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Tag: United Kingdom

  • Prince William and Kate Middleton’s college classmate dead after 100-foot rooftop fall

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    A British reality star and socialite who was also a classmate of Prince William and Kate Middleton during their college days, died Thursday after a fall from a rooftop, London police confirmed to Fox News Digital Tuesday.

    “Officers responded to concerns for a man on the roof of a building in Cockspur Street, Westminster at 23:02hrs on Thursday, 30 October,” a spokesperson for the Metropolitan Police told Fox News Digital.

    “The man sadly fell from height. Despite the best efforts from the London Ambulance Service, he was sadly pronounced dead at the scene. His death is being as unexpected but non-suspicious.”

    He reportedly fell from the posh Trafalgar St. James Hotel. The fall was about 100 feet, according to People magazine.

    PRINCE WILLIAM, KATE MIDDLETON MOVE TO FOREST LODGE DESPITE PREVIOUS PRIVACY AND SAFETY CONCERNS

    A British reality star and socialite who was also friends with Prince William and Kate Middleton during their college days died Thursday after a fall from a rooftop, London police confirmed to Fox News Digital Tuesday. (Getty Images)

    Duncan, 45, who appeared on reality shows like Britain’s “Big Brother,” attended University of St. Andrews in Scotland at the same time William and Middleton were there and began dating.

    He was an acquaintance of the couple while they were at St. Andrews and was one of the first people to know they were an item, according to the Daily Mail, which was first to report the story.

    He was also at the school’s infamous student fashion show during which Middleton reportedly caught William’s eye when she walked the runway in a sheer dress.

    William at his college graduation

    Prince William and Kate Middleton knew Duncan from their college days.  (Michael Dunlea/AFP via Getty Images)

    Kate Middelton at her college graduation

    Kate Middleton at her college graduation in 2005.  (Michael Dunlea/Pool/AFP via Getty Images)

    PRINCE ANDREW VANISHES FROM ROYAL WEBSITE AFTER KING CHARLES STRIPS ALL TITLES AND HONORS

    “It was the end of their first year,” Duncan previously told the Daily Mail of the fashion show. “I was there, and in person there were a lot of attractive girls. She was in a very daring dress, in a sheer stocking-like dress. He was sitting front row, and his eyes were like stalks.

    “She brushed by him on the way to the catwalk, and things were never the same again — the whole history of the monarchy had been altered.”

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    Ben Duncan in a suit

    Duncan on the UK’s “Big Brother” in 2010.  (Eamonn McCormack/Getty Images)

    British TV personality Lizzie Cundy mourned Duncan on social media.

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    Trafalgar St. James Hotel

    The Trafalgar St. James Hotel in London.  (Getty)

    “So shocked and heartbroken to hear my friend Ben Duncan has passed away,” she wrote on X Monday. “A beautiful soul with a large fun character. We laughed so much about the silly things in life. God bless you dear Ben. You are a one off . Thoughts and prayers with all his family.”

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    Broadcaster Mike Hollingsworth wrote on Facebook, “My dear, dear friend Benjamin (Ben) Duncan has left us. He lived life as a Peter Pan, the boy who never grew up. He will be sorely missed by his many, many friends who grew to love his charm, his wit, his infectious laugh and his innate sense of style. The world is a poorer place for his passing…RIP Benji.”

    Fox News Digital has reached out to a rep for Buckingham Palace for comment.

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  • UK Anti-Islam Activist Tommy Robinson Thanks Musk After Being Cleared of Terrorism Charge

    LONDON (Reuters) -British anti-Islam activist Tommy Robinson was cleared on Tuesday of committing an offence under counterterrorism laws by refusing to give police his phone PIN, thanking billionaire Elon Musk who he said funded his defence.

    Robinson, 42, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, has become a flag-bearer for some British nationalists and one of Britain’s most high-profile anti-migration campaigners.

    He was stopped by police in July 2024 as he drove through border security at the Channel Tunnel train terminal in southeast England.

    Prosecutors told London’s Westminster Magistrates’ Court at a trial last month an officer had become suspicious because of his demeanour, he was driving a high-value vehicle, a friend’s silver Bentley, and was heading to Benidorm in southern Spain having only bought a ticket on the day.

    He and colleagues seized Robinson’s phone and asked him to provide the passcode to unlock it. But he refused, saying he was a journalist and it contained privileged material.

    Giving his verdict on Tuesday, Judge Sam Goozee said it appeared the police had detained Robinson because of his political views and so the decision to stop him was unlawful.

    “First of all, thank you, Elon Musk … why has it taken an American businessman to fight for our justice here and our fight against terrorism charges for journalists?” Robinson said outside court.

    Musk often reposts his messages on X and appeared by videolink at a recent rally in London attended by about 150,000 people that Robinson organised. Before his trial, he said Musk had paid for his defence.

    Robinson says he was targeted by the state for exposing wrongdoing, but is denounced by critics as a far-right rabble-rouser with a string of criminal convictions.

    “I’m so glad that judge has given such a powerful judgment now that says it how it was – I was targeted because of my political beliefs,” he said. “On behalf of the government, counterterrorism (police) targeted me to try and get access to my phone as a journalist.”

    (Reporting by Michael Holden; Editing by Alex Richardson)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • U.K. Treasury Chief Says Lowering Inflation Will Be Budget Focus

    The U.K. government’s upcoming budget will focus on lowering inflation and paving the way for the Bank of England to lower its key interest rate, treasury chief Rachel Reeves said Tuesday.

    In a speech, Reeves also said the Nov. 26 budget would aim to lower the government’s debt, but also protect public services. She didn’t rule out a rise in taxes on households, which many economists see as the only option left to the government if it is to achieve its other goals.

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    Paul Hannon

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  • EU in Last-Minute Talks to Set New Climate Goal for COP30

    BRUSSELS (Reuters) -EU climate ministers will make a last-ditch attempt to pass a new climate change target on Tuesday, in an effort to avoid going to the U.N. COP30 summit in Brazil empty-handed.

    Failure to agree could undermine the European Union’s claims to leadership at the COP30 talks, which will test the will of major economies to keep fighting climate change despite opposition from U.S. President Donald Trump. 

    Countries including China, Britain and Australia have already submitted new climate targets ahead of COP30.

    But the EU, which has some of the world’s most ambitious CO2-cutting policies, has struggled to contain a backlash from industries and governments sceptical that it can afford the measures alongside defence and industrial priorities.

    EU members failed to agree a 2040 climate target in September, leaving them scrambling for a deal days before European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen meets other world leaders at COP30 in Belem, Brazil, on November 6.

    “The geopolitical landscape has rarely been more complex,” EU climate policy chief Wopke Hoekstra told a gathering of climate ministers in Canada on Saturday, adding that he was confident the bloc would approve its new goal. 

    “The European Union will continue to do its utmost, even under these circumstances, in Belem to uphold its commitment to multilateralism and to the Paris Agreement,” he said.

    A MORE FLEXIBLE EU TARGET

    The starting point for talks is a European Commission proposal to cut net EU greenhouse gas emissions by 90% from 1990 levels by 2040, to keep countries on track for net-zero by 2050.

    Italy, Poland and the Czech Republic are among those warning this is too restrictive for domestic industries struggling with high energy costs, cheaper Chinese imports and U.S. tariffs. 

    Others, including the Netherlands, Spain and Sweden, cite worsening extreme weather and the need to catch up with China in manufacturing green technologies as reasons for ambitious goals.

    The draft compromise ministers will discuss, seen by Reuters, includes a clause demanded by France allowing a weakening of the 2040 goal in future, if it becomes clear EU forests are not absorbing enough CO2 to meet it. 

    Brussels has also vowed to change other measures to attempt to win buy-in for the climate goal. These include controlling prices in an upcoming carbon market and considering weakening its 2035 combustion engine ban as requested by Germany. 

    A deal on Tuesday will require ministers to agree on the share of the 90% emissions cut countries can cover by buying foreign carbon credits – effectively softening efforts required by domestic industries.

    France has said credits should cover 5%, more than the 3% share originally proposed by the Commission. Other governments argue money would be better spent on supporting European industries than buying foreign CO2 credits.

    Support from at least 15 of the 27 EU members is needed to pass the goal. EU diplomats said on Monday the vote would be tight and could depend on one or two flipping positions.

    Ministers will try first to agree the 2040 goal, and from that derive an emissions pledge for 2035 – which is what the U.N. asked countries to submit ahead of COP30. 

    (Reporting by Kate Abnett; Editing by Alexander Smith)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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    Reuters

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  • Europe’s Role Reversal: The Problem Economies Are Now Further North

    The European debt crisis of the early 2010s created an image of a continent cleaved in two: The fiscally responsible core countries led by Germany versus the spendthrift southern periphery of Portugal, Italy, Greece and Spain—disdainfully dubbed PIGS.

    Nowadays, there has been a role reversal. Europe’s three biggest economies are stuck in a cycle of weak growth, leading to widening budget deficits. France is the epicenter of this shift and remains mired in a budget and political crisis, while the U.K. is eyeing tax hikes to try to narrow the gap and avoid spooking markets. Famously frugal Germany and the Netherlands are taking on debt, albeit from lower levels.

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    Chelsey Dulaney

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  • Opinion | The U.K. Stabbing Is Every Commuter’s Nightmare

    For those of us who ride the commuter rails and subways daily, Saturday night’s mass stabbing on a London-bound train is a nightmare brought to life. In such confined and well-lit spaces, there isn’t any way to do what the experts say you should: run, hide and, as a last resort, fight.

    A train car moving at high speed with the doors and windows closed is a violent psychopath’s dream—a veritable barrel full of unarmed, unsuspecting fish. Most of us have our heads buried in our phones, our ears distracted by music or podcasts. Some of us are poring over newspapers or dreamily watching the countryside fly by. Rarely do any of us do a threat assessment of those nearby. We are in our own little in-between place—not home, not at work. En route. Vulnerable.

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    Matthew Hennessey

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  • Mass Stabbing on Train to London Causes Life-Threatening Injuries

    Police made two arrests after the train was stopped in Huntingdon, near Cambridge, and say there is no sign of a terrorist motive.

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  • Andrew Will Head Into Exile at King Charles’ Private and Remote Sandringham Estate

    LONDON (AP) — Andrew Mountbatten Windsor, the disgraced younger brother of King Charles III, is going into internal exile that will see him further hidden from view from a clearly angry British public.

    His ejection from the 30-room Royal Lodge on the grounds of Windsor Castle to one of the properties on the king’s private estate at Sandringham in the east of England will symbolize the downfall of the one-time prince and duke.

    Though he’s lost his perks of title and status, Andrew, 65, will not be slumming it.

    But it is a banishment nonetheless that leaves Andrew increasingly exposed to scrutiny both in the U.K. and the U.S. over his friendship with the deceased sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Andrew denies allegations of improper behavior during his long friendship with Epstein, including from Virginia Roberts Giuffre, who claimed she had sex with the ex-prince when she was 17.

    Following years of scandals related to Andrew, Charles arguably took the biggest step of his reign Thursday by seeking to insulate the monarchy from any exposure emanating from Andrew’s connections with Epstein, who took his own life in prison in August 2019 while awaiting trial on sex-trafficking charges, more than a decade after his initial conviction.


    Andrew’s eviction won’t happen too quickly

    Andrew has been given notice that his time at Royal Lodge, the mansion near Windsor Castle where he has lived for more than 20 years, is coming to an end. He signed a 75-year lease in 2003 with the Crown Estate, a portfolio of properties that is nominally owned, but not controlled, by the monarch.

    He invested a required 7.5 million pounds ($9.9 million) to refurbish the home and now resides there for the annual sum of a peppercorn, a symbolic figure often used to satisfy the legal requirement of real estate transactions.

    His move won’t happen overnight. As everyone knows, moving house is an ordeal at the best of times, regardless of the size of the dwelling. It’s certainly going to take Andrew, and whoever he can get to help him, a fair chunk of time to go through his belongings, decide what to take, give to charity or what to toss.

    There’s also the little matter of divvying up possessions with his ex-wife Sarah Ferguson, who has lived with Andrew at Royal Lodge since 2008, but who will not be moving on to Sandringham at Charles’ expense.

    With Christmas looming, the likely time and effort is no bad thing for a royal family seeking to isolate Andrew. The last thing the 76-year-old monarch, and his son, the heir to the throne Prince William, will want is Andrew within shouting distance on Christmas Day when members of the royal family go to St. Mary Magdalene church on the Sandringham Estate, before what is no doubt a majestic banquet at the king’s main residence, Sandringham House, and its 100 or so rooms.


    Andrew’s new home was loved by the monarchs

    So the expectation is that Andrew will move to his new home in one of the U.K.’s least densely populated counties, after all the festivities have concluded.

    The Sandringham Estate is not an official royal residence, which means it’s not owned by the state, a fact that Charles will hope will keep a lid on the public’s anger. Charles will be funding Andrew’s relocation and provide his brother an annual stipend from his own private resources. In effect, Andrew will not live out his vintage years at the expense of the British taxpayer.

    Sandringham, the private home of the last six British monarchs, sits amid parkland, gardens and working farms about 110 miles (180 kilometers) north of London. It has been owned by the royal family since 1862, passing directly from one monarch to the next for more than 160 years.

    It was recorded in the Domesday Book, the survey of lands in England compiled by William the Conqueror in 1086, as “Sant Dersingham,” or the sandy part of Dersingham. That was shortened to Sandringham in later years.

    Queen Victoria bought Sandringham for her eldest son, Edward, in 1862, largely in hopes that becoming a country gentleman would keep the playboy prince out of trouble in the nightspots of London, Paris, Monte Carlo and Biarritz. The future Edward VII transformed the estate into a modern country retreat to be passed on from one generation to the next.

    The monarchs since have inherited it — and loved it. Charles was a fan from a young boy, joining shooting parties in the 1950s, with one photograph catching him blowing a miniature hunting trumpet while sitting on horseback.

    There is growing speculation that Andrew will not be moving to Wood Farm on the estate, the property favored by his mother, Queen Elizabeth II and father, Prince Philip, who preferred its cosy surroundings to the grandiose main residence.

    But there are a number of other properties available, including Park House, the birthplace and childhood home of Diana, Princess of Wales. The late princess continued to live there until the death of her grandfather in 1975.

    York Cottage is another possibility. It’s where King George V, Andrew’s great-grandfather, lived before becoming monarch in 1910.

    The cottage, which is not a cottage in the traditional sense given it has multiple bedrooms and a lake nearby, was reportedly earmarked for William’s brother, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan Markle, before they decided to ditch their royal lives and go and live in the U.S.

    York Cottage, which has often been used as holiday accommodation, may have one problem, though. It does after all share the name of the dukedom that Andrew used to have — a constant reminder of what’s transpired.

    Another option for Andrew could be Gardens House, which was once home to the estate’s head gardener. It has four bedrooms, three bathrooms and is being used as a holiday let, according to Sandringham’s website.

    The Folly, which has been a hunting lodge and a place where ladies enjoyed afternoon tea, would certainly see Andrew downsizing substantially. It only has three bedrooms — but as a single man, does he really need any more?

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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  • Andrew’s Royal Exit Is the Latest Crisis for Britain’s Monarchy

    LONDON (AP) — Holding prestige but not power, Britain’s monarchy is finely tuned to public sentiment.

    That’s been evident with the disgrace of Andrew Mountbatten Windsor, who was stripped of his princely title and his spacious home by his brother King Charles on Thursday, a banishment that has left the disgraced royal increasingly exposed to political and legal scrutiny over his finances and his friendship with the sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

    Following years of scandals related to Andrew, Charles arguably took the biggest step of his reign by seeking to insulate the monarchy from any further scandals relating to Andrew and his connections with Epstein, who took his own life in prison in August 2019 while awaiting trial on sex-trafficking charges, more than a decade after his initial conviction.

    It’s not the first time the current iteration of the British monarchy — the House of Windsor — has been in crisis over the past century and where the future of the institution has been threatened.

    George Gross, a royal expert at King’s College London, said the most recent precedent for what has happened to Andrew is the 1917 Titles Deprivation Act, which “saw various members of loosely affiliated royals and dukes and members of the peerage losing titles if they had sided with Germany in the First World War.”

    The royal families of Europe are intertwined, and Britain’s is heavily German, especially after Queen Victoria married Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, with whom she had nine children.

    When Britain and Germany went to war in 1914, some members of the wider British royal family found themselves on opposing sides.

    Britain’s King George V changed the family name from Saxe-Coburg and Gotha to Windsor in 1917, and initiated legislation to strike out the titles of princes and lords “who have, during the present war, borne arms against His Majesty or His Allies, or who have adhered to His Majesty’s enemies.”

    One target was Prince Ernest Augustus, Duke of Cumberland and Teviotdale, who was a U.K. royal and also a prince of Hanover. His title was removed for being an enemy of Britain under the 1917 act, which was enacted in 1919, once the war was over.

    According to the House of Commons Library, “this was the first and only time such a title has been removed in this way.”

    The relationship between Edward, Prince of Wales, and U.S. socialite Wallis Simpson was a headache that turned into a constitutional crisis. Simpson was twice divorced, and Edward, the heir to the throne, was destined to be ceremonial head of the Church of England, which did not allow divorced people to remarry in church.

    The prince became King Edward VIII when his father King George V died in early 1936. He continued to say he wanted to marry Simpson, despite the opposition of the British government.

    Forced to choose between duty and passion, he gave up the throne in December 1936, announcing in a radio broadcast that “I have found it impossible … to discharge my duties as king as I would wish to do without the help and support of the woman I love.”

    The news was a surprise to many in Britain, though not beyond it. British newspapers had not reported on the relationship, and American magazines had offending articles cut out before going on sale.

    The abdication set the monarchy on a new course. Edward’s younger brother took the throne as King George VI. He was succeeded by his daughter, Queen Elizabeth II, and after her 70-year reign by her son, King Charles III. All doubled down on the idea that the monarch’s primary attribute should be a sense of duty — something Edward, in the popular imagination, lacked.

    Edward and Wallis, now the Duke and Duchess of Windsor and suspected by some of Nazi sympathies, were sent to the Bahamas, where he served as governor. After the war they mostly stayed away from Britain, living a life of nomadic luxury.

    The death of Princess Diana — the ex-wife of Charles — in a car crash in Paris in 1997 at the age of 36 shocked the world and left her family, including sons William and Harry, then 15 and 12, in mourning.

    The strength of public feeling caught the royal family by surprise. Mounds of floral tributes piled up outside the gates of Buckingham Palace to mourn a princess who had been ostracized by the royal family after her divorce from Charles in 1992.

    The queen was at Balmoral in Scotland on her summer holiday with her husband Prince Philip, Charles, William and Harry. The family kept their grief private and stuck to routine — taking the ashen-faced boys to church on Sunday morning — and the queen did not issue a statement for several days.

    She was advised to make a public display of grief by Prime Minister Tony Blair, who perfectly caught the public mood with his own tribute calling Diana “the people’s princess.”

    After newspaper headlines urging “Speak to us Ma’am” and “Show us you care,” the queen made a live televised address to the nation on the eve of Diana’s funeral.

    “What I say to you now, as your queen and as a grandmother, I say from my heart,” the queen said, acknowledging the country’s grief, praising Diana and promising to cherish her memory.

    Until the Epstein scandal reared up again last year, Andrew had been trying to regain favor with the family. He may have benefited indirectly from the trouble with Prince Harry, who was the source of most of the drama at the time outside of the family’s high-profile medical problems.

    Harry became estranged from his father and older brother, Prince William, heir to the throne, when he and his wife, Meghan, stepped down from their working roles and moved to California in 2020. The couple famously aired their grievances with the royal family in a tell-all interview to Oprah Winfrey and a revealing Netflix series. Harry, also known as the Duke of Sussex, then fueled the tensions by revealing personal conversations in his memoir, “Spare.”

    Harry also broke from royal protocol in turning to the courts to sort out his legal problems. He became the first senior royal to testify in court in more than a century in his successful phone hacking lawsuit against the Daily Mirror.

    A failed legal effort to restore his police protection detail that was stripped from him when he left royal work, though, was seen as an attack on his father’s government.

    When the courts finally rejected the lawsuit, it provide a chance for a reunion between father and son. The two shared a cup of tea at Charles’ London abode, Clarence House, in September. It was their first meeting in over a year. It lasted less than an hour.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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  • Prince William Leaves Andrew Scandal Behind for Trip to Brazil

    LONDON (Reuters) -Prince William heads to Brazil next week for the awards ceremony for his multi-million-dollar environmental prize, hoping to refocus attention away from the scandal of his uncle Andrew and back on the royals’ causes.

    William will visit some of Rio de Janeiro’s most famous landmarks on what will be the British heir’s first Latin American trip.

    The aim is to turn the spotlight onto a line-up of environmental projects before the annual awards ceremony for the prince’s Earthshot Prize.

    The visit comes days after King Charles stripped his younger brother of his title of prince and evicted him from his mansion, banishing his sibling from public life to try to prevent any further damage to the royal brand from Andrew’s ties to the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

    During his three-day trip, William will seek to focus on his main philanthropic environmental cause, which aims to find innovations to combat climate change, and awards five winners 1 million pounds ($1.3 million) each to drive their projects.

    William will visit Sugarloaf mountain, the Maracana soccer stadium, the Christ the Redeemer statue and the Copacabana beach where he will play volleyball, a Kensington Palace spokesperson said.

    His wife Kate, who is in remission after cancer treatment, will not be joining him.

    South America is an uncommon destination for the British royals who tend to focus overseas trips on Europe or the foreign realms where the king is head of state, such as Canada.

    William has never been to Brazil or Latin America before, while Charles last went there in 2009.

    This year, the Earthshot events will take place a week before the United Nations COP30 climate summit which is also being held in Brazil and which the prince will attend in place of his father.

    “With its energy, its people and its iconic landscapes it is the perfect place to celebrate amazing environmental innovation and host our biggest and best Earthshot ever,” Jason Knauf, chief executive of the Earthshot Prize, said.

    The winners will be announced at a ceremony on November 5 which will feature a host of celebrities and performances from Australian popstar Kylie Minogue and Brazilian musician Gilberto Gil.

    Organisers say the summit surrounding the event will attract more than 1,000 global leaders, some of the world’s biggest philanthropists along with global mayors and world-leading scientists.

    (Reporting by Michael Holden; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Key Moments in the Downfall of Prince Andrew

    After years of damaging headlines over his friendship with Jeffrey Epstein and allegations of sexually abusing a teenager, Andrew has been stripped of all his titles and his Windsor mansion residence.

    His public disgrace is unprecedented in modern British royal history. Here is a recap of his downfall:

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    Natasha Dangoor

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  • Why Buckingham Palace Decided to Get Rid of Andrew

    LONDON—In recent days, King Charles III moved decisively to shut down a slow-burning scandal that threatened to tarnish not only his reign but that of his son Prince William.

    For over a decade, the former friendship between Charles’s younger brother Andrew and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein generated negative headlines, embarrassing the royal family. Andrew had long denied he abused an American teenage girl introduced to him by Epstein decades ago, but a drumbeat of fresh disclosures in recent weeks brought the scandal back to Britain’s front pages, sparking fresh public disapproval and complaints from lawmakers about the man 8th in line to the throne. 

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    Max Colchester

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  • BOE to Embrace Uncertainty, and Bernanke’s Guidance, With Communications Revamp

    The central bank place will more emphasis on developments that could upend its expectations and less on forecasts that convey too much certainty about the future.

    Paul Hannon

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  • Anthony Grey, Reuters Journalist Held Captive in Mao’s China, Dies at 87

    (Reuters) -In his first job interview with Reuters, Anthony Grey was asked why he wanted to cover international news. To be mixed up in important events, he said.

    His wish would come true – to a ruinous degree.

    Three years later, in 1967, Grey – by then the agency’s Beijing correspondent – became a pawn in a drawn-out feud between China and the United Kingdom. After the crown colony of Hong Kong arrested communist reporters, Chinese authorities retaliated by placing Grey under house arrest.

    The Briton’s ordeal would last some 26 months – and make him famous around the world.

    Finally set free in October 1969, he told the press: “I felt very, very low many times. But I didn’t despair.”

    Grey would go on to work for the BBC, write several popular novels and set up a charity to assist other state hostages.

    He held no bitterness towards his former captors. The trauma of solitary confinement nonetheless lingered his entire life.

    Grey, who had Parkinson’s disease, died on October 11 in Norwich, England, his daughters Lucy and Clarissa Grey told Reuters. He was 87 years old.

    Anthony Keith Grey was born on July 5, 1938, in Norwich, the second child of driver Alfred Grey and shopkeeper Agnes (née Bullent).

    Raised by Agnes after his parents’ divorce, Grey was estranged from his father for most of his life. An athletic pupil who excelled in English, he was once described by a friend’s mother as “restless”. He wore the epithet with pride.

    After leaving school at 16, he did national service with the air force in Glasgow. Concerns that he would eventually require glasses prevented him from becoming a pilot.

    Grey harboured another hope: to write fiction. But he sensed that he should first find out more about life. He chose journalism.

    In 1960 he joined Norwich’s Eastern Daily Press newspaper, where he overlapped with Frederick Forsyth, who died earlier this year. Both reporters later joined Reuters, before writing novels.

    The news agency first posted Grey to East Berlin, ahead of which he took German lessons in London with a teacher called Shirley McGuinn. She would eventually become his wife.

    From his base in Berlin, Grey travelled to Czechoslovakia, Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria and Poland. On several occasions he was followed, and questioned, by Soviet agents, he said. Among his accomplishments: breaking the news that a prisoner exchange was in the works to free Gerald Brooke, a British lecturer held captive in Russia, years before the exchange finally took place.

    ‘A CORRESPONDENT’S DREAM’

    One night in January 1967 a Reuters executive rang to ask whether he would go to Peking, as Beijing was then known.

    “It was a correspondent’s dream,” Grey recalled in his 1970 book “Hostage in Peking”. China’s capital city, then convulsed by the Cultural Revolution, was generating a torrent of headlines, but was host to just four Western reporters.

    “I made a conscious effort to restrain the enthusiasm of my reply. I was twenty-eight. I didn’t want to be thought over-eager and unreliable. Yes, I quite liked the idea.”

    Grey had no special knowledge of China. All he had was 18 months’ experience covering another communist part of the world: Eastern Europe.

    As he set off, he was advised to gauge the state of the country from his train seat by whether smoke rose from the factory chimneys and rice shoots from the paddy fields – “a measure of the ignorance existing among outsiders of conditions in China at that time”, he later remarked.

    One of his first reports debunked a Russian news bulletin claiming a famine in South China. A few weeks later, while he was covering May Day celebrations, Mao Zedong passed within a few feet of him. Caught up in the crowd’s commotion, Grey failed to film the chairman of the Chinese Communist Party.

    Grey’s relative freedom of movement ended abruptly on July 21, 1967. That day, a foreign ministry official told him that, in view of the “illegal persecution” and “fascist atrocities” in Hong Kong against Chinese correspondents, he would no longer be allowed to leave his house. He protested that his British employer was independent from the British state, to no avail.

    Of his house arrest, Grey wrote in his diary that evening: “The novelty of it prevented me feeling depressed; I feel a small sense of how unjust the measure.”

    There ensued four weeks of relative normality in Reuters’ staffed, two-storey residence on the edge of the Forbidden City. That all changed on August 18.

    That night, Red Guards burst into the house, daubed paint on him and dragged him into the yard, his arms wrenched behind his back and his head forced down – an agonising position known as jet-planing.

    The intruders killed his cat, Ming Ming, and shouted: “Hang Grey! Hang Grey!”

    Around midnight, they finally left. “I was aching all over and out of breath, and didn’t sit down for a long time,” Grey wrote in his diary.

    After that, the conditions of his detention became much starker. Guards confined Grey to one tiny room, its walls plastered with Maoist propaganda.

    A pen was his only solace. With it he secretly journaled, wrote short stories and compiled crossword puzzles. “I would occupy the emptiness of time by thinking of cliches and colloquial phrases and making up what I thought were smart or groan-provoking puns as clues,” he wrote in the foreword to his 1975 collection “Crosswords from Peking”.

    Among his favourite ones: “The law of graffiti?” Tantalisingly, he declined to give readers the four-word answer.

    ‘CAUGHT UP IN A BATTLE OF FACE’

    The British government insisted on quiet negotiations with China. But as that approach proved fruitless, Grey’s peers launched a far more public campaign to secure his release. The tall, slender reporter became a fixture on front pages.

    When his wait was finally over, a Chinese official told him that he owed his freedom to the release of the communist reporters.

    “I don’t think Peking cared desperately about the news workers in Hong Kong in themselves,” Grey later wrote. “I was simply caught up in a battle of face between two intransigent governments.”

    Readjusting to society proved a challenge, especially as Britain had changed so much during his captivity. Recreational drugs abounded, as did miniskirts, long-haired men and – with the musical “Hair” – on-stage nudity.

    His status too had changed. “The former newshound, accustomed to hunting safely in numbers with the press corps pack, had been separated out – had become the fox, the hunted one,” he wrote in his book “The Hostage Handbook” decades later.

    He went on to host a current affairs programme on BBC radio and write several thrillers. But the unexplained death in Cairo of journalist David Holden in 1977 – a chilling real-life incident of the sort Grey had lightly imagined in his novels – put him off the genre.

    After that he wrote sprawling historical fiction set in China, Vietnam and Japan. His best-selling work was “Saigon”.

    Grey would have a few more dalliances with journalism. In 1983, he wrote “The Prime Minister Was a Spy”, a book which alleged that Australia’s Harold Holt, who is widely believed to have drowned at sea in 1967, had in fact fled the country in a Chinese submarine.

    The stridently anti-communist Holt had spied on Beijing’s behalf for 38 years, Grey wrote.

    Holt biographer Tim Frame called the theory “a complete fabrication”. Relying on a former Australian naval officer who claimed to have Chinese informants, Grey himself wrote of his account: “I can’t guarantee that it is true.”

    A 1996 BBC radio documentary about unidentified flying objects led him to yet more unorthodox views. “At the end of my own investigation, I personally feel sure that extraterrestrial craft are visiting us,” he concluded in the broadcast.

    After that, Grey became a follower of Rael, a Frenchman who said that humanity had been created by alien scientists. His movement – Raelism – defines itself as an atheist religion. A French parliamentary inquiry called it a cult.

    Grey’s faith, which led him to write the foreword to Rael’s 2005 book “Intelligent Design”, became, for a time, all-consuming. It threatened to engulf his finances, reputation and mental health, the latter already largely hobbled by his experiences in Beijing.

    Four decades on from captivity, Grey, who fell in and out of depression, finally saw a psychiatrist. He was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder.

    In brighter moments, he would laugh with Lucy about how much he identified with Billy Joel’s lyrics: “Darling I don’t know why I go to extremes / Too high or too low there ain’t no in-betweens.”

    Grey had an open yet troubled mind. He could also be “wonderfully silly”, Clarissa said.

    Both daughters are journalists. They survive him, as do Lucy’s children Eddie and Oscar.

    Preaching forgiveness, Grey let go of any resentment towards the British and Chinese authorities, as well as towards his fellow journalists, who had pressed him for stories even at his lowest. He founded several charities, including Hostage Action Worldwide and Planet of Forgiveness.

    Sitting at home in England’s South Downs listening to John Williams’s “Cavatina” with a Chivas Regal in hand was his idea of bliss.

    He was married to Shirley for 22 years. Following their separation, and before her death from cancer in 1995, they remained close friends. He would visit her every week to tackle a crossword together.

    The answer to his own clue, “The law of graffiti?”, it turned out, was “Writing on the wall”.

    Conceived in detention half a century ago, all four walls of his cell covered in Maoist mantras, the pun brought a smile to his face.

    (Editing by Andrew HeavensArchival research by Rory Carruthers and Susan Ponsonby)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Prince Andrew Stripped of Royal Title by King Charles

    Andrew’s friendship with Jeffrey Epstein and new revelations about longstanding abuse allegations forced the king’s hand.

    Max Colchester

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  • Explainer-Nuclear Testing: Why Did It Stop, Why Test and Who Has Nuclear Weapons?

    (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump ordered the U.S. military on Thursday to immediately resume testing nuclear weapons after a gap of 33 years, minutes before beginning a meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

    How many nuclear weapons tests have there been, why were they stopped – and why would anyone start them again?

    The United States opened the nuclear era in July 1945 with the test of a 20-kiloton atomic bomb at Alamogordo, New Mexico, in July 1945, and then dropped atomic bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945 to force Japan to surrender in World War Two.

    The Soviet Union shocked the West by detonating its first nuclear bomb just four years later, in August 1949.

    In the five decades between 1945 and the 1996 Comprehensive Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT), over 2,000 nuclear tests were carried out, 1,032 of them by the United States and 715 of them by the Soviet Union, according to the United Nations.

    Britain carried out 45 tests, France 210 and China 45.

    Since the CTBT, 10 nuclear tests have taken place. India conducted two in 1998, Pakistan also two in 1998, and North Korea conducted tests in 2006, 2009, 2013, 2016 (twice) and 2017, according to the United Nations.

    The United States last tested in 1992, China and France in 1996 and the Soviet Union in 1990. Russia, which inherited most of the Soviet nuclear arsenal, has never done so.

    Russia held nuclear drills last week and has tested a nuclear-powered cruise missile and a nuclear-powered torpedo but has not tested a nuclear warhead.

    WHY WAS NUCLEAR TESTING ENDED?

    Concern mounted about the impact of the tests – above ground, underground and underwater – on human health and the environment.

    The impact of the West’s testing in the Pacific and of Soviet testing in Kazakhstan and the Arctic was significant on both the environment and the people. Activists say millions of people in both the Pacific and Kazakhstan had their lands contaminated by nuclear testing – and have faced health issues for decades.

    By limiting the Cold War bonanza of nuclear testing, advocates said, tensions between Moscow and Washington could be reduced.

    The CTBT bans  nuclear explosions  by everyone, everywhere. It was signed by Russia in 1996 and ratified in 2000. The United States signed the treaty in 1996 but has not ratified it.

    In 2023, President Vladimir Putin formally revoked Russia’s ratification of the CTBT, bringing his country in line with the United States.

    WHY WOULD YOU TEST AGAIN?

    To gather information – or to send a signal.

    Tests provide evidence of what any new nuclear weapon will do – and whether older weapons still work.

    In 2020, the Washington Post reported that the administration of U.S. president Donald Trump had discussed whether or not to conduct a nuclear test.

    Apart from providing technical data, such a test would be seen in Russia and China as a deliberate assertion of U.S. strategic power.

    Putin has repeatedly warned that if the United States resumed nuclear testing, Russia would too. Putin says a global nuclear arms race is already underway.

    WHAT ARE BIG POWERS DOING WITH THEIR NUCLEAR WEAPONS?

    The exact number of warheads each country has are secret but Russia has a total of about 5,459 warheads while the United States has about 5,177, according to the Federation of American Scientists. Those number include deployed, stockpiled and retired warheads.

    The Washington D.C.-based Arms Control Association says the United States has a stockpile of 5,225 nuclear warheads and Russia has 5,580.

    Global nuclear warhead stockpiles peaked in 1986 at over 70,000 warheads, most in the Soviet Union and the United States, but have since been reduced to about 12,000, most still in Russia and the United States.

    China is the third largest nuclear power with 600 warheads, France has 290, the United Kingdom 225, India 180, Pakistan 170, Israel 90 and North Korea 50, according to the Federation of American Scientists.

    Russia, the United States and China are all undertaking major modernisations of their nuclear arsenals.

    (Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • UK and Vietnam Agree Deal on Illegal Migration

    LONDON (Reuters) -Britain said on Wednesday it had agreed a deal with Vietnam on illegal migration, in what London described as the strongest Hanoi had ever agreed with another country.

    The agreement will cut red tape and make it faster and easier to return those with no right to be in the United Kingdom, Britain said.

    “The number of illegal arrivals from Vietnam has already been cut by half, but more can be done,” British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said in a statement.

    “Today’s agreement shows that through international cooperation – not shouting from the sidelines – we can deliver for the UK and for working people.”

    (Reporting by Sam Tabahriti)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Factbox-Corporate Concerns Mount Ahead of Trump and Xi Talks in South Korea

    (Reuters) -Global companies have a long list of concerns around the U.S.-China trade war. They will closely monitor President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping’s expected meeting in South Korea on Thursday, hoping that the world’s two biggest economies begin to resolve their differences.

    Below are the biggest issues for global companies.

    The U.S. semiconductor industry will closely watch the talks for indications of a deal over whether U.S. firms can sell powerful artificial intelligence chips to China. While Nvidia is the market leader, Advanced Micro Devices and Intel are trying to gain market share, and a raft of other chip companies from Broadcom to Marvell Technology that help develop AI chips will feel the impact.  Also critical will be discussions over critical minerals and materials, which affect chip manufacturers such as Intel and GlobalFoundries. Those materials have become a flashpoint in the tussle between the U.S. and China over Chinese access to the tools needed to build out its own semiconductor manufacturing industry. Those tools come from U.S. firms such as Applied Materials, Lam Research and KLA. 

    China is an important manufacturer of both finished pharmaceutical products and key ingredients of drugs used in the U.S. 

    In 2024, China was the eighth-largest exporter of pharmaceutical products to the U.S., accounting for more than 3.5% of those products imported for the year, according to U.S. trade data.

    More importantly, China is the largest manufacturer globally of the key building blocks used to make pharmaceutical ingredients. According to a report published earlier this month by U.S. Pharmacopeia, China is the sole supplier of over 40% of the key starting materials for U.S.-approved pharmaceutical ingredients.

    The top Chinese drug companies include Shanghai Fosun Pharmaceutical, WuXi AppTec, CSPC Pharmaceutical Group and Sinopharm Group.

    U.S. energy companies, particularly LNG exporters including Venture Global LNG and Cheniere Energy, will be paying close attention to see if the Trump-Xi meeting can restart frozen energy flows after China levied a 15% tariff on American LNG in February. 

    China had been a major buyer before that, purchasing nearly 6% of U.S. exports of the fuel in 2024. Since the tariffs were imposed, Chinese companies have not signed any new long-term supply deals with U.S. LNG producers, and the country has been diverting U.S. cargoes to the European market in a move that has tempered global prices. 

    The U.S., meanwhile, has not exported any oil to China since February, when a 10% tariff was also imposed on crude. Exports to China totaled only about 4% of American shipments abroad – about 150,000 barrels per day – in 2024, down 42% from the previous year.

    Top exporters of U.S. crude to China have previously included Occidental Petroleum; Unipec, the trading arm of China’s Sinopec; and Atlantic Trading & Marketing, an arm of French oil major TotalEnergies, according to shipping flows data from Kpler.   

    A wide range of global companies will be watching to see if the Trump administration intends to follow through on a plan to curb an array of software-powered exports to China. If implemented, it would make good on Trump’s threat earlier this month to bar “critical software” exports to China by restricting global shipments of items that contain U.S. software or were produced using U.S. software.  It could disrupt global trade, given that many items are made with U.S. software, like jet engines from General Electric, or cars from companies like Toyota that use software in safety features. Chips worldwide are also produced with U.S. chip-design software from Cadence Design Systems and Synopsys.

    Carmakers have much riding on the geopolitical dynamics between Trump and China, including a slate of still-unresolved tariffs between the two countries. Most pressing, though, is the threat of a shortage of chips from Chinese-owned firm Nexperia. China has banned exports of Nexperia’s finished products amid a dispute with the Dutch government. The inexpensive chips are used widely in car electronics, and automotive lobbying groups that represent Volkswagen, General Motors and Ford have warned of likely factory disruptions if the dispute is not quickly settled. China’s stepped-up export controls on rare-earth metals as well as battery materials and equipment also have raised fears among automakers and suppliers of production snags.  

    Agribusinesses including Archer-Daniels-Midland, Bunge Global and privately held Cargill will be watching for any lifting of tariffs that have halted Chinese purchases of U.S. soybeans and other farm goods and driven crop prices to multiyear lows. Soybeans are the largest U.S. farm export by value, with $12.6 billion in shipments to top buyer China in 2024, according to U.S. government data.  Farm equipment makers such as Deere, AGCO and CNH Industrial will also be eying any easing of duties that have hammered farmer income and chilled sales of tractors and combine harvesters.

    Boeing faces rising pressure as Xi-Trump talks spotlight aerospace trade. Beijing’s push for domestic jets and retaliatory tariffs risk eroding Chinese demand for Boeing aircraft. With China historically a top market for Boeing, escalating trade tensions could threaten the company’s long-term growth. If Trump-Xi talks go well, Boeing could increase its access to China’s aviation market, but if they falter, the company risks deeper isolation. Meanwhile, Trump’s threat to restrict Boeing aircraft parts exports to China could disrupt the nascent jet production of state-owned Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China, which relies on U.S.-made engines and avionics.       

    (Reporting by Karl Plume in Chicago, Stephen Nellis in San Francisco, Mike Erman in New York, Mike Colias in Detroit, Chris Sanders in Washington, Nathan Crooks in Houston and Joe Brock in Los Angeles; Editing by Matthew Lewis)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Japan Woos Trump With a Royal Welcome

    TOKYO—The British aren’t the only ones who can sprinkle a little royal stardust when President Trump comes to town.

    As Trump pays a visit to Tokyo this week, his Japanese hosts are counting on some face time with the emperor to set a positive tone—even if the reception fell short on pomp.

    Copyright ©2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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  • Southeastern Minnesota swatting incidents tied to terrorist organization


    Investigators say they have linked two swatting incidents in southeastern Minnesota to a terrorist organization that targets children through extortion and violence.

    Swatting is when someone makes a false report, intending to trigger a large-scale response.

    On Tuesday and Thursday, the Red Wing Police Department says officers were called to two separate emergency calls reporting multiple shooting victims at a residence on the 1300 block of East Avenue.

    Red Wing’s Investigation Unit says evidence suggests those involved in the incidents are connected to an “extremist group” that is recognized by the U.S. Department of Justice and the FBI as a terrorist organization. Authorities did not name the organization.

    Investigators worked with law enforcement in the United Kingdom and arrested a suspect overseas in connection with the fake emergency reports.

    The investigation into the incident remains open, police say.

    WCCO Staff

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