Deputy Russian Navy chief killed in strike near Ukraine border
The deputy head of the Russian Navy has been killed near the Ukrainian border, the Russian military has confirmed.
Major General Mikhail Gudkov, appointed by President Vladimir Putin to the senior naval post in March, was killed during what Russia’s defence ministry described as “combat work” in the western Kursk region, which borders Ukraine’s Sumy region. The ministry gave no further details about the operation.
Last summer Ukraine launched a surprise offensive in Kursk. While its troops have mostly been driven out, in June Kyiv said it was still holding onto small areas of the region.
Gudkov’s death is one of the most high-profile losses for Moscow since the start of its full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
According to Oleg Kozhemyako, governor of the Primorsky region in Russia’s Far East, ten others were also killed in the incident.
Kozhemyako made the announcement on Telegram, where he described Gudkov as a loyal officer who died “carrying out his duty”.
Unconfirmed reports from Russian and Ukrainian military-linked Telegram channels suggest the deaths were the result of a Ukrainian missile strike on a Russian command post near the town of Korenevo, around 30km (19 miles) from the border.
Ukraine has not officially commented on the attack – consistent with its usual policy of not confirming targeted strikes on Russian territory.
Gudkov had previously commanded the 155th Naval Infantry Brigade of the Pacific Fleet, a unit involved in heavy fighting across eastern Ukraine and later in the Kursk region itself.
Footage from the far eastern city of Vladivostok, home to Russia’s Pacific Fleet, showed mourners laying flowers at a makeshift memorial to Gudkov, who received the Gold Star medal of Hero of Russia in late 2023. He was seen receiving the honour from President Putin at a Kremlin ceremony in February.
Ukraine has not acknowledged involvement in Gudkov’s death.
However sources within Ukrainian security services have previously told the media, including the BBC, that they were behind similar targeted strikes, such as the killing of Gen Igor Kirillov in December 2024.
Earlier this year, General Yaroslav Moskalik was killed in a car bomb attack in Moscow – an incident the Kremlin also blamed on Kyiv. At the time Presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov accused Ukraine of “continuing its involvement in terrorist activities inside our country”.
Since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, there have been several high-level assassination plots on both sides.
Last year the Ukrainian security service (SBU) said it foiled a Russian plot to assassinate President Volodymyr Zelensky and other high-ranking Ukrainian officials.
At the start of the war, the Ukrainian leader said he was Russia’s “number one target”.
Meanwhile, officials in the southern Ukrainian city of Odesa said two people were killed and six injured in a missile strike on the port on Thursday.
Earlier, strikes on the central city of Poltava targeting an army recruitment centre killed two people and wounded nearly 50 others, authorities said.
BBC senior staff told to ‘step back’ from duties following row
The BBC has told a small number of senior staff to step back from their day-to-day duties on music and live events, following the broadcast of Bob Vylan’s controversial Glastonbury set.
The punk duo led a chant of “death, death to the IDF [Israel Defence Forces]” and made other derogatory comments during their performance, which was available to watch via a live stream on iPlayer.
In a statement, the BBC said there was “no place for antisemitism” in its output, and that it was taking action to “ensure proper accountability for those found to be responsible” for the broadcast.
The BBC also said Bob Vylan were one of seven Glastonbury acts it had deemed “high risk” in advance of the festival.
The broadcaster said it would make “immediate changes to livestreaming music events”, so that “any music performances deemed high risk by the BBC will now not be broadcast live or streamed live” in the future.
The corporation’s chair, Samir Shah, said the decision not to pull the live feed was “unquestionably an error of judgement”.
Earlier on Thursday, Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy told the House of Commons she was unsatisfied with the BBC’s response after she had asked questions about due diligence, senior oversight, and the delay in pulling the live feed.
“Given the seriousness of what happened, and particularly we heard in the House the absolute shocking stories of the impact this has had on the Jewish community in this country – given the seriousness of this, I would expect there to be accountability at the highest levels [of the BBC],” she said.
Shadow culture secretary Stuart Andrew said the BBC’s “belated response suggests a lack of vigilance and proper oversight”, adding the BBC has “clear responsibilities when broadcasting live events”.
The BBC has also been criticised by the UK’s chief rabbi Sir Ephraim Mirvis, while media regulator Ofcom said the corporation had “questions to answer”.
During their Glastonbury set, Bob Vylan’s singer Pascal Robinson-Foster, who performs under the stage name Bobby Vylan, also spoke about a record label boss he used to work for.
That boss would “speak very strongly about his support for Israel”, and had put his name to a letter urging Glastonbury to cancel Irish-language rap trio Kneecap’s performance, the musician said.
“Who do I see on that list of names but that bald-headed [expletive] I used to work for. We’ve done it all, all right? From working in bars to working for [expletive] Zionists.”
In a message to staff on Thursday, director general Tim Davie said: “I deeply regret that such offensive and deplorable behaviour appeared on the BBC and want to say sorry – to our audience and to all of you, but in particular to Jewish colleagues and the Jewish community.”
The BBC said Bob Vylan had been deemed high risk following a risk assessment process applied to all acts appearing at Glastonbury.
The duo, along with six other acts, were included in this category, but the BBC said they “were all deemed suitable for live streaming with appropriate mitigations”.
The statement continued: “Prior to Glastonbury, a decision was taken that compliance risks could be mitigated in real time on the live stream – through the use of language or content warnings – without the need for a delay. This was clearly not the case.”
The BBC noted that the live stream was monitored “in line with the agreed compliance protocols and a number of issues were escalated”.
Warnings appeared on the stream on two occasions, but, the BBC added: “The editorial team took the decision not to cut the feed. This was an error.”
Davie, who was attending Glastonbury himself on the day, was “subsequently made aware of what had happened and instructed the team that none of the performance should feature in further coverage”.
The BBC said the team on duty prioritised stopping the performance from becoming available on demand, meaning that the set would not appear separately on iPlayer or BBC Sounds.
However, the live feed remained available for more than four hours, which meant viewers were able to rewind and view the content.
“Given the failings that have been acknowledged, we are taking actions to ensure proper accountability for those found to be responsible for those failings in the live broadcast,” the BBC said. “We will not comment further on those processes at this time.”
In a statement, Shah apologised “to all our viewers and listeners and particularly the Jewish community for allowing the ‘artist’ Bob Vylan to express unconscionable antisemitic views live on the BBC”.
“This was unquestionably an error of judgement,” he added. “I was very pleased to note that as soon as this came to the notice of Tim Davie – who was on the Glastonbury site at the time visiting BBC staff – he took immediate action and instructed the team to withdraw the performance from on demand coverage.”
Since Glastonbury, Bob Vylan have had several bookings cancelled, including festival appearances in Manchester and France and a slot in Germany.
In response to the cancellations, the band reiterated their position, telling followers: “Silence is not an option. We will be fine, the people of Palestine are hurting.”
Avon and Somerset Police have launched a criminal investigation into their Glastonbury comments.
On Wednesday, London’s Metropolitan Police said the band are also under investigation for comments they allegedly made during a concert at Alexandra Palace in May.
After the media coverage of their comments, Bob Vylan said in a statement on Tuesday: “We are not for the death of Jews, Arabs or any other race or group of people. We are for the dismantling of a violent military machine”.
They added that “we, like those in the spotlight before us, are not the story. We are a distraction from the story, and whatever sanctions we receive will be a distraction”.
UN expert calls for companies to stop doing business with Israel
A United Nations expert has called on dozens of multinational companies to stop doing business with Israel, warning them they risk being complicit in war crimes in Gaza and the occupied West Bank.
Francesca Albanese, presenting her report to the UN human rights council, described what she called “an economy of genocide” in which the conflict with Hamas provided a testing ground – with no accountability or oversight – for new weapons and technology.
Israel has rejected her report as “groundless”, saying it would “join the dustbin of history”.
UN experts, or special rapporteurs, are independent of the UN, but appointed by it to advise on human rights matters.
Ms Albanese is an international lawyer from Italy, and she is known for her bluntness; in previous reports she has suggested that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza.
On Thursday she repeated that claim, accusing Israel of “committing one of the cruellest genocides in modern history”.
In this report Ms Albanese names companies she says are profiting from, and therefore complicit in, war crimes in Gaza.
Her list includes arms manufacturer Lockheed Martin for selling weapons, and tech firms Alphabet, IBM, Microsoft and Amazon for providing technology which allows Israel to track and target Palestinians.
She also lists Caterpillar, Hyundai, and Volvo, which her report claims have supplied vehicles used for demolishing homes and flattening bombed communities.
Financial institutions are included too – Ms Albanese claims banks BNP Paribas and Barclays have been underwriting Israeli treasury bonds throughout the conflict.
The BBC has approached the companies named above for comment.
Lockheed Martin said foreign military sales were government-to-government transactions, and discussions were best addressed by the US government.
Volvo said it did not share Ms Albanese’s criticism which it believes was based on “insufficient and partly incorrect information”. It added that it is committed to respecting human rights and constantly works to strengthen its due diligence. But it said that since its products have a long life and change hands often “there is unfortunately a limit to how much control or influence we can have on how and where our products are used during their lifetime”.
For the companies named, the business is lucrative, the report says, and helps Israel to continue the war. Ms Albanese says all the companies should stop dealing with Israel immediately.
But how likely is that? UN reports like this one have no legal power, but they do attract attention.
Ms Albanese is, in targeting economic ties, trying to remind multinationals, and governments, of what happened with apartheid South Africa.
For a while many businesses made good money trading with South Africa, but the injustice of apartheid attracted global condemnation and UN sanctions which forced disinvestment and, eventually, helped to end the apartheid regime.
By listing companies which are household names, Ms Albanese is probably also hoping to provide millions of consumers worldwide with information they can use when choosing whether or not to buy something, as they did with South Africa.
But the suggestion they are complicit in possible genocide is the one the multinationals themselves may take most seriously. The law on genocide is strict, it needs to be determined by a court of law, and in fact the International Court of Justice is currently considering a case against Israel on this very question, brought by South Africa.
Complicity is defined as a person or entity having engaged in actions whose foreseeable results may have contributed to genocide, but without having personally intended to commit genocide.
This is an accusation that Ms Albanese suggests could be levelled against businesses selling anything that might contribute to Israel’s war effort. It is known that international lawyers have privately advised European governments that continued arms sales to Israel may lead to charges of complicity.
Israel, which has long accused Ms Albanese of being extremely hostile to it, and even antisemitic, has rejected her latest report as “groundless, defamatory and a flagrant abuse of office”.
Israel denies genocide, claiming the right of self-defence against Hamas.
But when Ms Albanese presented her report to UN member states, she received primarily praise and support.
African, Asian, and Arab states backed her call for disinvestment, many agreed that genocide was taking place, and some also warned Israel against vilifying international lawyers like Ms Albanese for doing their job.
European states, traditionally more supportive of Israel, also condemned the denial of aid to Gaza, and said Israel had a legal responsibility, as the occupying power, to ensure Palestinians had the means to survive.
But Israel’s biggest ally, the United States, left the UN Human Rights Council when President Donald Trump took office in January. Washington’s response to the report has simply accused Ms Albanese, whose team contacted US companies for information about their dealings with Israel, of an “unacceptable campaign of political and economic warfare against the American and worldwide economy”.
It’s unlikely the US administration will pay much more attention to the words of one international lawyer. But the big US companies named in her report, listening to the condemnation from so many countries where they have financial interests, may start to question their ties with Israel.
Angélique Kidjo first black African to get Hollywood Walk of Fame star
Musical icon Angélique Kidjo has become the first black African performer to be selected for a star on the prestigious Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Kidjo, who comes from the West African country of Benin and has won five Grammy awards, was among the 35 names announced as part of the Walk of Fame’s class of 2026 list.
The 64-year-old was hailed as Africa’s “premier diva” during a press conference announcing the list on Wednesday.
Singer Miley Cyrus, actor Timothée Chalamet, actress Demi Moore and former basketball player Shaquille O’Neal are also among those set to be honoured with a star on Los Angeles’ famous walk.
- Angélique Kidjo on being hangry and Africa’s ‘tsunami’ of talent
- Red-hot Afrobeats star Rema doesn’t intend to calm down
Kidjo receives the honour after making music for more than four decades and releasing 16 albums.
The songstress has won fans across the world with her commanding voice and ability to fuse West African styles with the likes of funk, jazz and R&B.
Her long list of collaborators includes forces such as Burna Boy, Philip Glass, Sting and Alicia Keys.
Kidjo joins Charlize Theron, a white South African actress, in representing Africa on the Walk of Fame. Theron received her star in 2005.
The date on which Kidjo will see her star unveiled on the Walk of Fame has not yet been announced.
After recipients have been selected for a star, they have two years to schedule induction ceremonies.
Kidjo grew up in Benin, but left for Paris in 1983, citing oppression from the country’s then communist government.
“From the moment the communist regime arrived in Benin, I became aware that the freedom we enjoy can be snatched away in a second,” she told the BBC in 2023.
She said she has been driven by curiosity since childhood, adding: “my nickname was ‘when, why, how?’. I want to understand things, to understand my place in this world.”
Kidjo worked as a backing singer in France before striking out as a solo artist in 1990, with the album Parakou.
She is a Unicef and Oxfam goodwill ambassador, and has her own charity, Batonga, which is dedicated to supporting the education of young girls in Africa.
More about African music from the BBC:
- Ghana’s love affair with reggae and Jamaican Patois
- Singer Libianca on ‘horrific threats’ over Cameroon war
- Who should count as African at the Grammy Awards?
- How old English sea shanties inspired Cape Verdean singer
- Brave, inspiring, crazy – the joy of managing Fela Kuti
Four dead, 14 injured in drive-by shooting outside Chicago nightclub
At least four people were killed and 14 others injured in a drive-by shooting outside a Chicago nightclub, police said.
Chicago Police said a dark-coloured car drove past the club around 23:00 local time (04:00 GMT) on Wednesday, when gunmen inside the vehicle opened fire into a crowd of people outside.
The crowd was said to be leaving the nightclub following an album release party for rapper Mello Buckzz, the BBC’s US partner, CBS News reported.
Police said the vehicle fled the scene immediately and no one has been taken into custody.
The victims of the shooting were rushed to several different area hospitals. Two men, ages 24 and 25, and two women, aged 26 and 27 years old, were pronounced dead, police said.
At least four people taken to hospital are reported to be in critical to serious condition. The identities of the victims have not yet been released.
Eyewitness Pastor Donovan Price said there were scenes of “absolute chaos” unlike he had ever seen before.
“From people screaming to blood on the streets to people laying on the streets… horrific,” he told Reuters.
“It’s something that you wouldn’t expect to find in the city. We have a lot of shootings, but nothing like this.”
Following the incident, rapper Mello Buckzz said all she can do is “talk to god and pray”.
In a statement on social media, she said: “Prayers up for all my sisters god please wrap yo arms around every last one of them.”
“Feel like everything just weighing down on me,” she added.
Kilmar Ábrego García alleges torture and abuse in El Salvador prison
A Maryland man who was mistakenly deported to El Salvador and detained in one of that country’s most notorious prisons was subjected to “severe beatings” and “torture”, new court documents allege.
Lawyers for Kilmar Ábrego García, 29, alleged that assaults from guards left him with visible injuries within a day of his arrival at the CECOT prison.
The Trump administration had previously alleged Mr Ábrego García was a member of the Salvadorian gang, MS-13, which his lawyers and family have strongly denied.
While officials initially said Mr Ábrego García could never return to the US, in June he was extradited to Tennessee to face human trafficking charges – to which he has pleaded not guilty.
According to new court documents filed on Wednesday as part of a lawsuit his wife brought against the Trump administration, Mr Ábrego García and 20 other detainees were repeatedly beaten when they arrived at El Salvador’s Terrorism Confinement Centre, or Cecot.
- US brings back El Salvador deportee to face charges
- Kilmar Ábrego García pleads not guilty in human trafficking case
Once there, according to the documents, Mr Ábrego García and 20 other deported inmates “were confined to metal bunks with no mattresses in an overcrowded cell with no windows, bright lights that remained on 24 hours a day, and minimal access to sanitation”.
Mr Ábrego García has also alleged that he and the other prisoners were “forced to kneel” from 9 PM to 6 AM, “with guards striking anyone who fell from exhaustion”.
At one point, guards allegedly threatened to confine him with gang members who would “tear” him apart.
His mistreatment led to him losing 30lbs (14kg) within the first two weeks of his incarceration in El Salvador, according to the complaint.
El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele has previously said his country’s prisons are “clean, orderly, free from abuses, unsanitary conditions, beatings, or murders”.
During a visit to the White House earlier this year, he expressed support for the Trump administration’s deportation agenda.
The Trump administration has asked the federal judge in Maryland overseeing the case to dismiss the lawsuit, arguing that it was overtaken by events after Mr Ábrego García was returned to the US. The lawsuit was filed by Mr Ábrego García’s wife after his deportation.
Mr Ábrego García first entered the US illegally in 2011 and was granted protection from deportation by an immigration judge in 2019 because it was determined he might face danger from gangs if returned to his native El Salvador.
But in March 2025 the Maryland resident was deported and initially held in El Salvador’s Cecot mega-prison, in what Trump administration officials later admitted was a mistake. A judge ordered the government to “facilitate” his return, but White House officials initially refused to bring him back.
Following his return to face charges in June, Attorney General Pam Bondi said that “this is what American justice looks like”.
He has denied any wrongdoing, and his attorneys have called the trafficking charges “preposterous”.
In late June, a federal judge in Tennessee ruled that Mr Ábrego García is eligible for release, but he has remained in jail over fears from his own legal team that he could be swiftly deported again if he leaves the facility.
Ethiopia has finished building mega-dam on Nile, PM says
Ethiopia says it has completed building a mega-dam on the Blue Nile that has long been a source of tension with Egypt and Sudan.
Launched in 2011 with a $4bn (£2.9bn) budget, the dam is Africa’s biggest hydro-electric plant, and a major source of pride for Ethiopians.
Ethiopia sees the dam as vital to meeting its energy needs but Egypt and Sudan see it as threatening their water supply from the Nile.
In a statement announcing the completion of the project, Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed sought to reassure his neighbours. “To our neighbours downstream – Egypt and Sudan – our message is clear: the Renaissance Dam is not a threat, but a shared opportunity,” he said.
US President Donald Trump said in 2020 that Egypt had threatened to “blow up” the dam – officially known as the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (Gerd).
In a conciliatory move, Abiy said that both Egypt and Sudan would be invited to its official inauguration in September.
“We believe in shared progress, shared energy, and shared water,” he said.
Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and Sudan’s military chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan met earlier this week and “stressed their rejection of any unilateral measures in the Blue Nile Basin”, AFP news agency reports.
More than a mile long and 145m high, the dam is on the Blue Nile tributary in the northern Ethiopia highlands, from where 85% of the Nile’s waters flow.
Ethiopia wants the dam to produce desperately needed electricity, as the majority of its population – about 60% – have no supply.
Egypt relies on the River Nile for nearly all of its fresh water, and fears that the flow of water could be disrupted.
It has argued that just a 2% reduction in the amount of water it gets from the Nile could result in the loss of 200,000 acres of irrigated land.
Sudan is also heavily reliant on water from the Nile, and shares Egypt’s concerns.
Abiy said Ethiopia was “willing to engage constructively” with the two countries.
However, previous talks have failed to resolve differences.
More about the Ethiopian dam from the BBC:
- Why is Egypt worried about Ethiopia’s dam on the Nile?
- Nile Dam row: Egypt and Ethiopia generate heat but no power
- River Nile dam: Why Ethiopia can’t stop it being filled
Universal UK could feature Europe’s tallest rides
The new Universal Studios theme park that will be built in the UK could include the tallest rides in Europe, the company said.
Universal has sought planning permission for a new destination in Bedford through a special development order (SDO), which would allow the government to approve the project directly and bypass standard local planning procedures.
In new planning documents, the firm said it could build structures in the park reaching up to 377ft (115m), which includes rides.
“The reason for proposing structures up to this maximum height is to allow the proposed theme park to compete with other attractions in Europe,” the documents said.
It continued: “Although the Universal Orlando Resort does not currently have attractions up to this height, taller attractions are more common in Europe, where rides need to be taller to create the experience, as space is more constrained.
“Building attractions that are higher, rather than over greater areas, also makes the best use of land which is in line with planning policy.”
The current tallest ride in the UK is Hyperia at Thorpe Park which measures 236ft (72m), the tallest in Europe is Red Force, a 367ft (112m) rollercoaster at PortAventura World in Spain.
The plans explain that most structures at the park will range between 20m and 30m, with some taller structures creating a skyline with “visual interest”.
The park expects to receive 8.5 million visitors a year, with 55,000 visitors on peak days.
Guests arriving to the park by car will drive through a tree-lined boulevard, while those using public transport will access the resort via a transport hub.
From there visitors will arrive at the site’s entry plaza, which has restaurants, shops and entertainment venues.
These can be accessed and used by both those with and without tickets.
Paying guests then enter the attraction by passing under a large archway.
The documents describe how once inside the resort guests will experience “adrenaline-pumping coasters”, “mind-blowing spectaculars” and will “come face-to-face with incredible creatures, heroes, and villains”.
“They’ll discover great food, new laughs, new ways to play, and step into immersive worlds they’ve only ever dreamed of,” the document said.
The plans also include parking for more than 7,000 cars and additional spaces for people to arrive by coach and bicycle.
It also includes a proposal to build a new junction on the A421 and an expanded four-platform station at Wixams station on the Thameslink line.
There will also be a new footbridge over the tracks at the station, to allow people to walk or cycle to the site from Wixams.
Further active travel routes will allow visitors to reach the site at Kempston Hardwick from Interchange West Retail Park in Bedford.
The park is hoping to secure planning permission to open in time for 2031, when it aims to hire 8,500 staff mostly from the local area.
By 2051 it expects the amount of employees to increase to 10,000.
These planning documents submitted to the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) have been made public as part of the consultation process.
Consultation ends on 31 August, at which point the MHCLG will review comments and make a decision.
If granted the SDO could still impose specific conditions on the construction and operation phases, requiring ongoing monitoring.
Universal declined to comment on the specifics of the planning documents, but encouraged people to submit feedback to MHCLG.
Ryanair cancels flights for 30,000 passengers due to French strike
Tens of thousands of passengers have been hit by a French air traffic control strike that has cancelled flights in France on Thursday and Friday and had a knock-on effect elsewhere in Europe.
Budget airline Ryanair said it had been forced to cancel more than 170 flights and the holiday plans of more than 30,000 passengers had been disrupted.
Two French unions were staging the two-day strike over working conditions, leading to a quarter of flights being cancelled at the main airports in Paris and half of flights at Nice airport.
French Transport Minister Philippe Tabarot condemned as unacceptable both the unions’ demands and their decision to go on strike at such an important time for people going on holiday.
Ryanair said the strike had affected not only its flights to and from France, but also aircraft flying over French airspace to destinations including the UK, Ireland, Spain and Greece.
Its chief executive, Michael O’Leary, accused the air traffic controllers of “holding European families to ransom”.
“It makes no sense and is abundantly unfair on EU passengers going on holidays,” he complained, calling on European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to take “urgent action” to ensure minimum service levels during strikes and to protect flights going through French airspace from domestic industrial action.
France’s civil aviation authority, DGAC, asked airlines to reduce flight schedules at several airports across the country.
Disruption is expected to worsen at French airports on Friday, with 40% fewer flights from the Paris airports at Charles de Gaulle, Orla and Beauvais.
The strike was called by the UNSA-ICNA union, which cited staffing shortages, management issues and the planned introduction of a controversial clock-in system for controllers among its concerns. Talks with the DGAC earlier this week failed to resolve the dispute.
Airlines for Europe (A4E), the continent’s leading aviation body, described the strike as “intolerable”, warning that it would severely disrupt travel plans at the height of the holiday season.
EasyJet, another low-cost carrier affected by the disruption, expressed “deep disappointment” and urged a resolution.
Ryanair said on Wednesday it also had been hit by the recent conflict in the Middle East and had cancelled more than 800 flights last month.
Despite the cancellations, the airline said it still operated more than 109,000 flights in June, indicating that fewer than 1% of flights were affected.
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Liverpool say they are “devastated” by the “unimaginable loss” of forward Diogo Jota, who has died in a car crash aged 28.
The Portugal international and his brother Andre Silva, 25, were killed after their car left the road because of a tyre blowout in the Spanish province of Zamora.
Jota married his long-term partner Rute Cardoso, with whom he had three children, just last month.
Portugal captain Cristiano Ronaldo, who played alongside Jota, wrote on social media: “It doesn’t make sense. Just now we were together in the national team, you had just got married.”
Five-time Ballon d’Or winner Ronaldo sent his condolences to Jota’s family, wife and children, and added: “I know you will always be with them. Rest in Peace, Diogo e Andre. We will miss you.”
Liverpool said in their statement they were “devastated by the tragic passing of Diogo Jota”.
The club added: “Liverpool FC will be making no further comment at this time and request the privacy of Diogo and Andre’s family, friends, team-mates and club staff is respected as they try to come to terms with an unimaginable loss.”
Jurgen Klopp, the former Liverpool manager who signed Jota for the Reds, said he was “heartbroken”.
“This is a moment where I struggle. There must be a bigger purpose. But I can’t see it,” the German coach posted on Instagram.
“Diogo was not only a fantastic player, but also a great friend, a loving and caring husband and father. We will miss you so much.”
Jota, who joined Liverpool in 2020 from Wolves, won the Premier League last season and was also part of the team that won the FA Cup and League Cup in 2021-22.
The Portuguese Football Federation (FPF) said he was “much more than an amazing player”.
“Jota was an extraordinary person, respected by all team-mates and opponents, someone with an infectious joy and a reference in the community itself,” the FPF said.
“We have lost two champions. The passing of Diogo and Andre represents irreparable losses for Portuguese football, and we will do everything to honour their legacy daily.”
Uefa announced a moment of silence would be observed at all Women’s European Championship games on Thursday and Friday, including Portugal’s tie against Spain.
Aleksander Ceferin, president of European football’s governing body, said: “Just three weeks ago, I had the honour of presenting Jota with a medal after the Nations League final – a moment of joy, pride, and celebration that will now forever be burned in memory with sorrow.”
In a post on world football’s governing body Fifa’s X account, president Gianni Infantino said Jota and Andre Silva will both be “so sorely missed by all those who knew them and by the worldwide football community”.
“Aged just 28, Diogo had enjoyed a fantastic career to date and had many great years ahead of him, while his brother Andre was thriving at Penafiel.”
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Liverpool forward Jota dies in car crash
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Tributes and reaction to the death of Liverpool forward Jota
Portugal’s President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa said: “Jota represented Portuguese football at the highest level and demonstrated a high level of professionalism and dedication as part of a generation that has taken Portuguese football to the highest level.”
And Portugal’s Prime Minister Luis Montenegro added: “The news of the death of Diogo Jota, an athlete who greatly honoured Portugal’s name, and his brother is unexpected and tragic.”
UK Prime Minister Sir Kier Starmer was among those to pay tribute to Jota.
“I am sure I speak for everyone in saying our first thoughts are going to be with his family and his friends in particular,” he said.
“There are millions of Liverpool fans but also football fans and non-fans who will also be shocked by this. It is devastating and really important we bear in mind just how difficult a period this will be for his friends and for his family.”
UK’s Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy, speaking in the House of Commons, added: “The whole House is heartbroken by this news and I want to send our sympathies to his friends and family on behalf of the whole House.”
Prince William, president of the Football Association since 2006 and its patron from last year, also expressed his condolences.
“As part of the footballing family, I am deeply saddened to hear of the passing of Diogo Jota and his brother. Our thoughts are with his family, friends, and all who knew him,” read a message on the social media account of the Prince and Princess of Wales that was signed ‘W’.
The FA said: “Our thoughts and deepest condolences are with Diogo’s family, friends and team-mates at Liverpool and Portugal.”
‘I will always remember you with your smile’
Jota’s Liverpool team-mate Darwin Nunez said there were “no words of comfort for so much pain”.
“I will always remember you with your smile, as a good companion on and off the field,” he added.
“I send all my strength to his family, from where he is I’m sure he will always be with you, especially his wife and three children.”
Liverpool legend Sir Kenny Dalglish said “football is not important at this sad time”, adding: “You feel helpless, knowing there’s so little we can do to ease the pain for his wife of just two weeks, his three beautiful children.
“Thinking and praying for all their loved ones after the devastating loss of both Diogo and Andre. YNWA.”
Former England and Liverpool defender Jamie Carragher said he was “in a state of shock”.
“I can only imagine how his team-mates feel at Liverpool and Portugal, they must be in a world of pain with his friends and family,” Carragher told Sky Sports.
“It just shows us all how quickly life can change. What a summer he’s had, and you get this devastating news that his family have had in the last few hours. You can’t even comprehend it.”
Former England and Liverpool midfielder Steven Gerrard posted on Instagram: “RIP Diogo. Condolences to his family and friends during this incredibly sad time.”
Manchester United captain and Portugal team-mate Bruno Fernandes called Jota a “friend colleague and companion of a thousand battles”.
He added: “It’s hard to understand how can someone leave so soon.
“May you and your brother find the peace you need to watch over your loved ones who lost you too soon and suddenly. My condolences to all your family.”
Jota’s Portugal team-mate Ruben Neves, who is playing at the Fifa Club World Cup for Al-Hilal, said: “They say we only lose people when we forget them. I will never forget you.”
Fulham striker Raul Jimenez, who played with Jota at Wolves, posted on Instagram: “It’s hard to get this kind of news and I still can’t believe it.
“An excellent colleague, friend and above all a great father. Thank you for everything friend, we will always remember you.”
NBA legend and LA Lakers power forward LeBron James, who is a minority owner of Liverpool, wrote on X “my prayers go out to his loved ones”.
Legendary tennis player Rafael Nadal described Jota’s death as “sad and painful news”.
“All my love, affection and support go out to his wife, children, family and friends at this difficult time,” the 22-time Grand Slam champion added.
Manchester City’s Jack Grealish posted he was “lost for words”, while Manchester United’s Portuguese defender Diogo Dalot said he was “speechless”.
Former Liverpool defender Stephen Warnock told BBC Radio 5 Live: “You saw the smile on his face when he played. He was always that bubbly character, but he was also a fiery person on the pitch. He had that lovely balance.
“He was always happy to give up his time, more than gracious when he spoke to people, very respectful but also a very charismatic character. I don’t think you become a fans’ favourite without being that type of person.”
Premier League clubs pay tribute
The Premier League said football had “lost a champion who will be forever missed”, adding it would “continue to support our friends and colleagues at the club”.
Wolves, where Jota spent three seasons, said they were “heartbroken” and that their former player would be “truly missed, and always remembered”.
“Diogo was adored by our fans, loved by his team-mates and cherished by everyone who worked with him during his time at Wolves,” they added.
“The memories he created will never be forgotten.”
Manchester United said their “deepest condolences are with the loved ones of Diogo Jota and his brother, Andre, and everyone connected with Liverpool”, while Everton said they were “deeply saddened by the tragic passing” of the brothers.
Jota joined Atletico Madrid in 2016, and spent the 2016-17 season on loan with Porto, where his brother was also a youth player.
Porto said they were “in mourning”.
Andre Villas-Boas, the former Chelsea and Spurs manager who is now president of the Portuguese club, added: “This is a moment of profound dismay for the entire Porto fanbase and for all Portuguese people.
“Two young men tragically lost their lives, two men who represented FC Porto in an exemplary manner and who will be remembered not only for their football but also for their personal and human qualities.”
Porto’s rivals Sporting said “the world of football has become poorer”.
Pacos de Ferreira, the Portuguese club where Jota began his professional career and his brother also was a player, said the siblings left their mark on the club.
“They were two extraordinary people who stood out for their humility, responsibility and immense dedication to the club they played for,” the club said.
Portuguese second division club Penafiel, where Andre Silva played for the past two seasons as a forward, said: “The loss of two lives so young and linked to the world of football fills us with pain and consternation.”
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Diogo Jota’s death: How to process your emotions
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Published31 January
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Published
Diogo Jota, who has died in a car crash aged 28, was a natural goalscorer who played a pivotal role in Liverpool’s successes in recent years as well as in Portugal’s Nations League triumphs.
Jota signed for Liverpool in a £45m deal from Wolverhampton Wanderers in September 2020 after helping Nuno Espirito Santo’s side return to the Premier League.
His composure in front of goal made him a match-winner on many occasions under Jurgen Klopp and then Arne Slot.
Indeed, some judges regarded him as Liverpool’s most natural finisher, despite the presence in the team of one of the greatest players in the club’s history, Mohamed Salah.
When Jota signed, Klopp said: “He is a player who gives us so many options to use. He’s 23 years old, still far away from being kind of a finished article – he has so much potential.
“He has the speed, he can combine with other players, can defend, can press. It gives us real options for different systems.”
Jota brought all this and more to Liverpool.
He was in the team that won a domestic cup double of the FA and League Cups in 2022, and despite latterly being hampered by injuries, he still made vital contributions last season.
It was trademark Jota when he headed the equaliser seconds after coming on as a substitute at Nottingham Forest in January, then scored the winner in the Merseyside derby against Everton in April.
Jota’s strike against their Merseyside rivals encapsulated all the qualities that made him an adored figure among Liverpool fans as they recaptured their old dominance domestically.
He took two touches in a packed penalty area – his sleight of foot evading Everton’s defence – before he wrong-footed goalkeeper Jordan Pickford with a right-foot finish in front of The Kop.
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Liverpool forward Diogo Jota dies in car crash
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Liverpool forward Jota dies in car crash
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Published7 hours ago
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Liverpool ‘devastated’ by death of forward Jota
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Published4 hours ago
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He had a lengthy spell on the sidelines last season after picking up a rib injury against Chelsea early in the campaign, but when he returned he demonstrated his sure touch in front of goal and the priceless knack of being in the right place at the right time.
Salah understandably claimed more headlines, but Jota’s goals were often key and he was a striker always feared by defences because of his finishing prowess.
Having outgrown his local club Gondomar, in the Porto area, he moved to Pacos de Ferreira aged 16.
But his burgeoning career was at risk a year later, when a heart problem was detected during pre-season tests.
Just as he did in front of goal, Jota stayed calm.
“I knew it could mean quitting football, but I didn’t believe for a second that it was going to happen,” he said in 2021.
He missed the entire pre-season and the start of the 2014-15 campaign before being cleared to return.
His drive was evident from the fact he approached the youth team co-ordinator at Pacos de Ferreira, Gilberto Andrade, asking for help to learn a foreign language.
Then 17, he told Andrade he hoped to play abroad one day and wanted to be ready for the opportunity.
His first move abroad was fleeting, joining Atletico Madrid in 2016 before swiftly being loaned to Porto, where his brother Andre Silva, who also died in the crash, was a youth player.
Jota then came to prominence in England when he joined Wolves, initially on loan, from Atletico in July 2017. The move was made permanent as he showed his class, scoring 44 goals in 131 games at Molineux before the switch to Liverpool.
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Jota: Liverpool’s number 20
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The forward became a hero at Wolves, scoring 18 goals in 46 appearances in all competitions in 2017-18 as they returned to the top flight as Championship title winners.
He enjoyed his best goalscoring return at Liverpool with 21 goals in 55 games in 2021-22, part of an impressive overall haul of 65 in 182 appearances.
Hugely popular with his team-mates and Liverpool supporters, Jota fitted comfortably into Klopp’s all-action and potent attack. Then under Slot he was frequently selected as the central striker in preference to high-priced number nine Darwin Nunez as the title came to Anfield for the 20th time last season.
Jota was also a force at international level with Portugal, playing his part in their Nations League final against Spain – the second time he claimed the trophy.
He came on as an extra-time substitute before they won on penalties and that game now carries added poignancy as the final act of a stellar career cut short in its prime.
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Published26 July 2022
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Tears as fans mourn Liverpool’s Jota at Anfield
Thousands of football fans have made their way to Anfield stadium to pay their respects to the Liverpool forward Diogo Jota after his death in a car crash in Spain.
Jota, 28, was killed when a Lamborghini he was travelling in with his younger brother, Andre Silva, suffered a tyre blow-out, crashed and caught fire in Cernadilla in the Zamora province.
Both men died in the crash, which happened at about 00:30 local time, Spanish police told the BBC.
A sea of flowers, football shirts, scarves, balloons and flags have been laid outside Liverpool’s ground by fans since news of his death broke.
Lifelong fan John Barlow from Leyland in Lancashire, a survivor of the Hillsborough disaster in 1989, said he was “absolutely devastated” when the news broke.
Mr Barlow said: “I had to stop what I’m doing at work and drive in.
“I come to every match and he was like one of us. He had a bit of something about him, like a proper old Liverpool player, like the players we were brought up with.
“He had a fight in him and he came back from things and he was tough.”
He said he was “just heartbroken, absolutely heartbroken”.
- ‘We will miss you so much’: Klopp leads tributes to Diogo Jota after he dies in car crash
Andrea Molyneux, who went to the stadium with her daughters Isabella and Lily Costello, described their “utter devastation”.
“I can’t even comprehend the grief that the family are going through,” Ms Molyneux said.
“He was just such a young man and life can be taken away from you in such a short time.
“He had everything. Everything.”
The Portugal international had recently married his partner, Rute Cardoso, with whom he had three young children.
Another fan told the BBC he would remember Jota with “a smile on his face, scoring goals for Liverpool”.
“But in a time like this, football pales into insignificance,” he added.
“He’s left a wife and three children behind, his brother has passed away with him and his poor parents have lost two children.
“I mean, he’ll forever be remembered as a great Red for us. But when something like this happens, football doesn’t matter anymore.”
Writing on social media, former Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp, who was in charge at Anfield when Jota was signed from Wolverhampton Wanderers in 2020, said he was heartbroken.
“This is a moment where I struggle!” he wrote.
“There must be a bigger purpose, but I can’t see it.”
Earlier Liverpool FC said it was “devastated” by the loss of the player and his brother.
The club described the player’s death as “an unimaginable loss”.
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Published
“It’s not about where we come from, but where we’re going to.”
The sentence can be found at the entrance of the Gondomar SC academy followed by a picture of its illustrious son Diogo Jota wearing the colours of the club he played for between the ages of nine and 17.
Right next to it, there’s another one of him with the Portugal national team shirt too.
That’s how far Jota went.
Since 2022, it has been renamed as the Diogo Jota academy.
Those words, said by the forward himself after scoring twice in a 3-0 win against Sweden in the Nations League in 2020, illustrate exactly who he was.
The 28-year-old, who died along with his brother Andre Silva on Thursday following a car accident in Spain, spent almost all his formative years in his hometown with a third-tier team, paying around 20 euros each month to play for them while being overlooked by the big sides because of his size.
Despite the odds, he never gave up.
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Liverpool forward Jota dies in car crash
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Published7 hours ago
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Diogo Jota was on way to catch ferry when car crashed, after doctor advised against flying
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‘A natural finisher who was always feared by defences’
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Published4 hours ago
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He kept believing and went from Gondomar to Pacos de Ferreira, then to Porto, Wolverhampton and finally Liverpool.
Jota became a symbol of hope and inspiration back home. He proved to an entire country that it’s possible to reach the top even if the path isn’t a straight line.
The talent had always been there.
So much so that in his early days, when he was starting to draw some attention with Pacos, one of his former coaches, Jorge Simao, made a big claim by saying Jota would be Cristiano Ronaldo’s successor.
The player was obviously surprised to hear that, but immediately thought to himself, ‘If he believes in that, why can’t I do that?’
Jota was a rare case of an elite Portuguese footballer who never spent time at any of the big three academies – Benfica, Sporting and Porto.
“What set him apart from everyone else was really the mental aspect, the way he overcame any situation – and he realised that very quickly,” former Pacos’ youth football coordinator Gilberto Andrade told BBC Sport.
“I think there are moments when, whether you’re a coach, a coordinator, or a director, there are words, things said, that have a great impact on players. At the time, perhaps they don’t fully understand it, but later it reflects in their behaviour, in how they train, in how they live day to day.
“And Jota, I think, to some extent with us, understood what it meant to be a professional player, what it meant to be a good athlete, a good person. He was an example in that regard. An example, because often success leads many players to have a somewhat winding path due to the money they make.
“But that wasn’t the case with him. He was always very disciplined, very intelligent, very humble. He invested wisely, knew what he was doing, helped those he could. So I think this is the image that must remain of him.”
Jota took the long road, but always had it clear where he was going.
That became obvious to Andrade the day he came to him with an unusual request. “I want to learn a foreign language. Someday, I might play abroad and I’ve got to be ready,” said Jota.
The Gondomar boy was still young but had spent long enough outside the radar of the Portuguese powerhouses to realise his future could be far away from his home country.
“He knew very well where he was going,” recalled Andrade, who has also worked in Italy, Belgium and Saudi Arabia.
“Back then, I had those audio language courses, so I handed some of them to him. Soon, however, he realised they weren’t enough – he actually needed a teacher. For him, it was evident that he was going to need it later in his career. He was this different.”
For a brief moment, Jota feared his career would be at risk following a heart problem diagnosed during medical tests ahead of the 2014-15 season.
He was not allowed to train for almost a month.
“Do not put the cart before the horse,” he used to reply to anyone who came to him worried about the situation at the time.
That was how he lived his life – taking it day by day.
Jota quickly established himself as one of the rising talents of the Portuguese league after that, but didn’t change a bit.
The number of teams interested in his services kept rising and yet he chose to remain living in the club’s dormitory with other academy graduates and trialists that came and went until his very last day at Pacos. He was the only first-team player living there.
“He wouldn’t leave his room. He was solely focused on his work, there was no time for distractions when it came to him,” added Andrade.
Jota always knew where he was heading and, throughout his life, he proved time and again the journey mattered more than the starting point.
His voyage to becoming a Portuguese hero was a beautiful one.
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Liverpool and Ronaldo lead tributes to Jota
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BBC visits heart of Tibetan resistance as showdown looms between Dalai Lama and China
Shrouded in crimson robes, prayer beads moving rhythmically past his fingers, the monk walks towards us.
It is a risky decision.
We are being followed by eight unidentified men. Even saying a few words to us in public could get him in trouble.
But he appears willing to take the chance. “Things here are not good for us,” he says quietly.
This monastery in China’s south-western Sichuan province has been at the centre of Tibetan resistance for decades – the world learned the name in the late 2000s as Tibetans set themselves on fire there in defiance of Chinese rule. Nearly two decades later, the Kirti monastery still worries Beijing.
A police station has been built inside the main entrance. It sits alongside a small dark room full of prayer wheels which squeak as they spin. Nests of surveillance cameras on thick steel poles surround the compound, scanning every corner.
“They do not have a good heart; everyone can see it,” the monk adds. Then comes a warning. “Be careful, people are watching you.”
As the men tailing us come running, the monk walks away.
“They” are the Communist Party of China, which has now governed more than six million Tibetans for almost 75 years, ever since it annexed the region in 1950.
China has invested heavily in the region, building new roads and railways to boost tourism and integrate it with the rest of the country. Tibetans who have fled say economic development also brought more troops and officials, chipping away at their faith and freedoms.
Beijing views Tibet as an integral part of China. It has labelled Tibet’s exiled spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, as a separatist, and those who display his image or offer him public support could end up behind bars.
Still, some in Aba, or Ngaba in Tibetan, which is home to the Kirti monastery, have gone to extreme measures to challenge these restrictions.
The town sits outside what China calls the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR), created in 1965, comprising about half of the Tibetan plateau. But millions of Tibetans live outside of TAR – and consider the rest as part of their homeland.
Aba has long played a crucial role. Protests erupted here during the Tibet-wide uprising of 2008 after, by some accounts, a monk held up a photo of the Dalai Lama inside the Kirti monastery. It eventually escalated into a riot and Chinese troops opened fire. At least 18 Tibetans were killed in this tiny town.
As Tibet rose up in protest, it often turned into violent clashes with Chinese paramilitary. Beijing claims 22 people died, while Tibetan groups in exile put the number at around 200.
In the years that followed there were more than 150 self-immolations calling for the return of the Dalai Lama – most of them happened in or around Aba. It earned the main street a grim moniker: Martyr’s row.
China has cracked down harder since, making it nearly impossible to determine what is happening in Tibet or Tibetan areas. The information that does emerge comes from those who have fled abroad, or the government-in-exile in India.
To find out a little more, we returned to the monastery the next day before dawn. We snuck past our minders and hiked our way back to Aba for the morning prayers.
The monks gathered in their yellow hats, a symbol of the Gelug school of Buddhism. Low sonorous chanting resonated through the hall as ritual smoke lingered in the still, humid air. Around 30 local men and women, most in traditional Tibetan long-sleeved jackets, sat cross-legged until a small bell chimed to end the prayer.
“The Chinese government has poisoned the air in Tibet. It is not a good government,” one monk told us.
“We Tibetans are denied basic human rights. The Chinese government continues to oppress and persecute us. It is not a government that serves the people.”
He gave no details, and our conversations were brief to avoid detection. Still, it is rare to hear these voices.
The question of Tibet’s future has taken on urgency with the Dalai Lama turning 90 this week. Hundreds of followers have been gathering in the Indian town of Dharamshala to honour him. He announced the much-anticipated succession plan on Wednesday, reaffirming what he has said before: the next Dalai Lama would be chosen after his death.
Tibetans everywhere have reacted – with relief, doubt or anxiety – but not those in the Dalai Lama’s homeland, where even the whisper of his name is forbidden.
Beijing has spoken loud and clear: the next reincarnation of the Dalai Lama will be in China, and approved by the Chinese Communist Party. Tibet, however, has been silent.
“That’s just the way it is,” the monk told us. “That’s the reality.”
Two worlds under one sky
The road to Aba winds slowly for nearly 500km (300 miles) from the Sichuan capital of Chengdu.
It passes through the snow-packed peaks of Siguniang Mountain before it reaches the rolling grassland at the edge of the Himalayan plateau.
The gold, sloping rooftops of Buddhist temples shimmer every few miles as they catch especially sharp sunlight. This is the roof of the world where traffic gives way to yak herders on horseback whistling to reluctant, grunting cattle, as eagles circle above.
There are two worlds underneath this Himalayan sky, where heritage and faith have collided with the Party’s demand for unity and control.
China has long maintained that Tibetans are free to practise their faith. But that faith is also the source of a centuries-old identity, which human rights groups say Beijing is slowly eroding.
They claim that countless Tibetans have been detained for staging peaceful protests, promoting the Tibetan language, or even possessing a portrait of the Dalai Lama.
Many Tibetans, including some we spoke to within the Kirti monastery, are concerned about new laws governing the education of Tibetan children.
All under-18s must now attend Chinese state-run schools and learn Mandarin. They cannot study Buddhist scriptures in a monastery class until they are 18 years old – and they must “love the country and the religion and follow national laws and regulations”.
This is a huge change for a community where monks were often recruited as children, and monasteries doubled up as schools for most boys.
“One of the nearby Buddhist institutions was torn down by the government a few months ago,” a monk in his 60s told us in Aba, from under an umbrella as he walked to prayers in the rain.
“It was a preaching school,” he added, becoming emotional.
The new rules follow a 2021 order for all schools in Tibetan areas, including kindergartens, to teach in the Chinese language. Beijing says this gives Tibetan children a better shot at jobs in a country where the main language is Mandarin.
But such regulations could have a “profound effect” on the future of Tibetan Buddhism, according to renowned scholar Robert Barnett.
“We are moving to a scenario of the Chinese leader Xi Jinping having total control – towards an era of little information getting into Tibet, little Tibetan language being shared,” Mr Barnett says.
“Schooling will almost entirely be about Chinese festivals, Chinese virtues, advanced Chinese traditional culture. We are looking at the complete management of intellectual input.”
The road to Aba shows off the money Beijing has pumped into this remote corner of the world. A new high-speed railway line hugs the hills linking Sichuan to other provinces on the plateau.
In Aba, the usual high-street shop fronts selling monks’ robes and bundles of incense are joined by new hotels, cafes and restaurants to entice tourists.
Chinese tourists arrive in their branded hiking gear and stand amazed as the local faithful prostrate themselves on wooden blocks at the entrance to Buddhist temples.
“How do they get anything done all day?” one tourist wonders aloud. Others turn the prayer wheels excitedly and ask about the rich, colourful murals depicting scenes from the Buddha’s life.
A party slogan written on the roadside boasts that “people of all ethnic groups are united as closely as seeds in a pomegranate”.
But it’s hard to miss the pervasive surveillance.
A hotel check-in requires facial recognition. Even buying petrol requires several forms of identification which are shown to high-definition cameras. China has long controlled what information its citizens have access to – but in Tibetan areas, the grip is even tighter.
Tibetans, Mr Barnett says, are “locked off from the outside world”.
The ‘right’ successor
It’s hard to say how many of them know about the Dalai Lama’s announcement on Wednesday – broadcast to the world, it was censored in China.
Living in exile in India since 1959, the 14th Dalai Lama has advocated for more autonomy, rather than full independence, for his homeland. Beijing believes he “has no right to represent the Tibetan people”.
He handed over political authority in 2011 to a government-in-exile chosen democratically by 130,000 Tibetans globally – and that government has had back-channel talks this year with China about the succession plan, but it’s unclear if they have progressed.
The Dalai Lama has previously suggested that his successor would be from “the free world”, that is, outside China. On Wednesday, he said “no-one else has any authority to interfere”.
This sets the stage for a confrontation with Beijing, which has said the process should “follow religious rituals and historical customs, and be handled in accordance with national laws and regulations”.
Beijing is already doing the groundwork to convince the Tibetans, Mr Barnett says.
“There is already a huge propaganda apparatus in place. The Party has been sending teams to offices, schools and villages to teach people about the ‘new regulations’ for choosing a Dalai Lama.”
When the Panchen Lama, the second highest authority in Tibetan Buddhism, died in 1989, the Dalai Lama identified a successor to that post in Tibet. But the child disappeared. Beijing was accused of kidnapping him, although it insists that boy, now an adult, is safe. It then approved a different Panchen Lama, who Tibetans outside China do not recognise.
If there are two Dalai Lamas, it could become a test of China’s powers of persuasion. Which one will the world recognise? More important, would most Tibetans in China even know of the other Dalai Lama?
China wants a credible successor – but perhaps no-one too credible.
Because, Mr Barnett says, Beijing “wants to turn the lion of Tibetan culture into a poodle”.
“It wants to remove things it perceives as risky and replace them with things it believes Tibetans ought to be thinking about; patriotism, loyalty, fealty. They like the singing and dancing – the Disney version of Tibetan culture.”
“We don’t know how much will survive,” Mr Barnett concludes.
As we leave the monastery, a line of women carrying heavy baskets filled with tools for construction or farming walk through the room of prayer wheels, spinning them clockwise.
They sing in Tibetan and smile as they pass, their greying, pleated hair only just visible under their sun hats.
Tibetans have clung on to their identity for 75 years now, fighting for it and dying for it.
The challenge now will be to protect it, even when the man who embodies their beliefs – and their resistance – is gone.
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Fact-checking three key claims about Trump’s mega-bill
President Donald Trump’s flagship piece of legislation – which he’s labelled the “big beautiful bill” – has faced major objections from Democrats as well as from some Republicans.
It has been subject to tense negotiations amid questions about how much it could cost and its proposed cuts to some US welfare schemes.
Elon Musk has also weighed in, repeating threats to form a new political party if the “insane spending bill passes”.
BBC Verify has looked at claims made about the bill’s possible impact in three key areas – the US national finances, medical cover, and taxes.
How much would the bill cost?
The White House has said the bill “reduces deficits by over $2 trillion” – but senior Democrats have insisted it would actually add trillions.
BBC Verify has examined various independent studies about the bill’s impact and interviewed six tax experts who all agreed that it would increase the national deficit.
The deficit is what happens when the US government spends more than it collects through taxes and other forms of revenue.
Musk criticised lawmakers who “voted for the biggest debt increase in history” when it was being passed in the US Senate.
The debt is the overall sum of money owed by the government – essentially the accumulation of past budget deficits – which means it has to borrow money and pay interest on this.
- Live updates as Trump’s mega-bill heads for final vote
- A look at the key items in Trump’s sprawling budget bill
- ‘Our food doesn’t even last the month’ – Americans brace for Trump’s welfare cuts
The US national debt is currently about $36tn (£26tn) – of which about $29tn is money owed by the government to investors around the world.
Larger deficits and a bigger debt can theoretically result in higher interest rates – the idea being that investors worry more about a country’s capacity to pay its debts as those rise and they therefore demand higher interest payments.
That can feed into higher interest rates for consumers which make things like housing and cars less affordable, and restrict business investment and therefore productivity and jobs.
The current version of the bill is estimated to add about $3.3tn (£2.4tn) to the US deficit over the next 10 years, despite an initial economic boost, according to estimates from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) – the government agency which provides independent analysis of spending.
The CBO said the spending cuts proposed in the bill would be outweighed by the tax cuts.
An analysis from the Tax Foundation think tank concluded that the bill “would increase economic output but worsen deficits”. It projects that the bill would increase the level of US GDP by around 1% after 10 years relative to where it would otherwise be, but that it would also add $3.6tn (£2.6tn) to the deficit over the same period.
Some banks have said they are in favour of the bill – with the American Bankers Association writing an open letter to lawmakers saying it provides “much needed tax relief” which would boost the economy.
The experts BBC Verify spoke to said although the bill may provide some economic growth, its cost would be significantly more than this boost.
“Most analysis finds that the bill will produce a small, temporary, short-lived boost – but that over time the bill will actually be a drag on the economy,” says Bobby Kogan, a federal budget expert at the Center for American Progress, a left-leaning policy institute.
And Mark Zandi, an economist at the financial consultancy Moody’s Analytics, says: “It will result in continued massive budget deficits, and a high and rising debt load.”
What impact would the bill have on Medicaid?
“We’re cutting $1.7 trillion in this bill and you’re not gonna feel any of it. Your Medicaid is left alone. It’s left the same,” Trump claimed at an event about the bill last week.
However, various studies show there will be significant reductions to Medicaid under the bill.
Medicaid is the government-run scheme which provides healthcare insurance for about 71 million low-income adults, children, pregnant women, elderly adults and people with disabilities.
Analysis by the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) – an independent health policy research group – found that the bill would cut $1tn (£729bn) from future Medicaid spending over the next 10 years.
The White House has said the bill “removes illegal aliens, enforces work requirements, and protects Medicaid for the truly vulnerable”.
The CBO estimates that nearly 12 million Americans would lose health insurance by 2034 under the terms of the Senate bill – with just 1.4 million of these being people “without verified citizenship, nationality, or satisfactory immigration status”.
What about the impact on taxes?
Trump has repeatedly said that not passing the bill would lead to massive tax rises on Americans – in part because the tax cuts passed during his first-term in office are due to expire at the end of this year.
“If it’s not approved, your taxes will go up by 68%,” the president said last week.
We asked the White House for the calculations behind Trump’s claim – they responded saying the bill “prevents the largest tax hike in history” but didn’t answer our question on where the specific figure comes from.
The Tax Policy Center estimates that not extending tax cuts introduced under Trump in 2017 would lead to a hike of 7.5% on average.
The body also says roughly 60% of tax payers would have to contribute more if they expire.
“The 68% figure is incorrect… It could be roughly drawn from a count of taxpayers that would see an increase in taxes, as opposed to an estimate of the actual tax increase,” says Elena Patel, a tax policy expert and assistant professor at the University of Utah’s business school.
Overall, the tax changes in the bill would benefit wealthier Americans more than those on lower incomes, according to the Tax Policy Center analysis. About 60% of the benefits would go to those making above $217,000 (£158,000), it found.
“There is no question that this bill will result in a massive redistribution from the poorest to the richest,” says Ms Patel.
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Why the world’s superyachts are getting bigger and bigger
Business is booming in the luxury world of superyachts, with the super-rich wanting ever bigger floating palaces.
Paola Trifirò knows a thing or two about superyachts – she and her husband have owned more than a dozen over the years.
The Italian couple, who have made their fortune in law, and continue to run a global legal firm, like to sail around the world in the height of luxury.
Ms Trifirò describes their boats, which can be more than 50m (164ft) long, as being like floating five-star hotels. And she likes to get involved in the design process.
One criterion she insists upon is that the crew have ample kitchen space, so they can cook gourmet meals for up to 15 people.
Ms Trifirò explains her reasoning: “If you are used to eating well, not everywhere [in the world] are there restaurants good enough.”
She also says that the large size of the vessels is reassuring. “Whether it’s sailing alongside humpback whales, or receiving greetings by fishermen on the Fiji islands, my boats allow me to sail… with strength and safety.”
But what exactly is a superyacht? While there is no official global classification, industry website and magazine Boat International describes one as “a luxury, privately-owned yacht that measures 24 metres or more in length, and is professionally crewed”.
The magazine says that global sales boomed after Covid. With the super rich suddenly unable to go to luxury hotels, as they were all closed during the pandemic, many switched to superyachts instead.
As a result, 1,024 new superyachts were built or on order around the world in 2022, a 25% jump from 2021, and a then all-time high, according to Boat International’s figures. This then increased to 1,203 in 2023, another new record.
“After the pandemic people considered their super yachts as safe islands both for themselves and their relatives,” says Barbara Armerio who co-owns Italian family-run superyacht builder Amer.
She adds that billionaires cherished their personal space and independence even more. “They asked for bigger windows, more space outside, and to be able to touch the seawater more easily”.
While the overall number of superyachts being built or ordered is expected to fall slightly this year to 1,138, they are getting bigger on average, Boat International’s data also shows. So far this year, 61 boats of 76m or more in length are being made, up from 55 in 2024.
And in the 46m to 60m grouping, numbers have increased to 175 from 159. Meanwhile, sales of the smallest superyachts, between 24m and 27m are down to 286 from 321.
“It’s clear that some of those new clients the industry found in the Covid-19 years are trading up,” says Ms Armerio.
Boat International’s editor in chief Stewart Campbell says that whatever size superyacht people buy “designers and naval architects are getting very clever at packing ever more volume into hulls, giving owners lots more space on board”.
As a result, today’s superyacht’s increasingly have everything from helipads to cinemas, gyms, beauty salons, and saunas.
As you’d imagine, prices are extremely high. You can pay €36m ($41m; £30m) for a new smaller boat, up to €295m for a 105m-long vessel with all the optional extras.
Half of all superyachts continue to be built in Italy, with its yards currently working on a combined length of 22,195m, or approximately 22km (13 miles), of boats. Turkey is in second place, followed by the Netherlands, the UK, Taiwan, Germany, the US and China.
Back in 2023, Italian shipbuilders earned €8.3bn from making superyachts, a record high.
Ms Armerio says her shipyard “produces only a few high-grade” superyachts per year, “masterpieces with unique details”.
She adds that Italian yacht-makers like hers are supported by a solid network of local artisans. “In Italy we find everything we need.”
Ms Armerio points to being able to drive to Tuscany’s stone quarries from her company’s base on the coast of Liguria if she needs to order marble.
Regarding the billionaires and multimillionaires who buy superyachts, Boat International says that most are from the US. Yet it points to more coming from Turkey, Indonesia and Mexico as those countries’ economies grow.
Meanwhile, sales to Russian buyers have fallen to due to the sanctions against the country and its elites as a result of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
If the appeal of a superyacht wasn’t immediately obvious, Ms Trifirò says they enable her to see the world and fulfil her wanderlust. And she likes to be at the controls of the boat.
“My curiosity to explore new places pushes me to cruise the oceans while in the driver’s seat,” she says.
Ms Trifirò adds that her crew is paid double what they’d likely earn on land “as it is very important to keep them happy. Our captain has worked for us for 22 years.”
Diddy’s secret world revealed in videos and his voice notes
“Can y’all come straighten it up over here? It’s not looking luxurious,” Sean ”Diddy” Combs says in a voice note to his personal assistants as R&B music mellows in the background.
Hours before, a so-called ”freak-off” - a drug-fuelled orgy also known as a “Wild King Night” – had been in full swing. Now, staff were being called in to clean up.
“PD said he’s going to need emergency clean up at hotel,” his chief of staff texts after another of these events. ”Bring him stain remover (for a chair and couch) and black trash bags. And baking soda too, he said.”
The BBC has seen messages and recordings from former staff in Combs’ household. The staff members have also given detailed accounts of what it was like to work on the multi-millionaire music mogul’s glamorous yacht rentals and inside his sprawling estates across the US – in the Hamptons, Beverly Hills and on Star Island in Miami.
Their experiences span the past five to 10 years, a period that was under scrutiny during Combs’ criminal trial in New York.
At the trial’s conclusion on Wednesday, the 55-year-old was cleared of the most serious charges – racketeering, and two counts of sex trafficking related to ex-partner Casandra Ventura and another woman referred to as “Jane”.
But jurors found he was guilty of two other counts related to the transportation to engage in prostitution of both women. He will be sentenced at a later date.
We have been shown material which paints a picture of a “scary” and unpredictable boss, who would administer shocking “loyalty tests”, and whose demands grew more and more extreme.
Staff have described how his sometimes-days-long “freak-offs” were held at locations around the world, with the rapper expecting staff to prepare a bag containing “baby oil, lubricant and red lights” – to create the red-tinted ambience Combs preferred – alongside class-A drugs wherever he travelled.
‘Wild King Nights’
Inside his waterfront Miami mansion, a $48m (£36m) compound located on an exclusive man-made island, we have been told that Combs kept tight control of his inner circle.
“I’m not about to be transparent with y’all,” a groggy Combs warns staff one day in a rambling voice note posted in an employee WhatsApp group in 2020. ”There’s some dark places y’all [EXPLETIVE] don’t want to go. Stay where you’re at.”
Staff say he was intense, demanding and volatile, with some attributing his unpredictability to a lifestyle of drug-fuelled parties. The turnover of staff was high and Combs had more than 20 different house managers join and leave in just two years across his properties, one former estates manager told us.
Phil Pines, 40, who worked for Combs as a senior executive assistant from 2019-2021, has told the BBC the mogul didn’t say a word to him when he first started his job.
“It was like an initiation,” he explains. “We didn’t speak to each other for 30 days.”
Another recent assistant, Ethan (not his real name), recalls: “He was a very ill man with different behaviours, sometimes very aggressive, sometimes very sweet.”
We have changed Ethan’s name because, like many former staff members, he still works in the high-net-worth hospitality industry and fears speaking out about Combs will hurt his career.
Ethan shows us a small scar on his forehead. He says this was the result of Combs smashing a glass against a wall in a fit of rage, and the shards cutting Ethan’s face.
Phil Pines and Ethan were part of Combs’ small group of trusted assistants and say he often played mind games with staff.
Ethan recalls one of Combs’ loyalty tests – when the star took off one of his rings and threw it into the Atlantic Ocean. He then turned to Ethan and told him he had to go into the water to get it.
They were at a formal event and Ethan, like his boss, was wearing a smart suit. He says this didn’t stop him jumping in right away to rescue it.
In another incident, Pines says Combs called him to his residence after midnight, just so he could fetch the TV remote from under the bed he was in with a female guest.
“See? He is loyal and now he can go back home,” he recalls Combs telling her. Pines says he felt like an animal.
But the Wild King Nights – as the rapper’s chief of staff, Kristina Khorram, referred to them – revealed an even darker side to working for Combs.
“I was asked to set up a laundry list of items for him,” says Pines. “And I thought to myself, why didn’t anybody explain this to me before?”
In one exchange seen by the BBC, Khorram texted him to warn a bag needs to be prepared for a Wild King Night in two hours. In another, she asked for a ”drop off” of seven bottles of baby oil and seven bottles of Astroglide lubricant alongside iced vanilla lattes.
“Rounding up a shelf of baby oil and Astroglide at a store is very, very humiliating. I would always pretend like I was on the phone,” Pines tells us.
In Combs’ trial the prosecution presented evidence of supplies they said were procured for “freak-offs”. A police raid on Combs’ Los Angeles mansion found drugs and more than 1,000 bottles of baby oil.
From three months into his role, Pines began having concerns about the frequency of these requests. “It became daily, sometimes twice a day, every day, and every week.”
Pines says there was a constant stream of young women who frequented Combs’ homes – apparently for sex. Young men were also called to the parties, says Ethan.
Some of these young people would appear to be friends of the star’s sons, Pines tells us, with some of the women later seen “hanging” with Combs.
Pines says he also had concerns that some of these guests – who looked like they were in their early 20s – were ”too young” and “impressionable” for his then 50-year-old boss.
“I would see some women feel uncomfortable or at least look like they’d had a wild night,” says Pines.
A woman with an IV drip would usually visit the next day, he says, to help guests recover after sometimes ”partying” for 24 hours non-stop without food.
Pines recalls one young guest uttering to him in distress: “I’ve never done anything like that before.”
He was instructed to drive her home from Combs’ Miami residence: ”She was kind of shaking and shivering, like she was coming down off the drugs.”
The drug-fuelled nature of these nights has repeatedly been brought up during Combs’ trial. Casandra Ventura, his ex-partner of more than a decade, testified that she endured years of coerced sex with male escorts under the threat of beatings and blackmail, while Combs filmed the encounters. She said these events would sometimes go on for days and require her to take countless drugs to stay awake.
Another woman, who dated Combs on-and-off from 2021 until his arrest last September, gave evidence that she felt pressured to fulfil his desires partly because he was paying her rent, and said the encounters left her feeling “disgusted” and in physical pain.
In his defence at trial, Combs’ lawyer said he admitted to domestic violence, but argued that all the sexual encounters were consensual, and that Combs had a “swingers lifestyle”.
The BBC understands at least one staff member was asked to search online for escorts to participate in the Wild King nights. Screenshots of the escorts were then sent to Combs for approval.
Pines says he doesn’t know what happened at these events, but he was asked to deal with the aftermath.
It was “just complete wreckage”, he says. “Oil all over the floor. Marijuana joints everywhere… I would wear gloves. I would wear a mask.”
“He [Combs] would get up, put his hoodie on and walk out the door,” Pines says, leaving staff to clean the room.
On one occasion, Pines says he witnessed Combs push and kick a female guest during an argument at his house, which continued outside.
Combs swore at her and said “give me my hoodie”, Pines remembers. “She takes off the hoodie, she’s topless, no bra, nothing, no t-shirt on. So, I take off my jacket and I wrap it around her to kind of shield her.”
The guest left in an Uber crying, says Pines, but within a week she was back at the house again with Combs.
“She came back shortly after that. Dinner, gifts… she was brought back into the fold.”
When Pines told his supervisor Khorram about the incident, he says she knew exactly what to say to him: “I kind of give her a play-by-play of what happened. Her words to me: ‘Never speak about this again.'”
Kristina Khorram has not responded to the BBC’s request for comment but has previously denied any wrongdoing.
In a statement to CNN last March, she described allegations against her as “false” and “causing irreparable and incalculable damage to my reputation and the emotional well-being of myself and my family”.
“I have never condoned or aided and abetted the sexual assault of anyone. Nor have I ever drugged anyone,” she said.
Staff would be required to erase any evidence of “freak-offs” – removing bodily stains from sheets, disposing of drugs and, Pines tells us, scrubbing any ”compromising” recorded footage of the sexual encounters off his boss’s personal phones and laptops.
Other staff also describe feeling disturbed by Combs’ sexual encounters.
“[There are] things I saw with my own eyes, memories that will stay forever,” says Ethan. He says Combs would sometimes ask him to enter the room and “bring him water or male enhancement pills” while sex was taking place.
Pines has filed his own civil lawsuit against Combs. The BBC approached Combs’ lawyers for comment in respect of Pines’ allegations, and they made this statement in response: “No matter how many lawsuits are filed, it won’t change the fact that Mr. Combs has never sexually assaulted or sex trafficked anyone – man or woman, adult or minor. We live in a world where anyone can file a lawsuit for any reason.”
Pines recalls a particularly horrifying incident around November 2020, when he says he was asked to stay behind after work and set up an after-party at the Miami mansion.
He says that Combs and his guests had been “in the sun partying, taking mushrooms, smoking, drinking all day – so they were completely gone by this time”.
During the party, Pines says Combs invited him to take a shot, before asking him to ”prove his loyalty”.
He handed Pines a condom and pushed him towards a female guest who was lying on a nearby couch.
“At that moment, I’m like, what is going on?” Pines says. ”I froze. I was just shocked by what was happening. I felt cold… but I also felt so much pressure.”
Pines says the woman consented and they had sex until Combs began ”drifting off into another part of the suite”.
“I didn’t want any of that,” he says. ”Once I kind of saw him out of my peripheral, that he was gone, I pulled up my pants and just got out of there quickly.
“It was a power move. I felt like I was coerced. It was manipulation.”
The Gucci bag
When they travelled internationally, staff say Combs’ drugs came with him, concealed in a safe onboard his $60m (£45m) private jet.
“Even if it was for a day trip, if he was going on the yacht for four hours, take all that stuff with you because he may use it,” Pines recalls being instructed.
He claims mushrooms, ketamine and ecstasy were kept in a small black Gucci bag alongside baby oil, lubricant and red lights.
Combs’ lawyers admitted during trial that he had procured drugs, but said they were for personal use only.
In one nerve-wracking incident in Venice in summer 2021, Pines says Italian authorities questioned Combs’ staff for an hour. He feared that if they had found the drugs hidden in the luggage, he would have “taken the fall” for his boss.
A former personal assistant, Brendan Paul, was arrested on charges of drug possession while with Combs at a Miami airport in March 2024, on the same day police raided the rapper’s homes. The charges were later dropped after Paul completed a pre-trial diversion programme.
During Combs’ trial, Paul, 26, testified that he had found cocaine after “sweeping” his boss’s room and had forgotten it was in his bag while they prepared for a vacation in the Bahamas. He told the court that he did not tell law enforcement that they were Combs’ drugs out of “loyalty”.
By December 2021, Pines says he had had enough.
“The money wasn’t worth it… because of the experiences I was having with him. It was just too much to bear.”
When asked why staff had not spoken out sooner, Pines does not hesitate. They were, he says, afraid of Combs.
“He is a very scary person. Whether you’re his employee, you’re a contractor, you’re a girlfriend, guest, you know what he’s capable of,” he says.
Ethan says he used to believe that Combs had ”people a couple of steps in front” who ”caught everything”. But after his former boss’s arrest, his view shifted. Staff simply were not able to stop what was coming, he says. “Obviously being a celebrity, he could cut many corners,” he reflects, but ”he couldn’t avoid the law”.
Pines says he was approached by federal agents in the Department of Homeland Security as part of its criminal investigation last summer and was later legally summoned to give evidence ahead of Combs’ trial. Other ex-assistants, who worked for Combs back in 2014 and as recently as 2024, testified in court during the trial.
“I have to nod to Cassie Ventura for being so courageous to stand up to him,” Pines says.
Ventura’s civil lawsuit, filed in November 2023, alleged Combs had trapped her in a cycle of violence and sexual abuse. The lawsuit was settled in a $20m (£15m) pay-out, one day after the filing. But dozens more followed in quick succession – there are now more than 60 civil cases against Combs, which remain to be resolved.
“She opened the door for people like me to come forward, and for other people who are going through similar things who feel silenced, who feel powerless going up against a giant.”
As medics worked to save my dad, people shared photos online
When Eve Thomas found paramedics treating her badly injured father at the scene of a crash, she was surrounded by people taking photos and videos to share on social media.
Loved ones were then mistakenly told that Eve’s father had died, because online speculation travelled faster than the truth.
Eve has backed a campaign urging people to think before sharing images of traumatic events, supported by emergency workers who say these actions interfere with their ability to save lives and preserve dignity.
Insp Nia Lambley said there had been a “seismic change” in the behaviour of onlookers at the scene of emergency incidents, with phones often used to capture images rather than to call for help.
Eve, now 25, was 17 when her father, Nigel, was knocked off his bicycle returning home from work as a delivery driver in Hirwaun, Rhondda Cynon Taf.
Her school bus was among the traffic that stopped at the scene in the immediate aftermath, and she saw that her father was involved.
“I was essentially on a bus full of other children that were filming and taking pictures and it was incredibly distressing,” said Eve.
“He was treated by the air ambulance and people filmed his treatment.”
Nigel had sustained a severe traumatic brain injury and numerous other physical injuries. He was in a coma for a month and spent about nine months in hospital.
Eve said having the incident documented and discussed online “took on a life of its own”.
“He was at a very vulnerable point and didn’t have a voice in that – he couldn’t speak on any of it, and people were sort of doing that for him – putting that narrative out there, that wasn’t necessarily true.”
While friends attempted to have material taken down from various online platforms, the fact that it was filmed or photographed at all is something that Eve has struggled with.
“Even if it’s somebody’s old phone is in a drawer, they’ve got my father’s worst moment in his entire life on there,” she said.
“Even if we’ve managed to get [the images] taken down, the impact of knowing that people would do that stays.
“If it was you or someone you loved in that situation, would you rather have someone take a minute and think – or call for help – or would you rather them film it and preserve that?”
Insp Lambley from South Wales Police is urging people to use their phones to call for help, rather than to livestream a person’s final moments.
“We’re trying to give people as much dignity in that vulnerable moment as possible,” said Insp Lambley.
“When people whip their phones out and take photos of them or video them, we’re losing control of that. We’re not able to give them dignity.”
She said there had been a “seismic change” during her 13 years as a police officer.
“Now it just seems the go-to is that instead of people using their phone to call for help, they’re using it to film and upload to social media for nothing more than likes and comments.
“It’s not with the intention of bringing anyone to justice or to assist that person in any way – you’re robbing that person of dignity.”
The campaign, It’s Not Your Story To Tell, has been co-produced by Ms Thomas and the South Wales Trauma Network, which is made up of hospitals, emergency services and rehabilitation services.
‘Livestreaming their last moments’
Insp Lambley said police being filmed by members of the public is common, and said she accepted that officers must be held accountable.
“But when we see the impact it has on people that we’re dealing with as victims of crime or traumatic incidents like car accidents or stabbings, it really hurts, because it completely contradicts what we’re trying to do.
“On some occasions they’re using their phone to livestream people in – sometimes – their last moments.”
She recalled one incident where a 15-year-old boy had died and after attempting to resuscitate him, she and colleagues became aware that a member of the public had taken a photo and circulated on social media that the teenager had died.
She said she had been trained to deliver “a death message” with dignity, meaning they would take time to compose themselves before breaking the news to relatives.
“In this case I literally had to run from the scene to the house of this boy’s parents, looking dishevelled and out of breath and bang on their door and say ‘I’m really sorry, your son is dead’.
“That’s not how I ever wanted to deliver that message, but I felt I had to get there before social media. You’re running against something that you have no control over.
“For me, I did a disservice to that family.
“But I intercepted somebody who was on their way to give their condolences, and more or less push them back from the front door, saying ‘the [family] don’t know’.”
The campaign was initiated by the South Wales Trauma Network because of the impact the issue has on a number of affiliated professions.
Andrea Bradley, operations manager for the network, said having someone record your efforts to support a person in their hour of need had “a negative experience for everyone involved”, including the professionals.
“I think it’s really important to highlight the effect on staff too,” she said.
“When people are recording them actually trying to save a life the effect is huge. It’s a huge responsibility on that member of staff.
“I have never forgotten any patient that has been involved in any sort of serious accident – or their family and loved ones. They stay with me forever.
“We reached out to every blue light service and asked them about the impact – every one of them came back and said we have an experience that is negative and we want to be part of this campaign.”
I had a tough day, says Rachel Reeves after Commons tears
Rachel Reeves has said she had had “a tough day” and had been “clearly upset”, as she gave her first interview since crying in the House of Commons on Wednesday.
She did not go into details behind the incident saying she had been dealing with “a personal issue” adding: “Today’s a new day and I’m just cracking on with the job.”
The chancellor was speaking after making a surprise appearance alongside Sir Keir Starmer to unveil the government’s 10-year plan for the NHS.
Government borrowing costs initially rose following Reeves’ tearful appearance at Prime Minister’s Questions, when Sir Keir initially failed to guarantee that the chancellor would keep her job.
The fall was partially reversed after Sir Keir insisted he was “in lockstep” with his chancellor, who he said would be in her job “for a very long time to come”.
One analyst told the BBC the initial rise reflected concern in the financial markets that if Reeves left her job then control over the government’s finances would weaken.
Will Walker Arnott, head of private clients at the bank Charles Stanley, told the BBC’s Today programme: “It looks to me like this is a rare example of financial markets actually enhancing the career prospects of a politician.”
In a bid to put on a united front, the chancellor unexpectedly joined Sir Keir and Health Secretary Wes Streeting at a hospital in East London to set out details of new neighbourhood health centres.
As she addressed staff, Reeves was smiling broadly and later shared a hug with the prime minister.
Speaking to broadcasters after the event, Reeves was asked about her tears in Parliament. She said: “My job as chancellor at 12 o’clock on a Wednesday is to be at PMQs next to the prime minister, supporting the government and that’s what I tried to do.”
“I think all your viewers have had tough days, for personal reasons, for whatever reasons. I happened to be on the camera when I had a tough day.”
She said she was “totally” up for the job of chancellor and asked if she was surprised the prime minister had not unequivocally backed her in Parliament replied: “People can see that Keir and me are a team.”
“We fought the election together, we changed the Labour Party together so that we could be in the position to return to power and over the past year we’ve worked in lockstep together.”
During the event, Sir Keir praised his chancellor telling the audience: “I think it’s just fantastic that she is here.”
He said decisions made by Reeves had allowed the government to “invest record amounts in the NHS”.
Asked if he had been aware that his chancellor had been crying next to him in the House of Commons, Sir Keir said he “hadn’t appreciated what was happening” as he was “literally up and down” answering questions.
“No prime minister ever has had side conversations in PMQs. It does happen in other debates when there is a bit more time, but in PMQs it is bang, bang, bang, bang.
“I was probably the last to appreciate anything else going on in the chamber.”
He said the incident was due to “a personal issue and I am certainly not going to say anything more about that”.
Speculation about Reeves’ future had been growing after Labour rebels forced the government to give up some of its benefits changes and in so doing put a £5bn hole in the chancellor’s spending plans.
In order to meet her self-imposed borrowing rules, she is now likely to have to consider cutting public spending or raising taxes at the Budget in autumn.
Asked if taxes would be going up, Reeves said she would not “speculate” but added: “Of course there is a cost to the welfare changes that Parliament voted through this week and that will be reflected in the Budget.”
In a sign that she would not be changing her own restrictions on borrowing, the chancellor said “stability that we’ve been able to return to the economy… is only possible because of the fiscal discipline which is underpinned by the fiscal rules”.
Reeves’s two main rules are not to borrow to fund day-to-day public spending; and to get debt falling as a share of the UK economic output by 2029/30.
In her speech, she also said the boost to NHS spending would not “have been possible” without the measures she took in last year’s Budget.
Speaking to BBC Breakfast on Thursday, shadow chancellor Mel Stride said he “felt for” Reeves, and the incident showed politicians “are all human beings”.
But he accused the government of making “serious mistakes” and “bungling and chaos”, which he predicted would lead to tax rises in the autumn.
Rachael Maskell, one of the Labour MPs who led efforts to block the government’s benefits bill, told the BBC on Wednesday that when trying to find money, the government should “look at those with the broadest shoulders”.
“We do need to look at things like a wealth tax or equalisation of capital gains tax,” she said.
On Thursday, the government announced that its Universal Credit and Personal Independence Bill would be renamed the Universal Credit Bill, after the legislation was gutted of significant measures relating to the personal independence payment.
Wildfire forces evacuation of thousands on Greek island of Crete
A major wildfire in eastern Crete has forced the evacuation of thousands of people and caused widespread damage to homes and businesses, as strong winds continue to hamper firefighting efforts.
The blaze, which broke out on Wednesday afternoon near the village of Achlia, has spread rapidly across forested and mountainous terrain due to gale-force winds and high temperatures.
According to Greece’s fire service, the fire has now split into three active fronts – in Achlia, Ferma and Skinokapsala.
Fire crews say the conditions are creating new flare-ups, making containment efforts extremely difficult.
Authorities have ordered the mass evacuation of hotels, rental rooms and homes in the Ferma municipality. The operation is underway with the support of the fire service, police and local volunteers.
Manolis Tzarakis, president of the Ierapetra and Southeast Crete Hoteliers’ Association, told a local radio station on Thursday that around 5,000 people have been evacuated, the majority of whom are foreign tourists staying in local hotels. At least 200 evacuees are being sheltered in a sports hall in Ierapetra.
As of Thursday morning, a total of 230 firefighters, supported by 13 specialised foot teams, 46 engines, and a drone surveillance unit, have been deployed in the area. For aerial firefighting, 10 helicopters have been made available – one of them coordinating airborne operations.
Authorities say the damage is extensive, with homes, greenhouses, villas, hotels and businesses reportedly destroyed in both coastal and inland areas.
In the settlement of Agia Fotia, homes and rental properties have been destroyed, and the area is experiencing a power outage, according to local reports. At least four elderly people have been taken to hospital with respiratory problems caused by smoke inhalation.
The main road near Agia Fotia has been closed by police, who have urged residents and visitors to avoid all non-essential travel due to hazardous air quality, extreme heat, and falling ash.
As a precaution, all hospitals in Crete have been placed on alert by health authorities.
Emergency alerts via the 112 public warning system were issued throughout Wednesday, calling for evacuations from Achlia, Ferma, Agia Fotia, Galini, and later Koutsounari, instructing residents and tourists to move towards Ierapetra.
Some individuals who were cut off by road were reportedly evacuated by boat from local beaches.
Earlier this week in Turkey more than 50,000 people were evacuated due to wildfires in the western province of Izmir.
At least six heat-related deaths have been reported in Europe as the continent reels under an early summer heatwave. The latest recorded fatalities were in Spain and Italy. There were also casualties in France.
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Peru’s president doubles her salary despite record low approval rating
The president of Peru, Dina Boluarte, has issued a decree doubling her salary despite having a historically low approval rating of only 2%.
She will now be paid more than 35,500 soles ($10,000; £7,300) per month.
Peru’s economy minister said the president’s salary had been increased to match those of other heads of state in the region.
The news has been greeted with derision on social media, where many called Boluarte “tone-deaf” and her salary increase “outrageous”.
Others shared footage of the president’s recent visit to the city of Arequipa, where her car was pelted with stones and eggs, to illustrate the anger many Peruvians feel.
Boluarte was not elected as president. Instead, she came to power in December 2022, when the previous president, Pedro Castillo, was impeached and she, as the vice-president at the time, stepped in to fill the vacuum.
Her presidency has been overshadowed by several investigations, including into whether she failed to declare luxury gifts and into whether she abandoned her post when she did not appoint a caretaker president during her absence for surgery on her nose.
She has denied any wrongdoing but her already low approval rating has fallen further as Peruvians grow increasingly impatient at what they say is her failure to tackle rising crime.
Economy Minister Raúl Pérez Reyes said that prior to the raise, Boluarte’s salary had been the second lowest of 12 countries in the region, with only Bolivia paying its president less per month.
Her new salary is almost 35 times that of the monthly minimum wages, which stands at 1,025 soles ($288; £210).
Strong jump in US jobs as economy defies expectations
Hiring in the US defied expectations with 147,000 jobs added in June, according to the latest figures.
The gain was much bigger than the 110,000 analysts had predicted, with government and healthcare the sectors driving the rise.
The unemployment rate declined to 4.1%, down from 4.2% in May, the Labor Department said.
However, concerns remain around hiring in the private sector, and analysts point to a growing caution among firms, with many employers hesitant to take on new staff or replace those who leave.
Job gains for April and May were also revised up by a combined total of 16,000.
Hiring for roles in the federal government, professional services, and manufacturing declined in June.
However, roles in state and local government education rose, with around 63,500 positions added, while healthcare and social assistance gained another 58,600 jobs.
Despite the unemployment rate declining, the number of long-term unemployed in the US increased by 190,000 to a total of 1.6 million people.
The monthly jobs report from the government is a closely-watched signal of economic health.
George Brown, senior economist at Schroders, said: “For all the tariff turmoil, the US labour market remains remarkably resilient.”
He said companies are reluctant to let go of workers after labour shortages in recent years, and “pockets of this may persist in certain sectors and states given the Trump administration’s hard-line stance on immigration”.
Some economists have said businesses are in limbo at the moment as they wait for the outcome of the end of US President Donald Trump’s 90-day pause on bringing in higher import taxes on many countries.
Trade negotiations are continuing with a number of countries, including the UK, with whom the Trump administration agreed a partial deal in June.
There have been some predictions of higher inflation due to tariffs. However, forecasts that the pace of price rises could pick up over the summer, economists expect the US central bank, the Federal Reserve, to cut rates again in September.
Fed chair Jerome Powell said on Tuesday that the central bank planned to “wait and learn more” about the impact of tariffs on inflation before lowering rates again.
Last month the Fed left its benchmark overnight interest rate in the 4.25%-4.50% range where it has been since December.
Trump has repeatedly criticised Mr Powell for not cutting interest rates, and on Wednesday he called for him to quit right away.
“‘Too Late’ should resign immediately!!!”, Trump said in a post on his Truth Social platform.
US Supreme Court to review bans on trans athletes in female sports
The US Supreme Court has agreed to review whether state laws can ban transgender athletes from competing in women’s and girls’ sports.
The case concerns laws in Idaho and West Virginia, where two transgender students won injunctions from lower courts allowing them to continue competing.
How the top court rules could have significant implications across the country.
It comes two weeks after the conservative majority court upheld a Tennessee law that bans gender transition care for young people – a ruling that some advocates say delivered a major blow to transgender rights in the US.
The Supreme Court will review the cases of Becky Pepper-Jackson, 15, and Lindsay Hecox, 24, who successfully challenged state bans in West Virginia and Idaho by arguing they were discriminatory.
Idaho was the first state to pass a law prohibiting transgender athletes from competing in women and girls’ sports. Two dozen other states have since followed.
Ms Hecox, a long distance runner, lodged a legal challenge against the Idaho law in 2020 shortly after it was enacted. She was later granted an injunction by both a district court and an appeals court.
State lawmaker Barbara Ehardt, who introduced the law, said at the time of its passing that it would ensure “boys and men will not be able to take the place of girls and women in sports because it’s not fair”.
But in the appeals ruling, a panel of three judges found that the Idaho law violated constitutional rights, and that the state had “failed” to provide evidence that the law protects “sex equality and opportunity for women athletes.”
West Virginia Attorney General John McCuskey backed the top court’s intervention.
“The people of West Virginia know that it’s unfair to let male athletes compete against women; that’s why we passed this common sense law preserving women’s sports for women,” he said.
Joshua Block of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which is representing the athletes, insisted lower courts were correct to block the “discriminatory laws”.
“Categorically excluding kids from school sports just because they are transgender will only make our schools less safe and more hurtful places for all youth,” he said.
How the Supreme Court decides to rule on the issue will likely impact other states that have similar bans in place.
At the federal level, President Donald Trump signed an executive order earlier this year that aimed to ban transgender women and girls from competing on female sports teams.
The Supreme Court will hear the challenges during its next term, which begins in October. A hearing date has not yet been set.
Bear kills motorcyclist in Romanian mountains
A man has died after he was attacked by a bear in one of Romania’s most scenic mountain regions.
The victim, who had been riding a motorcycle, stopped at a popular tourist area on the Transfagarasan road on Tuesday morning, authorities said.
The bear dragged him down a steep ravine with an elevation drop of around 80 metres (262ft), they added.
“Unfortunately, he was already dead when we arrived,” Ion Sanduloiu, head of the Arges County Mountain Rescue Service, told the BBC.
“The injuries were extremely severe. Even though he was wearing a helmet and full protective gear, it wasn’t enough.”
Sanduloiu said the victim had parked his bike next to a sign that warned not to feed the bears.
“My advice is simple: do not stop, do not feed them, and keep your distance,” he added.
The animal has not yet been euthanised, officials said. An investigation into the incident is ongoing.
Romania is home to the largest brown bear population in the European Union.
Human-bear encounters have increased in recent years, with several fatal incidents prompting calls for clearer regulations and investment into prevention strategies.
Recent genetic population studies conducted by Romania’s environment ministry estimated the country’s brown bear population to be between 10,400 and 12,800 – significantly higher than previous counts.
Former environment minister Mircea Fechet considered the optimal sustainable population to be around 4,000 bears – roughly one-third of the current estimate.
Fechet has proposed simplifying laws to allow local authorities to take more immediate action, including the ability to euthanise bears that enter residential areas.
The ministry also plans to introduce risk zone maps to better manage bear populations, balancing conservation efforts with public safety.
Conservationists say the death reflects deeper structural problems in Romania’s wildlife management.
Gabriel Paun, founder of the environmental NGO Agent Green, which campaigns for wildlife protection and against illegal logging, said the issue was mismanagement, not overpopulation.
“The recurring tragedies on the Transfagarasan road are the result of multiple failures: tourists stopping to interact with wild animals, local authorities not doing enough to drive bears back into the forest, and the national government – particularly the environmental ministry – failing to properly implement the national plan for coexistence between wildlife and humans,” he said.
Paun said the bear population was threatened by “climate change, habitat destruction and human persecution”, adding that Romania has become a “key destination” for international trophy hunters.
Sanduloiu believes stronger deterrents are needed to prevent further loss of life.
“The solution is simple, in my opinion: higher fines and even prison sentences for those who stop to feed the bears,” he said.
$88m pollution-tracking satellite missing in space
An $88m (£65m) satellite designed to detect releases of the planet-warming gas methane from oil and gas production, has been lost in space in a major setback for climate efforts.
The MethaneSat satellite which had backing from Google and billionaire Jeff Bezos, was launched only last year aboard an Elon Musk SpaceX rocket.
It was meant to collect data for five years on sources of the powerful greenhouse gas, which is responsible for nearly a third of human-induced warming, to help curtail the worst offenders.
The Environment Defense Fund, the NGO which oversees the satellite, said that communication was lost ten days ago and is currently undertaking an investigation into what happened.
Methane is the most potent of the greenhouse gases, and although it does not hang around in the atmosphere as long as carbon dioxide, it is 28 times stronger over a 100-year period.
Despite an international commitment to reduce methane levels by 30% by 2030, year-on-year it continues to rise with the target unlikely to be met, according to the European Space Agency.
The main sources of methane are from oil and gas production, farming and food decomposition in landfill.
But many of the current satellites that monitor it are operated privately, reducing reducing transparency of who the worst offenders for methane release are.
MethaneSat came after years of development by the NGO Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) and once launched made much of its data publicly available, allowing scrutiny by governments and scientists.
It was backed by a consortium of tech giants including Google and billionaire Jeff Bezos, which together contributed $88m to the project.
The instruments used by the satellite are some of the most sensitive in the world, able to pick up much smaller sources of methane as well as “super-emitters”.
Improving the sensitivity is important for detecting releases from agriculture which are often much more diffuse than from oil and gas production.
‘Likely not recoverable’
Google said when it was launched it hoped its project would “fill gaps between existing tools”.
The company was using its artificial intelligence tools to process the data and generate a global methane map.
But after just a year in orbit, in what was meant to be a five-year programme, communication was lost with MethaneSat.
The team at EDF suspect that the satellite has lost power and said in a statement “that it is likely not recoverable.”
It went on to say that some of the software could be re-used but said it was too early to comment on whether a new satellite would be launched.
“To solve the climate challenge requires bold action and risk-taking and this satellite was at the leading edge of science, technology and advocacy,” it added.
One of the other major publicly-available sources of methane data is hosted by CarbonMapper. One of its sources of data is the TROPOMI instrument aboard the European Space Agency’s Sentinel-5P satellite. Although it continues to send back data its seven-year programme was meant to finish in October.
It is unclear how much longer it can continue to collect information, further limiting global efforts to track the greenhouse gas.
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BBC senior staff told to ‘step back’ from duties following row
The BBC has told a small number of senior staff to step back from their day-to-day duties on music and live events, following the broadcast of Bob Vylan’s controversial Glastonbury set.
The punk duo led a chant of “death, death to the IDF [Israel Defence Forces]” and made other derogatory comments during their performance, which was available to watch via a live stream on iPlayer.
In a statement, the BBC said there was “no place for antisemitism” in its output, and that it was taking action to “ensure proper accountability for those found to be responsible” for the broadcast.
The BBC also said Bob Vylan were one of seven Glastonbury acts it had deemed “high risk” in advance of the festival.
The broadcaster said it would make “immediate changes to livestreaming music events”, so that “any music performances deemed high risk by the BBC will now not be broadcast live or streamed live” in the future.
The corporation’s chair, Samir Shah, said the decision not to pull the live feed was “unquestionably an error of judgement”.
Earlier on Thursday, Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy told the House of Commons she was unsatisfied with the BBC’s response after she had asked questions about due diligence, senior oversight, and the delay in pulling the live feed.
“Given the seriousness of what happened, and particularly we heard in the House the absolute shocking stories of the impact this has had on the Jewish community in this country – given the seriousness of this, I would expect there to be accountability at the highest levels [of the BBC],” she said.
Shadow culture secretary Stuart Andrew said the BBC’s “belated response suggests a lack of vigilance and proper oversight”, adding the BBC has “clear responsibilities when broadcasting live events”.
The BBC has also been criticised by the UK’s chief rabbi Sir Ephraim Mirvis, while media regulator Ofcom said the corporation had “questions to answer”.
During their Glastonbury set, Bob Vylan’s singer Pascal Robinson-Foster, who performs under the stage name Bobby Vylan, also spoke about a record label boss he used to work for.
That boss would “speak very strongly about his support for Israel”, and had put his name to a letter urging Glastonbury to cancel Irish-language rap trio Kneecap’s performance, the musician said.
“Who do I see on that list of names but that bald-headed [expletive] I used to work for. We’ve done it all, all right? From working in bars to working for [expletive] Zionists.”
In a message to staff on Thursday, director general Tim Davie said: “I deeply regret that such offensive and deplorable behaviour appeared on the BBC and want to say sorry – to our audience and to all of you, but in particular to Jewish colleagues and the Jewish community.”
The BBC said Bob Vylan had been deemed high risk following a risk assessment process applied to all acts appearing at Glastonbury.
The duo, along with six other acts, were included in this category, but the BBC said they “were all deemed suitable for live streaming with appropriate mitigations”.
The statement continued: “Prior to Glastonbury, a decision was taken that compliance risks could be mitigated in real time on the live stream – through the use of language or content warnings – without the need for a delay. This was clearly not the case.”
The BBC noted that the live stream was monitored “in line with the agreed compliance protocols and a number of issues were escalated”.
Warnings appeared on the stream on two occasions, but, the BBC added: “The editorial team took the decision not to cut the feed. This was an error.”
Davie, who was attending Glastonbury himself on the day, was “subsequently made aware of what had happened and instructed the team that none of the performance should feature in further coverage”.
The BBC said the team on duty prioritised stopping the performance from becoming available on demand, meaning that the set would not appear separately on iPlayer or BBC Sounds.
However, the live feed remained available for more than four hours, which meant viewers were able to rewind and view the content.
“Given the failings that have been acknowledged, we are taking actions to ensure proper accountability for those found to be responsible for those failings in the live broadcast,” the BBC said. “We will not comment further on those processes at this time.”
In a statement, Shah apologised “to all our viewers and listeners and particularly the Jewish community for allowing the ‘artist’ Bob Vylan to express unconscionable antisemitic views live on the BBC”.
“This was unquestionably an error of judgement,” he added. “I was very pleased to note that as soon as this came to the notice of Tim Davie – who was on the Glastonbury site at the time visiting BBC staff – he took immediate action and instructed the team to withdraw the performance from on demand coverage.”
Since Glastonbury, Bob Vylan have had several bookings cancelled, including festival appearances in Manchester and France and a slot in Germany.
In response to the cancellations, the band reiterated their position, telling followers: “Silence is not an option. We will be fine, the people of Palestine are hurting.”
Avon and Somerset Police have launched a criminal investigation into their Glastonbury comments.
On Wednesday, London’s Metropolitan Police said the band are also under investigation for comments they allegedly made during a concert at Alexandra Palace in May.
After the media coverage of their comments, Bob Vylan said in a statement on Tuesday: “We are not for the death of Jews, Arabs or any other race or group of people. We are for the dismantling of a violent military machine”.
They added that “we, like those in the spotlight before us, are not the story. We are a distraction from the story, and whatever sanctions we receive will be a distraction”.
Deputy Russian Navy chief killed in strike near Ukraine border
The deputy head of the Russian Navy has been killed near the Ukrainian border, the Russian military has confirmed.
Major General Mikhail Gudkov, appointed by President Vladimir Putin to the senior naval post in March, was killed during what Russia’s defence ministry described as “combat work” in the western Kursk region, which borders Ukraine’s Sumy region. The ministry gave no further details about the operation.
Last summer Ukraine launched a surprise offensive in Kursk. While its troops have mostly been driven out, in June Kyiv said it was still holding onto small areas of the region.
Gudkov’s death is one of the most high-profile losses for Moscow since the start of its full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
According to Oleg Kozhemyako, governor of the Primorsky region in Russia’s Far East, ten others were also killed in the incident.
Kozhemyako made the announcement on Telegram, where he described Gudkov as a loyal officer who died “carrying out his duty”.
Unconfirmed reports from Russian and Ukrainian military-linked Telegram channels suggest the deaths were the result of a Ukrainian missile strike on a Russian command post near the town of Korenevo, around 30km (19 miles) from the border.
Ukraine has not officially commented on the attack – consistent with its usual policy of not confirming targeted strikes on Russian territory.
Gudkov had previously commanded the 155th Naval Infantry Brigade of the Pacific Fleet, a unit involved in heavy fighting across eastern Ukraine and later in the Kursk region itself.
Footage from the far eastern city of Vladivostok, home to Russia’s Pacific Fleet, showed mourners laying flowers at a makeshift memorial to Gudkov, who received the Gold Star medal of Hero of Russia in late 2023. He was seen receiving the honour from President Putin at a Kremlin ceremony in February.
Ukraine has not acknowledged involvement in Gudkov’s death.
However sources within Ukrainian security services have previously told the media, including the BBC, that they were behind similar targeted strikes, such as the killing of Gen Igor Kirillov in December 2024.
Earlier this year, General Yaroslav Moskalik was killed in a car bomb attack in Moscow – an incident the Kremlin also blamed on Kyiv. At the time Presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov accused Ukraine of “continuing its involvement in terrorist activities inside our country”.
Since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, there have been several high-level assassination plots on both sides.
Last year the Ukrainian security service (SBU) said it foiled a Russian plot to assassinate President Volodymyr Zelensky and other high-ranking Ukrainian officials.
At the start of the war, the Ukrainian leader said he was Russia’s “number one target”.
Meanwhile, officials in the southern Ukrainian city of Odesa said two people were killed and six injured in a missile strike on the port on Thursday.
Earlier, strikes on the central city of Poltava targeting an army recruitment centre killed two people and wounded nearly 50 others, authorities said.
Ryanair cancels flights for 30,000 passengers due to French strike
Tens of thousands of passengers have been hit by a French air traffic control strike that has cancelled flights in France on Thursday and Friday and had a knock-on effect elsewhere in Europe.
Budget airline Ryanair said it had been forced to cancel more than 170 flights and the holiday plans of more than 30,000 passengers had been disrupted.
Two French unions were staging the two-day strike over working conditions, leading to a quarter of flights being cancelled at the main airports in Paris and half of flights at Nice airport.
French Transport Minister Philippe Tabarot condemned as unacceptable both the unions’ demands and their decision to go on strike at such an important time for people going on holiday.
Ryanair said the strike had affected not only its flights to and from France, but also aircraft flying over French airspace to destinations including the UK, Ireland, Spain and Greece.
Its chief executive, Michael O’Leary, accused the air traffic controllers of “holding European families to ransom”.
“It makes no sense and is abundantly unfair on EU passengers going on holidays,” he complained, calling on European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to take “urgent action” to ensure minimum service levels during strikes and to protect flights going through French airspace from domestic industrial action.
France’s civil aviation authority, DGAC, asked airlines to reduce flight schedules at several airports across the country.
Disruption is expected to worsen at French airports on Friday, with 40% fewer flights from the Paris airports at Charles de Gaulle, Orla and Beauvais.
The strike was called by the UNSA-ICNA union, which cited staffing shortages, management issues and the planned introduction of a controversial clock-in system for controllers among its concerns. Talks with the DGAC earlier this week failed to resolve the dispute.
Airlines for Europe (A4E), the continent’s leading aviation body, described the strike as “intolerable”, warning that it would severely disrupt travel plans at the height of the holiday season.
EasyJet, another low-cost carrier affected by the disruption, expressed “deep disappointment” and urged a resolution.
Ryanair said on Wednesday it also had been hit by the recent conflict in the Middle East and had cancelled more than 800 flights last month.
Despite the cancellations, the airline said it still operated more than 109,000 flights in June, indicating that fewer than 1% of flights were affected.
Tears as fans mourn Liverpool’s Jota at Anfield
Thousands of football fans have made their way to Anfield stadium to pay their respects to the Liverpool forward Diogo Jota after his death in a car crash in Spain.
Jota, 28, was killed when a Lamborghini he was travelling in with his younger brother, Andre Silva, suffered a tyre blow-out, crashed and caught fire in Cernadilla in the Zamora province.
Both men died in the crash, which happened at about 00:30 local time, Spanish police told the BBC.
A sea of flowers, football shirts, scarves, balloons and flags have been laid outside Liverpool’s ground by fans since news of his death broke.
Lifelong fan John Barlow from Leyland in Lancashire, a survivor of the Hillsborough disaster in 1989, said he was “absolutely devastated” when the news broke.
Mr Barlow said: “I had to stop what I’m doing at work and drive in.
“I come to every match and he was like one of us. He had a bit of something about him, like a proper old Liverpool player, like the players we were brought up with.
“He had a fight in him and he came back from things and he was tough.”
He said he was “just heartbroken, absolutely heartbroken”.
- ‘We will miss you so much’: Klopp leads tributes to Diogo Jota after he dies in car crash
Andrea Molyneux, who went to the stadium with her daughters Isabella and Lily Costello, described their “utter devastation”.
“I can’t even comprehend the grief that the family are going through,” Ms Molyneux said.
“He was just such a young man and life can be taken away from you in such a short time.
“He had everything. Everything.”
The Portugal international had recently married his partner, Rute Cardoso, with whom he had three young children.
Another fan told the BBC he would remember Jota with “a smile on his face, scoring goals for Liverpool”.
“But in a time like this, football pales into insignificance,” he added.
“He’s left a wife and three children behind, his brother has passed away with him and his poor parents have lost two children.
“I mean, he’ll forever be remembered as a great Red for us. But when something like this happens, football doesn’t matter anymore.”
Writing on social media, former Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp, who was in charge at Anfield when Jota was signed from Wolverhampton Wanderers in 2020, said he was heartbroken.
“This is a moment where I struggle!” he wrote.
“There must be a bigger purpose, but I can’t see it.”
Earlier Liverpool FC said it was “devastated” by the loss of the player and his brother.
The club described the player’s death as “an unimaginable loss”.
Fact-checking three key claims about Trump’s mega-bill
President Donald Trump’s flagship piece of legislation – which he’s labelled the “big beautiful bill” – has faced major objections from Democrats as well as from some Republicans.
It has been subject to tense negotiations amid questions about how much it could cost and its proposed cuts to some US welfare schemes.
Elon Musk has also weighed in, repeating threats to form a new political party if the “insane spending bill passes”.
BBC Verify has looked at claims made about the bill’s possible impact in three key areas – the US national finances, medical cover, and taxes.
How much would the bill cost?
The White House has said the bill “reduces deficits by over $2 trillion” – but senior Democrats have insisted it would actually add trillions.
BBC Verify has examined various independent studies about the bill’s impact and interviewed six tax experts who all agreed that it would increase the national deficit.
The deficit is what happens when the US government spends more than it collects through taxes and other forms of revenue.
Musk criticised lawmakers who “voted for the biggest debt increase in history” when it was being passed in the US Senate.
The debt is the overall sum of money owed by the government – essentially the accumulation of past budget deficits – which means it has to borrow money and pay interest on this.
- Live updates as Trump’s mega-bill heads for final vote
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- ‘Our food doesn’t even last the month’ – Americans brace for Trump’s welfare cuts
The US national debt is currently about $36tn (£26tn) – of which about $29tn is money owed by the government to investors around the world.
Larger deficits and a bigger debt can theoretically result in higher interest rates – the idea being that investors worry more about a country’s capacity to pay its debts as those rise and they therefore demand higher interest payments.
That can feed into higher interest rates for consumers which make things like housing and cars less affordable, and restrict business investment and therefore productivity and jobs.
The current version of the bill is estimated to add about $3.3tn (£2.4tn) to the US deficit over the next 10 years, despite an initial economic boost, according to estimates from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) – the government agency which provides independent analysis of spending.
The CBO said the spending cuts proposed in the bill would be outweighed by the tax cuts.
An analysis from the Tax Foundation think tank concluded that the bill “would increase economic output but worsen deficits”. It projects that the bill would increase the level of US GDP by around 1% after 10 years relative to where it would otherwise be, but that it would also add $3.6tn (£2.6tn) to the deficit over the same period.
Some banks have said they are in favour of the bill – with the American Bankers Association writing an open letter to lawmakers saying it provides “much needed tax relief” which would boost the economy.
The experts BBC Verify spoke to said although the bill may provide some economic growth, its cost would be significantly more than this boost.
“Most analysis finds that the bill will produce a small, temporary, short-lived boost – but that over time the bill will actually be a drag on the economy,” says Bobby Kogan, a federal budget expert at the Center for American Progress, a left-leaning policy institute.
And Mark Zandi, an economist at the financial consultancy Moody’s Analytics, says: “It will result in continued massive budget deficits, and a high and rising debt load.”
What impact would the bill have on Medicaid?
“We’re cutting $1.7 trillion in this bill and you’re not gonna feel any of it. Your Medicaid is left alone. It’s left the same,” Trump claimed at an event about the bill last week.
However, various studies show there will be significant reductions to Medicaid under the bill.
Medicaid is the government-run scheme which provides healthcare insurance for about 71 million low-income adults, children, pregnant women, elderly adults and people with disabilities.
Analysis by the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) – an independent health policy research group – found that the bill would cut $1tn (£729bn) from future Medicaid spending over the next 10 years.
The White House has said the bill “removes illegal aliens, enforces work requirements, and protects Medicaid for the truly vulnerable”.
The CBO estimates that nearly 12 million Americans would lose health insurance by 2034 under the terms of the Senate bill – with just 1.4 million of these being people “without verified citizenship, nationality, or satisfactory immigration status”.
What about the impact on taxes?
Trump has repeatedly said that not passing the bill would lead to massive tax rises on Americans – in part because the tax cuts passed during his first-term in office are due to expire at the end of this year.
“If it’s not approved, your taxes will go up by 68%,” the president said last week.
We asked the White House for the calculations behind Trump’s claim – they responded saying the bill “prevents the largest tax hike in history” but didn’t answer our question on where the specific figure comes from.
The Tax Policy Center estimates that not extending tax cuts introduced under Trump in 2017 would lead to a hike of 7.5% on average.
The body also says roughly 60% of tax payers would have to contribute more if they expire.
“The 68% figure is incorrect… It could be roughly drawn from a count of taxpayers that would see an increase in taxes, as opposed to an estimate of the actual tax increase,” says Elena Patel, a tax policy expert and assistant professor at the University of Utah’s business school.
Overall, the tax changes in the bill would benefit wealthier Americans more than those on lower incomes, according to the Tax Policy Center analysis. About 60% of the benefits would go to those making above $217,000 (£158,000), it found.
“There is no question that this bill will result in a massive redistribution from the poorest to the richest,” says Ms Patel.
What do you want BBC Verify to investigate?
Wildfire forces evacuation of thousands on Greek island of Crete
A major wildfire in eastern Crete has forced the evacuation of thousands of people and caused widespread damage to homes and businesses, as strong winds continue to hamper firefighting efforts.
The blaze, which broke out on Wednesday afternoon near the village of Achlia, has spread rapidly across forested and mountainous terrain due to gale-force winds and high temperatures.
According to Greece’s fire service, the fire has now split into three active fronts – in Achlia, Ferma and Skinokapsala.
Fire crews say the conditions are creating new flare-ups, making containment efforts extremely difficult.
Authorities have ordered the mass evacuation of hotels, rental rooms and homes in the Ferma municipality. The operation is underway with the support of the fire service, police and local volunteers.
Manolis Tzarakis, president of the Ierapetra and Southeast Crete Hoteliers’ Association, told a local radio station on Thursday that around 5,000 people have been evacuated, the majority of whom are foreign tourists staying in local hotels. At least 200 evacuees are being sheltered in a sports hall in Ierapetra.
As of Thursday morning, a total of 230 firefighters, supported by 13 specialised foot teams, 46 engines, and a drone surveillance unit, have been deployed in the area. For aerial firefighting, 10 helicopters have been made available – one of them coordinating airborne operations.
Authorities say the damage is extensive, with homes, greenhouses, villas, hotels and businesses reportedly destroyed in both coastal and inland areas.
In the settlement of Agia Fotia, homes and rental properties have been destroyed, and the area is experiencing a power outage, according to local reports. At least four elderly people have been taken to hospital with respiratory problems caused by smoke inhalation.
The main road near Agia Fotia has been closed by police, who have urged residents and visitors to avoid all non-essential travel due to hazardous air quality, extreme heat, and falling ash.
As a precaution, all hospitals in Crete have been placed on alert by health authorities.
Emergency alerts via the 112 public warning system were issued throughout Wednesday, calling for evacuations from Achlia, Ferma, Agia Fotia, Galini, and later Koutsounari, instructing residents and tourists to move towards Ierapetra.
Some individuals who were cut off by road were reportedly evacuated by boat from local beaches.
Earlier this week in Turkey more than 50,000 people were evacuated due to wildfires in the western province of Izmir.
At least six heat-related deaths have been reported in Europe as the continent reels under an early summer heatwave. The latest recorded fatalities were in Spain and Italy. There were also casualties in France.
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Dramatic moment Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs fell to his knees after learning his fate
Twelve New York jurors gathered around 10:00 (14:00 GMT) on Wednesday in a wood-panelled courtroom to tell Sean “Diddy” Combs that they found him not guilty of running a criminal enterprise with employees, and sex trafficking his ex-girlfriends.
The disgraced hip-hop mogul fell to his knees and buried his head in a chair at the defence table where he had just spent two months on trial for sex trafficking and racketeering.
Before the verdict came down, Combs sat quietly in his chair, looking forward, wearing the same off-white sweater and pants he wore for much of his trial.
The court grew quiet as the jury foreperson handed the verdict sheet to the court deputy. Then it was handed back to the foreperson.
And they began to read.
As the sound of the “not guilty” rung out in court for the first time, acquitting Combs of the most severe crime of racketeering, the rapper kept his head low.
By the time the foreperson announced Combs was not guilty of sex trafficking, Combs had his head in his hands.
The jury did find him guilty on the least severe charges of transporting people to engage in prostitution. As they confirmed their decision, Combs buried his face in his hands.
A flurry of small celebrations followed for Combs, who has been in a federal jail in Brooklyn since September. He made a prayer sign with his hands to the jury, then turned around and made the same gesture to his family – twin daughters, sons and 85-year-old mother.
He appeared to mouth: “I’m coming home.”
The moment seemed equally emotional for Combs’ many lawyers, including Teny Geragos, seated next to him and wiping away tears with a tissue after the verdict was read.
Combs’ attorneys wasted no time in telling the judge that the verdict, reached after roughly two days of deliberations, meant Combs should be able to walk out of the Manhattan courthouse a free man that very day.
His acquittal on the most serious charges meant he no longer needed to be jailed, his attorney Marc Agnifilo told the court, noting that his client’s plane was inaccessible – chartered and in Maui.
“Mr Combs has been given his life by this jury,” he said. “He will not run afoul of anything this court imposes on him.”
Then, in the perhaps the most emotional gesture of the day for Combs, he appeared to express his gratitude by pressing his head into his chair at the defence table.
He rose, clapping his hands loudly, to hug several of his lawyers. Many family members and supporters in the main courtroom and a packed overflow room joined him, cheering.
Then, with one final hug to his lawyer and a wave to his family – blocked by a mass of people and court benches – he was escorted out of the court.
The hip-hop mogul’s homecoming hopes were later dashed as Judge Arun Subramanian denied him bail at another hearing on Wednesday afternoon.
Outside the Manhattan court, there were repeated calls of “free Diddy” in a large crowd behind barriers.
But he will remain behind bars until his sentencing later this year.
Sixteen Dublin flights grounded in air traffic control strikes
Flights between Dublin Airport and several European cities have been cancelled due to a French air traffic control strike.
A total of 16 flights have been grounded between Dublin and the French cities of Paris, Biarritz and Nice, as well as Murcia in Spain on Thursday.
No flights departing or arriving to Belfast City Airport have been affected so far, the airport has confirmed.
Dublin airport has advised passengers flying to or over mainland Europe to check with their airline for updates on the status of their flight.
Two French unions are staging the two-day strike over working conditions.
Ryanair has said it has cancelled 170 flights due to the strike action across Thursday and Friday, disrupting more than 30,000 passengers.
The Irish airline has said the disruption will mostly affect flights over French airspace en route to their destination, including those from Spain to Ireland and the UK to Greece, alongside flights to and from France.
Daa spokesperson Graeme McQueen said the flights included eight departures and eight arrivals.
“As it stands, no cancellations have been confirmed for flights in and out of Cork Airport today,” he said.
EasyJet has confirmed no flights to or from Northern Ireland have been impacted by the strikes. The airline does not operate in the Republic of Ireland.
The disruption comes at the start of the European summer holiday season – one of the busiest travel periods of the year.
‘Urgent action’ needed
France’s civil aviation authority, DGAC, has asked airlines to reduce flight schedules at several airports across the country.
Ryanair has criticised France for not protecting aircrafts flying over French airspace when national air traffic control strikes are taking place.
The airline has called on the head of European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, to take “urgent action”, requesting air traffic control services to be “fully staffed” for the first wave of daily departures and for flights going through French airspace to be protected during national strikes.
Chief executive of the airline Michael O’Leary said the disruption is “abundantly unfair” on passengers and families booked to go on holiday.
“Once again European families are held to ransom by French Air Traffic Controllers going on strike. It is not acceptable that overflights over French airspace en route to their destination are being cancelled/delayed as a result of yet another French ATC strike”, he added.
Why the world’s superyachts are getting bigger and bigger
Business is booming in the luxury world of superyachts, with the super-rich wanting ever bigger floating palaces.
Paola Trifirò knows a thing or two about superyachts – she and her husband have owned more than a dozen over the years.
The Italian couple, who have made their fortune in law, and continue to run a global legal firm, like to sail around the world in the height of luxury.
Ms Trifirò describes their boats, which can be more than 50m (164ft) long, as being like floating five-star hotels. And she likes to get involved in the design process.
One criterion she insists upon is that the crew have ample kitchen space, so they can cook gourmet meals for up to 15 people.
Ms Trifirò explains her reasoning: “If you are used to eating well, not everywhere [in the world] are there restaurants good enough.”
She also says that the large size of the vessels is reassuring. “Whether it’s sailing alongside humpback whales, or receiving greetings by fishermen on the Fiji islands, my boats allow me to sail… with strength and safety.”
But what exactly is a superyacht? While there is no official global classification, industry website and magazine Boat International describes one as “a luxury, privately-owned yacht that measures 24 metres or more in length, and is professionally crewed”.
The magazine says that global sales boomed after Covid. With the super rich suddenly unable to go to luxury hotels, as they were all closed during the pandemic, many switched to superyachts instead.
As a result, 1,024 new superyachts were built or on order around the world in 2022, a 25% jump from 2021, and a then all-time high, according to Boat International’s figures. This then increased to 1,203 in 2023, another new record.
“After the pandemic people considered their super yachts as safe islands both for themselves and their relatives,” says Barbara Armerio who co-owns Italian family-run superyacht builder Amer.
She adds that billionaires cherished their personal space and independence even more. “They asked for bigger windows, more space outside, and to be able to touch the seawater more easily”.
While the overall number of superyachts being built or ordered is expected to fall slightly this year to 1,138, they are getting bigger on average, Boat International’s data also shows. So far this year, 61 boats of 76m or more in length are being made, up from 55 in 2024.
And in the 46m to 60m grouping, numbers have increased to 175 from 159. Meanwhile, sales of the smallest superyachts, between 24m and 27m are down to 286 from 321.
“It’s clear that some of those new clients the industry found in the Covid-19 years are trading up,” says Ms Armerio.
Boat International’s editor in chief Stewart Campbell says that whatever size superyacht people buy “designers and naval architects are getting very clever at packing ever more volume into hulls, giving owners lots more space on board”.
As a result, today’s superyacht’s increasingly have everything from helipads to cinemas, gyms, beauty salons, and saunas.
As you’d imagine, prices are extremely high. You can pay €36m ($41m; £30m) for a new smaller boat, up to €295m for a 105m-long vessel with all the optional extras.
Half of all superyachts continue to be built in Italy, with its yards currently working on a combined length of 22,195m, or approximately 22km (13 miles), of boats. Turkey is in second place, followed by the Netherlands, the UK, Taiwan, Germany, the US and China.
Back in 2023, Italian shipbuilders earned €8.3bn from making superyachts, a record high.
Ms Armerio says her shipyard “produces only a few high-grade” superyachts per year, “masterpieces with unique details”.
She adds that Italian yacht-makers like hers are supported by a solid network of local artisans. “In Italy we find everything we need.”
Ms Armerio points to being able to drive to Tuscany’s stone quarries from her company’s base on the coast of Liguria if she needs to order marble.
Regarding the billionaires and multimillionaires who buy superyachts, Boat International says that most are from the US. Yet it points to more coming from Turkey, Indonesia and Mexico as those countries’ economies grow.
Meanwhile, sales to Russian buyers have fallen to due to the sanctions against the country and its elites as a result of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
If the appeal of a superyacht wasn’t immediately obvious, Ms Trifirò says they enable her to see the world and fulfil her wanderlust. And she likes to be at the controls of the boat.
“My curiosity to explore new places pushes me to cruise the oceans while in the driver’s seat,” she says.
Ms Trifirò adds that her crew is paid double what they’d likely earn on land “as it is very important to keep them happy. Our captain has worked for us for 22 years.”
Diddy’s secret world revealed in videos and his voice notes
“Can y’all come straighten it up over here? It’s not looking luxurious,” Sean ”Diddy” Combs says in a voice note to his personal assistants as R&B music mellows in the background.
Hours before, a so-called ”freak-off” - a drug-fuelled orgy also known as a “Wild King Night” – had been in full swing. Now, staff were being called in to clean up.
“PD said he’s going to need emergency clean up at hotel,” his chief of staff texts after another of these events. ”Bring him stain remover (for a chair and couch) and black trash bags. And baking soda too, he said.”
The BBC has seen messages and recordings from former staff in Combs’ household. The staff members have also given detailed accounts of what it was like to work on the multi-millionaire music mogul’s glamorous yacht rentals and inside his sprawling estates across the US – in the Hamptons, Beverly Hills and on Star Island in Miami.
Their experiences span the past five to 10 years, a period that was under scrutiny during Combs’ criminal trial in New York.
At the trial’s conclusion on Wednesday, the 55-year-old was cleared of the most serious charges – racketeering, and two counts of sex trafficking related to ex-partner Casandra Ventura and another woman referred to as “Jane”.
But jurors found he was guilty of two other counts related to the transportation to engage in prostitution of both women. He will be sentenced at a later date.
We have been shown material which paints a picture of a “scary” and unpredictable boss, who would administer shocking “loyalty tests”, and whose demands grew more and more extreme.
Staff have described how his sometimes-days-long “freak-offs” were held at locations around the world, with the rapper expecting staff to prepare a bag containing “baby oil, lubricant and red lights” – to create the red-tinted ambience Combs preferred – alongside class-A drugs wherever he travelled.
‘Wild King Nights’
Inside his waterfront Miami mansion, a $48m (£36m) compound located on an exclusive man-made island, we have been told that Combs kept tight control of his inner circle.
“I’m not about to be transparent with y’all,” a groggy Combs warns staff one day in a rambling voice note posted in an employee WhatsApp group in 2020. ”There’s some dark places y’all [EXPLETIVE] don’t want to go. Stay where you’re at.”
Staff say he was intense, demanding and volatile, with some attributing his unpredictability to a lifestyle of drug-fuelled parties. The turnover of staff was high and Combs had more than 20 different house managers join and leave in just two years across his properties, one former estates manager told us.
Phil Pines, 40, who worked for Combs as a senior executive assistant from 2019-2021, has told the BBC the mogul didn’t say a word to him when he first started his job.
“It was like an initiation,” he explains. “We didn’t speak to each other for 30 days.”
Another recent assistant, Ethan (not his real name), recalls: “He was a very ill man with different behaviours, sometimes very aggressive, sometimes very sweet.”
We have changed Ethan’s name because, like many former staff members, he still works in the high-net-worth hospitality industry and fears speaking out about Combs will hurt his career.
Ethan shows us a small scar on his forehead. He says this was the result of Combs smashing a glass against a wall in a fit of rage, and the shards cutting Ethan’s face.
Phil Pines and Ethan were part of Combs’ small group of trusted assistants and say he often played mind games with staff.
Ethan recalls one of Combs’ loyalty tests – when the star took off one of his rings and threw it into the Atlantic Ocean. He then turned to Ethan and told him he had to go into the water to get it.
They were at a formal event and Ethan, like his boss, was wearing a smart suit. He says this didn’t stop him jumping in right away to rescue it.
In another incident, Pines says Combs called him to his residence after midnight, just so he could fetch the TV remote from under the bed he was in with a female guest.
“See? He is loyal and now he can go back home,” he recalls Combs telling her. Pines says he felt like an animal.
But the Wild King Nights – as the rapper’s chief of staff, Kristina Khorram, referred to them – revealed an even darker side to working for Combs.
“I was asked to set up a laundry list of items for him,” says Pines. “And I thought to myself, why didn’t anybody explain this to me before?”
In one exchange seen by the BBC, Khorram texted him to warn a bag needs to be prepared for a Wild King Night in two hours. In another, she asked for a ”drop off” of seven bottles of baby oil and seven bottles of Astroglide lubricant alongside iced vanilla lattes.
“Rounding up a shelf of baby oil and Astroglide at a store is very, very humiliating. I would always pretend like I was on the phone,” Pines tells us.
In Combs’ trial the prosecution presented evidence of supplies they said were procured for “freak-offs”. A police raid on Combs’ Los Angeles mansion found drugs and more than 1,000 bottles of baby oil.
From three months into his role, Pines began having concerns about the frequency of these requests. “It became daily, sometimes twice a day, every day, and every week.”
Pines says there was a constant stream of young women who frequented Combs’ homes – apparently for sex. Young men were also called to the parties, says Ethan.
Some of these young people would appear to be friends of the star’s sons, Pines tells us, with some of the women later seen “hanging” with Combs.
Pines says he also had concerns that some of these guests – who looked like they were in their early 20s – were ”too young” and “impressionable” for his then 50-year-old boss.
“I would see some women feel uncomfortable or at least look like they’d had a wild night,” says Pines.
A woman with an IV drip would usually visit the next day, he says, to help guests recover after sometimes ”partying” for 24 hours non-stop without food.
Pines recalls one young guest uttering to him in distress: “I’ve never done anything like that before.”
He was instructed to drive her home from Combs’ Miami residence: ”She was kind of shaking and shivering, like she was coming down off the drugs.”
The drug-fuelled nature of these nights has repeatedly been brought up during Combs’ trial. Casandra Ventura, his ex-partner of more than a decade, testified that she endured years of coerced sex with male escorts under the threat of beatings and blackmail, while Combs filmed the encounters. She said these events would sometimes go on for days and require her to take countless drugs to stay awake.
Another woman, who dated Combs on-and-off from 2021 until his arrest last September, gave evidence that she felt pressured to fulfil his desires partly because he was paying her rent, and said the encounters left her feeling “disgusted” and in physical pain.
In his defence at trial, Combs’ lawyer said he admitted to domestic violence, but argued that all the sexual encounters were consensual, and that Combs had a “swingers lifestyle”.
The BBC understands at least one staff member was asked to search online for escorts to participate in the Wild King nights. Screenshots of the escorts were then sent to Combs for approval.
Pines says he doesn’t know what happened at these events, but he was asked to deal with the aftermath.
It was “just complete wreckage”, he says. “Oil all over the floor. Marijuana joints everywhere… I would wear gloves. I would wear a mask.”
“He [Combs] would get up, put his hoodie on and walk out the door,” Pines says, leaving staff to clean the room.
On one occasion, Pines says he witnessed Combs push and kick a female guest during an argument at his house, which continued outside.
Combs swore at her and said “give me my hoodie”, Pines remembers. “She takes off the hoodie, she’s topless, no bra, nothing, no t-shirt on. So, I take off my jacket and I wrap it around her to kind of shield her.”
The guest left in an Uber crying, says Pines, but within a week she was back at the house again with Combs.
“She came back shortly after that. Dinner, gifts… she was brought back into the fold.”
When Pines told his supervisor Khorram about the incident, he says she knew exactly what to say to him: “I kind of give her a play-by-play of what happened. Her words to me: ‘Never speak about this again.'”
Kristina Khorram has not responded to the BBC’s request for comment but has previously denied any wrongdoing.
In a statement to CNN last March, she described allegations against her as “false” and “causing irreparable and incalculable damage to my reputation and the emotional well-being of myself and my family”.
“I have never condoned or aided and abetted the sexual assault of anyone. Nor have I ever drugged anyone,” she said.
Staff would be required to erase any evidence of “freak-offs” – removing bodily stains from sheets, disposing of drugs and, Pines tells us, scrubbing any ”compromising” recorded footage of the sexual encounters off his boss’s personal phones and laptops.
Other staff also describe feeling disturbed by Combs’ sexual encounters.
“[There are] things I saw with my own eyes, memories that will stay forever,” says Ethan. He says Combs would sometimes ask him to enter the room and “bring him water or male enhancement pills” while sex was taking place.
Pines has filed his own civil lawsuit against Combs. The BBC approached Combs’ lawyers for comment in respect of Pines’ allegations, and they made this statement in response: “No matter how many lawsuits are filed, it won’t change the fact that Mr. Combs has never sexually assaulted or sex trafficked anyone – man or woman, adult or minor. We live in a world where anyone can file a lawsuit for any reason.”
Pines recalls a particularly horrifying incident around November 2020, when he says he was asked to stay behind after work and set up an after-party at the Miami mansion.
He says that Combs and his guests had been “in the sun partying, taking mushrooms, smoking, drinking all day – so they were completely gone by this time”.
During the party, Pines says Combs invited him to take a shot, before asking him to ”prove his loyalty”.
He handed Pines a condom and pushed him towards a female guest who was lying on a nearby couch.
“At that moment, I’m like, what is going on?” Pines says. ”I froze. I was just shocked by what was happening. I felt cold… but I also felt so much pressure.”
Pines says the woman consented and they had sex until Combs began ”drifting off into another part of the suite”.
“I didn’t want any of that,” he says. ”Once I kind of saw him out of my peripheral, that he was gone, I pulled up my pants and just got out of there quickly.
“It was a power move. I felt like I was coerced. It was manipulation.”
The Gucci bag
When they travelled internationally, staff say Combs’ drugs came with him, concealed in a safe onboard his $60m (£45m) private jet.
“Even if it was for a day trip, if he was going on the yacht for four hours, take all that stuff with you because he may use it,” Pines recalls being instructed.
He claims mushrooms, ketamine and ecstasy were kept in a small black Gucci bag alongside baby oil, lubricant and red lights.
Combs’ lawyers admitted during trial that he had procured drugs, but said they were for personal use only.
In one nerve-wracking incident in Venice in summer 2021, Pines says Italian authorities questioned Combs’ staff for an hour. He feared that if they had found the drugs hidden in the luggage, he would have “taken the fall” for his boss.
A former personal assistant, Brendan Paul, was arrested on charges of drug possession while with Combs at a Miami airport in March 2024, on the same day police raided the rapper’s homes. The charges were later dropped after Paul completed a pre-trial diversion programme.
During Combs’ trial, Paul, 26, testified that he had found cocaine after “sweeping” his boss’s room and had forgotten it was in his bag while they prepared for a vacation in the Bahamas. He told the court that he did not tell law enforcement that they were Combs’ drugs out of “loyalty”.
By December 2021, Pines says he had had enough.
“The money wasn’t worth it… because of the experiences I was having with him. It was just too much to bear.”
When asked why staff had not spoken out sooner, Pines does not hesitate. They were, he says, afraid of Combs.
“He is a very scary person. Whether you’re his employee, you’re a contractor, you’re a girlfriend, guest, you know what he’s capable of,” he says.
Ethan says he used to believe that Combs had ”people a couple of steps in front” who ”caught everything”. But after his former boss’s arrest, his view shifted. Staff simply were not able to stop what was coming, he says. “Obviously being a celebrity, he could cut many corners,” he reflects, but ”he couldn’t avoid the law”.
Pines says he was approached by federal agents in the Department of Homeland Security as part of its criminal investigation last summer and was later legally summoned to give evidence ahead of Combs’ trial. Other ex-assistants, who worked for Combs back in 2014 and as recently as 2024, testified in court during the trial.
“I have to nod to Cassie Ventura for being so courageous to stand up to him,” Pines says.
Ventura’s civil lawsuit, filed in November 2023, alleged Combs had trapped her in a cycle of violence and sexual abuse. The lawsuit was settled in a $20m (£15m) pay-out, one day after the filing. But dozens more followed in quick succession – there are now more than 60 civil cases against Combs, which remain to be resolved.
“She opened the door for people like me to come forward, and for other people who are going through similar things who feel silenced, who feel powerless going up against a giant.”
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“You realise what comes of making a decision like this is all the periphery stuff, not the rugby decision. It becomes a major story for 48 hours and a big debate.
“That is the process I have gone through, but I would hate to think we made calls based on trying to avoid any criticism or [gain] public popularity.”
They could easily be the words of British and Irish Lions head coach Andy Farrell, standing by the decision to call up his son Owen.
Instead, they come from 12 years earlier. A man in the same job, in the same city, but in a different era, with a different dilemma.
Back then it was Warren Gatland defending his dropping of Lions legend Brian O’Driscoll for the series decider against the Wallabies. He installed Jamie Roberts and Jonathan Davies – the midfield he knew and trusted from his day job with Wales – in O’Driscoll’s place.
Lions calls are invariably controversial. The quality and quantity of those ignored is too great for these decisions to be easily accepted by everyone.
However, the debate around Owen Farrell’s call-up, like O’Driscoll’s dropping, is turbo charged.
Andy Farrell’s harshest critics will claim that, regardless of Owen’s on-pitch pedigree, blood ties have played a part.
Andy and Owen are close. Andy was 16 when Owen was born. As a child, Owen would kick a ball about on the sidelines as his father captained Wigan. As a teenager Owen made his first Saracens appearance in a pre-season friendly against Western Force, replacing his father off the bench.
As Owen’s career has grown, Andy’s words about his son have become careful and few.
However, in 2023 he let his guard down after World Rugby attempted to reinstate a red card that would rule Owen out of some of England’s Rugby World Cup campaign.
“When you’re talking about somebody’s son and asking the question, it’s always going to be flawed,” said Farrell, qualifying his opinion before describing the disciplinary process against Owen as “a disgusting circus”.
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There will certainly be enough hot air expressed over Owen’s Lions call-up to fill a big top or two.
The case against is clear. Owen is short of form, fitness and top-level rugby.
His last game was two months ago, when he was forced out of Racing 92’s defeat by Lyon. His last Test rugby was nearly two years ago as part of England’s run to the France 2023 semi-finals.
His most recent club campaign was interrupted by injury, with a groin problem restricting his game time and place kicking.
Racing, having flirted with relegation, finished 10th in the Top 14.
Why, with the likes of Scotland’s Tom Jordan and Wales’ Blair Murray – both geographically closer, fitter, and less controversial – has Andy disrupted the Lions’ Test preparations with the furore that will accompany Owen’s call-up?
Perhaps because that disruption is exactly what Farrell thinks the tourists need.
Even allowing for another curveball call, Owen’s chances of making the Test 23 are surely slim.
Finn Russell seems secure as the Test 10 – Fin Smith is more likely to deputise for the Scot. Both are better suited to the more expansive style that Farrell has so far attempted to implement.
At inside centre, Bundee Aki and Sione Tuipulotu offer a ball-carrying threat that Farrell, certainly at 33, doesn’t. To include Farrell there would mean turning tactics on their head as well.
On the bench, Marcus Smith’s ability to cover full-back, with Blair Kinghorn and Hugo Keenan undercooked as yet, and fly-half looks more useful.
What Farrell does offer though is an instant injection of intensity, just as the Wallabies bound into sight.
At half-time of one match of the Lions’ last visit to Australia, Alun Wyn Jones asked the great and the good huddled around him why the 21-year-old rookie in their midst was the one shouting loudest and asking most on the field.
Johnny Sexton was on that tour. And was equally impressed.
In October, before being included in Farrell’s Lions coaching staff, he gave an interview to the Times newspaper, saying he would still have Farrell as his Test 10 for the 2025 tour.
“He’s one of the best team-mates I’ve ever had,” Sexton said.
“He’s one of the best players I’ve ever played with. Who do you want in there when the going gets tough? Test-match animals.”
Every player who has shared a dressing room says the same. Farrell’s appetite for the contest is insatiable. His drive to improve standards is constant.
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It isn’t always easy to have him as a team-mate. But winning isn’t easy either.
And, perhaps, Farrell Sr senses things have been over-easy down under.
“Unacceptable” was his verdict on the loss to Argentina, while slow starts and lost collisions against the Western Force and Queensland Reds suggest a side still short of a ruthless edge.
Dropping Owen Farrell into the playing pool will certainly churn things up.
Andy insisted in Thursday’s news conference that Owen was a contender for a Test spot.
“If he didn’t have a chance then what is the point, everybody should be competing,” he said.
However, in his second breath, he focused on the intangibles that might be his greatest influence on the fate of the series.
“Along with that, there is the experience he brings, the support that you need for the group and how you make the room feel,” Andy added.
Those ripples on the rest of the 37 players are hard to predict.
Will Russell, who might reasonably have expected to be out of assistant coach Sexton and Farrell’s shadow on this tour, feel any creative tension at 10?
Will Maro Itoje’s leadership be affected by the return of the man who was his long-time captain for both club and country?
Will Owen himself, having stepped away from Test rugby after the scrutiny and jeers of the 2023 Rugby World Cup, enjoy the Aussie humour inevitably heading his way?
The Lions drama just got a new character – and a whole lot more intriguing.
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“It’s not about where we come from, but where we’re going to.”
The sentence can be found at the entrance of the Gondomar SC academy followed by a picture of its illustrious son Diogo Jota wearing the colours of the club he played for between the ages of nine and 17.
Right next to it, there’s another one of him with the Portugal national team shirt too.
That’s how far Jota went.
Since 2022, it has been renamed as the Diogo Jota academy.
Those words, said by the forward himself after scoring twice in a 3-0 win against Sweden in the Nations League in 2020, illustrate exactly who he was.
The 28-year-old, who died along with his brother Andre Silva on Thursday following a car accident in Spain, spent almost all his formative years in his hometown with a third-tier team, paying around 20 euros each month to play for them while being overlooked by the big sides because of his size.
Despite the odds, he never gave up.
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He kept believing and went from Gondomar to Pacos de Ferreira, then to Porto, Wolverhampton and finally Liverpool.
Jota became a symbol of hope and inspiration back home. He proved to an entire country that it’s possible to reach the top even if the path isn’t a straight line.
The talent had always been there.
So much so that in his early days, when he was starting to draw some attention with Pacos, one of his former coaches, Jorge Simao, made a big claim by saying Jota would be Cristiano Ronaldo’s successor.
The player was obviously surprised to hear that, but immediately thought to himself, ‘If he believes in that, why can’t I do that?’
Jota was a rare case of an elite Portuguese footballer who never spent time at any of the big three academies – Benfica, Sporting and Porto.
“What set him apart from everyone else was really the mental aspect, the way he overcame any situation – and he realised that very quickly,” former Pacos’ youth football coordinator Gilberto Andrade told BBC Sport.
“I think there are moments when, whether you’re a coach, a coordinator, or a director, there are words, things said, that have a great impact on players. At the time, perhaps they don’t fully understand it, but later it reflects in their behaviour, in how they train, in how they live day to day.
“And Jota, I think, to some extent with us, understood what it meant to be a professional player, what it meant to be a good athlete, a good person. He was an example in that regard. An example, because often success leads many players to have a somewhat winding path due to the money they make.
“But that wasn’t the case with him. He was always very disciplined, very intelligent, very humble. He invested wisely, knew what he was doing, helped those he could. So I think this is the image that must remain of him.”
Jota took the long road, but always had it clear where he was going.
That became obvious to Andrade the day he came to him with an unusual request. “I want to learn a foreign language. Someday, I might play abroad and I’ve got to be ready,” said Jota.
The Gondomar boy was still young but had spent long enough outside the radar of the Portuguese powerhouses to realise his future could be far away from his home country.
“He knew very well where he was going,” recalled Andrade, who has also worked in Italy, Belgium and Saudi Arabia.
“Back then, I had those audio language courses, so I handed some of them to him. Soon, however, he realised they weren’t enough – he actually needed a teacher. For him, it was evident that he was going to need it later in his career. He was this different.”
For a brief moment, Jota feared his career would be at risk following a heart problem diagnosed during medical tests ahead of the 2014-15 season.
He was not allowed to train for almost a month.
“Do not put the cart before the horse,” he used to reply to anyone who came to him worried about the situation at the time.
That was how he lived his life – taking it day by day.
Jota quickly established himself as one of the rising talents of the Portuguese league after that, but didn’t change a bit.
The number of teams interested in his services kept rising and yet he chose to remain living in the club’s dormitory with other academy graduates and trialists that came and went until his very last day at Pacos. He was the only first-team player living there.
“He wouldn’t leave his room. He was solely focused on his work, there was no time for distractions when it came to him,” added Andrade.
Jota always knew where he was heading and, throughout his life, he proved time and again the journey mattered more than the starting point.
His voyage to becoming a Portuguese hero was a beautiful one.
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Liverpool and Ronaldo lead tributes to Jota
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Published4 hours ago
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AttributionSounds
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Published
Diogo Jota was on his way to take a ferry and return to Liverpool for pre-season training when he died in a car accident, BBC Sport has been told.
The Portugal forward, who was 28, had undergone minor surgery so doctors had advised him against flying.
As a result, he was planning to return to Liverpool for the start of pre-season, due to begin on Monday, by boat.
This is understood to mean he was travelling by car from Porto to take a ferry from Santander in northern Spain.
There are ferry routes from Santander to Plymouth and Portsmouth in the south of England.
Jota and his brother, Andre Silva, crashed in the Spanish province of Zamora and died.
The Guardia Civil has told BBC Sport that both men died at about 00:30 local time on Thursday following a tyre blowout that occurred while overtaking another vehicle.
Zamora, close to the Portuguese border, is about 190 miles from Porto, and a similar distance from the port.
It is understood Jota had also travelled by road and sea to get to Porto for his wedding 11 days ago to his long-term partner, Rute.
The couple had three children together.
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Diogo Jota was on way to catch ferry when car crashed, after doctor advised against flying
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Liverpool and Ronaldo lead tributes to Jota
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Published4 hours ago
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‘A natural finisher who was always feared by defences’
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Published4 hours ago
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Jota scored 65 goals in 182 appearances for Liverpool, helping them win the FA Cup and League Cup in 2022 and the Premier League title last season.
He had previously played for Pacos de Ferreira, Atletico Madrid, Porto and Wolves – for whom he netted 44 goals in 131 games.
Jota’s final match was for Portugal in their Uefa Nations League final win against Spain. He scored 14 goals in 49 internationals.
Jota’s brother who died in the crash was also a professional footballer – for Portuguese second-tier club Penafiel.
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Adored & admired – Jota memories ‘will live on forever’
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Published1 hour ago
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Tears as fans mourn Liverpool’s Jota at Anfield
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AttributionNews
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Published52 minutes ago
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Published26 July 2022
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