Qatar suspends role as mediator between Israel and Hamas
Qatar has suspended its work as a mediator in ceasefire and hostage release talks between Israel and Hamas, officials say.
The country said it would resume its work when Hamas and Israel “show their willingness” to negotiate.
It comes after senior US officials reportedly said Washington would no longer accept the presence of Hamas representatives in Qatar, accusing the Palestinian group of rejecting fresh proposals for an end to the war in Gaza.
Qatar said initial reports it had withdrawn from mediation talks and said that Hamas’s political office in Doha “no longer serves its purpose” were “inaccurate”.
“Qatar notified the parties 10 days ago during the last attempts to reach an agreement, that it would stall its efforts to mediate between Hamas and Israel if an agreement was not reached in that round,” a statement from the Qatari foreign ministry said.
“Qatar will resume those efforts… when the parties show their willingness and seriousness to end the brutal war.”
Hamas has had a base in the Qatari capital since 2012, reportedly at the request of the Obama administration.
Several news agencies reported on Saturday that Qatar had agreed with the US to tell Hamas to close its political office in Doha due to “a refusal to negotiate a deal in good faith”.
But the foreign ministry said the reports were “inaccurate”. The claims have also been denied by Hamas officials.
The small but influential Gulf state is a key US ally in the region. It hosts a major American air base and has handled many delicate political negotiations, including with Iran, the Taliban and Russia.
Alongside the US and Egypt, the Qataris have also played a major role in rounds of so-far unsuccessful talks to broker a ceasefire in the year-long war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza.
But there is growing evidence of a shift in the relationship.
After the killing of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, Hamas held a two-hour mourning tent in Doha in a small hall, a stark contrast to the recent three-day mourning held for Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh, which was conducted with official state oversight and security.
The latest round of talks in mid-October failed to produce a deal, with Hamas rejecting a short-term ceasefire proposal. The group has always called for a complete end to the war and the full withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza.
The Qatari foreign ministry statement said: “Media reports regarding the Hamas office in Doha is inaccurate.”
“The main goal of the office in Qatar is to be a channel of communication… [which] has contributed to achieving a ceasefire in previous stages.”
Israel has also been accused of rejecting deals. Days after being fired earlier this week, former Defence Minister Yoav Gallant accused Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of rejecting a peace deal against the advice of his security chiefs.
The call for Hamas to be expelled from Qatar appears to be an attempt by the outgoing Biden administration to force some sort of peace deal before the end of his term in January.
Were Hamas to be forced to leave Doha, it is unclear where they would base their political office. Key ally Iran would be an option, although the assassination of former leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran in July suggests they may be at risk from Israel if based there. It would also not give them anything close to the same diplomatic channels to the West.
A more likely option would be Turkey. As a Nato member but also a Sunni majority state, it would give the group a base from which to operate in relative safety. Last April President Erdogan hosted then Hamas political chief Ismail Haniyeh and his delegation in Istanbul, where they talked about “what needs to be done to ensure adequate and uninterrupted delivery of humanitarian aid to Gaza, and a fair and lasting peace process in the region”.
The move would also most likely be welcomed by Ankara, which has often sought to position itself as a broker between east and west.
Key Hamas figures such as Osama Hamdan, Taher al-Nunu, and others frequently featured on news outlets have been staying in Istanbul for over a month.
Their extended presence in Turkey marks a departure from past visits, which were typically limited to brief stays.
It is thought the personal safety of Hamas leadership is now a major concern for the group, which saw two leaders killed in less than four months. As well as Haniyeh’s death in July, in October Israel killed Yahya Sinwar, the mastermind behind the 7 October Hamas attack on southern Israel.
According to the European Council of Foreign Relations, “Hamas has adopted a temporary model of collective leadership to mitigate the effect of future Israeli assassinations”.
H A Hellyer, a senior associate fellow at the Royal United Services Institute (Rusi), told the BBC that nowhere “will give them protection from Israeli assassination attempts in the same way that being in Doha, where America has its largest military base in the region, did”.
The latest move comes as US officials appear increasingly frustrated with the approach the Israeli government has taken to ending the war. In October, the US Secretaries of State and Defense said if Israel did not allow more humanitarian aid into the territory by 12 November, they would face unspecified policy “implications”.
Last weekend a number of UN officials warned the situation in northern Gaza was “apocalyptic”. On Saturday the independent Famine Review Committee said there was a “strong likelihood that famine is imminent in areas”.
The relationship between President Joe Biden and Netanyahu has deteriorated over the course of the war in Gaza, with increasing pressure from Washington to improve the humanitarian situation for the Palestinians and find some sort of negotiated settlement.
But, according to Dr Hellyer, US attempts at negotiation have been fatally flawed.
“By setting red lines and allowing Netanyahu to cross them without consequence, the Biden administration effectively encouraged further impunity. I don’t think any of this will change in the next 10 weeks,” he said.
Any overtures have been repeatedly rejected by Netanyahu and his right-wing coalition, who will now also feel emboldened by the prospect of an incoming Donald Trump presidency.
While exactly what approach Trump will take to the region remains uncertain, he is thought to be more likely to allow Israel to act on its terms.
He has previously said Israel should “finish what they started” in Gaza. During his last term in the White House, he took a number of steps deemed highly favourable to Israel, including moving the US embassy to Jerusalem.
It has also been reported, however, that Trump has told Netanyahu that he wants to see an end to the fighting by the time he takes office.
Either way, it seems likely that the current US administration will have less influence over the government in Jerusalem.
They may therefore believe the best way to force some sort of deal is to apply pressure on Hamas. Whether it pays off may depend on whether Qatar, so long a reliable ally, decides to go along with it.
‘Life turned to dust’: A family’s grief after Spain floods
Like every parent in Valencia that day, Victor Matías had quickly changed his plans, fearing what could be on the way.
The rain was still thundering down, but by now – early evening – he had managed to leave work early, safely pick up his boys from nursery and was about to make their favourite dinner – croquetas.
The crispy fried rolls of mashed potatoes, stuffed full of cheese and ham, would be a treat for Izan, 5, and Rubén, 3, while their mum Marta finished her late shift at the supermarket in town.
We have pieced together the tragic chronology of what happened next.
Our picture emerges from the testimony of neighbours and relatives we spoke to, as well as what Victor was able to recall himself along with other first-hand accounts given to local media.
The crushing story of the Matías family has generated huge attention in Spain. Many have followed updates on “Los niños desaparecidos” – the missing children – as they have been frequently described.
But this one family’s grief is many people’s grief as it’s a nightmare replicated across the Valencia region which was hammered by flash flooding nearly two weeks ago, killing at least 219 people.
More than 90 are still missing.
Utter devastation
When we arrived at the family home, a few days after the deluge, it was languishing in a sea of destruction.
That startling statistic – a year’s worth of rain had been dumped on some parts of Valencia in a matter of hours – became easy to believe as you took all this in.
Huge metal containers – broken free from their articulated lorries – rested at unfathomable angles amid a jumble of cars, crumpled furniture and treacherous mud.
One of the few things still intact was the door to what had been the boys’ bedroom; the bright, white individual letters spelling their names standing out in a sea of brown.
Picking his way through this mess was Jonathan Perez, their next-door neighbour, who began to relive the terrifying sequence of events. “It was madness” he said. “I’ve never seen such force.”
Jonathan explained to us how the raging torrent had scooped up trucks parked next door to the Matías family home with one smashing through an external wall.
He said that Victor had explained to him how he’d grabbed his sons in his arms as the water dragged them all outside.
Then – despite his desperate efforts to keep hold of them – they were gone.
Victor was found around four hours later, more than 200m away.
He had been clinging to a tree.
His mother – the boys’ grandma – revealed that Victor had been ready to throw himself into the torrent and surrender to his fate, but then stopped.
He told himself he could not leave his wife alone.
Family paradise shattered
For five-year-old Izan and Rubén, three, few places felt safer than the playground that was their house and garden.
Their aunt, Barbara Sastre, told us they were like little bugs – “bichetes” – an endearing description to convey how they buzzed around, that is, when they weren’t absorbed by their cartoons.
“They were such happy kids,” she told us.
Izan and Rubén’s parents had bought the property from a man called Francisco Javier Arona.
Javi – as he’s known – told EFE, the Spanish news agency, that the home had become “a paradise” for the Matías family.
He said he himself had lovingly constructed the house in La Curra, a neighbourhood of Mas del Jutge, in a colonial style over three years.
Javi said he’d affixed ornamental amphoras and delicate clay stars beneath a sweeping arch.
Outside, there was little traffic in the cul-de-sac, meaning the boys could run around carefree with little perceptible danger.
Family house surrounded by trucks
The impending storm gathering on 29 October was a very big danger, and so Victor closed his business early and picked up his boys from the nursey so that he could keep them safe and dry at home, as the rain fell harder and harder.
The force of the downpour became incredible, and soon the power was cut.
The brothers’ grandma, Antonia María Matías, a 72 year old cancer patient, told ABC Sevilla that she had called her son Victor at around 18:00 and heard the brothers crying.
The water around them was rising all the time. But still, they were safe for now.
It may have been their haven, but the family home was also next to a lorry park.
Jonathan Perez, their next door neighbour, explained to us how this played a deadly role.
He said, “The father told us that there was a truck that hit the back of the house and the force of the water tore away everything.”
“Victor regained his footing and carried the boys in his arms. But then he realised he no longer had them. The water took everything in its path,” he explained.
Barbara Sastre, the boy’s aunt also told us at least one truck had sliced open the house in a blow that precipitated the boys and their dad being swept towards the nearby ravine.
The unnamed owner of the parking lot from where the trucks came told one newspaper they had not hit the family house. He insisted it was the strength of the water that did the fatal damage.
Jonathan, the neighbour, encapsulated the seething anger millions of Spaniards are feeling. Particularly, at the fact the official red alert sent to mobile phones came at 20:00 – far too late.
“They were loving life and they hadn’t even started being people, they were three and five years old,” he said.
“With better co-ordination, better management, and an earlier alarm – even half an hour earlier – those kids could have been saved and those parents would not be going through hell.”
The frantic search for the boys
The whole neighbourhood in La Curra, stunned and shattered by the violence of the flooding, immediately began to search for the missing Izan and Rubén.
At least they did once the water had receded sufficiently for them to climb down from trees and clamber off their cars and try to reorientate themselves.
They were helped by police officers from nearby Alicante, including a friend of Victor’s, who quickly arrived and began a desperate search.
But where to start?
Cars, bricks, bed frames had been carried hundreds of metres from where they once stood.
A team of firefighters from Mallorca and then Civil Protection volunteers from the island of Ibiza also came and scoured the most hard-to-reach areas.
Despite nearly two weeks of intensive daily searches, the brothers have not been found.
Life ‘turned to dust’
In the hours before everything changed, Marta – the mother of the boys – had started her late shift at the shop, safe in the knowledge their dad would be picking them up from school and taking them home.
In the early hours of the next morning, she was told her boys were gone.
Relatives say they can’t describe what Marta is experiencing.
The boy’s grandma, Antonia María, said her son Victor’s life had been destroyed – in her own words “turned to dust”.
As he was recovering in hospital, Victor took to sleeping with his boys’ blankets – salvaged from the ruins of their family home – resting on his face.
It is the closest he can be to them now.
‘Smaller R in the royal’ – How Prince William wants to do things differently
The Prince of Wales has said he wants to use his royal role differently and make it relevant for a younger generation.
It’s a sign of his view of modern royalty, and came while speaking to reporters at the end of his trip to South Africa for his Earthshot environmental prize.
Throughout, Prince William has spoken openly at times, not just about his role but also his family.
“I can only describe what I’m trying to do, and that’s I’m trying to do it differently and I’m trying to do it for my generation,” he told us. “And to give you more an understanding around it, I’m doing it with maybe a smaller R in the royal, if you like, that’s maybe a better way of saying it.”
His use of the word “smaller R in royal” is an insight into Prince William’s view of his role in public life.
The pomp and ceremony of royalty doesn’t always sit easily with Prince William, neither does some of the leadership he has seen globally.
“It’s more about impact philanthropy, collaboration, convening, and helping people. And I’m also going to throw empathy in there as well, because I really care about what I do. It helps impacts people’s lives. And I think we could do with some more empathetic leadership around the world.”
I have spent the past week with Prince William on his visit to South Africa.
It’s the longest period of time he’s spent with the media this year and he’s been more open than perhaps many of us had expected.
He was pretty relaxed and spoke freely about his family and his role as Prince of Wales both on and off the record.
The chat was often light hearted – how he was settling into his wardrobe of sustainable clothing, the perils of having a beard when your daughter doesn’t like it and the ‘papa’ bracelet she made for him when he took his children to see Taylor Swift.
But the impact of the past year was also on show.
Seeing and talking to Prince William up close, it’s clear the toll it has taken with both his wife and his father undergoing cancer treatment.
As he put it, it has been “the hardest year of my life”.
Add to that, the burden of being a senior Royal and a future King which has hung heavily over Prince William.
The formality that comes with the job and the need to live some of your life in the public gaze haven’t sat comfortably at times.
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He has found a peace by trying to carve out the role of Prince of Wales in his own way.
His aim is to a have a smaller number of projects to work on where he can make a greater impact
But it’s a risk.
His two big projects, the Earthshot Prize and Homewards, his homelessness project, are not free of politics.
They both also leave him open to accusations of hypocrisy – the wealthy prince, with the comfort of privilege, from his palaces and castles telling us how to make the world a better place.
Prince William also began his trip to South Africa amidst reports questioning the transparency of the royal family’s finances and income.
Those close to the prince say he is well aware of this criticism but it would be far worse if he did nothing, and they argue that privilege shouldn’t prevent you trying to improve the lives of others.
Questioned about the future, Prince William said both he and the Princess of Wales would hopefully be doing more public duties together next year and described how they both wanted to bring something different to the organisations they support.
“I sit here right now doing Earthshot and doing all the projects I’m doing, like Homewards as well. And who knows what’s going to come next, but it all centres around those values of trying to help deliver change and make those lives better.”
Melania Trump, enigmatic first lady who might do it differently this time
A day after her husband’s big election night win, Melania Trump took to social media to address the nation.
“The majority of Americans have entrusted us with this important responsibility,” Mrs Trump said.
“We will safeguard the heart of the republic – freedom,” she vowed, and urged Americans to rise above ideology for the sake of the country.
It was a brief message, but suggested a shift in how the former first lady will approach the role this second time around.
When Trump won his first presidency in 2016, his wife was initially absent from the White House, instead staying in New York with their young son. She appeared reticent, at times, with the traditions set out by first ladies that preceded her.
But experts say that this time, Mrs Trump will likely be more deliberate with her approach to the largely undefined role of being America’s First Lady.
Born Melanija Knavs, the 54-year-old Slovenian-American former fashion model eventually traded a glamorous life in the gilded walls of Manhattan’s Trump Tower for the confines of political life that came with the Oval Office, during a presidency that was often mired in controversy.
Described by some as an “enigma”, Mrs Trump has preferred to be less public than her predecessors, giving fewer speeches both in the White House and on the campaign trail.
“She’s been unique among modern first ladies,” said Tammy Vigil, an associate professor of communications at Boston University and author of a book on Michelle Obama and Melania Trump.
“She does things the way she wants to do them, as opposed to the way she has to do them. But she fulfils the base expectations.”
In recent years, she avoided the spotlight as her husband challenged several legal cases against him while he campaigned for a second term.
Her absence inspired several news articles this summer asking: “Where is Melania?”
Mrs Trump did appear on key occasions, like when her husband announced in late 2022 that he would be running again.
She also attended the Republican National Convention in July wearing a bright red Christian Dior suit, but did not deliver a speech – another break from tradition.
When she does speak, her words appear carefully chosen, offering hints to her point of view.
At her husband’s Madison Square Garden rally just weeks before Election Day, she delivered short but pointed remarks in line with the Trump campaign’s law and order messaging, painting New York City as a “great metropolis” in decline due to rampant crime.
She also spoke after the first assassination attempt on her husband, calling for unity and labelling the perpetrator a “monster”.
In a rare interview on Fox, she later accused his political opponents and the media of “fuelling a toxic atmosphere” that led to the attack.
Mrs Trump declared her pro-choice stance in her recent memoir, putting her at odds with anti-abortion activists within the Republican Party – though the remarks prompted speculation due to their timing, as her husband was struggling to campaign on the issue after the overturning of Roe v Wade.
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Mrs Trump wrote about her modelling career, her admiration for her husband and their past political disagreements, but chose to keep details of those disputes private.
She has, however, publicly stood by Trump on controversial stances like his false claim that the 2020 presidential election was stolen.
“I am not the only person who questions the results,” she wrote in her book. On the Capitol Riots on 6 January, 2021, she wrote that she “wasn’t aware” of what was taking place because she was preoccupied with her duties.
Her former press secretary, Stephanie Grisham, wrote in her own memoir that Mrs Trump refused to issue a statement condemning the violence, leading Ms Grisham to resign.
Some commentators have questioned whether she enjoyed the role of first lady at all.
One of her biographers, former CNN reporter Kate Bennett, maintains she did despite her early reluctance.
“She liked all the accoutrements that go with being first lady and living in the White House,” Ms Bennett told People magazine in 2021. “I think she actually really enjoyed it.”
In her memoir, Mrs Trump wrote that she has a “strong sense of duty to use the platform as First Lady for good”.
And she said in a 1999 interview that if her then-boyfriend Trump ever ran for president, she would use former first ladies Jacqueline Kennedy and Betty Ford as role models, calling them “very traditional”.
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Mrs Kennedy was a fashion icon who was dedicated to the preservation of the White House, while Mrs Ford was known as a trailblazer who advocated for abortion rights and women’s rights.
After relocating to Washington, Mrs Trump started taking on first lady duties, such as hosting luncheons and state dinners for visiting world leaders. She also focused on White House aesthetics, ordering extensive renovations and overseeing ambitious Christmas decorations (and was once secretly recorded complaining about that last task).
Her clothing was the subject of media fascination and controversy, particularly after she was spotted wearing a jacket with the phrase “I really don’t care, do you?” during a trip to a migrant child detention centre in 2018.
She said the jacket was a message for “the people and the left-wing media” who were criticising her.
Mrs Trump came under fire again after being secretly recorded by her former friend and senior advisor. She was heard expressing her frustration at being criticised for her husband’s policy to separate migrant children from their families.
She later revealed that she had been blindsided by the policy, and had told Trump privately that she did not support it. The policy was dropped by the president in June 2018 after a firestorm of controversy.
Prof Vigil says one of the biggest challenges that Mrs Trump faced in her first term was her political inexperience as well as a revolving door of staff, who were equally inexperienced and at times disloyal.
But Mrs Trump kept quietly busy regardless, Prof Vigil adds, advocating for issues like children’s welfare through her Be Best campaign against online bullying.
She was forced to defend that campaign given her own husband’s aggressive use of social media, telling CBS in 2016 that how he conducted himself online got him in trouble – and boosted his followers.
She also advocated for children affected by the opioid crisis, and has since started a foundation that raises education funds for children in foster care.
Many expect for that work to continue once she moves back to Washington, though it remains unclear if she will live there full-time.
Prof Vigil says the role of first lady has evolved over the years and Mrs Trump will “make choices about how active in public she wants to be”.
“And I think she’ll do that much more intentionally.”
Pakistan railway bomb blast kills at least 25
Authorities say at least 25 people have been killed after a bomb exploded at a railway station in Pakistan’s south-western Balochistan province.
Dozens of others were injured in the blast, which happened as a popular morning train was about to leave Quetta station in southwestern Pakistan for Peshawar.
A separatist militant group, the Balochistan Liberation Army, said it carried out what police are deeming a suicide attack.
There has been a recent surge in deadly attacks in the province, driven by demands for independence and control over local resources.
The city’s commissioner said that the suicide bomber was among the dead, while about 50 others were injured in the blast.
Senior police official Muhammad Baloch said the explosion was thought to have been caused by a suicide bomber carrying 6-8kg of explosives. The dead and injured included both civilians and military personnel, he told the BBC.
Videos shared on social media appear to show the moment the explosion happened on Saturday morning, with dozens of people visible at the platform.
There is also footage circulating of the aftermath, showing a number of injured people and debris spread across the station.
Abdul Jabbar was among the injured brought to the Civil Hospital. He said that he was entering the station, having purchased a ticket from the booking office, when the explosion happened.
“I can’t describe the horror I faced today, it was like a judgement day has come,” he said.
Muhammad Sohail arrived soon after the explosion had happened to catch his train to Multan, in Punjab province.
“Everything was destroyed at the station, and people were laying down on the ground screaming for help,” he said.
The Baloch Liberation Army, which claimed responsibility for the attack, said in a statement released on social media that it had targeted a Pakistan military unit that was returning from Quetta after completing a training course.
Police later confirmed 14 soldiers were among the dead.
The chief minister of Balochistan called the act deplorable and the perpetrators “worse than animals”. Mir Sarfraz Bugti said the authorities would pursue them and “bring them to their logical end”.
The speaker of Pakistan’s National Assembly, Sardar Ayaz Sadiq, condemned the blast, saying those responsible were the “enemies of humanity”.
Balochistan is Pakistan’s largest province and the richest in terms of natural resources, but it is the least developed.
The region shares a volatile border with Iran and Taliban-controlled Afghanistan, and also boasts a vast coastline along the Arabian Sea.
In August, at least 73 people were killed in a series of attacks – which the Baloch Liberation Army also claimed responsibility for – targeting police stations, railway lines and highways, according to Reuters.
The militant separatist group has been waging a decades-long insurgency to gain independence for the region from Pakistan.
Tens of thousands protest in Valencia over floods
Tens of thousands of people have protested in Valencia against authorities’ handling of recent deadly floods, demanding the resignation of regional head Carlos Mazón.
Protesters chanted, “we are stained with mud, you are stained with blood” as they took to the streets on Saturday evening.
More than 200 people died in the flooding, which was caused by torrential rain hitting Valencia and neighbouring provinces in October. Eighty people are still missing.
Protesters have accused local authorities of issuing flood warnings far too late.
Angry protesters clashed with police towards the end of the demonstrations.
Pictures show Valencia City Hall smeared with mud, while the Reuters news agency reports protesters throwing chairs and other objects.
The city’s mayor, María José Catalá, posted pictures of broken windows and a video appearing to show a fire being started on social media, adding: “Vandalism is not the solution.”
Valencia City Council condemned “vandalism”, saying the city had also been affected by the floods.
Anna Oliver, one of the protest organisers, told the Reuters news agency: “We want to show our indignation and anger over the poor management of this disaster which has affected so many people.”
Last week the king and queen of Spain were pelted with mud and other objects by angry protesters during a visit to the town of Paiporta, one of the worst affected.
Objects were also thrown at Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, who was quickly evacuated.
Thousands of people have lost their homes and streets in many areas are still covered in mud and debris.
Mazón, of the conservative Popular Party, has defended his actions. He says his officials did not receive enough warning from central government and the scale of the disaster was unforeseeable.
In Spain, regional governments are responsible for handling disaster response and can ask for extra resources from the central government in Madrid.
Spain’s weather agency issued storm warnings for the region from 25 October, but Valencian authorities did not issue alerts to local mobile phones until hours after flooding started.
The local councillor in charge of emergencies has since admitted she did not know there was a system for sending phone alerts.
Local media report that, as flooding started, Mazón met for lunch with a journalist and did not arrive at an emergency co-ordination meeting until 19:00 local time (18:00 GMT).
Government sources told the El País newspaper this was “irrelevant” and that Mazón was constantly informed of events.
The flooding in Valencia was caused by a Dana phenomenon – when warm, moist air meets cold air, creating an unstable weather system.
Scientists say the warming climate made the floods worse.
Is this tiny Mauritian island a confidential spy station?
Arnaud Poulay never wanted to leave the tiny Indian Ocean island of Agalega, but this year he packed his bag and took off, broken-hearted by what he regards as the militarisation of his home.
Until recently, just 350 people lived on Agalega, fishing and growing coconuts. Other food was delivered four times a year by ship from the capital of Mauritius, 1,100km (680 miles) to the south. A small airstrip was rarely used except in medical emergencies.
But in 2015, Mauritius, an island nation of which Agalega is a part, signed a deal enabling India to build a vast 3,000m runway and a big new jetty there, as part of the two countries’ deepening collaboration on maritime security.
However some Agalegans fear this could grow into a fully-fledged military presence.
Mr Poulay, a 44-year-old handyman and reggae musician, led a campaign against the project.
“I love my island and my island loves me,” he says. “But when that base was unveiled, I knew I had to leave.”
Agalega – two small islands covering 25 sq km, in the south-west Indian Ocean – would be an ideal location for India to monitor marine traffic. And a comparison of satellite images from 2019 with others taken in July this year shows how much has changed.
A carpet of palm trees has made way for the runway, which stretches along the spine of the north island between the two main villages – La Fourche in the north and Vingt-Cinq further south.
Two 60m-wide buildings can be seen sitting on a tarmac apron, at least one of which could be a hangar to accommodate the Indian navy’s P-8I aircraft, according to Samuel Bashfield, a PhD scholar at the Australian National University.
The P-8I is a Boeing 737 modified to hunt and potentially attack submarines, and to monitor maritime communications. Islanders have already photographed the aircraft on the airstrip.
To the north-west is the new jetty jutting out into the ocean, which Mr Bashfield says could be used by Indian surface patrol vessels, as well as the ship that brings supplies to Agalega.
“As newer satellite images become available, we’ll better understand Agalega’s role in Indian Ocean communications,” he says.
The International Institute for Strategic Studies refers to the facility as a “surveillance station” and says it is likely to contain a coastal radar surveillance system similar to Indian-built equipment elsewhere in Mauritius.
The Indian government declined to answer questions about Agalega, and referred the BBC to earlier statements on its website. In one of these, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said India and Mauritius were “natural partners” in maritime security, facing traditional and non-traditional challenges in the Indian Ocean region.
The two countries have had a close defence relationship since the 1970s. The country’s national security adviser, its coastguard chief and the head of the police helicopter squadron are all Indian nationals and officers in India’s external intelligence agency, navy and air force, respectively.
Both sides would want the facility to be seen “as one that is more about capacity building than for any overt military use”, says Prof Harsh Pant, of the India Institute at King’s College London.
It’s no secret, though, that India and its Western allies are concerned about China’s increasing presence in the Indian Ocean.
While it’s not unusual for a large country to establish a military outpost on the territory of a smaller ally, the construction work on Agalega has troubled some islanders.
A number of areas, including some of the island’s palm-fringed white-sand beaches, have already been cordoned off, islanders say. There are also persistent rumours that the village of La Fourche will be swallowed by the Indian infrastructure that has grown up around it, and that the 10 families who live there will be forced out.
“It will become a restricted area completely for Indians,” says Laval Soopramanien, president of the Association of Friends of Agalega.
He fears that “Agalega will become the story of the Chagos islands” – a concern echoed by 26-year-old handyman Billy Henri, who is the son of an Agalegan and a woman expelled from the Chagos islands.
“My mother [lost] her island,” says Mr Henri. “My father will be the next.”
A number of Agalega’s residents are from families scarred by eviction from the Chagos Islands, 2,000km to the east, after the UK government declared them in 1965 to be British territory and granted the US permission to build a communications station on the largest island, Diego Garcia. This gradually became a fully-fledged military base.
Billy Henri fears that the Mauritius government, which owns all land on Agalega and is the only employer, is trying to make conditions so miserable that everyone will leave.
He points to problems with healthcare and education, limited investment in the local economy, a lack of job opportunities, and a ban on local people opening their own businesses.
A Mauritius government spokesman told the BBC that no-one would be asked to leave, and that local people were only prevented from entering the airport and the port – facilities that he said would help the country control piracy, drug-trafficking and unregulated fishing.
Mauritius also denies suggestions that Agalega hosts a military base, saying that the national police are still in full control. However, it acknowledges that India will assist in the “maintenance and operation” of the new facilities, which were built at Indian expense.
The Mauritius and Indian governments say the improvements to sea and air transportation were designed to benefit the islanders and help lift them out of poverty. But local people say this hasn’t happened: there are still only four ferries to the main island of Mauritius every year, and no passenger flights.
Agalegans say they are barred from a new Indian-built hospital, even though a Mauritius government press release vaunted its operating theatres, X-ray machines and dentistry equipment.
Billy Henri says that a boy suffering from cooking oil burns, who needed more help than he could get from the north island’s health centre, was refused entry in October.
“It’s only for Indians!” he says.
The injured boy and his parents were flown to the main island of Mauritius instead. Laval Soopramanien says the boy is still in hospital there, and that the family will remain on the main island until the next boat leaves for Agalega.
The Mauritius government did not respond, when asked to comment on the plight of the boy with burns. The Indian government declined to comment.
In a recent speech to the Mauritius parliament, Prime Minister Pravind Jugnauth said the socio-economic development of Agalega was higher than ever on his government’s agenda.
A “master plan” had been drawn up to improve health and education, transport connections and recreational facilities for the island’s residents, and to develop the fishing sector and the exploitation of coconut by-products, he said.
But distrust is fuelled by the fact that neither India nor Mauritius has published the details of the 2015 memorandum of understanding, so their plans for the future are unknown.
Irish man suspected of killing US nurse arrested in Hungary
A 37-year-old Irish man has been arrested in connection with the murder of an American nurse in Hungary, police say.
Mackenzie Michalski, 31, from Portland, Oregon, was reported missing after a night out in Hungary’s capital, Budapest, on Tuesday.
Officers said the suspect was identified through CCTV footage and later confessed to killing Ms Michalski, but claimed her death had been an accident.
In a statement, put out on Saturday, police said the man had attempted to conceal Ms Michalski’s death by renting a car, putting her body in a suitcase and hiding it in woodland near the village of Szigliget in the country’s west.
Officers said Ms Michalski was killed during an “intimate encounter” with the suspect, but did not provide any further details.
They were able to establish that the pair had met at a nightclub, danced together and then travelled to the man’s rented apartment.
He was arrested there on Thursday evening, and has been remanded in custody.
After being questioned, the suspect showed detectives where he had disposed of Ms Michalski’s body, the police statement said.
It added that the man had placed the nurse’s body in a wardrobe while he cleaned his apartment – in a bid to “remove traces” of the alleged murder – before driving to the woods.
Ms Michalski was reported missing by friends when she failed to return to their accommodation.
During the course of their investigation, police said they uncovered evidence which “gave rise to the suspicion of murder”.
Following Ms Michalski’s disappearance, the man made a series of online searches – including “what does a dead body smell like after it decomposes?”, “how do the police handle missing person cases?”, and “removing rotting meat smell”.
He is also alleged to have searched whether pigs eat dead bodies and about the appearance of wild boar along Lake Balaton – a body of water near Szigliget.
In footage released by Hungarian police, a man in handcuffs can be seen guiding officers through woodland. Sniffer dogs and forensic investigators are present.
A Facebook group, called Find Mackenzie Michalski, says the 31-year-old often went by the nickname Kenzie.
On Saturday, her friends held a candlelit vigil close to the US embassy in Budapest.
‘A disabled South Park character from 24 years ago is getting me harassed today’
I can feel the anger rising. How am I facing this abuse again after 20 years?
My name is Alex. But increasingly young people shout “Timmy” at me in the street. This isn’t mistaken identity – it‘s mockery because I use a wheelchair.
I should ignore it, but this time, I react. I turn to see a group of young teenage boys smirking in front of me. “I heard you,” I tell them. “I know exactly who Timmy is.”
I know this because although we do not share a name, I have felt the shadow of Timmy since childhood – never through choice.
A disabled character from dark-humoured satire cartoon series South Park, he uses a wheelchair and can only shout his name, mainly loudly and uncontrollably.
Growing up at the show’s initial peak during the turn of the millennium, Timmy followed me through school corridors, classrooms and playgrounds – no matter my friends, sociability or relatively good grades.
Now, in my 30s, he’s back. For the third time in a year, this time heading to my local train station in my wheelchair, I hear the familiar, brutish drawl: “Timmaaah.”
A laugh. A snigger. An assumption I either won’t hear or be unable to understand.
When I confront the group of boys, one feigns innocence, claiming he’d been speaking to his friend.
“You weren’t,” I say. “I was watching the show before you were born.”
Initially I was baffled as to how this phenomenon had returned to a new young generation, 24 years after the character first appeared.
The answer lies in social media, particularly TikTok, where hundreds of short user-edited clips of Timmy and audio of him saying his name are sparking the revival.
TikTok users often take part in trends by using the audio of popular videos and overlaying it with their own clips.
That’s what many have done with Timmy, where the name is used as a punchline, or played on top of unrelated clips of wheelchair users, reinforcing harmful and dehumanising stereotypes.
The irony is that the character Timmy is presented with warmth in South Park and given character depth by co-creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker.
An equal in the show’s unflinching satire, his disability isn’t necessarily the butt of the joke.
Timmy is an accepted member of the class: he fails to complete homework, faces adversity and causes trouble with his disabled best friend Jimmy. His personality is conveyed through the different intonations in which he delivers his name.
One episode, Timmy 2000, sees him win a battle of the bands as frontman for a metal group. The adult characters are shown to respond in an over-protective and condescending way – a striking criticism of the way society often treats disabled people.
Nearly 20 years ago, a poll by Ouch! – the former name of the BBC’s disability section – crowned Timmy as the most popular disabled TV character.
Seattle Times’ late disabled critic Jeff Shannon described Timmy as the most “progressive, provocative and socially relevant disability humour ever presented on American television”.
“Without telling viewers what to think, South Park challenges [the audience’s] own fears and foibles regarding disability, and Timmy emerges triumphant,” he wrote in 2005.
In interviews Stone and Parker have spoken of how carefully and purposefully they integrated him into the show.
But two decades later, the fact remains that on meeting Timmy, certainly at first glance, many find him outrageously offensive.
South Park has always worked on multiple levels – offering outrageous forbidden shock value for schoolchildren while delivering crunching adult satire.
None of this nuance is reflected in the TikTok trend, which reduces Timmy, and by extension wheelchair users and disability, to one-dimensional ridicule.
This warped revival parallels the case of Joey Deacon, a man with cerebral palsy whose appearance on Blue Peter in the 1980s backfired to spark playground mockery, with kids shouting “you’re a Joey!”, and “do the Joey face”.
TikTok says its community guidelines strictly prohibit hate speech and content promoting discrimination, violence or harm based on disability.
It removed the videos flagged by the BBC for violating this policy. But it didn’t remove the Timmy sound used on several other videos – meaning it can be used again.
TikTok didn’t respond to a specific question about removing offensive audio.
Ciaran O’Connor, from the Institute for Strategic Dialogue (ISD), a think tank focusing on online hate, says that sounds are a “blind spot in TikTok’s content moderation practices”.
Even if a video with an “original sound” is removed by the platform, the audio usually isn’t, he says.
This makes it a common way of bypassing TikTok’s content moderation guidelines – including for harassment and abuse.
Bullying and trolling of disabled people is still common online. Three in 10 said they’d experienced it in a survey of 4,000 disabled people carried out by charity Scope.
My last experience of having the name hurled at me on the street shocked me not so much in the name-calling, but the absolute lack of contrition shown even when challenged.
It mirrored an experience last year when teenagers, again taunting me, rode off shouting “Timmy is going to run us over.”
Ross Hovey, a wheelchair user and Liverpool fan, recently posted on LinkedIn about a near-identical experience.
He was heading to a Liverpool match with his 79-year-old father and care assistant when a group of young men shouted “Timmy” at him. When Ross challenged them with “I heard you,” they too tried to claim innocence.
The abuse raises questions about what role platforms should take in providing context to young users.
“Brief, contextless clips and participatory trends are at the heart of TikTok’s popularity,” says O’Connor.
“That’s normally good and positive and funny … but when these dynamics are being used to demean, mock or stigmatise others, it does raise the question of whether TikTok should be doing more to inform or educate users.”
Alison Kerry, head of communications at Scope, told the BBC “these kinds of ableist trends are deeply harmful. They don’t exist in a vacuum, so a social media trend can quickly turn into someone facing abuse in their everyday life.”
The real-world impact is certainly becoming more noticeable.
Disabled TikTokers have been posting about their experiences, and a teacher recently wrote a Reddit thread titled “Getting real sick of this Timmy trend”, expressing frustration at students’ lack of awareness.
This is why I challenged the teens at the station – I felt a duty not only to my 12-year-old self, who once burst into tears feeling helpless at similar taunts, but also to disabled students today.
I returned a second time when the boys called out “Timmy” again after I turned to leave.
“Why?” I asked forcefully. Silence. One of the group eventually apologised, admitting the behaviour was wrong.
“Speak to your friends,” I pleaded, sensing a glimmer of hope. “Maybe then they’ll listen.”
Somebody moved UK’s oldest satellite, and no-one knows who or why
Someone moved the UK’s oldest satellite and there appears to be no record of exactly who, when or why.
Launched in 1969, just a few months after humans first set foot on the Moon, Skynet-1A was put high above Africa’s east coast to relay communications for British forces.
When the spacecraft ceased working a few years later, gravity might have been expected to pull it even further to the east, out over the Indian Ocean.
But today, curiously, Skynet-1A is actually half a planet away, in a position 22,369 miles (36,000km) above the Americas.
Orbital mechanics mean it’s unlikely the half-tonne military spacecraft simply drifted to its current location.
Almost certainly, it was commanded to fire its thrusters in the mid-1970s to take it westwards. The question is who that was and with what authority and purpose?
It’s intriguing that key information about a once vital national security asset can just evaporate. But, fascination aside, you might also reasonably ask why it still matters. After all, we’re talking about some discarded space junk from 50 years ago.
“It’s still relevant because whoever did move Skynet-1A did us few favours,” says space consultant Dr Stuart Eves.
“It’s now in what we call a ‘gravity well’ at 105 degrees West longitude, wandering backwards and forwards like a marble at the bottom of a bowl. And unfortunately this brings it close to other satellite traffic on a regular basis.
“Because it’s dead, the risk is it might bump into something, and because it’s ‘our’ satellite we’re still responsible for it,” he explains.
Dr Eves has looked through old satellite catalogues, the National Archives and spoken to satellite experts worldwide, but he can find no clues to the end-of-life behaviour of Britain’s oldest spacecraft.
It might be tempting to reach for a conspiracy theory or two, not least because it’s hard to hear the name “Skynet” without thinking of the malevolent, self-aware artificial intelligence (AI) system in The Terminator movie franchise.
But there’s no connection other than the name and, in any case, real life is always more prosaic.
What we do know is that Skynet-1A was manufactured in the US by the now defunct Philco Ford aerospace company and put in space by a US Air Force Delta rocket.
“The first Skynet satellite revolutionised UK telecommunications capacity, permitting London to securely communicate with British forces as far away as Singapore. However, from a technological standpoint, Skynet-1A was more American than British since the United States both built and launched it,” remarked Dr Aaron Bateman in a recent paper on the history of the Skynet programme, which is now on its fifth generation.
This view is confirmed by Graham Davison who flew Skynet-1A in the early 70s from its UK operations centre at RAF Oakhanger in Hampshire.
“The Americans originally controlled the satellite in orbit. They tested all of our software against theirs, before then eventually handing over control to the RAF,” the long-retired engineer told me.
“In essence, there was dual control, but when or why Skynet-1A might have been handed back to the Americans, which seems likely – I’m afraid I can’t remember,” says Mr Davison, who is now in his 80s.
Rachel Hill, a PhD student from University College London, has also been scouring the National Archives.
Her readings have led her to one very reasonable possibility.
“A Skynet team from Oakhanger would go to the USAF satellite facility in Sunnyvale (colloquially known as the Blue Cube) and operate Skynet during ‘Oakout’. This was when control was temporarily transferred to the US while Oakhanger was down for essential maintenance. Perhaps the move could have happened then?” Ms Hill speculated.
The official, though incomplete, logs of Skynet-1A’s status suggest final commanding was left in the hands of the Americans when Oakhanger lost sight of the satellite in June 1977.
But however Skynet-1A then got shifted to its present position, it was ultimately allowed to die in an awkward place when really it should have been put in an “orbital graveyard”.
This refers to a region even higher in the sky where old space junk runs zero risk of running into active telecommunications satellites.
Graveyarding is now standard practice, but back in the 1970s no-one gave much thought to space sustainability.
Attitudes have since changed because the space domain is getting congested.
At 105 degrees West longitude, an active satellite might see a piece of junk come within 50km of its position up to four times a day.
That might sound like they’re nowhere near each other, but at the velocities these defunct objects move it’s starting to get a little too close for comfort.
The Ministry of Defence said Skynet-1A was constantly monitored by the UK’s National Space Operations Centre. Other satellite operators are informed if there’s likely to be a particularly close conjunction, in case they need to take evasive action.
Ultimately, though, the British government may have to think about removing the old satellite to a safer location.
Technologies are being developed to grab junk left in space.
Already, the UK Space Agency is funding efforts to do this at lower altitudes, and the Americans and the Chinese have shown it’s possible to snare ageing hardware even in the kind of high orbit occupied by Skynet-1A.
“Pieces of space junk are like ticking time bombs,” observed Moriba Jah, a professor of aerospace engineering at the University of Texas at Austin.
“We need to avoid what I call super-spreader events. When these things explode or something collides with them, it generates thousands of pieces of debris that then become a hazard to something else that we care about.”
Crypto expert with links to gang shot dead at Brazilian airport
A Brazilian businessman, with ties to one of the country’s most powerful criminal groups, has been shot dead at Guarulhos Airport in São Paulo.
Antônio Vinicius Gritzbach had recently entered into a plea bargain with local prosecutors to provide information about Primeiro Comando da Capital (PCC) – or First Capital Command.
He received death threats from the gang as a result, local media reports.
Three others were injured in the attack, with footage online showing the aftermath. Police said officers had been deployed to the airport and surrounding area.
The moment two hooded men exited a car holding sub-machine guns and began firing outside the airport terminal was caught on security camera.
Gritzbach, a former member of the PCC, dropped his bag and tried to run away – but he was shot many times and died at the scene.
A cryptocurrency expert, Gritzbach had been in the process of telling officials how he helped the group launder millions of dollars.
Reports in Brazilian media suggest he was once considered a key player in the gang’s operation.
As part of his plea deal, Gritzbach had promised to help investigators locate other members and hand over documents.
In exchange, São Paulo prosecutors are said to have offered Gritzbach a judicial pardon and a reduction of his sentence for money laundering.
The PCC was formed in the early 1990s and has gone on to become one of Brazil’s most feared drug gangs. Its members, however, are not confined to Latin America.
Last year, a report by security services in Portugal alone suggested the group had 1,000 associates in the European country’s capital, Lisbon.
São Paulo’s organised crime taskforce estimated in 2023 that PCC makes almost $1bn (£773,000,000) from international cocaine trafficking.
Trump ally says Ukraine focus must be peace, not territory
A former adviser to President-elect Donald Trump says the incoming administration will focus on achieving peace in Ukraine rather than enabling the country to gain back territory occupied by Russia.
Bryan Lanza, who worked on Trump’s 2024 presidential campaign, told the BBC the incoming administration would ask Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky for his version of a “realistic vision for peace”.
“And if President Zelensky comes to the table and says, well we can only have peace if we have Crimea, he shows to us that he’s not serious,” he said. “Crimea is gone.”
A spokesperson for Trump distanced the incoming president from the remarks, saying Mr Lanza “does not speak for him”.
Russia annexed the Crimean peninsula in 2014. Eight years later, it launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine and has occupied territory in the country’s east.
The president-elect has consistently said his priority is to end the war and stem what he characterises as a drain on US resources, in the form of military aid to Ukraine.
But he has yet to divulge how he intends to do so – and will likely be hearing competing visions for Ukraine’s future from his various advisers.
Mr Lanza, a Trump political adviser during his 2016 and 2024 campaigns, did not mention areas of eastern Ukraine, but he said regaining Crimea from Russia was unrealistic and “not the goal of the United States”.
“When Zelensky says we will only stop this fighting, there will only be peace once Crimea is returned, we’ve got news for President Zelensky: Crimea is gone,” he told the BBC World Service’s Weekend programme.
“And if that is your priority of getting Crimea back and having American soldiers fight to get Crimea back, you’re on your own.”
The US has never deployed American soldiers to fight in Ukraine, nor has Kyiv requested American troops fight on its behalf. Ukraine has only requested American military aid to arm its own soldiers.
Mr Lanza said he had tremendous respect for the Ukrainian people, whose “hearts are made of lions”. But he said the US priority was “peace and to stop the killing”.
“What we’re going to say to Ukraine is, you know what you see? What do you see as a realistic vision for peace. It’s not a vision for winning, but it’s a vision for peace. And let’s start having the honest conversation,” he said.
In response, Zelensky’s adviser Dmytro Lytvyn characterised Mr Lanza’s remarks as placing the pressure for peace on Ukraine when it was “Putin who wants more war”.
“Putin loses most of his people in assaults at the front. What does this indicate? It is obvious that he wants to fight on,” he said.
“Ukraine has been offering peace since 2022 – there are quite realistic proposals. And it is Russia that must be made to hear that peace is needed and that peace must be reliable, so that there is simply no repetition of Russian strikes.”
A spokesperson for Trump’s transition team – which prepares the incoming administration for office – said Mr Lanza was “a contractor for the campaign”, but “does not work for President Trump and does not speak for him”.
Trump is expected to handle peace talks with a close circle of aides once in office.
An unnamed National Security Council aide who previously served under Trump told the Wall Street Journal on Wednesday: “Anyone – no matter how senior in Trump’s circle – who claims to have a different view or more detailed window into his plans on Ukraine simply doesn’t know what he or she is talking about.”
They said that the former president “makes his own calls on national security issues” and had done so “many times in the moment”.
Trump spoke to Zelensky after his election win, with billionaire Elon Musk also taking part in the call.
A source in Ukraine’s presidential office told the BBC that the “good lengthy conversation” between Zelensky and Trump lasted “about half an hour”.
“It was not really a conversation to talk about very substantial things, but overall it was very warm and pleasant.”
Trump’s Democratic opponents have accused him of cosying up to Russian President Vladimir Putin and say his approach to the war amounts to surrender for Ukraine that will endanger all of Europe.
The prime minister of Estonia told the BBC that if Ukraine backs down from the conflict, “Russia’s appetite will only grow”.
Kristen Michal told Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg: “The question probably is that if you start giving up, then you should be prepared to give more.
“For Russia it’s quite understandable that if you draw a line somewhere and use the force to back it up, they will back up too, but not by politeness, that’s not the plan.”
Last month, Zelensky presented a “victory plan” to the Ukrainian parliament that included a refusal to cede Ukraine’s territories and sovereignty.
During his election campaign, Trump repeatedly said he could end the war between Russia and Ukraine “in a day”, but never gave further details.
A paper written by two of his former national security chiefs in May said the US should continue supplying weapons, but make the support conditional on Kyiv entering peace talks with Russia.
Ukraine should not give up its hopes of getting all of its territory back from Russian occupation, the paper said, but it should negotiate based on current front lines.
Earlier this week, Putin congratulated Trump on his election victory and said Trump’s claim that he can help end the war in Ukraine “deserves attention at least”.
Mr Lanza also criticised the support the Biden-Harris administration and European countries have given to Ukraine since Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022.
“The reality on the ground is [that] the European nation states and President Biden did not give Ukraine the ability and the arms to win this war at the very beginning and failed to lift the restrictions for Ukraine to win,” he said.
Earlier this year, the US House of Representatives approved a $61bn (£49bn) package in military aid for Ukraine to help combat Russia’s invasion.
The US has been the biggest arms supplier to Ukraine – between February 2022 and the end of June 2024, it delivered or committed weapons and equipment worth $55.5bn (£41.5bn), according to the Kiel Institute for the World Economy, a German research organisation.
Who’s in the frame to join Trump’s new top team?
Donald Trump made the first official hire of his incoming administration, announcing 2024 campaign co-chair Susan Summerall Wiles as his chief of staff.
The president-elect’s transition team is already vetting a series of candidates ahead of his return to the White House on 20 January 2025.
Many who served under Trump in his first term do not plan to return, though a handful of loyalists are rumoured by US media to be making a comeback.
The 78-year-old Republican is also surrounded by new allies who could fill his cabinet, staff his White House and take up other key roles across government.
Here is a closer look at names in the mix for the top jobs.
Chief of staff – Susie Wiles
Susie Wiles and campaign co-chair Chris LaCivita were the masterminds behind Trump’s victory over Kamala Harris.
In his victory speech on Wednesday, he called her “the ice maiden” – a reference to her composure – and said she “likes to stay in the background”.
Wiles was confirmed the next day as the first appointee of his second term – as his White House chief of staff. She will be the first woman ever to hold that job.
Chief of staff is often a president’s top aide, overseeing daily operations in the West Wing and managing the boss’s staff.
Wiles, 67, has worked in Republican politics for decades, from Ronald Reagan’s successful 1980 presidential campaign to turning businessman Rick Scott into Florida’s governor in just seven months back in 2010.
Republicans have said she commands respect and has an ability to corral the big egos of those in Trump’s orbit, which could enable her to impose a sense of order that none of his four previous chiefs of staff could.
Attorney general
No personnel decision may be more critical to the trajectory of Trump’s second term than his appointee to lead the Department of Justice.
After uneven relationships with both Jeff Sessions and William Barr, the attorney generals during his first term, Trump is widely expected to pick a loyalist who will wield the agency’s prosecutorial power to punish critics and opponents.
Among the names being floated for the cabinet post are Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, who has been both indicted and impeached like Trump; Matthew Whitaker, the man who took over for three months as acting attorney general after Sessions stepped down at Trump’s request; Mike Davis, a right-wing activist who once clerked for Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch and has issued bombastic threats against Trump critics and journalists; and Mark Paoletta, who served in Trump’s budget office and argues there is no legal requirement for a president to stay out of justice department decisions.
Homeland secretary
The secretary of homeland security will take the lead in enforcing Trump’s promises of deporting undocumented migrants en masse and “sealing” the US-Mexico border, as well as leading the government response to natural disasters.
Tom Homan, Trump’s former acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice), stands out as the most likely pick.
Homan, 62, supported separating migrant children from their parents as a means to deter illegal crossings and has said politicians who support migrant sanctuary policies should be charged with crimes. Though he resigned in 2018, midway through the Trump presidency, he remains a proponent of the Trump approach on immigration.
Chad Wolf, who served as acting homeland secretary from 2019-20 until his appointment was ruled unlawful, and Chad Mizelle, the homeland department’s former acting general counsel, are also potential contenders.
Stephen Miller, widely considered to be the architect of Trump’s immigration agenda, is expected once again to play a senior advisory role with the White House.
Secretary of state
The US secretary of state is the president’s main adviser on foreign affairs, and acts as America’s top diplomat when representing the country overseas.
Florida Senator Marco Rubio – who was most recently under consideration to be Trump’s vice-president – is a major name being floated for the key cabinet post.
Rubio, 53, is a China hawk who opposed Trump in the 2016 Republican primary but has since mended fences. He is a senior member of the Senate foreign relations committee and vice-chairman of the chamber’s select intelligence panel.
Other contenders for the job include Trump’s former national security adviser Robert O’Brien; Tennessee Senator Bill Hagerty, who was previously Trump’s ambassador to Japan; and Brian Hook, the hawkish special envoy to Iran in Trump’s first term and the man who is leading the transition effort at the State Department.
A dark horse for the nomination, however, is Richard Grenell, a loyalist who served as ambassador to Germany, special envoy to the Balkans and acting national intelligence chief. Grenell, 58, was heavily involved in Trump’s efforts to overturn his 2020 election defeat and even sat in on his private meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in September.
Intelligence/ national security posts
Grenell’s combative style may make him a better fit for national security adviser – a position that does not require Senate confirmation – than secretary of state.
Also in line for major posts in a second Trump term are former Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe; Keith Kellogg, a national security adviser to Trump’s first Vice-President Mike Pence; former defence department official Eldridge Colby; and Kash Patel, a loyalist who staffed the national security council and became chief of staff to the acting secretary of defence in Trump’s final months in office.
Patel, 44, who helped block the transition to the incoming Joe Biden administration in the latter role, is tipped to become the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) chief.
Trump has also said he would fire Federal Bureau of Intelligence (FBI) Director Chris Wray, who he nominated in 2017 but has since fallen out with. Jeffrey Jensen, a former Trump-appointed US attorney, is under consideration to replace Wray.
Defence secretary
Two names being discussed are Michael Waltz, a Florida lawmaker who sits on the armed services committee in the US House of Representatives, and Robert O’Brien.
Trump has ruled out Mike Pompeo, who was an early favourite to head up the Pentagon.
Former CIA director Pompeo served as secretary of state during Trump’s first presidency, when he led the administration’s diplomatic blitz in the Middle East.
UN ambassador
During Trump’s first term, New York Congresswoman Elise Stefanik transformed from a moderate to a vocal backer. The fourth-ranking House Republican leader has remained one of Trump’s most fiercely loyal defenders on Capitol Hill – which makes her a leading contender to represent him in unfriendly territory at the United Nations.
But she may find herself competing for the position with the likes of former State Department spokeswoman Morgan Ortagus; David Friedman, Trump’s ambassador to Israel; and Kelly Craft, who served as UN ambassador at the end of Trump’s term.
Treasury secretary
Trump is reportedly considering Robert Lighthizer, a free trade sceptic who led the tariff war with China as the US trade representative, as his chief financial officer.
But at least four others may be under consideration for the role, including Scott Bessent, a billionaire hedge fund manager who has become a major fundraiser and economic adviser to the president-elect; John Paulson, another megadonor from the hedge fund world; former Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) chair Jay Clayton; and Fox Business Network financial commentator Larry Kudlow, who ran Trump’s national economic council during his first term.
Commerce secretary
The woman co-chairing Trump’s transition team, Linda McMahon, is tipped as a key contender to represent US businesses and job creation in his cabinet – after previously serving as small business administrator during his first term.
Others who could fill this vacancy include Brooke Rollins; Robert Lighthizer; and Kelly Loeffler, a wealthy businesswoman who briefly served in the US Senate.
Interior secretary
South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem – who was passed over to be Trump’s running mate over a bizarre admission that she killed her pet dog – could see her loyalty to him pay off with the leadership of the interior department, which manages public land and natural resources.
She may compete with North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum for the role.
Energy secretary
Doug Burgum is also a contender to lead the energy department, where he would implement Trump’s pledges to “drill, baby, drill” and overhaul US energy policy.
A software entrepreneur who sold his small company to Microsoft in 2001, Burgum briefly ran in the 2024 Republican primary before dropping out, endorsing Trump and quickly impressing him with his low-drama persona and sizeable wealth.
Former energy secretary Dan Brouillette is also reportedly in the running.
Press secretary
Karoline Leavitt, 27, who impressed Trump as his campaign’s national press secretary, has already served as an assistant White House press secretary and may be a shoo-in to be the administration’s spokesperson.
Robert F Kennedy Jr
RFK Jr, as he is known, is an environmental lawyer by trade, a vaccine sceptic by fame and the nephew of former President John F Kennedy.
He is on a shortlist to run the heath and human services department, multiple people close to the president-elect’s campaign told CBS News, the BBC’s US news partner.
Despite having no medical qualifications to his name, Kennedy, 70, is expected to become a kind of “public health star” in the Trump administration.
Democratic Party attacks on Kennedy’s credentials are not likely to carry much weight, as control of the US Senate is in the hands of Republicans and confirming Kennedy to any cabinet-level post will not require Democratic support.
Besides a new job at the health and human services department, Kennedy could also influence policy at the agriculture department, the Environmental Protection Agency, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and the Food and Drug Safety Administration (FDA).
Elon Musk
The world’s richest man poured millions of dollars into re-electing Trump and critics say he will now have the power to shape the regulations that affect his companies Tesla, SpaceX and X.
Both he and Trump have focused on the idea of him leading a new “Department of Government Efficiency”, where he would cut costs and streamline what he calls a “massive, suffocating federal bureaucracy”.
The would-be agency’s acronym – DOGE – is a playful reference to a “meme-coin” cryptocurrency Musk has previously promoted.
But Musk, 53, could also play a role in global diplomacy. He participated in Trump’s first call with Ukraine’s Zelensky on Wednesday.
How US election fraud claims changed as Trump won
In the build-up to Tuesday’s US election, claims of voter fraud flooded social media – but as Donald Trump’s victory crystallised, the chatter largely subsided.
The claims didn’t stop entirely, however. A number of right-wing influencers and organisations pushing stories about “cheating” and a “rigged” vote pointed to incomplete vote totals and continued to repeat discredited theories about the 2020 election.
And disappointed Democratic Party supporters developed their own unsubstantiated voter fraud theories, some of which went viral on X, formerly Twitter, and other platforms.
The reach of the posts is nowhere near the deluge of content that circulated after Trump lost the 2020 election.
And with no support from losing candidate Kamala Harris or other Democratic Party officials, the chances seem slim of a large-scale movement developing along the lines of the “Stop the Steal” drive four years ago, which culminated in a riot at the US Capitol.
How did fraud claims develop on election day?
The BBC tracked a huge wave of pre-election fraud claims that carried through election day and into the evening.
These included claims of the vote being “stolen” in some key swing states, with exaggerated takes on real events being used in some cases to bolster the allegations.
Early on election day in Cambria County, Pennsylvania, a Republican stronghold, there were problems with voting machines malfunctioning. The issues were fixed and voting hours in the affected areas were extended.
However, many online immediately used the story to suggest nefarious activities were taking place.
One post at 08:45 local time on Tuesday said: “The election steal is happening!”
Other rumours were spread in posts that popped up throughout the day, including one at around 14:00, which claimed ballots in Delaware County, Pennsylvania, had been pre-marked for Kamala Harris.
In Milwaukee, the biggest city in the swing state of Wisconsin, elections officials made a decision to re-run around 30,000 ballots out of an “abundance of caution”, after doors on the back of voting machines were left open.
Once the count was completed, it showed that support for Harris had dropped compared with Joe Biden’s four years earlier.
Like many of the pro-Trump posters, Harris supporters pointed to real but isolated events – fires at ballot drop boxes in Washington and Oregon, and a series of fake bomb threats that disrupted voting at several polling locations on election day – as evidence of widespread voter fraud.
However, there’s no evidence that the incidents significantly altered the vote or changed the outcome.
Several posts from Democratic Party activists questioning the result went viral and were seen by millions on X and other platforms.
Pam Keith, a Harris supporter in Florida, posted: “Is it possible that the machines were hacked to switch the tallies from Harris to Trump?” Her message was seen more than one million times on X, according to the site’s metrics. The BBC has reached out to her for comment.
Unlike Trump’s campaign in 2020, however, the Harris campaign and top Democratic Party officials have not endorsed allegations of cheating or voter fraud.
On election day, fraud rumours also came from President-elect Trump himself, who has repeatedly argued from the outset of his political career that the voting system is unfairly stacked against him.
Just after 16:30 Trump posted on his social media platform Truth Social: “A lot of talk about massive CHEATING in Philadelphia. Law Enforcement coming!!!”
The now president-elect did not give any details and the Philadelphia Police Department told BBC Verify they were not aware of what Trump was referring to.
Seth Bluestein, the Republican City Commissioner in Philadelphia, posted on X: “There is absolutely no truth to this allegation. It is yet another example of disinformation. Voting in Philadelphia has been safe and secure.”
Trump has not repeated the fraud allegations since election day.
We have contacted several hugely influential accounts that regularly posted about election fraud claims in the build-up to the vote, but none of them replied.
With data firm NodeXL, the BBC tracked accounts that engaged with Donald Trump, Donald Trump Jr, Eric Trump, Lara Trump and Elon Musk on X around election day.
Posts mentioning vote fraud peaked at 15:00 EST on 5 November – but then dropped off significantly that evening and into the next day as polls closed and results came in.
Claims continue to circulate
However, some organisations and activists who promoted voter fraud allegations in the past continued to repeat debunked rumours even after the results became clear.
Emerald Robinson, a former reporter with right-wing TV networks and a pro-Trump influencer with more than 750,000 followers on X, insisted that Democrats were “cheating right now” and posted: “I always told people the voting machines were rigged!”
More generally, reaction from pro-Trump groups and influencers who previously hyped up vote fraud claims varied – from silence on the issue, to continued insistence that the 2020 vote was marred by fraud.
The BBC contacted Ms Robinson for comment.
Conspiracy theories based on vote numbers
In another case, a chart that was widely circulating online claimed to show a sharp drop-off in vote totals in 2024 compared to 2020.
Many are pointing to the figures as “proof” of fraud.
Conservative commentator Dinesh D’Souza, a Trump supporter who has pushed voter fraud theories, posted the day after the election: “Kamala got 60 million votes in 2024. Does anyone really believe Biden got 80 million in 2020? Where did those 20 million Democratic voters go? The truth is, they never existed.”
However, the chart and the figures circulating online were based on preliminary vote totals, which continue to go up as final results are still being tabulated.
Already, Harris has more than 69 million votes in her column – with Trump on more than 73 million. As of Friday, fewer than two million ballots have yet to be counted nationally, in states including Arizona and California, according to Reuters.
The BBC contacted Mr D’Souza for comment.
Those same numbers are also fuelling conspiracy theories from supporters of Harris, who are wondering where their “missing” voters are – and ignoring the fact that turnouts and preferences frequently shift, often dramatically, between elections.
Partisans on both sides are also pointing to differences in vote tallies for Harris and other Democrats running for Senate seats.
But there is no requirement for US voters to support candidates from just one party, and “ticket-splitting” – voting for candidates from different parties in different races – although becoming rarer, is fairly common in American politics.
The University of Florida’s Election Lab turnout tracker is showing slightly lower turnout in 2024 as compared to 2020 – 62.5% v just over 66%.
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Divided Arizona contends with Trump’s sweeping border plan
Donald Trump has offered a sweeping immigration pitch that he has promised to begin on the first day of his presidency, including mass deportations and a major crackdown on illegal border crossings. Arizona could find itself on the frontline of these moves, and the sharply divided state is contending with what they could mean.
In the Phoenix home of the Villalobos family, members across three generations discussed Donald Trump’s decisive election victory with their friends.
Over Latin jazz and a dinner of empanadas, beans and rice, the group – mostly women – were close to tears.
“I really had hope for humanity, and I feel like we were let down,” said Monica Villalobos, 45. “It changes the way we think about ourselves in the Latino community.”
Her family made America their home after immigrating from Jalisco, Mexico. They worry that friends and relatives’ families could be torn apart with deportations.
Trump has promised the biggest mass deportations of migrants in US history, and has pledged to seal the border and stop the “migrant invasion”. He is also promising to hire 10,000 Border Patrol agents and says he will ask Congress to give all agents a 10 % pay raise.
His message is one that resonates with many voters here who consistently rank immigration and border security as top concerns. Many detail seeing the impacts of illegal migration firsthand, but voters are divided on how to handle it.
Arizona was, for a time, a Republican stronghold. Trump was the first to lose here in more than 20 years when Joe Biden came out victorious in 2020. The 2024 result is still too close to call – a testament to just how split residents are.
Voters on Tuesday, however, overwhelmingly approved a Republican-supported measure that gives sheriffs, police and state law enforcement the authority to enforce federal immigration laws and arrest those who cross the border illegally. It had faced opposition from Democratic and Latino groups, who argue it could result in racial profiling.
- Trump says there’s ‘no price tag’ for mass deportations. How would it work?
- Seven things Trump says he will do as president
- In maps and charts: How small gains delivered Trump a big win
There are an estimated 12 million undocumented migrants in the US, and many have lived and worked here for decades. When discussing Trump’s mass deportation proposals, Ms Villalobos’s niece, 19-year-old university student Alexandra de Leon, said they were “terrifying”.
“It’s your neighbours, it’s the people you see in the grocery store, it’s your teachers, it’s your friend’s parents,” she said. “To know that those people are in danger and their families could be torn apart at any moment… it’s heartbreaking.”
One of the main storylines of election night was the extent to which Trump racked up huge support from Latino voters nationwide. He saw a mammoth 14 percentage-point bump compared to the 2020 election, according to exit polls.
One of these supporters is Jorge Gonzalez, Sr, who moved his family to Arizona from Mexico 20 years ago in the hope of building a more prosperous future. Now the proud owner of a body shop in Phoenix, he believes Trump’s policies will help him as a business owner.
“As a person I don’t like him, but as a politician, I like how he ran the economy. Many Latinos probably think he managed the country better,” he said.
“He allowed a large number of undocumented workers to come here and get work visas. I didn’t see any family separations,” he added. “I saw that he integrated and allowed undocumented immigrants to live and work here in a regulated way.”
Across the yard, Jorge’s son, Jorge Jr, was under a car examining brake pads and checking an engine.
As he swapped out wrenches, he said Trump had the right tools to be a successful president.
“I don’t like his attitude. His mouth gets the better of him a lot of times, but when you are in a position of power or leadership, you need to be able to be a little bit tough,” he said.
When asked about the mass, militarised deportations Trump campaigned on in his home state, Jorge Jr just laughed.
“That’s impossible!” he said, noting the millions of undocumented immigrants in the US. “You will need a lot of resources, planes, food, detention centres, police, more ICE officers, so I don’t think it will be feasible.”
If the Trump administration were to move forward with mass deportations, they would likely face a host of challenges. Experts are wary that federal immigration authorities do not have proper staffing to track down migrants, or the capacity to hold them until a court date.
“You learn to develop a thick skin, especially coming from where we come from,” Jorge Jr said. “We don’t pay attention to a lot of the things that people say, because we know those are just words and there’s a long gap between the things that we say and the things that we actually do.”
Others are excited to see Trump’s proposals come to fruition.
Mark Lamb, the sheriff in Pinal County – a conservative area just south-east of Phoenix – said Trump winning the White House would deter migrants.
“Once you start holding people accountable, securing the border, you’re going to start to see a lot of these folks will go back on their own. And then we can start to go after the criminals, people that are causing problems in communities.”
But how Trump’s policies will actually work on the ground is still anyone’s guess.
“I don’t think anybody has the resources right now,” Sheriff Lamb said. “But the people he picks are going to really have to figure out what that looks like.”
- UNITED KINGDOM: What does Trump victory mean for UK?
- GLOBAL: What Trump’s win means for Ukraine, Middle East and China
- AFRICA: Trade, aid, security: What does Trump’s win mean for Africa?
- ANALYSIS: Analysis: Will Trump’s victory spark a global trade war?
- IN PICS: Different lives of Harris and Trump
- IN FULL: All our election coverage in one place
Democrats had bet on women showing up in force. They didn’t
In an election full of uncertainties, one thing at least felt likely – women across the US were going to turn out for Kamala Harris.
Just as months of relentless polling showed Harris in a virtual tie with Donald Trump, many of those same surveys told the story of a yawning gender gap.
It was a strategy Harris’s team was betting on, hoping that an over-performance among women could make up for losses elsewhere.
It didn’t happen.
Across the country, the majority of women did cast their ballots for Harris, but not by the historic margins she needed. Instead, if early exit polls bear out, Harris’s advantage among women overall – around 10 points – actually fell four points short of Joe Biden’s in 2020.
Democrats suffered a 10 point drop among Latino women, while failing to move the needle among non-college educated women at all, who again went for Trump 63-35, preliminary data suggests.
The shortfall was not for lack of trying.
Throughout her 15-week campaign, much of Harris’s messaging was aimed directly at women, most obviously with her emphasis on abortion.
On the trail, Harris made reproductive rights a cornerstone of her pitch. She repeatedly reminded voters that Trump had once bragged about his role in overturning Roe v Wade – a ruling that ended the nationwide right to an abortion.
“I will fight to restore what Donald Trump and his hand-selected Supreme Court justice took away from the women of America,” Harris said at her closing address in DC last week.
- Follow live updates
- The shifts that delivered Trump a big win
Her most powerful advertisements featured women who had suffered under state abortion bans – deemed “Trump abortion bans” by Harris – including those who said they were denied care for miscarriages.
The strategy, it seemed, was to harness the same enthusiasm for abortion access that drove Democrats’ unexpected success in the 2022 midterms.
Abortion rights remain broadly popular – this Gallup poll in May suggested only one in 10 Americans thought it should be banned.
And even these election results seemed to underline that. Seven out of the 10 states where abortion was on the ballot voted in favour of abortion rights.
But that support did not translate into support for Harris.
Abortion did matter to women, it just didn’t matter enough, said Evan Roth Smith, a pollster and campaign consultant.
“Voters – particularly the women – who feel strongest about abortion are already voting for Democrats,” he said. But Democrats were unable to raise the importance of abortion for women who didn’t yet see it as a pressing issue.
“The abortion argument did not penetrate at all with non-college educated women, did not move them an inch. And they lost ground with Latinos,” Mr Smith said.
- Results: Who did each state vote for?
- These are the seven things Trump says he will do as president
- Analysis – Why Kamala Harris lost: A flawed candidate or doomed campaign?
For many, the decisive issue proved to be the economy.
In pre-election surveys and preliminary exit data, inflation and affordability continued to top lists of voters’ concerns. And for these voters, Trump was the overwhelming favourite.
Jennifer Varvar, 51, an independent from Grand Junction, Colorado said she had not even considered a vote for Harris because of the financial stress she faced over the past four years.
“For me and my family, we’re in a worse position now than we ever have been financially. It’s a struggle. I have three boys to put food on the table for,” she said. Things had been better under Trump, she said, and that’s why she voted for him.
But if gender didn’t divide the electorate in the way some expected, it still played a part in the Harris defeat, say some analysts.
There have been many explanations offered for Trump’s resounding victory but for some there is one thing that stands out.
“I do think that the country is still sexist and is not ready for a woman president,” said Patti Solis Doyle, who managed Hillary Clinton’s 2008 presidential campaign, to Politico.
Unlike Clinton, who explicitly leaned into her gender and the history-making potential of her campaign, Harris was noticeably reluctant to do the same.
There is a widespread belief that the country is more ready for a woman president now than when Clinton ran a second time in 2016. But it’s still an open question.
A Reuters/Ipsos poll in October suggested 15% of those surveyed would not be able to vote for a female president.
And Donald Trump, who doubled down on masculinity in this election, may have played a part in exploiting that.
- Trump attempts to woo the manosphere
“He framed being president as being a tough guy in a dangerous world… he framed that as the job description,” said Mr Smith.
“And that’s one of the hardest possible job descriptions for a woman to successfully meet, in the minds of many Americans.”
Will Republicans win the House? The outstanding races to watch
The party that will control the US House of Representatives for the next two years is not yet decided – but the Republicans look to be inching towards a majority that would hand them full control of the US government.
On Saturday morning, the party was a handful of seats short of the 218 needed to take control of the lower chamber of Congress.
The Senate, or upper chamber, and the White House have already flipped to Republicans – meaning President-elect Donald Trump could have significant power to carry out his political agenda after he is sworn in on 20 January 2025.
Control of the House gives a party the power to initiate spending legislation and launch impeachment proceedings against officials.
- Follow live updates: Trump plans White House transition
- Results: Who did each state vote for?
- In maps and charts: How small gains delivered Trump a big win
- These are the seven things Trump says he will do as president
- Analysis – Why Kamala Harris lost: A flawed candidate or doomed campaign?
Under Trump, a unified Republican Party could more easily push through tax cuts and introduce border control measures.
Here are some of the races that have yet to be called.
California: Democrats hold out hope for five potential gains
Democrats are closely monitoring five seats in California they see as crucial to winning back the House.
Challengers are hoping to defeat the incumbent Republicans and flip the seats blue, but polling has shown incumbents holding onto their seats by narrow margins.
The key races to watch are:
- California’s 45th congressional district: Republican Congresswoman Michelle Steel, the incumbent, has been leading against Democrat Derek Tran
- California’s 27th: Democrat George Whitesides is challenging incumbent Republican Congressman Mike Garcia. Garcia has been leading by a narrow margin
- California’s 41st: Incumbent Republican Congressman Ken Calvert is running against Democrat Will Rollins, and has also been leading by a narrow margin
- California’s 22nd: Democrat Rudy Salas is challenging incumbent Republican Congressman David Valadao, who has been enjoying a lead
- California’s 13th: Incumbent Republican Congressman John Duarte is running against Democrat Adam Gray, and has been leading
Arizona: two toss-up seats
There are two closely-watched races in this swing state.
Republican Juan Ciscomani, the Republican, appears to be neck and neck with his Democratic challenger, Kirsten Engel, in Arizona’s 6th district, located in the south-east corner of the state.
In Arizona’s 1st district, David Schweikert has a slight lead over Democratic challenger Amish Shah. This district covers north-eastern Maricopa County, outside Phoenix.
Maine: Democrat looks to defend seat in toss-up race
Incumbent Democratic Congressman Jared Golden is fighting to keep his seat in Maine’s 2nd congressional district – one of two congressional districts in the state. This encompasses the majority of the state north of Augusta and Portland.
Golden is currently leading in the race against his Republican challenger, Austin Theriault. Almost all votes have been counted.
Ohio: Democrat leads by less than one point
Democrats are looking to hold onto one seat in Ohio’s 9th congressional district, which encompasses Toledo in the state’s north.
Incumbent Democratic Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur, who has served in Congress since 1983, narrowly leads in the race against her Republican challenger, Derek Merrin.
North America correspondent Anthony Zurcher makes sense of the race for the White House in his twice-weekly US Election Unspun newsletter. Readers in the UK can sign up here. Those outside the UK can sign up here.
Pictures from space show mighty smog choking Lahore
Smog starts slow.
At first, you cannot see it but you can smell it. It smells like something is burning. And it intensifies as the temperature drops.
Then the smoke and fog start to envelop you and the city around you. Now you can see it. You are walking through the smoke, a thick ceiling of it hanging overhead.
If you are not wearing a mask or you lower it for a moment, you will immediately inhale the bitter air.
Your throat might start to feel itchy and sore. As it gets worse, you start sneezing and coughing. But it’s worse for others: children, the elderly, those with breathing difficulties. The hospitals know to expect the influx.
Lahore and its 13 million residents have now been choking for a week; the air quality index has passed the 1,000 mark repeatedly this month – anything above 300 is considered hazardous.
Pakistani officials have scrambled to respond to the crisis – its scale unprecedented even in a city which deals with smog at this time each year.
Schools are closed, workers have been told to stay home and people urged to stay indoors – part of a so-called “green lockdown”, which has also seen motorbike rickshaws, heavy vehicles and motorbike parking banned from hot spot areas.
By the end of the week, Lahore High Court had ordered all the markets in the Punjab province to close by 20:00 each night, with complete closures on Sundays. Parks and zoos have also been shut until 17 November.
The problem, according to Nasa scientist Pawan Gupta, is that pollution levels in the city “typically peak in late November and December”.
“So this is just beginning. The worst pollution days are probably still ahead of us,” he warned.
The smoke that has enveloped Lahore, in Pakistan’s Punjab province, can be seen from space – as can part of the cause.
Satellite images from the US space agency Nasa shows both the thick layer of smog and the multiple concentrations of fire in the region between the Indian capital, Delhi, and Pakistan’s Lahore.
The same image, six weeks earlier, shows clear skies and – crucially – far fewer fires.
A major cause of the smog is the fires which are caused by the burning of stubble after harvest by farmers in both Pakistan and India – a quick way to clear their fields ready for the next crops.
This year, Nasa estimates it will count “between 15,500 and 18,500 fires ”, according to Hiren Jethva, a senior research scientist at Nasa’s Goddard Space Flight Center and Morgan State University, higher than most years.
According to Pakistan’s environment protection authorities, around 30% of Lahore’s smog comes from across the border in India. The Indian government has this year doubled fines for farmers caught stubble-burning as it tries to deal with the issue.
But much of Lahore’s air pollution comes from its five million motorbikes and millions of other vehicles’ exhausts. On Friday, Lahore’s high court identified heavy traffic emissions as the main cause of the smog, according to the Associated Press of Pakistan.
Then there are the industries in the city’s outskirts – like the coal-fired brick kilns – adding even more pollution to the air.
And in the final months of the year, it all combines with cold air flowing down from Tibet, creating the smog which is currently sitting over the city.
It is clear the toxic air is making people sick.
According to the US Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Air Quality Index (AQI), a value of 50 or below indicates good air quality, while a value above 300 signals Hazardous air quality.
The WHO guidelines say the average concentration of PM2.5 level should be below five.
Abid Omar, founder of Pakistan’s Air Quality Initiative, which collects data from 143 air quality monitors across the country, says the readings in Lahore “have hit beyond index on every day in November”.
“Some locations in Lahore have exceeded 1,000,” he says, adding: “On Thursday we had one reading of 1,917 on the AQI scale.”
By Tuesday, it was widely reported 900 people had been admitted to hospital in Lahore with breathing difficulties.
“More and more people are coming with complaints of asthma, itchy throats and coughing,” says Dr Irfan Malik, a pulmonologist at one of the biggest hospitals in Lahore.
He has already seen a surge in patients complaining of respiratory tract illnesses – “particularly worrying because we have not yet seen our first cold wave of the winter season”.
The danger is a constant concern for Lahore resident Sadia Kashif.
“Like every mother, I want to see my children run and play without fearing pollution,” she tells the BBC.
“I see my children struggle with coughs and breathing problems these days, and it is a painful reminder that our air has become extremely toxic.”
But the current “green lockdown” has left her unimpressed.
“It is easy for the government to shut down school rather than taking real steps to address the crisis,” says Kashif.
For years, authorities have struggled to find a solution to Lahore’s pollution problem.
The government hopes short fixes will provide reprieve, but says long term solutions – like improving public transport – will take time.
In the meantime, Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz announced this week she intends to write a letter to her counterpart in Indian Punjab to invite them to engage in “climate diplomacy”, since it impacts both regions. Delhi says it is yet to hear from Pakistan on the issue.
However, Omar points out air pollution is not a seasonal problem but a persistent issue.
“Lahore is much more polluted than Delhi with pollution episodes that last longer and reach higher peaks,” he notes.
And it is getting worse, he believes. As per his own analysis of data, October has seen a 25% rise in pollution level compared to the same period last year.
Governments on both sides of the border need to act swiftly to deal with the issue, he argues.
“The roadmap to clean air is clear, but the present policies from both India and Pakistan aren’t enough to significantly reduce pollution.”
It has left him sceptical of the change in the near future.
“I tell people, blue skies are an indicator of good governance,” Omar says.
Hologram in Amsterdam window aims to solve sex worker’s cold case murder
A hologram of a young sex worker haunts Amsterdam’s red light district.
Dressed in faded denim hotpants, a leopard-print bra, with a tattoo snaking up her stomach and across her chest, the 3D computer-generated image reaches out and appears to knock on the window to attract attention.
She leans forward, breathes on the glass and writes the word “help”.
The hologram is designed to represent Bernadette “Betty” Szabo, a 19-year-old woman from Hungary who was murdered a few months after giving birth in 2009.
Her fatal stabbing has baffled police for 15 years. Dutch cold case detectives are using the innovative technology for the first time in an effort to solve the case.
The murdered teenager’s image is being projected from behind a window, alongside hundreds of young women who continue to make a living in this notoriously risky industry.
Investigators hope the lifelike hologram will help jog memories and draw attention to the unsolved murder.
Until now, Betty’s killer has eluded justice and cold case detective Anne Dreijer-Heemskerk is determined to change that: “A young woman, only 19, taken from life in such a horrific way.”
Szabo had a tough life and her story was one of hardship and resilience, according to the detective.
She had moved to Amsterdam aged 18 and became pregnant soon afterwards. She carried on working throughout her pregnancy, returning to the job shortly after her son was born.
It was in the early hours of 19 February 2009, when two sex workers went to check on the teenage mother during a break between clients, because they realised her usual music was not playing.
When they entered her brothel, a small room with a plastic-covered bed, vanity table and sink, they discovered Betty Szabo’s body.
She had been murdered three months after giving birth, the victim of a savage knife attack.
Her baby was placed in foster care and never got to know his mother – a fact that motivates detectives.
Although police immediately launched a murder investigation, her killer was never found. They combed through CCTV footage and questioned potential witnesses.
The majority of people eyeing the scantily dressed women behind the red neon windows are tourists. Police suspect the perpetrator came from abroad.
Now they are urging people who may have visited Amsterdam to think back, with a €30,000 reward to encourage witnesses to come forward.
As Amsterdam grapples with controversial plans to relocate its famous brothels to an out-of-town “erotic zone”, Betty Szabo’s hologram offers a poignant reminder of the vulnerability of sex workers in an area that, despite a range of security measures, remains perilous.
Sex workers have voiced concerns that removing the women who sell sex from public view could expose them to even greater danger.
The fact that such a violent crime could occur in one of the Netherlands’ busiest nightspots without witnesses coming forward continues to confound investigators.
In the historic red-light district where she once lived and worked, the teenage sex worker’s digital presence reminds passers-by that her case is yet to be solved.
‘We shouldn’t need to face racist attacks in 2024’
“We shouldn’t be having this conversation about racism and racist attacks almost 50 years on.”
Lynval Golding, founding member of The Specials, is angry that this summer’s riots have given him “flashbacks” of his experiences in Coventry in the 1970s and 80s.
But after violence flared across the UK, fuelled by online misinformation and anti-immigration sentiment, Love Music Hate Racism (LMHR) is being relaunched, more than 40 years after its predecessor Rock Against Racism (RAR) first combined pop music with politics.
A Coventry event on Saturday, involving a gig with local bands, will add poignancy, organisers say, given the city’s history of brutal racist killings and violent assaults.
After the violence across the UK this summer, British Asians recalled the 1970s and 1980s, when racist violence was widespread and the National Front was on the rise.
With the National Front at its most vocal, they were then coping with day-to-day harassment, police brutality and later on, riots.
“How can people get into the state where they would want to go and burn down a hotel with other human beings in it?,” guitarist and vocalist Golding asks.
The Specials were one of many bands, including Birmingham reggae legends Steel Pulse, Aswad and The Clash, to play RAR gigs.
The movement emerged in 1976 in reaction to a rise in racist attacks before LMHR launched in 2002, picking up the mantel of its predecessor.
It is now necessary to revise the movement to fight “a frightening expansion of the far-right across Europe,” said Clive Dixon, from Coventry LMHR.
“We mustn’t be afraid to confront it again.”
During the late 1970s and early 80s, areas of Britain experienced increasing racial intolerance and violence, and in a period of just five months Coventry witnessed two racist killings, one attempted murder, several petrol bombings and numerous attacks.
The violence formed the backdrop to the foundation of the 2 Tone movement, by Jerry Dammers.
In April 1981, 20-year-old student Satnam Singh Gill was stabbed to death in broad daylight in the the city centre, reportedly for walking with his white girlfriend.
This followed the death of Dr Amal Dharry, who was also stabbed outside a chip shop in the Earlsdon area of the city.
At the time, it was reported in court that a 17-year-old had killed the professional for a bet.
Both deaths shocked the city.
In response to the violence local groups including the Indian Workers’ Association and Anti Nazi League banded together to form Coventry Committee Against Racism (CCAR).
It also prompted The Specials to organise a benefit concert in the city.
Previously a prosperous city, Coventry had been hit “particularly hard” by the recession, said Dr Nirmal Puwar, of Goldsmiths University in London.
Growing up there, she said, you always had to be on your guard.
“[Racism] affected the activities you did, the time of day you went out, who you went out with,” she said.
“The hostility became part of your membrane.”
Asians were specifically targeted because they personified difference, she explained.
Co-author of a book Racist Tones, documenting stories of racism from parts of the 1970s and 80s, she said football crowds were particularly fearsome.
“Match day was almost a day when curfew would encircle the family and you had to make sure everyone was home, because there was such a lot of anger and violence,” Dr Puwar remembers.
Co-author Jitey Samra, whose family had a business in the Foleshill area of the city, said she had “almost normalised” racist incidents she witnessed.
One particular “terrifying” experience involved a driving instructor who had made racist comments during a lesson.
“I actually ran from the car, but it was the racism and the hate in the guy’s face that really frightened me,” she said.
The atmosphere in the city following the racist killings was “like a cloud” had descended, she added.
“You know when you have this horrible gut feeling and a feeling of fear for children as well,” she explains.
Despite using music to spread anti-racism messages with The Specials, Golding described how he himself was also subjected to horrific racial violence.
He was beaten up in a park for intervening in a racist incident and had to run for his “dear life” through the city centre, chased by thugs.
In early 1982, he was also stabbed in the neck whilst at a city centre nightclub, leaving him traumatised.
Looking back at the attack was “very painful, emotionally,” he said.
“It took years to get over being in a club without having my back against the wall,” he explained.
“The stabbing and racial attacks – it lives on with those who’ve had to go through the trauma for years.”
Those experiences would lead to Golding writing The Specials’ Why?, which is on the B-side of 1981’s iconic Ghost Town.
In response to the attacks the CCAR organised a march for racial harmony in the city, joined by thousands of people.
The demonstration was a mile long, and was attended by groups from across the country, said Mr Dixon, who took part.
Setting off from Edgwick Park in Foleshill, by the time marchers entered the city centre “it all got a bit tense”, he remembers.
“The National Front were waiting for us, and the police were attempting to keep us apart,” he said.
“And there were justifiably angry young Asians, determined to show that they were not going to be too intimidated.”
Reports from the time document large numbers of skinheads had lined the route giving Nazi-style salutes and chanted “Sieg Heil.”
When the rally reached Cathedral Square, mounted police were sent into the crowd who retaliated with rocks, sticks and bottles.
Eleven police officers received minor injuries and 74 demonstrators were arrested.
More peaceful was the concert at the city’s Butts Park Stadium, which Golding said he was proud to have taken part in.
It was one of many in the area attended by Mr Dixon.
“I remember seeing Tom Robinson, John Cooper Clarke, Stiff Little Fingers, all at Warwick University at a Rock Against Racism gig,” he said.
He also attended the RAR march and concert at Victoria Park in London in the same year, joined by an estimated 100,000 demonstrators.
“And now we’ve got to do it all again,” he said.
Groups like RAR had, in the 80s, “pushed racism into the background, so that it became unfashionable, it wasn’t cool.”
“And this is as much about allowing artists to take a position on it, and allow them to sing on behalf of something,” he added.
Coventry musician Ace Ambrose said she was excited to be taking part in the re-launch concert, and it was important musicians took a stand against racism.
“It’s now become engrained that music is a universal language, it’s one of those things that binds us together regardless of what type of human being you are,” she said.
“This event is to remind people of that,” she added.
Another who is set to play, Duke Keats, said the movement also served as a reminder of how “diverse and rich the city is”.
“It’s absolutely incredible to think I have been born in a city with such a culture of cultures banding together,” he says.
“Everybody loves music and everybody deep down should hate racism.”
The movement reinforces our culture that’s already there, including the 2 Tone era, and allows people to look back and feel represented.
“I’m proud of what we did with The Specials, Fun Boy Three, Steel Pulse, Aswad – all of those bands who got out to support Rock Against Racism,” asserts Golding.
“Is there something wrong with us because we want to deal in love and unity? I don’t think so”.
‘They shouted Jewish, IDF’: Israeli football fans describe attack in Amsterdam
Israeli football fans have described being attacked by groups of young men in Amsterdam, with some left with injuries including broken noses.
Adi Reuben, 24, said he was kicked on the ground and had his nose broken when he and his friends were confronted by a group of over 10 men while walking back to their hotel.
The men asked Mr Reuben where he and his friends were from. “They shouted ‘Jewish, Jewish, IDF, IDF’,” he said, referring to the Israeli military.
Police say the violence involved men on scooters carrying out “hit and run” attacks which were difficult to prevent.
“They started to mess with me and I realised I had to run, but it was dark and I didn’t know where to go. I fell to the floor and 10 people were kicking me. They were shouting ‘Palestine’,” Mr Reuben told the BBC.
“They were kicking me on the floor for about a minute, then they walked off, they weren’t afraid of anything.
“I realised I had full blood on my face and my nose was broken and it is very painful.”
Mr Reuben said he could not see properly for about 30 minutes, but decided against going to hospital in Amsterdam because he had heard that taxi drivers were involved in the violence.
Instead he said he was flying to Israel on Friday afternoon and would get medical treatment there.
He added that it appeared to be “a specific attack that was organised beforehand”.
Some Israeli football fans said they were ordered to show their passports when they were set upon.
Gal Binyanmin Tshuva, 29, told the BBC he was attacked on Wednesday outside a casino after watching a different football game.
“We faced around 20 people who ran towards us. They asked me where I was from, and I said I was from Greece. They said they didn’t believe me and they asked to see my passport.
When he told them he didn’t have it, the men beat him, pushed him to the ground and kicked his face, Mr Tshuva said.
“I don’t remember anything after that, and I woke up in an ambulance with blood all over my face, and realised they had broken two of my teeth.”
British men Aaron and Jacob, who are Jewish, told the BBC they went to the match, but left early.
Afterwards, they said they saw men yelling antisemitic threats and stamping on an Israeli man. They intervened, helped the man to his feet, and went to leave.
Shortly after, a group asked the men if they were Jewish, and Aaron said that they were British.
“But they said ‘you helped the Jew’, and he punched me in my face and broke my glasses,” Aaron said.
“I was bleeding and have a black eye. I’m okay but a bit shaken.”
The BBC has seen a photo of Aaron that shows a stream of blood running down his nose, his eye swollen and other cuts on his face.
Esther Voet, editor-in-chief of a Dutch Jewish weekly newspaper, lives in the city centre. She says she offered her home to Israeli fans after she saw footage of the violence.
“I told them this is a Jewish home and you are safe here,” she told Israeli public broadcaster Kann. “People were really scared. I never thought I would go through this in Amsterdam.”
Dutch police said Israeli fans had suffered “serious abuses” during “hit-and-run” attacks, many carried out by young men on scooters.
Amsterdam police chief Peter Holla said it had proven difficult to prevent such attacks even with a significant number of officers present.
The force eventually decided to bring Maccabi supporters together and protect them before transporting them out of the area in buses, he said.
The attacks overnight into Friday followed some tensions between Maccabi fans and people in Amsterdam over previous days, officials said.
On Wednesday Maccabi fans attacked a taxi and burned a Palestinian flag, police chief Holla said.
There were further clashes in Dam Square overnight into Thursday but police were mostly able to keep the groups separate.
Some Maccabi Tel Aviv fans have previously been involved in racist incidents in Israel, including cursing at the team’s Palestinian and Arab players and reportedly applying pressure on the team to oust them.
Fans of the team have also previously attacked protesters demonstrating against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Asked about video footage appearing to show Maccabi fans in Amsterdam chanting offensive slogans, Mayor Halsema said: “What happened last night has nothing to do with protest. There is no excuse for what happened.”
Is this tiny Mauritian island a confidential spy station?
Arnaud Poulay never wanted to leave the tiny Indian Ocean island of Agalega, but this year he packed his bag and took off, broken-hearted by what he regards as the militarisation of his home.
Until recently, just 350 people lived on Agalega, fishing and growing coconuts. Other food was delivered four times a year by ship from the capital of Mauritius, 1,100km (680 miles) to the south. A small airstrip was rarely used except in medical emergencies.
But in 2015, Mauritius, an island nation of which Agalega is a part, signed a deal enabling India to build a vast 3,000m runway and a big new jetty there, as part of the two countries’ deepening collaboration on maritime security.
However some Agalegans fear this could grow into a fully-fledged military presence.
Mr Poulay, a 44-year-old handyman and reggae musician, led a campaign against the project.
“I love my island and my island loves me,” he says. “But when that base was unveiled, I knew I had to leave.”
Agalega – two small islands covering 25 sq km, in the south-west Indian Ocean – would be an ideal location for India to monitor marine traffic. And a comparison of satellite images from 2019 with others taken in July this year shows how much has changed.
A carpet of palm trees has made way for the runway, which stretches along the spine of the north island between the two main villages – La Fourche in the north and Vingt-Cinq further south.
Two 60m-wide buildings can be seen sitting on a tarmac apron, at least one of which could be a hangar to accommodate the Indian navy’s P-8I aircraft, according to Samuel Bashfield, a PhD scholar at the Australian National University.
The P-8I is a Boeing 737 modified to hunt and potentially attack submarines, and to monitor maritime communications. Islanders have already photographed the aircraft on the airstrip.
To the north-west is the new jetty jutting out into the ocean, which Mr Bashfield says could be used by Indian surface patrol vessels, as well as the ship that brings supplies to Agalega.
“As newer satellite images become available, we’ll better understand Agalega’s role in Indian Ocean communications,” he says.
The International Institute for Strategic Studies refers to the facility as a “surveillance station” and says it is likely to contain a coastal radar surveillance system similar to Indian-built equipment elsewhere in Mauritius.
The Indian government declined to answer questions about Agalega, and referred the BBC to earlier statements on its website. In one of these, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said India and Mauritius were “natural partners” in maritime security, facing traditional and non-traditional challenges in the Indian Ocean region.
The two countries have had a close defence relationship since the 1970s. The country’s national security adviser, its coastguard chief and the head of the police helicopter squadron are all Indian nationals and officers in India’s external intelligence agency, navy and air force, respectively.
Both sides would want the facility to be seen “as one that is more about capacity building than for any overt military use”, says Prof Harsh Pant, of the India Institute at King’s College London.
It’s no secret, though, that India and its Western allies are concerned about China’s increasing presence in the Indian Ocean.
While it’s not unusual for a large country to establish a military outpost on the territory of a smaller ally, the construction work on Agalega has troubled some islanders.
A number of areas, including some of the island’s palm-fringed white-sand beaches, have already been cordoned off, islanders say. There are also persistent rumours that the village of La Fourche will be swallowed by the Indian infrastructure that has grown up around it, and that the 10 families who live there will be forced out.
“It will become a restricted area completely for Indians,” says Laval Soopramanien, president of the Association of Friends of Agalega.
He fears that “Agalega will become the story of the Chagos islands” – a concern echoed by 26-year-old handyman Billy Henri, who is the son of an Agalegan and a woman expelled from the Chagos islands.
“My mother [lost] her island,” says Mr Henri. “My father will be the next.”
A number of Agalega’s residents are from families scarred by eviction from the Chagos Islands, 2,000km to the east, after the UK government declared them in 1965 to be British territory and granted the US permission to build a communications station on the largest island, Diego Garcia. This gradually became a fully-fledged military base.
Billy Henri fears that the Mauritius government, which owns all land on Agalega and is the only employer, is trying to make conditions so miserable that everyone will leave.
He points to problems with healthcare and education, limited investment in the local economy, a lack of job opportunities, and a ban on local people opening their own businesses.
A Mauritius government spokesman told the BBC that no-one would be asked to leave, and that local people were only prevented from entering the airport and the port – facilities that he said would help the country control piracy, drug-trafficking and unregulated fishing.
Mauritius also denies suggestions that Agalega hosts a military base, saying that the national police are still in full control. However, it acknowledges that India will assist in the “maintenance and operation” of the new facilities, which were built at Indian expense.
The Mauritius and Indian governments say the improvements to sea and air transportation were designed to benefit the islanders and help lift them out of poverty. But local people say this hasn’t happened: there are still only four ferries to the main island of Mauritius every year, and no passenger flights.
Agalegans say they are barred from a new Indian-built hospital, even though a Mauritius government press release vaunted its operating theatres, X-ray machines and dentistry equipment.
Billy Henri says that a boy suffering from cooking oil burns, who needed more help than he could get from the north island’s health centre, was refused entry in October.
“It’s only for Indians!” he says.
The injured boy and his parents were flown to the main island of Mauritius instead. Laval Soopramanien says the boy is still in hospital there, and that the family will remain on the main island until the next boat leaves for Agalega.
The Mauritius government did not respond, when asked to comment on the plight of the boy with burns. The Indian government declined to comment.
In a recent speech to the Mauritius parliament, Prime Minister Pravind Jugnauth said the socio-economic development of Agalega was higher than ever on his government’s agenda.
A “master plan” had been drawn up to improve health and education, transport connections and recreational facilities for the island’s residents, and to develop the fishing sector and the exploitation of coconut by-products, he said.
But distrust is fuelled by the fact that neither India nor Mauritius has published the details of the 2015 memorandum of understanding, so their plans for the future are unknown.
‘Adult crime, adult time’: Row as Australian territory locks up 10-year-olds again
‘Thomas’ – not his real name – was 13 years old when he began his first stint in prison.
Following the sudden death of his father, he had robbed a shop in Australia’s Northern Territory (NT). He was detained for a week but, within a month, he was back in custody for another burglary.
Five years on, the Aboriginal teenager has spent far more of that time inside prison than out.
“It’s hard changing,” Thomas tells me. “[Breaking the law] is something that you grow up your whole life doing – it’s hard to [stop] the habit.”
His story – a revolving door of crime, arrest and release – is not an isolated one in the Northern Territory.
For many, over the years the crimes get more serious, the sentences longer and the time spent between prison spells ever briefer.
The Northern Territory is the part of Australia with the highest rate of incarceration: more than 1,100 per 100,000 people are behind bars, which is greater than five times the national average.
It’s also more than twice the rate of the US, which is the country with the highest number of people behind bars.
But the issue of jailing children in particular has been thrust into the spotlight here, after the territory’s new government controversially lowered the age of criminal responsibility from 12 back to 10.
The move, which defies a UN recommendation, means potentially locking up even more young people.
It’s not just an issue of incarceration. It’s one of inequalities too.
While around 30% of the Northern Territory’s population is Aboriginal, almost all young people locked up here are Indigenous.
So, Aboriginal communities are by far the most affected by the new laws.
The Country Liberal Party (CLP) government says it has a mandate after campaigning to keep Territorians safe. It helped the party claim a landslide victory in August’s elections.
Among those voting for the CLP was Sunil Kumar.
The owner of two Indian restaurants in Darwin, he’s had five or six break-ins this past year and wants politicians to take more action.
“It’s young kids doing [it] most of the time – [they] think it’s fun,” explains Mr Kumar.
He says he’s improved his locks, put in cameras and even offered soft drinks to kids loitering outside in a bid to win them over.
“How come they are out and parents don’t know?” he says. “There should be a punishment for the parents.”
But while the political rhetoric around crime is powerful, critics say it actually has little to do with real numbers.
Youth offender rates have risen since Covid. Last year, there was a 4% rise nationally.
But the rates are about half of what they were 15 years ago in the Northern Territory, Australian Bureau of Statistics figures show.
Politicians, though, are playing to residents’ fears.
As well as lowering the age of criminal responsibility, they have also introduced tougher bail legislation known as Declan’s Law, after Declan Laverty, a 20-year-old who was fatally stabbed last year by someone on bail for a previous alleged assault.
“I never want another family to experience what we have,” said his mother Samara Laverty.
“The passing of this legislation is a turning point for the Territory, which will become a safer, happier, and more peaceful place.”
‘10 year olds still have baby teeth’
On the day the laws started to be debated in Darwin last month, a small crowd of demonstrators stood outside parliament in a last-ditch effort to turn the political tide.
One woman held up a placard that read: ’10 year olds still have baby teeth’. Another asked: ‘What if it was your child?’
“Our young people in Don Dale need to have opportunity for hope,” said Aboriginal elder, Aunty Barb Nasir, addressing the demonstrators.
She was referring to a notorious youth detention centre just outside Darwin, where evidence of abuse – including video of a child wearing a spit hood and shackled to a chair – outraged many in Australia and led to a royal commission inquiry.
“We need to always stand for them because they are lost in there,” Aunty Barb said.
Kat McNamara, an independent politician who opposed the bill, told the crowd: “The idea that in order to support a 10-year-old you have to criminalise them is irrational, ineffective and morally bankrupt.”
After a ripple of applause, she added: “We are not going to stand for it.”
But with a large majority in parliament, the CLP easily managed to pass the laws.
Lowering the age of criminal responsibility undid legislation passed just last year that had briefly lifted the threshold to 12.
And while other Australian states and territories have been under pressure to raise the age from 10 to 14, for now it is once again 10 across the country, with the exception of the Australian Capital Territory.
Australia is not alone – in England and Wales, for instance, it is also set at 10.
But in comparison, the majority of European Union members make it 14, in line with UN recommendations.
The Northern Territory’s Chief Minister, Lia Finocchiaro, argues that by lowering the age of criminal responsibility, authorities can “intervene early and address the root causes of crime”.
“We have this obligation to the child who has been let down in a number of ways, over a long period of time,” she said last month.
“And we have [an obligation to] the people who just want to be safe, people who don’t want to live in fear any more.”
But for people like Thomas, now 18, prison didn’t fix anything. His crimes just got worse, and his time inside increased.
He says he finds prison oddly comforting. It’s not that he likes it, but with custody comes familiarity.
“Most of my family has been in and out of jail. I felt like I was at home because all the boys took care of me.”
His two younger brothers are also stuck in a similar cycle. At one point, their mother was catching a bus to visit all three in prison every week.
Thomas still wears an ankle bracelet issued by authorities but he has been out of prison for nearly three months now – his longest spell of freedom since becoming a teenager.
He’s been helped by Brother 2 Another – an Aboriginal-led project that mentors and supports First Nations children caught up in the justice system.
“Locking these kids up is just a reactive way to go about it,” says Darren Damaso, a youth leader for Brother 2 Another.
“There needs to be more rehabilitative support services, more funding towards Aboriginal-led programmes, because they actually understand what’s happening for these families. And then we’re going to slowly start to see change. But if it’s just a ‘lock them up’ default action, it’s not going to work.”
Mr Damaso is from the Larrakia Aboriginal people, the ancestral owners of the region of Darwin, and he also has connections to the Yanuwa and Malak Malak people.
His organisation brings young people to a refashioned unit on an industrial estate on the outskirts of Darwin, providing a space to relax, a sensory room and a gym.
Brother 2 Another also works in schools and tries to help young people find work – opportunities that many who’ve been involved with police and prisons struggle to engage with.
“It’s a self-perpetuating cycle,” says John Lawrence, a Scottish criminal barrister who’s been based in Darwin for more than three decades.
He’s represented many young people and argues more money needs to go into schooling than the prison system, to prevent incarceration in the first place.
Aboriginal people “have no voice, and so they suffer great injustice and harm”, says Mr Lawrence.
“The fact that this can happen reveals very graphically and obviously how racist this country is.”
A national debate
The tough talk on crime isn’t particular to politics in the Northern Territory.
In Queensland’s recent elections, the winning campaign by the Liberal National Party played heavily on its slogan: “Adult crime, adult time.”
In a recent report by the Australian Human Rights Commission, Anne Hollonds, the National Children’s Commissioner, argued that by criminalising vulnerable children – many of them First Nations children – the country is creating “one of Australia’s most urgent human rights challenges”.
“The systems that are meant to help them, including health, education and social services, are not fit-for-purpose and these children are falling through the gaps,” she said.
“We cannot police our way out of this problem, and the evidence shows that locking up children does not make the community safer.”
Which is why there’s a growing push to fund early intervention through education, not incarceration, and trying to reduce marginalisation and disadvantage in the first place.
“What are the cultural strengths of people? What are the community strengths of people? We are building on that,” says Erin Reilly, a regional director for Children’s Ground.
Her organisation works with communities and schools on their ancestral lands, learning about foods and medicines from the bush and about the Aboriginal ‘kinship’ system – how people fit in with their community and family.
“We centre Indigenous world views and Indigenous values and we work in a way that works for Aboriginal people,” explains Ms Reilly.
“We know that the education system and health systems don’t work for our people.”
For Thomas, life on the inside was hard, involving weeks at a time spent in isolation. But on the outside, he says, there’s little understanding of the circumstances he’s lived through.
“I felt like no one cared. Nobody wanted to listen,” he says.
He points out the bite marks on his forearms and adds: “So, I hurt myself all the time – see the scars here?”
DNA firm holding highly sensitive data ‘vanishes’ without warning
A DNA-testing firm appears to have ceased trading – without telling its customers what has happened to the highly sensitive data they shared with it.
Atlas Biomed, which has offices in London, offered to provide insights into people’s genetic make up as well as their predisposition to certain illnesses.
However, users are no longer able to access their personalised reports online and the company has not responded to the BBC’s requests for comment.
Customers of the firm describe the situation as “very alarming” and say they want answers about what has happened to their “most personal information”.
The regulator, the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO), has confirmed it has received a complaint about Atlas Biomed.
“People have the right to expect that organisations will handle their personal information securely and responsibly,” it said in a statement.
Experts say it shows how users of DNA-testing services can find themselves “completely at the mercy” of such companies when it comes to protecting very sensitive data.
Disappearing DNA reports
Lisa Topping, from Saffron Walden, Essex, sent a saliva sample to Atlas Biomed several years ago, paying around £100 for a personalised genetic report.
As well as telling her about her DNA profile, it claimed to also inform her about her predisposition to diseases and even injuries, taking into account information she had provided in an accompanying questionnaire.
She could access her report online – which she checked from time to time – until one day the website disappeared. She got no reply when she contacted them to ask what had happened.
“I don’t know what someone else could do with [the data] but it’s the most personal information… I don’t know how comfortable I feel that they have just disappeared,” Lisa told me.
In 2023, Kate Lake from Tonbridge, Kent, paid Atlas Biomed £139 for a report it never delivered.
It promised her a refund – then went silent, despite her trying every means of contact she could find.
“I just never heard back from anyone, it’s like no-one was at home,” she said.
She describes the situation as “very alarming.”
“What happens now to that information they have got? I would like to hear some answers,” she said.
The BBC was also unable to contact Atlas Biomed.
A phone number listed for the company is dead. The BBC visited its offices in London, but there was no sign of Atlas Biomed there.
The firm’s Instagram account, with over 11,000 followers, was last updated in March 2022. Its final post on X was in August the same year.
It shared a post on Facebook in June 2023, but did not respond to any of the comments – which were full of people complaining about being unable to contact it or access their profiles.
Russia links
The apparent disappearance of Atlas Biomed is a mystery – but it appears to have links with Russia.
It is still listed as an active company with Companies House, where all UK-based businesses must register. However, it has not filed any accounts since December 2022.
It lists eight official positions – though four of its officers have resigned.
Two of the apparently remaining officers are listed at the same address in Moscow – as is a Russian billionaire, who is described as a now resigned director.
Atlas Biomed’s registered office is near London’s so-called Silicon Roundabout, one of the prime locations in the UK for tech firms.
When the BBC visited, there was no sign of Atlas Biomed itself, but a company registration firm based in the building confirmed that it was a client of theirs, and legitimately used the address as its own.
This firm, in an email, claimed that it could not put the BBC in touch with Atlas Biomed “for security purposes”.
“We highly suggest that you contact them directly,” it said.
No-one from Atlas Biomed has responded to the BBC’s attempts to contact it.
Cybersecurity expert Prof Alan Woodward said the apparent links to Russia were “odd.”
“If people knew the provenance of this company and how it operates they might not be quite so ready to trust them with their DNA,” he told the BBC.
‘At their mercy’
None of this explains where Atlas Biomed’s database of customer DNA has ended up – and the BBC has seen no evidence it is being misused.
But Prof Carissa Veliz – author of Privacy is Power – points out that DNA is arguably the most valuable personal data you have. It is uniquely yours, you can’t change it, and it reveals your – and by extension, your family’s – biological strengths and weaknesses.
Biometric data is given special protection under the UK’s version of GDPR, the data protection law.
“When you give your data to a company you are completely at their mercy and you have to be able to trust them,” Prof Veliz said.
“We shouldn’t have to wait until something happens.”
Irish man suspected of killing US nurse arrested in Hungary
A 37-year-old Irish man has been arrested in connection with the murder of an American nurse in Hungary, police say.
Mackenzie Michalski, 31, from Portland, Oregon, was reported missing after a night out in Hungary’s capital, Budapest, on Tuesday.
Officers said the suspect was identified through CCTV footage and later confessed to killing Ms Michalski, but claimed her death had been an accident.
In a statement, put out on Saturday, police said the man had attempted to conceal Ms Michalski’s death by renting a car, putting her body in a suitcase and hiding it in woodland near the village of Szigliget in the country’s west.
Officers said Ms Michalski was killed during an “intimate encounter” with the suspect, but did not provide any further details.
They were able to establish that the pair had met at a nightclub, danced together and then travelled to the man’s rented apartment.
He was arrested there on Thursday evening, and has been remanded in custody.
After being questioned, the suspect showed detectives where he had disposed of Ms Michalski’s body, the police statement said.
It added that the man had placed the nurse’s body in a wardrobe while he cleaned his apartment – in a bid to “remove traces” of the alleged murder – before driving to the woods.
Ms Michalski was reported missing by friends when she failed to return to their accommodation.
During the course of their investigation, police said they uncovered evidence which “gave rise to the suspicion of murder”.
Following Ms Michalski’s disappearance, the man made a series of online searches – including “what does a dead body smell like after it decomposes?”, “how do the police handle missing person cases?”, and “removing rotting meat smell”.
He is also alleged to have searched whether pigs eat dead bodies and about the appearance of wild boar along Lake Balaton – a body of water near Szigliget.
In footage released by Hungarian police, a man in handcuffs can be seen guiding officers through woodland. Sniffer dogs and forensic investigators are present.
A Facebook group, called Find Mackenzie Michalski, says the 31-year-old often went by the nickname Kenzie.
On Saturday, her friends held a candlelit vigil close to the US embassy in Budapest.
New Paddington film charming but slow, critics say
The much-anticipated new Paddington in Peru film has had mixed reviews over its opening weekend, with critics calling it “charming-enough”, but some agreeing the film struggles to reach the heights of its predecessors.
The third instalment in the Paddington live action adventure franchise sees the marmalade sandwich munching bear return to Peru to visit his aunt Lucy.
The film, that includes a return of much loved cast members including Ben Whishaw, Emily Mortimer and Hugh Bonneville, opened in UK cinemas on Friday 8 November.
Since the beginning of the film series in 2014, Paddington Bear has grown to become a national treasure with fans of all ages through its heart-warming appeal.
Of the latest film, Peter Bradshaw wrote in the Guardian that the experience was “just as jolly as the previous two films, but not really as funny” and likened it to a “special episode of a TV sitcom that takes the cast to the Costa del Sol”.
In the Hollywood Reporter, Leslie Felperin wrote that while the film “lacks the absurdist wit and decidedly dark edge that elevated the first two Paddington movies”, it was “serviceable enough given its limitations”.
Nick Curtis was more cutting with his two star review in the Standard, saying Paddington in Peru “misses the easy charm, the fluency and the icy sliver of jeopardy” from the first two movies “which had genuine cross-generational appeal”.
He added the pacing felt “ponderous and slow”.
The Telegraph’s Tim Robey was one of many critics to give Paddington in Peru a three-star rating, praising the addition of new characters portrayed by Hollywood heavyweights Olivia Colman and Antonio Banderas, calling them “assets” to the film, albeit not matching the previous “scene-stealing” from Hugh Grant.
Nick de Semlyen also agreed, writing in Empire: “Colman is perfect casting as sinister sister Reverend Mother, overseer of the Home For Retired Bears.
“Whether riffing on The Sound Of Music, strumming irritatingly on a guitar, or struggling to keep a phony smile plastered across her face, Colman is great fun, though a little underused. Antonio Banderas, meanwhile, goes full Kind Hearts And Coronets, playing not just a boat captain with a secret, but his many descendants.”
Speaking in an interview with BBC Radio 1, Whishaw, who has voiced the character of Paddington in all three movies, said “I think they are beautiful films made with such care and love.
“A good film is a good film and they are hard to make, so I feel very proud of them and very proud to be associated in this way with this character.”
The director of the first two Paddington films, Paul King, has since moved on to new projects including Wonka, starring Timothee Chalamet, but he is credited with writing this latest story alongside Simon Farnaby and Mark Burton.
Clarisse Loughrey gave the film three stars in the Independent, calling Paddington in Peru “the worst in the franchise” but praised the production design, which takes full advantage of moving the cast away from the cosy comforts of London, and making “every interior look like an untouched escape room with secrets hidden under every trinket”.
Leila Latif of Total Film gave Paddington in Peru four stars, saying “despite the title, the film feels distinctly un-Peruvian”.
She added: “There are no Peruvian characters (unless you count the bears) and while the film alludes to the previous horrors of plundering Spanish colonizers in a surprisingly brutal montage, it’s still an uneasy shift that there is more screen presence from people of colour in London than there is in South America.”
Away from the big screen, a new Paddington musical is being developed for the stage, with McFly’s Tom Fletcher set to write the music and lyrics.
On November 7 the cast of the upcoming film unveiled special livery on a Great Western Railway (GWR) train that will travel through Devon and Cornwall.
FBI investigates racist text messages sent to black people across US
Authorities are investigating racist text messages sent to black Americans across the country telling them to report to a plantation “to pick cotton”.
Black Americans, including school and college students, were among the recipients in states including Alabama, North Carolina, Virginia, New York and Pennsylvania.
“The FBI is aware of the offensive and racist text messages sent to individuals around the country and is in contact with the Justice Department and other federal authorities on the matter,” the agency said.
The messages appear to have started on Wednesday, the day after election day. Some of the messages mentioned the Trump campaign – which strongly denied any connection.
Steven Cheung, a campaign spokesman, said: “The campaign has absolutely nothing to do with these text messages.”
The source of the anonymous messages and the total number sent are unclear.
A 42-year-old mother in Indiana sent a copy of the texts her high-school-aged daughter received to the BBC.
The messages said that the daughter had “been selected to become a slave at your nearest plantation” and would be “picked up in a white van” and “searched thoroughly once you’ve reached your destination”.
The woman, who asked to remain anonymous for her safety, called the messages “extremely, extremely alarming” and made her feel “really vulnerable”.
“It’s because of America’s history, but the timing is specific to the day after the election,” she said. “This had to be a strategised effort.”
Another recipient, Hailey Welch, told a University of Alabama student newspaper that several students on the campus had also received the messages.
“At first I thought it was a joke, but everyone else was getting them. People were texting, posting on their stories, saying they got them,” Ms Welch told The Crimson White. “I was just stressed out, and I was scared because I didn’t know what was happening.”
The wording of the messages varied but generally instructed recipients to report to a “plantation” or wait to be picked up in a van, and referred to “slave” labour.
The texts were sent from numbers with area codes in at least 25 different states, according to CBS News, the BBC’s partner network in the US.
TextNow, a mobile provider that allows people to create phone numbers for free, said it found one or more of its accounts were used to send text messages “in violation of its terms of service”. The company disabled the accounts within an hour of discovering the misuse, it said in a statement.
“We do not condone the use of our service to send harassing or spam messages and will work with the authorities to prevent these individuals from doing so in the future,” it said.
Civil rights group NAACP condemned the messages saying they were a consequence of President-elect Trump’s election.
“These actions are not normal, ” said the group’s chief executive Derrick Johnson. “These messages represent an alarming increase in vile and abhorrent rhetoric from racist groups across the country, who now feel emboldened to spread hate and stoke the flames of fear that many of us are feeling after Tuesday’s election results.”
Jessica Rosenworcel, chairwoman of the Federal Communications Commission, which is also investigating the messages, said: “These messages are unacceptable. We take this type of targeting very seriously.”
In several states, top law enforcement officials said they were aware of the messages and encouraged residents to report them to the authorities if they received them.
The office of Nevada’s attorney general said it was working to “probe into the source of what appear to be robotext messages”.
In a statement, Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill said Louisiana Bureau of Investigation officers had traced some of the messages to a virtual private network – a method of masking the origins of electronic communications – based in Poland.
Murrill said investigators “have found no original source – meaning they could have originated from any bad actor state in the region or the world”.
The Indiana mother responded to reports the messages could have originated abroad, telling the BBC: “It doesn’t make it any safer or better that it could have been foreign.”
“They know the mindset of America,” she said.
We must not turn blind eye to antisemitism, says Dutch king after attacks on Israeli football fans
The Dutch king says Jewish people must feel safe in the Netherlands, after violent attacks against Israeli football fans in the centre of Amsterdam.
Willem-Alexander said “our history has taught us how intimidation goes from bad to worse,” adding that the country could not ignore “antisemitic behaviour”.
Youths on scooters had criss-crossed the Dutch capital in “hit-and-run” attacks on Maccabi Tel Aviv supporters who were visiting Amsterdam for a Europa League match, authorities said.
Police said five people were treated in hospital and others suffered minor injuries. At least 62 people have been arrested.
“My heart goes out to the victims and to their families here and in Israel as well,” Amsterdam’s Mayor Femke Halsema told a press conference on Friday.
Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof flew back early from a summit of EU leaders in Budapest where he said he had been following developments with horror.
“The perpetrators will be tracked down and prosecuted,” he promised.
The violence on Thursday night was condemned by leaders across Europe, the US and Israel. For many, it was especially shocking coming on the eve of commemorations marking Kristallnacht, the 1938 Nazi pogroms against German Jews.
Three-quarters of Jewish people in the Netherlands were murdered during the Holocaust in World War Two.
- Israeli fans describe violence in Amsterdam
- Are you in Amsterdam? Please share your experiences here.
The king alluded to that history, saying: “Jews must feel safe in the Netherlands, everywhere and at all times. We put our arms around them and will not let them go.”
US President Joe Biden said the attacks “echo dark moments in history when Jews were persecuted”.
There had already been trouble and some arrests the night before Thursday’s match, involving Maccabi fans as well as pro-Palestinian protesters.
Police chief Peter Holla confirmed there had been incidents “on both sides”. Israeli supporters had removed a Palestinian flag from a wall and set it alight and attacked a taxi, although there had been no further trouble until the following night, he said.
There were also reports of supporters setting off fireworks. One unverified video showed fans going down an escalator chanting anti-Arab slogans.
The Palestinian Ministry of Foreign Affairs condemned “anti-Arab chants” and an “attack on the Palestinian flag,” calling on the Dutch government to “protect Palestinians and Arabs” living in the Netherlands.
The national co-ordinator for combating antisemitism in the Netherlands said a line had been crossed and the “readiness to commit such violence was disgusting”.
Mayor Halsema said Dutch counter-terror co-ordinator NCTV had not flagged any concrete threat about the game itself as there was no animosity between the fans of the two clubs. There was no trouble at the game in which Ajax inflicted a heavy 5-0 defeat on the visiting team.
But the unrest spiralled out of control soon afterwards.
Halsema spoke of fans being “attacked, abused and pelted with fireworks” as they walked from the Johan Cruyff Arena to the centre of Amsterdam.
Police initially said it was unclear who had taken part in the riots, although the mayor later spoke of young men on scooters. She was careful not to give details about the ethnic backgrounds of those involved in the attack, emphasising that it was part of the police investigation.
Several videos circulated on social media, with one showing a man being kicked and beaten on the ground and another showing someone being run over. In some unverified videos, people could be heard shouting pro-Palestinian slogans.
Two British visitors said they came under attack as they tried to help an Israeli beaten up by people on mopeds. Jacob, 33, told the BBC he saw “10 people stamping and kicking” the man, and that they had seen “lots of little gangs chasing people”.
Asked whether locals had been provoked by a Palestinian flag being torn down in the city, the mayor said what had happened in the centre of her city had nothing to do with protests about the situation in the Middle East.
“I am deeply ashamed of the behaviour that unfolded,” Halsema told reporters. “On Telegram [messaging] groups people talked of going to hunt down Jews. It’s so terrible I can’t find the words for it.”
In a statement, Telegram said it had closed a group chat on the platform which “may have been linked to the disturbance”. The company said it did not tolerate “calls to violence” and would cooperate with the Dutch authorities.
The mayor confirmed reports that taxi drivers had been involved in the attacks, after the head of the Netherlands’ Central Jewish Committee (CJO) said they had “moved in groups and cornered their targets”.
Israeli airline El Al said it was operating free “rescue flights” to Amsterdam to bring passengers back to Israel.
On Friday, those flights started arriving back at Israel’s Ben Gurion airport, where passengers were swarmed by reporters in the arrival hall and asked to share their experiences of the violence.
Israeli President Isaac Herzog spoke of a “pogrom” against Maccabi fans and Israeli citizens.
Herzog said on X that he trusted the Dutch authorities would act immediately to “protect, locate and rescue all Israelis and Jews under attack”.
The violence in Amsterdam has raised questions about security for Israeli fans elsewhere in Europe.
Israel’s national security council had urged fans to avoid a basketball game in the Italian city of Bologna on Friday due to the risk of “copycat actions”, though there were no reports of violence following the EuroLeague fixture.
According to Italian media, Bologna’s police chief assigned a special escort to the Israeli players for their travel to the match, which Virtus Bologna won 84-77.
Candyman actor Tony Todd dies aged 69
Tony Todd, best known for starring in the Candyman horror films, has died aged 69.
The American actor died at his home in Los Angeles on Wednesday night, according to reports.
He starred as the title character in the horror series, depicting the ghostly Candyman character with a hook for a hand, summoned by saying his name five times in front of a mirror.
Todd continued as Candyman from the first film in 1992 through follow-ups in 1995 and 1999, and reprised the role in 2021 for a fourth film serving as a direct sequel to the original.
Throughout his 40-year career, Todd also featured in hundreds of films, stage productions and television dramas, including roles in the Transformers and Final Destination films.
In Candyman, Todd’s titular character is the ghost of artist Daniel Robitaille, a black man who was lynched in the 19th Century.
The 1992 film sees Todd’s character accidentally summoned to the real world by a graduate student in Chicago intrigued by the urban legend of the Candyman, setting off a chain of murderous events.
Speaking to the Guardian in 2019, Todd recalled the film’s famous scene that sees Candyman swarmed with bees, during which he was stung 23 times and apparently paid a $1,000 bonus each time.
“Everything that’s worth making has to involve some sort of pain,” he remarked.
Read next: How horror reflected black trauma, for better or worse.
On his Candyman character, he told the same interview: “I’ve done 200 movies, this is the one that stays in people’s minds. It affects people of all races. I’ve used it as an introductory tool in gang-intervention work: what frightens you? What horrible things have you experienced?”
Paying tribute, actor Virginia Madsen, who starred as student Helen Lyle in Candyman, said Todd “now is an angel. As he was in life”.
She called him a “truly poetic man” with “a deep knowledge of the arts”.
“I will miss him so much and hope he haunts me once in a while,” she added. “But I will not summon him in the mirror!”
The original film’s sequel – Candyman: Farewell to the Flesh – set three years later sees Todd’s iconic lead appear again in New Orleans, encountering a descendant of his daughter.
The third film – Candyman: Day of the Dead – was released in 1999, but set in 2020 Los Angeles.
Todd, and others from the 1992 film, reprised their roles in the 2021 film.
In 2020, Todd called that version “brilliant”, crediting the film’s director Nia DaCosta as “a fan of body horror”.
As part of her tribute, Madsen praised the “gift” that the film’s co-writer Jordan Peele had given herself and Todd to “let us live again as lovers”.
Before Candyman, one of Todd’s earliest roles in film was in 1986 as Sgt Warren in war drama Platoon.
Catherine joins royals at Remembrance event
The Princess of Wales joined King Charles and other senior royals at a Remembrance event in London on Saturday night, her first major formal appearance since finishing chemotherapy.
Catherine, 42, is gradually returning to public duties following her cancer treatment earlier this year.
She joined Prince William and other members of the Royal Family as well as senior politicians at the Royal Albert Hall on Saturday night, where they watched the commemorative concert from the royal box.
The King, who has also been treated for cancer, received a standing ovation from the audience when he arrived.
He was not accompanied by Queen Camilla because she is recovering from a chest infection.
The Festival of Remembrance was held to pay respect to serving personnel, veterans and their families.
The Royal British Legion event featured a performance from Sir Tom Jones, who performed I Won’t Crumble With You If I Fall with the Royal Air Force band, and salutes by military personnel.
The royal family stood at points to clap for veterans, and later in the night joined in the singing of a hymn.
The concert and the service at the Cenotaph on Sunday are among the most important events on the royal calendar.
Catherine is also expected to attend the Remembrance Day ceremony on Sunday.
King Charles, 75, will lead the royal family at that event too. The King, who is still receiving cancer treatment, will lay a wreath at the memorial in Whitehall, London on Sunday.
The palace announced in February that he had been diagnosed with cancer and would take time away from public life to undergo treatment.
The following month, Catherine revealed that she too had been diagnosed with cancer and was getting treatment.
In an emotional video address in September, she announced she had completed her treatment and was looking forward to undertaking more engagements “when I can”.
But she added her focus was “doing what I can to stay cancer free”.
The palace has not disclosed what type of cancer they both have.
Both Catherine and the King have since made limited returns to public duties. Charles recently toured Australia and Samoa, an overseas trip during which his treatment was paused.
For Catherine, Remembrance events had been flagged as an example of when she might make a public appearance.
She had already made a few tentative returns, beginning with her first public appearance after her cancer diagnosis at the annual Trooping the Colour parade in June.
In September, she attended her first official work meeting since her treatment ended.
In October, Catherine visited Southport with the Prince of Wales – where they met the families of three children killed in a knife attack in the town.
The Remembrance events, which are a big date in the royal calendar, are being seen as another major milestone in her return to public life.
On Thursday while in tour in South Africa, Prince William described the past year as the “hardest year” of his life.
“I’m so proud of my wife, I’m proud of my father, for handling the things that they have done,” he told reporters at the end of his visit to South Africa to promote his Earthshot eco-project.
“But from a personal family point of view, it’s been brutal.”
Queen Camilla’s absence followed medical guidance “to ensure a full recovery from a seasonal chest infection” and to protect others, the Palace said in a statement on Saturday.
Hidden message in a bottle found in lighthouse wall after 132 years
Engineers have found a bottle with a 132-year-old message deep inside the walls of a lighthouse in the south of Scotland.
The bottle was found inside the Corsewall Lighthouse at the most northerly point of the Rhins of Galloway.
The “once in a lifetime” find is understood to be the first message in a bottle ever discovered in a lighthouse in Scotland.
Written using quill and ink, the letter dated 4 September 1892 reveals the names of three engineers who installed a new type of light in the 100ft (30m) tower.
It also has the names of the lighthouse’s three keepers.
The 8in (20cm) bottle was found by Ross Russell, a Northern Lighthouse Board mechanical engineer, during an inspection.
He spotted it after removing panels in a cupboard but it was well out of arm’s reach. The team retrieved it using a contraption made from a rope and a broom handle.
But they waited until retained lighthouse keeper, Barry Miller, arrived before they opened it.
“My goodness am I grateful for them doing that,” he said.
The bottle has an unusual convex base, meaning it cannot stand upright, and it is made of coarse glass, full of tiny air bubbles.
It is thought it would have once contained oil.
The bottle stopper was cork, which had expanded over time and stuck to the glass, while the wire which held it in place had rusted away.
The men had to cut the top off the cork and very carefully drill the cork out.
The note initially seemed too big to pull out the neck of the bottle so they devised a tool using two pieces of cable to twist it through the narrow opening.
Dr Miller, 77, told BBC Scotland News his hands were shaking when he opened it.
“It was so exciting, it was like meeting our colleagues from the past. It was actually like them being there,” he said.
“It was like touching them. Like them being part of our team instead of just four of us being there, we were all there sharing what they had written because it was tangible and you could see the style of their handwriting.
“You knew what they had done. You knew they had hidden it in such a place it wouldn’t be found for a long, long time.”
What did the letter say?
‘I was in utter amazement’
Ross Russell, from Oban, who found the bottle with his colleagues Morgan Dennison and Neil Armstrong, said it was an unbelievable discovery.
“The note was just sensational, I was just in utter amazement,” Ross said.
“Being the first person to touch the bottle after 132 years was just mind blowing.
“It’s a once in a lifetime find.”
The engineers had travelled to the 209-year-old lighthouse ahead of a year long project to check the bearing the five tonne lens rotates on.
They were trying to check under the floor to see if that section would be able to hold the lens while it was off its bearing when they found the bottle.
The men who wrote the note in 1892 had been at the lighthouse to install a different type of lantern and glazing at the top of the tower.
“It was just a strange coincidence to find the note while working on the equipment described on the note,” Ross said.
The 36-year-old said they planned to replace the note and bottle where they had found them as well as adding another of their own.
The bottle and note are currently being stored in the Northern Lighthouse Board’s headquarters in Edinburgh.
Meanwhile a descendant of one of the lighthouse keepers said he was delighted by the discovery.
Euan Murray, who grew up 10 miles (16km) from the lighthouse in Stranraer, is the great great great grandson of Robert Murray who worked alongside John Wilson at Corsewall.
“I do find it very interesting to see a bit of family history pop up out the blue like this,” he said.
The 32-year-old added: “It’s amazing to think that the work they did back then is still completely relevant today, even in the age of satellite navigation.”
The Royal Navy chief engineer said: “Ships are still using these lighthouses for safe navigation on a daily basis.
“All the more apparent because of my career at sea and having passed the lighthouse many times on vessels arriving and departing from around the world. Always a nice sign of home.”
Qatar suspends role as mediator between Israel and Hamas
Qatar has suspended its work as a mediator in ceasefire and hostage release talks between Israel and Hamas, officials say.
The country said it would resume its work when Hamas and Israel “show their willingness” to negotiate.
It comes after senior US officials reportedly said Washington would no longer accept the presence of Hamas representatives in Qatar, accusing the Palestinian group of rejecting fresh proposals for an end to the war in Gaza.
Qatar said initial reports it had withdrawn from mediation talks and said that Hamas’s political office in Doha “no longer serves its purpose” were “inaccurate”.
“Qatar notified the parties 10 days ago during the last attempts to reach an agreement, that it would stall its efforts to mediate between Hamas and Israel if an agreement was not reached in that round,” a statement from the Qatari foreign ministry said.
“Qatar will resume those efforts… when the parties show their willingness and seriousness to end the brutal war.”
Hamas has had a base in the Qatari capital since 2012, reportedly at the request of the Obama administration.
Several news agencies reported on Saturday that Qatar had agreed with the US to tell Hamas to close its political office in Doha due to “a refusal to negotiate a deal in good faith”.
But the foreign ministry said the reports were “inaccurate”. The claims have also been denied by Hamas officials.
The small but influential Gulf state is a key US ally in the region. It hosts a major American air base and has handled many delicate political negotiations, including with Iran, the Taliban and Russia.
Alongside the US and Egypt, the Qataris have also played a major role in rounds of so-far unsuccessful talks to broker a ceasefire in the year-long war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza.
But there is growing evidence of a shift in the relationship.
After the killing of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, Hamas held a two-hour mourning tent in Doha in a small hall, a stark contrast to the recent three-day mourning held for Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh, which was conducted with official state oversight and security.
The latest round of talks in mid-October failed to produce a deal, with Hamas rejecting a short-term ceasefire proposal. The group has always called for a complete end to the war and the full withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza.
The Qatari foreign ministry statement said: “Media reports regarding the Hamas office in Doha is inaccurate.”
“The main goal of the office in Qatar is to be a channel of communication… [which] has contributed to achieving a ceasefire in previous stages.”
Israel has also been accused of rejecting deals. Days after being fired earlier this week, former Defence Minister Yoav Gallant accused Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of rejecting a peace deal against the advice of his security chiefs.
The call for Hamas to be expelled from Qatar appears to be an attempt by the outgoing Biden administration to force some sort of peace deal before the end of his term in January.
Were Hamas to be forced to leave Doha, it is unclear where they would base their political office. Key ally Iran would be an option, although the assassination of former leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran in July suggests they may be at risk from Israel if based there. It would also not give them anything close to the same diplomatic channels to the West.
A more likely option would be Turkey. As a Nato member but also a Sunni majority state, it would give the group a base from which to operate in relative safety. Last April President Erdogan hosted then Hamas political chief Ismail Haniyeh and his delegation in Istanbul, where they talked about “what needs to be done to ensure adequate and uninterrupted delivery of humanitarian aid to Gaza, and a fair and lasting peace process in the region”.
The move would also most likely be welcomed by Ankara, which has often sought to position itself as a broker between east and west.
Key Hamas figures such as Osama Hamdan, Taher al-Nunu, and others frequently featured on news outlets have been staying in Istanbul for over a month.
Their extended presence in Turkey marks a departure from past visits, which were typically limited to brief stays.
It is thought the personal safety of Hamas leadership is now a major concern for the group, which saw two leaders killed in less than four months. As well as Haniyeh’s death in July, in October Israel killed Yahya Sinwar, the mastermind behind the 7 October Hamas attack on southern Israel.
According to the European Council of Foreign Relations, “Hamas has adopted a temporary model of collective leadership to mitigate the effect of future Israeli assassinations”.
H A Hellyer, a senior associate fellow at the Royal United Services Institute (Rusi), told the BBC that nowhere “will give them protection from Israeli assassination attempts in the same way that being in Doha, where America has its largest military base in the region, did”.
The latest move comes as US officials appear increasingly frustrated with the approach the Israeli government has taken to ending the war. In October, the US Secretaries of State and Defense said if Israel did not allow more humanitarian aid into the territory by 12 November, they would face unspecified policy “implications”.
Last weekend a number of UN officials warned the situation in northern Gaza was “apocalyptic”. On Saturday the independent Famine Review Committee said there was a “strong likelihood that famine is imminent in areas”.
The relationship between President Joe Biden and Netanyahu has deteriorated over the course of the war in Gaza, with increasing pressure from Washington to improve the humanitarian situation for the Palestinians and find some sort of negotiated settlement.
But, according to Dr Hellyer, US attempts at negotiation have been fatally flawed.
“By setting red lines and allowing Netanyahu to cross them without consequence, the Biden administration effectively encouraged further impunity. I don’t think any of this will change in the next 10 weeks,” he said.
Any overtures have been repeatedly rejected by Netanyahu and his right-wing coalition, who will now also feel emboldened by the prospect of an incoming Donald Trump presidency.
While exactly what approach Trump will take to the region remains uncertain, he is thought to be more likely to allow Israel to act on its terms.
He has previously said Israel should “finish what they started” in Gaza. During his last term in the White House, he took a number of steps deemed highly favourable to Israel, including moving the US embassy to Jerusalem.
It has also been reported, however, that Trump has told Netanyahu that he wants to see an end to the fighting by the time he takes office.
Either way, it seems likely that the current US administration will have less influence over the government in Jerusalem.
They may therefore believe the best way to force some sort of deal is to apply pressure on Hamas. Whether it pays off may depend on whether Qatar, so long a reliable ally, decides to go along with it.
Trump rules out top jobs for Nikki Haley and Mike Pompeo
US President-elect Donald Trump has said he will not offer Nikki Haley or Mike Pompeo jobs in his administration, as he assembles his cabinet following a resounding election victory over Vice-President Kamala Harris.
“I very much enjoyed and appreciated working with them previously, and would like to thank them for their service to our country,” he wrote in a social media post.
Trump’s closest allies have accused Haley and Pompeo of being so-called deep state moles, arguing they would plot to undermine his ‘America First’ agenda.
As he lays the groundwork for his inauguration on 20 January, Trump will meet outgoing President Joe Biden in the coming days.
Haley was Trump’s most durable challenger from a crowded field of contenders during the Republican primaries earlier this year, when the party’s voters were deciding who would be their White House standard-bearer.
During the race, former South Carolina Governor Haley strongly criticised her former boss – at one point calling him “unhinged”.
Trump ultimately prevailed. Haley, who served as United Nations ambassador during his first presidency from 2017-21, eventually endorsed him – though he did not call on her to help him campaign on the final stretch of this election.
While it is little surprise that Haley did not make the shortlist for a role, former CIA director Pompeo had been widely tipped as a contender for secretary of defence.
The former Kansas congressman led Trump’s diplomatic blitz in the Middle East and often tangled with the press in defence of his boss.
But influential voices within the Trump-world have been lobbying against Pompeo and Haley.
They include veteran political strategist Roger Stone, who wrote on his website on Friday that Trump ought to beware of “neocons” who might form “a sinister fifth column” within his new administration. Stone singled out Haley and Pompeo.
Also on Saturday, the Trump campaign announced that the Presidential Inaugural Committee will be chaired by two long-time Trump allies: Steve Witkoff, a real estate investor, and Kelly Loeffler, a former senator for the state of Georgia.
Biden will host the president-elect in the Oval Office on Wednesday, the White House said in a brief statement on Saturday.
The meeting will bring together two bitter rivals for a display of national unity after one of the most rancorous American election campaigns in living memory.
Such moments are a tradition between the outgoing and incoming presidents, though when Trump lost his re-election bid in 2020 amid the Covid pandemic he did not invite Biden. Nor did he attend his successor’s inauguration, as is customary.
Incoming First Lady Melania Trump has also been invited to the White House to meet Jill Biden, an East Wing official told CNN, though it is unclear when that might happen.
- Melania Trump, the enigmatic first lady who might do it differently this time
Trump and Biden’s chat will be their first encounter since they stood almost side by side at a 9/11 memorial in New York City two months ago.
The two traded plenty of insults over the campaign, with Biden saying Trump should be locked up and appearing to call Trump supporters “garbage”, while Trump called Biden a “bad guy” and “a broken-down pile of crap”.
But on Thursday, Biden pledged to help Trump make an orderly transition back to the White House.
“Campaigns are contests of competing visions,” Biden said. “The country chooses one or the other. We accept the choice the country made. I’ve said many times you can’t love your country only when you win. You can’t love your neighbour only when you agree.”
The visual of Biden and Trump together in the White House is likely to be as striking as the one of former President Barack Obama and Trump in 2016, after Trump defeated Hillary Clinton to secure the presidency for the first time.
Harris – the Democratic candidate who Trump defeated in the 5 November election – will be required to certify his presidential victory in Congress in the new year.
Under the US Constitution, the vice-president is the president of the Senate and formally presides over the counting of electoral ballots cast in elections.
The ceremony will take place on 6 January, four years to the day since Trump supporters rioted at the Capitol as Biden’s win was being certified.
Harris became the Democratic candidate when Biden bowed to pressure within the party to step aside after his performance in a televised debate with Trump in July.
In the presidential election, Trump on Saturday completed a clean sweep of all seven swing states in US election victory, after a projected win in Arizona.
The result leaves Trump with 312 votes in the all-important US electoral college, surpassing the 270 needed to win.
In the Senate, the Republican Party has gained control with a majority of at least 52 seats. Results are yet to emerge from two states: Arizona and Pennsylvania.
In the House of Representatives, Republicans are inching towards a majority, having secured 215 seats. Nineteen races are yet to be called. A party needs 218 seats to have overall control of the chamber.
Indian experts hail breakthrough in bid to save huge native bird
Last month brought good news for the great Indian bustard, a critically endangered bird found mainly in India.
Wildlife officials in the western state of Rajasthan have performed the first successful hatching of a chick through artificial insemination.
A lone adult male in one of two breeding centres in Jaisalmer city was trained to produce sperm without mating, which was then used to impregnate an adult female at the second centre some 200km (124 miles) away.
Officials said the development was important as it has opened up the possibility of creating a sperm bank.
Over the years, habitat loss, poaching and collisions with overhead power lines have effected great Indian bustards. Their numbers have fallen from more than 1,000 in the 1960s to around 150 at present.
Most of them are found in Jaisalmer and hence, conservation activists say that the bird’s habitat in the city should be protected. But this land is also prime real estate for renewable energy firms, presenting authorities with a unique conservation challenge.
The great Indian bustard may not be as well known as the peacock (India’s national bird) but it’s just as impressive, says Sumit Dookia, a conservation ecologist who has been studying the bird for close to a decade. The massive bird, which weighs between 15kg and 18kg, is one of the biggest flying birds in India.
It once had a prolific presence in the country and was found in at least 11 states, but today, its population is confined to Rajasthan, while a handful might be spotted in the southern state of Karnataka and the western state of Gujarat.
The shy bird plays an important role in the food chain by preying on rodents, snakes and other pests and is also the state bird of Rajasthan, where it is called ‘Godawan’ by locals.
But some of the bird’s unique evolutionary traits are clashing with human interventions, making it vulnerable to extinction.
For one, the great Indian bustard has good peripheral vision but poor frontal vision, making it difficult for them to spot power lines until they fly too close to them. Their large size makes it difficult for them to quickly change their flight path and they end up colliding with the cables and dying.
“Their vision could have developed like this as the bird spends a large amount of time on land,” says Mr Dookia. It also lays its eggs on the ground, without a nest or any other form of protection except for the watchful eye of the mother and this might have caused it to develop good side vision, he adds.
The great Indian bustard also has unique breeding habits. The bird lays just one egg at a time and spends the next two years caring for its offspring.
“Since it reaches maturity at around four years of age and lives for 12-15 years, it lays just about four-five eggs in its lifetime and many of these eggs are destroyed by predators,” Mr Dookia says.
Conservationists say that over the past few years, the great Indian bustard’s habitat in Jaisalmer has been overrun by solar and wind energy farms, leading to an increase in flying accidents.
“The increased human presence has also created more filth, attracting stray dogs who kill the birds or destroy their eggs,” Mr Dookia says.
To boost the bird’s population, the government of Rajasthan collaborated with the federal government and the Wildlife Institute of India to launch a conservation breeding centre at Sam city in 2018. Another breeding centre was set up at Ramdevra village in 2022, says Ashish Vyas, a top forest official in Jaisalmer.
As a first step, researchers collected eggs found in the wild and hatched them in incubation centres. “Currently, there are 45 birds in both the centres,14 of which are captive-bred chicks (including the one born through artificial insemination),” he adds.
The plan is to further boost the bird’s population and then eventually release them into the wild. But conservationists say that this is easier said than done.
This is because the birds born in these breeding centres have imprinted on human researchers (in other words, they have formed close bonds with their human caretakers) and have lost about 60-70% of their ability to survive in the wild, says Mr Dookia.
“Human imprinting is necessary for feeding and handling the birds but it also makes them lose their natural instincts. It will be extremely challenging to re-wild them, especially if there’s no habitat left for the birds to be released into,” he adds.
The loss of habitat has also resulted in another problem: researchers have noticed that the birds, which used to migrate across states, have almost completely stopped doing so. Even in Jaisalmer, where the birds are found in two pockets – Pokhran in the eastern part of the city and the Desert National Park in the west – there’s hardly any cross-migration, says Mr Dookia.
It’s likely that the birds have stopped migrating over large distances in response to flying accidents, he adds. This increases the risk of inbreeding, which could result in birth defects.
“Thus, the only solution to conserve the great Indian bustard is to preserve its natural habitat,” he says.
But a Supreme Court judgement from April has made conservationists uneasy.
The court overturned an earlier interim order, which had instructed Rajasthan and Gujarat to prioritise moving power cables underground in great Indian bustard habitats. The order had created a furore among renewable energy firms, who said that this would cost them billions of rupees and virtually kill their business.
In its latest judgment, the court observed that people had the right to be free from the harmful effects of climate change and that shifting large sections of power cables underground may not be feasible for firms from a monetary and technical standpoint.
It also directed that a committee be set up to look into the feasibility of moving power lines and the efficacy of bird diverters – devices that have reflectors and are attached to power cables to alert birds about their presence.
While corporates have hailed the top court’s judgment, conservationists and some legal experts say that it’s problematic as it pits one good cause against another.
“The judgment brings into focus a flawed understanding of the interplay between climate change, biodiversity and development issues,” ecologist Debadityo Sinha wrote in a column.
He noted that many highly-populated cities in India have underground power lines and that other states have taken such a step to protect other bird species in the past. He also pointed out that although moving power cables underground is expensive, it’s likely to amount to a fraction of a firm’s total earnings.
Mr Dookia says that one of the reasons renewable energy companies are flocking to Rajasthan is because of the low cost of land.
“There’s also not much research on how these renewable energy farms will impact the state’s climate and ecology in the long run,” he says.
“So it’s not just the bird’s future that hangs in the balance, it’s also man’s.”
Melania Trump, enigmatic first lady who might do it differently this time
A day after her husband’s big election night win, Melania Trump took to social media to address the nation.
“The majority of Americans have entrusted us with this important responsibility,” Mrs Trump said.
“We will safeguard the heart of the republic – freedom,” she vowed, and urged Americans to rise above ideology for the sake of the country.
It was a brief message, but suggested a shift in how the former first lady will approach the role this second time around.
When Trump won his first presidency in 2016, his wife was initially absent from the White House, instead staying in New York with their young son. She appeared reticent, at times, with the traditions set out by first ladies that preceded her.
But experts say that this time, Mrs Trump will likely be more deliberate with her approach to the largely undefined role of being America’s First Lady.
Born Melanija Knavs, the 54-year-old Slovenian-American former fashion model eventually traded a glamorous life in the gilded walls of Manhattan’s Trump Tower for the confines of political life that came with the Oval Office, during a presidency that was often mired in controversy.
Described by some as an “enigma”, Mrs Trump has preferred to be less public than her predecessors, giving fewer speeches both in the White House and on the campaign trail.
“She’s been unique among modern first ladies,” said Tammy Vigil, an associate professor of communications at Boston University and author of a book on Michelle Obama and Melania Trump.
“She does things the way she wants to do them, as opposed to the way she has to do them. But she fulfils the base expectations.”
In recent years, she avoided the spotlight as her husband challenged several legal cases against him while he campaigned for a second term.
Her absence inspired several news articles this summer asking: “Where is Melania?”
Mrs Trump did appear on key occasions, like when her husband announced in late 2022 that he would be running again.
She also attended the Republican National Convention in July wearing a bright red Christian Dior suit, but did not deliver a speech – another break from tradition.
When she does speak, her words appear carefully chosen, offering hints to her point of view.
At her husband’s Madison Square Garden rally just weeks before Election Day, she delivered short but pointed remarks in line with the Trump campaign’s law and order messaging, painting New York City as a “great metropolis” in decline due to rampant crime.
She also spoke after the first assassination attempt on her husband, calling for unity and labelling the perpetrator a “monster”.
In a rare interview on Fox, she later accused his political opponents and the media of “fuelling a toxic atmosphere” that led to the attack.
Mrs Trump declared her pro-choice stance in her recent memoir, putting her at odds with anti-abortion activists within the Republican Party – though the remarks prompted speculation due to their timing, as her husband was struggling to campaign on the issue after the overturning of Roe v Wade.
- Melania Trump is latest Republican First Lady to back abortion
Mrs Trump wrote about her modelling career, her admiration for her husband and their past political disagreements, but chose to keep details of those disputes private.
She has, however, publicly stood by Trump on controversial stances like his false claim that the 2020 presidential election was stolen.
“I am not the only person who questions the results,” she wrote in her book. On the Capitol Riots on 6 January, 2021, she wrote that she “wasn’t aware” of what was taking place because she was preoccupied with her duties.
Her former press secretary, Stephanie Grisham, wrote in her own memoir that Mrs Trump refused to issue a statement condemning the violence, leading Ms Grisham to resign.
Some commentators have questioned whether she enjoyed the role of first lady at all.
One of her biographers, former CNN reporter Kate Bennett, maintains she did despite her early reluctance.
“She liked all the accoutrements that go with being first lady and living in the White House,” Ms Bennett told People magazine in 2021. “I think she actually really enjoyed it.”
In her memoir, Mrs Trump wrote that she has a “strong sense of duty to use the platform as First Lady for good”.
And she said in a 1999 interview that if her then-boyfriend Trump ever ran for president, she would use former first ladies Jacqueline Kennedy and Betty Ford as role models, calling them “very traditional”.
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Mrs Kennedy was a fashion icon who was dedicated to the preservation of the White House, while Mrs Ford was known as a trailblazer who advocated for abortion rights and women’s rights.
After relocating to Washington, Mrs Trump started taking on first lady duties, such as hosting luncheons and state dinners for visiting world leaders. She also focused on White House aesthetics, ordering extensive renovations and overseeing ambitious Christmas decorations (and was once secretly recorded complaining about that last task).
Her clothing was the subject of media fascination and controversy, particularly after she was spotted wearing a jacket with the phrase “I really don’t care, do you?” during a trip to a migrant child detention centre in 2018.
She said the jacket was a message for “the people and the left-wing media” who were criticising her.
Mrs Trump came under fire again after being secretly recorded by her former friend and senior advisor. She was heard expressing her frustration at being criticised for her husband’s policy to separate migrant children from their families.
She later revealed that she had been blindsided by the policy, and had told Trump privately that she did not support it. The policy was dropped by the president in June 2018 after a firestorm of controversy.
Prof Vigil says one of the biggest challenges that Mrs Trump faced in her first term was her political inexperience as well as a revolving door of staff, who were equally inexperienced and at times disloyal.
But Mrs Trump kept quietly busy regardless, Prof Vigil adds, advocating for issues like children’s welfare through her Be Best campaign against online bullying.
She was forced to defend that campaign given her own husband’s aggressive use of social media, telling CBS in 2016 that how he conducted himself online got him in trouble – and boosted his followers.
She also advocated for children affected by the opioid crisis, and has since started a foundation that raises education funds for children in foster care.
Many expect for that work to continue once she moves back to Washington, though it remains unclear if she will live there full-time.
Prof Vigil says the role of first lady has evolved over the years and Mrs Trump will “make choices about how active in public she wants to be”.
“And I think she’ll do that much more intentionally.”
Irish man suspected of killing US nurse arrested in Hungary
A 37-year-old Irish man has been arrested in connection with the murder of an American nurse in Hungary, police say.
Mackenzie Michalski, 31, from Portland, Oregon, was reported missing after a night out in Hungary’s capital, Budapest, on Tuesday.
Officers said the suspect was identified through CCTV footage and later confessed to killing Ms Michalski, but claimed her death had been an accident.
In a statement, put out on Saturday, police said the man had attempted to conceal Ms Michalski’s death by renting a car, putting her body in a suitcase and hiding it in woodland near the village of Szigliget in the country’s west.
Officers said Ms Michalski was killed during an “intimate encounter” with the suspect, but did not provide any further details.
They were able to establish that the pair had met at a nightclub, danced together and then travelled to the man’s rented apartment.
He was arrested there on Thursday evening, and has been remanded in custody.
After being questioned, the suspect showed detectives where he had disposed of Ms Michalski’s body, the police statement said.
It added that the man had placed the nurse’s body in a wardrobe while he cleaned his apartment – in a bid to “remove traces” of the alleged murder – before driving to the woods.
Ms Michalski was reported missing by friends when she failed to return to their accommodation.
During the course of their investigation, police said they uncovered evidence which “gave rise to the suspicion of murder”.
Following Ms Michalski’s disappearance, the man made a series of online searches – including “what does a dead body smell like after it decomposes?”, “how do the police handle missing person cases?”, and “removing rotting meat smell”.
He is also alleged to have searched whether pigs eat dead bodies and about the appearance of wild boar along Lake Balaton – a body of water near Szigliget.
In footage released by Hungarian police, a man in handcuffs can be seen guiding officers through woodland. Sniffer dogs and forensic investigators are present.
A Facebook group, called Find Mackenzie Michalski, says the 31-year-old often went by the nickname Kenzie.
On Saturday, her friends held a candlelit vigil close to the US embassy in Budapest.
Trump ally says Ukraine focus must be peace, not territory
A former adviser to President-elect Donald Trump says the incoming administration will focus on achieving peace in Ukraine rather than enabling the country to gain back territory occupied by Russia.
Bryan Lanza, who worked on Trump’s 2024 presidential campaign, told the BBC the incoming administration would ask Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky for his version of a “realistic vision for peace”.
“And if President Zelensky comes to the table and says, well we can only have peace if we have Crimea, he shows to us that he’s not serious,” he said. “Crimea is gone.”
A spokesperson for Trump distanced the incoming president from the remarks, saying Mr Lanza “does not speak for him”.
Russia annexed the Crimean peninsula in 2014. Eight years later, it launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine and has occupied territory in the country’s east.
The president-elect has consistently said his priority is to end the war and stem what he characterises as a drain on US resources, in the form of military aid to Ukraine.
But he has yet to divulge how he intends to do so – and will likely be hearing competing visions for Ukraine’s future from his various advisers.
Mr Lanza, a Trump political adviser during his 2016 and 2024 campaigns, did not mention areas of eastern Ukraine, but he said regaining Crimea from Russia was unrealistic and “not the goal of the United States”.
“When Zelensky says we will only stop this fighting, there will only be peace once Crimea is returned, we’ve got news for President Zelensky: Crimea is gone,” he told the BBC World Service’s Weekend programme.
“And if that is your priority of getting Crimea back and having American soldiers fight to get Crimea back, you’re on your own.”
The US has never deployed American soldiers to fight in Ukraine, nor has Kyiv requested American troops fight on its behalf. Ukraine has only requested American military aid to arm its own soldiers.
Mr Lanza said he had tremendous respect for the Ukrainian people, whose “hearts are made of lions”. But he said the US priority was “peace and to stop the killing”.
“What we’re going to say to Ukraine is, you know what you see? What do you see as a realistic vision for peace. It’s not a vision for winning, but it’s a vision for peace. And let’s start having the honest conversation,” he said.
In response, Zelensky’s adviser Dmytro Lytvyn characterised Mr Lanza’s remarks as placing the pressure for peace on Ukraine when it was “Putin who wants more war”.
“Putin loses most of his people in assaults at the front. What does this indicate? It is obvious that he wants to fight on,” he said.
“Ukraine has been offering peace since 2022 – there are quite realistic proposals. And it is Russia that must be made to hear that peace is needed and that peace must be reliable, so that there is simply no repetition of Russian strikes.”
A spokesperson for Trump’s transition team – which prepares the incoming administration for office – said Mr Lanza was “a contractor for the campaign”, but “does not work for President Trump and does not speak for him”.
Trump is expected to handle peace talks with a close circle of aides once in office.
An unnamed National Security Council aide who previously served under Trump told the Wall Street Journal on Wednesday: “Anyone – no matter how senior in Trump’s circle – who claims to have a different view or more detailed window into his plans on Ukraine simply doesn’t know what he or she is talking about.”
They said that the former president “makes his own calls on national security issues” and had done so “many times in the moment”.
Trump spoke to Zelensky after his election win, with billionaire Elon Musk also taking part in the call.
A source in Ukraine’s presidential office told the BBC that the “good lengthy conversation” between Zelensky and Trump lasted “about half an hour”.
“It was not really a conversation to talk about very substantial things, but overall it was very warm and pleasant.”
Trump’s Democratic opponents have accused him of cosying up to Russian President Vladimir Putin and say his approach to the war amounts to surrender for Ukraine that will endanger all of Europe.
The prime minister of Estonia told the BBC that if Ukraine backs down from the conflict, “Russia’s appetite will only grow”.
Kristen Michal told Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg: “The question probably is that if you start giving up, then you should be prepared to give more.
“For Russia it’s quite understandable that if you draw a line somewhere and use the force to back it up, they will back up too, but not by politeness, that’s not the plan.”
Last month, Zelensky presented a “victory plan” to the Ukrainian parliament that included a refusal to cede Ukraine’s territories and sovereignty.
During his election campaign, Trump repeatedly said he could end the war between Russia and Ukraine “in a day”, but never gave further details.
A paper written by two of his former national security chiefs in May said the US should continue supplying weapons, but make the support conditional on Kyiv entering peace talks with Russia.
Ukraine should not give up its hopes of getting all of its territory back from Russian occupation, the paper said, but it should negotiate based on current front lines.
Earlier this week, Putin congratulated Trump on his election victory and said Trump’s claim that he can help end the war in Ukraine “deserves attention at least”.
Mr Lanza also criticised the support the Biden-Harris administration and European countries have given to Ukraine since Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022.
“The reality on the ground is [that] the European nation states and President Biden did not give Ukraine the ability and the arms to win this war at the very beginning and failed to lift the restrictions for Ukraine to win,” he said.
Earlier this year, the US House of Representatives approved a $61bn (£49bn) package in military aid for Ukraine to help combat Russia’s invasion.
The US has been the biggest arms supplier to Ukraine – between February 2022 and the end of June 2024, it delivered or committed weapons and equipment worth $55.5bn (£41.5bn), according to the Kiel Institute for the World Economy, a German research organisation.
Is this tiny Mauritian island a confidential spy station?
Arnaud Poulay never wanted to leave the tiny Indian Ocean island of Agalega, but this year he packed his bag and took off, broken-hearted by what he regards as the militarisation of his home.
Until recently, just 350 people lived on Agalega, fishing and growing coconuts. Other food was delivered four times a year by ship from the capital of Mauritius, 1,100km (680 miles) to the south. A small airstrip was rarely used except in medical emergencies.
But in 2015, Mauritius, an island nation of which Agalega is a part, signed a deal enabling India to build a vast 3,000m runway and a big new jetty there, as part of the two countries’ deepening collaboration on maritime security.
However some Agalegans fear this could grow into a fully-fledged military presence.
Mr Poulay, a 44-year-old handyman and reggae musician, led a campaign against the project.
“I love my island and my island loves me,” he says. “But when that base was unveiled, I knew I had to leave.”
Agalega – two small islands covering 25 sq km, in the south-west Indian Ocean – would be an ideal location for India to monitor marine traffic. And a comparison of satellite images from 2019 with others taken in July this year shows how much has changed.
A carpet of palm trees has made way for the runway, which stretches along the spine of the north island between the two main villages – La Fourche in the north and Vingt-Cinq further south.
Two 60m-wide buildings can be seen sitting on a tarmac apron, at least one of which could be a hangar to accommodate the Indian navy’s P-8I aircraft, according to Samuel Bashfield, a PhD scholar at the Australian National University.
The P-8I is a Boeing 737 modified to hunt and potentially attack submarines, and to monitor maritime communications. Islanders have already photographed the aircraft on the airstrip.
To the north-west is the new jetty jutting out into the ocean, which Mr Bashfield says could be used by Indian surface patrol vessels, as well as the ship that brings supplies to Agalega.
“As newer satellite images become available, we’ll better understand Agalega’s role in Indian Ocean communications,” he says.
The International Institute for Strategic Studies refers to the facility as a “surveillance station” and says it is likely to contain a coastal radar surveillance system similar to Indian-built equipment elsewhere in Mauritius.
The Indian government declined to answer questions about Agalega, and referred the BBC to earlier statements on its website. In one of these, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said India and Mauritius were “natural partners” in maritime security, facing traditional and non-traditional challenges in the Indian Ocean region.
The two countries have had a close defence relationship since the 1970s. The country’s national security adviser, its coastguard chief and the head of the police helicopter squadron are all Indian nationals and officers in India’s external intelligence agency, navy and air force, respectively.
Both sides would want the facility to be seen “as one that is more about capacity building than for any overt military use”, says Prof Harsh Pant, of the India Institute at King’s College London.
It’s no secret, though, that India and its Western allies are concerned about China’s increasing presence in the Indian Ocean.
While it’s not unusual for a large country to establish a military outpost on the territory of a smaller ally, the construction work on Agalega has troubled some islanders.
A number of areas, including some of the island’s palm-fringed white-sand beaches, have already been cordoned off, islanders say. There are also persistent rumours that the village of La Fourche will be swallowed by the Indian infrastructure that has grown up around it, and that the 10 families who live there will be forced out.
“It will become a restricted area completely for Indians,” says Laval Soopramanien, president of the Association of Friends of Agalega.
He fears that “Agalega will become the story of the Chagos islands” – a concern echoed by 26-year-old handyman Billy Henri, who is the son of an Agalegan and a woman expelled from the Chagos islands.
“My mother [lost] her island,” says Mr Henri. “My father will be the next.”
A number of Agalega’s residents are from families scarred by eviction from the Chagos Islands, 2,000km to the east, after the UK government declared them in 1965 to be British territory and granted the US permission to build a communications station on the largest island, Diego Garcia. This gradually became a fully-fledged military base.
Billy Henri fears that the Mauritius government, which owns all land on Agalega and is the only employer, is trying to make conditions so miserable that everyone will leave.
He points to problems with healthcare and education, limited investment in the local economy, a lack of job opportunities, and a ban on local people opening their own businesses.
A Mauritius government spokesman told the BBC that no-one would be asked to leave, and that local people were only prevented from entering the airport and the port – facilities that he said would help the country control piracy, drug-trafficking and unregulated fishing.
Mauritius also denies suggestions that Agalega hosts a military base, saying that the national police are still in full control. However, it acknowledges that India will assist in the “maintenance and operation” of the new facilities, which were built at Indian expense.
The Mauritius and Indian governments say the improvements to sea and air transportation were designed to benefit the islanders and help lift them out of poverty. But local people say this hasn’t happened: there are still only four ferries to the main island of Mauritius every year, and no passenger flights.
Agalegans say they are barred from a new Indian-built hospital, even though a Mauritius government press release vaunted its operating theatres, X-ray machines and dentistry equipment.
Billy Henri says that a boy suffering from cooking oil burns, who needed more help than he could get from the north island’s health centre, was refused entry in October.
“It’s only for Indians!” he says.
The injured boy and his parents were flown to the main island of Mauritius instead. Laval Soopramanien says the boy is still in hospital there, and that the family will remain on the main island until the next boat leaves for Agalega.
The Mauritius government did not respond, when asked to comment on the plight of the boy with burns. The Indian government declined to comment.
In a recent speech to the Mauritius parliament, Prime Minister Pravind Jugnauth said the socio-economic development of Agalega was higher than ever on his government’s agenda.
A “master plan” had been drawn up to improve health and education, transport connections and recreational facilities for the island’s residents, and to develop the fishing sector and the exploitation of coconut by-products, he said.
But distrust is fuelled by the fact that neither India nor Mauritius has published the details of the 2015 memorandum of understanding, so their plans for the future are unknown.
Fema official ordered storm crews not to help Trump voters
A Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema) supervisor has been fired for telling staff helping hurricane survivors to skip houses displaying signs supporting Donald Trump.
The agency’s head, Deanne Criswell, described the supervisor’s actions as “reprehensible”, saying Fema takes its mission “to help everyone before, during and after disasters seriously”.
Although Criswell’s statement on X does not indicate when or where the incident took place, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis said the Division of Emergency Management would be launching an investigation at his direction.
DeSantis called the situation “targeted discrimination” of Trump supporters in Florida.
Fema staff have been in Florida helping residents recover from Hurricane Milton last month, and needed to survey damage to homes to assess who qualified to apply for federal aid.
The Daily Wire reported on Friday that Fema staff had been checking on homes in Lake Placid when they were ordered to skip properties that had yard signs supporting the Republican candidate.
“Trump sign no entry per leadership,” said internal messages in a government system, reports the Daily Wire.
“When we got there we were told to discriminate against people,” a whistleblower told the outlet. “It’s almost unbelievable to think that somebody in the federal government would think that’s okay.”
Criswell, the Fema director, ended her statement saying that she “will continue to do everything I can to make sure this never happens again”.
Congressman James Comer said he would be calling on Criswell to appear before the House Oversight Committee hearing on 19 November.
Josh Hawley, senator for Missouri, also published a letter calling for those involved to be prosecuted if necessary.
Florida was hit by two major hurricanes in the last couple of months.
At least 24 people were killed during Milton, which left millions of homes and businesses without power.
Two weeks before Milton, Hurricane Helene made landfall, going on to become the deadliest mainland US storm since Katrina.
More than 200 people were killed, over half of those in North Carolina, where entire communities were devastated.
‘Smaller R in the royal’ – How Prince William wants to do things differently
The Prince of Wales has said he wants to use his royal role differently and make it relevant for a younger generation.
It’s a sign of his view of modern royalty, and came while speaking to reporters at the end of his trip to South Africa for his Earthshot environmental prize.
Throughout, Prince William has spoken openly at times, not just about his role but also his family.
“I can only describe what I’m trying to do, and that’s I’m trying to do it differently and I’m trying to do it for my generation,” he told us. “And to give you more an understanding around it, I’m doing it with maybe a smaller R in the royal, if you like, that’s maybe a better way of saying it.”
His use of the word “smaller R in royal” is an insight into Prince William’s view of his role in public life.
The pomp and ceremony of royalty doesn’t always sit easily with Prince William, neither does some of the leadership he has seen globally.
“It’s more about impact philanthropy, collaboration, convening, and helping people. And I’m also going to throw empathy in there as well, because I really care about what I do. It helps impacts people’s lives. And I think we could do with some more empathetic leadership around the world.”
I have spent the past week with Prince William on his visit to South Africa.
It’s the longest period of time he’s spent with the media this year and he’s been more open than perhaps many of us had expected.
He was pretty relaxed and spoke freely about his family and his role as Prince of Wales both on and off the record.
The chat was often light hearted – how he was settling into his wardrobe of sustainable clothing, the perils of having a beard when your daughter doesn’t like it and the ‘papa’ bracelet she made for him when he took his children to see Taylor Swift.
But the impact of the past year was also on show.
Seeing and talking to Prince William up close, it’s clear the toll it has taken with both his wife and his father undergoing cancer treatment.
As he put it, it has been “the hardest year of my life”.
Add to that, the burden of being a senior Royal and a future King which has hung heavily over Prince William.
The formality that comes with the job and the need to live some of your life in the public gaze haven’t sat comfortably at times.
- William announces Earthshot winners in Cape Town
He has found a peace by trying to carve out the role of Prince of Wales in his own way.
His aim is to a have a smaller number of projects to work on where he can make a greater impact
But it’s a risk.
His two big projects, the Earthshot Prize and Homewards, his homelessness project, are not free of politics.
They both also leave him open to accusations of hypocrisy – the wealthy prince, with the comfort of privilege, from his palaces and castles telling us how to make the world a better place.
Prince William also began his trip to South Africa amidst reports questioning the transparency of the royal family’s finances and income.
Those close to the prince say he is well aware of this criticism but it would be far worse if he did nothing, and they argue that privilege shouldn’t prevent you trying to improve the lives of others.
Questioned about the future, Prince William said both he and the Princess of Wales would hopefully be doing more public duties together next year and described how they both wanted to bring something different to the organisations they support.
“I sit here right now doing Earthshot and doing all the projects I’m doing, like Homewards as well. And who knows what’s going to come next, but it all centres around those values of trying to help deliver change and make those lives better.”
‘A disabled South Park character from 24 years ago is getting me harassed today’
I can feel the anger rising. How am I facing this abuse again after 20 years?
My name is Alex. But increasingly young people shout “Timmy” at me in the street. This isn’t mistaken identity – it‘s mockery because I use a wheelchair.
I should ignore it, but this time, I react. I turn to see a group of young teenage boys smirking in front of me. “I heard you,” I tell them. “I know exactly who Timmy is.”
I know this because although we do not share a name, I have felt the shadow of Timmy since childhood – never through choice.
A disabled character from dark-humoured satire cartoon series South Park, he uses a wheelchair and can only shout his name, mainly loudly and uncontrollably.
Growing up at the show’s initial peak during the turn of the millennium, Timmy followed me through school corridors, classrooms and playgrounds – no matter my friends, sociability or relatively good grades.
Now, in my 30s, he’s back. For the third time in a year, this time heading to my local train station in my wheelchair, I hear the familiar, brutish drawl: “Timmaaah.”
A laugh. A snigger. An assumption I either won’t hear or be unable to understand.
When I confront the group of boys, one feigns innocence, claiming he’d been speaking to his friend.
“You weren’t,” I say. “I was watching the show before you were born.”
Initially I was baffled as to how this phenomenon had returned to a new young generation, 24 years after the character first appeared.
The answer lies in social media, particularly TikTok, where hundreds of short user-edited clips of Timmy and audio of him saying his name are sparking the revival.
TikTok users often take part in trends by using the audio of popular videos and overlaying it with their own clips.
That’s what many have done with Timmy, where the name is used as a punchline, or played on top of unrelated clips of wheelchair users, reinforcing harmful and dehumanising stereotypes.
The irony is that the character Timmy is presented with warmth in South Park and given character depth by co-creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker.
An equal in the show’s unflinching satire, his disability isn’t necessarily the butt of the joke.
Timmy is an accepted member of the class: he fails to complete homework, faces adversity and causes trouble with his disabled best friend Jimmy. His personality is conveyed through the different intonations in which he delivers his name.
One episode, Timmy 2000, sees him win a battle of the bands as frontman for a metal group. The adult characters are shown to respond in an over-protective and condescending way – a striking criticism of the way society often treats disabled people.
Nearly 20 years ago, a poll by Ouch! – the former name of the BBC’s disability section – crowned Timmy as the most popular disabled TV character.
Seattle Times’ late disabled critic Jeff Shannon described Timmy as the most “progressive, provocative and socially relevant disability humour ever presented on American television”.
“Without telling viewers what to think, South Park challenges [the audience’s] own fears and foibles regarding disability, and Timmy emerges triumphant,” he wrote in 2005.
In interviews Stone and Parker have spoken of how carefully and purposefully they integrated him into the show.
But two decades later, the fact remains that on meeting Timmy, certainly at first glance, many find him outrageously offensive.
South Park has always worked on multiple levels – offering outrageous forbidden shock value for schoolchildren while delivering crunching adult satire.
None of this nuance is reflected in the TikTok trend, which reduces Timmy, and by extension wheelchair users and disability, to one-dimensional ridicule.
This warped revival parallels the case of Joey Deacon, a man with cerebral palsy whose appearance on Blue Peter in the 1980s backfired to spark playground mockery, with kids shouting “you’re a Joey!”, and “do the Joey face”.
TikTok says its community guidelines strictly prohibit hate speech and content promoting discrimination, violence or harm based on disability.
It removed the videos flagged by the BBC for violating this policy. But it didn’t remove the Timmy sound used on several other videos – meaning it can be used again.
TikTok didn’t respond to a specific question about removing offensive audio.
Ciaran O’Connor, from the Institute for Strategic Dialogue (ISD), a think tank focusing on online hate, says that sounds are a “blind spot in TikTok’s content moderation practices”.
Even if a video with an “original sound” is removed by the platform, the audio usually isn’t, he says.
This makes it a common way of bypassing TikTok’s content moderation guidelines – including for harassment and abuse.
Bullying and trolling of disabled people is still common online. Three in 10 said they’d experienced it in a survey of 4,000 disabled people carried out by charity Scope.
My last experience of having the name hurled at me on the street shocked me not so much in the name-calling, but the absolute lack of contrition shown even when challenged.
It mirrored an experience last year when teenagers, again taunting me, rode off shouting “Timmy is going to run us over.”
Ross Hovey, a wheelchair user and Liverpool fan, recently posted on LinkedIn about a near-identical experience.
He was heading to a Liverpool match with his 79-year-old father and care assistant when a group of young men shouted “Timmy” at him. When Ross challenged them with “I heard you,” they too tried to claim innocence.
The abuse raises questions about what role platforms should take in providing context to young users.
“Brief, contextless clips and participatory trends are at the heart of TikTok’s popularity,” says O’Connor.
“That’s normally good and positive and funny … but when these dynamics are being used to demean, mock or stigmatise others, it does raise the question of whether TikTok should be doing more to inform or educate users.”
Alison Kerry, head of communications at Scope, told the BBC “these kinds of ableist trends are deeply harmful. They don’t exist in a vacuum, so a social media trend can quickly turn into someone facing abuse in their everyday life.”
The real-world impact is certainly becoming more noticeable.
Disabled TikTokers have been posting about their experiences, and a teacher recently wrote a Reddit thread titled “Getting real sick of this Timmy trend”, expressing frustration at students’ lack of awareness.
This is why I challenged the teens at the station – I felt a duty not only to my 12-year-old self, who once burst into tears feeling helpless at similar taunts, but also to disabled students today.
I returned a second time when the boys called out “Timmy” again after I turned to leave.
“Why?” I asked forcefully. Silence. One of the group eventually apologised, admitting the behaviour was wrong.
“Speak to your friends,” I pleaded, sensing a glimmer of hope. “Maybe then they’ll listen.”
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Pep Guardiola’s body language provided compelling evidence that he is now facing the closest thing to a crisis since his transitional first season at Manchester City.
Guardiola had already been perching anxiously on one knee, his face wreathed in anguish, well before Joao Pedro’s 77th-minute equaliser started the Brighton comeback that inflicted a fourth successive defeat, City’s first such sequence since 2006.
It also means Guardiola is on the worst run of his entire managerial career, having never before lost four games in a row in normal time.
The Catalan, who arrived at Manchester City in the summer of 2016, had been on hot bricks from the first whistle at Amex Stadium, his mood made worse by Matt O’Riley racing through a creaking defence to score Brighton’s deserved winner seven minutes from the end of a thunderous encounter.
And after the final whistle, Guardiola was involved in lengthy, animated dialogue with Brighton defender Jan Paul van Hecke, who looked mystified as he was on the receiving end of a lecture from the City manager.
Casting doubt on Guardiola and Manchester City is a hazardous business given their unprecedented history of Premier League success, but there is no escaping that these losses, and the manner of them, flag up trouble.
So, as City trail Premier League leaders Liverpool by five points, where is it all going wrong… and could it really be the beginning of the end for Guardiola’s dynasty at the club?
What do the stats say?
City’s mounting problems are coming at both ends of the pitch – as demonstrated when comparing their stats from last season to this.
In front of goal, they have gone from an average of 2.53 goals per game last season to two per game this – despite having more shots on goal on average, up from 18.5 to 19.6.
Are they lacking a cutting edge?
They are certainly now relying even more on Haaland, with their big chance conversion down from 38% to 29.8%.
At the other end, meanwhile, they are now conceding 1.17 goals per game, up from 0.92 goals per game, while they are facing more shots per game too.
It all adds to the noise surrounding Manchester City, scrutiny will increase should poor results continue.
Have teams found a weakness down City’s right?
There is suddenly a vulnerability about Manchester City that is offering rivals the sort of encouragement they have rarely scented since Guardiola arrived.
The increasing ease with which Brighton cut through City will have alarmed Guardiola, the statistics backing up the sense that they are much easier to get at this season.
While City’s midfield went absent without leave in the second half, the veteran Kyle Walker looked every one of his 34 years as he was given a torrid time by Kaoru Mitoma, then substitute Joao Pedro.
Brighton’s strategy of attacking City’s right flank looked like a deliberate ploy, with 44.9% of their attacks targeting that wing as opposed to 26.9% on the left.
Walker has missed a chunk of this season, but Rico Lewis, who has deputised, often drifts into midfield, leaving space for opposition sides to exploit.
In the course of this season, 38.7% of attacks have come down City’s right flank compared to 36% on the left.
Has a weakness been exposed?
Could it really all be down to losing Rodri?
The stats highlighting their defensive issues all add up to City’s malaise – but, in the most basic terms, Rodri is the player Guardiola is unable to replace.
Rodri provides a shield City cannot rebuild in his absence.
Since the start of last season Rodri, who suffered an anterior cruciate knee ligament injury against Arsenal in September, played 53 games in which they won 39, drew 13 and lost one, the FA Cup Final against Manchester United.
Without Rodri, City have played 24 games, winning 14, drawing two and losing eight. City’s win percentage with the Ballon d’Or winner is 73.6% compared to 58.3% without him.
It is a stark contrast only underscored by their current struggles.
Former City defender Micah Richards, speaking on Match Of The Day, said: “The most defining thing for me is not pressing any more. They’re going as individuals.
“When you lose the best midfielder in Europe [Rodri] you’re always going to have a strain on the team.
“But they are just too easy to play through at this moment in time.”
And former England midfielder Jamie Redknapp, speaking on Sky Sports, added: “There was no way City lose those four games if Rodri plays.”
What else is going on at the club?
Manchester City’s rivals will reach for the world’s smallest violin if Guardiola mentions injuries, given their vast financial and playing resources, but he is well within his rights to mention losing Rodri, his most important player, for the season.
Kevin de Bruyne, Ruben Dias, Jack Grealish, Jeremy Doku, Nathan Ake and Manuel Akanji have all missed games too.
And Guardiola’s own future is yet to be decided as his contract expires next June. Director of football Txiki Begiristain, a close friend going back to their Barcelona days, is going at the end of the season.
When Guardiola has extended his City contract on the previous two occasions, the club has announced that in November 2020 and November 2022. He is yet to give any hint about his decision, with reports of approaches from Brazil and also England before the FA appointed Thomas Tuchel.
If City were winning, there would be a serenity as events moved behind the scenes. Instead, this will become more of an issue unless they pull out of this slump.
And could it be, at long last, that City’s squad needs new names and fresh hunger after winning the Champions League, six Premier League titles, two FA Cups, four League Cups, the Uefa Super Cup and the Fifa Club World Cup under Guardiola?
The manager looked hungry enough on the touchline, an energetic presence throughout. He will not accept anything less from his players.
If any manager or team can provide the answer to the questions facing them, Guardiola and Manchester City can.
They will need to stop the decline swiftly, however. Liverpool and Arsenal will be scenting weaknesses.
But don’t forget, we’ve been here before…
While four successive defeats as Manchester City boss might be a new experience for Guardiola, emerging from the chasing pack to win a league title is not.
City’s defeat by Brighton leaves them five points behind Liverpool, who beat Aston Villa 2-0 and will host City on 1 December.
But, two years ago, City were able to chase down Arsenal, overcoming an eight-point deficit at the start of April to win the Premier League trophy.
Write off Guardiola and City at your peril.
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First T20, Barbados
West Indies 182-9 (20 overs): Pooran 38 (29), Shepherd 35* (22); Mahmood 4-34
England 183-2 (16.5 overs): Salt 103* (54), Bethell 58* (36)
Scorecard
Phil Salt powered a superb century to take England to a commanding eight-wicket victory over West Indies in the first T20 in Barbados.
After a disappointing defeat in the one-day international series, Salt struck an unbeaten 103 off 54 balls on the island he used to call home as England cruised to a pursuit of 183.
It was the opener’s third T20 hundred for England – all three of which have come against West Indies in the past 12 months.
He crashed his first 50 runs in just 25 balls as England took 73 from the first six overs for the loss of only Will Jacks for 17.
Captain Jos Buttler was sensationally caught for a golden duck on his return to the side after four months out injured but Salt continued, dropping down the gears with the required run-rate under control, as England pulled off the highest T20 chase at the Kensington Oval with 19 balls to spare.
Jacob Bethell, another with Bajan roots, finished unbeaten on 58 from 36 balls alongside Salt, in the process becoming the youngest man to hit a T20 fifty for England, aged 21.
Earlier, West Indies made their imposing total in remarkable fashion, reaching 183-9 despite falling to 18-3 and 117-8.
They managed a further 65 runs in the last 5.2 overs after the eighth wicket fell, with number 10 Gukadesh Motie, who later produced the stunning catch to dismiss Buttler, flogging 33 from 14 balls.
That came as England lost their grip despite a strong start to the innings, with Saqib Mahmood taking 4-34 and Adil Rashid 3-32.
The second of five T20s begins on Sunday at the same ground from 20:00 GMT.
England will wait on the fitness of Reece Topley, who left the field visibly emotional after jarring his knee midway through his third over – the latest blow to a bowler who has had a cruel run of injuries throughout his career.
England impress after ODI struggles
England struggled for much of the ODI series, at times making it a poor spectacle.
This was entertaining from the outset – the same inexperienced England squad looking far more comfortable in the shorter format.
Salt’s knock was the highlight. There was also Motie’s catch and a sensational one-handed grab at slip by Buttler, who gave up the gloves and dropped down to number three as he finally took the field in England’s white-ball rebuild.
Salt, who spent six years of his youth living in Barbados, ignited England’s chase by hitting a six and four fours in the fourth over, bowled by Shamar Joseph, which cost 24.
He impressively mixed belligerent strokes with classy drives and deft touches. When he reached three figures he roared and charged towards the dressing room in celebration.
As pleasing for England was the performance of Bethell, who did not panic when taking only five runs from his first eight balls.
He was born in Barbados, only moved to England as a 14-year-old and had a large group of family and friends supporting him in the stands. By the end the left-hander, who could make a Test debut in New Zealand later this month, was elegantly driving seamer Romario Shepherd over extra cover for six.
Buttler left the field smiling so good was Motie’s catch at third man to dismiss him. On his return, there was plenty more for the England captain to cheer.
Bowlers let good start slip
England also did so much right for most of their bowling innings.
Mahmood had opener Brandon King caught at extra cover in the second over and in his next Evin Lewis picked out deep square leg and Shimron Hetmyer nicked behind in consecutive balls, leaving the hosts 18-3 before a 35-minute rain interruption.
After the resumption, West Indies skipper Rovman Powell struck two sixes before hitting Adil Rashid’s second ball to long-on and Buttler’s catch dismissed Sherfane Rutherford.
Even when Andre Russell belted four sixes in a typically-powerful 30 from 17, England held firm. Russell hit Liam Livingstone to deep cover and Nicholas Pooran departed by skewing Jamie Overton to extra cover for 38 in the next over.
England’s missteps came late and were familiar. Again, as they often do across formats, they struggled to wrap up an innings, leaving room for improvement in the rest of the series.
Motie, who played with more class than his batting position suggests, came out swinging – striking his first two balls for six and continuing to take 31 from his first nine balls.
When the left-hander finally picked out deep mid-wicket at the end of penultimate over, giving Mahmood his fourth wicket, England were on the back foot.
Salt ensured that was only temporary.
‘The place I’m happiest’ – reaction
Player of the match, England opener Phil Salt: “This is probably the place I’m happiest. I enjoy batting here. I’ve grown up on these surfaces.
“Bethell is a huge talent. He’s a 21-year-old lad but if you didn’t know how old he was, you’d think he’d played 100 games already.”
West Indies captain Rovman Powell: “It didn’t really come off. Credit has to be given to the boys. We still managed to score 180.
“We have highlighted the way we want to play. In the bad times we have to keep backing ourselves.”
England captain Jos Buttler: “An absolutely fantastic performance, I’m delighted for the guys.
“Salt has been outstanding and obviously he likes playing against West Indies. In the last 12-18 months, he’s taken his game to new heights and I’m sure he can go to other levels.”
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Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola says maybe another team deserves to win the Premier League after their sustained period of success.
The Blues have won six of the past seven Premier League titles, including four in a row, but have fallen five points behind leaders Liverpool following a 2-1 defeat by Brighton.
Guardiola has now lost four successive matches (excluding shootouts) for the first time in his 17-year managerial career, and this is City’s first four-game losing run for 18 years, since Stuart Pearce was manager.
In recent weeks, they have lost to Bournemouth and Brighton in the league, Tottenham in the Carabao Cup, and Sporting in the Champions League.
“We have to try and win games again,” Guardiola told BBC Match of the Day. “Four [defeats] in a row. We have to change things quick.
“The schedule becomes tough but it [winning games] is going to happen when the players come back.”
He added: “Maybe after seven years winning six Premier Leagues, maybe one year another team deserve it.”
City continue to be ravaged by injuries with Ruben Dias, John Stones, Jeremy Doku and Jack Grealish – despite his England call-up – all missing, alongside long-term absentees Rodri and Oscar Bobb.
Centre-backs Nathan Ake and Manuel Akanji were only fit enough for the bench, meaning Guardiola handed a first Premier League start to 19-year-old Jahmai Simpson-Pusey in defence.
Speaking to BBC Radio 5 Live, he said: “This is sport. Sport is not always sunrises. It is not always good moments.
“Today in the press conference I was asked if it was the end of the era. I know people want that. I smell it for many, many years.
“What we have done in these years, people have said it’s so difficult, but if somebody would like to beat us it is going to happen because in the next 50 years we’re not going to win all the Premier Leagues. It’s impossible.”
Guardiola previously lost three back-to-back games with Bayern Munich, before losing a fourth in a shootout, in the 2014-15 season.
His worse run as City boss had been three successive defeats.
Asked about the current run, Guardiola told Sky Sports: “Two in the Premier League. You have to count the victories and defeats, and we will win a lot.
“If you have to count how many victories in a row, we are far away from that position.”
It is “not nice” to lose two league games in a row, but City are “not far away” from the top of the table, in second place going into the international break, he said.
On Saturday, City took a first-half lead at Brighton through Erling Haaland’s 12th Premier League goal of the season.
The Blues dominated for much of the first half, having 67% possession and five shots on target to Brighton’s zero.
But that flipped after the break to just one on target, to Brighton’s four. City looked lethargic for large periods of the second half as Brighton substitutes Joao Pedro and Matt O’Riley scored to earn the win.
It was the first time City had lost a Premier League game having led at half-time since 2021.
Speaking on Match Of The Day, former City defender Micah Richards said: “The most defining thing for me is not pressing any more. They’re going as individuals.
“When you lose the best midfielder in Europe [Rodri] you’re always going to have a strain on the team. But they are just too easy to play through at this moment in time.”
Guardiola added: “We are not able to do 90 minutes right now.
“We played a really good first half, but we were not able to sustain the rhythm in the second half.
“We lost again so [we will] clear our heads [in the] international break and hopefully our players come back fit.”
In his news conference, Guardiola added: “When the players come back, I don’t have any doubt that we will be back to our best.”
City’s run is tough after the break, with games against Tottenham, Liverpool, Nottingham Forest, Crystal Palace, Manchester United and Aston Villa before Christmas.
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Liverpool have taken early control of the Premier League title race, but Alexis Mac Allister says he didn’t think they would be contenders at the start of the season.
Arne Slot’s side beat Aston Villa 2-0 at Anfield after reigning champions Manchester City had earlier slipped up 2-1 at Brighton.
The results gave Liverpool a five-point lead at the top over Pep Guardiola’s men, who have now lost four successive games.
“If we are top of the league by five points then it means something,” said Mac Allister.
“But we have to go step by step. If you asked me before the season started I would not say we were candidates, but now it looks like [we are].”
Records have tumbled under Slot, who replaced Jurgen Klopp in the summer, as his excellent start at Anfield continued with a ninth Premier League win in 11 games and 15 from 17 overall.
But the Dutch boss was wisely managing expectations as he added: “We are really happy that most of our players have stayed fit through this tough run.
“If I look at the games that are ahead, they are tough. It will be a tough season in general. Margins are small, we have a margin but it is small.
“There are many challenges to come for us.”
‘Experienced Reds can sustain title challenge’
Liverpool are looking to win the Premier League for the first time since 2019-20, and their side against Villa featured several players who were part of that trophy-winning team, including Mohamed Salah.
The Egypt international scored for a fourth successive league game when he netted the second at Anfield on Saturday night.
It continued Salah’s fine individual form, with his latest strike making the 32-year-old the first player in all competitions across Europe’s big five leagues this season to have registered double figures for both goals (10) and assists (10).
Former Liverpool winger Steve McManaman believes the Reds have the experience to maintain their challenge at the top.
“This group of players have been long into a campaign, some of them have won the Premier League and the Champions League, so of course they can sustain it,” he said on TNT Sports.
“If they stay fit and roll that starting 11 out and the five or six from the bench then of course they will go all the way.”
Statistics bode well for a 2019-20 repeat
After Liverpool’s win against Aston Villa and Manchester City’s loss at Brighton, Opta’s League Prediction model put the Reds’ chances of finishing first in the Premier League at 59.3%.
Liverpool were only given 5.1% chance of winning the title pre-season by Opta’s projections, behind City (82%) and Arsenal (12%). It’s the first time this season City haven’t been deemed favourites this season.
What also bodes well for the Reds is the similarity between this season and 2019-20 – when they won the Premier League.
Only in that title-winning campaign have they collected more points after 11 games of a Premier League season – 31 compared to 28 this term.
At the same stage of that season they were six points clear of second-placed Manchester City – compared to five this time. They went on to become champions by an 18-point margin.
And the statistics continue to make for impressive reading for Slot. He has now earned 28 points from his first 11 Premier League games in charge of Liverpool (W9 D1 L1), the joint-most by a manager after as many games in the competition, along with Guus Hiddink at Chelsea.
Man City the hunters again
While Liverpool are in the ideal position right now, their supporters will know there’s a long way to go in the race.
Manchester City have won the last four Premier League seasons in a row and while some of those have been comfortable, they have also had to overcome the pressure of being the side hunting the leaders.
Two seasons ago they trailed Arsenal by four points after 10 games but battled back to ultimately finish five points clear.
In 2020-21 it was Chelsea who led the Premier League at the same stage as Liverpool lead this time.
The gap on that occasion was just three points after 11 games, but Manchester City went on a run of 12 consecutive wins that saw them 13 points clear of the Blues by the end of January.
As the club’s supporters often sing, ‘we fight til’ the end’.
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It is easy to imagine, somewhere in a Parisian hotel room, Eddie Jones chuckling at the television.
With his Japan side not playing France until the evening, he would have had just enough time to take in England’s defeat by his native Australia.
And, if not a repeat, the 64-year-old might have picked up on some recycled storylines.
Five years ago, during his own time in charge at Twickenham, England astonishingly squandered a 31-0 lead against Scotland, ultimately squeaking a 38-38 draw.
A grim-faced Jones said afterwards that losing had become a habit. He thought the prospect of victory triggered jitters that put it back out of his team’s reach.
“It is a recurring thing,” he said.
“It’s like we have some hand grenades in the back of a jeep and sometimes they go off when there’s a lot of pressure.”
It seems there are still some bouncing about in the boot.
And against Australia on Saturday, there was a whole fireworks display of frailties.
England contrived to win the match twice over and then, with the clock deep in the red, lost it again on a fatal, final play. They had led by 12 points in the first quarter, ahead with two minutes to play and a kick-off to come their way.
But, once again, the game squirmed free of their grasp as Len Ikitau got away from Ollie Sleightholme and Australia’s replacement wing Max Jorgensen gleefully hared into the corner.
England have lost their last four matches by margins of five, two, seven and one point. Captain Jamie George has resisted Jones’ old diagnosis, that their inability to see out matches is a psychological glitch.
But, until they grind through the pressure to victory, his team can’t dispel the theory either.
There are plenty of impossible-to-deny problems to deal with first.
England’s defence conceded five tries, as they were drawn into ding-dong high-tempo game that suited the opposition and the half-time break couldn’t halt.
At times, they were outmuscled on the gain line. At others, they were burned out wide.
Missed tackles around the fringes – where a defence should be most sturdy – cost them for tries by Harry Wilson and Jeremy Williams.
George had called for “bravery” earlier in the week. That strayed into recklessness when, leading by two points with five minutes left, England’s needlessly elaborate first-phase play went awry and Andrew Kellaway scooped up and sprinted in.
England too scored five tries. The first was a beauty, passing through eight pairs of English hands in as many seconds to allow Chandler Cunningham-South in at the corner.
But there is a sense they rely on such off-the-cuff improvisation, rather than the methodical working over and opening up of opponents.
As England searched for a route back into the game in the second half, it was twin moments of Marcus Smith magic that showed the way.
Individuals given licence to roll out heads-up rugby and “play what you see” is good, but so are patterns, structures and plays that work in tandem to collectively tenderise and carve through a defence.
Joe Schmidt in the opposing coaches box is a master of them. Under him, Ireland played with more cunning, deception and trick set-pieces than a street magician.
England’s playbook seems thin by comparison.
Schmidt’s Australia are not at Ireland’s level either. But they are slowly recovering their mojo after their pool-stage eviction from last year’s Rugby World Cup.
Caught cold in the opening stages, they wrestled their way back into the contest before revelling in broken field.
Schmidt’s big gamble of thrusting new rugby league recruit Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii into midfield for his first union game since his schooldays paid off handsomely.
The 21-year-old jigged across Twickenham’s turf barefooted before the warm-ups, getting the size of the stage, and looked completely at home as he set up Tom Wright’s try with the most delicious finger roll this side of a sushi platter.
It had been put to the Wallabies earlier this week that some people would like to see them win as evidence of their competitiveness before the British and Irish Lions’ arrival in the summer.
Feeling understandably patronised, they shrugged off the suggestion.
Suaalii’s debut, his midfield combination with Ikitau, Wright’s scorching counter-attacks and Wilson’s hard-hitting captain’s performance showed that the Wallabies are not going to roll over in eight months’ time.
Steve Borthwick’s side, meanwhile, need their own injection of belief. A victory to flush out any neurosis and compound the belief in their plan.
Unfortunately South Africa are in town next. The only thing the reigning world champions and Rugby Championship holders are likely give their hosts are more questions to answer.
Jones, whose reign was ended by a defeat to Springboks two years ago, might be tempted to tune in once more.
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Coco Gauff showed supreme determination to come back from a set and a break down against Zheng Qinwen to win the season-ending WTA Finals.
In an enthralling encounter that lasted just over three hours, the American beat the Olympic champion 3-6 6-4 7-6 (7-2) in Saudi Arabia.
At 20 years old, she is the youngest player to win the tournament since Maria Sharapova exactly two decades ago, and the youngest American since Serena Williams in 2001.
“This means a lot to me,” said third seed Gauff, who wins a total prize of $4.8m (£3.7m) – a record amount in women’s professional tennis.
“This is the first professional women’s tennis event here in Saudi Arabia and I’ll forever be etched in history in that standard.”
Speaking earlier to Sky Sports, she said: “That was a great match. I was just trying my best to hang in there and I never gave up.”
In progressing to Saturday’s showpiece in Riyadh, Gauff had become the youngest player to reach the championship match at the WTA Finals since Caroline Wozniacki in 2010.
She had seen off both the world number one and two in Aryna Sabalenka and Iga Swiatek en route to the final, and piled the pressure on her opponent in the early stages against Zheng.
In what was only their second meeting – Gauff having won their first in straight sets in Rome earlier this year – Zheng, 22, was forced to save four break points, including three in a captivating fifth game.
But it was the Chinese seventh seed who got the decisive break in the opener, a double fault from Gauff after a hat-trick of unforced errors giving Zheng the advantage from which she sealed the set as Gauff slammed a backhand into the net.
Zheng’s serve is one of her greatest weapons, but she struggled to show it off against Gauff, with her first of only four aces coming at the start of the second set after she had broken Gauff again.
With renewed determination, the American restored parity in an outstanding return game, after which the pair again traded breaks. But the unperturbed Gauff broke Zheng’s serve for the third successive game to take the match to a decider.
At the start of the third set, Gauff saved three break points before conceding as Zheng took back control on her serve – yet it was only temporary.
Gauff soon broke back, her fine play at the net rewarded as Zheng sent a forehand long, before securing another love hold.
Zheng then won three successive games, dropping just four points along the way, and looked to be sauntering towards the win. But a game of errors when serving for the match brought Gauff back into contention.
That was the start of the American’s own three-game run, her spree halted as Zheng saved two championship points to ensure the tournament would be decided by a tie-break, which Gauff utterly dominated.
The victory marks her third title of a year in which she did not reach a singles Grand Slam final, with her best runs coming at the Australian Open and on the Roland Garros clay, when she was eliminated in the semi-finals.
Fourth-round exits followed at Wimbledon and in New York, where she had been defending her maiden major title from 2023.
Gauff previously said she had reservations about playing in Saudi Arabia because of the country’s human rights record, but said after her win: “Hopefully there’s more events here.”
Year to remember for Zheng
Although it has ended in defeat, 2024 has been a season to remember for Zheng, who after reaching her first Grand Slam final at the Australian Open in January – losing to Sabalenka – made history in Paris in the summer when she won China’s first Olympic singles tennis gold medal.
In addition to that success, the year also brought Zheng a successful title defence at the Palermo Ladies Open as well as victory at the Pan Pacific Open, which secured her place at the WTA Finals for the first time in her career.
She is the youngest player to reach the final of the tournament on debut since Petra Kvitova in 2011, and will start 2025 as a top-five player.
“It hurts to lose this match of course but I think it’s better I forget it and move on for my next steps,” said Zheng.
Earlier on Saturday, second seeds Erin Routliffe and Gabriela Dabrowski won the doubles title in Riyadh.
The New Zealand-Canadian pair beat American Taylor Townsend and Katerina Siniakova of the Czech Republic 7-5 6-3, avenging their loss in the Wimbledon final.