kerry, Limerick between 3am and 10am on Friday.
A red warning is only issued for “rare and very dangerous weather conditions”, according to the forecaster.
An “status orange” warning, which is the same level as “amber” in the UK, applies to all of Ireland’s counties between 2am and 5pm on Friday.
Potential impacts include fallen trees, power outages, dangerous waves on the coast, structural damage and travel disruption.
Met Eireann said it will start to become “very stormy” on Thursday night, before the centre of Storm Eowyn tracks just off the northwest coast on Friday morning.
This will be followed by a “swathe of extremely strong and damaging winds extending across the country bringing disruption”.
Sky News weather producer Chris England said: “It’s looking increasingly likely that Storm Eowyn will bring potentially damaging gusts of over 80mph for Ireland and parts of northern and western Britain, mainly coasts and hills.
“Gusts of 60mph can be expected almost anywhere,” he added.
A yellow warning for fog had been issued for Wednesday morning covering Northern Ireland and large parts of England between Birmingham and Carlise.
Politics
Suella Braverman doubles-down on Reform pact just days after refusing to rule out defection to Nigel Farage
Ex-Home Secretary Suella Braverman has renewed calls for the Torries to “unify” with Reform UK in order to defeat Sir Keir Starmer’s Labour Party.
Braverman also called on her Conservative colleagues to mirror the tactics adopted by Republicans following Donald Trump’s emphatic 2024 US Presidential Election victory.
The Fareham & Waterlooville MP claimed that the Tories should look to adopt Trump’s brand of “unfiltered conservatism”, adding that she wants to make the “unsayable mainstream”.
Directly addressing the threat posed by her friend Nigel Farage, Badenoch told The Telegraph: “We do need to unite the Right. We need to come to some kind of accommodation.
`Rael Braverman, Suella Braverman and Nigel Farage
RAEL BRAVERMAN
“I don’t know what the precise form looks like – whether that is a merger, whether that is a coalition, whether that is a supply and confidence agreement, whether that is a non-aggression pact.
“I don’t know what it looks like.“In general, I am in favour of unifying the right.”
Braverman, who last week declined to rule out defecting to Reform UK, also highlighted that she agrees with Reform UK on its support for leaving the European Convention on Human Rights.
The 2022 Tory leadership hopeful was joined in Washington DC by her Reform-supporting husband Rael Braverman.
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The couple posed alongside Farage ahead of Trump’s inauguration on Monday.
Discussing Trump’s victory, Braverman said: “Donald Trump has not just shifted Overton window [a theory about what is politically acceptable], he’s shattered it.
“He’s made the unsayable mainstream and he’s made the radical much more acceptable to the moderates.
“That is of an undeniable value to British Right-wing politicians. There are many things that we can adopt going forward to hopefully emulate his success in a few years time in the United Kingdom.”
Braverman also slammed her Conservative colleagues for their attacks on Reform UK.
She claimed: “I’m not one of these Tories who is going to denigrate the Reform Party for running Nuremberg rallies [as] some of my colleagues did during the general election.
“I’m not going to turn my nose up at those who vote Reform as racists or nut jobs.
“The people who are in Reform are largely conservatives who have lost patience with our party and that’s our fault.”
Despite Braverman extending an olive branch to Reform UK, Tory leader Kemi Badenoch and the populist party’s chairman Zia Yusuf dismissed calls for an alliance on the right.
Addressing the threat to the right of the Tories, Badenoch said: “Nigel Farage says he wants to destroy the Conservative Party. Why on earth would we merge with that?”
Yusuf also downplayed talks of a merger – comparing the populist party joining forces with the Tories to Netflix merging with Blockbuster.
However, the latest YouGov poll paints a difficult picture for the Tories.
Labour retain top spot on 26 per cent, with Reform UK leapfrogging the Tories into second-place with 24 per cent of the vote.
Support for the Tories appears to have dropped slightly since the 2024 General Election, falling to as low as 22 per cent.
NewsBeat
Starmer to be grilled at PMQs over Southport killings as Axel Rudakubana’s family go into hiding: latest
Sir Keir Starmer will be grilled at PMQs after announcing a public inquiry into the Southport killings and vowing to leave no stone unturned in identifying potential failings.
Axel Rudakubana, 18, admitted on Monday to murdering three girls aged between six and nine after his frenzied knife attack at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in Merseyside last year.
The then-17-year-old travelled five miles from his family home to the Hart Space, where he ambushed the youngsters. Since then, The Community Church, which his father attended, revealed the killer’s family have been moved to a secret location for their protection.
“The Rudakubana family have been devastated following this terrible incident and they have been moved by the police, for their protection, from their home in Banks to a secret location that we are unaware of,” it said.
In an address to the nation on Tuesday, Sir Keir promised action to end how “shockingly easy” it is for children to buy knives, including forcing online retailers to put in place tougher checks.
Starmer to be grilled at PMQs after launching inquiry into Southport attack
Sir Keir Starmer is set to be grilled at PMQs after announcing a public inquiry into the Southport killings, and vowing to leave no stone unturned in identifying potential failings ahead of the July attack.
Following Axel Rudakubana’s guilty plea on Monday, it emerged that the killer had been referred to anti-terror scheme Prevent three times prior to the attack in which he murdered three young girls and attempted to kill 10 others.
In an address to the nation on Tuesday, the prime minister firmly rejected suggestions of a cover-up by Reform and the Conservatives, saying he would have risked leaving the Southport victims’ families without justice by making information about Rudakubana public ahead of the trial.
Prosecutors will reveal further information about Rudakubana on Thursday ahead of his sentencing.
Andy Gregory22 January 2025 11:08
Ex-Met Assistant Commissioner urges increase in counter terrorism resources or warns lone attackers will keep slipping through net
The former head of counter terrorism policing has called for an urgent increase in resources for counter terrorism or feared lone attackers like Axel Rudakubana will continue to slip through the net.
A public inquiry into the Southport killer was announced on Monday after it emerged he had “contact with a range of different state agencies throughout his teenage years”, according to the home secretary, including three referrals to government anti-extremism scheme Prevent before the killings due to concerns about his obsession with violence.
Former Metropolitan Police Assistant Commissioner Neil Basu described these agencies as “unfunded, untrained, [and] largely staffed by frontline staff who are overwhelmed by demand”, warning: “This will come with a big bill, but that bill has got to be paid if we want to be safe.”
Tara Cobham22 January 2025 10:23
Ex-UK counter terrorism chief brands government plan to extend terrorism definition a ‘mistake’
The former head of counter terrorism policing in the UK has branded the government’s proposal to extend the definition of terrorism to encompass atrocities carried out by lone attackers like the Southport killer “a mistake” .
Former Metropolitan Police Assistant Commissioner Neil Basu explained that violent individuals could “revel” in being called a terrorist as he also warned against the use of the term “lone wolf” for risk of “glorifying” perpetrators.
Tara Cobham22 January 2025 09:46
Rudakubana described as ‘ticking time bomb’ by former classmate
After his guilty plea, fresh details emerged claiming Axel Rudakubana had been excluded from secondary school over allegations he was carrying a knife and later returned to attack someone with a hockey stick.
One former classmate told The Guardian he was a “ticking time bomb”, while others told The Times he was an odd pupil who would be disruptive in class, to the point that the phrase “doing an Axel” had become common among the class.
Tara Cobham22 January 2025 09:04
Garage owner tells of confronting killer moments before hearing screams from young girls’ holiday class
A garage owner who confronted Axel Rudakubana just before the Southport attack said he had no idea of the “unspeakable” horror the agitated teen was about to unleash – as he called for him to never see the light of day again.
Reliving the horrific events for the first time since 18-year-old Rudakubana pleaded guilty, Colin Parry said all he could see was the killer’s eyes when the knifeman, wearing a bright green hoodie and Covid face mask, arrived on Hart Street in a taxi and took a wrong turn into the entrance of his garage.
When the 63-year-old swore at him and told him to pay the driver, who had followed to demand payment, Rudakubana leant forward and replied: “What you gonna do?”
“He’s agitated, shuffling around because the lad realises he’s in the wrong place, yeah, and walks out,” he told The Independent. “Doesn’t run out. He just walked out, but he pushed past the taxi.”
Moments later screams were heard from the Hart Space studio next door, where 26 girls were making bracelets and singing at a Taylor Swift-themed holiday class. By the time Mr Parry arrived at the scene, his colleague was running out carrying an injured child who he laid on the floor in front of him. His white spray suit was soaked red with blood, he recalled.
Tara Cobham22 January 2025 09:01
Review of terror law would be a mistake, experts warn PM after Southport murders
Expanding terror laws to encompass atrocities carried out by lone attackers like the Southport killer would be a mistake – and such threats are not new, security experts have warned.
Sir Keir Starmer announced a review of terror laws to address “extreme violence carried out by loners, misfits, young men in their bedrooms” following the Southport murders.
Axel Rudakubana, 18, pleaded guilty on Monday to murdering three girls at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in Southport, Merseyside, in July.
Tara Cobham22 January 2025 09:00
Full story: Starmer promises action to end ‘shockingly easy’ access to knives online
Online retailers will be forced to put in place tougher checks to stop youngsters buying knives after Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said it is “shockingly easy” for children to buy blades.
Southport murderer Axel Rudakubana used a knife bought from Amazon to kill three girls at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in Southport, Merseyside, in July.
The Government has promised new laws, which could see retailers forced to ask anyone buying a knife for two types of identification.
Read the full story here:
Tara Cobham22 January 2025 08:46
Lord Carlile backs calls for government to crack down on online retailers selling knives to under-18s
Lord Carlile has backed calls for the Government to crack down on online retailers selling knives to under-18s.
It comes after it was revealed Southport killer Axel Rudakubana was able to order a knife on Amazon when he was still aged 17 and had been convicted over violence.
The sale of knives with a fixed blade of more than three inches long to under-18s is illegal in England and Wales, with retailers facing fines or prosecution if they breach the law.
Speaking to BBC Breakfast on Wednesday morning, Lord Alex Carlile said: “The companies concerned have indicated that they’re capable of doing online scans while people are going onto their sites, which are a rudimentary but reasonably reliant test of their age.
“And, also, we all have some form of identity.
“Students often have identity cards for their student lives, and so I don’t see any reason why people who are buying things online should not have to establish that they’re at appropriate age to buy those things online.
“It’s no different from going into a bar and being refused service without proving that one is over 18.”
Tara Cobham22 January 2025 08:45
Lord Carlile calls for more regulation of social media companies after Southport attack
Lord Carlile has called for more regulation of social media companies to prevent potential perpetrators from “learning how to be a terrorist online” in the wake of the Southport stabbing attack.
Speaking to BBC Breakfast on Wednesday morning, Lord Alex Carlile said: “It is absolutely clear that the online companies are not prepared to scrutinise the content of what is placed on their sites in a way that will ensure that our children and grandchildren do not see dreadful things online when they’re not mature enough to be able to exercise a critical faculty over them.
“So, given that the internet companies are not prepared to do what they should voluntarily agree to carry out, it is time for a regulatory regime to be established which does not question the right of free speech, but which protects the public from unlawful acts.
“If the internet companies are not prepared to do it, then the sanction is on governments – not just our government, but many other governments.
“And as we saw in America earlier in the week, one can switch off the site – Tiktok was switched off for a day.
“Also, they can be fined, fines based upon their world turnover, very big fines.
“So, it is time that we looked at having a proper regulatory regime for our own country, doing what we have to do first, protecting our own country and our own citizens to ensure that people like this perpetrator are not able to learn how to be a terrorist online.”
Tara Cobham22 January 2025 08:44
Employment minister defends new measures to use two-factor identification to buy knives
New measures to use two-factor identification to prevent underage people from buying knives are needed to stop the “absolute devastation” caused by the flow of knives, a minister has said.
Employment minister Alison McGovern was asked about plans for two-factor identification to prevent people who are not old enough to buy knives and whether the technology is workable.
She told BBC Breakfast: “Knife crime is horrendous and we have got to have the new measures that you just mentioned, because we cannot have this flow of knives that can cause such absolute devastation.
“We know that the technology is there to improve verification checks and I think that everyone would want that, every business, every organisation.
“So, the Government will work with organisations to bring in every possible protection to stop knives getting into the wrong hands.”
She said the Government wants to work with retailers but that “in the end, we’ve got to have the right checks in place” and “look at every measure that we can bring forward through legislation”.
Tara Cobham22 January 2025 08:43
NewsBeat
Storm Éowyn: Amber weather warning issued for UK amid threat of 90mph winds
Storm Éowyn – pronounced “ay-oh-win” – and the fifth named storm of the season will undergo rapid development during Thursday as it moves across the Atlantic. It will be fuelled by a very powerful jet stream which is fast moving air high in the atmosphere where wind speeds are around 260mph (418km/h).
The exact track that Éowyn takes as it approaches the UK and Ireland will determine where the strongest winds will be.
It’ll turn windy on Thursday, especially on coasts of west Wales and southern England where there is a yellow Met Office wind warning in force from 07:00 GMT to 18:00.
However, this spell of strong winds with gusts of 50-60mph (80-97km/h) is not connected to Storm Éowyn.
The strong winds associated with Éoywn will start on Friday morning.
Met Office amber severe weather warning covers Northern Ireland, southern Scotland, northern England and North Wales from 06:00 GMT to 21:00 on Friday.
Wind gusts of 60-70mph (97-113km/h) fairly widely inland and 80-90mph (129-145km/h) along more exposed coasts and hills.
The Met Office suggest that we could even perhaps see even higher gusts in a few locations.
Elsewhere, yellow warnings have been issued for most of the UK on Friday and continuing across much of Scotland into Saturday.
Across northern and western Scotland, parts of the Midlands and southern England, gusts of 50-65mph (80-105km/h) are expected but around coastal areas gusts up to 80mph (129km/h) are likely.
Met Office warnings could still be adjusted and possibly upgraded ahead of Friday.
These gales and severe gales are likely to bring travel disruption and some damage, which could include roof tiles being blown off and power cuts.
Large waves are also expected with coastal overtopping.
Heavy rain is also expected where there is a yellow Met Office rain warning for west Wales and south-west England from midnight to 09:00 GMT Friday.
While it will turn milder for some, especially in the south, it will remain cold enough for snow to fall over hills in Scotland and northern England.
With potentially 15-25cm (6-10 in) of snow to fall over the highest ground there is a separate yellow warning for snow from 03:00 GMT to 12:00 on Friday.
Politics
‘Absolute transparency’ needed on Southport attack, Labour MP claims
“Absolute transparency” is needed about the circumstances surrounding the attack in Southport by Axel Rudakubana, according to Employment Minister Alison McGovern.
She told GB News: “In relation to Southport, I hope you’ll understand if I first say that, like everybody in our country, my heart just breaks for the poor families of the three little girls and everybody who was injured or hurt in that dreadful attack.
“And we’ve seen another attack this morning that also is utterly heartbreaking.
“When it comes to the question that you asked there, we need to have transparency over all of the elements that have happened here.
“I’m very, very concerned about some of the things that seem to have gone wrong in this case. That’s why it’s right that we have an inquiry to get the facts out in the open.
“That is the best way to get trust in the steps that we need to take forward to put right what is wrong, and to make sure, as a matter of course, there should be absolute transparency about what’s happened here.”
She added: “I know the police and Merseyside very well, and they are incredibly good and they will make their needs known following these terrible events to the government.
“As a general point, I’ve been a strong supporter of the Hillsborough Law, which following the terrible events and all that went wrong in covering up that terrible situation, we need to have a duty of candour to make sure that public servants who say what they know when terrible things happen, because that’s the public’s information and it should be out there.
“I would say that anybody who’s worried about trust in government can show that they want change by voting and supporting Hillsborough law.”
WATCH ABOVE.
NewsBeat
Cat left on plane ends up taking three flights before reaching its destination | World News
A family’s move from New Zealand to Australia went horribly wrong when they realised their cat had been left on the plane and flown back home.
Mittens, an eight-year-old Maine coon cat, was booked on a one-way trip from Christchurch, in New Zealand, to Melbourne, Australia, on 13 January.
Once they touched down in Melbourne, she was meant to be unloaded from the cargo hold but after three hours waiting, owner Margo Neas said there was no sign of her.
It was then that ground staff told Ms Neas the plane had returned to New Zealand – with Mittens still on board. The return trip involves about seven-and-a-half hours in the air.
“I said, ‘how can this happen? How can this happen? Oh my God’,” Ms Neas said.
“It was not a great start to our new life in Melbourne because we didn’t have the family, we weren’t complete.”
The Air New Zealand pilot was told about Mittens’s presence mid-air, so they turned on the heating in the cargo hold to keep her comfortable, Ms Neas said.
She was told a stowed wheelchair had obscured a baggage handler’s view of Mittens’s cage.
Upon landing back in Christchurch, Mittens was met by the company Ms Neas had employed to take care of the cat’s transfer and they ensured she was safely put on a plane back to Melbourne to be reunited with her family.
Mittens had lost weight but was otherwise unharmed.
“She basically just ran into my arms and just snuggled up in here and just did the biggest cuddles of all time,” Ms Neas said. “It was just such a relief.”
Read more from Sky News:
No wonder the public is confused about Southport attack
The climate rules Trump has ripped up already
Air New Zealand apologised for the blunder and said it would refund all costs associated with the animal’s travel, according to a statement by the airline.
“We’ll work closely with our ground handler in Melbourne to ensure this doesn’t happen again,” said spokesperson Alisha Armstrong.
Meanwhile Mittens, not usually an affectionate pet, is “the cuddliest she’s ever been”, said Ms Neas.
“The cat gets as much attention as she wants right now because we’re just so absolutely and utterly relieved to have her back.”
NewsBeat
Man who died after falling down Tube station escalator 'may have been pushed'
A man who died after falling down an escalator at Waterloo Station may have been pushed, his family have told police.
NewsBeat
Prince Harry receives ‘full apology’ from The Sun owner as he settles legal claim against newspaper
Prince Harry has received a public apology and substantial damages from the publisher of The Sun after settling his legal action over allegations of unlawful information-gathering.
The Duke of Sussex, 40, alleged he was targeted by journalists and private investigators working for News Group Newspapers (NGN), which also published the now-defunct News Of The World.
On Wednesday morning, the duke’s barrister said the parties had “reached an agreement” and that NGN had offered an “unequivocal apology” and would pay “substantial damages” – reportedly an “eight-figure” sum, according to ITV royal correspondent Chris Ship.
Standing on the steps of the High Court, David Sherborne delivered a scathing rebuke of Rupert Murdoch’s NGN, declaring: “The lies are laid bare, the cover-ups are exposed, and today proves that no one is above the law.”
He described the settlement as a “monumental victory,” asserting that News UK had finally been held to account for its “illegal actions and blatant disregard for the law.”
NGN has denied unlawful activity took place at The Sun.
A trial of up to 10 weeks was set to begin was set to begin on Tuesday, but three requests for adjournments and a Court of Appeal bid meant that the case remained unopened.
Continuing this morning, Mr Sherborne said “I am pleased to announce to the court that the parties have reached an agreement. As a result of the parties reaching an agreement I would ask formally that the trial is vacated.”
He continued: “NGN offers a full and unequivocal apology to the Duke of Sussex for the serious intrusion by The Sun between 1996 and 2011 into his private life, including incidents of unlawful activities carried out by private investigators working for The Sun.
“NGN also offers a full and unequivocal apology to the Duke of Sussex for the phone hacking, surveillance and misuse of private information by journalists and private investigators instructed by them at the News Of The World.
“NGN further apologises to the duke for the impact on him of the extensive coverage and serious intrusion into his private life as well as the private life of Diana, Princess of Wales, his late mother, in particular during his younger years.”
He continued: “It is also acknowledged, without any admission of illegality, that NGN’s response to the 2006 arrests and subsequent actions were regrettable.”
Lord Tom Watson, former Labour deputy leader, was also taking legal action against the publisher, but also settled his claim.
After two earlier requests for adjournments on Tuesday, thought to be related to settlement discussions, Mr Justice Fancourt refused a third request for a delay as both sides had had “ample time to seek to resolve their differences”.
Following a short break, lawyers for both sides asked for the green light to challenge the judge’s decision to not provide a further delay at the Court of Appeal.
While Mr Justice Fancourt denied the request, the lawyers could go to the Court of Appeal itself, meaning Tuesday’s hearing was adjourned in any event.
Several other high-profile figures have settled their cases against NGN, with 39 people settling claims between July and December last year.
Harry had been expected to return to the UK in February to give evidence over several days in support of his claim that journalists and private investigators working for The Sun targeted him.
He and Lord Watson were the final remaining claimants in the case against NGN, which denied the allegations, after many high-profile figures—including actor Hugh Grant—had already settled similar claims.
In April, the High Court heard that actor Hugh Grant had settled his case against NGN because of the risk of a £10 million legal bill if his case went to trial.
Mr Sherborne said at that hearing that “the Duke of Sussex is subject to the same issues that Sienna Miller and Hugh Grant have been subject to, which is that the offers are made that make it impossible for them to go ahead”.
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9 spring/summer 2025 fashion trends to know for next season
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Entertainment8 years ago
The old and New Edition cast comes together to perform You’re Not My Kind of Girl.
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Sports8 years ago
Ethical Hacker: “I’ll Show You Why Google Has Just Shut Down Their Quantum Chip”
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Business8 years ago
Uber and Lyft are finally available in all of New York State
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Entertainment8 years ago
Disney’s live-action Aladdin finally finds its stars
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Sports8 years ago
Steph Curry finally got the contract he deserves from the Warriors
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Entertainment8 years ago
Mod turns ‘Counter-Strike’ into a ‘Tekken’ clone with fighting chickens
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Fashion8 years ago
Your comprehensive guide to this fall’s biggest trends
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