The stern appearance of Wandsworth prison is enough to make grown people shudder.
Based in leafy south-west London, the Victorian-era facility - with its gault brick walls and a dark intimidating entrance - is one of the largest in the UK.
The inside is just as intimidating. Having visited several years ago, I was struck by the smell of urine from the gutters that line the cell blocks.
I've been inside several prisons during my career but this was by far the worst.
Like many prisons, it suffers from overcrowding and has almost double the number of inmates it was designed to house.
Some of the small, cramped cells still have stone walls, which add to the cold feeling
One serving prison officer from the jail described the security as a "joke".
They told me: "It's crazy in there and mistakes are constantly happening. There is a real state of panic after this blunder and I'm thinking about whether I can take much more of this job when stuff like this happens and makes us look like idiots."
An independent monitoring board report released last month said a third of staff are absent every day - while a 2024 inspectorate report said security remained a significant concern with staff across most units unable to confirm where all their prisoners were during the working day.
The prison is renowned for being one of the worst in the country. It received an urgent notification in May 2024 following an unannounced visit by HM Chief Inspector of Prisons Charlie Taylor.
An "urgent notification" in prisons is a formal process where the chief inspector alerts the justice secretary about significant and urgent concerns. The urgent concerns included assaults on staff, overcrowding, and staff not being able to confirm where prisoners were.
In a letter to the then Justice Secretary Alex Chalk, Mr Taylor wrote: "Inspectors found significant weaknesses in many aspects of security. Wings were chaotic and staff across most units were unable to confirm where all prisoners were during the working day."
We know very little at this stage about why or how Brahim Kaddour-Cherif, a sex offender, was mistakenly released.
The Metropolitan Police was not told about the error for almost a week and it is unclear why this was the case.
As for a second man, William Smith, the BBC understands his accidental release was due to a clerical error at court. He has since handed himself in.
I hear from insiders that it is a possibility prison staff did not realise Khaddour-Cherif was even missing until a few days after his release.
Sources tell me that the governor of HMP Wandsworth, Andy Davy, was not at the jail on the day Khaddour-Cherif was mistakenly freed.
Ironically, that is because Davy had been tasked with carrying out the inquiry into how Hadush Kebatu was released by accident from Chelmsford prison in Essex. I understand that investigation is now complete.
Almost two weeks ago, the Justice Secretary and Deputy Prime Minister, David Lammy, introduced additional checks after the accidental release of Kebatu to ensure mistakes like that do not happen again.
But these checks are proving to be a "significant burden" according to one senior prison staffer, who said "they've only increased the paperwork". "It's now taking a day in some cases to complete the checks to release someone and this isn't helpful when staffing is an issue," they said.
I understand the early release scheme that was brought in last summer after prisons almost reached full capacity has also increased pressure on staff - and contributed to the increase in accidental releases.
The emergency scheme allows some inmates to be released after serving 40% of their fixed term sentence, rather than the usual 50%.
"There are more comings and goings now, and that means we're dealing with more checks, more paperwork, more calculations of sentences, and this just means more mistakes are happening. It's inevitable," a prison officer said.
More than 200 people were released by mistake over the last year - and the government says it is unacceptable. Some staff are incandescent, saying the prison system has been in crisis for a while now, but that the recent errors are why politicians are suddenly engaging.
"How bad does it have to get before they do something?," asked one staffer. "It's a shitstorm."
King Charles III has officially stripped his brother Andrew Mountbatten Windsor of his HRH style and prince title.
A new entry into Britain's official public record shows that the change has formally come into effect after it was announced last week.
The King made the changes following weeks of intense scrutiny over the former prince's links to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
The record also confirmed his removal from the Roll of Peerage as the Duke of York, which had also been previously announced.
The entry published in The Gazette, the UK's official public record, reads:
"The King has been pleased by Letters Patent under the Great Seal of the Realm dated 3 November 2025 to declare that Andrew Mountbatten Windsor shall no longer be entitled to hold and enjoy the style, title or attribute of 'Royal Highness' and the titular dignity of 'Prince'."
The Great Seal of the Realm refers to a wax seal, and is used by the Crown to show the monarch's approval of important State documents.
Andrew Mountbatten Windsor - as he is now to be known - gave up his other royal titles in October, including the Duke of York, after more questions and allegations about his private life.
The palace said the former prince agreed to leave Royal Lodge as his links to paedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein continued to cause controversy.
It was also understood that he did not object to the King's decision to remove his titles.
Lucy Powell was elected as Labour's deputy leader last month
Labour should stick to its manifesto pledge not to raise key taxes, the party's new deputy leader Lucy Powell has said.
Ahead of last year's general election, Labour promised not to increase taxes on "working people", including National Insurance, Income Tax and VAT.
Asked whether it would be acceptable to break this promise, Powell told the BBC: "We should be following through on our manifesto, of course. There's no question about that."
Chancellor Rachel Reeves is widely expected to increase taxes in her Budget this month, with the government repeatedly refusing to rule out an income tax hike.
Economists say Reeves may need tax rises totalling as much as £30bn to meet her financial rules by a comfortable margin.
In an interview with Matt Chorley on BBC Radio 5 Live, Powell was pressed over how important it was for Labour to stick to its manifesto promises.
"If we're to take the country with us then they've got to trust us," she said.
She added: "It's really important we stand by the promises that we were elected on and that we do what we said we would do."
Powell also called for the two-child benefit cap to be lifted "in full", saying this was the only way to ensure child poverty falls significantly over the course of the Parliament.
She added that the issue was "urgent" because every year the policy is in place at least 40,000 children "are pushed into deep levels of poverty as a result".
The government has been facing growing pressure from its own MPs to lift the cap, which restricts child tax credit and universal credit to the first two children in most households.
Reeves is expected to make changes to the cap, which was introduced by the Conservatives, in her Budget.
However, experts estimate that scrapping it completely would cost around £3.5bn a year.
Other options reportedly being considered by the Treasury include raising the cap to cover three or four children, exempting families where at least one adult is in work or reducing benefits for third and subsequent children.
Campaigners have called for it to be abolished in full, arguing this would be the most cost-effective way to reduce child poverty.
The former footballer said he "cannot believe I'm on trial for words on a social media site"
Former footballer Joey Barton has told a jury he believes he is the victim of a "political prosecution" and denied he sent alleged grossly offensive social media posts to "get clicks and promote himself".
He told a court he did not intend to call broadcaster Jeremy Vine a paedophile and described it as a "bad, dark, juvenile joke".
The former Manchester City and Everton midfielder is on trial accused of having "crossed the line between free speech and a crime" with posts on X about the presenter, and commentators Lucy Ward and Eni Aluko.
Giving evidence at Liverpool Crown Court, the 43-year-old said his references to Vine were a "wind-up".
"It was not meant to call him a paedophile. It was a bad, dark, juvenile joke," he said.
"I have not at any point tried to cause distress or anxiety or risk his life or his daughters' lives.
"I don't want people to fear for their lives, I'm a dad.
"I cannot believe I'm on trial for this. Words on a social media site."
PA/REUTERS
The charges relate to posts the former footballer made on X about Jeremy Vine, Lucy Ward and Eni Aluko
The court has heard how following an FA Cup game in January 2024, he compared pundits Ward and Aluko to the "Fred and Rose West of football commentary".
Fred and Rose West gained notoriety after murdering and abusing a number of women over a 20-year period.
Mr Barton is then said to have called Vine a paedophile in numerous posts after the broadcaster sent a message querying whether the ex-player had a "brain injury".
During cross-examination, prosecutor Peter Wright KC said: "The reality is you targeted these women and you bullied them."
Mr Barton, who is from Huyton in Merseyside, said: "If you are public facing, you have to accept there is going to be criticism and feedback you don't like."
Mr Wright said: "Is the truth that, under the guise of your right to freedom of expression, you engage in personal slur and grossly offensive remarks to those who you feel are fair game?"
Mr Barton, who also played for Newcastle and Marseille, said: "I sometimes use the wrong language. I was trying to make a serious point in a provocative way."
He denied he was trying to attract more clicks and promote himself.
'Celebrity spat'
Mr Wright said: "You have got these views on women and their role with men's football, and they were strongly expressed by you."
"Yes," Mr Barton replied.
Mr Wright said: "And if someone challenges you on that you double down."
Mr Barton said: "No, I defend my position."
Mr Wright said: "You say to the jury that your purpose here, first in respect of the female pundits or co-commentators, was what you were seeking to do was to provoke a debate about it."
Mr Barton, who also managed Fleetwood Town and Bristol Rovers, said: "That was my intention."
He said he felt he was subject to a "political prosecution" from the first knock on his door by police.
"This was the state, in my opinion, trying to squeeze me into the ground," he said.
"It's a spat between celebrities online.
"I believe this is a highly politicised case."
Mr Wright said: "You have sought to deflect, divert and avoid. That's the position, isn't it?"
Mr Barton replied: "This is a state prosecution I believe for whatever their agendas are in pushing on people."
Barton, now of Widnes, Cheshire, denies 12 counts of sending a grossly offensive electronic communication with intent to cause distress or anxiety between January and March last year.
A network of community kitchens in Sudan - a crucial lifeline for millions of people caught up in the civil war - is on the verge of collapse, a report says.
The warning from aid organisation Islamic Relief comes after a UN-backed global hunger monitor confirmed that famine conditions were spreading in conflict zones.
The locally run kitchens have operated in areas that are difficult for international humanitarian groups to access, but are facing closure due to neglect, shortages and volunteer exhaustion.
Sudan's people have been brutalised by more than two years of war after fighting broke out between the army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).
It has created what the UN has called the world's largest humanitarian crisis, with estimates that more than 24 million people are facing acute food shortages.
These local initiatives often operate alongside social networks known as Emergency Response Rooms that have filled the gaps of collapsing government services and limited international aid.
Everyone from teachers to engineers to young people pitch in.
Financial fragility is the most pressing issue the kitchens face. They are now funded mainly by the Sudanese diaspora, after the USAID cuts earlier this year.
"It was like someone cut a rope we were holding on to," one volunteer said.
"Before March, we had a small, regular stream that let us plan. We knew we could serve at least one meal a day. Now? In the last month, I would say there were 10 days we went to sleep not knowing if we could cook the next day. The uncertainty, it's worse than having nothing."
There are severe operational challenges, such as the lack of safe water and firewood.
Aid agencies say both sides obstruct deliveries with bureaucratic delays and denials. To make matters worse, there are often market disruptions due to blockades, insecurity and looting.
The situation is worst in the besieged cities of el-Fasher in the western Darfur region and Kadugli in South Kordofan state. Both are largely cut off from commercial supplies and humanitarian assistance.
In el-Fasher, the kitchens were reduced to serving animal fodder by the time the city finally fell to the RSF last week.
It is estimated that half of Sudan's population faces acute shortages - with emergency community kitchens often the only hope for millions of getting food
Food security in Sudan shows stark contrasts along conflict lines, the IPC report says.
"Conflict still decides who eats and who does not."
In areas where violence has subsided the situation has begun to improve, it says.
And some international aid agencies are contributing to the Emergency Response Rooms, although they have not been able to replace the US funding.
But even in Omdurman, across the Nile from the capital, Khartoum, and largely under army control with ample commercial supplies, the scale of need often exceeds available resources, leading kitchens to ration food.
The city has been a hub for people displaced by the war, and prices are high.
"This is the hardest part of my day," a volunteer from Omdurman is quoted as saying.
"We don't have a formal system. We feed everyone, but one time we had to tell a mother at the end of the day that we had nothing left for her two children and that she should come back tomorrow early. She didn't even cry, she just looked deflated.
"I went home and I couldn't even speak to my own family that night. The shame of having food in my stomach when that child did not, it is a heavy feeling for me."
The Emergency Response Rooms have been hailed as a model for UN-led reforms that emphasise shifting power and resources closer to the people most affected by crises.
This year they were nominated for a Nobel Prize.
But after nearly three years, the volunteers find themselves increasingly on their own, facing burnout and danger.
They have to work with whoever is in control in their area, and have become targets when territory changes hands, because they are sometimes seen by both sides as collaborating with the other party.
Limited communications are a real problem. Long-term internet blackouts make it difficult to get money transferred through a mobile bank system, and mobile phones are a prime target for looters.
"They depend on this mobile money," Shihab Mohamed Ali from Islamic Relief Sudan based in Port Sudan told the BBC's Newsday programme.
"They are taking the money inside their mobiles and going to bring the commodities from far areas. So, they used to cross through different checkpoints. And sometimes they were being looted, their mobile taken. And if the mobile is taken, that means the money is taken."
Worse, he says, "there are some reports of members of community kitchens who were even killed".
"My biggest fear is that in six months, the community will be completely exhausted," says a volunteer from Khartoum.
Tech firms such as Microsoft, whose Majorana chip is pictured here, are racing to embrace quantum
There's an old adage among tech journalists like me - you can either explain quantum accurately, or in a way that people understand, but you can't do both.
That's because quantum mechanics - a strange and partly theoretical branch of physics - is a fiendishly difficult concept to get your head around.
It involves tiny particles behaving in weird ways. And this odd activity has opened up the potential of a whole new world of scientific super power.
Its mind-boggling complexity is probably a factor in why quantum has ended up with a lower profile than tech's current rockstar - artificial intelligence (AI).
This is despite a steady stream of recent big quantum announcements from tech giants like Microsoft and Google among others.
Broadly speaking, we tend to think about quantum more commonly in the form of hardware like sensors and computers, while AI is more software-based – it requires hardware to operate.
Put them together, and we might one day have a new form of technology that's more powerful than anything we have ever created… although the word "might" is doing some heavy-lifting in that particular prediction, warns Brian Hopkins, VP and principal analyst in emerging tech at research firm Forresters.
"The potential is there, but the jury is still out," he says.
"Initial experiments suggest promise, but they all indicate that we require much more powerful quantum computers and further innovative research to effectively apply quantum effects to AI."
Quantum and AI have one more thing in common - errors. While we are largely familiar now with the "hallucinations" of generative AI tools, quantum is plagued by a different kind of error.
These are caused because the state in which the particles have to operate is so fragile. The slightest change to the environment, including light and noise, can disrupt them.
Quantum computers don't look anything like a traditional machines. There is no design blueprint, but they are currently very big.
They exist in laboratories, and the most commonly adopted format seems to include a kind of jellyfish-inspired shape.
They require extremely cold temperatures and lasers. It's not the sort of thing you're likely to have in your home, let alone in your pocket.
They're also a bit bling - researchers have found that using synthetic diamonds to create qubits, which are the building blocks of quantum computers, enables them to work much closer to room temperature.
The luxury jeweller De Beers has a subsidiary company called Element 6, which claims to have launched the world's first general-purpose quantum-grade diamond in 2020. And it has worked with Amazon Web Services on optimising artificial diamonds for future networks of quantum machines.
AFP via Getty Images
Quantum computers, such as this on display, are large structures
These machines are all in their infancy right now, there are believed to be around 200 of them in the whole world (China however has not disclosed how many it has) – this doesn't stop quantum experts making bold claims about their potential.
"We as consumers will touch the impacts of quantum computing in almost every walk of our lives," said Rajeeb Hazra, the boss of Quantinuum, a firm recently valued at $10bn. He was talking to the BBC's Tech Life podcast.
"The area of quantum computing is, in my mind, when you look at the applications, as big if not bigger than AI."
Prof Sir Peter Knight is one of the UK's top quantum experts. "Things that could take the age of the universe to calculate, even on the most powerful supercomputer, could be performed probably in seconds," he told Dr Jim Al-Khaleli on BBC Radio 4's The Life Scientific.
So what exactly are these gigantic, life-changing things that the machines might do once they're ready?
As with AI, there's a lot of quantum research directed towards improving healthcare.
Quantum computers could one day be able to effortlessly churn through endless combinations of molecules to come up with new drugs and medications – a process that currently takes years and years using classical computers.
To give you an idea of that scale - in December 2024, Google unveiled a new quantum chip called Willow, which it claimed could take five minutes to solve a problem that would currently take the world's fastest super computers 10 septillion years - or 10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 years – to complete.
Hazra says this could pave the way for personalised medication, where instead of getting a standard prescription, you get a specific drug tailormade for your individual body, that's most likely to work for you.
And that applies to wider chemical processes too, such as new ways to produce fertilizers more efficiently, potentially a huge boost for global farmers.
Quantum sensors, which use the principles of quantum mechanics to measure things incredibly precisely, already exist and are found in atomic clocks.
In 2019, scientists at Nottingham University put them in a prototype device the size of a bike helmet, and used them in a new system to conduct non-intrusive brain scans on children with conditions such as epilepsy.
"The foundations for human cognition are laid down in the first decades of life, but there have always been limited ways to study them due to restrictions in brain scanning technology," said researcher Ryan Hill at the time.
"A particular problem has always been movement and the fact that the large traditional fixed scanners have always required patients to stay completely still.
"Not only does this fail to give an accurate picture of the brain operating in a natural environment, but it also places severe restrictions on who can be scanned, with children representing the biggest challenge."
AFP via Getty Images
Quantum is tipped to greatly speed up drug development
Last year, scientists at Imperial College, London trialled an alternative to GPS satellite navigation, dubbed a "quantum compass", on the city's underground Tube network.
GPS doesn't work underground but this does – the idea is that it could more accurately track and pinpoint objects anywhere in the world, either above or below ground, unlike GPS signals which can be blocked, jammed and affected by the weather.
"The UK economy relies on GPS to the tune of £1bn per day, position, navigation and timing – this is often labelled a defence requirement - but all our financial transactions require a timestamp for authentication," says Dr Michael Cuthbert, director of the UK's National Quantum Computing Centre.
"Using quantum clocks, gyroscopes and magnetometers enables us to create a resilience against jamming and spoofing of our vital navigational systems."
The National Grid is investing in quantum research to see if it can help with what's known as "load shedding" - how to maximise the output of thousands of generators from various energy sources as demand rises and falls in real time, preventing blackouts.
And Airbus partnered with the UK quantum firm IonQ to trial quantum-based algorithms designed to load cargo more efficiently onto aircraft. An aircraft can use thousands of kilos of extra fuel if its centre of gravity shifts by just a small amount.
AFP via Getty Images
Western analysts are unsure how many quantum computers China has developed
So far, so good – but we also need to talk about secrets.
It is widely accepted that current forms of encryption – the way in which we store both personal data and official secrets – will one day be busted by quantum technology being able to churn through every single possible combination in record time, until the data becomes unscrambled.
Nations are known to be already stealing encrypted data from each other with a view to being able to decode it one day.
"It's called harvest now, decrypt later," says Prof Alan Woodward, a cybersecurity expert from Surrey University.
"The theory of how to break current forms of public key encryption await a truly operational quantum computer," he adds.
"The threat is so high that it's assumed everyone needs to introduce quantum-resistant encryption now."
The moment a such a computer exists is sometimes referred to as Q-day. Estimates of when it might arrive vary, but Brian Hopkins at Forrester says it could be soon - around the year 2030.
Companies like Apple and the secure messaging platform Signal have already rolled out what they believe to be post-quantum encryption keys, but they cannot be applied retrospectively to current data encrypted in the traditional way.
And that's already a problem. In October, Daniel Shiu, the former head of cryptographic design at GCHQ, the UK's intelligence, security and cyber agency, told the Sunday Times it was "credible that almost all UK citizens will have had data compromised" in state-sponsored cyber attacks carried out by China – with that data stockpiled for a time when it can be decrypted and studied.
Strong winds hit Quy Nhon beach in Gia Lai province, central Vietnam, on Thursday
Typhoon Kalmaegi made landfall in Vietnam on Thursday after killing at least 114 people and flooding entire towns in the Philippines.
More than 260,000 soldiers are on standby for rescue efforts as winds of up to 92mph (149km/h) hit the country's coastline, according to Vietnamese media and the government's online portal.
Six airports in the country have been forced to close and hundreds of flights are expected to be affected, the government warned.
The country, which has already been battling record rains and floods, is now facing one of Asia's strongest typhoons this year.
The typhoon could generate waves of up to 8m (26ft) on the South China Sea, according to Vietnam's weather bureau.
The country's environment ministry said on Thursday that "the storm is on land, in the provinces of Dak Lak and Gia Lai" in a statement quoted by various outlets, including the AFP news agency.
The Vietnamese national weather forecaster says hundreds of localities in seven cities and provinces are at risk of flooding and landslides in the next six hours.
There have already been reports of damage from several provinces, including roofs torn off homes, shattered glass panels at hotels, and trees uprooted or snapped along city streets and rural roads by powerful gusts.
In the Quy Non area, trees have fallen on main roads and windows in hotels have smashed.
About 30 minutes after the typhoon made landfall, hundreds of residents in two communes of Dak Lak province called for help, local media reported.
Many people reported that their homes had collapsed or been flooded, while strong winds and heavy rain continued to batter the area.
Dak Lak province is approximately 350km (215 miles) north-east of Ho Chi Minh City.
EPA
Waves crashed on the beach in Cua Dai, Da Nang, central Vietnam, on Thursday
Vietnam's military has deployed more than 260,000 soldiers and personnel, along with more than 6,700 vehicles and pieces of equipment, including six aircraft, to help with storm relief efforts.
On Wednesday morning, a reporter from AFP news agency saw officials knocking on the doors of homes in coastal communities and warning people to evacuate.
According to local media reports, Prime Minister of Vietnam Pham Minh Chinh held an online meeting to direct the emergency response.
"We must reach isolated areas and ensure people have food, drinking water, and essential supplies," he was quoted as saying.
"No one should be left hungry or cold."
Before making landfall in Vietnam, the typhoon, known locally as Tino, left a trail of devastation in the Philippines.
At least 114 people were killed and tens of thousands were evacuated, particularly from central areas including the populous island and tourist hotspot of Cebu, where cars were swept through the streets.
Early on Thursday, Philippines President Ferdinand Marcos Jr declared a state of emergency, the threshold of which involves mass casualty, major damage to property, and disruption to means of livelihoods and the normal way of life for people in the affected areas.
AFP via Getty Images
The clean up begins at a hotel in Vietnam
Reuters
Homes were destroyed in floods caused by Typhoon Kalmaegi in Talisay, Cebu, Philippines, on 5 November
Vietnam has already been battling with floods and record rains for the past week.
Burst riverbanks have flooded some of the country's most popular tourist spots, including the Unesco-listed city of Hue and historic hotspot Hoi An, where residents have been pictured navigating the city in wooden boats after the Hoai river overflowed.
Seaside communities in Vietnam are expected to be hit hard by Typhoon Kalmaegi.
A sea-level rise of 4 to 6m (13 to 20ft) in at least two provinces could capsize boats and devastate fishing farms, according to a forecast issued at 16:00 local time (9:00 GMT) by a senior official at Vietnam's National Center for Hydro-Meteorological Forecasting.
Meanwhile, deputy director Nguyen Xuan Hien says Typhoon Damrey - which struck Vietnam in 2017 with less intensity than Kalmaegi, but still caused severe damage to coastal communities - should serve as a warning and urged people to remain highly alert.
Thailand is also bracing for the storm's impact. Local officials have warned of flash floods, landslides and river overflows.
US Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi has said she will be stepping down at the end of her term in January 2027.
Pelosi's announced her departure in a video message, after nearly four decades in the House of Representatives.
It also marks the end of a storied political career: Pelosi, 85, served as the first female Speaker of the House and led her party in the lower chamber of Congress from 2003 until 2023.
The San Francisco Democrat was also considered the consummate political operator. She was instrumental in forcing then-President Joe Biden to step aside during questions about his mental acuity, which led to the ill-fated candidacy of Kamala Harris.
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Policymakers at the Bank of England are widely expected to hold interest rates at 4% following their final meeting before the chancellor's Budget.
Some Bank watchers have suggested that the latest inflation data could strengthen the case for a cut, but most commentators think such a move is more likely in December.
In September, the Bank's governor Andrew Bailey said he still expected further rate cuts, but the pace would be "more uncertain".
The Bank's base rate has an impact on the cost of borrowing for individuals and businesses, and also on returns on savings.
Uncertainty over pace of cuts
The Bank's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) will make its latest announcement at 12:00 GMT with most analysts predicting a hold.
The Bank of England has reduced its benchmark interest rate by 0.25 percentage points every three months since August last year. However, that cycle is widely expected to be broken this time.
Members of the MPC will be closely considering the latest economic data on rising prices, as well as jobs and wages as they cast their vote on interest rates.
The rate of inflation in September was 3.8%, well above the Bank's 2% target, but lower than expected. Within that data, food and drink prices rose at their slowest rate in more than a year.
That has eased some of the squeeze on family finances, and also led to some analysts, including at banking giants Barclays and Goldman Sachs, to predict a cut in interest rates this month to 3.75%.
They expect a split in the vote among the nine-member committee. For the first time, the views of each individual on the MPC will be published alongside the wider decision.
Danni Hewson, head of financial analysis at AJ Bell, said the market was giving a one in three chance of a rate cut to 3.75%.
"The odds are still firmly in favour of a hold," she said.
All eyes on Budget
Members of the MPC will be fully aware of the potential implications of the Budget which will be delivered by Chancellor Rachel Reeves on 26 November.
The case for a cut in interest rates in December could be boosted if the Budget includes substantial tax rises that do not add to inflation.
The chancellor, in a speech on Tuesday, said measures in the Budget "will be focused on getting inflation falling and creating the conditions for interest rate cuts".
However, detail remains thin until the Budget is delivered and more economic data will be published before the Bank's next meeting in December that could sway MPC members' thinking.
"It's possible Rachel Reeves' surprise press conference on Tuesday was partly a cry for help to the Bank of England," AJ Bell's Ms Hewson said.
"By promising to push down on inflation, she might have been signalling that the Bank didn't have to wait until after the Budget to cut rates. Whether they do or not is a finely balanced call."
The Bank's interest rates heavily influence borrowing costs for homeowners - either directly for those on tracker rates, or more indirectly for fixed rates.
In recent days and weeks, many lenders have been cutting the interest rates on their new, fixed deals as they compete for custom, and in anticipation of future central bank rate cuts.
Savers, however, would likely see a fall in the returns they receive if the Bank cuts the benchmark rate on Thursday or in December.
Rachel Springall, from financial information service Moneyfacts, said many savers were feeling "demoralised" as a result of falling returns and still relatively high inflation, which reduces the spending power of their savings.
Astrid: "Undoubtedly, if Stephen wasn't there, I would have been seriously injured."
A teenager, who was onboard the train near Huntingdon when a man started attacking passengers with a knife last Saturday, said her life "could have been so different" without the bravery of fellow passenger Stephen Crean.
This week Mr Crean said he confronted the attacker who was holding a large knife to give others time to escape.
Now, 19-year-old Astrid, who does not want to give her last name, has told the BBC she believes his actions saved her and others from serious injury or worse.
The teenager, who was travelling alone, said she started running up the carriage as others ran past shouting that a man had a knife and was stabbing people.
"I came across the buffet car which was almost full, but I managed to get in there as the last person," said Astrid. "Then Stephen Crean placed himself in front of me, between myself and the attacker, and then he tried to reason with him in a way.
"The attacker showed his knife, showed his weapon and Stephen Crean threw himself at the attacker in order for me to have the opportunity to close the door. I witnessed Stephen Crean unfortunately get injured and I didn't see him after that."
Astrid is in no doubt how vital his actions were, saying he was a hero. "I think undoubtedly, if Stephen wasn't there, I would have been seriously injured, as well as many other people in that buffet car," she said.
"My message to him would be that I'm so thankful for his actions because my life could have been so different. I'm so lucky to be here walking around unharmed."
Mr Crean told the BBC on Monday how he had been stabbed on his hand, back and head as he "tussled" with the attacker and was determined not to let him past until he was sure everyone who had barricaded themselves in the buffet car was safe.
He said: "That door still wasn't shut behind me because I could still see [a passenger] struggling to close it. So until I knew it was I wasn't moving away from it."
Astrid said she was pulling at the door of the buffet car to try and close it and other passengers were inside holding onto the door as others called the police.
Everyone in the buffet car was in "a state of shock", she said as she praised Mr Crean's calm in the moment.
"A lot of people hypothesize what they would have done, or whether they would have been able to take on the attacker," said Astrid. "But it's if you are brave enough in that moment and it's much easier said than done.
"The fact that Stephen had that courage when he only had a split second decision to make is so admirable."
'So proud'
The BBC told a tearful Mr Crean about Astrid's message to him. "It makes you feel so proud. That's made my life. I'm just so happy now. That's the best thing ever, knowing that I've actually done something…It's good news that they're safe, and that's what I set out to do, to protect."
Mr Crean's now faces an operation on his fingers which were sliced by the attacker as he confronted him.
An online fundraiser has raised more than £50,000 for him including donations from Nottingham Forest football club whose match he was returning from.
The LNER train was travelling from Doncaster to London King's Cross and stopped at Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire, shortly before 20:00 GMT on Saturday as the attack unfolded.
Anthony Williams, 32, has been charged with 11 counts of attempted murder, including that of Mr Crean, two counts of possession of a bladed article and one count of actual bodily harm.
One of the attempted murder count relates to a separate incident.
Hassan Jhangur was found guilty of murder by a majority verdict in July
A driver who murdered a father-of-two by running him over in a "senseless act of hot-headed violence" has been jailed for life .
Hassan Jhangur, 25, killed Chris Marriott, 46, when he deliberately rammed his car into a crowd of people during a brawl at his sister's wedding reception in Burngreave, Sheffield, in December 2023.
"Good Samaritan" Mr Marriott, who had stopped to help when Jhangur's sister collapsed during the fighting, died at the scene while four others were seriously injured.
In a statement, Mr Marriott's wife of 16 years, Bryony, described her husband as "genuine, kind and loving" and said his death would affect her and their two sons "for the rest of our lives".
Jailing him at Sheffield Crown Court for a minimum term of 26 years, Mr Justice Morris said the attack had been "a deliberate and senseless act of hot-headed and wanton violence" that resulted in the death of Mr Marriott and life-changing consequences for many others.
Jhangur, of Whiteways Road, Sheffield, was found guilty or murder by a majority verdict and of three counts of causing grievous bodily harm with intent and one of wounding with intent relating to those also hurt after a trial in July.
He was cleared of a charge of attempted murder but convicted of a second count of wounding with intent after jurors heard he launched a vicious knife attack on his new brother-in-law, Hasan Khan, following the crash, stabbing him repeatedly in the head and chest.
The BBC has upheld 20 complaints over impartiality after presenter Martine Croxall altered a script she was reading live on the BBC News Channel which referred to "pregnant people" earlier this year.
Croxall was introducing an interview about research on groups most at risk during UK heatwaves, which quoted a release from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
The presenter changed her script to instead say "women", and the BBC's Executive Complaints Unit said it considered her facial expression to express a "controverial view about trans people".
The presenter said: "Malcolm Mistry, who was involved in the research, says that the aged, pregnant people … women … and those with pre-existing health conditions need to take precautions."
The ECU said it considered Croxall's facial expression laid it open to the interpretation that it "indicated a particular viewpoint in the controversies currently surrounding trans ideology."
Governor Andrew Bailey said he wanted to see if forthcoming developments confirmed this view before cutting rates; weakness in the labour market could also play a part.
The Bank also noted last year's Budget measures – such as an increase in employer National Insurance Contributions and minimum wages – contributed to price pressures over the last year.
A key factor in future decisions will be the contents of the forthcoming Budget, which may ease price pressures with direct measures on bills, but also tax rises taking money out of pockets.
The chancellor has been keen to claim credit for creating the conditions for rate cuts by providing the right environment. But the Bank's report makes clear that last year's Budget measures have contributed to price pressures, and hiring hesitancy by adding to employer's costs.
Ironically it is the impact on the labour market that may have contributed to views of the rate setters already looking to cut the cost of borrowing.
While the Bank itself refused to speculate about the contents of this Budget, it noted signs that concerns elsewhere, among consumers and businesses, may be holding back the economy.
With consumer spending remaining cautious, it expects the economy to grow by 1.2% in 2026, less than the 1.5% it predicts this year - that will not be welcomed in the Treasury.
The interest rate panel will have plenty to evaluate in the Budget – the scale and shape of tax rises, help with energy bills and possibly other cost of living challenges, and increases in the National Living Wage.
According to the Bank's research, labour costs remain a key uncertainty for employers and also for consumer prices.
The rate setters will have to judge the impact of those policies – and the usual monthly evidence on inflation, jobs and so forth – by the next meeting in mid-December.
By, in effect, holding the cast vote, it's the governor who may find himself deliberating whether to play Santa – or Scrooge.
If not then, economists reckon a cut will come in February.
And how many more to follow?
The Bank says it sees rates continuing on a "gradual downward path". Some members remain nervous about lingering inflation pressures.
Its research, for example, shows our expectations of inflation are shaped by recent experience, and in particular, the movements of food prices.
We are still scarred by the impact of recent price hikes, and there's a risk that can lead people and businesses to behave as if inflation is higher than it really is - through wage demands or price increases.
Meanwhile, hundreds of thousands of homeowners could still face rising costs when renewing their mortgages if rates remain elevated.
Borrowers may expect more gifts in 2026, but they may arrive only gradually.
There could be an untapped resource under everyone's feet in Wales' capital that could lead to cheaper heating bills
On an unassuming street in Cardiff, engineering geologist Ashley Patton is lifting the lid on what looks like an ordinary drain cover.
But deep inside is one of 234 boreholes, first drilled by the city council more than 30 years ago, which could now hold the key to a revolution in the way that homes across the city - and beyond - are heated.
Pioneering research has found that the activity of traffic, businesses, and people on Cardiff's streets has caused what has been described as "thermal pollution", meaning water underground is unusually warm - about 12C (54F).
Since 2014, the boreholes - drilled to monitor groundwater levels during the construction of the Cardiff Bay Barrage - have been used by the British Geological Survey to measure the temperature of the water - the world's largest survey of urban groundwater.
The results have potentially huge implications for the city's 124,000 homes, and properties across the UK.
"I feel like I have a bit of secret knowledge," said Ms Patton.
"When I'm out with friends and family I'm always saying 'there's a borehole there' and nobody would know it."
She pulls a cable out of a borehole, plugs it into her laptop, and begins taking measurements.
These readings have been taken across the city every half an hour for the past 11 years.
While most people have no idea the boreholes are even there, they are revealing a potentially transformative heat source under our feet - geothermal energy.
This is a type of renewable energy that uses the Earth's natural heat to heat homes and businesses or generate electricity.
The data suggests the entire city could be heated using ground source heat pumps to tap into this.
Ashley Patton measures the groundwater temperature from one of 234 boreholes around Cardiff - they hide secret work few have known about up until now
"We think that we are one of the largest geo-observatories of its kind in the world," Ms Patton added.
The British Geological Survey is the oldest of its kind globally, and has called its work in Cardiff the world's largest survey of urban groundwater.
Ground source heat pumps are one of several solutions the UK government is looking at to meet its target of making all new homes built from this year "zero carbon-ready".
A ground source heat pump takes water from underground pipes and uses a compressor to increase the temperature
An easy way to think about how a heat pump functions is to imagine it as a fridge in reverse.
For ground source heat pumps, water is circulated underground in pipes and heated slightly by the groundwater around it.
This water is then passed through a refrigerant liquid, similar to what you would find in the back of a home fridge freezer.
The refrigerant evaporates and goes through a compressor which raises its temperature further.
This heats water in another pipe, which can then be used for hot showers, radiators or underfloor heating.
The relative stability of ground water temperatures means that ground source heat pumps can be more efficient than air source heat pumps - which transfer heat from the outside air to the water in a central heating system.
But they are not as widely used because of the high cost of installing the underground infrastructure.
A new development in Rhondda Cynon Taf could become a model for how that cost barrier could be overcome.
Parc Eirin is a development of more than 200 low carbon homes on the outskirts of Tonyrefail which is pioneering a new way of funding the infrastructure needed for ground source heating.
Rather than paying to dig boreholes and install underground pipes themselves, residents pay a standing charge to connect to the existing system, which is paid for upfront by investors, such as through pension funds.
Getty Images
Could the activity of the people on the streets of Cardiff one day help to heat the city?
"The issue we often find in Wales is that we can struggle to make these schemes commercially viable," said Tirion Homes chief executive David Ward.
"Up until now, it's tended to be smaller, higher end developments that would be able to afford to use ground source heating."
The company behind the new funding model is Kensa, which also provides the heat pumps inside the homes.
Commercial director Wouter Thijssen believes the development in Tonyrefail is a world first.
"The cost of decarbonisation doesn't fall on the taxpayer here," he said.
"It falls on private capital that's crowded in, which is what we need if we're going to achieve the targets that we have."
The aim of the scheme, according to Mr Thijssen, is to make the transition away from gas boilers as simple as possible by emulating how utility companies work.
"Just like when you get a gas boiler, you don't pay for additional gas pipes in your street," he said.
Craig Williams didn't know anything about ground source heating before buying his home
Police constable Craig Williams, 30, has been living with a ground source heat pump since buying his home at Parc Eirin three years ago.
While he admits there were "teething issues", such as there being no valve to get pressure back up when it drops as there is on a traditional boiler, he now believes every home should have one.
In 2022, the year he moved into his low carbon home, many households in the UK were struggling with high energy costs driven by post-pandemic demand and the war in Ukraine.
But Mr Williams found himself getting money back from his energy provider.
"I had a cheque from them for about £400. I don't think that happens in many households these days," he said.
"Everything was on the rise, and I was pretty much saving money."
Back in Cardiff, Ashley Patton is hopeful that ground source heating could become commonplace sooner than many people realise, and Wales can lead the way.
"I think as Wales was once in charge of the Industrial Revolution through its coal, we could be leading a green revolution through geothermal energy."
The Welsh government said its heat strategy sets out its ambition for decarbonising home and business heating systems by 2050, adding there was "strong evidence to support electrification as the main solution with ground source heat pumps likely to play a smaller role".
Three weeks after the spectacular jewel theft at the Louvre, the museum has been heavily criticised for neglecting security.
The Court of Auditors report, drawn up before the heist, found that for years managers had preferred to invest in new artworks and exhibitions rather than basic upkeep and protection.
"Let no-one be mistaken: the theft of the crown jewels is a resounding wake-up call," said the court's president, Pierre Moscovici.
In broad daylight on Sunday 19 October, thieves broke into the Louvre's first-floor Apollo Gallery. Using a angle-grinder to open display cases, the gang made off with €88m (£78m) of jewels that once belonged to 19th-Century queens and empresses.
Basing its findings on the years 2018 to 2024, the report says the Louvre "favoured operations that were visible and attractive at the expense of maintenance and renovation of technical installations, notably in the fields of safety and security".
In the period studied, it found the museum spent €105.4m on buying new artworks and €63.5m on exhibition spaces.
But at the same time it spent only €26.7m on maintenance works and €59.5m on restoration of the palace building.
The findings chime with other criticisms, such as from Culture Minister Rachida Dati who said managers had "grossly underestimated" the dangers of intrusion into the museum.
One of France's leading art experts, Didier Rykner, has also accused the museum of preferring to spend its "abundant" resources on eye-catching initiatives rather than basic protection of what it already has.
One possible casualty is the Louvre's ambitious New Renaissance project which was launched with fanfare earlier this year by President Emmanuel Macron and the museum's director, Laurence des Cars.
The plan includes a new entrance at the eastern end of the Louvre, and the excavation of new exhibition spaces including a separate gallery for the Mona Lisa.
Louvre Museum
Louvre Museum
The Marie-Louise necklace and a pair of earrings were among the eight items stolen
A tiara worn by the Empress Eugenie, wife of Napoleon III, was taken
But the Court of Auditors found that the project had been "undertaken without proper studies - either of technical and architectural feasibility (or)… financial evaluations".
The projected cost had already soared to €1.15bn, it said, compared with the €700m announced in January.
In its response, the Louvre said it accepted most of the court's recommendations, but it believed the court did not fully understand all that it had done – notably in security.
"When it comes to the biggest and most visited museum on the world , the only balanced judgment is one that looks at the long term," it said.
Meanwhile it has been revealed that one of the suspected thieves, named as Abdoulaye N, 39, was for many years considered a local hero in the Aubervilliers neighbourhood of northern Paris, renowned for his often illegal feats of motorcycling.
Going by the nickname Doudou Cross Bitume, he regularly posted videos of himself performing skills on a motocross bike – such as wheelies at Paris landmarks like the Trocadero.
More recently his videos showed him conducting body-building gymnastics.
Abdoulaye N was previously a guard at the Center Pompidou in Paris, an arts centre containing Europe's largest museum of modern art.
He had a number of convictions for traffic and other offences, but nothing linked to organised crime.
According to French media, his profile – and that of the other main suspect Ayed G – suggests they might have been petty criminals possibly in the pay of a wealthy third party.
Two other people are in custody.
They are a man suspected of being one of the two who waited with getaway motorbikes on the street outside the Louvre; and his wife, who faces a possible charge of conspiracy.
The fourth man at the scene is still being sought – as are the jewels.
According to Le Parisien newspaper, quoting investigators, Abdoulaye N and Ayed G made some surprising statements under interrogation.
Abdoulaye N apparently did not realise he was breaking into the Louvre, he just thought the museum was in the area around the famous glass pyramid, while Ayed G assumed it would be empty because it was a Sunday.
In fact it was open and had plenty of visitors.
Watch: Two people leave Louvre in lift mounted to vehicle
A man at the centre of an organised crime network has been secretly filmed telling BBC undercover reporters how he can help to erase fines of up to £60,000 for employing illegal workers.
The self-described "accountant" is among a group of Kurdish men, first exposed in a BBC investigation on Tuesday, who enable migrants to work illegally in mini-marts, by registering the businesses in their own name.
The man, who goes by the name of Shaxawan, told the two journalists that he and his associates could help migrants - including asylum seekers - to set up businesses illegally and "confuse" immigration enforcement.
Operating from a solicitor's office in Huddersfield, he said he had "customers in every city".
In Companies House listings, Shaxawan is named as Kardos Mateen, a British resident in his 30s, and has been the director of 18 businesses across the north of England.
When later confronted by us, with details of his claims, he denied any wrongdoing.
Trading Standards confirmed it has found illegal cigarettes being sold in many businesses registered under the name Kardos Mateen, and the BBC was sold counterfeit tobacco in four mini-marts where he was listed as the director.
The BBC News two-part investigation has revealed the sophistication and scale of criminal networks profiting from undocumented working on UK High Streets. Loose regulation of Britian's labour market is acting as a pull factor for those entering the UK illegally, the government has acknowledged.
Shaxawan made several claims to our reporters:
He could set up a company and provide bank cards and a card machine to accept payments from customers for one of our undercover reporters, believing him to be an asylum seeker
His network could "confuse" Immigration Enforcement teams which "won't have the time" to check details
Fake directors would be paid to register mini-marts in their own names, while illegal workers, including asylum seekers, would actually run the businesses
In separate deals, other people referred to as "ghost names" would be paid to put their names to large fines for illegal working
An "English woman" in the network would help reduce hefty fines to "zero" and deal with other issues like electricity, gas and bailiffs
Our reporters also spoke to a paralegal, with Shaxawan present, who offered to "make documents", including "business agreements", to avoid fines.
'I'll make sure you have no issues'
It took months to set up the first meeting with Shaxawan.
He pulled up at a busy Manchester retail park in a white 4x4 BMW, in the belief he was meeting an asylum seeker who was looking to run a mini-mart and sell illegal cigarettes.
In fact, he was meeting Saman (not his real name), a Kurdish journalist working undercover for the BBC.
In a cafe, Shaxawan freely shared details of what he and his associates were able to offer: "We are a group. Each of us provides a service and works together," he said.
He explained how he worked with an "English woman who dealt with electricity, gas and bailiffs". And when Immigration Enforcement issues a fine, he added, "she makes it zero".
"I will… set up your company, provide the [card] machine, get you electricity, speak to your landlord," Shaxawan assured him. "I'll make sure you have no issues."
Shaxawan told our reporter he could help him set-up a mini-mart illegally
He told Saman that he should register a mini-mart business in the name of someone else - what is sometimes known as a "ghost director". This would cost £400 per month, and getting access to a business bank card would require a one-off payment of £140, he said.
The ghost director would be the one to "take the risk" if the shop was raided by law enforcement and fines issued, he explained.
"That's why you're paying," he said.
To show he was genuine and to provide reassurance, Shaxawan called someone he said could act as ghost director.
Saman explained to the man on the phone that he did not have asylum status.
"Don't worry" came the reply. "As Mr Shaxawan says, send the money at the end of the month."
ID documents sent to Saman by phone swiftly after his meeting with Shaxawan, revealed that the potential ghost director was a 28-year-old from Iran called Bryar Mohammed Zada.
Mr Zada has racked up company directorships for 20 car washes and mini-marts from Newcastle upon Tyne to Essex in the past 12 months, according to Companies House records.
Undercover journalists found illegal cigarettes being sold at four of Mr Zada's businesses.
Saman later called Shaxawan asking for a second meeting, and Shaxawan suggested they meet at RKS Solicitors in Huddersfield.
The firm is registered with the Law Society and has branches in Dewsbury and Sheffield.
The meeting was arranged on the premise Saman needed help to deal with an illegal working fine which had been given to a family member.
There is no mention of the names "Shaxawan" or "Mateen" on the firm's website.
But Saman had called Shaxawan when he was outside the solicitors, and Shaxawan opened the front door, and welcomed him in.
He led our reporter upstairs to an office, where he outlined how Saman's family member could avoid the fine, transferring company details to someone else for a fee.
RKS Solicitors told the BBC it had no connection to any alleged immigration or fine-related misconduct.
Fines turned to 'zero'
We later got our second undercover reporter, "Ali", who is also Kurdish, to investigate further by calling the same RKS Solicitors branch - but without mentioning Shaxawan.
Posing as a Kurdish mini-mart owner, he told the woman who answered the phone that he had received a £60,000 fine from Immigration Enforcement for employing two people without the right to work.
He was given an appointment with Zohaib Hussain, who is listed on RKS's website as a paralegal - someone who can advise on legal matters but is not a qualified solicitor and works under supervision.
As Ali was arriving for his appointment with Mr Hussain at the RKS offices, he came across Shaxawan outside. On the street, Shaxawan repeated the claim he had made to Saman - that he could make fines go to "zero" with no comeback from authorities.
Shaxawan again referred to the "English woman" he mentioned in the earlier meeting, and said she could make sure that fines for illegal working were reassigned to other people, as if they were the culpable business owner.
Shaxawan said these would be Hungarians who "live nearby". They would be paid between £2,000-£3,000 and their names would be used to assume liability for the fines.
He did not give any more details, but an immigration lawyer we spoke to suggested this could work much like receiving a speeding fine, and giving the name of someone else on the paperwork as the person who was driving - and therefore liable to pay the penalty.
Shaxawan said the overall cost to Ali would be about £4,600 per illegal worker. He said he had done this successfully in "Manchester, Birmingham, Blackpool and Leeds", with the process usually taking about four weeks.
He added Ali's company would then need to be closed, reopened and re-registered under a new name.
Ali was then let into the RKS branch, and Shaxawan came inside too. Inside an office, Shaxawan showed him documents on his phone detailing the people he claimed to have helped before.
Shaxawan claimed the scam would confuse Immigration Enforcement officers who would not have time to check the details.
Ali was then introduced to the paralegal, Zohaib Hussain. Shaxawan stayed in the room throughout the meeting.
Watch: Undercover filming of alleged negotiation to fix a fine
Speaking quickly and in a hushed tone, Mr Hussain fired questions at our reporter about his cover story - the mini-mart and the immigration fine.
"How many illegal workers? So how much is the fine? How many times did they catch you?"
Then, with a chuckle, he asked what was sold in the mini-mart: "Do you sell vapes? Legal or illegal? Bit of both as well?"
When Ali said his mini-mart was registered under someone else's name, Mr Hussain said: "Very clever then, already very clever."
The first step, Mr Hussain said, would be to deal with the fine.
If Ali was not let off the fine, he continued, "we will look at certain other things that we have to do as precautions".
"Sometimes we might have to make documents," said Mr Hussain, such as "business agreements".
Ali then asked if the fine would be transferred to someone else's name. Mr Hussain said that would be "the last resort."
Before the meeting ended, Mr Hussain warned that the immigration authorities would want to jump on the fine straight away - making a cutting-motion across his throat.
He said his charges would be £3,500 and he "would look after us". He then asked Ali to share any future Immigration Enforcement letters with Shaxawan.
Immigration lawyer Bryony Rest says it was likely "fraud and immigration offences" were taking place
We showed our undercover filming and translations to senior immigration lawyer Bryony Rest, who told us Hussain was "clearly offering to falsify documents".
There were "likely fraud and immigration offences" taking place, she said, and she would expect law enforcement to investigate.
When we later contacted Mr Hussain for comment he replied by email saying he denied "all allegations, insinuations, and claims" we had put to him.
"For clarity, the individual named in your correspondence, Mr Shaxawan Jawad, is not associated with me in any capacity; professional, personal, or otherwise."
In a statement to the BBC, RKS Solicitors said the company was carrying out an internal review and "the individual concerned" had been suspended pending further investigation.
"We are already informing" the Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA), it added.
"Mr Hussain is employed as a paralegal under strict supervision… The individual is not authorised or instructed to provide immigration and tax advice."
The firm did not comment on Shaxawan Jawad. It said it did not condone unlawful conduct and was committed to the "highest standards of professionalism, integrity, and public service".
Shaxawan, otherwise known as Kardos Mateen, told us by email that he categorically denied "every allegation, insinuation and claim made" in our reporting, and said that he was "not employed by, associated with, or acting on behalf of RKS Solicitors in any capacity".
Home secretary Shabana Mahmood, said the Home Office would investigate the BBC's findings.
"Illegal working and linked organised criminality creates an incentive for people to come here illegally. We will not stand for it," she said.
Additional reporting Phill Edwards and Kirstie Brewer
The final of the show is being broadcast on Thursday evening in the UK
Note: This article does not contain spoilers related to the final episode
The final of BBC One's The Celebrity Traitors was uploaded in error by overseas broadcasters before it was due to be shown in the UK on Thursday, the BBC has confirmed.
It is understood the final was seen by a few hundred people who subscribe to streaming service Crave in Canada; they were able to watch it for a couple of hours before it was removed.
The episode being uploaded was not a BBC mistake, and a spokesperson for the corporation urged those who believe they know the outcome of the show to "avoid sharing potential spoilers".
''We kindly ask anyone who thinks they know the outcome of The Celebrity Traitors to keep whatever they believe they know to themselves," the statement said.
"Please avoid sharing potential spoilers so that the millions of fans who have been faithfully following every twist and turn of the series can enjoy the final this evening.''
The Celebrity Traitors is currently the most-watched TV show of the year, with an average of 12.6m people across the first four episodes.
Fans of the show have been waiting to see whether traitors Cat Burns and Alan Carr will win the £100,000 prize for charity or whether faithfuls Joe Marler, Nick Mohammed and David Olosuga will be triumphant.
Thursday evening's final episode is extended to 70 minutes on BBC One, with an extended edition of The Celebrity Traitors: Uncloaked set to air on BBC Two after the final.
Host Ed Gamble will be joined by the cast and Claudia Winkleman as they react to the show's outcome.
US President Donald Trump has issued a fresh threat to target Nigeria if the government "continues to allow the killing of Christians".
In a video released on Truth Social he pledged to "do things to Nigeria that Nigeria is not going to be happy about" and "go into that now-disgraced country guns-a-blazing". But the White House's interest in this subject did not come out of the blue.
For months, campaigners and politicians in Washington have been alleging that Islamist militants were systematically targeting Christians in Nigeria.
But the BBC has found that some of the data being relied on to come to this conclusion are difficult to verify.
Referring to the Boko Haram group, he said "they have killed over 100,000 since 2009, they've burned 18,000 churches".
Similar figures have also been gaining traction on social media.
The government in Abuja has pushed back on these claims describing them as "a gross misrepresentation of reality".
It did not deny that there was deadly violence in the country. But officials said that "terrorists attack all who reject their murderous ideology - Muslims, Christians and those of no faith alike".
Other groups monitoring political violence in Nigeria say the number of Christians who have been killed is far lower, and say most victims of the jihadist groups are Muslims.
Nigerian security analyst Christian Ani said that while Christians had been attacked as part of a broader strategy of creating terror, it was not possible to justify claims that Christians were deliberately being targeted.
And Nigeria is facing various security crises across the country, not just violence by jihadist groups, and these have different causes so should not be confused.
The country's 220 million people are roughly evenly split between followers of the two religions, with Muslims in the majority in the north, where most attacks take place.
What are US politicians saying?
Prominent Texas Senator Ted Cruz has been campaigning on the issue for some time and, highlighting similar figures to Maher on 7 October, he wrote on X that "since 2009, over 50,000 Christians in Nigeria have been massacred, and over 18,000 churches and 2,000 Christian schools have been destroyed".
In an email to the BBC, his office made clear that, unlike Maher, the senator was not calling this a "genocide" but describing "persecution".
But Cruz accused Nigerian officials of "ignoring and even facilitating the mass murder of Christians by Islamist jihadists". Trump, echoing these words, has described Nigeria as a "disgraced country", saying the government "continues to allow the killing of Christians".
The Nigerian government has denied this, saying it is doing its best to tackle the jihadists. Some officials have also welcomed the prospect of the US helping fight the insurgents, as long as it is not done unilaterally.
The authorities have certainly struggled to contain the violent jihadist groups and criminal networks – most weeks seem to come with stories of fresh attacks or abductions.
Boko Haram – infamous for kidnapping the Chibok girls just over a decade ago - has been active since 2009, but its activities have been concentrated in the north-east, which has a majority Muslim population. Other jihadist groups have also emerged, including the Islamic State West Africa Province but they also operate in the north-east.
The figures for Christian deaths cited by some in the US are alarming, but assessing their accuracy is hard.
Where do their numbers come from?
When it comes to the source of the data, on a podcast in September, Cruz directly referred to a 2023 report by the International Society for Civil Liberties and Rule of Law (InterSociety) - a non-governmental organisation that monitors and tracks human rights abuses across Nigeria. His office also sent the BBC a number of links to online articles on the issue – most of which pointed back to InterSociety.
Maher did not respond to a BBC request for the source of his figures, but given certain similarities to those used by Cruz, it seems likely that he was drawing on InterSociety's work.
For data that could be shaping US policy towards Nigeria, InterSociety's work is opaque.
In its report published in August, which was an amalgamation of previous research and updated numbers for 2025, it said jihadist groups in Nigeria had killed over 100,000 Christians in the 16 years since 2009.
It also notes that 60,000 "moderate Muslims" also died during this period.
InterSociety did not share an itemised list of sources, making it hard to verify the total number of deaths it reports.
In response to this criticism, the organisation has said that "it is almost impossible to reproduce all our reports and their references dating back to 2010. Our easy method is to pick their summary statistics and add them to our fresh discoveries or findings to make up our new reports." But the data sources quoted by InterSociety in its reports do not reflect the figures published.
AFP via Getty Images
Many of those killed and abducted by Boko Haram are Muslims
What about those killed in 2025?
Looking at deaths this year alone, InterSociety concluded that between January and August just over 7,000 Christians were killed. This is another figure that has been widely shared on social media, including by Republican Congressman Riley M Moore, who has been a leading voice on this issue in the House of Representatives.
InterSociety includes a list of 70 media reports as some of the sources to its findings on the attacks against Christians in 2025. But in about half of these cases, the original news stories did not mention the religious identity of the victims.
For example, InterSociety quoted an Al Jazeera report of an attack in north-eastern Nigeria, saying that according to the news organisation "not less than 40 farmers mainly Christians were abducted by Boko Haram in Damboa part of Borno State".
But Al Jazeera's report didn't mention that the victims were "mainly Christians", as quoted by InterSociety.
InterSociety told the BBC that it does further analysis to identify their background, without explaining how exactly in this case, but did mention their knowledge of local populations and use of "Christian media reports".
Adding the number of death referenced in these reports cited by InterSociety does not result in the stated total of 7,000.
The BBC added up the number of deaths from the 70 reports and found that the total was around 3,000 deaths. Some of the attacks also appear to be reported more than once.
To explain the shortfall, InterSociety says it also estimates the number of people it believes have died in captivity and includes eyewitness testimonies it cannot make public.
Who is behind the killings?
Included in its list of perpetrators are Islamist militant groups like Boko Haram but also Fulani herders. The Fulanis are a mainly Muslim ethnic group who live across West Africa and have traditionally earned their living by raising cattle and sheep.
The inclusion of the Fulani herders, who InterSociety describes as "jihadists" in all its reports, however, is the source of some controversy in Nigeria over how these killings should be categorised.
While the herders tend to be Muslim, many researchers in this field reject the description of this as a religious conflict, saying it is often about access to land and water.
Fulani herders have come into conflict with both Muslim and Christian communities across Nigeria.
Security analyst Mr Ani argues that "to say that they are jihadists - it's a far stretch. It has nothing to do with that. It has a lot more to do with rogue and criminal elements."
Confidence McHarry, a senior security analyst at Africa-focussed consultancy SBM Intelligence, says the clashes are often due to ethnic tensions and competition over resources.
"It might be ethnic in nature - they're seeking to grab lands, they're seeking to expand territory, but the more they displace communities and the more they attack worship centres, the more these things tend to get looked at in that light."
InterSociety also mention what are known in Nigeria as bandits, saying they are mostly ethnic Fulanis in the north-west of the country, who are involved in kidnapping and have a track record of killing both Christians and Muslims.
Reuters
Nigeria's media has been full of Trump's threats
Who has been campaigning on this?
Concerns about threats facing Nigerian Christians has been discussed by politicians in the United States and by international Christian groups for a long time.
In previous years, it has been raised in the US by the Indigenous People of Biafra (Ipob) – a group proscribed in Nigeria which is fighting for a breakaway state in the mainly Christian south-east.
Intersociety has been accused by the Nigerian military of being linked to Ipob but the NGO has denied any connection.
Another Biafran separatist group has also claimed to have played a key role in promoting the "Christian genocide" narrative in the US Congress.
The Biafra Republic Government in Exile, BRGIE, described it as a "highly orchestrated effort", saying it had hired lobbying firms and met US officials, including Cruz.
InterSociety's figures are far higher than other sources of data on the number of Christians killed in Nigeria.
Acled, which closely monitors violence in West Africa, has produced very different numbers. The sources for its published findings can be easily traced and checked.
Its senior analyst, Ladd Serwat, did not directly address the InterSociety reports but told the BBC that the figure of 100,000 deaths, touted on social media, would include all acts of political violence in Nigeria, and so it would not be true to say this is the number of Christians who have been killed since 2009.
Acled has found that just under 53,000 civilians - Muslims and Christians - have been reported killed in targeted political violence since 2009.
Looking at just the period from 2020 to September 2025, Acled says that about 21,000 civilians were killed in abductions, attacks, sexual violence and the use of explosives.
It identified 384 incidents where Christians were specifically targeted from 2020 to September 2025, in which 317 people died, meaning they account for just a small proportion of those killed.
For its sources, Acled relies on traditional media, social media where the reports can be verified, rights groups as well as local partners.
What about Trump's figures?
In a Truth Social post last Friday, Trump cited a figure of 3,100 Christians killed. He was referring to a report by Open Doors for deaths for the 12 months from October 2023, a White House official said.
Open Doors is a charity which researches the persecution of Christians worldwide.
In its reporting it says that while 3,100 Christians died, 2,320 Muslims were also killed in that 12-month period.
Open Doors also includes what it calls "Fulani Terror Groups" in its list of perpetrators and says they were responsible for almost a third of Christians killed during those 12 months.
Frans Veerman, senior research fellow at Open Doors, said "what we see now is that Christians are still targeted, but increasingly some Muslims are targeted by Fulani militants".
Analysts say there are many violent attacks on mosques and Muslim communities in the north-west of the country.
"One could say that this is part of the broader insecurity," said Mr McHarry. "The reason why it is not assumed to have a religious dimension is down to the fact that the identities of the people who are carrying out these attacks against Muslims are themselves Muslims."
The UK is facing a long, drawn-out flu season, the boss of the NHS in England is warning.
Sir Jim Mackey said there is "no doubt" this winter will be one of the toughest the health service has faced.
It comes as flu rates have started climbing early this year, which is causing concern because the winter vaccination campaign has only just got under way and there are lots of vulnerable people yet to get protected.
NHS England is issuing a "flu jab SOS", urging those eligible for the free vaccine to come forward quickly for it.
More than 13 million people have been vaccinated so far this year, but that is still more than 5 million below the number who were jabbed last winter.
Sir Jim said: "There's no doubt this winter will be one of the toughest our staff have ever faced.
"Since stepping into this role, the thought of a long, drawn-out flu season has kept me awake at night. And, unfortunately, it looks like that fear is becoming reality.
"Australia has just endured its worst flu season on record — over 410,000 cases — and all the signs suggest the NHS will face similar challenges in the months ahead. From December through to March, our hospitals will be at capacity."
How to get a flu shot
People aged 65 and over, pregnant women and those with certain long-term health conditions can get a free flu jab on the NHS. Appointments can be booked online, by phoning 119 or at local pharmacies and GPs.
Children aged two to 16 can also get vaccinated with a nasal spray. That's mainly to help stop flu spreading.
Other people can buy a flu vaccine from high street chemist shops and some supermarket pharmacies.
Bad winter predicted
Two of the worst winter flu seasons of the past decade have been seen in the last three years, something partly attributed to the bounce-back of the virus after Covid restrictions were lifted combined with immunity being low.
Last year, nearly 8,000 people died from flu, and in the 2022-23 flu season there were nearly 16,000 deaths.
Flu rates are currently three times higher than normal for this time of year, with the highest rates seen in children and young people. But health officials have warned the virus will start spreading to older groups in the coming weeks.
Duncan Burton, chief nursing officer for England, said: "With just weeks left to ensure best protection against the worst of the flu season, we are issuing an urgent SOS to the eligible people who have yet to get jabbed this year.
"It is vital that the public use the available appointments we have running next week to stamp out this early wave of flu cases and help shield themselves ahead of winter.
"The vaccine is proven to be safe and help prevent those at risk from getting seriously ill and even hospitalised from flu."
The Great Barrier Reef has suffered mass bleaching events in recent years
The Great Barrier Reef is headed for a "grim future" and will suffer a "rapid coral decline" by 2050 but parts may recover if global warming is kept below 2C, a new study has found.
Researchers at the University of Queensland (UQ) used modelling to simulate the lifecycles of certain coral species and found that some were better at adapting to warmer oceans and could help new coral grow.
Reefs near cooler-water currents were also more resilient, giving a "glimmer of hope" to the natural wonder, which has suffered severe climate-induced heat stress in recent years.
The study warned that curbing carbon emissions was crucial to allow coral to recover and avoid a "near collapse" of the reef.
Dr Yves-Marie Bozec, who led the research, said the modelling of more than 3,800 individual reefs that make up the Great Barrier Reef looked at their "eco-evolutionary dynamics". This included how corals interact with each other, how they deal with warmer water and corals in naturally cooler areas.
"We ran all of those factors with the most up-to-date climate projections - and the news was not good," he said.
"We forecast a rapid coral decline before the middle of this century regardless of the emissions scenario."
The Great Barrier Reef is one of the world's most biodiverse ecosystems, stretching more than 2,300km (1,400 miles) off Australia's north-east coast.
It has suffered four significant marine heatwaves between 2016 and 2022, causing much of its coral to expel the algae which gives them life and colour - a process called bleaching, which is often fatal.
A recent report found that parts of the Great Barrier Reef had suffered the largest annual decline in coral cover since records began nearly 40 years ago.
Dr Bozec said some parts of the reef "may partially recover after 2050, but only if ocean warming is sufficiently slow to allow natural adaptation to keep pace with temperature changes".
"Adaptation may keep pace if global warming does not exceed two degrees by 2100. For that to happen, more action is needed globally to reduce carbon emissions which are driving climate change."
Dr Bozec said: "The window for meaningful action is closing rapidly but it hasn't shut".
Under the Paris agreement, almost 200 nations have pledged to limit global temperature rises to 1.5C and to keep them "well below" 2C above those recorded in pre-industrial times, generally considered to mean the late 19th Century.
Prof Peter Mumby, who also worked on the study, said they found "many reefs could persist under the Paris agreement target of two degrees of warming".
"However, higher emissions leading to faster temperature rises would drive most reefs to a near collapse," he said.
Prof Murphy said reefs in areas "where the water doesn't heat up so dramatically because it is well mixed, fared better than others" and reefs close to populations of corals that can regenerate were also healthier.
Identifying areas of the reef network that are more resilient will mean efforts to protect the reef can focus on "strategic parts" of the ecosystem, he added.
Watch: Can you un-bleach coral? BBC visits remote Australian reef to find out
Headaches are something almost all of us deal with at some point.
They can last from a couple of minutes to days and the pain can be sharp, dull, throbbing or stabbing and sometimes spread beyond your head to your scalp, face or even your neck.
Dr Xand van Tulleken, who hosts the BBC's What's Up Docs wellness podcast, knows the feeling all too well and says he gets headaches once a month or every six weeks and it "feels like someone's drilling into my eyeball".
While it's easy to panic about what might be behind a bad headache, Dr Katy Munro, a GP and expert at the National Migraine Centre, says it's rarely something serious.
"It's natural to worry that something is seriously wrong, but the chances of that are actually very small," she explains.
She advises that if it's your "first or worst headache, get it checked out by a doctor," but if you're getting a pattern of milder, recurring headaches, there are a few simple things you can try at home as well as seeing your GP.
1. How big was the impact on your day?
Dr Xand says understanding your own headaches can be surprisingly helpful as they often don't have a single cause so keeping a diary can help you spot patterns and triggers.
For some people, weather such as thunder and lightning could trigger it, while for others it might be sensitivity to light.
"The worst time for me is when we're driving in the autumn and the sun is low and the sun is flickering through the trees...it really aggravates," says Dr Munro.
It's worth noting down things like:
What you were doing when the headache started
What you ate or drank
How well you slept
The weather
For women, track your menstrual cycle, as headaches can be linked to hormonal changes
But, Dr Munro cautions that you shouldn't overdo it.
"I made the mistake of making mine very detailed, which was depressing. Instead keep it simple and maybe write a number from one to 10 to summarise the impact it had on your day.
"It's also useful to track how many crystal-clear days you have, not just the bad ones.
Your doctor can then review it to help identify patterns.
2. Use caffeine wisely
You might think that caffeine is something you should instantly avoid if you have a headache but Dr Munro says the truth is more nuanced.
In small, careful doses, it can make painkillers more effective if you are not having too much caffeine on a daily basis.
"Caffeine is a co-analgesic which means it can boost the effect of a painkiller," Dr Munro explains, but avoid it in the afternoon and evening as it can disrupt your sleep.
It's worth also thinking about your caffeine consumption more broadly - consuming lots of it every day can cause a caffeine overuse headache and if you suddenly stop, you might get a withdrawal headache.
3. Don't skip meals
What you eat and when may make a difference if you're suffering from headaches.
Dr Munro recommends following a diet similar to the Mediterranean one that is rich in protein, healthy fats and complex carbs which can help stabilise your energy levels.
You should avoid quick-release sugary snacks and definitely don't skip meals as that can be a common trigger.
Dr Munro says she found her headaches were helped by cutting out dairy and gluten, though that's not universal.
"I also found eating regularly and taking lunch to work made a difference," she says.
As well as thinking about food, Dr Munro says regular exercise, good sleep, stress management and staying hydrated can also help reduce headaches.
You should drink enough during the day so your pee is a pale clear colour and you don't feel thirsty.
4. Avoid painkillers with codeine
"There are lots of things, like painkillers or anti-nausea tablets, you can buy over the counter that may be helpful to manage headaches" says Dr Munro.
She cautions that you should avoid "anything containing codeine" as it can make some headaches occur more frequently and can worsen symptoms like nausea.
"Painkillers can work extremely well but it does depend on how severe your headache is.
"If they're becoming more frequent or intense, your GP can help you find a more suitable medication."
Make sure you don't regularly take painkillers on more than two days a week as this will reduce your risk of rebound headaches.
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."
"It's shocking," said Dr Josh Doble, the director of policy and advocacy at Community Land Scotland.
"We are an international anomaly."
Getty Images
The Knoydart peninsula can only be reached by boat or a two-day hike
Lawmakers have been grappling with this issue for a long time but the pace of change has picked up since devolution in 1999.
The Land Reform (Scotland) Bill is the Scottish government's latest wide-ranging and controversial attempt to tackle the issue.
It aims to make community buy-outs easier, to provide tenants with more information about the management of their land, and to give ministers the power to break up some large estates at the point of sale.
SNP ministers say the law gives a voice to the voiceless, handing communities a greater say over their futures.
Opponents have called it an unworkable and unprecedented assault on private property rights. There has even been talk of "class war".
Sarah-Jane Laing of Scottish Land and Estates, which represents many large landowners, says the provisions within the act are being "driven by ideology".
She claims the Scottish government "want to see fragmentation and break up of estates as an end in itself" - an aim Ms Laing describes as "really damaging for people, jobs and nature".
Stephanie Harris said Knoydart had gone from strength to strength
The debate has its roots in the profit-driven clearances of the 18th and 19th centuries when landowners drove people from their estates to make way for sheep and cattle.
They know all about that in Knoydart in the west Highlands, a rugged peninsula accessible only by boat or a two-day hike.
In the 1850s, hundreds of Highlanders were violently evicted from Knoydart. Many were forced to emigrate to Canada.
The Crofters Holdings Act was enacted by William Gladstone's Liberal government and granted security of tenure to small-scale tenant farmers known as crofters.
The Old Forge in Inverie is the most remote pub on the British mainland
The peninsula is home to Great Britain's most remote pub, The Old Forge in Inverie, which is run by Stephanie Harris.
She told us that Knoydart had gone from strength to strength over the past 25 years.
"There's lots more people live here, there's lots of kids here now, there's more private businesses and community enterprises going," she explained.
"There's a lot more opportunities and the fact people still want to come here I think is showing that it's working."
Davie Newton was instrumental in much of that change, building and renovating a pub, shop, village hall and more while also helping to run the Knoydart Foundation which manages the land.
"As the community makes decisions over its own future, it gains confidence by making decisions and getting them right, it gains experience by making decisions and getting them wrong," he said.
The new Land Reform Bill aims to make it easier for other communities to follow in Knoydart's footsteps.
Local residents say there are now more opportunities in Knoydart
But clauses which will hand ministers powers to force the break-up of some big estates are deplored by many landowners and their representatives.
Sarah-Jane Laing said it was not true to say that "big is bad" when it comes to Scottish estates.
"It's almost impossible to deliver some of the peatland restoration, the river restoration - alongside building houses, bringing forward renewables, creating businesses - unless you have scale of ownership," she said.
Ms Laing met us at a more modest but still fairly large landholding – Preston Hall Farm in Midlothian to demonstrate her point – that big can in fact be good.
The 650-hectare estate is home to a range of enterprises, from coffee roasters to picture framers to a pottery studio.
"It's the variety of things that are going on which makes it exciting to manage and run," said the landowner, Will Callander.
"To be blunt, we are not making big sums of money. We're not sitting here driving fast cars and living the high life.
"We live here, we work here, and we want to be surrounded by fun, exciting, happy people."
Dr Josh Doble of Community Land Scotland wants more radical reform
Mr Callander has concerns about the latest land reform legislation which has already generated some talk of legal action to challenge some of its provisions.
"Certainty is what we need," he said.
The new bill was supported by Labour and the Liberal Democrats but the Conservatives voted against, calling it unworkable and devastating.
The Scottish Greens abstained, saying it fell far short of what Scotland needed – and accusing the SNP of failing to stand up to landed elites.
Many land reform campaigners agree with the call for more radical reform.
Dr Josh Doble said Scotland had a rural housing crisis, growing inequality, depleted biodiversity and limited economic opportunities for local people.
"All of that stems back to the fact that we have a very small number of people who control what happens in those areas," he argued.
"If we had a much more democratic and equitable way in which land was shared amongst people, we would start to address those issues in an actually meaningful way."
Like many claims in this debate, that is hotly disputed.
Hundreds of years after they began, battles over land reform look set to rage on in 21st century Scotland.
Watch: Filipino families assess damage after Typhoon Kalmaegi
The death toll from flooding caused by one of the strongest typhoons this year in the central Philippines has risen to at least 114, authorities said on Thursday.
Typhoon Kalmaegi has flooded entire towns on Cebu, the region's most populous island, where 71 deaths were reported. Another 127 are missing and 82 injured, officials said.
Cebu provincial authorities reported an additional 28 deaths, which were not included in the tally released by the national civil defence office, according to AFP news agency.
Kalmaegi left the Philippines on Thursday morning and is currently moving toward central Vietnam, where residents are still reeling from floods that have already killed dozens of people.
Most of the deaths were due to drowning, reports said. The storm sent torrents of muddy water down hillsides and into towns and cities.
Damage to Cebu's residential areas was extensive, with many small buildings swept away and a thick carpet of mud left by the retreating floodwaters.
Local officials described the havoc wrought by the storm as "unprecedented".
Residents returning to their destroyed homes are reeling from the deadly floods earlier this week.
Jel-an Moira Servas, a business owner who lives in Mandaue city, told the BBC that she found herself waist-deep in water within minutes when her house became flooded. She quickly evacuated with her family, bringing only light items like food and electronics.
"Right now, the rain has completely stopped and the sun is out, but our houses are still filled with mud, and everything inside is in shambles," she said. "We don't even know where to start cleaning. I can't even look at it without crying."
Getty Images
The national disaster agency said more than 400,000 people had been displaced by the disaster in Cebu, home to 2.5 million people.
The official death toll also includes six crew members of a military helicopter that crashed on Mindanao island, south of Cebu, after it was deployed to assist in relief efforts on Tuesday.
Carlos Jose Lañas, a volunteer rescuer, told the BBC that despite preparing for the worst case, they were caught off-guard by the extent of the flooding.
"This is the worst flood I've ever experienced," the 19-year-old said. "Almost all the rivers here in Cebu overflowed. Even emergency responders did not expect this kind of scenario."
"The rescue operation was too overwhelming for the emergency responders around Cebu, because there were a lot of people asking for help."
Typhoon Kalmaegi, locally called Tino, is the 20th tropical cyclone this year to hit the Philippines, a country prone to powerful storms.
It comes barely a month after back-to-back typhoons killed over a dozen people and wrought damage to infrastructure and crops.
Super Typhoon Ragasa, known locally as Nando, struck in late September, followed swiftly by Typhoon Bualoi, known locally as Opong.
In the months before, an extraordinarily wet monsoon season caused widespread flooding, sparking anger and protests over unfinished and sub-standard flood control systems that have been blamed on corruption.
Typhoon Kalmaegi left the Philippines at 00:30 local time (16:30pm GMT) on Thursday morning.
It has since strengthened, with maximum sustained winds increasing from 150 km/h to 155 km/h.
It is expected to make landfall in central Vietnam on Friday morning, according to forecasts. More than 50 flights there have been cancelled or rescheduled.
Vietnam has already been battling with a week of flooding and record rains that burst riverbanks and flooded some of the country's most popular tourist spots.
Thailand is also bracing for the storm's impact, with local officials warning of possible flash floods, landslides and river overflows caused by Kalmaegi.
Drivers of electric vehicles (EVs) could be facing a new tax in next month's Budget.
With pressure on the chancellor to find tens of billions of pounds in additional revenue, the BBC understands there have been "conversations" within government about the possibility of a new levy on EVs.
A government spokesperson told the BBC: "Fuel duty covers petrol and diesel, but there's no equivalent for electric vehicles. We want a fairer system for all drivers."
The statement follows a report in the Daily Telegraph, that the Budget would include a new pay-per-mile charge for electric vehicles.
According to the Telegraph EV drivers could be charged 3p per mile, on top of other road taxes, amounting to an extra £12 on a journey from London to Edinburgh. Drivers of hybrid cars would also be charged, but at a lower rate.
The paper says the idea is that owners would have to estimate, and pay for, their road usage for the year ahead. If, at the end of the year, they had driven fewer miles they would have a credit to carry over, but if they had driven more they would face a top-up charge.
Drivers of petrol and diesel vehicles pay fuel duty, so the transition to electric vehicles leaves a shortfall in government revenues, which are already under significant pressure.
Since April of this year, electric cars stopped being exempt from vehicle excise duty, due to a change made in the 2022 Budget.
"We want a fairer system for all drivers whilst backing the transition to electric vehicles," a government spokesperson told the BBC.
"It is right to seek a tax system that fairly funds roads, infrastructure and public services," they added.
However, the government was still backing the transition away from petrol and diesel, they said, pointing to £4bn in support already given, including grants to cut upfront costs by up to £3,750 per eligible vehicle,
"We will look at further support measures to make owning electric vehicles more convenient and more affordable," they said.
There has been growing concerns about the emerging "tax gap" from more petrol and diesel cars coming off the roads.
That has put pay-per-mile systems in the spotlight, but there has been push back from some quarters.
Edmund King, AA president, said while the government was losing fuel duty revenue, it should "tread carefully unless their actions slow down the transition to EVs".
He added that car sales indicated that the government's own zero emissions target would not be met this year, and that the detail of the proposal was needed "to ascertain whether these new taxes will be equitable or a poll tax on wheels".
Headaches are something almost all of us deal with at some point.
They can last from a couple of minutes to days and the pain can be sharp, dull, throbbing or stabbing and sometimes spread beyond your head to your scalp, face or even your neck.
Dr Xand van Tulleken, who hosts the BBC's What's Up Docs wellness podcast, knows the feeling all too well and says he gets headaches once a month or every six weeks and it "feels like someone's drilling into my eyeball".
While it's easy to panic about what might be behind a bad headache, Dr Katy Munro, a GP and expert at the National Migraine Centre, says it's rarely something serious.
"It's natural to worry that something is seriously wrong, but the chances of that are actually very small," she explains.
She advises that if it's your "first or worst headache, get it checked out by a doctor," but if you're getting a pattern of milder, recurring headaches, there are a few simple things you can try at home as well as seeing your GP.
1. How big was the impact on your day?
Dr Xand says understanding your own headaches can be surprisingly helpful as they often don't have a single cause so keeping a diary can help you spot patterns and triggers.
For some people, weather such as thunder and lightning could trigger it, while for others it might be sensitivity to light.
"The worst time for me is when we're driving in the autumn and the sun is low and the sun is flickering through the trees...it really aggravates," says Dr Munro.
It's worth noting down things like:
What you were doing when the headache started
What you ate or drank
How well you slept
The weather
For women, track your menstrual cycle, as headaches can be linked to hormonal changes
But, Dr Munro cautions that you shouldn't overdo it.
"I made the mistake of making mine very detailed, which was depressing. Instead keep it simple and maybe write a number from one to 10 to summarise the impact it had on your day.
"It's also useful to track how many crystal-clear days you have, not just the bad ones.
Your doctor can then review it to help identify patterns.
2. Use caffeine wisely
You might think that caffeine is something you should instantly avoid if you have a headache but Dr Munro says the truth is more nuanced.
In small, careful doses, it can make painkillers more effective if you are not having too much caffeine on a daily basis.
"Caffeine is a co-analgesic which means it can boost the effect of a painkiller," Dr Munro explains, but avoid it in the afternoon and evening as it can disrupt your sleep.
It's worth also thinking about your caffeine consumption more broadly - consuming lots of it every day can cause a caffeine overuse headache and if you suddenly stop, you might get a withdrawal headache.
3. Don't skip meals
What you eat and when may make a difference if you're suffering from headaches.
Dr Munro recommends following a diet similar to the Mediterranean one that is rich in protein, healthy fats and complex carbs which can help stabilise your energy levels.
You should avoid quick-release sugary snacks and definitely don't skip meals as that can be a common trigger.
Dr Munro says she found her headaches were helped by cutting out dairy and gluten, though that's not universal.
"I also found eating regularly and taking lunch to work made a difference," she says.
As well as thinking about food, Dr Munro says regular exercise, good sleep, stress management and staying hydrated can also help reduce headaches.
You should drink enough during the day so your pee is a pale clear colour and you don't feel thirsty.
4. Avoid painkillers with codeine
"There are lots of things, like painkillers or anti-nausea tablets, you can buy over the counter that may be helpful to manage headaches" says Dr Munro.
She cautions that you should avoid "anything containing codeine" as it can make some headaches occur more frequently and can worsen symptoms like nausea.
"Painkillers can work extremely well but it does depend on how severe your headache is.
"If they're becoming more frequent or intense, your GP can help you find a more suitable medication."
Make sure you don't regularly take painkillers on more than two days a week as this will reduce your risk of rebound headaches.
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."
Specialist ADHD services for adults are stopping taking on new patients as they struggle to cope with demand, a BBC investigation has shown.
The BBC has identified 15 local areas that have closed waiting lists and another 31 that have introduced tighter criteria, making it more difficult to access support.
Reacting to our investigation, Prof Anita Thapar, chair of NHS England's ADHD taskforce, said the findings were "disturbing", adding there were "enormous risks" for patients.
It comes as she prepares to publish her report into the state of ADHD services on Thursday, which is expected to recommend an overhaul of the way people are supported.
ADHD - attention deficit hyperactivity disorder - affects the way the brain works and can cause people to act impulsively and become easily distracted.
It is thought to affect 5% of children and 3-4% of adults, although many remain undiagnosed.
Getting a diagnosis and treatment, which can include medication and psychological therapy, can be life-changing, experts say.
And now a BBC investigation has found a significant number of areas are restricting access to those waiting lists.
The BBC received information from 59 services, which accounts for the majority of those providing support in England, after submitting freedom of information requests.
The responses showed:
15 trusts had halted all or part of their referrals - some cover large areas and have closed their waiting lists to just some places
In Cheshire, the service for adults has been closed to new patients since 2019
Of the remaining trusts, 31 were rationing care by bringing in exclusions, such as by age or severity
One trust, Coventry and Warwickshire Partnership Trust, is being threatened with legal action for restricting adult assessments to people under 25 only
In some areas, people referred for support by GPs can use something called 'right to choose' to go onto another NHS list or ask for private support, which would provide an alternative option if their local NHS has stopped taking on new referrals.
The BBC investigation also found examples of areas that are innovating. One of those is Surrey where the local service, which has 11,000 adults on its waiting list, is piloting a scheme to train a group of private GPs to carry out assessments and treatment.
Louise has been waiting years for an assessment for ADHD
Louise Nichols, who suspects she has ADHD, is just one of many people affected by the rationing.
Even when she was at primary school she struggled. She was diagnosed with school phobia and ended up being home schooled for a while, and has since found it hard to stay in a job.
The mother-of-one says it is frustrating to see everyone else managing, while she finds daily life hard.
"I need a way of helping me function to the best of my abilities. Whether that's medication or whether that's support," she says.
"I'm hoping to get a part-time job. I want to be part of my community."
The 45-year-old lives in Derbyshire, but as this area does not have its own service, she was on the waiting list with the neighbouring Sheffield trust for two years.
But she was taken off that list in October last year because Sheffield stopped doing assessments for people who live outside their borders, as it's struggling to keep up with demand. There are more than 3,700 people in the county in the same position.
She said it was really disappointing. "I can't understand why a national health service isn't across the whole nation. "
Patients at risk
Prof Thapar said the problems being encountered by people like Louise were unacceptable and showed the "historic neglect" of ADHD by the NHS.
She called the BBC's findings "disturbing", adding: "There's enormous risks. It's not a trivial condition."
With the right support, she said people with ADHD can thrive, but there were "high, high risks" that without that support, people's conditions can become much more complicated.
This, she said, can include mental health problems, substance misuse, unemployment and getting in trouble with the criminal justice system.
And Dr Jessica Eccles, of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, said services were having to make difficult decisions because "rising demand was outstripping capacity" in many parts of the country.
"There are unacceptably long waiting lists," she added.
'Diagnosis transformed my life'
Sam's life has been transformed by getting his ADHD diagnosis
Patients who have received support say it has transformed their lives.
Sam Stone is an example of that, but he had to battle to get help.
The 33-year-old, who lives near Gloucester, paid for a private diagnosis on his health insurance, but his GP wouldn't accept it and he had to go back on an NHS waiting list to get it confirmed.
He is angry at how complicated the system is. "I almost struggle to think about it as a system, to be honest, because it feels like there's such a cacophony of routes that it almost feels like you're constantly trying to hack the system."
Sam said the diagnosis has been life-changing. He had been on and off anti-depressants since the age of 16, but he is now on medication for his ADHD.
He said it was like having a cloud hanging over him removed.
"It's massive, it's huge," Sam says.
Additional reporting by Elena Bailey and data analysis by Rob England