Viswashkumar Ramesh breaks down in tears as he talks about the loss of his brother in the crash
The sole survivor of the Air India plane crash, which killed 241 people on board, has said he feels like the "luckiest man" alive, but is also suffering physically and mentally.
Viswashkumar Ramesh walked away from the wreckage of the London-bound flight in Ahmedabad in extraordinary scenes that amazed the world.
He said it was a "miracle" he escaped but told how he has lost everything, as his younger brother Ajay was a few seats away on the flight and died in the crash in June.
Since returning to his home in Leicester, Mr Ramesh has struggled with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), his advisers said, and has been unable to speak to his wife and four-year-old son.
Flames engulfed the Boeing 787 flight when it went down shortly after take-off in western India.
Shocking video shared at the time showed Mr Ramesh walking away from the aftermath with seemingly superficial injuries, as smoke billowed in the background.
Speaking to BBC News, an emotional Mr Ramesh, whose first language is Gujarati, said: "I'm only one survivor. Still, I'm not believing. It's a miracle.
"I lost my brother as well. My brother is my backbone. Last few years, he was always supporting me."
He described the devastating impact the ordeal has had on his family life.
"Now I'm alone. I just sit in my room alone, not talking with my wife, my son. I just like to be alone in my house," Mr Ramesh said.
Watch: The moment Viswashkumar Ramesh walked away from the crash
He spoke from his hospital bed in India at the time, describing how he had managed to unbuckle himself and crawl out of the wreckage, and met Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi while receiving treatment for his injuries.
Of the passengers and crew killed, 169 were Indian nationals and 52 were Britons, while 19 others were killed on the ground.
A preliminary report into the crash, published by India's Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau in July, said fuel supply to the engines was cut off just seconds after take-off. Meanwhile, an investigation is ongoing and the airline said care for Mr Ramesh, and all families affected by the tragedy, "remains our absolute priority".
This is the first time the 39-year-old has spoken to the media since he has been back in the UK. A documentary crew were also filming in the room.
The BBC had detailed discussions with his advisers around his duty of care before the interview.
When asked about his memories of the day of the crash, he said: "I can't say anything about that now."
'I'm suffering'
Flanked by local community leader Sanjiv Patel and spokesman Radd Seiger, Mr Ramesh said it was too painful to recall the events of the disaster, and broke down during parts of an interview at the home of Mr Patel in Leicester.
Mr Ramesh described the anguish he and his family are now living through.
"For me, after this accident... very difficult.
"Physically, mentally, also my family as well, mentally... my mum last four months, she is sitting every day outside the door, not talking, nothing.
"I'm not talking to anyone else. I do not like to talk with anyone else.
"I can't talk about much. I'm thinking all night, I'm suffering mentally.
He says he suffers pain in his leg, shoulder, knee and back, and has not been able to work or drive since the tragedy.
"When I walk, not walk properly, slowly, slowly, my wife help," he added.
Sanjiv Patel said he was supporting, advising and protecting the family
Mr Ramesh was diagnosed with PTSD while he was being treated in hospital in India but has not received any medical treatment since being back home, his advisers said.
They described him as being lost and broken, with a long journey of recovery ahead, and are demanding a meeting with Air India's executives, claiming he has been treated poorly by the airline since the crash.
"They're in crisis, mentally, physically, financially," Mr Patel said.
"It's devastated his family.
"Whoever's responsible at the highest level should be on the ground meeting the victims of this tragic event, and understanding their needs and to be heard."
'Put things right'
Air India has offered an interim compensation payment to Mr Ramesh of £21,500, which has been accepted, but his advisers say this is not enough to meet his immediate needs.
The family fishing business in Diu in India, which Mr Ramesh ran with his brother before the crash, has since collasped, his advisers said.
Spokesman for the family Mr Seiger said they had invited Air India for a meeting on three occasions, and all three were either "ignored or turned down".
The media interviews were the team's way of reissuing that appeal for the fourth time, he said.
Mr Seiger added: "It's appalling that we are having to sit here today and putting him [Viswashkumar] through this.
"The people who should be sitting here today are the executives of Air India, the people responsible for trying to put things right.
"Please come and sit down with us so that we can work through this together to try and alleviate some of this suffering."
In a statement, the airline, which is owned by Tata Group, said senior leaders from the parent company continue to visit families to express their deepest condolences.
"An offer has been made to Mr Ramesh's representatives to arrange such a meeting, we will continue to reach out and we very much hope to receive a positive response," it said.
The airline told the BBC that this offer was made before the media interviews with Mr Ramesh.
Two-time Oscar winner, Sir Anthony Hopkins tells the BBC that he can't "take credit" for his success
Not many people can say they've been given a private piano recital by Sir Anthony Hopkins.
But that's exactly what happened when our four-strong BBC team went to interview the double Oscar-winning actor in Los Angeles.
We were in the same room as the man who terrified as Hannibal Lecter in The Silence of the Lambs, shattered as a butler in The Remains of The Day and devastated as a dad with dementia in The Father.
An actor who was cast by Oliver Stone as President Nixon because - according to Sir Anthony - the director said "you're nuts like Nixon".
At a grand piano in a hotel in Beverly Hills, as he plays us a piece he calls Goodbye, it's clear an artistic soul exudes from his every pore. Haunting notes of music, lines of poetry and Shakespearean verses cascade out of him.
A private piano recital with Sir Anthony Hopkins
We were meeting because Sir Anthony's publishing his autobiography, We Did OK, Kid, an honest and at times upsetting account of a loner who was bullied and written off as a child in Wales and became one of Britain's finest acting exports.
He puts his success down to sheer luck, telling me: "I couldn't take credit for any of it, I couldn't have planned any of this - and now at 87, about to turn 88, I get up in the morning and I think, 'Hello, I'm still here,' and I still don't get it."
From the outside, it looks less about luck and more about his deep understanding of human emotion, as his performances testify. I ask what makes him such an instinctive actor.
"It's such a miracle being alive," he says.
He finds the complexity of human beings "fascinating... I mean, how can you produce Beethoven, Bach and then Treblinka and Auschwitz?"
Sir Anthony has always understood the duality of being human, and it explains his acting range.
He got his first break on film when the actor Peter O'Toole suggested he audition for the 1968 movie The Lion in Winter, in which O'Toole was playing Henry II.
At that point, Sir Anthony had been a member of Sir Laurence Olivier's National Theatre company for several years. But, he recalls: "I couldn't fit into the British theatre style, I just felt out of it."
He also "didn't want to be standing on stage holding a spear for the rest of my life, in wrinkled tights, I just wanted to have a bit of a life".
He was cast as Richard the Lionheart and couldn't believe that a baker's son from Port Talbot was working with Katharine Hepburn.
The actress, playing his mother Eleanor of Aquitaine, gave him "the best advice I've had" as they rehearsed their first scene together. She told him to "just speak the lines... Don't act, just do it". She also said he was "real good".
Hepburn was right, of course. Some classically trained theatre actors, particularly back then, didn't appreciate how much they needed to adjust their performance for the intimacy of a camera. He did.
He doesn't much care for talking about the craft of acting, or certainly the reverence there can be around it, but he shares his method with me: "Be still. Be economic. Don't act or twitch around, you know, 'showing off' acting... simplify, simplify, simplify'."
Hollywood Pictures
Director, Oliver Stone (L) told a reluctant Sir Anthony that he wanted him to play Nixon because he was "nuts" like President Nixon
His performances stand out because he's an actor of huge emotional depth and psychological insight. Think of him as Dr Treves, the friend and protector of John Hurt's Elephant Man.
Or as Lecter, still for me the most terrifying of characters more than 30 years on. The serial killer is a monster but Sir Anthony understood that less is more, on screen.
Instead of playing Lecter as obviously monstrous, "you go the opposite way, you draw back", he explains. He realised as soon as he had read a few pages of the script that the role was "a life-changer".
He writes in his memoir that he "instinctively sensed how to play Hannibal. I have the devil in me. We all have the devil in us, I know what scares people".
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Sir Anthony and Jodie Foster both won Oscars for their roles in The Silence of the Lambs
He tells me he played Lecter still - and deadly. So when he was in character opposite other actors, he decided, "Don't take your eyes off the person. That's terrifying."
He puts on Lecter's metallic rasp for me and appears to enjoy repeating his character's words to Jodie Foster's Clarice. "You're not real FBI," he almost hisses.
"That's scary," he says. He's not wrong. Even in an upmarket LA hotel on a warm autumn afternoon, I'm feeling chilled.
And what about the famous line - "I ate his liver with some fava beans and a nice Chianti", which he follows with that vampire-like hiss?
He explains as a child he'd seen the Hungarian-American actor Bela Lugosi do the same when playing Count Dracula in the 1931 movie. Sir Anthony decided in the moment of filming to copy it and The Silence of the Lambs director, Jonathan Demme, kept it in.
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Bela Lugosi's portrayal of Count Dracula in the 1931 horror film influenced Sir Anthony when playing Hannibal Lecter
What is startling about the memoir is the disconnect between how the world viewed the young actor and how much it was clearly missing about him. He was bullied at school for what other kids saw as his large "elephant" head.
He was slapped around by teachers who deemed him a complete dunce. Even his parents pretty much wrote him off.
He believes it was the making of him. It "gave me a core of anger, resentment and revenge", he says.
But why hadn't they all noticed his talents? This was a child who was given the 10 volume Children's Encyclopaedia when he was six ("I was so captivated, I read every one of them") and became fascinated by astronomy.
A boy who played the piano, made art and loved Dickens and Shakespeare, quoting from them extensively.
A school report in 1955 when he was 17 marked "the turning point" in his life. It was terrible, as usual. "What's going to happen to you?" Sir Anthony recalls his father lamenting. "I said: 'One day, I'll show you, both of you'."
Sir Anthony Hopkins
Sir Anthony, a "little confused boy" by his own recollection, with his father at Aberavon Beach in 1941
Sir Anthony Hopkins
Sir Anthony Hopkins, here in 1953, says he was bullied at school, where teachers thought he was "thick"
He's pleased his parents lived long enough to see him succeed. When he won his first best actor Oscar, for The Silence of the Lambs in 1992, 11 years to the day after his father died, he rang his mother in Wales and said: "I guess I did OK."
But it was a rough ride in the early days. He was an alcoholic who picked fights with directors and others. He wasn't always a good husband to his first two wives. Booze turned him nasty.
"That's the ugly side of alcoholism," he writes. "It brought out a brutal side of me. I'm not proud of it at all."
The anger, he believes, came "from inside, my own insecurities, being bullied at school and all the rest of it. I didn't like authority".
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Sir Anthony (seen with co-star Kate Nelligan) played an alcoholic actor, Theodore Gunge, in the 1974 TV drama The Arcata Promise
Then one night in LA in December 1975, almost 50 years ago, he drove his car while in "a complete alcoholic blackout". When he came to, he realised that he was "out of control" and could have killed someone. He made a phone call to ask for help.
"Suddenly, something said 'it's all over, now you can start living'... the craving left and it's never come back."
At his first meeting of Alcoholics Anonymous, he had a realisation about everyone else in the room.
"They're all misfits like me. Like all of us. We feel we never belong. We feel self-hatred. All of us are the same. I'm not alone."
It's that feeling of disconnection that shines out of the book.
He writes that his wife Stella believes he is on the autism spectrum which is "likely right, given my proclivity for memorisation and repetition... and my lack of emotionality" but he says he prefers the term "cold fish". I want to know why.
It seems to have begun as a reaction to the bullying and screaming at him through school and National Service.
"I'd just stare them out, and that drove them mad," he recalls. "You withdraw into yourself and think, 'OK you can't hurt me, can you?" It was, he says, his "only defence... and that's a power, you see: I don't care."
Of course, Sir Anthony does care and we talk a little about the state of the world. It's at this point in our interview that he becomes his most passionate. He grew up in Port Talbot surrounded by people who had been impacted, even brutalised, by war.
He played Sir Nicholas Winton, the man who saved hundreds of mainly Jewish children from the Nazis, in the film One Life.
Warner Bros.
In One Life, Sir Anthony played Sir Nicholas Winton, a stockbroker who helped to save nearly 700 mainly Jewish children from the Nazis
When I ask him about whether he worries about increasing polarisation now, he becomes very animated and intense.
"The world has always been a place of utter turmoil. But I think if we go on in this way of hatred... we are dead.
"Nobody's allowed to have an opinion. Nobody can have a different view. That's fascism. And it's insanity."
If he has any advice about it all, it's to say "'Come on, stop this rubbish, beating each other up over ideas. They're only ideas and we're only going to be dead one day'."
Sir Anthony Hopkins' best performances
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Brooks Films
Sir Anthony played President Nixon, but told us that, if offered the role of President Trump, he'd say no
Sir Anthony played the role of Dr Frederick Treves with compassion and said of his character that he "wrestled with his goodness"
I ask him, as he looks back at his long life, what his biggest regrets are and he's quick to answer. "People I've hurt over the years, the stupid things I did."
He's estranged from his only child, his daughter Abigail, who he walked out on when she was just one and he was in the depths of alcoholism.
He writes that "after realising I was unfit as a father for Abigail, I vowed not to have any more children... I couldn't do to another child what I'd done to her".
He has tried to repair their relationship over the years.
Getty Images
Sir Anthony with his daughter, Abigail (here at the premiere of Little Man Tate in Los Angeles in 1991), describes his estrangement as "a tremendous source of pain"
When he took on the role of King Lear in his 80s, in Sir Richard Eyre's 2018 film, Lear's words to his daughter Cordelia struck a painful chord.
He writes in his new book: "The line that hit me harder than perhaps any other I've ever spoken was 'I did her wrong'. Saying those words, I felt deeply, perhaps for the first time in my life, how I had hurt my own daughter.
"I remembered how as a baby she'd lit up when I walked into the room. I remembered how I said goodbye to her the night I walked out. I remembered how I had tried and failed to win her back later. I remembered how I had given up. And as Lear, but also as myself, I began to cry."
He didn't want to talk about it in our interview. Poignantly, in this section of the book, he writes: "I hope my daughter knows that my door is always open to her."
I couldn't help feeling moved reading this. It's as if he is trying to send a message to her, hoping against hope that there might be a reconciliation before it is too late.
Playground Television
Sir Anthony (pictured with Florence Pugh) says playing King Lear made him reflect on the hurt he caused his own daughter, Abigail
At 87, he is looking back, aware he has lived many years longer than he has left to live. "Most of my friends have died, they're gone, God bless them," he says. "I hope to be around a little longer. But even that, I'm thinking, 'oh well, I had a good time'."
He certainly still appears to be having fun. After some early reserve when we first met, he quickly relaxed. When he played the piano, he shared how he had lost two much-loved pianos when his house burnt down in the LA fires earlier this year. "They were all under the rubble".
As we walked through the hotel lobby together, he was spotted by guests and waved happily to them. "I like to say hi because people think actors are special. We're not at all," he smiles.
Reuters
Sir Anthony credits his third wife Stella Arroyave with helping him overcome "feelings of anxiety in a way that set [him] free"
Whatever he says, it was special to spend a few hours in his presence. He's an acting legend who's given us six decades of memorable performances. He's also a genuine heavyweight who is steeped not just in musical knowledge, but culture, history and philosophy.
And we end the interview on a philosophical note - as he recites "They are not long, the days of wine and roses" from an Ernest Dowson poem and muses on the fleeting nature of life.
"What are we doing here, what are we?" he asks. "We can't explain anything about ourselves. We may have fancy ideas, religious ideas, philosophical ideas, scientific ideas... what's that all about? We're nothing finally, and yet we're everything".
We Did OK, Kid by Sir Anthony Hopkins is published on 4 November.
Major General Yifat Tomer-Yerushalmi resigned on Friday, admitting her role in leaking the video
The former top lawyer in the Israeli military has been arrested, as a political showdown deepens over the leaking of a video that allegedly shows severe abuse of a Palestinian detainee by Israeli soldiers.
Maj Gen Yifat Tomer-Yerushalmi resigned as the Military Advocate General of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) last week, saying that she took full responsibility for the leak.
On Sunday, the story took a darker turn when she was reported as missing, with police mounting an hours-long search for her on a beach north of Tel Aviv.
She was subsequently found alive and well, police said, but was then taken into custody.
The fallout from the leaked video is intensifying by the day.
Broadcast in August 2024 on an Israeli news channel, the footage shows reserve soldiers at the Sde Teiman military base in southern Israel taking aside a detainee, then surrounding him with riot shields to block visibility while he was allegedly beaten and stabbed in the rectum with a sharp object.
The detainee was subsequently treated for severe injuries.
Five reservists were subsequently charged with aggravated abuse and causing serious bodily harm to the detainee. They have denied the charges have not been named.
On Sunday, four of the reservists wore black balaclavas to hide their faces as they appeared at a news conference outside the Supreme Court in Jerusalem along with their lawyers, who demanded the dismissal of their trial.
Adi Keidar, a lawyer from the right-wing legal aid organisation Honenu, claimed his clients were subject to "to a faulty, biased and completely cooked-up legal process".
Anadolu via Getty Images
The leaked surveillance video was filmed at the Sde Teiman military base in southern Israel
Last week, a criminal investigation was launched into the leaking of the video.
Gen Tomer-Yerushalmi was put on leave while the inquiry took place.
On Friday, Defence Minister Israel Katz said she would not be allowed to return to her post.
Shortly after that, Gen Tomer-Yerushalmi resigned.
In her resignation letter, she said she took full responsibility for any material that was released to the media from the unit.
"I approved the release of material to the media in an attempt to counter false propaganda against the army's law enforcement authorities," she said.
That is a reference to efforts by some right-wing political figures in Israel to claim that the allegations of severe abuse of the Palestinian detainee had been fabricated.
She added: "It is our duty to investigate whenever there is reasonable suspicion of acts of violence against a detainee."
After her resignation, Katz issued a fierce condemnation of her conduct.
"Anyone who spreads blood libels against IDF troops is unfit to wear the army's uniform," he said.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu echoed his defence minister's words on Sunday, saying that the incident at Sde Teiman was "perhaps the most severe public relations attack that the State of Israel has experienced since its establishment".
Hours later, the first reports began appearing in the Israeli media that Gen Tomer-Yerushalmi was missing, sparking fears that a political scandal had taken a turn towards tragedy.
A massive search effort was launched. Several hours later, she was found "safe and in good health" in the coastal area of Herzliya, Israeli police said.
Overnight, a police spokesperson announced that two people had been arrested on suspicion of "leaking and other serious criminal offences" as part of an investigation.
Israeli media reported that the pair were Gen Tomer-Yerushalmi and the former chief military prosecutor, Col Matan Solomosh.
Reuters
Israeli forces mounted an hours-long search for Gen Tomer-Yerushalmi when she went missing on Sunday
The Sde Teiman incident has been a lightning rod for the division between the left and right in Israel.
On the right, the leaking of the video is denounced as a defamation of the Israeli military, all but amounting to an act of treason.
After Israeli military police went to Sde Teiman to question 11 reservists over the incident in July 2024, far-right protesters - including at least three lawmakers from Netanyahu's governing coalition - broke into the facility to show their support.
On the left, Gen Tomer-Yerushalmi's decision to enable the footage to be released is seen as the one time she lived up to the responsibilities of her post.
The video is regarded by the left as concrete evidence backing up multiple reports of abuse of Palestinian detainees since the Hamas-led 7 October 2023 attacks on Israel.
Last October, a report by a UN commission of inquiry alleged that thousands of child and adult detainees from Gaza had been "subjected to widespread and systematic abuse, physical and psychological violence, and sexual and gender-based violence amounting to the war crime and crime against humanity of torture and the war crime of rape and other forms of sexual violence".
Israel's government said it rejected the accusations of widespread ill-treatment and torture of detainees, and insisted that it was "fully committed to international legal standards". It also said it had carried out thorough investigations into every complaint.
The dancer's treatment for stage three breast cancer was depicted in a BBC documentary
Strictly Come Dancing's Amy Dowden has announced she is to undergo "another mastectomy this week".
The 35-year-old said the surgery was "not to treat a new cancer diagnosis" but came following an appointment with her "incredible" medical team, adding that she wanted to be "clear" and "open" with her followers.
In a post on Instagram, accompanied by a video of her stroking her dog, the Welsh star said: "They're [the medical team] confident that, all going well, I can expect a straightforward recovery.
"Once I have healed I look forward to rejoining my Strictly family."
She added that she would "of course" miss not being part of the show as much but would be "watching from home and look forward to cheering everyone on".
"Thank you always for all the support," said Dowden.
The dancer revealed she had been diagnosed with breast cancer in May 2023 after finding a lump in April, the day before going to the Maldives on her honeymoon with fellow professional dancer Ben Jones.
After her diagnosis, Dowden had a mastectomy and underwent chemotherapy, with her treatment preventing her from being able to compete with a celebrity partner on the BBC dancing programme that year.
Dowden documented her cancer experience online, and revealed in February 2024 that "no evidence of disease" was found at her latest health check.
She returned to the dancefloor a few months later, partnered with former JLS star JB Gill.
However, she was forced to pull out of Strictly midway through the 20th anniversary series due to an injury and was replaced by Lauren Oakley.
BBC/PA
The Strictly professional was partnered with former Apprentice contestant Thomas Skinner for the latest season of Strictly Come Dancing
Dowden returned once again in this year's series where she was partnered with former Apprentice contestant and social media star Thomas Skinner, being eliminated in week two.
'I worry about unity' - Southgate on St George's flag
Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,
Gareth Southgate managed England between 2016 and 2024
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Former England manager Sir Gareth Southgate says he is "worried about unity" amid a debate about flying the St George's flag.
A growing number of St George's and union jack flags have appeared across England in recent months.
While some people feel the flag-raising is patriotic, others feel it is intimidating.
Southgate, who spent eight years in charge of the Three Lions, stepped down as manager following a Euro 2024 final defeat by Spain.
Though he failed to win silverware with England, he is widely recognised for uniting the country in support of the national side and has now written a book called Dear England: Lessons in Leadership.
On Monday, BBC Breakfast presenter Jon Kay asked Southgate for his opinion on the flags debate, saying: "Some people are proud of them. Some people are questioning the use of them in certain circumstances. What do you think of that flags debate in the context of what you think about patriotism?"
Southgate replied: "I worry about unity. I've seen what we did with the team [England] to unify every community.
"I do think there's more that bonds us all than separates us. We should try and focus more on what brings us together than what separates us."
Salford City's League Two fixture against Oldham Athletic was delayed later that week when two pitch invaders attempted to place a St George's flag inside the centre circle at the Peninsula Stadium.
Far-right group Britain First claimed responsibility for the incident, saying they "teamed up with local Salford patriots" to protest against the "treachery of Gary Neville".
"At any time in history there will always be some disunity under the surface," said Southgate.
"Life is economically tough for a lot of people so I understand why people are disaffected.
"Covid [the pandemic] was a good example where people did shopping for their neighbours, they rallied round one another, that's what British spirit is about."
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Media caption,
Southgate 'very relaxed not being in football at the moment'
Southgate, who was appointed England head coach in November 2016 after an interim spell, earned 57 caps for the Three Lions during his playing career.
The closest the defender came to silverware with the national side as a player was in 1996, when he missed a penalty in a semi-final shootout defeat by Germany at Wembley.
Asked about the importance of failing, Southgate said: "It's one of the certainties of life that things are going to go wrong for you. What I learned from 1996 is that I failed to execute a skill under pressure and that I needed to be better prepared.
"When I went to bed that night I remember thinking: 'I don't know how I'll ever get over this.'
"The whole country was on this carnival of football in 1996 and heading to the final, and I was responsible for us going out.
"But you step outside the house the next day and slowly get over it. People weren't shy of reminding me about it when I played at opposition grounds but there's always a way through these things and you have to find that strength to come through it."
"Run there's a guy stabbing everyone" - witnesses describe attack
Passengers have described blood-covered seats and attempting to protect themselves with a bottle after a mass stabbing on a LNER train left 11 people injured and needing hospital treatment. Two remain in a life-threatening condition.
Police met the Doncaster-London King's Cross train as it made an unscheduled stop at Huntingdon in Cambridgeshire shortly before 20:00 GMT.
Alistair Day, who was travelling back to Hertford having watched Nottingham Forest, was on the train when the attack happened - having narrowly missed his original connecting service.
He joined others and hid in the train's buffet carriage as a fellow passenger confronted a man with a knife.
"I was just by the buffet car. It was odd. I was at the end of the carriage. All these kids were running up and I thought it was like a prank - Halloween or students," he said.
"Then they're getting louder and louder any sorts of people with blood on them [appeared] and I thought, 'Oh, bloody hell, this is not good.'
"I saw a guy flailing out - a fracas with arms going everywhere. I didn't see him that well because there were people in front of him.
"My initial thought was I'm going to sit there and try and do something but I changed my mind.
"We all jumped up and everyone kept running but I was next to the buffet car and the guys in the carriage were trying to close up the shutters and everything.
"So I said, no, you've got to let us in here. So I jumped in there - there were about 12 of us in there.
"I was the first one in, so I was in the corner. A young woman who I spoke to afterwards was by the window and the guy was at the window with his knife trying to get in. Obviously we'd locked it by then."
The 24-year-old, from Peckham in south-east London, said: "I was texting my friends about my plans for that night and then people came rushing through from the carriage, running through, saying, 'You need to run, you need to run'.
"At first it didn't really register what was going on.
"And then quickly, I just dropped my stuff and I started running along with them.
"And then I looked back, and I could see this guy - he was quite a tall, black male, and he had a bloodied knife.
"You just looked around and there was blood just everywhere."
'What if we run out of carriages?'
Joe continued: "We kept moving through the train. We could see him behind us coming through.
"The scariest thing was that I knew that because the stops at this stage of the journey are just Stevenage and King's Cross there's quite a lot of big distances between stops.
"So we had no idea how long we were going to be on the train for.
"The thing that was in my mind was we're running through this train now but what if we run out of carriages to run through? What if we reach the end of the train? What happens there?
"It all happened very quickly. I was just in a fight or flight mode really."
Whiskey bottle
Joe Giddens/PA
Olly Foster, a passenger on the train, told the BBC he initially heard people shouting "run, run, there's a guy literally stabbing everyone", and believed it might have been a Halloween related prank.
He said within minutes, people started pushing through the carriage, and he noticed his hand was "covered in blood" as there was "blood all over the chair" he had leaned on.
An older man "blocked" the attacker from stabbing a younger girl, leaving him with a gash on his head and neck, Mr Foster said.
Passengers around him used jackets to try to staunch the bleeding.
He added that the only thing people in his carriage could use against the attacker was a bottle of whiskey, leaving them "staring down the carriage" and "praying" that he would not enter the carriage.
Although it lasted 10-15 minutes in total, Mr Foster says the incident "felt like forever".
Describing the scene when he got off the train, he said: "There were three people bleeding severely. One guy was holding his stomach and there's blood coming from his stomach and going down his leg.
"He was going 'help, help, I've been stabbed'."
PA
The incident prompted a huge response by the emergency services
The train's only other scheduled stop before King's Cross was due to be at Stevenage.
Wren Chambers, who was due to get off in the Hertfordshire town, said they first became aware something was wrong when a man bolted down the carriage with a bloody arm, saying "they've got a knife, run".
Wren said they and a friend ran to the front of the train and saw a man who had collapsed on the floor.
Wren said they felt "stressed and pretty scared" once they knew what was happening, but they were eventually able to get off the train unharmed.
"There was quite a lot of blood on the train, there was some on my bag, some on my jeans," she told BBC Radio 5 Live.
"As soon as the train stopped and people got off most of them ran outside trying to get away from it, because we knew the attacker was still inside on the train."
PA Media
The incident took place at 19:42 on Saturday and British Transport Police (BTP) received reports of multiple stabbings aboard the 18:25 LNER service from Doncaster to King's Cross
London Underground worker Dean McFarlane told the BBC that he saw the train pull into Huntingdon railway station at 20:00 with a passenger bleeding.
He said that on arrival, he saw multiple people running down the platform bleeding, with one man in a white shirt "completely covered in blood".
He said he grabbed people and told them to leave the station, and tried to assist passengers who he believed were having panic attacks.
PA Media
Ten people have been taken to hospital and nine have life-threatening injuries
There will be increased visible patrols at mainline stations over the coming days, the Transport Secretary said
There will be a review of rail security in the UK following a mass stabbing on a train, Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander has said.
A man has been charged with 10 counts of attempted murder after the knife attack on a Doncaster to London service on Saturday night.
Alexander told the BBC the government would "review security arrangements" and respond "swiftly and in a proportionate way".
But she did not think airport scanning technology "is the right solution for stations in the UK".
Questions about passenger safety on the UK's rail network have been raised after a a black British national, who boarded a train at Peterborough station, attacked passengers with a knife.
Eleven people were treated in hospital including a member of train staff who is said to be in a "critical but stable condition".
Anthony Williams, 32, from Peterborough has been charged with 10 counts of attempted murder, one count of actual bodily harm and one count of possession of a bladed article, British Transport Police (BTP) said on Monday morning.
Alexander told BBC Breakfast that BTP officers would increase visible patrols at mainline stations over the coming days "because I do understand that people will want to feel reassured following what happened".
"Thankfully incidents like this on the public transport network are very, very rare," she added.
She said the rail network in the UK was a "low crime environment" and for every one million passenger journeys only 27 crimes were committed.
Asked what steps the government would take to improve security on trains, she said: "We are investing in improved CCTV in stations and the Home Office will soon be launching a consultation on more facial recognition technology which could be deployed in stations as well."
Asked about luggage scanners similar to those used in some major train stations abroad she said: "At the moment that type of airport scanning technology I don't think is the right solution for stations in the UK."
Andy Trotter, former British Transport Police Chief Constable told BBC Breakfast Saturday's attack illustrates "people's real concerns about being trapped with an offender or with someone causing disorder".
"I hope this results in a broader review of security, the need for more British Transport Police, the need for more security from the rail companies themselves."
Tim Richards appeared on the BBC's Big Boss Interview podcast
The boss of one of the UK's biggest cinema chains says he does not see streaming services and home entertainment as competition.
Tim Richards, the founder and chief executive of Vue International, says film studios tried to "circumvent" cinemas during the pandemic but lost "hundreds of millions of dollars" as a result.
"I think the studios certainly learned that we are in one small ecosystem, we all need each other," he told the BBC's Big Boss Interview podcast.
Rival cinema chains have a constructive relationship too, he says: "We are fairly open in terms of trading best practices. We want to have a message that cinemas are a great place to have a good time."
Richards spoke of the turbulence of the last five years for the film industry.
Vue went from having its best year ever in 2019, to being "effectively closed for almost two years" during the Covid-19 pandemic, to grappling with actors' and writers' strikes which shut down production for nearly another year.
While Richards was trying to figure out how to prevent Vue from going under, or from having to lay off any of its staff, streaming services like Netflix saw their subscriber numbers explode.
"I had a singular focus: save the company and save all of our 10,000 employees," he says.
"When you have a mission like that, failure is not really an option, because the consequences are too high."
Even as cinemas began to re-open, industry figures questioned whether the model of film release had changed for good. Films like Marvel's Black Widow saw minimal theatrical runs as streaming platforms tried to push their original productions.
More recently, titles like K-Pop Demon Hunters and The Thursday Murder Club are playing for just a few weeks in cinemas, despite proving to be hugely popular.
But Richards is unfazed. Vue returned to pre-pandemic trading levels this year and is expecting next summer to be the company's biggest ever.
He is emphatic that there will always be an appetite for the big screen: "During the pandemic, there was an increase with subscription services because people had no choice...But that has not continued."
"I have never looked at what happens in the home as being competition...our biggest, most frequent customers are Netflix subscribers or Disney Plus subscribers. People who love movies love movies in all formats."
The Hollywood strikes, too, he says, were a supply issue, not a demand one. "We've never had a demand issue."
Richards clearly knows the ecosystem of films inside out. Before founding Vue (then Spean Bridge Cinemas) in 1999, he was a senior executive at Warner Brothers, operating the studio's own cinema chain, Warner Village. Spean Bridge bought Warner Village's 36 cinemas in 2003, and the Vue brand was born.
"The headline in the business section of the Times was: 'Unknown Bit Player Buys Warner Brothers,'" he recalls with a laugh.
Entertainment industry squeezed
Due to cost-of-living pressures persisting, many parts of the entertainment industry are seeing revenue slow down as people cut back on discretionary spending.
Coupled with this is rising operational costs: an increase in the minimum wage and higher employer national insurance contributions.
"We have done our very, very best to not pass on those costs to our customers," Richards said. "And we haven't. And we've taken a small hit as a consequence, but we're hoping that the volume which we've seen as a consequence will follow it."
Still, he says, the entertainment industry has been "squeezed...and kind of attacked in some instances".
Government decisions have "hurt the people they're trying to help", in his view.
What's the industry's message ahead of the upcoming budget? "Please don't touch [us] again."
And while Richards doesn't believe that streamers are poaching his customers, he says he does worry about "somebody turning right and going to a theme park or a football game or something else".
But it's not a case of teenagers and young adults sitting at home instead of going out: "They're a lot more social than previous generations, and that has shown in our attendance with a lot of our movies."
And what's his own favourite movie?
He responds diplomatically: "I see a lot - a lot - of movies every week.
"But I look at a movie like One Battle After Another. And when I see a movie like that, I have hope for the future because it's such an incredible movie. Original IP, original story, incredibly well done."
Trump announced new tariffs in the Rose Garden at the White House in April
What may be the biggest battle yet in Donald Trump's trade war is about to begin.
The Trump administration heads to the US Supreme Court on Wednesday, facing off against small businesses and a group of states who contend most of the tariffs it has put in place are illegal and should be struck down.
If the court agrees with them, Trump's trade strategy would be upended, including the sweeping global tariffs he first announced in April. The government would also likely have to refund some of the billions of dollars it has collected through the tariffs, which are taxes on imports.
The final decision from the justices will come after what could be months of poring over the arguments and discussing the merits of the case. Eventually they will hold a vote.
Trump has described the fight in epic terms, warning a loss would tie his hands in trade negotiations and imperil national security. He has even suggested he might take the unprecedented step of hearing the arguments at court in person.
"If we don't win that case, we will be a weakened, troubled, financial mess for many, many years to come," he said.
The stakes feel just as high for many businesses in the US and abroad, which have been paying the price while getting whipped about by fast-changing policies.
Trump's tariffs will cost Learning Resources, a US seller of toys made mostly overseas and one of the businesses suing the government, $14m (£10.66m) this year. That is seven times what it spent on tariffs in 2024, according to CEO Rick Woldenberg.
"They've thrown our business into unbelievable disruption," he said, noting the company has had to shift the manufacturing of hundreds of items since January.
Few businesses, though, are banking on a win at the court.
"We are hopeful that this is going to be ruled illegal but we're all also trying to prepare that it's setting in," said Bill Harris, co-founder of Georgia-based Cooperative Coffees.
His co-op, which imports coffee from more than a dozen countries, has already paid roughly $1.3m (£975,000) in tariffs since April.
A test to Trump's presidential power
In deciding this case, the Supreme Court will have to take on a broader question: How far does presidential power go?
Legal analysts say it is hard to predict the justices' answer, but a ruling siding with Trump will give him and future White House occupants greater reach.
Specifically, the case concerns tariffs that the Trump administration imposed using the 1977 International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), which the White House has embraced for its speed and flexibility.By declaring an emergency under the law, Trump can issue immediate orders and bypass longer, established processes.
Trump first invoked the law in February to tax goods from China, Mexico and Canada, saying drug trafficking from those countries constituted an emergency.
He deployed it again in April, ordering levies ranging from 10% to 50% on goods fromalmost every country in the world. This time, he said the US trade deficit - where the US imports more than it exports - posed an "extraordinary and unusual threat".
Those tariffs took hold in fits and starts this summer while the US pushed countries to strike "deals".
Opponents say the law authorises the president to regulate trade but never mentions the word "tariffs", and they contend that only Congress can establish taxes under the US Constitution.
They have also challenged whether the issues cited by the White House, especially the trade deficit, represent emergencies.
Members of Congress from both parties have asserted the Constitution gives them responsibility for creating tariffs, duties and taxes, as well.
More than 200 Democrats in both chambers and one Republican, Senator Lisa Murkowski, filed a brief to the Supreme Court, where they also argued the emergency law did not grant the president power to use tariffs as a tool for gaining leverage in trade talks.
Meanwhile, last week the Senate made a symbolic and bipartisan move to pass three resolutions rejecting Trump's tariffs, including one to end the national emergency he declared. They are not expected to be approved in the House.
Still, business groups said they hoped the rebuke would send a message to the justices.
'An energy drain like I've never seen'
Three lower courts have ruled against the administration. After the Supreme Court hears arguments on Wednesday it will have until June to issue its decision, although most expect a ruling to come by January.
Whatever it decides has implications for an estimated $90bn worth of import taxes already paid - roughly half the tariff revenue the US collected this year through September, according to Wells Fargo analysts.
Trump officials have warned that sum could swell to $1tn if the court takes until June.
Cafe Campesino
Trip Pomeroy, chief executive of Cafe Campesino, one of the 23 roasteries that owns Cooperative Coffees, on a recent trip to Peru with a partner farmer
If the government is forced to issue refunds, Cooperative Coffees will "absolutely" try to recoup its money, said Mr Harris, but that would not make up for all the disruption.
His business has had to take out an extra line of credit, raise prices and find ways to survive with lower profits.
"This is an energy drain like I've never seen," said Mr Harris, who is also chief financial officer of Cafe Campesino, one of the 23 roasteries that own Cooperative Coffees. "It dominates all the conversations and it just kind of sucks the life out of you."
What could happen next?
The White House says that if it loses, it will impose levies via other means, such as a law allowing the president to put tariffs of up to 15% in place for 150 days.
Even then, businesses would have some relief, since those other means require steps like issuing formal notices, which take time and deliberation, said trade lawyer Ted Murphy of Sidley Austin.
"This is not just about the money," he said. "The president has announced tariffs on Sunday that go into effect on Wednesday, without advance notice, without any real process."
"I think that's the bigger thing for this case for businesses - whether or not that is going to be in our future," he added.
There is no clear sign of how the court will rule.
In recent years it has struck down major policies, such as Biden-era student loan forgiveness, as White House overreach.
But the nine justices, six of whom were appointed by Republicans, including three by Trump,have shown deference to this president in other recent disputes and historically have given leeway to the White House on questions of national security.
"I really do think arguments are available for the Supreme Court to go in all different directions," said Greta Peisch, partner at Wiley and former trade lawyer in the Biden administration.
Adam White, senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, said he expected the court to strike down the tariffs, but avoid questions like what constitutes a national emergency.
Reuters
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and Trump announcing a deal in July
The case has already complicated the White House's trade deals, such as one struck in July with the European Union.
The European Parliament is currently considering ratifying the agreement, which sets US tariffs on European goods at 15% in exchange for promises including allowing in more US agricultural products.
"They're not going to act on this until they see the outcome of the Supreme Court decision," said John Clarke, former director for international trade at the European Commission.
Chocolats Camille Bloch
Swiss chocolatier Daniel Bloch says he is not confident the Supreme Court will resolve the tariff issues facing his business
In Switzerland, which recently downgraded its outlook for economic growth citing America’s 39% tariff on its goods, chocolatier Daniel Bloch said he'd welcome a ruling against the Trump administration.
His business Chocolats Camille Bloch is absorbing about a third of the cost of new tariffs on kosher chocolate that his firm has exported to the US for decades, aiming to blunt price increases and maintain sales. That decision has wiped out profits for the unit and is not sustainable, he said.
He hopes Trump will reconsider his tariffs altogether, because "that would be easiest".
"If the court were to make the tariffs go away of course we would see that as a positive sign," he said. "But we don't trust that that will bring the solution."
Many of us moan about calling call centres, but would dealing with AI be an improvement?
Ask ChatGPT whether AI will replace humans in the customer service industry, and it will offer a diplomatic answer, the summary of which is "they will work side by side".
Humans though, are not so optimistic.
Last year, the chief executive of Indian technology firm Tata Consultancy Services, K Krithivasan, told the Financial Times that AI may soon mean that there is "minimal need" for call centres in Asia.
There is currently a lot of hype around "AI agents". That is the term given to AI systems that can operate more autonomously and make decisions.
They could turbo-charge current non-AI chatbots, known as "rule-based chatbots", which can only answer a set list of questions.
My own recent experience with parcel delivery firm Evri's chatbot illustrates the existing, non-AI state of play.
My parcel had not arrived, and Ezra (the name of the chatbot), offered to "get this resolved straight away".
It asked for a tracking reference, and after I had typed that in, it told me that my parcel had been delivered.
I could request proof of delivery, and when I did so it showed me a photo of the package… at the wrong front door. And there was no option to advance the conversation after this "evidence" was shown.
In response, Evri tells the BBC it is investing £57m to further improve the service.
"Our intelligent chat facility uses tracking data to suggest the most helpful responses and ensure the customer's parcel is delivered as soon as possible, if this has not happened as scheduled," it says.
"Our data confirms the vast majority of people get the answers they need from our chat facility, first time, within seconds. We're always reviewing feedback to ensure our services are as helpful as possible, and we continue to make enhancements on a rolling basis."
On the flipside, rival parcel delivery firm DPD had to disable its less rule-bound AI chatbot after it criticised the company and swore at users.
Getty Images
Companies around the world are adding AI to their existing chatbots
Getting the balance right between being on brand and genuinely helping customers is a tricky one for businesses to grapple with as they migrate to AI.
Some 85% of customer service leaders are exploring, piloting or deploying AI chatbots, according to Gartner. But it also found that only 20% of such projects are fully meeting expectations.
"You can have a much more natural conversation with AI," says Garner analyst Emily Potosky.
"But the downside is the chatbot could hallucinate, it could give you out-of-date information, or tell you completely the wrong thing. For parcel delivery I would say rules-based agents are great because there are only so many permutations of questions about someone's package."
Resources and money are among the key reasons businesses may be considering the move from human to AI customer service. But Ms Potosky points out that it isn't a given that AI will be cheaper than human agents.
"This is a very expensive technology," she says.
The first thing that any business wanting to replace humans with AI will have to do is ensure that they have extensive training data.
"There's this idea that knowledge management becomes less important because generative AI can solve the fact that their knowledge is not particularly well organised, but actually the opposite is the case," adds Ms Potosky.
"Knowledge management is more important when deploying generative AI."
Joe Inzerillo, chief digital officer at software giant Salesforce, tells the BBC that call centres provide fertile training grounds for AIs, particularly ones that have been moved to low-cost areas such as the Philippines and India.
This is because a lot of staff training will have been done, which the AI can also learn from.
"You have a huge amount of documentation, and that's all really great stuff for the AI to have when it is going to take over that first line of defence," he says.
Salesforce's AI-powered customer service platform, AgentForce, is currently being used by a range of customers from Formula 1, to insurance firm Prudential, restaurant-booking website Open Table, and social media site Reddit.
Mr Inzerillo says that when Salesforce first put the platform through its paces it learned some valuable lessons about how to make the AI seem more human-like.
"While a human might say 'sorry to hear that', the agent just opened a ticket," says Mr Inzerillo.
So the AI was trained to show more sympathy, especially when a customer has a problem.
Salesforce also found that not allowing the agent to talk about competitors proved problematic.
"This backfired when customers asked legitimate questions about integrating Microsoft Teams with Salesforce," says Mr Inzerillo. "The agent refused to help because Microsoft appeared on our competitor list."
The firm subsequently replaced that rigid rule.
Salesforce has ambitious plans for the continuing rollout of its AI agents, and so far it claims that they are a hit with its customers. It also says that the vast majority of customers, 94%, are choosing to interact with AI agents when given the option.
"We've seen customer satisfaction rates that are in excess of what people get with humans – then AI can unlock the next level of customer service," says Mr Inzerillo.
It has also meant that the firm has cut customer service costs by $100m, but he was keen to play down recent headlines that suggest this has led to 4,000 jobs being slashed.
"A very large percentage of those people got redeployed in other areas around customer service."
Fiona Coleman
Fiona Coleman says there will always be times when she wants to speak to a human
Fiona Coleman runs QStory, a firm which is using AI to offer human call centre workers more flexibility in their shift patterns. Its customers include eBay and NatWest.
While she sees the value in AI improving working conditions, she is not sure the technology can ever replace humans entirely.
"There are times where I don't want to have a digital engagement, and I want to speak to a human," she says.
"Let's see what it looks like in five years' time - whether an AI can do a mortgage application, or talk about a debt problem. Let's see whether the AI has got empathetic enough."
The use of AI in customer service could, in fact, already be facing a backlash.
Legislation currently proposed in the US to move off-shore call centres back to America also requires businesses to disclose the use of AI, and transfer a caller to a human if asked to do so.
Meanwhile, Gartner predicted that by 2028 the EU may mandate what is called 'the right to talk to a human" as part of its consumer protection rules.
Fleeing man shouted 'someone's got a knife', eyewitness tells BBC
Passengers travelling from Doncaster to London have been attacked in a mass stabbing on Saturday night.
Ten people were injured and taken to hospital. Nine of them are believed to have life-threatening injuries.
Two people were arrested after the train made an unscheduled stop at Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire and witnesses reported that police used a Taser on one man holding a knife.
Counter-terror police have joined the investigation. Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said the attack was "appalling" and "deeply concerning".
Emergency crews and police rushed to Huntingdon station in Cambridgeshire after 999 calls from the London-bound train
The stabbing took place on the 18.25 GMT Saturday night LNER train service from Doncaster to London's King Cross station.
Passengers reported that at least one person brandishing a knife began stabbing people on the train after the train stopped at Peterborough, Cambridgeshire.
Witnesses told the BBC of panic and confusion.
Olly Foster, who was on the train, said he heard people dashing across carriages shouting "run, there's a guy stabbing literally everyone and everything" - and thought it might have been a Halloween-type prank.
Another passenger heard someone shouting, "someone's got a knife"
Some passengers hid inside the toilets while others swarmed towards the front of the train.
At 19:39, the train driver made an unscheduled stop at Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire, where dozens of armed police officers and emergency services rushed to the platform.
Witnesses said police used a Taser on one man. Two people, whose identities are not yet known, were arrested.
Altogether, the incident was estimated to last roughly 10 to 15 minutes.
The uninjured passengers were interviewed by police and some boarded a coach bound for London.
What do we know about the victims?
Emergency crews took 10 people to hospital, nine of whom are believed to have suffered life-threatening injuries, according to police.
The identities of the victims are not yet known.
Witnesses described some of the victims, including a man keeled over in pain on the platform, bleeding from his stomach.
Wren Chambers, a passenger on the train, told the BBC that one person had been stabbed in the arm and bolted down the train to alert others.
Olly Foster told the BBC how an older man had gashes on his head and neck after he "blocked" the attacker from stabbing a younger girl and passengers then used their jackets to try to staunch the bleeding.
London Underground worker Dean McFarlane told the BBC how he saw multiple people running down the platform bleeding, with one man in a white shirt "completely covered in blood".
What is happening with the train services?
London North Eastern Railway (LNER), which operates East Coast Mainline services in the UK, has urged passengers to avoid travelling on Sunday 2 November.
Ticketholders who are no longer planning to travel will be eligible for a full refund. Unused weekend LNER tickets will be valid until Tuesday 4 November.
Huntingdon station is not guaranteed to reopen on Sunday, LNER warned. Disruption to services between Stevenage and Peterborough are due to last all day.
Passengers are able to use their tickets on the following services without incurring extra cost:
• Avanti West Coast between London Euston, Manchester
• TransPennine Express between Manchester, Leeds and York/Newcastle
• ScotRail between Glasgow Central and Edinburgh Waverley
• Northern between Carlisle and Newcastle
• East Midlands Railway (EMR) between London St Pancras, Leicester and Sheffield.
• CrossCountry between Sheffield, Doncaster/Leeds, York and Newcastle/Edinburgh
• Greater Anglia between London Liverpool Street, Stevenage and Peterborough.
• Great Northern and Thameslink between London Kings Cross, Stevenage and Peterborough
• London Northwestern Railway services from Euston
LNER said delays are expected across the train system, including from other services and operators in the East of England and London, throughout Sunday.
Thameslink tickets that were not used on Saturday will be valid for Sunday.
In a statement published early on Sunday morning, LNER Managing Director David Horne wrote that he was "deeply shocked and saddened by this serious incident" and thanked emergency services for their "quick and professional" response.
Bella Culley, pictured at a previous hearing, hugged her lawyer when she was told she would be freed
Pregnant teenager Bella Culley, who was charged with drug trafficking in Georgia, is to be freed from prison, her lawyer has said.
The 19-year-old from Billingham, Teesside, had faced a potential 20 years in jail, but prosecutors made a last minute change to the terms of a plea bargain.
As she learned of the news in court in Tbilisi, Miss Culley gave her lawyer Malkhaz Salakaia a big hug.
The teenager was detained on 10 May having being arrested at Tbilisi International Airport when 12kg (26lb) of marijuana and 2kg (4.4lb) of hashish were found in her luggage.
Mr Salakaia said prosecutors made the change to the terms of her plea bargain given her age and pregnancy, and decided to free her.
Some high-street clinics are putting lives at risk by allowing unqualified non-specialists to carry out baby scans, the Society of Radiographers (SoR) has warned.
The trade union says its members have seen examples of pregnant women being incorrectly diagnosed with serious health conditions and given dangerous advice.
Other expectant mums have been sent to hospital after being told an abnormality meant they would need to end the pregnancy only to find their baby was completely healthy.
It is concerned that anyone using an ultrasound machine can call themselves a sonographer and offer the service - often sold as a reassurance, souvenir or sexing scan - ahead of the routine 20-week NHS check.
Dangerous advice
"One time, we had a lady referred [to hospital] from a private clinic, who was eight or nine weeks pregnant," says Elaine Brooks, Midlands regional officer at the SoR.
"The sonographer at the private clinic said there was no heartbeat and that the baby was very, very malformed, and they sent her in for an induced miscarriage.
"We started scanning the lady, who was in tears, and on the scan there was a clearly beautiful nine-week pregnancy with a heartbeat. It was absolutely fine."
It heard reports of women who were bleeding and in pain being accepted for scans, rather than being told to contact their doctor.
Bad practice and sexual misconduct
The trade union, which is also the professional body for medical imaging, says it has seen other examples of bad practice by some private clinics including:
Major foetal abnormalities such as spina bifida or polycystic kidneys being missed
Ectopic pregnancies, where the fertilised egg implants itself outside of the womb, either not being diagnosed or being falsely diagnosed
A radiographer continuing to work as a private sonographer despite having been struck off and banned from working for the NHS due to sexual misconduct
The president of the SoR, Katie Thompson, said there were some "really great" private services offering checks with properly trained staff, but she was particularly concerned about the growth of pop-up clinics in shopping centres and on high streets selling souvenir images or scans to reveal the sex of the baby.
She said she was aware of another case where a private scan late in pregnancy did not record the baby was still breech or lying bottom first in the uterus. The mother was not immediately referred to the NHS and the baby later died.
Getty Images
Private clinics often offer reassurance or sexing scans before the standard NHS anomaly scan which is normally offered between 18 and 21 weeks into the pregnancy
The SoR is now calling for sonographer to become a protected job title in the UK in the same way as dietician, podiatrist, art therapist or radiographer.
That would mean only those who are properly qualified and registered with a regulatory body would be allowed to use that job description.
Many private sonographers are already qualified midwives or radiographers, and accredited training courses are also available, although this is currently not a legal requirement.
Individual sonographers can also decide to join the Register of Clinical Technologists, which the public can then search to see if certain standards have been met, but again participation is voluntary.
The Professional Standards Authority for Health and Social Care recently carried out a public interest test of that register and has written to the government to say the "risks appear sufficiently high" that it should consider if stronger regulation of sonographers may be needed.
The Care Quality Commission which inspects private clinics said many were providing good quality care, but it "remains concerned that some are not" with worries over staff training, consent policies and procedures for escalating unusual findings.
Where its inspections identify concerns it said it would "hold providers to account and make clear that action is required to ensure staff are adequately trained".
In a statement, the Department of Health said the safety of patients was paramount and the regulation of all healthcare professionals was kept under review.
"We will carefully consider any proposals from professional bodies regarding this," added a spokesman.
Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni have been at loggerheads since starring together in It Ends With Us
Justin Baldoni's $400m (£295m) lawsuit against his former co-star Blake Lively has been formally ended by a judge, who said the actor and director had failed to meet a deadline to continue his claim.
The pair, who starred in the 2024 film It Ends with Us, have been locked in a bitter legal battle since Lively sued Baldoni last December accusing him of sexual harassment and waging a smear campaign against her.
In response, he filed a lawsuit against her as well as her husband Ryan Reynolds, their publicist and the New York Times, claiming civil extortion, defamation and invasion of privacy.
Baldoni's case was dismissed in June, but he had a chance to file an amended complaint. However, Judge Lewis Liman said he had failed to do.
The judge said he had contacted all of the parties on 17 October to give them warning that he would enter a final judgement to conclude the case.
Only Lively responded, asking for the final judgement to be declared, but for her request for legal fees to remain active. The judge agreed.
Her original lawsuit against Baldoni is also ongoing.
After Baldoni's case was dismissed in June, the actress's lawyers called it "a total victory and a complete vindication".
At the time, Baldoni's lawyer said Lively's "predictable declaration of victory is false", and that "with the facts on our side, we march forward".
He added: "While the court dismissed the defamation related claims, the court has invited us to amend four out of the seven claims against Ms Lively, which will showcase additional evidence and refined allegations."
However, those amended claims were not filed, according to the latest ruling. Baldoni and Wayfarer have not commented.
In June, Judge Liman explained that Baldoni's lawsuit centred on two claims: that Lively "stole the film" from him and his production company Wayfarer by threatening not to promote it, and that she and others promoted a false narrative that Baldoni sexually assaulted her and launched a smear campaign against her.
But Baldoni and his production company "have not adequately alleged that Lively's threats were wrongful extortion rather than legally permissible hard bargaining or renegotiation of working conditions", Judge Liman wrote at that time.
Additionally, the judge wrote, Baldoni and his company did not prove defamation because the "Wayfarer Parties have not alleged that Lively is responsible for any statements other than the statements" in her lawsuit, which are privileged.
The judge also determined that evidence did not show that the New York Times "acted with actual malice" in publishing their story, dismissing that $250m suit as well.
"The alleged facts indicate that the Times reviewed the available evidence and reported, perhaps in a dramatised manner, what it believed to have happened," he wrote. "The Times had no obvious motive to favour Lively's version of events."
The incident prompted a huge response by the emergency services
People in Huntingdon have found themselves at the centre of a national news story after a train was forced to make an unscheduled stop in their town after multiple stabbings on board. Two people remain in a life-threatening condition in hospital and two men have been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder after Saturday evening's incident.
'The atmosphere was silent' at the station
Cassie Marriott
Cassie Marriot was at the station in the town as her mother lives across the road
Cassie Marriot was at Huntingdon railway station at 20:00 GMT on Saturday because her mother lives across the road.
Speaking to the BBC, she said she tried to help people who had come off the train, in shock.
"I met one young lad standing on his own; he looked shell-shocked; he had blood all over his legs. We asked if he was OK and he said, 'it's not my blood," Ms Marriot said.
"I met another young girl, who was about 18 or 19. She told me she was listening to music on the train when a man tried to stab her. She said someone pulled her out of the way.
"She looked absolutely petrified. She had left all her belongings including her phone on the train, the only thing she was carrying was a vape."
Ms Marriot says there were police and ambulances everywhere but "the atmosphere was silent" at the station, which is on the southern edge of the Cambridgeshire town.
"Everyone was in total shock."
'It is not the sort of thing that happens around here'
Shariqua Ahmed/BBC
Colin Hardy, who attends a church in Huntingdon, said they were offering prayers to people involved
Colin Hardy, who lives in Huntingdon and attends All Saints' Church, said he had not "come to terms" with the incident as "it is not the sort of thing that happens around here".
"We offer our prayers up to the victims and everyone involved; it must be horrific to have seen what was going on," he said.
"We give thanks for the dedication of the local police, the railways police, and all of the hospital staff."
Police met the Doncaster-London King's Cross train as it made an unscheduled stop at Huntingdon shortly before 20:00 GMT, having made its last scheduled stop at Peterborough at about 19:30.
A woman who lives across the road from the Huntingdon station, and wanted to remain anonymous, said she "was shaken up" but what had happened.
'We are travelling to places; we should be safe'
Shariqua Ahmed/BBC
Adriana Fernandez heard the news today as she was about to board a train at Peterborough station
Adriana Fernandez, from Norwich, said the event was "really shocking".
The 19-year-old was at Peterborough station on Sunday, and was travelling on her own for the first time.
She said: "We are travelling to places, and we should be safe.
"It is really heartbreaking. I feel bad for everyone."
Elsie, who lives in Huntingdon, said she was "frightened... I think we should increase security in the area and on the trains".
Council to support people in coming days
Nicola Haseler/BBC
Sarah Conboy, Liberal Democrat councillor, said the community came together
Sarah Conboy, Liberal Democrat leader at Huntingdonshire District Council, said it was an event "you hope you never get caught up in".
She said local people were accommodating to individuals during the incident, adding: "At the moment when they really needed the community, they opened their doors and looked after them.
"This is normally a very busy station and people are expecting to travel, so we will do all we can to support people to get back to some sort of normality."
'I am absolutely stunned'
Shariqua Ahmed/BBC
Mark Keen, who lives in Huntingdon, visited the scene the following morning to see what had happened
Mark Keen, who lives locally said he visited the scene on Sunday morning to see what had happened.
"I am absolutely stunned really; I cannot actually believe it," he said.
"It is a quiet place, and it is so sad for the people, it is dreadful."
Another person who has lived in the area for four years, but did not want to be named, said: "It is very shocking.
"I do not what to say. What can we say? It is a very scary world we are living in."
Local church 'grateful' for emergency services
Shariqua Ahmed/BBC
The Reverend Jan Smith said the church held a silence for those who had been affected by the incident
All Saints' Church in Huntingdon town centre has been offering support to those affected.
The Reverend Jan Smith, its vicar, said: "We were praying last night for all of the people on the train and those severely injured."
She said the church was "grateful" for the emergency services and the local hospital.
"We opened our service with silence and remembered all of those people who have been affected."
'I feel for the victims'
Shariqua Ahmed/BBC
Asha Lockwood, a member at the church, said she was thinking of the victims involved
Asha Lockwood, a parishioner at All Saints, said it was "frightening" as her partner was travelling on a different train.
She said it was "horrendous" listening to the eyewitness accounts and credited the train driver.
"I feel for the victims," she said.
"The church is a wonderful community, family, and we will do anything in our power to help anybody."
'I would rather drive'
Shariqua Ahmed/BBC
Dal Hicks, who lives in Peterborough, said he uses the train services regularly
In Peterborough, about 20 miles north of Huntingdon, Dal Hicks, who has lived in the city for about five years, said the event was "a massive shock as it is so close to home".
"I travel in and out from London most days of the week and now it is quite frightening," he said.
"Now I am thinking I would rather drive than go up by train."
He said he could not see how further incidents could "be prevented".
Shariqua Ahmed/BBC
There was as visible police presence at Peterborough railway station on Sunday
Viswashkumar Ramesh breaks down in tears as he talks about the loss of his brother in the crash
The sole survivor of the Air India plane crash, which killed 241 people on board, has said he feels like the "luckiest man" alive, but is also suffering physically and mentally.
Viswashkumar Ramesh walked away from the wreckage of the London-bound flight in Ahmedabad in extraordinary scenes that amazed the world.
He said it was a "miracle" he escaped but told how he has lost everything, as his younger brother Ajay was a few seats away on the flight and died in the crash in June.
Since returning to his home in Leicester, Mr Ramesh has struggled with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), his advisers said, and has been unable to speak to his wife and four-year-old son.
Flames engulfed the Boeing 787 flight when it went down shortly after take-off in western India.
Shocking video shared at the time showed Mr Ramesh walking away from the aftermath with seemingly superficial injuries, as smoke billowed in the background.
Speaking to BBC News, an emotional Mr Ramesh, whose first language is Gujarati, said: "I'm only one survivor. Still, I'm not believing. It's a miracle.
"I lost my brother as well. My brother is my backbone. Last few years, he was always supporting me."
He described the devastating impact the ordeal has had on his family life.
"Now I'm alone. I just sit in my room alone, not talking with my wife, my son. I just like to be alone in my house," Mr Ramesh said.
Watch: The moment Viswashkumar Ramesh walked away from the crash
He spoke from his hospital bed in India at the time, describing how he had managed to unbuckle himself and crawl out of the wreckage, and met Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi while receiving treatment for his injuries.
Of the passengers and crew killed, 169 were Indian nationals and 52 were Britons, while 19 others were killed on the ground.
A preliminary report into the crash, published by India's Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau in July, said fuel supply to the engines was cut off just seconds after take-off. Meanwhile, an investigation is ongoing and the airline said care for Mr Ramesh, and all families affected by the tragedy, "remains our absolute priority".
This is the first time the 39-year-old has spoken to the media since he has been back in the UK. A documentary crew were also filming in the room.
The BBC had detailed discussions with his advisers around his duty of care before the interview.
When asked about his memories of the day of the crash, he said: "I can't say anything about that now."
'I'm suffering'
Flanked by local community leader Sanjiv Patel and spokesman Radd Seiger, Mr Ramesh said it was too painful to recall the events of the disaster, and broke down during parts of an interview at the home of Mr Patel in Leicester.
Mr Ramesh described the anguish he and his family are now living through.
"For me, after this accident... very difficult.
"Physically, mentally, also my family as well, mentally... my mum last four months, she is sitting every day outside the door, not talking, nothing.
"I'm not talking to anyone else. I do not like to talk with anyone else.
"I can't talk about much. I'm thinking all night, I'm suffering mentally.
He says he suffers pain in his leg, shoulder, knee and back, and has not been able to work or drive since the tragedy.
"When I walk, not walk properly, slowly, slowly, my wife help," he added.
Sanjiv Patel said he was supporting, advising and protecting the family
Mr Ramesh was diagnosed with PTSD while he was being treated in hospital in India but has not received any medical treatment since being back home, his advisers said.
They described him as being lost and broken, with a long journey of recovery ahead, and are demanding a meeting with Air India's executives, claiming he has been treated poorly by the airline since the crash.
"They're in crisis, mentally, physically, financially," Mr Patel said.
"It's devastated his family.
"Whoever's responsible at the highest level should be on the ground meeting the victims of this tragic event, and understanding their needs and to be heard."
'Put things right'
Air India has offered an interim compensation payment to Mr Ramesh of £21,500, which has been accepted, but his advisers say this is not enough to meet his immediate needs.
The family fishing business in Diu in India, which Mr Ramesh ran with his brother before the crash, has since collasped, his advisers said.
Spokesman for the family Mr Seiger said they had invited Air India for a meeting on three occasions, and all three were either "ignored or turned down".
The media interviews were the team's way of reissuing that appeal for the fourth time, he said.
Mr Seiger added: "It's appalling that we are having to sit here today and putting him [Viswashkumar] through this.
"The people who should be sitting here today are the executives of Air India, the people responsible for trying to put things right.
"Please come and sit down with us so that we can work through this together to try and alleviate some of this suffering."
In a statement, the airline, which is owned by Tata Group, said senior leaders from the parent company continue to visit families to express their deepest condolences.
"An offer has been made to Mr Ramesh's representatives to arrange such a meeting, we will continue to reach out and we very much hope to receive a positive response," it said.
The airline told the BBC that this offer was made before the media interviews with Mr Ramesh.
Changpeng Zhao, the co-founder of crypto giant Binance, is also known as 'CZ'
US President Donald Trump says he does not know who Changpeng Zhao is, despite pardoning the cryptocurrency multi-billionaire last month.
Trump was asked about the pardon during an interview with CBS News' 60 Minutes programme, which was broadcast on Sunday.
Zhao, who is also known as "CZ", pleaded guilty to enabling money laundering in 2023. He served four months in prison and agreed to step down as the chief executive of Binance, the crypto exchange he co-founded.
His companies have partnered with firms linked to Trump on new digital-currency projects including Dominari Holdings, where his sons sit on the board of advisers and which is based in Trump Tower.
The host of 60 Minutes, Norah O'Donnell, asked Trump why he pardoned Zhao even though government prosecutors had said he caused "significant harm to US national security."
"Okay, are you ready? I don't know who he is", the president responded.
Trump added that he did not recall meeting Zhao and had "no idea who he is", only that he had been told that the businessman was a victim of a "witch hunt" by the administration of former US president Joe Biden.
During the interview, Trump also discussed his support for cryptocurrencies and said that the US had to make sure it was a leader in the industry or risk China and its rivals gaining an advantage in the emerging technology.
The president's pardon lifts restrictions that had stopped Zhao from running financial ventures, but it is unclear whether it changes his standing with US regulators or his role at Binance.
At the time of the pardon, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt called Zhao's prosecution under the Biden administration part of a "war on cryptocurrency", pushing back on critics who said the pardon appeared motivated by Trump's personal financial interests.
"This was an overly prosecuted case by the Biden administration," she said, adding that the case had been "thoroughly reviewed". "So the president wants to correct this overreach of the Biden administration's misjustice and he exercised his constitutional authority to do so."
The Binance platform remains the most used crypto exchange in the world for trading digital assets.
The Trump administration previously halted a fraud case against crypto entrepreneur Justin Sun, after his investments in the Trump family's crypto firm, World Liberty Financial.
In May, it was announced that a stablecoin launched by World Liberty Financial would be used by an Abu Dhabi firm for a $2bn (£1.52bn) investment in Binance.
Trump has also pardoned founders of the crypto exchange BitMEX, who faced charges related to money laundering, and Ross Ulbricht, founder of the Silk Road, the dark web marketplace known as a place for drug trade.
The incident prompted a huge response by the emergency services
People in Huntingdon have found themselves at the centre of a national news story after a train was forced to make an unscheduled stop in their town after multiple stabbings on board. Two people remain in a life-threatening condition in hospital and two men have been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder after Saturday evening's incident.
'The atmosphere was silent' at the station
Cassie Marriott
Cassie Marriot was at the station in the town as her mother lives across the road
Cassie Marriot was at Huntingdon railway station at 20:00 GMT on Saturday because her mother lives across the road.
Speaking to the BBC, she said she tried to help people who had come off the train, in shock.
"I met one young lad standing on his own; he looked shell-shocked; he had blood all over his legs. We asked if he was OK and he said, 'it's not my blood," Ms Marriot said.
"I met another young girl, who was about 18 or 19. She told me she was listening to music on the train when a man tried to stab her. She said someone pulled her out of the way.
"She looked absolutely petrified. She had left all her belongings including her phone on the train, the only thing she was carrying was a vape."
Ms Marriot says there were police and ambulances everywhere but "the atmosphere was silent" at the station, which is on the southern edge of the Cambridgeshire town.
"Everyone was in total shock."
'It is not the sort of thing that happens around here'
Shariqua Ahmed/BBC
Colin Hardy, who attends a church in Huntingdon, said they were offering prayers to people involved
Colin Hardy, who lives in Huntingdon and attends All Saints' Church, said he had not "come to terms" with the incident as "it is not the sort of thing that happens around here".
"We offer our prayers up to the victims and everyone involved; it must be horrific to have seen what was going on," he said.
"We give thanks for the dedication of the local police, the railways police, and all of the hospital staff."
Police met the Doncaster-London King's Cross train as it made an unscheduled stop at Huntingdon shortly before 20:00 GMT, having made its last scheduled stop at Peterborough at about 19:30.
A woman who lives across the road from the Huntingdon station, and wanted to remain anonymous, said she "was shaken up" but what had happened.
'We are travelling to places; we should be safe'
Shariqua Ahmed/BBC
Adriana Fernandez heard the news today as she was about to board a train at Peterborough station
Adriana Fernandez, from Norwich, said the event was "really shocking".
The 19-year-old was at Peterborough station on Sunday, and was travelling on her own for the first time.
She said: "We are travelling to places, and we should be safe.
"It is really heartbreaking. I feel bad for everyone."
Elsie, who lives in Huntingdon, said she was "frightened... I think we should increase security in the area and on the trains".
Council to support people in coming days
Nicola Haseler/BBC
Sarah Conboy, Liberal Democrat councillor, said the community came together
Sarah Conboy, Liberal Democrat leader at Huntingdonshire District Council, said it was an event "you hope you never get caught up in".
She said local people were accommodating to individuals during the incident, adding: "At the moment when they really needed the community, they opened their doors and looked after them.
"This is normally a very busy station and people are expecting to travel, so we will do all we can to support people to get back to some sort of normality."
'I am absolutely stunned'
Shariqua Ahmed/BBC
Mark Keen, who lives in Huntingdon, visited the scene the following morning to see what had happened
Mark Keen, who lives locally said he visited the scene on Sunday morning to see what had happened.
"I am absolutely stunned really; I cannot actually believe it," he said.
"It is a quiet place, and it is so sad for the people, it is dreadful."
Another person who has lived in the area for four years, but did not want to be named, said: "It is very shocking.
"I do not what to say. What can we say? It is a very scary world we are living in."
Local church 'grateful' for emergency services
Shariqua Ahmed/BBC
The Reverend Jan Smith said the church held a silence for those who had been affected by the incident
All Saints' Church in Huntingdon town centre has been offering support to those affected.
The Reverend Jan Smith, its vicar, said: "We were praying last night for all of the people on the train and those severely injured."
She said the church was "grateful" for the emergency services and the local hospital.
"We opened our service with silence and remembered all of those people who have been affected."
'I feel for the victims'
Shariqua Ahmed/BBC
Asha Lockwood, a member at the church, said she was thinking of the victims involved
Asha Lockwood, a parishioner at All Saints, said it was "frightening" as her partner was travelling on a different train.
She said it was "horrendous" listening to the eyewitness accounts and credited the train driver.
"I feel for the victims," she said.
"The church is a wonderful community, family, and we will do anything in our power to help anybody."
'I would rather drive'
Shariqua Ahmed/BBC
Dal Hicks, who lives in Peterborough, said he uses the train services regularly
In Peterborough, about 20 miles north of Huntingdon, Dal Hicks, who has lived in the city for about five years, said the event was "a massive shock as it is so close to home".
"I travel in and out from London most days of the week and now it is quite frightening," he said.
"Now I am thinking I would rather drive than go up by train."
He said he could not see how further incidents could "be prevented".
Shariqua Ahmed/BBC
There was as visible police presence at Peterborough railway station on Sunday
Fleeing man shouted 'someone's got a knife', eyewitness tells BBC
Passengers travelling from Doncaster to London have been attacked in a mass stabbing on Saturday night.
Ten people were injured and taken to hospital. Nine of them are believed to have life-threatening injuries.
Two people were arrested after the train made an unscheduled stop at Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire and witnesses reported that police used a Taser on one man holding a knife.
Counter-terror police have joined the investigation. Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said the attack was "appalling" and "deeply concerning".
Emergency crews and police rushed to Huntingdon station in Cambridgeshire after 999 calls from the London-bound train
The stabbing took place on the 18.25 GMT Saturday night LNER train service from Doncaster to London's King Cross station.
Passengers reported that at least one person brandishing a knife began stabbing people on the train after the train stopped at Peterborough, Cambridgeshire.
Witnesses told the BBC of panic and confusion.
Olly Foster, who was on the train, said he heard people dashing across carriages shouting "run, there's a guy stabbing literally everyone and everything" - and thought it might have been a Halloween-type prank.
Another passenger heard someone shouting, "someone's got a knife"
Some passengers hid inside the toilets while others swarmed towards the front of the train.
At 19:39, the train driver made an unscheduled stop at Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire, where dozens of armed police officers and emergency services rushed to the platform.
Witnesses said police used a Taser on one man. Two people, whose identities are not yet known, were arrested.
Altogether, the incident was estimated to last roughly 10 to 15 minutes.
The uninjured passengers were interviewed by police and some boarded a coach bound for London.
What do we know about the victims?
Emergency crews took 10 people to hospital, nine of whom are believed to have suffered life-threatening injuries, according to police.
The identities of the victims are not yet known.
Witnesses described some of the victims, including a man keeled over in pain on the platform, bleeding from his stomach.
Wren Chambers, a passenger on the train, told the BBC that one person had been stabbed in the arm and bolted down the train to alert others.
Olly Foster told the BBC how an older man had gashes on his head and neck after he "blocked" the attacker from stabbing a younger girl and passengers then used their jackets to try to staunch the bleeding.
London Underground worker Dean McFarlane told the BBC how he saw multiple people running down the platform bleeding, with one man in a white shirt "completely covered in blood".
What is happening with the train services?
London North Eastern Railway (LNER), which operates East Coast Mainline services in the UK, has urged passengers to avoid travelling on Sunday 2 November.
Ticketholders who are no longer planning to travel will be eligible for a full refund. Unused weekend LNER tickets will be valid until Tuesday 4 November.
Huntingdon station is not guaranteed to reopen on Sunday, LNER warned. Disruption to services between Stevenage and Peterborough are due to last all day.
Passengers are able to use their tickets on the following services without incurring extra cost:
• Avanti West Coast between London Euston, Manchester
• TransPennine Express between Manchester, Leeds and York/Newcastle
• ScotRail between Glasgow Central and Edinburgh Waverley
• Northern between Carlisle and Newcastle
• East Midlands Railway (EMR) between London St Pancras, Leicester and Sheffield.
• CrossCountry between Sheffield, Doncaster/Leeds, York and Newcastle/Edinburgh
• Greater Anglia between London Liverpool Street, Stevenage and Peterborough.
• Great Northern and Thameslink between London Kings Cross, Stevenage and Peterborough
• London Northwestern Railway services from Euston
LNER said delays are expected across the train system, including from other services and operators in the East of England and London, throughout Sunday.
Thameslink tickets that were not used on Saturday will be valid for Sunday.
In a statement published early on Sunday morning, LNER Managing Director David Horne wrote that he was "deeply shocked and saddened by this serious incident" and thanked emergency services for their "quick and professional" response.
Viswashkumar Ramesh breaks down in tears as he talks about the loss of his brother in the crash
The sole survivor of the Air India plane crash, which killed 241 people on board, has said he feels like the "luckiest man" alive, but is also suffering physically and mentally.
Viswashkumar Ramesh walked away from the wreckage of the London-bound flight in Ahmedabad in extraordinary scenes that amazed the world.
He said it was a "miracle" he escaped but told how he has lost everything, as his younger brother Ajay was a few seats away on the flight and died in the crash in June.
Since returning to his home in Leicester, Mr Ramesh has struggled with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), his advisers said, and has been unable to speak to his wife and four-year-old son.
Flames engulfed the Boeing 787 flight when it went down shortly after take-off in western India.
Shocking video shared at the time showed Mr Ramesh walking away from the aftermath with seemingly superficial injuries, as smoke billowed in the background.
Speaking to BBC News, an emotional Mr Ramesh, whose first language is Gujarati, said: "I'm only one survivor. Still, I'm not believing. It's a miracle.
"I lost my brother as well. My brother is my backbone. Last few years, he was always supporting me."
He described the devastating impact the ordeal has had on his family life.
"Now I'm alone. I just sit in my room alone, not talking with my wife, my son. I just like to be alone in my house," Mr Ramesh said.
Watch: The moment Viswashkumar Ramesh walked away from the crash
He spoke from his hospital bed in India at the time, describing how he had managed to unbuckle himself and crawl out of the wreckage, and met Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi while receiving treatment for his injuries.
Of the passengers and crew killed, 169 were Indian nationals and 52 were Britons, while 19 others were killed on the ground.
A preliminary report into the crash, published by India's Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau in July, said fuel supply to the engines was cut off just seconds after take-off. Meanwhile, an investigation is ongoing and the airline said care for Mr Ramesh, and all families affected by the tragedy, "remains our absolute priority".
This is the first time the 39-year-old has spoken to the media since he has been back in the UK. A documentary crew were also filming in the room.
The BBC had detailed discussions with his advisers around his duty of care before the interview.
When asked about his memories of the day of the crash, he said: "I can't say anything about that now."
'I'm suffering'
Flanked by local community leader Sanjiv Patel and spokesman Radd Seiger, Mr Ramesh said it was too painful to recall the events of the disaster, and broke down during parts of an interview at the home of Mr Patel in Leicester.
Mr Ramesh described the anguish he and his family are now living through.
"For me, after this accident... very difficult.
"Physically, mentally, also my family as well, mentally... my mum last four months, she is sitting every day outside the door, not talking, nothing.
"I'm not talking to anyone else. I do not like to talk with anyone else.
"I can't talk about much. I'm thinking all night, I'm suffering mentally.
He says he suffers pain in his leg, shoulder, knee and back, and has not been able to work or drive since the tragedy.
"When I walk, not walk properly, slowly, slowly, my wife help," he added.
Sanjiv Patel said he was supporting, advising and protecting the family
Mr Ramesh was diagnosed with PTSD while he was being treated in hospital in India but has not received any medical treatment since being back home, his advisers said.
They described him as being lost and broken, with a long journey of recovery ahead, and are demanding a meeting with Air India's executives, claiming he has been treated poorly by the airline since the crash.
"They're in crisis, mentally, physically, financially," Mr Patel said.
"It's devastated his family.
"Whoever's responsible at the highest level should be on the ground meeting the victims of this tragic event, and understanding their needs and to be heard."
'Put things right'
Air India has offered an interim compensation payment to Mr Ramesh of £21,500, which has been accepted, but his advisers say this is not enough to meet his immediate needs.
The family fishing business in Diu in India, which Mr Ramesh ran with his brother before the crash, has since collasped, his advisers said.
Spokesman for the family Mr Seiger said they had invited Air India for a meeting on three occasions, and all three were either "ignored or turned down".
The media interviews were the team's way of reissuing that appeal for the fourth time, he said.
Mr Seiger added: "It's appalling that we are having to sit here today and putting him [Viswashkumar] through this.
"The people who should be sitting here today are the executives of Air India, the people responsible for trying to put things right.
"Please come and sit down with us so that we can work through this together to try and alleviate some of this suffering."
In a statement, the airline, which is owned by Tata Group, said senior leaders from the parent company continue to visit families to express their deepest condolences.
"An offer has been made to Mr Ramesh's representatives to arrange such a meeting, we will continue to reach out and we very much hope to receive a positive response," it said.
The airline told the BBC that this offer was made before the media interviews with Mr Ramesh.
Water companies have been ordered to tackle potentially harmful levels of so-called forever chemicals in drinking water sources for more than six million people, the BBC can reveal.
Forever chemicals, or PFAS, are a group of thousands of substances used in everyday products. They are persistent pollutants which build up in the environment, and a small number have been linked to increased risk of some serious illnesses.
The BBC examined 23 enforcement notices issued by the Drinking Water Inspectorate over elevated levels of PFAS which could "constitute a potential danger to human health" to see how many people were affected.
Industry body Water UK said it was confident drinking water was safe.
But Water UK called for a ban on the chemicals to prevent accumulation.
Amid growing worries about these chemicals, water companies have been required since 2021 to test for 47 of the most concerning ones in water supplied to customers' homes and drinking water sources such as aquifers and reservoirs.
In the last four years, 1.7 million tests for individual forever chemicals have been carried out across the network. At least 9,432 of those recorded PFAS levels above the level which the DWI says could constitute a potential danger to human health.
When a test result is above or likely to breach this level - set at 0.01ug/L - (micrograms per litre) the Drinking Water Inspectorate issues enforcement notices to the water company requiring action to be taken to ensure water is safe.
The BBC analysed the enforcement documents, highlighted by Watershed Investigations - a group of journalist campaigners - to identify all the water supply areas with sanctions in place.
Using publicly available information, we matched each supply system to the number of customers it serves, identifying a minimum of six million people.
Forever chemicals have been used prolifically since the 1940s in thousands of products from frying pans to medical equipment to school uniforms.
Over time they have found their way into the environment - and the water that gets treated for drinking - through the washing of PFAS products, storm runoff and releases from industrial sites, according to Dr William Hartz, an environmental chemist specialising in PFAS at research institute NILU in Norway.
He said this might include PFAS leaching out as rainwater filters through landfill sites or firefighting training sites, where the use of some firefighting foam directly releases forever chemicals into the environment.
The study of PFAS is an emerging field but a small number of these chemicals have been identified as carrying significant risks to human health.
But Megan Kirton, senior projects officer at environmental charity Fidra, said the chemistry of PFAS meant they do not easily break down, so even if banned they remain in the environment unless treated by water companies.
"It's a very tough situation that we're in, because PFAS is very hard to get out of water. It's like trying to get milk out of your coffee once you've already poured it in there," she said.
The BBC assessed more than 2,000 individual test results from 2024, obtained via Freedom of Information Act requests, to identify which specific PFAS compounds were being found when levels breached the limits. This showed that both PFOS and PFOA were found in more than 350 of the drinking water tests.
Kristen Colwell/Getty Images
Some firefighting foam used on chemical fires previously contained the now banned forever chemicals PFOA and PFOS
The Drinking Water Inspectorate has said that water quality remains safe because, once a sanction is issued, water companies are required to increase testing, change or strengthen treatment for PFAS, or remove a source of drinking water altogether.
This process can take several years and requires months of monitoring before a sanction is removed.
The inspectorate told the BBC that it "operates one of the world's most comprehensive PFAS monitoring programmes", ensuring the public can have "complete confidence in the safety of their drinking water".
However, environmental charities and the Royal Society of Chemistry have raised concerns that UK guidelines are not legally binding and that the limits, which are 2.5 times higher than those of the US, should be reduced.
"I think we have a pretty good idea of both what PFAS are in the waters in the UK, and knowing that these health effects happen at very low levels, so we think it's time that they put these guidance into law, to make sure water companies are fully held to account," said Stephanie Metzger, policy adviser at the Royal Society of Chemistry.
In July, an independent review into the England and Wales' water system commissioned by the government found that "there is a need for stricter treatment requirements to protect public health and the environment".
The BBC understands that the government is currently preparing a white paper in response to the review which will include changes to the Drinking Water Inspectorate.
But removing PFAS is very challenging for water companies with conventional water treatment infrastructure, the Environment Agency has said.
Prof Peter Jarvis, professor of water science and technology at Cranfield University, said there were technologies such as nanofiltration occasionally deployed by the water industry which could be used more widely, but that these came with high costs and huge energy demands.
"We have got to have a bit of a more mature conversation about how we go about implementing these types of technology, and how we pay for them," he said.
"Regardless of where you are in the country, when you turn on your tap, you are enjoying the very best drinking water in the world," a Water UK spokesperson said.
But in light of the rising treatment costs, Water UK has called for stricter regulation on those who produce the forever chemicals in the first place.
"We want to see PFAS banned and the development of a national plan to remove it from the environment which should be paid for by manufacturers," its spokesperson said.
Some high-street clinics are putting lives at risk by allowing unqualified non-specialists to carry out baby scans, the Society of Radiographers (SoR) has warned.
The trade union says its members have seen examples of pregnant women being incorrectly diagnosed with serious health conditions and given dangerous advice.
Other expectant mums have been sent to hospital after being told an abnormality meant they would need to end the pregnancy only to find their baby was completely healthy.
It is concerned that anyone using an ultrasound machine can call themselves a sonographer and offer the service - often sold as a reassurance, souvenir or sexing scan - ahead of the routine 20-week NHS check.
Dangerous advice
"One time, we had a lady referred [to hospital] from a private clinic, who was eight or nine weeks pregnant," says Elaine Brooks, Midlands regional officer at the SoR.
"The sonographer at the private clinic said there was no heartbeat and that the baby was very, very malformed, and they sent her in for an induced miscarriage.
"We started scanning the lady, who was in tears, and on the scan there was a clearly beautiful nine-week pregnancy with a heartbeat. It was absolutely fine."
It heard reports of women who were bleeding and in pain being accepted for scans, rather than being told to contact their doctor.
Bad practice and sexual misconduct
The trade union, which is also the professional body for medical imaging, says it has seen other examples of bad practice by some private clinics including:
Major foetal abnormalities such as spina bifida or polycystic kidneys being missed
Ectopic pregnancies, where the fertilised egg implants itself outside of the womb, either not being diagnosed or being falsely diagnosed
A radiographer continuing to work as a private sonographer despite having been struck off and banned from working for the NHS due to sexual misconduct
The president of the SoR, Katie Thompson, said there were some "really great" private services offering checks with properly trained staff, but she was particularly concerned about the growth of pop-up clinics in shopping centres and on high streets selling souvenir images or scans to reveal the sex of the baby.
She said she was aware of another case where a private scan late in pregnancy did not record the baby was still breech or lying bottom first in the uterus. The mother was not immediately referred to the NHS and the baby later died.
Getty Images
Private clinics often offer reassurance or sexing scans before the standard NHS anomaly scan which is normally offered between 18 and 21 weeks into the pregnancy
The SoR is now calling for sonographer to become a protected job title in the UK in the same way as dietician, podiatrist, art therapist or radiographer.
That would mean only those who are properly qualified and registered with a regulatory body would be allowed to use that job description.
Many private sonographers are already qualified midwives or radiographers, and accredited training courses are also available, although this is currently not a legal requirement.
Individual sonographers can also decide to join the Register of Clinical Technologists, which the public can then search to see if certain standards have been met, but again participation is voluntary.
The Professional Standards Authority for Health and Social Care recently carried out a public interest test of that register and has written to the government to say the "risks appear sufficiently high" that it should consider if stronger regulation of sonographers may be needed.
The Care Quality Commission which inspects private clinics said many were providing good quality care, but it "remains concerned that some are not" with worries over staff training, consent policies and procedures for escalating unusual findings.
Where its inspections identify concerns it said it would "hold providers to account and make clear that action is required to ensure staff are adequately trained".
In a statement, the Department of Health said the safety of patients was paramount and the regulation of all healthcare professionals was kept under review.
"We will carefully consider any proposals from professional bodies regarding this," added a spokesman.
Changpeng Zhao, the co-founder of crypto giant Binance, is also known as 'CZ'
US President Donald Trump says he does not know who Changpeng Zhao is, despite pardoning the cryptocurrency multi-billionaire last month.
Trump was asked about the pardon during an interview with CBS News' 60 Minutes programme, which was broadcast on Sunday.
Zhao, who is also known as "CZ", pleaded guilty to enabling money laundering in 2023. He served four months in prison and agreed to step down as the chief executive of Binance, the crypto exchange he co-founded.
His companies have partnered with firms linked to Trump on new digital-currency projects including Dominari Holdings, where his sons sit on the board of advisers and which is based in Trump Tower.
The host of 60 Minutes, Norah O'Donnell, asked Trump why he pardoned Zhao even though government prosecutors had said he caused "significant harm to US national security."
"Okay, are you ready? I don't know who he is", the president responded.
Trump added that he did not recall meeting Zhao and had "no idea who he is", only that he had been told that the businessman was a victim of a "witch hunt" by the administration of former US president Joe Biden.
During the interview, Trump also discussed his support for cryptocurrencies and said that the US had to make sure it was a leader in the industry or risk China and its rivals gaining an advantage in the emerging technology.
The president's pardon lifts restrictions that had stopped Zhao from running financial ventures, but it is unclear whether it changes his standing with US regulators or his role at Binance.
At the time of the pardon, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt called Zhao's prosecution under the Biden administration part of a "war on cryptocurrency", pushing back on critics who said the pardon appeared motivated by Trump's personal financial interests.
"This was an overly prosecuted case by the Biden administration," she said, adding that the case had been "thoroughly reviewed". "So the president wants to correct this overreach of the Biden administration's misjustice and he exercised his constitutional authority to do so."
The Binance platform remains the most used crypto exchange in the world for trading digital assets.
The Trump administration previously halted a fraud case against crypto entrepreneur Justin Sun, after his investments in the Trump family's crypto firm, World Liberty Financial.
In May, it was announced that a stablecoin launched by World Liberty Financial would be used by an Abu Dhabi firm for a $2bn (£1.52bn) investment in Binance.
Trump has also pardoned founders of the crypto exchange BitMEX, who faced charges related to money laundering, and Ross Ulbricht, founder of the Silk Road, the dark web marketplace known as a place for drug trade.
Hamas' military wing stands guard during a search for the bodies of hostages
Hamas has handed over three coffins it says contain the bodies of deceased Gaza hostages, according to the Israeli military.
Israel has received the coffins, via the Red Cross in the Gaza Strip, and transported them to Israel for formal identification.
If confirmed as deceased hostages, it would mean eight Israeli and foreign deceased hostages remain in Gaza.
Under the first phase of the US-brokered ceasefire deal with Israel that started last month, Hamas agreed to return the 20 living and 28 dead hostages it was holding.
Israel has accused Hamas of being too slow to return the deceased hostages, while Hamas has said it is working to recover bodies trapped under rubble in the territory.
Hamas's armed wing, Al-Qassam Brigades, said the remains had been found earlier on Sunday "along the route of one of the tunnels in the southern Gaza Strip".
Later, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's official X account said: "All of the hostages' families have been updated accordingly, and our hearts are with them in this difficult hour. The effort to return our hostages is ongoing and will not cease until the last hostage is returned."
Hamas and Israel have accused each other of violating the ceasefire.
On Sunday, an Israeli air strike killed a man in northern Gaza, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.
The Israeli military said it had struck a militant that was posing a threat to its soldiers.
Under the first phase of the ceasefire, all the living Israeli hostages were released on 13 October in exchange for 250 Palestinian prisoners and 1,718 detainees from Gaza.
Israel has handed over the bodies of 225 Palestinians in exchange for the bodies of the 15 Israeli hostages so far returned by Hamas, along with those of two foreign hostages - one of them Thai and the other Nepalese.
Prior to Sunday, nine of the 11 dead hostages still in Gaza were Israelis, one was Tanzanian, and one was Thai.
All but one of the dead hostages still in Gaza were among the 251 people abducted during the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on 7 October 2023, during which about 1,200 other people were killed.
Israel responded by launching a military campaign in Gaza, during which more than 68,500 people have been killed, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.
The incident prompted a huge response by the emergency services
People in Huntingdon have found themselves at the centre of a national news story after a train was forced to make an unscheduled stop in their town after multiple stabbings on board. Two people remain in a life-threatening condition in hospital and two men have been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder after Saturday evening's incident.
'The atmosphere was silent' at the station
Cassie Marriott
Cassie Marriot was at the station in the town as her mother lives across the road
Cassie Marriot was at Huntingdon railway station at 20:00 GMT on Saturday because her mother lives across the road.
Speaking to the BBC, she said she tried to help people who had come off the train, in shock.
"I met one young lad standing on his own; he looked shell-shocked; he had blood all over his legs. We asked if he was OK and he said, 'it's not my blood," Ms Marriot said.
"I met another young girl, who was about 18 or 19. She told me she was listening to music on the train when a man tried to stab her. She said someone pulled her out of the way.
"She looked absolutely petrified. She had left all her belongings including her phone on the train, the only thing she was carrying was a vape."
Ms Marriot says there were police and ambulances everywhere but "the atmosphere was silent" at the station, which is on the southern edge of the Cambridgeshire town.
"Everyone was in total shock."
'It is not the sort of thing that happens around here'
Shariqua Ahmed/BBC
Colin Hardy, who attends a church in Huntingdon, said they were offering prayers to people involved
Colin Hardy, who lives in Huntingdon and attends All Saints' Church, said he had not "come to terms" with the incident as "it is not the sort of thing that happens around here".
"We offer our prayers up to the victims and everyone involved; it must be horrific to have seen what was going on," he said.
"We give thanks for the dedication of the local police, the railways police, and all of the hospital staff."
Police met the Doncaster-London King's Cross train as it made an unscheduled stop at Huntingdon shortly before 20:00 GMT, having made its last scheduled stop at Peterborough at about 19:30.
A woman who lives across the road from the Huntingdon station, and wanted to remain anonymous, said she "was shaken up" but what had happened.
'We are travelling to places; we should be safe'
Shariqua Ahmed/BBC
Adriana Fernandez heard the news today as she was about to board a train at Peterborough station
Adriana Fernandez, from Norwich, said the event was "really shocking".
The 19-year-old was at Peterborough station on Sunday, and was travelling on her own for the first time.
She said: "We are travelling to places, and we should be safe.
"It is really heartbreaking. I feel bad for everyone."
Elsie, who lives in Huntingdon, said she was "frightened... I think we should increase security in the area and on the trains".
Council to support people in coming days
Nicola Haseler/BBC
Sarah Conboy, Liberal Democrat councillor, said the community came together
Sarah Conboy, Liberal Democrat leader at Huntingdonshire District Council, said it was an event "you hope you never get caught up in".
She said local people were accommodating to individuals during the incident, adding: "At the moment when they really needed the community, they opened their doors and looked after them.
"This is normally a very busy station and people are expecting to travel, so we will do all we can to support people to get back to some sort of normality."
'I am absolutely stunned'
Shariqua Ahmed/BBC
Mark Keen, who lives in Huntingdon, visited the scene the following morning to see what had happened
Mark Keen, who lives locally said he visited the scene on Sunday morning to see what had happened.
"I am absolutely stunned really; I cannot actually believe it," he said.
"It is a quiet place, and it is so sad for the people, it is dreadful."
Another person who has lived in the area for four years, but did not want to be named, said: "It is very shocking.
"I do not what to say. What can we say? It is a very scary world we are living in."
Local church 'grateful' for emergency services
Shariqua Ahmed/BBC
The Reverend Jan Smith said the church held a silence for those who had been affected by the incident
All Saints' Church in Huntingdon town centre has been offering support to those affected.
The Reverend Jan Smith, its vicar, said: "We were praying last night for all of the people on the train and those severely injured."
She said the church was "grateful" for the emergency services and the local hospital.
"We opened our service with silence and remembered all of those people who have been affected."
'I feel for the victims'
Shariqua Ahmed/BBC
Asha Lockwood, a member at the church, said she was thinking of the victims involved
Asha Lockwood, a parishioner at All Saints, said it was "frightening" as her partner was travelling on a different train.
She said it was "horrendous" listening to the eyewitness accounts and credited the train driver.
"I feel for the victims," she said.
"The church is a wonderful community, family, and we will do anything in our power to help anybody."
'I would rather drive'
Shariqua Ahmed/BBC
Dal Hicks, who lives in Peterborough, said he uses the train services regularly
In Peterborough, about 20 miles north of Huntingdon, Dal Hicks, who has lived in the city for about five years, said the event was "a massive shock as it is so close to home".
"I travel in and out from London most days of the week and now it is quite frightening," he said.
"Now I am thinking I would rather drive than go up by train."
He said he could not see how further incidents could "be prevented".
Shariqua Ahmed/BBC
There was as visible police presence at Peterborough railway station on Sunday
"Run there's a guy stabbing everyone" - witnesses describe attack
Passengers have described blood-covered seats and attempting to protect themselves with a bottle after a mass stabbing on a LNER train left 11 people injured and needing hospital treatment. Two remain in a life-threatening condition.
Police met the Doncaster-London King's Cross train as it made an unscheduled stop at Huntingdon in Cambridgeshire shortly before 20:00 GMT.
Alistair Day, who was travelling back to Hertford having watched Nottingham Forest, was on the train when the attack happened - having narrowly missed his original connecting service.
He joined others and hid in the train's buffet carriage as a fellow passenger confronted a man with a knife.
"I was just by the buffet car. It was odd. I was at the end of the carriage. All these kids were running up and I thought it was like a prank - Halloween or students," he said.
"Then they're getting louder and louder any sorts of people with blood on them [appeared] and I thought, 'Oh, bloody hell, this is not good.'
"I saw a guy flailing out - a fracas with arms going everywhere. I didn't see him that well because there were people in front of him.
"My initial thought was I'm going to sit there and try and do something but I changed my mind.
"We all jumped up and everyone kept running but I was next to the buffet car and the guys in the carriage were trying to close up the shutters and everything.
"So I said, no, you've got to let us in here. So I jumped in there - there were about 12 of us in there.
"I was the first one in, so I was in the corner. A young woman who I spoke to afterwards was by the window and the guy was at the window with his knife trying to get in. Obviously we'd locked it by then."
The 24-year-old, from Peckham in south-east London, said: "I was texting my friends about my plans for that night and then people came rushing through from the carriage, running through, saying, 'You need to run, you need to run'.
"At first it didn't really register what was going on.
"And then quickly, I just dropped my stuff and I started running along with them.
"And then I looked back, and I could see this guy - he was quite a tall, black male, and he had a bloodied knife.
"You just looked around and there was blood just everywhere."
'What if we run out of carriages?'
Joe continued: "We kept moving through the train. We could see him behind us coming through.
"The scariest thing was that I knew that because the stops at this stage of the journey are just Stevenage and King's Cross there's quite a lot of big distances between stops.
"So we had no idea how long we were going to be on the train for.
"The thing that was in my mind was we're running through this train now but what if we run out of carriages to run through? What if we reach the end of the train? What happens there?
"It all happened very quickly. I was just in a fight or flight mode really."
Whiskey bottle
Joe Giddens/PA
Olly Foster, a passenger on the train, told the BBC he initially heard people shouting "run, run, there's a guy literally stabbing everyone", and believed it might have been a Halloween related prank.
He said within minutes, people started pushing through the carriage, and he noticed his hand was "covered in blood" as there was "blood all over the chair" he had leaned on.
An older man "blocked" the attacker from stabbing a younger girl, leaving him with a gash on his head and neck, Mr Foster said.
Passengers around him used jackets to try to staunch the bleeding.
He added that the only thing people in his carriage could use against the attacker was a bottle of whiskey, leaving them "staring down the carriage" and "praying" that he would not enter the carriage.
Although it lasted 10-15 minutes in total, Mr Foster says the incident "felt like forever".
Describing the scene when he got off the train, he said: "There were three people bleeding severely. One guy was holding his stomach and there's blood coming from his stomach and going down his leg.
"He was going 'help, help, I've been stabbed'."
PA
The incident prompted a huge response by the emergency services
The train's only other scheduled stop before King's Cross was due to be at Stevenage.
Wren Chambers, who was due to get off in the Hertfordshire town, said they first became aware something was wrong when a man bolted down the carriage with a bloody arm, saying "they've got a knife, run".
Wren said they and a friend ran to the front of the train and saw a man who had collapsed on the floor.
Wren said they felt "stressed and pretty scared" once they knew what was happening, but they were eventually able to get off the train unharmed.
"There was quite a lot of blood on the train, there was some on my bag, some on my jeans," she told BBC Radio 5 Live.
"As soon as the train stopped and people got off most of them ran outside trying to get away from it, because we knew the attacker was still inside on the train."
PA Media
The incident took place at 19:42 on Saturday and British Transport Police (BTP) received reports of multiple stabbings aboard the 18:25 LNER service from Doncaster to King's Cross
London Underground worker Dean McFarlane told the BBC that he saw the train pull into Huntingdon railway station at 20:00 with a passenger bleeding.
He said that on arrival, he saw multiple people running down the platform bleeding, with one man in a white shirt "completely covered in blood".
He said he grabbed people and told them to leave the station, and tried to assist passengers who he believed were having panic attacks.
PA Media
Ten people have been taken to hospital and nine have life-threatening injuries
Two-time Oscar winner, Sir Anthony Hopkins tells the BBC that he can't "take credit" for his success
Not many people can say they've been given a private piano recital by Sir Anthony Hopkins.
But that's exactly what happened when our four-strong BBC team went to interview the double Oscar-winning actor in Los Angeles.
We were in the same room as the man who terrified as Hannibal Lecter in The Silence of the Lambs, shattered as a butler in The Remains of The Day and devastated as a dad with dementia in The Father.
An actor who was cast by Oliver Stone as President Nixon because - according to Sir Anthony - the director said "you're nuts like Nixon".
At a grand piano in a hotel in Beverly Hills, as he plays us a piece he calls Goodbye, it's clear an artistic soul exudes from his every pore. Haunting notes of music, lines of poetry and Shakespearean verses cascade out of him.
A private piano recital with Sir Anthony Hopkins
We were meeting because Sir Anthony's publishing his autobiography, We Did OK, Kid, an honest and at times upsetting account of a loner who was bullied and written off as a child in Wales and became one of Britain's finest acting exports.
He puts his success down to sheer luck, telling me: "I couldn't take credit for any of it, I couldn't have planned any of this - and now at 87, about to turn 88, I get up in the morning and I think, 'Hello, I'm still here,' and I still don't get it."
From the outside, it looks less about luck and more about his deep understanding of human emotion, as his performances testify. I ask what makes him such an instinctive actor.
"It's such a miracle being alive," he says.
He finds the complexity of human beings "fascinating... I mean, how can you produce Beethoven, Bach and then Treblinka and Auschwitz?"
Sir Anthony has always understood the duality of being human, and it explains his acting range.
He got his first break on film when the actor Peter O'Toole suggested he audition for the 1968 movie The Lion in Winter, in which O'Toole was playing Henry II.
At that point, Sir Anthony had been a member of Sir Laurence Olivier's National Theatre company for several years. But, he recalls: "I couldn't fit into the British theatre style, I just felt out of it."
He also "didn't want to be standing on stage holding a spear for the rest of my life, in wrinkled tights, I just wanted to have a bit of a life".
He was cast as Richard the Lionheart and couldn't believe that a baker's son from Port Talbot was working with Katharine Hepburn.
The actress, playing his mother Eleanor of Aquitaine, gave him "the best advice I've had" as they rehearsed their first scene together. She told him to "just speak the lines... Don't act, just do it". She also said he was "real good".
Hepburn was right, of course. Some classically trained theatre actors, particularly back then, didn't appreciate how much they needed to adjust their performance for the intimacy of a camera. He did.
He doesn't much care for talking about the craft of acting, or certainly the reverence there can be around it, but he shares his method with me: "Be still. Be economic. Don't act or twitch around, you know, 'showing off' acting... simplify, simplify, simplify'."
Hollywood Pictures
Director, Oliver Stone (L) told a reluctant Sir Anthony that he wanted him to play Nixon because he was "nuts" like President Nixon
His performances stand out because he's an actor of huge emotional depth and psychological insight. Think of him as Dr Treves, the friend and protector of John Hurt's Elephant Man.
Or as Lecter, still for me the most terrifying of characters more than 30 years on. The serial killer is a monster but Sir Anthony understood that less is more, on screen.
Instead of playing Lecter as obviously monstrous, "you go the opposite way, you draw back", he explains. He realised as soon as he had read a few pages of the script that the role was "a life-changer".
He writes in his memoir that he "instinctively sensed how to play Hannibal. I have the devil in me. We all have the devil in us, I know what scares people".
Getty Images
Sir Anthony and Jodie Foster both won Oscars for their roles in The Silence of the Lambs
He tells me he played Lecter still - and deadly. So when he was in character opposite other actors, he decided, "Don't take your eyes off the person. That's terrifying."
He puts on Lecter's metallic rasp for me and appears to enjoy repeating his character's words to Jodie Foster's Clarice. "You're not real FBI," he almost hisses.
"That's scary," he says. He's not wrong. Even in an upmarket LA hotel on a warm autumn afternoon, I'm feeling chilled.
And what about the famous line - "I ate his liver with some fava beans and a nice Chianti", which he follows with that vampire-like hiss?
He explains as a child he'd seen the Hungarian-American actor Bela Lugosi do the same when playing Count Dracula in the 1931 movie. Sir Anthony decided in the moment of filming to copy it and The Silence of the Lambs director, Jonathan Demme, kept it in.
Getty Images
Bela Lugosi's portrayal of Count Dracula in the 1931 horror film influenced Sir Anthony when playing Hannibal Lecter
What is startling about the memoir is the disconnect between how the world viewed the young actor and how much it was clearly missing about him. He was bullied at school for what other kids saw as his large "elephant" head.
He was slapped around by teachers who deemed him a complete dunce. Even his parents pretty much wrote him off.
He believes it was the making of him. It "gave me a core of anger, resentment and revenge", he says.
But why hadn't they all noticed his talents? This was a child who was given the 10 volume Children's Encyclopaedia when he was six ("I was so captivated, I read every one of them") and became fascinated by astronomy.
A boy who played the piano, made art and loved Dickens and Shakespeare, quoting from them extensively.
A school report in 1955 when he was 17 marked "the turning point" in his life. It was terrible, as usual. "What's going to happen to you?" Sir Anthony recalls his father lamenting. "I said: 'One day, I'll show you, both of you'."
Sir Anthony Hopkins
Sir Anthony, a "little confused boy" by his own recollection, with his father at Aberavon Beach in 1941
Sir Anthony Hopkins
Sir Anthony Hopkins, here in 1953, says he was bullied at school, where teachers thought he was "thick"
He's pleased his parents lived long enough to see him succeed. When he won his first best actor Oscar, for The Silence of the Lambs in 1992, 11 years to the day after his father died, he rang his mother in Wales and said: "I guess I did OK."
But it was a rough ride in the early days. He was an alcoholic who picked fights with directors and others. He wasn't always a good husband to his first two wives. Booze turned him nasty.
"That's the ugly side of alcoholism," he writes. "It brought out a brutal side of me. I'm not proud of it at all."
The anger, he believes, came "from inside, my own insecurities, being bullied at school and all the rest of it. I didn't like authority".
Shutterstock
Sir Anthony (seen with co-star Kate Nelligan) played an alcoholic actor, Theodore Gunge, in the 1974 TV drama The Arcata Promise
Then one night in LA in December 1975, almost 50 years ago, he drove his car while in "a complete alcoholic blackout". When he came to, he realised that he was "out of control" and could have killed someone. He made a phone call to ask for help.
"Suddenly, something said 'it's all over, now you can start living'... the craving left and it's never come back."
At his first meeting of Alcoholics Anonymous, he had a realisation about everyone else in the room.
"They're all misfits like me. Like all of us. We feel we never belong. We feel self-hatred. All of us are the same. I'm not alone."
It's that feeling of disconnection that shines out of the book.
He writes that his wife Stella believes he is on the autism spectrum which is "likely right, given my proclivity for memorisation and repetition... and my lack of emotionality" but he says he prefers the term "cold fish". I want to know why.
It seems to have begun as a reaction to the bullying and screaming at him through school and National Service.
"I'd just stare them out, and that drove them mad," he recalls. "You withdraw into yourself and think, 'OK you can't hurt me, can you?" It was, he says, his "only defence... and that's a power, you see: I don't care."
Of course, Sir Anthony does care and we talk a little about the state of the world. It's at this point in our interview that he becomes his most passionate. He grew up in Port Talbot surrounded by people who had been impacted, even brutalised, by war.
He played Sir Nicholas Winton, the man who saved hundreds of mainly Jewish children from the Nazis, in the film One Life.
Warner Bros.
In One Life, Sir Anthony played Sir Nicholas Winton, a stockbroker who helped to save nearly 700 mainly Jewish children from the Nazis
When I ask him about whether he worries about increasing polarisation now, he becomes very animated and intense.
"The world has always been a place of utter turmoil. But I think if we go on in this way of hatred... we are dead.
"Nobody's allowed to have an opinion. Nobody can have a different view. That's fascism. And it's insanity."
If he has any advice about it all, it's to say "'Come on, stop this rubbish, beating each other up over ideas. They're only ideas and we're only going to be dead one day'."
Sir Anthony Hopkins' best performances
Shutterstock
Brooks Films
Sir Anthony played President Nixon, but told us that, if offered the role of President Trump, he'd say no
Sir Anthony played the role of Dr Frederick Treves with compassion and said of his character that he "wrestled with his goodness"
I ask him, as he looks back at his long life, what his biggest regrets are and he's quick to answer. "People I've hurt over the years, the stupid things I did."
He's estranged from his only child, his daughter Abigail, who he walked out on when she was just one and he was in the depths of alcoholism.
He writes that "after realising I was unfit as a father for Abigail, I vowed not to have any more children... I couldn't do to another child what I'd done to her".
He has tried to repair their relationship over the years.
Getty Images
Sir Anthony with his daughter, Abigail (here at the premiere of Little Man Tate in Los Angeles in 1991), describes his estrangement as "a tremendous source of pain"
When he took on the role of King Lear in his 80s, in Sir Richard Eyre's 2018 film, Lear's words to his daughter Cordelia struck a painful chord.
He writes in his new book: "The line that hit me harder than perhaps any other I've ever spoken was 'I did her wrong'. Saying those words, I felt deeply, perhaps for the first time in my life, how I had hurt my own daughter.
"I remembered how as a baby she'd lit up when I walked into the room. I remembered how I said goodbye to her the night I walked out. I remembered how I had tried and failed to win her back later. I remembered how I had given up. And as Lear, but also as myself, I began to cry."
He didn't want to talk about it in our interview. Poignantly, in this section of the book, he writes: "I hope my daughter knows that my door is always open to her."
I couldn't help feeling moved reading this. It's as if he is trying to send a message to her, hoping against hope that there might be a reconciliation before it is too late.
Playground Television
Sir Anthony (pictured with Florence Pugh) says playing King Lear made him reflect on the hurt he caused his own daughter, Abigail
At 87, he is looking back, aware he has lived many years longer than he has left to live. "Most of my friends have died, they're gone, God bless them," he says. "I hope to be around a little longer. But even that, I'm thinking, 'oh well, I had a good time'."
He certainly still appears to be having fun. After some early reserve when we first met, he quickly relaxed. When he played the piano, he shared how he had lost two much-loved pianos when his house burnt down in the LA fires earlier this year. "They were all under the rubble".
As we walked through the hotel lobby together, he was spotted by guests and waved happily to them. "I like to say hi because people think actors are special. We're not at all," he smiles.
Reuters
Sir Anthony credits his third wife Stella Arroyave with helping him overcome "feelings of anxiety in a way that set [him] free"
Whatever he says, it was special to spend a few hours in his presence. He's an acting legend who's given us six decades of memorable performances. He's also a genuine heavyweight who is steeped not just in musical knowledge, but culture, history and philosophy.
And we end the interview on a philosophical note - as he recites "They are not long, the days of wine and roses" from an Ernest Dowson poem and muses on the fleeting nature of life.
"What are we doing here, what are we?" he asks. "We can't explain anything about ourselves. We may have fancy ideas, religious ideas, philosophical ideas, scientific ideas... what's that all about? We're nothing finally, and yet we're everything".
We Did OK, Kid by Sir Anthony Hopkins is published on 4 November.
We all think we know how to brush our teeth - a scrub morning and night, a rinse with water and maybe a minty mouthwash for good measure.
But according to dental experts, even the most diligent brushers might be making a few mistakes that could be undoing their good work.
Dr Praveen Sharma, from the school of dentistry at the University of Birmingham, says that half of adults in the UK will have gum disease at some point and an early sign is bleeding gums.
"If your gums are bleeding or swollen it's a sign you need to brush better," he says.
As well as regular dentist visits, here are four things he and BBC's What's Up Docs podcast hosts Dr Xand and Dr Chris van Tulleken, say many of us are currently getting wrong which if we change could improve the health of our teeth.
1. Brushing once well is better than twice quickly
It's one of the great dental commandments - brushing twice a day - and that's what the NHS recommends.
But Dr Sharma says the real key is quality, not quantity.
"If you can find time, then yes, twice a day," he says. "But it's better to do it once a day well rather than twice quickly."
If you are brushing once a day then he recommends it be in the evening and make sure you also floss.
Of course, no one likes flossing, but Dr Sharma says using interdental brushes, particularly rubber ones, can make it easier and less painful.
When it comes to the method, each tooth has an outer, biting and inner surface and all three need to be brushed.
Dr Sharma advises small circular motions over each surface without applying too much pressure. He also says to pay particular attention to the junction between the tooth and the gum as that's where gum disease can occur.
Dr Xand says it's important to "focus on the sensation of the bristles" and approach tooth brushing mindfully, not scrolling on your phone at the same time.
2. Brush before breakfast, not after
Many people brush their teeth right after eating, but that might not be doing your enamel any favours.
"Ideally, brush before breakfast," Dr Sharma says. "You don't want to do it after something acidic.
"If you do brush after, then you need to leave some space between eating and brushing."
That's because acids from foods and drinks, especially fruit juice or coffee, can soften tooth enamel and brushing too soon afterwards can wear it away.
Dr Chris suggests rinsing your mouth with water after eating to get rid of some acid and then waiting at least 30 minutes if you are brushing after breakfast.
3. Don't rinse after brushing
If you've been spitting, rinsing and gargling after every brush, you might want to rethink that last step.
"You spit but don't rinse," Dr Sharma advises. Rinsing your mouth washes away the concentrated fluoride in the remaining toothpaste.
That means simply spitting out the excess toothpaste and leaving the thin layer of fluoride behind to continue protecting your teeth.
4. Expensive toothpaste isn't better
With shelves full of whitening, charcoal, and enamel-boosting pastes, it's easy to assume the pricier options will give you a healthier smile.
But according to Dr Sharma, it doesn't really matter which brand you choose, as long as it contains one key ingredient.
"As long as your toothpaste has fluoride, it doesn't make much difference," he says, adding that he tends to buy whatever is cheaper or on offer.
Fluoride helps protect enamel and prevents decay, and that's what really counts.
Drs Chris and Xand van Tulleken are on a mission to help us take better care of ourselves. Listen to What's Up Docs? on BBC Sounds or wherever you get your BBC podcasts."
Police met the Doncaster to London King's Cross train as it made an unscheduled stop at Huntingdon
A 32-year-old man is now the only suspect after multiple stabbings on a train, police have confirmed.
A member of LNER staff remains in a life-threatening condition following the attacks on a train from Doncaster to London King's Cross, which stopped in Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire shortly before 20:00 GMT on Saturday.
A 35-year-old man, arrested at the scene, has been released with no further action after it was reported "in good faith" that he had been involved in the attack.
British Transport Police (BTP) said the suspect, who is from Peterborough, boarded the train at the city' station. They also confirmed five casualties have now been discharged from hospital.
A BTP statement confirmed the LNER staff member had tried to stop the attacker, and said it is "clear his actions were nothing short of heroic and undoubtedly saved many people's lives".
Dep Chf Con Stuart Cundy said: "Our investigation is moving at pace and we are confident we are not looking for anyone else in connection to the incident."
The force said a knife had been recovered by officers at the scene.