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Tag: London

  • Want to live in London or New York? Good luck if you’re renting | CNN Business

    Want to live in London or New York? Good luck if you’re renting | CNN Business

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    London
    CNN
     — 

    In May, Viveca Chow hurriedly transferred $3,700 over her phone while standing in the lobby of a building in Queens, New York. She made the upfront payment to secure an apartment minutes after seeing it.

    It was a moment the 28-year-old lifestyle influencer — forced to leave her previous accommodation after the landlord increased her monthly rent by $1,000 — described to CNN as “dystopian.”

    Yet it is something that Chow, along with millions of renters in big cities, has come to expect as part of the fight for affordable housing. Her realtor urged her to pay the holding deposit on the spot to secure the one-bedroom unit.

    In many urban centers, an influx of workers and students after the pandemic has collided with a lack of accommodation for rent, high levels of inflation, and rising interest rates that are trapping some people in the rental market when they would otherwise be buying a home.

    Average rents in New York and Sydney grew by an inflation-busting 4.7% and 6.9% respectively in the year to August, according to real estate firm Knight Frank. While growth in rental costs in both cities has slowed compared with its pandemic peaks, average rents are still at all-time highs.

    In other places, rents are rising even faster. In London, the average annual rise in the cost of a rental property exceeded 17% in April and again last month, the biggest jumps since real estate agency Hamptons started collecting the data in 2014.

    That runaway growth far exceeds both inflation and pay raises in the United Kingdom.

    Many are struggling to meet the costs.

    According to property website Realtor.com, affordability in the New York metropolitan area deteriorated the most out of the 50 largest US metro areas in the year to July. The share of median household income in the New York area eaten up by the median rent rose from 35% to 37% in that time.

    Based on one approach, housing costs are judged affordable if they account for no more than 30% of the typical household income, Realtor.com said. This is also the benchmark used by the UK Office for National Statistics when assessing private rents.

    In London, the destination for many UK college students looking for work after graduating, renting has become “entirely unaffordable” for that cohort, said SpareRoom, the UK’s biggest room search site, in a recent analysis.

    The platform used the ONS’s measure of affordability in its study and the average graduate starting salary of £29,000 ($36,000) a year. According to SpareRoom’s latest Quarterly Rental Index, average monthly room rent reached £971 ($1,190) in the second quarter, up by almost a fifth compared with the same period in 2022.

    Barnaby Scudds is feeling the pain. The public relations executive moved to London in March after graduating last year and now pays £975 ($1,195) a month to rent a room, which gobbles up more than half of his monthly paycheck.

    “I’m paid well for the work that I do, and yet it’s still difficult,” he told CNN.

    Even at those prices, rooms get snapped up fast.

    “It is very difficult because properties come on at about six o’clock in the morning generally, and they are normally gone by six o’clock in the evening,” he said.

    A property for rent in London, seen in August.

    Matt Hutchinson, communications director at SpareRoom, told CNN that the UK’s chronic lack of supply of rental properties was to blame.

    Beyond problems afflicting most global cities, such as a proliferation of short-term rentals offered through platforms like Airbnb, the shortage of places for long-term rent in London is exacerbated by local factors.

    Since 2016, the UK government has increased taxes on purchases of second homes and cut the amount of tax landlords can claim back. Put simply, being a landlord in the UK isn’t as lucrative as it used to be.

    “[It] is a much more tight-margin experience than it was six, seven years ago. And a lot of people are just selling up and leaving the market,” Hutchinson said, adding that rising interest rates, as well as higher costs for labor and materials, had discouraged many from investing in rental properties.

    In a recent note about rental markets in 10 cities worldwide, Liam Bailey, global head of research at Knight Frank, concluded: “Affordability of housing is set to become the leading political issue within the next 12 months.”

    London’s mayor, Sadiq Khan, last month reiterated his call for rent control, urging the UK government to impose a two-year rent freeze for the capital’s 2.7 million private tenants. It is a version of a policy proposed by politicians and campaigners over the years as a way out of the affordability crisis.

    But rental caps, while instinctively appealing, are generally “a bad idea,” Nikodem Szumilo, director of the Bartlett Real Estate Institute at University College London, told CNN.

    “It benefits people who live in the rent control unit and maybe the politicians who impose the policy, but nobody else,” Szumilo said, noting that rental caps discouraged home builders from investing in new units, which in turn limited supply growth in places where demand might be rising.

    A better way, Szumilo argues, is to simply make it easier to build more homes. Tokyo, the world’s most populous city, housing more than 37 million people, has a “very deregulated market” where rents are “relatively stable,” he said.

    Lifestyle influencer Viveca Chow feels lucky to have found a rent-stabilized apartment in New York City.

    Policies that help people become homeowners — for example, offering subsidies on down payments or on mortgages for first-time buyers, as the UK government has done — are also effective, Szumilo said, because they help ease demand in the rental market.

    Still, Chow in New York is grateful for rent control.

    She and her partner live in one of the city’s coveted rent-stabilized units, which means the $3,700 they pay each month can’t increase by more than 3.75% if they renew the lease for another year. That’s below the 4.7% annual increase in rental costs in the city recorded by Knight Frank at the start of August.

    That “doesn’t necessarily mean it’s cheap,” Chow said, but the cap provides a welcome safety net after the instabilities — and indignities — of her last place.

    “We didn’t even have a kitchen, a proper kitchen. It was like a kitchen nailed to the wall. So I was like, you’re not raising $1,000 on me!”

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  • Rugby World Cup 2023: England head coach Steve Borthwick highlights World Rugby over inconsistency

    Rugby World Cup 2023: England head coach Steve Borthwick highlights World Rugby over inconsistency

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    England are without captain Owen Farrell and forward Tom Curry for Sunday’s World Cup match against Japan as the duo serve suspensions following red cards; England head coach Steve Borthwick joined by predecessor Eddie Jones in questioning decisions made by World Rugby

    Last Updated: 15/09/23 11:56pm

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    England head coach Steve Borthwick explains why he decided to start Lewis Ludlam at eight over Billy Vunipola for their Rugby World Cup clash with Japan on Sunday

    England head coach Steve Borthwick explains why he decided to start Lewis Ludlam at eight over Billy Vunipola for their Rugby World Cup clash with Japan on Sunday

    Steve Borthwick has accused World Rugby of taking an inconsistent approach to disciplinary issues as the England head coach continues to contend with suspensions for his squad members.

    Tom Curry was sent off in the third minute of Saturday’s World Cup victory over Argentina for a dangerous tackle and received a two-match ban, yet similar incidents involving South Africa’s Jesse Kriel and Martin Sigren of Chile failed to produce a dismissal, citing or suspension.

    It has raised concerns in the England camp, and beyond, over the officiating of illegal challenges involving the head.

    Borthwick also highlighted when Owen Farrell was sent off for a dangerous tackle against Wales and then cleared by a disciplinary hearing, World Rugby intervened by appealing against the decision.

    “There has been a large amount of commentary from different sources about what appears to be a lack of consistency and transparency in the decision-making process,” Borthwick said.

    Kevin Sinfield says despite three red cards in four games, England do not have a discipline problem and there is too much 'noise' around the squad

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    Kevin Sinfield says despite three red cards in four games, England do not have a discipline problem and there is too much ‘noise’ around the squad

    Kevin Sinfield says despite three red cards in four games, England do not have a discipline problem and there is too much ‘noise’ around the squad

    “Now it’s not my role to comment on that, it’s World Rugby’s. I also note there was a tremendous amount of comment from World Rugby on Owen Farrell for a couple of weeks during our preparation for this tournament.

    “It was a situation that went on and on with lots of comment from World Rugby. I note there hasn’t been very many comments from World Rugby – I’m told – in the last week or so. I will leave that to World Rugby.”

    The suspended Curry is one of three players to drop out of England’s starting XV for Sunday’s clash with Japan.

    Borthwick has opted to start Lewis Ludlam at No 8 ahead of Billy Vunipola, who is available again after serving a four-match suspension.

    While Vunipola could only earn a place on the bench, props Kyle Sinckler and Joe Marler have been inserted to the starting line-up.

    Jones: Use of TMO fraught with danger

    Australia head coach Eddie Jones also used his press conference on Friday to question the sport’s international governing body.

    “I think our use of the TMO in rugby is fraught with danger; that we’re asking a referee in the grandstand to make decisions on a different angle on the game, through video,” former England boss Jones said.

    Australia head coach Eddie Jones was happy to come away with a victory over Georgia in their World Cup opener, but expects his side to improve as the tournament progresses

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    Australia head coach Eddie Jones was happy to come away with a victory over Georgia in their World Cup opener, but expects his side to improve as the tournament progresses

    Australia head coach Eddie Jones was happy to come away with a victory over Georgia in their World Cup opener, but expects his side to improve as the tournament progresses

    “And it’s not making the game a better spectacle, it’s not making it a better game for the players, and I think we’re just lucky because international rugby is so popular. But I think we really need to improve the game and at the end of this World Cup there’ll be an opportunity to do that.”

    Jones, whose Australia side are also in action on Sunday, against Fiji, suggested that some of the changes implemented by World Rugby in attempt to make the game safer are actually having the opposite effect.

    “World Rugby have tried to make the game safer, but they’ve made it more powerful by having more stoppages in the game,” Jones added. “And there’s risk to that, there are risks when the game becomes more powerful.

    “The game’s evolving into these 30-second bouts of absolute power. This World Cup will be decided by who can win those power contests. You need the game to be more continuous. The average ball-in-play is 30 seconds, the average break in the game is 70 seconds, so you encourage a power contest. We need more continuous play.”

    Follow England’s Rugby World Cup match against Japan across Sky Sports’ digital platforms from 7.30pm, kick-off 8pm on Sunday.

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  • Watch live: ECB President Christine Lagarde speaks after rate decision

    Watch live: ECB President Christine Lagarde speaks after rate decision

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    [The stream is slated to start at 8:45 a.m. ET. Please refresh the page if you do not see a player above at that time.]

    European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde is due to give a press conference following the bank’s latest monetary policy decision.

    The Bank hiked interest rates to a record level as it put tackling inflation ahead of bolstering the weakening economy.

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  • What FI execs are saying about ChatGPT| Bank Automation News

    What FI execs are saying about ChatGPT| Bank Automation News

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    Executives at financial institutions are looking into ChatGPT to unleash a new era of innovation, education and customer experience.   While many FIs, like Fifth Third Bank are using ChatGPT to improve the efficiency of their chatbots, others, like DNB, are exploring generative AI to increase operational efficiency. Financial institution executives discussed the potential and […]

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  • Rugby World Cup: England inspired by verbal ‘rocket’ from Kevin Sinfield as they start tournament with win

    Rugby World Cup: England inspired by verbal ‘rocket’ from Kevin Sinfield as they start tournament with win

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    England defence coach Kevin Sinfield laid into the team after defeat to Fiji in late August, says Freddie Steward, with that blast inspiring Steve Borthwick’s men in victory over Argentina in World Cup opener; England triumph 27-10 despite early red card for Tom Curry

    Last Updated: 11/09/23 11:17pm

    Freddie Steward says strong words from Kevin Sinfield inspired England in their World Cup victory over Argentina

    Freddie Steward says England’s heroic victory over Argentina in their World Cup opener was inspired by a verbal “rocket” from defence coach Kevin Sinfield after the recent humbling defeat to Fiji.

    Steve Borthwick’s men suffered a first-ever loss to Fiji in late August, going down 30-22 in what was arguably the side’s lowest ebb, but they rebounded a fortnight later to defeat Argentina 27-10 despite playing virtually the whole game with 14 men following Tom Curry’s early red card.

    Curry faces a disciplinary hearing in Paris on Tuesday, with the flanker expected to learn the length of his ban for a challenge that led to a clash of heads with Pumas back Juan Cruz Mallia.

    Full-back Steward said: “We got a bit of a rocket after that [Fiji] game.

    Tom Curry will attend a disciplinary hearing on Tuesday following his red card in England's opening World Cup match against Argentina.

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    Tom Curry will attend a disciplinary hearing on Tuesday following his red card in England’s opening World Cup match against Argentina.

    Tom Curry will attend a disciplinary hearing on Tuesday following his red card in England’s opening World Cup match against Argentina.

    ‘Sinfield a bloke you don’t want to let down’

    “There were no complaints about that, it needed to happen. We had a very thorough review, which we needed, and we reaped the benefits against Argentina. It was necessary for that to happen.

    “That’s what makes Kev such a good defence coach – he’s so inspiring. He motivates us so much and he’s the sort of bloke you don’t want to let down. That’s testament to him as a bloke. When you go out there, part of it is you do it for him.

    “You don’t want to see a guy like that, who puts his heart and soul into us in his work with his defence, feel let down.

    “Kev is big on covering each other’s backs. That’s his big thing. He wants a defensive unit that are going to work incredibly hard for each other and, when it goes wrong, cover up for each other.

    “Inevitably, you can be as good a defender as you want as a full-back but there are going to be times where it doesn’t go to plan and that is where you get tested. That’s his main ethos.”

    Sinfield says England's win over Argentina was 'just the start'

    Sinfield says England’s win over Argentina was ‘just the start’

    Sinfield: Fans would have loved our fight and spirit

    Sinfield says England must build on a resolute display ahead of their second World Cup fixture against Japan in Nice on Sunday.

    “It is just a start. We saw lots of what we had seen in training against Argentina, which is pleasing, but I still feel there is so much in this team – so much improvement, so much growth,” Sinfield said.

    “To get the win, given the noise that has been around us and the way the group have really circled the wagons – metaphorically that is – is really pleasing.

    “We saw a fight, a spirit and attitude that the people at home supporting us and in the ground would have loved to have seen, and for us as coaches that is particularly pleasing, (but) we know we need to be better.

    “Part of our challenge as coaches and part of the challenge of the playing group is to ensure this is not an anomaly, it is the start.”

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  • UK approach to AI can give it an edge | Bank Automation News

    UK approach to AI can give it an edge | Bank Automation News

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    LONDON — The United Kingdom’s innovation-friendly approach to regulating AI could give the country a boost compared to its counterparts in the European Union, Paul Dongha, group head of data and AI ethics at Lloyds Banking Group, told Bank Automation News. In March, the U.K. government issued principles for regulators in finance and other industries […]

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  • U.K. terror suspect Daniel Khalife still on the run as police narrow search

    U.K. terror suspect Daniel Khalife still on the run as police narrow search

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    The dramatic escape from a British prison by Daniel Khalife has been called “pre-planned” by London’s police chief as a wide-scale manhunt to find the terror suspect enters its third day. 

    Mark Rowley, the commissioner for London’s Metropolitan police, told U.K. radio station LBC on Friday that police authorities were not ruling out the possibility that Khalife had assistance from others, including those working in the prison. 

    Prisoner Daniel Abed Khalife (pictured) was reported missing at 7:50 a.m. local time on Wednesday, U.K. police officials said.

    London Metropolitan Police


    “To work out a prison escape, and how you are going to do the logistics of it, get the right equipment and how you are going to do it, it’s unlikely that you would do that in the spur of the moment,” Rowley said. 

    The 21-year-old former British soldier, who had been awaiting trial at a south London prison on terrorism related charges accusing him of planting fake bombs at an army base, escaped a London prison Wednesday by clinging to the underside of a delivery truck.

    Khalife also faced charges of allegedly working for Iran and eliciting personal information from a U.K. Ministry of Defence database, according to CBS News partners at the BBC. 

    The search for Khalife narrowed on Friday as authorities honed their search in on Richmond park in southwest London — the largest urban park in Europe, spanning an area of 2,500 acres. 

    gettyimages-1421229445.jpg
    View of the London skyline seen from Richmond Park against a cloudy sky. Richmond Park is the largest urban park in Europe, spanning an area of 2,500 acres. 

    Wirestock


    About 150 counter-terrorism officers are involved in the search effort, the Metropolitan police have said. 

    Police helicopters were seen circling the park overnight and vans were seen driving through the park on Friday morning. 

    There have been no publicly confirmed sightings of Khalife, and police have warned that the terror suspect may be more skilled at avoiding being caught due to his military background. 

    Investigators say that Khalife was last seen wearing a white T-shirt, red and white checkered trousers and brown steel- toe cap boots, and they believe he is still wearing a prison chef’s uniform as he had worked in the prison kitchen while incarcerated. 

    Questions have been raised over whether Khalife should have been held in a more secure facility, considering the nature of the charges against him. London’s Wandsworth prison where Khalife was held is a “Category B” prison, which holds high security prisoners but is not considered as secure as a “Category A” prison, the highest security ranking for prisons in the U.K. 

    Dominic Murphy, counter-terrorism commander for London’s Met police, had confirmed that the vehicle Khalife used to escape had been stopped in southwest London less than an hour after he was declared missing, but Khalife had not been found at that time. 

    Murphy said on Thursday that despite over 50 calls from the public offering “valuable lines of inquiry,” it was “a little unusual and perhaps a testament to [Mr Khalife’s] ingenuity” that he has yet to be found. 

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  • Norway’s DNB tests generative AI | Bank Automation News

    Norway’s DNB tests generative AI | Bank Automation News

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    LONDON — Financial institution DNB is exploring the risks and benefits of generative AI as the bank tests Boost.ai’s tools. “Generative AI is something that the entire organization DNB is looking into with excitement, and there are a lot of benefits with this technology,” Maia Sognefest, project manager at the more than $270 billion, Oslo, […]

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  • Jonny May and Alex Mitchell to start for England in Rugby World Cup opener against Argentina

    Jonny May and Alex Mitchell to start for England in Rugby World Cup opener against Argentina

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    Alex Mitchell and Jonny May were not included in England’s original World Cup squad; Tom Curry has recovered from an ankle injury and will play for the first time since May; Dan Cole starts in his fourth World Cup

    Last Updated: 07/09/23 3:05pm

    Jonny May scores vs Fiji

    Alex Mitchell and Jonny May will start for England in their World Cup opener against Argentina on Saturday.

    The pair were not in Steve Borthwick’s initial World Cup squad but were called up after injuries and will now take to the field in The Stade Velodrome in Marseille.

    Elsewhere, Tom Curry starts for the first time since May having recovered from an ankle injury and Dan Cole starts in his fourth World Cup.

    England: 15 Freddie Steward, 14 Jonny May, 13 Joe Marchant, 12 Manu Tuilagi, 11 Elliot Daly, 10 George Ford, 9 Alex Mitchell; 1 Ellis Genge, 2 Jamie George, 3 Dan Cole, 4 Maro Itoje, 5 Ollie Chessum, 6 Courtney Lawes (c), 7 Tom Curry, 8 Ben Earl.

    Replacements: 16 Theo Dan, 17 Joe Marler, 18 Will Stuart, 19 George Martin, 20 Lewis Ludlam, 21 Danny Care, 22 Marcus Smith, 23 Ollie Lawrence.

    Argentina pick six forwards on the bench against England

    Argentina’s Juan Cruz Mallia returns at fullback to face England as coach Michael Cheika opted for six forwards on the bench.

    Mallia is part of a back three with goal-kicker Emiliano Boffelli and Mateo Carreras on the wings and a powerful midfield of Santiago Chocobares and Lucio Cinti. Santiago Carreras is at flyhalf and Gonzalo Bertranou gets the nod at number nine.

    The team is captained by hooker Julian Montoya, who packs down with props Thomas Gallo and Francisco Gomez Kodela, while the second row is made up of Matias Alemanno and Tomas Lavanini. Former captain Pablo Matera is on the flank along with Marcos Kremer, and Juan Martin Gonzalez is at number eight, as Cheika took the unusual step, for him at least, of naming a 6-2 split between forwards and backs on his bench.

    Argentina: 15 Juan Cruz Mallia, 14 Emiliano Boffelli, 13 Lucio Cinti, 12 Santiago Chocobares, 11 Mateo Carreras, 10 Santiago Carreras, 9 Gonzalo Bertranou, 8 Juan Martin Gonzalez, 7 Marcos Kremer, 6 Pablo Matera, 5 Tomas Lavanini, 4 Matias Alemanno, 3 Francisco Gomez Kodela, 2 Julian Montoya (c), 1 Thomas Gallo

    Replacements: 16 Augustin Creevy, 17 Joel Sclavi, 18 Eduardo Bello, 19 Guido Petti, 20 Pedro Rubiolo, 21 Rodrigo Bruni, 22 Lautaro Bazan Velez, 23 Matias Moroni.

    More to follow…

    This is a breaking news story that is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh this page for the latest updates.

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    Win £250,000 with Super 6!

    Another Sunday, another chance to win £250,000 with Super 6. Play for free, entries by 4:30pm.

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  • DNB’s chatbot has 83% accuracy rate | Bank Automation News

    DNB’s chatbot has 83% accuracy rate | Bank Automation News

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    LONDON — DNB’s internal chatbot fielded more than 2.1 million queries last year and boasts an 83% accuracy rate.  Juno, the chatbot launched in March 2020, “knows how to answer around 3,500 questions and he can also answer them in seven different ways, depending on what kind of adviser is asking the question,” Jorgen Hansen, […]

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  • Terror suspect on the run after escaping London prison | CNN

    Terror suspect on the run after escaping London prison | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    A serving member of the British Army awaiting trial on terror charges escaped from prison in London on Wednesday, the city’s Metropolitan Police said.

    Daniel Abed Khalife went missing from Wandsworth prison, in the southwest of the British capital, shortly before 8 a.m. UK time. He had been awaiting trial for terror offenses and alleged breaches of the Official Secrets Act.

    Khalife is a soldier accused of planting fake bombs at a military base, according to the PA Media news agency.

    “Police are issuing an urgent appeal to the public to help trace a 21-year-old man who has escaped from prison,” the Metropolitan Police said in a statement.

    “Khalife was on remand at HMP Wandsworth, awaiting trial in relation to terrorism and Official Secrets Act offences,” it continued. “From our initial enquiries, it is believed he escaped from the prison at approximately 07:50hrs.”

    According to the Met statement, Khalife was last seen wearing a white t-shirt, red and white checkered trousers and brown steel toe cap boots.

    He is of slim build, has short brown hair and is around 6ft 2ins tall.

    Police believe that he most likely remains in the London area at this time, although he may have traveled further afield.

    Commander Dominic Murphy, head of the Met’s Counter Terrorism Command, said: “We have a team of officers who are making extensive and urgent enquiries in order to locate and detain Khalife as quickly as possible.”

    “I also want to reassure the public that we have no information which indicates, nor any reason to believe, that Khalife poses a threat to the wider public, but our advice if you do see him is not to approach him and call 999 straight away,” Murphy added, referring to the UK’s emergency services phone line.

    British airports and ports are also experiencing disruption after counter-terrorism police alerted the country’s airports and ports to Khalife’s escape.

    Manchester Airport was facing delays of up to 30 minutes on Wednesday afternoon after introducing extra security checks, according to PA Media.

    Meanwhile, Port of Dover Travel posted on X, formerly known as Twitter: “Due to a police matter, there are currently enhanced checks on outbound traffic at the Port of Dover and other portals within the UK.

    “Please be advised this is currently resulting in some delays at the port.”

    UK prison escapes are a rare occurrence. Data from the British government shows that there was just one escape across England and Wales in 2021-22, none in the proceeding period, and only a handful in the years prior to that.

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  • A new hotel trend that puts you to sleep — literally

    A new hotel trend that puts you to sleep — literally

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    Yearning for a good night’s sleep?

    Join the club.

    Globally, more people searched about sleep this year than ever before, according to data released by Google Trends last week. People are turning to the internet to learn about bedtime routines, sleep positions and to understand — “Why am I so tired all the time?” — a question which peaked in June, according to Google.

    In fact, restorative sleep eludes so many that it’s given rise to a new type of travel. Hotels and wellness resorts are launching “sleep tourism” programs that go beyond plush bedding and blackout curtains.

    From beds that use real-time artificial intelligence to on-call hypnotherapists, here are six spots that go to great lengths to help travelers get great shut-eye.

    Zedwell Hotel, London

    For those who need to switch off completely, London’s two Zedwell hotels have minimalist rooms that are free of “distractions” — such as televisions, telephones and even windows — according to its website.

    Zedwell Hotel, London.

    Source: Zedwell Hotels Trocadero (London) Hotel Ltd

    The clutter-free aesthetic incorporates natural oak and ambient lighting, and rooms have sound insulation and purified air.

    Six Senses Laamu, Maldives

    Sleep-deprived guests can book a sleep wellness program that ranges from three to 10 days at Six Senses Laamu. Each stay comes with sleeping tracking, wellness screenings, spa treatments, meditation or breathwork exercises and nutritional advice, according to its website.

    Six Senses Laamu, Maldives.

    Source: Eleven Six PR

    There are also yoga and Ayurvedic treatments, and visitors get access to the Timeshifter app to curb jet lag.

    Sleep packages are also available at select Six Senses resorts in Switzerland, Fiji, India, Turkey and Thailand, among other locations.

    Park Hyatt, New York

    For restless sleepers in the Big Apple, New York’s Park Hyatt refreshed its three “Sleep Suites” with the latest version of Bryte’s “Balance” smart beds.

    Park Hyatt Hotel, New York.

    Source: Park Hyatt New York

    The mattress plays sounds and uses subtle motion to lull guests to sleep. To wake up, the bed gradually moves over a period of 15 minutes to slowly and silently wake users up again. Within the mattress, a matrix of AI cushions adapts to body movements to relieve pressure in real time, too.

    Suites also come with a diffuser and relaxing essential oil blend, along with a collection of “sleep-related books,” according to the hotel.

    The Cadogan, London

    Partnering with sleep specialist and hypnotherapist Malminder Gill, The Cadogan has a “Sleep Concierge” service that comes with a meditation (recorded by Gill), pillow menu, weighted blanket, bedtime tea blend and scented pillow mist.

    The Cadogan, London.

    Source: The Cadogen, A Belmond Hotel

    For extra help, guests can book a session with Gill for one-on-one in-room sleep assistance, according to the hotel’s website.

    Carillon Miami Wellness Resort, Miami

    From ocean-front rooms on Miami Beach, this resort applies a tech-forward approach to sleep wellness through vibration and sound therapy that will provide an “essential powernap — even for the busiest of minds,” according to the hotel’s website.

    Carillon Miami Wellness Resort, Miami.

    Source: Carillon Miami Wellness Resort

    In addition to having Bryte Balance mattresses, the resort provides hypnosis, saltwater bath therapies that allow guests to immerse in water loaded with 800 pounds of Epsom salt, and a “Somadome” futuristic meditation pod that combines color and sound, according to the website.

    Sha Wellness Clinic, Alicante, Spain

    With the help of sleep medicine specialist, Dr. Vicente Mera, guests at this luxury hotel and wellness clinic can participate in its “Sleep Medicine” program, which includes a sleep consultation, night-time polygraph, a continuous positive airway pressure (or CPAP as it’s known) study and tests that measures sleep and daytime indicators, such as resting heart rate and heart-rate variability, according to its website.

    Sha Wellness Clinic, Alicante, Spain.

    Source: Sha Wellness Clinic

    A wellness plan is put in place for each guest that includes stress management sessions and hydrotherapy.

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  • Rugby World Cup: England wing Anthony Watson ruled out of tournament with calf injury

    Rugby World Cup: England wing Anthony Watson ruled out of tournament with calf injury

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    Last Updated: 24/08/23 2:17pm

    England wing Anthony Watson in action against Ireland

    England wing Anthony Watson has been ruled out of the Rugby World Cup due to a calf problem.

    Watson picked up the injury in last week’s warm-up defeat to Ireland and has now been withdrawn from the 33-player squad.

    The 29-year-old is the second England player to be forced out of the tournament in recent weeks, with scrum-half Jack van Poortvliet absent due to an ankle issue.

    England will be without captain and fly-half Owen Farrell and No 8 Billy Vunipola for the start of the competition after both were handed suspensions for high tackles.

    Farrell will sit out the games against Argentina and Japan, while Vunipola will miss the Argentina fixture.

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  • Adwoa Aboah on Gurls Talk Dialogues and the Off-Kilter Side of Fragrance

    Adwoa Aboah on Gurls Talk Dialogues and the Off-Kilter Side of Fragrance

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    Adwoa Aboah owes her green thumb to happenstance. “I’ve got a south-facing garden, which my mom’s really jealous about because it just grows everything in it,” the Londoner says of her home there, surprisingly lush. “It’s a hot box.” Aboah considers herself a late bloomer in the horticultural sense, even though greenery fills the elegantly appointed room she’s in for a Zoom conversation this past spring. “We’re at the Jo Malone London townhouse—mega, so nice,” she explains, sounding like someone who doesn’t exaggerate for effect. “I have to push myself to go and involve myself in nature, just because I think, through and through, I am a city girl and I love that I’ve been brought up in a city and I love everything to do about being in a city.” 

    The model’s voice, gravelly in timbre with a polished accent, seems to reflect that origin story. Though she was born into the fashion community (Aboah’s British mother runs a management agency, her Ghanaian father is a talent scout), it wasn’t a frictionless path to the December 2017 cover of British Vogue—notably the first under Edward Enninful’s direction, featuring peacock-blue eye shadow by Pat McGrath and photography by Steven Meisel. Aboah has been candid about her teen struggles with addiction and mental health. In 2015—by then a familiar presence in high-profile runway shows and editorials—Aboah launched Gurls Talk, a nonprofit that blossomed out of an Instagram account. The organization operates as a multifaceted community space, for IRL events and podcast conversations and resource sharing at one’s fingertips. Her most recent Google searches, she says, are “Sanrio world and then the fentanyl crisis, but that’s where my brain is right now. It’s, like, all the things that we have to think about.” 

    When Jo Malone London approached Aboah to be a global ambassador in 2022, this shared interest in well-being cemented their relationship. Jo Malone London, over the past decade, has supported a variety of mental health causes through proceeds from its Charity Candle. As part of a recently announced partnership with Unicef, the brand has pledged $2 million over the year-long period ending this October. Gurls Talk is another beneficiary, as Aboah readies the organization for the next phase of growth—work she balances with auditions, having pursued drama in school. (This conversation took place before the SAG-AFTRA strike.) 

    A larger-than-life moment in the new Jo Malone London campaign.

    By Samuel Bradley for Jo Malone London.

    September brings the final season of Netflix’s Top Boy, a crime show set in East London that has given Aboah her small-screen break. And this month, she stars in the campaign for Jo Malone London’s newest launch, English Pear & Sweet Peacinematic in its own right, with cartoonishly giant fruit atop a button-cute Mini Cooper. The fragrance (ethereal on skin, as if effervescent) features a novel concentrated extract, upcycled from pear water leftover from the food industry’s juice process. To Aboah, a “spring baby” who turned 31 in May, sweet pea conveys a spirit of renewal, “where you start feeling like you’re ready to get out of your tracksuits and start seeing people again,” she says. Here, she talks about creative outlets, recommended reading, and what the next generation of girls are talking about. 

    Vanity Fair: We last spoke at the Vanity Fair Oscar Party in 2022, on the cusp of your Jo Malone London announcement. What has surprised you about this relationship?

    From the get-go it felt like an instant connection. It’s meeting a new friend and bypassing all the small talk and getting to know each other. That has been really refreshing because it feels like we can get straight to the work that needs to be done. I’m just speaking to the individuals that I know at Jo Malone London, but obviously they are a massive brand and there are so many people that need to approve certain things—I don’t necessarily feel that. Creatively it’s invigorating, and I feel really proud every time I see the imagery that we do together. But also on the side of mental health and Gurls Talk, it’s like: Oh wow, we’re actually doing the stuff. They’re sticking to their word.

    Jo Malone London English Pear & Sweet Pea

    Do the key fragrance notes, English pear and sweet pea, stir up any associations for you? 

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    Laura Regensdorf

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  • The British Museum fires employee for suspected theft of ancient treasures

    The British Museum fires employee for suspected theft of ancient treasures

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    The British Museum, home to the largest collection of artifacts in the world, has fired a staff member on suspicion of stealing and damaging items including gold, gems and centuries-old glass. 

    Items including “gold jewelry and gems of semi-precious stones and glass dating from the 15th century BC to the 19th century AD,” were found to be “missing, stolen or damaged,” the museum said in a press release sent to CBS News on Thursday. 

    Campaign To Return The Elgin Marbles To Greece
    Sculptures that form part of the “Elgin Marbles” – taken from the Parthenon in Athens, Greece over 200 years ago – on display at the British Museum in London.

    Graham Barclay / BWP Media / Getty Images


    “The majority of the items in question were small pieces kept in a storeroom belonging to one of the museum’s collections. … None had recently been on public display, and they were kept primarily for academic and research purposes,” the press release said. 

    One employee, who has not been named, has been dismissed and the museum is taking legal action against that person. The museum also said it has launched an independent investigation into its security practices. 

    In an e-mailed statement to CBS News on Thursday, London’s Metropolitan Police confirmed there was an “ongoing investigation” of the incident. No arrests have been made as of yet, the statement said.  

    George Osborne, the chair of the British Museum, said the incident was “a sad day for all who love our British Museum, but we’re determined to right the wrongs and use the experience to build a stronger Museum.”

    London scenics
    LONDON, ENGLAND – OCTOBER 2, 2017: A hoard of Roman coins from AD 160 on display at the British Museum in London, England.

    Robert Alexander / Getty Images


    More than six million people visit London’s British Museum every year and its collection consists of over eight million objects spanning over two million years of human history, according to the museum’s website. 

    The museum is also no stranger to high profile acts of theft. 

    In 2002, a 2,000-year-old Greek artifact was stolen from a public gallery that had been left unattended by security. In 2017, a Cartier diamond ring was also reported as missing from the museum’s collection.

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  • Keith Earls honoured as long-awaited 100th Ireland cap approaches against England

    Keith Earls honoured as long-awaited 100th Ireland cap approaches against England

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    Keith Earls is set to become Ireland’s ninth centurion when they face England in a Rugby World Cup warm-up; he will join Ireland greats such as Brian O’Driscoll, Ronan O’Gara, Rory Best, Paul O’Connell and Johnny Sexton in reaching three figures

    Last Updated: 16/08/23 6:40am

    Keith Earls is set to become Ireland’s ninth centurion

    Keith Earls admits it will be a mixture of relief and pride to reach 100 Ireland caps after fearing injury issues may cause him to fall short of the milestone.

    Munster wing Earls is poised to become only the ninth Irishman to achieve a century of Test outings ahead of Saturday’s World Cup warm-up match with England in Dublin.

    The 35-year-old went more than a year without an international appearance amid fitness problems before being recalled by head coach Andy Farrell for the 33-17 win over Italy on August 5.

    “I’m trying not to think about it but talking to Andy about if it does happen, he’s telling me: ‘it’s not just another cap, you can’t have a normal week because it’s not a normal week’,” said Earls.

    “It would be a massive honour but also just a bit of relief because I was stuck on 98.

    “I suppose in the last couple of years I was genuinely thinking every time I stepped on to the field it could be the last time.

    “I’d be extremely proud and privileged to join a unique group.”

    Earls made his international return against Italy earlier this month

    Earls made his international return against Italy earlier this month

    Earls is set to move alongside Ireland greats Brian O’Driscoll, Ronan O’Gara, Rory Best, Paul O’Connell and John Hayes in reaching three figures, in addition to current team-mates Cian Healy, Johnny Sexton and Conor Murray.

    He featured in two of his country’s three Tests during last summer’s victorious tour of New Zealand but was then sidelined for autumn victories over South Africa, Fiji and Australia and this year’s Six Nations Grand Slam success.

    Earls believes he has enjoyed the best pre-season of his career as he attempts to secure a spot at his fourth World Cup.

    England fly-half George Ford said he and his team-mates are delighted captain Owen Farrell avoided a lengthy ban

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    England fly-half George Ford said he and his team-mates are delighted captain Owen Farrell avoided a lengthy ban

    England fly-half George Ford said he and his team-mates are delighted captain Owen Farrell avoided a lengthy ban

    Asked if there were times during the past 12 months when he thought his Ireland days may be over, he replied: “Yeah, especially with the talent coming through and the way some of the lads are playing and my injury history last year.

    “But I just kept the head down and I’m grateful. I’ve a great relationship with Andy and great trust with Andy and we’ll always be honest with each other.

    “I genuinely have probably had my best pre-season this year as a professional rugby player.

    “We’ve got everything spot on between all the training, physios, coaches, so it’s been really enjoyable.

    “I suppose there’s that bit of pressure as well because you want to repay them [the coaches] as well but Andy’s just big on allowing us to be ourselves and not blowing things up too much or trying anything special.

    “It’s just be yourself and if you’re special, you’re special, but it gives you great confidence, especially as an old winger.”

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  • Owen Farrell: England captain has red card overturned and is free to play against Ireland

    Owen Farrell: England captain has red card overturned and is free to play against Ireland

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    England captain Owen Farrell has had his red card against Wales overturned and is free to play in their Rugby World Cup warm-up match against Ireland on Saturday

    Last Updated: 15/08/23 1:46pm

    Owen Farrell is free to face Ireland on Saturday

    England captain Owen Farrell has had his red card against Wales overturned and is free to play in their Rugby World Cup warm-up match against Ireland on Saturday.

    More to follow…

    This is a breaking news story that is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh this page for the latest updates.

    Sky Sports brings you live updates as they happen. Get breaking sports news, analysis, exclusive interviews, replays and highlights.

    Sky Sports is your trusted source for breaking sports news headlines and live updates. Watch live coverage of your favourite sports: Football, F1, Boxing, Cricket, Golf, Tennis, Rugby League, Rugby Union, NFL, Darts, Netball and get the latest transfers news, results, scores and more.

    Visit skysports.com or the Sky Sports App for all the breaking sports news headlines. You can receive push notifications from the Sky Sports app for the latest news from your favourite sports and you can also follow @SkySportsNews on Twitter to get the latest updates.

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  • Centuries-Old Coach House Offers City-Close Country Living Near London

    Centuries-Old Coach House Offers City-Close Country Living Near London

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    Griffin House is a city-close home with a country feel. Set on a walled half-acre site, the historic residence is just outside central London in the village of East Sheen.

    Originally a coach house, the property has 80 feet of frontage, old-growth trees and a 180-foot-long garden—ample space for a sports court or swimming pool.

    “A lot of this size is rare for East Sheen,” says listing agent Matthew Genders of Chestertons.

    In the three centuries since the stone structure housed horses and carriages for a large manor, it has been transformed into a gracious two-story residence.

    Generously proportioned rooms with high ceilings make up Griffin House’s more than 4,000 square feet of living space.

    Sunlight pours in from 11 triple-glazed south-facing windows. Panoramic views take in the tranquil garden. Wembley Stadium, some 10 miles away, can be seen from the first-floor landing.

    A double-height foyer with a sweeping staircase creates a grand first impression upon entering the home. Three large reception rooms feature parquet floors and garden-facing floor-to-ceiling windows and doors.

    A wood-burning antique marble fireplace sits in the living room. Nearby are a library/TV room and an oversized bedroom/bonus room with a bathroom and separate access. The space could be used for an office, studio or granny flat.

    The upgraded kitchen is outfitted with Miele appliances, a central island/breakfast bar and radiant floor heating. A separate back entrance leads to the driveway. The ground floor also contains a powder room and laundry room.

    Upstairs are four double bedrooms, including a primary suite with two dressing areas, dual bathrooms and vaulted ceilings. There are a total of five bedrooms and six bathrooms.

    The walkable community of East Sheen offers country living with city access via London transport. Paddington Station is about a 30-minute ride away.

    “The lifestyle here is relaxed,” Genders says. “Smart but unpretentious.”

    Centuries-old pubs, boutique-lined cobbled lanes, cafes, schools and Sheen Common, popular with cricket players, lawn bowlers and dog walkers, are among community amenities. But perhaps the main attraction is the adjacent 2,500-acre natural parkland.

    “People live here for Richmond Park,” Genders says. Once the hunting grounds of royalty, the ancient woods and grasslands are now a habitat shared by free-roaming herds of deer, hikers and joggers.

    The asking price for the Stanley Road property is GBP 6.25 million or about USD $7.76 million.

    MORE FROM FORBES GLOBAL PROPERTIES

    MORE FROM FORBES$8 Million Shophouse In Singapore Conserves A Rich HeritageMORE FROM FORBES‘Camp’ Contemporary At Private Lake Tahoe Enclave Delivers The Best Of Everything OutdoorsMORE FROM FORBESA Fairy Tale Estate In Pennsylvania Has A Former Barn At Center StageMORE FROM FORBESWoodsy Designer Home Hits The Market On Toronto’s Millionaire’s MileMORE FROM FORBESVilla In The Portugal Town That Inspired Ian Fleming’s 007 Asks $7 Million

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    Lauren Beale, Contributor

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  • $1,850 a day? What it costs to visit the 10 most expensive vacation destinations in the world

    $1,850 a day? What it costs to visit the 10 most expensive vacation destinations in the world

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    Looking to splurge on your next vacation?

    The travel website FloridaPanhandle.com analyzed costs in 100 popular vacation spots, looking into average prices for accommodations, transportation, food and attractions.

    Here are 10 destinations that certainly call for big budgets.

    According to the analysis, the most expensive vacation destinations, excluding flight costs, are:

    1. Gustavia, St. Barts
    2. Gstaad, Switzerland
    3. Aspen, Colorado
    4. Park City, Utah
    5. Maui, Hawaii
    6. London, England
    7. Cocoa Island, Maldives
    8. Maun, Botswana
    9. Grand Cayman, Cayman Islands
    10. Monte Carlo, Monaco

    The 10 most expensive vacation destinations around the globe.

    Source: CNBC

    The list was dominated by islands and ritzy ski towns, though the draw of eco-tourism safaris in Botswana and Europe’s financial capital, London, rounded out the ranking.

    Where hotels average $1,000 per night

    The Caribbean island of St. Barts is the most expensive vacation destination in the world, largely because of its high accommodation costs, which average $1,770 per night, according to the analysis.

    Average hotel rates in Switzerland’s Gstaad (No. 2) are $1,360, according to the research. The town in the Swiss Alps also has the highest average food costs on the list, at $177 per day.

    Accommodations at the third priciest spot — Aspen, Colorado — average $1,385 for one person, but a family of four can expect to pay $2,274, according to the analysis.

    A street in downtown Aspen, Colorado.

    Nik Wheeler | Corbis Historical | Getty Images

    To find those prices, FloridaPanhandle.com researched average rates for four- and five-star hotels for stays during Christmas (Dec. 21-27) and the spring (May 19-25), but did not include taxes.

    Attractions: from $0 to $333 per day

    To estimate the price of activities, FloridaPanhandle.com calculated the average cost for each location’s three most-reviewed attractions on TripAdvisor.

    The ski town of Park City, Utah, averaged $333 for daily attractions — the highest on the list.

    Attractions in Maun, Botswana, Africa’s lone destination on the list, averaged more than $100 per day for activities like a one-day visit to the Okavango Delta.

    Despite having higher overall average costs, St. Barts and the Maldives’ attractions were valued at $0. Vacationers may have to pay top dollar for hotels in those locations, but their beaches are free.

    Monaco, Monte Carlo.

    Ostill | Istock | Getty Images

    Monte Carlo had one of the lowest average rates for attractions on the list, a surprising result for a vibrant gambling hot spot.

    While “Monte Carlo is known for its casinos, it is also not the most popular thing to do in town,” said a representative from FloridaPanhandle.com.

    According to the company, the three most popular attractions in Monte Carlo are the Oceanographic Museum of Monaco, an outdoor area called Casino Square, and the Casino of Monte Carlo, which has an entrance fee of 18 euros ($20).

    Gambling losses, however, are not included in Monte Carlo’s average attraction costs.

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  • Wales 20-9 England: Gareth Davies and George North help hosts to World Cup warm-up victory in Leigh Halfpenny’s 100th game

    Wales 20-9 England: Gareth Davies and George North help hosts to World Cup warm-up victory in Leigh Halfpenny’s 100th game

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    Marc Bazeley

    @MarcBazeley

    Gareth Davies and George North both scored tries, while Leigh Halfpenny kicked two goals and two penalties; Marcus Smith kicked England’s points; England head coach Steve Borthwick names his squad for the World Cup on Monday, with the sides clashing again at Twickenham next Saturday

    Last Updated: 05/08/23 7:36pm

    Gareth Davies goes over for Wales’ first try against England

    Second-half tries from Gareth Davies and George North saw Wales kick off their Rugby World Cup preparations with a 20-9 victory over an out-of-sorts England at the Principality Stadium.

    It was a battle of the kickers in the first 40 minutes, with three successful penalties from the boot of Marcus Smith compared to two from Wales’ Test centurion Leigh Halfpenny, giving the visitors a 9-6 lead at half-time.

    But the hosts seized the initiative eight minutes into the second half when Gareth Davies was on hand to finish for a try and they surged further in front thanks to George North going over from close range just before the hour mark, with Halfpenny converting both.

    Wales: Tries – Davies, North; Conversions – Halfpenny (2); Goals – Halfpenny (2).

    England: Goals – Smith (3).

    Louis Rees-Zammit was unfortunate not to add a third try for the hosts before full-time when he was adjudged to have knocked on after a TMO review, but that did not take the shine off the result or the performance from Warren Gatland’s new-look team.

    More to follow…

    This is a breaking news story that is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh this page for the latest updates.

    Sky Sports brings you live updates as they happen. Get breaking sports news, analysis, exclusive interviews, replays and highlights.

    Sky Sports is your trusted source for breaking sports news headlines and live updates. Watch live coverage of your favourite sports: Football, F1, Boxing, Cricket, Golf, Tennis, Rugby League, Rugby Union, NFL, Darts, Netball and get the latest transfers news, results, scores and more.

    Visit skysports.com or the Sky Sports App for all the breaking sports news headlines. You can receive push notifications from the Sky Sports app for the latest news from your favourite sports and you can also follow @SkySportsNews on Twitter to get the latest updates.

    What’s next?

    Wales and England do it all again on Saturday August 12 when they reconvene at Twickenham for the second Rugby World Cup warm-up clash against each other. First, though, England’s players face a nervous wait to see who will make Borthwick’s 33-player squad for the global gathering when it is announced on Monday.

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