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Today — 2 May 2025News

Harrods latest retailer to be hit by cyber attack

2 May 2025 at 01:04
Getty Images Harrods department store in LondonGetty Images

The luxury department store Harrods says it is the latest retailer to have been targeted by a cyber attack.

The firm said it had "restricted internet access at our sites" following an attempt to gain access to its systems.

It comes the day after the Co-op shut down parts of its IT systems to fend off a hack, while Marks & Spencer continues to deal with a cyber attack that has cost it millions of pounds in lost sales.

Harrods said its flagship store remained open, and it continues to operate its online sales.

Customers are not being asked to not "do anything differently at this point".

A statement from Harrods read: "We recently experienced attempts to gain unauthorised access to some of our systems.

"Our seasoned IT security team immediately took proactive steps to keep systems safe and as a result we have restricted internet access at our sites today.

"Currently all sites including our Knightsbridge store, H beauty stores and airport stores remain open to welcome customers. Customers can also continue to shop via harrods.com.

"We are not asking our customers to do anything differently at this point and we will continue to provide updates as necessary."

Meanwhile, M&S has seen its operations severely hampered by a cyber attack it disclosed last week.

Customers are still unable to place online orders ands helves have been left empty in some stores.

The police are investigating.

The Co-op said on Wednesday that it had shut down parts of its IT systems in response to hackers attempting to gain access.

On Thursday it emerged staff were being ordered to keep their cameras on during remote work meetings, and verify all attendees.

Experts say that indicates the company suspects hackers may be lurking in calls.

British woman, 115, becomes world's oldest person

2 May 2025 at 00:59
Hallmark Care Homes Close up shot of Ethel Catherham wearing a tiara with 115 written on it.Hallmark Care Homes
Ethel Caterham celebrated her 115th birthday in Lightwater in Surrey in August

A woman from Surrey has become the oldest person in the world, at the age of 115 and 253 days.

Ethel Caterham, who lives at a care home in Lightwater, reached the milestone following the death of Brazilian nun Sister Inah Canabarro Lucas, aged 116 on Wednesday.

Ms Caterham was born on 21 August 1909 and is the last surviving subject of Edward VII.

Celebrating her 115th birthday in August 2024, she said she "didn't know why there was all the fuss".

She said the secret to her longevity was "never arguing with anyone, I listen and I do what I like".

The new record has been confirmed by Guinness World Records and LongeviQuest, a database of the world's oldest people.

'Remarkable milestone'

On her 115th birthday, Ms Caterham received a letter from the King congratulating her on a "truly remarkable milestone".

The King conveyed his "warmest good wishes" and "hoped that Ethel enjoys her incredibly special day".

The letter stated that His Majesty was "heartened to learn about Ethel's fascinating personal history".

Ms Caterham was born in Shipton Bellinger, in Hampshire, and was raised in nearby Tidworth in Wiltshire.

She was the second youngest of eight children.

Hallmark Care Homes Ethel Caterham sat wearing a tiara with 115 on it with a woman clapping and surrounded by balloons Hallmark Care Homes
Ms Caterham celebrated turning 115 with family and friends

At the age of 18, she was employed as an au pair to a military family in India.

She returned to the UK in 1931 and met her future husband, Norman Caterham. They married at Salisbury Cathedral in 1933.

Mr Caterham became a lieutenant colonel in the army, and the couple were stationed in Hong Kong and Gibraltar.

In Hong Kong, Ms Caterham set up a nursery.

She has lived through the sinking of the Titanic, World War One, the Russian Revolution, the Great Depression and World War Two.

She has spent the last 50 years living in Surrey and continued driving until she was 97.

One of her sisters, Gladys, lived to be 104.

Ms Caterham has three granddaughters and five great grandchildren.

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Man accused of felling Sycamore Gap tree told police he was framed in feud

1 May 2025 at 23:16
CPS A large wedge of wood next to a chainsaw, which has a silver body and red blade coverCPS
Experts say a wedge of wood came from the tree and was pictured in Daniel Graham's car

A man accused of felling the world famous Sycamore Gap tree told police he did not have the skill or experience to do the job.

The tree had grown in a dip on Hadrian's Wall in Northumberland for more than 100 years before it was felled in a "moronic mission" in the early hours of 28 September 2023, Newcastle Crown Court has heard.

Daniel Michael Graham, 39, from Carlisle and Adam Carruthers, 32, from Wigton in Cumbria, each deny two counts of criminal damage relating to the tree and the Roman wall.

In his interview with Northumbria Police, Mr Graham said he had been falsely accused amid an ongoing feud with others.

Jurors were previously told the tree was a much-loved landmark and had global significance for its position on the former frontier of the Roman empire.

On the night of 27 September, Mr Carruthers and Mr Graham made a 40-minute drive in the latter's Range Rover from Cumbria to chop the tree down, prosecutors allege.

Watch: Video footage shown to jurors in Sycamore Gap tree trial

The felling was filmed on Mr Graham's phone and the pair took a wedge cut of the trunk home as a "trophy", jurors have heard.

A video analyst said there was "no doubt" a car boot depicted in a picture of a wedge of wood and chainsaw was that of Mr Graham's Range Rover, jurors heard.

The image was taken a couple of hours after the tree was felled and a forensic botanist said there was "very strong evidence" the wedge, which has not been recovered by police, had come from the Sycamore Gap tree, the court heard.

Nick Lewis Sketch of the two defendants. Graham on the left has a white shirt, short fair hair and a ginger beard, Carruthers on the right has short fair hair, is clean shaven and wearing a black suit jacket and tie with a white shirtNick Lewis
Daniel Graham claimed the accusation stemmed from a feud

The pair were both arrested on 31 October and taken for police interview, the transcript of which jurors were read on the third day of the trial.

Asked at the outset of his hour and 20 minute-long interview if he was responsible for felling the tree, Mr Graham replied: "No."

He said he only knew what everyone else did from the news and had gone to the site in the days afterwards to have a look at the felled tree, the court heard.

Mr Graham said he had been to the tree previously to do "the same as everyone else does", namely going for a walk and staying nearby in his campervan.

He told officers he did not know who had cut it down but did know who had put his name forward as a suspect, adding: "I'm going to get my own back."

Mr Graham said he and Mr Carruthers were embroiled in a dispute with others and it was their rivals who posted the accusations about the tree on Facebook.

PA Media A far away view of a tree standing in a dip between two hills. The grass around is green and yellow with a blue sky and large white clouds beyondPA Media
The tree was planted on Hadrian's Wall in the 1800s

Mr Graham said there was nothing on his iPhone 13 which would link him to the felling, adding: "I've got no worries about anything on that phone, nothing at all."

He said he did not have "a clue" what he had done on the night of 27 September as it was a month before, but added he "didn't do much" and would either have been at home or with a friend or his girlfriend, who he referred to as his "bird".

Mr Graham said he ran a groundworks company, DM Graham Groundworks, making "everything from house foundations, patios and fencing, the lot, it all depends on the weather".

He said he had three or four chainsaws at his yard which police would find "if they looked with their eyes".

Asked if he knew how to fell trees, Mr Graham said he could so small and medium ones and directed police to look at his Facebook page to see what work he had done.

"I've never done a large fell," he said, adding he had done "pretty high trees" but "nothing with major diameter".

PA Media The felled Sycamore Gap tree which has fallen over a section of Hadrian's Wall into the field behind. The bottom of the cut trunk is resting on the stone wall. The stump is on the other side of it surrounding by police tape.PA Media
The Sycamore Gap tree was felled in September 2023

Mr Graham was asked how he would cut down a large tree, to which he replied he would cut a notch in the front to mark the direction of fall then chop a wedge out the back, which jurors have heard is the "hinge-and-wedge" technique used to fell the sycamore.

He also said he left the keys in all his vehicles, including his Range Rover, and they were free for anyone to use.

Mr Graham said his "good pal" Mr Carruthers had used his Range Rover before and done tree felling work for him, adding: "I can put him up a tree with ropes and not worry he is going to come down."

Asked if Mr Carruthers ever stayed at his overnight, Mr Graham said "definitely not" and asked if police thought they were gay, the court heard.

The trial continues.

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McDonald's sales drop as diners face 'uncertainty'

1 May 2025 at 22:37
Getty Images A McDonald's 'Golden Arches' sign against a blue sky with a US flag waving in the background to the bottom leftGetty Images

McDonald's has suffered its biggest drop in US sales since the height of Covid, a fall that it said was driven by wider concerns about the US economy.

The world's largest burger chain's revenue at US stores open at least a year sank 3.6% in the first three months of 2025 compared with the same period in 2024, as customers reduced their visits.

It marked the steepest decline in like-for-like sales in the US since the three months to the end of June 2020 when many pandemic restrictions were still in place.

Chief executive Chris Kempczinski said customers were "grappling with uncertainty" but assured investors that the firm could "navigate even the toughest of market conditions".

McDonald's has been working for months to try to re-ignite its business, after facing backlash from customers, especially lower income households, over rising prices.

The firm's latest drop in sales coincided with a contraction in the US economy, which shrank at an annual rate of 0.3% in the first three months of 2025.

It marked the first quarterly decline since 2022.

The figures reflected just over two months of Donald Trump's presidency - as many firms and consumers reacted with confusion to his barrage of tariff announcements - but not his "Liberation Day" tariff plans on 2 April

Over the same three-month period, the slump in McDonald's US sales dragged its overall like-for-like revenue down 1% even as sales in Japan, Australia, and the Middle East grew.

Mr Kempczinski said: "Consumers today are grappling with uncertainty, but they can always count on McDonald's [...] for exceptional value".

"McDonald's has a 70-year legacy of innovation, leadership, and proven agility, all of which give us confidence in our ability to navigate even the toughest of market conditions and gain market share," he added.

Higher prices

Businesses have had a mix of reactions since Trump began revealing and enforcing his plans for tariffs, which are a tax payable by a person or firm buying a good from overseas.

This week, technology giant Intel said costs would rise and a recession was more likely because of Trump's tariffs.

Sportswear brand Adidas said they would lead to higher prices in the US for popular trainers including the Gazelle and Samba.

Meanwhile, delivery giant DHL paused deliveries worth more than $800 (£603) due to US trade policy before lifting them after negotiating "adjustments" to customs rues.

Trump and his allies have said the policies will help to bring more jobs to the US as firms base factories and operations the country to avoid the new taxes.

However, many companies and economists have said this will be difficult to achieve and will likely mean job losses and economic pain at least in the short term.

Reacting to yesterday's economic figures, Trump said he needed "a little bit of time" - calling the numbers a reflection of the "Biden economy", a reference to the former president.

After 20 years, family favourite The Gruffalo set for new adventure

1 May 2025 at 19:40
Axel Scheffler/Macmillan Children's Books Axel Scheffler illustration of The Gruffalo and other characters, with a tree with an inscription reading "Coming soon September 2026"Axel Scheffler/Macmillan Children's Books
The new book will be published in September 2026

After more than 20 years roaming the deep dark wood, the Gruffalo is coming back in a new book, which author Julia Donaldson says she was spurred to write by a campaign to reverse a decline in children's reading.

The book will be published in 2026, and will be the third about the beloved animal - after 1999's best-selling original and 2004's sequel The Gruffalo's Child.

Donaldson said she had the idea "a long time ago", but was inspired to finally put pen to paper after the National Literacy Trust (NLT) started using the previous two books in its Early Words Matter scheme.

According to the NLT, just 35% of children aged between eight and 18 said they enjoyed reading in their free time in 2024.

That is the lowest level since the charity started gathering data in 2005.

Some of those who had the original books read to them as young children will now be able to read the new story to their own kids.

Urszula Soltys Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler posing togetherUrszula Soltys
Author Julia Donaldson and illustrator Axel Scheffler are teaming up again for the new book

The first picture book saw a humble mouse encounter a fox, a snake and an owl in the deep, dark wood - before meeting the Gruffalo itself, and tricking the furry monster into being scared of it.

Then in The Gruffalo's Child, the character's offspring went in search of the "big, bad mouse".

"It's always a challenge to write a sequel," Donaldson said in a statement. "Five years elapsed between publication of The Gruffalo and The Gruffalo's Child, and now it will be more than 20 between The Gruffalo's Child and the third book.

"I actually had the basic idea for the story a long time ago, but couldn't think how to develop it.

"It was only when the NLT, whose work I'm very impressed by, used the first two books as part of their Early Words Matter programme that I was spurred on to get my idea out of the cupboard and see once and for all if I could turn it into a really satisfying story. To my surprise, I managed to do just that!"

She said she was "delighted" when illustrator Axel Scheffler came back on board. "I really hope that children - and adults too - will enjoy the new story, as I know what a wonderful experience shared reading can be," she added.

Publisher Macmillan Children's Books billed the new book as "a fresh and exciting adventure that has all the hallmarks of a Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler classic".

The first two books have sold 18 million copies, Macmillan said.

NLT chief executive Jonathan Douglas said "reading and sharing stories is critical for shaping a child's early speech and language development".

Since the two main Gruffalo books were published, there have been spin-offs and animated versions of both, the first of which was nominated for an Oscar.

Donaldson has written more than 200 books in total, and told the BBC last year it was "amazing" that The Gruffalo had such an impact, but that she thought it "hogs too much of the attention".

Runcorn and Helsby by-election - all you need to know

17 April 2025 at 20:45
EPA A drone view of Runcorn, showing housing estates in the foreground and the Silvewr Jubilee Bridge over the River MerseyEPA

A key Westminster by-election is set to be held in Runcorn and Helsby.

Voters will head to the polls in the Cheshire constituency on 1 May, the same day as local elections in much of England.

The by-election has been triggered by the resignation of Mike Amesbury, who was convicted earlier this year of assaulting a constituent.

What is the make-up of Runcorn and Helsby?

Runcorn and Helsby includes the towns of Runcorn, Frodsham and Helsby, as well as various villages and a significant rural area.

In total, 22% of the constituency is classed as a built-up area, 60% rural and 14% as water or wetland.

It has a population of 93,520, with 21% of residents under 18, 57% aged 18-64 and 21% over 65.

Runcorn and Helsby is a new constituency that was only created in time for the general election in July 2024.

More than half of it (51.2%) came from the former constituency of Weaver Vale, with 37.1% from Halton and the remainder from three other former constituencies - Ellesmere Port and Neston, Eddisbury, and City of Chester.

Who are the candidates?

A total of 15 candidates are standing in the by-election.

Listed alphabetically, they are as follows:

  • Catherine Anne Blaiklock (English Democrats)
  • Dan Clarke (Liberal Party)
  • Chris Copeman (Green Party)
  • Paul Duffy (Liberal Democrats)
  • Peter Ford (Workers Party)
  • Howling Laud Hope (Monster Raving Loony Party)
  • Sean Houlston (Conservatives)
  • Jason Philip Hughes (Volt UK)
  • Alan McKie (independent)
  • Graham Harry Moore (English Constitution Party)
  • Paul Andrew Murphy (Social Democratic Party)
  • Sarah Pochin (Reform)
  • Karen Shore (Labour)
  • John Stevens (Rejoin EU)
  • Michael Williams (independent)

What rules are in place?

Since May 2023, voters have had to show a valid form of photo identification at polling stations to vote in person.

Anyone who does not have photo ID can apply for a free voter authority certificate, and the deadline to apply for this is 23 April.

The deadline to apply for someone to vote on your behalf if you cannot get to a polling station is also 23 April.

Read more stories from Cheshire on the BBC and follow BBC North West on X. For more local politics coverage, BBC Politics North West is on BBC One on Sunday at 10:00am and on BBC iPlayer.

Local elections 2025: Dogs at polling stations

1 May 2025 at 23:36

Voters across England are heading to the polls to choose councillors and mayors. For plenty of them, it was the perfect excuse to take the dog for a walk too.

Getty Images Lucy the Yorkshire terrier pictured outside the Royal British Legion polling station on May 01, 2025 in Runcorn, England.Getty Images
Lucy the Yorkshire terrier attended the Royal British Legion polling station in Runcorn, with her owner. The Runcorn and Helsby by-election was triggered by the conviction of former MP, Mike Amesbury, for assaulting a constituent
EPA A voter takes a photograph of their dog outside a polling station in Runcorn, Britain, 1 May 2025. EPA
A voter took a photograph of their dog outside another station in the Cheshire town
Niall Cook via PA Media Handout photo issued by Niall Cook of Margo the Airedale Terrier, outside a polling station in GloucestershireNiall Cook via PA Media
Margo the Airedale Terrier, waited patiently outside a polling station in Gloucestershire
PA Media A dog outside a polling station in St. Anne's, LancashirePA Media
This little pooch was pictured outside a polling station in St Anne's, Lancashire
@yoshineale via PA Media Yoshi, a 13-year-old Chinese Crested Powderpuff, outside a polling station in Rothwell@yoshineale via PA Media
Yoshi, a 13-year-old Chinese Crested Powderpuff, waited for their owner outside a polling station in Rothwell in West Yorkshire
Dan Q Three-year-old Demmy waits patiently outside the polling station at Stanton Harcourt Village Hall, West OxfordshireDan Q
Three-year-old Demmy waited patiently outside the polling station at Stanton Harcourt Village Hall, West Oxfordshire
Calum Brown Maxi the Jack Russell this morning at St John's Chapel, County DurhamCalum Brown
It may have been a little too bright and early for Maxi the Jack Russell this morning at St John's Chapel, County Durham
James Moloney A dog called Oliver Oliver outside a polling station in NorthamptonshireJames Moloney
Oliver - captured here in Northamptonshire - pulled a pose
Ameila Halls Heather the dog accompanying owner Amelia to vote in CambridgeshireAmeila Halls
Heather posed for the camera while accompanying owner Amelia to vote in Cambridgeshire
David Majarich Gib, the Springer/Cocker outside a polling stationDavid Majarich
David Majarich's Sprocker (Springer/Cocker), Gib, was not impressed when he realised he wasn't there for the monthly cake sale, his owner David told us
Amanda Vilder Ingrid the GreyhoundAmanda Vilder
Ingrid the Greyhound was ready to continue her walk

Four ways your plants could be affected by hot spring weather

1 May 2025 at 19:47
Getty Images A woman in a denim top waters potted plants and smiles while looking at them. There are other potted plants in the background, while she stands on her patio.Getty Images

With parts of the UK expected to reach 29C on Thursday, this week's spring heatwave will undoubtedly have an effect on plants - both inside and outdoors.

Experts say that while the unusually warm weather this early in the year could pose some issues for some plants, others stand to benefit and flourish.

Indoor plants will need protecting, and trees could suffer - but outdoor plants may thrive if watered properly, in particular those producing fruit.

Here's what the experts we spoke to had to say about the warm weather - and what they advise green-fingered folk do to make the most of it.

Indoor plants

Increased temperatures and too much direct sunlight can have a negative effect on houseplants.

Signs like wilting, drooping, or changing colour could indicate that the heat is getting to your beloved leafy greens.

Conservatories and greenhouses, similarly, can get too hot unless shading is provided, Guy Barter, the Royal Horticultural Society's chief horticulturist, told the BBC.

"Houseplants can scorch in bright sunlight unless moved back deeper into rooms where there is more shade."

He suggested providing additional shading from now until September to prevent heat damage.

If space is a factor, using a sheer curtain can also help mitigate the impacts of direct sunlight.

Fruits and veggies

The warmer than average start to May is already having a noticeable affect on the timing of this year's harvest, according to Pauline Goodall, a strawberry farmer from Limington in Somerset.

In the past week, she told BBC Breakfast her small farm had gone from filling three to four trays of strawberries a day to 50.

"They're just ripening at a phenomenal rate."

Helena Dove, head of Kew Gardens' kitchen garden, said they had also already seen ripe strawberries - and that this was a trend for other fruits being grown in the UK.

"Traditionally, a good kitchen gardener would be proud to have ripe strawberries by Wimbledon," she told the BBC.

However, Mr Barter cautioned that while the days were warmer, night time temperatures were still relatively low, limiting the "helpful" effects of the warmth.

He said the risk of frost would pass in the south soon, allowing "frost-tender plants" such as dahlias and tomatoes to be planted outside.

Outdoor plants

During times of hotter weather, outdoor plants and flowers will typically require more water than usual.

That's particularly true for plants that have recently been put in the ground, according to Tony Hall, the head of Kew Gardens' temperate collections. He told the BBC it was essential that they are well watered "to encourage a deep root system".

"Hot weather tends to weed out plants that are in poor health and already struggling, but this can present an opportunity to plant something that is more drought tolerant," he said.

Mr Barter said newly sown seeds and recently planted vegetables, flowers and shrubs will need "careful watering" until they grow their roots out enough.

But he added that more warmth and extra light earlier in the year "helps them send out strong roots to counter any drought later in the summer".

For both indoor and outdoor plants, the advice is to water in morning or evening, but not in the middle of the day when the water will evaporate quickly.

Trees

At this time of year, trees are enter into their leaf expansion phase - a process that demands substantial physiological resources, including water.

Kevin Martin, Kew Gardens' head of trees, explained that the recent warmer weather - coupled with an existing soil moisture deficit - is creating a "worrying" situation.

If these conditions persist, he warned it could hamper a tree's ability to carry out photosynthesis, reducing growth and leaving them exposed to further decline over the summer.

Mr Martin suggested planting "better-suited species" of trees that have "greater built-in resilience as we experience more extreme conditions".

What should I plant for future warm weather?

This recent bout of warm weather is because of a fluctuation in the jet stream - a river of fast-flowing air that tends to divide warmer air close to the equator from colder air further north - bringing warm air up from the Mediterranean.

While scientists say climate change is making these fluctuations more erratic, how much influence climate change has on particular weather events requires a full scientific study.

Paul Hadaway, from Kent Wildlife Trust, told the BBC that the spring heatwave was part of a larger trend of "seasonality breaking down".

"Last year we had a mild winter, warm spring and then we had a wet summer – and that's not good for wildlife that's learned to adapt to a certain climate pattern," he told BBC Breakfast.

He said people in the UK could mitigate the negative effects of this seasonal breakdown by rethinking "how we manage our naturals areas", including planting new species that are better accustomed to these extreme swings.

Ms Dove, of Kew's kitchen garden, said that while "traditional" fruits like apples were struggling, "the warm spring means crops like citrus, kiwi, and tropical plants are thriving earlier, with longer seasons and better yields".

She added: "We're even growing peaches, apricots, and nectarines outside currently, something that would have been unthinkable in previous years due to the risk of late frosts and lack of early pollinators."

Meanwhile, the RHS says species of oak and ash tree could be more adaptable to withstand extreme changes in the seasons.

At a Dubai Conference, Trump’s Conflicts Take Center Stage

2 May 2025 at 00:30
A deal for a state-backed Emirati firm to use a Trump-affiliated digital coin was announced in a panel that included the president’s son and his business partner, who promised, “This is only the beginning.”

© Katarina Premfors for The New York Times

Eric Trump, right, and Zach Witkoff speaking at a cryptocurrency convention in Dubai on Thursday.

Kennedy Issues Demands for Vaccine Approvals that Could Affect Fall Covid Boosters

The agency suggested that clinical trials in humans may be required for updated Covid shots, raising questions about whether they will be available in the fall.

© Al Drago for The New York Times

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has questioned the safety of vaccines for years.

May Day Protests Are Expected to Mobilize Outcry Against Trump

1 May 2025 at 22:56
Organizers see a traditional day for labor marches as an opportunity to show growing opposition to the Trump administration’s agenda.

© Desiree Rios for The New York Times

A demonstration this month in Fort Worth, Texas, where hundreds marched to protest against President Trump’s policies.

Who Decides How Much You Pay for College? Here’s How Tuition Costs Are Set.

2 May 2025 at 00:42
Schools turn to little-known consultants, owned by private equity firms, to find applicants and calculate scholarships. Here’s how that affects the price you pay.

© Cameron Pollack for The New York Times

A series of algorithms developed quietly over decades by private equity-owned consulting firms are helping to decide college prices.

'They wanted $4m': Lessons for M&S from other cyber attacks

1 May 2025 at 20:53
Getty Images M&S sign outside a shopGetty Images

As Marks & Spencer (M&S) - and its customers - continue to reel from a major cyber attack, other people who have gone through similar experiences have been sharing what it is like to be targeted by hackers.

"It was an absolute nightmare", says Sir Dan Moynihan. He is the Senior Executive Principal and Chief Executive of the Harris Federation, a group of 55 schools in the London and Essex area.

It was hacked in 2021 - Sir Dan told the Today programme, on BBC Radio 4, that the culprits were the Russian ransomware crime group REvil.

"Their purpose was to blackmail us into paying four million dollars in cryptocurrency within ten days," he said.

"If we didn't pay in ten days, they wanted eight million."

The hack caused chaos. Sir Dan said the group lost teaching materials, lesson plans and registration systems.

More importantly, they also lost medical records and even the fire and phone systems were affected.

The finances of the school group were hit. Staff, and bills, were left unpaid.

Harris Federation Sir Dan Moynihan is the Senior Executive Principal and Chief Executive of the Harris FederationHarris Federation
Sir Dan Moynihan said it took the Harris school group months to fix their systems after they were hacked

Delay and don't pay

M&S has also been targeted with ransomware - malicious software which locks an owner out of their computer or network and scrambles their data.

The criminals then demand a fee to unlock it. Sir Dan says it was a demand he resisted.

Instead, the school group approached a firm of cyber specialists who employed a hostage negotiator. That individual then took on the role of an inexperienced school bursar - an administrator - who pretended to not know what was going on.

They took up negotiations with the hackers, with the purpose of delaying them for as long as possible so the school group could rebuild its systems.

"The Russians had stolen data from us - they didn't tell us what - and they threatened to put this stuff up on the dark web and cause us great embarrassment, and secondly they would lock down our systems."

Sir Dan said it took the Harris Federation three months to get everything working again, at the cost of £750,000. Among the work was 30,000 devices that needed to be "cleaned" following the hack.

Was there ever a question of giving the criminals what they wanted? Never, said the school group boss.

"The money we have is for disadvantaged young people, and secondly had we paid we would have opened the door for other school groups to be attacked."

'Like going back in time'

It is not known whether similar scenes are playing out behind the scenes at M&S, as the company has only issued limited information in its official statements, and has not put anyone up for interview.

But people claiming to work for the retailer have given a sense of the chaos on social media.

On Reddit, users who identified themselves as M&S workers, something the BBC has not verified, described the impact of the cyber attack

One wrote that most internal systems had been affected and that there had been experiments with "resuming operations manually with paper and pen".

Another poster said head office staff were working weekends, and that the problems were "like going back in time".

While some reported shortfalls in goods coming in, others described oversupply of some items, which meant food went to waste - with one saying they had to pour away multiple pints of milk.

What is clear is other companies are watching what's happening closely, even more so since another retailer, the Co-op, shut down some of its IT systems this week in response to a separate cyber attack.

"We're patching like mad," is what one retailer told the BBC.

In other words, they are making sure every part of system has the most up-to-date software and protections.

Sir Charlie Mayfield, the former chairman of John Lewis, said other firms understood only too well how vulnerable they were.

"Online shopping has completely transformed retail - as technology becomes more pervasive, the risk of this kind of attack rises with it," he told the BBC.

According to the cyber security breaches survey, conducted by the UK government, 74% of large businesses said they were targeted with cyber attacks last year.

The wedding dress designer to the hospital

Catherine Deane Wedding dress designer Catherine DeaneCatherine Deane
Wedding dress designer Catherine Deane says that dealing with Meta was "almost traumatising"

The experience of being hacked can be a difficult one for individuals caught in the disruption.

Wedding dress designer Catherine Deane said it was "devastating" when her company's Instagram account was hacked.

"It felt like the rug had been pulled from under us. Instagram is our primary social platform, and we've invested the most amount of time and business resources into it.

"To keep the account current we post content every day. Suddenly all this work… it was just pulled."

She told the BBC last month of the difficulty of fixing the problem with Meta, the owner of Instagram, describing that expereince as "almost traumatising".

In June last year, staff at hospitals in London told of how they were left grappling with the aftermath of a cyber attack that led to many hours of extra work for their staff.

A critical incident was declared after the ransomware attack targeted the services provided by pathology firm Synnovis.

Services including blood transfusions were severely disrupted at Guy's and St Thomas' Hospital and King's College Hospital (KCH).

Dr Anneliese Rigby, a consultant anaesthetist at KCH, told the BBC: "So what the labs are having to do is receive the blood sample, manually process that, which is a long, time-consuming process requiring a lot of staff which we don't have so we're having to get extra people to help with that."

It seems likely there will still be many difficult days ahead of M&S.

Additional reporting by Zoe Kleinman, Chris Vallance, Joe Tidy and Tom Gerken

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National Security Adviser Mike Waltz to leave role, US media reports

1 May 2025 at 23:31
Getty Images Mike Waltz with a dark backgroundGetty Images
Mike Waltz was President Trump's closest adviser on national security issues

US National Security Adviser Mike Waltz is leaving his post with the Trump adminstration, according to media reports.

Waltz, who was the president's principal adviser on national security issues, has had a difficult tenure amid accusations that senior officials used insecure methods of communication to conduct government business.

Last month, he took responsibility for a group chat on the Signal messaging app in which high-ranking officials planned military strikes in Yemen in the company of a journalist who was inadvertently added.

Waltz's deputy Alex Nelson Wong has also reportedly been removed from his post in what appears to be a shakeup of the US' security establishment.

In March, the editor-in-chief of The Atlantic magazine Jeffrey Goldberg revealed he had been mistakenly added to a group chat on Signal, in which senior officials - including Waltz, Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo - discussed confidential information about a planned military strike on Yemen.

Mr Goldberg revealed he was added to the chat by Mike Waltz, who later took responsibility for the fiasco.

At the time, Trump and US intelligence chiefs downplayed the security risks and said no classified material was shared.

President Trump had defended Waltz, saying he was "doing his best" with "equipment and technology that's not perfect".

But Democrats and some Republicans had called for an investigation into what several lawmakers described as a major breach.

Tanzanian priest - and government critic - brutally attacked

1 May 2025 at 21:33
TEC Fr Charles Kitima in a blue clerical shirt and white collar and holding a microphoneTEC
Fr Charles Kitima has been an outspoken critic of the government

A prominent Tanzanian Catholic priest and government critic has been violently attacked amid rising political tensions ahead of elections due in October.

Fr Charles Kitima, who had attended an all-day religious meeting, was ambushed by two people at night in a canteen restroom near his residence in Dar es Salaam.

According to the police, he was hit on the head with a blunt object and was later admitted to hospital, where he is in a stable condition.

Eyewitnesses said Fr Kitima had been seen talking to several people before the attack, and was later found bleeding and calling for help, moments after individuals were seen fleeing the scene.

The police say they have detained a suspect, while investigations continue.

The attack on Fr Kitima, who is the secretary-general of the Catholic bishops' organisation, Tanzania Episcopal Conference (TEC), has been widely condemned.

Boniface Mwabukusi, president of the Tanganyika Law Society, who visited the priest in hospital, said it had been "a brutal attack with the intent to take his life".

Posting on X, Mwabukusi said Fr Kitima had a message for Tanzanians that "we should not be afraid to pay the price for standing up for justice and fulfilling our duties to the country".

Political tension is increasing in Tanzania ahead of the general elections, with rights groups raising concerns over shrinking civic space, accountability, and justice.

Opposition Chadema party vice-chairman John Heche said the incident was bad "news for the country".

Lobby group Legal and Human Rights Centre also condemned the "heinous attack" that portrayed a "bad image" for the country.

Fr Kitima has frequently criticised government policies and is widely known in Tanzania for his bold stance on democratic reforms and human rights.

The assault, which has alarmed faith leaders and the civil society, comes days after the Catholic Church called for the government to heed calls for electoral reform - a key opposition demand.

Leaders of Christian churches, whose followers make up 60% of the population, have become increasingly outspoken on justice and governance issues.

But their criticism has not been received well by some supporters of the ruling party, with some senior figures asking religious leaders to stay out of politics.

President Samia Suluhu Hassan last weekend warned the opposition that "no-one is above the law".

"We must not allow this election to be a cause for conflict," she added.

She also sought to downplay fears of rigging by vowing that the government would "do everything in its power to ensure that the election is free and fair".

Since last year there has been a wave of attacks and abductions targeting government critics. Senior opposition figures have also been arrested, including Chadema leader Tundu Lissu, who has been charged with treason.

But attacks of this kind on church leaders are uncommon.

Police have said the motive for Fr Kitima's attack is not yet known, with ongoing investigations looking to identify other suspects.

The government has not commented on the attack.

But Stephen Wasira, vice-chairman of the ruling CCM party, condemned it and sent a message of sympathy to the priest.

You may also be interested in:

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A Tidal Wave of Change Is Headed for the U.S. Economy

1 May 2025 at 23:03
American consumers are not yet seeing much evidence of the drastic changes President Trump has made on trade. But they are on their way.

© Maggie Shannon for The New York Times

Trump Resistance? It’s Not a Full Movement, but It’s Growing.

Despite lacking a unified message or strategy, Democrats, universities, law firms and other institutions are starting to push back harder against the administration.

© Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times

A demonstration this month in Washington against President Trump’s policies. Such protests have increased in size and frequency through the first 100 days of the Trump administration.

‘I Have Cancer,’ the TikTok Star Said. Then Came the Torrent of Hate.

Sydney Towle’s videos have drawn an enormous audience on TikTok, where her followers praise and support her. On Reddit, an army of skeptics was determined to paint her as a fraud.

Sydney Towle at a cancer fund-raiser in Manhattan in March, with friends from college.
Yesterday — 1 May 2025News

Robert De Niro shows support for transgender daughter

1 May 2025 at 18:08
Getty Images Robert De NiroGetty Images
Robert De Niro's latest movie, the biographical crime drama Alto Knights, was released in March

Hollywood star Robert De Niro has said he his showing "love and support" for his daughter Airyn, after she came out as being transgender.

In a recent interview with LGBTQ+ publication Them, Airyn De Niro spoke about "stepping into this new identity".

Airyn's famous father told Variety in a statement: "I loved and supported Aaron as my son, and now I love and support Airyn as my daughter.

"I don't know what the big deal is," he added. "I love all my children."

'Honest and open'

The Goodfellas actor's daughter, 29, noted how she began to transition last year because, as a transgender women, "there's a difference between being visible and being seen.

"I've been visible. I don't think I've been seen yet."

Airyn, daughter of De Niro and Toukie Smith, also said the actress Laverne Cox had been an inspiration and that she now hoped to help expand trans visibility and to honour her black queer ancestors.

"Trans women being honest and open, especially [in] public spaces like social media and getting to see them in their success… I'm like, you know what? Maybe it's not too late for me."

And with regard to the experience of being one of seven De Niro children, she went on say that "no parent is perfect, but I am grateful that both my parents agreed to keep me out of the limelight.

"They have told me they wanted me to have as much of a normal childhood as possible."

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The rights of transgender women in the UK have been challenged in recent weeks, after judges at the Supreme Court unanimously ruled a woman is defined by biological sex under equalities law.

Now the UK's only ever judge to publicly say they are transgender is planning to take the government to the European Court of Human Rights over the ruling which she said violated her human rights.

Tesla denies contacting headhunters to replace Musk

1 May 2025 at 19:10
Getty Images A close up of Tesla chief executive Elon Musk from his left sideGetty Images

Tesla has denied reports that it has contacted recruitment firms to launch a search for a replacement for Elon Musk as chief executive.

The Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday that the electric car firm's board began looking for a successor to Mr Musk last month.

It said this was because of frustration around Mr Musk's focus on his job in US President Donald Trump's administration and Tesla's sinking share price.

However, in statement on Thursday, Tesla said the report was "absolutely false", adding "the board is highly confident in [Mr Musk's] ability to continue executing on the exciting growth plan ahead".

Jeju Air Disaster Prompts a Reckoning Over Runway Safety

After a plane overshot a runway in South Korea, killing 179 people, a Times analysis found that global standards that help minimize fatalities are inconsistently followed.

© Chang W. Lee/The New York Times

The remains of the concrete structure that Jeju Air Flight 2216 crashed into at Muan International Airport in Muan, South Korea, in December.

A Contender for the Papacy Known for Promoting Dialogue With Other Faiths

1 May 2025 at 18:26
Cardinal Jean-Marc Aveline comes from the diverse port city of Marseille in France.

© Tiziana Fabi/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Cardinal Jean-Marc Aveline attending a Mass at St Peter’s Basilica on Wednesday.

六神磊磊读金庸|肖飞居然还让大家向董小姐学习

1 May 2025 at 21:55

file

事件本身已经不用多说了,都吃瓜多少轮了。

有一处很小的细节,最让人感觉不是滋味。

就是董小姐非要取消轮转,肖飞在工作群里怼麻医生,说了这样一番话:

“如果(你们的医生)因为工作量的轻微增加就闹情绪,建议他们和胸外科教学秘书联系,帮助他们向董大夫学习,更好理解规培住院医生应该具备的使命感和责任心。”

董袭莹小姐不肯去脊柱外科轮转,各种托关系、打电话,要留在肖医生的胸外科。

脊柱外科的麻昊宁医生十分火大,公然和肖飞开撕,并直言:这种特权行为,增加了同学们的工作量,导致不公平,大家意见很大。

原话就说的是“特权”。

结果是麻医生阻击失败,董小姐摇来大佬打招呼,让脊柱外科不得不低头,自己不用轮转了。

文章开头这番话,就是肖飞在群里撂下的一句胜利宣言:如果你们有意见,建议来向我们董大夫学习。

等于是贴脸开大。

file

CDT 档案卡
标题:肖飞居然还让大家向董小姐学习
作者:帅呆的sixgod
发表日期:2025.5.1
来源:微信公众号“六神磊磊读金庸”
主题归类:董袭莹
主题归类:协和4+4
CDS收藏:公民馆
版权说明:该作品版权归原作者所有。中国数字时代仅对原作进行存档,以对抗中国的网络审查。详细版权说明

这句话,是相当膈应人的。任何人但凡有一点基本的同理心,大概都会被这句话灼伤。

见字如见人,从中看得出此人个性确实比较骄狂,也的确是做得出手术室发飙,还解开女朋友助手的工作服,扔下病人扬长而去的事。

且来品味一下这句话,它妙就妙在,群里一百多人,以及所有的围观同事,都知道这是谎言和狂言,半个字都没人信。

就那么大个单位,谁不明白肖董二人的关系,谁又不明白这次拒绝轮岗是咋回事?

但肖飞偏就能怼得理直气壮,扯淡得义正辞严;偏就能毫无顾忌,公然说董大夫最棒、最优秀,还要你们学习她的“使命感和责任心”。

估计当时所有围观的医护都被上了一课:最牛逼的不是说谎,而是能够把谎话公然说得和真理一样。

最张狂的不是后台操作,而是操作完了还特意摆上前台让你吃下去。

我把这段话看了好多遍,字缝里歪歪斜斜只看出来一句:你服不服?就问麻医生你服不服?

过去,在你我这种土鳖的肤浅认知里,规矩不该是这样的。

总觉得倘若是既得利益者,通常应当低调一点,闷声发财最好。

占了便宜了,就多少顾及一下旁人的感受,这本该是走后门的基本道德。

人家科室都认栽了,何必还当众贴脸开大?你俩睡都睡了,何必非大群里示爱?要办的事明明都已办成了,何必不依不饶补刀拉仇恨?

却不知社会已经进化到另一个层面了。所谓低调、避嫌、闷声发财,原来都已经是穷人思维和底层认知了。

在肖飞他们的认知里,已经没有低调这一说,只有胜利之后的纵情宣泄和对失败者的当场折辱。

都说“得理不饶人”,但他们已经是不得理还不饶人。

都说“赢者通吃”,但这些赢者不但要通吃,还会公然让你向她学习。

活该你阻击失败,活该你社会资源不如,那么就往死里按你的头,问你服不服。

这让人想到武侠小说里很多桥段:

“如果小杨过你因为挨打次数的稍微增加就闹情绪,建议你和全真派的教学秘书联系,帮助你向赵志敬老师学习,更好理解修真行业的忍耐力和牺牲精神。”

“如果金翠莲你因为卖唱工作量的轻微增加就闹情绪,建议你和状元桥肉铺的教学秘书联系,帮助你向郑大官人学习,更好理解服务行业应该具备的使命感和责任心。”

只能说,这个世界上,存在着完全不同的两种人格,已经到了无法互相理解的地步。

一种“不争气型老实人格”是,一切以不冒犯别人、不产生冲突对立为宗旨。

哪怕只是得到自己份内应当的东西,也总觉得欠了别人的,心虚忐忑;偶尔被公平对待几次,都受宠若惊;正常地评了个职称、得了个先进,都莫名其妙地心下惴惴,忍不住在单位里溜墙根半月,唯恐被误会为张扬跋扈,伤害了旁人的感情。

这就是屌丝为什么终究是屌丝。

相比之下,肖飞这种完全是另一种人格,为了一点便宜,不惮于任何冲突和对立,哪怕赢了还要贴脸开大。

不止一个肖飞,整个故事里许多人都是如此。

譬如董小姐,以她的人生职业规划,几项关键目的都达到了。那就低调一点,混在别的老实孩子里暗度陈仓就完了呗。

可人家偏不,还要当明星学员;还要上媒体露脸,登大头照片。

里子也要面子也要,实的也要虚的也要,岗位也要流量也要,既要又要还要。

再者,博士已经拿到了,规培三年,坚持一下有什么挺不过去?轮岗一下怎么就熬不得?

可人家偏不,非要例外之上创造例外,不可能里再造不可能。

顶级大咖的关系,别人即便有,动用时都慎之又慎。换了那些穷孩子历练少的,别说求大佬办事了,连打个正常工作电话都紧张得不行,事先要做无数心理建设。可董小姐非要挑战规则,动用大咖,只为了一个屁大的“不轮转”。

达到目的之后,和肖医生还要不依不饶,群里发飙,去碾压那些捍卫原则的人,对人公开处刑。

特权的版本,如今已经升级了。

光是使用特权本身已没有快感了,只有揉捏、折辱不识相的阻挠者,“建议你们向董大夫学习”,才有足够的快感。

普通人其实已经很接受现实了,早都默认了“资源咖”“关系咖”的存在,默认了无处不在的裙带。

他们只是希望你们的吃相好看一点。

但在肖飞这些人看来,吃相好看,那还不如不吃。

看到一句话挺有意思:强者从不抱怨环境,因为环境就是他们搞坏的。

6-Day ICE Operation in Florida Resulted in More Than 1,000 Arrests

1 May 2025 at 22:43
The Trump administration hopes to work with local law enforcement as it tries to reach its goals for mass deportation.

© Rebecca Blackwell/Associated Press

An ICE detention facility near Miami last month.

特朗普挽留马斯克:只要愿意,随时可以留下来

1 May 2025 at 22:47
德正
2025-05-01T14:31:24.822Z

(德国之声中文网)美国总统特朗普在周三(4月30日)举行的内阁会议上对马斯克表达了高度肯定,并表示只要其愿意,可以继续担任白宫顾问角色。“这个国家绝大多数人都非常尊重你、感谢你,”特朗普说道,“你知道,只要你愿意,你可以一直留在这里。”不过,他也补充说,马斯克可能“更想回家照看他的汽车了”。

马斯克上个月宣布,他将减少自己在由特朗普设立的“政府效率部(Doge)”中的角色重新专注特斯拉。特斯拉品牌引起投入的政治工作而严重受损且面临业绩挑战——销量和业绩都在大幅下滑。

今年2月开始,全美多地特斯拉门店外爆发抗议活动。特朗普对此表示:“你真的牺牲了很多,他们对你很不公平。”马斯克说道:“他们确实喜欢烧我的车,这可不太妙。”

利润暴跌 品牌受损,特斯拉董事会秘密物色接班人

马斯克在特朗普政府效率部推动削减美国政府成本的工作激起广泛抗议,特斯拉品牌因此受损。在美国和欧洲,因不满其政治立场,多个特斯拉展厅遭到破坏,消费者也发起了抵制。

据特斯拉公司4月22日公布的财报显示,今年第一季度特斯拉营收同比下降9%,汽车业务收入同比下降20%,净利润同比暴跌71%。

据《华尔街日报》报道,由于公司利润和股价双双下滑,特斯拉董事会在约一个月前就已开始与数家高管猎头公司接洽,物色马斯克继任者。投资者对马斯克在削减美国政府成本的相关职务上投入的时间过多感到担忧。董事会成员要求马斯克为公司投入更多时间

特斯拉否认“物色继任者”

然而,特斯拉在5月1日公开否认了这一报道,特斯拉此前几乎不会对有关该公司的报道公开置评。特斯拉董事会主席罗宾·丹霍姆(Robyn Denholm)在社交平台X上发文称,《华尔街日报》的报道“完全是错误”。

长期以来,马斯克被视为特斯拉的灵魂人物。Wedbush证券分析师丹·艾夫斯(Dan Ives)曾说:“特斯拉就是马斯克,马斯克就是特斯拉。”然而,特斯拉目前正面临困境:产品线老化、中国竞争加剧,再加上马斯克的备受争议的政治言论,使得产品需求和利润双双下降。 

德新社评论称,马斯克在华盛顿的举动以及他的右翼政治观点也导致一些潜在买家对特斯拉敬而远之。分析师艾夫斯估计,特斯拉车辆的长期需求可能下降15%至20%。

此外,特斯拉也在一定程度上被卷入特朗普的关税贸易战之中。虽然特斯拉大部分汽车在美国本土生产,但公司需从国外采购部分材料,这些材料将面临进口税。

中国的报复也将损害特斯拉的利益。本月初,该公司被迫停止接受大陆客户对Model S和Model X两款车型的订单。

(综合报道)

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© 2025年德国之声版权声明:本文所有内容受到著作权法保护,如无德国之声特别授权,不得擅自使用。任何不当行为都将导致追偿,并受到刑事追究。

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