Reading view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.

Tories demand answers on Mandelson in letter to Starmer

Getty Images Sir Keir Starmer and the UK's former ambassador to the US Lord Mandelson in Washington, DC on 26 February 2025.Getty Images

The Conservative Party has written to Sir Keir Starmer demanding answers over the extent of Downing Street's knowledge of Lord Mandelson's links to paedophile Jeffrey Epstein.

The Tories also called for the prime minister to release documents relating to Mandelson's appointment, including evidence that shows how No 10 reacted when they learned of his ties to Epstein.

On Sunday, the BBC reported that Starmer explicitly asked Mandelson about his links to the paedophile before deciding to appoint him as ambassador to the US.

Mandelson was sacked last week after a cache of emails reported by Bloomberg showed supportive messages he sent after Epstein plead guilty to sex offences.

In the letter to the prime minister, Tory MP Alex Burghart questioned what and when Sir Keir knew of Mandelson's friendship with Epstein before defending the former ambassador during Prime Minister's Questions last Wednesday.

He added that the scandal had exposed the PM's "appalling judgement".

"He ignored warnings about Peter Mandelson's relationship with Jeffrey Epstein, forced through his appointment, and is avoiding scrutiny about what he knew," Burghart wrote.

The Conservative MP's letter also demanded the release of what he called the "Mandelson-Epstein Files" - government correspondence and internal documents related to the pair - and for Sir Keir and his chief of staff Morgan McSweeney to give evidence to Parliament.

Downing Street have already stressed the prime minister only knew the contents of the emails last Wednesday evening and acted swiftly in sacking Mandelson within hours.

This scandal, following so soon after Angela Rayner's resignation, has encouraged some Labour MPs to become more vocal in their criticism of the prime minister.

Speaking on BBC Radio 4's The Westminster Hour on Sunday, Labour MP Helen Hayes said if the scandal were to affect the party's chances in next year's local elections in May, there will be questions about Starmer's leadership.

"If those elections don't go well then that will be the time to ask questions... questions about the nature of the leadership and whether things can continue as they are, but we're not at that point now," she said.

Hayes added that she felt "devastated" about Mandelson, but said she believed he shouldn't have been appointed.

"I think there is a question about how frank he [Mandelson] was in the original vetting process. If he was not frank about that association, then that should be dealt with and his ability to speak as a Labour peer should be taken away from him," she said.

Mandelson has repeatedly expressed regret about his relationship with Epstein who died in jail in 2019.

Over the weekend, Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch accused the prime minister of lying to the public and said he had "very serious questions to answer".

Madeleine McCann suspect turns down Met Police interview

Reuters Christian Brückner, a suspect in the disappearance of British toddler Madeleine McCann in Portugal, stands trial in Germany on unrelated sexual assault charges in Braunschweig, Germany, February 16, 2024.Reuters
Christian Brückner has not been charged over Madeleine's disappearance

The prime suspect in the high-profile case of Madeleine McCann's disappearance has declined to be interviewed by the Metropolitan Police, the force has said.

The Met said an international letter of request was sent to Christian Brückner, ahead of his imminent release for a separate offence, for him to speak with them which he later rejected.

German national Brückner, 49, has never been charged in the McCann case and denies involvement.

Madeleine vanished in the Portuguese resort of Praia da Luz in 2007, shortly after she was left sleeping by her parents, Kate and Gerry McCann, who went for dinner in a nearby restaurant.

Brückner is currently serving a seven-year prison sentence in Germany for the rape of an elderly 72-year-old woman at her home in Praia da Luz in 2005.

He could potentially be released on Wednesday.

Det Ch Insp Mark Cranwell said Brückner remains a suspect in the Met Police's own investigation into Madeline's disappearance.

"We have requested an interview with this German suspect but, for legal reasons, this can only be done via an International Letter of Request which has been submitted," Det Ch Insp Cranwell said.

"It was subsequently refused by the suspect. In the absence of an interview, we will nevertheless continue to pursue any viable lines of inquiry.

"We can provide no further information while the investigation is ongoing."

Handout Madeleine McCann.Handout
Madeleine McCann disappeared in 2007, then aged three

Almost two decades since Madeleine's disappearance, it has become one of the highest-profile unsolved missing person cases in the world.

Earlier this year, German prosecutors pointed to evidence suggesting Brückner may have been in the area when Madeleine disappeared.

Elsewhere in June, Portuguese and German police conducted a fresh search of land in Lagos - between where the McCanns had been staying and addresses linked to Brückner, but this yielded no breakthroughs.

PA Media Search teams use a backhoe digger next to a derelict and abandoned property close to Praia De Luz, Portugal, where searches are being carried out by officers investigating the disappearance of Madeleine McCann, in countryside a few miles from the resort where she was last seen in 2007.PA Media
Investigators have been searching scrubland and abandoned buildings in the latest searches for Madeleine McCann

Brückner was not identified as a suspect in her disappearance until 2020.

Due to differences in legal systems, German authorities suspect Brückner of murder in relation to Madeleine, while British police continue to treat her disappearance as a missing persons case.

However, no charges have ever been brought against Brückner in the case of Madeleine, and the full details of the alleged evidence have never been released.

In 2023, investigators carried out searches near the Barragem do Arade reservoir, about 30 miles from Praia da Luz.

Brückner spent time in the Praia da Luz area between 2000 and 2017 and had photographs and videos of himself near the reservoir.

In October last year, Brückner was cleared by a German court of unrelated sexual offences, alleged to have taken place in Portugal between 2000 and 2017.

The funding given to the Met's investigation into Madeleine's disappearance, titled Operation Grange, has totalled more than £13.2m since 2011. A further £108,000 was secured from the government in April.

Boss of degrading sex-trade ring in Dubai's glamour districts unmasked by BBC

Watch: Charles Mwesigwa - known locally as Abbey - says his women are "open-minded"

Warning: Contains disturbing content and graphic descriptions of sexual acts

A man running a sex ring operating out of Dubai's most glamorous neighbourhoods, and exploiting vulnerable women, has been identified by a BBC investigation.

Charles Mwesigwa, who says he is a former London bus driver, told our undercover reporter he could provide women for a sex party at a starting price of $1,000 (£740), adding that many can do "pretty much everything" clients want them to.

Rumours of wild sex parties in the UAE emirate have circulated for years. The hashtag #Dubaiportapotty, which has been viewed more than 450 million times on TikTok, links to parodies and speculative exposés of women accused of being money-hungry influencers secretly funding their lifestyles by fulfilling the most excessive of sexual requests.

Our BBC World Service investigation was told the reality is even darker.

Young Ugandan women told us they had not expected to have to undertake sex work for Mr Mwesigwa. In some cases, they believed they were travelling to the UAE to work in places like supermarkets or hotels.

At least one of Mr Mwesigwa's clients regularly asks to defecate on the women, according to "Mia", whose name we have changed to protect her identity, and who says she was trapped by Mr Mwesigwa's network.

Mr Mwesigwa denies the allegations. He says he helps women find accommodation through landlords, and that women follow him to parties because of his wealthy Dubai contacts.

We have also discovered that two women linked to Mr Mwesigwa have died, having fallen from high-rise apartments. Although their deaths were ruled as suicides, their friends and family feel the police should have investigated further.

Mr Mwesigwa said the incidents were investigated by the Dubai police and asked us to contact them for information. They did not reply to our request.

One of the women who lost her life, Monic Karungi, arrived in Dubai from western Uganda.

She found herself sharing a flat with dozens of other women working for Mr Mwesigwa, according to one of the women, who we are calling Keira, who says she lived with Monic there in 2022.

"[His] place was like a market… There were like 50 girls. She was not happy because what she expected is not what she got," Keira told us.

Monic thought the job in Dubai was going to be in a supermarket, according to her sister Rita.

"He [Mr Mwesigwa] was violent when I told him I wanted to go back home," says Mia, who also knew Monic in Dubai. She says that, when she first arrived, he told her she already owed him £2,000 ($2,711) and that within two weeks that debt had doubled.

"Money for air tickets, for your visa, for where you're sleeping, food," says Mia.

"That means you have to work hard, hard, hard, pleading for men to come and sleep [with] you."

Monic owed Mr Mwesigwa more than $27,000 (£19,918) after several weeks, according to what a relative of hers we are calling Michael says she told him. He adds that he received tearful voice notes from her.

Family handout Monic smiles at the camera - she is wearing a yellow and white lace dress with a yellow shirt over the topFamily handout
Monic grew up with 10 siblings in rural Uganda

Mia told us that clients were mostly white Europeans, and included men with extreme fetishes.

"There's this one client, he poops on girls. He poops and he tells them to eat the shit," she explained quietly.

Another woman we are calling Lexi, who says she was tricked by a different network, echoed Mia's story, saying "porta potty" requests were frequent.

"There was a client who said: 'We pay you 15,000 Arab Emirates Dirham ($4,084, £3,013) to gang-rape you, pee in your face, beat you, and add in 5,000 ($1,361, £1,004)'" for being recorded eating faeces.

Her experiences have led her to believe there is a racial element to this extreme fetish.

"Every time I said that I wouldn't want to do that, it seemed to get them more interested. They want somebody who is going to cry and scream and run. And that somebody [in their eyes] should be a black person."

Lexi says she tried to get help from the only people she thought could intervene - the police. But she says they told her: "You Africans cause problems for each other. We don't want to get involved. And they would hang up."

We put this allegation to the Dubai police and they did not reply.

Lexi eventually escaped back to Uganda and now helps to rescue and support women in similar situations.

Warsan Tower, an extremely tall silver tower block in Dubai
Warsan Tower in Dubai, from which Monic Karungi fell in May 2022

Finding Charles Mwesigwa wasn't easy. We could only find one picture of him online - and it was taken from behind. He also uses multiple names across social media.

But through a combination of open-source intelligence, undercover research, and information from a former member of his network, we traced him to a middle class neighbourhood in Dubai - Jumeirah Village Circle.

To corroborate what sources had told us about his business - supplying women for degrading sex acts - we sent in an undercover reporter posing as an event organiser sourcing women for high-end parties.

Mr Mwesigwa appeared calm and confident when speaking about his business.

Undercover image of Charles Mwesigwa. He is looking down and wearing a black and white vertical-striped top. In the bottom of the frame is part of what appears to be his UK driving licence.
Mr Mwesigwa showed us his UK driving licence and said he was a former London bus driver

"We've got like 25 girls," he said. "Many are open-minded… they can do pretty much everything."

He explained the cost - from $1,000 (£738) per girl per night, but more for "crazy stuff". He invited our reporter for a "sample night".

When asked about "Dubai porta potty" he replied: "I've told you, they are open-minded. When I say open-minded… I will send you the craziest I have."

In the course of the conversation, Mr Mwesigwa said he used to be a London bus driver. We have seen evidence he put that occupation down on an official document in east London in 2006.

He went on to tell our reporter that he loved this business.

"I could win the lottery, a million pounds, but I would still do it… it's become part of me."

Troy, a man who says he used to act as operations manager for Mr Mwesigwa's network, gave us more information about how he says it is run.

Troy is wearing a black bobble hat, cream collared-top, has a beard and an earring and a distinctive anchor tattoo on his forehead
Troy says he used to work as a driver and then an operations manager for Charles Mwesigwa

He says Mr Mwesigwa pays off security at various nightclubs so they will let his women in to find clients.

"I've heard about types of sex that I've never seen in my life. It doesn't matter what you go through as long as his rich men are happy… [the women] have no escape route…They see musicians, they see footballers, they see presidents."

Mr Mwesigwa has been able to get away with running this operation, Troy claims, because Troy and others are not just used as drivers. He says their names are also used by Mr Mwesigwa to hire cars and apartments, so that his own name never appears on the paperwork.

On 27 April 2022, Monic posted a selfie from Al Barsha - a residential neighbourhood popular with expats in Dubai. Four days later, she was dead. She had been in the emirate for just four months.

According to Mia, Monic and Mr Mwesigwa had been regularly arguing in the period before she left. Mia says Monic had been refusing to comply with Mr Mwesigwa's demands and had found a way out of his network.

"She had got some kind of job. She was very excited. She thought she was gonna get free, she was going to get her life back because now that was a real job, no sleeping with men," Mia says.

Monic moved out to a different apartment about 10 minutes' walk away. It was from this apartment's balcony that she fell on 1 May 2022.

Instagram A grab of a social media video by Monic showing a young woman looking at the camera with dark hair cut straight to her shoulders and with a fringe Instagram
The final selfie Monic posted before she died

Monic's relative Michael, who was in the UAE at the time she died, says he tried to get answers.

Police told him they stopped their investigation, having found drugs and alcohol in the apartment Monic had fallen from, and only her fingerprints on the balcony, he says.

He obtained a death certificate for Monic from a hospital, but it did not say how she had died. And her family were unable to obtain a toxicology report for her.

But a Ghanaian man living in the apartment building was more helpful, he says, taking him to another block to meet the man he said was Monic's boss.

Michael describes the scene when he got there and saw where the women were housed.

He says through the cloud of shisha smoke in the living room, he made out what looked like cocaine on the table and women having sex on chairs with clients.

He claims he found the man we had previously identified as Charles Mwesigwa in bed with two women, and that when he tried to drag him to the police Mr Mwesigwa replied: "I have spent 25 years in Dubai. Dubai is mine… There is no way you are going to report me… Embassy is me, I'm the embassy.

"[Monic's] not the first to die. And she won't be the last," he added, according to Michael.

Mia and Keira both independently say they witnessed this conversation and both confirm its wording. When we asked Mr Mwesigwa what he meant by this, he denied having said it.

Monic's death shares haunting similarities with that of Kayla Birungi, another Ugandan woman who lived in the same neighbourhood as her, and died in 2021 after falling from a Dubai high-rise apartment which we have evidence to suggest was managed by Charles Mwesigwa.

The phone number for her landlord, shared with us by Kayla's family, turned out to be one of Mr Mwesigwa's numbers. Troy also confirms that Mr Mwesigwa managed the apartment, as do four other women we spoke to for this investigation.

Instagram A young woman wearing a hat and dark glasses with straight dark hair smiles for the cameraInstagram
Kayla Birungi, another Ugandan, also died after falling from a Dubai high-rise building

Kayla's relatives say that they - like Monic's family - heard Kayla's death had been linked to alcohol and drugs. But a toxicology report seen by the BBC shows none were present in her system at the time of her death.

While Kayla's family was able to repatriate her body and hold a burial, Monic's remains were never returned.

Our investigation found she was likely buried in a section of Dubai's Al Qusais Cemetery known as "The Unknown". It features rows and rows of unmarked graves, typically thought to belong to migrants whose family couldn't repatriate their bodies.

Monic and Kayla were part of a wider, unofficial pipeline connecting Uganda to the Gulf.

As Uganda wrestles with rising youth unemployment, moving to work abroad - mainly in the Gulf states - has become a huge industry that contributes $1.2bn (£885m) of tax revenue to the country each year.

But these opportunities can carry a risk.

Mariam Mwiza, a Ugandan activist against exploitation, says she has helped rescue more than 700 people from around the Gulf.

"We get cases of people who have been promised to work, let's say, in a supermarket. Then [that person] ends up sold as a prostitute," she told us.

Four members of Monic's family including her mother hold up framed photos of Monic
Monic's family in rural Uganda say Monic always had the ambition to seek a better life

For Monic's family, grief is now tangled with fear. Fear for other families who could suffer the same loss they have, if nothing is done.

"We are all looking at Monica's death," her relative Michael told us. "But who is there for the girls still alive? They're still there. Still suffering."

The BBC asked Charles "Abbey" Mwesigwa to respond to all the allegations made in our investigation. He denied running an illegal prostitution ring.

He said: "These are all false allegations.

"I told you I am just a party person who invites big spenders on my tables, hence making many girls flock [to] my table. That makes me know many girls and that's it."

He also said: "[Monic] died with her passport meaning no-one was demanding her money for taking her. Prior to her death, I hadn't seen her for over four to five weeks.

"I knew [Monic and Kayla] and [they] were renting with different landlords. If no-one in both flats was arrested or any of the landlords, then there was a reason. Both incidents were investigated by the Dubai police and maybe they can help you."

The BBC contacted Al Barsha Police Station to request to see the case files for Monic Karungi and Kayla Birungi. It did not respond to that request or to allegations Monica and Kayla's deaths had not been properly investigated.

The BBC was unable to see any toxicology reports in relation to Monic Karungi, or speak to the landlord of the apartment in which she was living when she died.

  • If you have any information to add to this investigation please contact runako@bbc.co.uk
  • Details of organisations offering information about or support after sexual abuse or with feelings of despair are available at bbc.co.uk/actionline.

Children and teenagers share impact of pandemic in new report

BBC A group of male and female students, all aged 17, sit together, smiling, at two picnic tables in front of their college buildingBBC

When lockdown started, college student Sam was living with his mum because his parents were separated.

Then his dad died unexpectedly, leaving him feeling that "something had been stolen" from him.

His experience is one of many being highlighted as the Covid-19 public inquiry prepares to look at the pandemic's impact on children and young people.

A new report - seen exclusively by the BBC - includes individual accounts of 600 people who were under 18 during the pandemic.

They include happy memories of time spent with family, as well as the impact of disruption to schools being moved online, social isolation and the loss of relatives.

The inquiry will start hearing evidence on these issues from Monday 29 September.

'I lost a relationship'

17-year-old student Sam stands and smiles in the courtyard of his FE college. He is wearing sunglasses and his college lanyard
Sam's dad died suddenly during the pandemic, when he was 12

Wigan resident Sam was 12 during the first lockdowns and says he found it hard to understand the rules that prevented him spending more time with his dad.

His dad's death left him struggling with regrets that he had "lost a relationship" because of the isolation before his father's death.

"I do feel deep down that something has been stolen from me," he says.

"But I do know that the procedures that we had to go through were right. It was a bad situation."

Now 17, Sam's resilience has sadly been tested further after the loss of his mum, who recently died from cancer.

But Sam says that strength he built up during Covid has helped give him "the tools to deal with grief alone".

'Trying to catch up on the lost moments'

Kate Eisenstein, who is part of the team leading the inquiry, says the pandemic was a "life-changing set of circumstances" for the children and teenagers who lived through it.

The impact of the pandemic set out in the testimony is hugely varied and includes happier memories from those who flourished in secure homes, enjoying online learning.

Other accounts capture the fears of children in fragile families with no escape from mental health issues or domestic violence.

Some describe the devastating sudden loss of parents or grandparents, followed by online or physically distanced funerals.

Grief for family members lost during the pandemic is an experience shared with some of Sam's college classmates.

Student Ella told the BBC that losing her granddad during Covid had made her value spending more time with her grandma.

It is one of the ways in which Ella says she is trying to "catch up on the lost moments" she missed during Covid.

Living life online

One almost universal experience for children living through the pandemic was much of life shifting to online platforms.

While this allowed family connections and friendships to be maintained, Ms Eisenstein said some children had darker experiences, spending up to 19 hours a day online, leaving them "really anxious".

"Some told us how they started comparing their body image to people online, how video games and social media distracted from their learning," she said.

Most worrying, she said, were the accounts revealing an increased risk of adults seeking to exploit young children online, including sending nude images and inappropriate messages.

The remarkable variety of experiences, both positive and stressful, adds up to what she describes as "an unprecedented insight into children's inner world".

Aaliyah, a student at Winstanley College near Wigan, says the social isolation she experienced aged 11 led to her spending hours looking at social media, which began altering her self-confidence.

"With the content I was seeing online, I'd start to look in the mirror and go, 'I could change that about myself,' or 'I don't really like that about myself,'" she says.

Lasting effects

Avalyn, a 16 year old with long Covid, sits on her bed smiling propped up with cushions, with the books she used for GCSE revision open alongside her.
Avalyn was home schooled through her GCSEs after contracting long Covid

The inquiry is also expected to hear about the experiences of children still living with long Covid, like Avalyn, now 16, who became ill with the virus in October 2021.

While schools were beginning to return to normal, Avalyn was struggling with a deep and debilitating fatigue, and eventually left school for home education.

It took a year to get a formal diagnosis of long Covid and specialist advice.

"I enjoyed being in school, I enjoyed being social and seeing people, and then suddenly that was taken away from me very quickly," Avalyn says.

Before long Covid, Avalyn says she was sporty at primary school and enjoyed acrobatics.

Like lots of other children her age, Avalyn has shown determination and resilience to achieve the things that might not have been so difficult in other circumstances, and she has now passed four GCSEs.

"I knew I wanted to do GCSEs to prove to myself especially that I still had the ability to do what everyone else was doing," she says.

She still goes to a performing arts group, which allows her to join in as much or as little as she can manage.

Avalyn admits "it's weird to say", but in some ways she is "grateful" to have had long Covid, because of the things she has achieved during her long spells at home.

She has written, illustrated and self-published two children's books and spent more time on her art.

While the path ahead is not straightforward, she says she is optimistic of finding a way to study and get into work.

The inquiry plans to hear evidence on the impact of children and young people across four weeks from 29 September to 23 October.

UK and US unveil nuclear energy deal promising thousands of jobs

Getty Images Aerial landscape view of Drax power station with thick white steam rising from cooling towers on a sunny dayGetty Images

The UK and US are set to sign a landmark agreement aimed at accelerating the development of nuclear power.

The move is expected to generate thousands of jobs and strengthen Britain's energy security.

It is expected to be signed off during US President Donald Trump's state visit this week, with both sides hoping it will unlock billions in private investment.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said the two nations were "building a golden age of nuclear" that would put them at the "forefront of global innovation".

The government has said that generating more power from nuclear can cut household energy bills, create jobs, boost energy security, and tackle climate change.

The new agreement, known as the Atlantic Partnership for Advanced Nuclear Energy, aims to make it quicker for companies to build new nuclear power stations in both the UK and the US.

It will streamline regulatory approvals, cutting the average licensing period for nuclear projects from up to four years to just two.

'Nuclear renaissance'

The deal is also aimed at increasing commercial partnerships between British and American companies, with a number of deals set to be announced.

Key among the plans is a proposal from US nuclear group X-Energy and UK energy company Centrica to build up to 12 advanced modular nuclear reactors in Hartlepool, with the potential to power 1.5 million homes and create up to 2,500 jobs.

The broader programme could be worth up to £40bn, with £12bn focused in the north east of England.

Other plans include multinational firms such as Last Energy and DP World working together on a micro modular reactor at London Gateway port. This is backed by £80m in private investment.

Elsewhere, Holtec, EDF and Tritax are also planning to repurpose the former Cottam coal-fired plant in Nottinghamshire into a nuclear-powered data centre hub.

This project is estimated to be worth £11bn and could create thousands of high-skilled construction jobs, as well as permanent jobs in long-term operations.

Beyond power generation, the new partnership includes collaboration on fusion energy research, and an end to UK and US reliance on Russian nuclear material by 2028.

Commenting on the agreement, Energy Secretary Ed Miliband said: "Nuclear will power our homes with clean, homegrown energy and the private sector is building it in Britain, delivering growth and well-paid, skilled jobs for working people."

And US Energy Secretary Chris Wright described the move as a "nuclear renaissance", saying it would enhance energy security and meet growing global power demands, particularly from AI and data infrastructure.

Sir Keir has previously said he wants the UK to return to being "one of the world leaders on nuclear".

In the 1990s, nuclear power generated about 25% of the UK's electricity but that figure has fallen to around 15%, with no new power stations built since then and many of the country's ageing reactors due to be decommissioned over the next decade.

In November 2024, the UK and 30 other countries signed a global pledge to triple their nuclear capacity by 2050.

And earlier this year, the government announced a deal with private investors to build the Sizewell C nuclear power station in Suffolk.

Its nuclear programme also includes the UK's first small modular reactors (SMRs), which will be built by UK firm Rolls Royce.

'Killer' child car seats still on sale 10 years on

BBC Two unidentifiable people holding a child's car seat each. One on the left is orange and the other is blue. The seats are made of thin padded fabric without structure.BBC
Websites like Shein and Wish sell children's car seats which are potentially lethal, Which? says

Lethal children's car seats are still appearing for sale on online marketplaces a decade after concerns were first raised by trading standards officers and a well-known consumer group.

Which? warned in 2014 the fabric seats were potentially dangerous to children due to safety defects and were illegal to use in the UK following tests by Surrey Trading Standards, which dubbed the products "killers".

Which? is urging parents not to be tempted into buying cheap seats after it found they are still being sold via online sites including Shein and eBay, both of which said they took safety very seriously.

Regulations state only EU-approved child car seats with R44 or R129 codes can be used in the UK.

Approved seats carry a clear orange label, on which the codes are printed, to indicate they have been put through EU safety testing and can therefore be legally sold on the UK market.

In 2014, Surrey Trading Standards tested a fabric seat which fell to pieces in a 30 mph accident. The crash test dummy of a three-year-old child was flung through the windscreen when the straps securing the seat failed.

Which? said families struggling with living costs could be tempted by the cheaper products, which cost as little as £12.50, compared to the more expensive ones that retail in excess of £80.

Stuart Howarth, a car seat safety advisor at Good Egg Safety, which campaigns on child safety, told BBC News he had seen a child using an unsafe seat that had "no support to the body" and "no way of securing it to the car safely".

"It's just a lethal piece of material," he said.

"You might as well just sit on a settee cushion and hope for the best."

A rectangular orange label on a child's booster seat.
Child car seats that have been tested have a bright orange label on them

Which? said it found more than a dozen listings of illegal car seats on websites such as eBay, Little Dreams, ManoMano, Shein and Wish.

One listing for a child's car seat on eBay warned against using it in cars despite the product being described as suitable.

The description in the listing read: "It is best not to use it on high-speed cars.

"We recommend that it be used in non-motorized products such as electric vehicles, two-wheelers... Because it is not a child safety seat that complies with traffic."

In response, eBay said consumer safety "is a top priority".

"We swiftly removed these listings and notified buyers, and we continue to strengthen our preventative measures," a spokesperson said.

Which? said stricter rules were needed to "impose a clear and robust duty on online marketplaces to prevent the sale of unsafe products" and called for "strong penalties and rigorous enforcement".

Sue Davies, Which? head of consumer protection policy, said: "It is appalling that these deadly car seats are reappearing on online marketplaces more than a decade after Which? first exposed them, but it is not surprising."

She said children's lives "will be at risk" until online retailers were forced to comply with product safety regulations.

Which? A screenshot of an eBay listing for a child's car seat.Which?
An eBay listing for a car seat said it was not safe for use in "high-speed" vehicles

Which? advised families to look for retailers who can provide guidance and help fit the seat.

It suggested car seats should not be bought secondhand, as they might have been involved in an accident and damage to the seat may be unclear.

Janis James, chief executive of Good Egg Safety, urged parents not to "skimp" on cash when purchasing car seats for children.

In a statement, Shein said it was committed to "offering safe and reliable products to its customers".

The online retail giant said the product Which? found listed on its website had been "mislabelled" by a third-party seller and Shein had "taken action against the seller" after removing it from its platform.

It said vendors were required to comply with the company's rules and "stringent safety standards and must also abide by the relevant laws and regulations of the markets where we operate".

Little Dreams also told the BBC product safety was a "top priority".

ManoMano said its online marketplace was used by third party sellers to sell their own products.

It added: "We rely on our sellers to provide a resolution to any product/fulfilment issues."

Struggling with brain fog? Here's how to fix it

BBC Woman with hands on her head looking stressedBBC

When life gets busy and stress levels rise, it's not uncommon to find yourself walking into a room and forgetting why you went there, losing your train of thought mid-sentence or struggling to stay focused on simple tasks.

Especially after the weekend, it can be hard to get back into work or study mode.

This mental cloudiness is often called brain fog and while it isn't a medical condition in itself, it refers to a collection of cognitive symptoms such as difficulty concentrating, forgetfulness, and mental slowness.

Common causes of it can include menopause or perimenopause, but it can also strike when you've got too much on your mind.

Medical doctor and Morning Live expert, Dr. Tharaka has these four tips and a special acronym to help cut through the haze.

1. Be kind to yourself

Brain fog can happen to anyone and it's not a personal failing or a sign that you're not coping.

Often, it's simply your brain's way of saying it's tired, stressed or overstretched.

Remind yourself that brain fog is usually temporary and it's okay to slow down, delegate tasks or ask for help when you need it.

If you are concerned then you should contact your GP.

2. Create routines

Reduce decision fatigue by having a set rhythm to your days - a predictable structure can take pressure off your working memory.

Knowing what's coming next stops your brain from constantly asking, "What am I doing today?"

It's worth creating a morning and evening routine and even something as simple as laying out clothes or prepping breakfast ahead of time frees your mind from constant decision-making.

3. Take breaks

Getty Images Person is organizing their work and personal agenda in a notebook at home, using sticky notes and colorful markers to plan their week, surrounded by envelopes, a smartphone, and a notepad Getty Images
Taking some time between tasks can help reset your brain and focus

It's easy to fill your diary with back-to-back commitments - meetings, social events, errands and daily tasks - without leaving any breathing room.

But constantly jumping from one thing to the next can leave your brain no time to reset, making brain fog more likely.

Try deliberately scheduling short breaks between activities, even just 5–10 minutes to stretch, get a drink, step outside or sit quietly.

Think of these firebreaks like mental buffers: they give your mind a chance to process what you've just done, let go of lingering stress and prepare for what's next.

4. Use calendars and reminders

Trying to hold every appointment, task and reminder in your head can quickly lead to mental clutter and forgetfulness.

Let tech do the remembering for you - use calendars and reminders to free up mental space.

Schedule recurring tasks so they happen automatically - for example, block out lunch in your diary each day or set weekly reminders for bills and chores.

This means you're not constantly thinking, "What do I need to remember next?"

Swans

Getty Images A woman in a white top drinks water in a kitchen surrounded by fresh vegetables and a laptopGetty Images
Staying hydrated and eating whole foods can help clear brain fog

Alongside these practical daily strategies, Dr T also recommends using his Swans acronym to support brain health and sharpen focus.

Each letter stands for a key habit that can help clear the mental mist and keep your mind performing at its best:

  • Sleep: Sleep is non-negotiable - it gives your brain time to rest and consolidate memories. Aim for between seven and nine hours each night.
  • Water: Our bodies are about 60% water and even mild dehydration can make you feel unfocused so keep water nearby and sip it regularly
  • Activity: Moving your body boosts blood flow and oxygen to the brain, which helps you think more clearly. Try going on short walks, a light jog or regularly stretching
  • Nutrition: Nourish your brain with whole foods rather than processed ones. Choline is a nutrient vital for brain health so eating food that is rich in it like eggs, fish and nuts can support concentration and focus.
  • Stress: Chronic stress floods the body with cortisol - a hormone that helps regulate your body's response to stress - and that can cloud your thinking. Find ways to lower stress through breathing exercises, mindfulness and hobbies.

Use the NHS website to find out more about brain fog and how to manage it.

'Rest in peace, champ' and 'scramble inside No 10'

The Sun's headline is Rest in Peace, Champ
The death of former world champion boxer Ricky Hatton features on many of Monday's front pages. Nicknamed 'the Hitman', he won world titles at light-welterweight and welterweight and was one of Britain's most popular fighters. 'Rest in peace,' the Sun says on its front page, reporting that Hatton was found dead in his house in Manchester on Sunday.
The Telegraph's main headline is 'Benefits rebels rally behind Burnham'
While Hatton features as the main picture on the front page of the Daily Telegraph, the paper's lead story is about the growing pressure on Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer. It reports some Labour MPs who rebelled over benefit cuts during the summer - action which resulted in a major concessions by the government - are planning to back a leadership tilt by Mayor of Manchester Andy Burnham.
The Times' lead headline is "Bruised PM hopes deals with US will quell revolt".
The Times also reports on the "bruised PM" and the "growing threat of a leadership challenge". The paper reports that Sir Keir will use his first public appearance since sacking US ambassador Peter Mandelson to regain the political initiative by hailing a "landmark" partnership with the US on nuclear power.
The Guardian's lead headline is "PM condemns protesters who use England flag as symbol of violence".
The Guardian leads on Sir Keir's reaction to the tens of thousands of people who took to the streets of central London at the weekend for a "Unite the Kingdom" march organised by far-right activist Tommy Robinson. Sir Keir said that Britain would "never surrender" its flag to those who wish to use it as a symbol of violence, fear and division. It also reports on Prince Harry's recent visit to Ukraine, where he, "somewhat surprisingly, has achieved cult-hero status". The Guardian says the aim of the visit was to promote the work of the Duke of Sussex's Invictus Games Foundation (IGF).
The Daily Mail's lead headline is "scramble inside No 10 to save Starmer".
The Daily Mail says there is a "scramble inside No 10 to save Starmer". The paper reports that No 10 was aware at the start of last week of the allegation against Lord Mandelson which eventually led to his sacking on Thursday - however it says Sir Keir was not informed.
The Mirror's lead headline is "RIP, champ"
"RIP, champ," the Mirror declares on its front page, leading with tributes to Ricky Hatton. Inside, the paper has an eight-page tribute to the boxing great.
The Daily Star's lead headline is a tribute to Hatton "He was a man of the people. A great man inside the ring and wonderful man outside of it".
The Daily Star leads on former boxer Barry McGuigan's tribute to Hatton. The Hitman won 45 of his 48 professional bouts across a 15-year career, and last fought professionally in 2012. In 2023 he was the subject of a documentary 'Hatton', in which he discussed his personal life and mental health issues.
The i Paper's lead headline is 'prisoners will help to build warships under new plan to boost UK defences'.
Hatton and Sir Keir feature on the i Paper's front page, but the lead story is about a plan to use prisoners to help build warships. It reports that prisoners and ex-offenders could join a four-year apprenticeship scheme to fill 5,000 welding vacancies in the defence sector as UK ramps up its war readiness.
The Metro's lead headline is 'Show's over for phone grabbers'.
The Metropolitan Police are planning a crackdown on criminal gangs in the London's West End, according to the Metro. It says police are targeting phone snatchers, drug dealers and watch thieves who have enjoyed "rich pickings from tourists, commuters and residents in the London district".
The Express's lead headline is "Khan 'must quit' over grooming failure'
The Daily Express says Sadiq Khan is facing to calls to quit after a former Met Police detective accused the London mayor of refusing to face up to "industrial scale" grooming gangs in the capital. A spokesperson for the mayor called the accusations "false, malicious, and politically motivated".
The FT's lead headline is "Fed expected to reduce rates for first time this year as job market weakens"
The Financial Times says the US Federal Reserve is this week expected to make its first interest rate cut this year. It comes as the Fed faces fierce pressure from US President Donald Trump, who has called on the Fed chair Jay Powell to resign, labelling him a "numbskull" over his reluctance to cut rates.
News Daily banner

Sign up for our morning newsletter and get BBC News in your inbox.

News Daily banner

US farmers are being squeezed - and it's testing their deep loyalty to Trump

BBC House that says Vote Trump on a farmBBC

On a scorchingly hot day in the American Midwest, Tim Maxwell is voicing his fears about the future of farming.

The 65-year-old has worked the fields since he was a teenager. He now owns a grain and hog farm near Moscow, Iowa - but he's unsure about its prospects.

"I'm in a little bit of a worried place," says Mr Maxwell, who wears a baseball cap bearing the logo of a corn company.

He is concerned that American farmers aren't able to sell their crops to international markets in the way they could in previous years, in part because of the fallout from President Trump's tariffs.

"Our yields, crops and weather are pretty good - but our [interest from] markets right now is on a low," he says. "It's going to put stress on some farmers."

Bloomberg via Getty Images A sign saying Farmers for Trump with a US flag in a cornfieldBloomberg via Getty Images
American farmers are facing widespread difficulty this year, in part due to economic tensions with China

His fears are not unique. US agricultural groups warn that American farmers are facing widespread difficulty this year, mostly due to economic tensions with China. Since April, the two countries have been locked in a trade war, causing a sharp fall in the number of Chinese orders for American crops.

American farmers are wounded as a result, economists say. The number of small business bankruptcies filed by farmers has reached a five-year high, according to data compiled by Bloomberg in July.

With all this economic pain, rural areas could well have turned against Trump. But that doesn't seem to be happening.

Rural Americans were one of the president's most loyal voting blocs in last year's election, when he won the group by 40 percentage points over Kamala Harris, beating his own margins in 2020 and 2016, according to Pew Research analysis.

Polling experts say that in the countryside, he is still broadly popular.

A man with a beard wears a cap and stands in the foreground of a state fair
'I'm in a little bit of a worried place:' Tim Maxwell owns a grain and hog farm near Moscow, Iowa

Mr Maxwell says he is sticking with Trump, despite his own financial worries. "Our president told us it was going to take time to get all these tariffs in place," he says.

"I am going to be patient. I believe in our president."

So why do so many farmers and other rural Americans broadly continue to back Trump even while feeling an economic squeeze that is driven in part by tariffs - the president's signature policy?

Farmers on a 'trade and financial precipice'

If you want a window into rural America, the Iowa State Fair is a good start. The agricultural show attracts more than one million visitors over 10 days.

There is candy floss; deep-fried hot dogs on a stick for $7 (£5) - known as "corn dogs"; an antique tractor show; a competition for the biggest boar.

But when the BBC visited last month, there was another topic of conversation: tariffs.

Anna Jones holds a corn dog, beside a colourful stand selling corn dogs
Anna Jones at the Iowa State Fair where there was much talk about the impact of tariffs

"A lot of people say he's just using tariffs as a bargaining chip, as a bluff," says Gil Gullickson, who owns a farm in South Dakota and edits an agriculture magazine.

"But I can say: history proves that tariffs don't end well."

In April, what he termed "liberation day", Trump imposed sweeping tariffs on most of the world, including a 145% tariff on China.

In response, China put a retaliatory 125% tariff on American goods - a blow to farmers in the American Midwest, sometimes known as the "corn belt", many of whom sell crops to China.

Last year Chinese companies bought $12.7bn (£9.4bn) worth of soybeans from America, mostly to feed their livestock.

September is harvest season, and the American Soybean Association (ASA) has warned that soybean orders from China are way below where they should be at this point in the year.

Fairground rides at the Iowa State Fair
The Iowa State Fair attracts more than one million visitors over 10 days

Tariffs have fluctuated dramatically since they were introduced - and the uncertainty is proving tough for farmers, says Christopher Wolf, a professor of agricultural economics at Cornell University.

"China is just so big that when they buy things, it matters - and when they don't, it matters."

The cost of fertiliser has rocketed, too - partly because of trade disputes with Canada, which has raised the cost of potash, a salt imported from Canada by American farmers and used in fertiliser.

Jon Tester, a former Democrat Senator of Montana, who is a third-generation farmer, told a US news station earlier this month: "With all these tariffs the president's put on, it's interrupted our supply chain… it's increased the cost of new equipment… and because of the trade and tariffs, a lot of customers have said to heck with the United States…

"The people who are new to agriculture, those young farmers who haven't saved money for times like this, they're going to be in trouble and a lot of those folks are going to go broke.

"And if this continues, a lot of folks like me are going to go broke too."

Sign with Trump and Vance on it that says Iowa is Trump Country
Farmers in the American Midwest, sometimes known as the "corn belt", sell a huge number of crops to China

American farmers already suffer from high levels of stress. They are more than three times more likely than average to die by suicide, according to a paper by a charity, the National Rural Health Association, which analysed a period before Trump's presidency.

In a letter to the White House, Caleb Ragland, president of the ASA, warned of a tipping point: "US soybean farmers are standing at a trade and financial precipice."

Trump: 'Our farmers are going to have a field day'

Supporters of President Trump say that his tariffs will help American farmers in the long run, by forcing countries like China to come to the negotiating table and agree new deals with the US over agriculture.

And they point to other ways this White House has helped farmers. Over the summer, as part of Trump's tax and spend bill, his administration expanded federal subsidies for farmers by $60bn (£44bn), and boosted funding for federal crop insurance.

In his annual speech to Congress in March, Trump warned farmers of a "little bit of an adjustment period" following the tariffs, adding: "Our farmers are going to have a field day… to our farmers, have a lot of fun, I love you."

Getty Images Trump holds two MAGA style hats that say Make Our Farmers Great AgainGetty Images
Supporters of Trump say that his tariffs will help American farmers in the long run

Sid Miller, commissioner of the Texas Department of Agriculture, is among those who have praised Trump for his "vital support".

"We finally have an administration that is prioritising farmers and ranchers," he wrote in a statement earlier this year. "They advocate for farmers, challenge China ... and ensure America's producers are receiving fair treatment."

And it is possible the president's tariff strategy could eventually work, according to Michael Langemeier, a professor of agricultural economics at Purdue University.

But he also worries that uncertainty is inflicting long-term damage. "Your trading partner doesn't know exactly what your position's going to be next year, because it seems like we're changing the goalposts.

"That is a problem."

Tariffs will make us great again

There's an old adage in American politics that says people "vote with their pocketbooks" - and turn against politicians if they appear to harm their finances.

Yet despite financial pressures, the rural Americans we spoke to are firmly sticking with Trump.

Experts say they haven't seen any evidence of meaningful change in support among rural voters since last year. A survey by Pew last month found that 53% of rural Americans approve of the job Trump is doing, far higher than the 38% figure for the country as a whole.

Though a survey by ActiVote earlier this month did find a small decline in Trump's approval among rural voters from 59% in August to 54% in September. Analysts warn not to pay too much attention to those shifts, however, because the number of rural voters included in those polls is so small.

"The data I've seen suggests Trump is still heavily supported in rural communities," says Michael Shepherd, a political science professor at the University of Michigan who focuses on rural politics.

Man attends the Iowa State Fair with a large brown ram
At Iowa's State Fair, many of the conversations revolved around Trump and tariffs (pictured: attendee John Wilson with Judah the Big Ram)

For some farmers at the state fair, the explanation is simple: they believe the US president when he tells them that tariffs will help them in the long run.

"We think the tariffs eventually will make us great again," says John Maxwell, a dairy farmer and cheese producer from Iowa.

"We were giving China a lot, and [previously] we paid tariffs when we sold to them. Let's make it fair. What's good for the goose is good for the other goose."

Some may also hold onto hope that the president will bail farmers out. During Trump's first term he gave farmers a $28bn (£20.7bn) grant amid a tariff dispute with China.

A case of selective blame attribution?

For Nicholas Jacobs, a politics professor at Colby College and author of The Rural Voter, there's a deeper reason at play.

"It's easy for an outsider to ask, 'Why the hell are you still with this guy?'" he says. "But you have to understand that across rural America, the move towards Republicans long predates Donald Trump."

Starting in the 1980s, he says, rural Americans started to feel alienated and left behind while cities benefited from globalisation and technological change.

What he calls a "rural identity" formed, based on a shared grievance and an opposition to urban liberals. The Republicans seemed like their natural champion, while he says the Democrats became "the party of the elite, technocrats, the well-educated, the urbane".

Bloomberg via Getty Images Badges that say Resist. Persist. Repeat. Progress IowaBloomberg via Getty Images
Rural America: the move towards Republicans long predates Donald Trump, says one expert

Some repeat that sentiment at the state fair. Joan Maxwell, a dairy farmer from Davenport in Iowa, says that her area is too often viewed as "flyover country".

"We are not looked at very positively for the most part from the media," she says. "We've been called deplorables, uneducated," - a reference to Hillary Clinton's description of half of Trump's supporters as a "basket of deplorables".

Ms Maxwell added: "A lot of times they ignore us or make fun of us."

Prof Shepherd, of Michigan University, believes there's another factor: in his view, America has become so polarised - with voters from both sides entrenched in their camps - that many are willing to forgive much more than they would previously, as long as it's a policy implemented by their own side.

He calls this "selective blame attribution… they might be really angry about some things that are happening, but they're reticent to blame Trump for them."

'We're giving him a chance - there'd better be results'

Mr Wolf has his own view on the "best case scenario" from here. "What I hope happens is that he [Trump] just declares victory and leaves it [tariffs] alone."

But he warns that even if the policy is dropped, the damage to American farmers could be long-term due to the shake-up to supply chains. Some Chinese firms are now buying their soybeans from Brazil rather than America, he says; they may not quickly return.

Many of the analysts we spoke to believe that rural America's support for Trump is not a blank cheque, despite their current support.

Farmer Gil Gullickson pictured with Anna Jones at Iowa State Fair
'A lot of people say he's just using tariffs as a bargaining chip, as a bluff,' farmer Gil Gullickson (left). 'But history proves that tariffs don't end well'

Mr Shepherd points to the Great Depression and rural "Dustbowl" of the 1930s, which forced millions of farmers to migrate to American cities, causing a long-term realignment in politics - though nobody expects it to get anywhere near that bad this time. The farm crisis of the 1980s also saw thousands of farms go under.

Back at the state fair, Ms Maxwell, the Iowan dairy farmer, makes this point clear.

"We're giving him the chance to follow through with the tariffs, but there had better be results. I think we need to be seeing something in 18 months or less.

"We understand risk - and it had better pay off."

Additional reporting: Florence Freeman

BBC InDepth is the new home on the website and app for the best analysis and expertise from our top journalists. Under a distinctive new brand, we’ll bring you fresh perspectives that challenge assumptions, and deep reporting on the biggest issues to help you make sense of a complex world. And we’ll be showcasing thought-provoking content from across BBC Sounds and iPlayer too. We’re starting small but thinking big, and we want to know what you think - you can send us your feedback by clicking on the button below.

The secrets began before I even auditioned, says The Summer I Turned Pretty actress

BBC Corinna Brown is seen smiling widely in a portrait photograph. She is facing the camera and is wearing a grey jumper over a blue striped shirtBBC
"It's lucky me to be a little part of that," says Corinna Brown of the show

The Summer I Turned Pretty fans are preparing for this week's series three finale - and many are desperate to know how the season will end.

The Amazon show has been a breakout hit for young viewers and the tech giant is taking no chances of spoiling the story.

For actress Corinna Brown, who plays Gemma, the secrecy began before she even auditioned.

"There were codenames galore," she remembers. "There was a codename for the title of the show, there was a codename for my character.

"I thought up until maybe two days before we started shooting that my character was called Maeve.

"Amazon are very good at keeping it a secret."

So keen are producers to prevent spoilers, BBC News is speaking to Brown under the condition she doesn't discuss the finale, which drops on Prime Video on Wednesday.

Warning: The below may contain spoilers - especially if you haven't watched series three of the show

Millions are gripped by the show's love triangle plot between Isabel 'Belly' Conklin, played by Lola Tung, and brothers Conrad and Jeremiah Fisher, played by Christopher Briney and Gavin Casalegno.

Among the obsessions for fans have been a tiny engagement ring, a two-tier mirror glaze dark chocolate cake with raspberries and that sensual peach scene.

Brown's character Gemma is one of Belly's new friends she meets after her move to Paris. So what was it like to be part of a cultural phenomenon?

"It was so exciting because it's so highly anticipated and everybody wants to know what's going to happen," London-born Brown, 26, says.

"The fan base are so passionate, which is something you don't always get."

She says she "didn't really realise" how big the fandom of the show was until its release.

"So I think that was a good thing, to be fair, because otherwise, from the beginning, I would have been like: 'Oh my God'."

'We all love a bit of romance'

As the show's Paris-era was unlocked, viewers have been introduced to a new supporting cast in Belly's circle in the French capital, including Gemma, who like Belly, is new to Paris.

Brown describes her character as a "kindred spirit" to Belly.

They meet outside a nightclub, when Gemma is being bothered by a man. Belly steps in to help her out and the two become friends.

Brown says it is one of her favourite moments and shows "women supporting each other".

Getty Images Gavin Casalegno, Lola Tung and Christopher Briney pose on a red carpet promoting The Summer I Turned PrettyGetty Images
Gavin Casalegno, Lola Tung and Christopher Briney are the lead actors in the show

According to Amazon, this season's first episode drew in 25 million global viewers, a 40% increase on the previous season, with Prime Video saying it is its most-watched TV season among women aged 18-34.

Brown thinks the success of the show comes down to the writing by Jenny Han, who wrote the young adult (YA) romance books the TV series is based on.

"She knows what she's doing. She's got everybody hooked from the books," Brown says.

"It's lucky me to be a little part of that."

Brown feels another reason why the show resonates is "because we all go through it".

"We go through friendship, heartache, love, confusion. For the audience that watch this show and love The Summer I Turned Pretty that is a big thing, it's a new thing, it forms so much of your life.

"Being able to watch someone's else experience of that is helpful... and we all love a bit of romance," she says.

Beyond the traditional audience watching on screens, there are countless fan edits and reaction videos posted on social media, which Corinna says have been positive towards her character.

"They've been lovely. I've only seen good things. They say they like Gemma giving her [Belly] straight advice."

Prime Video A scene from The Summer I Turned Pretty - cast members sit around a table in a bar with drinks laid outPrime Video
According to Amazon, this season's first episode drew in 25 million global viewers

Already beloved by YA fans for her turn as Tara Jones in Netflix-hit Heartstopper, Brown is no stranger to the world of teen romance adaptations.

"With any show that's for a young audience, you have to have that awareness of the young minds that you're inspiring, shaping," Brown says.

"And that's an honour in itself."

Amid all the buzz of the show, secrets are tightly guarded and with the finale about to drop we are not allowed to ask Brown what happens in it.

But we can't help but ask what feels to fans like the summer's most pressing question: Are you team Conrad or team Jeremiah?

"I'm going to keep my lips tight on that one," Brown says, smiling.

"But what I will say is I am Team Gemma and Team Belly's friendship forever."

'My wife died giving birth after Trump cut funding to our clinic'

Aakriti Thapar / BBC Abdul Wakeel stands looking at the camera while holding his daughter and with his young son standing next to them, against a rural backdrop and blue sky in Shesh Pol in the north-eastern Badakhshan province of Afghanistan.Aakriti Thapar / BBC

When Shahnaz went into labour, her husband Abdul called a taxi to take them to the only medical facility accessible to them.

"She was in a lot pain," he says.

A 20-minute drive away, the clinic was in Shesh Pol village in Afghanistan's north-eastern Badakhshan province. It was where their two older children were born.

Abdul sat next to Shahnaz comforting her as they drove over gravel tracks to reach help.

"But when we reached the clinic, we saw that it was closed. I didn't know it had shut down," he said, his face crumpling with agony.

Warning: Readers may find some details in this article distressing.

The clinic in Shesh Pol is one of more than 400 medical facilities that closed down in Afghanistan, one of the world's poorest countries, after the Trump administration cut nearly all US aid to the country earlier this year, in a drastic and abrupt move following the dismantling of the US Agency for International Development (USAID).

A single-storey structure with four small rooms, white paint peeling off its walls, the Shesh Pol clinic has USAID posters tacked up everywhere with information and guidance for pregnant women and new mothers.

Aakriti Thapar / BBC Shesh Pol maternity clinic is pictured with a sign in front of it, it's a small building in a rural looking part of the village in north-eastern Badakhshan province.Aakriti Thapar / BBC
Shesh Pol maternity clinic is one of hundreds of medical facilities forced to close as a result of US aid cuts in Afghanistan

It doesn't look like much but in Badakhshan's mountainous, unforgiving terrain, where a lack of access has been a major reason for historically high maternal mortality rates, the clinic was a critical lifeline, part of a wider programme implemented during the tenure of the US-backed government in the country, to reduce maternal and newborn deaths.

It had a trained midwife who assisted around 25-30 deliveries every month. It had a stock of medicines and injections, and it also provided basic healthcare services.

Other medical facilities are simply too far from Abdul's village, and it was not without risk for Shahnaz to travel on bumpy roads. Abdul also didn't have money to pay for a longer journey - renting the taxi cost 1,000 Afghani ($14.65; £12.70), roughly a quarter of his monthly income as a labourer. So they decided to return home.

"But the baby was coming and we had to stop by the side of the road," Abdul said.

Shahnaz delivered their baby girl in the car. Shortly after, she died, bleeding profusely. A few hours later, before she could be named, their baby also died.

Aakriti Thapar / BBC Abdul gestures as he speaks while stood next to the grave of his newborn baby. The grave is marked by a collection of rocks and foliage against a background of trees, river and blue sky in the village of Shesh Pol.Aakriti Thapar / BBC
Abdul spoke to the BBC about the traumatic deaths of his wife and newborn baby, who are buried in Shesh Pol

"I wept and screamed. My wife and child could've been saved if the clinic was open," said Abdul. "We had a hard life, but we were living it together. I was always happy when I was with her."

He doesn't even have a photo of Shahnaz to hold on to.

There's no certainty the mother and baby would've survived if they'd been treated at the clinic, but without it, they didn't stand a chance, underlining the undeniable impact of US aid cuts in Afghanistan.

For decades, America has been the largest donor to Afghanistan, and in 2024, US funds made up a staggering 43% of all aid coming into the country.

The Trump administration has justified withdrawing it, saying there were "credible and longstanding concerns that funding was benefiting terrorist groups, including... the Taliban", who govern the country. The US government further added that they had reports stating that at least $11m were "being siphoned or enriching the Taliban".

The report that the US State Department referenced was made by the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR). It said that $10.9m of US taxpayer money had been paid to the Taliban-controlled government by partners of USAID in "taxes, fees, duties, or utilities".

The Taliban government denies that aid money was going into their hands.

"This allegation is not true. The aid is given to the UN, and through them to NGOs in provinces. They identify who needs the aid, and they distribute it themselves. The government is not involved," said Suhail Shaheen, the head of the Taliban's political office in Doha.

The Taliban government's policies, especially its restrictions on women, the harshest in the world, have meant that after four years in power, it is still not recognised by most of the world. It's also a key reason donors have been increasingly walking away from the country.

The US insists no one has died because of aid cuts. Shahnaz and her baby's deaths are not recorded anywhere. Neither are countless others.

The BBC has documented at least half a dozen first-hand, devastating accounts in areas where USAID-supported clinics have shut down.

Right next to Shahnaz's grave, villagers who had gathered around us pointed to two other graves. They told us both were of women who died in childbirth in the past four months – Daulat Begi and Javhar. Their babies survived.

Not far from the graveyard, we met Khan Mohammad whose wife, 36-year-old Gul Jan, died in childbirth five months ago. Their baby boy Safiullah died three days later.

Aakriti Thapar / BBC Khan Mohammad is pictured sitting outside a building with his family against a blue sky in the village of Shesh Pol.Aakriti Thapar / BBC
Khan Mohammad also lost his wife and newborn after the Shesh Pol clinic shut down, leaving his children without a mother

"When she became pregnant, she would go to the clinic for check-ups. But midway through her pregnancy it shut down. During the delivery she had a lot of pain and blood loss," Khan Mohammad said. "My children are sad all the time. No one can give them the love of a mother. I miss her every day. We had a sweet and loving life together."

A roughly five-hour drive from Shesh Pol, in Cawgani, another village where a USAID-backed clinic closed down, Ahmad Khan, the grief-stricken father of Maidamo showed us the room in their mud and clay home where she died giving birth to baby Karima.

Aakriti Thapar / BBC Ahmad Khan looks at the camera with a grieving expression, as he's pictured in a head-and-shoulders portrait against a light coloured wall.Aakriti Thapar / BBC
Ahmad Khan blames the US decision to pull funding after his daughter Maidamo died during childbirth

"If the clinic had been open, she might have survived. And even if she had died, we would not have had regrets knowing the medics tried their best. Now we're left with regret and pain. America did this to us," he said, tears rolling down his face.

In another home a few lanes away, Bahisa tells us how terrifying it was to give birth at home. Her three other children were born in the Cawgani clinic.

"I was so scared. In the clinic, we had a midwife, medicines and injections. At home I had nothing, no painkillers. It was unbearable pain. I felt like life was leaving my body. I became numb," she said.

Her baby girl, named Fakiha, died three days after she was born.

Aakriti Thapar / BBC Bahisa and her daughter wear head scarves while looking at the camera as they're pictured at home against a wall and window with a red curtain.Aakriti Thapar / BBC
Bahisa had to give birth without access to painkillers, a midwife or medicine after the Cawgani clinic closed

The closure of clinics in villages has resulted in a surge of patients at the maternity ward of the main regional hospital in the provincial capital Faizabad.

Getting to it, through Badakhshan's treacherous landscape is risky. We were shown a horrifying photo of a newborn baby, who was delivered on the way to Faizabad, and whose neck snapped before he got to the hospital.

We had visited the hospital back in 2022, and while it was stretched then, the scenes we saw this time were unprecedented.

In each bed, there were three women. Imagine having gone into labour, or just having gone through a miscarriage, and not even having a bed to yourself to lie in.

Aakriti Thapar / BBC Zuhra Shewan wears a green head scarf and medical mouth covering while sat on a hospital bed with three other patients.Aakriti Thapar / BBC
Zuhra Shewan (left) suffered a miscarriage at Faizabad hospital, where patients severely outnumber beds

It's what Zuhra Shewan, who suffered a miscarriage, had to endure.

"I was bleeding severely and didn't even have a place to sit. It was really hard. By the time a bed is free, a woman could die bleeding," she said.

Dr Shafiq Hamdard, the director of the hospital, said: "We have 120 beds in the hospital. Now we've admitted 300 to 305."

While the patient load is swelling, the hospital, too, has faced sharp cuts in its funding.

"Three years ago our annual budget was $80,000. Now we have $25,000," Dr Hamdard said.

By August this year, there had been as many maternal deaths recorded as there were for the whole of last year. Which means that at this rate, maternal mortality could increase by as much as 50% over last year.

Newborn deaths have already increased by roughly a third in the past four months, compared with the start of the year.

Razia Hanifi, the hospital's head midwife, says she's exhausted. "I have been working for the past 20 years. This year is the toughest, because of the overcrowding, the shortage of resources and the shortage of trained staff," she said.

Aakriti Thapar / BBC A head-and-shoulders portrait of Razia Hanifi wearing a white head scarf and medical mouth covering in a corridor on the hospital's ward.Aakriti Thapar / BBC
Midwifes like Razia Hanifi face extremely tough working conditions amid shortages of staff, which are likely to worsen after the Taliban banned midwifery training for women

But no reinforcements are coming because of the Taliban government's restrictions on women. Three years ago, all higher education, including medical education was banned for women. Less than a year ago, in December 2024, training for midwives and female nurses was also banned.

At a discreet location, we met two female students who were midway through the training when it was closed. They didn't want to be identified for fear of reprisal.

Anya (name changed) said they both were in graduate courses at university when the Taliban took over. When those were closed in December 2022, they began midwife and nursing training, as it was the only path left to getting an education and a job.

"When that was also banned, I became depressed. I was crying day and night, and I wasn't able to eat. It's a painful situation," she said.

Karishma (named changed) said: "There is already a shortage of midwives and nurses in Afghanistan. Without more being trained, women will be forced to give birth at home which will put them at risk."

We asked the Taliban government's Suhail Shaheen how they can justify bans which effectively curb access to health for half the population.

"It is our internal issue. These are our issues, how to handle them, how to consider them, how to take decisions, this is something internal. That is up to the leadership. Based on the needs of the society, they will take a decision," he said.

With their access to medical services severely restricted, by wave after wave of crushing blows, for Afghanistan's women, their right to health, and life itself, is at grave risk.

Additional reporting, photography and video: Aakriti Thapar, Mahfouz Zubaide, Sanjay Ganguly

Top image shows Abdul with his daughter and son in Shesh Pol.

Yellow warning as strong winds and heavy rain hit UK

Strong winds and heavy rain forecast as stormy weather to hit the UK

Two people sharing an umbrella on a wet and windy pierImage source, Getty
  • Published

Low pressure is sweeping in from the Atlantic bringing a spell of strong winds and heavy rain across the UK.

A Met Office Yellow wind warning has been issued across most of England and all of Wales and is valid from 8pm Sunday until 6pm Monday.

Coastal gales may develop bringing large waves to southern and western shores.

Travel disruption and power cuts are also possible.

Map of UK showing yellow area covering most of England and all of Wales
Image caption,

Places in the yellow warning area will experience the strongest winds which may lead to some disruption

Sunday started dry for most but heavy outbreaks of rain will spread in from the west during the day, reaching eastern England and central Scotland by the late afternoon. Winds will strengthen too, especially for south-west England where coastal gales are likely to develop.

Throughout Sunday night and into Monday gusts up to 45-55mph are expected inland with 60-70mph possible around coasts and hills. Whilst these wind speeds are fairly typical for an autumn storm like this, trees are still in full leaf, which may increase the chance of branches or small tress coming down.

Heavy rain is an additional hazard with 10-30mm falling widely, with some western hills having around 70mm.

There is a risk of surface water flooding and difficult driving conditions.

Will the storm be named?

The Met Office says it is currently "not expecting to name the storm". The warning level for the UK is only yellow, which is the lowest tier.

However, storms are named in association with Ireland's Met Éireann and the Netherlands' KNMI, so if the forecast changes in any of these regions, there is a small potential for one of these agencies to name it.

A storm is named when it is forecast to cause "medium" or "high" impacts. The first name in in this season's storm list would be 'Amy'.

What's the outlook for the rest autumn?

Map of north-west Europe and the north Atlantic showing a blue flowing jet stream to the south, and areas of low pressure moving across the UK
Image caption,

The current weather pattern is dominated by an active jet stream to the south and low pressure systems moving west to east across the UK

As we transition from summer to autumn, we typically see the jet stream moving further south and strengthening in September, which gives rise to more unsettled, stormy weather to move in from the Atlantic.

So far this September we've already seen more than the expected rainfall for the whole month for several parts of the UK.

As we head deeper into the autumn months most forecast models indicate an increased chance of a 'wetter than average' spell until November in the UK.

However, there is always a lot of uncertainty in seasonal forecasts, and these should be interpreted as likely trends rather than expected conditions.

It's unlikely we'll see a repeat of September 2024 which was the wettest on record for 10 English counties, including Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire and Wiltshire. They received more than three times their expected September rainfall leading to widespread flooding.

Kirk suspect 'not co-operating' with authorities, governor says

Getty Images Utah Governor Spencer Cox shoulder cropped image. He is facing   left and in the background is a blurred US flag on a pole to his left. To the back right is a blurred partial flag.Getty Images

Charlie Kirk's alleged killer is "not cooperating" with authorities and has not confessed to carrying out the shooting, Utah's governor Spencer Cox has told US media.

Suspect Tyler Robinson, 22, was taken into custody some 33 hours after Kirk, a 31-year-old right-wing activist, was shot dead in Orem on Wednesday.

Speaking to ABC News, Cox, a republican, said people around Mr Robinson had been cooperating with the investigation.

Cox appeared on various US news outlets on Sunday morning, where he also reiterated concerns regarding social media in the aftermath of Kirk's death.

The governor was also asked about a New York Times report alleging Mr Robinson had spoken to others after the shooting via the Discord messaging platform, including allegations that he joked about being the gunman.

Cox said told ABC News: "All we can confirm is that those conversations definitely were happening, and they did not believe it was actually him.

"It was, it was all joking until, until he, you know, until he admitted that it actually was him."

Mr Robinson was arrested on Thursday night after surrendering to police.

Kirk was speaking at Utah Valley University at an open-air event held by Turning Point USA - the organisation he co-founded - when he was shot and killed.

The event was part of the American Comeback Tour, which was a speaking engagement that took him to several college campuses throughout the US.

Cox previously told the Wall Street Journal that Mr Robinson, a Utah native, was "deeply indoctrinated with leftist ideology".

When questioned on it during CNN's State of the Union programme on Sunday, he said the information was offered by the suspect's friends and family.

"There's so much more that we're learning and so much that we will learn," he explained, adding that when official charges are filed, there will be "much more evidence and information available then".

An affidavit from the state of Utah confirms that Mr Robinson was arrested on suspicion of the crimes of aggravated murder, felony discharge of a firearm, and obstruction of justice.

He is currently being held without bail at Utah County Jail.

"We're interviewing all kinds of people - everyone that knows him - and trying to learn more about what the motive actually was," Cox said.

The governor said among those cooperating with authorities is Mr Robinson's roommate, who he said was also his partner.

He said the partner did not have have any knowledge about the alleged shooting, had been "incredibly cooperative" and was working with investigators "right now".

He also confirmed that the partner was currently transitioning, but, when asked by CNN, said that authorities do not yet know if that is relevant to the investigation.

Watch: How the Charlie Kirk shooting unfolded

Phillipson urges Labour to remain united as she launches deputy leadership bid

PA Media Bridget Phillipson is smiling broadly while standing in front of red screens and signs behind her. She has bobbed brown hair and is wearing a black blazer.PA Media
Bridget Phillipson said she would continue Angela Rayner's "campaigning role"

Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson has urged Labour to remain united as she launched her bid for the party's deputy leadership.

In a speech in Sunderland, she told supporters to back her to bring the party together, secure a second term and "deliver the change we want to see and beat Reform".

The Houghton and Sunderland South MP also paid tribute to Angela Rayner, who vacated the deputy leadership when she resigned over her tax affairs, and pledged to continue her campaigning role.

Phillipson is up against her former Cabinet colleague Lucy Powell, who lost her post as Commons leader in the reshuffle triggered when Rayner quit.

She warned the party would not win if it was not united.

"How did we win last [time]? We came together to show the country a different vision for the future.

"I won't pretend this government hasn't made mistakes – I've been first to admit it.

"But we can't afford to look inwards - to go back to bad old days of divided Labour Party and open old wounds.

"If we turn against each other only one person will win – Nigel Farage - but millions more will lose."

Phillipson pledged to take on Reform UK with a "mandate to do more".

She was joined by Mayor of the North East, Kim McGuinness, at the Fire Station music venue in Sunderland.

The contest is seen by some as a referendum on the Prime Minister's leadership, which has come under pressure amid the loss of two of his government's household names - Rayner and Lord Mandelson - within a week.

PA Media A group of supporters look up at the camera. Among them is the Labour North East mayor Kim McGuinness. Two of them are holding placards which state "I'm backing Bridget Phillipson". PA Media
Bridget Phillipson launched her bid for Labour's deputy leadership in Sunderland

Phillipson said she planned to use her position to give members a "strong voice" at the Cabinet table.

"What can be achieved under a deputy leader with a seat at Cabinet? Just look at Angela Rayner. Angela knew the importance of the role she had. There was nothing part-time about her deputy leadership.

"That's why, today, I pledge to continue Angela Rayner's campaigning role as deputy leader.

The winner of the contest will not become deputy prime minister, as Rayner was, because that position has already been handed to Justice Secretary David Lammy.

The Education Secretary and Ms Powell now need to secure the support of 5% of constituency parties or at least three affiliates, including at least two affiliated trade unions.

The ballot for candidates who clear the nomination hurdles will open on 8 October and close at 12:00 (BST) on 23 October, with the winner announced on 25 October.

A graphic showing the Labour deputy leader process

Follow BBC Sunderland on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.

England sweep aside Scotland to reach semi-finals

England sweep aside Scotland to reach semi-finals

Kelsey Clifford scores a try for England against ScotlandImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Kelsey Clifford scored two tries but did not return to the pitch after a 45th-minute head injury assessment

England (26) 40

Tries: Clifford (2), Talling, Dow, Cokayne, Aitchison Cons: Aitchison (5)

Scotland (3) 8

Try: Lloyd Pens: Nelson

England swept aside Scotland in Bristol to rack up a record 31st straight Test victory and march into a Rugby World Cup semi-final against France.

Scotland were first on the board through a Helen Nelson penalty, but by half-time England had left a heavier imprint on the scoreline as Kelsey Clifford, twice, and Morwenna Talling barged over in the pouring rain.

Abby Dow also claimed her 50th try in 57 Tests after Holly Aitchison's slung miss-pass exposed Scotland out wide to give the hosts a 26-3 interval lead.

Amy Cokayne trucked over at the back of a driven line-out and Aitchison darted in as England coasted to victory in the second half.

Scotland's spirit was never snuffed out and Rhona Lloyd crossed on the final play, after good work by opposite wing Fran McGhie, to ensure the well-beaten underdogs went out on a high.

England's current winning streak breaks their own record, which was set en route to the Rugby World Cup final in 2022.

Defeat by New Zealand in that match is England's only loss in their last 62 matches - a statistic that stretches back to 2019.

Scotland's exit marks the end of number eight Jade Konkel's Test career after 12 years and 74 caps. The 31-year-old became Scotland's first professional player in 2016.

There has been uncertainty about how many of Konkel's team-mates will be able to continue playing rugby as a profession after this tournament, with around half the squad's deals believed to be nearing the end of their current terms.

France had fought back to beat Ireland 18-13 in similarly dismal weather conditions earlier in the day to book their own place in the last four.

More to follow.

England: Rowland; Dow, Jones, Heard, Breach; Aitchison, Hunt; Clifford, Cokayne, Muir, Talling, Galligan, Aldcroft (capt), Kabeya, Matthews.

Replacements: Atkin-Davies, Carson, Bern, Ward, Feaunati, Packer, Harrison, Sing.

Scotland: Rollie; Lloyd, Orr, Thomson, McGhie; Nelson, Brebner-Holden; Bartlett, Skeldon, Belisle, Wassell, Bonar, Malcolm (capt), Gallagher, Konkel.

Replacements: Martin, Wright, Poolman, Donaldson, McLachlan, Stewart, Mattinson, Wills.

'Hatton was the people's champion who fought with every part of his soul'

'People's champion who fought with every part of his soul'

Ricky Hatton in his gym in 2007Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Ricky Hatton made his professional boxing debut in 1997

  • Published

Ricky Hatton was remembered as a "warrior" who became the "people's champion" as boxing legends and sporting greats paid tribute following the fighter's death at the age of 46.

Former world champion Hatton's body was found at his home in Hyde, Greater Manchester on Sunday and police said there are not thought to be any suspicious circumstances.

Stockport-born Hatton - nicknamed 'the Hitman' - was high on the list of Britain's most popular and recognisable boxers having won world titles in the light-welterweight and welterweight divisions.

Amir Khan remembered "one of Britain's greatest boxers" and Tyson Fury said Hatton was a "legend", while Wayne Rooney said he was "devastated" by the news.

Boxing journalist Steve Bunce told BBC Radio 5 Live: "We used the cliche 'people's champion', but nobody had come close to what Ricky was before and nobody has come close to what Ricky was since.

"He fought with every part of his soul and fibre. If he won there was nothing left, and if he lost there was nothing left. He gave everything in victory and defeat.

"He should never have been as good as he was. He should never have had the fame and accolades and glory he had, but that was down to pure determination and desire."

Hatton's parents made a small gym in the basement of their pub when he was 12, and it was there that he honed his skills on a punching bag.

He rose through amateur and domestic levels to pit his wits against elite boxers of his generation, including Kostya Tszyu, Floyd Mayweather Jr and Manny Pacquiao.

Hatton achieved a staggering 43-0 record before his first loss came at the hands of Mayweather at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas in 2007.

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

This video can not be played

Media caption,

Hatton was a 'massive inspiration to me' - Amir Khan pays tribute to former world champion Ricky Hatton

Much of Hatton's appeal lay in the salt-of-the-earth roots which he never lost touch with - doing much of his training in a ramshackle gym above a carpet factory in Hyde.

Indeed, when he walked to the ring to face Mayweather in Las Vegas he did so wearing a robe which carried an advert for his father's carpet shop where he had worked until he turned professional.

"He was very approachable, very down to earth, which goes a long way to tell you what the man is all about," said former WBC super-middleweight champion Richie Woodhall.

"He reached the very top in his sport, but you could approach him and have a cup of tea with him – that's what made him appealing to people."

Mancunian Hatton's all-action style made him one of the most popular fighters in the first decade of the 21st Century.

Hatton's former promoter Frank Warren described, in a post on X, a "superbly talented fighter" who "inspired a generation of young boxers".

Warren wrote: "From making his debut in Widnes in 1997 to then go on to win one of the most historic fights in British boxing history against Kostya Tszyu in Manchester, Ricky will rightly go down as one of the modern greats of this sport."

Fellow promoter Eddie Hearn added: "Everybody loved Ricky. May he rest in eternal peace."

Britain's former light-welterweight world champion Khan said Hatton was "a friend, a mentor, a warrior".

"Rip to the legend Ricky Hatton may he rip," said former heavyweight world champion Fury on Instagram. "There will only ever be one Ricky Hatton. Can't believe this so young."

Hatton had rare popularity, being a figure who managed to transcend his sport.

During his peak he hung out with fellow Manchester City fans Liam and Noel Gallagher of Oasis.

Bunce said that Hatton "lived life fully" but was always willing "to take the mickey out of himself".

Darts legend Phil Taylor and ex-England cricketer Andrew Flintoff were among those from other sports to pay tribute on social media.

Former England and Manchester United footballer Rooney, who carried Hatton's belts into the ring before a fight with Jose Luis Castillo in 2007, said on X he was "devastated" and Hatton was a "a legend, a warrior and a great person".

Ricky Hatton defends against a Floyd Mayweather jab during their title fight at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas in 2007Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

More than 30,000 fans travelled to Las Vegas for Ricky Hatton's title fight with Floyd Mayweather in 2007

Defeats to Mayweather and Pacquiao in 2007 and 2009 left Hatton deeply depressed and led to the darkest times of his life.

After retirement he was candid about his struggles with drinking and mental health as he tried to fill a void in his life.

"Those of us in the business have lived with Ricky's ups and downs over the last 15 years," Bunce said.

"The highs and the lows, the great nights in Las Vegas and the great nights in Manchester. Some of those that were closer to him witnessed the dark holes, the depression and the dark thoughts.

"He has had some troubles. He talked about his mental health problems. He has talked about his addictions. He addressed them and faced them and attacked them."

Hatton, who won 45 of his 48 professional bouts across a 15-year career, last fought professionally in 2012, suffering defeat by Ukraine's Vyacheslav Senchenko during a brief comeback.

He later found some success as a trainer, proved to be an especially sought after after-dinner speaker, and beamed with pride at the rise to the professional ranks of his son, Campbell.

Hatton fought an exhibition bout against Marco Antonio Barrera in 2022 and was scheduled to have another fight in Dubai in December.

"He was a man of the people and a spectacular fighter," former WBA featherweight champion Barry McGuigan wrote on X.

"A great man inside the ring and a wonderful man outside of it. RIP Ricky, my thoughts and prayers are with his family at this very difficult time."

Related topics

More boxing from the BBC

We will never surrender our flag, Sir Keir Starmer says

EPA Protesters taking part in a 'Unite the Kingdom' rally are held back by police officers, some on horses, in central London.EPA

Britain will not surrender its flag to those that wish to use it as a symbol of violence, fear and division, Sir Keir Starmer has said.

The prime minister said the flag represents "our diverse country" and he will not allow people to feel intimidated on "our streets because of their background or the colour of their skin".

His comments came after more than 150,000 people took to the streets of central London for a "Unite the Kingdom" march organised by far-right activist Tommy Robinson, and about 5,000 took part in a counter-protest, co-ordinated by Stand Up To Racism.

Earlier, Business Secretary Peter Kyle said marchers were "demonstrating freedom of association and freedom of speech".

The prime minister said: "People have a right to peaceful protest. It is core to our country's values.

"But we will not stand for assaults on police officers doing their job or for people feeling intimidated on our streets because of their background or the colour of their skin.

"Britain is nation proudly built on tolerance, diversity and respect. Our flag represents our diverse country and we will never surrender it to those that use it as a symbol of violence, fear and division."

Police say 26 officers were injured on the day - including four who were seriously hurt - with 24 people arrested.

Speaking about Saturday's protests on Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg, Kyle said moments like these were "klaxon calls" for those in power to redouble their efforts to address the big concerns people have, including on immigration.

"What worries me most is the divisions in our society and other societies and other democratic societies ... it's not even the left and the right at the moment, " he told the programme.

"There are figures such as Tommy Robinson that are able to touch into a sense of disquiet and grievance in the community in our society," he said.

The "small minority" who had committed violence would be held accountable, he told the programme.

Kyle criticised Elon Musk's comments after he appeared at Saturday's rally via video link telling protesters to "fight back" or "die".

"I thought that they were slightly incomprehensible comments that were totally inappropriate", the minister said.

The tech billionaire also referred to massive uncontrolled migration and called for a change of government in the UK.

This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh the page for the fullest version.

You can receive Breaking News on a smartphone or tablet via the BBC News App. You can also follow @BBCBreaking on X to get the latest alerts.

Romania becomes second Nato country to report Russian drone in its airspace

EPA A Romanian Air Force F-16 fighter jet flying through blue skyEPA
F-16 aircraft detected a Russian drone in Romanian airspace, while monitoring the country's border with Ukraine

Romania says a Russian drone has breached its airspace - the second Nato country to report such an incursion.

Romanian fighter jets were in the air monitoring a Russian attack in Ukraine on Saturday and were able to track the drone near Ukraine's southern border, the defence ministry said in a statement.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said the incursion could not be a mistake - it was "an obvious expansion of the war by Russia". Moscow has not commented on the Romanian claims.

On Wednesday, Poland said it had shot down at least three Russian drones which had entered its airspace.

In its statement, Romania's defence ministry said it detected the Russian drone when two F-16 jets were monitoring they country's border with Ukraine, after "Russian air attacks on Ukrainian infrastructure on the Danube".

The drone was detected 20km (12.4 miles) south-west of the village of Chilia Veche, before disappearing from the radar.

But it did not fly over populated areas or pose imminent danger, the ministry said.

Poland also responded to concerns over Russian drones on Saturday.

"Preventative operations of aviation - Polish and allied - have begun in our airspace," Prime Minister Donald Tusk said in a post on X.

"Ground-based air defence systems have reached the highest state of readiness."

Earlier this week Russia's defence ministry said there had been "no plans" to target facilities on Polish soil.

Belarus, a close Russian ally, said the drones which entered Polish airspace on Wednesday were an accident, after their navigation systems were jammed.

On Sunday, the Czech Republic announced it had sent a special operations helicopter unit to Poland.

The unit consists of three Mi-171S helicopters, each one capable of transporting up to 24 personnel and featuring full combat equipment.

The move is in response to Russian's incursion into Nato's eastern flank, the Czech Defence Minister Jana Cernochova said.

In response to the latest drone incursion, President Zelensky said the Russian military "knows exactly where their drones are headed and how long they can operate in the air".

He has consistently asked Western countries to tighten sanctions on Moscow.

US President Donald Trump also weighed in on airspace breach earlier this week, saying he was "ready" to impose tougher sanctions on Russia, but only if Nato countries met certain conditions, such as stopping buying Russian oil.

Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 and has been making slow progress in the battlefield.

Trump has been leading efforts to end the war, but Russia has intensified attacks on Ukraine since President Vladimir Putin returned from a summit with Trump in Alaska last month.

Rubio in Israel as IDF destroys more Gaza City buildings

Reuters U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visit the Western WallReuters
Rubio and Netanyahu visited the Western Wall in Jerusalem

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio has arrived in Israel to discuss the war in Gaza following Israel's attack on Hamas members in Qatar, which has drawn international condemnation.

Before his departure, Rubio said US President Donald Trump was unhappy with the Israeli strike on the key US ally, but stressed that the US-Israeli relationship was "very strong".

"Obviously we're not happy about it, the president was not happy about it. Now we need to move forward and figure out what comes next," Rubio said.

His visit comes as Israeli forces continue to destroy residential buildings in Gaza City, forcing thousands to flee ahead of an expected ground offensive to seize the city.

In his remarks at Joint Base Andrews, Rubio added that Trump's priority remained the return of all hostages and an end to the war. Hamas members had been in Doha to discuss the latest US proposal for a ceasefire in Gaza when Israel launched its strikes.

When asked whether the strike on Doha complicated Qatar's willingness to work with the US, Rubio said "they've been good partners on a number of fronts".

Qatar - a key US ally in the region and the location of a major American air base - will host an emergency Arab-Islamic summit on Monday to discuss next moves.

Doha has condemned Israel's attack as "cowardly" and a "flagrant violation of international law". Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the move was "fully justified" because it targeted senior Hamas leaders who organised the 7 October 2023 attacks.

Some 48 Israeli hostages, of whom 20 are believed to remain alive, are being held by Hamas in Gaza. Their families have said Netanyahu is the "one obstacle" preventing their return and reaching a peace deal.

The Hostages and Missing Families Forum wrote on social media that Israel's strike on Qatar last week shows "every time a deal approaches, Netanyahu sabotages it".

Reuters Smoke rises from an evacuated residential building which was housing displaced Palestinians, after it was hit by an Israeli air strike, in Gaza CityReuters
Israeli forces have continued to destroy residential buildings in Gaza City

Netanyahu's plan to occupy Gaza City has drawn international criticism, with the UN warning a military escalation in an area where famine has been declared will push civilians into an "even deeper catastrophe".

Footage from Sunday verified by the BBC showed bombs hitting the al-Kawthar tower. Local officials told Reuters that at least 30 residential buildings had been destroyed. Israel said it had completed five waves of air strikes on the city over the past week, targeting more than 500 sites including what it said were Hamas reconnaissance and sniper sites, buildings containing tunnel openings and weapons depots.

Israel has demanded that Gaza City's residents leave the city and head south and on Saturday the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said it estimated about 250,000 Palestinians had fled, though hundreds of thousands are believed to remain in the area. Hamas has called on people not to leave.

Some say they cannot afford to go while others say southern Gaza is not safe either as Israel has carried out air strikes there too.

"The bombardment intensified everywhere and we took down the tents, more than 20 families, we do not know where to go," Musbah al-Kafarna, displaced in Gaza City, told Reuters.

Reuters Displaced Palestinians, fleeing northern Gaza due to an Israeli military operation, move southward after Israeli forces ordered residents of Gaza City to evacuate to the south, in the central Gaza StripReuters
Palestinians continue to flee Israel's bombardment of Gaza City, heading south

On Sunday, the Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza said the bodies of 68 people killed by the Israeli military had arrived at its hospitals over the previous day.

Since UN-backed global food security experts confirmed a famine in Gaza City on 22 August, the ministry has reported that at least 144 people have died from starvation and malnutrition across the territory. Israel has said it is expanding its efforts to facilitate aid deliveries and has disputed the health ministry's figures on malnutrition-related deaths.

The Israeli military launched a campaign in Gaza in response to the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on 7 October, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.

At least 64,871 people have been killed in Israeli attacks in Gaza since then, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.

Men arrested after house explosion injures four

YappApp An aerial shot of a terraced house with extensive explosion damage including a decimated roof and debris all over the road and back gardenYappApp
The house is located on Southfield Lane in Bradford

A suspected thief is at large after four people were injured following an explosion at a house he targeted, police have said.

The explosion took place at the empty house on Southfield Lane, Bradford, at about 22:00 BST on Saturday, but two neighbouring properties were also damaged and a man, woman and child were treated for minor injuries.

A 27-year-old man, who was found seriously injured near the scene, has been arrested on suspicion of theft and West Yorkshire Police are also seeking Jacob Ryan, 28.

A force spokesperson said: "It is possible Jacob Ryan may have been injured as well and we urge him or anyone who knows him to come forward."

West Yorkshire Police Mugshot of Jacob RyanWest Yorkshire Police
Jacob Ryan, 28, is on the run after the explosion

They added: "It is important we make sure he has access to any medical treatment he may need."

Officers also said the men were attempting to steal metal from the unoccupied terraced property.

The arrested man's injuries were said to be serious but not life-threatening and he was treated at hospital.

Fire and ambulance services also attended the "significantly damaged" building, as well as the two adjacent properties.

The force said the affected property was then made safe with the assistance of utilities companies.

Supt Lucy Leadbeater, from Bradford District Police, said: "A number of enquiries remain ongoing into this serious incident today."

She added: "While the cause of the explosion at this empty property remains under investigation, we are investigating reports of a metal theft taking place there just prior to the incident."

West Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service confirmed a technical rescue unit with dogs carried out further searches after the casualties were treated to ensure there were no persons unaccounted for.

YappApp An close up shot of a terraced house with extensive explosion damage including a decimated roof and debris all over the road and back gardenYappApp
Police said the injuries suffered by the family living next door were not life-threatening

Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.

Related internet links

Tommy Robinson tapping into disquiet in the country, says minister

Disquiet in society has "roots in the financial crisis", says Peter Kyle

Far-right activist Tommy Robinson is among those tapping into a "sense of disquiet" in the country, a Cabinet minister has told the BBC, after thousands joined a march and counter-protest in London on Saturday.

Business Secretary Peter Kyle said marchers were demonstrating freedom of association and freedom of speech, after up to 150,000 joined a "Unite the Kingdom" rally, organised by Robinson and about 5,000 took part in a counter-protest, co-ordinated by Stand Up To Racism.

But he told Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg the "small minority" who had committed violence would be held accountable.

Twenty-six police officers were injured, the police said, and 24 people arrested for a range of offences.

Kyle criticised Elon Musk's comments after he appeared at Saturday's rally via video link telling protesters to "fight back" or "die".

"I thought that they were slightly incomprehensible comments that were totally inappropriate", the minister said.

The tech billionaire also referred to massive uncontrolled migration and called for a change of government in the UK.

Speaking about Saturday's protests, Kyle said moments like these were "klaxon calls" for those in power to redouble their efforts to address the big concerns people have, including on immigration.

"What worries me most is the divisions in our society and other societies and other democratic societies ... it's not even the left and the right at the moment, " he told the programme.

Figures like Robinson were able to "touch into a sense of disquiet and grievance in the community in our society", he said.

"A lot of it goes back to its roots in the financial crisis and the impact that had on communities around the country, and we haven't been able to bring our communities back together again since," Kyle continued.

Met Police officers clash with protesters at Tommy Robinson rally

A huge policing operation was in place in London on Saturday, with the Met deploying 1,000 officers and drafting in help from other forces across England.

Assistant Commissioner Matt Twist said officers said: "There is no doubt that many came to exercise their lawful right to protest, but there were many who came intent on violence."

Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, addressed the crowds where he criticised politicians for "parroting" his ideas.

He also claimed UK courts had decided the rights of undocumented migrants superseded those of the "local community".

Last month, the Court of Appeal overturned an injunction blocking asylum seekers being housed at The Bell Hotel in Epping, Essex.

Robinson was released from prison earlier this year after being jailed in October for ignoring an order not to repeat false claims about a Syrian refugee, who had successfully sued him for libel.

Prince Andrew needs to be fully investigated, Giuffre family says

Getty Images Prince Andrew wearing a white shirt and a dark blue suitGetty Images

The family of Virginia Giuffre has told the BBC the Duke of York needs to be fully investigated over allegations he sexually abused her.

"It doesn't matter if it's a Royal Family member or president or prince... every single person deserves to be held to the fullest extent of the law," Sky Roberts, Giuffre's brother, told the Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg programme.

Giuffre was one of the most prominent victims of disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein. In 2001, at the age of 17, she said Epstein introduced her to Prince Andrew, who she said sexually abused her three times.

The prince, who has denied all claims against him, reached an out-of-court settlement with her in 2022 which contained no admission of liability or apology.

BBC News has asked the prince for comment.

Prince Andrew stepped back from royal duties in 2019 because of the Epstein scandal and after growing backlash from a BBC Newsnight interview about his friendship with the convicted paedophile.

But a visibly emotional Mr Roberts told the BBC he felt the prince "had not gotten enough from this".

"Of course he's been stripped of... all of these different things and publicly shamed in certain ways, but that's not enough," he said.

"The fact that he's still out there, that he's still living in a palace or a castle is not enough.

"It's time we put every single person, whether you're a royal, Prince Andrew, you need to be fully investigated, and if it is found that you had any participation, you need to be put behind bars for the rest of your life."

Speaking alongside his wife, Amanda Roberts, they said the Royal Family had not reached out to them.

Mrs Roberts said she felt there was "more that's going to come to light... every single person who knows they've harmed her, they have to live with that".

"I think we're right on the precipice of seeing all of those skeletons start to come to surface," she said, though it was not clear if she was referring specifically to Prince Andrew.

"You know what you've done and that is for you to live with," she said.

Giuffre took her own life in April after many years of campaigning.

The couple also told the BBC that Lord Mandelson should never have been given the position of the UK ambassador to the United States.

Lord Mandelson was sacked earlier this week after a cache of emails between him and Epstein was published by Bloomberg, revealing the extent of their contacts and relationship.

The interview also touched upon US President Donald Trump's relationship with Epstein. Giuffre alleged that she was abused by Epstein after she met Ghislaine Maxwell, a British socialite, in 2000 while working as a locker room attendant at Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach.

The couple said that associates of Epstein who contributed to his recently published birthday book, including Trump, needed to be investigated.

"I think anybody that's in that book, including President Trump, should be completely and 100% investigated, and if it is found, then should be held to the fullest extent of the law," Mr Roberts said.

Entries from 40 people in the book, divided into several categories such as "friends", "business", "science" and "Brooklyn", were published, though the names under "family" and "girl friends" were redacted.

These people are not accused of any legal wrongdoing in connection with Epstein's case.

The White House has denied that the alleged letter from Trump to Epstein is authentic.

Giuffre's brother also urged Trump to release the remaining so-called Epstein files.

"If he's not implicated in this, then he needs to do the right thing. And the right thing right now is to release the documents, give the accountability to the survivors, and give accountability to my sister," he said.

In response, a White House spokeswoman hit out at what she described as "fake news" and told the BBC "it's not news that Epstein knew Donald Trump, because Donald Trump kicked Epstein out of his club for being a creep."

"Democrats and the media knew about Epstein and his victims for years and did nothing to help them while President Trump was calling for transparency, and is now delivering on it with thousands of pages of documents," she added.

Trump's coming to Britain. He'll get a spectacular royal welcome but no cheering crowds

BBC Image of King Charles and US President Donald TrumpBBC

US President Donald Trump is going to be greeted with a spectacular royal charm offensive during his state visit this week.

The aim will be to dazzle and flatter him with the ultimate red-carpet experience, with guards of honour, flypasts, historic carriages, a lavish banquet, pomp and pageantry.

In return, Sir Keir Starmer will be hoping this gilt-edged reception will help to deliver the UK's message on awkward issues such as Ukraine and trade tariffs.

And if anyone can get the US president's attention and influence him, surely King Charles III and the Royal Family can.

Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images Queen Elizabeth II greets Melania Trump and US President Donald Trump as they attend their ceremonial welcome in the Buckingham Palace garden on day one of his state visit to the UK on June 3, 2019 in London, England.  Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images
Queen Elizabeth II greeted the President and First Lady on the state visit to the UK in 2019

But how will King Charles handle his sometimes unpredictable guest in Windsor? Can he be the Trump whisperer?

"Trump loves the monarchy and the Royal Family. It's a potential diplomatic ace card for the UK government," says Anna Whitelock, professor of history of the modern monarchy at City St George's, University of London.

This attraction to royalty will give the King a "rare advantage" in dealing with Trump, who usually expects to have the upper hand, says Prof Whitelock.

Sir Anthony Seldon, biographer of the UK's prime ministers, agrees. The King can benefit from Trump's "palpable enthusiasm" for the royals, he says.

"At the same time, King Charles is in the most delicate of positions. His own known views, on the environment, and standing up for democracy and the rule of law in Europe, are a long way apart from the president's," says Sir Anthony.

"He will, I am sure, be scrupulously correct and civil," he adds. In essence, the King will stick to the script given to him by the UK government.

The government will certainly hope that this week's royal schmooze-fest will make a positive impression on Trump, creating a feelgood factor for the UK.

It's an unusual and carefully crafted state visit. There's a crammed schedule squeezed into a day and a half, most of it dedicated to royal spectacles. Windsor is being used like a royal theme park.

With fears over security and protests, there won't be any cheering crowds and no public procession, like the one recently enjoyed by France's President Emmanuel Macron. Instead, it will be helicopters and closed events, including the carriage ride, which will wind its way inside the Windsor estate.

A YouGov poll over the summer showed opinion divided on whether Trump's visit should go ahead, with slightly more wanting it cancelled.

And the nearest thing to the public that the president will see will be the staff working at the banquet.

Jonathan Brady/Getty Images King Charles III holds an audience with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky at Windsor Castle, Berkshire on June 23, 2025 in Windsor, England. Jonathan Brady/Getty Images
The King has shown his public support for Ukraine's President Zelensky

The King will make a speech in honour of the president at the state banquet in St George's Hall, inside Windsor Castle. He's likely to praise the special relationship and talk of the anniversaries of wartime alliances, perhaps mentioning his mother, the late Queen, and Trump's mother, who so admired royalty.

Every word will have been written in close consultation with the government, anxious to hit the right notes.

Guests, including many celebrity faces, will dine on a showcase of US and British food, from a menu written in French, with five or six different glasses for each place, in a hall lined with royal portraits and suits of armour.

Charles has decades of experience at playing host. Whatever his own private thoughts - and he's not exactly going to be signed up to Trump's "drill, baby, drill" message - the King has a strong sense of duty and will work hard to make this visit a success.

Royal author Robert Hardman suggests they'll stick to safe topics - such as talking about the president's Scottish roots.

And the royals have, of course, had plenty of visits from people with whom they might not have seen eye-to-eye. Mr Hardman describes how the late Queen Elizabeth II once hid behind a bush rather than bump into Romania's President Caecescu in the palace gardens, during the dictator's state visit in 1978.

Mark Kerrison/In Pictures via Getty Images King Charles III and President Emmanuel Macron of France proceed by carriage to Windsor Castle on the first day of the latter's State Visit to the UK on 8th July 2025 in Windsor, United KingdMark Kerrison/In Pictures via Getty Images
There will be no public carriage rides for the US visit, unlike for President Macron

The King is also not alone. The rest of the Royal Family will be deployed to help with the hospitality.

All eyes will be on Catherine, the Princess of Wales, and the First Lady, Melania Trump, when they visit a nature project involving the Scouts on Thursday.

Trump is also an admirer of Prince William, praising their "great, great talk" in France at the re-opening of the Notre-Dame Cathedral. William and Catherine will be an important part of the ceremonial welcome on Wednesday.

Queen Camilla will show Melania one of the quirkier items in Windsor, a remarkable dolls' house, made a century ago by the architect Sir Edwin Lutyens. If things get too tough, the miniature wine bottles in the dolls' house have real drink inside.

Getty Images The Princess of Wales at the state banquet for Trump in 2019Getty Images
The Princess of Wales at the state banquet for Trump in 2019

While King Charles and Trump might seem contrasting personalities, they're very much known quantities to each other. They're men of the same post-war generation - Trump aged 79 and the King aged 76 - who have overlapped for decades. As far back as the late-1980s, Charles had been to Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate.

After Trump survived an assassination attempt last July, the King sent him a personal note. They spent time together during Trump's previous state visit in 2019.

And it's also not just the two heads of state who have crossed paths, but their families.

Before Trump had taken a tilt at the White House, his businessman brother Robert, who died in 2020, had been a significant donor to Charles's charities, bringing him to royal dinners in the UK, along with other wealthy US socialites.

The King's brother, Prince Andrew, had visited Mar-a-Lago in 2000, introducing himself as "Andrew York" to guests. Jeffrey Epstein, later convicted as a sex offender, and Ghislaine Maxwell were pictured at the same party.

Prince Andrew will be entirely airbrushed out of this week's visit. But for Trump's 2019 visit, he was described as Buckingham Palace's "secret weapon", accompanying the president on two of the three days. That was only a matter of months before the Duke of York's notorious Newsnight interview.

Trump clearly relished meeting the late Queen Elizabeth II and he'll pay his respects to her, laying a wreath on her tomb in St George's Chapel.

Andrew Harnik/Getty Images British Prime Minister Keir Starmer (L) presents a letter from King Charles III to U.S. President Donald Trump as Vice President JD Vance (R) looks on in the Oval Office at the White House on February 27, 2025 in Washington, DC. Andrew Harnik/Getty Images
Sir Keir Starmer handed over the historic invitation to a second state visit

Trump's fascination with the monarchy is at the heart of this state visit. As with much about the president, it's about his personality more than his politics.

"I still remember my mother, who is Scottish by birth, sitting in front of the television set to watch Queen Elizabeth's coronation and not budging for an entire day. She was just enthralled by the pomp and circumstance, the whole idea of royalty and glamour," Trump recalled in his book The Art of the Deal.

"I also remember my father that day, pacing around impatiently. 'For Christ's sake Mary,' he'd say. 'Enough is enough, turn it off.'"

It seems to be his mother's voice that he listened to.

"A meeting with the Queen of England was the ultimate sign, that he, Trump, had made it in life," wrote his former Russia adviser Fiona Hill in her White House memoir.

For Trump, getting close to a King or Queen seems to have been the ultimate way for an outsider to become an insider.

Offering him a second state visit has been called "unprecedented". And it is very rare, although Queen Margrethe and Prince Henrik of Denmark also had two, in 1974 and 2000.

Since the start of Queen Elizabeth II's reign in 1952, there have only been three state visits by US presidents - George W Bush, Barack Obama and Trump - who is the only one who has had two. There have been other presidential trips to the UK, but not fully-fledged state visits.

The significance of that shouldn't be underestimated and it reflects how much Trump dominates the international news agenda.

For the UK government, his apparent fandom for the royals creates an opportunity to make its own pitch to Trump.

Getty Images Canadian PM Mark Carney and King Charles in the Opening of Parliament in OttawaGetty Images
The King and PM Mark Carney asserted Canada's independence from US claims

It's an important moment for King Charles, who used to be criticised for "meddling" in politics. Now he's in the unusual position of being actively encouraged to play a role in diplomatic negotiations. Soft power is being applied to tough times.

It was the King who embraced Ukraine's President Zelensky after his White House mauling in February. And it was the King who went to Canada in May to show solidarity when it was under pressure from Trump to become his 51st state.

Charles appears to have been effective. Former Canadian high commissioner to the UK, Jeremy Kinsman, said the intervention had been "outstanding" and Trump seems to have reduced his aggressive rhetoric.

The King has also received warm support and standing ovations after speeches to the parliaments of France, Italy and Germany. Charles is a bridge-builder in an era when populist politicians are burning them down.

Yet issues such as protecting Ukraine are personally and deeply held by the King.

"I imagine it is an uncomfortable moment for the King," adds Mr Kinsman. "I cannot imagine two men more utterly different in values, purpose, style, and psychology."

Mr Kinsman, the former professional diplomat, says the King will have been briefed to "play the genial host and continue to try to charm the US president and impress him with the majesty of the setting". In turn, he says Trump will be on best behaviour and he will have been briefed and ready for small talk on topics such as organic farming.

"The King will know what to expect and I'm confident he will handle the president very diplomatically," royal commentator Pauline Maclaran says.

"The chemistry between them will be very interesting."

Thin, purple banner promoting the Royal Watch newsletter with text saying, “Insider stories and expert analysis in your inbox every week”. There is also a graphic of a fleur-de-lis in white.

Sign up here to get the latest royal stories and analysis every week with our Royal Watch newsletter. Those outside the UK can sign up here.

Romania becomes second Nato country to detect Russian drone in its airspace

EPA A Romanian Air Force F-16 fighter jet flying through blue skyEPA
F-16 aircraft detected a Russian drone in Romanian airspace, while monitoring the country's border with Ukraine

Romania says a Russian drone has breached its airspace - the second Nato country to report such an incursion.

Romanian fighter jets were in the air monitoring a Russian attack in Ukraine on Saturday and were able to track the drone near Ukraine's southern border, the defence ministry said in a statement.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said the incursion could not be a mistake - it was "an obvious expansion of the war by Russia". Moscow has not commented on the Romanian claims.

On Wednesday, Poland said it had shot down at least three Russian drones which had entered its airspace.

In its statement, Romania's defence ministry said it detected the Russian drone when two F-16 jets were monitoring they country's border with Ukraine, after "Russian air attacks on Ukrainian infrastructure on the Danube".

The drone was detected 20km (12.4 miles) south-west of the village of Chilia Veche, before disappearing from the radar.

But it did not fly over populated areas or pose imminent danger, the ministry said.

Poland also responded to concerns over Russian drones on Saturday.

"Preventative operations of aviation - Polish and allied - have begun in our airspace," Prime Minister Donald Tusk said in a post on X.

"Ground-based air defence systems have reached the highest state of readiness."

Earlier this week Russia's defence ministry said there had been "no plans" to target facilities on Polish soil.

Belarus, a close Russian ally, said the drones which entered Polish airspace on Wednesday were an accident, after their navigation systems were jammed.

On Sunday, the Czech Republic announced it had sent a special operations helicopter unit to Poland.

The unit consists of three Mi-171S helicopters, each one capable of transporting up to 24 personnel and featuring full combat equipment.

The move is in response to Russian's incursion into Nato's eastern flank, the Czech Defence Minister Jana Cernochova said.

In response to the latest drone incursion, President Zelensky said the Russian military "knows exactly where their drones are headed and how long they can operate in the air".

He has consistently asked Western countries to tighten sanctions on Moscow.

US President Donald Trump also weighed in on airspace breach earlier this week, saying he was "ready" to impose tougher sanctions on Russia, but only if Nato countries met certain conditions, such as stopping buying Russian oil.

Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 and has been making slow progress in the battlefield.

Trump has been leading efforts to end the war, but Russia has intensified attacks on Ukraine since President Vladimir Putin returned from a summit with Trump in Alaska last month.

Strong winds and heavy rain forecast as stormy weather to hit the UK

Strong winds and heavy rain forecast as stormy weather to hit the UK

Two people sharing an umbrella on a wet and windy pierImage source, Getty
  • Published

Low pressure is sweeping in from the Atlantic bringing a spell of strong winds and heavy rain across the UK.

A Met Office Yellow wind warning has been issued across most of England and all of Wales and is valid from 8pm Sunday until 6pm Monday.

Coastal gales may develop bringing large waves to southern and western shores.

Travel disruption and power cuts are also possible.

Map of UK showing yellow area covering most of England and all of Wales
Image caption,

Places in the yellow warning area will experience the strongest winds which may lead to some disruption

Sunday started dry for most but heavy outbreaks of rain will spread in from the west during the day, reaching eastern England and central Scotland by the late afternoon. Winds will strengthen too, especially for south-west England where coastal gales are likely to develop.

Throughout Sunday night and into Monday gusts up to 45-55mph are expected inland with 60-70mph possible around coasts and hills. Whilst these wind speeds are fairly typical for an autumn storm like this, trees are still in full leaf, which may increase the chance of branches or small tress coming down.

Heavy rain is an additional hazard with 10-30mm falling widely, with some western hills having around 70mm.

There is a risk of surface water flooding and difficult driving conditions.

Will the storm be named?

The Met Office says it is currently "not expecting to name the storm". The warning level for the UK is only yellow, which is the lowest tier.

However, storms are named in association with Ireland's Met Éireann and the Netherlands' KNMI, so if the forecast changes in any of these regions, there is a small potential for one of these agencies to name it.

A storm is named when it is forecast to cause "medium" or "high" impacts. The first name in in this season's storm list would be 'Amy'.

What's the outlook for the rest autumn?

Map of north-west Europe and the north Atlantic showing a blue flowing jet stream to the south, and areas of low pressure moving across the UK
Image caption,

The current weather pattern is dominated by an active jet stream to the south and low pressure systems moving west to east across the UK

As we transition from summer to autumn, we typically see the jet stream moving further south and strengthening in September, which gives rise to more unsettled, stormy weather to move in from the Atlantic.

So far this September we've already seen more than the expected rainfall for the whole month for several parts of the UK.

As we head deeper into the autumn months most forecast models indicate an increased chance of a 'wetter than average' spell until November in the UK.

However, there is always a lot of uncertainty in seasonal forecasts, and these should be interpreted as likely trends rather than expected conditions.

It's unlikely we'll see a repeat of September 2024 which was the wettest on record for 10 English counties, including Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire and Wiltshire. They received more than three times their expected September rainfall leading to widespread flooding.

Man on the run after house explosion injures four

YappApp An aerial shot of a terraced house with extensive explosion damage including a decimated roof and debris all over the road and back gardenYappApp
The house is located on Southfield Lane in Bradford

A suspected thief is at large after four people were injured following an explosion at a house he targeted, police have said.

The explosion took place at the empty house on Southfield Lane, Bradford, at about 22:00 BST on Saturday, but two neighbouring properties were also damaged and a man, woman and child were treated for minor injuries.

A 27-year-old man, who was found seriously injured near the scene, has been arrested on suspicion of theft and West Yorkshire Police are also seeking Jacob Ryan, 28.

A force spokesperson said: "It is possible Jacob Ryan may have been injured as well and we urge him or anyone who knows him to come forward."

West Yorkshire Police Mugshot of Jacob RyanWest Yorkshire Police
Jacob Ryan, 28, is on the run after the explosion

They added: "It is important we make sure he has access to any medical treatment he may need."

Officers also said the men were attempting to steal metal from the unoccupied terraced property.

The arrested man's injuries were said to be serious but not life-threatening and he was treated at hospital.

Fire and ambulance services also attended the "significantly damaged" building, as well as the two adjacent properties.

The force said the affected property was then made safe with the assistance of utilities companies.

Supt Lucy Leadbeater, from Bradford District Police, said: "A number of enquiries remain ongoing into this serious incident today."

She added: "While the cause of the explosion at this empty property remains under investigation, we are investigating reports of a metal theft taking place there just prior to the incident."

West Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service confirmed a technical rescue unit with dogs carried out further searches after the casualties were treated to ensure there were no persons unaccounted for.

YappApp An close up shot of a terraced house with extensive explosion damage including a decimated roof and debris all over the road and back gardenYappApp
Police said the injuries suffered by the family living next door were not life-threatening

Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.

Related internet links
❌