The number of people surviving cancer has improved hugely in the past 50 years, but experts warn progress has been uneven with some of the cancers with the worst survival rates falling further behind.
For some, including melanoma skin cancer, 10-year survival is now above 90%, while for all cancers, half of patients can expect to live that long - double the figure in the early 1970s.
But a study by the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine said there had been little improvement in those affecting the oesophagus, stomach and lungs - and less than 5% survive pancreatic cancer for 10 years.
The government said it was committed to making more progress with a new strategy due soon.
The researchers said advances in treatment and earlier detection were behind the improvements in survival seen for many cancers.
Breast cancer is a perfect example of this, with 10-year survival rates rising from 42% to more than 76% between 1971 and 2018 in England and Wales.
The period saw the introduction of an NHS breast screening programme, plus targeted therapies for different types of breast cancer.
In comparison, the cancers with the lowest survival rates tend to be the hardest to detect and have the fewest treatment options.
Alongside pancreatic cancer, the study says these include oesophagus, stomach and lung cancers, which all still have 10-year survival rates below 20%, after only a small amount of progress since the 1970s.
This has meant the gap between the cancers with the best and worst survival rates has nearly doubled.
'Amazing job'
Matt Black is someone with first-hand experience of how the type of cancer you get makes a huge difference.
In 2019 the 60-year-old lost his sister, Harriette, to pancreatic cancer, 20 years after his father-in-law died of oesophageal cancer.
Five years ago he was diagnosed with bowel cancer which has above average survival rates. Soon after developing symptoms he had surgery and was given the all-clear.
"NHS staff do an amazing job, but it's such a difficult time to be a cancer patient, especially for those with cancers which aren't easy to spot or treat.
"It's so important that there is more research and support for cancer services here, so that more people can be as fortunate as me," says Matt.
The researchers also warned that, while overall survival was still improving, the rate of progress had slowed during the 2010s. Longer waits for diagnosis and treatment are thought to be partly to blame.
Michelle Mitchell, chief executive of Cancer Research UK, which funded the study, said: "Thanks to research, most patients today are far more likely to survive cancer than at any other point in the past.
"But the reality is that this progress is slowing – and for some cancers it never got going in the first place."
The charity wants the government's forthcoming strategy to focus on:
cutting waiting times
early detection, including full introduction of a lung cancer screening programme
investment in research, particularly targeting the most deadly cancers
A Department of Health and Social Care spokesman said cancer care was a priority. with some progress already made on waiting times.
"The national cancer plan will set out how we will improve survival rates further and address the unacceptable variation between different cancer types," he added.
"I sincerely apologise for causing trouble despite being a person of no importance," Kim told reporters.
The wife of South Korea's jailed former president, Yoon Suk Yeol, has been arrested over a raft of charges, including stock manipulation and bribery.
Former first lady Kim Keon Hee denied all charges during a four-hour court hearing in Seoul on Tuesday. But the court issued a detention warrant, citing the risk that she may destroy evidence.
South Korea has a history of former presidents being indicted and imprisoned. However, this is the first time both the former president and former first lady have been jailed.
Yoon was detained in January to face trial over a failed martial law bid last year that plunged the country into chaos and eventually led to his ouster.
Prosecutors say Kim, 52, made over 800 million won ($577,940; £428,000) by participating in a price-rigging scheme involving the stocks of Deutsch Motors, a BMW dealer in South Korea.
While this allegedly happened before her husband was elected the country's leader, it continued to cast a shadow throughout his presidency.
"I sincerely apologise for causing trouble despite being a person of no importance," Kim told reporters.
She allegedly also accepted two Chanel bags and a diamond necklace as bribes from the controversial Unification Church in exchange for business favours.
Among other charges, Kim is also accused of meddling in candidate nominations during the parliamentary by-elections in 2022 and the general elections last year.
Kim appeared solemn as she attended Tuesday's hearing wearing a black suit and a black skirt.
"I sincerely apologise for causing trouble despite being a person of no importance," she told reporters.
While he was president, Yoon vetoed three opposition-led bills that sought a special counsel investigation into allegations against Kim.
He issued the last veto in November, a week before he declared martial law.
A special counsel was set up in June this year after Yoon's rival Lee Jae Myung became president.
More live facial recognition (LFR) vans will be rolled out across seven police forces in England to locate suspects for crimes including sexual offences, violent assaults and homicides, the Home Office has announced.
The forces will get access to 10 new vans equipped with cameras which scan the faces of people walking past and check them against a list of wanted people.
The government says the technology has been used in London to make 580 arrests in 12 months, including 52 registered sex offenders who breached their conditions.
However, campaign group Big Brother Watch said the "significant expansion of the surveillance state" was "alarming".
Live facial recognition was first used in England and Wales in 2017 during the Uefa Champions League final football match in Cardiff.
The government is now funding ten vans equipped with LFR to be shared between seven forces, approximately doubling the number of vehicles.
The seven forces are Greater Manchester, West Yorkshire, Bedfordshire, Surrey, Sussex, Thames Valley and Hampshire.
The technology identifies people by taking measurements of facial features including the distance between the eyes and the length of the jawline and then comparing the data to to an existing watchlist.
Each van will be staffed with a trained officer who checks the matches identified by the technology.
Simultaneously, the government is holding a consultation on what safeguards are needed to "ensure transparency and public confidence", ahead of drawing up a new legal framework.
Rebecca Vincent, interim director of Big Brother Watch, said: "Police have interpreted the absence of any legislative basis authorising the use of this intrusive technology as carte blanche to continue to roll it out unfettered, despite the fact that a crucial judicial review on the matter is pending.
"The Home Office must scrap its plans to roll out further live facial recognition capacity until robust legislative safeguards are established."
Charlie Whelton, policy and campaigns officer at Liberty, said: "It's welcome news that the government will finally develop a statutory framework on the use of facial recognition, but this should be in place before more facial recognition technology is rolled out.
"There's no reasonable excuse to be putting even more cameras on our streets before the public have had their say and legislation is brought in to protect all of us."
The government says officers using the LFR vans will need to follow the College of Policing's guidance on the technology and the Surveillance Camera Code of Practice.
It also says independent testing of the facial recognition algorithm by the National Physical Laboratory found that "the algorithm is accurate and there is no bias for ethnicity, age or gender at the settings used by the police".
Chief Superintendent of South Wales Police Tim Morgan said: "We understand the concerns which are raised about the use of live facial recognition technology and we use any new technology ethically and spend time and effort making sure it's deployed in line with all legislation and guidance."
The Police Federation of England and Wales, which represents police officers, said: "The government must also invest in comprehensive training programmes for officers to accompany this technology rollout, particularly as police forces face an unprecedented officer retention crisis."
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said the government would "provide police with the tools they need to do their jobs".
"Facial recognition will be used in a targeted way to identify sex offenders or people wanted for the most serious crimes who the police have not been able to find."
The Home Office has also announced that it has fulfilled a manifesto pledge to ensure there is a named, contactable officer in every neighbourhood in England and Wales.
It said people can search for an officer on the website of local police forces, who have signed up to a commitment to respond to queries within 72 hours.
The type of contact method provided will be up to individual forces.
The migrant crisis dominates the papers on Wednesday, with the Times leading with the headline "Channel boat migrants arriving at record speed". More than 50,000 migrants have crossed the Channel under Sir Keir Starmer's leadership, which the paper says is "the fastest the milestone has been reached under any prime minister".
The Guardian's headline reads "Treasury targets inheritance tax rises", reporting that a "clampdown on gifting money and assets" is under consideration for the forthcoming budget. Sources told the paper that officials have been tasked with examining whether a change to inheritance tax could help close the reported £40bn gap between revenue and spending.
"Migrants flood into Britain" says The Telegraph, paired with a photograph of migrants racing into the sea to board small boats off the coast of Gravelines, France. The headline story is also on inheritance tax, with the paper reporting that the amount of money raised from the tax has more than doubled over the past decade.
"It's not our fault!" declares the Mail's headline, leading on comments from Baroness Smith of Malvern, a former Labour home secretary, after she said "what is happening is the result of the last government". The image of migrants sprinting into the channel is front and centre of the paper, with the caption "Dawn dash".
The Financial Times says migrants arriving by boat will "add to stresses" for local councils, which will have a duty to house the homeless amid a severe shortage of social homes. The paper also reports that weapons factories in the EU are expanding at three times their rate before the Ukraine war, which they write "represents rearmament on a historic scale".
A record eight million people are now receiving universal credit, according to the Express. The paper reports that the number of benefit claimants who are not obliged to look for work has "shot up by a million under Labour".
The i Paper is leading with a clampdown on artificial stone imports to the UK, writing that the incoming restrictions have come off the back of their own investigation into rising cases of silicosis among young workers.
"Bungling hitwoman in niqab faces life" reads the front page of the Metro, after US woman Aimee Betro was found guilty of attempting to shoot a man dead in the UK. Betro will be sentenced on 21 August.
The Sun's headline reads "Taunts of the TikTok migrant", reporting that a man has "boasted on TikTok" of crossing the Channel by dinghy and has "racked up a million views" detailing his journey from an asylum hotel near Heathrow.
The Star has pictured Match of the Day's new "hat-trick of hosts" of the front page, with the paper saying the new show will "focus strictly on footie".
"Dry alert" warns the Mirror, reporting that drought conditions could last until the middle of October.
A gleaming white Vivaro van drove slowly off the production line at Vauxhall's factory in Luton, beeping its horn, while workers cheered and crowded around taking photographs.
Behind it, the production line came to a halt – forever.
The Luton plant began building cars in 1905. It kept operating for the next 120 years, taking time out to build tanks and aircraft engines during World War Two. But on 28 March, that came to an end.
The factory shut down, a victim of cutbacks at Vauxhall's parent company, Stellantis.
Justin Nicholls, a production shift manager, was one of the 1,100 workers there - he had worked at the plant for 38 years. "It was devastating, because it came out of the blue", he says. "It was a complete surprise."
It followed the closure of Honda's car factory in Swindon in 2021, and Ford's engine plant in Bridgend the year before.
Together, they have come to symbolise an apparent long-term decline in the UK motor industry.
Daily Herald/Mirrorpix via Getty Images
Vauxhall's Luton plant has been building cars since 1905 until production stopped earlier this year
In all, just 417,000 new cars and vans were built in the UK in the first six months of 2025, according to the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) - the lowest for that period since 1953.
Output for the year is expected to be around 755,000 vehicles — lower even than during the Covid-19 pandemic.
The SMMT's chief executive, Mike Hawes, described the situation as "depressing".
The sector contributes some £22bn a year to the economy, according to the SMMT, and as recently as 2023 automotive manufacturing employed some 198,000 people in the UK.
Andy Palmer, who was previously chief executive of Aston Martin, believes the ecosystem - and the sum it contributes to the economy - can only survive if the industry maintains its current scale.
"There is a critical mass of employment," he explains. "Once you go below that, you see it all fall apart.
"You don't have the university courses, you don't have people coming across from the aero industry, you don't have the pipeline of skilled engineers that allow the luxury firms to exist, and so on."
And the knock-on effect of this could affect regions already facing challenges.
"If we think about parts of the UK that have automotive plants, they're often disadvantaged regions," says David Bailey, professor of business economics at Birmingham Business School.
"Losing these good quality jobs would have a big impact in terms of wages for workers and also a knock-on effect in terms of the multiplier on the local economy."
He is concerned about what has already been lost. "I'd argue that actually we've let too much of this go already. I think once it's gone, it's really gone."
The question is, can the industry recover - or is it too late?
A concealed deeper problem
The UK car industry is sprawling. Alongside large factories run by the likes of JLR, Nissan, BMW MINI and Toyota, there is a network of suppliers and high-tech specialist engineering firms, along with a number of smaller, luxury car firms, such as Aston Martin, Bentley, Rolls-Royce and McLaren, plus bus and truck manufacturers.
In 2016, the UK produced 1.82m new vehicles – more than at any point since 1999. Yet even at that point, storm clouds were already gathering. And the industry has suffered further over the past decade.
Factory closures have had an impact, but other factors have been at play as well, including uncertainty over US trade policy, which has hit exports to a major market.
Then there was the role of Brexit.
Adam Vaughan/EPA/Bloomberg via Getty Images
One of the UK's leading manufacturers, Jaguar Land Rover (JLR), has deliberately moved upmarket in recent years, meaning it now sells fewer cars - also contributing to the lower figure of UK car production
"Obviously, Brexit had a big impact", says Santiago Arieu, senior autos research analyst at Fitch Solutions. "It created uncertainty and complicated future visibility."
As a result, experts say new investment suffered – just as the industry was gearing up for the massive changes being brought by the transition to electric vehicles.
The agreement with the EU to guarantee continued tariff-free trade soothed the industry's concerns when it came. But by then, there was another challenge to contend with.
The pandemic caused havoc within the industry globally.
In 2020, output dropped by nearly a third, hitting levels not seen since the mid-1980s. It also threw finely tuned global supply chains out of kilter and created shortages of vital parts.
Although demand for new cars was spiking, manufacturers simply couldn't build them quickly enough.
Reuters/ Chris Radburn
'Losing these good quality jobs would have a big impact in terms of wages for workers and also a knock-on effect in terms of the multiplier on the local economy,' says one expert
All of this caused short-term disruption - but the impact concealed a deeper, structural problem for the UK industry.
Quite simply, it has become an expensive place to build cars.
Part of this is to do with labour costs. Although lower than in some other Western European countries, particularly Germany, they are around twice the level seen in Central European nations such as Poland, Slovakia and Hungary.
Then, there are energy costs. British manufacturers currently pay some of the highest electricity prices in the world.
"Car makers operating in the UK also have factories in Europe and elsewhere, so it's not hard for them to find a replacement for their UK production," explains Felipe Munoz of JATO Dynamics.
The former chief executive of Stellantis, Carlos Tavares, has previously criticised the cost of manufacturing cars in the UK and northern Europe – while holding up the company's Kenitra factory in Morocco as a model of efficiency.
The investments starting to bear fruit
When the Luton plant shut last year, it was estimated by Luton Borough Council that the move could cost the regional economy £300m per year.
A small part of the workforce relocated to Stellantis' other UK plant, at Ellesmere Port in Cheshire, where the company is in the process of investing £50m in expanding production.
Of those who have not relocated, some retired. "[Others] are taking quite a reduction in pay", says Gary Reay, who was a representative of the Unite union at the plant.
The factory site has been bought by a property firm, Goodman - it plans to create more than 1,700 jobs at a new industrial park.
Mr Reay is unimpressed. "The problem for the workforce… is this is years down the road… It's too far away for most of our workers."
Toby Melville/PA Wire
Just 417,000 new cars and vans were built in the UK in the first six months of 2025
Yet there is hope in some quarters: it is possible this year's output may turn out to be a low point, as recent investments start to bear fruit.
In 2024, for example, Nissan stopped building its ageing electric Leaf model at its Sunderland plant — having previously been building about 30,000 a year. But it is due to begin making a new version this year and will start building an electric version of the Juke in 2026.
Nissan is also one of the manufacturers set to benefit from investments in gigafactories. Nissan's battery partner AESC is building one in Sunderland, which will be able to make power packs for 100,000 electric vehicles a year.
JLR's parent company, Tata, meanwhile, is investing in its own plant in Somerset, through its subsidiary Agratas.
The government says it wants to increase the number of cars and commercial vehicles built annually to 1.3m by 2035. The SMMT believes 803,000 vehicles will leave the production lines next year but bringing that up to 1.3m looks like a very tall order, according to Mike Hawes.
Greg McDonald, the CEO of Goodfish Group, is also circumspect. "I don't think many people think there's going to be a resurgence," he says.
His business makes injection moulded components for carmakers and has four sites across the UK. It also has a base in Slovakia.
"Suppliers like us are used to being constantly bid at for price and cost reductions, and there's a limit to how much you can do."
Diversifying or Chinese investment?
One way of mitigating this is for businesses to diversify - something more viable for smaller businesses in the sector.
Burnett's Manufacturing, based in Northampton, is one of many automotive suppliers clustered around the Midlands Corridor. A manufacturer of specialist rubber and plastic parts, it relies on the motor industry for about 40% of its business. But it also provides components for shipbuilders and oil and gas firms.
According to technical sales manager, Rich Dixon, smaller companies are more flexible and able to adapt to changing circumstances.
"I think we're lucky in some ways, because 60% of our business is diversified across many different industries," he says. "The last thing you want to be is 100% automotive.
"The difficulty is that higher up the food chain, there are some big companies that are very reliant on automotive."
Yang Dong/VCG via Getty Images
Chinese giants such as Dongfeng want to expand their international operations
Some argue there is another way forward. Chinese giants such as Chery Group and Dongfeng want to expand their international operations – and see the transition to electric vehicles as an opportunity to do this in the European market.
"If you embrace the move to electric vehicles and become a leading light in attracting Chinese investment, then you can do what China did to us in the past, which is essentially use collaboration to rebuild your industry," argues Andy Palmer, who now owns and invests in clean energy companies.
This would, he adds, require significant government action, including negotiations with Beijing.
The question is, is it already too late?
One senior executive, who has spent decades in the European industry, doesn't believe the UK will become a major player in the EV market.
"I don't think governments have spent the necessary time and energy preparing for the shift to EVs.
Chris J. Ratcliffe/Bloomberg via Getty Images
The UK is home to a number of luxury car firms, such as Bentley
"I don't see much opportunity for new players to come in," says the executive, who asked not to be named. "It's all about encouraging those who are already here to stay, and if possible to expand."
Another option, Felipe Munoz believes, is that the UK could double down on its position as a key player in the market for high-end cars.
This could mean becoming a hub for the production of luxury Chinese designs, while allowing cheaper mass-market models to be built elsewhere.
"I think people globally are willing to pay a premium for a British-made luxury car," adds Prof Bailey.
The Great British 'brain drain'
There is plenty at stake here, and it goes beyond the impact on local communities when factories are lost or suppliers stop trading.
"I also worry about it in terms of impacts on productivity, exports, and research and development," says Prof Bailey.
"Part of the reason why we've got poor productivity performance in the UK is that we have allowed too much manufacturing to go."
This is where we differ from our European counterparts, argues Steve Fowler, EV editor for The Independent. "We tend not to support our homegrown industries in the same way that other countries do".
What is harder to assess is the loss of national prestige. When MG Rover collapsed in 2005, there was an outcry, not just because thousands lost their jobs, but also because it was perceived as a symbol of the wider decline of British industry.
This became even more marked when MG – a classic British brand – became a boutique badge for cars made in China.
Bloomberg via Getty Images
‘The UK is a great place to make cars, we have incredible expertise’
Many of the upmarket brands that still build cars in this country deliberately trade on their British identity. Think of Rolls Royce, Bentley, McLaren and Lotus. Even BMW-Mini, a mass market manufacturer, is more than willing to wave the Union Jack – or rather, have it painted on door mirrors and roofs.
If those cars were no longer built in Britain, it might well be perceived as a national humiliation. And for some, the decline of the auto industry would almost certainly be perceived as a symptom of a much wider loss.
"I do think people are [becoming] much more aware of where things are made," argues Mr Fowler. "This isn't necessarily a nationalistic thing, but more a sustainability thing. Do you want your car to have travelled halfway around the world to reach you?"
Ultimately, he says, there is already "a bit of a brain drain of talent, because the opportunities, bluntly, aren't here in the UK.
"[But] the UK is a great place to make cars, we have incredible expertise, we have some of the best engineers and people who can build them better than anybody else."
Top image credit: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg via Getty Images
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Artist's impression of a small nuclear power station
Rolls-Royce's plan to power artificial intelligence (AI) with its nuclear reactors could make it the UK's most valuable company, its boss has said.
The engineering firm has signed deals to provide small modular reactors (SMRs) to the UK and Czech governments to power AI-driven data centres.
AI has boomed in popularity since 2022, but the technology use lots of energy, something which has raised practical and environmental concerns.
Rolls-Royce chief executive Tufan Erginbilgic told the BBC it has the "potential" to become the UK's highest-valued company by overtaking the largest firms on the London Stock Exchange thanks to its SMR deals.
"There is no private company in the world with the nuclear capability we have. If we are not market leader globally, we did something wrong," he said.
Tufan Erginbilgic has overseen a ten-fold increase in Rolls-Royce's share price since taking over in January 2023.
However, he has ruled out the idea of Rolls-Royce seeking to list its shares in New York as British chip designer Arm has done and the likes of Shell and AstraZeneca have considered in the search for higher valuations.
This is despite the fact that 50% of its shareholders and customers are US-based.
"It's not in our plan," said Mr Erginbilgic, a Turkish energy industry veteran. "I don't agree with the idea you can only perform in the US. That's not true and hopefully we have demonstrated that."
AI investment
Rolls-Royce already supplies the reactors that power dozens of nuclear submarines. Mr Erginbilgic said the company has a massive advantage in the future market of bringing that technology on land in the form of SMRs.
SMRs are not only smaller but quicker to build than traditional nuclear plants, with costs likely to come down as units are rolled out.
He estimates that the world will need 400 SMRs by 2050. At a cost of up to $3bn (£2.2bn) each, that's another trillion dollar-plus market he wants and expects Rolls-Royce to dominate.
The company has signed a deal to develop six SMRs for the Czech Republic and is developing three for the UK.
But it remains an unproven technology. Mr Erginbilgic conceded he could not currently point to a working SMR example but said he was confident in its future potential.
There are also concerns about the demands on water supplies from the data centre and SMR cooling systems.
In response, companies including Google, Microsoft and Meta have signed deals to take energy from SMRs in the US when they are available.
Next generation aircraft
Rolls-Royce sees SMRs as key to its future, but its biggest business is aircraft engines.
Already dominant in supplying engines to wide-bodied aircraft like Boeing 787 and Airbus A350, it plans to break into the next generation of narrow-bodied aircraft like the Boeing 737 and Airbus A320. This market is worth $1.6tn - nine times that of the wide-bodied .
Rolls-Royce is abit player in a market that has powerful and successful leaders, and that rival Pratt and Witney lost $8bn trying and failing to break into.
The market is dominated by CFM International – a joint venture between US-based GE Aerospace and French company Safran Aerospace Engines.
Industry veterans told the BBC that market leaders can and will drop prices to airline customers long enough to see off a new assault on their market dominance.
But Mr Erginbilgic said this is not just the biggest business opportunity for Rolls-Royce. Rather, it is "for industrial strategy... the single biggest opportunity for the UK for economic growth".
"No other UK opportunity, I challenge, will match that," he said.
Share price up ten-fold
Although Rolls-Royce sold its car making business to BMW nearly 30 years ago, the name of the company is still synonymous with British engineering excellence.
But in the early part of this decade that shine had worn off. The company was heavily indebted, its profit margins were non-existent, and thousands of staff were being laid off.
When Mr Erginbilgic took over in January 2023, he likened the company to "a burning platform".
"Our cost of capital was 12%, our return was 4% so every time we invested we destroyed value," he said.
Two and a half years later, the company expects to make a profit of over £3bn, its debt levels have fallen and shares have risen over 1,000% - a ten-fold rise.
So how did that happen? And is Mr Erginbilgic right to think that Rolls-Royce's roll is only just starting?
'Grudging respect'
The timing of his appointment was fortunate according to some industry veterans.
Rolls-Royce's biggest business – supplying engines to commercial airlines – has rebounded strongly from the Covid pandemic.
The company's most successful product – the Trent series of aircraft engines – are at the sweet spot of profitability as the returns on investment in their development over a decade ago begin to pour into company coffers.
Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 arguably made it almost inevitable that its defence business would see higher spending from European governments – which has been confirmed by recent announcements.
Unions have not always been fans of Mr Erginbilgic's hard-charging approach.
In October 2023, one of his first major move was cutting jobs, which drew criticism from Sharon Graham, the boss of the Unite union.
"This announcement appears to be about appeasing the markets and its shareholders while ignoring its workers," she said at the time.
However, overall global headcount has grown from 43,000 to 45,000 since 2023 and union sources say there is "grudging respect" for Mr Erginbilgic.
Those sources give him one third of the credit for the turnaround around in the company's fortunes, with a third credited to market conditions and a third to his predecessor Warren East for "steadying the ship".
So does Mr Erginbilgic really believe that Rolls-Royce can be the UK's most valuable company – overtaking the likes of AstraZeneca, HSBC, and Shell?
"We are now number five in the FTSE. I believe the growth potential we created in the company right now, in our existing business and our new businesses, actually yes – we have that potential."
Rolls-Royce is undoubtedly a company with the wind at its back – and Tufan Ergenbilgic certainly believes he has set the sails just right.
Under-22s in England should be given free bus passes to help them get into work and education, according to major a report by MPs.
The number of bus journeys taken in England has dropped in recent years, while fares have risen faster than inflation, it said.
This was a barrier to opportunity and growth in some areas, MPs found, recommending a pilot scheme of free bus travel at any time of day for under-22s.
The Department for Transport said it was providing "£1bn in multi-year funding to improve the reliability and frequency of bus services across the country".
In England, the number of bus passenger journeys had dropped from 4.6 billion in 2009 to 3.6 billion in 2024, the report by the Transport Committee said.
Some smaller towns and rural areas have no bus services at all, or buses that run so infrequently that "they do not meaningfully add to people's transport options", it said.
A 2019 study found that some 57% of jobseekers lived in areas where they could not reach a centre of employment within 45 minutes by bus.
"High bus fares and limited local provision can severely restrict young people's access to education, employment, and other opportunities," the report said.
'We rely on public transport'
Alex Mustafa
Alex Mustafa, 19, says she uses the bus all the time as she can't drive due to health and financial reasons and would benefit from a free bus pass.
"It would also help poorer young people like myself who rely on public transport to better plan for social connections without needing to worry about bus cost on top of how expensive it is to go out as it is," she said.
Alex says she has been left waiting for a bus for over an hour before and has been late to work and missed social events due to cancelled buses.
"It's very difficult to live life according to plan when you have to plan around an unreliable schedule. Trains are sometimes better, but they also come with a higher cost and they're more limiting with location," she said.
Roman Dibden, chief executive of youth charity Rise Up, said it sees young people turn down job interviews and training all the time because they can't afford the bus fare.
"Free bus passes for under-22s would remove a huge barrier, opening up access to jobs, apprenticeships, and training - especially in communities where opportunity isn't on your doorstep."
'Support people who struggle costs-wise'
Dylan Lewis-Creser
Dylan Lewis-Creser, 21, is a student in town planning and also stood as a Green Party candidate for Walkley Ward in the local elections in May 2024.
They told the BBC they use the bus quite a lot to travel around Sheffield as driving is too expensive.
"A free bus pass would mean I could get to and from university and work without paying £10 a week, which adds up significantly as a student on a low budget," they said.
"That cost is amplified when considering changing buses to get to other job opportunities and elsewhere, like hospitals."
Dylan thinks there needs to be more discussion around "making transport accessible, affordable and reliable."
"Part of that would be supporting people who often struggle costs-wise to do that, such as young people," they said.
"We've seen how it's boosted young people using buses in Scotland, and it only makes sense to extend that policy."
Bus passengers spend £39.1 billion in local businesses every year, according to research from KPMG.
But experts told the Transport Committee that the bus sector's contribution to the economy declined by around £8.9 billion between 2011 and 2023.
The report said: "The current deregulated nature of the bus sector can encourage commercial operators to "deprioritise" less profitable routes, often leaving vulnerable communities without a service."
'Social exclusion'
The committee heard that older people were particularly deterred from using the bus if they felt unsafe at bus stops.
The report recommended improvements to bus stops and shelters such as screen showing real-time information.
Jane Bishop is the chief executive of North Norfolk Community Transport, a charity that provides low-cost dial-a-ride services in the local area. She says for some people bus services mean the difference between being able to stay in their homes or having to move into assisted living.
Jane Bishop
North Norfolk Community Transport helps people get around if they can't drive
"Most of our passengers are older people, but not all," she told the BBC. "A lot of people, we're the only people they see every week."
"They become friends with the other people on their route so it's a great tool for combatting loneliness," Ms Bishop said.
But, she added, "it's a lottery whether there is a community transport in your area".
Fare cap
The cap on bus fares outside London was increased to £3 last year.
The committee said fare caps were most beneficial to people in rural areas, as they tended to take longer journeys or had to use multiple buses for one trip.
But the report was critical of the short-term nature of funding for bus services, saying it has "hampered local authorities' ability to improve services".
"Five-year settlements in other transport sectors like rail and the strategic road network have enabled greater certainty and promoted strategic planning," it said. "Bus services, the most widely used form of public transport, require a similar commitment."
Bus services are devolved in England, meaning they are the responsibility of local authorities. Individual councils could choose to offer concessions to under-22s.
The Local Government Association (LGA) welcomed the committee's recommendation to end "stop-start funding" for buses.
A spokesperson said: "Bus services provide an essential mode of public transport in local communities, relied upon by millions of people.
"More work is needed to attract them back onto buses to ensure services are sustainable for our communities. Stop-start funding risks losing passengers, with patronage difficult to recover if and when money is found."
Steff Aquarone, a Liberal Democrat MP who sits on the Transport Committee, said the report shows the need for "a different model for rural public transport".
He said local councils cannot heavily subsidise bus fares as in other countries, but "if you put buses on at the time people want to travel, going to places they want to go, people will use them".
Police will be encouraged to disclose the ethnicity and nationality of suspects charged in high-profile and sensitive investigations under new guidance, the National Police Chiefs' Council (NPCC) says.
It is hoped the change will reduce the risk to public safety where there are high levels of misinformation about an incident or in cases of significant public interest.
Decisions on releasing such information will remain with police forces, with wider legal and ethical considerations also considered, the NPCC added.
Welcoming the new guidance, a Home Office spokesperson said: "Public trust requires transparency and consistency from the authorities that serve them."
The guidance, which comes into immediate effect, forms part of a wider review of the College of Policing's professional practice for media relations.
The NPCC said the guidance would reaffirm that verifying a suspect's immigration status was not the police's responsibility.
"It is for the Home Office to decide if it is appropriate in all the circumstances to confirm immigration status," the council said.
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper told the BBC last week that there needed to be "more transparency in cases" over the background of suspects.
The NPCC said the new guidance aimed to ensure policing was more consistent, fair and transparent, as well as addressing possible mis and disinformation.
The change was in recognition of public concern and ensured police processes were "fit for purpose in an age of rapid information spread", the council added.
Before 2012 police forces made decisions on what information to give to the media on a purely case-by-case basis.
But after Lord Leveson published his report into the ethics of the press, police forces became much more cautious abut what information they released.
As it stands, there is nothing in the College of Policing's guidance on media relations that prevents police giving information about the nationality, asylum status or even ethnicity of someone who has been charged.
However there is nothing that specifically mentions them either which is why the information released to the media largely comes at the discretion of the police force. Hence the very different measures taken in recent cases.
In May, when a car ploughed into crowds celebrating Liverpool FC's winning of the Premiership title, Merseyside Police were quick to reveal that the man arrested was white and British, in order to quash rumours of a terrorist attack in the public interest.
Conversely, the forces decision not to release information about Axel Rudakubana - the man jailed for murdering Alice Aguiar, nine, Bebe King, six, and Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, in Southport last summer - allowed false information to spread.
That misinformation was deemed at least partly responsible for the riots in England and Northern Ireland between 30 July and 5 August 2024.
Referring to the riots, Deputy Chief Constable Sam de Reya, the NPCC lead for communications and media, described it as the "real-world consequences" of the information the police release into the public domain.
He said: "We have to make sure our processes are fit for purpose in an age of social media speculation and where information can travel incredibly quickly across a wide range of channels."
He added that "being as fair, consistent and transparent as we can will improve confidence in policing".
Chief Constable Sir Andy Marsh, CEO at the College of Policing, added that the interim guidance would "bring consistency" and that "information can be released for all ethnicities and nationalities when it meets the right criteria."
The guidance has been developed following consultation with the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) and Home Office and the College of Policing will update its current authorised professional practice for media relations later this year.
The Home Office spokesperson added: "The public, and police forces themselves, want greater clarity on when, why and how information is released and the legitimate and compelling reasons it may need to be withheld.
"The Home Office will support that effort by authorising the release of relevant accompanying immigration information in future cases, where it is appropriate to do so, and where the police have requested it. All cases will of course take account of consultation with the police and CPS.
"The government also asked the Law Commission at the end of February to speed up the elements of its review around the law of contempt in relation to what can be said publicly ahead of a trial."
President Volodymyr Zelensky has said Ukraine would reject any Russian proposal to give up the Donbas region in exchange for a ceasefire, warning it could be used as a springboard for future attacks.
Zelensky was speaking ahead of a meeting between US President Donald Trump and Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin in Alaska on Friday.
Trump has insisted any peace deal would involve "some swapping of territories" and could see Russia taking the entire eastern Donbas region and keeping Crimea.
Meanwhile Moscow's troops have continued their summer offensive, making a sudden thrust near the eastern Ukrainian town of Dobropillia and advancing 10km (six miles) in a short period of time.
Zelensky admitted the advance had taken place in "several spots" but said Kyiv would soon destroy the units involved in the attack.
No official details have emerged on what demands Vladimir Putin could make when he meets Donald Trump in Anchorage on Friday.
The Donbas - made up of the eastern regions of Luhansk and Donetsk - has been partly occupied by Russia since 2014.
Moscow now holds almost all of Luhansk and about 70% of Donetsk but speaking to reporters on Tuesday, Zelensky reaffirmed that Ukraine would reject any proposal to leave the Donbas.
"If we withdraw from the Donbas today - our fortifications, our terrain, the heights we control - we will clearly open a bridgehead for the Russians to prepare an offensive," he said.
In his nightly address on Tuesday, Zelensky also said Moscow was preparing new offensives on three parts of the front - Zaporizhzhia, Pokrovsk and Novopavlov areas.
Last week Trump said there would be "some swapping of territories to the betterment of both" Russia and Ukraine - sparking concern in Kyiv and across Europe that Moscow could be allowed to redraw Ukraine's borders by force.
Russia currently controls just under 20% of Ukrainian territory.
The White House on Tuesday said the Alaska talks would be a "listening exercise" for Trump and added having him and Putin sit down in the same room would give the US president "the best indication on how to end this war".
It follows Trump describing the summit as a "feel-out meeting" on Monday, seeming to tone down expectations that Friday's meeting could bring Ukraine and Russia closer to peace.
When he announced the summit last week, Trump sounded positive that the meeting could result in concrete steps towards peace.
"I think my gut instinct really tells me that we have a shot at it," he said.
But Ukrainian President Zelensky once again expressed serious doubts that the talks could result in a positive outcome for Kyiv, which has been excluded from the summit. "I don't know what they will talk about without us," he said.
Zelensky has steered clear of criticising Trump but in recent days his frustration at being sidelined has become apparent, and on Tuesday he said the choice of Alaska as a location was a "personal victory" for Putin.
"He is coming out of isolation, because they are meeting with him on US territory," he said.
On Wednesday, Zelensky is due to join a virtual meeting with Donald Trump, EU leaders, UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and Nato chief Mark Rutte.
All sides will try to convince Trump of the need not to be swayed by Putin when the two meet at the hastily-organised summit.
Heat health alerts are coming into effect for the whole of England later, with amber warnings for most southern and central areas - meaning there could be travel disruption or increased demand on health services.
Following a warm night, temperatures are set to rise across the UK on Tuesday when the heat will peak for most.
Much of England and Wales will see 25-28C, reaching 34C in some areas, meaning heatwave thresholds are likely to be met in a number of regions this week.
Meanwhile, the national drought group - which includes the Met Office, regulators, the government, and water companies - has warned that England is now suffering from "nationally significant" water shortfalls.
The group said England is experiencing widespread environmental and agricultural effects from the shortage of water, which is hitting crop yields, reducing feed for livestock, damaging river wildlife and wetlands, as well as increasing wildfires.
A jet stream to the north and high pressure to the east is drawing up hot and humid air from the south
As high pressure has pushed eastwards, the UK has been drawing in some very warm air on a southerly to south easterly wind from the European continent, where temperatures have been particularly high.
On Monday, Bergerac and Bordeaux in France set all-time records at 41.4C and 41.6C. There are red warnings for the heat in France and in Spain.
The amber heat health alert – issued by the UK Health Security Agency – begins across the Midlands, East Anglia, London and South East England at 09:00 and continues until 18:00 on Wednesday.
North East England, North West England, Yorkshire and Humber and south-west England have a yellow alert for the same period.
Yellow alerts warn of possible impacts on health and social services.
Temperatures across Scotland and Northern Ireland could reach 23-26C, maybe 27C in eastern Scotland and the Borders.
Much of England and Wales could see 25-28C, but the low 30s are again likely for central and southern England, and south-east Wales. Anywhere from the south-west Midlands to west London could see 34C.
This would still not make it the warmest day of the year so far, although the year's top temperature in Wales may be threatened.
Highest temperatures of 2025
England - 35.8C Faversham, 1July
Wales - 33.1C Cardiff Bute Park, 12 July
Scotland - 32.2C Aviemore, 12 July
Northern Ireland - 30C Magilligan, 12 July
EPA/Shutterstock
Temperatures could reach 34C in the capital
Some could see a fourth heatwave of the summer this week, the official criteria for which is when locations reach a particular threshold temperature for at least three consecutive days. That varies from 25C across the north and west of the UK, to 28C in parts of eastern England.
Conditions will stay warm for a third day for most areas on Wednesday, though temperatures could dip a little in the west.
There will be more cloud and it will feel more humid. There will be a slight shift in wind direction to more of a south-westerly meaning the highest temperatures could be across parts of East Anglia, again in the low 30s.
The heat will ease for most on Thursday with some thunderstorms and some cooler, less humid air into Friday.
However, as high pressure builds in once more it is likely temperatures will rise again into the weekend to the mid-to-high 20s, with 30C possible in southern England and south Wales.
This year saw the warmest and sunniest spring on record across the UK.
June and July saw the second and fifth highest average temperatures for those months respectively.
There have been 13 days so far this year that have seen temperatures of 30C or more in the UK this year.
That number will rise further this week, but is still low compared with the 19 days above 30C in 2022 and 34 days in 1995.
Rainfall for August has been very variable. Despite it only being 11 days into the month, some parts of northern Scotland are not far from recording their average August rainfall already, while some parts of southern England, such as Heathrow and Kew Gardens, have yet to record any measurable rain.
The Trump administration has significantly rewritten and downscaled the US government's annual report on global human rights abuses.
The document, previously seen as the most comprehensive study of its kind by any government, significantly reduces criticism of some US allies such as Israel and El Salvador while escalating disapproval of perceived foes such as Brazil and South Africa.
Entire sections included in reports from previous yeas are also eliminated, dramatically reducing coverage of issues including government corruption and persecution of LGBTQ+ individuals.
State department officials say it has been "restructured" to "remove redundancies" and "increase readability".
The report also describes the human rights situation as having "worsened" in major European democracies including the UK, France and Germany.
The language used echoes previous criticism by the Trump administration and some US tech bosses who oppose online harm reduction laws in some European countries, portraying them as attacks on free speech.
Uzra Zeya, a former senior state department official who now runs the charity Human Rights First, accused the Trump administration of "gutting" decades of highly respected work on human rights protections and an "abandonment of core values" to the US.
"It sends a signal that there's going to be a free pass from the United States government, that it will look the other way if a government is willing to cut deals or do the bidding of this administration," she told the BBC.
The report accuses the UK of "significant human rights issues", including "credible reports of serious restrictions on freedom of expression". It also describes prosecution and punishment for human rights abuses as "inconsistent".
Both the UK and Brazil have previously rejected similar criticism from the US.
In the section on Israel, the West Bank and Gaza, the report says the ongoing war "led to a rise in reports of human rights violations". However, the report continues, "the government took several credible steps to identify officials who committed human rights abuses". It also accuses Hamas and Hezbollah of war crimes, charges both have denied.
The report omits reference to the International Criminal Court (ICC) arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, former defence minister Yoav Gallant and a Hamas commander, Mohammed Deif. ICC judges concluded there were "reasonable grounds" the men bore "criminal responsibility" for alleged war crimes. Both Israel and Hamas have rejected the allegations.
El Salvador has has been accused by Amnesty International of "arbitrary detentions and human rights violations" as well as "inhumane" detention conditions. However the state department report concluded there were "no credible reports of significant human rights abuses".
The document was published following a months' long delay amid reports of significant internal dissent at the state department over its contents.
It follows internal guidance issued by political leaders earlier this year reportedly advising staff to shorten the reports to remove some references to issues including corruption and gender-based crimes, and follows some executive orders on related issues issued by President Trump.
During a visit to Saudi Arabia earlier this year Trump berated "Western interventionists" and said the US would no longer be "giving you lectures on how to live or how to govern your own affairs".
"It is definitely going to happen" - Dana White confirms 4 July UFC fight at White House
The White House is set to a host an Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) event next year as part of 4 July celebrations in the US to mark the 250th anniversary of the country's founding.
The octagon cage fight event was announced by UFC boss Dana White, whose friendship with the president dates back to the early 2000s when Trump hosted some of the first ever UFC events at his business properties.
"It is definitely going to happen," White told CBS Mornings.
White said he planned to meet with the president and his daughter Ivanka at the end of the month to finalise the plans. A White House official confirmed the event to the BBC.
It will mark the first time a UFC fighting competition would be hosted at the White House.
It's unclear where the event would be hosted. UFC fights typically draw tens of thousands of people and are held in large arenas, with the sports trademarked eight-sided octogen cage in the middle.
"When he called me and asked me to do it, he said: 'I want Ivanka in the middle of this,'" White said of his discussions with Trump.
"So Ivanka reached out to me, and her and I started talking about the possibilities, where it would be and, you know, I put together all the renderings."
Trump had teased the idea of hosting a fight at the White House during an event last month in Iowa.
He indicated that there were ideas to build a cage for the fight on the grounds of the White House and suggested the event could host up to 25,000 people.
"We're going to have a UFC fight, think of this, on the grounds of the White House," Trump said at a 4 July Salute to America event in the state. "We have a lot of land there."
Getty Images
He told supporters at the event, which he said would kick of a year of celebrations for the nation's 250th birthday, that national parks and historic sites across the US would also host special events.
The UFC fight is the latest move by Trump to place his mark on the White House.
He has made renovating the entire complex of the White House a priority for his second term. So far, he's redecorated the Oval Office with gold decor, paved over the grass lawn in the Rose Garden, erected two large flagpoles on the north and south lawns, and announced plans to build a $200m (£151m) new ballroom in the East Wing.
Last week, he walked on the roof of the West Wing, saying he was looking at "another way to spend my money for this country".
The plans for the fight come shortly after Paramount, which owns CBS, announced a seven-year, $7.7bn deal to stream UFC fights.
Heat health alerts are coming into effect for the whole of England later, with amber warnings for most southern and central areas - meaning there could be travel disruption or increased demand on health services.
Following a warm night, temperatures are set to rise across the UK on Tuesday when the heat will peak for most.
Much of England and Wales will see 25-28C, reaching 34C in some areas, meaning heatwave thresholds are likely to be met in a number of regions this week.
Meanwhile, the national drought group - which includes the Met Office, regulators, the government, and water companies - has warned that England is now suffering from "nationally significant" water shortfalls.
The group said England is experiencing widespread environmental and agricultural effects from the shortage of water, which is hitting crop yields, reducing feed for livestock, damaging river wildlife and wetlands, as well as increasing wildfires.
A jet stream to the north and high pressure to the east is drawing up hot and humid air from the south
As high pressure has pushed eastwards, the UK has been drawing in some very warm air on a southerly to south easterly wind from the European continent, where temperatures have been particularly high.
On Monday, Bergerac and Bordeaux in France set all-time records at 41.4C and 41.6C. There are red warnings for the heat in France and in Spain.
The amber heat health alert – issued by the UK Health Security Agency – begins across the Midlands, East Anglia, London and South East England at 09:00 and continues until 18:00 on Wednesday.
North East England, North West England, Yorkshire and Humber and south-west England have a yellow alert for the same period.
Yellow alerts warn of possible impacts on health and social services.
Temperatures across Scotland and Northern Ireland could reach 23-26C, maybe 27C in eastern Scotland and the Borders.
Much of England and Wales could see 25-28C, but the low 30s are again likely for central and southern England, and south-east Wales. Anywhere from the south-west Midlands to west London could see 34C.
This would still not make it the warmest day of the year so far, although the year's top temperature in Wales may be threatened.
Highest temperatures of 2025
England - 35.8C Faversham, 1July
Wales - 33.1C Cardiff Bute Park, 12 July
Scotland - 32.2C Aviemore, 12 July
Northern Ireland - 30C Magilligan, 12 July
EPA/Shutterstock
Temperatures could reach 34C in the capital
Some could see a fourth heatwave of the summer this week, the official criteria for which is when locations reach a particular threshold temperature for at least three consecutive days. That varies from 25C across the north and west of the UK, to 28C in parts of eastern England.
Conditions will stay warm for a third day for most areas on Wednesday, though temperatures could dip a little in the west.
There will be more cloud and it will feel more humid. There will be a slight shift in wind direction to more of a south-westerly meaning the highest temperatures could be across parts of East Anglia, again in the low 30s.
The heat will ease for most on Thursday with some thunderstorms and some cooler, less humid air into Friday.
However, as high pressure builds in once more it is likely temperatures will rise again into the weekend to the mid-to-high 20s, with 30C possible in southern England and south Wales.
This year saw the warmest and sunniest spring on record across the UK.
June and July saw the second and fifth highest average temperatures for those months respectively.
There have been 13 days so far this year that have seen temperatures of 30C or more in the UK this year.
That number will rise further this week, but is still low compared with the 19 days above 30C in 2022 and 34 days in 1995.
Rainfall for August has been very variable. Despite it only being 11 days into the month, some parts of northern Scotland are not far from recording their average August rainfall already, while some parts of southern England, such as Heathrow and Kew Gardens, have yet to record any measurable rain.
A major blaze in Turkey forced hundreds from their homes
A scorching heatwave is fuelling dozens of wildfires across parts of southern Europe, forcing thousands of people from their homes and pushing temperatures above 40C (104F).
Red heat alerts have been issued in parts of Italy, France, Spain, Portugal and the Balkans, warning of significant risks to health.
Spain's weather service Aemet said temperatures could reach 44C (111.2F) in Seville and Cordoba, while authorities in southern Portugal also warned of possible 44C highs.
In Italy, a child died of heatstroke on Monday, and in Tres Cantos, north of Spain's capital Madrid, a man who suffered serious burns died in hospital, officials said.
Reuters
Wildfires in Albania forced people to evacuate their homes on Monday
Hundreds of Tres Cantos residents were forced to leave their homes amid Spain's wildfires and the regional environment minister described the fire as having "explosive characteristics because of a dry storm that has brought winds of more than 70km/h (43.5mph)".
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez posted on X on Tuesday and said that rescue services "are working tirelessly to extinguish the fires". "We are at extreme risk of forest fires. Please be very cautious," he added.
In Spain's north-western region of Castile and Leon, almost 4,000 people were evacuated and more than 30 blazes were reported - with one threatening Las Medulas, a Unesco World Heritage site renowned for its ancient gold mines.
Another 2,000 people were evacuated from hotels and homes near the tourist hotspot of Tarifa in the southern region of Andalusia.
Almost 1,000 soldiers were deployed to battle wildfires around the country, Spain's national military emergency unit said on Tuesday morning.
In neighbouring Portugal, firefighters battled three large wildfires, with the most serious near Trancoso contained in the centre of the country on Tuesday.
Getty
Firefighting efforts continue in Canakkale, Turkey, where a large blaze spread
More than 1,300 firefighters and 14 aircraft were deployed, with Morocco sending two planes after Portuguese water bombers broke down, Reuters reported. Authorities warned southern regions could hit 44C, with the temperature not expected to dip below 25C.
One child died of heatstroke in Italy on Monday, where temperatures of 40C are expected to hit later this week and red heat alerts were in place for 16 cities including Rome, Milan and Florence.
The four-year-old Romanian boy, who was found unconscious in a car in Sardinia was airlifted to a hospital in Rome but died due to irreversible brain damage, reportedly caused by heatstroke, medical authorities told AFP.
Almost three-quarters of France was placed under heat alerts on Tuesday, with temperatures forecast to top 36C in the Paris region and 40C in the Rhône Valley.
French Health Minister Catherine Vautrin said hospitals were braced for fallout from the country's second heatwave in just a few weeks. On Monday, 80 weather stations broke August records, 58 reaching all-time highs.
Reuters
Wildfires in Montenegro destroy property near the capital Podgorica
In Greece, gale-force winds fanned fires on tourist islands Zakynthos and Cephalonia, prompting village and hotel evacuations. Another blaze near the western Greek town Vonitsa threatened homes, while four areas of the mainland also faced evacuations.
Turkey's northwestern Canakkale province saw a major fire force hundreds from their homes. Canakkale Governor Omer Toraman said in a post on X that seven planes and six helicopters were tackling the blaze on Tuesday.
He added the Dardanelles Strait, a waterway linking the Aegean Sea to the Sea of Marmara, was closed to allow water-dropping planes and helicopters to operate safely.
Wildfires in Albania forced people to evacuate their homes on Monday, while in Croatia a large fire raged in Split and was contained on Tuesday. A major wildfire swept through Piperi village near Montenegro's capital Podgorica, devastating houses in the area.
Parts of the UK are sweltering in its fourth heatwave of the year, with amber and yellow heat health alerts in place for all of England and potential highs of 34C forecast.
Scientists warn global warming is making Mediterranean summers hotter and drier, fuelling longer and more intense fire seasons.
A pair of uninsured purple Lamborghinis were impounded after they were flown into the UK for their owner's summer trip
Millions of pounds worth of luxury vehicles have been seized by the Metropolitan Police to curb dangerous driving in central London.
Police seized 72 vehicles worth an estimated £6m, including identical purple Lamborghinis, in a three-day operation across Hyde Park, Kensington and Chelsea.
Drivers were issued with tickets for a variety of motoring offences, including driving with no insurance, no driving licence, disqualification, false documentation and the use of fraudulent number plates.
Officers also recovered several stolen vehicles and made eight arrests for a range of offences including a man who was wanted for actual bodily harm (ABH) and criminal damage.
One car was stopped by officers over a discrepancy with the vehicle's insurance. But after routine checks, officers had enough information to arrest four people for immigration offences.
The force said uninsured driving was often linked to broader criminal activity including drink and drug driving, disqualified driving, stolen vehicles, money laundering, drug running and organised crime.
Met Police
The Met said uninsured driving was often linked to broader criminal activity
Luxury vehicles seized included Ferraris, Lamborghinis and Bentleys that were either unroadworthy or being driven illegally.
A pair of uninsured purple Lamborghinis were also seized after they were flown into the UK for their owner's summer trip.
One of the two drivers had been in the country for two hours and had been driving for 15 minutes before the car was seized, the Motor Insurers' Bureau said.
Several of the seized vehicles had been brought to the UK from abroad, with drivers using motor insurance from their home countries without verifying whether the policy provided coverage in the UK, the organisation added.
Andy Trotter, from the Motor Insurers' Bureau said: "Someone is hit by an uninsured driver every 20 minutes in the UK, someone is seriously injured by an uninsured driver every day and one person will lose their lives to an uninsured driver every week."
Met Police
Police seized 72 vehicles across the three day operation
One driver who was stopped by police officers told BBC London: "Apparently the car came up without insurance on this registration.
"It was my mistake because I changed it two days ago.
"On DVLA it wasn't automatically swapped from the original reg number to the personalised one, and my mistake was not to call the insurance and declare the new reg with them."
Special Chief Officer James Deller, from the Met's Special Constabulary, said the operation was in response to concerns from residents and businesses that high-value vehicles were "causing a nuisance" in central and west London.
Seven men and one woman were arrested during the operation:
A 22-year-old man who was arrested for ABH and criminal damage
A 25-year-old man, who was later charged for possession of a Class B drug
A 27-year-old man was arrested for theft of a motor vehicle and released under investigation
A 23-year-old man was arrested for theft of motor vehicle, dangerous driving, failing to stop for police, no insurance, no driving licence and drug driving
Three men, aged 26, 35 and 39, and a 23-year-old woman, were arrested on suspicion of immigration offences.
Destruction following the Israeli attack on Zeitoun on 8 August
Gaza City has come under intense air attack, the territory's Hamas-run civil defence agency has said, as Israeli forces prepare to occupy the city.
Mahmud Bassal, a spokesman, said the residential areas of Zeitoun and Sabra had for three days been hit by bombs and drone strikes that "cause massive destruction to civilian homes", with residents unable to recover the dead and injured.
Meanwhile the UK, EU, Australia, Canada and Japan issued a statement saying "famine is unfolding in front of our eyes" and urged action to "reverse starvation".
They demanded "immediate, permanent and concrete steps" to facilitate the entry of aid to Gaza. Israel denies there is starvation in Gaza.
It has accused UN agencies of not picking up aid at the borders and delivering it.
The joint statement also demanded an end to the use of lethal force near aid distribution sites and lorry convoys, where the UN says more than 1,300 Palestinians have been killed, mostly by the Israeli military.
Separately, the World Health Organisation on Tuesday appealed to Israel to let it stock medical supplies to deal with a "catastrophic" health situation before it seizes control of Gaza City.
"We all hear about 'more humanitarian supplies are allowed in' - well it's not happening yet, or it's happening at a way too low a pace," said Rik Peeperkorn, the agency's representative in the Palestinian territories.
"We want to as quickly stock up hospitals," he added. "We currently cannot do that. We need to be able to get all essential medicines and medical supplies in."
Israel's war cabinet voted on Monday to occupy Gaza City, a move condemned at an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council later that day. On Tuesday the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said it was "at the beginning of a new state of combat".
The Israeli government has not provided an exact timetable on when its forces would enter the area. On Sunday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel's forces had been instructed to dismantle the "two remaining Hamas strongholds" in Gaza City and a central area around al-Mawasi.
He also outlined a three-step plan to increase aid in Gaza, including designating safe corridors for aid distribution, as well as more air drops by Israeli forces and other partners.
On the ground, however, residents of Gaza City said they had come under unrelenting attack from the air. Majed al-Hosary, a resident in Zeitoun in Gaza City, told AFP that the attacks had been "extremely intense for two days".
"With every strike, the ground shakes. There are martyrs under the rubble that no one can reach because the shelling hasn't stopped," he said.
The Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza said that 100 dead had been brought to hospitals across Gaza over the past 24 hours, including 31 people who were killed at aid sites. Five more people had also died of malnutrition, it added.
Israel has faced mounting criticism over the 22-month-long war with Hamas, with UN-backed experts warning of widespread famine unfolding in the besieged territory.
On Tuesday members of an international group of former leaders known as "The Elders" for the first time called the war in Gaza an "unfolding genocide" and blamed Israel for causing famine among its population.
Following a visit to the Gaza border, Helen Clark and Mary Robinson, a former prime minister of New Zealand and a former president of Ireland, said in a joint statement: "What we saw and heard underlines our personal conviction that there is not only an unfolding, human-caused famine in Gaza. There is an unfolding genocide."
Palestinians flock to an area of western Gaza City during an aid drop.
The statement mirrors those of leading Israeli rights groups, including B'Tselem, which said it had reached an "unequivocal conclusion" that Israel was attempting to "destroy Palestinian society in the Gaza Strip".
Israel strongly rejects the accusations, saying its forces target terrorists and never civilians, and that Hamas was responsible for the suffering in Gaza.
On Sunday, the IDF killed five Al Jazeera journalists in a targeted attack on a media tent in Gaza City, sparking widespread international condemnation. It said it had killed well known reporter Anas al-Sharif, whom it alleged "served as the head of a terrorist cell in Hamas", and made no mention of the others.
Media freedom groups said it had provided little evidence for its claims. Al Jazeera's managing editor said Israel wanted to "silence the coverage of any channel of reporting from inside Gaza".
Hamas killed more than 1,200 people and took 251 hostage in its attack on Israel on 7 October 2023. Israel's response in Gaza has killed at least 61,599 Palestinians, according to the health ministry, whose toll the UN considers reliable.
US Vice-President JD Vance is meeting Conservative shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick at the house where he is staying during his holiday in the UK.
The BBC has been told Vance's team invited Jenrick to a private meeting with the vice-president in the Cotswolds on Tuesday.
Vance and his family are visiting the area in south-west England for their summer break away from Washington DC.
The BBC has approached a Vance spokesperson for comment.
Vance arrived in the UK last week and met David Lammy for talks about Gaza and other international affairs at the foreign secretary's official residence, Chevening House, in Kent on Friday.
The vice-president is not due to meet Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch, who was speaking to business owners in the Isle of Wight on Tuesday.
A Conservative spokesman said aides for Badenoch and Vance had been discussing a meeting but "just couldn't make it work with schedules".
Badenoch met Vance last year when she was in Washington DC and had dinner with the vice-president.
Jenrick, who was defeated by Badenoch in the Tory leadership contest last year, will be meeting Vance for the first time in the Cotswolds.
The Tory shadow secretary of state and Vance have taken similar positions on a range of policy issues, from immigration to free speech.
Reuters
There is an increased police presence in the area Vance is staying
Vance's trip has included several official engagements, meetings and visits to cultural sites.
Over the weekend, Vance and his family enjoyed a guided tour of Hampton Court Palace, the former home of Henry VIII.
Residents in the hamlet of Dean in Oxfordshire have faced disruption, with police closing roads for the vice-president's visit.
The village and a manor house in the area have been under heavy security since Vance's arrival on Sunday evening.
The vice-president has been pictured at a farm shop, near Chipping Norton, close to the home of the former UK Prime Minister Lord David Cameron.
Vance's trip comes before US President Donald Trump, who travelled to Scotland for a private visit in July, is scheduled to make a historic second state visit to the UK next month.
Starbucks customers in South Korea have been asked to stop bringing "bulky items" into cafes to do their office work, after some brought printers and desktop computers.
Others had brought in partitions and more than one computer to mark their office territory.
As many people choose to work from home, cafes like Starbucks have been trying to strike the balance between being a casual coffee place and welcoming customers choosing to work there.
Starbucks said laptops, iPads, and mobile phones are still welcome but not items that "impact the shared space" and limit seating.
Starbucks's announcement comes as the growing trend of those studying and working at cafes - cagongjok - becomes a subject of intense debate in Korean society.
Since the pandemic, as the trend towards working from home escalates, many have started using the term cagonjok in not-so-friendly terms, showing irritation at those who use the seats for hours after only buying one drink.
Some users in Korea on social media have said cagonjok are also freeloading electricity.
"If you can't afford an office space and Starbucks is silly enough to let you run your office there for the price of their less-than-mediocre sugary caffeine beverage, go for it," said one user on Reddit.
'Bad manners'
Koreans on social media have been reacting to the announcement from Starbucks.
"Good job," said one Korean user on social media. "Now that Starbucks has started, other cafes should follow suit".
Another said that people working from cafes made him stop going to Starbucks, and that the announcement is a "measure against those who've crossed the line with their bad manners".
"It feels like there are way too many people without common sense these days," the user wrote.
A spokesperson for Starbucks said: "Starbucks Korea has updated its policy so all customers can have a pleasant and accessible store experience.
"While laptops and smaller personal devices are welcome, customers are asked to refrain from bringing desktop computers, printers, or other bulky items that may limit seating and impact the shared space".
"Starbucks remains committed to being a welcoming third place for coffee and connection, and where community thrives in every cup, every conversation, and every visit", Starbucks concluded, though its mild-mannered response hides the derision many feel for those seen to be hogging seats at cafes.
Starbucks's in South Korea move echoes sentiment in cafes across the world, including in England where some coffee shops have introduced policies aimed at stopping remote workers from "hogging" tables and limiting turnover.
Madonna released her remix album Veronica Electronica last month
Madonna has urged Pope Leo XIV to visit Gaza and bring his "light to the children before it is too late".
The US queen of pop shared her plea on social media, saying the supreme pontiff was "the only one of us who cannot be denied entry."
Her intervention came as the UK, EU, Australia, Canada and Japan issued a statement saying "famine is unfolding in front of our eyes" and urged action to "reverse starvation".
"Most Holy Father, please go to Gaza and bring your light to the children before it's too late," Madonna posted on Instagram. "As a mother, I cannot bear to watch their suffering.
Israel denies there is starvation in Gaza.
'Please say you will go'
"The children of the world belong to everyone.
"You are the only one of us who cannot be denied entry."
The Like a Prayer singer added: "We need the humanitarian gates to be fully opened to save these innocent children."
She signed off by saying: "There is no more time. Please say you will go. Love, Madonna."
According to PA News, he said: "I appeal to the international community to observe humanitarian law and respect the obligation to protect civilians as well as the prohibition of collective punishment, the indiscriminate use of force, and the forced displacement of populations."
Reuters
Pope Leo XIV became the first US head of the Catholic Church in May
Madonna - who last month released her long-rumoured remix album Veronica Electronica - has made impassioned speeches on stage about Gaza since the war began.
This includes while performing at London's O2 in 2023, when she told fans: "It breaks my heart to see children suffering, teenagers suffering, elderly people suffering - all of it is heartbreaking, I'm sure you agree.
"But even though our hearts are broken our spirits cannot be broken."
She urged fans to bring "light and love" into the world - both individually and collectively, via words and actions - in order to "bring peace to the Middle East" and beyond.
In the caption of her latest online post, she noted how it was her son Rocco's birthday and "the best gift I can give to him as a mother - is to ask everyone to do what they can to help save the innocent children caught in the crossfire in Gaza."
The star, who also asked for donations to three different organisations, continued: "I am not pointing fingers, placing blame or taking sides.
"Everyone is suffering. Including the mothers of the hostages. I pray that they are released as well."
U2's solidarity statement
Madonna's comments come as U2 frontman Bono - along with the rest of his bandmates - also released a statement letting fans know where they stand on the matter.
While condemning the actions of both Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Hamas, the Irish frontman offered: "Our band stands in solidarity with the people of Palestine who truly seek a path to peace and coexistence with Israel and with their rightful and legitimate demand for statehood.
"We stand in solidarity with the remaining hostages and plead that someone rational negotiate their release."
Hamas killed more than 1,200 people and took 251 hostage in its attack on Israel on 7 October 2023. Israel's response in Gaza has killed at least 61,599 Palestinians, according to the Hamas-run Gaza health ministry, whose toll the UN considers reliable.
Israel has faced mounting criticism over the 22-month-long war with Hamas, with UN-backed experts also warning of widespread famine unfolding in the besieged territory.
On Tuesday the health ministry said five more people had died from malnutrition, bringing the total number of such deaths to 227 including 103 children.
Last week the UN's humanitarian agency said the amount of aid entering Gaza continued to be "far below the minimum required". It said it continued to see impediments and delays as it tries to collect aid from Israeli-controlled border zones.
Israel has continued to deny there is starvation in Gaza and has accused UN agencies of not picking up aid at the borders and delivering it.
HMRC has confirmed it uses artificial intelligence (AI) to monitor social media posts as part of criminal investigations into suspected tax cheats.
It said the tech would not replace "human decision-making" and was subject to legal oversight.
"Greater use of AI will enable our staff to spend less time on admin and more time helping taxpayers, as well as better target fraud and evasion to bring in more money for public services," it said in a statement.
However, experts warn there are risks with using AI in this way.
"AI could help HMRC to streamline its processes and make it easier to compile all the available information about an individual," accountancy firm RSM UK partner Chris Etherington told the BBC.
"There are of course risks with automating this and there could be cases of mistaken identity, particularly with fake or hacked social media accounts.
"There will clearly still need to be a human touch in the process to ensure appropriate decisions are made and all the relevant information is reviewed."
The tax authority said it had used AI for several years to support its work, though it first emerged it was being used to monitor the social media accounts of suspected tax cheats when reported by the Daily Telegraph on Tuesday.
A spokesperson clarified AI was only used this way as part of criminal investigations - not on the everyday tax payer.
Government investigators have for years looked at the social media posts of people suspected of wrongdoing in relation to tax and benefits.
It is now known that HMRC is now partially automating the process through the use of AI - with human oversight.
This does not appear to be coming at the cost of jobs, with the government announcing the tax authority will gain 5,500 compliance staff.
'Make life easier'
Nonetheless the disclosure comes at an uncomfortable time for the government, which is currently facing allegations from insiders that its national institute for AI is at risk of collapse.
The technology secretary has threatened to withdraw its funding, and wants it to focus on defence research.
Meanwhile, HMRC has already announced several efforts using AI which could streamline its operations.
"It is not yet clear how far and fast HMRC has got with its AI developments, but it has already been successfully using software that compiles and analyses data for years," Mr Etherington said.
"The primary focus at HMRC appears to be on using AI to make life easier for taxpayers."
He said he expected the tax authority to look into developing tools which would help people get their tax returns right, as "a lot of tax revenues can be lost through errors and mistakes".
"It has also been announced that HMRC will be using AI to help taxpayers access over 100,000 pages of guidance on its website," he said.
"Anything that can help on that front is likely to be welcome news to taxpayers as HMRC's current online guidance can be bewildering to many."
Aikines-Aryeetey took part in last year's Strictly Come Dancing Christmas Special
Gladiators star and Olympic sprinter Harry Aikines-Aryeetey is the first celebrity contestant to be announced for the Strictly Come Dancing 2025 line-up.
Aikines-Aryeetey, known as Nitro to Gladiators fans, appeared on the BBC's Newsround on Monday to announce he will be joining the dancing show.
"I'm so excited to be part of the Strictly family this series and I'm ready to give it all I've got," he said.
Strictly Come Dancing airs on BBC One and iPlayer from September through to December.
Aikines-Aryeetey is a former Team GB sprinter and was the first athlete to win gold medals at both 100 and 200 metres at the World Youth Championships.
In 2005, aged 17, he was won the BBC Young Sports Personality of the Year award.
He has competed at two Olympic Games and is a three-time European champion and two-time Commonwealth champion.
In 2023, he was unveiled as Nitro in Gladiators, and took part in last year's Strictly Come Dancing Christmas Special partnered with Nancy Xu.
Aikines-Aryeetey said the Christmas Special "was so nice I just had to do it twice".
On Monday, he appeared live in the Newsround studio disguised as "world-famous choreographer Nicky Trott", there to talk about a scientific study into the benefits of dancing every day.
He then revealed his real identity and told viewers how excited he was to be joining the dancing competition.
"I'll be bringing tons of energy to light up the dance floor," he said. "Let's hope I'm as quick picking up the routines as I am on the track."
The next three celebrity contestants joining the new series of Strictly will be announced on The One Show on Monday evening.
Two new professional dancers are also joining the line-up this year - Alexis Warr, who won US dance series So You Think You Can Dance in 2022, and Australian-born Julian Caillon, who has appeared as a professional dancer on three seasons of Australia's Dancing With The Stars.
The show, which has been airing since 2004, has faced multiple controversies over the past year relating to the behaviour of some of its professional dancers and celebrity guests.
Professional dancers Giovanni Pernice and Graziano Di Prima left the show last year following allegations about their behaviour towards their dance partners.
The BBC announced new welfare measures for Strictly last July. These include having chaperones in all rehearsal rooms, adding two new welfare producers and providing additional training for the professional dancers, production team and crew.
Karen Loderick-Peace, Juliet Mayhew, Panthea Parker, Juliet Angus, Nessie Welschinger and Amanda Cronin are the cast of the Real Housewives of London
The Real Housewives franchise has spread around the world, with viewers lapping up the partying and catfighting of wealthy socialites in locations from Orange County to Sydney to Nairobi. But there hasn't been a series based in London - until now.
"Go back to Paddington."
On its own, it sounds harmless enough, more like directions than an insult. But for Belgravia's gilded set, being told to leave the rarefied streets and return to a supposedly less desirable part of the English capital cuts deep.
It's Amanda Cronin, a former model and now skincare founder, who makes the remark in a clip from The Real Housewives of London.
For Cronin and her five co-stars - Juliet Angus, Karen Loderick-Peace, Juliet Mayhew, Panthea Parker, and Nessie Welschinger - it's just one of the many dramatic moments as the international franchise arrives in the city.
Speaking in a West End hotel, Cronin laughs about how quickly the insult went viral and stands by the fact that her co-star Angus, an American socialite who also appeared in Ladies of London, should be banished from SW3.
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Juliet Angus was sent packing to Paddington in a teaser clip for the show
Cronin says she "didn't hesitate" when she was asked to be on the show. "It's just a massive opportunity and such a blessing - to be a housewife is huge so I grabbed it and ran with it."
Parker, an Iranian-born north London socialite, admits she had her doubts about joining, but didn't want to live with the regret of turning down such a big franchise.
And the brand really is huge - there have been 11 US editions and more than 30 international ones.
The London version's cast claim their exploits put the rest in the shade, with producers cutting the cameras and telling the women to dial down the drama at times.
'Too much drama'
Angus says producers of other reality shows often bemoan that everyone is getting on and there isn't enough drama. "But that did not happen once" on this series, she says.
Cronin says: "The producers came to my room one day and said 'You're too strong, your blows are too low and there was too much drama'."
Parker adds that producers told her they were doing her a favour by cutting out parts of an argument in the first episode.
"I don't think anyone has seen anything like this before," says Welschinger, an award-winning cake designer whose creations have graced Buckingham Palace.
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Angus says there wasn't enough drama in 2014 reality TV series Ladies of London
Perhaps the reason for so much friction is the fact that the group of six women weren't friends before the show.
They knew of each other, but the links are tenuous - some share a dentist, others mingled in the same circles, while a few attended similar exclusive soirées in the capital.
Emotions certainly did run high when they came together for the show, and many of the women admit to having regrets about saying certain things, or feel embarrassed about how they acted when the cameras were rolling.
But Loderick-Peace, a Housewives veteran from Jersey UK and Cheshire, says she doesn't dwell on her mistakes.
"You cannot live your life looking in the rear view mirror, you're going to stress yourself out. You just have to own it and life is about making mistakes, rising up, brushing yourself off and starting all over again."
The group grew closer "because we spend so much time together filming", she adds.
"Filming feels like a year, so you get to know each other on another level. We even got to know each other better than how we know some of our closest friends."
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The Real Housewives of Orange County was the first series in the franchise
Before stepping in front of the cameras, the London housewives sought advice from women who had previously been in their positions.
Mayhew, an Australian-born former Miss Galaxy Universe, jokes that Taleen Marie from the Dubai show advised her to take lots of Valium. Welschinger says Lisa Barlow from Salt Lake City told her to "enjoy every second because a lot of women want this but not everyone can get it".
Loderick-Peace adds that several existing housewives told her the most important thing was to "just be yourself" - and all the London cast insist they have put their authentic selves on screen.
"You can't curate a persona because audiences realise that," she explains.
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Karen has previously appeared on The Real Housewives of Cheshire and Jersey UK
Most of the housewives are no strangers to reality TV, and as a result tend to forget the cameras are rolling after a while.
But that's not always the case for their families. We meet spouses and children, some of whom are more enthusiastic than others about being tangentially pulled into the Real Housewives vortex.
"I sat down and discussed the pros and cons with my family, and after three weeks everyone said yes," Parker says. Except one, that is.
"My eldest son didn't want to be in it at all and I begged him to be on a FaceTime so he did. Then he was regretting it, but I said he was giving himself too much importance and it was probably only going to be two seconds."
Cronin and Loderick-Peace's children chose not to appear, but Welschinger says her whole family, particularly her husband, enjoyed the experience.
"I think it was because the production team made you feel safe and they know what they're doing so you can trust the process."
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Amanda Cronin previously dated Wham! singer Andrew Ridgeley
The husbands, usually dressed in suits as they leave for work or take business calls, appear fleetingly in the first episode.
For some of the housewives, their lifestyle is made entirely possible through the salaries of their spouses.
Loderick-Peace, whose husband is the former chairman and owner of West Bromwich Albion football club, says that's not the full picture. "Behind every successful man there's a strong woman and men can't do it on their own," she says.
Parker reveals her mother-in-law wanted her son to marry a woman who also worked. "My husband said, 'Why would I do that if I have a woman that's going to be making my home amazing, treating me like a king and making sure there's no stress when I come back from work?'" she says.
Some critics claim the Real Housewives franchise is inherently anti-feminist - an exercise in pitting women against each other for entertainment.
But the cast push back on that narrative. As well as the heightened drama we see on screen, the friendships, mentoring and mutual support have emerged, they say, and continued after the cameras stopped rolling.
The Real Housewives of London is available to watch on Hayu from 18 August.
US citizen Aimee Betro had virtually no "criminal footprint" before the shooting in Birmingham, UK, police say
US woman Aimee Betro has been found guilty of attempting to shoot a man dead in the UK. But the investigation into the Wisconsin native revealed her to be "fairly unexceptional" with virtually no "criminal footprint". And it remains unclear why she became a would-be contract killer.
On an autumn night six years ago, Betro pointed a 9mm gun at Sikander Ali in a suburban cul-de-sac and pulled the trigger, as she had been hired to do.
But instead of firing, the weapon jammed - saving the man's life.
It marked the mid-point of a plot more suited to a television drama, and one that eventually ended several years later and thousands of miles away with Betro's capture in Armenia.
It started, however, the year before the botched shooting in 2019, at a clothes shop in Birmingham's Alum Rock.
Police handout
Betro, pictured in a shop in Birmingham, was extradited to the UK from Armenia earlier this year
In 2018, Mohammed Aslam and his son Mohammed Nabil Nazir were injured during a fight at a shop owned by Mr Ali's father, Aslat Mahumad.
The clash sparked a violent feud between the families, Birmingham Crown Court heard, which "clearly led Nazir and Aslam to conspire to have someone kill Aslat Mahumad or a member of his family".
The pair, from Derby, turned to Betro - a woman not known by police "to have a huge footprint criminally" in the US or anywhere, according to Det Ch Insp Alastair Orencas from West Midlands Police's major crime unit.
"[She was] a fairly unexceptional individual," he said. "On the face of it, a normal-looking individual [but] prepared to do an outrageous, audacious and persistent murder."
Police handout
Betro was captured firing directly at the family home in Measham Grove
Betro,a childhood development and graphic design graduate from the US city of West Allis, arrived in the UK in August 2019 to carry out Aslam and Nazir's vendetta.
The court heard she had previously met Nazir via a dating app and slept with him at an Airbnb in London's Kings Cross during a visit to the UK between December 2018 and January 2019, although it remains unclear how she came to be hired to carry out the shooting.
Prior to the attack on 7 September, she stayed at hotels in London, Manchester, Derby and Birmingham and met her co-conspirators at various points, jurors heard.
This included an incident three days before the attempted murder when footage found on Nazir's phone showed a gun being fired and jamming.
Scoping out house
On the day of the shooting, Betro - wearing a summer dress, hoodie and flip-flops - bought a second-hand Mercedes from a garage in Alum Rock under the name Becky Booth.
Later that day, she was seen "driving in convoy" with Nazir and Aslam "scoping out" Measham Grove, where Mr Mahumad lived.
She then waited in the cul-de-sac for her victim and disguised herself with a niqab, jurors heard.
When Mr Ali pulled up, she got out and fired the gun directly at him but it did not discharge, prompting him to jump back in his car and flee.
The distance between the firearm and Mr Ali meant there would have been little-to-no chance of survival had it gone off, according to Det Ch Insp Orencas.
"It was absolute pure chance this didn't culminate in a murder investigation," he said.
West Midlands Police
Bullets went through the windows of the house
Betro initially fled the scene but returned by taxi just after midnight and fired three shots at the family home.
By 13:30 BST, she was at Manchester Airport and flew to the US, prosecutors said.
Days later, Nazir followed and according to Betro, the pair rented a car and drove to Seattle "just for a road trip" with stops at an amusement park, Area 51 in Nevada, Los Angeles and San Francisco.
She told jurors she did not know there had been a shooting in Measham Grove and Nazir had not mentioned it during his time in the States.
The investigation to find Betro andbring her co-conspirators to justice not only spanned several years but was hampered by the pandemic and involved the FBI, National Crime Agency and two UK police forces.
Eventually, she was traced to a housing complex on the outskirts of Yerevan in Armenia and apprehended by police before she was extradited to the UK.
West Midlands Police
Mohammed Aslam (left) and his son Mohammed Nazir were jailed in November
From the start, Betro denied her involvement and told the trial it was "all just a terrible coincidence" that she was around the corner from the scene of the attempted assassination six minutes later.
She claimed it was in fact the work of "another American woman" who sounded similar to her, used the same phone and wore the same sort of trainers.
Jurors found her guilty of conspiracy to murder by majority verdict after almost 21 hours of deliberation.
Det Ch Insp Orencas described Betro as someone who was "extremely dangerous and extremely motivated to cause the worst harm to people".
Nor was her involvement "off-the-cuff... madness" but pre-planned with others across continents, he added.
"I think [she] has had a somewhat problematic relationship with the truth in not accepting what she was accused of."
Asked if he believed Betro was paid or had acted out of loyalty to her partner Nazir, the officer said: "We've not seen evidence of payments.
"They met on a dating site, whether this is a partner doing something for another partner, again, there's no clear evidence of that. I see it as a criminal association and a murderous plot."
The RNLI and Border Force brought more than 400 people ashore in Dover on Monday, figures are expected to show
The number of migrants to cross the English Channel in small boats since Labour came to power last summer is expected to have reached 50,000.
Home Office data shows 49,797 people had arrived as of Sunday, with Monday's total due to be released later.
Government minister Baroness Jacqui Smith told the BBC this was an "unacceptable number of people" but pointed to the "one in, one out" returns deal with France as a deterrent.
But the Conservative Party said the migrant crossing totals showed Labour had "surrendered our borders".
The latest figures come as ministers continue to grapple with how to effectively crack down on people-smuggling gangs - a key pledge of Sir Keir Starmer's when he became prime minister.
Baroness Smith told BBC Breakfast: "We understand how concerning this is to people."
She said the migrant crossing figures showed people-smuggling gangs had taken an "absolute foothold in the tragic trafficking of people" in recent years.
But the minister added the government was "making progress" on tackling people smuggling, and people had already been detained under the UK's "ground-breaking agreement" with France.
The "one in, one out" pilot will see the UK return some migrants to France in exchange for receiving the same number of asylum seekers who are believed to have legitimate claims.
The first returns are due to happen within weeks - but the initial numbers are expected to be small.
The 50,000 figure will cover 5 July 2024, when Labour came to power, to 11 August this year.
Between 5 July 2023 and 11 August 2024, during which time the Conservatives were in power for the most part, there were 36,346 migrant crossings in small boats.
A number of factors affect crossing totals, including where weather conditions are more favourable for attempts.
But the Tories accused Labour of overseeing the "worst illegal immigration crisis in our history".
"This is a taxpayer-funded ferry service for the people-smuggling trade. Every illegal immigrant should be removed immediately upon arrival," said shadow home secretary Chris Philp.
The Home Office said it wants to "end dangerous small boat crossings, which threaten lives and undermine our border security".
"People do not cross the Channel unless what lies behind them is more terrifying than what lies ahead," said Enver Solomon, chief executive of the Refugee Council charity.
The charity's frontline workers say the men, women and children travelling in small boats are "often fleeing places like Sudan, where war has left them with nowhere else to turn", he added.
"To stop smugglers for good, the government must expand safe and legal routes, such as allowing family members to travel to be with their loved ones who are already settled in the UK," he said.
"Without these measures, desperate people will continue to take dangerous journeys, and the criminal gangs are likely to simply adapt their approaches."
Nicola Sturgeon's memoir Frankly is now on sale, slightly earlier than expected after newspaper serialisations and interviews teased some tantalising extracts.
True to its title, the book has Scotland's former first minister writing candidly about the highs and lows of her time in office including challenges she says had a serious impact on her mental health.
So with the full text now available, what are the key things we have learned?
Transgender controversy
After more than eight years in power, and eight election victories, Sturgeon saw final months in office marred by rows about trans issues.
It was, she writes in her memoir, a time of "rancour and division".
Sturgeon now admits to having regrets about the process of trying to legislate to make it easier to legally change gender, saying she has asked herself whether she should have "hit the pause button" to try to reach consensus.
"With hindsight, I wish I had," she writes, although she continues to argue in favour of the general principle of gender self-identification.
Spindrift
Isla Bryson was jailed in 2023 after being convicted of rape
Sturgeon also addresses the case of double rapist Adam Graham who was initially sent to a female prison after self-identifying as a woman called Isla Bryson.
It was, writes Sturgeon, a development "that gave a human face to fears that until then had been abstract for most people".
As first minister she sometimes struggled to articulate her position on the case and to decide which, if any, pronoun to use to describe Bryson.
"When confronted with the question 'Is Isla Bryson a woman?' I was like a rabbit caught in the headlights," she writes.
"Because I failed to answer 'yes', plain and simple... I seemed weak and evasive. Worst of all, I sounded like I didn't have the courage to stand behind the logical conclusion of the self-identification system we had just legislated for.
"In football parlance, I lost the dressing room."
Speaking to ITV News on Monday Sturgeon said she now believed a rapist "probably forfeits the right" to identify as a woman.
JK Rowling
JK Rowling posted a selfie of herself wearing a T-shirt describing Sturgeon as a "destroyer of women's rights"
The former first minister also criticises her highest profile opponent on the gender issue, Harry Potter author JK Rowling, for posting a selfie in a T-shirt bearing the slogan "Nicola Sturgeon, destroyer of women's rights".
"It resulted in more abuse, of a much more vile nature, than I had ever encountered before. It made me feel less safe and more at risk of possible physical harm," she writes.
Sturgeon adds that "it was deeply ironic that those who subjected me to this level of hatred and misogynistic abuse often claimed to be doing so in the interests of women's safety".
Rowling has been approached for comment.
Her relationship with Alex Salmond
Sturgeon's mentor and predecessor as first minster, Alex Salmond, is mentioned dozens of times in the book, often in unflattering terms which reflect their estrangement after he was accused of sexual offences.
Salmond won a judicial review of the Scottish government's handling of complaints against him and in 2020 was cleared of all 13 charges but his reputation was sullied by revelations in court about inappropriate behaviour with female staff.
Sturgeon lambasts Salmond's claim that he was the victim of a conspiracy, saying there was no obvious motive for women to have concocted false allegations which would then have required "criminal collusion" with politicians, civil servants, police and prosecutors.
"He impugned the integrity of the institutions at the heart of Scottish democracy," she writes, adding: "He was prepared to traumatise, time and again, the women at the centre of it all". The claims have been angrily rejected by Salmond's allies.
The former SNP leader died of a heart attack in North Macedonia last year, aged 69.
The independence referendum
Nicola Sturgeon recalls a "totally uncharacteristic sense of optimism" as Scotland prepared to vote on whether to become an independent nation on 18 September 2014.
It was arguably the defining event of her professional life and, in her view, a chance to "create a brighter future for generations to come".
The campaign was tough, she says, partly because of what she calls unbalanced coverage by the British media including the BBC and partly because Salmond left her to do much of the heavy lifting.
"It felt like we were trying to push a boulder up hill," she writes.
PA Media
Sturgeon claims Alex Salmond showed little interest in the "detail" of the independence white paper
A key period in the lead-up to the poll was her preparation, as deputy first minister, of a white paper setting out the case for independence.
At one point, she says, the magnitude of the task left her in "utter despair" and "overcome by a feeling of sheer impossibility".
"I ended up on the floor of my home office, crying and struggling to breathe. It was definitely some kind of panic attack," she writes.
Sturgeon says Salmond "showed little interest in the detail" of the document and she was "incandescent" when he flew to China shortly before publication without having read it.
"He promised he would read it on the plane. I knew his good intention would not survive contact with the first glass of in-flight champagne," she writes.
Operation Branchform
Sturgeon describes her "utter disbelief" and despair when police raided her home in Glasgow and arrested her husband, Peter Murrell, on 5 April 2023.
"With police tents all around it, it looked more like a murder scene than the place of safety it had always been for me. I was devastated, mortified, confused and terrified."
In the weeks that followed she says she felt like she "had fallen into the plot of a dystopian novel".
Sturgeon calls her own arrest two months later as part of the inquiry into SNP finances known as Operation Branchform "the worst day" of her life.
She was exonerated. Murrell, the former SNP chief executive, has been charged with embezzlement.
The couple announced they were separating earlier this year.
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Sturgeon described her house as looking like a murder scene
Text here
Leading Scotland during the pandemic
ForSturgeon, the coronavirus pandemic which struck the world five years ago still provokes "a torrent of emotion".
Leading Scotland through Covid was "almost indescribably" hard and "took a heavy toll, physically and mentally", writes the former first minister.
She says she will be haunted forever by the thought that going into lockdown earlier could have saved more lives and, in January 2024, after she wept while giving evidence to the UK Covid inquiry, she "came perilously close to a breakdown".
"For the first time in my life, I sought professional help. It took several counselling sessions before I was able to pull myself back from the brink," she writes.
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Nicola Sturgeon appeared visibly upset when giving evidence to the Covid Inquiry
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Misogyny and sexism
Scathing comments about the inappropriate behaviour of men are scattered throughout the book.
"Like all women, since the dawn of time, I have faced misogyny and sexism so endemic that I didn't always recognize it as such," Sturgeon writes on the very first page.
One grim story, from the first term of the Scottish Parliament which ran from 1999 to 2003, stands out.
Sturgeon says a male MSP from a rival party taunted her with the nickname "gnasher" as he spread a false rumour that she had injured a boyfriend during oral sex.
"On the day I found out about the story, I cried in one of the toilets in the Parliament office complex," she writes.
She said it was only years later, after #MeToo, that she realised this had been "bullying of an overtly sexual nature, designed to humiliate and intimidate, to cut a young woman down to size and put her in her place".
Her personal life
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Parts of the memoir are deeply personal.
Nicola Sturgeon says she may have appeared to be a confident and combative leader but underneath she is a "painfully shy" introvert who has "always struggled to believe in herself."
She writes in detail about the "excruciating pain" and heartbreak of suffering a miscarriage after becoming pregnant at the age of 40.
"Later, what I would feel most guilty about were the days I had wished I wasn't pregnant," she says.
Sturgeon touches on the end of her marriage, saying "I love him" but the strain of the past couple of years" was "impossible to bear."
She also writes about her experience of the menopause, explaining that "one of my deepest anxieties was that I would suddenly forget my words midway through an answer" at First Minister's Question Time.
"My heart would race whenever I was on my feet in the Chamber which was debilitating and stressful," she says.
And she addresses "wild stories" about her having a torrid lesbian affair with a French diplomat by saying the rumours were rooted in homophobia.
"The nature of the insult was water off a duck's back," she writes.
"Long-term relationships with men have accounted for more than thirty years of my life, but I have never considered sexuality, my own included, to be binary. Moreover, sexual relationships should be private matters."
What the future holds
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Sturgeon loves books and has often appeared at literary events such as Aye Write in Glasgow
Nicola Sturgeon has a few regrets.
These include pushing hard for a second independence referendum immediately after the UK voted — against Scotland's wishes — to leave the EU, and branding the 2024 general election as a "de facto referendum" on independence.
But now, she says, she is "excited about the next phase" of her life which she jokingly refers to as her "delayed adolescence".
"I might live outside of Scotland for a period," Sturgeon writes.
"Suffocating is maybe putting it too strongly, but I feel sometimes I can't breathe freely in Scotland," she tells the BBC's Newscast podcast.
"This may shock many people to hear," she continues, "but I love London."
She is also considering writing a novel.
Nicola Sturgeon concludes her memoir by saying she believes Scotland will be independent within 20 years, insisting she will never stop fighting for that outcome and adding: "That, after all, is what my life has been about."
European leaders have warned against Ukrainian borders being redrawn by force – two days before a US-Russia summit on Ukraine is due to take place in Alaska.
In a statement, European leaders said "the people of Ukraine must have the freedom to decide their future."
It added the principles of "territorial integrity" must be respected and "international borders must not be changed by force".
The statement was signed by 26 of 27 leaders. Missing from the signatories was Hungary's leader Viktor Orban, who has maintained friendly relations with Russia and has repeatedly tried to block EU support for Ukraine.
The statement underscored the nervousness felt by Europeans about Moscow's actions in Ukraine, which many countries – particularly those bordering Russia or those in which the memory of Soviet occupation still lingers – believe could pose a direct threat in the near future.
In recent years Sweden and Finland have joined Nato, Baltic countries have reinstated conscription, and Poland has set aside billions to build a barrier alongside its border with Russia.
European countries have a long history of borders being redrawn by bloody wars and are extremely concerned by the prospect of the US allowing that to happen in Ukraine. A legal recognition of Russia's sovereignty over territories it conquered by force is unacceptable to the EU.
However, the notion that some Ukrainian regions currently under Russian control may not return to Kyiv is gaining ground.
US President Donald Trump has insisted that any peace deal would involve "some swapping of territories" and could see Russia taking the entire Donbas region in eastern Ukraine and keeping Crimea. In exchange it would give up the Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions, which it partially occupies.
Last week, while admitting that some Ukrainian territory might end up being de facto controlled by Russia, Nato chief Mark Rutte stressed that this should not be formally recognised.
In their statement, European leaders said "Russia's war of aggression against Ukraine has wider implications for European and international security", and stressed the need for a "just and lasting peace".
They also said Ukraine should be capable of "defending itself effectively" and pledged to continue providing military support to Kyiv, which was "exercising its inherent right of self-defence".
"The European Union underlines the inherent right of Ukraine to choose its own destiny and will continue supporting Ukraine on its path towards EU membership," the statement concluded.
Denting the apparent unity of the declaration was a line in smaller print at the bottom of the page pointing out that "Hungary does not associate itself with this statement".
In a post on social media its leader Viktor Orban said he had opted out of supporting the statement as it attempted to set conditions for a meeting to which the EU was not invited and warned leaders not to start "providing instructions from the bench".
He also urged the EU to set up its own summit with Russia – though EU leaders have been shunning direct talks with Moscow since it launched its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
On Monday Trump revealed he had sought Orban's advice over the chances of Ukraine winning against Russia on the battlefield. "He looked at me like, 'What a stupid question'," Trump said, suggesting that Orban felt Russia would continue to wage war until it beat its adversary.
EU leaders are due to hold talks with Trump on Wednesday. They will be hoping to put the security of the European continent and Ukrainian interests at the forefront of his mind – at a time when nervousness is growing that the peace imposed on Ukraine may end up being neither "just" nor "lasting".
Trump and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin are then expected to meet in Alaska on Friday.
Around nine in 10 pharmacies have reported an increase in shoplifting and aggression towards staff in the past year.
A survey of 500 pharmacies by the National Pharmacy Association (NPA) also found 87% had experienced at least one instance of intimidating behaviour towards workers, while 22% said they had seen staff physically assaulted.
Henry Gregg, the head of the body, which represents more than 6,000 independent community pharmacies in the UK, called the findings "appalling".
It comes amid an increase in reports of shoplifting across the UK's wider retail sector.
A government spokesperson said it had a "zero-tolerance approach to violence or harassment directed at NHS staff and community pharmacists".
They added that more than 500 town centres were being given extra neighbourhood patrols aimed at preventing shop theft and related offences.
But Mr Gregg said police "should do much more to tackle crimes like shoplifting". Nearly three-quarters of pharmacies the NPA surveyed said they felt the police response to criminal incidents was inadequate.
Ashley Cohen, a pharmacist in Leeds, said he had witnessed an "endemic increase in criminality".
"I'm not just talking about petty crime, small incidents of shoplifting, I'm seeing wanton vandalism," he told BBC Breakfast, noting instances of what he believed were "sinister organised crimes, where people are trying to access our dispensaries".
He has counted two attempted break-ins overnight at each of his two pharmacies, and three instances in which a brick was thrown through the front window.
Mr Cohen said: "Every incident of crime in our pharmacy isn't just a statistic but it makes my staff feel unsafe and it also stops our patients accessing healthcare."
The NPA says pharmacies have tightened security, including bringing in private security guards, employing body cameras and panic buttons, and installing CCTV and security shutters.
Some have also considered displaying photographs of known thieves as a form of deterrence - something the UK's information watchdog has warned against as it could break data protection laws.
But these measures are paid for by the pharmacies themselves. Mr Cohen said faster response times from police would give them better protection.
The British Retail Consortium (BRC) has also found that shoplifters have been carrying out increasingly brazen and violent acts of theft because they do not fear any consequences.
Victims minister Alex Davies-Jones told BBC Radio 4's Today programme on Monday that shoplifting had "got out of hand" in the UK.
When asked about whether it was appropriate for images of known shoplifters to be displayed in places such as shop windows, she replied: "It's on all of us to be aware of what is going on in our local communities."
Nick Kaye, the former NPA chair, noted that instances of aggression were not always linked to shoplifting, but were often people going into pharmacies after being let down by other parts of the NHS.
"We [community pharmacies] are dealing with the most vulnerable, we are always there and accessible," he added.
The NPA warns that thieves could harm themselves or others by using stolen prescription medication.
The NHS is over-treating men for prostate cancer, a charity says, with around 5,000 a year undergoing treatment for cancers unlikely ever to cause harm.
Around one in four prostate cancers are so slow growing that men can opt for regular monitoring rather than treatment, such as surgery and radiotherapy, which can cause side-effects such as incontinence and erectile dysfunction
Of the 56,000 diagnosed in the UK each year, around 6,500 men opt for this, but an analysis by Prostate Cancer UK said another 5,000 could benefit.
The charity said outdated guidelines were to blame. The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), which produces them, said it was reviewing its advice.
NICE recommends that monitoring, using blood tests and scans, should be offered to the lowest risk cases, where nine in 10 will have no signs of cancer spreading within five years.
But research has suggested this could be extended to the next lowest risk group where eight in 10 men will have no signs of cancer spreading.
Evidence gathered by Prostate Cancer UK suggests many hospitals have started offering monitoring to this wider group of patients, but a quarter have not.
According to the charity's analysis:
in some hospitals in England, 24% of patients who could be monitored, instead undergo treatment
across the UK, an average of 8% of men who could be monitored are treated instead, amounting to 5,000 a year
Some of this could be down to patient choice – men are generally given the option of treatment even if they are at low-risk.
But the charity said if the NHS was more active in offering monitoring it could help strengthen the case for prostate cancer screening, which has gained traction since the diagnosis of Olympic cyclist Sir Chris Hoy.
One argument against screening is that the prostate specific antigen (PSA) blood test, used to spot potential signs of the cancer, is unreliable and leads to unnecessary treatment.
Amy Rylance of Prostate Cancer UK, said: "To reduce the harm caused by prostate cancer and build the foundations for a screening programme, we need to both save lives and prevent unnecessary treatment."
One patient who opted for monitoring was Michael Lewis, 63, from the West Midlands.
He was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2020 and, as it was judged low-risk, he opted for monitoring.
Four years later tests suggested the cancer was worsening so he had his prostate removed. He said delaying treatment was so valuable.
"I was able to continue my everyday life with no side effects."
NICE said the organisation was reviewing the prostate cancer guidelines and looking to update them.
"We are committed to ensuring our guidelines continue to reflect the best available evidence and give patients the best possible outcomes," said a spokesman.