NewsBeat
Sara Sharif plays guitar and sings in unseen home video | News
Sara Sharif was filmed playing the guitar and singing in unseen home footage which has been released after three members of her family were found guilty over her death after years of horrific abuse.
The 10-year-old’s father Urfan Sharif, 42, and stepmother Beinash Batool, 30, were found guilty of her murder and her uncle Faisal Malik, 29, was convicted of causing or allowing her death following a trial at the Old Bailey.
Sara died after suffering a catalogue of injuries which included a traumatic brain injury, 25 fractures, an ulcerated burn to her buttocks, human bite marks and scalding wounds.
Sentencing has been adjourned until Tuesday, 17 December.
Politics
I was in Washington for the inauguration. What I saw shattered Khan’s veiled attack on Trump
On January 20th, London Mayor Sadiq Khan plastered his social media with a series of conciliatory if not vague messages.
“We’re living in increasingly uncertain times, and I know many Londoners are concerned by what’s taking place around the world,” wrote Sadiq.
Sadiq shared a photo of himself smiling benevolently beneath a Piccadilly Circus LED screen. A screen which beams the assuring “London is and will always be a place for everyone”.
Now cynics will say he has deliberately timed these with Donald Trump’s second inauguration as President of the United States. Kahn’s critics will say this is just more vacuous virtue signalling from Mr Kahn.
They’ll bemoan his pronouncements as typical progressive platitudes. They will seethe that our “DEI” Mayor is making allusions to geopolitics when violent crime, knife crime and rape and sexual offences have all risen under his mayorship.
But not I! Unlike those critics, I will give our great leader the benefit of the doubt. But what could he possibly be alluding to?
In Washington D.C. recently, still buzzing and high from Donald Trump’s victory rally at the Capitol One Arena on Sunday, I racked my brains.
Sadiq would’ve loved it. The Village People, chaps, tashes and leather. They tore the roof off. It was old-school diversity. Turbo-diversity. When DEI and S&M went cock in hand. Sadiq “Diversity is our greatest strength” Kahn would’ve been shaking his little booty with joy.
Donald Trump won the election in a landslide victory
Reuters
He can’t have been referring to Trump’s America.
What could it be? When I lay back in my hotel room, the sound of cacophonous patriotism bouncing up from the streets below, I tried to find answers on the tele.
Israel ceasefire and hostage deal agreed upon, including a British hostage. Soon-to-be-Sir Sadiq must have been overjoyed.
This is what Sadiq’s has been tweeting about for the last year and a half. A deal forced through by Trump, according to Benjamin Netanyahu anyway.
Sadiq is no doubt thrilled by the immediate impact by America’s returning Commander-in-chief.
He couldn’t have been referring to Trump’s America.
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After all, thanks to exposure by Elon Musk, Britain’s Pakistani rape gangs scandal – where our country’s most vulnerable children who have been abused, tortured and in some cases brutally murdered – has been given global attention at last.
Thanks to Trump’s team, the American media and X, we in Britain are being nudged towards justice for the girls. No doubt Sadiq will be thrilled.
He can’t have been referring to Trump’s inauguration. After all, a majority of American-Muslims voted for Trump in opposition to the Democrat’s disregard for traditional family values and chaotic foreign policy which has left the middle east, and Eastern Ukraine in rubbles.
When I watched the swearing in ceremony beneath the Capitol building Rotunda, I laughed to myself. Those silly critics probably think Khan was referring to this. Silly them.
Prayers from both a Rabbi and Pastor Lorenzo Sewell from Detroit. A glorious display of America’s founding mantra “E Pluribus Unum” – of the many one.
A mantra that celebrates diversity but recognises unity as more important. I know Sadiq loves Diversity, but are you to tell me the idea of unity would offend him? Surely not.
Now I can’t tell you exactly what he was referring to. But I for one have no reason to believe those posts have anything to do with the return of Donald J. Trump to The White House.
A celebration of diversity, unity, democracy, and patriotism. A rejection of Biden’s disastrous foreign policy and, one hopes, a return to Trump’s first term of relative global peace.
I tell you what. I’ll come back to you.
NewsBeat
Southport killer Axel Rudakubana had ricin materials sent to neighbour
BBC News
WhatsApp messages seen by the BBC reveal how Southport killer Axel Rudakubana had packages sent to a neighbour’s home – one of which contained ingredients to make ricin.
The messages also reveal that his father Alphonse was aware of the deliveries and apologised for them.
In one message seen by the BBC, the father reassured a neighbour who was concerned about the unexplained deliveries that it was “sorted”, adding: “He will use our address next time.”
A neighbour told the BBC the messages raise questions over whether a crucial opportunity to stop Rudakubana’s descent into violence was missed.
The BBC has also established that Rudakubana’s parents did not alert local police to the fact the teenager attempted to travel to his former school a week before the Southport attack, where prosecutors now believe he intended to carry out a mass killing.
Details of both incidents come amid ongoing investigations into why red flags that the teenager was planning to kill went unheeded.
The messages seen by the BBC, which are from January 2022, suggest the neighbour believed the parcels which unexpectedly arrived at their home were for Axel Rudakabana. Neighbours now believe the Southport killer was using separate addresses as a decoy.
It is not known whether his father knew what was contained in the packages.
When asked about the deliveries, Merseyside Police said they would not comment on what was an ongoing investigation.
But investigators have previously revealed that Rudakubana took steps to conceal his online purchases and obsessions. He masked his identity while using online retailers to stockpile weapons – including the knife he would use in the dance class attack – and when pursuing his obsession with extreme graphic material.
After the attack in July 2024, police discovered a substance at Rudakubana’s home in a sealed box. Tests at Porton Down, the government’s biological warfare laboratory, confirmed the substance was ricin, a poison for which there is no antidote.
The search had to be halted because of the danger of the substance, though the court heard there was no evidence it had ever been used.
When the search resumed detectives found a plastic bag containing a variety of seed that is used to produce the poison. The package had been bought under the fake name of “Al Rud” and delivered to a neighbour’s address.
Caroline, a former neighbour of Rudakubana’s in Banks, Lancashire, told the BBC: “He was clearly ordering seeds and having them delivered to a neighbour, possibly a decoy, so that it couldn’t be traced to the address that he was living at.”
Alphonse Rudakubana told neighbours in a WhatsApp group that he would have the address amended so it would not happen again.
He wrote: “It’s sorted now. These were the last orders, I am told. He will use our address next time. Thanks.”
Caroline said she witnessed social workers and police visiting the family about six weeks before the attack. She said she believes neighbours should have been alerted to concerns about Rudakubana.
She also told the BBC her cat needed to be put down after straying into the police forensic tent during the search and began “convulsing and foaming at the mouth”.
She believes it came into contact with the ricin. While no toxicology test was carried out on the cat, vets told Caroline they believe the cat had suffered from poisoning
By the time the packages were delivered to neighbours, Rudakubana had already been researching mass murder and genocide online. He was referred to the anti-extremism programme Prevent on three separate occasions between 2019 and 2021 over his interest in school shootings and extreme violence.
A week before he killed three children, Rudakubana attempted to take a taxi to the Range High School in Formby, where he had been expelled from five years earlier for attacking a pupil with a hockey stick and repeatedly taking a knife into class.
Video from the 22 July incident shows him carrying a backpack and wearing the same hooded jumper and surgical mask he would later wear during the attack on the dance class.
On that occasion, his father intervened and pleaded with the taxi driver not to take him. His son got out of the taxi and went back inside their home.
But despite concerns over his son’s movements, the BBC has established his father did not call local police.
It is not known how much he knew of his son’s intentions that day and the BBC has been unable to speak to Rudakubana’s parents, who are believed to be living in a safe house.
Asked about the incident, a spokesman for Lancashire Constabulary, in whose area the Rudakubana family lived, said: “This wasn’t reported to Lancashire Police”. Merseyside Police, who are still carrying out an investigation, said they could not comment.
The BBC has not established whether the 22 July incident was referred to social care staff.
Investigators have previously revealed that Rudakubana’s parents did call the police on earlier occasions as they sought help to deal with their son’s violent and erratic behaviour.
Between the ages of 13 and 17, Rudakubana – who was diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder – became detached and reclusive. He was known to the police, the youth justice system and mental health services. His parents had also been offered social care help to deal with their son.
Pictures taken by police after his arrest following the dance class attack reveal a scene of chaos inside their family home.
One image shows a cluttered living room, which police believe Rudakubana had been using as his bedroom. Knives, arrows and chemical equipment were found inside the house, with Amazon boxes stacked in the middle of the room.
On four separate occasions, his parents resorted to calling the police as they struggled to cope with their son’s behaviour.
The first 999 call was in November 2021 after Rudakubana became “disruptive” when a stranger came to their door.
A few weeks later police were called again after Rudakubana attacked his father and damaged his car during an argument.
There was a serious incident in March 2022 when Rudakubana’s mother reported him missing. He was located after a bus driver called 999 to report a teenage passenger was refusing to pay.
When police arrived, they found Rudakubana and discovered he was carrying a kitchen knife. On that occasion, his parents were given advice on securing knives inside the home – but Rudakubana was not charged with a criminal offence.
The final call came in May 2022, when his father reported that an argument had broken out after his son was denied access to a computer.
During a briefing earlier this week, investigators were asked whether they were satisfied his parents had secured the knives inside the home. The officers would not be drawn on that but did say that when the house was searched, the weapons stored under the teenager’s bed which included a machete were clearly visible.
The Rudakubana family have not been seen by neighbours in Banks since the attack.
NewsBeat
The most iconic moments from series three
Spoiler alert! – This video reveals details about the latest series of The Traitors.
Series three of the BBC’s hit show The Traitors comes to a close tonight, with just five contestants left in the running to bank the prize money.
In the final episode we will find out if ‘The Seer’ used their power to their advantage, and if a faithful or a traitor prevailed.
After keeping viewers on the edge of their seats for weeks, take a look at some of this series’ most iconic moments – from Charlotte’s fake Welsh accent, to Linda’s conspicuous head turn.
Video produced by Sophie Bott
NewsBeat
Harry v The tabloids. What next, if anything?
Did the hero Prince slay the tabloid dragon? Or to quote one of its most memorable headlines, was it The Sun Wot Won It?
The dust is still settling on the settlement of Prince Harry’s epic legal battle against News Group Newspapers.
Had the trial gone ahead, Prince Harry would have alleged he had been the victim of unlawful newsgathering by NGN journalists between 1996 and 2011 – and that its leaders covered up wrongdoing by destroying evidence – something that the company denied. But the eight-week trial didn’t happen because the two sides suddenly settled.
He’s scored an apology for intrusion by The Sun, including NGN accepting that there was unlawful information gathering by private investigators working for the newspaper.
NGN has not admitted unlawful activity by journalists or editors – and the settlement means a judge won’t now have to decide if there was, as the Duke’s team alleges, a corporate cover-up of wrongdoing – a claim NGN vehemently denied and said it would fight at trial.
The space between those positions, in which both sides will feel they won something, is now the battleground.
The question is how far, realistically, can a campaign around historical events go? Is this week a reboot of investigations or, in fact, the final chapter?
The main focus of pressure and lobbying will be the police – because campaigners believe Scotland Yard didn’t go far enough in its previous investigations, missing opportunities to widen its focus beyond wrongdoing at The News of the World.
‘Dossier’ being prepared
Speaking to the BBC on Friday, actor Hugh Grant – who said the financial risks forced him to settle, with The Sun’s owners last year – said the police’s job was not done “by any means” – and suing the newspapers was never going to get at the full truth.
So all eyes will be on Lord Tom Watson, the former Labour deputy leader, who NGN admits was placed under surveillance by News of the World journalists in 2009.
The last remaining claimant alongside Prince Harry, he says a dossier will go to the Metropolitan Police.
The Met for its part says there is no active criminal investigation into alleged newspaper wrongdoing.
That statement also means there’s no current probe into the separate Mirror Group titles, despite a judge ruling in 2023 that they had used phone hacking to get information on Prince Harry.
So why no investigation?
The police aren’t ruling one out, but Sir Mark Rowley, the Met’s commissioner, told LBC radio on Friday that they would need to see something “radically new”.
And that’s because Scotland Yard takes the view that it carried out a huge investigation 10 years ago.
Team Harry believe this is profoundly myopic. While some of their planned evidence for the NGN trial had come from the police, his lawyers also obtained new documents from NGN itself under rules for a fair trial.
Could that be new evidence? Let’s take the example of the records of the myriad of payments to private investigators.
Team Harry and Watson would have sought to prove at a trial that many were for unlawful activity. On one level you can see that would arguably fit a test of something radically new.
But, in its defence, News Group would have argued that none of this proved journalists or anyone else at the Sun knew information was being unlawfully gathered – far short of a whiff of a criminal enterprise.
What this single episode we had been expecting to see at the trial shows is how each allegation against NGN would have been fought rather than conceded. And if the police knock on the company’s door with its truncheon, they are likely to face a similarly robust response.
And that’s why the thrust of Lord Watson’s promised dossier to the police will become important. It will have to say something really big. And in the absence of a court finding – that challenge becomes larger still.
Other bodies could in theory act. Parliament’s Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee investigated phone-hacking allegations in 2011. It’s likely to face calls to review the evidence of NGN CEO Rebekah Brooks and others – evidence that NGN will stand by because there’s been no finding in court of unlawful activity by journalists, editors or executives.
There’s also the Information Commissioner’s Office. It had a role in the origins of this story, investigating privacy and data breaches by private investigators. The ICO says it has no plans to reopen or review this investigation.
The government has already ruled out launching “Leveson 2”, the second leg of the public inquiry promised by David Cameron. It was meant to investigate “unlawful or improper conduct” across tabloids and whether the police, put simply, had turned a blind eye to it because they had been corrupted by getting too close to journalists who may have been paying them off. But it never happened.
Labour in government won’t revisit it because too much time has passed.
Politics
Nigel Farage says he’s ready to be next PM and vows to save ‘miserable’ Britain as Reform UK snatch lead in shock poll: ‘You bet your life!’
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage says he is ready to become the next Prime Minister of Great Britain after a new poll put his party ahead of Labour and the Conservatives.
Speaking on GB News, Nigel said the country is engulfed by a ‘miserable’ atmosphere, a stark contrast to what we are seeing across the pond.
This is a breaking story, more to follow.
Farage says the British public has lost faith in the ‘uniparty’
GB NEWS / PA
Politics
MPs Push for More Time to Debate Voting Reform
3 min read
The Lib Dems have urged the Government to provide them with more time to debate Parliamentary reform as momentum builds to change the UK’s voting system.
The Elections (Proportional Representation) Bill won a vote in the House of Commons during its first reading in December by 138 votes to 136. It narrowly passed with the support of 59 Labour MPs.
It was the first time MPs had endorsed replacing the current First-Past-The-Post (FPTP) for Proportional Representation (PR).
A minority of private members’ bills become law, because they are put forward by backbenchers and not the Government. They face competition from other MPs’ private members bills and may never receive a second reading.
Sarah Olney, Lib Dem MP for Richmond Park, said the Labour Government should “finally listen to the public” and give the Bill the time it needs to be scrutinised and debated in the chamber.
“Winning a vote in Parliament on proportional representation was a victory for democracy and for members of the public everywhere. They deserve their rightful say and for their vote to count,” she said.
“It’s long been clear that First Past the Post is not fit for purpose. The 2024 election was the most disproportionate in history, with a government winning two-thirds of the seats on one-third of the vote.
“The Labour Government needs to finally listen to the public, and give my Bill the time and support it needs to progress through Parliament and into law. Anything less would be an insult to everyone whose vote was effectively wasted at the last General Election.”
Keir Starmer is open to electoral reform having promised to give 16-year-olds the vote at the next election in his party’s manifesto in 2024.
The Prime Minister came under renewed pressure from his own party in November when Labour MPs joined a parliamentary group calling for the UK to move to a proportional voting system.
Many Labour MPs and activists are sympathetic to electoral reform, after a motion to commit the party to proportional representation passed at its 2022 conference.
However, the Prime Minister’s team have ruled out any action or commitment for the first term of a Labour government.
The UK held a referendum in 2011 on whether Westminster elections should use Alternative Voting (AV), where voters rank candidates in order of preference.
The ‘No’ to AV campaign won more than two-thirds of the vote with a turnout of 42 per cent.
Research from YouGov has found voters 48 per cent of respondents are in favour of adopting proportional representation, compared to 24 per cent who oppose it and 29 per cent who are unsure.
At the last election Labour won the second largest majority in political history after it secured 412 seats with 33.8 per cent of the vote.
If the voting system was based on PR, instead of FPTP, Labour would have only won 228 seats.
The Conservatives would have gained 139 seats while Reform would have won 100, the Lib Dems 73 and the Greens 71.
The Government was approached for comment.
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NewsBeat
Ange Postecoglou: Tottenham injuries to blame for poor form
Tottenham head coach Ange Postecoglou says the club are in a stronger position than when he took charge 18 months ago, despite their poor form this season.
Spurs have won just one of their past 10 Premier League matches, which has seen the club drop to 15th in the table.
Injuries have blighted Spurs’ campaign, with key players such as Micky van de Ven, Cristian Romero and Destiny Udogie missing large chunks of the season.
The Australian’s training methods and style of play have come under question given the number of muscle injuries sustained at the club this term.
Asked why his second season in charge had been more difficult, Postecoglou said: “It’s just injuries.
“I mean you can walk outside and say, ‘Jeez it’s really bright’, and say to yourself maybe it’s not the sun. But it is the sun, mate, we’ve just got injuries.
“Every decision that is made is from me.
“I am responsible for this. If you want a head on a stick, take mine, but I am absolutely 100% confident that we are in a better place as a football club today than when I started.”
NewsBeat
Cardiff: Watchdog probes police chase before fatal crash | UK News
The police watchdog has started an investigation into a police chase, which began minutes before a fatal crash.
The collision happened in the early hours of Thursday 9 January 2025 on the Junction 30 eastbound exit slip road of the M4 in Cardiff.
The Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) has now launched an independent investigation into the involvement of South Wales Police.
Modecai Juma, 51, had previously failed to stop for officers, and a police pursuit began at 3.24am, the IOPC said in a statement.
The watchdog said it was notified by the force as officers had been pursuing Mr Juma’s Honda Accord at the time of the incident.
Mr Juma was travelling eastbound on the M4 and the crash happened at 3.30am after he took the exit lane towards Cardiff Gate.
He received medical assistance by officers but Mr Juma died at the scene just after 4am.
The IOPC’s initial investigation has established that the driver of the Honda Accord was reported for failing to stop for police at 1.42am, and police had concerns about the way in which the car was being driven.
Shortly after 3am, officers were alerted to the vehicle again and a police pursuit was authorised.
The IOPC’s deputy director of investigations, Catherine Bates, said the watchdog’s thoughts were with Mr Juma’s family and it would “continue to update them” as its enquiries progressed.
“While our investigation is in the early stages, investigators have already conducted CCTV enquiries and have obtained initial accounts from the officers involved,” she added.
Read more from Sky News:
Grandson of pie company tycoon jailed for friend’s murder
Mum jailed after four sons died in house fire
A spokesperson for South Wales Police said the force “made a referral to the Independent Office for Police Conduct as is normal procedure following such incidents”.
In a statement at the time of the collision, a spokesperson said the driver’s family would receive support from specialist family liaison officers.
A post-mortem has been carried out and an inquest was opened and adjourned at Pontypridd Coroner’s Court on Friday.
NewsBeat
Man arrested on suspicion of murder after 75-year-old stabbed to death in Putney in London
A man has been arrested on suspicion of murder after a 75-year-old man died with stab wounds in Putney, south west London.
The 30-year-old, believed to be known to the victim, was arrested after the elderly man was pronounced dead on Deodar Road at around 3am on Friday.
His next of kin have been made aware although police currently await formal identification. They are currently being supported by specialist officers, the Met Police said.
Detective Superintendent Amanda Mawhinney said: “We are currently supporting the family of a man who was sadly killed in the early hours of this morning.
“I am aware that people in the community may feel shocked following this – we believe this to be an isolated incident and there is no wider threat to the public.
“Although we have made significant progress by making an arrest, I would like to make it clear that our investigation does not stop here.
“We need the local community to help us understand what happened in the early hours of this morning. We are appealing for anyone who was in the area at around 3am and that saw or heard anything unusual to contact us as soon as possible.
“You may notice a higher police presence within the area today whilst we carry out our enquiries. A scene is in place as well as road closures.
“If you feel the need to raise anything with our officers, then please feel free to speak with them whilst they are in the area.”
Anyone with information which could assist with the investigation is asked to call 101 stating CAD721/24JAN.
Alternatively you can contact the independent charity Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111 or by submitting an online form.
This is a breaking news story. More to follow…
NewsBeat
Judge rejects US mother’s extradition challenge
BBC News
A judge has rejected a US mother’s challenge to extradition over accusations she murdered two of her children in Colorado and “fled” to London.
Kimberlee Singler’s nine-year-old daughter Elianna and seven-year-old son Aden were found dead on 19 December, 2023 in Colorado Springs.
Prosecutors acting on behalf of US officials said Ms Singler, 36, “fled” the US and was arrested in west London 11 days later.
District Judge John Zani told Westminster Magistrates’ Court he rejected Ms Singler’s challenge against extradition and said the case now passed to the home secretary to decide whether the 36-year-old should be sent back to the US.
Warning: This report contains descriptions of violence against children
In his ruling Judge Zani said he was not convinced that the defendant’s rights, particularly her concerns about prison conditions and a possible life sentence without parole, would be infringed on by extradition.
“I am of the firm opinion that the defendant’s extradition to the United States of America to face criminal prosecution complies with all of her Convention Rights within the meaning of the Human Rights Act 1998,” Judge Zani said.
Ms Singler’s legal team has said she intends to appeal against the judge’s decision.
Previously, the court heard in September that Ms Singler’s alleged crimes were “committed against the backdrop of acrimonious court proceedings” relating to the custody of her children with her ex-husband Kevin Wentz.
Prosecutor Joel Smith said on 19 December 2023 the Colorado Springs Police Department responded to a 911 call reporting a burglary at a Colorado residence at 00:29 local time (06:29 GMT).
When officers arrived at the defendant’s address, they found two dead children and a “blood-stained handgun” which was discovered on the floor of the bedroom.
Mr Smith said DNA tests were carried out on the gun and a knife which revealed the presence of mixed profiles matching the children and Ms Singler.
A third child, who has not been named, was found with a serious injury to her neck. She was taken to hospital and survived.
Mr Smith said Ms Singler blamed her husband for the attack, but it was found he had been driving a “GPS-tracked truck” in Denver, giving what the prosecutor described as a “complete and verifiable alibi”.
In the days that followed, the third child was moved into foster care and, on Christmas Day, she told her foster carer that Ms Singler had been responsible for the attack and had asked her to lie to police, Mr Smith said.
The prosecutor said the girl was interviewed by police on 26 December, during which time she recounted how the attack had unfolded after the defendant guided all three children into their bedroom.
The police investigation then led to a warrant being issued by Fourth Judicial District Court in El Paso County, Colorado, for Ms Singler’s arrest.
Mr Smith said Ms Singler was arrested in the Chelsea area of west London on 30 December.
It is not for the court in London to carry out a criminal trial.
However, in his ruling published on Friday Judge Zani said: “I note that the defendant, through counsel, has clearly stated that her defence to the charges is a total denial of liability.”
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