US President Donald Trump says countries that side with the polices of the Brics alliance that go against US interests will be hit with an extra 10% tariff.
"Any country aligning themselves with the Anti-American policies of BRICS, will be charged an ADDITIONAL 10% tariff. There will be no exceptions to this policy," Trump posted on his Truth Social platform on Sunday.
His comments came after Brics members criticised his tariff policies as well as proposing reforms to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and how major currencies are valued.
Trump has long criticised Brics - an alliance designed to boost member nations' standing on the international stage to challenge the US and Western Europe.
Last year, the list of Brics members expanded beyond Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa to include Egypt, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Iran, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE).
The bloc is said to represent more than half of the world's population.
Brics leaders, who started a meeting in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil this weekend, have called for reforms to global institutions and positioned the alliance as a platform for diplomacy amid escalating trade conflicts and geopolitical tensions.
The Times and the Guardian lead with Sir Keir Starmer "facing fresh revolt" as the Times puts it, over the special educational needs and disabilities (Send) shake-up in schools. The Times also has the Texas summer camp disaster - which it calls an "unimaginable tragedy" - on its front page.
The Guardian's front page also includes stories on possible new doctors' strikes, and the exhaustion faced by Palestinians in Gaza as ceasefire negotiations continue.
Labour is "willing to explore" a wealth tax, the Daily Telegraph reports, above its own story on the Send review.
The i leads on Labour promising to avert a "water crisis", reporting that the UK "was 10 years off from turning off the taps".
China is rerouting exports via south-east Asia as it seeks to avoid Trump's tariffs, the FT reports.
The Daily Mirror carries a special report on "dental deserts" as it launches a campaign called "Dentists for All". "Data from 700,000 participants in last year's GP Patient Survey showed it is hardest to get an NHS dentist appointment in South West England," it reports, with Devon being highlighted as one of the country's worst dentistry deserts.
Metro's front page focuses on the Metropolitan Police chief Mark Rowley calling for a policing shake-up that would see 43 county forces turned into 12-15 mega-forces.
The Daily Express reports that "Campaigners have warned Sir Keir Starmer that a stealth tax raid on the state pension would be an 'insult' to older people."
The Sun leads with the BBC's new Match of the Day pundit, Wayne Rooney, and his £800,000 two-year deal.
The Daily Mail's top story is on senior officers saying that the smell of cannabis can make them feel "unsafe", under the headline "Top police chiefs: smell of cannabis is a 'sign of crime'."
The Daily Star has a summer-focused front page, complete with a sunglasses and sombrero-wearing seagull, and a topless man in swimming shorts. "Britain hotter than Delhi", it reports.
Ministers are facing calls to not cut education plans for children and young people with special needs and disabilities (Send).
Campaigners say education, health and care plans (EHCPs) are "precious legal protections", warning that thousands of children could lose access to education if the plans are abolished.
The government has said it inherited the current system "left on its knees". Speaking on the BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg programme, Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson described it as a "complex and sensitive area" when asked if she could rule out scrapping EHCPs.
But Neil O'Brien, the shadow education minister, has criticised the government for "broken promises and U-turns".
An EHCP is a legally binding document which ensures a child or young person with special or educational needs gets the right support from a local authority.
Full details of the proposed changes are due in October, but ministers have not ruled out scrapping the education plans, insisting no decisions have been taken.
In a letter to the Guardian newspaper, campaigners have said that without the documents in mainstream schools, "many thousands of children risk being denied vital provision, or losing access to education altogether".
"Whatever the Send system's problems, the answer is not to remove the rights of children and young people. Families cannot afford to lose these precious legal protections," they added.
Signatories to the letter include the heads of charities, professors, Send parents including actor Sally Phillips, and campaigners including broadcaster Chris Packham.
Speaking to the BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg programme, Ms Phillipson saidL
"What I can say very clearly is that we will strengthen and put in place better support for children.
"I've been spending a lot of time listening to parents, to disability rights groups, to campaigners and to others and to colleagues across Parliament as well, because it's important to get this right," she added, but said it is "tough".
Mr O'Brien, the shadow minister, said the government had "no credibility left".
"This is a government defined by broken promises and u-turns. They said they would employ more teachers and they have fewer. They said they would not raise tax on working people but did," Mr O'Brien said.
Data from the Department for Education released in June showed that the number of EHCPs has increased.
In total, there were 638,745 EHCPs in place in January 2025, up 10.8% on the same point last year.
The number of new plans which started during 2024 also grew by 15.8% on the previous year, to 97,747.
Requests for children to be assessed for EHCPs rose by 11.8% to 154,489 in 2023.
A Department for Education spokesperson said: "We have been clear that there are no plans to abolish Send tribunals, or to remove funding or support from children, families and schools."
The spokesperson added that it would be "totally inaccurate to suggest that children, families and schools might experience any loss of funding or support".
Watch: Kerrville official dodges question on lack of flood warnings
Nearly 80 people have been killed after devastating flash floods swept through parts of central Texas. Rescue efforts are ongoing and the total number of casualties remains unconfirmed, though officials warn the death toll will rise.
Questions have been raised about whether adequate flood warnings were provided and why people weren't evacuated ahead of the deluge.
Most of the fatalities, including 28 children, were in Kerr County, where a girls' camp was inundated.
Judge Rob Kelly, the top elected official in Kerr County, told CBS the severity of the flooding had been unexpected.
"We had no reason to believe that this was gonna be any, anything like what's happened here. None whatsoever," Kelly said.
Reuters
What flood warnings were issued and when?
The flash floods began on Thursday night and continued into Friday morning, with meteorologists saying several months' worth of rain fell in just a few hours.
Within the space of 45 minutes, the Guadalupe River rose by 26ft (8m), causing it to burst its banks.
On Wednesday, the Texas Division of Emergency Management (TDEM) activated state emergency response resources because of "increased threats of flooding in parts of West and Central Texas"
On Thursday afternoon, the National Weather Service (NWS) issued a flood watch that highlighted Kerr County, central Texas, as a place at high risk of flash flooding overnight
At 01:14 local time (06:14 GMT) on Friday a flash flood warning was issued for Kerr Country
At 04:03 local time (09:30 GMT) an emergency flash flood warning was issued for Kerr County, followed by another for the Guadalupe River at 05:34
Was there a failure to warn people?
At a news conference on Sunday, Governor Greg Abbott said people in Texas are used to flash flood warnings.
"But there's no expectation of a water wall of almost 30ft high," he added.
Nim Kidd, chief of the Texas Division of Emergency Management, told reporters: "You have areas where there is no cell phone coverage, plus some coverage.
"It doesn't matter how many alert systems you sign up for, you're not going to get that."
The public can get desensitised to too many weather warnings, said Kerrville City Manager Dalton Rice, according to the Associated Press.
He said he didn't notice any problems and that it was only raining lightly at 03:30 Friday when he went jogging along the Guadalupe River trail.
But by 05:20, the water had risen so fast "we almost weren't able to get out of the park," he said.
Judge Kelly said there is no county-administered warning system in the area because such systems are expensive.
He said that about six years ago, before he took office, the county had looked into a flood warning system along the river, similar to a tornado warning siren. Because of the cost, however, it was never implemented.
The NWS said it was "heartbroken by the tragic loss of life in Kerr County" and defended itself.
"On July 3, the NWS office in Austin/San Antonio, TX conducted forecast briefings for emergency management in the morning and issued a Flood Watch in the early afternoon.
Flash Flood Warnings were issued on the night of July 3 and in the early morning of July 4, giving preliminary lead times of more than three hours before warning criteria were met."
After some officials in Texas appeared to blame the NWS for underestimating the rainfall, former Weather Service officials told the New York Times newspaper that the forecasts were as good as they could have been given the huge amounts of rainfall and storm's abrupt escalation.
Did staff shortages at the National Weather Service affect flood warnings?
Before the tragedy, there had been concerns over the Trump administration's budget cuts to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) - the government agency that operates the National Weather Service.
The Fiscal Year 2026 budget includes cuts and closures of some weather research laboratories, while the Department of Government Efficiency (Doge) has slashed hundreds of employees at NOAA and the NWS.
Meteorologists in the US and elsewhere have expressed concerns over "reduced number of weather balloons" that observe wind, relative humidity and pressure above the ground.
They claim that budget cuts have resulted in 20% fewer weather balloons being released for such observations, impacting the accuracy of weather forecasting.
The New York Times reported that critical positions of the NWS were vacant on Friday morning, with some experts questioning whether staffing shortages had impeded the agency's efforts to coordinate with local emergency managers.
However, Tom Fahy, legislative director of the NWS Employees Organization, told NBC News: "The WFOs [weather forecasting offices] had adequate staffing and resources as they issued timely forecasts and warnings leading up to the storm".
And the Associated Press quoted Jason Runyen, a meteorologist in the National Weather Service office, as saying their office that delivers forecasts for that part of central Texas had extra staff on duty at the time of the storms - five, instead of the usual two.
How has the US government responded to questions about flood preparedness?
Asked whether the tragedy was due to "fundamental failure" by the government to provide early warnings, US Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said the "weather is difficult to predict", but that President Donald Trump was seeking to modernise the current system.
In response to questions during a Sunday press conference about the impact of cuts to the NWS, she said that she would "carry your concerns back to the federal government".
Over the years the NWS had done well, Noem said, but "we know that everybody wants more warning time, and that's why we're working to upgrade the technologies that have been neglected for far too long".
Noem said that it was difficult for forecasters to predict how much rain would fall but that the Trump administration would make it a priority to upgrade the technology used to deliver warnings.
She added that when Trump took office he "wanted to fix and is currently upgrading the technology" and that "reforms are ongoing".
Trump is planning a possible visit to the area on Friday.
Al-Qaeda affiliate Jama'at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM) is the main group behind a surge in militant jihadist attacks sweeping across several West African nations, especially Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger.
On 1 July, the group said it had carried out a major coordinated attack on sevenmilitary locations in western Mali, including near the borders with Senegal and Mauritania.
There is growing concern about the impact JNIM could have on the stability of the region.
Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger have struggled to contain the violence – and this is one of the factors that contributed to several military coups in the three Sahel countries over the last five years.
But like the civilian governments they replaced, the juntas are seemingly unable to stem the growing jihadist threat, especially from JNIM.
What is JNIM?
JNIM has become one of Africa's deadliest jihadist groups within the space of just a few years.
It was formed in Mali in 2017, as a coalition of five jihadist militant groups:
Ansar Dine
Katibat Macina
Al-Mourabitoun
Ansar al-Islam
The Sahara branch of al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb
These groups started collaborating after the French military pushed back several jihadist and separatist organisations that were operating in northern Mali in 2012. Eventually, the leaders of the groups came together to create JNIM.
In recent years, they have expanded geographically, establishing new areas of operation.
JNIM is led by Iyad Ag Ghali, a former Malian diplomat who belongs to the Tuareg ethnic group. He was at the helm of the Tuareg uprising against the Malian government in 2012 which sought to establish an independent state for the Tuareg people called Azawad. Deputy leader Amadou Koufa is from the Fulani community.
Analysts believe the central leadership helps guide local branches which operate across the Sahel region of West Africa.
While it is difficult to know exactly how many fighters there are in JNIM's ranks, or how many have recently been recruited, experts suggest it could be several thousand - mostly young men and boys who lack other economic opportunities in one of the poorest regions in the world.
What does JNIM want?
The group rejects the authority of the Sahel governments, seeking to impose its strict interpretation of Islam and Sharia in the areas where it operates.
Analysts say that in some areas, JNIM has been known to impose strict dress codes, implement bans against music and smoking, order men to grow beards and prevent women from being in public spaces alone.
This version of Islam can be at odds with the religion as practised by local communities, says Yvan Guichaoua, a senior researcher at the Bonn International Centre for Conflict Studies.
"These practices are clearly breaking from established practices and certainly not very popular," he says.
"But whether it's attractive or not, also depends on what the state is able to deliver, and there has been a lot of disappointment in what the state has been doing for the past years."
Disillusionment with the secular justice system can make the introduction of Sharia courts appealing to some.
Where does JNIM operate?
After its beginnings in central and northern Mali, JNIM rapidly expanded its reach. While its strongholds are in Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger, JNIM has also carried out attacks in Benin, Togo and at one point Ivory Coast.
It is now operational throughout Mali and 11 of Burkina Faso's 13 regions, according to the Global Initiative against Transnational Organised Crime (Gi-Toc), a civil society organisation.
In the last year, Burkina Faso has become the epicentre of the group's activities – predominately the northern and eastern border regions. This is, in part, because of divisions and defections in the country's military as well as how deeply embedded the militants are in the local communities, according to Beverly Ochieng, a senior analyst for security consultancy firm Control Risk.
"JNIM have an ability to embed in local communities or to be able to use local grievances as a means of recruiting or winning sympathy towards their cause," she told the BBC.
Are JNIM attacks increasing in scale?
In recent months violent incidents have spiked in Burkina Faso to previously unseen levels, according to analysis from BBC Monitoring's jihadist media team. Major attacks have also recently been carried out in Mali, Niger and Benin.
In the first half of 2025, JNIM said it carried out over 280 attacks in Burkina Faso – double the number for the same period in 2024, according to data verified by the BBC.
The group has claimed to have killed almost 1,000 people across the Sahel since April, most of them members of the security force or militias fighting alongside government forces, according to BBC Monitoring data.
Almost 800 of these have been in Burkina Faso alone. Casualties in Mali were the next highest (117) and Benin (74).
"The frequency of attacks in June is just unheard of so far," says Mr Guichaoua. "They have really stepped up their activities in the past weeks."
The militants use a variety of tactics designed to cause maximum disruption, Ms Ochieng explains.
"They plant IEDs [improvised explosive devices] on key roads, and have long-range capabilities.
"They [also] target security forces in military bases, so a lot of their weapons come from that. They have also attacked civilians - in instances where communities are perceived to be cooperating with the government."
Starlink - a company owned by Elon Musk which provides internet via satellites - has also been exploited by groups like JNIM to enhance their capabilities, according to a recent report by Gi-Toc.
The company provides high-speed internet where regular mobile networks are unavailable or unreliable.
Militant groups smuggle Starlink devices into the country along well-established contraband routes, G-toch says.
"Starlink has made it much easier for [militant groups] to plan and execute attacks, share intelligence, recruit members, carry out financial transactions and maintain contacts with their commanders even during active conflict," an analyst from Gi-Toc told the BBC's Focus on Africa podcast.
The BBC has contacted Starlink for comment.
How is JNIM funded?
The group has multiple sources of income.
At one time in Mali, funds were raised through kidnapping foreigners for ransom but few remain in the country because of the deteriorating security situation.
Cattle-rustling has now become a major source of income, according to an analyst from Gi-Toc. They did not want to be named as it could risk their safety in Mali.
"Mali is a big exporter of cattle so it's easy for them to steal animals and sell them," the analyst said.
Research by Gi-Toc shows that in one year in just one district of Mali, JNIM made $770,000 (£570,000) from livestock. Based on this figure, JNIM could be earning millions of dollars from cattle theft.
JNIM also imposes various taxes, according to experts.
"They tax the gold, but basically tax anything that goes through their territory, whether that's listed goods or illicit goods," Gi-Toc says.
"There can be an extortion type of tax, where JNIM tell citizens they need to pay in return for protection."
The militants have also been known to set up blockades, at which people must pay to leave and enter the area, according to Ms Ochieng.
What about efforts to fight them?
France's armed forces were on the ground supporting the government in Mali for almost a decade - with over 4,000 troops stationed across the Sahel region fighting groups that went on to form JNIM, as well as Islamic State in the Greater Sahara.
While they had some initial success in 2013 and 2014, reclaiming territory from the militants and killing several senior commanders, this did not stop JNIM's growth after it was formed.
"Counterinsurgency efforts have failed so far because of this idea that JNIM can be beaten militarily, but it is only through negotiation that the group will end," Gi-Toc's analyst suggested.
In 2014, Sahelian countries banded together to form the G5 Sahel Task Force, a 5,000-strong group of international troops. However, over the past couple of years, Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger have withdrawn, undermining the task force's ability to tackle the insurgency.
Minusma, the UN peacekeeping force – while not a counter-insurgency effort – was also in Mali for a decade to support efforts, however it left the country at the end of 2024.
What impact have military coups had on JNIM?
Military coups took place in Mali in 2020 and 2021, Burkina Faso in 2022 and Niger in 2023.
Poor governance under the military juntas in Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger subsequently has allowed militant groups like JNIM to flourish, according to analysts.
These juntas were swift to tell French troops to leave, replacing them with Russian support and a joint force formed by the three Sahelian countries.
Though Russian paramilitary group Wagner has withdrawn its troops from Mali entirely, Africa Corps, a Kremlin-controlled paramilitary group, will remain in place.
In Burkina Faso, a so-called "volunteer" army, launched in 2020 before the military takeover, is one strategy being used to fight militants. Junta leader Ibrahim Traoré has said he wants to recruit 50,000 fighters.
But experts say many of these volunteers are conscripted by force. Inadequate training means they often suffer heavy casualties. They are also often a target for JNIM attacks.
The military juntas in Burkina Faso and Mali have also been accused by human rights organisations of committing atrocities against civilians, particularly ethnic Fulanis. Human rights group say the government often conflates the Fulani community with Islamist armed groups, which has furthered hampered peace efforts.
Between January 2024 and March 2025, the military government and their Russian allies were responsible for 1,486 civilian casualties in Mali, according to Gi-Toc.
This extreme violence against civilians has generated anger towards the government, fuelling further recruitment for JNIM.
There are extraordinary secret surveillance images - now largely forgotten - that in their own grainy and mysterious way, tell the story of missed opportunities that maybe, just maybe, could have stopped the horrific suicide attacks that took place in London 20 years ago.
They are images of the ringleader of the 7/7 bombings - first caught on camera at an al-Qaeda-associated training camp in the Lake District in 2001.
Two more images from 2004 show him - name and intentions then unknown - meeting a different cell of bomb plotters outside London and being followed by an MI5 team as he made his way back to Leeds.
PA Media
A surveillance photo shows Mohammed Sidique Khan (right) the ringleader of the 7/7 bombings
Nobody joined all these dots, and worked out the man was Mohammad Sidique Khan until he and the three other members of his gang had killed 52 people with their four homemade bombs.
Despite being seen meeting other men of real concern, he was never made a priority for investigation.
For months I have been asking many of the top people - from prime ministers through to former extremists - to reflect on what they have learned over the 20 years since 7/7. Sir Tony Blair was prime minister on 7/7. Hindsight, he told me, was a wonderful thing.
I've found that the British state has, arguably, the most evolved and sophisticated suite of powers and tools possible to identify, disrupt, prosecute, ban and jail people for terrorism offences.
But at the same time the threats that those powers are being used to counter today are so much more complex than they were in 2005. And so, 20 years since 7/7, are we any safer now than we were then?
'Of course it was a failure'
The 7/7 attacks were the worst wake-up call imaginable for the UK's then outdated counter-terrorism operations.
Until that day in 2005, the UK's response to terrorism groups was heavily influenced by the experience of combating the IRA, which organised itself along military lines.
Al-Qaeda (AQ) was also broadly organised in a military way - directing its adherents, including the 7/7 bombers. But the key lesson from 7/7 was that this analogy only went so far.
MI5 and the police realised they had to work closer together to penetrate AQ's cells.
MI5 teams were the experts in secretly gathering intelligence. They could bug, burgle and listen to "subjects of interest", to use the jargon. But in the run-up to 7/7, the agency often fell short of sharing that information widely and quickly enough.
PA Media
Video footage taken by emergency services of the scene at Russell Square Tube station in London, after a bomb blast onboard a train
Peter Clarke was the Metropolitan Police officer in charge of counter-terrorism policing at the time of 7/7.
"I haven't spoken to anybody who was involved in either counter-terrorism or in the intelligence agencies, who don't regard it as a failure," he told me. "Of course it was."
The failure was complex. Lord Jonathan Evans, the former head of MI5 - and at the time of 7/7, the deputy head - highlights the pressure intelligence teams were under.
"You have to make choices in counter-terrorism investigations. You can't investigate everything, so the question is are you investigating the most immediately threatening intelligence and making the right priority calls?"
The reason why the future 7/7 ringleader was put to one side in 2004 was that there was no substantial intelligence that he was actually planning an attack.
The agencies were focusing on a huge bomb plot they knew about - Operation Crevice. It was run by the men Khan was seen meeting. But the brutal fact was that they had no idea that Khan could be a serious threat because he had been discounted as a priority for further investigation.
How MI5 foiled the liquid bomb plot
The 2005 attacks forced the agency and police to think deeply about how they could end a doom loop of not investigating someone because they had decided they didn't know enough to think they were worth investigating.
Some of that was about funding - and there was a huge injection into counter-terrorism in the years that followed.
But more importantly MI5, alongside their partners in the police, began to develop a better "triage" system to work out which of the thousands of potential plotters they had titbits of intelligence about needed to be prioritised.
That helped get the police closer, more quickly, to the point where they could seize evidence to land someone in jail.
Metropolitan Police via Getty Images
After 7/7, Parliament created a new offence of preparing for acts of terrorism
Nowhere was this more successful than in Operation Overt, which came a year after 7/7. The Overt plotters had an al-Qaeda recipe for a liquid bomb disguised as a soft drink - and they planned to blow up transatlantic planes.
MI5 captured in extraordinary detail the gang's preparations. They saw the men working with tools to make strange-looking devices from household items including drink bottles and camera flash circuits.
Nobody was sure what they were up to - until the surveillance revealed the men recording "martyrdom" videos envisaging their own deaths mid-air.
This time, the intelligence was being shared in almost real-time - and the police and prosecutors dived in and arrested and charged the gang before the devices were finally ready. The success of Operation Overt shows that plots could be disrupted early.
Lord Evans points to another critical shift in thinking. "We had always been predominantly, not exclusively, a London-based organisation," he says. "But when you recognise that the 7/7 bombers came down from Yorkshire, the threat was national.
"We needed to have an effective regional network working very closely with the police in the major cities and that was accelerated and was a very successful way of ensuring that we were able to find out what was happening in Manchester or Birmingham or wherever as effectively as we had traditionally done in London."
Then, in 2006, Parliament created a new offence of preparing for acts of terrorism.
This meant the police could swoop in even earlier than in the case of Operation Overt - even before an attacker's plan was settled. All they needed now was to show a court that an individual had a terrorism mindset and was taking steps towards an outrage - such as researching targets, even if their plan was not finalised.
Max Hill KC led some of the UK's most complex terrorism trials - and went on to be the Director of Public Prosecutions between 2018 and 2023. He always wanted the strongest case to put to a jury and judge - in order to get the longest possible sentence to protect the public. But in the case of a bomb-maker, that presented a dilemma for the police and MI5.
"How long to let a person run towards their ultimate aim of deploying devices?" he says. "The longer you leave it, the more serious the jail sentence. But the longer you wait, the greater the risk that there will be damage or harm."
Success after success followed - and cells of plotters were also increasingly infiltrated by spooks finding secret ways to capture chats about plans. Until, that is, the rise of the self-styled Islamic State, which changed all of that once again.
DIY attacks across Europe
By 2014, thousands of young radicalised men and women had flocked to the territory the group had seized in Syria and Iraq, convinced that the ultra-violent movement was building a utopian state.
Its ideologues told some followers, who could not travel, to plan their own attacks at home and without any direction from commanders.
This was a new and terrifying prospect - and led to a wave of DIY attacks across Europe, including in the UK. So the government turned to other tools to "disrupt" extremists coming home from abroad, by cancelling their passports or stripping citizenship.
The first of a number of attacks in 2017 was committed by a killer who drove into pedestrians on Westminster Bridge before stabbing to death a police officer at the gates of Parliament. He acted without warning and seemingly alone, rapidly self-radicalising - moving from thought to violence before his intentions became clear to anyone else.
In Pictures via Getty Images and Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
In 2017 a killer drove into pedestrians on Westminster Bridge before stabbing to death a police officer at the gates of Parliament
The rapidity of these attacks - and the regularity of them, disrupted or acted out, had an extraordinary consequence that further complicated the picture. Far-right extremists watched and learned and, seeking a form of "revenge", became determined to respond in kind.
In 2015, a 25-year-old member of National Action, a now banned extreme right-wing group, carried out a racist attack on a Sikh-heritage dentist in a supermarket. The attacker acted alone. The man who murdered Jo Cox MP a year later, during the Brexit referendum, planned and acted in a similar manner.
This DIY rapid violence did not rely on personal connections to puppet-masters. It was increasingly linked to how extremists found and absorbed extremist material all over the internet.
AFP via Getty Images
Jo Cox was a Labour MP for Batley and Spen and died after being shot and stabbed in her constituency
But that also presented an opportunity. The security service and partners - including the FBI - created teams of "online role-players". They would pose as extremist recruiters in vile chat groups to identify would-be attackers and befriend them. It began to work.
One early success in 2017 saw a young man, angry at the death of his uncle who had been fighting in Syria, ask these spies for a bomb to attack Downing Street. It was a crazy and unrealisable plan. But he genuinely wanted to do it.
The Prevent system - which was set up to identify potential extremists and to stop them supporting terrorism - struggled to win public support amid fears that it was a network to spy on people.
But today it is a vital tool in the state's armoury - with figures showing that since 2015, some 5,000 young people have been identified as being at risk of extremism and given support, typically through counselling and mentoring, to reject it.
Why MI5 failed to stop the Manchester bombing
The Manchester Arena terror attack of 2017 - in which 22 people were killed - revealed that MI5 missed a significant chance to focus on the would-be suicide bomber and stop him - but it also revealed how lax security at public gatherings could be exploited.
Figen Murray's son Martyn Hett was one of the 22 killed.
"You don't ever come to terms with it," she tells me. "It's the brutality, the randomness. These people who commit terrorist attacks do not care who they kill. They don't select people in most cases.
"Our loved ones are pawns in a big game, because terrorists really want to make a statement against the state."
Her grief spurred her on to come up with one of the biggest legal changes of the last 20 years - a practical measure to protect people if the security services fail to spot an incoming threat.
Oli Scarff/AFP via Getty Images
In 2017, 22 people were killed in a suicide bombing at The Manchester Arena
Along with Nick Aldworth, a former senior police officer, they lobbied government to create "Martyn's Law".
The legislation - which is coming into force over two years - requires venues to have a security plan to help stop acts of terrorism on their premises.
In time, sites with more than 800 people will need extra measures such as CCTV or security staff and all venues that can hold more than 200 people will have to devise some kind of plan to protect the public and make sure their staff know how to act on it in an emergency.
At the O2 Arena in London, for example, staff process arriving guests a bit like they are going through an airport. There are machines available to scan for weapons too.
Violence without an ideology
Deputy Assistant Commissioner Vicky Evans, the current head of counter-terrorism policing, says her officers are seeing suspects getting younger, with violent material on the internet playing a role in that.
In some cases officers are trying to work out what to do about people bent on extreme violence, inspired by acts of terrorism, but who have no clear-cut ideology.
Many of these complex cases are referred by the police to the Prevent counter-radicalisation programme to see if specialist mentors can help.
Peter Powell/AFP via Getty Images
After the Southport attack, riots broke out across England
The case of the Southport murderer Alex Rudakubana - who had been repeatedly flagged to Prevent - is at the heart of a debate about internet-fuelled violence. The forthcoming public inquiry will look for answers, and may even mean we have to rethink what we mean by the word "terrorism".
The Home Secretary Yvette Cooper's recent decision to ban Palestine Action under terrorism laws - for causing massive criminal damage - is further adding to a national debate about what threats the counter-terrorism network should confront.
Today, many many more powers are in place - and the UK's counter-terrorism network, which has a dedicated secret headquarters in London, is a well-oiled machine. But the threat is more diverse than ever.
Since 2017, the police say there have been 15 domestic terrorism incidents and they have disrupted 43 "late-stage" plots.
In the wake of the 2005 attacks, Sir Tony Blair was accused of trampling over civil liberties in the search for the right set of powers he thought the security services needed.
I asked whether he had got the balance right - and the posed back at me will be in the mind of every one of his successors.
"The most fundamental basic liberty is to be protected from violence - and particularly random terrorist violence," he said.
"You've got to ask yourself, are the policy tools we have in our toolbox adequate to deal with the threat?"
Additional Reporting: Jonathan Brunert
Top image credits: AFP via Getty and Justin Talli
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King Charles warned against "those who would seek to divide us"
King Charles has called on people to stand united "against those who would seek to divide us", in a message marking the 20th anniversary of the 7/7 attacks in London.
He condemned the "senseless acts of evil" that saw bombs detonated on the capital's public transport system, killing 52 people and injuring more than 700.
The King called for a "spirit of unity" and said the attacks had shown the importance of "building a society where people of all faiths and backgrounds can live together with mutual respect and understanding".
Commemorative events will be held in the capital on Monday, remembering the victims of the 7 July 2005 bombings, carried out by Islamist extremists.
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A London bus ripped apart by an explosion in the 7/7 bombings 20 years ago
That will include a National Service of Commemoration at St Paul's Cathedral, where the King will be represented by the Duke of Edinburgh.
The suicide attacks in central London had seen bombs detonated on three underground trains and a double-decker bus, causing terrible casualties in the capital's rush hour.
The King's message said his "special prayers remain with all those whose lives were forever changed on that terrible summer's day", including those who carried the "physical and psychological scars".
He praised those who helped with the rescue and the "extraordinary courage and compassion that emerged from the darkness of that day".
King Charles has been a dedicated supporter of building bridges between different faiths and encouraging tolerance and respect between religions.
"While the horrors will never be forgotten, we may take comfort from the way such events rally communities together in solidarity, solace and determination.
"It is this spirit of unity that has helped London, and our nation, to heal," he said.
Watch: BBC reports from Camp Mystic, where search for missing girls continues
At least 78 people have been confirmed dead in central Texas and another 41 are missing following flash floods on Friday.
Sixty-eight of the fatalities, including 28 children, occurred in Kerr County, where a riverside Christian girls' camp was deluged. Ten girls and a counsellor from Camp Mystic are still missing.
Officials say the death toll is certain to rise. More storms are expected in the next 24-48 hours in the region, which could hamper rescue teams who are already facing venomous snakes as they sift through mud and debris.
Three days after the inundation, one of the largest search-and-rescue efforts in recent Texas history was shifting towards a recovery operation.
Of those recovered in Kerr County, 18 adults and 10 children have yet to be formally identified.
Texas Governor Greg Abbott said on Sunday that authorities would "stop at nothing" to ensure every missing person is found.
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"It was nothing short of horrific to see what those young children went through," said Abbott, a day after he toured the area.
A major focus of the search has been Camp Mystic, a popular summer camp for girls perched on the banks of the Guadalupe River, which suffered significant damage.
The catastrophe unfolded before daybreak on Friday as the river rose 26ft (8m) in the span of just 45 minutes while most campers were asleep.
Several young campers and the camp's longtime director, Richard "Dick" Eastland, are among the dead.
'It's very traumatising' - Kerrville local reacts to flood devastation
Greg Froelick, a former Navy Seal and volunteer with the rescue group 300 Justice, is helping the effort to find survivors.
Speaking to the BBC, he said he had heard of victims being found up to eight miles downriver from where Camp Mystic once stood.
He said he has seen "clothing and items from the camp dressers scattered everywhere, up and down the river".
There is also uncertainty about how many other people were camping in the area for the Fourth of July weekend - and how many may have been swept away in the floods.
A two-lane highway that skirts the Guadalupe River and connects the city of Kerrville to Camp Mystic is a scene of devastation.
Ravaged homes are surrounded by fallen trees and furniture on lawns. Fences are toppled and utility lines down in some areas.
Watch: Kerrville official is asked about lack of flood warnings
President Donald Trump signed a major disaster declaration on Sunday for Kerr County, activating the Federal Emergency Management Agency to Texas. He also said he would probably visit the state on Friday.
"We're working very closely with representatives from Texas, and it's a horrible thing that took place, absolutely horrible," Trump said on Sunday in New Jersey.
On the ground, local residents are stepping up to support relief efforts - collecting supplies, offering shelter, and doing what they can to help neighbours displaced by the storm.
Alma Garcia drove in from the city of San Antonio to deliver home-cooked meals to residents and volunteers helping with the clean-up effort.
The BBC saw her pull over on the side of the road and take off a top layer T-shirt to give to a resident.
"She was all wet, I told her she's going to need it," Ms Garcia told the BBC.
Local resident Perla started collecting clothes and shoes on Friday after she finished her shift at Walmart. She dropped them off at a shelter the next morning.
"I've never seen something like this before," she told the BBC.
Meanwhile, well wishes poured in from around the world.
In Rome, Pope Leo XIV offered special prayers on Sunday for the bereaved in Texas.
"I would like to express sincere condolences to all the families who have lost loved ones, in particular their daughters who were in summer camp, in the disaster caused by the flooding of the Guadalupe River in Texas in the United States," the pontiff said.
"We pray for them."
Angélica Casas and Alex Lederman contributed to this report
Delegations from Israel and Hamas have begun an indirect round of ceasefire talks in Qatar, as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu heads to Washington to meet Donald Trump.
Netanyahu said he thinks his meeting with the US president on Monday should help progress efforts to reach a deal for the release of more hostages and a ceasefire in Gaza.
He said he had given his negotiators clear instructions to achieve a ceasefire agreement under conditions Israel has accepted.
Hamas has said it has responded to the latest ceasefire proposal in a positive spirit, but it seems clear there are still gaps between the two sides that need to be bridged if any deal is to be agreed.
For now, Hamas still seems to be holding out for essentially the same conditions it has previously insisted on - including a guarantee of an end to all hostilities at the end of any truce and the withdrawal of Israeli troops.
Netanyahu's government has rejected this before.
The Israeli position may also not have shifted to any major degree. As he was leaving Israel for the US, Netanyahu said he was still committed to what he described as three missions: "The release and return of all the hostages, the living and the fallen; the destruction of Hamas's capabilities - to kick it out of there, and to ensure that Gaza will no longer constitute a threat to Israel."
Qatari and Egyptian mediators will have their work cut out during the indirect talks between Israel and Hamas in trying to overcome these sticking points, which have have derailed other initiatives since the previous ceasefire ended in March.
Israel has since resumed its offensive against Hamas with great intensity, as well as imposing an eleven-week blockade on aid entering Gaza, which was partially lifted several weeks ago.
The Israeli government says these measures have been aimed at further weakening Hamas and forcing it to negotiate and free the hostages.
Just in the past 24 hours, the Israeli military says it struck 130 Hamas targets and killed a number of militants.
But the cost in civilian lives in Gaza continues to grow as well. Hospital officials in Gaza said more than 30 people were killed on Sunday.
The question now is not only whether the talks in Qatar can achieve a compromise acceptable to both sides - but also whether Trump can persuade Netanyahu that the war must come to an end at their meeting on Monday.
Many in Israel already believe that is a price worth paying to save the remaining hostages.
Once again, they came out on to the streets on Saturday evening, calling on Netanyahu to reach a deal so the hostages can finally be freed.
But there are hardline voices in Netanyahu's cabinet, including the national security minister Itamar Ben Gvir and the finance minister Bezalel Smotrich, who have once again expressed their fierce opposition to ending the war in Gaza before Hamas has been completely eliminated.
Once again, there is the appearance of real momentum towards a ceasefire deal, but uncertainty over whether either the Israeli government or Hamas is ready to reach an agreement that might fall short of the key conditions they have so far set.
And once again, Palestinians in Gaza and the families of Israeli hostages still held there are fervently hoping this will not be another false dawn.
The Israeli military launched a campaign in Gaza in response to Hamas's 7 October 2023 attacks, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.
At least 57,338 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.
Harjinder Butoy says he lost everything from the day he was sentenced
Former sub-postmaster Harjinder Butoy spent more time in prison than any other victim of the Post Office Horizon IT scandal.
After 18 months in jail, it then took another 15 years to clear his name. He is one of dozens of sub-postmasters who gave evidence to the official inquiry into what happened.
The inquiry chair, Sir Wyn Williams, will deliver the first part of his final report on Tuesday, which will focus on the human impact of the scandal and will also look at compensation.
But Mr Butoy is not sure he will be able to watch. "It's going to bring back too many bad memories for me," he told the BBC, adding he needs "someone to be punished".
The Post Office scandal is believed to be one of the biggest miscarriages of justices in UK history.
Thousands of victims were wrongly blamed for financial losses from the faulty Horizon computer system which was rolled out across the Post Office branch network from 1999.
More than 900 people were prosecuted and 236 were sent to prison.
Mr Butoy was one of them, convicted of stealing more than £200,000 from his branch in Nottinghamshire in 2007.
"We lost everything from the day I got sentenced. We lost our business. I had to declare bankruptcy. My wife and three kids had to move back in with my parents, " he says.
After he was released from prison his conviction meant he struggled to find work and his health also suffered.
"I just want everyone to know the impact, what's happened to us all. But I also need someone to be punished and let them go to prison and feel like what we've been through," he says.
His conviction was overturned in 2021. Parliament later passed a law exonerating all those who had been convicted.
'Huge day'
The inquiry heard from 189 people who gave evidence on how the scandal had turned their lives upside down.
Many lost their businesses, some lost their homes, and most lost their reputations and financial security.
The second part of the inquiry's report – on how the scandal happened and why – may not be published until 2026.
Nichola Arch (left) and Wendy Buffrey say the publication of the report will be "huge"
Although Harjinder Butoy may not be watching, Wendy Buffrey and Nichola Arch will be among dozens of victims and their families travelling to hear Sir Wyn speak as he presents Volume 1 of his report. Many more will be watching the proceedings livestreamed over the internet.
Mrs Buffrey, who had a Post Office in Cheltenham, was suspended after an audit in December 2008 and prosecuted. She had to sell her house and business to pay off the alleged shortfall in her accounts, and has suffered with her mental health.
She says the publication of the report is going to be "a huge day".
"To actually have the establishment recognise what they've put us through is huge," she said. "The apologies we've had from the Post Office have been so mealy-mouthed, not thought through, and really not sincere."
Mrs Arch, who managed the Chalford Hill branch near Stroud, says: "You would hope the government would acknowledge every detail of that report."
She was accused of stealing from pensioners, shunned by her local community, and spat on outside a local supermarket.
After two years she was found not guilty, "but the damage had been done by then".
The impact on her family was "like a tsunami", she says. "It's like a cobweb. It just affects every single friend, family, child, you know, connected to you."
For many victims of the scandal, the most pressing issue is financial redress.
That's the main reason why Sir Wyn has split his report into two, to publish his findings on the progress of compensation as soon as possible.
He has taken a keen interest on how redress is being delivered, holding several hearings on the issue and delivering an interim report in 2023 where he likened the various schemes to a "patchwork quilt with some holes in it".
"Compensation has been a painful issue," says solicitor David Enright, from Howe & Co, which represents hundreds of wronged sub-postmasters.
"However, we are also hoping [the report] will remind people of what the real harm has been, and that is the shattering of families across the country. "
According to the latest figures from the government, more than £1bn has been paid out in compensation to over 7,300 sub-postmasters.
However, hundreds are still waiting for their final payments and many are locked in disputes over the amount they have been offered.
Mr Butoy has only just submitted his claim for compensation. It has taken three years to gather all the necessary reports and paperwork.
"Clearing our name was so good. But compensation is very hard. It's like they don't believe us, don't trust us."
His solicitor, Neil Hudgell, whose firm also represents hundreds of other former sub-postmasters, told the BBC that if the situation doesn't improve, full and fair redress for all victims could take another two to three years.
Hudgell Solicitors says it has helped more than 300 people agree damages totalling more than £170m. However, Mr Hudgell says his firm still has more than 700 cases waiting to be resolved through the various compensation schemes.
Early years teachers in England will be offered tax-free payments of £4,500 to work in nurseries in disadvantaged areas as part of government efforts to boost standards.
The incentives are designed to attract and retain fully qualified staff in 20 areas, the education department said on Monday without confirming exactly which places would benefit.
The scheme is part of a wider strategy designed to narrow the attainment gap among pre-school children due to be unveiled on Monday.
Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson said the plans would "help give our youngest children the very best start in life" - but the Conservatives said Labour's tax changes had hit nurseries hard.
The government said it would spend £1.5 billion on its so-called Best Start in Life strategy, which builds on Labour's campaign pledge to reform services for the youngest children in order to drive up education and health standards.
The education department said only one in 10 nurseries currently have a specialist early years teacher.
The direct payments to trained teachers are intended to incentivise staff to work in areas with the most acute needs.
Payments will begin next year, though no details about the eligibility criteria have been published.
Also included in the package of reforms is a proposal to increase the number of Ofsted inspection nurseries undergo, including ensuring all new providers are assessed within 18 months.
Announcing the plans, Phillipson said "the best way of reducing inequalities is by tackling them early".
Neil Leith of the Early Years Alliance said the early years announcement was a "positive development" but warned the strategy would only work "if it is backed up with the tangible support - financial or otherwise".
Shadow education minister Neil O'Brien said that an increase in employers' National Insurance contributions had left nurseries across the country "on the brink".
Some have had to "hike fees or shut their doors", he said, adding: "Families are being left to face higher childcare costs and fewer places."
Israel says it has launched strikes on Houthi targets in three Yemeni ports, including the western port of Hodeidah, Ras Isa and Saif.
The attacks come shortly after the Israeli military issued evacuation orders for civilians in the areas, warning of imminent air strikes.
Israeli defence minister Israel Katz confirmed on social media the strikes on the Houthi-controlled sites including a power station and ship that was hijacked by the group two years ago.
Houthi-run media in Yemen said the strikes hit the port of Hodeidah, but no further details were provided on damage or casualties.
Katz said the strikes were part of "Operation Black Flag" and warned that the Houthis "will continue to pay a heavy price for their actions".
"The fate of Yemen is the same as the fate of Tehran. Anyone who tries to harm Israel will be harmed, and anyone who raises a hand against Israel will have their hand cut off," he said in a post on X.
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Parents who experience a miscarriage before 24 weeks of pregnancy will be entitled to bereavement leave under a planned law change.
The government is set to amend the Employment Rights Bill to give parents the legal right to take time off work to grieve if they experience pregnancy loss at any stage.
As it stands, bereavement leave is only available to parents who lose an unborn child after 24 weeks of pregnancy.
Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner said the change will give "people time away from work to grieve".
"No one who is going through the heartbreak of pregnancy loss should have to go back to work before they are ready," Rayner said.
Parents are currently entitled to a fortnight's leave if they suffer pregnancy loss after 24 weeks, or if a child younger than 18 dies.
The extended right to leave will be for "at least" one week, though the exact length is still being consulted on.
The Employment Rights Bill, which includes further measures to protect in law the right of employees to have time off to grieve the loss of a loved one, is already making its way through Parliament.
Labour MP Sarah Owen, who chairs the Women and Equalities Committee, has previously campaigned for the change.
In 2021, she told MPs that after her own miscarriage she felt physically better in a few days but had "all the classic signs" of grieving.
"I could not eat, I could not sleep. I really did not hold much hope that life would ever get brighter," she said.
In March, business minister Justin Madders told MPs he accepted the principle of bereavement leave for pregnancy loss and promised to look at adding the right to the Employment Rights Bill.
Vicki Robinson, chief executive of the Miscarriage Association, welcomed the announcement.
She said it was "a hugely important step that acknowledges the often very significant impact of pre-24-week loss, not only for those experiencing the physical loss, but for their partners too".
Dunham's move to London in 2021 inspired her new rom-com
Lena Dunham is almost synonymous with New York City. The US actress, writer and director rose to fame with her award-winning semi-autobiographical series Girls, which followed four 20-something women as they navigated love, life and friendship in the Big Apple.
But her latest project - a Netflix rom-com loosely based on her life over the last few years - is set on the other side of the Atlantic.
Too Much follows Jessica (Megan Stalter), who moves from New York to London after breaking up with her boyfriend, and falls in love with punk musician Felix (Will Sharpe).
Just as Dunham did when she moved to London in 2021, Jessica quickly learns the important things about the UK: everybody loves Paddington, the Jaffa Cake debate is highly contentious (it's definitely a biscuit) and a "housing estate" isn't the sprawling gardens of a lavish manor house.
Dunham tells the BBC that while Too Much has "superficial similarities" to her life and is "about 5% autobiographical", she didn't see herself ever playing the show's protagonist in the way she did in Girls.
"I didn't consider Jessica to be me - she's inspired by my life but is her own character and was written with Megan in mind," she says.
Megan Stalter says Girls "was all about sex and Too Much is about falling in love", which is a similar to how Dunham sees the show.
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Dunham says there are some autobiographical elements to Too Much
There was also another reason she chose to step away from the spotlight. While filming Girls, in her 20s, Dunham's body was heavily scrutinised and last year, she told the New Yorker she "was not up for having my body dissected again".
She explains that body shaming was part of the reason she stepped further behind the camera. "Just being perceived was overwhelming," she says.
Dunham has spent the past few years focusing on writing projects that don't centre her as an actor.
She believes society has made some strides towards being more body positive, but says the culture we live in is still "so deeply fatphobic, misogynistic, racist and ageist and that informs our dynamic with our body".
The 39-year-old has been vocal about challenges she's faced with her health, particularly her endometriosis, which led her to have a hysterectomy aged 31.
Asked how her relationship with her body has changed since then, she says she's developed a new love for how she looks.
"I've been able to have a relationship with my body that exists outside of the cultural pressures and I feel lucky for that."
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Girls ran for six series between 2012 and 2017
As well as reflecting on how her self image has changed, Dunham also says she's learned a lot since her 20s.
Having been in the spotlight for more than decade, the actress has had her fair share of controversies.
In 2017, she defended Girls writer Murray Miller when he was accused of sexual assault. Dunham later apologised, saying it was "absolutely the wrong time" to share her perspective. Miller vehemently denied the claims and was not charged.
She also apologised for a "distasteful joke" she had made on a podcast saying she wished she'd experienced a termination when discussing the US abortion.
"I thought, back then, it was important to just keep going and be tough no matter what happened," she reflects.
"I was so focused on work and not letting any of the noise in but I wish I had allowed myself to take more time and space. We all have to acknowledge our own complexities and sensitivities but it's hard to wrap your head around that when you're in your 20s."
'I've felt like I'm too much'
Dunham's new 10-episode series stars Hacks actor Megan Stalter and Will Sharpe, best known for playing Ethan Spiller in The White Lotus and films such as A Real Pain.
Sharpe, 38, says he relates to the challenges his character faces, as "everyone carries baggage from their previous relationship" and feels vulnerable when they enter a new one.
Stalter relates to her character too. The 34-year-old says she often "felt like she was too much" in her 20s but with time, has come to be proud of her who she is.
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Megan Stalter and Will Sharpe say they both see similarities between themselves and their characters in Too Much
Written with Dunham's husband, musician Luis Felber, Too Much focuses on the evolution of one romantic relationship.
It's refreshing in its realness - from serious conversations between Jessica and Felix to the fact Jessica's media salary stretches to a housing estate in east London rather than a Bridget Jones-esque flat in Borough Market.
I ask Dunham if she has any dating tips for women in their 20s, given she's been through the rollercoaster of trying to find a life partner.
She says the concept of dating has changed over the years, and back in the late noughties, it was "considered a last resort or a strange thing to meet someone online".
Looking back, Dunham wishes she would have allowed herself to understand what she really wanted rather than just seeing the cultural expectations that were placed on her.
"If I was letting myself understand my own desire, my 20s would have looked really different romantically."
Camp Mystic, a Christian girls' camp perched on the banks of the Guadalupe River in Texas, was a place of laughter, prayer, and adventure just days ago.
Among the girls at the camp was eight-year-old Renee Smajstrla, smiling ear-to-ear in a picture taken on one of those days - "having the time of her life" with her friends.
But the next day, the camp she, and so many other young girls loved, turned into the site of one of the deadliest flood disasters in recent Texas history.
Smajstrla was among those killed.
"She will forever be living her best life at Camp Mystic," her uncle Shawn Salta wrote on Facebook.
Photos show the eerie aftermath: the bunk beds are still there - mud-caked and toppled over, the detritus of a summer camp cut tragically short.
Destroyed personal belongings are scattered across soaked interiors where children once gathered for Bible study and campfire songs.
Camp Mystic
Renee Smajstrla
At least 59 people - among them camp's longtime director, Richard "Dick" Eastland, and several young campers - have been confirmed dead.
Eleven of its campers and one camp counsellor remain missing. Many of the girls who remain missing were sleeping in low-lying cabins less than 500ft (150m) from the riverbank, US media report.
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Camp Mystic has been operated by the same family for generations, offering girls a chance to grow "spiritually" in a "wholesome" Christian atmosphere, according to its website.
Families from all across Texas and the US send their daughters each summer to swim, canoe, ride horses, and form lifelong friendships.
But the beauty of the Guadalupe River, which draws so many to the area, also proved deadly.
The floodwaters arrived with little warning, ripping through the picturesque riverfront area that is home to nearly 20 youth camps.
Though Camp Mystic suffered the greatest losses, officials say the scale of the disaster is far-reaching.
Nearby, the all-girls camp Heart O' the Hills also faced flooding.
Its co-owner and director, Jane Ragsdale, was among the dead. Fortunately, the camp was out of session at the time.
A statement from the camp said, "Most of those who were on camp at the time have been accounted for and are on high ground… We are mourning the loss of a woman who influenced countless lives and was the definition of strong and powerful."
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Questions are now mounting over why so many camps were situated so close to the river, and why more was not done to evacuate the children in time.
Congressman Chip Roy, who represents the area, acknowledged the devastation while urging caution against premature blame.
"The response is going to be, 'We've gotta move all these camps - why would you have camps down here by the water?'" Roy said.
"Well, you have camps by the water because it's by the water. You have camps near the river because it's a beautiful and wonderful place to be."
As recovery efforts continue, families wait anxiously for news of the missing. Search and rescue teams - some navigating by boat, others combing through debris - are working around the clock.
Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leitha said on Sunday the search for survivors continued.
"Until we can get them reunited families, we are not going to stop," City Manager Dalton Rice said.
Governor Greg Abbott has declared a state of emergency, and officials warn the final toll may rise in the days to come.
Dr Gomo completed her PhD at the University of Dundee in 2022
A man has been charged in connection with the death of a scientist after she was found seriously injured on a Dundee street.
Dr Fortune Gomo, 39, who was originally from Zimbabwe, was pronounced dead at the scene of the incident, which happened on South Road at about 16:25 on Saturday.
The 20-year-old suspect is expected to appear before Dundee Sheriff Court on Monday.
Dr Gomo, who worked for Scottish Water, lived locally and was a graduate of the University of Dundee.
Prof Nigel Seaton, interim principal and vice-chancellor, said the university was "shocked" by the death of the former research assistant.
Police carried out extensive investigations at the scene on Sunday
Det Supt Peter Sharp, the officer in charge of the inquiry, said: "Firstly, my thoughts remain with Fortune's family at this incredibly sad time.
"They are being supported by specialist officers and I would ask that their privacy is respected."
He added inquiries were continuing and said the incident "poses no wider risk to the public".
The senior officer said his team were following a number of lines of inquiry.
Det Supt Sharp added: "I am also acutely aware of content circulating on social media and would urge the public not to speculate about the circumstances of the incident.
"The public will notice a visibly increased police presence in the area and I would encourage anyone who has any concerns to speak with our officers."
Anyone with information about the incident is asked to contact the force.
A large section of South Road was cordoned off on Sunday
Prof Seaton said Dr Gomo was a PhD student and then postdoctoral research assistant in geography at the University of Dundee until February 2022.
Dr Gomo had recently joined Scottish Water as a senior service planner in water resource planning and was "thriving in her career".
Prof Seaton added: "Her death, following an alleged attack in South Road, Dundee, on Saturday afternoon, is a truly shocking event in our city and for our University community.
"It will be particularly distressing for those who knew and worked with Fortune throughout her time here at the University, and for all of those in our close-knit community of African colleagues and students.
"Our thoughts are with her family, friends and colleagues at this tragic time."
He said students affected by Dr Gomo's death could find "support and solace" in the university's Chaplaincy Centre, which will open on Monday.
Delegations from Israel and Hamas have begun an indirect round of ceasefire talks in Qatar, as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu heads to Washington to meet Donald Trump.
Netanyahu said he thinks his meeting with the US president on Monday should help progress efforts to reach a deal for the release of more hostages and a ceasefire in Gaza.
He said he had given his negotiators clear instructions to achieve a ceasefire agreement under conditions Israel has accepted.
Hamas has said it has responded to the latest ceasefire proposal in a positive spirit, but it seems clear there are still gaps between the two sides that need to be bridged if any deal is to be agreed.
For now, Hamas still seems to be holding out for essentially the same conditions it has previously insisted on - including a guarantee of an end to all hostilities at the end of any truce and the withdrawal of Israeli troops.
Netanyahu's government has rejected this before.
The Israeli position may also not have shifted to any major degree. As he was leaving Israel for the US, Netanyahu said he was still committed to what he described as three missions: "The release and return of all the hostages, the living and the fallen; the destruction of Hamas's capabilities - to kick it out of there, and to ensure that Gaza will no longer constitute a threat to Israel."
Qatari and Egyptian mediators will have their work cut out during the indirect talks between Israel and Hamas in trying to overcome these sticking points, which have have derailed other initiatives since the previous ceasefire ended in March.
Israel has since resumed its offensive against Hamas with great intensity, as well as imposing an eleven-week blockade on aid entering Gaza, which was partially lifted several weeks ago.
The Israeli government says these measures have been aimed at further weakening Hamas and forcing it to negotiate and free the hostages.
Just in the past 24 hours, the Israeli military says it struck 130 Hamas targets and killed a number of militants.
But the cost in civilian lives in Gaza continues to grow as well. Hospital officials in Gaza said more than 30 people were killed on Sunday.
The question now is not only whether the talks in Qatar can achieve a compromise acceptable to both sides - but also whether Trump can persuade Netanyahu that the war must come to an end at their meeting on Monday.
Many in Israel already believe that is a price worth paying to save the remaining hostages.
Once again, they came out on to the streets on Saturday evening, calling on Netanyahu to reach a deal so the hostages can finally be freed.
But there are hardline voices in Netanyahu's cabinet, including the national security minister Itamar Ben Gvir and the finance minister Bezalel Smotrich, who have once again expressed their fierce opposition to ending the war in Gaza before Hamas has been completely eliminated.
Once again, there is the appearance of real momentum towards a ceasefire deal, but uncertainty over whether either the Israeli government or Hamas is ready to reach an agreement that might fall short of the key conditions they have so far set.
And once again, Palestinians in Gaza and the families of Israeli hostages still held there are fervently hoping this will not be another false dawn.
The Israeli military launched a campaign in Gaza in response to Hamas's 7 October 2023 attacks, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.
At least 57,338 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.
'Human error' - Wimbledon sorry over missed line calls
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Kartal wins controversial game after electronic line-calling system fails
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Wimbledon organisers have apologised after the electronic line-calling system on Centre Court was turned off in error and missed three calls in one game.
Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova said a game was 'stolen' from her after there was no 'out' call when a Sonay Kartal backhand went long in the first set of their fourth-round match.
The Russian stopped after seeing the ball go long, and chair umpire Nico Helwerth halted play.
The All England Club initially said the system was "deactivated on the point in question" because of "operator error".
A spokesperson said later on Sunday that, after further investigation, it was found that the technology was "deactivated in error on part of the server's side of the court for one game".
During that time, three calls on the affected side of the court were not picked up.
Helwerth - who did not know the system had been turned off - called two of them himself before the incident highlighted by Pavlyuchenkova.
"We have apologised to the players involved," a spokesperson for the All England Club said.
"We continue to have full confidence in the accuracy of the ball tracking technology.
"In this instance, there was a human error and as a consequence we have fully reviewed our processes and made the appropriate changes."
Had the ball been called out, Pavlyuchenkova would have won the point and taken the game.
Instead, it was replayed, Kartal won the point and went on to break for a 5-4 lead.
Pavlyuchenkova had seen the ball was out - and a TV replay showed that was the case by some distance.
Addressing the crowd, Helwerth said: "We're just going to check if the system was up and running, because there was no audio call."
After a telephone call, he announced the electronic system "was unfortunately unable to track the last point" and ordered the point to be replayed.
The rulebook states that if the electronic line calling system fails to make a call, "the call shall be made by the chair umpire".
It adds: "If the chair umpire is unable to determine if the ball was in or out, then the point shall be replayed. This protocol applies only to point-ending shots or in the case when a player stops play."
The fact Pavlyuchenkova went on to win the match meant the malfunction was not as costly as it could have been, although she still questioned why the umpire did not call it out.
"That's why he's there," she said. "He also saw it out, he told me after the match.
"I thought he would do that, but he didn't. Instead they just said replay.
"I don't know if it's something to do [with Kartal being] local.
"I think it's also difficult for him. He probably was scared to take such a big decision."
Image caption,
The electronic line-calling system did not call the shot from Sonay Kartal out
'You took the game away from me'
Pavlyuchenkova was clearly frustrated when she returned to her chair at the end of the game.
She told the umpire: "I don't know if it's in or out. How do I know? How can you prove it?
"You took the game away from me ... They stole the game from me. They stole it."
The automated line-calling system was introduced at Wimbledon for the first time this year.
Debbie Jevans - chair of the All England Club - said on Friday she was confident in its accuracy and the decision to bring it in.
Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,
The umpire explained to the players there had been no line call
Electronic line-calling technology has been under scrutiny this week at Wimbledon, with a number of players saying they do not trust it.
Britain's Emma Raducanu has been one of those to voice concerns, saying some of the calls had been "dodgy", while former Olympic champion Belinda Bencic said the technology was a topic of discussion among players in the locker room.
Bencic said she was usually a fan of the technology but "it is not correct" at this tournament.
Line judges have been replaced by technology at many top-level tournaments, including the US Open and Australian Open.
Jevans previously said the technology was brought in because "the players wanted it" and some have backed the system, with former world number one Iga Swiatek saying she has had doubts but "has to trust" the calls.
When there were line judges, players could challenge the calls by using an electronic review. There are no challenges under the current system and video replays are not used.
Pavlyuchenkova suggested tennis should use video checks like football does "so that we can review the point".
"On such a big event I think it is necessary, since this isn't the first time this has happened," she told BBC Sport.
She said umpires were there to make big decisions otherwise they could "just play without them", adding: "I think the chair umpire should be able to take initiatives.
"That's what he is there for and that's why he is sitting in that chair, otherwise I think we could have also had a match without a chair umpire.
"They have no problem giving us fines and code violations, for any reason sometimes. So I would like them to be a bit more intensive to this sort of situation."
Pavlyuchenkova added in a news conference: "I would prefer they looked at the lines and call in the errors [and] mistakes better."
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Media caption,
How Pavlyuchenkova's 'incredible mental toughness' overcame glaring error
Dr Gomo completed her PhD at the University of Dundee in 2022
A man has been charged in connection with the death of a scientist after she was found seriously injured on a Dundee street.
Dr Fortune Gomo, 39, who was originally from Zimbabwe, was pronounced dead at the scene of the incident, which happened on South Road at about 16:25 on Saturday.
The 20-year-old suspect is expected to appear before Dundee Sheriff Court on Monday.
Dr Gomo, who worked for Scottish Water, lived locally and was a graduate of the University of Dundee.
Prof Nigel Seaton, interim principal and vice-chancellor, said the university was "shocked" by the death of the former research assistant.
Police carried out extensive investigations at the scene on Sunday
Det Supt Peter Sharp, the officer in charge of the inquiry, said: "Firstly, my thoughts remain with Fortune's family at this incredibly sad time.
"They are being supported by specialist officers and I would ask that their privacy is respected."
He added inquiries were continuing and said the incident "poses no wider risk to the public".
The senior officer said his team were following a number of lines of inquiry.
Det Supt Sharp added: "I am also acutely aware of content circulating on social media and would urge the public not to speculate about the circumstances of the incident.
"The public will notice a visibly increased police presence in the area and I would encourage anyone who has any concerns to speak with our officers."
Anyone with information about the incident is asked to contact the force.
A large section of South Road was cordoned off on Sunday
Prof Seaton said Dr Gomo was a PhD student and then postdoctoral research assistant in geography at the University of Dundee until February 2022.
Dr Gomo had recently joined Scottish Water as a senior service planner in water resource planning and was "thriving in her career".
Prof Seaton added: "Her death, following an alleged attack in South Road, Dundee, on Saturday afternoon, is a truly shocking event in our city and for our University community.
"It will be particularly distressing for those who knew and worked with Fortune throughout her time here at the University, and for all of those in our close-knit community of African colleagues and students.
"Our thoughts are with her family, friends and colleagues at this tragic time."
He said students affected by Dr Gomo's death could find "support and solace" in the university's Chaplaincy Centre, which will open on Monday.
Passengers were asked to leave the train which had broken down near Calais
People have been evacuated from a broken-down Eurostar train in northern France after waiting nearly four hours for help, passengers have told the BBC.
One person who was on board said they had been stuck on the train without air conditioning before emergency services and local rescue teams arrived to hand out water.
James Grierson said he was evacuated alongside a number of "very frustrated" passengers, and there was "no sign" of a replacement train to collect them.
Eurostar has been approached for comment. It had earlier posted messages on social media urging passengers to remain in their seats and wait for a replacement train.
James Grierson
Passengers say local rescue teams attended the train hours after it had stopped
The affected train was en route from Brussels to London before it suffered "some electrical failing 10 minutes outside of Calais", Mr Grierson said.
Eurostar has not yet commented on the cause of the delay.
Pictures from the scene show dozens of people stood outside the stationary train, along with rescuers in high-vis jackets - one carrying an armful of bottled water.
Several passengers have messaged Eurostar on X, complaining of no air conditioning, overflowing toilets and a lack of updates.
The rail operator has replied to some of these messages apologising and saying a replacement train has been arranged to pick them up.
Dr Gomo completed her PhD at the University of Dundee in 2022
A man has been charged in connection with the death of a scientist after she was found seriously injured on a Dundee street.
Dr Fortune Gomo, 39, who was originally from Zimbabwe, was pronounced dead at the scene of the incident, which happened on South Road at about 16:25 on Saturday.
The 20-year-old suspect is expected to appear before Dundee Sheriff Court on Monday.
Dr Gomo, who worked for Scottish Water, lived locally and was a graduate of the University of Dundee.
Prof Nigel Seaton, interim principal and vice-chancellor, said the university was "shocked" by the death of the former research assistant.
Police carried out extensive investigations at the scene on Sunday
Det Supt Peter Sharp, the officer in charge of the inquiry, said: "Firstly, my thoughts remain with Fortune's family at this incredibly sad time.
"They are being supported by specialist officers and I would ask that their privacy is respected."
He added inquiries were continuing and said the incident "poses no wider risk to the public".
The senior officer said his team were following a number of lines of inquiry.
Det Supt Sharp added: "I am also acutely aware of content circulating on social media and would urge the public not to speculate about the circumstances of the incident.
"The public will notice a visibly increased police presence in the area and I would encourage anyone who has any concerns to speak with our officers."
Anyone with information about the incident is asked to contact the force.
A large section of South Road was cordoned off on Sunday
Prof Seaton said Dr Gomo was a PhD student and then postdoctoral research assistant in geography at the University of Dundee until February 2022.
Dr Gomo had recently joined Scottish Water as a senior service planner in water resource planning and was "thriving in her career".
Prof Seaton added: "Her death, following an alleged attack in South Road, Dundee, on Saturday afternoon, is a truly shocking event in our city and for our University community.
"It will be particularly distressing for those who knew and worked with Fortune throughout her time here at the University, and for all of those in our close-knit community of African colleagues and students.
"Our thoughts are with her family, friends and colleagues at this tragic time."
He said students affected by Dr Gomo's death could find "support and solace" in the university's Chaplaincy Centre, which will open on Monday.
McLaren's Lando Norris took his first home victory in a chaotic, dramatic, rain-affected British Grand Prix.
Norris benefited from a 10-second penalty handed to team-mate Oscar Piastri, who was found to have driven erratically during a restart after one of two safety-car periods at Silverstone.
Piastri had led the race calmly through a heavy shower of rain and series of incidents but was passed by Norris when he served his penalty at his final pit stop in the closing laps.
Norris appeared to be crying in his helmet on the slowing-down lap and described the win as "beautiful".
It reduces his deficit to Piastri in the drivers' championship to eight points.
"Apart from a championship, I think this is as good as it gets in terms of feelings and in terms of achievement, being proud, all of it," Norris said.
"The last few laps, I was just looking into the crowd. I was just trying to take it all in, enjoy the moment, because it might never happen again. I hope it does. But these are memories that I'll bring with me forever."
Nico Hulkenberg, 37, took his first podium finish at the 239th attempt - setting a new record for the longest time before finishing in the top three - after a strong race for Sauber.
The German managed to keep Lewis Hamilton's Ferrari at bay in the closing laps as Red Bull's Max Verstappen came home fifth.
Record crowd sees action-packed race
Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,
Max Verstappen facing in the wrong direction after spinning coming out of Stowe
An all-time F1 record crowd - 168,000 on the day and 500,000 over the weekend - were treated to an action-packed race.
Perhaps the most extraordinary moment came when Verstappen spun before racing had resumed at the restart after the second safety-car period.
Verstappen appeared to have been distracted by what had happened a few seconds before in the incident that earned Piastri his penalty.
As Piastri prepared for the final restart on lap 22, he slowed on the Hangar Straight. Verstappen, partially unsighted in the wet conditions, briefly passed the Australian, and then complained over the radio that he had suddenly braked.
It carried echoes of an incident at the Canadian Grand Prix two races ago, when Red Bull protested against a similar action by race winner George Russell of Mercedes, but had it rejected.
This time, the stewards decided Piastri had contravened a regulation that demands drivers "proceed at a pace which involved no erratic braking nor any other manoeuvre which is likely to endanger other drivers from the point at which the lights on the safety car are turned off".
Piastri was angry, but said he was "not going to say much because I'll get myself into trouble" - a reference to rules that say drivers can be penalised for criticising officials.
"Apparently you can't break behind the safety car any more. I did it for five laps before that," he said.
As the field rounded Stowe, Verstappen lost control and spun, dropping down to 10th place.
He recovered to fifth but is now 69 points behind Piastri and his championship hopes are dimmer than ever, especially in the face of McLaren's consistently strong form.
Hulkenberg, meanwhile, secured a hugely popular podium place from 19th on the grid.
"Coming from almost last it was pretty surreal, not sure how it happened," he said.
"We were really on it, the right calls. I was in denial until probably the last pit stop. But when we gapped Lewis I thought, 'OK.' The pressure was there. I knew he would give it all in front of his home crowd, but I was like, 'Sorry guys, this is my day. I have to stick my neck out.'"
Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,
Oscar Piastri passes Max Verstappen for the lead on lap eight
The race started on a wet track after a soaking wet morning, but with the sun out and more rain heading towards Silverstone.
Verstappen held the lead through a brief challenge from Piastri off the line but he could not shake the McLarens, and Piastri was soon challenging him hard for the lead.
Before he could try a move, though, a virtual safety car was deployed after Sauber's Gabriel Bortoleto crashed at Turn Two on lap four.
The race was restarted on lap seven, and Piastri was past Verstappen on the Hangar Straight before two laps were over, building a 2.9-second lead after just one lap.
It was then Norris' turn to challenge the Red Bull, but Verstappen gifted him the position when he slid off at Becketts on lap 11, just as heavy rain started.
That brought the drivers into the pits for fresh intermediates. By then, Aston Martin's Lance Stroll had gained time by an earlier change to soft tyres when the track was drying and emerged in fourth place, with Hulkenberg in fifth after stopping for inters on lap 10, so benefiting when others had to drive on a wet track on slick tyres and then pit.
The rain became heavier and a safety car was deployed on lap 14. The race restarted on lap 18, but a second safety car was sent out within a lap after Racing Bulls' Isack Hadjar ran into the back of Kimi Antonelli's Mercedes at Copse because he could not see him in the spray.
When the race restarted for the last time on lap 22, Piastri started to try to build a lead but he was not able to get more than four seconds ahead before Norris came back at him - he was less than two seconds back by the time Piastri pitted to serve his penalty with nine laps to go.
Stroll was unable to hold on to his third place, soon being passed by Hulkenberg, then Hamilton, and eventually dropping down to seventh place.
Behind Verstappen, Alpine's Pierre Gasly, who was fifth at the restart, lost places to Hamilton and the Dutchman but was able to secure sixth place.
Williams' Alex Albon was eighth, ahead of Fernando Alonso, who was frustrated by his team's strategy costing him places in the topsy-turvy early part of the race, then pitted a couple of laps too early for slick tyres as the track dried in the closing stages.
That dropped him to last, but he recovered to take ninth, ahead of Mercedes' George Russell, who also stopped early for slicks for the final time.
Top 10
Image source, Reuters
Image caption,
Torrential rain falls on Silverstone and the eventual race winner Lando Norris
It's a three-week break before we move into the second half of the season with the Belgian Grand Prix at Spa-Francorchamps, which this year is a sprint event, from 25-27 July.
Passengers were asked to leave the train which had broken down near Calais
People have been evacuated from a broken-down Eurostar train in northern France after waiting nearly four hours for help, passengers have told the BBC.
One person who was on board said they had been stuck on the train without air conditioning before emergency services and local rescue teams arrived to hand out water.
James Grierson said he was evacuated alongside a number of "very frustrated" passengers, and there was "no sign" of a replacement train to collect them.
Eurostar has been approached for comment. It had earlier posted messages on social media urging passengers to remain in their seats and wait for a replacement train.
James Grierson
Passengers say local rescue teams attended the train hours after it had stopped
The affected train was en route from Brussels to London before it suffered "some electrical failing 10 minutes outside of Calais", Mr Grierson said.
Eurostar has not yet commented on the cause of the delay.
Pictures from the scene show dozens of people stood outside the stationary train, along with rescuers in high-vis jackets - one carrying an armful of bottled water.
Several passengers have messaged Eurostar on X, complaining of no air conditioning, overflowing toilets and a lack of updates.
The rail operator has replied to some of these messages apologising and saying a replacement train has been arranged to pick them up.
Camp Mystic, a Christian girls' camp perched on the banks of the Guadalupe River in Texas, was a place of laughter, prayer, and adventure just days ago.
Among the girls at the camp was eight-year-old Renee Smajstrla, smiling ear-to-ear in a picture taken on one of those days - "having the time of her life" with her friends.
But the next day, the camp she, and so many other young girls loved, turned into the site of one of the deadliest flood disasters in recent Texas history.
Smajstrla was among those killed.
"She will forever be living her best life at Camp Mystic," her uncle Shawn Salta wrote on Facebook.
Photos show the eerie aftermath: the bunk beds are still there - mud-caked and toppled over, the detritus of a summer camp cut tragically short.
Destroyed personal belongings are scattered across soaked interiors where children once gathered for Bible study and campfire songs.
Camp Mystic
Renee Smajstrla
At least 59 people - among them camp's longtime director, Richard "Dick" Eastland, and several young campers - have been confirmed dead.
Eleven of its campers and one camp counsellor remain missing. Many of the girls who remain missing were sleeping in low-lying cabins less than 500ft (150m) from the riverbank, US media report.
Getty Images
Camp Mystic has been operated by the same family for generations, offering girls a chance to grow "spiritually" in a "wholesome" Christian atmosphere, according to its website.
Families from all across Texas and the US send their daughters each summer to swim, canoe, ride horses, and form lifelong friendships.
But the beauty of the Guadalupe River, which draws so many to the area, also proved deadly.
The floodwaters arrived with little warning, ripping through the picturesque riverfront area that is home to nearly 20 youth camps.
Though Camp Mystic suffered the greatest losses, officials say the scale of the disaster is far-reaching.
Nearby, the all-girls camp Heart O' the Hills also faced flooding.
Its co-owner and director, Jane Ragsdale, was among the dead. Fortunately, the camp was out of session at the time.
A statement from the camp said, "Most of those who were on camp at the time have been accounted for and are on high ground… We are mourning the loss of a woman who influenced countless lives and was the definition of strong and powerful."
Getty Images
Questions are now mounting over why so many camps were situated so close to the river, and why more was not done to evacuate the children in time.
Congressman Chip Roy, who represents the area, acknowledged the devastation while urging caution against premature blame.
"The response is going to be, 'We've gotta move all these camps - why would you have camps down here by the water?'" Roy said.
"Well, you have camps by the water because it's by the water. You have camps near the river because it's a beautiful and wonderful place to be."
As recovery efforts continue, families wait anxiously for news of the missing. Search and rescue teams - some navigating by boat, others combing through debris - are working around the clock.
Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leitha said on Sunday the search for survivors continued.
"Until we can get them reunited families, we are not going to stop," City Manager Dalton Rice said.
Governor Greg Abbott has declared a state of emergency, and officials warn the final toll may rise in the days to come.
A displaced child plays inside a destroyed vehicle at the Arafat Police Academy in Gaza City
A senior officer in Hamas's security forces has told the BBC the Palestinian armed group has lost about 80% of its control over the Gaza Strip and that armed clans are filling the void.
The lieutenant colonel said Hamas's command and control system had collapsed due to months of Israeli strikes that have devastated the group's political, military and security leadership.
The officer was wounded in the first week of the war, which began after the Hamas-led attack on Israel on 7 October 2023, and has since stepped away from his duties for health reasons.
He shared several voice messages with the BBC on condition of anonymity.
In the messages, the officer painted a picture of Hamas's internal disintegration and the near-total collapse of security across Gaza, which the group governed before the conflict.
"Let's be realistic here - there's barely anything left of the security structure. Most of the leadership, about 95%, are now dead... The active figures have all been killed," he said. "So really, what's stopping Israel from continuing this war?"
"Logically, it has to continue until the end. All the conditions are aligned: Israel has the upper hand, the world is silent, the Arab regimes are silent, criminal gangs are everywhere, society is collapsing."
Last September, Israel's then-defence minister declared that "Hamas as a military formation no longer exists" and that it was engaged in guerrilla warfare.
According to the officer, Hamas attempted to regroup during the 57-day ceasefire with Israel earlier this year, reorganizing its political, military, and security councils.
But since Israel ended the truce in March, it has targeted Hamas's remaining command structures, leaving the group in disarray.
"About the security situation, let me be clear: it has completely collapsed. Totally gone. There's no control anywhere," he said.
"People looted the most powerful Hamas security apparatus (Ansar), the complex which Hamas used to rule Gaza.
"They looted everything, the offices - mattresses, even zinc panels - and no-one intervened. No police, no security."
Anadolu via Getty Images
Hamas-run security forces went out in uniform during a ceasefire with Israel in January
The officer said a consequence of the security vacuum was gangs or armed clans were "everywhere".
"They could stop you, kill you. No one would intervene. Anyone who tried to act on their own, like organising resistance against thieves, was bombed by Israel within half an hour.
"So, the security situation is zero. Hamas's control is zero. There's no leadership, no command, no communication. Salaries are delayed, and when they do arrive, they're barely usable. Some die just trying to collect them. It's total collapse."
The Israeli military said it struck "several armed terrorists" belonging to Hamas's Internal Security Forces.
Reuters
At least 18 Palestinians were reportedly killed in an Israeli strike that targeted a Hamas-run police unit in Deir al-Balah on 26 June
In this vacuum, six armed groups affiliated with powerful local clans have emerged as serious contenders to fill the void, according to the officer.
These groups have access to money, weapons and men, and are active across all of Gaza, but mostly in the south.
One of them is led by Yasser Abu Shabab, a figure who has attracted attention from the Palestinian Authority, which is based in the occupied West Bank and is a rival to Hamas, as well as regional players - particularly after Israel confirmed last month that it was supplying him with weapons.
The officer confirmed that Hamas had placed a large bounty on Abu Shabab's head, fearing he could become a unifying figure for its many enemies.
"Hamas would ignore ordinary thieves. People are hungry and [the fighters] don't want to provoke more chaos. But this guy? If the Hamas fighters find him, they might go after him instead of Israeli tanks."
Sources in Gaza told the BBC that Abu Shabab was working to co-ordinate with other armed groups to form a joint council aimed at toppling Hamas.
Reuters
Armed members of a local clan said they accompanied a convoy of UN aid lorries in northern Gaza to protect it from looting last month
A retired Palestinian security official, who was part of the force that cracked down on Hamas's military wing in 1996 following a wave of bombings in Israel, said Abu Shabab's network was gaining traction.
"Abu Shabab's group is like an orphaned child who everyone will want to adopt if he succeeds in undermining Hamas rule," said the official, who now lives in Cairo.
"Publicly, all sides deny links to the armed groups in Gaza. But Abu Shabab has met a senior Palestinian intelligence officer three times and sent messages of assurance to the Egyptians through relatives in Sinai," he claimed.
He also said Abu Shabab "maintains good ties with Mohammad Dahlan's camp". Dahlan is a former Gaza security chief who has lived in exile since he fell out with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas 15 years ago.
The Hamas security officer warned the group was "willing to do anything" to eliminate Abu Shabab not because of his current military strength, but out of fear he could become a symbol around which all of Hamas's adversaries rally.
"For 17 years, Hamas made enemies everywhere. If someone like Abu Shabab can rally those forces, that could be the beginning of the end for us."
As Gaza is plunged further into lawlessness, with entire neighbourhoods descending into gang rule, Hamas finds itself not just under Israeli fire but increasingly surrounded by rivals from within.
Smera Chohan and Sajjad Butt, Nuria's parents, gathered with hundreds of others to remember the girls on Sunday
The parents of two eight-year-old girls who were killed when a car crashed into a London school say they are still waiting for answers two years later.
Speaking at a remembrance event on Sunday, Nuria's mother Smera Chohan said: "We have had to fight very hard - harder than any victim should ever have had to - but we remain committed to uncovering the truth about what happened."
The event on Wimbledon Common, a short walk from the school, marked two years to the day since the girls died.
Det Supt Lewis Basford said: "Our main priority is to ensure the lines of inquiry identified by the review are progressed. I would urge people to avoid speculation."
At the time, the girls' parents welcomed this and said the reopened investigation should be carried out "in the pursuit of truth and the full facts".
At Sunday's memorial event they expressed dismay at having to wait so long for answers. They said they wanted someone to be held accountable.
Hundreds of people from the local community joined Ms Chohan, Sajjad Butt (Nuria's father), as well as Selena's parents Franky Lau and Jessie Deng, for the memorial event.
Franky Lau and Jessie Deng, Selena's parents, joined others in adorning commemorative benches with flowers
Members of the emergency services also participated in the moment of reflection and remembrance.
Two benches created in the girls' memory were adorned with floral tributes and messages.
Following a two minutes' silence - one minute for each girl - Ms Chohan delivered an emotional speech.
"We still await answers for what happened on that fateful day... and with all your support, we will continue our fight until we have the answers we deserve."
She added: "Nothing is going to make our lives the same again... we were parents. I sometimes don't know if I'm a mother, I need to know why I'm not a mother and Nuria deserved a thorough investigation."
Mr Lau said: "We are still waiting, we want a version of events that adds up."
Helen Lowe, the school's former headteacher, and her successor Sharon Maher attended the event on Wimbledon Common
Helen Lowe, who was the school's headteacher at the time of the crash, said: "There are still no answers to what happened on that day, and in that two-year period, there have been a number of events which involved awful tragedy for children.
"But the people who perpetrated those events have had to be answerable, and we don't have that, which makes it - for the parents and for us - impossible to move on."
Sharon Maher, the school's current headteacher, described the quality of the new police investigation, which was launched in October, as having "a very different feel".
She added: "They've taken our questions seriously… it's more thorough, it's detailed, that's all we've ever asked for."
The Metropolitan Police said: "Our thoughts are with Nuria and Selena's loved ones at this particularly difficult time. Our investigation continues and we remain in regular contact with the families.
"Anyone with information is asked to call the major incident room on 0207 175 0793, call 101 quoting CAD 6528/27Jan, or message @MetCC on X providing the CAD reference."
Football clubs should pay towards the £70 million cost of policing their matches in the UK, the head of the Metropolitan Police has told the BBC.
Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley, the country's most senior police officer, asked why organisers of events that require policing to support their security do not pay for it, and said there should be "more of a polluter pays approach".
Sir Mark's comments came as he called for the creation of 12 to 15 bigger police forces as part of his plans for radical police reforms.
He told the BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg programme the current model of 43 forces across England and Wales needed to be reduced to cope with increased demand and overstretched funding.
Sir Mark said reforms would help police forces, including the Met, "make the best use of the money we've got".
As part of funding concerns, the commissioner also cited the £70 million cost of policing football in the UK, most of which is spent on Premier League matches in England.
"Why isn't the organiser paying for that, rather than local communities who lose their resources to go to football matches?" he said.
A move to make football clubs pay was previously suggested to the Times by the head of the UK's football policing unit and later criticised by sports bodies who said it could threaten events and lead to increased ticket prices.
Writing in the Sunday Times, Sir Mark suggested the number of police forces needed to be reduced by two-thirds and said bigger forces would be better able to utilise modern technology.
He added the 43-force model designed in the 1960s had not been "fit for purpose" for at least two decades and hindered "the effective confrontation of today's threats".
Speaking to the BBC, the commissioner referred to an "invisible spaghetti" behind police forces that was responsible for "sucking resources and costs".
"Lots of the smaller forces can't actually do all the services locally and they're having to club together and run complicated collaborations," he said, adding that with "bigger local forces and one national body" they could "cut away" with a lot of that cost and waste.
The commissioner was questioned by Kuenssberg on the likelihood of the reform going ahead, referencing similar Labour plans in 2006 which were dropped following significant opposition.
Sir Mark said reform was "essential", adding that spending on policing and public safety has dropped substantially over the last decade or more.
"I don't see that changing dramatically. We've got to make the best use of every pound the government can give to us," he added.
Put to him that he had warned he would have to de-prioritise some crimes, and asked what the force will not investigate, Sir Mark said: "So I don't want policing activity to fall off the list, and I know that the mayor and the home secretary have pushed hard for the most police funding that we can get.
"We are determined to improve day in and day out experiences of Londoners on the streets. We can only do that if we focus ruthlessly on police work."
Archaeologists have announced the discovery of an ancient city in Peru's northern Barranca province.
The 3,500-year-old city, named Peñico, is believed to have served as a key trading hub connecting early Pacific coast communities with those living in the Andes mountains and Amazon basin.
Located some 200km north of Lima, the site lies about 600 metres (1,970 feet) above sea level and is thought to have been founded between 1,800 and 1,500 BC - around the same time that early civilisations were flourishing in the Middle East and Asia.
Researchers say the discovery sheds light on what became of the Americas' oldest civilisation, the Caral.
Reuters
An aerial view of the archaeological zone of Peñico, in Peru, an ancient city established 3,500 years ago
Drone footage released by researchers shows a circular structure on a hillside terrace at the city's centre, surrounded by the remains of stone and mud buildings.
Eight years of research at the site unearthed 18 structures, including ceremonial temples and residential complexes.
In buildings at the site, researchers discovered ceremonial objects, clay sculptures of human and animal figures and necklaces made from beads and seashells.
Peñico is situated close to where Caral, recognised as the oldest known civilisation in the Americas, was established 5,000 years ago at around 3,000 BC in the Supe valley of Peru.
Caral features 32 monuments, including large pyramid structures, sophisticated irrigation agriculture and urban settlements. It is believed to have developed in isolation to other comparative early civilisations in India, Egypt, Sumeria and China.
Dr Ruth Shady, the archaeologist who led the recent research into Peñico and the excavation of Caral in the 1990s, said that the discovery was important for understanding what became of the Caral civilisation after it was decimated by climate change.
The Peñico community was "situated in a strategic location for trade, for exchange with societies from the coast, the highlands and the jungle", Dr Shady told the Reuters news agency.
At a news conference unveiling the findings on Thursday, archaeologist Marco Machacuay, a researcher with the Ministry of Culture, said that Peñico's significance lies in it being a continuation of the Caral society.
Peru is home to many of the Americas' most significant archaeological discoveries, including the Inca citadel of Machu Picchu in the Andes and the mysterious Nazca Lines etched into the desert along the central coast.
Holders England and tournament first-timers Wales both lost their opening games of Euro 2025, but will they bounce back next time out in Group D?
BBC Sport football expert Rachel Brown-Finnis is predicting the outcome of all 31 games in Switzerland.
She got five of the opening eight group matches correct, including the Netherlands' victory over Wales, but was caught out by the Lionesses' defeat by France.
You did not see that result coming either, with only 16% of you backing Les Bleues. Like Rachel, you ended up with a score of 5/8 overall, and were also wrong about Finland beating Iceland and Italy getting the better of Belgium.
Will you and Rachel do better next time? You can make your own predictions for the second set of group games below, including England versus the Netherlands, and France against Wales.
Brown-Finnis has also picked her two teams to go through from each group into the knockout stage, and given her reasons why.
She is backing England to win the Euros again, and believes Wales won't get out of their group.
Rachel Brown-Finnis was speaking to BBC Sport's Chris Bevan.
Group A
Brown-Finnis' pre-tournament picks: Norway (winners) and Switzerland (runners-up).
Best Euros finish: Norway: winners in 1987 & 1993. Finland: semi-finals in 2005
Norway made such a slow start against Switzerland in their opening game but they were unrecognisable in and out of possession in the second half.
They looked like a different team after the break as they fought back from a goal down to beat the hosts, and I feel like they will build on that performance now they know the levels they need to reach.
Finland showed in their win over Iceland that they are well organised at the back and how tough they are to break down, but I still think Norway will find a way through.
Best Euros finish: Switzerland: groups in 2017 & 2022. Iceland: quarter-finals in 2013.
It feels like the tournament has only just got started but this is a huge match for both teams. If the earlier game in Group A finishes in a draw, then whoever loses here is out.
Iceland are the higher-ranked team and they will definitely believe they can get the result they need - but they were held to two draws when they played each other in this year's Nations League.
Switzerland's defeat by Norway was a disappointing result for the hosts but I thought they were fantastic in the first half and I don't think they let their lead slip because of a lack of application or a dip in their performance.
The swing in that game was more down to Norway changing their tactics and the Swiss failing to adapt. Even then, they were a bit unfortunate not to get anything from the game.
If Switzerland can play with the same intensity here then, with the crowd behind them, I think they will have enough quality to get their tournament back on track.
Brown-Finnis' prediction: 2-1
Group B
Brown-Finnis' pre-tournament picks: Spain (winners) and Portugal (runners-up).
Best Euros finish: Spain: semi-finals in 1997. Belgium: quarter-finals in 2022.
Spain were hugely impressive in their 5-0 victory over Portugal. It's already clear how much better they are this time than they were at the 2022 European Championship, when England beat them in the quarter-finals, and they are only just getting started at this tournament.
Lots of teams have seen changes in personnel since that tournament, and the 2023 World Cup, but none of them have improved to the extent that Spain have.
We saw against Portugal what happens when a team does not adapt at all to the dominant way Spain play - you have to acknowledge you are not going to see much of the ball, sit off them and play on the counter, but Portugal did not really do that and paid the price.
I am not expecting Belgium to make the same mistake, but it is still hard to see them getting anything out of this game. Losing to Italy was a big blow to their hopes of getting out of the group, and this is clearly a much harder task.
Belgium have played Spain four times in the past few months, in the Nations League and in qualifying for these Euros, and lost every time.
A couple of those defeats were heavy ones, but Belgium did cause them a few problems at times too.
I am not sure how close they will get to the world champions this time, but at least they know what to expect.
Best Euros finish: Portugal: groups in 2017 & 2022. Italy: runner-up in 1993 & 1997
Portugal were quite naive against Spain. They have got some quality, but not enough to take risks against the world champions and get a result.
This game is going to be much closer, and I am expecting a reaction from Portugal after seeing the way they have grown over the past couple of tournaments. They know they have to perform here, or they will be going home soon.
Italy may have a bit of a swagger about them after beating Belgium in their first game but they can be quite open themselves at times and I'd be surprised if they find this straightforward.
Brown-Finnis' prediction: 2-1
Group C
Brown-Finnis' pre-tournament picks: Germany (winners) and Sweden (runners-up).
Best Euros finish: Germany: Eight-time winners between 1989 & 2013. Denmark: runners-up in 2017.
Germany got off to a good start with their win over Poland but losing captain Giulia Gwinn to injury was a big blow, and she will not play again at these Euros.
I still think they have the squad depth to see off Denmark, and they already look composed and like they have found some rhythm, but this won't be easy.
The Danes badly need to get something out of this game, and Pernille Harder will be desperate to kickstart her tournament after hitting the bar in their defeat against Sweden.
Best Euros finish: Poland: first-time qualifiers. Sweden: winners in 1984
Poland put in a spirited performance against Germany, but still lost on their debut at a major finals.
It's hard to see them getting anything here, either. Sweden's win over Denmark was massive for their hopes of getting out of the group and I am expecting them to get another victory here too.
Like Wales, Poland are finding out that the level of tournament football at a European Championship really is the best of the best.
When you look at the world ranking of the teams here, then Europe is the strongest continent, which is why it's so hard to get out of your group - let alone go all the way and win it.
For teams who are at their first major finals, it is a case of looking upwards - not just in terms of everyone else's world rankings, but with factors like experience and confidence too.
Sweden have got lots of know-how at major finals and that should help them get the win they want before they face Germany in their final group game.
Brown-Finnis' prediction: 0-1
Group D
Brown-Finnis' pre-tournament picks: England (winners) and France (runners-up).
Best Euros finish: England: winners in 2022. The Netherlands: winners in 2017.
England started well against France but after having a goal ruled out for offside they were just not good enough in the first half.
The Lionesses improved and dominated possession after the break but still didn't manage any shots on target until the closing stages.
That defeat means this is a must-win game for them but, if they are going to beat the Netherlands, they will have to be much better at the basics.
Too many simple passes went astray on Saturday night, and we didn't see the kind of sharp and polished England performance that we have become used to.
We know England can be better, and I do think they will be much improved against the Dutch, but they will have to be careful because Vivianne Miedema looked like she is back to her best with her brilliant goal that broke the deadlock against Wales.
It was a reminder of her class, and also how she is not a player who needs loads of chances, but makes her opportunities count - which is why she has scored 100 goals and counting for her country.
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Media caption,
Miedema scores 100th goal to give Dutch the lead
Miedema can sometimes look disinterested, or seem uninvolved, but that's just how she plays - it means she is sometimes underestimated, when she is always dangerous.
I still believe England will rise to the challenge, however, even if manager Sarina Wiegman may have to review the tactics she used against France - they looked much more threatening when Michelle Agyemang came on late on, compared to when Alessia Russo was up top on her own.
When it comes down to games like this, where they have to get the three points, I would always back England and Wiegman to find a way of winning.
Best Euros finish: France: semi-finals in 2022. Wales: first-time qualifiers.
France were worthy winners against England. They got a bit of momentum in the first half, and took control.
Wales will know what to expect after watching that game, because Les Bleues looked pumped, and never gave England any easy possession of the ball at all, but stopping France is a huge ask - they looked fresh and fiery and their intensity and work-rate was simply relentless.
Wales had a way of playing against the Dutch that worked for a while - they defended in numbers, worked hard and pressed hard, and tried to attack on the break when they won the ball back - but they couldn't sustain it.
They found out the hard way what happens when you give players like Miedema too much space and time on the edge of your area, and if they drop off against France, then their quality will shine through too.