Connect with us
DAPA Banner

Politics

Lord Hermer must go – spiked

Published

on

Lord Hermer must go

A Telegraph investigation has revealed the role Richard Hermer KC, the UK attorney general, played in the Al-Sweady scandal, which led to British servicemen facing false accusations of murder and torture for over a decade. As a result, senior MPs have reported Hermer to the Bar Standards Board for misconduct.

The Al-Sweady scandal centred on claims brought by Iraqis who alleged that British soldiers had tortured and executed civilians after the Battle of Danny Boy in southern Iraq in 2004. These claims originated with the now disgraced solicitor Phil Shiner, who broadcast them to the world in a widely publicised press conference in 2008.

The subsequent Al-Sweady Inquiry (2009-2014) into these allegations concluded that they were ‘wholly without foundation and entirely the product of deliberate lies, reckless speculation and ingrained hostility’. It turned out that Shiner’s clients were not innocent farmers and labourers murdered by malevolent British soldiers. They were in fact members of the Mahdi Army – an Islamist militia backed by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

Advertisement

It later emerged that Shiner had advanced the claims using dubious intermediaries to gather witness evidence. He used cold-calling to invite people to give testimony, with the promise of remuneration. He also made fraudulent claims to the Legal Aid service, receiving money from the public purse to fund his discredited litigation. He was struck off. Shiner later pleaded guilty to three counts of fraud and was sentenced on 10 December 2024 to two years’ imprisonment, suspended for two years.

Hermer played a significant role in the litigation. In the words of the Telegraph, he ‘acted as lead counsel in civil claims against the Ministry of Defence and pressed for lucrative compensation despite mounting evidence that his eight Iraqi clients were “on the make”’.

Advertisement

Enjoying spiked?

Why not make an instant, one-off donation?

We are funded by you. Thank you!

Advertisement




Please wait…

Advertisement
Advertisement

These are very damaging claims for Hermer. Barristers often say they have a professional obligation to act in cases irrespective of their personal views. They cite the ‘cab-rank rule’, which requires them to accept instructions in cases they may not personally support.

But the cab-rank rule did not apply in this case. Hermer worked instead under a conditional-fee agreement at double his normal fees. This is what most people would call a ‘no win, no fee’ agreement. That meant he would not be paid unless the claims succeeded. It also meant he could have withdrawn from the case without breaching the cab-rank rule. Indeed, if he had doubts about the credibility of the claims, he would have been under a professional obligation to withdraw.

Advertisement

That is why Hermer has now been reported to the Bar Standards Board. It appears that he had concerns about the claims but remained involved. In one internal email advising Shiner on how to ‘get the big story out there’, Hermer admitted that there needed to be ‘wriggle room if the killings did not in fact happen’. Other emails also appear to show that Hermer was enthusiastic about litigating against British soldiers, saying in one message, that ‘these Iraqi cases are a good reminder of why I wanted to be a lawyer’.

Hermer denies any wrongdoing. He has distanced himself from Shiner and maintains that his work on the case was entirely proper. This may all be true. But Hermer cannot expect to be politically immune from the professional decisions he took as a lawyer. He could have withdrawn from the case if and when he had concerns about the credibility of the allegations. Yet he failed to do so. He was plainly committed to what he was doing. He will now need to explain that to the Bar Standards Board.

Regardless of what the regulator decides, this ought to be politically catastrophic for Hermer. He was involved in one of the most shameful scandals to hit the legal profession in living memory. One can only imagine what those young men went through. They survived a firefight with Islamist insurgents, only to return home and face false allegations of the gravest crimes imaginable.

Advertisement

Hermer must be held to account for his role in all this. His position as the most senior law officer of the Crown is no longer tenable. He should either step down, or be forced out. Either way, Hermer must go.

Luke Gittos is a spiked columnist and author. His most recent book is Human Rights – Illusory Freedom: Why We Should Repeal the Human Rights Act, which is published by Zero Books. Order it here.

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

Politics

Beverley Callard Forced To Miss I’m A Celebrity Live Final On Medical Grounds

Published

on

Beverley Callard Forced To Miss I'm A Celebrity Live Final On Medical Grounds

Former I’m A Celebrity contestant Beverley Callard has shared her disappointment at having to miss the all-star series’ final.

Beverley was one of 12 ex-campmates invited back for the latest season of I’m A Celebrity: South Africa, which was filmed last year and has been airing on ITV for the last three weeks.

Earlier this week, viewers saw that the Coronation Street legend was forced to leave the series early on medical grounds, which preceded her being diagnosed with cancer back in February.

Following this, she shared with her Instagram followers on Thursday that she would not be able to join her co-stars at the live I’m A Celebrity final on doctors’ advice.

Advertisement

“Yesterday I should have flown over to England to get ready for the I’m A Celeb final,” she explained. “I was so excited and looking forward to it. And on medical advice, I can’t go, so I’m absolutely gutted.

“I was dying to see them all, and it would have been brilliant. But I can’t go… the flights were booked and everything, [but] no, they said basically it’s too long a day, flying there, then a very late night.”

The soap star added that she would still be taking part in the broadcast, chatting to her campmates and presenters Ant and Dec via video-chat, even if she can’t join them in person.

“So, I’ve got to make the best of a bad job,” she added. “But I am resting, I am doing as I am told.”

Advertisement

It had previously been reported that Jimmy Bullard may have also avoided reuniting with the rest of the cast at the final, after his blazing row with campmate Adam Thomas aired.

However, he later assured his social media followers: “My version [of the story] will be told Friday! Can’t wait to see you all – well some of yous!!”

I’m A Celebrity: South Africa concludes at 7.30pm on ITV1 and ITVX, where viewers will vote for one of the four finalists to be crowned the next I’m A Celebrity “Legend”.

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

Politics

Gladiators’ Giant To Leave Show After Choice That ‘Didn’t Align’ With His Values

Published

on

Gladiators' Giant To Leave Show After Choice That 'Didn't Align' With His Values

Gladiators star Jamie Bigg, better known to viewers by the stage name Giant, has confirmed that he will be leaving the show at the end of the current series.

In a social media post on Friday morning, Giant explained that stepping away from the show “wasn’t a decision I made”, indicating that he had been “faced with a choice that didn’t align with my values”.

He explained: “Being a Gladiator has been one of the greatest honours of my life. Stepping into that arena, hearing the crowd, representing strength, resilience and being a role model… that’s something I’ll carry with me forever.”

“What I do want to make clear is this wasn’t a decision I made to step away,” he continued. “I was faced with a choice that didn’t align with my values. And if you know me, you know this… I stand by my people and I stand by what I believe in. That’s what being a role model means to me.

Advertisement

“I’m proud of everything I gave to the show and grateful for every single person who supported me along the way. This isn’t the end. It’s just the beginning. Stay strong. Stand tall.”

Several of Giant’s Gladiators co-stars were quick to show him their support in the comments, including Zack “Steel” George, who referred to him as “always the biggest” and Tom “Hammer” Wilson, who hailed him as the “duel king”.

A BBC spokesperson said: “After three formidable series, Giant is leaving Gladiators. We’d like to thank him for everything he has contributed to the show and wish him well for the future.”

The ex-professional bodybuilder and fire fighter had been with Gladiators since it was rebooted by the BBC in 2024.

Advertisement

He previously faced scrutiny after an old YouTube video of his in which he spoke candidly about his past use of his steroids was unearthed.

At the time, he said in a statement: “I have always been open and transparent about my use of steroids whilst I was a professional bodybuilder. During that time, I spoke openly about the legal use of performance enhancements as a competitive bodybuilder and how to safely administer them.

“I stopped competing as a bodybuilder in October 2022 and responsibly came off steroids. I am no longer a professional bodybuilder and am no longer taking steroids and do not advocate the use of them.”

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

Politics

Filmmaker Adderley says will sue Steve Reed, others, as Greens capitulate again

Published

on

Adderley

Adderley

Filmmaker, anti-genocide campaigner and Green Party candidate Mark Adderley has reacted with fury to smears from Israel fanatic Labour front-bencher Steve Reed. He has also blasted the Green Party administration for (again) capitulating to fake antisemitism smears from Reed and the Israel lobby media.

The Greens have again fallen for Labour’s and the Israel lobby’s desperate and arrogant attempts to dictate who can stand against Labour. Adderley was the Green candidate for Crystal Palace and Upper Norwood in London’s Croydon — a hotbed of Labour corruption unfortunate enough to have Reed as its MP.

But now the party has caved to a blatantly political — and libellous — smear by Reed and others and has suspended Adderley. His ‘crime’, apparently, was to criticise wanted war criminal Benjamin Netanyahu. And, allegedly, he wondered, on the YouTube channel he runs with his wife Nadia Sawalha — like millions of others — whether Israel was involved in the assassination of US right-winger Charlie Kirk.

Kirk had said he was going to end his support for the genocidal colony and feared Israel would kill him.

Advertisement

Israel lobby worried

It seems Adderley’s candidacy seriously worried the Israel lobby. It has targeted him with a clearly-coordinated series of smears and hit-pieces, including one in the Times. Its author, Israel advocate Fintan Hogan, helped Israel deny murdering 500 Palestinian civilians in a missile attack on the Al-Ahli hospital in 2023. The attack was subsequently forensically proven to have been perpetrated by Israel, one of hundreds of Israeli war crimes against hospitals, medics and ambulances.

For the Times, Hogan attacked Adderley for daring to compare Benjamin Netanyahu’s racist ‘Greater Israel’ project with Hitler’s ‘Lebensraum’ (‘room to live’) plans. Also cited were other views Adderley mentioned that are now entirely mainstream — except in the pro-Israel ‘mainstream’ media and lobby groups, of course. Like the idea that the Israel lobby’s constant conflation of Jewish people with the terrorist colony puts Jews in danger.

The same attacks were amplified by the ‘usual suspects’ in the pro-Israel smear industry. Libel-factory and “dauphin of phone-hacking” Lee Harpin had to get in on the act, of course, after years of spouting a “litany of lies” against left-wingers that cost his previous rag huge libel payouts. Harpin posited that Adderley is part of a Green “antisemitism problem” — familiar language, eh? — that is even “worse than feared”.

And pro-Israel Labour horror Reed — of course — chipped in. Reed, with typical arrogance, demanded that the Greens bow to his ‘Labour’ call to withdraw Adderley and another local candidate for daring to oppose Israel’s crimes:

Advertisement
View on Threads

Adderley hits back

But it seems that Harpin, his new rag, and a number of others — including the odious Reed — may be about to add to the heap of cash paid out to wronged and smeared left-wingers. In a withering post on his Instagram feed he poured scorn on the despicable Reed — and he said he will be suing those who have libelled him:

I am disgusted. Truly, deeply, viscerally disgusted.

Labour Cabinet Minister Steve Reed MP has had the audacity to level accusations of antisemitism and racism against me.

Let me be CRYSTAL clear: I have spent my entire life fighting racism in all its forms. I have stood shoulder to shoulder with Jewish friends, comrades, and communities against genuine hatred. But Steve Reed’s pathetic, blood-soaked government has and continues to directly assist in the genocide of the Palestinian people, the slaughter of Lebanese civilians, and the indiscriminate killing of Iranian men, women & children.

He is a “politician” knee deep in atrocity who spends more time smearing humanitarians than he does calling out the behaviour of Netanyahu’s government. And now, to add insult to injury, I learn that, having only recently joined the Green Party with hope in my heart, I have been suspended. Suspended because the Green Party has seemingly folded to the same false allegations, weaponised smears and cowardly lies that The Labour Party has thrown at me.

The complaint against me (like recent articles in the legacy media) conflates anti-Zionism with a hatred of Jewish people. It takes issue with my opposition to Netanyahu, a wanted war criminal leading a far-right Zionist government that is overseeing a genocide. It even twists my statements on NATO expansion and warmongering into so-called “conspiracy theories”. I have never supported Putin. I have never supported war. But by simply pointing out that decades of NATO aggression has helped create the conditions for conflict is not conspiracy. It is history and I refuse to apologise for speaking truth to power.

Advertisement

This complaint is not only disgusting in its cynical weaponisation of racism accusations, but (like Steve Reed and the Labour Party’s accusations) they are also defamatory & libellous and I will be seeking legal advice. It mocks every genuine victim of antisemitism. It cheapens their struggle. And it insults every anti­racist who has ever risked everything or anything for justice.

His words for the Green Party machine were scarcely less furious:

I genuinely thought The Green Party was supposed to be different, and was promising a beacon of hope in the dark, ugly world of British Party Politics. Instead, they have fallen at what feels like the first hurdle in Labour’s attempts to recreate the Corbyn anti­semitism psychodrama of some years ago. If we are to change politics for the good, we must do things differently. We must be unafraid to say what establishment politics has disallowed: that Zionism is racism, that opposing a fascistic, apartheid state is not racism, it is not antisemitic, it is not conflating all Jewish People with the Netanyahu Regime — and that standing with the oppressed should NEVER be something to suspend someone for.

Adderley made clear that he has no intention of being cowed by the cynical smears of the friends of genocide — even if the Greens’ administrators don’t find a spine:

So let me be CRYSTAL clear … I will NOT STOP

I will not stop campaigning for a free Palestine. I will not stop demanding a liberated Arab World from Gaza to the West Bank, from Lebanon to Iran and beyond. I will NOT stop calling out this Labour Government’s complicity and I will NOT be bullied by Govt Ministers who say nothing other than they are “DEEPLY CONCERNED”,

I would have preferred to do this inside the Green Party (a party I believed would have understood the nuance in these sorts of attacks that have been levelled at me) but I will pursue these goals outside the party if necessary.
This is just the beginning. The fightback carries on.

Advertisement

But there was room for just a touch of humour at the end. In a post-script, Adderley admitted that one complaint against him had been upheld — but this one he seemed quite proud of: a few choice words for the Labour “fuck-wads” ruining the country and collaborating in genocide and a war of aggression:

p.s. whilst l’m here … one of the other complaints lodged against me (and being upheld) is me describing the Labour Cabinet as being populated with “FUCK­WADS in TIES” … well … as the last 24 hours have proven … there is definitely one “fuck-wad in a tie” who really doesn’t know when to shut up.

Peace & Love … Free Palestine
Mark Adderley

The Greens must get their act together — or go the way of Corbyn’s Labour. There is even less excuse for capitulation to the Israel lobby’s smear campaign when two and a half years of genocide in Gaza have exposed that racist, murderous ideology for what it is.

Follow Mark Adderley and Nadia Sawalha on YouTube here and Instagram here. Also, read about Israel’s long history of false-flag attacks and its ‘Hannibal’ mass slaughter of its own citizens in October 2023.

Advertisement

Featured image via HelloMagazine

By Skwawkbox

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Politics

Ryanair, TUI, easyJet Share Advice To Passengers At Airports Over New Europe Rules

Published

on

Ryanair, TUI, easyJet Share Advice To Passengers At Airports Over New Europe Rules

The EU’s new Entry/Exit System (EES) has fully kicked into place for UK passengers after its October rollout.

It’s a biometric system (including a photo and/or fingerprints) that registers non-EU nationals every time they make a short stay in Schengen countries.

The EU’s site says it’s designed to eventually replace passport stamps and offer a more “efficient” version of EU check-ins. But so far, there have been early hiccups: EES has been blamed for border delays that left passengers behind and “hours-long queues”.

In response, airlines like TUI, Jet2, and easyJet have shared advice.

Advertisement

Which countries are affected by the EES system?

The Schengen countries involved are:

  • Austria,
  • Belgium,
  • Bulgaria,
  • Croatia,
  • Czechia,
  • Denmark,
  • Estonia,
  • Finland,
  • France,
  • Germany,
  • Greece,
  • Hungary,
  • Iceland,
  • Italy,
  • Latvia,
  • Liechtenstein,
  • Lithuania,
  • Luxembourg,
  • Malta,
  • Netherlands,
  • Norway,
  • Poland,
  • Portugal,
  • Romania,
  • Slovakia,
  • Slovenia,
  • Spain,
  • Sweden, and
  • Switzerland.

The Republic of Ireland and Cyprus are excluded from EES systems as they’re not Schengen countries.

What advice have airlines given to UK travellers for EES checkins?

The advice so far includes:

Advertisement

British Airways

Their site reads, “You should allow extra time to register your biometric details, such as fingerprints and a photo, the first time you enter the EU. There is no cost for EES registration, and your digital record will last three years before you need to register again.”

And responding to an X post by a passenger, the company added: “We ask customers travelling on our European short-haul flights to be there two hours prior to departure. It would be three hours if you’re travelling on a long-haul flight and one if you’re travelling on a domestic flight within the UK.”

Hi there. We ask customers travelling on our European short haul flights to be there two hours prior to departure. It would be three hours if you’re travelling on a long haul flight and one if you’re travelling on a domestic flight within the UK. Corry

— British Airways (@British_Airways) April 16, 2026

Advertisement

TUI

In a travel alert, they said: “At some airports, you might still find longer queues, particularly at busy travel periods.”

They added, “To help your journey run as smoothly as possible, please allow a little extra time when passing through border control. Keep any essential medication in your hand luggage in case of delays, and when departing the EU, head straight to passport control after dropping your bags to avoid hold‑ups. Bringing some extra water for comfort is also a good idea.”

Jet 2

Advertisement

The company shared, “There may be longer wait times at Border Control at some EU Airports, especially at busy times. Once you start your EES registration, it should take around 1-2 minutes per person to complete.

“There may be longer wait times than usual when you arrive in destination and before your flight back to the UK. Unfortunately, this is outside of our control. But remember, there’s nothing you can prep before you travel.”

The airline added, “You’ll also need to pass through EES when leaving the EU in the same way you do on arrival. Depending on how busy the airport is, this may result in longer wait times at passport control before boarding your flight to the UK. After checking in for your flight, please head straight to security and passport control in order to arrive at your gate in plenty of time.”

easyJet

Advertisement

The airline pointed out that while kids under 12 are exempt from fingerprinting, passengers “may experience longer waiting times on arrival, so allow extra time and factor this in when planning onward travel, including trains, taxis, or flight transfers”.

Plan your journey, arrive early, use Bag Drop as soon as possible if you’re availing of the service, get through security as fast as possible, and “be aware that there may be further checks at passport control after security and before reaching your gate,” they said.

Ryanair

They warned that queues might be longer as airports adjust to the system.

Advertisement

“Have your passport ready and follow EES signs,” they wrote.

“We recommend arriving at the airport with extra time to allow for these additional checks, especially during busy travel periods.”

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Politics

At What Age Should We Stop Drinking Energy Drinks?

Published

on

At What Age Should We Stop Drinking Energy Drinks?

We’ve written before at HuffPost UK about when dementia experts think we should consider giving up booze for good to keep our brains healthy.

Speaking to HuffPost UK, Dr Arun Narayanan, a clinical electrophysiologist and an assistant professor of medicine in the division of cardiology at the University of Texas Medical Branch, said that another beverage – energy drinks – might carry risks for our hearts, too.

“Energy drinks may affect the heart differently [than other caffeinated drinks] because they often deliver caffeine in larger doses, more quickly, and in combination with additional stimulants or additives,” he shared.

“This can increase the risk of palpitations, elevated blood pressure, abnormal heart rhythms, and, in susceptible individuals, more serious cardiac events. Tea and coffee are generally better studied, more predictable in composition, and less likely to contain multiple stimulant compounds in a single serving,” he said.

Advertisement

We asked the expert what he thinks the upper limit of energy drink consumption should be in a single day, as well as at what age (if any) we should quit it cold turkey.

What’s the upper limit of energy drink consumption a day?

Dr Narayanan said, “In general, I would recommend limiting energy drinks to no more than one standard-sized can per day, and for many individuals, avoiding them altogether may be the safer choice”.

The expert said 400mg of caffeine a day is often considered the safe limit.

Advertisement

“Unlike coffee or tea, many energy drinks contain high caffeine concentrations consumed rapidly, along with sugar, taurine, guarana, and other stimulants that may amplify cardiovascular effects,” he said.

Too much caffeine may “increase heart rate, blood pressure, palpitations, anxiety, and sleep disruption.”

At what age should you stop drinking energy drinks?

Dr Narayanan told us it’s not so much about a person’s age as it is their health.

Advertisement

“Rather than age alone, the more important issue is underlying health status. Older adults are more likely to have hypertension, coronary artery disease, atrial fibrillation, or other rhythm disorders that can be worsened by stimulant beverages,” he said.

“I would advise individuals with cardiovascular disease, arrhythmias, uncontrolled blood pressure, or frailty to avoid energy drinks regardless of age. For healthy older adults, caution and moderation are still appropriate.”

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Politics

Waking Up Every Night At 3AM? You May Have This Common Sleeping Condition

Published

on

According to Harvard Health, the term refers to a lack of sleep that happens not because someone can’t nod off, but because they wake up and can’t fall back asleep.

I have insomnia, but not the kind that means I struggle to fall asleep (in fact, the speed and ease with which I nod off at night put me off seeking help for years).

Instead, the problem happens in the early hours of the morning. It reaches roughly 3am, and my body wakes me up – a common enough process, but one which I, for some reason, don’t recover from.

After the disruption, I stay up for hours, only feeling able to sleep when it’s time to get up and go to work. This persists no matter how much shut-eye I do (or don’t) get, how much exercise I do, or how early I go to bed.

If that sounds familiar, you – like me – may have something called sleep maintenance insomnia.

Advertisement

What is sleep maintenance insomnia?

According to Harvard Health, the term refers to a lack of sleep that happens not because someone can’t nod off, but because they wake up and can’t fall back asleep.
According to Harvard Health, the term refers to a lack of sleep that happens not because someone can’t nod off, but because they wake up and can’t fall back asleep.

According to Harvard Health, the term refers to a lack of sleep that happens not because someone can’t nod off, but because they wake up and can’t fall back asleep.

In America, it’s believed to affect as many as one in five people (and while there doesn’t seem to be much data on the phenomenon in the UK, one in three adults here are thought to experience acute insomnia at some point).

Harvard Health added that the condition might be especially common in women during midlife.

Health problems, family stresses, depression, and even hot flashes might play a role.

Advertisement

As, they say, can age: “as we grow older, the normal sleep cycle becomes shorter, and we spend less time in deep sleep”.

How can I manage sleep maintenance insomnia?

Dr Karen Carlson, a doctor who runs classes focusing on women’s sleep quality at Boston’s Massachusetts General Hospital, told Harvard Health that going to bed really early to “make up” for missed sleep might not help.

“What sometimes happens is that women are going to bed early trying to sleep and then they wake up at 3 or 4am – and they’re not really meant to sleep more than six or seven hours, but they’re in bed early trying, and they awaken early.”

Advertisement

What may help, however, is “clock blocking”, or ignoring any screen which tells you the time, Johns Hopkins shared.

So, too, can getting up out of bed to do something screen-free and relatively mindless, like folding laundry after about 20 minutes of being awake ― or, as Johns Hopkins sleep expert Dr Luis F. Buenaver said, try to “Read a book, with just enough lights on so that you can see the print comfortably”.

Try as much as you can to stick to your regular routine the day after a bad night’s sleep, he continued.

Speak to your doctor if sleep issues persist for weeks and/or affect your day-to-day life.

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

Politics

Study Reveals Three Behaviours At Midlife That May Affect How Long You Live

Published

on

Study Reveals Three Behaviours At Midlife That May Affect How Long You Live

GP Dr Dominic Greyer previously shared that strength training, good sleep, reducing inflammation, maintaining your “metabolic flexibility,” and enjoying life (in moderation) separates those who age well from those who don’t.

And a new paper, which focused on the short-lived African turqioise killifish, aimed to work out how different behaviours appeared to affect their ageing trajectories.

The fish, which were partly chosen because they shared “key biological features with longer-lived species like humans, including a complex brain”, shared the same genes and were raised in similar environments.

Researchers found that by midlife (for the fish, 70-100 days), fish that lived longer were already behaving differently from those that died sooner.

Advertisement

Study leader Claire Bedbrook said, “Behavioural changes pretty early on in life are telling us about future health and future lifespan”.

What were the differences?

In this study, one of the biggest factors was sleep. Fish that had longer lives mostly slept at night, while those with shorter lifespans slept both at night and during the day.

Incidentally, longer naps, more disorganised nap times, and a higher percentage of naps taken at noon and in the early afternoon have been linked to increased mortality risk among humans.

Advertisement

But activity mattered too.

Fish who swam harder and faster were likelier to live longer, “a measure of spontaneous movement that has been linked to longevity in other species as well”.

And fish that lived longer were more active in the daylight as well. A separate human study found that those who did the majority of their physical activity between 11am and 5pm, or mixed throughout the day, had a lower cardiovascular and all-cause mortality risk than those who moved mostly in the early morning or at night.

Ageing seemed to happen in stages

Advertisement

The researchers noticed that ageing seemed to occur in two to six stages rather than gradually.

“We expected ageing to be a slow, gradual process,” Bedbrook said.

“Instead, animals stay stable for long periods and then transition very quickly into a new stage. Seeing this staged architecture appear from continuous behaviour alone was one of the most exciting discoveries.”

Researchers hope this will benefit humans

In an editor’s summary, senior editor at the journal Science, Mattia Maroso, said: “These results might lead to better understanding of the ageing process in other vertebrates, including humans”.

And speaking to Stanford Reports, study leader Ravi Nath said, “Behaviour turns out to be an incredibly sensitive readout of ageing… You can look at two animals of the same chronological age and see from their behaviour alone that they’re ageing very differently”.

The other study leader, Claire Bedbrook, shared, “We now have the tools to map ageing continuously in a vertebrate… With the rise of wearables and long-term tracking in humans, I’m excited to see whether the same principles – early predictors, staged ageing, divergent trajectories – hold true in people”.

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

Politics

Fitness Experts Share The Best Exercises To Keep You Fit At Every Age

Published

on

Fitness Experts Share The Best Exercises To Keep You Fit At Every Age

I’ll rant to anyone I know about the importance of maintaining muscle mass as we age to prevent conditions like sacropeonia and even osteoporosis.

Cardiovascular health has also been linked to longevity.

But what about flexibility? Though it might be less talked about than the other two, this, too, has been linked to a longer life, especially among men.

You may know the importance of lifting weights for strength and understand that everything from tennis to cycling and running can improve your heart health.

Advertisement

What, though, does a person to increase their flexibility – and does it change over time?

We asked personal trainers to share their thoughts:

In your 20s and 30s

James Bickerstaff, a personal trainer at Origym, told us: “In your 20s and 30s, your body still has natural elasticity, so muscles and joints move easily and recover quickly”.

Advertisement

Nonetheless, he adds, sitting for long periods of time (as you may do for work) can hold your flexibility back.

“To maintain mobility, focus on stretching major muscle groups by performing dynamic stretches such as leg swings for the hips and static chest openers for the upper body,” he advised.

“Short daily sessions, along with activities like yoga, Pilates, or tai chi, can help prevent stiffness.”

In your 40s and 50s

Advertisement

Trainer and owner of Made Possible Personal Training, a gym which works mainly with those aged 50 and up, Heather Lachance, said: “One of the biggest things I try to help people understand is that losing flexibility isn’t a given”.

But in our 40s and 50s, she said, more of us notice we’re not as flexible as we used to be.

“At this stage, adding 10 minutes of mobility work a few times a week, especially dynamic movements before workouts and static stretches afterwards, can go a long way,” she advised.

“Leg swings, hip openers, thoracic rotations, that sort of thing. It doesn’t need to be complicated; it just needs to be done consistently.”

Advertisement

For his part, Bickerstaff recommends swimming and dancing alongside stretches.

In your 60s

“In your 60s and later years, joints become less mobile, cartilage thins, and muscles tighten more easily,” Bickerstaff explained.

“This can make everyday tasks feel restricted and raise the risk of falls. At this stage, flexibility work is about protecting independence and helping you move safely.”

Advertisement

Lachance stated that yoga and pilates can be great in this decade as they provide a “low-impact” form of exercise.

In your 70s and beyond

At this age, Lachance said, “The conversation becomes more about maintaining independence, things like being able to get up off the floor, move confidently through space, and reduce the falling risk.

“Here, I pair flexibility with balance and strength work. Chair-based stretching, simple guided routines, and daily movement all play a role.”

Advertisement

Sated hamstring and tricep stretches can help, Bickerstaff agreed, as can resistance bands and plain ol’ walking ― gentle, daily movement is key.

“No matter the age, the message is the same: you don’t need to be able to do the splits, but you do need to move well enough to live your life without restriction,” Lachance ended.

“Flexibility is really about freedom! Freedom to keep doing the things you enjoy without pain or hesitation.”

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

Politics

Experts denounce “utterly horrifying” state of Six Counties’ emergency care

Published

on

A&E

A&E

The Royal College of Emergency Medicine (RCEM) has decried the dire state of the north of Ireland’s emergency departments (ED). The RCEM said the new figures released by the Department of Health (DoH) about A&E units show:

…the worst four and 12-hour performance for Northern Irish EDs for any quarter on record.

In a statement, they continued:

The stats, which cover January–March 2026, showed that almost a quarter (23.5%, or an average of 12,309 patients per month) of all major ED attendances waited more than 12 hours before being discharged, admitted or transferred. A decade ago, only 1% of patients waited this long.

Meanwhile, less than a third (30.5%) were in and out of the department within the target of four hours. 

The Department of Health’s targets stipulate that:

Advertisement

95% of patients [be] either treated and discharged home, or admitted, within four hours of their arrival in the department; and no patient… should wait longer than 12 hours.

Horror of patients left to wait for days in A&E

Perhaps the most shocking statistic is the RCEM’s citing of:

…a truly staggering 1,280 patients [who] waited more than two and a half days.

That means often very ill and exhausted people sitting or lying in corridors for sometimes 72 hours and more before they are admitted to a ward. In fact:

More than 400 (449) admitted patients waited more than 3 days in the ED in January alone.

6.7% of people simply leave the ED before they’re treated, due to the appalling wait times.

The RCEM’s north of Ireland’s vice chair Dr Sara McGurk said:

Advertisement

The state of our emergency care system is utterly horrifying. 

She continued:

These patients [waiting for days] are being put at risk of deterioration, or even death, by this overcrowding of departments. Meanwhile, the patients who can pass through, or be discharged from, our departments within four hours are now firmly in the minority.

It is becoming difficult to even perform the basics of emergency care with overcrowding as bad as it is. Things are dire and, as the data shows, the worst they have ever been.

The RCEM’s Dr Michael Perry urged Stormont to act. He said when speaking to the BBC’s Good Morning Ulster programme (segment starts at 1:36:50 mark):

Problems in A&E [Accident & Emergency] are symptoms manifesting themselves because of [issues in] the wider network.

He continued:

Advertisement

I’m not here saying A&E needs all the money to fix things. It has to be distributed across the system because if we improve community care, waiting lists, timely access to specialists in hospital, social care and discharge, a lot of the problems we’re seeing manifested in our departments will be actually eased a bit.

Doctor calls for Stormont to intervene as Westminster withholds funds

Perry called on Stormont to pass a three year budget which he said would:

…improve things, it would allow a plan to be put in place to tackle this rather than stumbling on through the same permacrisis year after year.

Finance minister John O’Dowd put forward a draft budget in January 2026, but Stormont is yet to reach agreement on passing it. Ministers within the Northern Ireland Assembly have been pushing Westminster for additional funding. Thus far the Labour government has granted a £400 million loan. They will also provide an extra £380m over three years. Obviously, the second sum will largely go towards simply paying back the first.

The Treasury’s response to recent pleas for more money has been an unashamedly neoliberal review that suggested hammering average earners with regressive measures. These included water charges, raising rates (the equivalent of England’s council tax) and cutting public sector pay.

Perry also lamented the effect the A&E disaster has on staff, saying:

Advertisement

The nursing staff turnover that we have in our departments is vast and is largely to do with the environment they work in.

This creates a vicious downward spiral in which insufficient staffing leads to worsening conditions, and those worsening conditions lead to even more staff being driven away. Perry spoke of the moral injury endured by heroic healthcare workers:

We talk about moral injury and I’ve had staff with me who have tried to deliver the best care they can and because of the environment something adverse has happened. All we’re asking for is the capacity to do our jobs.

The concept of moral injury entered wider public consciousness during the COVID pandemic. It refers to the psychological distress endured when someone is forced to violate their own moral code. It was routine during the pandemic for healthcare staff to be forced into saving just one of two desperately ill patients.

Proper pandemic management and healthcare resourcing by the Tory government would have prevented them being put in this cruel position. Six Counties healthcare workers are now having to make those same choices again.

Patients dying in A&E are the human sacrifice capitalism demands

Anyone familiar with A&E in the north of Ireland will know that at times it isn’t far from the apocalyptic scenes shown in the sci-fi film Elysium. That film is set in 2154 and is meant to show the United States as essentially a failed state with a tiny oligarch class and crushing poverty for everyone else.

Advertisement

The north of Ireland isn’t even a proper state — it’s a strangled, dysfunctional appendage of de-developing Britain. A region that should rightly be part of a united Ireland instead suffers instead under partial autonomy, and endures the ritual humiliation of going to Westminster with a begging bowl.

Even then, Stormont is up against a Labour government captured by oligarchs, in a society where 50 families hold more wealth than half the population. An intelligent alien coming across this ‘civilisation’ would be puzzled by what it saw. It might consider it strange that the people living on this group of islands seemingly see it as correct to murder hundreds of thousands of people so a billionaire can have another yacht, or a 3,000th house.

Of course, most of us don’t actually believe that, we’re just subject to an economic system that ensures psychopaths rise to the top and make these decisions. The north of Ireland is simply an acute case of the intersection between empire’s legacy and late-stage capitalist reality. Those being left to die in A&E are the human sacrifice these beasts demand as they continue limping on.

Featured image via the Canary

Advertisement

By Robert Freeman

Source link

Continue Reading

Politics

Best Pillow For Sleep Apnoea UK 2026: Derila Review, Benefits, and CPAP Compatibility

Published

on

Best Pillow For Sleep Apnoea UK 2026: Derila Review, Benefits, and CPAP Compatibility

We hope you love the products we recommend! All of them were independently selected by our editors. Just so you know, HuffPost UK may collect a share of sales or other compensation from the links on this page if you decide to shop from them. Oh, and FYI — prices are accurate and items in stock as of time of publication.

There’s nothing worse than a bad night of sleep. You wake up feeling tired; you can’t focus; and even worse, you know it will be the same the next night.

If you’re one of the 10 million people in the UK with sleep apnoea, you’ll know this all too well.

Then there’s the having to deal with the impact on your relationship and worrying about the affect it has on your overall health. Not to mention having to be strapped up to a CPAP machine every night – which is boring, bulky, and uncomfortable.

Advertisement

But now, there might be a solution to more restful sleep. As most cases of sleep apnoea are caused by throat obstruction during the night, Derila has created a pillow specifically designed to keep your airway open as you snore.

Shaped like a butterfly, the pillow is not only made of cooling, hypoallergenic material, but its ergonomic shape contours your head and neck to keep them in a neutral position.

For those with mild to moderate sleep apnoea, this could stop the airway from narrowing during sleep – whether you sleep on your back, side, or stomach.

The Derila pillow can also be used at the same time as a CPAP machine, which can help with aligning your head to the mask and reducing leaks.

The result? Less snoring, not waking up so much during the night, and (the cherry on top) feeling less groggy and more energised in the morning.

Advertisement

So much so that 87% of testers reported better sleep within their first week of using the Derila pillow.

But you don’t have to take their word for it. Here’s what Derila customers said about the pillow:

One reviewer said: “Yesterday I received my pillow and last night I had the best nights sleep in a very long time. My husband also commented that I didn’t snore last night , so hopefully I will continue to sleep peacefully and in the same way as last night.”

Meanwhile, another buyer said the pillow has improved sleep for them and their partner: “The pillow fits our neck very well, even when we turn. I wear a CPAP every night, and my wife wears an oxygen thing in her nose. We can turn and our breathing is not affected.”

Advertisement

“Since getting the pillow, I’ve had no more neck pain,” another reviewer claimed. “My sleep apnoea has improved significantly.”

Source link

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025