Woman feeding pigeons with bread arrested and handcuffed by police
A woman feeding pigeons in the street was arrested and handcuffed in a “ridiculous” incident caught on camera.
Video posted on social media shows a woman aged in her forties being detained by a group of at least six police officers and council enforcement workers in Harrow, London, on Wednesday.
In the footage captured by a passer-by, the woman looks visibly distressed as she is placed in handcuffs at around 2.30pm on the High Street in Wealdstone, before her pockets are searched. She is then marched by two officers and put in the back of a police van.
The man filming can be heard repeatedly expressing his outrage at the scene, and other passers-by are similarly heard questioning the incident, with one saying, “This is ridiculous.”
The local council said the woman was in “breach of the Public Spaces Protection Order (PSPO) relating to bird feeding” and issued her with a £100 fine. Anyone in breach of the PSPO must pay a £100 fixed penalty notice, otherwise they may face prosecution.
Police said the woman was arrested after she “repeatedly refused to provide her personal details” when asked by officers, which is an offence.
Once her details were obtained, the force said she was de-arrested, and the matter was passed over to council officers.
A spokesperson for the Metropolitan Police said: “At around 2.30pm on Wednesday 7 January, officers were approached by local council enforcement officers dealing with an anti-social behaviour incident on Wealdstone High Street, Harrow.
“A woman, in her forties, was repeatedly asked to provide her name and address so that a fixed penalty notice could be issued. After speaking with officers for around 20 minutes, she repeatedly refused to provide her personal details.
“She was arrested on suspicion of breaching Section 50 of the Police Reform Act, which requires people to provide their name and address when requested to do so by the police.
“Her details were later obtained, and she was de-arrested and dealt with by council officers.”
A Harrow Council spokesperson said: “There was a breach of the Public Spaces Protection Order (PSPO) relating to bird feeding.
“The individual refused to provide their details, which is an offence, and also refused to stop feeding pigeons when asked to do so.
“Our PSPO is in place to help keep our streets clean and safe for everyone, and anyone found breaching these faces a £100 fixed penalty notice.”
Denmark’s dark history with Greenland and the women who can’t forget
Right now, Donald Trump’s eyes – and the world’s collective gaze – are trained firmly on Greenland. The world’s largest island is home to just 57,000 people, but has been the focal point of months of tense geopolitical wrangling that, in the wake of the United States’ recent incursion into Venezuela, only looks set to become more fraught.
Trump has made no secret of his desire to “buy” Greenland – and hasn’t ruled out using military force to acquire it, despite the fact that doing so would seriously damage Nato. The territory has been part of Nato member Denmark for centuries, dating back to the arrival of the Danish-Norwegian missionary Hans Egede in 1721.
Egede, who is commemorated in a controversial statue in the Greenlandic capital city of Nuuk, has come to be seen as a symbol of colonial power. He is just one player in the complicated, often dark history between Denmark and Greenland, which has been blighted not only by centuries-old grievances, but scandals within living memory.
But although Trump and co might see this resentment towards the Danes as potential fuel to fan the flames of a “Make Greenland Great Again” campaign, it’s not as simple as that. Greenlanders are wary of simply swapping one controlling foreign power for another. The image of a grinning Donald Trump Jr, who visited Greenland “as a tourist” shortly before his father’s 2025 inauguration, posing in front of the statue of Egede with his entourage, will surely only have underlined this unease.
For the majority of Greenlanders, independence is the preferred option: a 2025 poll showed that 56 per cent would vote in favour if a referendum were held. Earlier this week, the Icelandic singer Björk shone a light on the cause when she shared an Instagram post wishing “all Greenlanders blessing in their fight for independence”. Colonialism, she added, “has repeatedly given me horror chills up my back, and the chance that my fellow Greenlanders might go from one cruel coloniser to another is too brutal to even imagine”.
Although their capital cities are more than 3,500km apart, Greenland has been linked to Denmark for a millennium, with Norse migrants settling there around AD1000. It was a Danish colony until 1953, when it fully became part of the Danish state; a little over a quarter century later, following a referendum, it gained home rule, granting Greenland control over domestic affairs.
Then, in 2009, a new self-government act gave even greater autonomy (although Denmark retained control of foreign affairs and defence). The official language switched, too, from Danish to Greenlandic, the Inuit language of Kalaallisut. And as part of this act, Greenland has the option to declare independence fully, should its people vote in favour in a referendum (the Danish parliament would need to agree, too).
Denmark has long cultivated an image as a benevolent coloniser. But a handful of recent revelations have irrevocably shattered that flattering portrait. One particularly harrowing chapter in Denmark and Greenland’s joint history came to light in the late 2010s, when Greenlandic women who had been forcibly fitted with the contraceptive coil by Danish doctors started to speak out about their ordeal.
In the Sixties and Seventies, thousands of Greenlandic women and girls, some as young as 12, were fitted with intrauterine devices (IUDs), without their knowledge or consent. The policy was an attempt to slow down population growth in Greenland (which at the time had one of the highest birth rates in the world) and therefore lessen the potential financial burden on Denmark; it’s thought to have impacted around half of the island’s women of childbearing age between 1966 and 1970.
Many were left traumatised, and others suffered pain, bleeding, infection and lasting health complications; some struggled to conceive later in life, not realising that they had been fitted with the coil. “I could clearly see that the [IUD] tools looked much too big for my little girl’s body, but at the time I didn’t realise they were for adult women,” Naja Lyberth, who was fitted with the coil at the age of 14 and later became the first woman to come forward, has said. “It was like torture, like a rape.”
Múte Egede, the former Greenland prime minister, has described this programme as “straightforward genocide, carried out by the Danish state against the Greenland population”. The Danish broadcaster DR released a podcast series, Spiralkampagnen, about the scandal in 2022; an apology from the Danish prime minister Mette Frederiksen followed in 2025. “I apologise to the girls and women who have been subjected to systematic discrimination,” she said. “Because they are Greenlanders. For experiencing both physical and psychological harm. For being let down.”
Another dark episode that has recently prompted a much-belated apology is the so-called “little Danes experiment” of the Fifties. The Danish government sent 22 Inuit children from Greenland to live with Danish families; the idea was that they would learn the Danish language and way of life, then later return to their home country, inculcated with these values and traditions. It was, of course, a policy steeped in colonialist ideals; the aim was to eventually create a “new ruling class of Greenlanders” who were, essentially, culturally Danish.
The participating children were meant to be orphans, but some were actually taken from their families. Six were adopted by foster families in Denmark, but when the remaining 16 eventually returned to Greenland, they were placed in orphanages and made to continue speaking Danish.
Most of them never returned to live with their birth families; around half of the youngsters involved in the “experiment” later experienced mental health problems, substance abuse and suicide attempts. In 2020, prime minister Frederiksen made an official apology to the survivors, admitting that “we cannot change what happened. But we can take responsibility and apologise to those we should have cared for but failed to do”.
But for decades after this “experiment”, there has been further controversy over the use of “parenting competency” tests, known as FKU, on Greenlandic families based on the Danish mainland. Activists have long argued that it is unfair to make decisions about whether a Greenlander is a fit parent based on assessments that are rooted in Danish norms and carried out in Danish, rather than Kalaallisut. Greenlandic parents in Denmark are five times more likely to have their children taken into care, according to one report.
The forced contraception programme and “controversial child welfare practices” are not “just historical footnotes”, says Aurélien Colson, professor of political science at ESSEC Business School. “They are seen as deeply intrusive decisions imposed from outside. These episodes matter because they reinforce a colonial grievance narrative: Denmark is seen not only as a partner, but as a state that historically made intrusive decisions over Greenlandic bodies and families”. The scandals, he adds, “have strengthened a sense that Greenland’s future should be decided in Nuuk, not elsewhere, and certainly not in Washington DC”.
This year, though, Denmark banned the use of FKU tests on Greenlandic families; the decision came not too long after Trump started voicing plans for a Greenland takeover. The timing inevitably raised eyebrows, with some Greenlanders believing that this sudden and speedy policy U-turn on a longstanding grievance was rooted in Danish fears about US involvement. Speaking to The Guardian in January 2025, Greenlandic politician Naaja Nathanielsen suggested that Trump’s interest had been “a wake-up call to Copenhagen”.
Trump is not the first US president to attempt to acquire Greenland. Back in the 1860s, Andrew Johnson’s administration raised the idea of buying it; at the start of the Cold War, Harry Truman made Denmark a secret offer of $100m for the territory, which he believed held strategic importance (the Americans, it should be noted, have had a military presence in Greenland since the Second World War).
But the 47th president is arguably the most persistent. Back in 2019, he expressed his interest in buying the territory, claiming that “essentially it’s a large real estate deal”, but his overtures were rejected outright by the Danes, with the prime minister describing the prospect as “absurd”. During his second term, though, it has become something of a fixation.
Why is Trump so obsessed with the idea of planting the stars and stripes on Greenland? Its vast array of natural resources might well play a part. Underneath the ice lie rare earth elements, which are used in the manufacturing of smartphones, batteries and green technology, as well as other valuable raw materials such as lithium, graphite and copper. It’s estimated to be home to significant and as-yet-untapped reserves of fossil fuels, too.
The president has also repeatedly claimed that the US needs Greenland “from the standpoint of national security”, as he put it on Air Force One earlier this week, arguing that its location is of “strategic” importance. Its position along the GIUK gap, the passage between Greenland, Iceland and the UK, makes it potentially useful for overseeing access to the North Atlantic; it is also well placed to potentially provide warning of missile attacks.
But for all the American attempts to rally support, such as the coolly received “charm offensive”-style visit from vice-president JD Vance and his wife, Usha, Greenlanders have not warmed to the idea of swapping Denmark for the States. Last year, a poll found that 85 per cent opposed the idea of Greenland becoming part of the USA; only six per cent were in favour.
Some politicians reckon that Trump’s interest might have another potential side effect: accelerating a possible split from Denmark and eventual independence. “There’s a window of opportunity here for us, where we could actually go into a dialogue about concrete steps we can take to better Greenlandic people’s lives,” MP Juno Berthelsen said earlier this week.
The general mood, Colson says, could be summed up as “less Copenhagen over time, and certainly not Washington instead”, with a desire for “more Greenlandic control when it becomes economically viable”. But the question of exactly “when” is a very important one.
As Colson points out, its economy is “small and highly dependent on fishing”, plus it still receives an annual grant from Denmark, known as the “block grant”; this represents over half of the public budget and helps subsidise services like education and healthcare. And on the latter point, Denmark covers costs for Greenlandic patients who need treatment in mainland Danish hospitals, too.
Indeed, the same 2025 poll that showed 56 per cent of Greenlanders favoured independence also reported that 45 per cent would be opposed if it meant that their living standards would deteriorate. Rather than an immediate shift, most Greenlanders seem to favour a slow, steady move away from Denmark. Independence, Colson reckons, “is possible but it’s not imminent”. A move to independence, he adds, “would take years, probably a decade or more”, and would also require new revenues, such as mining, tourism growth or an expansion of fishing, or some sort of transitional arrangement.
Iceland might present a potential blueprint for Greenland’s way forward. Once part of the Kingdom of Denmark, it officially gained full independence in 1944 following a referendum, having slowly gained significant autonomy in the preceding decades through a handover period. Like Greenland, it is rich in natural resources; geothermal power has proved important for the economy, as it could do for its neighbour.
Whatever lies in Greenland’s future, though, for now its people and its politicians are sticking to one refrain: that their land is not for sale.
Anti-ICE protests erupt across US after woman fatally shot by agent
Protests have erupted across the country after an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent, identified as Jonathan Ross, fatally shot 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good.
Demonstrators in Minneapolis and other cities across the U.S., including Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Raleigh and Washington, D.C., have turned out this weekend for nonviolent protests, being called “ICE Out For Good.” Photos showed demonstrators holding signs demanding ICE leave their cities or remembering Good’s legacy.
Large anti-ICE protests have been ongoing in Minneapolis, drawing hundreds of local and state law enforcement officers. A large crowd formed Saturday in the city’s Powderhorn Park, where protesters have chanted Good’s name and waved signs with slogans like “ICE will melt,” according to CNN.
While the Minneapolis protests have been largely peaceful, at least 29 individuals were arrested Friday evening after a hotel was vandalized.
Several activist groups have helped organize the protests, which call for the government to reduce ICE presence in cities and demand accountability.
Meanwhile, the Department of Homeland Security has released a new video showing the minutes that led up to the fatal shooting in Minneapolis. In a post on X, the agency asserted Good was “STALKING and IMPEDING a law enforcement operation.”
Fundraiser for Renee Good’s family soars past $1 million after she was shot dead by ICE agent
An online fundraiser for the family of Renee Nicole Good, the woman shot dead by an ICE agent in Minneapolis, has already flown past its $50,000 goal and is approaching $1.5 million.
Keep reading:
Fundraiser for Renee Good’s family soars past $1 million after ICE agent shooting
Tucker Carlson takes conservatives to task for trying to ‘score political points’ from Minnesota shooting
Tucker Carlson lambasted his fellow members of the right this week over their response to an ICE agent fatally shooting a woman in Minneapolis, accusing them of trying to score “political points” and failing to see Renee Good’s death “through a human lens.”
Keep reading:
Tucker Carlson slams right for seeking ‘political points’ from Minnesota shooting
‘It’s been hard to … hold on to hope’: Minneapolis pastor speaks out
Rev. Ingrid Rasmussen, a pastor in Minneapolis, told CNN her community is experiencing “grief and sadness and anger” after an ICE agent, identified as Jonathan Ross, shot and killed Renee Nicole Good.
Rasmussen explained that it has “been hard to sort of hold onto hope,” but the community is still rallying together.
“I think I have been drawing on that image that Jesus uses of the mustard seed, that tiny little seed that holds great power to grow into something formidable, and I have been seeing those mustard seeds emerge all over the city,” she told the outlet.
ICYMI: Minneapolis mayor urges protesters not to ‘take the bait’
Before nationwide anti-ICE protests began Saturday, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey told peaceful protesters not to “take the bait” when a single agitator begins vandalizing property or acting aggressively toward law enforcement.
“We cannot take the bait,” Frey said in a press conference Saturday morning.
He asserted that President Donald Trump wants to see chaos in cities, which would prove his claim that protesters are violent and that there is an increased need for federal law enforcement in cities.
Frey said any person who engages in protest behavior not protected by the Constitution would be held accountable.
In pictures: Anti-ICE protesters march nationwide
Watch: Minneapolis mayor says 50% of the shootings this year in the city have been ICE
Los Angeles protesters gathered outside federal buildings: report
Anti-ICE protesters in Los Angeles have gathered outside federal buildings in the city’s downtown area, prompting a police response, CNN reports.
Police blocked a nearby intersection, and many protesters cleared the area after some time. However, a small group has remained, prompting the Los Angeles Police Department to tell them to “leave the area,” the outlet reports.
ICYMI: Trump team admits it’s reviewing the status of thousands of refugees in Minnesota
President Donald Trump’s administration has announced it is “reexamining” thousands of refugee cases in Minnesota.
The Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services launched a “sweeping initiative reexamining thousands of refugee cases through new background checks and intensive verification of refugee claims” in Minnesota since mid-December, according to a statement released Friday.
The announcement came just days after an ICE agent, identified as Jonathan Ross, shot and killed 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis while the agency was conducting a large operation in the city.
Keep reading:
Trump team admits it’s reviewing the status of thousands of refugees in Minnesota
Kristi Noem signs policy requiring week’s notice for congressional visits to ICE facilities
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has signed a new policy requiring a week’s notice from lawmakers before they can visit an ICE facility, according to Politico.
The order was signed Thursday, but revealed in court Saturday, the outlet reports.
Protesters and law enforcement officers gather in Texas
Protesters are marching in downtown Austin, Texas, which has prompted law enforcement officers to also gather at the scene, CNN reports.
Demonstrators are carrying signs that read “abolish ICE” and “end ICE terrorism,” according to the outlet.
Trump’s ‘morality’ raises nightmare of ghosts past in Colombia
A man convicted on 34 felony charges of falsifying business records, and found liable in a civil court for sexual abuse and defamation, now says that as US president he is unbound by international law and answers only to “my own morality”.
Donald Trump’s latest boast came at the end of a week when his forces abducted the Venezuelan president abroad and after his ICE agents killed a mother of three on home soil.
In Venezuela, he violated the nation’s sovereignty. In Minneapolis, he pre-empted any investigation into the shooting of Renee Good, claimed she had tried to run over an ICE agent and that the armed agent who killed her by firing three shots point blank acted in self-defence.
There is no aspect, now, of international law that Trump believes he is bound by. And few of domestic, either.
In an interview with The New York Times, he was asked whether there were any limits on his use of American military might.
“Yeah, there is one thing,” he replied. “My own morality. My own mind. It’s the only thing that can stop me. I don’t need international law. I’m not looking to hurt people.”
In Bogata, Colombia’s capital, that claim is dismissed outright.
Filipe Grisaldo, a bookshop assistant not far from Palaza de Bolivar, the central square in the capital, represents many when he says that for the last week he has felt genuinely afraid that his country would come under American attack.
“Here where I work is very close to the government buildings. If the Americans come, I could be killed,” he adds.
His fear was caused by Trump’s threats against Colombia’s president, Gustavo Petro, who, the US president said, needs to “watch his ass”.
“He has cocaine mills and cocaine factories and isn’t going to be doing it very long,” Trump threatened earlier this week.
When asked if he favoured military intervention against Colombia’s drug operations, the president said, “sounds good”.
This week, thousands of people flooded onto Plaza de Bolivar, named after South America’s “liberator”, Simon Bolivar, to protest at the US threats – made before Trump insisted he was above international law.
Colombia’s military is already on high alert along its border with Venezuela, dealing with transnational narco-gangs like Tren de Aragua, and with rebel movements like ELN and FARC, also involved in international drugs and gold smuggling.
Cocaine production in Colombia is at its highest ever. But the US and Bogota have worked together for years trying to reduce the scale of the problem for both countries.
“It is the longer history between South and Central America and the US that really frightens me, though,” says Grisaldo.
“We had decades when the US was operating in our countries, supporting authoritarians and guerrilla groups that brought chaos.”
In the 1960s and for the next three decades, until the fall of the Soviet Union, successive governments in Washington backed covert and overt operations to keep socialist and communist-leaning leaders from power in America’s backyard.
Cuba remains isolated and under a crippling economic embargo as a socialist state established by Fidel Castro.
The US was instrumental in the 1973 coup against Salvador Allende, who was killed, and backed the reign of terror of right-wing dictator Augusto Pinochet until 1990.
US military support for successive military regimes in Guatemala led to UN allegations of acts of genocide against the Indigenous people. The US backed Contra guerrillas in Nicaragua, and supported death squad regimes in El Salvador, plus the “dirty war” of Argentina’s dictatorship. The list is longer than this.
Those US actions sought to offset a threat of growing Soviet influence and the possibility of establishing military bases to threaten the US.
Today, there is no obvious physical danger from Vladimir Putin’s Russia. His efforts to restore the Soviet empire have focused on Eastern Europe. He has weaponised the cyber realms and social media to undermine democracy across the West, including the US, to this end. He wants Ukraine – not Uruguay.
Trump is leaving Putin to pursue his aim to regain dominance over Eastern Europe while his focus is on the western hemisphere.
To that end, he has withdrawn further from international bodies and treaties, leaving 31 UN bodies and agreements and more than 30 others that cover global efforts to mitigate climate change and defend the rights of women.
“American dominance in the western hemisphere will never be questioned again,” Trump said after the Venezuelan operation.
His focus lies on the drug cartels, which have evolved into military organisations with nation-sized budgets in the bloody soup of South and Central America’s proxy wars between Moscow and Washington.
Chaos and compromise led to vast ungoverned spaces and weak governments unable, or unwilling, to deal with the explosion of criminal gangs.
These gangs, Trump insists, now pose a threat to US security. But now Trump, in turn, poses a threat to the security of allies in the US’s “war on drugs”.
He has backed away from threatening Colombia’s president for now and has instead invited him to a meeting at the White House.
Petro has readily agreed because when Trump makes threats, as Maduro has found out and Greenland may soon, he tends to mean it. And his business and personal life shows that he is unhindered by complex ethics.
Britain’s former top judge tells Starmer: Make things right on IPP
A former lord chief justice has urged Sir Keir Starmer to end the scandal of cruel indefinite jail terms, accusing ministers of ignoring “the urgency of the situation”, as scores of prisoners languish in jail with no hope of release.
Comparing the cases of those locked up under imprisonment for public protection (IPP) sentences to the Post Office and infected blood scandals, Lord John Thomas argued it is “time for the state to recognise that a mistake has been made” and called for ministers to “bring justice at long last to those never released”.
IPP sentences – recognised as “psychological torture” by the UN – were scrapped in 2012, but not retrospectively, leaving almost 2,500 inmates who were already jailed incarcerated with no release date as the government continues to refuse to resentence them.
At least 94 people have taken their own lives in prison after losing hope of getting out.
Victims of the scandal, whose tragic cases have been highlighted by The Independent, include Leroy Douglas, who has served almost 20 years for stealing a mobile phone; Thomas White, 42, who set himself alight in his cell and has served 13 years for stealing a phone; and Abdullahi Suleman, 41, who is still inside 19 years after he was jailed for a laptop robbery.
Lord Thomas, a crossbench peer, last month tabled an amendment to the Sentencing Bill calling for IPP prisoners to be given a release date within two years of their next parole hearing, but it was voted down by the government this week.
It came alongside another defeated amendment tabled by Edward Garnier KC, a former solicitor general under the Conservative government, which called for a panel of judges to reconsider the plight of every prisoner on an indefinite jail term.
Writing for The Independent, Lord Thomas argued that IPP sentences have left some prisoners facing “extraordinary” sentences which are “wholly disproportionate to the crime” they committed.
“The IPP sentence is now accepted to have been wrong in principle by absolutely everyone. How, therefore, can we as a nation justly continue to imprison people under such a sentence?
“There is no answer to this question, save that the policy of the government is unjust,” he wrote.
Lord Thomas continued: “Psychiatric evidence is clear that if we lock someone up for an indefinite time for an offence that is not that serious, we are likely to do them damage.
“People on IPP sentences are being subjected to increased risk because their imprisonment is unjust and they lose all hope. It is time for the state to recognise that a mistake has been made.
“If we can do justice in the terrible cases of the Post Office and infected blood scandal, we can do it here.”
James Timpson, the prisons minister, has been at the forefront of trying to push reform in the new government, and is understood to have been arguing for many of the changes that Lord Thomas specifies in his mission for change.
Even though deputy prime minister David Lammy showed sympathy for change while in opposition, he has been reluctant to embrace the changes he once advocated.
The Independent understands there have been heated exchanges at the top of government, with the debate pivoting on the possible public disdain over the release of prisoners against the compassion of not locking people up and throwing away the key.
Lord Thomas’s remarks come just days after The Independent reported on the plight of 233 prisoners serving indefinite sentences who have been transferred to secure mental health units, in many cases because the hopeless nature of the jail term has left them profoundly damaged.
Meanwhile, a senior doctor who treats IPP prisoners warned that more will likely take their lives in custody unless the government moves to end the scandal.
Calling for ministers to take urgent action, Lord Thomas said: “2026 should be the year in which we at last remedy this longstanding injustice.
“It should not be a year when our government leaves the stain of IPP on our otherwise world-renowned system of justice and shows we, as a country, cannot pass the unfailing test of any civilisation.”
The Independent revealed in September that the United Nations will investigate whether Britain is breaching human rights law by arbitrarily detaining prisoners trapped on IPP sentences.
Campaigners and their legal team launched a landmark complaint on behalf of five men who have served a combined total of 84 years incarcerated under IPP jail terms, including for minor crimes.
The case, lodged with the UN’s Working Group on Arbitrary Detention in September 2025, includes a bombshell letter from Mr Lammy, which proves he agrees the jail term is a “grave injustice” which causes “simply horrendous” mental trauma.
The letter, written in 2021 when he was shadow justice secretary, says the implementation of the jail term was “tragically flawed”, adding: “It is now painfully clear that the IPP sentence was far too broad, and many low-risk offenders are serving IPP sentences today for committing minor offences in the past.”
Meanwhile, senior judges who imposed the jail terms have revealed their regret for their part in the “injustice”.
Former High Court judge Sir John Saunders said he would apologise to offenders he handed IPP jail terms.
A Ministry of Justice spokesperson said:“It is right that IPP sentences were abolished and we have already acted. This includes tabling an amendment to ensure those serving IPP sentences in the community can be more swiftly considered for licence termination, supporting them to move on with their lives.
“Every IPP prisoner is entitled to a parole review at least every two years – and no one is kept in prison unless the independent Parole Board judges they still pose a serious risk.”
Your dream cruise formula: From Caribbean islands to European cities
If your ideal holiday is one that blends fuss-free adventure with great culinary choices and sumptuous relaxation, then book yourself onto a cruise immediately. From experiencing rich cultures, visiting breathtaking beauty spots, and dining on delicious delicacies – cruising has become one of the most luxurious ways to travel.
This dream-holiday formula is something that Virgin Voyages has perfected with its multi-award-winning, adult-only cruises, which sail across Europe, North America and the Caribbean. From entertaining onboard experiences and modern facilities to exciting escapades on land, these are the types of trips that are worth writing home about, and why Virgin Voyages has been named Travel + Leisure ® World’s Best #1 Mega Ship for an impressive three years in a row.
Here’s what would-be Sailors can expect from a Virgin Voyages cruise…
Meet the leading ladies
Whichever of the 150-plus destinations you choose to sail to, one thing remains guaranteed, you’ll get an unforgettable journey, and leave with happy stories to share with loved ones back home. Why not make those memories on Virgin Voyages’ impressive Lady Ships, with Scarlet Lady, Valiant Lady, Resilient Lady and Brilliant Lady each offering a distinct personality which is encapsulated in everything from decor to destinations. Expect enough amenities and activities to entertain a small city: from tequila tasting to spa days and over 20 premium eateries serving menus curated by Michelin starred chefs. There’s a whole holiday’s worth of experiences before you’ve even docked at your first port.
Everyone sleeps easy
Be gone any thoughts of pokey, old-fashioned interiors and get ready to embrace charming cabins with a super-yacht aesthetic. No matter which of the Virgin Voyages sleeping quarters you choose from, you’ll be met with super comfortable beds, a roomy rainshower, mood lighting, free Wi-Fi and a large flat-screen HDTV. Want to really push the boat out? Opt for luxury suites that promise five-star comfort and opulence, with champagne tables, sun loungers, handwoven terrace hammocks and in-room bars. Virgin Voyages ‘RockStar’ Sailors can also enjoy everything from VIP entrances to private access to rooftop terraces.
Let them entertain you
Whether your spirit is one of a dancing queen or a sophisticated theatre-goer, Virgin Voyages has nightlife and entertainment options to suit every taste – developed with the help of the world’s most-talked-about directors, choreographers, and artists. Choose from 80s parties, festival acts or classic stories like Romeo and Juliet – reinvented with a circus twist. Each ship offers something different, so if you’re a Virgin Voyages regular, you’ll never see the same thing twice. Save your vocal chords for the private karaoke rooms, while the casinos and gaming arcades could elevate an already winning mood even further.
Wonderful wellness
Don’t want to leave your full-on fitness regime behind when you go on holiday? Or are you just curious to try a new healthy group class? Whatever your wellness wishes, there’s plenty to keep you busy onboard with workouts for every level. There’s yoga, HIIT, weight training, boxing, meditation and more, plus running or walking the signature 255-metre-ish Virgin red running track, which curves around the top of the ship in a halo shape. If relaxation is your main goal, head to the spa for everything from steam room and sauna to hot stone massage and seaweed wrap. The beauty salon offers a range of professional treatments, from manicures, pedicures and nail art to IV therapy, Botox and fillers.
Make it a ‘Shore Thing’
While you’re free to enjoy port cities at your own leisure, Virgin Voyages also curates an array of land excursions or ‘Shore Things’ for those who want to immerse themselves in local culture. Why not enjoy a barefoot fish cookout on the Mexican island of Cozumel, a late night party on the Greek Island of Mykonos or visit the historic halls of Harvard University when sailing through Boston, Massachusetts. If you’re cruising the Caribbean, choose from a beach day in St Vincent and The Grenadines; explore the private island of Mustique or visit the colourful buildings of the capital Kingstown. Do as much or as little as you like – you’re always in charge!
Discover dreamy destinations
Proving that there really is a cruise for everyone, Virgin Voyages’ child-free cruises visit almost endless destinations that span Europe, North America and the Caribbean. Choose a five-night cruise from New York to Bermuda, taking in the paradise pink-sand beaches, maritime history and cafe culture of the island, or maybe a seven-night voyage starting in Los Angeles and sailing to Cabo San Lucas and Mazatlan in Mexico. For a trip closer to home, soak in the Mediterranean sunshine while visiting Europe’s most famous cities and islands starting in the homeports of Greece and Spain. Tick off an array of bucket list destinations with the Idyllic Ibiza cruise aboard the Valiant Lady; set sail from Rome to Barcelona with stop offs at the superluxe Amalfi Coast, Cannes and Ibiza – now, that’s what you call an A-list adventure.
With so many incredible destinations to visit and on-board luxury to explore, a cruise with Virgin Voyages is a holiday you’ll never stop talking about.
Discover Virgin Voyages luxury range of cruises and plan your next adventure today
Colombian singer Yeison Jiménez among six killed in plane crash
A Colombian singer is among the six people who have been killed in a plane crash.
Yeison Jiménez and the five other people on board the private aircraft all died in the crash in central-eastern Colombia on Saturday, authorities have confirmed.
The Sun reported the 34-year-old had written a poignant social media post before boarding the flight, saying: “Always humble, because what God gives you he can also take away.”
The other victims have been identified as Jiménez, the pilot Captain Hernando Torres, and passengers Juan Manuel Rodríguez, Óscar Marín, Jefferson Osorio, and Weisman Mora.
Jiménez, whose full name is Yeison Orlando Jiménez Galeano, was one of the most famous música popular artists in Colombia, producing eight albums in a 25-year career.
He has been credited with revitalising the genre, originally a form of folk music that began in the Paisa Region in northwestern Colombia between the 1930s and 1940s.
The singer was headed to a concert on Saturday night, but crashed just after take-off and became engulfed in flames, according to reports.
In videos circulating on local media, shouts of “the runway is run out” can be heard as the aircraft takes off, with images showing the later wreckage of the plane on fire.
The plane, registered as N325FA, crashed in the Paipa and Duitama area in the department of Boyacá while travelling to Medellín, the Civil Aviation Authority said in a statement.
Transportation minister Maria Fernanda Rojas said an investigation into the cause of the crash has begun. The Civil Aviation Authority added that the Technical Directorate for Accident Investigation has started collecting evidence.
The Boyacá governor’s office has declared a period of mourning.
Messages have been pouring in from fans paying tribute to Jiménez.
In response to a statement issued on social media about his death, one wrote: “I never thought I’d see a post like this so soon. This is all so painful. My deepest condolences to the family. I’m praying for you.”
Another said: “Rest in peace, Master. Thank you for your music, your example to follow, your performance that will always remain in our celebrations, and that voice that sang to us with all its heart.”
And one more added: “You will always be the best. RIP. This news is hard to believe. Your loss hurts so much. God give strength to the families. You leave a huge void.”
Fellow música popular’ artist Andrés García is among the high-profile figures who have also paid their respects. He said: “I dare say that we’ve lost the number one artist in the popular music genre in Colombia and the world. What a great legacy you left us, @yeison_jimenez, an artist who didn’t live with arrogance, with remarkable humility. Fly high, Champion. Strength to all his family.”
Jiménez became the first singer of the genre to sell out tickets for a solo show when he performed at the Movistar Arena in Bogotá in 2024.
Born in Manzanares, Caldas, in 1991, he dedicated himself to his music career full-time from the age of 17, releasing his first commercial song “Te Deseo Lo Mejor” in 2013. Popular releases such as songs “Aventurero” and” Hasta La Madre”, and album Con el Corazón followed.
The singer has garnered 2.75 million subscribers on YouTube and has 3.1 million monthly listeners on Spotify.
He also served as a celebrity judge on the popular Latin American reality TV competition Yo Me Llamo in 2021.
More follows on this breaking story…
Trump warned Greenland dispute threatens crucial US defence agreements
Donald Trump’s hostile approach to Greenland threatens to undermine the largely unfettered access the United States has with the Danish territory, America’s leading expert on the issue has warned.
Barack Obama’s former assistant secretary of state Frank Rose was the last U.S. official to negotiate a defence deal with Denmark and the Greenland Home Rule administration and spoke exclusively to The Independent about the international dispute threatening to break NATO.
“Like many things with the president, I don’t disagree with what he’s trying to do,” he said. “I disagree with the means he’s trying to get there.”
Rose described Greenland as “critical” to U.S. defence and in 2003/2004 was responsible for negotiating the agreement for satellite defence on the island as part of the early warning system for attacks on America.
He noted that thanks to another treaty in 1951 the U.S. can “do whatever it wants” militarily on Greenland with the consent of the Danish government “and they were never going to say no”.
But he warned that with President Trump’s bellicose language of forcibly taking Greenland from Denmark, that the consent needed might not be forthcoming if the U.S. wants to put 10,000 troops on the island again – the number it had there until the end of the Cold War.
On Friday, Trump reiterated his intentions to take to take the territory one way or another and showed no sign of backing down.
“We’re going to do something on Greenland whether they like it or not,” he told reporters. “We’re not going to have Russia or China as a neighbor. I would like to make a deal, the easy way. But if we don’t do it the easy way, we’re going to do it the hard way.
“I’m a big fan of Denmark, they’ve been very nice to me. But the fact they had a boat land there 500 years ago doesn’t mean they own the land. I’m sure we had lots of boats go there also.”
The issue has shocked NATO allies with U.K. prime minister Sir Keir Starmer speaking twice to the president about it in a bid to persuade him to back off his demands.
When it was put to Rose that Denmark and Greenland are not going to be cooperative because of the international backlash to Trump’s threats, he replied: “That’s quite possible.”
He went on: “I’ve worked with Danes for 25 years of my career. They are wonderful allies. They have shed blood for the United States in Afghanistan. These people are good allies.
“You know, you really don’t want to upset your friends for no reason. Sometimes you need to upset your friends. Okay, that’s just, that’s life. This is not one of those situations where we need to upset our friends to get what we need.
“I say this, as someone who’s actually negotiated with the Danes and the Greenland Home Rule government back in 2003/ 2004 to enhance the security of the United States, I understand how important Greenland is.”
As a a junior staffer at the Pentagon working on missile defense, he was responsible for working with the Danish government and the Greenland Home Rule government to allow them to upgrade the radar as part of the homeland missile defense mission.
He said the radar “is really critical with regards to our ability to protect the East Coast of the United States from long range missile threats from North Korea and potentially Iran.”
It is also critical to track missiles in space or ones fired over the poles by Russia or China.
The United States occupied Greenland during the Second World War after Denmark fell to Nazi Germany and then the treaty of 1951 meant that they could station whatever military they wanted afterwards.
“So Trump absolutely right about the strategic importance of Greenland, but fundamentally, under the 1951 Defense of Greenland Treaty, we basically have wide latitude to deploy additional troops as needed,” Rose said.
“We have all the legal rights necessary to do what we need to do. This is Donald Trump. He gets many of these, the fundamental issues right, but it’s how he goes about it. And I wish somebody on the National Security Council or the State Department was telling him that we can do whatever we need to do there.”