No more excuses for Israel on Gaza, says Starmer
Sir Keir Starmer has warned Israel there can be “no more excuses”, demanding that more aid is allowed into Gaza.
The Prime Minister said there must be an “immediate ceasefire” as he delivered his first speech to the UN General Assembly in New York.
He also warned Israel against a potential invasion of Lebanon and described the Middle East as a region “at the brink” of war.
In a separate round of interviews Sir Keir said the situation was deteriorating “hour on hour” and urged all Britons still in Lebanon to leave.
He did not rule out deploying troops on the ground to evacuate stranded citizens if necessary after sending 700 extra soldiers to Cyprus.
Addressing the UN, the Prime Minister said: “We must face up to the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza that continues to deepen by the day.
“Israel must grant humanitarian access to civilians in line with its obligations under international humanitarian law. There can be no more excuses.
“Israel must open more crossings, allow vital, life-saving aid to flow and provide a safe environment for the UN and other humanitarian organisations to operate.”
Sir Keir described the civilian suffering in Gaza as “beyond belief” and said the fighting must “stop” immediately to allow more aid in.
He also said that the UN Security Council must come up with a long-term plan to “break repeating cycles of violence” in the Middle East.
His comments represent some of his toughest rhetoric towards Israel’s actions to date as tensions continue to mount in the region.
Israel has begun calling up reserve troops to send to its northern front as fears mount over a potential ground invasion of Lebanon.
The Israel Defense Forces said it would call up two reserve brigades – which could consist of 6,000 to 10,000 troops – for “operational missions” in the north.
“This will enable the continuation of combat against the Hezbollah terrorist organisation,” the IDF said, without specifying further.
Sir Keir warned Israel against any potential invasion of Lebanon, which is the base for the Iranian-backed terrorist group Hezbollah. Hezbollah has launched regular rocket attacks over the border into Northern Israel and beyond, which Israel has responded to with air strikes.
‘Region is at the brink’
Lebanese officials say some 600 people have been killed, almost two thousand wounded and tens of thousands forced to leave their homes as a result.
The Prime Minister said: “The region is at the brink. We need an immediate ceasefire between Israel and Lebanese Hizballah and the implementation of a political plan which allows Israeli and Lebanese civilians to return to their homes to live in peace and security.
“That security will come through diplomacy – not escalation. There is no military solution here. Nor is there a military-only solution to the conflict in Gaza.
“This Council must demand – again, an immediate, full and complete ceasefire in Gaza with the release of all the hostages.”
There are believed to be around 10,000 British citizens in Lebanon and officials have warned efforts to evacuate them would be fraught with danger.
Sir Keir also held talks with president Zelensky on the sidelines of the UN assembly.
Afterwards a Downing Street spokesman said: “The Prime Minister met Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky at UNGA this afternoon.
“The two leaders had a productive meeting, with the Prime Minister paying tribute to the continued courage of the Ukrainian people in the face of Russian aggression.
“The Prime Minister acknowledged that Ukraine is at a critical point in the war, but he reiterated the UK’s support is ironclad and will continue for as long as it takes.
“President Zelenskyy set out his ambitions for the coming months and thanked the Prime Minister for the UK’s continued backing.
“They agreed to keep in close contact in the coming weeks.”
Sir Keir used the UN Security Council meeting to confront fellow permanent member Russia over its illegal invasion of Ukraine.
In some of his most strident comments to date the Prime Minister accused Vladimir Putin of sending millions of Russian soldiers into a “meat grinder”.
He also accused Moscow of conducting the “kidnapping” of 20,000 Ukrainian children who have been forcibly deported to Russia.
“Six hundred thousand Russian soldiers have also been killed or wounded in this war. And for what?” the Prime Minister said.
“The UN Charter – which they sit here to uphold speaks of human dignity. Not treating your own citizens as bits of meat to fling into the grinder.
“There can be no equivocation here. There must be accountability. Aggression cannot pay. Borders cannot be redrawn by force.
“Russia started this illegal war. It must end it – and get out of Ukraine.”
The state will take back control of people’s lives, says Starmer
Sir Keir Starmer has said the state will take more “control” in people’s lives…
Phillip Schofield set to make TV comeback after This Morning scandal
Phillip Schofield will tell his “story of survival, both on a desert island and off it” as he makes his TV comeback 16 months after being axed by ITV.
The TV presenter, 62, will be battling for survival in the Channel 5 special Cast Away, which sees him stranded on an island for 10 days.
The former This Morning presenter will open his heart about the last two years as he spends his time on an island off Madagascar.
Posting an image of himself on a beach on Instagram, Schofield wrote: “Now you know how I spent my Summer! Alone for 10 days, no food, no water, no crew. My story of survival, both on a desert island and off it. Cast Away starts Monday on @channel5-tv & My5 at 9pm.”
A source told The Sun: “Over the past few months Phil has had quite a few offers for various things – but has steadfastly turned them all down.
“This sort of challenge has always appealed to him though, and after consulting with friends and family, he decided to go for it. It’s all been top secret, and has been an incredibly quick turnaround in order to keep the news quiet.
“After 42 years on telly, Phillip has learnt from some great crews and teams on how to film and tell a story.”
The source added: “With 10 days to himself, no camera crews or production around, he shot some unbelievably raw footage – some of it makes for tough, emotional viewing.
“But he wanted a chance to share his story, unedited and honest, and let viewers see another side to him.
“Whilst this is a massive coup for Channel 5, and huge for Phillip, he’s in no rush to come back to TV full-time yet; he remains very bruised, and is just taking some time now to weigh things up before he makes any major decisions.”
Schofield is following in the footsteps of Joanna Lumley and Ruby Wax on the programme, which airs on Monday night.
On its social media pages, Channel 5 posted a short clip of Schofield walking across a remote beach with the words: “A celebrity marooned on an uninhabited tropical island for 10 days is challenged with total isolation, the forces of nature and the battle within his own mind.”
Schofield said: “This is most definitely a first for me and the only thing I felt compelled to do. It appealed to me on so many levels.
“I’ve recently had a lot of time to think about my life, what went right and what went wrong, but I’ve always had the safe arms of friends and family wrapped around me. This time it’s just me, no phone, no comforts, no crew and only lip balm as a luxury.
“I’m looking forward to exploring the island, trying to tie knots to secure my shelter and foraging and fending for myself in the wild … with no help. Maybe I’ll be Robinson Crusoe, or maybe I’ll just be Tom Hank’s Wilson and quietly drift off into the wild blue yonder.”
His sacking followed a brief affair with a younger member of staff, which led to an external review looking at This Morning’s culture.
In December, an external review by Jane Mulcahy KC, instructed by ITV boss Dame Carolyn McCall, found that ITV made “considerable efforts” to find out the truth about an alleged relationship between Schofield and a runner on This Morning in 2019 but was “unable to uncover the relevant evidence” until the presenter’s own admission in late May 2023.
At the time, the former TV star said he had “lost everything” after admitting to the affair and that the fallout had had a “catastrophic effect” on his mind.
Last June, the presenter said he regretted what had happened.
“I have massive guilt and regret,” he said. I’ve made a mistake, I’ve had an affair at work.”
This Morning co-host Holly Willoughby left This Morning almost five months later, after 14 years on the sofa alongside Schofield.
Trans owner puts £5m Scottish castle up for sale because of abuse
The transgender owner of a £5 million Scottish castle is selling up, claiming the rural community is “not ready” to accept someone who has changed their gender.
Samantha Kane said it sometimes felt like she had “landed on Mars” when “hurtful” gender identity comments were shared on social media.
Ms Kane, who was born male and now styles herself as Lady Carbisdale, is thought to be the only person in the UK to have changed gender three times.
The barrister has spent millions of pounds restoring Carbisdale Castle, near Ardgay in Sutherland, after buying the 117-year-old property in 2022.
But Ms Kane has now decided to sell the 19-bedroom, 29-acre castle, complete with its own loch. It has been listed with a guide price of £5 million.
Ms Kane, 64, told the Daily Mail: “It has been a labour of love mostly. But when people sit in their bedrooms writing on social media they have to realise the effect that has on some people.
“I really have been quite hurt by comments on my gender identity, so now I think it just needs someone, for a better word, ‘normal’ to take over.”
Ms Kane added: “It is such a special place but I did suffer some prejudice and I think probably the Highlands is not ready for a transgender owner of the castle. It needs someone else to protect its future.
“But I came here to a near-ruined castle and have restored it to its former glory, so I’ve done the job I said I was going to do.
“It’s really such an important landmark and my main concern is to see it preserved and to see it respected.”
After Ms Kane bought Carbisdale Castle for more than £1 million, police were called over a community council meeting at which homophobic remarks were allegedly made about her.
Ms Kane had attended the meeting to state her intention to restore the manor but had to leave while a vote took place.
One resident, who did not want to be named, claimed he heard a woman had been “abusive” towards a committee member understood to have been Ms Kane.
He claimed: “The language she used was exceptionally strong which even a sailor would have been proud of. I wouldn’t use it as a man, never mind it coming from a woman.”
Police Scotland said it received a report of a disturbance in Carron Place, Ardgay, on Nov 23.
Officers issued advice and a woman received a recorded warning in relation to an earlier disturbance on Nov 21.
At the time, Ms Kane described the police involvement as an “overreaction” despite claiming that some of what was said was “homophobic and racist”.
She said of the alleged abuse: “In my view it wasn’t a disturbance other than a handful of people wanting to see what I’m doing derailed. I’ve got a half a dozen people trying to smear my name and the castle’s name. They’d rather see a ruined castle than a preserved castle.”
Ms Kane said there were “a lot of great people in the community” and stressed the “actions of one or two people should not reflect the whole community”.
“Unfortunately if you have one or two very active and very vocal people trying to make it all personal… and comments on social media calling me a man – and this and that – it really hurt me and I can do without that,” Ms Kane said.
“It is a sad situation. But really for me I think it should be about whatever helps the castle, it shouldn’t be what helps me personally. In the interests of the castle I think it will be best served with someone else at the helm.”
Ms Kane was born in Iraq and moved to the UK, later making a fortune as the head of investment at a Saudi-owned company. She transitioned to become Samantha in 1997 and in 2004 transitioned back to a man.
In 2018, she underwent further surgery and hormone replacement therapy to revive her transition into femininity.
Police boss ‘wanted to comfort Pc Andrew Harper’s widow’ in hotel room, hearing told
The former head of the Police Federation made a sexually suggestive remark about the grieving widow of a police officer killed in the line of duty, a misconduct panel was told.
John Apter is accused of saying he wanted to comfort Lissie Harper in his hotel room as she prepared to collect a posthumous award on behalf of her husband, Andrew Harper, who was dragged to his death while trying to stop a gang of quad bike thieves in 2019.
Mr Apter, who was chairman of the Police Federation between 2018 and 2021, allegedly told colleagues: “I wouldn’t mind looking after her tonight” and “I’d like to comfort her in my hotel room”.
A gross misconduct panel also heard the former Hampshire constable groped a much younger officer’s bottom and made a suggestive comment to a pregnant colleague while attending the annual Police Bravery Awards.
Barrister Cecily White, representing Hampshire Constabulary, told the misconduct hearing there was a “pattern” to Mr Apter’s behaviour, which she said was “sexist and derogatory”.
“There are significant similarities between the allegations that different people have made from different perspectives which show an unfortunate attitude towards women in the workplace,” Ms White said.
She added that his role as chairman “placed him in significant power and authority”.
Outlining the first of the allegations, Ms White said: “It was about the widow of Pc Andrew Harper, who was killed in the line of duty.
“His widow, Lissie Harper, was due to attend an awards ceremony to accept a posthumous award on behalf of her husband.
“In the context of a discussion about her attending the event, which would have been quite stressful for her, he said ‘I’d like to comfort her in my hotel room’, with an obvious sexual connotation.”
Pc Harper, a 28-year-old officer with Thames Valley Police, was killed in 2019 when a getaway car dragged him to his death.
He had married his wife just three weeks earlier and the pair were about to go on their honeymoon when he was killed.
Three teenagers were subsequently jailed for his manslaughter.
Ms White told the hearing Mr Apter is also accused of touching the bottom of a junior constable from another force – named only as Female A – on a police night out in December 2021 before the Police Bravery Awards in London.
The panel was told a large group of officers had been celebrating at a pub in central London.
Ms White said: “He bought [Female A] a bottle of Prosecco whilst everyone else got a single drink, continually topping her drink, giving her the impression that he was trying to get her drunk, directing all his comments to her. It made her feel uncomfortable.”
She said when the group moved on to a restaurant afterwards, Mr Apter allegedly placed his hands on Female A’s hips before squeezing her bottom at least once.
She described Mr Apter’s behaviour as “disrespectful and discourteous”.
The misconduct panel was told Mr Apter was allegedly “intoxicated” and “stumbling on the stairs” during the night out.
It was also alleged that he told a female colleague: “Maybe you’ll get a bum now”, after hearing about her pregnancy.
Mr Apter, who has since retired from Hampshire Constabulary, denies the allegations.
The hearing continues.
Watch: Starmer calls for return of ‘sausages’ from Gaza in conference gaffe
Sir Keir Starmer has called for the return of the “sausages” from Gaza in a slip-up during his speech at the Labour Party conference.
In an embarrassing gaffe, the Prime Minister misread his script – which called for the return of Israeli hostages taken by Hamas on Oct 7 last year.
He said: “I call again for restraint and de-escalation between Lebanon and Israel. I call again for all parties to pull back from the brink.
“I call again for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, the return of the sausages… the hostages, and a recommitment to the two-state solution, a recognised Palestine and a safe and secure Israel.”
The Prime Minister also said criticism of the way he runs his Government was “water off a duck’s back”.
“Politics can be on the side of good, politics can be on the side of truth and justice, politics can secure a better life for your family through the steady and uncompromising work of service,” he said.
“Because service is responsibility and opportunity for all. The precondition for hope. The bond of respect that can unite a country, bind us to the politics of national renewal. Service doesn’t mean you get everything you want. It doesn’t mean everyone will agree.
“But it does mean we understand that every decision we take, we take together, and that it is our duty for the British people to face up to necessary decisions in their interests.
“And conference – you know me by now, so you know all those shouts, the bad faith advice from people who still hanker after the politics of the people before me, the weak and tawdry fantasy of populism, it’s water off a duck’s back. Mere glitter on a shirt cuff.”
The Conservatives responded with a video on X, formerly known as Twitter.
The party said: “Keir Starmer uses his first big speech as Prime Minister to call for the return of the sausages.”
It then led to a Star Wars style title, saying: “Episode X: Return of the Sausages.”
Michael Gove takes helm in new era for The Spectator
Michael Gove has been appointed as editor of The Spectator magazine after its takeover by Sir Paul Marshall, the GB News co-owner, The Telegraph can reveal.
The controversial former Cabinet minister will begin his new job on Oct 4 just over three months after he stood down as an MP. It means he will be at the helm of the magazine known as the “Tory Bible” as the Conservative Party leadership election reaches its climax.
He will take over from Fraser Nelson, who has achieved record print circulation figures during his 15 years in the job as well as making a success of its digital subscription strategy.
It was also announced that Lord Moore, a former editor of The Spectator and The Telegraph, will become The Spectator’s non-executive chairman, replacing Andrew Neil.
Mr Gove’s appointment will not only give him a major platform for shaping opinion around who should be the next Tory leader, but it also suggests a shift in emphasis at the influential magazine, which was fiercely opposed to the Covid lockdowns that Mr Gove championed while in government.
Mr Gove is a divisive figure in Conservative circles, having scuppered Boris Johnson’s 2016 leadership bid by standing against him after promising he would back him. It earned him a reputation as a backstabber that has stayed with him ever since.
Mr Johnson, himself a former editor of The Spectator, had run the successful Vote Leave campaign with him before they became rivals.
Mr Gove will take over as editor of the magazine three weeks before the end of the Tory leadership contest. He has in the past been a vocal supporter of Kemi Badenoch, though their relationship is said to have cooled in recent months. She told a hustings event last month that she was not “controlled” by the former housing secretary.
Mr Gove is thought to have sought the approval of the Advisory Committee on Business Appointments, which must approve any job taken by an ex-minister within two years of leaving government.
Mr Nelson, who is also a Telegraph columnist, is expected to leave the world’s oldest weekly magazine, which had become so successful under his stewardship that Sir Paul outbid Rupert Murdoch to pay £100 million for it earlier this month, around twice what it had been expected to sell for.
Mr Gove’s divisiveness in the Conservative Party was not confined to his long-running rivalry with Mr Johnson. David Cameron, now Lord Cameron, described him in his autobiography as “mendacious” after falling out with him over Brexit and said of him: “One quality shone through, disloyalty.”
Liz Truss described him as “that snake” after he helped undermine her brief premiership by saying he would not vote for her Budget when it was put before Parliament.
Sir Paul, who made his fortune as the co-founder of the hedge fund group Marshall Wace, is a former member of the Liberal Democrats who switched his allegiance to the Conservative Party because he supported Brexit.
He is co-owner of GB News and owner of the news website UnHerd, and is part of a consortium that has previously expressed an interest in buying Telegraph Media Group, the sale of which is ongoing.
Earlier this month, veteran journalist Mr Neil resigned as chairman of The Spectator with a parting shot at Sir Paul.
He told its staff: “My greatest regret is that I have not been able to find you a new home guaranteed to nurture the unique chemistry of The Spectator, which makes it so special and successful,” said Mr Neil.
“You can have all the resources in the world but if you don’t understand what really makes The Spectator tick then they will be as nought.”
He also urged Sir Paul not to interfere in editorial matters, saying: “I regarded it as my prime responsibility for 20 years to ensure [editorial independence], protecting the editor not just from outside pressures, commercial or political, but even from proprietors,” said Mr Neil.
“I cannot tell if the new owners will have the same reverence for editorial independence since they have not shared their thinking.”
Mr Gove and Sir Paul share a belief in the need for a more responsible form of capitalism, and in March, Mr Gove defended Sir Paul in the House of Commons during a debate about extremism.
Sir Paul had “liked” a tweet that said “civil war is coming” because of the increasing proportion of Muslims making up the population of Britain, which Labour criticised. Mr Gove said: “I deprecate the personal attack on Sir Paul”, describing him as “a distinguished philanthropist”.
Mr Gove’s new job marks a return to the career he left when he became an MP in 2005. He was assistant editor of The Times, having started his career in journalism working on The Telegraph’s Peterborough column.
Mr Gove is not the first former Cabinet minister to become an editor: George Osborne, the former chancellor, was appointed editor of The Evening Standard in 2017 by its owner Lord Lebedev, but he was unable to halt its decline during his three years in the job. Earlier this month, the newspaper ceased daily publication and moved to a weekly print publication model to cut costs.
Sir Paul bought The Spectator through his Old Queen Street Media company, which owns UnHerd. Its chief executive is Freddie Sayers, who is now publisher of The Spectator.
After the takeover, he promised that UnHerd and The Spectator would “remain fully separate titles, with independent editorial and governance structures”.
Mr Sayers said: “To be editor of The Spectator requires a rare breadth of intellectual interests and depth of journalistic experience.
“Alongside his political and journalistic nous, Michael brings a love of books, philosophy, art, opera – and a mischievous sense of humour. He is perfectly suited to this role, and I can’t wait to work together to bring The Spectator to new audiences.
“Fraser has achieved huge success over his 15 years as editor, modernising and building The Spectator into a formidable media brand. I am delighted that he will continue to write and, as Associate Editor, be part of The Spectator family.”
Lord Moore said: “The Spectator thrives because of its free spirit and editorial independence. Having been continuously associated with the paper for more than a fifth of its nearly 200-year history, I am honoured to have been asked to be its chairman. I look forward to its future being even greater than its past.”
Mr Nelson said: “There’s never a good time to leave a job like mine but, after 15 years and a new owner with big ambitions, there is an obvious time. In many ways, Michael is the obvious successor.
“He’s a first-class journalist who took a detour into politics, he was my news editor when I was a young reporter at The Times and he first declared his ambition to edit The Spectator in an Aberdeen classroom at the age of seven. Now, aged 57, he has made it. His experience, combined with his journalistic skills and the quality of the team around him, will make for quite a potent combination.
“Charles was made editor of The Spectator aged 27 and went on to edit The Daily Telegraph. His remit as chairman will be to safeguard editorial independence and I can think of no one better-suited to The Spectator chairmanship.”
Mr Gove has been contacted by The Telegraph for comment.
Israeli boots ‘ready to hit the ground’ in Lebanon
Israel is preparing to put boots on the ground with an invasion of Lebanon, its army chief has said.
Israel Defense Forces (IDF) jets have carried out heavy bombardments of Hezbollah targets to pave the way for “your boots” to “enter enemy territory”, Lt Gen Herzi Halevi told troops on Wednesday.
It came as the Israeli army called up two brigades of reservists, around 4,000 soldiers, for operations on the northern border.
Gen Halevi, speaking during a visit to the border, said: “You hear the jets overhead; we have been striking all day. This is both to prepare the ground for your possible entry and to continue degrading Hezbollah.”
“The sense is that your military boots, your manoeuvre boots, will enter enemy territory,” he said.
“Your entry there with force… will show (Hezbollah) what it is like to meet a professional combat force,“ he said.
The purpose of the invasion would be to allow Israeli citizens to return to their homes in the north, Gen Halevi added.
Missiles fired across the border by Iran-backed Hezbollah have led to the evacuation of around 60,000 citizens.
Lt Gen Halevi’s remarks and the call-up of reservists formed the clearest signal yet that Israel intends to escalate Operation Northern Arrow, which has killed more than 600 people, according to Lebanon’s health authorities.
Joe Biden, the US president, said all-out war was possible but not “inevitable”.
“We’re still in play to have a settlement that can fundamentally change the whole region,” he told ABC News.
The US and France on Wednesday night jointly called for an “immediate” 21-day cease-fire to allow for negotiations.
The joint statement, negotiated on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly in New York, said the recent fighting is “intolerable and presents an unacceptable risk of a broader regional escalation”.
“We call for an immediate 21-day cease-fire across the Lebanon-Israel border to provide space for diplomacy,” the statement said. “We call on all parties, including the Governments of Israel and Lebanon, to endorse the temporary cease-fire immediately.”
Sir Keir Starmer urged all British citizens to leave Lebanon immediately, saying the situation was deteriorating “hour on hour”.
He did not rule out deploying troops on the ground to evacuate stranded citizens if necessary after sending 700 extra soldiers to Cyprus.
Border Force officers are being deployed to help up to 6,000 trapped Britons flee Lebanon, it emerged on Wednesday.
Some UK officers have been sent to Lebanon to work with consular and military staff in helping Britons seeking to leave the country after appeals to do so by Sir Keir.
A bigger contingent of Border Force officers are on 24-hour notice to fly to the region in the event that Britain has to evacuate stranded workers and families.
Chloe Lewin, a 24-year-old freelance journalist from London who is based in Beirut, told BBC News that it was not possible to book commercial flights out of the country. “Keir Starmer’s telling everyone to get out but we can’t,” she said.
“You can’t get out this week because they’re [flights] all full and every time you get to the last page of the booking, it just crashes and it says you can’t book a flight. And then people I know who have had flights, they’re all getting cancelled. My friends were meant to leave this morning on Egyptair – that got cancelled, so they can’t get out.”
According to multiple reports, the US is engaging in a last-ditch diplomatic effort to secure a ceasefire in both Lebanon and Gaza.
Details are being hammered out at the UN General Assembly in New York. The deal, which would result in the release of all Israeli hostages in Gaza, is the first attempt to link the two conflicts.
Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, has given the “green light” to discuss the initiative, an Israeli official told The Telegraph.
The source said that while the US was not speaking to Hezbollah directly, it was mediating emergency talks with the terror group.
Another Israeli official said that Amos Hochstein, its US envoy, was involved in crisis talks, shuttling between the two sides in search of a deal.
‘We will not rest until they return home’
“We are striking Hezbollah with blows it never imagined,” Mr Netanyahu said on Wednesday evening. “We are doing this with full force, we are doing this with guile. One thing I promise you: we will not rest until they [displaced families] return home.”
A ground invasion to force Hezbollah away from Israel’s border would be a huge, complex operation.
The Lebanese terror group has a vast network of tunnels and a more sophisticated arsenal of anti-tank missiles than Hamas.
It would also likely fire off the full arsenal of its long-range missiles, which have been largely held in reserve since war broke out last year.
On Wednesday, Israel’s Iron Dome intercepted a Hezbollah missile aimed at Mossad’s headquarters near Tel Aviv, in the first attack attempting to reach so far into Israel.
“Hezbollah today expanded its [range] of fire. Later today, it will receive a very strong response,” Lt Gen Halevi vowed.
Hezbollah has fired around 9,000 missiles and drones at Israel since Oct 8.
In recent days, Israel has significantly stepped up its military campaign in Lebanon, killing several Hezbollah commanders in strikes on Beirut’s southern suburbs.
It carried out attacks on Monday that killed more than 500 people, including 50 children, Lebanese health authorities said, in the deadliest day for the country since fighting started.
Tensions intensified last week when scores of Hezbollah operatives’ pagers and walkie-talkies were blown up in remote detonations.
The attacks, which have not been claimed by Israel, took 1,500 fighters out of action, according to Reuters.
Watch: Ukrainian drone tries to kill Russian soldier – then returns and saves his life
A Ukrainian front-line battalion filmed its drone-led rescue of an injured Russian soldier.
The K-2 Battalion, which is part of the Ukrainian Army’s 54th Brigade, posted the video across several different social media platforms this week.
Set to eerie music, the video runs longest on Telegram at more than 18 minutes. It picks out the strained facial expressions of the injured Russian soldier, damage to his wrist watch and the streak of dried blood running down the side of his face.
In the video, the drone operator decides not to kill the injured Russian soldier and instead drops water and a note before leading him across No Man’s Land to a Ukrainian trench.
It is unclear where or when the video was shot, although it appears to be set in late summer on a battlefield in the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine. Throughout the war, the 54th Brigade has been positioned on the front line in the Donbas region.
The video appears to be part of a sophisticated recruitment for the K-2 Battalion which, like the rest of the Ukrainian army, is under pressure to sign up more soldiers.
The released video starts as a Ukrainian drone scans a Russian trench after an attack, searching for survivors. It spots the injured Russian soldier lying on top of at least two bodies under an earth arch.
The Ukrainian drone drops a grenade near the injured man but fails to kill him.
Later, the drone returns to the trench to discover that the injured soldier has crawled away from the earth arch and is now lying on his back, begging to be spared.
The Ukrainian drone operator takes pity on the injured Russian soldier. The drone dumps its grenades onto the battlefield, flies back to base and then returns with a bottle of water and a note with instructions on how the injured Russian soldier can reach Ukrainian lines and safety.
The Russian soldier crosses himself and waves “thank you” to the Ukrainian drone operator before he gulps down the water.
The Russian soldier then takes out a syringe from his pocket and injects a painkiller into his left arm. He lies back exhausted before gathering his strength and staggering out of the trench into a sun-drenched No Man’s Land.
He has a leg injury and immediately falls to the floor before gingerly picking himself up and slowly walking forward, threading his way between the artillery craters.
The Ukrainian drone leads the injured Russian soldier through the battlefield. Puffs of smoke show that fighting is continuing.
At one point, the Russian soldier lies in a crater and signals to the drone that he wants to smoke a cigarette before moving on.
He takes out a new packet of cigarettes from a pocket, unwraps the packet, takes one and lights up.
The drone pans out for a wider view of the heavily scarred battlefield.
The sun is setting, bathing the battlefield in a soft orange light. Occasionally, an artillery shell lands near the injured Russian soldier who picks his way between debris and craters. The video’s accompanying subtitle claims that he is being shot at by his own forces.
The injured Russian soldier, with the Ukrainian drone as his guide, eventually makes it to the Ukrainian trench system where he collapses onto the dirt floor, exhausted.
Two Ukrainian infantrymen walk through the trench system towards the injured Russian soldier.
They walk with purpose, striding over rubbish and rubble with their rifles at their shoulders.
The Russian soldier surrenders. One of the Ukrainians then grabs him, roughly, and half-pulls, half-marches him to the trench command post.
One million Israelis hide in bomb shelters from Hezbollah rockets
One million Israelis were ordered to hide in bomb shelters on Tuesday as Hezbollah launched 300 rockets across the Lebanon border.
Most of the rockets fired by the Iran-backed terror group were intercepted or fell in open areas in the north, though at least two people received minor injuries from shrapnel, according to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF).
The barrage of rockets were fired in a second day of intense fighting between Israel and Hezbollah after the IDF launched “Operation Northern Arrows” across Lebanon on Monday morning.
At least 569 people are said to have been killed in the operation so far, according to the Lebanese health authorities.
That includes Ibrahim Qubaisi, a senior Hezbollah commander, who was killed in a strike in the southern suburbs of Beirut on Tuesday.
Qubaisi, head of Hezbollah’s missile unit, was among the six killed in the “targeted” strike on a known Hezbollah stronghold, the Israeli military said.
He was the mastermind behind a kidnapping plot by Hezbollah in 2000, the IDF said, which led to the deaths of three soldiers.
The IDF has repeatedly insisted it is only targeted areas with homes that are used to store Hezbollah rocket launchers and other weapons.
Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, repeated his calls for Lebanese civilians to evacuate areas where Hezbollah is storing its weapons. “Nasrallah is leading you to the brink of the abyss,” the Israeli prime minister said.
“I told you yesterday to evacuate the houses where he put a missile in the living room and a rocket in the garage. He who has a missile in his living room and a rocket in his garage will not have a home,” he added.
The military also said it struck around 400 medium-range rocket launchers, 70 weapons depots, and around 80 drones and cruise missiles since launching widespread air strikes in Lebanon on Monday morning.
They are among more than 1,500 Hezbollah targets hit by Israel across 200 different areas of Lebanon in the last two days, the military said.
The second day of intense fighting between Israel and Hezbollah came as world leaders met at the United Nations General Assembly, where they urged Israel to show restraint.
Joe Biden, the US president, said the conflict could still be resolved diplomatically. “We’ve also been determined to prevent a wider war that engulfs the entire region,” the president said in his last UN speech as president.
“A diplomatic solution is still possible. In fact, it remains the only path to lasting security…full-scale war is not in anyone’s interest.”
Meanwhile, the UK Government is ramping up preparations for a mass evacuation of UK nationals from Lebanon. British troops are already stationed at an RAF base in Cyprus but more are set to join them ahead of the anticipated evacuation.
A small number of troops are also already in Lebanon to lead the evacuation if the conflict escalates further.
Officials fear around up to 15,000 UK nationals could still be in Lebanon, despite warnings from David Lammy, the Foreign Secretary, to evacuate the war-ravaged country.
Watch: Sleepwalking girl found huddled under tree by thermal drone
A missing 10-year-old girl was located with thermal imaging drones one day after she got lost inside a forest in Louisiana.
Peyton Saintignan disappeared on Sept 14 after she sleepwalked deep into the woods near her home.
Drone footage, which was released on Monday, captured the moment she was found huddled under a tree in her pyjamas at 11pm local time the next day.
In the video, the drone operators can be heard cheering as soon as they see Peyton start to lift her head.
“She’s awake,” a male voice exclaims. “They got her! She’s alive!” another man says as clapping can be heard in the background.
Several police officers then arrive at the scene and Peyton, who appears to be shaking, is carried to safety.
Multiple police departments, firefighters, homeland security agents and hundreds of volunteers were involved in a major search which began on Sept 15.
However, it was volunteers from Arkansas who offered up their specialist drone equipment and eventually located Peyton 1.5 miles from her home.
She was found “in dense woods roughly 300 yards from where a trail camera had recorded her earlier Sunday morning”, Jason Parker, the local sheriff, said.
He explained that police had tried but failed to use a helicopter to find her and thanked the three volunteer drone operators, Josh Klober, Matt Ramos and Micah Carter, for “successfully located the young girl”.
“I can’t tell you how thrilled we all are to have a happy ending to this,” Mr Parker said at the time.
“A lot of prayers were answered today. And, I want especially to thank all the agencies who helped bring Peyton safely home and all the volunteers who gave their time and efforts.”
It was just the latest example of such aerial technology being used to find missing children.
Earlier this month, a three-year-old was quickly located within a cornfield in Wisconsin by police using drones with thermal capabilities.
France and Germany want post-Brexit concessions in return for migration deal
France and Germany have demanded improved post-Brexit rules for EU workers and students in Britain in return for a new migration deal to drive down Channel crossings.
The two countries asked the European Commission to negotiate concessions alongside a deal on asylum with the UK in a letter seen by The Telegraph.
The call is an early result for Sir Keir Starmer’s efforts to reset relations with the EU and his diplomatic outreach to Emmanuel Macron, the French president, and Olaf Scholz, the German chancellor.
But any deal to return Channel migrants will be difficult and come attached with demands over youth mobility and calls on Britain to resettle genuine refugees in Europe to the UK.
Brussels must “rapidly present a draft negotiating mandate with a view to reaching an agreement with the United Kingdom on asylum and immigration issues”, Paris and Berlin wrote to the commission.
“We believe that Brexit has had very detrimental consequences for the coherence of our migration policies,” said the joint letter.
“The absence of provisions governing the flow of people between the UK and the Schengen area is clearly contributing to the dynamics of irregular flows – and to the danger posed to people using this route in the Channel and the North Sea.”
The joint letter was sent by Nancy Faeser, the German interior minister, and Gerald Darmanin, her outgoing French counterpart, on Friday. Mr Darmanin has now left his post as France ushered in a new Right-wing government that promises to be even tougher on illegal immigration at the weekend.
As many as 41,078 migrants tried to reach the UK from the EU’s Schengen zone in the first eight months of this year, according to Frontex, the bloc’s border agency.
The ministers said the lack of a deal regulating the movement of “persons between the UK and the Schengen zone is obviously contributing to the momentum of irregular migration flows.”
They added: “The arrival in office of a new British Government, demonstrating its intention to co-operate constructively with the EU, seems to us to be conducive to concrete progress on this issue.”
Labour hopes to make the fight against illegal migration part of a new security and defence pact with the EU. The bloc sees the negotiations as a way to impose pressure on the Government to agree to increase legal youth mobility for EU citizens into Britain.
Labour has already rejected a call from Brussels to negotiate such a deal, or rejoin the Erasmus student exchange scheme.
Diplomatic sources have previously said any EU migrant return deal would require Britain to take in a share of migrants from under-pressure countries in the bloc, as member states do.
“We are relying heavily on the commission to simultaneously address the issues of legal mobility, in particular family and professional mobility, the fight against illegal immigration and the right of asylum with our British partner,” the letter said.
During the Brexit negotiations, the European Commission rejected UK calls for an EU-wide migration deal to replace the Dublin regulation, which means migrants must stay in the first safe country they land.
‘Red lines have not changed’
Any EU-UK deal would require the unanimous support of the EU’s 27 member states, which is unlikely given that migration is a hugely divisive issue in the bloc.
Countries such as Italy and Greece, which have borne the brunt of migrant arrivals into Europe, will be likely resist moves to return people to the EU, as will the fiercely anti-migrant Hungary.
The overture from Paris and Berlin comes after Sir Keir told leaders at the European Political Community summit earlier this year that the UK would never leave the European Convention on Human Rights after ditching the Rwanda plan.
Yvette Cooper, the Home Secretary, will meet Ms Faeser, Bruno Retailleau, the new French interior minister, and Italy’s Matteo Piantedosi, her Italian counterpart, at a G7 ministerial meeting next week.
The Government insists its red lines have not changed and that there will be no return to freedom of movement or any involvement in an EU quota scheme for migrants.
“Starmer would do anything to get closer to the EU,” James Cleverly, the shadow home secretary and Tory leadership candidate, told The Times. “This is a man who campaigned for a second referendum and said all immigration laws were racist. The EU cannot wait to play Labour like a fiddle.”
Starmer hoping to meet Trump and Harris during US visit
Sir Keir Starmer has said that he hopes to meet both Donald Trump and Kamala Harris ahead of the US election in November.
The Prime Minister said that it would be “very good” to hold talks with the Republican and Democrat candidates for the White House.
He made the remarks as he headed to New York to speak at the UN General Assembly on Thursday.
No 10 is understood to be trying to set up meetings with both politicians whilst Sir Keir is in the United States this week.
The Prime Minister said: “As far as the candidates are concerned, if possible, it would be very good to meet both of them at some stage before the election.
“We’ll just have to see what’s possible.”
Sir Keir has made concerted efforts to build bridges with both camps ahead of the US election, which will take place on Nov 5.
He was the first world leader to phone Mr Trump after the assassination attempt on the former US president’s life in July.
Labour has naturally close ties with the Democrats, a fellow Left-wing party, with Ms Harris adopting some of Sir Keir’s election strategy.
The Prime Minister headed to the UN summit with a declaration that Britain is “returning to responsible global leadership” under his administration.
He said that talks with fellow world leaders are set to focus on the response to the situation in Israel and Lebanon as well as the Ukraine war.
“I think what will dominate is the Middle East and recent developments and, of course, Ukraine,” Sir Keir said.
“So I think that’ll be pretty central. And it will be really important for us to have the conversations with our allies about the situation in both of those areas.”
Sir Keir will use his speech to the assembly on Thursday to suggest that other countries had lost faith in the UK as an international partner under the Tories.
He will say: “We are returning the UK to responsible global leadership. This is the moment to reassert fundamental principles and our willingness to defend them. To recommit to the UN, to internationalism, to the rule of law.
“Because I know that this matters to the British people. War, poverty and climate change all rebound on us at home. They make us less secure, they harm our economy, and they create migration flows on an unprecedented scale.
“The British people are safer and more prosperous when we work internationally to solve these problems, instead of merely trying to manage their effects. So, the responsible global leadership that we will pursue is undeniably in our self-interest.”
Badenoch accuses Labour of hypocrisy over gifts because of Boris Johnson attacks
Kemi Badenoch has accused Labour of being “hypocrites” for accepting donor gifts while criticising Boris Johnson for taking money to help redecorate Number 10.
The Tory leadership frontrunner defended receiving freebies herself, saying it can allow a hard-pressed politician to spend time with her children.
But she insisted: “You can’t buy me with a glass of Prosecco and smoked salmon.”
Ms Badenoch’s comments come in the wake of Labour’s sleaze row, with ministers under fire for accepting free clothes, holidays and concert tickets.
She told Times Radio: “It’s about hypocrisy. They are being criticised because they are being hypocrites.
“They criticised Boris Johnson for putting wallpaper in a public property.”
This is a reference to claims in 2021 that an undisclosed loan was used to fund new wallpaper in Mr Johnson’s Downing Street flat. Following the furore, Mr Johnson agreed to pay for the refurbishment himself.
Angela Rayner tries to deflect criticism
Ms Badenoch made reference to the 40th birthday party of Bridget Phillipson, the Education Secretary,which was paid for by a donor.
“Once in a while [donors] would ask me to come to something, and my children haven’t seen me for a week and they would like to go,” she said.
“You declare it and you explain what it is you’re doing. Nobody paid for my birthday parties or anything like that.”
Ms Badenoch has taken freebies for an Ed Sheeran concert and a rugby game at Twickenham.
She said: “I think what Labour are failing to do is point out why politicians do this.
“What many people don’t see is the school sports days that I miss or my children crying as they were this weekend because I had to go to hustings, a lot of the constituency functions which you do which mean that you actually miss out on time with your family.
“So if someone says, well, you can do some work and we can have a chat and you get time to spend with your family at something that they probably wouldn’t be able to do normally, you say yes to it.”
On taking her husband to the rugby, she said: “He likes rugby. My husband spends a lot of money subsidising my life as a politician. He has to deal with the fallout.
“So here’s something nice that he can do with me. It doesn’t mean that those people are buying me. You can’t buy me with a glass of Prosecco and smoked salmon.”
Ms Badenoch hit out at Tory leadership rival Robert Jenrick for a poor record as immigration minister, saying things “didn’t go well” under his time in office.
She said that, unlike Mr Jenrick, she was able to campaign on her record in office as business secretary and equalities minister.
She added that while Britain will “probably” need to leave the European Convention on Human Rights in order to tackle the small boats issue, that would not be the major factor in bringing down immigration.
There are now four candidates left in the race to run the Conservative Party: Ms Badenoch, Mr Jenrick, James Cleverly and Tom Tugendhat.
Each will make speeches at next week’s Tory conference, after which MPs will hold two votes to whittle the number down to the final two.
Asked by Times Radio whether she thought Mr Jenrick had done a good job as immigration minister, Ms Badenoch said: “I think it’s an interesting argument to say that things didn’t go well when I was doing the job, but give me another chance.
“I’m standing on my record. I got things done and I can do more. And I think when it comes to immigration, we need to start from first principles.
“This policy of leaving the ECHR is something that we probably will have to do, but it’s not where to start from. We need to start from first principles. What kind of country do we want to be? Why have we been so bad at managing the borders despite wanting to do so?
“More promises are not the answer. We need a plan and we need people who show that they understand the system and know how to fix it.”
Ms Badenoch also ruled out doing an electoral deal with Nigel Farage to help the Tories at the next poll.
She said: “I’m a Conservative. I love competition. It’s another thing that we believe in from first principles.
“But that means doing better than the other lot. We created a vacuum which Reform has filled by not being authentically Conservative or visibly Conservative, by not delivering on our promises. So we have a job to do in order to remove that vacuum.
“I don’t think that there is space for two centre-Right parties but I don’t think the solution is attacking Reform voters. We need to win them back.
“Many of the Reform voters in my constituency were former Conservatives. We’ve got to do that but doing a deal with Farage for me is not on the cards.”
Labour fixer who worked for Lord Alli helped select MPs
Sir Keir Starmer faces a fresh backlash over his relationship with Lord Alli because of the role played by one of the donor’s former staff members in choosing prospective Labour MPs.
Matthew Faulding, who was in charge of candidate selection for this year’s general election, worked in Lord Alli’s office on secondment from his firm BM Creative Management in the months before the poll.
He was blamed by critics of Sir Keir for “parachuting” favoured candidates into constituencies, imposing them on local Labour associations. He is now secretary of the Parliamentary Labour Party, “keeping them all in check” according to one former member of Labour’s National Executive Committee (NEC), who described the arrangement as “rotten to the core”.
It came as Lucy Powell, the Leader of the Commons, said Labour would not change the rules around MPs accepting so-called freebies.
The Labour Party conference has been overshadowed by a row over Lord Alli’s donations to Sir Keir Starmer to buy clothes and spectacles. Lord Alli was given a Downing Street security pass in what has been dubbed the “passes for glasses” controversy.
He is attending the conference but has kept a low profile, shunning the main conference hall and fringe events. On Monday afternoon he was spotted leaving the conference secure zone, when he walked past Bridget Phillipson, the Education Secretary, who did not acknowledge him.
When a reporter for Sky News asked him about the controversy, he said: “Please don’t – this is not very nice.”
Some Labour members are angry that Lord Alli’s influence appears to have extended to the selection of Labour candidates, many of whom are now MPs.
Mark Seddon, a former Labour candidate who served on the NEC and is now director of the Centre for United Nations Studies at the University of Buckingham, said on X: “The same Matt Faulding who fixed the selections is now Secretary of the Parliamentary Labour Party, keeping them all in check. Rotten to the core.”
The journalist Michael Crick reported before the election that candidates parachuted into constituencies included Josh Simons, the former director of the Starmerite think tank Labour Together, who is now MP for Makerfield; Calvin Bailey, MP for Leyton and Wanstead; James Asser, former chair of the NEC and now MP for West Ham and Beckton; and Luke Akehurst, MP for North Durham, who was seen as Sir Keir’s enforcer on the NEC.
Sir Keir had previously promised not to impose candidates on local party associations, but during the general election he was accused of breaking that promise and “riding roughshod” over the wishes of members.
‘Starmtroopers’
Those on the Left of the party accused him of flooding the country with “Starmtroopers” to purge Labour of anyone deemed to have diverged from the party line.
Some members resigned in disgust after having candidates imposed from above rather than being able to interview and select their own candidates.
Mr Faulding, 35, was a deputy director of Progress, the Left-wing think tank, and was also a director of the Lowick Group, a strategic communications consultancy, before he worked for Lord Alli.
‘We want to be transparent’
At a Labour conference fringe event on standards in public life, Ms Powell said she would “very strongly refute” the suggestion that the Government was “in hock” to “vested interests”.
“Campaigning is an expensive business and you do have to raise money. That’s why there are quite tight rules around that and people have fallen foul of it. So perhaps that’s just sort of how things are at the moment and [we have] no plans to change that.”
She acknowledged there were still “many” issues around “culture and behaviour” in politics.
But she said Labour politicians held themselves to higher standards than the Tories, which was “why we are transparent, and we want to be even more transparent around some of these things as well”.
Defending her own record on taking handouts, she said the “vast majority of the so-called freebies” she had accepted were “attending official events” in her former role as the shadow culture secretary.
Lord Alli and the Labour Party were both contacted for comment.
Working from home can be a ‘nightmare’ for young people, says Liz Kendall
The Work and Pensions Secretary has said young people benefit from being in the office, deepening a growing split in the Cabinet over working from home.
Liz Kendall said that young employees working for her during the pandemic had found remote working from shared rental properties “a nightmare” that left them “stressed”.
She said that there was no “one size fits all” answer to home working, but highlighted the social benefits of the office for the young.
Her stance echoes Rachel Reeves, the Chancellor, who has said that she wants civil servants in the office.
However, their comments are at odds with Jonathan Reynolds, the Business Secretary, who said that being able to work from home contributes to “productivity” and “resilience”, and makes a “significant contribution” to tackling regional inequality.
‘Bickering’ ministers
The Tories claimed that the Cabinet was not “on the same page” over home working.
Kevin Hollinrake, the shadow business secretary, said: “This just goes to show that if the Labour front bench can’t figure out what they want between themselves, businesses have no chance of navigating Labour’s byzantine regulations.
“Clearly the Business Secretary has been spending too much time telling some of the most successful businesses in the world how to operate, and forgotten to make sure the rest of the Government is on the same page as him.”
He added: “Ministers should spend less time bickering with themselves and more time engaging with businesses.”
Speaking at the Labour Party conference, Ms Kendall told a fringe event: “I do know from my own experience that many young people wanted to be in [the office], because it was a nightmare working from home and they were stressed, and it was great teamwork. But that was just in my circumstances.”
The Work and Pensions Secretary highlighted the challenges of working from home for young graduates who are often living in shared rental accommodation.
‘True flexibility’
She told delegates at a fringe event hosted by the Institute for Public Policy and Research: “Let me just say, from my perspective, during Covid, when I had a couple of young people start work for me, and they were desperate to get into their office.
“They didn’t want to try to work from home with two or three people in shared accommodation. I mean, this is not just London. They didn’t know people.”
She added: “Different things work for different people, and I think that that’s what true flexibility means.
“And as people of a certain generation, someone called me a veteran MP the other day…. How I worked is completely different from what people my age when I started work expect. So we have to change.
“So I’m not going to say either, ‘Everybody in the office’. Neither am I going to say, ‘Oh, yeah, let’s all work from home’. [It’s] what works for your company, but also for your individuals.”
Earlier on Monday, Ms Reeves said that there was “value” in working from the office.
She told LBC: “I lead by example. That first weekend when I was appointed Chancellor, I arrived at the Treasury at about three or four on a Friday afternoon.
‘Bringing people together’
“We work well into the evening, not just me and my political team, but civil servants. And we came in on a Saturday and a Sunday.
“We did that in the office, not on Zoom, because I do think there is real value in bringing people together and sharing ideas. You’re challenging each other.”
She said that there was “certainly a case for flexible working” to allow parents to take care of children or elderly relatives, but added: “I do think that productivity gains are more likely to happen when you have that sharing of ideas and bringing people together, and I lead by example on that in my department, and I think that it’s, it’s reaping dividends.”
Darren Jones, the Chief Secretary to the Treasury, was asked about his stance on Monday, telling Bloomberg Radio: “Well, I work for the Chancellor, and so I’ll be going to the office.”
Mr Reynolds, who is heading up the New Deal for Working People alongside Angela Rayner, the Deputy Prime Minister, praised working from home in an interview with The Times last week.
He told the newspaper: “We’ve had flexible working laws for quite some time in the UK. I think where people reach agreement with their employer … it does contribute to productivity, it does contribute to their resilience, their ability to stay working for an employer.”
While he said that there “are times when it is absolutely necessary” to have the workforce in the office, he added: “The UK has very significant regional inequality. It could play a significant contribution to tackling that.”
Mr Reynolds criticised Amazon’s move to order staff back into the office five days a week, saying that “flexibility, when agreed between employer and employee, is good for productivity, is good for staff resilience”.
Also at the fringe event, Ms Kendall expressed concern about the growing mental health crisis among young people, and criticised the former government’s approach and rhetoric on the issue.
“I think it’s really important that we don’t just say, ‘Well, buck your ideas up’. You know, as the last government did. ‘Some day you’ve got to toughen up’.
“Is anybody with a young person who’s anxious, trying to even get them to school, just telling them to toughen up? Well, how successful is that?”
‘What on Earth were you thinking?’ judge asks mother who took baby to riot
A young mother who took her baby to a riot at a hotel used by asylum seekers has been spared jail, with a judge asking her: “What on Earth were you thinking?”
Nevey Smith, 21, brought her 20-month-old son in a pram to the disorder outside the Holiday Inn in Newton Heath, Manchester, and threw water at police officers trying to contain the violence.
A large mob descended on the hotel and hurled bottles, bricks and eggs at the building as riots broke out across the country in the wake of the Southport killings on July 29.
Daniel Calder, Smith’s lawyer, told the court that she did not know what an asylum seeker was.
Judge Patrick Field KC, sentencing Smith at Manchester crown court on Monday, told her: “You chose to join, notwithstanding that you had your 20-month-old child in a pushchair.
“What on Earth were you thinking? I doubt you had his safety in mind.”
The judge also told Smith, of Oldham, Greater Manchester, that she had a “lot to learn” and “quite a lot of growing up to do”, labelling her “misguided, naive and immature”.
He added that her role was “minimal and peripheral” as she had not been involved in throwing bricks or encouraging others to do so.
Mr Calder told the court that Smith had not set out to attend the protest on the day, and had been passing the riot when she “foolishly” got involved. He added that she had not expressed discriminatory views.
Smith was given a community order and made to attend reviews at a women’s problem-solving court and carry out 100 hours of unpaid work.
Her mother, Vanessa Smith, 42, was also at the protest and admitted violent disorder. She will be sentenced on Thursday.
Woman and eight-year-old girl found dead at house in Salford
A 40-year-old woman and an eight-year-old girl have been found dead at a property in Salford.
Greater Manchester Police were called to South Radford Street shortly after 10:30am on Monday following reports of a concern for welfare at the property.
Officers attended, with assistance from North West Ambulance Service and Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service, and the bodies of a woman and girl were found at the property.
All known next of kin have been informed and are being supported by specialist officers.
Det Supt Simon Moyles said: “A woman and young girl were both tragically found dead and we are working hard as a team to establish what happened here this morning.
“Whilst we are not actively looking for anyone else in relation to this investigation, I understand the news of their deaths and the large police and emergency services presence at the address will most likely cause some concern to residents and those further afield in Greater Manchester.
“I want to reassure them that we believe this to be an isolated incident with no wider threat in the community.
“A cordon has been put in place and there is a scene contained on South Radford Street. We continue to thank the public for their patience as we respond in the area.
“We have placed a number of highly visible officers to patrol in and around the area should any residents wish to come and talk to us or pass on any information they may have about this tragic incident.”
A Salford City Council spokesman said: “We are aware of the terribly sad news this morning and our thoughts and prayers go out to the family and friends of those who have tragically lost their lives.
“We’re working closely with GMP and assisting them with their ongoing investigation and our teams will be supporting both local residents and council staff who have no doubt been greatly affected by the events today.”
Pictured: Grandmother takes pet giant tortoise for walks around seaside town
A grandmother has struck up a remarkable bond with a giant tortoise that she takes on walks around a seaside town.
Jackie Leek, 58, first bought the African sulcata tortoise she calls Mr Miyagi for company while recovering from cancer 18 months ago.
Since then, the pair have become inseparable and she has taken the eight-year-old tortoise on holiday in her caravan in Morecambe, Lancs, and for regular strolls on the beach.
It weighs around three stone (19kg) and is expected to be around 10 stone (63.5kg) when it is older.
Because it could live to be 120, she has even set up a trust fund to look after it when she has gone.
Despite Mr Miyagi’s size, Ms Leek, who is from Wigan, takes it everywhere she can and says that people often “abandon their cars” to stop and ask for a picture.
She said: “I open the door and he just follows me down the drive and onto the estate, where we live.
“He will just follow me and we have little walks.
“People will abandon their cars when they see us, they will stop and ask if he’s real and if they can touch him.
“I take him to the beach and there’s a little quiet bit where I take him.
“But I went there on a bank holiday Monday and before I knew it, we were surrounded by people and everyone was having a photo shoot with him – it was mad.”
Ms Leek was diagnosed with myeloma, a type of blood cancer that develops in the bone marrow, and breast cancer about four years ago.
After having radiotherapy, she would feel lonely, so decided to go to the pet shop, where she purchased a tortoise called Thor.
Ms Leek would often walk Thor in a pram, but it died three years after she bought it.
The mum of two then decided to rescue Mr Miyagi, who was originally called Arthur Pendragon.
Ms Leek, who lives in Warrington, Cheshire, said: “I never had an interest in reptiles or tortoises ever – I’m terrified of snakes.
“I never thought I would get a tortoise. He helps me loads, I do have some dark days.
“I’m getting stronger after my diagnosis, but Mr Miyagi is helping me.
“I couldn’t go back to work because of my immune system and I have to watch where I go and what I do, so he’s a massive part of my life.
“He gives me a purpose and when I’m crying, he sits there and I talk to him.”
Mr Miyagi loves eating romaine lettuce and dandelions, and sometimes has green beans, strawberries and tomatoes as a treat.
It also enjoys sitting in a children’s sand pit that has been filled up with water, but has been known to “rearrange the furniture” when Jackie has left her house.
Ms Leek, a former nurse said: “He takes himself off to bed at around 5pm and he will sleep until 8am unless I get up and he hears me in the kitchen.
“Before I do anything, I get a children’s sand pit and he stands next to me while I fill it with hot water and my partner lifts him into the bath.”
The trust fund set up for Mr Miyagi will make sure that whoever takes care of it after Ms Leek can afford it.
She said: “I’ve made plans for when I’m not here so my partner will keep him for as long as he can.
“After that, I’m hoping my daughter will take him and I’ve left money with him because they aren’t cheap and [he] has the best insurance and the best vets.
“If my daughter can’t have him or thinks that she doesn’t want him, then my partner has two sons, so I’m hoping they could even have him.
“If not, I’m sure there will be a home for him somewhere but you just don’t know.”
Five injured after bomb set off at courthouse
Five people were taken to hospital in California after a man allegedly set off an improvised explosive device in a courthouse.
A suspect was arrested on Wednesday morning after allegedly detonating the makeshift device in the lobby of the Santa Maria Courthouse, in the city of Santa Maria.
The resulting explosion injured five people and prompted the closure of the court complex and other city buildings, officials said.
Bill Ausman, a lawyer, said the suspect was “screaming that over 900,000 people a year are being killed” by the US government’s Food and Drug Administration when he arrived at the courthouse.
“I heard an explosion and someone screaming, ‘It’s a bomb, it’s a bomb, it’s a bomb,’” he said.
Mr Ausman described how he saw a man tackled by law enforcement as he tried to run while dozens of bystanders fleed. “It was really chaotic,” he added.
Sandy Doucette, a spokesman for Marian Regional Medical Center, said the hospital was treating five patients in connection with the explosion. Two were said to be in good condition and three in fair condition on Wednesday.
Darrel Parker, the court executive officer in Santa Barbara County, said the explosion occurred in the first-floor lobby of the criminal court building, which serves as the entryway and weapons screening point for the court campus.
Anyone who wants to go to criminal, civil or other courts would have to pass through there to do so, he said, adding: “I am not certain that the suspect made it past weapons screening.”
Loud bang
Shane Mellon, a witness, told KSBY-TV that he was at the courthouse when he heard a “loud bang” and was escorted away by a court officer.
Mr Mellon said he saw a man screaming while four or five people climbed on top of him, trying to keep him restrained.
“I think this could have been way worse than it was if not for the deputies just jumping on top of that guy,” he continued.
The office of Gavin Newsom, the California Governor said it was monitoring the situation and coordinating with local law enforcement.
The courts were closed on Wednesday and filing extensions will be offered for those affected by the shutdown. Mr Parker said he expected the court to resume operations on Thursday.
Patrols were stepped up at courthouses in neighboring Los Angeles County, the local sheriff’s department said.
Santa Maria City Hall, which is near the courthouse, was also closed Wednesday due to the ongoing investigation, said Mark van de Kamp, the city’s spokesman.
The courthouse holds state and county courts in the city of Santa Maria, which is about 150 miles northwest of Los Angeles. Two decades ago, the courthouse was where Michael Jackson was tried and acquitted of sexual abuse.
Neo-Nazi-linked woman plotted to destroy Baltimore’s power grid
A woman with links to a neo-Nazi group plotted to destroy Baltimore’s power grid in an attempt to destabilize the government according to court records.
Sarah Beth Clendaniel, 36, planned to target five electricity substations around Maryland’s largest city to further a white supremacist ideology that called for the collapse of American society, prosecutors said.
The Washington Post reported Clendaniel had earlier admitted to support for a white-supremacist ideology known as “accelerationism,” which suggests drastic actions are needed to bring about “societal and government collapse”.
“The Justice Department will continue to aggressively counter, disrupt and prosecute those who seek to launch these kinds of hate-fueled attacks that target our critical infrastructure, endanger entire cities, and threaten our national security,” Merrick Garland, the US attorney general, said in a statement.
Clendaniel pleaded guilty in April to conspiracy to damage an energy facility and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.
Clendaniel was recorded telling an associate that the plan, if successful, “would completely destroy this whole city,” according to prosecutors.
Sedira Banan, a lawyer for Clendaniel, asked a judge to impose a 10-year prison sentence, arguing that she had had a difficult upbringing and “sought meaning and control in toxic beliefs and planning of destruction,” according to a court filing.
“Her inherent goodness may at times be buried beneath destructive ideologies, but it is not destroyed,” the lawyer said.
Clendaniel was sentenced to 18 years behind bars followed by supervised release for the rest of her life.
Clendaniel was charged last year along with Brandon Russell, the founder of a neo-Nazi group called the Atomwaffen Division, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center, a civil rights organization that tracks US hate groups.
Russell pleaded not guilty and is awaiting trial in his case.
Labour’s non-dom plan could raise no extra funds, officials fear
Officials believe that Sir Keir Starmer’s crackdown on non-doms could reduce tax revenues rather than raise them, it has been reported.
According to The Guardian, treasury sources are worried that new estimates could suggest the money raised may be exceeded by the costs of super-rich individuals leaving Britain.
Currently, non-doms can avoid paying tax on overseas income and gains for up to 15 years.
But from April 2025, this system will be scrapped and replaced by a less generous residence-based regime that only allows wealthy foreigners to claim the tax break for four years.
The Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) originally forecast that scrapping the tax status could raise about £3.2 billion a year.
At the time, the watchdog admitted that this estimate was highly uncertain because it was difficult to predict how non-doms would react to the proposals.
But senior government sources have told The Guardian they fear that new estimates set to be released by the OBR will reveal that the policy is predicted to raise no extra tax.
A Treasury source told the newspaper that ministers would listen to what the OBR said on tax and would prioritise the raising of greater revenues.
It was reported that the Chancellor is understood to be minded to press ahead with the tax changes at next month’s Budget and has publicly made a moral case in favour of the wealthy making a greater contribution.
If correct, the new forecasts would leave a £1 billion hole in the Government’s spending plans for schools and hospitals.
Labour had previously said it would spend £1 billion raised through the policy on universal school breakfast clubs and more hospital and dental appointments.
But its plans could be scuppered if the super-rich instead limit the amount of time they spend in Britain.
Earlier this month, Oxford Economics forecast that Britain’s non-dom population could fall by 32 per cent because of Labour’s reforms and that tax revenue could subsequently drop by £0.9 billion in 2029-30 because fewer wealthy foreigners will be living in the country.
The end of non-dom status was first announced by the Conservatives in March at the Spring Budget.
The party claimed that the move, set to be rolled out in April next year, would raise £2.7 billion.
Labour has proceeded with those plans and claims that closing loopholes in the Tories’ non-dom abolition plans would raise a further £2.6 billion over the course of this Parliament.
Around 55,000 non-doms claim tax relief in Britain, according to HMRC.
Non-doms only have to pay tax to the Treasury on the money they earn in Britain, meaning they are not taxed on earnings made overseas.
Kamala Harris insists ‘I am a capitalist’ in speech on tax
Kamala Harris has declared herself a “capitalist” who “knows the limitations of government” in an attempt to counter Donald Trump’s accusation that she is a communist.
Speaking in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on Wednesday, the vice-president sought to present herself as a pragmatist and to allay voters’ concerns about her ideological past.
Ms Harris pointed to a series of economic policies already announced by her campaign, including expanded tax credits for middle-class Americans and plans to encourage domestic manufacturing to counter Chinese imports.
She said that while she was a “devout public servant” she also “knows the limitations of government,” and that while she supports workers and unions she would “engage those who create most of the jobs in America”.
“Look, I am a capitalist,” she said. “I believe in free and fair markets. I believe in consistent and transparent rules of the road, to create a stable business environment. And I know the power of American innovation.”
The speech comes after a series of attacks on Ms Harris by Trump, who has dubbed her “Comrade Kamala” and compared her pledge to impose a federal ban on price gouging to Soviet-era price controls.
Republicans have criticised her background as a liberal prosecutor and senator in California, where she suggested decriminalising illegal border crossings.
Wednesday’s speech marked her latest attempt to convince moderate Republicans to abandon Trump, by presenting herself as a common-sense policymaker who would listen to conservative viewpoints.
“As president, I will be grounded in my fundamental values of fairness, dignity and opportunity, and I promise you I will be pragmatic in my approach,” she said.
“I believe we shouldn’t be constrained by ideology, and should instead seek practical solutions to problems, realistic assessments of what is working and what is not.”
Taking good ideas
In a hint that she would consider Right-wing ideas on the economy, she added: “Part of being pragmatic means taking good ideas from wherever they come.”
Ms Harris has said she plans to appoint a Republican to her Cabinet, and has welcomed a swathe of GOP endorsements of her ticket, including from Dick Cheney, the vice-president to George W Bush.
Polls show she consistently trails Trump on the economy, although his lead is narrowing. The high cost of groceries and other domestic goods remains her most significant challenge with voters, and also in presenting a narrative of change in this campaign.
As Ms Harris spoke, her campaign published a comprehensive list of her policy proposals in an 82-page pamphlet.
It contained endorsements from leading economists and condemnation of Trump’s economic proposals, including greater tariffs on imports Ms Harris describes as a “sales tax”.
Like Trump, Ms Harris has proposed increasing domestic goods production to counter Chinese imports, especially in states with manufacturing heritage, like Pennsylvania.
The Midwest forms the backbone of her campaign and could win her the required 270 electoral college votes, if she succeeds in her attempt to take Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Michigan.
Karoline Leavitt, the Trump campaign’s press secretary, said in response to the vice-president’s speech that “[Ms Harris has] had three and a half years to prove herself, and she has failed.”
She added: “Personal savings are down, credit card debt is up, small business optimism is at a record-low, and people are struggling to afford homes, groceries, and gas.
“Every time Kamala speaks, it becomes increasingly clear that only President Trump will make America wealthy again.”
Speaking earlier on Wednesday at his own campaign event in North Carolina, Trump dismissed Ms Harris’s economic proposals and said she did not care about blue-collar workers.
He also said he would not permit taxes on Social Security for older adults “who have been devastated by inflation”.
“We’re going to have no tax on Social Security for our seniors,” he said.
“If any senior doesn’t vote for Trump, we’re gonna have to send you to a psychiatrist to have your head examined.”
Well-behaved prisoners may go free early to cut overcrowding
Prisoners could be released earlier from jail for good behaviour under Texas-style penal reforms being considered by ministers…
Comedian Janey Godley receiving end-of-life care for terminal cancer
Comedian Janey Godley has revealed she is receiving end-of-life care after her ovarian cancer spread.
The Scottish comic said in a video shared on social media that she will enter a hospice because she is “near the end”.
Godley, 63, found viral fame during the pandemic with dubbed pastiches of Nicola Sturgeon’s coronavirus news briefings.
“So I’m now in palliative care and I’m at end-of-life care now in the hospital,” she said in the video posted on X, formerly Twitter. “The chemo ran out of options and I just couldn’t take any more of it and the cancer has spread.
“So it looks like this will be getting to near the end of it and it’s really difficult to speak about this and say to people.”
Godley revealed she had ovarian cancer in November 2021 but was given the all-clear the following year. Chemotherapy kept the cancer at bay but earlier this month she cancelled a forthcoming tour after it returned.
In the self-recorded video, she added: “It is devastating news to know that I’m facing end-of-life but we all come to an end sometime.
“I want to thank everybody for supporting the family, especially [my daughter] Ashley and my husband. The overwhelming support has been amazing, and I don’t know how long I’ve got left before anybody asks.”
Godley was a regular co-presenter on BBC Radio 4’s Loose Ends, as well as fronting BBC Radio 4 series The C Bomb.
The comedian protested against Donald Trump at his Turnberry golf resort in 2016 with a sign saying he was “unwelcome”.
In 2023, she became the winner of the inaugural Sir Billy Connolly Spirit of Glasgow Award at the Glasgow International Comedy Festival.
Ms Sturgeon, the former Scottish first minister, paid tribute to Godley following her announcement on Wednesday night. She said: “Sending you so much love, my friend. You are an inspiration.”
Pc Andrew Harper’s widow hits back at police boss over alleged sexual remarks
The widow of a constable killed on duty hit back at the former chairman of the Police Federation after being told he made a sexually suggestive comment about her, a gross misconduct hearing has been told.
Lissie Harper described the alleged comments as “highly inappropriate”, the panel considering the charges against John Apter heard.
Mrs Harper also suggested Mr Apter had abused his senior position by making the alleged remark just months after her 28-year-old husband Andrew lost his life.
Mr Apter, who was chairman of the federation, which represents rank and file officers, between 2018 and 2021, is said to have told colleagues: “I wouldn’t mind looking after her tonight” and “I’d like to comfort her in my hotel room” as Mrs Harper prepared to collect a posthumous award for her husband in 2020.
He is also accused of touching a much younger officer’s bottom on the night of the annual police bravery awards, and telling a pregnant colleague “maybe you’ll get a bum now”.
The Hampshire Constabulary gross misconduct hearing was told Mrs Harper attended an awards ceremony at the Annual Roads Policing Conference in January 2020 to collect an award on behalf of her husband.
The Thames Valley Police roads officer had been dragged to his death by three teenagers in a getaway car as he responded to a burglary call in August 2019, just a month after the couple’s wedding.
During the ceremony, Mr Apter gave a speech and presented Mrs Harper with the award.
Cecily White, a barrister representing Hampshire Constabulary, said the night before the ceremony, Mr Apter allegedly made remarks about Mrs Harper to colleagues.
Ms White said: “In the context of a discussion about [Mrs Harper] attending the event, which would have been quite stressful for her, he said, ‘I’d like to comfort her in my hotel room’, with an obvious sexual connotation.”
The misconduct panel was told that on hearing about the alleged comment, Mrs Harper had said if it was true it was “highly inappropriate from someone in that position”.
Mrs Harper has not been called to give evidence at the hearing.
Martin Buhagiar, the former head of communications of the Police Federation, told the hearing Mr Apter regularly engaged in “locker room bloke banter”, and claimed he had “got used to” comments such as the one allegedly made about Mrs Harper.
Mr Buhagiar said the main priority at the awards ceremony was taking care of Mrs Harper as it was her first public appearance since her husband’s death, and a group of colleagues were discussing it.
“We wanted to make sure everything was done in the right way,” Mr Buhagiar said.
“Somebody said something along the lines of if she needs comforting we bring her in in the right way, and if she needs a pause we afford her that pause.
“I remember him [Mr Apter] saying something like, ‘I’d like to comfort her in my hotel room.’
“It took me a few seconds to hear it because at first I took it as him saying he could look after her, but then the penny dropped and there was an awkward silence.”
Mr Buhagiar said after the awkward silence, he quickly wrapped up the conversation and the group of colleagues disbanded.
‘Drunk at bravery awards’ claim
When asked why he had not raised the comment with Mr Apter immediately, Mr Buhagiar said: “My style was never to confront people in a crowd.
“John and I worked together for years and we had conversations in private, I didn’t want to turn it into a bigger issue.”
Mr Buhagiar claimed that at the police bravery awards in October 2021, Mr Apter had been drinking from a hip flask throughout the evening.
He added that at the end of the evening Mr Apter had filmed a short video interview about how the night went, but it could not be used because he was too drunk.
Mr Apter, who has retired after a 30-year police career, denies the claims and the hearing continues.
Putin rewrites nuclear doctrine in new threat
Vladimir Putin escalated his nuclear threats against the West on Wednesday, saying that any attack on Russia using conventional weapons supported by a nuclear power would now be perceived as a joint strike…