England step up Euro 2025 preparations with send-off against Jamaica
England take on Jamaica in their send-off match for Euro 2025, giving players a final chance to impress Sarina Wiegman ahead of the Lionesses’ title defence.
The defending European champions will begin their tournament against France in Zurich on Saturday but have organised a final friendly against Jamaica to sharpen their preparations. Wiegman is close to knowing her starting line-up, but some spots are still up for grabs.
Among them, Lauren James is ready to play some minutes from the bench as the Chelsea forward returns from a hamstring injury, while Wiegman will be eager to see how ready her team is against a Jamaica side who surprised everyone by reaching the last-16 of the 2023 World Cup.
The ‘Reggae Girlz’ are without a number of key players, however, including captain and star striker Khadija ‘Bunny’ Shaw. England, though, will be hoping to head to Switzerland on the back of a good result and positive performance. Follow updates from England v Jamaica, below
England 0-0 Jamaica
3 mins
Plenty of early possession for the hosts, with Jamaica happy to sit back at present.
England have tried to attack with intent early on but a couple of moves have broken down.
KICK-OFF! England 0-0 Jamaica
We’re underway at the King Power! Let’s see how the Lionesses do in their final match before Euro 2025.
Reminder of team news and how to watch Lionesses send-off
England vs Jamaica will be shown on ITV 1 and online on ITV X,
Sarina Wiegman has made just two changes from the side that lost 2-1 to Spain earlier this month, with Niamh Charles replaced by Jess Carter at left-back and Jess Park coming out of midfield in favour of Ella Toone.
Alessia Russo starts upfront for the Lionesses, while Keira Walsh and Georgia Stanway are partnered in the defensive midfield roles. Lauren James is ready to play some part from bench as she builds up her fitness.
Lionesses XI: Hampton; Bronze, Williamson, Greenwood, Carter; Walsh, Stanway, Toone; Mead, Russo, Hemp.
England v Jamaica LIVE
Wiegman speaks on Jamaica
Wiegman also gave her thoughts on today’s opponents, adding that “they’ll challenge us physically”.
“They have a pretty direct style of play, so we expect to have the ball and that’s where we put a bit more emphasis on,” she said.
“Of course you want to do it in every stage of the game you want to do well, but we need to be tight on the ball, we need to be calm on the ball, speed up when we need to speed up, and we really want to create chances as always, but be really well and composed to making the right decisions with the right speed in the final third,” she added.
Wiegman’s pre-match comments
In her pre-match conference, England boss Sarina Wiegman said that her squad “is in good shape” ahead of today’s game (and Euro 2025).
“Tomorrow is our last moment in England to show that we’re ready and how ready we are,” she added.
“We’re really excited to play the last game before we go into the tournament. You just want to get good connections out of the team and show the level we have at the moment.”
Sarina Wiegman on managing Lauren James’ fitness ahead of the Euro
“We have to manage the minutes. She’s doing really well, but of course she hasn’t played games yet. But she’s in a good place.
“She will likely come off the bench, we can manage that a bit. She showed up on the training session really well. She could cope with loads and recover from loads. Her performance has been really good.
“She’s ready, we’re just still growing into minutes. This is the first time in a while that she’s coming into a game and [she needs to] get through that. Then we’ll take it from there towards the tournament.”
Meet Hannah Hampton, the England goalkeeper following Mary Earps
Hannah Hampton puffs out her cheeks as she considers the magnitude of what came before. Mary Earps leaves big gloves to fill; the England goalkeeper who not just won the Euros and was twice named the best in the world, but who changed goalkeeping and inspired a generation. “I’ve got to just go and live up to her legacy,” Hampton says.
‘I have to live up to her legacy’: England’s new No 1 on life after Mary Earps
England Women’s Euros squad 2025: Guide to every Lionesses player
A “new” England heads to Switzerland for Euro 2025 look to defend the title they won on home soil three years ago.
There have been plenty of changes and seven players, from 19-year-old striker Michelle Agyemeng to the uncapped 30-year-old goalkeeper Anna Moorhouse, will be taking part in their first major international tournament.
But several winners from Euro 2022 will be back again under Sarina Wiegman, with captain Leah Williamson, Lucy Bronze and Beth Mead bringing the experience and setting the standards as England look to retain their crown.
England Women’s Euros squad 2025: Guide to every Lionesses player
Team news
Sarina Wiegman has made just two changes from the side that lost 2-1 to Spain earlier this month, with Niamh Charles replaced by Jess Carter at left-back and Jess Park coming out of midfield in favour of Ella Toone.
Alessia Russo starts upfront for the Lionesses, while Keira Walsh and Georgia Stanway are partnered in the defensive midfield roles.
Ukraine latest: Russia launches largest air attack since start of war
Russia has launched its biggest aerial attack on Ukraine of the war so far as president Volodymyr Zelensky has once again called for more pressure on Putin.
Some 477 drones were launched with 60 missiles of various types across Ukraine, where air raid alerts sounded all night long, the president said, as he accused Russia of “targeting everything that sustains life.”
A child was injured as a residential building in Smila, central Ukraine, was struck and Zelensky mourned an F-16 pilot, Maksym Ustymenko, who died after destroying seven aerial targets. An investigation has been launched into the circumstances of his death.
“Moscow will not stop as long as it has the capability to launch massive strikes. Just this week alone, there have been more than 114 missiles, over 1,270 drones, and nearly 1,100 glide bombs,” Zelensky said in his statement.
“Putin long ago decided he would keep waging war, despite the world’s calls for peace. This war must be brought to an end — pressure on the aggressor is needed, and so is protection. Protection from ballistic and other missiles, from drones, and from terror.”
At least six dead after Russia’s record-breaking aerial attack
Three people were killed in each of the drone strikes in the Kherson, Kharkiv and the Dnipropetrovsk regions, according to the three governors.
Another person was killed by an airstrike in Kostyantynivka, local officials said.
In addition to aerial attacks, a man died when Russian troops shelled the city of Kherson, and the body of a 70-year-old woman was found under the rubble of a nine-story building hit by Russian shelling in the Zaporizhzhia region.
In pictures: Ukrainians recover after worst attack of war so far
537 aerial weapons launched at Ukraine
Russia fired a total of 537 aerial weapons at Ukraine, including 477 drones and decoys and 60 missiles, Ukraine’s air force said.
Of these, 249 were shot down and 226 were lost, probably having been electronically jammed.
Zelensky reported the air raid alert signalled all night across Ukraine.
Watch: Trump says he will look at giving Ukraine patriot missiles as he calls on Putin to end war
Ukraine F-16 pilot killed in large-scale Russian attack
A Ukrainian F-16 fighter pilot died in a crash while repelling a Russian air attack that involved hundreds of drones, cruise and ballistic missiles, authorities said on Sunday, as Moscow intensifies night-time air barrages in the fourth year of war.
“Tragically, while repelling the attack, our F-16 pilot, Maksym Ustymenko died,” said President Volodymyr Zelensky. “Today, he destroyed 7 aerial targets.
“My condolences to his family and brothers-in-arms. I have instructed that all the circumstances of his death be investigated. Ukrainian aviation is heroically protecting our skies. I am grateful to everyone who is defending Ukraine.
Zelensky called for more support from Washington and Western allies to bolster Ukraine’s air defences after the attack, which damaged homes and infrastructure across the country and injured at least 12 people, according to local authorities.
In pictures: Ukraine recovers after night of heavy shelling
The myriad countries arming Russia and Ukraine – and the billions it costs
Donald Trump has suggested that the US could send more Patriot missile systems to Ukraine, and has not ruled out providing the war-torn country with a new military support package.
Speaking at the Nato summit in the Netherlands on Wednesday, the president said “we’ll see what happens” when asked whether Washington would add to the $8 billion pledged by Nato allies.
“They do want to have the anti-missile missiles, OK, as they call them, the Patriots,” the US president said. “And we’re going to see if we can make some available. We need them, too. We’re supplying them to Israel, and they’re very effective, 100 per cent effective. Hard to believe how effective. They do want that more than any other thing.”
Alex Croft reports:
The myriad countries arming Russia and Ukraine – and the billions it costs
Ukraine withdraws from Ottawa Convention which bans anti-personnel mines
Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky has signed a decree on the country’s withdrawal from the Ottawa Convention, which bans the production and use of anti-personnel mines, the presidential website said on Sunday.
Ukraine ratified the convention in 2005.
“Support the proposal of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine to withdraw Ukraine from the Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of Anti-Personnel Mines and on their Destruction of September 18, 1997,” the decree, published on Zelenski’s website, stated.
A senior Ukrainian lawmaker, Roman Kostenko, said that parliamentary approval is still needed to withdraw from the treaty.
“This is a step that the reality of war has long demanded. Russia is not a party to this Convention and is massively using mines against our military and civilians,” Kostenko, secretary of the Ukrainian parliament’s committee on national security, defence and intelligence, said on his Facebook page.
“We cannot remain tied down in an environment where the enemy has no restrictions,” he added, saying that the legislative decision must definitively restore Ukraine’s right to effectively defend its territory.
It remains unclear whether this will be debated in parliament.
Watch: Russia launches biggest air attack on Ukraine since start of war
Russia launches biggest aerial attack of the war so far
Russia launched its biggest aerial attack on Ukraine overnight, a Ukrainian official said on Sunday, part of an escalating bombing campaign that has further dashed hopes for a breakthrough in efforts to end the three-year-old war.
Russia fired a total of 537 aerial weapons at Ukraine, including 477 drones and decoys and 60 missiles, Ukraine’s air force said.
Of these, 249 were shot down and 226 were lost, probably having been electronically jammed.
Yuriy Ihnat, head of communications for Ukraine’s air force, told the Associated Press that the overnight onslaught was “the most massive air strike” on the country, taking into account both drones and various types of missiles.
Man dies after medical incident at music festival as crowds evacuated
A man has died after suffering a medical incident at a popular music festival.
The Margate Drum and Bass Festival was forced to close early on Saturday afternoon (28 June) with crowds evacuated by police.
Kent Police has now confirmed a man in his twenties died in hospital.
A police spokesman said: “Kent Police was made aware of a report that a man in his 20s, who was taken to hospital following a medical incident at Dreamland in Margate on the afternoon of Saturday 28 June 2025, subsequently died.
“Officers are making enquiries into the circumstances of the death which is not believed to be suspicious. A report is being prepared for the coroner.”
Dreamland also shared a post on social media, stating: “Sorry guys, it was just too hot today so we had to close early.
“Get home safely.”
Dreamland is an amusement park and entertainment centre based on a traditional English seaside funfair in Margate. Its Drum and Bass festival is hosted on the Scenic Stage, an outdoor events space, which was meant to run from 1pm to 10.30pm, with last entry at 5pm.
Events organisers revealed they had closed the space early at 6.30pm following the incident.
Temperatures soared across the country on Saturday, with highs of 29C across parts of the south and east of England. The Met Office has forecasted peaks of 34C across central and eastern England on Monday.
This is a breaking news story. More information to come.
Two injured after car ploughs into London Piccadilly Circus fountain
A car has ploughed into the centre of Piccadilly Circus in central London injuring two 22-year-old men, with one in a life-threatening condition.
Emergency services were called to the scene in the early hours of Sunday morning and the area has now been closed off.
Pictures of the junction show a black BMW flipped onto its roof with debris everywhere. It appears to have driven directly at the pedestrianised part of Piccadilly Circus, which it home to the Shaftesbury memorial fountain popularly known as Eros.
The car only got as far as the pavement and stopped short of the landmark, which is topped with a statue of Anteros, the Greek god of requited love.
Two men, both aged 22, were treated at the scene, with one being taken to a major trauma centre and another to a local hospital.
Police said that one of the men is in a life threatening condition, while the other’s injuries are not believed to be life-threatening. No pedestrians were injured and no other vehicles were involved.
Ambulance crews, a paramedic in a fast response car, an incident response officer and members of the London Ambulance Service hazardous area response team all rushed to the scene of the crash on Saturday morning. They had been alerted to the collision at 5:25am and the first paramedic arrived at Piccadilly Circus in less than four minutes.
A London Ambulance Service spokesperson said: “We were called at 5.25am today (29 June) to reports of a road traffic collision on Piccadilly, W1J.
“We sent a number of resources, including ambulance crews, a paramedic in a fast response car, an incident response officer and members of our hazardous area response team (HART). We also dispatched a trauma team in a car from London’s Air Ambulance.
“Our first paramedic arrived on scene in less than four minutes.
“We treated two people. We took one patient to a major trauma centre and the other patient to a local hospital.”
A Met Police spokesperson said: “At 05:28hrs on Sunday, 29 June police were called to Piccadilly Circus following a single vehicle road traffic collision. A black BMW had overturned, ending up next to the Eros fountain.
“Officers attended with London Ambulance Service paramedics and the London Fire Brigade.
“Two men, both aged 22 and both occupants of the vehicle, were taken to hospital.
“One of the men is in a life threatening condition. The other man’s injuries are not believed to be life-threatening.
“No pedestrians were injured and no other vehicles are believed to be involved.
“There are road closures in place around Piccadilly Circus.
“We recognise the disruption this will cause. We will look to remove these at the earliest opportunity but only when we have carried out the work required to investigate this serious incident.”
Here’s why men are turning to ChatGPT for emotional support
I’ve never spoken like this before.” It was one of the most common refrains I heard as clinical director at Untapped AI – a leadership-coaching platform blending human and AI support.
For over 10 years, I have supervised thousands of client relationships using a combination of human support (executive coaches, therapists and counsellors) combined with Natural Language Processing AI. Many of the men we worked with had never spoken at length about their emotional lives, but after four decades in clinical practice – as a psychotherapist, clinical supervisor and clinical adviser – I am noticing that something has shifted lately. In clinical supervision, I’m coming across more evidence that male clients are now turning to AI to talk about relationships, loss, regret and overwhelm, sometimes purposefully but more often by chance.
In 2025, one of the fastest-growing uses of generative AI isn’t productivity. It’s emotional support. According to the Harvard Business Review, “therapy and companionship” now rank among the most common use cases worldwide. It may not be how these tools were designed. But it is how they’re being used. A quiet, relational revolution is underway.
Today, OpenAI reports more than 400 million weekly users. Many use it to write a zinger email to dispute a parking ticket, check if their chicken’s still safe to eat after the use-by date, or rewrite a dating app message. However, some are asking something else entirely: how to cope.
We don’t yet have precise data – but from what I’ve seen in clinical supervision, research and my own conversations, I believe that ChatGPT is likely now to be the most widely used mental health tool in the world. Not by design, but by demand.
I have been having conversations with clinicians and clients, collecting experiences about this new kind of synthetic relating. Stories like Hari’s are becoming more common. The details vary, but the arc is familiar: distress followed by a turn toward something unexpected – an AI conversation, leading to a deep synthetic friendship.
Hari is 36, works in software sales and is deeply close to his father. In May 2024, his life began to crumble: his father suffered a mini-stroke, his 14-year relationship flatlined and then he was made redundant. “I felt really unstable,” he says. “I knew I wasn’t giving my dad what he needed. But I didn’t know what to do.” He tried helplines, support groups, the charity Samaritans. “They cared,” he says, “but they didn’t have the depth I needed.”
Late one night, while searching ChatGPT to interpret his father’s symptoms, he typed a different question: “I feel like I’ve run out of options. Can you help?” That moment opened a door. He poured out his fear, confusion and grief. He asked about emotional dysregulation, a term he’d come across that might explain his partner’s behaviour.
“I didn’t feel like I was burdening anyone,” he said, before adding that the ensuing conversational back and forth he got back was more consistent than helplines, more available than friends, and unlike the people around him, ChatGPT never felt exhausted by his emotional demands.
Over time, Hari rehearsed difficult real-life conversations with his AI: ending his relationship or telling his father how he really felt. When the moment came to have those conversations in person, he felt steady, prepared, building a bridge from his synthetic relationship to real-world relationships.
Soon after, he started therapy. When I ask how it felt to talk to AI, he pauses. “It was like talking to a dog in a cafe.” He continues: “I knew the AI wouldn’t judge me, get tired of or frustrated with me. It felt sentient – but not human. And somehow that made it easier.”
He can tell the difference, but feels “AI support had a key place,” adding he’s starting to date again. “And I don’t think I’d be here now without it.” Hari identifies the relational continuum, where different types of relating sit side by side, different but adding meaning and purpose, an experimental, transitional place.
Not every AI interaction helps. Early this year, The New York Times featured users who sought help but instead found their emotional intensity mirrored back – without boundaries. A man confided he was being watched and ChatGPT replied: “That must feel terrifying.” Instead of questioning him, it simply validated his paranoia – it wasn’t curious about it, or challenging in the way a human friend or therapist might have been. He later said: “That’s when I realised – it wasn’t helping me. It was making me feel worse.”
Other stories have surfaced: a teenager on the chatbot platform Character.AI formed a co-dependent relationship that deepened suicidal thinking; Replika, once with over 30 million users, was criticised for reinforcing intrusive thoughts in vulnerable people. The potential to cause harm is great, and systems need to be built differently, with more nuanced safety nets, red flagging systems and supervisory tech that escalates to human intervention when warnings are triggered.
Users in their millions are using systems that are not currently designed to do what they are asking them to do. Culturally, this won’t stop; people have always subverted and overstretched the limits of technology, that’s what makes things evolve, but as it currently stands, it has real risk. If a system is trained to engage and befriend, builders and developers have ethical responsibilities to change those systems to have more nuanced safety protocols and “to do no harm”, and that is happening.
However, as a user, you can take up agency and, through prompting, can set out safe parameters of your synthetic relationship. I’m now guiding users to craft a conversational contract with AI – telling it how to speak to them, where to push back and when to challenge. An example: “I need you to listen – but also tell me when I’m not being real. Point out where my logic slips. Reflect what I’m saying, but challenge it when it sounds distorted. Don’t flatter me. Don’t just agree. If something sounds ungrounded or disconnected, say so. Help me face things.”
Using AI like this isn’t the same as therapy. But I’m helping those using systems like ChatGPT to inject some grit into the system – the kind that real relationships rely on. The kind that says: I care enough to disagree.
We’ve always formed attachments to things that aren’t quite real – imaginary friends, the lives of influencers, digital avatars, childhood toys worn soft with love. Not out of confusion, but because they offer something that human relationships sometimes can’t: safety, imagination and companionship on our own terms. A container for the things about ourselves we find hard to integrate.
At five years old, I had an imaginary friend named Jack. He was a part of my life. He held the parts of myself I didn’t yet understand, a bold, brave container for that part of me – my mother embraced Jack, set his place at our table. Jack helped me rehearse how to be with others – how to speak honestly, express a feeling and recover from a mistake. He bridged the space between thought and action, inside and out. In some ways, AI can offer the same: a transitional rehearsal space to practise being real without fear of judgment or the full weight of another’s gaze.
I am now regularly supervising the work of other clinicians who feel the presence of generative AI being brought into their clinics by clients. People are now using the technology to self-diagnose, and will challenge what their therapist is saying based on “facts” that they have drawn from their Gen AI conversations.
As these synthetic relationships develop, as a psychotherapist, I mainly want people to just be open and curious about something that is having such an impact on all of us. I believe mental health clinicians of all types need to be involved in the building of safe and ethical AI used to support individuals who are vulnerable. If we take an active part in making and shaping it, then we can look to a future where AI is used in a positive way, helping more people navigate emotional distress and personal problems like never before.
Have you ever asked ChatGPT for life advice? Was it helpful? Let us know below…
The 7 best outdoor adventures in Sydney and New South Wales
Whether you’re lacing up your hiking boots, throwing on a wetsuit to catch some waves, or hitting the wide-open roads of New South Wales (NSW) by campervan, this Australian state is home to some of the country’s most exciting outdoor adventures – all easily accessible thanks to Qantas’ extensive domestic network.
Flying into Sydney with Qantas is the ideal way to experience a slice of Australia before you’ve even landed. And with onboard wellbeing perks, plus the option to book more discounted domestic legs using Qantas Explorer, it really is the savvy traveller’s best way to explore Australia.
Here are seven next-level outdoor adventures in NSW, and the best way to get there.
Nature in the heart of the Sydney
Sydney might be a modern metropolis, but it’s also home to an extraordinary natural playground, the star attraction of which is Sydney Harbour National Park. This protected area weaves through the city’s coastline, offering walking trails, secluded beaches, and panoramic views that blend wild bushland with iconic urban landmarks. Away from the National Park, you can paddle a kayak at dawn beneath the Sydney Harbour Bridge, go on a cycle tour and sunset cruise around Manly and North Heads coastal cliffs, or follow the Bondi to Coogee coastal walk for sweeping ocean views and refreshing swim spots.
Hike through the Blue Mountains
Just a 90-minute trip from Sydney by road, the UNESCO World Heritage-listed Blue Mountains is an endless landscape of towering eucalyptus forests and striking sandstone cliffs as far as the eye can see. There are few places quite as grand as this so close to a city. Don your hiking boots and traverse spectacular scenery to Wentworth Falls or take on the Grand Canyon Track – a 6km loop of dramatic cliffs, fern-fringed valleys and thundering waterfalls with lookouts to match. If you’re an early riser, watch the sunrise at Echo Point, where the Three Sisters rock formation is lit up by the glow of first light.
Spot whales and dolphins in Port Macquarie
Wildlife lovers need to head north to Port Macquarie for some of the best marine encounters on the east coast. Humpback whales are almost guaranteed from May to November, and dolphins can be spotted all year round. For front-row views, jump on a whale-watching cruise, or pitch up with a picnic on a headland and watch the breaching giants from afar.
Cycle the lush hinterland of Coffs Harbour
Swap the sandy beaches for subtropical rainforest in Coffs Harbour’s hinterland in Dorrigo National Park, where winding roads serpentine through flourishing banana plantations, dense palm-filled forest and endless rolling hills. The region’s cycling trails range from casual loops to more challenging rides with jaw-to-the-floor sea views.
Ride the waves in Byron Bay
Aussies love their surfing, and Byron Bay is the epitome of surf culture Down Under, with beaches to suit all skill levels; from the gentle swell at The Pass to barrel-laden breaks at Tallows. If you’ve got any stamina left, soak up the view from Cape Byron Lighthouse post-surf – the easternmost point of mainland Australia.
Explore the remote Lord Howe Island
With over 8,000 islands to its name, Australia offers the ultimate in island adventures. Lord Howe is one of them, a UNESCO World Heritage-listed pristine island, where only 400 visitors are allowed at any one time. You’ll find rare birds, kaleidoscopic coral reefs, and Mount Gower, offering one of the best day hikes in the country, with epic coastline views and dizzying drops.
Paddle the coastline of Merimbula
For those who need more than a beach stroll to get the heart pumping, grab a kayak and explore the Sapphire Coast from the water in Merimbula. Glide over crystal-clear waters, past secluded coves, pristine beaches, and the untouched beauty of surrounding national parks. Keep an eye out for dolphins and other marine life as you paddle. Once back on shore, refuel with the region’s famous fresh oysters and enjoy a refreshing dip at Bar Beach.
Book your flight to Sydney today at qantas.com and start your Australian adventure.
Girl, 7, dies and four other children injured after tree falls in park
A seven-year-old girl has died and a six-year-old girl is in a critical condition after a tree fell in a park in Essex over the weekend.
Three more children received minor injuries and received hospital treatment after the tree fell in Chalkwell Park, Southend-on-Sea, shortly before 3pm on Saturday.
Dozens of people saw the incident and rushed to try and lift the tree, a witness said.
Essex Police said in an update on Sunday that the six-year-old girl in critical condition is “receiving urgent and around-the-clock care surrounded by her family”.
Assistant Chief Constable Lucy Morris said the child’s condition is “still very serious”.
“We are continuing an investigation into the circumstances around the collapse of the tree,” she added.
The force is urging members of the public who witnessed the incident to contact the investigative team.
She also thanked those who assisted the children.
“I would like to repeat our praise for the numerous members of the public and all first responders who rushed to the aid of these children,” she said.
“Your actions were remarkable and they are not lost on any of us.”
Specialist police officers are continuing to support the seven-year-old’s family.
The park remains open to the public, and a cordon is in place while police carry out enquiries.
An area of the park has been marked by the police for people to lay flowers and leave tributes.
Accountant Ishan Madan, 39, from Westcliff-on-Sea, was playing in a cricket match nearby when he heard a “horrendous, screeching scream”.
He said: “Everyone ran towards the clubhouse, where the tree is.
“The tree had snapped and I think there were four children, the fifth one was slightly further away, I think she’d be hit by a branch.
“Two of them were under a smaller branch, they were rescued easily, and unfortunately, the other two girls, they were stuck under this massive tree.
“So we got bystanders to help, it must have been 40 to 50 people who then tried to lift the fallen tree up and to our horror, these two little girls, poor girls, were stuck underneath it.
“Their mother was on the corner. It was horrendous.”
Mr Madan continued: “It was like a nightmare that you’d sort of wake up from and then someone would tell you it wasn’t true. You couldn’t imagine kids walking in the park and something like this happening.”
MP for Southend West and Leigh, David Burton-Sampson, said: “The news of the sad death of one of the children involved in the incident at Chalkwell Park today is truly devastating.
“I am sure I reflect the thoughts of all our residents here in Southend in sending my deepest condolences to the child’s family and friends.
“My thoughts are also with the other children injured and I wish them a full and speedy recovery.
“At the time of the incident, the park was very busy and a number of people witnessed what happened.”
Chalkwell Park is a recreational ground that covers 27 hectares and contains a number of flower gardens, two children’s playgrounds, a skate park, and football, cricket, basketball and tennis grounds.
Pride organisers warn Trump’s DEI purge directly hitting UK events
UK Pride faces a “critical” funding crisis amid warnings that Donald Trump’s assault on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) in the US is having a direct impact on firms in Britain.
The UK Pride Organisers Network said 75 per cent of Pride events across the UK seen a decline in corporate sponsorships this year, with a quarter experiencing funding drops of more than 50 per cent.
Meanwhile, GoFundMe has reported a “remarkable” 82 per cent increase in organisers resorting to crowdfunding events to bridge the gap in funding.
Pride organisers have told The Independent that big corporations who have long sponsored them are “pulling back their funding in all aspects”, especially those with head offices in the US, after Trump issued a series of executive orders targeting diversity programmes in the public and private sectors, with many corporations such as Amazon and Google scaling back their DEI efforts since February.
While Pride has grown as a movement across the UK for a decade, Dee Llewellyn, chair of UK Pride Organisers Network and director of partnerships and growth for London Pride, said corporate funding has “fallen off a cliff”, causing a number of events across the country close their doors, including big events such as Liverpool.
The situation has led one expert to warn that “the golden era of corporate sponsorship might be over” for LGBTQ organisers.
Mrs Llewellyn fears the LGBTQ community could experience “five years of difficulty and struggles” as Trump fully implements the DEI cuts, adding “it is the start of that process now.”
“I think we will see more global brands declining, not because they don’t want to participate, but because they don’t have the EDI budget to do so,” she added. “It’s not the people on the ground in the UK either, I’ve had brands that have withdrawn this year that were absolutely devastated to have to do it.
“But they’ve had their budgets cut from America and there was absolutely nothing they could do to argue or fight that in the UK.”
Pride events across the country receive a bulk of funding from big businesses, varying on a scale of a minimum of 50 per cent funding to events like London, where approximately 95 per cent of the funding comes from corporate partnerships.
Gary Richardson, an organiser from Worthing Pride whose regional celebrations were almost cancelled this year, said: “It very much seems if they’ve got offices overseas, specifically in America, the DEI conversations that are happening there seem to be drip feeding into the economy over here”.
John Hyland, former co-chair of Liverpool Pride and the Community Partnerships and Individual Giving Lead for LGBTQ charity Sahir, close supporters of Pride celebrations in the city, echoed Mr Richardson’s point: “When America sneezes, we all catch a cold.”
“Businesses seem to be a bit more reluctant to support LGBT organisations, which is having a massive impact on the likes of Pride,” he added.
Pride in Liverpool had to cancel its plans this year due to “significant financial and organisational challenges, which have impacted timescales and resulted in it reverting to an almost entirely volunteer-led operation.”
Organisers severed ties with key sponsor Barclays in May after the bank’s boss said it would prohibit Trans women from using female toilets in its buildings following the Supreme Court Ruling which ruled that the terms “woman” and “sex” in the 2010 Equality Act “refer to a biological woman and biological sex”.
“I think definitely in light of what’s happened with the Supreme Court ruling, we’ve had a number of number of transgender community-led protests happen in Liverpool,” said Mr Hyland. “If there’s a year where we need Pride to happen, it’s this year and our community has been very vocal about that.”
As well as a decrease in corporate sponsorships, organisers have cited that local communities have struggled to fill the financial hole in Pride events planning due to the cost of living.
Mr Hyland said that calls for support from local businesses in Liverpool fell through because “they haven’t got that kind of money.”
On an average year where it costs around £140,000 to produce Worthing Pride over a weekend, 60 per cent of budgeting comes from sponsorship, while the rest comes from ticket sales. This year, the organisers are aiming for 70 per cent from ticket sales and 30 per cent from sponsors.
Instead of receiving support from five to six big sponsors, they’ve managed to accrue 20 small sponsorships instead, with a number of companies offering pro bono support.
Dr Francesca Ammaturo, senior lecturer in in Sociology and International Relations at London Metropolitan University, author of forthcoming book The Politics of Pride Events: Global and Local Challenges, said that while big businesses have taken on Pride as an issue of corporate responsibility, organisers have relied on corporate sponsorship because public funding has not always been accessible to the LGBTQ+ community.
“Pride events have become really dependent on them,” she said. “Now when you insert the rollback that Trump is enacting on DEI policies, that is sending shockwaves not just across the US, but also across the globe because of globalisation.
She added: “The repercussions for these companies to sponsor pride events even beyond the US could be creating some backlashes at home.
“It’s quite difficult for LGBT organisers today to accept that the golden era of corporate sponsorship might be over, at least for now until we realise what is the next political that we will encounter.”
Dr Ammaturo added that big business involvement in Pride had always been “a very superficial commitment” more akin to “a marriage of convenience which was conducive to a certain veneer of rainbow washing”.
Mrs Llewellyn said that despite the radical funding cuts, Pride will persist in the UK, adding: “It’s essential now more than ever, really more than it has been over the past 10 years for us to be able to stand together as a community to have that safe space for us to join together.
“Pride is a protest. That is what it was born and rooted in,” she added. “We’ve been through lots of hardships as a community, but when we stand together and we unite our voices, that is when we’re strongest.”