BBC 2025-06-26 00:07:06


Eurostar passengers face severe delays after cable theft

Alex Boyd & Simon Browning

BBC News

Eurostar passengers are facing a second day of severe delays after two people died on the railway track in France and then cables were stolen.

The high-speed rail operators says repairs are complete and the railway line is open again, but delays will last until the end of the day.

Eurostar said passengers should postpone their journey, after the disruption saw services cancelled and delayed in both directions on lines connecting London with Paris, Brussels and Amsterdam.

Eurostar said there was already knock-on disruption on Wednesday after two people died in separate incidents on the LGV Nord line on Tuesday, but services were further impacted after cable was stolen on the same line.

The theft near Lille, which French media said was of around 600 metres of copper cables, caused trains to be rerouted, leading to extended journey times.

Further cancellations are not expected on Wednesday now that the railway line is repaired.

Eurostar said that so far, five trains between London and Paris have been cancelled.

It added that impacted passengers can change their travel plans for free or request a full refund.

“We’re very sorry for the impact this is having on our customers,” Eurostar said in a statement.

“Our teams are working closely with the French authorities and infrastructure teams to manage the situation and restore services safely.”

The operator earlier said one track had reopened, allowing some trains to run in both directions until full repairs were completed.

Water is being handed out to passengers onboard delayed trains, and stations are also very busy.

Hundreds of people are queuing at London’s St Pancras International railway station trying to access the service centre to rebook onto other trains.

Elizabeth Romijn, a yoga teacher from the Netherlands, told PA news agency at St Pancras that the situation was “very chaotic” and people were having to sit on the ground because there were not enough chairs.

The 75-year-old was planning to travel home to Brussels after visiting friends in Surrey.

“My plan is to just wait. Maybe I should go and be more proactive and go to ask one of the staff but nobody seems to know anything,” she said, adding that “it’s quite horrible long queues.”

The railway line in France was closed for much of the afternoon and evening on Tuesday after the two fatalities between Lille and Paris.

Services were cancelled on routes to and from Paris while trains between London, Brussels and Amsterdam ran with delays.

Eurostar said disruption continued into Wednesday as trains and crew were displaced.

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Left-wing Democrat stuns former governor in NY mayor primary

Nada Tawfik

New York correspondent
Watch: How Mamdani and Cuomo responded to shock primary result

A young left-wing candidate, Zohran Mamdani, is poised to become the Democratic nominee for New York mayor after delivering a stunning political upset.

The 33-year-old democratic socialist declared victory in the party’s primary on Tuesday, defeating his main rival and political veteran Andrew Cuomo who previously served as state governor.

“Tonight we made history,” Mamdani said in his victory speech. If elected, he would be the first Muslim and Indian American to lead the nation’s largest city.

Cuomo, 67, was attempting to pull off a comeback after resigning from office in 2021 over a sexual harassment scandal. He congratulated his opponent for a “really smart and great campaign”.

The primary in staunchly liberal New York is likely to determine who becomes mayor in November’s election.

The contest was being watched as a litmus test for the Democratic Party as it seeks to hone its messaging after election losses last November that saw President Donald Trump’s Republicans win the White House and both chambers in Congress.

Results on Tuesday night showed Mamdani with a commanding lead, but falling short of the 50% threshold needed to win outright.

  • Who is Zohran Mamdani?

Cuomo’s concession was unexpected because counting looks likely to continue next week under the ranked choice system, which allowed New Yorkers to pick up to five candidates in order of preference.

The former governor’s loss marks the “biggest upset in modern NYC history,” Trip Yang, a political strategist, told the BBC.

“A massive win for Zohran Mamdani that shows that when Donald Trump is President, New York Democrats want to see their leaders fight with enthusiasm and courage, and that’s what Zohran showed voters.”

In an interview with the New York Times, Cuomo said he was still examining whether he would run in the general election in November on the independent line.

“I said he won the primary election,” Cuomo told the outlet. “I said I wanted to look at the numbers and the ranked-choice voting to decide about what to do in the future, because I’m also on an independent line.”

Cuomo was seen as a moderate and the establishment favourite, known across the country after his governorship during the Covid pandemic.

Mamdani is a millennial outsider who was fairly unknown until recently.

Born in Uganda, his family moved to New York City when he was seven. He has posted one campaign video entirely in Urdu and mixed in Bollywood film clips. In another, he speaks Spanish.

Mamdani’s strong support of Palestinians and criticism of Israel put him at odds with most of the Democratic establishment.

He went viral during his campaign for videos where he talked to New York voters who swung for Trump in the November election.

He asked what issues led them to cast their ballots for the Republican candidate and what it would take for them to swing Democrat.

Mamdani’s platform includes free public buses, universal childcare, freezing rent in subsidised units, and city-run grocery stores – all paid for by new taxes on the rich.

“This is a city where one in four of its people are living in poverty, a city where 500,000 kids go to sleep hungry every night,” he told the BBC at a recent event.

“And ultimately, it’s a city that is in danger of losing that which it makes it so special.”

Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio Cortez and Senator Bernie Sanders, also democratic socialists, endorsed Mamdani during his campaign.

Follow the twists and turns of Trump’s second term with North America correspondent Anthony Zurcher’s weekly US Politics Unspun newsletter. Readers in the UK can sign up here. Those outside the UK can sign up here.

Sexcam industry recruited us while we were schoolgirls, say models

Sofia Bettiza

World Service, Global Health Reporter
Reporting fromMedellín, Colombia 

One afternoon, as Isabella left school for the day, someone thrust a leaflet into her hand. “Do you want to make money with your beauty?” it asked.

She says a studio looking for models seemed to be targeting teenage pupils in her area in Bogotá, Colombia’s capital.

At 17, with a two-year-old son to support, she desperately needed money, so went along to find out more.

She says when she got there, it was a sexcam studio, run by a couple in a house in a run-down neighbourhood – it had eight rooms decorated like bedrooms.

Studios range from small, low-budget operations to large businesses with individual rooms set up with lights, computers, webcams and an internet connection. Models perform sexual acts which are streamed to viewers around the world, who message them and make requests via intermediaries, also known as monitors.

The next day Isabella, whose real name we are not using, says she started work – even though it is illegal in Colombia for studios to employ webcam models under 18.

She told the BBC World Service there was no written contract detailing how much she would be paid or what her rights were. “They had me streaming without teaching me anything. They said, ’Here’s the camera, let’s go.'”

Isabella says the studio soon suggested she do a livestream from school, so as classmates around her were learning English, she quietly took out her phone and started to film herself at her desk.

She describes how viewers began to ask her to perform specific sexual acts, so she asked her teacher for permission to go to the toilet and, locked in a cubicle, did what the customers had requested.

Her teacher had no idea what was happening, “so I started doing it from other classes”, says Isabella. “I  kept thinking, ‘It’s for my child. I’m doing it for him.’ That gave me the strength.”

Recycled accounts and fake IDs

The global sexcam industry is booming.

The number of monthly views of webcam platforms globally has more than tripled since 2017, reaching nearly 1.3 billion, in April 2025, according to analytics firm Semrush.

Colombia is now estimated to have more models than any other country – 400,000 – and 12,000 sexcam studios, according to Fenalweb, an organisation representing the country’s adult webcam sector.

These studios film performers and feed the content to global webcam platforms, which broadcast to millions of paying viewers around the world who make requests of models, give tips and buy them gifts.

Many of the models who work in studios do so because they lack privacy, equipment or a stable internet connection at home – often if they’re poor or young and still living with parents.

Performers told the BBC that studios often try to attract people with the promise of making easy money in a country where a third of the population lives in poverty.

  • Listen to Colombia’s webcam women on BBC Sounds and watch the documentary on YouTube

Models explained that while some studios are well run and offer performers technical and other support, abuse is rife at unscrupulous operators.

And Colombia’s President, Gustavo Petro, has described studio owners as “slave masters” who trick women and girls, like Isabella, into believing they can earn good money.

The four biggest webcam platforms that stream material from the studios, BongaCams, Chaturbate, LiveJasmin and StripChat, which are based in Europe and the United States, have checks that are supposed to ensure performers are 18 or older. EU and US laws prohibit the distribution of sexually explicit material involving anyone under 18.

But models told the BBC these checks are too easily sidestepped if a studio wants to employ under-age girls.

They say one way of doing this is to “recycle” old accounts of models who are of legal age but no longer perform, and give them to under-age girls.

Isabella says this is how she was able to appear on both Chaturbate and StripChat when she was 17.

“The studio owner said it was no problem that I was under-age,” Isabella, now 18, says.  “She used the account of another woman, and then I started working under that identity.”

Other models the BBC spoke to say they were given fake IDs by studios. One, Keiny, says this enabled her to appear on BongaCams when she was 17.

Milley Achinte, a BongaCams representative in Colombia, told the BBC they do not allow under-18s to perform and they shut accounts that break this rule. She added that the platform checks IDs on a Colombian government website and if a “model contacts us and we are aware that the model left the studio, we give them their password so they can close their account”.

In a statement, Chaturbate said it has “categorically” stopped the use of fake IDs, and models must regularly submit live images of themselves standing next to government-issued photo IDs, which are checked digitally and manually. It said it has “an average of one reviewer to fewer than 10 broadcasters” and any attempt to recycle accounts “would be unsuccessful” because “the age verification process continues as each and every broadcast is constantly reviewed and checked”.

StripChat also sent a statement saying it has a “zero-tolerance policy regarding under-age models” and that performers “must undergo a thorough age verification process”, adding that its in-house moderation team works with third-party verification services to “validate models’ identities”.

It said that recycled accounts cannot be used on its platform, and recent changes to its rules mean that the account holder must be present on every stream. “So, if a model moves to a new account to work independently, the original account tied to them becomes inactive and unusable by the studio.”

LiveJasmin did not respond to the BBC’s requests for comment.

Viewers ‘like it when you look young’

Keiny is now 20 and works from her bedroom at home in Medellín – streaming through another studio which provides a route to big international platforms.

And if it wasn’t for the high-tech equipment – several ring lights, a camera, and a large screen – this could pass for a child’s room. There are about a dozen stuffed animals, pink unicorns and teddy bears.

Viewers “really like it when you look young”, she says.

“Sometimes I think that’s problematic. Some clients ask that you act like an actual child, and that’s not OK.”

She says she got into the business to help her family financially after her parents decided to divorce.

Her father knows what she’s doing and she says he’s supportive.

Looking back, Keiny thinks she was too young when she started at the age of 17, but even so, she isn’t critical of her former employers.

Instead, she believes they helped her into a job which she says now earns her about $2,000 (£1,500) a month – far more than the minimum wage in Colombia, which is about $300 (£225) a month.

“Thanks to this job, I’m helping my mum, my dad, and my sister – my whole family,” she says.

That point of view is echoed by the studios – some of which are keen to demonstrate they look after their performers.

We visited one of the biggest, AJ Studios, where we were introduced to an in-house psychologist, employed to support models’ mental health. We were also shown a spa which offers pedicures, massages, botox and lip fillers at a “discount” or as prizes for “employees of the month” who may be high earners or people who are collaborative and support fellow models.

Fined for a toilet break

But as the country’s president has pointed out, not every performer is treated well or makes good money. And the industry is waiting to see if his new labour law will pave the way for tighter regulations.

Models and studios told the BBC that streaming platforms typically take 50% of the fees paid by viewers, studios take 20-30%, and the models get what’s left. This means that if a show makes $100 (£75), the model would usually get between $20 (£15) and $30 (£22). They explained that unscrupulous studios often take much more.

Models say there have been times when they logged on for sessions of up to eight hours and made as little as $5 (£4) – which can happen if a performance doesn’t have many viewers.

Others say they have been pressured into streaming for up to 18 hours without breaks and fined for stopping to eat or go to the toilet.

These accounts are supported by a report from the campaign group Human Rights Watch, published in December 2024. The author, Erin Kilbride, who did additional research on this story for the BBC, found some people were being filmed in cramped, dirty cubicles infested with bedbugs and cockroaches and were being coerced into performing sexual acts they found painful and degrading.

Sofi, a mother-of-two from Medellín, had been a waitress in a nightclub but, fed up with being insulted by customers, moved into webcam modelling.

But the 26-year-old says a studio she worked for pressured her into carrying out painful and degrading sexual acts, including performing with three other girls.

She explains that these requests were made by customers and agreed to by studio monitors – the staff employed to act as intermediaries between models and viewers.

Sofi says she told the studio she didn’t want to perform these acts, “but they said I had no choice”.

“In the end, I had to do it because it was either that, or they would ban my account,” she adds, explaining that means her account would effectively be closed down.

Sofi continues working in webcam studios because she says a typical salary in Colombia would not be enough to support her and her two children. She is now saving to start a law degree.

It’s not just Colombia that is facing these issues, says Erin Kilbride.

She found that between them, the big four streaming platforms also broadcast material from studios in 10 more countries – Bulgaria, Canada, the Czech Republic, Hungary, India, Romania, Russia, South Africa, Ukraine, and the US.

And she says she identified “gaps in platform policies and protocols that facilitate or exacerbate human rights abuses”.

When we asked platforms about conditions at the studios they stream, Milley Achinte from BongaCams said she is part of a team of eight women who visit some studios in Colombia “making sure that the models are getting paid, that the rooms are clean, that models are not getting violated”.

StripChat and Chaturbate do not visit studios and said they are not direct employers of performers and therefore do not intervene in the terms set between studios and models. But they both told us they are committed to a safe working environment. StripChat also said it expects studios to ensure “respectful and comfortable working conditions”.

BongaCams, StripChat and Chaturbate all said they have teams to intervene if they believe a model is being forced or coerced to do something.

‘They deceived me’

After two months of waking up at 05:00 to juggle webcamming, secondary school, and caring for her son, Isabella says she was eager to receive her first payment.

But after the platform and the studio took their cut, Isabella explains she was paid just 174,000 Colombian pesos ($42; £31) – far less than she expected. She believes that the studio paid her a much lower percentage than agreed and also stole most of her earnings.

The money was a pittance, she says, adding that she used some of it to buy milk and nappies.  “They deceived me.”

Isabella, who is still at school, only worked as a webcam model for a few months before quitting.

The way she says she was treated at such a young age left her deeply traumatised. She couldn’t stop crying, so her mother arranged for her to see a psychologist.

She and six other former employees of the studio have got together to file an official complaint with the state prosecutor’s office. Collectively, they have accused the studio of exploitation of minors, labour exploitation and economic abuse.

“There are video recordings of me still online, under-age,” she says, explaining she feels powerless when it comes to trying to get them removed. “It’s affected me a lot and I don’t want to think about it any more.”

Hear more on Assignment on BBC Sounds

British man charged over mock Disneyland wedding to child had been investigated by BBC

Noel Titheradge

Investigations Correspondent, BBC@NoelTitheradge

The British paedophile charged in connection with organising a “mock wedding” to a child in Disneyland Paris is Jacky Jhaj, who was found guilty of sexual activity with two 15-year-olds in 2016, the BBC understands.

Jhaj, 39, has been charged in connection with organising the fake ceremony on Saturday, in which a nine-year-old Ukrainian girl was due to feature as his bride.

He was arrested when police were called on Saturday morning by an actor who said he had been hired by Jhaj to play the father of the bride.

The BBC has previously investigated how Jhaj was able to hire hundreds of children to act as his fawning fans at a fake film premiere in London’s Leicester Square in 2023.

Some of the children, who had been hired from casting agencies, were as young as six.

Teenage girls told the BBC that they had been asked to scream for him and try to touch him, without being told his real identity by the agencies.

Watch: Jacky Jhaj greets a crowd of fans, played by actors, at a fake film premiere in London

Then in June last year, Jhaj was seen giving gifts to children outside dance auditions for another production – he was recognised by a parent who had seen the BBC article.

Two months later, and following the BBC’s further investigation, Jhaj was filmed posing naked in front of a mocked-up BBC News lorry in London which had been set on fire.

For the mock wedding at Disneyland Paris, which was to be filmed by Jhaj’s team, around 100 French extras had been recruited to take part.

The BBC understands that he appeared in front of a judge in Meaux, north-east of Paris, on Monday and was charged with fraud, breach of trust, money laundering, and identity theft and placed in pretrial detention.

Preliminary findings also stated that he had allegedly been “made-up professionally so that his face appeared totally different from his own”, according to the French prosecutor.

Jhaj has been on the sex offenders register since 2016 and has spent time in prison. He is subject to restrictions on his freedoms under the terms of a Sexual Harm Prevention Order.

Since he was released from prison, he has repeatedly staged productions involving children or young people.

BBC News can reveal that some videos of these productions were uploaded to a YouTube account styled as an official performer’s channel.

The account received more than six million views and had over 12 million subscribers.

A video on a different channel included secretly filmed footage of one of the 15-year-old victims he was convicted of sexually exploiting.

Her family has told the BBC that Jhaj “destroyed” her life and said it’s unacceptable that YouTube allowed the video to be watched for entertainment for four years.

Videos of the productions remained on YouTube for years until last September, when the BBC alerted Google, which owns the platform.

It told the BBC at the time that it takes users’ safety seriously, but offered no explanation as to how an account featuring a man with almost no profile or success had 12 million subscribers, or why the videos were not removed.

Over the past two years, the BBC has spoken to videographers, production assistants and technicians who worked on some of the events before they discovered Jhaj’s real identity.

Their records show that the cost of hiring casts and venues has run into hundreds of thousands of pounds.

The cost of hiring the area in front of the Odeon cinema in London’s Leicester Square, which hosts red carpet events for major Hollywood premieres, would have run into tens of thousands of pounds.

French outlet BFMTV reported that the fake wedding at Disneyland may have cost organisers more than €130,000 (£110,000).

It remains unclear how these elaborate productions have been funded.

The French prosecutor said the Ukrainian girl arrived in France two days before the Disneyland event – but had not been a victim of either physical or sexual violence and had not been “forced to play the role” of a bride.

The prosecutor’s statement also said that Disneyland Paris had been “deceived” and that the organiser had used a fake Latvian ID to hire the venue. Disneyland Paris can be rented by members of the public outside opening hours.

In a statement, the UK’s Metropolitan Police said:

“A 39-year-old man is wanted by the Met Police for breaching a Sexual Harm Prevention Order and a breach of a Sex Offenders’ Register notification requirement.

“We are aware the man has been arrested in France for other matters and officers are in contact with the French authorities.”

Burial of Zambia’s ex-president in South Africa halted at last minute by court

Basillioh Rukanga & Nomsa Maseko

BBC News, Nairobi & Johannesburg

A South African court has halted plans to bury former Zambian President Edgar Lungu at a private ceremony just as it was about to start.

The news was only announced to mourners in South Africa after a funeral mass had already finished.

This is the latest twist in a row between the government and Lungu’s family over his burial, after the family opted for a private ceremony in South Africa, rather than a full state funeral at home.

The Zambian government had filed an urgent case in the Pretoria High Court seeking to stop the burial planned by his family.

The court said that the funeral would not go ahead following an “agreement between the parties” however it appears that any funeral won’t happen until August at the earliest.

The dispute follows a long-standing feud between Lungu and his successor, President Hakainde Hichilema, with Lungu’s family saying he had indicated that Hichilema should not attend his funeral.

  • From Dos Santos to Mugabe – the burial disputes over ex-leaders
  • The presidential feud that even death couldn’t end

Following Lungu’s death in South Africa aged 68, the family wanted to be in charge of the funeral arrangements, including the repatriation of his body, but the Zambian authorities sought to take control.

The government and his family later agreed he would have a state funeral before relations broke down over the precise arrangements, prompting the family to opt for a burial in South Africa.

President Hichilema has since argued that Lungu, as a former president, “belongs to the nation of Zambia” and should be buried in the country.

The Pretoria court gave Zambian attorney general Mulilo D Kabesha until 4 July to submit his “amended notice of motion” in support of Lungu’s repatriation to Zambia. His family has until 11 July to file their opposing papers.

“This matter will be heard as a special motion on the 4th of August 2025,” the court said. The costs of the urgent application will be determined then.

The Zambian government argues that personal wishes should not override the greater public interest, citing the case of founding President Kenneth Kaunda.

In 2021, Kaunda’s family said he wanted to be laid to rest next to his wife and not at the site designated by the government.

However, the government went ahead and buried Kaunda at Embassy Memorial Park in Lusaka.

The current row over Lungu’s burial underscores the tense relationship between him and his successor, which played out in life and continues even in death.

When Lungu was president, Hichilema was locked up for over 100 days on treason charges after Hichilema’s motorcade allegedly refused to give way for him.

More Zambia stories from the BBC:

  • Funeral row causes chaos for mourners of Zambia’s ex-president
  • ‘My son is a drug addict, please help’ – the actor breaking a Zambian taboo
  • An ancient writing system confounding myths about Africa
  • Zambia president orders ministers to stop sleeping in cabinet

BBC Africa podcasts

Crowds pour in as Glastonbury Festival gates open

Sarah Turnnidge

BBC News, West of England
Emma Hallett

BBC News, Somerset
Watch: Gates open for Glastonbury Festival 2025

Thousands of people have poured into Worthy Farm after the gates officially opened for the 2025 Glastonbury Festival.

Co-founder Sir Michael Eavis and his daughter Emily Eavis, who now runs the festival, led the countdown shortly before 08:00 BST.

More than 200,000 people are set to descend on the site in the coming days ahead of the main festival programme launching on Friday.

Speaking shortly before the gates opened, Ms Eavis told the BBC: “It’s been such a build-up this year, it’s been an amazing amount of excitement.”

Ms Eavis said: “We’re all so looking forward to opening the gates and to be able to do it with my dad has been amazing.

“It’s the best moment to let them all in and it’s just such a joyful city, the most joyful city in the UK for the next five days.”

  • Rod Stewart on Glastonbury: ‘I wish they wouldn’t call it the tea time slot’
  • Secret Glastonbury: The mystery of the festival’s surprise stars
  • ‘I’d never heard of the Glastonbury Festival’
  • Man cycles to Glastonbury Festival – from Spain
The man carrying all of his stuff to Glastonbury in a wheelie bin

Hundreds of people arrived on Tuesday night, sleeping under the stars in queues in a bid to be the first on site.

Among them were James Trusson, 31, from Ash, Somerset, Grace Ball, 29, from Bournemouth and Dan Mortimore, from Compton Dundon, Somerset, who made it to the front of the line for the second year in a row.

Having put themselves in prime position for a top camping spot, Ms Ball said their plans for the rest of the day were to go “back to the car for snacks, and then sleep”.

“I’ll crack a beer I think,” added Mr Trusson.

Hair maintenance “just vibes and prayers” at Glastonbury

Hundreds of people have got in touch with the BBC with photos and stories of travelling to the festival – whether that’s a train into Castle Cary, a long coach journey or by bike.

Apart from the expected traffic on the A361 between Glastonbury and Worthy Farm, the main travel routes to the festival have remained relatively clear throughout the day.

While the main acts might not start performing until Friday, there is plenty for revellers to enjoy away from the music.

There are performances at the circus and theatre fields, seaside entertainment on offer at “Glastonbury-on-Sea” and plenty of food and drink stalls.

More on this story

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UK to host Trump for full state visit later this year

Daniela Relph

Senior Royal Correspondent
Thomas Mackintosh

Donald Trump will make a full state visit to the UK later this year after King Charles and the US president’s schedules meant they would be unable to meet informally over the summer, it is understood.

Buckingham Palace confirmed an invitation signed by the King, called the “Manu Regia”, was taken to the White House by representatives from the British Embassy in Washington last week.

The dates of Trump’s visit are yet to be confirmed but September is said to be the most likely.

It is also understood that there will not be a private meeting between Trump and King Charles this summer before the state visit.

The scheduling issues come despite the King going to Scotland for his summer break each year, and Trump being expected to visit his new golf course in Aberdeenshire when it opens this summer.

“His Majesty has known President Trump for many years and looks forward to hosting him and the First Lady later this year,” a Buckingham Palace aide told the BBC.

Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner told Parliament on Wednesday: “We are really pleased the US president is coming for a second state visit.”

Trump was hosted by the late Queen Elizabeth II during his previous three-day state visit in 2019, which took place during his first term in office.

Formal planning for the second official state visit has now begun.

In February during a visit to the White House, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer handed Trump a letter from the King.

Traditionally, second-term US presidents are not offered a state visit and have instead been invited for tea or lunch with the monarch at Windsor Castle.

King Charles’ letter proposed a meeting to discuss details of the state visit at either Dumfries House or Balmoral, both in Scotland, a country to which Trump has connections.

Speaking in April, Trump said: “They’re going to do a second, as you know, a second fest… that’s what it is: a fest, and it’s beautiful, and it’s the first time it’s ever happened to one person.

“And the reason is we have two separate terms, and it’s an honour… I’m a friend of Charles, I have great respect for King Charles and the family, William, we have really just a great respect for the family.

“And I think they’re setting a date for September.”

The Times reported that Buckingham Palace raised concerns about Trump’s “threats to Canada, seeing it as a reason not to rush into a state visit”.

According to the newspaper, a senior source said that a senior Palace aide told government officials that the King did not want to give Trump a state visit while the US president was “impugning his sovereignty” over Canada.

It added that senior government sources said the King wished to have a state visit at a later date.

The prime minister’s spokesman was asked whether Starmer overruled the King in bringing Trump’s visit forward. The spokesman said: “That is untrue.”

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Former England manager Sir Gareth Southgate says he does not miss managing the Three Lions and carrying the “weight” of the job.

The 54-year-old stepped down from the England role last summer after his side were beaten in the Euro 2024 final by Spain.

Southgate guided England to two European Championship finals during his seven and a half years in charge, finishing runner-up on both occasions.

The fourth-placed finish England achieved at Russia 2018 was the side’s best performance at a World Cup since 1990.

But the former Middlesbrough manager, who received his knighthood on Wednesday for services to English football, says he does not miss being in charge of the team.

“It is a little bit strange [watching the team] but also I’m not missing it,” Southgate told BBC Sport.

“I think it’s important that I am on that sofa and out of their way, you know. It’s theirs to take on now and I think it’s important that I give the team as much space as possible.”

Southgate became the fourth England manager in history to be knighted, after Sir Walter Winterbottom, Sir Alf Ramsey and Sir Bobby Robson.

Asked if he missed parts of the job, Southgate said it was a relief to no longer carry the expectations of a nation.

“I think it’s hard to describe because until that weight’s gone you don’t necessarily realise just on a day-to-day basis, you know, every hour of my day was thinking about how do I make England better, what’s happening with the players, how do we do things differently,” he added.

“So I think [that like] any leader of big organisations, you’re constantly thinking about how to do your job as well as you can.”

Thomas Tuchel replaced Southgate as manager following Lee Carsley’s interim spell in charge.

The German has won all three of his World Cup qualifiers at the helm, but England were booed off after losing a friendly against Senegal at the City Ground earlier this month.

After taking charge of the side, Tuchel said Southgate’s England did not have a clear identity and “were more afraid to drop out” of Euro 2024 “than having the excitement and hunger to win it”.

“I don’t think it’s important how I took it [Tuchel’s criticism] or what I think,” Southgate said.

“I think what’s really important is for me to give the team, the manager, the space to operate. I think that’s the right thing to do.

“I’ve had an amazing experience leading my country, but it’s time for them to take it forward now and I’ll be a fan at home supporting it.”

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Make Iran Great Again? ‘Tehrangeles’ community in LA reflects on US strikes

Regan Morris and Jon Donnison

BBC News, Los Angeles

A woman in a “Make America Great Again” hat leads a chant for “regime change” in Iran.

The crowds dance and wave Iranian, Israeli and American flags as Persian music blasts. Car horns beep in support but also some annoyance in LA’s gridlocked traffic.

Protests outside the West LA Federal Building are a common site, but even by LA standards this one is unusual, happening under the watchful eyes of armed US Marines, controversially ordered there by President Trump during protests against immigration raids.

But these immigrants are proudly demonstrating in MAGA hats in support of President Trump and his decision to intervene in the Israel-Iran conflict by launching air strikes against Iranian nuclear sites.

  • Follow latest on Iran-Israel conflict
  • Talk of regime change resonates with fleeing Iranians

“We want regime change in Iran,” says Bita Ashrafi, who left Iran 50 years ago and attended the protest wearing a “Trump Was Right About Everything” hat.

“I fully support President Trump’s decisions because this has been going on for 46 plus years – the tyranny, the dictatorship.”

West LA, often called Tehrangeles, is home to the largest population of Iranians outside of Iran, formerly known as Persia. There are Persian restaurants and bookstores and shops selling the saffron and rose ice cream popular in Iran.

Many of Southern California’s Persian Americans are in full support of President Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu.

Watch: BBC’s Lyse Doucet reports from Iran during ceasefire with Israel

But others say the involvement of the US, known as the “Great Satan” in Iran, will only bolster Iran’s leaders.

Ms Ashrafi took to the streets with several hundred others to show her support for Trump and regime change in Iran a day after a “No War” protest broke out in the same spot in response to the US “bunker busting” bombing of nuclear sites in Iran.

The US president said the action was necessary because Iran was close to developing a nuclear bomb. Tehran has always said its nuclear programme is for peaceful purposes.

  • Trump takes victory lap but big questions remain
  • What leaked intel report tells us about damage to Iran sites

Persian Americans are worried about friends and family in their homeland who they’ve struggled to reach with Iran’s phones and internet shut off. They also have strong feelings about how their adopted country should respond to Iran.

“Do not negotiate with them. They will go back to terrorising the world,” said Farzan Seyed, who was dressed in a MIGA (Make Iran Great Again) hat – the acronym coined recently by Trump on social media – and a tie showing the lion and sun emblem from Iran’s pre-1979 flag. He says Trump should show support for regime change but not get too involved.

“The people have to choose,” he says, though he hopes they choose exiled Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi who also lives in the United States.

Persian families in Southern California lost so much when they fled Iran, he says, adding that when they get together – whether Jewish, Christian, Muslim, Baháʼí or Zoroastrian – they “speak with one voice from West LA” against the Islamic Republic.

Many Iranian Americans dispute that there is one voice. The cafes and restaurants in West LA are full of debates about what should and could happen next in Iran. And not everyone in the community wears MAGA hats and supports the US bombing.

  • ‘We’re exhausted’ – how Iranians feel after fragile ceasefire
  • ‘We thought it was the end’ – Israeli town reels

Roozbeh Farahanipour – once imprisoned in Iran for his activism – says he fears the US involvement will push Iran into a broken, uncertain future.

“The job needs to be done by Iranian people,” he says in one of the three restaurants he now owns in the heart of Tehrangeles. “If we look at the history, I don’t think that’s the result of the Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, even Syria.”

Watch: Three things we learned about Trump’s foreign policy from Iran strikes

While he voted for Trump, Mr Farahanipour says he’s disappointed in the president. He knows that’s not a popular opinion in this community and it’s caused a rift with one of his oldest and closest friends, Elham Yaghoubian.

While the majority of this region’s Persian community fled to LA in 1979 after the Islamic Revolution, Mr Farahanipour and Ms Yaghoubian came later in 2000 after they were both targeted as enemies of the state for creating an underground opposition movement.

Mr Farahanipour was arrested along with his mother and several friends for his activism during a meeting at his home. Ms Yaghoubian escaped arrest – she was meant to be at Mr Farahanipour’s house that night but her own mother stopped her from going.

For decades, they have worked together as activists in Iran and in LA, where they both became successful entrepreneurs. Together they were instrumental in getting a corner of LA named “Persian Square.”

Later, they successfully lobbied the city to rename part of Westwood Boulevard “Women Life Freedom Square” in honour of Masha Amini, who was killed by Iran’s morality police in 2022 for not wearing her hijab head covering the way they wanted.

“We were shoulder-to-shoulder, until now,” says Mr Farahanipour.

Ms Yaghoubian agrees. She says she has never been supportive of any military action in Iran until now. She thinks the time is right and that the Israeli and the US attacks on Iran will help Iranians rise up and overthrow the regime.

The majority of people in Iran are “living in poverty,” she says. Her friends there tell her they have nothing to lose.

“This is the only opportunity for the Iranian people to rise and make a change,” she says.

Like others in Southern California’s Persian community they both fret over loved ones back in Iran, even if they don’t see eye to eye on how the US should respond to Iran.

When President Trump warned “everyone to evacuate” Tehran earlier this month, the world saw footage of thousands of terrified Iranians stuck in traffic trying to escape an escalation in the war.

Writer and actor Mary Apick, who was a child star in Iran and now lives in Los Angeles, says she is heartened watching how many Iranians she saw helping each other amid the traffic, sharing water and gasoline and offering strangers rides.

“There’s a camaraderie which is unbelievable,” she says, adding that she has family she is worried about in Iran. “This regime has to go. People are sick and tired.”

Damaged or destroyed – how much does leaked US report on Iran’s nuclear sites tell us?

Gordon Corera

Security analyst@gordoncorera

The site of Fordo is probably the most spied-on place on the planet.

Western intelligence first went public in 2009 that it was home to a secret nuclear facility and now understanding the damage done by US strikes will be vital in determining where the conflict goes next.

A leaked Defence Intelligence Agency (DIA) assessment has suggested the core components of Iran’s nuclear programme have not been destroyed and the strikes only set back Iran’s efforts by months rather than years.

But that is only an initial assessment and labelled as “low confidence” – the tag comes because it is early days in trying to understand what happened at a place which is deliberately hidden from prying eyes.

The DIA is the Pentagon’s own agency which specialises on military intelligence to support operations. It collects large amounts of technical intelligence but is distinct from other agencies like the CIA.

“Final battle damage will take some time,” Chairman of the Joint Chiefs General Dan Caine said in the immediate aftermath. But what does it mean to destroy or damage the programme and how do you find out?

Satellite images of holes and dust reveal little about what really happened underground. And they do not suggest massive subsidence or a cave-in of the mountain.

That likely indicates that even though the US used multiple bombs, the Iranians used enough reinforced concrete to keep them from reaching the main hall and destroying the machinery inside. It was the first time these bombs had been used operationally, which adds to the uncertainty.

Even so, the centrifuge machines, which spin at high speeds to enrich uranium, are highly sensitive which means the explosion will likely have crashed many of them by sending them spinning off their axis.

Developing a clearer picture of the damage will require other forms of intelligence – ranging from seismic detectors which can analyse the depth and magnitude of underground explosions (also used to understand earthquakes), sniffers to look for radiation (which international inspectors say they have not seen), and sensors like LIDAR (light detection and ranging) which can provide 3D maps using laser pulses from aircraft or drones to try and look inside the mountain.

Informers and intercepted communications will also be vital as they may reveal Iranians discussing the damage and its implications. All of that will be constantly updated to provide the final assessment with a higher degree of confidence.

And even if the sites like Fordo were dealt serious damage and made unusable for the moment, as US officials have claimed, that is different from saying it is the end of Iran’s overall programme. That is because it could be reconstituted at new sites.

A fleet of lorries was seen at Fordo just before the attack and the crucial question is what they were moving and where it has gone.

All the indications are that Tehran moved its stock of highly enriched uranium to another location. Another mountain known as “pickaxe” has drawn international attention and Iran may also have moved some of the centrifuges, although almost certainly not enough to make progress at the speed it could have done before the attack.

And even when you have enough highly enriched uranium there are more stages required in making a bomb through weaponisation and developing a delivery system. Those require a level of extremely high specialist scientific knowledge. And one of Israel’s most notable actions at the start of the conflict was to kill scientists involved in the programme in the hope of lengthening the timeline.

The attack will have certainly put back Iran’s programme. But by how much? Any answer depends on working out what remains after the attacks and is inevitably going to be an estimate rather than a hard figure.

All of this means that the work of intelligence agencies in trying to understand Iran’s nuclear programme is going to become even more intense in the coming months. And if the signs are Tehran is secretly reconstituting the programme or racing for a bomb then the conflict is likely to begin again.

Trump takes Middle East victory lap – but big questions remain

Anthony Zurcher

North America correspondent

Aboard Air Force One en route to the Nato summit in the Netherlands, Trump shared a personal text message from a somewhat unlikely source.

It was sent by Nato boss Mark Rutte who praised the American president for what he had accomplished in using US bombers to attack Iran’s nuclear facilities.

“Congratulations and thank you for your decisive action in Iran, ” wrote Rutte in a message the president posted to his Truth Social account. “That was truly extraordinary and something no one else dared to do.”

Trump has had his differences with Nato in the past, as he’s called into doubt the alliance’s mutual defence agreement and the military contributions made by other member nations.

Rutte addressed that, as well, telling Trump he was “flying into another big success” at the Nato summit, where member nations had agreed to Trump’s demand to boost defence spending to 5% of their gross domestic product.

“It will be your win,” he concluded.

  • Follow latest live updates and reaction

The warm words, and the president’s eagerness to share them to the world, illustrated just how much the diplomatic equation in the Middle East and among US allies has changed for Trump.

Last week he left the G7 summit in Canada a day early, as conflict raged between Israel and Iran and it appeared increasingly likely the US would join the fight.

The Americans attacked Iran’s nuclear facilities on Saturday night, but by Tuesday morning the president departed Washington for another international trip, this time with a fragile ceasefire established between the two warring parties.

Rutte’s text – which a Nato press officer confirmed to the BBC as authentic – dovetails with the accounts provided on and off the record by White House officials.

Trump’ military strike removed the threat of Iranian nuclear weapons. His actions triggered the ceasefire and ended what he calls the “12 Day War”.

Watch: Trump uses expletive in warning to Iran and Israel

His involvement and his pressure – including an angry outburst directed at both sides on Tuesday morning and what the White House called an “exceptionally firm and direct” phone call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu from Air Force One – ensured that the ceasefire would hold.

Last week, America’s allies were anxious. Now, it appears Trump is heading to Europe with the intention of basking in their praise.

The outlook, however, is more complicated than that.

While the administration touts that the US bombing raid “obliterated” Iran’s nuclear research facilities, US military intelligence officials have told American media that the damage is not as severe as the White House has claimed.

The country’s nuclear programme has probably only been set back by months, according to a preliminary Pentagon intelligence assessment. And the Islamic Republic’s stockpile of enriched uranium was not eliminated in the bombings, sources familiar with the report told CBS News.

The White House says the assessment is “flat-out wrong” and is “a clear attempt to demean” President Trump.

  • US strikes did not destroy nuclear programme, says Pentagon

Questions remain about the quantity and location of Iran’s enriched uranium supply – a key component of a nuclear weapon. There are also reports of the existence of an undisclosed and undamaged research facility elsewhere in Iran.

Watch: US strikes against Iran spark protests in North America

While the ceasefire is holding for now, Middle East truces are notoriously tenuous. Iran’s leadership has been weakened through two weeks of devastating Israeli attacks and the nation’s future is uncertain.

One need only look at the long bloody civil war in Syria to see the risks presented when an authoritarian government loses its grip on power. Trump has talked of “love, peace and prosperity” for Iran, but chaos, and regional turmoil, are still a realistic possibility.

And although Trump appears to have stopped the two-week Israel-Iran fighting, the wars that Trump inherited and promised to end, in Gaza and Ukraine, rage on.

For this White house, however, those appear to be concerns for another day.

  • ‘We’re exhausted’ – how Iranians feel after fragile ceasefire
  • ‘We thought it was the end’ – Israeli town reels
Watch: Three things we learned about Trump’s foreign policy from Iran strikes

At the moment, the dire warnings of Trump’s domestic critics, particularly within his own party, have proven unfounded. Republican Congressman Thomas Massie of Kentucky, who had planned to introduce legislation curtailing Trump’s use of military force in Iran, has announced he is abandoning that effort for now.

That has given Trump the political space to herald what his administration is trumpeting as an unqualified success.

Since Trump picked him as his vice-presidential running mate, JD Vance has often sought to add ideological substance to Trump’s America First politics.

On Tuesday morning, the vice-president took to Truth Social to offer his take on what he said were the three parts of Trump’s “foreign policy doctrine”.

“1) clearly define an American interest; 2) negotiate aggressively to achieve that interest; 3) use overwhelming force if necessary,” he wrote.

As doctrines go, however, that’s not much to work with.

Often, the president’s foreign policy seems reactive and contradictory, more tactical than strategic – whether it’s applying and removing tariffs or negotiating with allies and adversaries.

In the past two weeks, Trump has swung between distancing the US from Israel’s attacks on Iran to becoming an active participant in them; from calling for Iran’s “unconditional surrender” to negotiating a ceasefire with unclear terms; from entertaining the idea of regime change to downplaying it.

It makes for a rollercoaster ride, with the prospect of a catastrophic derailment seemingly around every bend.

But results, as they say, speak for themselves. And this week, Trump’s tumultuous ride has ended in a victory lap.

Follow the twists and turns of Trump’s second term with North America correspondent Anthony Zurcher’s weekly US Politics Unspun newsletter. Readers in the UK can sign up here. Those outside the UK can sign up here.

US strikes did not destroy Iran nuclear programme, says intelligence assessment

Nadine Yousif

BBC News
Watch: Trump responds to reports US strikes did not destroy Iran nuclear programme

The US strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities did not destroy the country’s nuclear programme and probably only set it back by months, according to an early Pentagon intelligence assessment of the attack.

The Islamic Republic’s stockpile of enriched uranium was not eliminated in Saturday’s bombings, sources familiar with the Defense Intelligence Agency evaluation told the BBC’s US partner CBS.

The White House said the “flat-out wrong” assessment was leaked by “a low-level loser in the intelligence community”.

President Donald Trump again declared the nuclear sites in Iran “completely destroyed” and accused the media of “an attempt to demean one of the most successful military strikes in history”.

  • Live: Follow the latest updates on Iran
  • Decoy flights and seven B-2 stealth bombers – how US says it hit Iran’s nuclear sites
  • Watch: How successful have the US strikes on Iran been?

The US has 18 intelligence agencies, which sometimes produce conflicting reports based on their mission and area of expertise. For example, the American intelligence community is still not in agreement over the origins of Covid-19.

It is possible future intelligence reports will include more information showing a different level of damage to the facilities.

According to CBS, officials familiar with the report warned it was an early assessment that could change as more information becomes available about the sites. It is also not clear at what confidence level the findings included in the report were made.

The US struck three nuclear facilities in Iran – Fordo, Natanz and Isfahan – with “bunker buster” bombs capable of penetrating 18m (60ft) of concrete or 61m (200ft) of earth before exploding.

But sources familiar with the Pentagon’s intelligence assessment say Iran’s centrifuges are largely “intact” and the impact was limited to above-ground structures.

Entrances to two nuclear facilities were sealed off, and some infrastructure was destroyed or damaged, but much of the facilities, which are deep underground, escaped the brunt of the blasts.

The anonymous sources told US media it is estimated that the attack only set Iran back “a few months, tops”, and that any resumption of its nuclear programme may be based on how long it takes the country to dig out and make repairs.

Sources also confirmed to CBS that some of Iran’s enriched uranium stockpile was moved before the strikes, according to the intelligence assessment.

The US 30,000lb (14,000kg) Massive Ordnance Penetrator bomb was thought to be the only weapon capable of destroying Iran’s underground enrichment facilities.

Tehran has always said its nuclear programme is for peaceful purposes.

In the hours that followed Saturday’s strikes, Gen Dan Caine, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, told reporters that it would take time to assess the damage to the facilities.

But he added that “all three sites sustained extremely severe damage and destruction”. Satellite images showed six fresh craters clustered around two entry points at the Fordo nuclear sites, as well as grey dust and debris.

It is unclear from the images, however, how much damage the sites sustained below the surface.

Hassan Abedini, the deputy political director of Iran’s state broadcaster, claimed the three sites targeted by the US had been evacuated a “while ago”, and that Iran “didn’t suffer a major blow because the materials had already been taken out”.

US officials, on the other hand, hailed the mission as a success, as have Israeli officials.

In a statement on Tuesday, Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth said that “based on everything we have seen – and I’ve seen it all – our bombing campaign obliterated Iran’s ability to create nuclear weapons”.

“Anyone who says the bombs were not devastating is just trying to undermine the President and the successful mission,” Hegseth said.

US Congressman Brad Sherman, a Democratic member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, told the BBC the Trump administration was using vague terms to declare victory – when it’s still unclear what the bombing mission accomplished.

He added that the administration hasn’t said whether the strikes destroyed Iran’s ability to weaponise its uranium, its uranium-enriching centrifuges or depleted its stockpile, which he said would be enough to create nine nuclear weapons.

“When they say obliterate the programme, they’re not even saying whether it’s obliterated the centrifuges and the ability to create uranium in the future or whether it is obliterating the stockpile,” Sherman told the BBC.

“All indications, including Vice-President Vance’s statement, indicate that we don’t think we got the stockpile,” he said, noting images that show trucks going to one of the facilities days before the strikes.

US didn’t hit ‘stockpile’ in Iran nuclear sites strikes, says Congressman Sherman

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Tuesday that since hostilities with Iran began on 13 June, Israel has been successful in curbing Iran’s nuclear ambitions, as well as destroying its missiles arsenal.

“We have removed two immediate existential threats to us – the threat of nuclear annihilation and the threat of annihilation by 20,000 ballistic missiles,” Netanyahu said in video remarks issued by his office.

A report in Saudi news outlet Al Hadath, citing an unnamed Israeli source, said that Israel believes most of Iran’s enriched uranium is buried under the rubble.

David Albright, president of the Institute for Science and International Security and an expert on secret nuclear weapons development, said the damage Iran sustained by the US attacks will mean “it will take significant time, investment and energy” for it to restore its nuclear programme.

In a post on X, Albright added that Iran is “under intense scrutiny and observation from the United States and Israel”, and it risks further attacks if it tries to rebuild.

On Monday, Iran retaliated against the US airstrikes by launching a missile attack on Al-Udeid Air Base in Qatar, which is home to thousands of US troops.

That attack was largely intercepted, and no casualties or injuries were reported.

Since Iran’s retaliation, an Iran-Israel ceasefire – brokered by President Trump and Qatari mediators – is in place.

Who is Zohran Mamdani?

Nada Tawfik and Rachel Hagan

BBC News
Reporting fromNew York City & London

Zohran Mamdani, a 33-year-old state assemblyman, is set to be the Democratic candidate for New York City Mayor, making history as the first Muslim nominee.

With 95% of ballots counted, Mamdani leads former governor Andrew Cuomo – who resigned that post after sexual harassment allegations in 2021 – 43% to 36% in the Democratic primary, propelled by a wave of grassroots support and a bold left-wing platform.

“Tonight, we made history,” Mamdani told supporters. “I will be your Democratic nominee for the mayor of New York City.”

New York’s ranked-choice voting system means the final result could still evolve, but Mamdani’s lead and momentum appear decisive.

His victory over Cuomo – once a dominant figure in state politics – marks a watershed moment for progressives and signals a shift in the city’s political centre of gravity.

From Uganda to Queens

Born in Kampala, Uganda, Mamdani moved to New York with his family age seven. He attended the Bronx High School of Science and later earned a degree in Africana Studies from Bowdoin College, where he co-founded the campus chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine.

The millennial progressive, who would be the city’s first Muslim and South Asian mayor, has leaned into his roots in a diverse city. He’s posted one campaign video entirely in Urdu and mixed in Bollywood film clips. In another, he speaks Spanish.

Mamdani and his wife, 27-year-old Brooklyn-based Syrian artist Rama Duwaji, met on the dating app Hinge.

His mother, Mira Nair, is a celebrated film director and his father Professor Mahmood Mamdani, teaches at Columbia. Both parents are Harvard alumni.

Mamdani presents himself as a candidate of the people and an organiser.

“As life took its inevitable turns, with detours in film, rap, and writing,” reads his state assembly profile, “it was always organising that ensured that the events of our world would not lead him to despair, but to action.”

Before entering politics, he worked as a housing counsellor, helping low-income homeowners in Queens fight eviction.

He has also made his Muslim faith a visible part of his campaign. He visited mosques regularly and released a campaign video in Urdu about the city’s cost-of-living crisis.

“We know that to stand in public as a Muslim is also to sacrifice the safety that we can sometimes find in the shadows,” he said at a rally this spring.

“There’s nobody who represents the totality of the issues that I truly care about that’s running for mayor currently other than Zohran,”Jagpreet Singh, political director for social justice organization DRUM, told the BBC.

Mamdani’s affordability battle

Mamdani said that voters in the most expensive US city want Democrats to focus on affordability.

“This is a city where one in four of its people are living in poverty, a city where 500,000 kids go to sleep hungry every night,” he told the BBC at a recent event. “And ultimately, it’s a city that is in danger of losing that which it makes it so special.”

He has proposed:

  • Free bus service citywide
  • Rent freezes and stricter accountability for negligent landlords
  • A chain of city-owned grocery stores focused on affordability
  • Universal childcare for children aged six weeks to five years
  • Tripling the production of rent-stabilized, union-built housing

His plan also includes “overhauling” the Mayor’s Office to hold property owners responsible and massively expanding permanently affordable housing.

In his campaign, he linked these policies to highly visual, and viral, gestures. He plunged into the Atlantic to dramatize rent freezes and broke a Ramadan fast on a subway train with a burrito to underscore food insecurity. Days before the primary, he walked the entire length of Manhattan, pausing for selfies with voters.

While he insists he can make the city more affordable, critics question such ambitious promises.

The New York Times did not endorse anyone in the city’s mayoral primary and criticised the candidates generally. Its editorial board said Mamdani’s agenda is “uniquely unsuited to the city’s challenges” and “often ignores the unavoidable trade offs of governance.”

His rent freezes would restrict housing supply, said the board.

Left-wing Democrat stuns former governor in NY mayor primary

Critics question experience

Cuomo and others frame Mamdani as untested and too radical for a city with a $115 billion budget and over 300,000 municipal workers.

Cuomo, backed by big donors and centrist endorsements including Bill Clinton, insisted experience matters, saying: “Experience, competence, knowing how to do the job, knowing how to deal with Trump, knowing how to deal with Washington, knowing how to deal with the state legislature, these are basics. I believe in on-the-job training, but not as the mayor of New York.”

But Trip Yang, a political strategist, said “experience” isn’t necessarily a game changer in this political era. And whether or not Mamdani wins, Mr Yang believes his campaign has done “the unthinkable.”

“Zohran is powered by tens of thousands of volunteers, hundreds of thousands of unique donors. It’s very rare to see a local Democratic primary New York campaign with this much amount of volunteer and grassroots excitement,” he said.

“He understand us. He belong to us. He’s from our community, you know, the immigrant community,” added supporter Lokmani Rai.

Israel and Palestine

At a recent Mamdani campaign event at a park in Jackson Heights, one of the most diverse communities in the country, children ran and played on swings, as Latino food vendors sold ice cream and snacks.

In many ways, the scene perfectly captured the city’s diversity – what many Democrats consider New York’s greatest asset. But the city is not without its racial and political tensions. Mamdani said he’s received Islamophobic threats daily, some targeting his family. According to police, a hate-crimes investigation into the threats is underway.

He told the BBC that racism is indicative of what’s broken in US politics and criticised a Democratic Party “that allowed for Donald Trump to be re-elected” and fails to stand up for working people “no matter who they were or where they came from”.

The candidates’ stances on the Israel-Gaza war was also likely on voters’ minds.

Mamdani’s strong support of Palestinians and staunch criticism of Israel goes further than most of the Democratic establishment. The assemblyman introduced a bill to end the tax-exempt status of New York charities with ties to Israeli settlements that violate international human rights law.

He has also said he believes Israel is committing genocide in Gaza, is an apartheid state, and that the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu should be arrested. Israel vehemently rejects accusations of genocide and apartheid.

Mamdani has been pressed numerous times by press in interviews to state whether he supports Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state. In a response this month, he said: “I’m not comfortable supporting any state that has a hierarchy of citizenship on the basis of religion or anything else, I think that in the way that we have in this country, equality should be enshrined in every country in the world. That’s my belief.” Israel says all religions have equal rights under the law.

Mamdani has also said he accepts Israel’s right to exist as a state, telling the Late Show on Monday that “like all nations, I believe it has a right to exist and a responsibility also to uphold international law”.

Mamdani has also said that there is no room for antisemitism in New York City, adding that if he were elected, he would increase funding to combat hate crimes.

Cuomo, on the other hand, has described himself as a “hyper supporter of Israel and proud of it”.

In many ways the issues facing New York Democrats are the same ones the party faces in future elections, and afterwards, the primary may be dissected nationally for what it says about the party – and how it should take on Trump.

Diljit Dosanjh defends new film that won’t be shown in India

Riyah Collins

BBC Newsbeat

One of India’s biggest stars Diljit Dosanjh has defended his new film, which won’t be shown in India following controversy over its casting.

The Punjabi singer and actor features in Sardaar Ji 3 alongside Canadian actress Neeru Bajwa, but backlash against his other co-star, Hania Aamir, has overshadowed its release.

The Pakistani actress was criticised for comments online after tensions flared between India and Pakistan in April, when 26 tourists were killed in an attack in Indian-administered Kashmir.

Speaking to BBC Asian Network, Diljit defended the movie, saying “everything was fine” between the two countries during filming in February.

“When the film was being made, the situation was OK.

“After that, there’s been a lot of things… that are not in our hands.”

India blamed Pakistan for the April attack – which Pakistan denied – and then launched air strikes inside Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir, with Pakistan firing missiles back.

It was the worst military confrontation between the neighbouring countries in decades, with dozens of people killed.

  • Read more: Why India and Pakistan fight over Kashmir

Hania reportedly shared comments on social media calling India’s strikes “cowardly” and “shameful”.

That sparked backlash in India and calls to boycott the Punjabi-language film, which is released on Friday.

“The producers decided that the film won’t be able to release in India but it can release overseas,” Diljit told BBC Asian Network’s Haroon Rashid, speaking both Punjabi and English.

“Obviously they’ve put a lot of money in the film and when they made it none of this had happened – so we were like, they are already going to have a loss.”

On working with Hania, Diljit says “we didn’t have much time together” but describes her as “very professional”, adding they had a “very good” experience on set.

Newsbeat has approached Hania Aamir for comment.

Diljit and Neeru have been working together for 15 years and Sardaar Ji 3 is their seventh film together as a lead couple.

The actress says that during that time, Diljit’s work on screen and as a musician has “impacted the Punjabi community greatly”.

“We finally have representation,” she says. “We are finally being celebrated and it is because of him.”

Diljit’s profile has been slowly rising outside of India, where he’s been a household name for years.

And his reputation for representing Punjabi culture was on display at last month’s Met Gala in New York.

His head-turning look was inspired by 20th century Indian king Maharaja Bhupinder Singh and included a cape printed with Gurmukhi (Punjabi) script and a jewel-encrusted turban, as well as a replica of a priceless necklace worn by the monarch.

“For me to go to the Met Gala wasn’t a big thing,” he says.

“But for Punjab and the turban to go there – that was the biggest thing.”

The star says the thought of wearing the symbolic outfit to the event – seen by millions around the world – got him emotional before he’d even arrived.

And the look wouldn’t be complete without a key accessory – his kirpan.

He says he was told not to take the ceremonial sword with him, but managed to get it past the event’s security thanks to an unwitting accomplice.

Shakira.

“Her dress was huge and had lots of pins and metal in it,” he says.

“And because Shakira is such a big star, no-one wanted to go behind her because they wouldn’t get any photos.

“I thought: ‘I don’t mind, I’ve come here, that’s the main thing’.

“As she was going through the metal detector, it was beeping so much – I just put the kirpan under my cape and followed through.

“They were so busy checking her that they didn’t even check me.”

As well as fashion and acting, Diljit has been making waves around the world with music too.

In 2023, he became the first Punjabi star to play Coachella, following that up with an appearance on The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon in 2024.

He says he purposely chose to sing Punjabi folk and bhangra tracks during the performance rather than some of his more western-inspired songs.

“If I’ve been given the chance to be on that stage, if I can showcase our music, our beats, then that’s a big deal,” he says.

He recently released a dance track with Korean star Jackson Wang, went viral on social media with Will Smith and brought out Ed Sheeran during his UK tour.

“It’s my intention if my song becomes a massive international hit then I want it to be Punjabi in feel, the beat, it needs a dhol in it,” he says.

“Otherwise what’s the point if it’s the same as someone else’s style?”

Listen to Newsbeat live at 12:45 and 17:45 weekdays – or listen back here.

‘Fast tech’ warning as demand for cheap gadgets heats up

Chris Vallance

Senior Technology Reporter

Demand for so-called “fast tech” – cheap electronic items often quickly binned or abandoned in drawers – is growing, a not-for-profit that works to reduce electronic waste has warned.

Material Focus singled out heatwave-fuelled demand for battery powered mini-fans as an example of the problem, suggesting over seven million were purchased last year.

Nearly £8m was spent on light-up toilet seats, mini karaoke machines and LED balloons, the group’s calculations also suggested.

Overall, consumer spending on fast tech has quadrupled to £11.6bn since 2023, surveys carried out for Material Focus suggested.

The boom could be as rapid as the growth in fast fashion with a “similar negative impact”, Professor Cathrine Jansson-Boyd wrote in the announcement of the findings.

Although fast tech can cost less than a pound, valuable materials can still be locked up in the cut-price gadgets.

A previous report by Material Focus looking at tech lurking in so-called “drawers of doom” suggested in total the junk could contain over 38,000 tonnes of copper.

The mining of materials used by tech gadgets can be environmentally damaging, and yet, experts say, such elements will be crucial as nations seek to transition to low carbon technologies.

Material Focus, whose board includes trade bodies representing manufacturers of domestic appliances, and lighting manufactures, argued that consumers needed to be more thoughtful,

“We had fast food, then fast fashion, now fast tech”, Scott Butler, the group’s executive director wrote.

He urged consumers to “think before you buy your latest fast tech item, and if you do really need it”.

Unwanted tech should always be recycled, Mr Butler argued. However, surveys carried out for the group suggest that over half of fast tech ends up in the bin or unused.

Repair and recycle

Joe Iles of the Ellen MacArthur Foundation which promotes the idea of a “circular economy” based on reuse and recycling said the charity believed the problem of fast tech could be fixed.

“It’s easy to think of these patterns of rapid use, disposal as inevitable, but they’re a recent symptom that has accelerated in the past 50 years or so”, he told the BBC.

There was already a booming market for some durable, reused, and refurbished electronics, he added.

And policy tools such as Right to Repair and Extended Producer Responsibility could encourage better design, as well as new practices in collection, repair, and resale, he said.

Others highlight how goods need to be manufactured in a way that helps consumers make sustainable choices.

Laura Burley, plastics campaign lead at Greenpeace UK told the BBC that the combination of plastic and electrical components made fast tech “a toxic cocktail that is very hard to recycle”.

The fact that so much cheap tech is not built to be repaired or to last exacerbated the problem she said.

When plastic and electronic waste is thrown away it often ends up being dumped on poorer countries.

The solution was “a circular economy where producers are responsible for the full life cycle of their products, and incentivised to make them easier to repair”.

Consumers could help by not buying fast tech – “manual fans or an open window work just as well” she noted.

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Rod Stewart on Glastonbury: ‘I wish they wouldn’t call it the tea time slot’

Mark Savage

Music Correspondent

“Did you know I can run 100 metres in 19 seconds?”

Rod Stewart, Rod Stewart, is boasting about his physical prowess. And why not?

At the age of 80, he’s still cavorting around the world, playing sold out shows, recording new music and even writing a book about his beloved model train set.

This weekend, he’ll play the coveted “legends” slot on Glastonbury’s Pyramid stage… although the former headliner isn’t 100% happy about his billing.

“I just wish they wouldn’t call it the tea time slot,” he complains.

“That sounds like pipe and slippers, doesn’t it?”

He’s also persuaded organisers to extend his set, securing an hour-and-a-half slot after initially being offered 75 minutes.

“Usually I do well over two hours so there’s still a load of songs we won’t be able to do,” he says.

“But we’ve been working at it. I’m not gonna make any announcements between songs. I’ll do one number, shout ‘next’, and go straight into the next one.

“I’m going to get in as many songs I can.”

It’s not like he’s short of choice. Sir Rod has one of the all-time classic songbooks, from early hits with the Faces such as Stay With Me and Ooh La La, to his solo breakthrough with Maggie May, the slick pop of Do Ya Think I’m Sexy? and his reinvention as a crooner on songs like Downtown Train and Have I Told You Lately.

The last time he played Glastonbury, in 2002, he was viewed as an interloper – sitting awkwardly on the bill beside the likes of The White Stripes, Coldplay and Orbital.

At first, “the crowd was wary” of the musician, who “looked to be taking himself too seriously”, said the BBC’s Ian Youngs in a review of the show.

But a peerless setlist of singalongs won them over. By the end of the night, 100,000 people were swaying in time to Sailing as if they were genuinely adrift on the surging tides of the Atlantic.

Amazingly, Rod has no memory of it.

“I don’t remember a thing,” he confesses. “I do so many concerts, they all blend into one.”

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One particular show does stand out, though. On New Year’s Eve 1994, Sir Rod played a free gig on Brazil’s Copacabana Beach, drawing a crowd of more than three million people.

But it wasn’t the record-breaking audience that made it memorable.

“I was violently sick about an hour before I was supposed to go on,” he confesses.

“I’d eaten something terrible, and I was in a toilet going, ‘huerrrgurkurkbleaggggh’

“I didn’t think I was going to make it but luckily they got a doctor to sort me out.”

We’re talking to the star about a month before Glastonbury at the Devonshire, a relaxed, old-school boozer just off Picadilly Circus that’s become the favoured haunt of everyone from Ed Sheeran to U2.

It’s a bit too early for a drink, though, so Sir Rod orders up a venti coffee, shooing away an over-eager assistant who attempts to stir in his sugar.

He’s dressed in a cream jacket and black jeans, which sit above the ankle to show off his box-fresh, zebra-striped trainers. His white shirt is unbuttoned far enough to display a diamond-encrusted necklace with the crest of his beloved football club, Celtic.

And then there’s the hair. A bleached blonde vista of windswept spikes, so famous that it earned a whole chapter in the singer’s autobiography.

Steve Marriott of The Small Faces once claimed that Sir Rod achieved this gravity-defying barnet by rubbing mayonnaise into his scalp, then rubbing it with a towel.

This, says the musician, is utter “bollocks”.

“Nah, nah, nah. I used to use sugared hot water, before the days of hair lacquer. And I couldn’t afford hair lacquer, anyway.”

But what really sets Sir Rod apart is that voice.

Raspy, soulful, raw and expressive, he’s one of rock and roll’s best interpretive singers. There’s a reason why his covers of Cat Steven’s First Cut Is The Deepest or Crazy Horse’s I Don’t Wanna Talk About It have eclipsed the originals.

So it’s a surprise to learn that he was discovered not for his vocals, but his harmonica skills.

That fateful night in 1964, he’d been at a gig on Twickenham’s Eel Pie Island, and was drunkenly playing the riff from Holwin’ Wolf’s Smokestack Lightnin’ while he waited for the train home, when he was overheard by influential blues musician Long John Baldry.

“As he described it, he was walking along platform nine when he noticed this pile of rubble and clothes with a nose pointing out,” Sir Rod recalls.

“And that was me playing harmonica.”

At the time, he “wasn’t so sure” about his singing voice. But, with Baldry’s encouragement, he started to develop his signature sound.

“I wanted to always sound like Sam Cooke and Otis Redding, so that’s the way I went,” he says. “I suppose I was trying to be different from anybody else.”

Sir Rod began his ascent to stardom with the Jeff Beck Group and the Faces, a boisterous blues-rock outfit heavily inspired by the Rolling Stones – both on and off the stage.

They were regularly so drunk he’d forget the words to his own songs, he admits. In the US, the group received a 40-year ban from the Holiday Inn hotel chain after racking up a $11,000 bill (£8,000 – or £54,000 in 2025 money) for trashing their rooms.

“We only did it because the Holiday Inns would treat us so badly, like we were the scum of the earth,” he says.

“So we’d get our own back by smashing the hotels up. One time we actually got a couple of spoons and chiselled through the walls to one another’s rooms.

“But we used to book in as Fleetwood Mac, so they’d get the blame.”

How come he never succumbed to drink and drugs, like many of his contemporaries?

“I never was a really druggy person, because I played football all the time and I had to be match fit,” he says.

“I would use the word dabble. I’ve dabbled in drugs, but not anymore.”

Perhaps a more destructive force was the singer’s womanising.

He wrote You’re In My Heart for Bond girl Britt Ekland, but they split two years later, due to his persistent unfaithfulness.

His marriage to Alana Stewart and relationship with model Kelly Emberg ended the same way.

“When it came to beautiful women, I was a tireless seeker of experiences,” he wrote in his memoir.

“I didn’t know how to resist. And also… I thought I could get away with it.”

He thought he’d settled down after marrying model Rachel Hunter in 1990, but she left him nine years later, saying she felt she had “lost her identity” in the relationship.

The split hit Sir Rod hard.

“I felt cold all the time,” he said. “I took to lying on the sofa in the day, with a blanket over me and holding a hot water bottle against my chest.

“I knew then why they call it heartbroken: You can feel it in your heart. I was distracted, almost to the point of madness.”

However, since 2007, the star has been happily married to TV presenter / police constable Penny Lancaster, with the couple reportedly renewing their vows in 2023.

Last week, they celebrated their 18th wedding anniversary with a trip on the Orient Express from Paris, where they met in 2005, to La Cervara in Portofino, where they held their wedding ceremony, in a medieval monastery.

These days, Sir Rod says, family is his priority.

“I’ve got eight kids all together, so sometimes I’ll wake up in the morning and see all these messages, Stewart, Stewart, Stewart, Stewart… and it’s all the kids. It’s just gorgeous.”

His youngest, Aiden, is now 14, and becoming an historian of his dad’s work.

“He’s gone back and listened to everything I’ve done, bless him,” says the star. “He knows songs that I don’t even remember recording!”

His Glastonbury appearance coincides with the release of a new greatest hits album – his 20th. (“Is it really?” gasps Sir Rod. “Oh “)

So how does it feel to look back over those five decades of music?

“Oh, it’s tremendous,” he says. “It’s a feeling that you’ve done what you set out to do.

“I don’t consider myself a particularly good songwriter,” he adds. “I struggle with it. It takes me ages to write a set of lyrics.

“So I don’t think I’m a natural songwriter. I’m just a storyteller, that’s all. A humble storyteller.”

Maybe – but this humble storyteller is going to draw a crowd of thousands when he plays the Pyramid Stage on Sunday afternoon.

“You know, it’s wonderful,” he concedes. “I’ll be in good voice. I’ll enjoy myself. I don’t care anymore what the critics think.

“I’m there to entertain my people.”

Thomas Sweeney’s first incentive to become a line judge was the offer of a free sandwich.

For Pauline Eyre, who called the lines at Wimbledon for 16 years, some natty blazers and the chance to buy tickets for the tournament were the main recompense for work she had to take annual leave to do.

Nowadays the best officials might earn up to £200 a day plus expenses.

But line judging has never been about the money for those who spend hours leaning forward, hands resting on knees, staring intently at a line of chalk to determine in a split second on which side of it the yellow ball has bounced.

Being so close to Jana Novotna on Centre Court that she could see her foot shaking on the first point of a Wimbledon final or being “psyched out” by John McEnroe were priceless experiences for Eyre.

And then there were the outfits.

“There’s nothing quite like walking out on to the iconic grass courts at SW19, wearing the uniform of what many consider the best-dressed officials in all of sport,” Malgorzata Grzyb, chair of the Association of British Tennis Officials (ABTO), told BBC Sport.

But times have changed. Next week at Wimbledon there will be no line judges for the first time in its 148-year history, with electronic line calling being introduced.

Players and umpires have already got used to the new set-up as it has been at other tournaments for a while, but on the green grass at Wimbledon, where advertising logos are muted and the players are dressed in white, the emptier courts may feel that bit more noticeable.

“It’s all the tradition of Wimbledon – the people and the funny uniforms – and that’s a bit of personality that’s gone,” said Eyre. “I think it’s all of those little things that made Wimbledon Wimbledon.”

Traditionalists will miss them, but technology fans will point to progress.

BBC Sport has been finding out what umpires, players and line judges make of the move.

Challenges are ‘out’

“Mr Djokovic is challenging the call on the right baseline; the ball was called out.”

There was often a buzz of excitement when the umpire signalled there would be a video replay of a line judge’s decision.

The rhythmic clap-clap-clapping built up to the moment being shown on the big screen, and the obligatory “ooooooooh” followed when the split-second judgement of the human eye was laid bare to a packed arena and millions watching on TV.

More than 14,000 pairs of eyes on Centre Court could bore into the line judge who had been wrong by less than the width of a blade of grass. But when the official was shown to be correct, their poker faces had to fight the urge to look even mildly smug.

This year players can still ask for a replay on the screen, although fans’ gasps will be over the depiction of a ‘close call’ rather than a verdict on human instinct versus technology. And, if recent tournaments are anything to go by, their laughs may be at the delayed reaction for some of the “out” calls.

Paul Hawkins, inventor of the Hawk-Eye technology that was first introduced at Wimbledon in 2007, said the challenge system had probably “had its day” with fans.

“When it was new, there was certainly more excitement – people kind of got into it,” he said.

“It got to the point where there was a little bit of a case of ‘we’ve been there, we’ve had that joke, let’s just get on with the tennis’ and obviously doing away with the challenge system does mean you can get on with the game a bit quicker.”

Some line judges are still ‘in’

The absence of line judges now gives players fewer people to take out their frustrations on, with Eyre remembering being “yelled at” by players and being hit by many balls.

Djokovic was disqualified from the 2020 US Open for accidentally hitting a ball at a line judge, while last year Andrey Rublev was defaulted in Dubai for screaming in the face of one.

Not all of the 300 line judges who have been cut will be out of work at Wimbledon, with about 80 being used as ‘match assistants’ who are on hand in case the technology fails and will also undertake duties such as escorting players who need to leave the court.

But their opportunities to work at big tournaments are dwindling, with the French Open now the only one of the four Grand Slams not using electronic line calling.

The men’s ATP Tour and the combined ATP/WTA tournaments introduced the technology this year and WTA-only events are moving in that direction.

Eyre fears this could have an impact on the quality of umpiring in years to come since line judging is a pathway to becoming a chair umpire.

“Why would you go to call the lines at Finchley Tennis Club under-12s if you haven’t got that carrot of ‘maybe one day I can get to call lines at Wimbledon’?” said Eyre, who called the lines in 12 Wimbledon finals in the 1990s and 2000s and is now a comedian touring a show about her line judge experiences.

However, Grzyb says the development pathway for officials has evolved and stressed that line judges are still used at many events below the top tier of tennis.

“Instead of starting solely as line umpires, new officials now receive training in both line and chair umpiring from the outset, enabling them to progress more rapidly to chair umpire roles,” the ABTO chair said.

“[This] is not dissimilar to the systems in place in many countries without a home Grand Slam, and who have been able to produce world-class chair umpires.”

‘Out… I think’ – You cannot be serious!

Being a line judge usually means being able to stand for a long period of time and, crucially, bellow out the call in a way that makes it obvious what is happening.

As British number one Jack Draper found out at Queen’s, the automated calls cannot always be heard over a raucous crowd.

Set point to take his semi-final to a decider was met with confusion as neither Draper nor the crowd were sure whether there had been an “out” call.

With players also no longer able to rely on the line judges’ arm gestures to indicate if the ball is out, Eyre says the voices used at the grass-court tournament were not loud enough.

“They have used very calm voices – it sort of sounds like the voice isn’t sure,” she said.

“Sort of like it’s saying ‘out… I think’. It feels a bit awkward. That’s very different psychologically, not hearing something sharp.”

And while some prefer the technology – Briton Heather Watson recently said a bad experience with line judges’ calls at Birmingham “ruined the match” – others are unsure.

Compatriot Sonay Kartal said she struggled at the Australian Open as she could hear automated calls from the other courts, leading to confusion and even players stopping the point because they thought the call was on their court.

It is not yet known what the voices of the Wimbledon calls will sound like, with the tournament using the voices of some of its behind-the-scenes staff and tour guides. The All England Club will be using different voices on different courts to avoid confusion between neighbouring courts.

It would have been great if the booming voice of McEnroe himself had been one of the voices, Eyre suggests.

“It would be fun to have McEnroe calling them, wouldn’t it? We’re all yelling at the telly going ‘you cannot be serious!’ – I’d like that, we could yell at him and that would be good karma!”

What information do we collect from this quiz?

Could umpires be next to go?

First it was a pencil, paper and a stopwatch. Then came an electronic scoring system and next Hawk-Eye.

As technology continues to develop, the need for human intervention diminishes.

So what will go next? Chair umpires?

Seven-time Grand Slam singles champion McEnroe, known for his on-court outbursts, has previously suggested getting rid of umpires and relying on the technology.

Sweeney – he of the free sandwich – is now a chair umpire who oversaw the 2023 women’s French Open final.

He has overseen numerous matches on Wimbledon’s Centre Court and cannot imagine time being called on umpires in top-level tennis any time soon.

“There will always be that need to have a human to facilitate at the end of where technology has its limitations,” Sweeney said.

“There are aspects to life that can’t be prepared for, and you need that human to be able to absorb pressure, provide the opportunity for understanding and empathy for a player, and to be able to help, guide and govern how the court itself operates.”

But with nine fewer people on court during matches, Sweeney said it “can feel a bit lonely out there” after the “tradition of living the match together and encouraging each other to stay focused”.

Ball kids and match officials are still on hand to assist with tasks like fetching towels for players or facilitating bathroom breaks, while one review official monitors the line technology.

“We still have that team,” said Sweeney. “Even with smaller numbers, we’re still a very strong and supporting team of each other. It just looks a bit different.”

Related topics

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Deal or no deal? Zimbabwe still divided over land 25 years after white farmers evicted

Shingai Nyoka

BBC News, Harare

A quarter of a century after their land was seized during a chaotic land reform programme that made global headlines, a small group of white Zimbabwean farmers have accepted a controversial compensation deal from the government.

Once the backbone of the country’s agricultural sector, many of them are now elderly, visibly frail, battling illness and financially desperate.

“I believe this is the only opportunity. We can’t wait 10 years for another deal, ” 71-year-old Arthur Baisley told the BBC.

Still recuperating from back surgery, Mr Baisley was among those who arrived earlier this year at a conference room in the capital, Harare – some aided by walking sticks and walking frames – to discuss the deal.

The catch is that these farmers have now been paid only 1% of their total compensation in cash – the rest is being issued as US dollar-denominated treasury bonds that mature in 10 years – with 2% interest paid twice a year.

The land reform programme, sparked by the invasion of white-owned farms around the country by supporters of the late Robert Mugabe, was launched in 2000 by the then president, who was desperate to shore up political support at the time when Zimbabwe had about 2,500 white farmers owning 4,000 farms – half of the country’s best farmland.

BBC
It was difficult for my family in the beginning but life goes on, you have to move on”

The seizures became Africa’s biggest modern-day land revolution, and was meant to redress colonial-era land grabs, when black people were forced to leave their land. But it set the country on a collision path with Western nations – economic sanctions followed, companies exited and the economy collapsed.

This compensation deal has been pushed by Mugabe’s successor President Emmerson Mnangagwa, who is keen to mend fences. The money being given to the farmers, as stipulated by the constitution, is for infrastructure and improvements to the land – like buildings and dams, not the value of the land itself, which Zimbabwe’s government insists was illegally seized from the country’s original inhabitants.

Overall this is estimated to total $3.5bn (£2.6bn). However, the recent cash pay-out totalled just $3.1m for 378 farms.

Mr Baisley said it was not the best deal but was reasonably fair – and his decision to accept it has come with the realisation that the takeovers cannot be undone.

“It was difficult for my family in the beginning but life goes on, you have to move on,” he said, adding that he would start selling some of the bonds immediately to offset medical bills and to care for his sickly parents.

It is a significant shift, a softening of hard lines previously drawn by both sides.

Mugabe used to pound the lectern at party rallies saying the white farmers should go to the UK, the former colonial power, for their compensation – although quietly he was paying out select farmers.

The white farmers meanwhile had insisted on a $10bn full cash settlement. Both sides have settled on the $3.5bn figure.

However, unlike Mr Baisley, the majority of white farmers are holding out for a deal which would see all the cash paid upfront.

Deon Theron, who in 2008 was forced off the farm he had bought after independence, leads more than 1,000 farmers who have rejected the offer.

Boxes of his possessions, hastily packed during his departure, still fill the veranda of his Harare home where he told me the deal was not fair as there was no guarantee that the bonds would be honoured in 10 years’ time.

The 71-year-old said it was clear that the government did not have the money – and he wanted to see the international community, including the UK, help with negotiations as the government was refusing to budge, or even meet the dissenting group.

“The British can’t go and sit in the pavilion and watch what’s happening because they are part of it. They are linked with our history. They can’t walk away from it,” he told the BBC.

In an agreement brokered in the run-up to independence, the UK was to support land reform financially – but it floundered towards the end of the 1990s when the Labour government came to power and relations soured.

The need to re-engage Britain on the compensation was the battle cry of many of the war veterans who led the farm invasions. They had fought in the 1970s war against white-minority rule – and felt let down by the slow pace of land reform following independence.

But like the white farmers, the war veterans are also split over the government’s handling of the compensation.

One faction is suing the government for “clandestinely” agreeing to pay $3.5bn in compensation, saying the offer should have been agreed in parliament.

One of its leaders, Godfrey Gurira, said that given the myriad economic challenges cash-strapped Zimbabwe faced, it should not have prioritised white farmers.

“It’s such a colossal amount… for a nation of our size. People are suffering they can hardly make ends meet, the hospitals have nothing, then we have the luxury to pay $3.5bn. In our opinion it’s an unnecessary act of appeasement,” he told the BBC.

A second lawsuit challenges an aspect of a new land policy that demands that new farmers pay for the land in order to obtain title deeds to own the land outright.

In the wake of the redistribution, the 250,000 people who replaced the 2,500 white farmers were only entitled to 99-year leases. However this meant it was near-impossible for them to get bank loans as their security of tenure was not guaranteed.

Last year, the government said farmers could apply to own their land outright – with title deeds – but they needed to pay between $100 and $500 per hectare (2.47 acres).

That money will go towards the compensation deal to white farmers, according to the government.

Those challenging this say forcing black farmers to effectively buy back the land contradicts the law.

And the black farmers themselves are divided over the issue.

The land reform programme has had mixed results. Many new farmers did not have the skills, the finances and labour to farm successfully. But the country’s agricultural sector is now rebounding with pockets of successful farmers.

In 2002, Solomon Ganye arrived on a bicycle to receive a 20-hectare bare piece of land in Harare South.

It was part of the sprawling 2,700-hectare farm that had been divided among 77 people.

He found the initial years a struggle – suffering from a lack of finances and climate shocks. But slowly through Chinese money ploughed into the tobacco sector, and after handing the business over to his sons – both agriculture graduates in their 20s – things have improved.

They have built an enviable enterprise with 200 permanent workers, and have expanded into dairy and livestock farming. They are applying for the title deeds of their land and have even acquired more in recent years from the government.

BBC
To be honest we’ve taken farming to another level… We’re doing more than what the white guys were doing in terms of quality of tobacco and the leaf is good”

Aaron Ganye, his oldest son, told the BBC that without the land reform programme, his family would probably not have been able to buy a farm because in the past the structure of ownership saw vast tracts of land being held by a single family.

“I’m very happy because to be honest we’ve taken farming to another level because now we’re living a good life through farming. We’re doing more than what the white guys were doing in terms of quality of tobacco and the leaf is good,” the 25-year-old said proudly.

“We’ve invested in technology. It’s not easy. I’m now motivating more farmers to do good work here,” he said.

He does believe that new farmers should contribute to compensation payments but based on the value of infrastructure they inherited.

On the political front, tensions are also easing – and the UK government no longer has any Zimbabwean on its sanction list having recently delisted four military and government officials it had accused of human rights abuses.

The UK’s Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office told the BBC this was because they were no longer in the positions they held at the time they were added to the list in 2021.

Nonetheless, it is a significant development, marking the end of more than 20 years of sanctions against Zimbabwe.

The country now hopes that the farmers’ compensation issue can be properly sorted out to get Western support for ongoing talks on restructuring its massive foreign debt.

There is no question that 25 years on, calm has returned to almost all farming fronts.

Agriculture is rebounding, this year farmers have sold over 300,000 tonnes of tobacco at auction – the highest tobacco production ever.

But compromise is needed on all sides for the country to fully jump over the hurdle of land reform and its fallout.

More Zimbabwe stories from the BBC:

  • How a self-styled knight giving away cars and wads of cash got people talking
  • I cannot forgive Mugabe’s soldiers – massacre survivor
  • Is Zimbabwe extending an olive branch to its white farmers?

BBC Africa podcasts

This burger was made in a lab from cow cells… Should it really be served in restaurants?

Pallab Ghosh

Science correspondent@BBCPallab

Inside an anonymous building in Oxford, Riley Jackson is frying a steak. The perfectly red fillet cut sizzles in the pan, its juices releasing a meaty aroma. But this is no ordinary steak. It was grown in the lab next door.

What’s strangest of all is just how real it looks. The texture, when cut, is indistinguishable from the real thing.

“That’s our goal,” says Ms Jackson of Ivy Farm Technologies, the food tech start-up that created it. “We want it to be as close to a normal steak as possible.”

Lab-grown meat is already sold in many parts of the world and in a couple of years, pending being granted regulatory approval, it could also be sold in the UK too – in burgers, pies and sausages.

Unlike so-called vegetarian meat, which is already available in UK supermarkets – from fake bacon rashers made from pea protein to steaks made of soy, and dyed bright red to resemble the real thing – lab-grown meat is biologically real meat, grown from cow cells.

To some, this could be a smart technological fix for a growing environmental problem: the rise in planet-heating gases caused, in part, by the rapid and growing demand for meat.

But others argue that the environmental benefits of lab-grown meat, officially known as cultivated meat, have been oversold. Some critics say that more effort should instead be expended on reducing meat consumption, instead of looking to a technology fix.

Then there are questions around the ultra-processed nature of this meat, which some also worry will be produced by a handful of multinational companies.

So now, with dog food made from meat that was grown in factory vats having already gone on sale in the UK earlier this year and with the possibility of lab-grown food for humans becoming available sooner than expected – the debate has never been more prescient.

Nor has the question: to grow or not to grow?

Curbing greenhouse gas emissions

Global demand for meat is growing. According the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation, meat production has increased fivefold since the 1960s and reached around 364 million tonnes in 2023.

Producing 1kg of beef can generate planet-heating greenhouse gases, equivalent to roughly 40kg of carbon dioxide, though estimates can vary depending on the type of production.

A study published in Nature Food in 2021 concluded that food production was responsible for a third of global greenhouse gas emissions. Cattle also burp planet-heating methane gas, plus they require water and land.

Tim Lang, a professor of food policy at City St George’s, University of London argues that the issue is a ticking environmental time bomb. “The situation is absolutely dire,” he says.

“Politicians are fearful of engaging with the issue. They don’t want to take on the meat and farming industry, nor do they wish to risk unpopularity by enacting policies that would reduce meat consumption.”

Lab-grown meat has been marketed as part of a solution. Its advocates claim that it can meet the growing demand for meat with much less carbon emissions and land use, plus it can help governments hit certain targets.

In the UK, for example, a 2021 independent review for the Department for the Environment Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) has called for a 30% reduction in meat consumption by 2032 to meet the country’s net zero target.

Lab-grown sausages, eel and caviar

The science behind lab-grown meat is also relatively straightforward. Researchers take cells from a farm animal and grow more of them in a dish. When they have enough, they are put into ever larger vats until they have enough to produce a meat product.

Turning this into something that people want to eat is trickier. Each company has its own closely guarded secret sauce. But in the main, the cells are developed in a cocktail of nutrients, which encourage them to grow in the right way, after which other ingredients are sometimes added to boost the nutritional values.

The result is a paste, which is then processed and mixed with other foods such as soy to make it look, feel and taste more like meat. There are also plans to produce fish-like products this way, including eel and even caviar.

Ivy Farm Technologies business that has applied for approval to sell its cultivated meat in the UK. If granted, its first products won’t be steaks but burgers and sausages.

It plans to combine cultivated mince, (which is cheaper and easier to produce than trying to replicate the taste of a real steak) with regular mince to create a blended cow-cultivated beef burger.

“If you want to make a sustainable difference, you have to go for mass production and burgers are where the masses are,” says the firm’s CEO Dr Harsh Amin. “If you blend our cultivated meat with animal derived meat, you are [still] reducing the carbon footprint.”

“Hope not hard evidence”?

Ivy Farm claims this type of meat can lead to significant reductions in greenhouse gas emissions and other environmental benefits. Other companies make similar claims, but these are based more on hope than hard evidence, according to Dr John Lynch, of Oxford University, who has carried out a comprehensive, independent assessment of the climate impact of lab-grown meat.

“There have not been any accurate climate assessment studies because production is not happening at large scale at the moment,” he adds.

The problem with comparing the climate impact of lab-grown meat with agricultural production is that there is little data and many variables.

Growing cells in vats requires energy, as does producing the chemicals that are added. Businesses keep the details of their processes secret, for perfectly legitimate reasons, so it is hard to produce a single figure for the climate cost of cultivated meat.

Dr Lynch has assessed the data available in scientific papers and found that the best-case cultivated meat carbon footprints were as low as 1.65 kg of CO2 per kg, which is better for the climate than traditional beef production.

However, if a lab-grown meat process needs a lot of energy, some estimates put the figure as high as 22kg of CO2 per kg, making its climate advantage less certain.

Then there is the fact that the cows’ methane gas burps disappear from the atmosphere after 12 years or so, whereas the CO2 produced to grow the lab meat continues to do its damage for much longer. Dr John Lynch has taken the more damaging impact of methane into account in his calculations and they indicate that the persistance of CO2 in the atmosphere can do more damage in the long term.

So, in the long run, it may be a bad idea to replace cows with high energy lab-grown production, according to Dr Lynch’s assessment. Yet that may be counter-balanced by the fact that cultivated meat production would require far less land.

The bottom line is that the environmental advantages of lab-grown beef over cattle farming is a closer run thing than its advocates argue – but it is likely to have the edge as production methods scale up and become more efficient, according to Dr Lynch.

“For beef, it is quite viable for cultured meat to come out on top,” he argues. “But I don’t think it is the same story for chicken and pork, which convert their feed into meat more efficiently than cattle.”

Lab-grown salmon in fine dining restaurants

Singapore became the first country to allow the sale of cell-cultivated meat for human consumption in 2020. This was followed by the United States three years later and Israel in 2024.

UK firms have complained that the regulatory approvals process is too slow for them to keep up with overseas competitors. But sales in those countries have in the main been peripatetic, with many firms only offering tastings or serving it in upmarket restaurants for short periods.

This is largely because manufacturers are not able to mass-produce their products in sufficient quantities or as cheaply as traditional meat.

In the US, four companies have received some form of regulatory approval for their lab-grown chicken, pork fat and salmon. Salmon from Wildtype, for example, is now served at Kann, a fine-dining restaurant in Oregon, while Good Meat’s chicken was introduced at a restaurant in Washington, DC.

The response from consumers so far has been “optimistic and curious”, according to Suzi Gerber who is the executive director of the US Association for Meat, Poultry and Seafood Innovation.

What farmers and fishermen say

Some parts of the US cattle industry have, however, expressed opposition to the technology and lobbied for it to be banned, though other livestock firms have remained neutral or been supportive.

The National Cattlemen’s Beef Association and several state-level organisations publicly oppose bans, perhaps in case it sets a precedent for banning other scientific advances, such as bio-engineered food stock for cattle.

The cultivated meat industry says that their products should have no effect on the livestock industry – people will always prefer real meat over artificial. The role of the new technology is, they say, to meet the demand that livestock production is unable to.

The seafood industry has also shown openness: for example, the US National Fisheries Institute recognises cultivated seafood as part of a broader domestic production of on-land fish, like aquaculture.

Will “high-protein slurry” really save the planet?

Ellen Dinsmoor is chief operating officer of Vow, a Sydney-based firm that sells cultivated Japanese quail products in Singapore. It recently received approval to sell in Australia too.

Unlike some cultivated meat firms, Vow is not trying to copy normal meats. Instead, the firm has chosen quail because fewer people know what it is supposed to taste like.

“What we have to do is produce a really delicious product that people want,” she explains. “A little later we can sell it on nutrition, for example we can add healthy omega-3 oils found only in salmon into chicken. And then if we can do all that at a fraction of the price, this is where it becomes interesting to consumers.”

This is all part of a strategy to create a stable high-end market, which could in time enable investment in producing food that is less posh and in larger quantities.

But for some critics, the potential benefits of this technology for the environment, or indeed for the poorest communities in the world, are being lost.

Some of the start-up companies involved are driven by delivering swift returns to their investors, argues Dr Chris van Tulleken, author of Ultra-Processed People, which can be more easily done by producing high-priced products in high-income countries.

A simpler, cheaper and easier option, he argues, would be to persuade people in both developed and emerging countries to eat less meat.

“It is all very well to propose to people that they should eat a high-protein slurry to keep themselves well,” he argues, “but… I don’t think it is something we should impose on already marginalised groups of people.”

He also worries that the emergence of cultivated food is an acceleration of a long-term trend away from environmentally sustainable, locally sourced, whole foods and toward factory mass-produced fare. “And at the moment the process is pretty energy intensive.”

But like it or not, lab-grown meat is here. To some, it’s a healthier option with less cholesterol, no animal suffering – and a clever solution to a pressing environmental problem. To others, those benefits may have been overblown.

For all the promises and potential about helping the world, however, most people choose food for more personal reasons, namely how it tastes and how affordable it is. That, more than anything, may well decide its future.

More from InDepth

India sends its first astronaut into space in 41 years

Geeta Pandey

BBC News, Delhi@geetapandeybbc

Jubilant Indians have been celebrating the successful launch of the Axiom-4 (Ax-4) mission which has taken off with a multi-country crew, including an Indian astronaut.

Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla, who’s piloting the mission, has become only the second Indian to travel to space.

In just over 26 hours – when the spacecraft docks at the International Space Station (ISS) – Group Captain Shukla will become the first ever Indian to visit Nasa’s orbiting laboratory.

His trip comes 41 years after cosmonaut Rakesh Sharma became the first Indian to fly to space aboard a Russian Soyuz in 1984.

Led by former Nasa astronaut Peggy Whitson – a space veteran who has been commander of ISS twice, has spent more than 675 days in space and done 10 space walks – Ax-4 lifted off from Nasa’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 02:31 EDT, (06:31 GMT; 12:01 India time) on Wednesday.

The trip to ISS aboard Ax-4 – a commercial flight operated by Houston-based private company Axiom Space – is a collaboration between Nasa, India’s space agency Isro, European Space Agency (Esa) and SpaceX.

Its four-member team also includes Slawosz Uznanski-Wisniewski from Poland and Tibor Kapu from Hungary. They will also be taking their countries back to space after more than four decades. The astronauts spent weeks in quarantine before Wednesday’s launch.

The flight has generated huge interest in India with Isro saying the experience Group Captain Shukla will gain during his trip to the ISS will help its efforts immensely.

The 39-year-old was among four Indian air force officers shortlisted last year to travel on the country’s first-ever human space flight, scheduled for 2027. India has also announced ambitious plans to set up a space station by 2035 and send an astronaut to the Moon by 2040.

Isro, which has been carrying out a number of tests to prepare for going into space, has paid 5bn rupees ($59m; £43m) to secure a seat for Group Captain Shukla on Ax-4 and his training.

Within minutes of take off, Group Captain Shukla had a message for India.

“We’re back in space after 41 years and what an amazing ride it’s been,” he said.

“Right now, we are orbiting Earth at a speed of 7.5km per second. On my shoulder, I carry the Indian flag. This is not the start of my journey to the ISS, this is the beginning of India’s human spaceflight. I welcome all my fellow Indians to be a part of this journey and feel proud and excited.”

The launch, using the SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule on a Falcon 9 rocket, was broadcast live by Axiom Space and Nasa and set off celebrations in India.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi welcomed the successful launch and said the Indian astronaut “carries with him the wishes, hopes and aspirations of 1.4 billion Indians”.

In Group Captain Shukla’s home city of Lucknow, his parents joined hundreds of students to watch the lift-off. They were welcomed by a music band on their arrival at the school and were seen breaking out into applause as the rocket lifted off.

Born on 10 October 1985 in the northern city of Lucknow, Group Captain Shukla joined the Indian air force as a fighter pilot in 2006.

He has flown MiGs, Sukhois, Dorniers, Jaguars and Hawks and has more than 2,000 hours of flying experience.

Describing the past year as “nothing short of transformative”, Group Captain Shukla recently told an online press conference that he did not have words to describe his excitement.

“It has been an amazing journey so far, but the best is yet to come,” he said.

“As I go into space, I carry not just instruments and equipment, I carry hopes and dreams of a billion hearts.

“I request all Indians to pray for the success of our mission,” he added.

What will he be doing on Ax-4?

Besides piloting the mission, the Indian astronaut will have a busy schedule during his two weeks on ISS.

Considering the huge interest in the flight, Isro has said they are organising events for him to interact with Indian students and answer their questions while floating in space. An interaction with Prime Minister Narendra Modi is also on the cards.

But most of the time, the four-member crew will be conducting 60 scientific experiments, seven of which come from India.

Former Nasa scientist Mila Mitra says Isro’s experiments will help improve our understanding of space and its effects on biology and micro-gravity.

One of the key experiments, she explains, will investigate the impact of spaceflight on six varieties of crop seeds.

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  • The Indian pilot set for a historic space journey on Axiom-4

Another Isro experiment involves growing three strains of microalgae which could be used as food, fuel or even in life support systems and this will help identify the most suitable ones for growing in microgravity, she says.

The Isro projects will also investigate how tardigrades – micro-animals on Earth that can survive extreme environments – would fare in space.

The other experiments aim to identify how muscle loss occurs in space and how it can be treated; and the physical and cognitive impact of using computer screens in microgravity.

Dog-sized dinosaur that ran around feet of giants discovered

Georgina Rannard

Science correspondent
Reporting fromNatural History Museum, London
Gwyndaf Hughes

Science videographer

A labrador-sized dinosaur was wrongly categorised when it was found and is actually a new species, scientists have discovered.

Its new name is Enigmacursor – meaning puzzling runner – and it lived about 150 million years ago, running around the feet of famous giants like the Stegosaurus.

It was originally classified as a Nanosaurus but scientists now conclude it is a different animal.

On Thursday it will become the first new dinosaur to go on display at the Natural History Museum (NHM) in London since 2014.

BBC News went behind the scenes to see the dinosaur before it will be revealed to the public.

The discovery promises to shed light on the evolutionary history that saw early small dinosaurs become very large and “bizarre” animals, according to Professor Paul Barrett, a palaeontologist at the museum.

When we visit, the designer of a special glass display case for the Enigmacursor is making last-minute checks.

The dinosaur’s new home is a balcony in the museum’s impressive Earth Hall. Below it is Sophie the Stegosaurus who also lived in the Morrison Formation in the Western United States.

Enigmacursor is tiny by comparison. At 64 cm tall and 180 cm long it is about the height of a labrador, but with much bigger feet and a tail that was “probably longer than the rest of the dinosaur,” says Professor Susannah Maidment.

“It also had a relatively small head, so it was probably not the brightest,” she adds, adding that it was probably a teenager when it died.

With the fossilised remains of its bones in their hands, conservators Lu Allington-Jones and Kieran Miles expertly assemble the skeleton on to a metal frame.

“I don’t want to damage it at this stage before it’s revealed to everybody,” says Ms Allington-Jones, head of conservation.

“Here you can see the solid dense hips showing you it was a fast-running dinosaur. But the front arms are much smaller and off the ground – perhaps it used them to shovel plants in its mouth with hands,” says Mr Miles.

It was clues in the bones that led scientists at NHM to conclude the creature was a new species.

“When we’re trying to identify if something is a new species, we’re looking for small differences with all of the other closely-related dinosaurs. The leg bones are really important in this one,” says Prof Maidment, holding the right hind limb of the Enigmacursor.

When the dinosaur was donated to the museum it was named Nanosaurus, like many other small dinosaurs named since the 1870s.

But the scientists suspected that categorisation was false.

To find out more, they travelled to the United States with scans of the skeleton and detailed photographs to see the original Nanosaurus that is considered the archtype specimen.

“But it didn’t have any bones. It’s just a rock with some impressions of bone in it. It could be any number of dinosaurs,” Professor Maidment said.

In contrast, the NHM’s specimen was a sophisticated and near-to-complete skeleton with unique features including its leg bones.

Untangling this mystery around the names and categorisation is essential, the palaeontologists say.

“It’s absolutely foundational to our work to understand how many species we actually have. If we’ve got that wrong, everything else falls apart,” says Prof Maidment.

The scientists have now formally erased the whole category of Nanosaurus.

They believe that other small dinosaur specimens from this period are probably also distinct species.

The discovery should help the scientists understand the diversity of dinosaurs in the Late Jurassic period.

Smaller dinosaurs are “very close to the origins of the large groups of dinosaurs that become much more prominent later on,” says Prof Barrett.

“Specimens like this help fill in some of those gaps in our knowledge, showing us how those changes occur gradually over time,” he adds.

Looking at these early creatures helps them identify “the pressures that finally led to the evolution of their more bizarre, gigantic descendants,” says Prof Barrett.

The scientists are excited to have such a rare complete skeleton of a small dinosaur.

Traditionally, big dinosaur bones have been the biggest prize, so there has been less interest in digging out smaller fossils.

“When you’re looking for those very big dinosaurs, sometimes it’s easy to overlook the smaller ones living alongside them. But now I hope people will keep their eyes close to the ground looking for these little ones,” says Prof Barrett.

The findings about Enigmacursor mollyborthwickae are published in the journal Royal Society Open Science.

Millions of children at risk as vaccine uptake stalls

Dominic Hughes

Global health correspondent

Progress in vaccinating children against a variety of life-threatening diseases has stalled in the past two decades – and even gone backwards in some countries – a new global study suggests.

The situation has been made worse by the Covid pandemic, leaving millions of children unprotected from diseases such as measles, tuberculosis and polio.

The researchers are calling for a concerted effort to provide better and more equal access to vaccines.

Child health experts warn that cuts to international aid budgets that fund vaccination programmes, combined with vaccine scepticism, are creating a “perfect storm”.

The global childhood vaccination programme has been a huge success.

Since 1974, more than four billion children have been vaccinated, preventing an estimated 150 million deaths worldwide.

In nearly half a century until 2023, researchers say vaccine coverage doubled.

But since 2010 progress has stagnated, to the extent that there are now wide variations in vaccine coverage around the world.

A study, published in the medical journal The Lancet, says measles vaccinations have declined in nearly 100 countries.

The Covid-19 pandemic made things even worse, because of disruption to vaccine programmes during lockdowns.

By 2023, there were nearly 16 million children who had not had any childhood vaccinations – most of them in sub-Saharan Africa and south Asia.

Study author Dr Jonathan Mosser, from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington, in the United States, says large numbers of children remain under-vaccinated and un-vaccinated.

“Routine childhood vaccinations are among the most powerful and cost-effective public health interventions available, but persistent global inequalities, challenges from the Covid pandemic, and the growth of vaccine misinformation and hesitancy have all contributed to faltering immunisation progress,” he said.

Dr Mosser said there was now an increased risk of outbreaks of diseases like measles, polio and diphtheria.

All children should benefit from life-saving immunisations, he added.

Wide discrepancies remain between vaccination rates in wealthier and lower-income countries.

But the report’s authors warn that vaccination rates have fallen in Europe, the US and other wealthy countries too.

Professor Sir Andrew Pollard, director of the Oxford Vaccine Group, says the findings present a concerning picture.

“More children will be hospitalised, permanently damaged and die from fully preventable diseases if the trend is not reversed.

“Alas, the cuts in global health funding mean that this situation is set to deteriorate,” Prof Pollard said.

Dr David Elliman, from University College London, says many factors have contributed to the current situation.

“Around the world, the increasing number of countries torn apart by civil unrest and wars, combined with the drastic cuts in foreign aid from rich nations, such as USA and UK, makes it difficult to get vaccines to many populations,” he said.

“Where it appears that policy is being made on the basis of ill-informed opinion, rather than science, we have a perfect storm,” Dr Elliman added.

The researchers recommend that all countries try to strengthen primary healthcare systems and combat misinformation around vaccines to prevent parents being hesitant about getting their children vaccinated.

They also call for a concerted effort to provide better and more equal access to vaccines around the world.

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Turmoil and trade wars dominate China’s ‘summer Davos’

Suranjana Tewari

Asia Business Correspondent
Reporting fromTianjin, China

Oil prices have hit their lowest in two weeks after Israel agreed to US President Donald Trump’s proposal for a ceasefire with Iran.

But business leaders at a key economic meeting in the northern Chinese port city of Tianjin find themselves troubled by the state of the global economy, and the prospect for meaningful growth.

The rapid escalation of the conflict between Iran and Israel – which has now pulled in the United States – temporarily replaced trade, tariffs and inflation at the top of a long list of concerns with far-reaching consequences.

“It is the most complex geopolitical and geo-economic backdrop we’ve seen in decades,” Borge Brende, president and chief executive of the World Economic Forum (WEF), said ahead of the summit, dubbed the “Summer Davos”.

“If we are not able to revive growth again, we can unfortunately see a decade of lower growth.”

WEF has long been a symbol of the merits of free trade and a globalised world – but Trump’s tariff wars have upended supply chains and the ability of businesses to plan for the future.

“We live in an environment of radical uncertainty,” says Jeffry Frieden, professor of international and public affairs and political science at Columbia University.

“Businesses have to figure out what has happened over the past several years as we come to the end of an era, in my view, of international economic and political affairs and move into a new era.”

Geopolitical risks have significant implications for the global economy.

Higher oil prices can push up the operational costs of energy for goods producers – and at some point, those additional costs may be passed onto the consumer.

People may in turn hold back on spending, as increased prices dampen demand. If inflation remains high, central banks will be reluctant to bring down interest rates.

Geopolitical tensions can also lead to losses as the result of other factors, such as the rerouting of flights and disruption to tourism activities.

Investors can get rattled by uncertainty, leading to sell-offs on the market and a rush for safe haven assets like gold and the US dollar.

Iran’s threat to close the Strait of Hormuz – one of the world’s most critical transit routes, through which roughly a quarter of the world’s global oil supply passes – would leave China especially vulnerable. It is estimated that Beijing imports 90% of the oil Iran sells.

Chris Torrens, head of China at advisory and advocacy firm APCO, points out that some of the country’s bigger machinery sectors, including the new high technology industries that Beijing is trying to support, still rely on oil.

“So anything that disrupts that oil supply is going to be a worry to Beijing,” he says.

The WEF event comes at a critical moment for China’s economy, which has for years struggled from a protracted property crisis, high unemployment and sluggish domestic spending.

Beijing has unveiled a string of measures to try to stimulate the economy.

Until now, China is still achieving its official growth target of around 5%, and economists say the country could account for almost 30% of global growth this year.

Mr Torrens says Chinese officials detect an opportunity, and suggests that in a sense the country is opening its doors through the WEF event.

“I think the US is giving China a massive PR opportunity to portray itself as a champion of globalisation,” he says. “To say that China is a bastion of free trade is still a work in progress, because there are still market access issues. But China is certainly keen to play its part and step up as a regional and a global player.”

With Trump’s trade war now threatening exports from the manufacturing powerhouse, Beijing is looking to emerging technologies like Artificial Intelligence (AI) as potential sources of growth.

“Trade has been an important engine of growth for the last decade or two, but it’s clear that certain technologies have a huge potential to help us with new sources of growth and competitiveness,” said Mirek Dusek, managing director at WEF.

Accounting firm PwC says AI could boost global growth by 15% by 2035.

At the WEF event, though, tariffs are never far from the minds of business leaders, as they try to make alliances and navigate an uncertain economic environment.

In the coming weeks, Trump’s pauses on his hefty reciprocal levies are due to expire. And there’s little certainty as to how the global business landscape might look after that.

“It’s very difficult for businesses to make long term plans,” Mr Frieden explains. “If you don’t know what the level of tariffs on your goods are, you can ‘t figure out if it makes sense to relocate in the US or keep your activities overseas – whether you’re an American corporation, or a non-American corporation.”

Dozens hospitalised as heatwave descends on North America

Ali Abbas Ahmadi

BBC News
Sarah Keith-Lucas

Lead Weather Presenter
Watch: How people on the US East Coast are coping with extreme heat

Dozens of people have been hospitalised for heat-related illnesses as the summer’s first major heat wave descends on eastern North America.

More than 150 people fell ill at an outdoor school graduation ceremony in Paterson, New Jersey on Monday, according to US media, as the city’s mayor declared a state of emergency.

In Washington DC, six people needed hospital treatment during a concert by South Korean band ‘Stray Kids’, according to CBS News, the BBC’s US news partner.

Heat warnings are in effect from the US Midwest to the East Coast, as well as in parts of Ontario, Quebec and Nova Scotia in Canada, impacting more than 160 million people through the week.

Further south along the US east coast, dozens in North Carolina sought treatment for heat-related injuries.

Local news media reported at least 41 people – including children – had been hospitalized in central North Carolina.

Local authorities in New Jersey called the illnesses at a pair of graduation ceremonies a “mass casualty” incident due to how many were sickened. It led to some graduation ceremonies being cancelled in the area.

Paterson Mayor Andre Sayegh declared a state of emergency over the heat, cancelling all recreational activities in the area and opening cooling centres.

Experts warn that the soaring temperatures throughout parts of North America could aggravate the risk of heat-related illness, especially due to high humidity levels.

Compounding the danger is the extended duration of the event, with little nighttime relief – temperatures in some eastern cities may remain above 80F (27C) overnight.

The heatwave arrives less than a week after the official start of summer. Forecasters say several places may experience record highs.

The Mid-Atlantic region is expected to face the most intense conditions by Thursday, followed by the eastern Ohio Valley into Friday. Several consecutive days of oppressive heat in these areas could significantly increase health risks.

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The US National Weather Service (NWS) has warned people to “take action when you see symptoms of heat exhaustion and heat stroke”.

People are advised to stay out of the sun during the hottest times of day, drink plenty of water, and to check on vulnerable individuals, including the elderly and those with pre-existing health conditions.

Although spells of extreme heat affect many parts of North America each summer, this heatwave could surpass June records in places.

In New York, highs on Tuesday may reach 101F (38C) which would equal the highest June temperature ever recorded in the city, dating back to 1966.

Energy companies on the east coast have appealed to customers to conserve power, due to fears of blackouts, as millions crank up their air conditioning units to high.

Judge backs AI firm over use of copyrighted books

Natalie Sherman and Lucy Hooker

BBC News

A US judge has ruled that using books to train artificial intelligence (AI) software is not a violation of US copyright law.

The decision came out of a lawsuit brought last year against AI firm Anthropic by three authors, including best-selling mystery thriller writer Andrea Bartz, who accused it of stealing her work to train its Claude AI model and build a multi-billion dollar business.

In his ruling, Judge William Alsup said Anthropic’s use of the authors’ books was “exceedingly transformative” and therefore allowed under US law.

But he rejected Anthropic’s request to dismiss the case, ruling the firm would have to stand trial over its use of pirated copies to build its library of material.

Bringing the lawsuit alongside Ms Bartz, whose novels include We Were Never Here and The Last Ferry Out, were non-fiction writers Charles Graeber, author of The Good Nurse: A True Story of Medicine, Madness and Murder and Kirk Wallace Johnson who wrote The Feather Thief.

Anthropic, a firm backed by Amazon and Google’s parent company, Alphabet, could face up to $150,000 in damages per copyrighted work.

The firm holds more than seven million pirated books in a “central library” according to the judge.

The ruling is among the first to weigh in on a question that is the subject of numerous legal battles across the industry – how Large Language Models (LLMs) can legitimately learn from existing material.

“Like any reader aspiring to be a writer, Anthropic’s LLMs trained upon works, not to race ahead and replicate or supplant them — but to turn a hard corner and create something different,” Judge Alsup wrote.

“If this training process reasonably required making copies within the LLM or otherwise, those copies were engaged in a transformative use,” he said.

He noted that the authors did not claim that the training led to “infringing knockoffs” with replicas of their works being generated for users of the Claude tool.

If they had, he wrote, “this would be a different case”.

Similar legal battles have emerged over the AI industry’s use of other media and content, from journalistic articles to music and video.

This month, Disney and Universal filed a lawsuit against AI image generator Midjourney, accusing it of piracy.

The BBC is also considering legal action over the unauthorised use of its content.

In response to the legal battles, some AI companies have responded by striking deals with creators of the original materials, or their publishers, to license material for use.

Judge Alsup allowed Anthropic’s “fair use” defence, paving the way for future legal judgements.

However, he said Anthropic had violated the authors’ rights by saving pirated copies of their books as part of a “central library of all the books in the world”.

In a statement Anthropic said it was pleased by the judge’s recognition that its use of the works was transformative, but disagreed with the decision to hold a trial about how some of the books were obtained and used.

The company said it remained confident in its case, and was evaluating its options.

A lawyer for the authors declined to comment.

South Korea banned dog meat. So what happens to the dogs?

Gavin Butler & Hyunjung Kim

BBC News
Reporting fromSingapore and Seoul
Watch: BBC follows a dog meat farm rescue operation in South Korea

When he isn’t preaching the word of God, Reverend Joo Yeong-bong is raising dogs for slaughter.

Business is not going well though. In fact, it’s on the brink of becoming illegal.

“Since last summer we’ve been trying to sell our dogs, but the traders just keep hesitating,” Mr Joo, 60, tells the BBC. “Not a single one has shown up.”

In 2024, the South Korean government implemented a nationwide ban on the sale of dog meat for consumption. The landmark legislation, which was passed last January, gives farmers like Mr Joo until February 2027 to shutter their operations and sell off their remaining animals.

But many say that isn’t enough time to phase out an industry which has propped up livelihoods for generations – and that authorities still haven’t come up with adequate safeguards for farmers or the estimated half a million dogs in captivity.

Even those who support the ban, including experts and animal rights advocates, have flagged issues around its enforcement – including the difficulty of rehoming dogs that, having been saved from the kill floor, now face the increasingly likely threat of euthanasia.

Midway through the grace period, dog farmers are finding themselves with hundreds of virtually unsellable animals, farms that can’t be closed, and little means of putting food on the table.

“People are suffering,” says Mr Joo, who is also president of the Korean Association of Edible Dogs, a group representing the industry. “We’re drowning in debt, can’t pay it off, and some can’t even… find new work.

“It’s a hopeless situation.”

A storm of obstacles

Chan-woo has 18 months to get rid of 600 dogs.

After that, the 33-year-old meat farmer – who we agreed to anonymise for fear of backlash – faces a penalty of up to two years in prison.

“Realistically, even just on my farm, I can’t process the number of dogs I have in that time,” he says. “At this point I’ve invested all of my assets [into the farm] – and yet they are not even taking the dogs.”

By “they”, Chan-woo doesn’t just mean the traders and butchers who, prior to the ban, would buy an average of half a dozen dogs per week.

He’s also referring to the animal rights activists and authorities who in his view, having fought so hard to outlaw the dog meat trade, have no clear plan for what to do with the leftover animals – of which there are close to 500,000, according to government estimates.

“They [the authorities] passed the law without any real plan, and now they’re saying they can’t even take the dogs.”

Lee Sangkyung, a campaign manager at Humane World for Animals Korea (Hwak), echoes these concerns.

“Although the dog meat ban has passed, both the government and civic groups are still grappling with how to rescue the remaining dogs,” he says. “One area that still feels lacking is the discussion around the dogs that have been left behind.”

A foreign press spokesperson from the Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs (Mafra) told the BBC that if farm owners gave up their dogs, local governments would assume ownership and manage them in shelters.

Rehoming them, however, has proven challenging.

Since weight equals profit in the dog meat industry, farms tend to favour larger breeds. But in South Korea’s highly urbanised society, where many people live in apartment complexes, aspiring pet owners often want the opposite.

There is also a social stigma associated with dogs that come from meat farms, Mr Lee explains, due to concerns of disease and trauma. The issue is further complicated by the fact that many are either pure or mixed tosa-inu, a breed that is classified as “dangerous” in South Korea and requires government approval to keep as a pet.

Meanwhile, rescue shelters are already overcrowded.

This perfect storm of obstacles points to a perverse irony: that countless so-called rescue dogs, with nowhere else to go, now face the prospect of being euthanised.

“It’s just unbelievable,” says Chan-woo.

“Since the law was made according to the demands of these groups, I assumed they had also worked out a solution for the dogs – like they would take responsibility for them. But now I hear that even the animal rights groups say euthanasia is the only option.”

Cho Hee-kyung, head of the Korean Animal Welfare Association, conceded in September 2024 that while rights groups would try to rescue as many animals as possible, there would “be dogs left over”.

“If remaining dogs become ‘lost and abandoned animals’ then it’s heartbreaking but they will be euthanised,” she said.

The government sought to temper these concerns weeks later, saying that euthanising animals was “certainly” not part of their plan.

More recently, Mafra told the BBC it was investing about 6bn Korean won ($4.3m; £3.2m) annually to expand animal shelters and support private facilities, and would offer up to 600,000 Korean won per dog ($450; £324) to farmers who shut their businesses early.

Hwak, however, says they have lobbied Mafra “hard” to have a clear rescue component in its phase-out plan.

They also point out that, while Hwak has rehomed almost 2,800 dogs from South Korean meat farms since 2015, animal welfare charities shouldn’t be expected to absorb the huge number that have proliferated over the years.

Chun Myung-Sun, director of the Office of Veterinary Medical Education at Seoul National University, agrees that the government’s plan for leftover dogs is largely lacking.

“There needs to be a concrete discussion about how to ‘dispose’ of the dogs,” she says.

“Both adoption and euthanasia should be on the table. [But] if we’ve gone to the effort of rescuing dogs from cruel slaughter only to euthanise them, it’s understandable that people would feel heartbroken and angry.”

A livelihood unravels

Some have looked for solutions further afield, sending the animals overseas to more willing adopters in countries like Canada, United Kingdom and the United States.

In 2023, a team from Hwak rescued some 200 dogs from a farm in Asan city – all of which have since been sent to Canada and the US.

The former owner of that farm, 74-year-old Yang Jong-tae, told the BBC that as he watched the rescuers loading his dogs into their trucks, he was astonished by the level of compassion they showed.

“When I saw how they handled the animals – like they were handling people, so gently and lovingly – it really moved me,” he said.

“We don’t treat them like that. For us, raising dogs was just a way to make a living. But those people from the animal group treated the dogs like they were individuals with dignity, and that really touched my heart.”

Mr Yang hastened to add, however, that he disapproves of the ban on dog meat farming.

“If dog meat is banned because dogs are animals, then why is it okay to eat other animals like cows, pigs or chicken?” he said. “It’s the same thing. These things exist in nature for people to live on.”

Eating dog is not the same as eating other meats, according to Ms Chun. She points out that dog meat carries more risk from a food safety and hygiene perspective – especially in South Korea, where it has not been integrated into the formal, regulated meat production system.

The meat is also consumed in countries such as China, Indonesia, Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar, parts of northeastern India and several countries in Africa, according to Humane World for Animals.

But while consumption rates have fluctuated throughout Korea’s history, it has become increasingly taboo in South Korea in recent years.

A government poll from 2024 found only 8% of respondents said they had tried dog meat in the previous 12 months – down from 27% in 2015. About 7% said they would keep eating it up until February 2027, and about 3.3% said they would continue after the ban came into full effect.

Since the ban was announced, 623 of South Korea’s 1,537 dog farms have closed.

“As society and culture have evolved, South Korean society has now made the decision to stop producing dog meat,” Ms Chun says.

And yet for many it remains the cornerstone of an industry on which they’ve built their lives.

Every member of the dog meat trade the BBC spoke to expressed uncertainty about how they would support themselves now that their longtime livelihood has been deemed illegal.

Some say they have resigned themselves to lives of poverty, noting that they were born during the Korean War and knew how to live hungry. Others suggested that the trade could go underground.

Many agree, however, that for younger farmers the crackdown is particularly worrying.

“Young people in this industry are really facing a bleak reality,” Mr Joo says. “Since they can’t sell the dogs, they can’t shut down quickly either. They’re stuck, with no way forward or back.”

Chan-woo recalls that when he started working in the industry a decade ago, at 23, “The perception of dog meat wasn’t that negative”.

“Still,” he adds, “There were some comments from people around me, so even back then I was aware that it wasn’t something I could do for the rest of my life.”

The ban came quicker than he expected – and since its announcement, he says, “Making a living has become incredibly uncertain”.

“All we’re hoping for now is that the grace period can be extended so that the process [of dealing with the remaining dogs] can happen more gradually.”

Many others are hoping for the same. But as the dog meat industry is pulled out from under the feet of those who’ve come to depend upon it, Mr Joo can’t help but speculate on a grim thought: that some farmers may not be able to endure the uncertainty for much longer.

“Right now, people are still holding on, hoping something might change – maybe the grace period will be extended,” he says. “But by 2027, I truly believe something terrible will happen.

“There are so many people whose lives have completely unravelled.”

Left-wing Democrat stuns former governor in NY mayor primary

Nada Tawfik

New York correspondent
Watch: How Mamdani and Cuomo responded to shock primary result

A young left-wing candidate, Zohran Mamdani, is poised to become the Democratic nominee for New York mayor after delivering a stunning political upset.

The 33-year-old democratic socialist declared victory in the party’s primary on Tuesday, defeating his main rival and political veteran Andrew Cuomo who previously served as state governor.

“Tonight we made history,” Mamdani said in his victory speech. If elected, he would be the first Muslim and Indian American to lead the nation’s largest city.

Cuomo, 67, was attempting to pull off a comeback after resigning from office in 2021 over a sexual harassment scandal. He congratulated his opponent for a “really smart and great campaign”.

The primary in staunchly liberal New York is likely to determine who becomes mayor in November’s election.

The contest was being watched as a litmus test for the Democratic Party as it seeks to hone its messaging after election losses last November that saw President Donald Trump’s Republicans win the White House and both chambers in Congress.

Results on Tuesday night showed Mamdani with a commanding lead, but falling short of the 50% threshold needed to win outright.

  • Who is Zohran Mamdani?

Cuomo’s concession was unexpected because counting looks likely to continue next week under the ranked choice system, which allowed New Yorkers to pick up to five candidates in order of preference.

The former governor’s loss marks the “biggest upset in modern NYC history,” Trip Yang, a political strategist, told the BBC.

“A massive win for Zohran Mamdani that shows that when Donald Trump is President, New York Democrats want to see their leaders fight with enthusiasm and courage, and that’s what Zohran showed voters.”

In an interview with the New York Times, Cuomo said he was still examining whether he would run in the general election in November on the independent line.

“I said he won the primary election,” Cuomo told the outlet. “I said I wanted to look at the numbers and the ranked-choice voting to decide about what to do in the future, because I’m also on an independent line.”

Cuomo was seen as a moderate and the establishment favourite, known across the country after his governorship during the Covid pandemic.

Mamdani is a millennial outsider who was fairly unknown until recently.

Born in Uganda, his family moved to New York City when he was seven. He has posted one campaign video entirely in Urdu and mixed in Bollywood film clips. In another, he speaks Spanish.

Mamdani’s strong support of Palestinians and criticism of Israel put him at odds with most of the Democratic establishment.

He went viral during his campaign for videos where he talked to New York voters who swung for Trump in the November election.

He asked what issues led them to cast their ballots for the Republican candidate and what it would take for them to swing Democrat.

Mamdani’s platform includes free public buses, universal childcare, freezing rent in subsidised units, and city-run grocery stores – all paid for by new taxes on the rich.

“This is a city where one in four of its people are living in poverty, a city where 500,000 kids go to sleep hungry every night,” he told the BBC at a recent event.

“And ultimately, it’s a city that is in danger of losing that which it makes it so special.”

Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio Cortez and Senator Bernie Sanders, also democratic socialists, endorsed Mamdani during his campaign.

Follow the twists and turns of Trump’s second term with North America correspondent Anthony Zurcher’s weekly US Politics Unspun newsletter. Readers in the UK can sign up here. Those outside the UK can sign up here.

Eurostar passengers face severe delays after cable theft

Alex Boyd & Simon Browning

BBC News

Eurostar passengers are facing a second day of severe delays after two people died on the railway track in France and then cables were stolen.

The high-speed rail operators says repairs are complete and the railway line is open again, but delays will last until the end of the day.

Eurostar said passengers should postpone their journey, after the disruption saw services cancelled and delayed in both directions on lines connecting London with Paris, Brussels and Amsterdam.

Eurostar said there was already knock-on disruption on Wednesday after two people died in separate incidents on the LGV Nord line on Tuesday, but services were further impacted after cable was stolen on the same line.

The theft near Lille, which French media said was of around 600 metres of copper cables, caused trains to be rerouted, leading to extended journey times.

Further cancellations are not expected on Wednesday now that the railway line is repaired.

Eurostar said that so far, five trains between London and Paris have been cancelled.

It added that impacted passengers can change their travel plans for free or request a full refund.

“We’re very sorry for the impact this is having on our customers,” Eurostar said in a statement.

“Our teams are working closely with the French authorities and infrastructure teams to manage the situation and restore services safely.”

The operator earlier said one track had reopened, allowing some trains to run in both directions until full repairs were completed.

Water is being handed out to passengers onboard delayed trains, and stations are also very busy.

Hundreds of people are queuing at London’s St Pancras International railway station trying to access the service centre to rebook onto other trains.

Elizabeth Romijn, a yoga teacher from the Netherlands, told PA news agency at St Pancras that the situation was “very chaotic” and people were having to sit on the ground because there were not enough chairs.

The 75-year-old was planning to travel home to Brussels after visiting friends in Surrey.

“My plan is to just wait. Maybe I should go and be more proactive and go to ask one of the staff but nobody seems to know anything,” she said, adding that “it’s quite horrible long queues.”

The railway line in France was closed for much of the afternoon and evening on Tuesday after the two fatalities between Lille and Paris.

Services were cancelled on routes to and from Paris while trains between London, Brussels and Amsterdam ran with delays.

Eurostar said disruption continued into Wednesday as trains and crew were displaced.

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Sexcam industry recruited us while we were schoolgirls, say models

Sofia Bettiza

World Service, Global Health Reporter
Reporting fromMedellín, Colombia 

One afternoon, as Isabella left school for the day, someone thrust a leaflet into her hand. “Do you want to make money with your beauty?” it asked.

She says a studio looking for models seemed to be targeting teenage pupils in her area in Bogotá, Colombia’s capital.

At 17, with a two-year-old son to support, she desperately needed money, so went along to find out more.

She says when she got there, it was a sexcam studio, run by a couple in a house in a run-down neighbourhood – it had eight rooms decorated like bedrooms.

Studios range from small, low-budget operations to large businesses with individual rooms set up with lights, computers, webcams and an internet connection. Models perform sexual acts which are streamed to viewers around the world, who message them and make requests via intermediaries, also known as monitors.

The next day Isabella, whose real name we are not using, says she started work – even though it is illegal in Colombia for studios to employ webcam models under 18.

She told the BBC World Service there was no written contract detailing how much she would be paid or what her rights were. “They had me streaming without teaching me anything. They said, ’Here’s the camera, let’s go.'”

Isabella says the studio soon suggested she do a livestream from school, so as classmates around her were learning English, she quietly took out her phone and started to film herself at her desk.

She describes how viewers began to ask her to perform specific sexual acts, so she asked her teacher for permission to go to the toilet and, locked in a cubicle, did what the customers had requested.

Her teacher had no idea what was happening, “so I started doing it from other classes”, says Isabella. “I  kept thinking, ‘It’s for my child. I’m doing it for him.’ That gave me the strength.”

Recycled accounts and fake IDs

The global sexcam industry is booming.

The number of monthly views of webcam platforms globally has more than tripled since 2017, reaching nearly 1.3 billion, in April 2025, according to analytics firm Semrush.

Colombia is now estimated to have more models than any other country – 400,000 – and 12,000 sexcam studios, according to Fenalweb, an organisation representing the country’s adult webcam sector.

These studios film performers and feed the content to global webcam platforms, which broadcast to millions of paying viewers around the world who make requests of models, give tips and buy them gifts.

Many of the models who work in studios do so because they lack privacy, equipment or a stable internet connection at home – often if they’re poor or young and still living with parents.

Performers told the BBC that studios often try to attract people with the promise of making easy money in a country where a third of the population lives in poverty.

  • Listen to Colombia’s webcam women on BBC Sounds and watch the documentary on YouTube

Models explained that while some studios are well run and offer performers technical and other support, abuse is rife at unscrupulous operators.

And Colombia’s President, Gustavo Petro, has described studio owners as “slave masters” who trick women and girls, like Isabella, into believing they can earn good money.

The four biggest webcam platforms that stream material from the studios, BongaCams, Chaturbate, LiveJasmin and StripChat, which are based in Europe and the United States, have checks that are supposed to ensure performers are 18 or older. EU and US laws prohibit the distribution of sexually explicit material involving anyone under 18.

But models told the BBC these checks are too easily sidestepped if a studio wants to employ under-age girls.

They say one way of doing this is to “recycle” old accounts of models who are of legal age but no longer perform, and give them to under-age girls.

Isabella says this is how she was able to appear on both Chaturbate and StripChat when she was 17.

“The studio owner said it was no problem that I was under-age,” Isabella, now 18, says.  “She used the account of another woman, and then I started working under that identity.”

Other models the BBC spoke to say they were given fake IDs by studios. One, Keiny, says this enabled her to appear on BongaCams when she was 17.

Milley Achinte, a BongaCams representative in Colombia, told the BBC they do not allow under-18s to perform and they shut accounts that break this rule. She added that the platform checks IDs on a Colombian government website and if a “model contacts us and we are aware that the model left the studio, we give them their password so they can close their account”.

In a statement, Chaturbate said it has “categorically” stopped the use of fake IDs, and models must regularly submit live images of themselves standing next to government-issued photo IDs, which are checked digitally and manually. It said it has “an average of one reviewer to fewer than 10 broadcasters” and any attempt to recycle accounts “would be unsuccessful” because “the age verification process continues as each and every broadcast is constantly reviewed and checked”.

StripChat also sent a statement saying it has a “zero-tolerance policy regarding under-age models” and that performers “must undergo a thorough age verification process”, adding that its in-house moderation team works with third-party verification services to “validate models’ identities”.

It said that recycled accounts cannot be used on its platform, and recent changes to its rules mean that the account holder must be present on every stream. “So, if a model moves to a new account to work independently, the original account tied to them becomes inactive and unusable by the studio.”

LiveJasmin did not respond to the BBC’s requests for comment.

Viewers ‘like it when you look young’

Keiny is now 20 and works from her bedroom at home in Medellín – streaming through another studio which provides a route to big international platforms.

And if it wasn’t for the high-tech equipment – several ring lights, a camera, and a large screen – this could pass for a child’s room. There are about a dozen stuffed animals, pink unicorns and teddy bears.

Viewers “really like it when you look young”, she says.

“Sometimes I think that’s problematic. Some clients ask that you act like an actual child, and that’s not OK.”

She says she got into the business to help her family financially after her parents decided to divorce.

Her father knows what she’s doing and she says he’s supportive.

Looking back, Keiny thinks she was too young when she started at the age of 17, but even so, she isn’t critical of her former employers.

Instead, she believes they helped her into a job which she says now earns her about $2,000 (£1,500) a month – far more than the minimum wage in Colombia, which is about $300 (£225) a month.

“Thanks to this job, I’m helping my mum, my dad, and my sister – my whole family,” she says.

That point of view is echoed by the studios – some of which are keen to demonstrate they look after their performers.

We visited one of the biggest, AJ Studios, where we were introduced to an in-house psychologist, employed to support models’ mental health. We were also shown a spa which offers pedicures, massages, botox and lip fillers at a “discount” or as prizes for “employees of the month” who may be high earners or people who are collaborative and support fellow models.

Fined for a toilet break

But as the country’s president has pointed out, not every performer is treated well or makes good money. And the industry is waiting to see if his new labour law will pave the way for tighter regulations.

Models and studios told the BBC that streaming platforms typically take 50% of the fees paid by viewers, studios take 20-30%, and the models get what’s left. This means that if a show makes $100 (£75), the model would usually get between $20 (£15) and $30 (£22). They explained that unscrupulous studios often take much more.

Models say there have been times when they logged on for sessions of up to eight hours and made as little as $5 (£4) – which can happen if a performance doesn’t have many viewers.

Others say they have been pressured into streaming for up to 18 hours without breaks and fined for stopping to eat or go to the toilet.

These accounts are supported by a report from the campaign group Human Rights Watch, published in December 2024. The author, Erin Kilbride, who did additional research on this story for the BBC, found some people were being filmed in cramped, dirty cubicles infested with bedbugs and cockroaches and were being coerced into performing sexual acts they found painful and degrading.

Sofi, a mother-of-two from Medellín, had been a waitress in a nightclub but, fed up with being insulted by customers, moved into webcam modelling.

But the 26-year-old says a studio she worked for pressured her into carrying out painful and degrading sexual acts, including performing with three other girls.

She explains that these requests were made by customers and agreed to by studio monitors – the staff employed to act as intermediaries between models and viewers.

Sofi says she told the studio she didn’t want to perform these acts, “but they said I had no choice”.

“In the end, I had to do it because it was either that, or they would ban my account,” she adds, explaining that means her account would effectively be closed down.

Sofi continues working in webcam studios because she says a typical salary in Colombia would not be enough to support her and her two children. She is now saving to start a law degree.

It’s not just Colombia that is facing these issues, says Erin Kilbride.

She found that between them, the big four streaming platforms also broadcast material from studios in 10 more countries – Bulgaria, Canada, the Czech Republic, Hungary, India, Romania, Russia, South Africa, Ukraine, and the US.

And she says she identified “gaps in platform policies and protocols that facilitate or exacerbate human rights abuses”.

When we asked platforms about conditions at the studios they stream, Milley Achinte from BongaCams said she is part of a team of eight women who visit some studios in Colombia “making sure that the models are getting paid, that the rooms are clean, that models are not getting violated”.

StripChat and Chaturbate do not visit studios and said they are not direct employers of performers and therefore do not intervene in the terms set between studios and models. But they both told us they are committed to a safe working environment. StripChat also said it expects studios to ensure “respectful and comfortable working conditions”.

BongaCams, StripChat and Chaturbate all said they have teams to intervene if they believe a model is being forced or coerced to do something.

‘They deceived me’

After two months of waking up at 05:00 to juggle webcamming, secondary school, and caring for her son, Isabella says she was eager to receive her first payment.

But after the platform and the studio took their cut, Isabella explains she was paid just 174,000 Colombian pesos ($42; £31) – far less than she expected. She believes that the studio paid her a much lower percentage than agreed and also stole most of her earnings.

The money was a pittance, she says, adding that she used some of it to buy milk and nappies.  “They deceived me.”

Isabella, who is still at school, only worked as a webcam model for a few months before quitting.

The way she says she was treated at such a young age left her deeply traumatised. She couldn’t stop crying, so her mother arranged for her to see a psychologist.

She and six other former employees of the studio have got together to file an official complaint with the state prosecutor’s office. Collectively, they have accused the studio of exploitation of minors, labour exploitation and economic abuse.

“There are video recordings of me still online, under-age,” she says, explaining she feels powerless when it comes to trying to get them removed. “It’s affected me a lot and I don’t want to think about it any more.”

Hear more on Assignment on BBC Sounds

Damaged or destroyed – how much does leaked US report on Iran’s nuclear sites tell us?

Gordon Corera

Security analyst@gordoncorera

The site of Fordo is probably the most spied-on place on the planet.

Western intelligence first went public in 2009 that it was home to a secret nuclear facility and now understanding the damage done by US strikes will be vital in determining where the conflict goes next.

A leaked Defence Intelligence Agency (DIA) assessment has suggested the core components of Iran’s nuclear programme have not been destroyed and the strikes only set back Iran’s efforts by months rather than years.

But that is only an initial assessment and labelled as “low confidence” – the tag comes because it is early days in trying to understand what happened at a place which is deliberately hidden from prying eyes.

The DIA is the Pentagon’s own agency which specialises on military intelligence to support operations. It collects large amounts of technical intelligence but is distinct from other agencies like the CIA.

“Final battle damage will take some time,” Chairman of the Joint Chiefs General Dan Caine said in the immediate aftermath. But what does it mean to destroy or damage the programme and how do you find out?

Satellite images of holes and dust reveal little about what really happened underground. And they do not suggest massive subsidence or a cave-in of the mountain.

That likely indicates that even though the US used multiple bombs, the Iranians used enough reinforced concrete to keep them from reaching the main hall and destroying the machinery inside. It was the first time these bombs had been used operationally, which adds to the uncertainty.

Even so, the centrifuge machines, which spin at high speeds to enrich uranium, are highly sensitive which means the explosion will likely have crashed many of them by sending them spinning off their axis.

Developing a clearer picture of the damage will require other forms of intelligence – ranging from seismic detectors which can analyse the depth and magnitude of underground explosions (also used to understand earthquakes), sniffers to look for radiation (which international inspectors say they have not seen), and sensors like LIDAR (light detection and ranging) which can provide 3D maps using laser pulses from aircraft or drones to try and look inside the mountain.

Informers and intercepted communications will also be vital as they may reveal Iranians discussing the damage and its implications. All of that will be constantly updated to provide the final assessment with a higher degree of confidence.

And even if the sites like Fordo were dealt serious damage and made unusable for the moment, as US officials have claimed, that is different from saying it is the end of Iran’s overall programme. That is because it could be reconstituted at new sites.

A fleet of lorries was seen at Fordo just before the attack and the crucial question is what they were moving and where it has gone.

All the indications are that Tehran moved its stock of highly enriched uranium to another location. Another mountain known as “pickaxe” has drawn international attention and Iran may also have moved some of the centrifuges, although almost certainly not enough to make progress at the speed it could have done before the attack.

And even when you have enough highly enriched uranium there are more stages required in making a bomb through weaponisation and developing a delivery system. Those require a level of extremely high specialist scientific knowledge. And one of Israel’s most notable actions at the start of the conflict was to kill scientists involved in the programme in the hope of lengthening the timeline.

The attack will have certainly put back Iran’s programme. But by how much? Any answer depends on working out what remains after the attacks and is inevitably going to be an estimate rather than a hard figure.

All of this means that the work of intelligence agencies in trying to understand Iran’s nuclear programme is going to become even more intense in the coming months. And if the signs are Tehran is secretly reconstituting the programme or racing for a bomb then the conflict is likely to begin again.

British man charged over mock Disneyland wedding to child had been investigated by BBC

Noel Titheradge

Investigations Correspondent, BBC@NoelTitheradge

The British paedophile charged in connection with organising a “mock wedding” to a child in Disneyland Paris is Jacky Jhaj, who was found guilty of sexual activity with two 15-year-olds in 2016, the BBC understands.

Jhaj, 39, has been charged in connection with organising the fake ceremony on Saturday, in which a nine-year-old Ukrainian girl was due to feature as his bride.

He was arrested when police were called on Saturday morning by an actor who said he had been hired by Jhaj to play the father of the bride.

The BBC has previously investigated how Jhaj was able to hire hundreds of children to act as his fawning fans at a fake film premiere in London’s Leicester Square in 2023.

Some of the children, who had been hired from casting agencies, were as young as six.

Teenage girls told the BBC that they had been asked to scream for him and try to touch him, without being told his real identity by the agencies.

Watch: Jacky Jhaj greets a crowd of fans, played by actors, at a fake film premiere in London

Then in June last year, Jhaj was seen giving gifts to children outside dance auditions for another production – he was recognised by a parent who had seen the BBC article.

Two months later, and following the BBC’s further investigation, Jhaj was filmed posing naked in front of a mocked-up BBC News lorry in London which had been set on fire.

For the mock wedding at Disneyland Paris, which was to be filmed by Jhaj’s team, around 100 French extras had been recruited to take part.

The BBC understands that he appeared in front of a judge in Meaux, north-east of Paris, on Monday and was charged with fraud, breach of trust, money laundering, and identity theft and placed in pretrial detention.

Preliminary findings also stated that he had allegedly been “made-up professionally so that his face appeared totally different from his own”, according to the French prosecutor.

Jhaj has been on the sex offenders register since 2016 and has spent time in prison. He is subject to restrictions on his freedoms under the terms of a Sexual Harm Prevention Order.

Since he was released from prison, he has repeatedly staged productions involving children or young people.

BBC News can reveal that some videos of these productions were uploaded to a YouTube account styled as an official performer’s channel.

The account received more than six million views and had over 12 million subscribers.

A video on a different channel included secretly filmed footage of one of the 15-year-old victims he was convicted of sexually exploiting.

Her family has told the BBC that Jhaj “destroyed” her life and said it’s unacceptable that YouTube allowed the video to be watched for entertainment for four years.

Videos of the productions remained on YouTube for years until last September, when the BBC alerted Google, which owns the platform.

It told the BBC at the time that it takes users’ safety seriously, but offered no explanation as to how an account featuring a man with almost no profile or success had 12 million subscribers, or why the videos were not removed.

Over the past two years, the BBC has spoken to videographers, production assistants and technicians who worked on some of the events before they discovered Jhaj’s real identity.

Their records show that the cost of hiring casts and venues has run into hundreds of thousands of pounds.

The cost of hiring the area in front of the Odeon cinema in London’s Leicester Square, which hosts red carpet events for major Hollywood premieres, would have run into tens of thousands of pounds.

French outlet BFMTV reported that the fake wedding at Disneyland may have cost organisers more than €130,000 (£110,000).

It remains unclear how these elaborate productions have been funded.

The French prosecutor said the Ukrainian girl arrived in France two days before the Disneyland event – but had not been a victim of either physical or sexual violence and had not been “forced to play the role” of a bride.

The prosecutor’s statement also said that Disneyland Paris had been “deceived” and that the organiser had used a fake Latvian ID to hire the venue. Disneyland Paris can be rented by members of the public outside opening hours.

In a statement, the UK’s Metropolitan Police said:

“A 39-year-old man is wanted by the Met Police for breaching a Sexual Harm Prevention Order and a breach of a Sex Offenders’ Register notification requirement.

“We are aware the man has been arrested in France for other matters and officers are in contact with the French authorities.”

Man guilty of murdering boy with sword in Hainault

Bethan Bell

BBC News
Lucy Manning

BBC News
Reporting fromOld Bailey
The court was shown footage of Marcus Monzo unboxing a sword he had bought online

A man has been found guilty of murdering 14-year-old schoolboy Daniel Anjorin with a samurai sword in Hainault last year.

Marcus Monzo, 37, has also been found guilty of three counts of attempted murder, wounding with intent and possession of an offensive weapon.

He gave no reaction in court as the verdicts were read out and the judge said he would face a life term when he returns to court for sentencing on Friday.

Daniel’s father, who was in court to hear the verdict, did not react as Monzo was found guilty of murdering his son.

Monzo, of Satanita Close, Canning Town, was cleared of one count of attempted murder but found guilty of the lesser offence of wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm.

The attacks took just 20 minutes on the morning of 30 April 2024.

Witnesses described the former Amazon delivery driver screaming “in delight” and smiling after fatally wounding Daniel, who had been walking to school in his PE kit.

As well as killing Daniel, Monzo, who had a blue belt in Brazilian jiu jitsu, also attacked a pedestrian, two police officers and a couple in their own home before he was arrested by police.

Monzo had gone into a cannabis-induced psychosis before the attack, and had killed and skinned his pet cat before heading to Hainault, north-east London.

Afterwards, Monzo likened events to the Hollywood film The Hunger Games and claimed to have an alternative persona of a “professional assassin”.

Giving evidence at his trial, he said he had no memory of what happened and claimed his mental state had diminished his responsibility for the crimes.

However, the prosecution argued that psychosis brought on by self-induced intoxication was no defence for murder.

A compilation of CCTV and body-worn camera footage of the attack as it unfolded

Monzo, a dual Spanish-Brazilian national, who was living in Newham, east London, had liked posts on X that praised Nazi leader Adolf Hitler.

Over a year, Monzo’s X account also liked references to various antisemitic conspiracy theories and misogynistic Incel material.

At his Old Bailey trial, Monzo had told jurors he believed the world was flat and that the 9/11 terrorist attack in New York was “probably” a conspiracy theory.

In a reference to another conspiracy, Monzo posted: “I live in London. Here everybody will agree that the city is GREY. And the reason is BECAUSE they spray the sky ALL DAY, EVERY DAY.”

Speaking outside the court, Ch Supt Stuart Bell from the Met Police said: “First in our thoughts is Daniel Anjorin – a talented, gentle, bright young man.

“A much-loved son and brother, brutally murdered simply walking to school at what should have been the start of a normal day at the start of a promising life.

“There are no words, really, to express how sorry we are for [the Anjorin family’s] loss or how much admiration we have for your courage and dignity.

“It is hard to comprehend the unimaginable pain that you must have suffered in the last year.

“I can only hope today’s verdict brings some semblance of justice and relief, and you are now able to grieve in some peace.

“Our thoughts remain with all those who have been impacted by this terrible incident.”

Ch Supt Bell said Monzo had a clear intention to kill: “It didn’t matter who they were and sadly, he targeted Daniel in a cowardly and brutal attack.

“A number of other local people were also attacked, seriously injured and threatened that day – and I would like to acknowledge their bravery and resilience in giving evidence in this case.

“As we heard in court, police officers and paramedics were on the scene within minutes of Monzo assaulting Daniel.

“I am in no doubt that the actions of those officers who arrived to pursue and attempt to detain Monzo saved lives and prevented more harm.

“I commend them for their extraordinary bravery – some setting out to deal with that call before their shift had even begun.”

‘Debt of gratitude’

Kirsty O’Connor, from the Crown Prosecution Service, CPS, said their “hearts go out” to Daniel Anjorin’s family and friends who have suffered “his unimaginable loss in horrific circumstances”.

“Our thoughts remain with all of the victims who continue to recover from their injuries and trauma,” she said.

She also paid tribute to the police officers and emergency workers who put their own personal safety at risk in the line of duty.

“The courage shown undoubtedly prevented further loss of life.

“We all owe them a debt of gratitude.”

PM defends leadership amid growing welfare rebellion

Kate Whannel

Political reporter
Sam Francis

Political reporter

Sir Keir Starmer has defended his leadership as he confirmed the government will push ahead with a vote on welfare reforms, in spite of a large number of Labour MPs opposing the measures.

Despite efforts to stop a growing rebellion, more than 120 Labour backbenchers have signed an amendment calling for the proposals to be scrapped, making an embarrassing defeat for the government possible.

The prime minister insisted the Labour party was “pretty united” on the principle of reforming the welfare system and brushed off criticism as “noises off”.

His comments came after Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner told MPs a vote on the government’s welfare bill will go ahead as planned on Tuesday.

Speaking to the media at a Nato summit in the Hague on Wednesday, Sir Keir acknowledged that making reforms to welfare was “tough going” but “the important thing is to focus on the change that we want to bring about”.

He said: “Are there plenty of people and noises off? Yes of course – there always are, there always have been, there always will be.”

Asked whether he had misjudged the handling of the welfare row because he did not understand his own party, Sir Keir said: “Many people predicted before the election that we ‘couldn’t read the room’ we ‘hadn’t got the politics right’ we ‘wouldn’t win an election after 2019’ because we lost so badly.

“We got a landslide victory. So I’m comfortable with reading the room and delivering the change the country needs.”

He argued that the current welfare system “doesn’t work as it stands for people who desperately need help to get into work or for people who need protection”.

“We were elected in to change that which is broken, and that’s what we will do, and that’s why we will press ahead with reforms,” he added.

Earlier in the House of Commons, Rayner had told MPs “we won’t walk way and stand by and abandon millions of people trapped in a failing system”.

She accused the Conservatives of having “no plans and no idea” on welfare policy.

Shadow chancellor Sir Mel Stride asked Rayner if she could defend the bill and explain why she thought so many of her own colleagues were “wrong”.

Rayner replied that the bill would help people into work, and end eligibility reassessments for the severely disabled.

With the prime minister at the Nato summit, Rayner and Sir Mel were standing in for their respective leaders at the weekly question session.

The government’s Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill changes who would qualify for certain disability and sickness benefits.

Ministers have said the bill is crucial to slow down the increase in the number of people claiming benefits.

However, Labour critics of the bill have argued there has not been sufficient assessments of the impact of the measures, which they say will push large numbers into poverty.

Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch has said her party could be prepared to back the bill providing the government can guarantee it would reduce the welfare budget and get more people into work, without raising taxes – a list of conditions which the government would be unlikely to accede to.

Both Rayner and Sir Keir have now insisted they will push ahead with the welfare changes – however, as it stands, the numbers look difficult for the government and over the last few days senior ministers have been ringing round Labour MPs convincing them to back the bill.

So far, only one Labour MP, Samantha Niblett, has taken her name off the list of MPs supporting the amendment.

It is still up to the Speaker of the House of Commons Sir Lindsay Hoyle whether this specific amendment gets voted on, but that could now be more likely as a number of other MPs from parties including the SDLP and the DUP have also added their names to the list.

Given the level of opposition to the bill from the Labour ranks, there had been speculation the government will be forced to pull the vote in order to avoid a defeat.

Asked by Sir Mel if this was the case, Rayner replied unequivocally: “We will go ahead on Tuesday.”

Stride said Labour backbenchers had “heard that before” with the winter fuel payment, making reference to the government’s U-turn last month.

He then repeated his leader’s offer to the government to back their bill and save them from defeat, as long as ministers could commit to reducing the overall welfare bill.

Rayner responded with an attack on Sir Mel, who served as work and pensions secretary in the previous Conservative government.

“He demands further welfare savings, from the man who was in charge, as the welfare bill absolutely ballooned. They say cut welfare bill – they failed.”

Sir Mel said the government’s bill would fail to stop the number of claimants from rising and that tax rises in the autumn were “inevitable”.

He asked Rayner if she could rule out tax increases. She said the criticism was “a bit rich” coming from a party that had introduced “the biggest tax rises”.

During the debate, Liberal Democrat deputy leader Daisy Cooper asked Rayner for a guarantee that “not a single person would lose a penny” until the review into Carer’s Allowance overpayment had been completed and the recommendations implemented.

The review was announced after more than 134,000 carers were forced to pay back thousands of pounds in over payments.

Rayner said the government was “taking steps” on the issue.

South Korea banned dog meat. So what happens to the dogs?

Gavin Butler & Hyunjung Kim

BBC News
Reporting fromSingapore and Seoul
Watch: BBC follows a dog meat farm rescue operation in South Korea

When he isn’t preaching the word of God, Reverend Joo Yeong-bong is raising dogs for slaughter.

Business is not going well though. In fact, it’s on the brink of becoming illegal.

“Since last summer we’ve been trying to sell our dogs, but the traders just keep hesitating,” Mr Joo, 60, tells the BBC. “Not a single one has shown up.”

In 2024, the South Korean government implemented a nationwide ban on the sale of dog meat for consumption. The landmark legislation, which was passed last January, gives farmers like Mr Joo until February 2027 to shutter their operations and sell off their remaining animals.

But many say that isn’t enough time to phase out an industry which has propped up livelihoods for generations – and that authorities still haven’t come up with adequate safeguards for farmers or the estimated half a million dogs in captivity.

Even those who support the ban, including experts and animal rights advocates, have flagged issues around its enforcement – including the difficulty of rehoming dogs that, having been saved from the kill floor, now face the increasingly likely threat of euthanasia.

Midway through the grace period, dog farmers are finding themselves with hundreds of virtually unsellable animals, farms that can’t be closed, and little means of putting food on the table.

“People are suffering,” says Mr Joo, who is also president of the Korean Association of Edible Dogs, a group representing the industry. “We’re drowning in debt, can’t pay it off, and some can’t even… find new work.

“It’s a hopeless situation.”

A storm of obstacles

Chan-woo has 18 months to get rid of 600 dogs.

After that, the 33-year-old meat farmer – who we agreed to anonymise for fear of backlash – faces a penalty of up to two years in prison.

“Realistically, even just on my farm, I can’t process the number of dogs I have in that time,” he says. “At this point I’ve invested all of my assets [into the farm] – and yet they are not even taking the dogs.”

By “they”, Chan-woo doesn’t just mean the traders and butchers who, prior to the ban, would buy an average of half a dozen dogs per week.

He’s also referring to the animal rights activists and authorities who in his view, having fought so hard to outlaw the dog meat trade, have no clear plan for what to do with the leftover animals – of which there are close to 500,000, according to government estimates.

“They [the authorities] passed the law without any real plan, and now they’re saying they can’t even take the dogs.”

Lee Sangkyung, a campaign manager at Humane World for Animals Korea (Hwak), echoes these concerns.

“Although the dog meat ban has passed, both the government and civic groups are still grappling with how to rescue the remaining dogs,” he says. “One area that still feels lacking is the discussion around the dogs that have been left behind.”

A foreign press spokesperson from the Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs (Mafra) told the BBC that if farm owners gave up their dogs, local governments would assume ownership and manage them in shelters.

Rehoming them, however, has proven challenging.

Since weight equals profit in the dog meat industry, farms tend to favour larger breeds. But in South Korea’s highly urbanised society, where many people live in apartment complexes, aspiring pet owners often want the opposite.

There is also a social stigma associated with dogs that come from meat farms, Mr Lee explains, due to concerns of disease and trauma. The issue is further complicated by the fact that many are either pure or mixed tosa-inu, a breed that is classified as “dangerous” in South Korea and requires government approval to keep as a pet.

Meanwhile, rescue shelters are already overcrowded.

This perfect storm of obstacles points to a perverse irony: that countless so-called rescue dogs, with nowhere else to go, now face the prospect of being euthanised.

“It’s just unbelievable,” says Chan-woo.

“Since the law was made according to the demands of these groups, I assumed they had also worked out a solution for the dogs – like they would take responsibility for them. But now I hear that even the animal rights groups say euthanasia is the only option.”

Cho Hee-kyung, head of the Korean Animal Welfare Association, conceded in September 2024 that while rights groups would try to rescue as many animals as possible, there would “be dogs left over”.

“If remaining dogs become ‘lost and abandoned animals’ then it’s heartbreaking but they will be euthanised,” she said.

The government sought to temper these concerns weeks later, saying that euthanising animals was “certainly” not part of their plan.

More recently, Mafra told the BBC it was investing about 6bn Korean won ($4.3m; £3.2m) annually to expand animal shelters and support private facilities, and would offer up to 600,000 Korean won per dog ($450; £324) to farmers who shut their businesses early.

Hwak, however, says they have lobbied Mafra “hard” to have a clear rescue component in its phase-out plan.

They also point out that, while Hwak has rehomed almost 2,800 dogs from South Korean meat farms since 2015, animal welfare charities shouldn’t be expected to absorb the huge number that have proliferated over the years.

Chun Myung-Sun, director of the Office of Veterinary Medical Education at Seoul National University, agrees that the government’s plan for leftover dogs is largely lacking.

“There needs to be a concrete discussion about how to ‘dispose’ of the dogs,” she says.

“Both adoption and euthanasia should be on the table. [But] if we’ve gone to the effort of rescuing dogs from cruel slaughter only to euthanise them, it’s understandable that people would feel heartbroken and angry.”

A livelihood unravels

Some have looked for solutions further afield, sending the animals overseas to more willing adopters in countries like Canada, United Kingdom and the United States.

In 2023, a team from Hwak rescued some 200 dogs from a farm in Asan city – all of which have since been sent to Canada and the US.

The former owner of that farm, 74-year-old Yang Jong-tae, told the BBC that as he watched the rescuers loading his dogs into their trucks, he was astonished by the level of compassion they showed.

“When I saw how they handled the animals – like they were handling people, so gently and lovingly – it really moved me,” he said.

“We don’t treat them like that. For us, raising dogs was just a way to make a living. But those people from the animal group treated the dogs like they were individuals with dignity, and that really touched my heart.”

Mr Yang hastened to add, however, that he disapproves of the ban on dog meat farming.

“If dog meat is banned because dogs are animals, then why is it okay to eat other animals like cows, pigs or chicken?” he said. “It’s the same thing. These things exist in nature for people to live on.”

Eating dog is not the same as eating other meats, according to Ms Chun. She points out that dog meat carries more risk from a food safety and hygiene perspective – especially in South Korea, where it has not been integrated into the formal, regulated meat production system.

The meat is also consumed in countries such as China, Indonesia, Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar, parts of northeastern India and several countries in Africa, according to Humane World for Animals.

But while consumption rates have fluctuated throughout Korea’s history, it has become increasingly taboo in South Korea in recent years.

A government poll from 2024 found only 8% of respondents said they had tried dog meat in the previous 12 months – down from 27% in 2015. About 7% said they would keep eating it up until February 2027, and about 3.3% said they would continue after the ban came into full effect.

Since the ban was announced, 623 of South Korea’s 1,537 dog farms have closed.

“As society and culture have evolved, South Korean society has now made the decision to stop producing dog meat,” Ms Chun says.

And yet for many it remains the cornerstone of an industry on which they’ve built their lives.

Every member of the dog meat trade the BBC spoke to expressed uncertainty about how they would support themselves now that their longtime livelihood has been deemed illegal.

Some say they have resigned themselves to lives of poverty, noting that they were born during the Korean War and knew how to live hungry. Others suggested that the trade could go underground.

Many agree, however, that for younger farmers the crackdown is particularly worrying.

“Young people in this industry are really facing a bleak reality,” Mr Joo says. “Since they can’t sell the dogs, they can’t shut down quickly either. They’re stuck, with no way forward or back.”

Chan-woo recalls that when he started working in the industry a decade ago, at 23, “The perception of dog meat wasn’t that negative”.

“Still,” he adds, “There were some comments from people around me, so even back then I was aware that it wasn’t something I could do for the rest of my life.”

The ban came quicker than he expected – and since its announcement, he says, “Making a living has become incredibly uncertain”.

“All we’re hoping for now is that the grace period can be extended so that the process [of dealing with the remaining dogs] can happen more gradually.”

Many others are hoping for the same. But as the dog meat industry is pulled out from under the feet of those who’ve come to depend upon it, Mr Joo can’t help but speculate on a grim thought: that some farmers may not be able to endure the uncertainty for much longer.

“Right now, people are still holding on, hoping something might change – maybe the grace period will be extended,” he says. “But by 2027, I truly believe something terrible will happen.

“There are so many people whose lives have completely unravelled.”

Who is Zohran Mamdani?

Nada Tawfik and Rachel Hagan

BBC News
Reporting fromNew York City & London

Zohran Mamdani, a 33-year-old state assemblyman, is set to be the Democratic candidate for New York City Mayor, making history as the first Muslim nominee.

With 95% of ballots counted, Mamdani leads former governor Andrew Cuomo – who resigned that post after sexual harassment allegations in 2021 – 43% to 36% in the Democratic primary, propelled by a wave of grassroots support and a bold left-wing platform.

“Tonight, we made history,” Mamdani told supporters. “I will be your Democratic nominee for the mayor of New York City.”

New York’s ranked-choice voting system means the final result could still evolve, but Mamdani’s lead and momentum appear decisive.

His victory over Cuomo – once a dominant figure in state politics – marks a watershed moment for progressives and signals a shift in the city’s political centre of gravity.

From Uganda to Queens

Born in Kampala, Uganda, Mamdani moved to New York with his family age seven. He attended the Bronx High School of Science and later earned a degree in Africana Studies from Bowdoin College, where he co-founded the campus chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine.

The millennial progressive, who would be the city’s first Muslim and South Asian mayor, has leaned into his roots in a diverse city. He’s posted one campaign video entirely in Urdu and mixed in Bollywood film clips. In another, he speaks Spanish.

Mamdani and his wife, 27-year-old Brooklyn-based Syrian artist Rama Duwaji, met on the dating app Hinge.

His mother, Mira Nair, is a celebrated film director and his father Professor Mahmood Mamdani, teaches at Columbia. Both parents are Harvard alumni.

Mamdani presents himself as a candidate of the people and an organiser.

“As life took its inevitable turns, with detours in film, rap, and writing,” reads his state assembly profile, “it was always organising that ensured that the events of our world would not lead him to despair, but to action.”

Before entering politics, he worked as a housing counsellor, helping low-income homeowners in Queens fight eviction.

He has also made his Muslim faith a visible part of his campaign. He visited mosques regularly and released a campaign video in Urdu about the city’s cost-of-living crisis.

“We know that to stand in public as a Muslim is also to sacrifice the safety that we can sometimes find in the shadows,” he said at a rally this spring.

“There’s nobody who represents the totality of the issues that I truly care about that’s running for mayor currently other than Zohran,”Jagpreet Singh, political director for social justice organization DRUM, told the BBC.

Mamdani’s affordability battle

Mamdani said that voters in the most expensive US city want Democrats to focus on affordability.

“This is a city where one in four of its people are living in poverty, a city where 500,000 kids go to sleep hungry every night,” he told the BBC at a recent event. “And ultimately, it’s a city that is in danger of losing that which it makes it so special.”

He has proposed:

  • Free bus service citywide
  • Rent freezes and stricter accountability for negligent landlords
  • A chain of city-owned grocery stores focused on affordability
  • Universal childcare for children aged six weeks to five years
  • Tripling the production of rent-stabilized, union-built housing

His plan also includes “overhauling” the Mayor’s Office to hold property owners responsible and massively expanding permanently affordable housing.

In his campaign, he linked these policies to highly visual, and viral, gestures. He plunged into the Atlantic to dramatize rent freezes and broke a Ramadan fast on a subway train with a burrito to underscore food insecurity. Days before the primary, he walked the entire length of Manhattan, pausing for selfies with voters.

While he insists he can make the city more affordable, critics question such ambitious promises.

The New York Times did not endorse anyone in the city’s mayoral primary and criticised the candidates generally. Its editorial board said Mamdani’s agenda is “uniquely unsuited to the city’s challenges” and “often ignores the unavoidable trade offs of governance.”

His rent freezes would restrict housing supply, said the board.

Left-wing Democrat stuns former governor in NY mayor primary

Critics question experience

Cuomo and others frame Mamdani as untested and too radical for a city with a $115 billion budget and over 300,000 municipal workers.

Cuomo, backed by big donors and centrist endorsements including Bill Clinton, insisted experience matters, saying: “Experience, competence, knowing how to do the job, knowing how to deal with Trump, knowing how to deal with Washington, knowing how to deal with the state legislature, these are basics. I believe in on-the-job training, but not as the mayor of New York.”

But Trip Yang, a political strategist, said “experience” isn’t necessarily a game changer in this political era. And whether or not Mamdani wins, Mr Yang believes his campaign has done “the unthinkable.”

“Zohran is powered by tens of thousands of volunteers, hundreds of thousands of unique donors. It’s very rare to see a local Democratic primary New York campaign with this much amount of volunteer and grassroots excitement,” he said.

“He understand us. He belong to us. He’s from our community, you know, the immigrant community,” added supporter Lokmani Rai.

Israel and Palestine

At a recent Mamdani campaign event at a park in Jackson Heights, one of the most diverse communities in the country, children ran and played on swings, as Latino food vendors sold ice cream and snacks.

In many ways, the scene perfectly captured the city’s diversity – what many Democrats consider New York’s greatest asset. But the city is not without its racial and political tensions. Mamdani said he’s received Islamophobic threats daily, some targeting his family. According to police, a hate-crimes investigation into the threats is underway.

He told the BBC that racism is indicative of what’s broken in US politics and criticised a Democratic Party “that allowed for Donald Trump to be re-elected” and fails to stand up for working people “no matter who they were or where they came from”.

The candidates’ stances on the Israel-Gaza war was also likely on voters’ minds.

Mamdani’s strong support of Palestinians and staunch criticism of Israel goes further than most of the Democratic establishment. The assemblyman introduced a bill to end the tax-exempt status of New York charities with ties to Israeli settlements that violate international human rights law.

He has also said he believes Israel is committing genocide in Gaza, is an apartheid state, and that the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu should be arrested. Israel vehemently rejects accusations of genocide and apartheid.

Mamdani has been pressed numerous times by press in interviews to state whether he supports Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state. In a response this month, he said: “I’m not comfortable supporting any state that has a hierarchy of citizenship on the basis of religion or anything else, I think that in the way that we have in this country, equality should be enshrined in every country in the world. That’s my belief.” Israel says all religions have equal rights under the law.

Mamdani has also said he accepts Israel’s right to exist as a state, telling the Late Show on Monday that “like all nations, I believe it has a right to exist and a responsibility also to uphold international law”.

Mamdani has also said that there is no room for antisemitism in New York City, adding that if he were elected, he would increase funding to combat hate crimes.

Cuomo, on the other hand, has described himself as a “hyper supporter of Israel and proud of it”.

In many ways the issues facing New York Democrats are the same ones the party faces in future elections, and afterwards, the primary may be dissected nationally for what it says about the party – and how it should take on Trump.

Burial of Zambia’s ex-president in South Africa halted at last minute by court

Basillioh Rukanga & Nomsa Maseko

BBC News, Nairobi & Johannesburg

A South African court has halted plans to bury former Zambian President Edgar Lungu at a private ceremony just as it was about to start.

The news was only announced to mourners in South Africa after a funeral mass had already finished.

This is the latest twist in a row between the government and Lungu’s family over his burial, after the family opted for a private ceremony in South Africa, rather than a full state funeral at home.

The Zambian government had filed an urgent case in the Pretoria High Court seeking to stop the burial planned by his family.

The court said that the funeral would not go ahead following an “agreement between the parties” however it appears that any funeral won’t happen until August at the earliest.

The dispute follows a long-standing feud between Lungu and his successor, President Hakainde Hichilema, with Lungu’s family saying he had indicated that Hichilema should not attend his funeral.

  • From Dos Santos to Mugabe – the burial disputes over ex-leaders
  • The presidential feud that even death couldn’t end

Following Lungu’s death in South Africa aged 68, the family wanted to be in charge of the funeral arrangements, including the repatriation of his body, but the Zambian authorities sought to take control.

The government and his family later agreed he would have a state funeral before relations broke down over the precise arrangements, prompting the family to opt for a burial in South Africa.

President Hichilema has since argued that Lungu, as a former president, “belongs to the nation of Zambia” and should be buried in the country.

The Pretoria court gave Zambian attorney general Mulilo D Kabesha until 4 July to submit his “amended notice of motion” in support of Lungu’s repatriation to Zambia. His family has until 11 July to file their opposing papers.

“This matter will be heard as a special motion on the 4th of August 2025,” the court said. The costs of the urgent application will be determined then.

The Zambian government argues that personal wishes should not override the greater public interest, citing the case of founding President Kenneth Kaunda.

In 2021, Kaunda’s family said he wanted to be laid to rest next to his wife and not at the site designated by the government.

However, the government went ahead and buried Kaunda at Embassy Memorial Park in Lusaka.

The current row over Lungu’s burial underscores the tense relationship between him and his successor, which played out in life and continues even in death.

When Lungu was president, Hichilema was locked up for over 100 days on treason charges after Hichilema’s motorcade allegedly refused to give way for him.

More Zambia stories from the BBC:

  • Funeral row causes chaos for mourners of Zambia’s ex-president
  • ‘My son is a drug addict, please help’ – the actor breaking a Zambian taboo
  • An ancient writing system confounding myths about Africa
  • Zambia president orders ministers to stop sleeping in cabinet

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Former England manager Sir Gareth Southgate says he does not miss managing the Three Lions and carrying the “weight” of the job.

The 54-year-old stepped down from the England role last summer after his side were beaten in the Euro 2024 final by Spain.

Southgate guided England to two European Championship finals during his seven and a half years in charge, finishing runner-up on both occasions.

The fourth-placed finish England achieved at Russia 2018 was the side’s best performance at a World Cup since 1990.

But the former Middlesbrough manager, who received his knighthood on Wednesday for services to English football, says he does not miss being in charge of the team.

“It is a little bit strange [watching the team] but also I’m not missing it,” Southgate told BBC Sport.

“I think it’s important that I am on that sofa and out of their way, you know. It’s theirs to take on now and I think it’s important that I give the team as much space as possible.”

Southgate became the fourth England manager in history to be knighted, after Sir Walter Winterbottom, Sir Alf Ramsey and Sir Bobby Robson.

Asked if he missed parts of the job, Southgate said it was a relief to no longer carry the expectations of a nation.

“I think it’s hard to describe because until that weight’s gone you don’t necessarily realise just on a day-to-day basis, you know, every hour of my day was thinking about how do I make England better, what’s happening with the players, how do we do things differently,” he added.

“So I think [that like] any leader of big organisations, you’re constantly thinking about how to do your job as well as you can.”

Thomas Tuchel replaced Southgate as manager following Lee Carsley’s interim spell in charge.

The German has won all three of his World Cup qualifiers at the helm, but England were booed off after losing a friendly against Senegal at the City Ground earlier this month.

After taking charge of the side, Tuchel said Southgate’s England did not have a clear identity and “were more afraid to drop out” of Euro 2024 “than having the excitement and hunger to win it”.

“I don’t think it’s important how I took it [Tuchel’s criticism] or what I think,” Southgate said.

“I think what’s really important is for me to give the team, the manager, the space to operate. I think that’s the right thing to do.

“I’ve had an amazing experience leading my country, but it’s time for them to take it forward now and I’ll be a fan at home supporting it.”

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French club Lyon have been demoted to Ligue 2 because of the poor state of their finances.

The club were provisionally demoted by the DNGC, the body which oversees the accounts of French professional football clubs, in November.

Lyon officials including owner John Textor, met with the DNGC on Tuesday but failed to convince the body that the club had sufficiently improved their financial situation to lift the punishment.

Last October, his Eagle Football Group, which owns a 77% stake in Lyon, announced debts of £422m.

In a statement, Lyon said the DNGC’s decision was “incomprehensible” and confirmed they would appeal.

Lyon’s relegation could prove significant to Crystal Palace’s hopes of playing in the Europa League next season.

Their participation is currently in doubt because of Uefa rules, which prevent multiple teams under one multi-club ownership structure competing in the same European competition.

Textor owns stakes in both clubs although he agreed a deal to sell his 43% share in Palace on Monday.

Lyon baffled by decision

“With proven funds and sporting success that has earned us a place in European competition for two consecutive years, we sincerely do not understand how an administrative decision could relegate such a major French club,” Lyon’s statement said.

“We will appeal to demonstrate our ability to provide the necessary financial resources to guarantee OL’s place in Ligue 1.”

Seven-time French champions Lyon raised around £45m with the sales of Maxence Caqueret to Como in January and Rayan Cherki to Manchester City in June in an attempt to improve their finances.

High earners such as Alexandre Lacazette and Anthony Lopes have also been released.

Lyon have the right to appeal against the decision. Should it stand, Lyon will be replaced in the top flight by Reims, who were beaten in the relegation play-off by Metz.

Only five teams have lifted more French titles than Lyon’s seven, which they won in successive seasons between 2002 and 2008.

The club reached the Champions League semi-finals as recently as 2020 and have not played in the second tier since 1989.

When the provisional punishment was handed down in November, Textor said that there was “no chance” the club would be relegated and reiterated his confidence before Tuesday’s meeting.

“We have made a variety of investments in recent weeks,” he said. “Everything is good financially.”

Textor is also the largest shareholder of Brazilian club Botafogo and currently co-owner of Palace until his deal to sell his stake to New York Jets owner Woody Johnson is completed.

“Over the past few months, we have worked closely with the DNCG, fulfilling all of its requests with equity investments that exceeded the required amounts,” Lyon’s statement continued.

“Thanks to capital injections from our shareholders and the sale of Crystal Palace, our cash flow has significantly improved and we now have more than sufficient financial resources for the 2025-26 season.”

Palace qualified for the Europa League by winning the FA Cup but Lyon also qualified by finishing sixth in Ligue 1. The French side’s higher league finish means they would take a European spot at Palace’s expense – should Uefa decide their multi-club ownership rules are being breached.

Last year, six-time Ligue 1 champions Bordeaux had to surrender their professional status after being relegated from Ligue 2 to the French fourth tier because of bankruptcy.

What could it mean for Palace’s European hopes?

There remains an air of caution at Palace despite the significant news of Lyon’s enforced relegation.

Uefa rules state that two clubs under significant control of the same person or entity cannot compete in the same competition and that the team with the highest league finish – Lyon – takes the spot in that respective European competition.

The Premier League side have insisted to Uefa that Textor has no control at all at Selhurst Park, despite the American businessman’s company Eagle Football Holdings having a 43.9% stake.

The news that Lyon have been relegated has raised hope at Palace that the issue will disappear because the French side, according to sources, will lose last season’s sixth-place finish.

As of Tuesday night, Palace were still awaiting full clarification on what Lyon’s relegation means for their European hopes.

But even if the French football authorities verify that Lyon’s sixth-place finish has now been expunged, Palace will have to wait for a final decision before they can plan their first venture into European football.

Lyon have already confirmed that they intend to appeal the decision.

There are concerns at the south London club that even if Lyon fail in their appeal with the French league, they will take their fight even further – thus prolonging the agony.

Can Textor and Lyon convince the authorities that they are rectifying their poor financial state enough to lift their relegation?

And can Lyon have their punishment delayed until the appeals processes are complete?

These are questions Palace are likely to be asking themselves.

Then there’s the matter of Nottingham Forest, who stand to gain if Palace lose their Europa League status, and their response to Palace keeping their place in Uefa’s second most prestigious competition.

There was hope that Palace would have clarity over their European destiny by the end of this week. They may now have to wait much longer.

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Arsenal are in advanced talks with Brentford over a move for Brentford midfielder Christian Norgaard amid uncertainty over Thomas Partey’s future.

Sources have indicated the Emirates Stadium club are exploring a deal worth in the region of an initial £10m, with a possible £5m in performance related add-ons.

BBC Sport understands Sevilla’s 23-year-old French midfielder Lucien Agoume also features prominently on Arsenal’s list of possible targets to replace Partey.

Crucially, however, it is understood Mikel Arteta has identified Norgaard as the midfielder he wants because he prefers a Premier League-ready player.

Club-to-club discussions over the Denmark international have accelerated in the last 24 hours, while it is understood the 31-year-old is keen to join Arteta’s side.

Partey, 32, has been in talks over a new deal with the Gunners, but has so far failed to reach an extension agreement.

He will leave when his contract expires next week if new terms cannot be finalised.

Norgaard, who joined Brentford in 2019 from Fiorentina and is contracted until 2027, became a key player for the Bees under Thomas Frank, who left to become manager of Tottenham earlier in June.

Arsenal are also set to complete the signing of Chelsea goalkeeper Kepa Arrizabalaga this week by paying his £5m release clause and are close to finalising the £51m signing of Real Sociedad midfielder Martin Zubimendi.

What would Norgaard bring to the Emirates?

Norgaard was linked with a reunion with former manager Thomas Frank at Tottenham earlier this summer and his record shows why he is highly regarded by the top teams.

The 31-year-old has just completed his sixth successive season at the Gtech Community Stadium, including all four of the Bees’ Premier League campaigns.

Since his top-flight debut in 2021, Norgaard has made 201 interceptions – the most of any Premier League player during this period – while he also ranks second overall for recoveries (844) and third for tackles won (189).

Not necessarily renowned for goalscoring, six goals in all competitions in 2024-25 was also the best return of his entire 14-year professional career.

Norgaard could effectively replace Thomas Partey in Arsenal’s midfield. Contract talks with the Ghana international, who joined Arsenal for £45m from Atletico Madrid in 2020, have reached an impasse, with Partey’s current deal due to expire in July.

While Norgaard offers his own well of experience, it would not be a like-for-like replacement as Partey offers more dynamism carrying the ball in central areas, whereas the Dane is more of a traditional six, screening for danger in front of Brentford’s defence. As a result, Partey’s average carrying stats comfortably surpass those of Norgaard, who is more prolific at breaking up opposition attacks.

‘The glue that holds the side together’

Norgaard has played a vital role in almost six years at the club, making nearly 200 appearances in all competitions and being named captain in the summer of 2023.

His importance to the side can be shown by the fact we failed to win any of the four Premier League games he missed last season, and had two victories in the seven in which he was absent during the last campaign.

He is the glue that holds the side together in his defensive midfield role, protecting the defence, winning tackles and setting up attacks. This season he has also become a more regular goalscorer – with his six in all competitions (five in the Premier League) nearly half of his entire total of 13 for the club. We are a much weaker team without him.

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Hands up if you owe Ben Stokes an apology?

Who thought he’d taken leave of his cricketing senses when he opted to field in the first Test against India?

As chasing leather under burning sunshine on Friday gave way to chasing victory under moody clouds on Tuesday, there were plenty of us forced to admit Stokes was right. Again.

This was another Headingley classic. Not quite touching the heights of Stokes in 2019 or Ian Botham in 1981, but knocking off 371 in relative comfort is another entry into the lore of the famous old ground. Ben Duckett, with his swashbuckling 149, is the newest candidate to be immortalised by the Burley Banksy.

There were reasons for Stokes to believe he would be vindicated: Headingley is the only ground in the past 14 years where Test batting has got easier innings on innings.

But 371 is a lot of runs, an amount historically not chased often. Throw in a pitch spitting like a cobra from a length at one end, Jasprit Bumrah bowling missiles and turn for Ravindra Jadeja, and England were second favourites.

England, though, are turning into supreme chasers. On home pitches, that age like fine wine, England will bat second unless there is irrefutable evidence not to. Listen to what Stokes says at a toss: “We’ll have a chase”, not “we’ll have a bowl”.

Since Stokes became captain, England have won the toss 10 times in home Tests. They have batted second in nine, winning seven, losing one and drawing the other – the Old Trafford Ashes Test, which they would have won had it not been for the Manchester weather. The one time they batted first, they lost.

This latest might not even be the best pursuit. Trent Bridge against New Zealand, Edgbaston against India and Headingley against Australia, with the threat of going 3-0 down in the Ashes, were all arguably as good, if not better.

Most encouraging was the manner in which England went about overhauling the target. They scored at a very brisk 4.54 an over, yet did so in a controlled manner. Up and down the gears, knowing when to attack and when to sit in. There was similar nous shown in the first innings and against Zimbabwe last month.

“It was Bazball with brains,” said former England captain Michael Vaughan. “They played the situation. That’s a sign of a young England side that is starting to use their smartness.”

It was also another example of England being incredibly hard to beat. India scored 835 runs across the match and lost. Only three teams in Test history have amassed more and been on the wrong end of the result. Spots two, three and four in that list are all occupied by teams beaten by Stokes’ England.

Before Stokes took over as captain in 2022, it had been 74 years since a team scored more than 775 runs in a Test and lost. It has now happened four times in the past three years, all at the hands of the Bazballers, leading to the question of what the opposition has to do in order to feel safe against this England team.

The run-scoring is a product of probably the strongest batting line-up in Test cricket. Any questions over Ollie Pope and Zak Crawley have been answered by their starts to the summer, while Joe Root and Harry Brook occupy the top two spots in the world rankings.

They have been joined in the top 10 by Duckett, on the back of his best innings in an England shirt.

In the past 22 years, the other England openers to score hundreds in the fourth innings of a Test have ended up with knighthoods. Duckett now has a better average at the top of the order than both Sirs Alastair Cook and Andrew Strauss. Arise, Sir Ben of the Buckett Hat.

“My mindset personally was a bit different to what it has been over the last couple of years,” said Duckett. “I was trying to focus on key moments. It’s potentially a bit of maturity from me kicking in.”

The thrill of England’s chase does not mean there is no room for improvement. Stokes looked scratchy with the bat, like a man who has only been in the middle three times since December. He is without a Test hundred in almost two years.

Having to chase all those runs means conceding them in the first place, and bar Stokes and Brydon Carse, England’s bowling looked toothless on the first day in Leeds. Chris Woakes and Josh Tongue improved as the game went on, so should be better at Edgbaston next week. Tongue lived up to his nickname – ‘The Mop’ – in cleaning up India’s tail in both innings.

Perhaps the biggest concern was off-spinner Shoaib Bashir, who went for 3-190 across the match. He struggled to extract turn or induce false shots and his three wickets came from catches in the deep, suggesting the only way India’s batters were going to get out was if they got after him.

In a short career Bashir has shown a knack of recovering from tough games and will retain Stokes’ unwavering support, but his performances should be watched closely.

This was the beginning of a decisive period for Stokes’ England, even if the captain regularly rejected anything looking beyond this India series to the Ashes in the winter.

As a starter for 10, it was the ultimate appetite whetter.

“Ben and Baz McCullum have created a fantastic vibe around the group,” said Vaughan. “When the pressure’s really on, they smile, they laugh. They seem to be able to play like it’s in their back garden. It’s an amazing ability and mentality to have as a cricket team, long may that continue.

“This is the week that I start to get slightly excited. The last time England won in Australia, and I know it’s a long way off, they had a rock solid top seven. If England can carry playing like they have done this week, they should be able to get on that plane with a rock-solid top seven.”

Speaking of a solid top seven, Australia will look to move on from their World Test Championship disappointment when they take on the West Indies in Barbados on Wednesday.

They will do so with an unfamiliar top order: a 19-year age gap between openers Usman Khawaja and Sam Konstas, Cam Green again shoe-horned in at three and Josh Inglis batting at four despite only doing it on one previous occasion in first-class cricket. It will be the first time in seven years the Aussies have been without at least one of the injured Steve Smith or dropped Marnus Labuschagne in their team.

England’s chase, in every sense, is on.

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A year ago, a poolside phone call changed Archie Goodburn’s life.

The Scottish 50m breaststroke record holder was dreaming of the Paris Olympics but his training had been hindered by some unusual factors.

Seizures. Numbness on his left side. A feeling of deja-vu.

He had tests and his scan results were due. When he emerged from his latest session in Edinburgh’s Commonwealth pool, his phone showed a missed call from an unknown number. He called back. The news that followed was devastating.

“It was a pretty unlikely time to get a phone call,” says Goodburn, who turns 24 on Thursday, at his family home in the capital.

“I had actually spoken to my mum first to ask if she had heard anything. She said the doctors had been in touch but she couldn’t get anything out of them.

“It’s a moment I’ll never forget, when I sat down at the edge of the pool – the pool where I’ve trained my whole life – to find out there’s a brain tumour.”

Goodburn was told he had brain cancer. He was 22 years old.

It’s the biggest cancer killer of people under the age of 40.

Further investigation, including biopsy surgery, revealed three ‘low grade’ tumours. They are inoperable and unable to be removed given how they had spread through his brain.

“It was utter shock,” says Goodburn, who reached the semi-finals of the 50m and the 100m breaststroke at the 2022 Commonwealth Games.

“Going from a healthy, young person to suddenly being told you have this ticking time-bomb in your brain that could, from one day to the next, become significantly worse and that there’s nothing we can do to stop it.”

‘I’m lucky… I’ve got time to shout about this disease’

It seems particularly poignant when you consider this is an athlete in peak physical condition suddenly having to come to terms with their own mortality.

“There are some potential advancements on the horizon and it’s just whether or not these will come soon enough to help people like me who are facing the hard reality that they may not see their 40s.”

Imran Liaquat, Goodburn’s neurosurgeon, says the prognosis can vary from three years to 20. Some live longer. Many do not. Accurate predictions are impossible and there is no cure.

Brain cancer is – according to the Astro Brain Fund charity – the most fatal of all in terms of years lost, but investigations into it represent just 1% of the national spend on cancer research since records began.

That, to Goodburn, is unacceptable. Undaunted by the battles to come, the young Scot is driven too.

He is continuing to train for this summer’s World University Games and is looking forward to the Commonwealths in Glasgow next summer, but is also determined to help raise awareness of brain cancer and its impact on young people.

Goodburn is painfully aware that many others have significantly less time than him.

“I’m in the fortunate position where I haven’t been diagnosed with a glioblastoma,” he explains. “I don’t have 12 to 16 months. I may have considerably longer.

“Often people don’t get anywhere near as long when they’re diagnosed with brain cancer. They’re not going to want to spend their time raising awareness. They’re going to want to live each day and making the most of every hour they have.

“I realise I’m in a position with my sport and with my diagnosis that I have time to shout about this horrible disease that takes so many lives.”

As Goodburn offers an insight into what he, and many others, must face on a daily basis, a tear rolls down each cheek.

“I see the future in different ways on different days,” he explains.

“There are days when I wake up feeling positive and hoping things are going to be out there that can help. Other days, my eyes open and I remember I have brain cancer. There is an end point to my life and it’s much earlier than it should be.”

While he campaigns for more funding and better awareness, this extraordinary young man is drawing on the support of family and friends as he pursues his career as elite swimmer.

He has a national title to defend this weekend and, despite everything, he will be the strong favourite to retain the Scottish 50m breaststroke crown – live on the BBC Sport website, app and iPlayer – given he claimed silver at the British Championships in April.

It is difficult for Goodburn to plan too far in advance, though, especially as he may now have to consider more aggressive forms of treatment such as radiotherapy and chemotherapy, options he has managed to postpone thus far.

“I want to keep going as long as I can and be in Glasgow for the next Commonwealth Games,” he says.

“I can live a pretty normal life at the moment but that’s not to say that’s something that’s going to last and it won’t be something that lasts.”

Watching Goodburn train at The Pleasance, alongside sister and fellow Commonwealth hopeful Katie, is long-time coach Mat Trodden.

He cannot quite fathom how his protege is not only still training at a high level, but getting results too. Within a month of his first surgery, he won that Scottish title. And at the end of last year, he equalled his PB at the world short course.

But Goodburn is not resting there. While he tackles head on all the difficult challenges life has landed him with, he is also allowing himself to dream.

“I’m dreaming of bettering myself,” he says. “A diagnosis like this takes away the belief in yourself that you can be better than you were previously. Cancer is something that we look at as a downhill, slippery slope and in some ways it is.

“But I dream of being better than the last time I tried to do something. That lights a wee fire in me when a lot of other things put the fire out.

“Doing a personal best post-diagnosis is a huge dream of mine. Going on to represent Scotland at the Commonwealth Games would be massive. Fingers crossed I can look towards the next Olympics.

“That depends on a lot of factors outside my control. I’m just going to keep going at this as long as I can and keep being Archie.”

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