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Tag: Wales

  • Rare Dom Pérignon champagne from Charles and Diana’s wedding fails to sell during Denmark auction

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    LYNGBY, Denmark (AP) — It was a wedding that captivated the world — in 1981, Lady Diana Spencer said “I will” to Prince Charles, becoming Princess of Wales and bringing youth and glamour to Britain’s royal family.

    More than 40 years after the wedding and many years after the marriage fell apart, royal fans had the chance to buy a rare part of that historic day — or perhaps a sip of it — during an auction Thursday. But the exclusive magnum of Dom Pérignon Vintage 1961 champagne was ultimately not sold because the bids were not high enough.

    The champagne, specially produced for the occasion, was expected to fetch up to 600,000 Danish kroner (around 81,000 euros or $93,000) when it went under the hammer Thursday at Bruun Rasmussen’s auction house in Lyngby, north of Copenhagen.

    “The bids did not reach the desired minimum price, and therefore it was unfortunately not sold,” auction house spokesperson Kirstine Dam Frihed said in an email Thursday. “We had of course hoped that it would sell at the estimated value, especially considering the great public interest it received.”

    Prince Charles, now King Charles III, married Lady Diana Spencer in London’s St. Paul’s Cathedral on July 29, 1981. The ceremony was followed by a lavish reception at Buckingham Palace.

    Charles and Diana separated in 1992 and divorced in 1996. A year later, she and companion Dodi Fayed died in a high-speed car crash in Paris.

    The champagne was a limited-edition wedding release, created to celebrate the union.

    A unique label reads: “Specially shipped to honor the marriage of His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales and Lady Diana Spencer. 29 July 1981.”

    “It’s really, really rare and a bottle with that royal provenance,” Thomas Rosendahl, head of the auction house’s wine department, said in a recent interview with The Associated Press ahead of the auction.

    Rosendahl said only 12 were made and were intended to be opened on the day. It’s not known what happened to the others, perhaps gifted to guests.

    “It was a celebration from Dom Pérignon to the wedding,” Rosendahl said.

    “They also got … normal bottles that were served at the wedding, but these bottles were just forgotten or kept away.”

    Little was revealed about the seller. Rosendahl only said that it’s a Danish collector who previously purchased the bottle from a London wine merchant.

    Rosendahl said that he’s been contacted by “a lot of wine collectors” asking about the magnum, its provenance, and how it was stored. And tests suggest it’s still drinkable.

    Henrik Smidt, who is the fine wine manager at Danish wine merchant Kjaer and Sommerfeldt in Copenhagen, said beforehand that he expected the magnum to achieve a high price.

    “You have the combination of one of the most famous weddings ever, Lady Diana and Prince Charles. A Dom Pérignon, one of the most famous brands in the world from a very rare vintage,” Smidt said. “All wine connoisseurs, all wine collectors would love to have Dom Pérignon in their cellar.”

    “My guess is that it will not be a wine connoisseur who will buy this bottle of wine, more likely a collector of royal artifacts or even potentially a museum,” he said.

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  • New coin honors Freddie Mercury and his 4-octave range

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    LONDON (AP) — Britain’s Royal Mint is celebrating Freddie Mercury with a new coin design that marks 40 years since his iconic Live Aid concert performance.

    The coin features an image of the Queen front man, head thrown back and holding the microphone stand midperformance. A musical stave that runs around the edge of the coin represents his four-octave vocal range.

    The first coin was struck by Mercury’s sister Kashmira Bulsara at the Royal Mint in Wales last week.

    “As Freddie died young, he didn’t get the chance of being awarded a royal medal for his talents in the music world. So to have a royal coin this way is wonderful and very fitting,” she said.

    “The coin perfectly captures his passion and the joy he brought to millions through his music,” she added. “I think the design is very impressive and they managed to catch the most iconic pose of Freddie, which is so recognizable worldwide.”

    The Royal Mint’s director of commemorative coin, Rebecca Morgan, said the timing was perfect for Mercury to be celebrated with his own coin. She said fans had been “calling out” for it and “this felt like the year to do it,” because it’s 40 years since he captivated audiences at the 1985 Live Aid concert, hailed by many as the greatest live gig of all time.

    This year also marks the 40th anniversary of Mercury’s solo studio album, “Mr Bad Guy.”

    Mercury died at age 45 in 1991, just one day after he publicly announced he was HIV positive.

    The Royal Mint has issued special coins to celebrate other music legends including David Bowie, George Michael, Shirley Bassey and Paul McCartney.

    The coins go on sale on the Royal Mint website on Tuesday. Prices start at 18.50 pounds ($24.4) for an uncirculated 5-pound denomination version. A 2 oz. gold proof coin costs 9,350 pounds ($12,315.)

    The Royal Mint said it will donate a special gold edition of the coin to the Mercury Phoenix Trust, a charity that was started in the singer’s memory and donates funds to those living with AIDS and HIV.

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  • Met Office issues yellow weather warning and Britain braces for heavy rain and strong gales

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    Britain is bracing for a travel chaos and potential flooding after a yellow weather warning was issued for heavy rain and strong gales.

    The Met Office has warned of strong storms bringing torrential showers, gusty winds and lightning with heavy bursts of showers set to unleash flash floods.

    Britons have been warned that the grim weather could bring travel delays and damage to buildings as well as some power cuts.

    The alert comes days after remnants of Hurricane Erin rocked parts of Britain last week, after the Category 5 monster exploded in the Atlantic.

    Gales are expected to rip through exposed western coastal areas, with the Met Office issuing a yellow weather warning for the south of England and eastern Scotland.

    Powerful winds blowing in from the Atlantic are set to bring heavy rain, with up to 80mm expected to hit some parts of the country.

    But it’s not all been doom and gloom with skygazers treated to the dazzling Northern Lights this week. 

    Britain is bracing for a washout after a yellow weather warning was issued for heavy rain and strong gales

    Pedestrians caught in a rain shower on Westminster Bridge

    Pedestrians caught in a rain shower on Westminster Bridge

    A yellow weather warning is in place in north east Scotland and the south

    A yellow weather warning is in place in north east Scotland and the south

    Incredible images show the rare Aurora Borealis illuminating the sky across different parts of the country – including Northumberland, North Yorkshire, Whitby, Norfolk and parts of Scotland.

    A fast-moving coronal mass ejection (CME) – a violent expulsion of charged material – left the sun 90 million miles away on Saturday night, bringing the Northern Lights to the UK this week. 

    It has brought an enhancement of geomagnetic activity, creating conditions that allow the aurora, to be visible further south than usual, provided that skies are sufficiently dark and clear.

    In stark contrast to the glowing aurora, Britons are also being warned to ready themselves for tempestuous weather, bringing an abrupt end to the nation’s warmest summer on record. 

    Monday saw the end of meteorological summer with cooling temperatures, rain and wind expected across the country after the warmest summer on record.

    In its warning, the Met Office said ‘there is a good chance driving conditions will be affected’ and that ‘delays to train services are possible’. 

    It added that people should expect ‘some damage to a few buildings and structures from strong winds and lightning strikes’ and that there ‘is a small chance that a few properties could become flooded’.

    Rebekah Hicks, chief meteorologist at the Met Office, said: ‘We’re expecting a band of heavy rain and strong winds to move north-east through the first part of Wednesday, followed by heavy showers and the risk of thunderstorms. Some of these could bring hail and gusty winds, particularly in southern areas.

    ‘Of course, the warning coincides with the first school run after the summer holidays for some, meaning a wet and potentially disruptive start to the day for many.’

    Heavy rain and strong winds will move north-east from early on Wednesday, followed by heavy showers and some thunderstorms.

    Conditions will gradually improve from the south west through Wednesday afternoon as showers become more isolated.

    Northern Lights pictured at Bow Fiddle Rock near Portknockie on the north-eastern coast of Scotland

    Northern Lights pictured at Bow Fiddle Rock near Portknockie on the north-eastern coast of Scotland

    The Northern Lights visible through clouds over Saltburn-by-the-Sea in North Yorkshire

    The Northern Lights visible through clouds over Saltburn-by-the-Sea in North Yorkshire

    Britain is bracing itself to be hit by heavy rain and strong winds (pictured: a woman's umbrella flips inside out as gusts rocked parts of London today)

    Britain is bracing itself to be hit by heavy rain and strong winds (pictured: a woman’s umbrella flips inside out as gusts rocked parts of London today)

    The Met Office has issued a yellow weather alert, set to come into effect from midnight

    The Met Office has issued a yellow weather alert, set to come into effect from midnight 

    The yellow weather alert brought an abrupt end to Britain's record-breaking summer, which was the hottest on record

    The yellow weather alert brought an abrupt end to Britain’s record-breaking summer, which was the hottest on record 

    Rain will continue to spread across the south of England, with the Met issuing flood alerts

    Rain will continue to spread across the south of England, with the Met issuing flood alerts 

    Rainfall totals will be 20-30mm across much of the area covered by the weather warning on Wednesday, but some places could see 40-60mm within a period of six to nine hours.

    Coastal gales are also likely for a time, especially along English Channel coasts, the Met Office added.

    The weather service said conditions on Thursday would be ‘unsettled’, with widespread showers and occasional thunderstorms.

    Some sunny spells are expected, but rain may become more persistent in parts of western Scotland.

    By Friday, southern areas will begin to see more settled conditions, with increasing sunshine and fewer showers. However, the North West will remain wet and windy, with a small chance of coastal gales, the Met Office said.

    The weather service confirmed on Monday that this year’s summer was the UK’s warmest on record.

    The mean average temperature across June, July and August was a provisional 16.10C, beating the previous seasonal high of 15.76C set in 2018.

    It comes just months after the UK experienced the warmest and sunniest spring since data began.

    Dismal weather has already hit parts of the UK today (pictured are shoppers in east London)

    Dismal weather has already hit parts of the UK today (pictured are shoppers in east London)

    The back-to-back record-breaking seasons have brought long spells of dry and hot weather for many across the country, but have taken their toll on the environment and agriculture, leading to hosepipe bans, drought orders, poor harvests and low water levels in reservoirs.

    The new record pushes the summer of 1976 out of the top five warmest summers in a series dating back to 1884. 

    Instead, all five warmest summers have now occurred since 2000.  

    ‘Provisional Met Office statistics show that summer 2025 is officially the warmest on record with a mean temperature of 16.10°C, surpassing the previous record of 15.76°C set in 2018,’ said Dr Emily Carlisle, Met Office scientist. 

    ‘The persistent warmth this year has been driven by a combination of factors including the domination of high–pressure systems, unusually warm seas around the UK and the dry spring soils. 

    ‘These conditions have created an environment where heat builds quickly and lingers, with both maximum and minimum temperatures considerably above average.’

    The Met Office revealed  the average temperature from June 1 to August 31 hit a balmy 16.10C. That's 1.51C above the long¿term average

    The Met Office revealed  the average temperature from June 1 to August 31 hit a balmy 16.10C. That’s 1.51C above the long–term average

    The new record pushes the summer of 1976 out of the top five warmest summers in a series dating back to 1884. Instead, all five warmest summers have now occurred since 2000

    The new record pushes the summer of 1976 out of the top five warmest summers in a series dating back to 1884. Instead, all five warmest summers have now occurred since 2000

    The five warmest summers in the UK are now 2025 (16.1C), 2018 (15.76C), 2006 (15.75C), 2003 (15.74C), and 2022 (15.71C). 

    The hot weather started back in June, which was the warmest on record in England. 

    July continued the trend, coming in as the UK’s fifth warmest July in history.

    In total, there have been four heatwaves throughout summer, although each has been relatively short–lived. 

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  • Brit dad of 4 found dead at bottom of 600ft cliffs after night out in Benidorm

    Brit dad of 4 found dead at bottom of 600ft cliffs after night out in Benidorm

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    A BRIT dad of four was found dead at the bottom of 600ft cliffs after a holiday night out, an inquest heard yesterday.

    Nathan Osman, 30, was on his first trip away with friends when the tragedy struck.

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    Brit dad of four Nathan Osman, 30, was found dead at the bottom of 600ft cliffs after a holiday night out in BenidormCredit: Jam Press

    His family think he was on his way back to his hotel but got lost and fell in Benidorm.

    His body was found by police the following day.

    An inquest opening was told he suffered traumatic brain injuries after falling 600ft from a cliff.

    Nathan’s family have started a fundraiser to bring his body home from Spain after the tragedy last month.

    They also said Nathan, from Pontypridd, South Wales, was “a doting partner to Katie, mother of his four children”.

    They added: “He was an incredible father and made so many memories his children will cherish.”

    Coroner Graeme Hughes said an inquest was needed due to the “violent” nature of his death and adjourned the hearing for a date to be set.

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    Alex West

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  • Naomi Campbell barred from being charity trustee in England and Wales

    Naomi Campbell barred from being charity trustee in England and Wales

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    LONDON (AP) — British supermodel Naomi Campbell has been barred from being a charity trustee in England and Wales for five years after the poverty charity she founded nearly two decades ago was deemed Thursday to have been “poorly governed” with “inadequate financial management.”

    Following a three-year investigation into the financial activities of “Fashion for Relief,” the Charity Commission, which registers and regulates charities in England and Wales, said it had found “multiple instances of misconduct and/or mismanagement,” and that only 8.5% of the charity’s overall expenditure went on charitable grants in a six-year period from 2016.

    For example, it said that thousands of pounds worth of charity funds were used to pay for a luxury hotel stay in Cannes, France, for Campbell as well as spa treatments, room service and even cigarettes. The regulator sought explanations from the trustees but said no evidence was provided to back up their explanation that hotel costs were typically covered by a donor to the charity, therefore not costing the charity.

    Campbell, 54, said she was “extremely concerned” by the findings of the regulator and that an investigation on her part was underway.

    “I was not in control of my charity, I put the control in the hands of a legal employer,” she said in response to a question from the AP after being named a knight in France’s Order of Arts and Letters at the country’s culture ministry for her contribution to French culture. “We are investigating to find out what and how, and everything I do and every penny I ever raised goes to charity.”

    The commission, which registers and registers and regulates charities in England and Wales, also found that fellow trustee Bianka Hellmich received around 290,000 pounds ($385,000) of unauthorized funds for consultancy services, which was in breach of the charity’s constitution. She has been disqualified as a trustee for nine years. The other trustee, Veronica Chou, was barred for four years.

    “Trustees are legally required to make decisions that are in their charity’s best interests and to comply with their legal duties and responsibilities,” said Tim Hopkins, deputy director for specialist investigations and standards. “Our inquiry has found that the trustees of this charity failed to do so, which has resulted in our action to disqualify them.”

    The charity, which was founded in 2005 in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, was dissolved and removed from the register of charities earlier this year. On its website, which is still active, the charity said that it presented fashion initiatives and projects in New York, London, Cannes, Moscow, Mumbai and Dar es Salaam, raising more than $15 million for good causes around the world.

    The charity had been set up with the aim of uniting the fashion industry to relieve poverty and advance health and education, by making grants to other organizations and giving resources towards global disasters.

    The commission said that around 344,000 pounds ($460,000) has been recovered and that a further 98,000 pounds of charitable funds have been protected. These funds were used to make donations to two other charities and settle outstanding liabilities.  

    “I am pleased that the inquiry has seen donations made to other charities which this charity has previously supported,” said the regulator’s Hopkins.

    ___

    Lesprit reported from Paris.

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  • Pro-Palestinian protesters disrupt opening night of Toronto Film Festival

    Pro-Palestinian protesters disrupt opening night of Toronto Film Festival

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    TORONTO (AP) — Pro-Palestinian protesters disrupted an opening night screening at the Toronto International Film Festival, chanting “Stop the genocide!” during opening remarks.

    At the screening for the David Gordon Green comedy “Nutcrackers” on Thursday evening, four protesters walked down the center aisle of the Princess of Wales Theatre, carrying signs and flashlights while shouting criticism of festival sponsor Royal Bank of Canada. “Cut ties with RBC,” they yelled.

    Cameron Bailey, festival director, was speaking at the podium on stage when the protest began. He tried to maintain order, urging the protestors, “We are here to start the festival.” Numerous crowd members booed the protesters.

    The protest lasted for a handful of minutes before the demonstrators were ushered out by security. Several attendees posted videos online of the episode.

    Representatives for the festival didn’t respond to requests for comment.

    In a statement, RBC said: “We respect the right of individuals to make their voices heard, but it’s unfortunate to see activist groups attempting to co-opt this important cultural event. Protestors targeting corporate sponsors are shifting attention from the work of artists and weakening support for essential arts and cultural programs.”

    The bank added: “The humanitarian crisis in Israel and Gaza continues to have a devastating impact and we feel deeply for everyone who is affected.”

    At last year’s TIFF, a campaign called RBC Off Screen also protested the festival sponsor. An open letter to TIFF urged the festival to reconsider its relationship with RBC. Signees included Mark Ruffalo, Rachel McAdams and Joaquin Phoenix. They criticized the bank’s funding of the oil and gas industry.

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  • Kate, the Princess of Wales, hands Carlos Alcaraz his Wimbledon trophy in a rare appearance for her

    Kate, the Princess of Wales, hands Carlos Alcaraz his Wimbledon trophy in a rare appearance for her

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    LONDON (AP) — Kate, the Princess of Wales, handed Carlos Alcaraz the champion’s trophy after the Wimbledon men’s final at the All England Club on Sunday in only her second public appearance since announcing she was diagnosed with cancer.

    Kate, wife of heir to the throne Prince William, was greeted by a standing ovation when she arrived in the Royal Box at Centre Court to watch Alcaraz’s victory over Novak Djokovic. After leaving the court following the trophy ceremony, the princess and Alcaraz had a conversation in a room inside the tournament’s main stadium.

    “You played so well,” Kate told him. “Enjoy the win.”

    Earlier, Kate — wearing a purple dress, one of Wimbledon’s official colors — went from the stands down to the playing surface to present the trophies, part of her duties as patron of the All England Club, which hosts the annual tournament.

    She shook hands with some of the ball kids who worked at the tournament, then exchanged words with both players and applauded for Alcaraz after giving him the winner’s trophy for the second year in a row.

    “It was, of course, a privilege to be in her presence again. I’ve said to her that it is very nice to see her in good health; she seems to be in good health,” Djokovic said at his postmatch news conference. “That’s obviously very positive news for everyone in this country, but also for Wimbledon.”

    Kate and her 9-year-old daughter, Princess Charlotte, got to the site of the grass-court Grand Slam tournament in southwest London in a motorcade about a half-hour before the final was scheduled to begin. They went to a terrace at the club that is connected to the main stadium by a pedestrian walkway and greeted several people, including 2021 U.S. Open champion Emma Raducanu and other young British tennis players.

    Also in the Royal Box for the final were Kate’s sister, Pippa Matthews, actors Tom Cruise and Benedict Cumberbatch and several past Wimbledon champions, including Rod Laver, Andre Agassi and Stefan Edberg.

    Since 2016, Kate has been the patron of the All England Club. She did not attend Saturday when Barbora Krejcikova defeated Jasmine Paolini for the women’s title.

    Kate revealed in March that she has an unspecified form of cancer and was undergoing chemotherapy. Her lone public appearance since then had been attending last month’s birthday parade for King Charles III. Before that event, she released a statement saying she was “making good progress” but still had “good days and bad days.”

    Prince William has been a regular at Wimbledon finals but was not there Sunday. Instead, he planned to be in Germany to watch England face Spain in the final of the men’s soccer European Championship. He is the president of the English Football Association.

    Queen Camilla, wife of King Charles III, visited Wimbledon on Wednesday.

    ___

    AP tennis: https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

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  • Princess Charlotte’s most adorable moments captured on camera

    Princess Charlotte’s most adorable moments captured on camera

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    PRINCESS Charlotte has won the hearts of royal fans around the globe thanks to her adorable personality and stylish looks.

    The sassy and lovable youngster – now aged nine – may be the Prince and Princess of Wales’ only daughter, but she certainly holds her own around brothers.

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    Princess Charlotte has captured the nation with her sweet appearancesCredit: Reuters

    From nailing her own little royal wave to delighting fans with her funny sayings, Princess Charlotte often steals the show.

    She was born on May 2, 2015, at St Mary’s Hospital in Paddington, and we’ve seen her grow into a sweet “mini-me” of mum, Kate Middleton.

    Royal fans have witnessed her perfectly perform royal duties as a bridesmaid at two royal weddings and for her first engagements with her parents.

    As the youngest turns nine-years-old, we look back at some of Charlotte’s cutest moments…

    More on Princess Charlotte

    May 2, 2024

    Princess Charlotte has turned nine-years-old

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    Princess Charlotte has turned nine-years-oldCredit: PA

    Princess Charlotte’s ninth birthday was marked with an adorable photo taken by mum, Princess Kate.

    The young royal is seen beaming from ear to ear as she posed in a garden.

    Her doting parents wrote: “Happy 9th Birthday, Princess Charlotte!

    “Thank you for all of the kind messages today.”

    Christmas Day 2023

    Princess Charlotte and Mia Tindall share a joke

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    Princess Charlotte and Mia Tindall share a jokeCredit: Splash

    This adorable snap was taken as Princess Charlotte and her second cousin Mia Tindall on Christmas Day.

    The two young royals were spotted deep in conversation as they left St Mary Magdalene Church in Sandringham.

    What is so sweet about this picture is the two girls seem to be sharing a little joke they have between themselves.

    June 18, 2023

    Princess Charlotte with her dad and brother

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    Princess Charlotte with her dad and brotherCredit: Millie Pilkington

    Royal fans were treated to a gorgeous family photo in honour of Father’s Day 2023.

    Wills beamed in the shots by portrait snapper Millie Pilkington, surrounded by his smiling kids.

    Inside Princess Charlotte’s 9th birthday plans, from ballet-themed gifts to Prince William stepping up to take on ‘big role’ on the day

    The photos were taken in Windsor, near the family’s home at Adelaide Cottage.

    May 6, 2023

    The Coronation was a special event for the Royal Family

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    The Coronation was a special event for the Royal FamilyCredit: AP

    Princess Charlotte looked to be the perfect ‘mini me’ of mum Kate Middleton at the coronation by ‘twinning’ in matching dresses. 

    Both Charlotte and the Princess of Wales opted for ivory silk crepe Alexander McQueen dresses for the celebration that had a subtle nod to the United Kingdom in the embroidery. 

    Their stylish dresses included rose, thistle, daffodil and shamrock motifs to symbolise the four nations; England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

    Princess Charlotte was joined by brother Prince Louis, while Prince George travelled separately from his family to the Abbey, with other Pages of Honour from Buckingham Palace.

    June 4, 2022

    Royal watchers loved for this adorable snap

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    Royal watchers loved for this adorable snapCredit: Getty

    Fans of the Royal Family were sent into swoon overdrive with Princess Charlotte’s adorable gesture towards her older brother Prince George on their first royal engagement in Cardiff.

    The regal children were accompanied by their parents Prince William and Kate as they met with performers in a Platinum Jubilee concert at Cardiff Castle.

    Princess Charlotte was seen taking a small purple flower and gave it to her older brother Prince George.

    June 2, 2022

    It all got too noisy for young Charlotte during Trooping the Colour

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    It all got too noisy for young Charlotte during Trooping the ColourCredit: Getty

    The flypast in Trooping the Colour is an exciting event of the celebratory weekend.

    However, it can be rather loud.

    Princess Charlotte was seen covering her ears as the RAF planes flew overheard, as she stood on the Buckingham Palace balcony with Prince George.

    August 7, 2021

    Proud mum Kate took this adorable photo

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    Proud mum Kate took this adorable photoCredit: PA

    The royal family released a sweet photo of Princess Charlotte gently cradling a brightly-coloured butterfly, as she took part in the Big Butterfly Count in Norfolk.

    Mum Kate shared the photos to encourage other families to take part too.

    The snap, which shows the little royal cupping a Red Admiral between her palms, was one of three released images by Kate.

    May 2, 2021

    Princess Charlotte celebrates her sixth birthday

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    Princess Charlotte celebrates her sixth birthdayCredit: EPA

    This photo was taken when Charlotte turned six.

    To mark her birthday, Kate snapped this gorgeous photo of Princess Charlotte with her long hair bleached by the sun.

    The photo was taken at the family’s country home in Norfolk.

    September 5, 2019

    Starting school is a huge milestone in every child' life

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    Starting school is a huge milestone in every child’ lifeCredit: PA

    Starting school can be nerve-wracking, so imagine how scary it must have been for Princess Charlotte with the world watching too.

    Photos were released as she entered Thomas’s Battersea in London for her first day of lessons with her parents to meet headteacher Helen Haslem.

    Thankfully she had big brother Prince George to lend some support, as he already went to the school.

    August 8, 2019

    A cheeky Princess Charlotte pokes her tongue out

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    A cheeky Princess Charlotte pokes her tongue outCredit: EPA

    It’s safe to say that Princess Charlotte totally stole the show at a sailing regatta in 2019.

    In an adorable video, Kate encouraged her four-year-daughter to wave at onlookers in Cowes, Isle of Wight – but the Princess had other ideas and cheekily stuck her tongue out instead.

    However, it has now appears that Kate was actually pointing out her father Michael Middleton who was standing in the crowds.

    Meanwhile, Kate was praised by fellow parents for her fantastic response to the comical moment.

    May 1, 2019

    Princess Charlotte on her fourth birthday

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    Princess Charlotte on her fourth birthdayCredit: Handout – Getty

    Charlotte showed off her ‘gan-gan style’, looking just like the Queen in pictures to mark her fourth birthday.

    The young royal is the spitting image of her great-granny, who she affectionately called Gan-Gan.

    In snaps she wore a £50 Amaia kids tartan skirt while playing in the garden of the family home, Anmer Hall in Norfolk.

    June 9, 2018

    Princess Charlotte during Trooping the Colour in 2018

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    Princess Charlotte during Trooping the Colour in 2018Credit: PA:Press Association

    It can’t all be smiles when you are a small royal during a long day.

    Dedicated mum Kate was seen comforting her daughter at Trooping the Colour when she had a moment of feeling sad.

    Kate, who looked elegant in her blue dress, crouched beside her in a bid to calm down the young princess.

    And cousin Savannah Phillips, daughter of Princess Anne’s son Peter, was also on hand to cheer the little royal up.

    May 19, 2018

    Bridesmaid in waiting - Princess Charlotte gets ready for Prince Harry's wedding

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    Bridesmaid in waiting – Princess Charlotte gets ready for Prince Harry’s weddingCredit: Handout – Getty

    When it came to Prince Harry’s iconic wedding to Meghan Markle, his niece played a starring role.

    Princess Charlotte was a bridesmaid for the event at St George’s Chapel in Windsor, and donned a sweet white dress with capped sleeves.

    However, the event wasn’t without drama, as it was claimed Meghan left Kate in tears over her demands for Princess Charlotte’s dress in the run-up to her royal wedding in 2018.

    Meghan and Harry claimed it was Kate who made Meghan cry over the incident.

    It was announced that after much speculation that Meghan would not have a maid of honour at her wedding, and just had her little bridesmaids and page boys.

    A Kensington Palace spokesperson said at the time: “She has a very close-knit group of friends and did not want to choose one over the other.”

    May 2, 2018

    Charlotte's third birthday was marked with this sweet snap

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    Charlotte’s third birthday was marked with this sweet snapCredit: Handout – Getty

    On Princess Charlotte’s third birthday, Kate snapped this adorable shot of her with younger brother Prince Louis.

    Prince Louis was born on April 23, 2018, making him just a few weeks old.

    Prince William was by the Princess of Wales’ side to welcome their third child at 11.01am in the Lindo Wing of the Paddington hospital.

    July 21, 2017

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    Credit: News Group Newspapers Ltd

    Princess Charlotte took a royal tumble as she departed Germany for the UK at the end of their visit to Poland and Germany.

    The sweet royal, dressed in a pretty pink dress, clutched onto mum Kate’s hand as she fell over on the tarmac.

    Thankfully she was fine.

    May 20, 2017

    Charlotte's first time at being a bridesmaid

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    Charlotte’s first time at being a bridesmaidCredit: Getty – Pool

    When Kate’s sister Pippa Middleton wed hedge fund manager James Matthews, Princess Charlotte and Prince George stole the show.

    The royal tots both had integral roles in the bridal party with Charlotte acting as a bridesmaid, while her older brother George was a pageboy.

    The wedding took place at St Mark’s Church in Englefield with the youngsters accompanied by mum Kate.

    May 1, 2017

    This picture marked her second birthday

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    This picture marked her second birthday

    Ahead of Charlotte’s second birthday, a new portrait of the princess, again taken by mum Kate, was released – showing her uncanny resemblance to the late Queen Elizabeth.

    Kate and William said they were “delighted” to share the photograph of their daughter who they once described as a “joy from heaven”.

    She was pictured at their Norfolk home Anmer Hall, wearing a yellow cardigan, decorated with sheep, while she sported a navy clip in her hair.

    May 1, 2016

    Princess Charlotte's first birthday

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    Princess Charlotte’s first birthdayCredit: PA:Press Association

    To honour Princess Charlotte’s first birthday, the royal family released four new shots of the young toddler.

    She was photographed by her mum, Kate, at their 10-bedroom Norfolk home.

    The collection of snaps showed Charlotte pushing colourful play blocks around on the lawn, along with her climbing stairs and handling a book.

    March 3, 2016

    24

    Credit: PA:Press Association

    Prince William and Kate decided to take their two children on a short private skiing break in the French Alps.

    They gave fans a window into their holiday fun sharing some heartwarming snaps of them on the slopes.

    Little Charlotte was kept snug with a white ski suit and pink knitted hat, while George sported a red hat with a huge bobble.

    Princess Charlotte appeared to be loving her first experience of snow, as she posed with proud dad Prince William.

    William wore a blue ski jacket and black goggles, and seemed to be delighted at introducing Charlotte to one of his favourite holiday destinations.

    It was in 2004 that university lovebirds Kate and William were pictured skiing together in Switzerland and it was apparent they were a little more than just friends. 

    November 29, 2015

    Baby Charlotte was adorable

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    Baby Charlotte was adorableCredit: Reuters

    Two official pictures were released by Kate and William of their six-month-old daughter as a thank you to fans for their kind wishes.

    The snaps were taken at the family’s home, Anmer Hall, in Norfolk early in November.

    Budding amateur photographer Kate was behind the lens, and her adorable tot giggled in a floral dress and pink cardigan.

    The young Princess is seen here at her christening

    24

    The young Princess is seen here at her christeningCredit: PA:Press Association

    Royal fans were delighted when they were treated to some stunning photos from Princess Charlotte’s christening.

    The momentous occasion took place at the Church of St Mary Magdalene at Sandringham –  the same place that Princess Diana was christened.

    While her other brothers were christened at Chapel Royal in St James’ Palace, it is thought the Sandringham church was chosen due to being close to their home at the time, Anmer Hall in Norfolk.

    It is especially meaningful that Princess Charlotte was christened in the same spot as Diana, as her name is a tribute to the late royal.

    June 6, 2015

    Princess Charlotte is born

    24

    Princess Charlotte is bornCredit: Handout

    Kensington Palace released four adorable photos of Prince George cuddling his new baby sister.

    The young prince wore a white shirt with blue detailing, and was seen carefully cradling Princess Charlotte, who was a few weeks old.

    And the photographer who took them? The sweet snaps were taken by mum Kate herself.

    The photographs were taken mid-May at the family’s countryside residence, Anmer Hall in Norfolk.

    May 2, 2015

    Kate and William show their baby to the world

    24

    Kate and William show their baby to the worldCredit: Getty Images – Getty

    Proud parents Kate Middleton and Prince William posed for photos outside the hospital and revealed their newest arrival, Princess Charlotte.

    The young royal was wrapped in a white GH Hurt & Son blanket, which followed a sentimental tradition.

    The sweet tradition of introducing the latest member of the Royal Family started back in 1948 when the Queen and her husband Prince Philip presented a then-Prince Charles to the world.

    How old is Princess Charlotte and when is her birthday?

    Kate and Will’s second child, Princess Charlotte was born on May 2, 2015 at 8.34am at St Mary’s Hospital.

    She was brought into the world in the infamous Lindo Wing, and weighed 8lbs 3oz..

    As of May 2, 2024, Charlotte is nine-years-old.

    What is Princess Charlotte’s full name and title?

    The young royal’s full name is Charlotte Elizabeth Diana.

    Her middle name being a nod to Prince William’s mother, Princess Diana, who passed away in 1997.

    When she was born she was born her title was Princess Charlotte of Cambridge.

    After her great-grandmother Queen Elizabeth II passed away, she became Princess Charlotte of Wales.

    Get to know Princess Charlotte

    Born on May 2, 2015, Princess Charlotte has become a much-loved member of the Royal Family.

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    Becky Pemberton

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  • Ryan Giggs and football: A very complicated relationship

    Ryan Giggs and football: A very complicated relationship

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    The celebration was almost as glorious as the goal itself. The fuzz of chest hair, the twirling shirt, the body swerve to evade the Manchester United fans who had run on the pitch in their euphoria.

    On Sunday, it is 25 years since Patrick Vieira, a genuine great of Arsenal’s midfield, played a wayward pass amid the high drama of an FA Cup semi-final between the leading two English sides of the time.

    Ryan Giggs took the ball and then he was off and running, picking up speed from inside his own half, slaloming past opponents, one by one.

    Vieira tried to get back but Giggs, crossing the halfway line, dipped his shoulder to get away. Lee Dixon was next to come across. He, too, could not get near him.

    Arsenal had the most famously parsimonious defence in English football — yet Giggs had magic in his feet. He was on his own, with everyone to beat, under the floodlights of Villa Park. Martin Keown went to block him. Dixon was still in the chase. Giggs shimmied between them both and suddenly, with a sway of his hips, he was in the penalty area, sizing up David Seaman, the Arsenal and England goalkeeper.

    His shot was still rising as it flew into the roof of the net. It was pandemonium in the stands and Martin Tyler’s voice, commentating for Sky Sports, seemed to have gone up a few octaves.

    “He’s cut Arsenal to ribbons,” summed it up rather beautifully.


    It’s a Thursday night in Radlett, a well-to-do village in London’s commuter belt, and a beery, boisterous crowd has broken into song.

    Ryan Giggs, now 50, has wandered onto the stage of the 300-capacity Radlett Centre. The venue is not full, but there is a racket anyway. He is greeted with a standing ovation and a song that will be familiar to United fans of a certain generation. It is an adaptation of the old Robin Hood classic.

    Ryan Giggs, Ryan Giggs, running down the wing
    Ryan Giggs, Ryan Giggs, running down the wing
    Feared by the Blues, loved by the Reds
    Ryan Giggs, Ryan Giggs, Ryan Giggs!

    It doesn’t take long, therefore, to realise that whatever else has happened in Giggs’ life in the last few years — most notably, the criminal trial that led to him relinquishing his position as Wales national manager — there is no shortage of people who regard him as football royalty.

    He has already done Cleethorpes, Hull and Lincoln since being acquitted last year of being a violent and abusive boyfriend. There was a night in Belfast and an event in Chester. Another “Evening with Ryan Giggs” is scheduled in Northampton, plus two in Manchester alongside Paul Scholes, his former United team-mate. It is not quite Giggs on tour, but it does feel like a man putting himself back out there.

    Is it what he imagined for himself at this stage of his life? Perhaps not, and the most decorated player in English football history will touch upon that when he is asked whether he is seeking a way back into management.

    “There’s a bit of unfinished business,” Giggs tells the audience. “I was obviously enjoying coaching Wales. We had a pretty successful time. And yeah, I loved it. So I don’t see why not.”

    GO DEEPER

    Who is the real Ryan Giggs?

    It is complicated, though, bearing in mind all the unpleasantness and excruciating detail that came out during the 2022 trial in which he denied subjecting his former girlfriend, Kate Greville, to three years of psychological and, at times, physical abuse.

    It also seems to be understood why there are no follow-up questions. To go any further might involve having to explain why he had to stand down from the Wales job, why we rarely see him on television these days, why he does not tend to do interviews and why, it seems, potential employers might have reservations about taking him on.

    To go further might involve having to ask why Giggs, a history-maker with an Order of the British Empire for his services to football and 13 Premier League titles, keeps being left off the competition’s Hall of Fame.

    Giggs had been charged with controlling and coercive behaviour, headbutting Greville, 10 years his junior, and assaulting her younger sister, Emma. The jury at Manchester Crown Court could not reach a verdict. Then, shortly before the retrial was due to begin last year, Greville wrote to the court to say she no longer wanted to give evidence because she felt “worn down” and “violated” by the judicial process.


    Ryan Giggs leaves Manchester Crown Court in August 2023 after the jury in his trial failed to reach a verdict (Cameron Smith/Getty Images)

    The judge issued not-guilty verdicts on all the alleged offences. “The position is, he has always been innocent of these charges,” Chris Daw KC, representing Giggs, told the court. “Going forward, he now looks to rebuild his life and career as an innocent man.”

    And so, there are around 240 people in Radlett — just a few miles from Arsenal’s training ground — paying between £90 and £250 ($113 and $314) to see him, with the more expensive packages involving a meet-and-greet and a professionally taken photograph. 

    Giggs looks tanned, relaxed, trim — a regular, apparently, at Barry’s Bootcamp gym in Manchester — and his Salfordian accent seems more pronounced in a room mostly filled by southerners.

    It is a friendly audience and, right from the start, Giggs reminds everyone that he has always been a crowd-pleaser. “The bar’s been open, has it?” is his opening line, as the most boisterous members of the audience have to be shushed down.

    He talks about watching United’s FA Cup defeat of Liverpool at his mother’s house (“she hates Scousers more than anyone”) and why he believes Erik ten Hag should keep his job as manager. United, he says, have suffered from “crap” recruitment in the post-Ferguson years and he hopes INEOS will put that right.

    The compere asks him to wish happy birthday to a United fan called Nina, who is in the audience with a group of friends. It is her 61st birthday and Giggs turns the charm on full beam. “I met her earlier,” he says. “She doesn’t look it.”

    But he is here to talk about his own United career, for the most part, and the evening opens with a video montage reminding the audience why they cherished him so much as a player.

    The footage shows Giggs, at 17, making his United debut in a shirt that seems a size or two too big for him. In between the mazy runs and spontaneous skills, there is a clip of Best himself, analysing the teenager. “One day,” he says, “they might say I was another Ryan Giggs.”

    The video moves on to the goal at Villa Park — April 14, 1999 — that would be voted in 2004 as the greatest FA Cup moment of all time. Vieira gives the ball away and the audience start cheering. They know what is coming. So does the compere, Alan Keegan, usually United’s matchday announcer.

    “Oh, this is the one,” says Keegan. “Keep going, keep going, keep going Ryan… wow! That is extraordinary.”


    Ryan Giggs fires in his famous goal against Arsenal in 1999 (Shaun Botterill /Allsport

    It would end up being voted the greatest goal in 50 years of the BBC’s Match of the Day. Giggs was 25 at the time and, incredibly, still had another 16 years ahead of him in United’s team.

    “I left the ground on crutches,” says Giggs, whose Achilles had been damaged after a tackle by Dixon. “I thought my season was over. As I was getting on the bus, a reporter asked me: ‘Was that the greatest goal you ever scored?’.”

    His answer, he explains, was that, no, he didn’t think it was. But he hadn’t seen it back at that point. “In my head, I was 30 yards out and I had beaten only a couple of players. It wasn’t until I got home, watching it on the news, that I realised I was that far out and that I’d beaten that many players.”

    go-deeper

    He leaves Radlett around 11pm and, by the following afternoon, he has made his way 190 miles north to watch Salford City take on Sutton United in League Two.

    Giggs is the co-owner of Salford alongside Scholes, Gary and Phil Neville, Nicky Butt and David Beckham. It is the fourth tier of English football and, at times, there have been some unexpected challenges for the group of ex-United players known as the Class of ’92. 

    “It’s different, especially when you have been in football at the top level,” says Giggs. “When we first took over, the manager had booked a two-week holiday in pre-season. ‘I book my family holiday at the same time every year’. But it’s your job, isn’t it? ‘I’m not changing it’. So yeah, we had a few things we had to get our heads around.”

    Sutton begin the day in the relegation zone, dangerously close to falling out of the EFL. It is 87th versus 91st at the start of play, in a ladder of 92 clubs. And it is a bad day for Salford, in a game of blood and thunder, a fair bit of thud and blunder, and not a great amount of skill. Salford lose 2-1 and the home fans in a crowd of 2,983 go home disappointed. 

    Overall, though, it has been a story of near-unremitting success, involving four promotions, since the Class of ’92 took control of Salford 10 years ago, backed by the wealth of Singaporean billionaire Peter Lim.

    “We love it,” Giggs tells the audience in Radlett. “Myself, Gary, Nicky, Scholesy. Phil and Becks are in America so don’t get to a lot of games. But the rest of the lads do. Roy Keane loves coming to home games. Steve Bruce comes because his son, Alex, is now assistant manager. So there’s a real United connection.”


    Ryan Giggs takes his seat at Salford City, where he is director of football (Ben Roberts Photo/Getty Images)

    The Athletic is there, too, though it is difficult not to get the feeling our presence is less welcome. Salford get in touch two days before the game to ask what we want to write about, which doesn’t usually happen. Giggs, we are told, is not expected to be there.

    In the end, they approve our accreditation request. The only logical explanation, however, is that there are people at the club who are not keen on Giggs being the subject of interest.

    A few weeks back, it was revealed that Giggs had been working for Salford all season as director of football. As well as going to all the home games, it means he is there for the majority of their away fixtures, too. So he has plenty to keep him busy, even if it is noticeable that his appointment was not announced at the time.

    Nor is he afraid to make the hard calls, judging by the story Robbie Savage, director of football at non-League Macclesfield Town, told recently about Giggs ringing him in February “to warn me that Salford City were poaching my manager”.

    Savage, who was once in United’s youth system with Giggs, recalled the conversation in his column for the Daily Mirror newspaper. “I thought Giggsy was calling to arrange a game of padel tennis, which we play occasionally, but this time he opened the conversation with, ‘You’re not going to like this’.

    “He said Salford wanted to speak to Alex Bruce, who had guided Macclesfield into the Northern Premier League play-off places and quarter-finals of the FA Trophy, two steps from Wembley. Laughing, but disappointed, I replied, ‘First you take my place in the 1992 FA Youth Cup final team and now you’re taking my manager?’.”

    Is Giggs actively applying for managerial jobs of his own? His brief spell as United’s caretaker manager in 2014 was, he says, the proudest he has ever felt. It also left him convinced he could do the job full-time. But it is far from straightforward when, unfortunately for Giggs, it is also clear that prospective employers would have to consider the damage to his reputation.


    Ryan Giggs called his spell in caretaker charge of United his proudest moment (Andrew Yates/AFP via Getty Images)

    “George Best has a statue outside Old Trafford and his charge sheet off the pitch is much worse than Ryan’s,” says the writer and author Frank Worrall. “So if that’s the yardstick, Giggs should have one, too. Not that he ever will. Times and attitudes have changed. Best wouldn’t get one now, either — protest groups wouldn’t stand for it.”

    In 2010, Worrall brought out a biography, Giggsy, that eulogised in the main about a player he regarded as “a personable guy away from the pitch and a genius on it”.

    Worrall can vividly remember that epic semi-final against Arsenal when Keane was sent off, Peter Schmeichel saved Dennis Bergkamp’s 90th-minute penalty and Giggs’ wonder goal pushed United closer towards what was, back then, an unprecedented treble.

    “The utter audacity of it,” says Worrall. “The interception, the dazzling dribble past bemused defenders, the hammer shot beyond David Seaman. The shirt off, twirling it in the air. The chest hair, the congratulatory hugs. The whole bloody miracle of a snatched glory in the face of 10-men adversity.”

    Giggs, he adds, “is, and always will be, a Manchester United legend… a footballing legend”.

    go-deeper

    Over the years, however, Worrall has had to get used to the idea that “the Bobby Charlton-style, clean-as-a-whistle family man” was not the person he thought him to be. And that can be conflicting — “Sir Bobby he certainly ain’t” — when Worrall counts Giggs in his top five United players from the 1970s onwards.

    “Ryan contributed as much to United as anyone ever,” he says. “Thirty-four trophies from 1991 to 2013, the most appearances (963), the first and last of the Class of ’92 to play for the club and United’s most decorated player… a winger-turned-midfielder genius who tore the opposition apart, again and again.” 

    Against that kind of backdrop, there are many people in football who think it is wrong, and certainly inconsistent, that the Premier League has excluded Giggs from the latest shortlist of possible Hall of Famers.

    Yes, there are other stories about Giggs’ private life that will be held against him. And, yes, it only needs a cursory look through the internet to understand, for example, why his relationship with his younger brother, Rhodri, has suffered badly.

    Yet the Premier League inducted Tony Adams into its Hall of Fame last year, even though the former Arsenal captain had previously served a prison sentence for drink-driving.

    John Terry, the former Chelsea captain, is one of the 15 players on this year’s shortlist, despite being banned for four matches and fined £220,000 by a Football Association commission that decided he had racially abused Anton Ferdinand, then of Queens Park Rangers.

    Perhaps the best way of summing it up is that Giggs may just have to accept that he is always going to polarise opinion but that, in football terms alone, his achievements are as solid as the foundations of Old Trafford itself.

    “You cannot separate genius from Ryan Giggs,” Ferguson said after the 1999 semi-final against Arsenal that, 20 years later, was ranked No 38 in The Times’ 50 Greatest Football Matches.

    That genius has been tarnished over recent years. In football, however, where there is genius, there will also be adoration. And, however complicated it can be in the rest of his life, Giggs will always be guaranteed that in a room filled with United fans.

    (Top photos: Getty Images; design: Eamonn Dalton)

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    The New York Times

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  • Albanian gang war to control drugs market that’s spilling onto UK’s streets

    Albanian gang war to control drugs market that’s spilling onto UK’s streets

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    WITH two bodyguards on patrol permanently outside his office, chief prosecutor Kreshnik Ajazi sums up why the Albanian drug gangs he targets are so ruthless.

    “In Albania, we have a tradition — revenge.”

    9

    In 2018, a shipment of 50 kilos of cocaine went missing in EnglandCredit: Alamy
    The theft triggered a string of revenge attacks back in Albania, including three men being gunned down in their Range Rover with AK-47s

    9

    The theft triggered a string of revenge attacks back in Albania, including three men being gunned down in their Range Rover with AK-47sCredit: Chris Eades
    This month, Bajram Luli, 27, was stabbed to death in Greenford, West London, after having just moved to the UK

    9

    This month, Bajram Luli, 27, was stabbed to death in Greenford, West London, after having just moved to the UKCredit: LNP

    A trail of tit-for-tat killings between warring gangs battling to control the UK drugs market shows he knows what he is talking about.

    The theft of 50 kilos of cocaine in England triggered a string of revenge attacks back in Albania, including three men being gunned down in their Range Rover with AK-47s.

    And a dealer convicted of murdering a rival in Southampton has been shot dead inside an Albanian top-security prison in a sophisticated revenge hit that cost a million euros to arrange.

    As the Met probes yet another killing of an Albanian man in London, The Sun travelled to the former Communist country to investigate the criminal gangs that have such a foothold in the UK.

    Mr Ajazi, a stylish 40-year-old who wears shirts monogrammed with his initials on the cuffs, has devoted his life to dismantling these gangs — but it comes with a heavy price.

    Hitting where it hurts

    Threats to his life mean the armed guards never leave his side, 28 security cameras are trained on the outside of his office building in the city of Elbasan, and his wife wonders when he will take a job prosecuting “normal criminals”.

    But he is too busy to worry, with many of the attacks he deals with stemming from bloody fall-outs that begin in Britain.

    The lawyer said: “These disputes between gangs are created in England but the revenge takes place in our city. When I became the chief prosecutor, my aim was to challenge those gangs, which we have done.

    “That means I am now escorted every single minute of my life by a special escort from the state police, which tells you what sort of danger I am in.

    “But it has been worth it.”

    Turkish and Albanian drug gangs are joining forces to wreak havoc on London amid UK migrant crisis

    Thanks to his and the state police’s work, the local gang-related murder rate has dropped from 15 a year to zero.

    The UK government is just as determined to take on the Albanian organised crime gangs.

    The National Crime Agency last month signed an agreement with Albanian police to challenge criminals who control the UK cannabis market as well as enjoying a healthy slice of the £4billion cocaine trade.

    Around 1,700 gang members are thought to be at large in the UK and there are more Albanians in our jails than any other foreign nationality, even though Albania has a population of just 2.8million.

    As well as trying to lock up gang leaders, the police are hitting them where it hurts — in their pockets.

    A British-registered £200,000 Lamborghini — with a number plate that partly reads 14MBO (Lambo) — was recently seized from a ­suspected criminal, along with a hotel he owned. And the cops now plan to use it as a patrol car.

    A spokesman for Albania’s Agency Of Seized And Confiscated Assets said: “We will send a message that what has been earned from criminal activities in the UK and Europe will be confiscated.”

    The problem is that in Albania revenge is a tradition so we cannot predict what is going to happen

    Mr Ajazi

    When the police Lamborghini rolls past, it will raise a smile from law-abiding Albanian migrants. But other cases the police have to deal with are no laughing matter.

    Organised crime gangs are similar to the Mafia in that they are structured around families. That means they take disputes personally.

    In 2013, drug dealer Arben Lleshi, 27, who killed a rival in Southampton was extradited to Peqin Prison in Albania and in 2023 his victim's gang spent a million euros organising a hit to kill him in jail

    9

    In 2013, drug dealer Arben Lleshi, 27, who killed a rival in Southampton was extradited to Peqin Prison in Albania and in 2023 his victim’s gang spent a million euros organising a hit to kill him in jailCredit: Handout
    Endrit Alibej, 34, was also killed

    9

    Endrit Alibej, 34, was also killedCredit: YouTube
    Alibej’s family wasted no time in taking revenge and the killings continued for two years, claiming a total of eight lives

    9

    Alibej’s family wasted no time in taking revenge and the killings continued for two years, claiming a total of eight livesCredit: Chris Eades

    In 2018, a shipment of 50 kilos of cocaine — with a potential market value of tens of millions of pounds — went missing in England.

    The gang waiting for its delivery suspected the courier so they beat him up and dumped him in a remote location, reckoning that whoever he had tipped off to steal the drugs would come to his aid.

    They kept watch to see who would collect him — and once they knew which family was behind the theft, the killings began.

    Soon after, Endrit Alibej, 34, was driving away from a family dinner in Elbasan with his uncle Arben Dylgjeri, 56, and a Turkish associate.

    As they slowed to negotiate a roundabout, a gunman armed with an AK-47 struck, spraying the vehicle and killing all three men.

    Setting body on fire

    Alibej’s family wasted no time in taking revenge and the killings continued for two years, eventually claiming a total of eight lives.

    Mr Ajazi said the to-and-fro attacks related to that particular dispute have ended — for now.

    He added: “Let’s say they are currently on standby.

    “The problem is that in Albania revenge is a tradition so we cannot predict what is going to happen.”       

    Another case Mr Ajazi is involved in shocked the Albanian justice system because it exposed the full extent of corruption in prisons.

    In 2013, Albanian drug dealer Arben Lleshi, 27, was jailed for life at Winchester Crown Court for killing a rival in Southampton and setting his body on fire.

    He was extradited to serve his sentence in the top-security Peqin Prison, 40 miles south of capital Tirana.

    Late last year, his victim’s gang began plotting their revenge.

    They spent an estimated one million euros bribing prison officials to smuggle a 9mm Smith and Wesson into the jail and to pay a hitman.

    The gun was passed to the killer in the middle of November and he kept it concealed for three weeks before going to Lleshi’s cell ten days before Christmas.

    Mr Ajazi said: “He invited that man to talk. He said, ‘Can we have a conversation?’

    “And at this moment, he took out the gun and shot and killed him.”

    The jail’s entire command structure has been arrested — 12 officers in total — on suspicion of taking bribes and turning a blind eye.

    Back in Britain, an Albanian man was stabbed to death in North London last month, with one of his countrymen being charged with the murder.

    And the Met are now investigating yet another killing of an Albanian.

    These disputes between gangs are created in England but the revenge takes place in our city

    Lawyer

    At around 5.30pm on Monday, March 11, a white Kia car was seen reversing down a road in Greenford, West London, before one of the occupants leapt out and fled.

    Moments later Bajram Luli, 27, staggered out of the car with a serious stab wound to his stomach.

    Cops and paramedics were called but they could not save him.

    A man has now been charged in connection with the alleged murder and will stand trial later.

    Bajram had only just moved to the UK from Albania. The motive for his killing has not been revealed and there is no suggestion he was involved in any criminality.

    But the police back in Albania — and chief prosecutor Mr Ajazi — will be hoping these two recent cases are not the start of yet more blood feuds.

    • Pictures from Chris Eades, in Albania
    This British-registered £200,000 Lamborghini was seized in Albania by police... who aim to use it as a patrol car

    9

    This British-registered £200,000 Lamborghini was seized in Albania by police… who aim to use it as a patrol carCredit: Chris Eades
    Arben Dylgjeri, 56, also died

    9

    Arben Dylgjeri, 56, also diedCredit: YouTube

    BRITISH POLICE LINK-UP

    A BRITISH bobby’s helmet takes pride of place on a shelf in the grand governmental office of Albania’s Interior Minister, Taulant Balla.

    The gift from a visiting UK police delegation shows the commitment of both countries to forging closer links to fight organised crime.

    A British bobby’s helmet takes pride of place on a shelf in the grand governmental office of Albania’s Interior Minister, Taulant Balla

    9

    A British bobby’s helmet takes pride of place on a shelf in the grand governmental office of Albania’s Interior Minister, Taulant BallaCredit: Chris Eades

    Mr Balla has had a series of meetings with UK ministers to thrash out ideas on how best to stop trafficking gangs.

    One success has been the 90 per cent drop in the number of Albanians crossing the Channel in small boats.

    And the no-nonsense politician – popular in Albania for an anti-drugs drive outside schools which has seen more than 800 dealers convicted – is confident of a similar result against the narco gangs.

    Mr Balla said: “We have had good results in the fight against organised crime.

    “We are working closely with Britain’s National Crime Agency and the Metropolitan Police, and we have some joint operations ongoing.

    “I’m very happy that from the British side we are receiving a lot of expertise and are exchanging important data that is needed in bringing people to justice.

    “Also, the work in seizing criminal assets is going very well.

    “Houses and hotels we seize are being used for good purposes. And the Lamborghini that was seized will be used by our traffic police.

    “My message to the organised crime gangs is – impunity time is finished. We are having a campaign against the fugitives.”

    As he spoke, his mobile phone pinged with more good news – a message revealing the date that a wanted killer who had been on the run abroad would finally arrive home to face justice.

    Albania’s fight against crime is a long, difficult one. But with the help of British police, they are finally reaping rewards.

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    Robin Perrie

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  • Scotland 16-20 France: Late Scotland try denied by TMO as Les Blues snatch Six Nations victory

    Scotland 16-20 France: Late Scotland try denied by TMO as Les Blues snatch Six Nations victory

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    Last Updated: 10/02/24 4:24pm

    France fought back valiantly to steal the win

    Sam Skinner’s late try was controversially ruled out by the TMO as Scotland suffered a 20-16 defeat by France at Murrayfield in the second round of the Six Nations.

    Louis Bielle-Biarrey’s sensational individual effort after 70 minutes gave France the lead for the first time with just under 10 minutes remaining but Scotland regained territory and fought back to get Skinner over the line.

    The decision was deliberated for a long time before it was ruled that there was not enough evidence to award the try, giving the visitors a narrow victory.

    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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  • France 17-38 Ireland: Superb visitors claim bonus-point Six Nations victory in Marseille as Paul Willemse shown red

    France 17-38 Ireland: Superb visitors claim bonus-point Six Nations victory in Marseille as Paul Willemse shown red

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    Ireland produced a magnificent display in Marseille as they registered a first Six Nations win in France since 2018

    Ireland began life in the post-Johnny Sexton era in ideal fashion, as a terrific Six Nations performance saw them to a bonus-point 38-17 victory over France in Marseille. 

    Scrum-half Jamison Gibson-Park, lock Tadhg Beirne, wing Calvin Nash, hooker Dan Sheehan and replacement hooker Ronan Kelleher scored tries at the Stade Velodrome against a French side who saw lock Paul Willemse shown a red card during the first half for two yellows – both high tackles.

    Ireland fly-half Jack Crowley, 24, started nervously but grew in confidence and into the contest, kicking one penalty and five exquisite conversions, while also producing a gorgeous try assist for Beirne in a record points total and winning margin for Ireland in France.

    Ireland – Tries: Gibson-Park (16), Beirne (30), Nash (46), Sheehan (62), Kelleher (78). Cons: Crowley (18, 31, 47, 63, 79). Pens: Crowley (7).

    France – Tries: Penaud (40), Gabrillagues (53). Cons: Ramos (42, 53). Pens: Ramos (27).

    Damian Penaud and lock Paul Gabrillagues scored France’s tries, who continued to fight hard and never appeared truly out of it – Ireland captain Peter O’Mahony was sin-binned in the second half with the gap seven points – but they ultimately had to swallow a home defeat.

    Jack Crowley, Johnny Sexton's Ireland replacement in the No 10 jersey, pulled the strings to victory in the Stade Velodrome

    Jack Crowley, Johnny Sexton’s Ireland replacement in the No 10 jersey, pulled the strings to victory in the Stade Velodrome

    For many in the sport, France vs Ireland was the Rugby World Cup final that never was back in October’s Paris showpiece, and although the hosts carved out the first threatening attack, Ireland were far the quicker to settle into their groove.

    Crowley edged Ireland into an early lead with a close-range penalty, and after Willemse collected his first yellow for a high hit to the head of Andrew Porter, the visitors notched the opening try.

    Centre Bundee Aki did magnificently for it, charging forward and freeing his hands to offload for Gibson-Park to sprint in.

    Ireland scrum-half Jamison Gibson-Park scored the first try after great work from Bundee Aki

    Ireland scrum-half Jamison Gibson-Park scored the first try after great work from Bundee Aki

    A huge try chance was spurned by Ireland after Beirne charged down Antoine Dupont’s replacement Maxime Lucu to win a turnover just after a France maul – Crowley and Aki playing narrow when a wide ball would have resulted in a certain try down the left.

    Within moments, Crowley missed poorly off the tee for the chance to go 13-0, with Thomas Ramos then striking at the other end after a scrum penalty.

    Perhaps illustrating a measure of his mentality, Crowley brushed off a tough few minutes to play Beirne in for Ireland’s second try via an exquisitely disguised short-ball.

    Tadhg Beirne scored Ireland's second try after being brilliantly played in by Crowley

    Tadhg Beirne scored Ireland’s second try after being brilliantly played in by Crowley

    Crowley then converted for 17-3, with Willemse – only recently back on – then shown his second yellow, which was upgraded to a straight red following a bunker review, after connecting with the head of Caelan Doris in Ireland’s first carry following the restart.

    France lock forward Paul Willemse was red carded for committing two yellow card offences - a very rare occurrence

    France lock forward Paul Willemse was red carded for committing two yellow card offences – a very rare occurrence

    Back-to-back penalties at the ruck against Ireland invited France forward, however, and though Beirne stole a lineout, a costly scrum penalty against the head eventually resulted in Penaud diving over as French persistence in kicking to the corner was rewarded seconds before the break.

    Damian Penaud hit back for France with a try seconds before half-time

    Damian Penaud hit back for France with a try seconds before half-time

    After Ramos uncharacteristically dragged a penalty wide, Ireland scored through Nash after they sprung the play wide and Robbie Henshaw had stepped, accelerated and offloaded brilliantly for Doris to find the championship debutant.

    Calvin Nash scored Ireland's third try on the occasion of his Six Nations debut

    Calvin Nash scored Ireland’s third try on the occasion of his Six Nations debut

    Crowley produced a sensational conversion off the touchline for 24-10, but France were back within a score seven minutes later, after a long TMO review saw Gabrillagues awarded a try and O’Mahony sin-binned for a cynical act in attempting to deny him.

    Ireland composed themselves to get back up the other end, though, and after the brave decision to kick to the corner instead of for points, Sheehan flew over the try-line from a maul for their fourth.

    Dan Sheehan's try wrapped up the bonus-point and put Ireland on firm course for victory

    Dan Sheehan’s try wrapped up the bonus-point and put Ireland on firm course for victory

    There remained time for one last try, and it was almost identical to Sheehan’s as Kelleher controlled possession at the back of a maul which romped over.

    Fittingly, the boot of Crowley was the final scoring act via the extras.

    Farrell: A special Irish victory | O’Mahony: I’m proud – the young players a big part

    Ireland head coach Andy Farrell to ITV Sport…

    “Any victory here, on a Friday night to start the Six Nations off is always going to be a hard task but I think coming away with a bonus-point win is special.

    “I was proud of the performance because we kept on playing for the full 80 minutes and we got what we deserved in the end.

    “When you play against 14 men, the tendency is sometimes to shut up shop but we kept on playing.

    “These are guys that have been in around the squad for the past couple of years so we had no doubt they are ready to play.

    “Some of them, their form guarantees they are going to be in. But it is a 23-man game.”

    Ireland captain O’Mahony to ITV Sport…

    “It is hard to sum up. It was a serious Test match.

    “I am very proud of the lads for the control of the game. We were cool, composed, might have been a bit frantic in the last 10 minutes down to 14, but we stayed to the plan the whole time.

    “We didn’t get carried away with positive and negative moments and I thought it was a good start.

    “I think a big chunk of the performance was the young fellas, Calvin Nash, Jack Crowley, big Joe [McCarthy]. Some big, big performances from guys getting an opportunity.”

    What’s next?

    Ireland are in action next Sunday, February 11 for the second round of the championship, hosting Italy at the Aviva Stadium in Dublin (3pm kick-off GMT).

    Ireland’s Six Nations 2024 fixtures

    Friday, February 2 France 17-38 Ireland 8pm
    Sunday, February 11 Ireland vs Italy 3pm
    Saturday, February 24 Ireland vs Wales 2.15pm
    Saturday, March 9 England vs Ireland 4.45pm
    Saturday, March 16 Ireland vs Scotland 4.45pm

    France travel to face Scotland at Murrayfield in Edinburgh next Saturday, February 10 (2.15pm kick-off GMT), in Round 2 of the Six Nations.

    France’s Six Nations 2024 fixtures

    Friday, February 2 France 17-38 Ireland 8pm
    Saturday, February 10 Scotland vs France 2.15pm
    Sunday, February 25 France vs Italy 3pm
    Sunday, March 10 Wales vs France 3pm
    Saturday, March 16 France vs England 8pm

    Get Sky Sports on WhatsApp!

    You can now start receiving messages and alerts for the latest breaking sports news, analysis, in-depth features and videos from our dedicated WhatsApp channel!

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  • Northern Ireland in 2024: A land of misery

    Northern Ireland in 2024: A land of misery

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    BELFAST — First its government collapsed. Then austerity began to bite. Now fresh elections are set to be cancelled, and tens of thousands of workers are going on strike.

    This is Northern Ireland in 2024 — a land of political deadlock, public sector cuts and mass labor unrest, with neither British ministers in London nor local powerbrokers the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) willing to do what is needed to restore a coherent government in this ever-divided corner of the United Kingdom.

    Nearly two years after the DUP first sabotaged the Northern Ireland Executive — the cross-community government at the heart of the region’s decades-old peace process — its leadership appears no closer to ending its boycott on cooperation with Sinn Féin. The Irish republicans overtook their DUP opponents as the most popular party at the last Stormont election in May 2022, but have been waiting ever since to lead a government under a power-sharing system the DUP refuses to revive.

    Similarly unwilling to fill the political vacuum is Northern Ireland Secretary Chris Heaton-Harris, who refuses to resume “direct rule” from Westminster. Northern Ireland was governed directly from London through most of its decades of bloodshed during the 20th century, and through a previous collapse of powersharing at Stormont between 2002-07.

    At least partly filling the vacuum over the past year have been Northern Ireland’s senior civil servants, abandoned to run their country without the help of elected politicians. They protest they lack both the power and democratic mandate to make essential spending and cost-cutting decisions — a weakness that has left public services to wither from within.

    This long-running crisis has triggered months of labor unrest, finally reducing Northern Ireland to a standstill on Thursday as 16 unions staged the region’s first coordinated mass strike in a half-century. It may not be the last.

    “This is a campaign we will continue,” said Gerry Murphy of the Irish Congress of Trade Unions. “This is a campaign we will win.”

    Labor pains

    More than 170,000 workers — nearly a fifth of the entire workforce — shut down schools, transport links, non-emergency healthcare and almost all government-funded services on Thursday in a mass demand for long-withheld pay raises.

    The promised salary hikes were secured in principle years ago as part of wider U.K. labor agreements, but most of this money has yet to reach paychecks and pensions in Northern Ireland because the relevant Stormont ministers aren’t in office. In their absence, the U.K. Treasury is withholding the required funds.

    That was supposed to change as part of a conditional funding package that Heaton-Harris presented to local parties last month in a bid to break the DUP logjam. If Democratic Unionist leader Jeffrey Donaldson agreed to lead his party back to Stormont, Heaton-Harris announced, the U.K. would provide £3.3 billion in exceptional financial supports to make the relaunch of power-sharing a success. Included in the package: £584 million for the outstanding pay claims.

    But to the exasperation of other parties, and despite Donaldson’s own efforts to telegraph a coming move, the DUP leader failed to persuade his most powerful deputies to grasp the offer as a moment for compromise.

    Donaldson since has insisted that talks with U.K. government officials will drag out indefinitely until the DUP wins further concessions on Northern Ireland’s complex post-Brexit trading arrangements, which unionists fear are pushing the economy toward a united Ireland.

    The DUP leader failed to persuade his most powerful deputies to grasp the offer as a moment for compromise | Charles McQuillan/Getty Images

    Indeed, dangling billions in front of the DUP seems only to have backfired. Heaton-Harris has repeatedly said the £3.3 billion will not be forthcoming until the DUP returns to Stormont — a condition that both British unionists and Irish nationalists have denounced as blackmail.

    Mass unrest

    Reflecting that anger, tens of thousands of striking workers braved freezing conditions on Thursday to march in central Belfast, Londonderry and Enniskillen, venting their anger and demanding their salaries be boosted to the levels of their professional peers in England, Scotland and Wales.

    As one example, they cited how a newly qualified teacher in Northern Ireland earns around £24,000 a year, versus £30,000 elsewhere in the U.K. Official U.K. statistics indicate that public sector workers in Northern Ireland have seen the value of their incomes fall by 11 percent in real terms during the past two years of government collapse.

    Heaton-Harris, an arch Brexiteer who was appointed to the post by ex-PM Liz Truss during her brief Downing Street reign, has struggled to find any pressure point that works on Donaldson, whose DUP is frequently cited as the most stubborn political party in Europe.

    Heaton-Harris’ most common threat — to call an early election for Stormont — has proved particularly absurd because it would potentially help the DUP. Donaldson would hope to claw back ground lost to politicians representing the moderate middle ground, who did unusually well in the 2022 vote.

    Indeed, the prospect of fresh elections is one reason why Donaldson keeps playing for time. Accepting a deal now — and so accepting the current post-Brexit trade arrangements are here to stay — would likely split his party and drive support toward Traditional Unionist Voice, an even harder-line unionist rival that rejects working with Sinn Féin in all circumstances.

    Reflecting that anger, tens of thousands of striking workers braved freezing conditions on Thursday to march in central Belfast | Paul Faith/AFP via Getty Images

    And so the stasis — and the misery — looks set to continue.

    The unions behind Thursday’s mass strike have vowed to conduct a rolling series of similar protests until Heaton-Harris untethers their pay demands from any proposed DUP sweetheart deal.

    But Heaton-Harris looks poised to kick the Stormont can down the road yet again, meaning Northern Ireland’s public services keep suffering via piecemeal funding half-measures.

    The minister is expected to unveil emergency legislation next week that gives both himself, and Northern Ireland’s permanent secretaries, a new “hybrid” mix of powers and responsibilities over the region.

    But a former permanent secretary who oversaw the Brexit process in Northern Ireland, Andrew McCormick, said Heaton-Harris’ mismanagement of the situation to date meant neither the Stormont mandarins nor the secretary of state himself “have a legal basis for the strategic decisions that are needed. The government can and should change course as a matter of urgency. Abdication is not acceptable.”

    The legislation also is expected to delay, once again, the legally required date for the next Stormont election to early 2025 — by which time a U.K.-wide general election will likely have ended the Conservative government’s 14-year reign and turned Northern Ireland into a problem for the British Labour Party.

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    Shawn Pogatchnik

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  • Britain and US ‘preparing to launch AIRSTRIKES on Iran-backed Houthis’

    Britain and US ‘preparing to launch AIRSTRIKES on Iran-backed Houthis’

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    BRITAIN may be gearing up to launch airstrikes against the Iran-backed Houthi group who have been wreaking havoc in the Red Sea.

    After weeks of ambushes and attacks in waters off the coast of Yemen, the UK might be joining its allies and taking up arms against them.

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    The Houthi rebels (pictured) are an Iran-backed group who have been attacking ships in the Red Sea
    HMS Diamond, a British missile destroyer which could be deployed to fight the Houthi

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    HMS Diamond, a British missile destroyer which could be deployed to fight the Houthi
    The UK may even deploy RAF warplanes (pictured: RAF Typhoon jet, used at UK bases in Iraq and Syria)

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    The UK may even deploy RAF warplanes (pictured: RAF Typhoon jet, used at UK bases in Iraq and Syria)Credit: PA

    In what could be an unprecedented move by Britain, tensions in the regions are likely to spiral further as the West looks to be fighting back.

    A government source told The Times that the UK could unleash RAF warplanes or even Royal Navy warship HMS Diamond – a missile destroyer which took out an attack drone in the Red Sea just weeks ago.

    When HMS Diamond took out the Sea Viper missile it was the first time the Royal Navy had unleashed air defence ­weapons in anger for more than 30 years.

    Now the fresh and unprecedented response could be the first step in a much larger retaliation amid ongoing tensions in the Middle East.

    The UK, under such plans, would join with America and potentially another European country to launch missile attacks against targets either in the Red Sea, or Yemen itself.

    Both Britain and the US are expected to release a statement within hours warning the Houthis to stop their relentless attacks – or face the allied countries wrath.

    The Westminster source described this statement as a “last warning” and said the response if attacks don’t stop would be “significant”.

    They didn’t confirm which type of aircraft Britain could use – but RAF Typhoon jets are currently stationed at bases in Cyprus for missions in Iraq and Syria.

    Apparently there to monitor any leftover threat from terror group ISIS, The Times previously reported that they are now being used to spy on Iran-backed terror proxies in Lebanon.

    Mark Wallace, former US ambassador to the UN, told The Sun today that the Iranian terror proxy group poses a serious threat to the West.

    Defence chiefs on Saturday held talks over a possible armed response on Houthi militias using sites in Yemen.

    And Defence Secretary Grant Shapps later issued a formidable warning to the Iran-backed rebels.

    He said: “Those terrorists who are disrupting trade in the Red Sea are drinking in the last chance saloon.

    “Attacks on commercial shipping with drones and missiles is an attack on all of us and the culture and freedoms we cherish.

    “There is no justification for targeting civilian shipping in this way. We need an immediate end to these illegal attacks.

    “If the Houthis continue to threaten lives and trade, we will be forced to take the necessary and appropriate action.”

    A UK Government spokesperson said: “The situation in the Red Sea is incredibly serious, and the Houthi attacks are unacceptable and destabilising. 

    “As you would expect, while planning is underway for a range of scenarios, no decisions have yet been made and we continue to pursue all diplomatic routes. 

    “We call for the Iranian-backed Houthi to cease these illegal attacks and we are working with allies and partners to protect freedom of navigation.”

    The Houthi group began their brutal targeting of vessels after war broke out between Israel and Hamas on October 7.

    They backed the terrorists and have used missiles, hijackings and harassment against ships they believe have links to Israel.

    Sources said eight of the 20 ships attacked in the 30 days before Christmas were either UK- registered, had Brits in their crew or carried goods for the UK.

    Major shipping firms such as BP and Maersk are also diverting vessels away from the Red Sea amid concerns the crisis will drive up the price of goods and inflation.

    The US previously vowed to launch missile attacks against the rebel group after they swore to continue the relentless attacks on cargo ships.

    President Joe Biden even ordered the formidable USS Dwight D. Eisenhower aircraft carrier to the Gulf of Aden near the Bab al-Mandab strait.

    And on Sunday US Navy helicopters sunk three Houthi boats attacking a cargo ship.

    It was the first clash between them which resulted in casualties – as a Houthi spokesperson later claimed ten had been killed.

    Wallace told The Sun today that the clash marks a major turning point in the crisis, and that self defence won’t be enough to stop them.

    A Maersk container vessel sent out distress calls early on Sunday that the Houthis were firing at the ship.

    Helicopters from the USS Eisenhower and USS Gravely then unleashed fire on the Houthi boats “in self-defence”.

    All militants onboard the three sunken ships were killed, while a fourth boat fled.

    Maersk stated their crew is now “safe” and that the boat had continued its journey to Port Suez.

    However, the shipping company – one of the world’s largest – has paused its sailings through the Red Sea for 48 hours.

    Houthi military spokesman Yahya Saree later said ten members of the rebel group had been killed by the US.

    Saree also vowed that the US would “bear the consequences” of the attack.

    The group also vowed that any other countries who threaten them, like America, could face “negative repercussions”.

    Houthi rebels approaching a ship in the Red Sea before storming the deck in November

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    Houthi rebels approaching a ship in the Red Sea before storming the deck in NovemberCredit: Reuters
    HMS Diamond shooting down an attack drone missile in December

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    HMS Diamond shooting down an attack drone missile in December
    USS Dwight D. Eisenhower was involved in Sunday's sinking of three Houthi ships

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    USS Dwight D. Eisenhower was involved in Sunday’s sinking of three Houthi shipsCredit: AFP
    A Houthi gunman storming a ship in the Red Sea in November

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    A Houthi gunman storming a ship in the Red Sea in NovemberCredit: Getty

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    Ellie Doughty

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  • Owen Farrell: Saracens boss Mark McCall blasts ‘shameful’ treatment of England captain

    Owen Farrell: Saracens boss Mark McCall blasts ‘shameful’ treatment of England captain

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    Saracens director of rugby Mark McCall hopes Owen Farrell’s decision to take a break from international rugby to prioritise his mental well-being will prove to be a wake-up call for the sport; the England captain announced on Wednesday he will not play in next year’s Six Nations

    Last Updated: 30/11/23 4:29pm

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    Owen Farrell will miss the Six Nations after deciding to take a break from international rugby to prioritise his and his family’s mental well-being

    Owen Farrell will miss the Six Nations after deciding to take a break from international rugby to prioritise his and his family’s mental well-being

    Mark McCall has criticised the treatment of Owen Farrell in what he believes should be a wake-up call for rugby union.

    Farrell will miss the Six Nations after deciding to take a break from international rugby in order to prioritise his and his family’s mental well-being, although he will continue to play for club Saracens.

    The unexpected decision comes after the 32-year-old fly-half led England to a third-place finish in the recent World Cup after losing to champions South Africa by a point in the semi-final.

    Mark McCall called the treatment of Farrell 'shameful'

    Mark McCall called the treatment of Farrell ‘shameful’

    Farrell has long been a lightening-rod figure in the sport, but the condemnation peaked in August when he was sent off for a dangerous tackle against Wales, a decision which was overturned by a disciplinary hearing only to then incur a ban on appeal.

    England’s captain was frequently booed in France, sometimes with his family present in the stadium, and Saracens director of rugby McCall is impressed that he delivered a series of strong performances despite shouldering a heavy burden.

    “It’s remarkable that he played the way he played during the World Cup, if we take into account how he was feeling,” McCall said.

    “He is a person who is right on top of his game at the moment, yet he and his family have been made to feel the way they feel. It is shameful – it’s not right.

    “I’ve worked with Owen for 15 years, every day, and the person that has been portrayed in the media bears no resemblance to the person I know. He’s a family man, they’ve always come first.

    He is a person who is right on top of his game at the moment, yet he and his family have been made to feel the way they feel. It is shameful – it’s not right.

    Saracens director of rugby Mark McCall on Owen Farrell

    “There was a narrative created and started and that’s been there for quite some time. There’s only so much that someone can take. On top of that, he’s a brilliant, caring, supportive team-mate and a loyal friend to many, and a very good, decent human being. That’s the person I know.

    “It was courageous and brave of him to open up. I admire Owen for many reasons anyway, but even more for doing this. I’m not worried about Europe or the club at all. I’m worried about Owen. We want him to be OK and happy. Clearly he hasn’t been.”

    Woodward: Farrell criticism ‘unjust and uncalled for’

    Former England international Heather Fisher said it should get to a point where athletes taking a break from their sport, to look after their mental health, isn't newsworthy

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    Former England international Heather Fisher said it should get to a point where athletes taking a break from their sport, to look after their mental health, isn’t newsworthy

    Former England international Heather Fisher said it should get to a point where athletes taking a break from their sport, to look after their mental health, isn’t newsworthy

    Sir Clive Woodward hopes Farrell’s decision to step away from England duty to focus on his and his family’s mental well-being inspires more players within rugby union to take sabbaticals.

    Woodward – who coached England to World Cup glory in 2003 – also said the criticism Farrell has received is “unjust” while former England captain Lawrence Dallaglio called it “sickening”.

    Writing for Mail Online, Woodward said of Farrell: “The first and most important thing is to acknowledge the brave and correct decision Farrell has made to step away from England duty to protect his and his family’s mental health and that we wish them all the best.

    “Farrell’s move comes as no great surprise considering the extraordinary weight his shoulders have been forced to bear and the unjust criticism he has had to face. Only he will know how much influence this had over his decision.

    “Rugby, sport and society have all come a long way in understanding mental health, but there is still so much more that can be done. Athletes and coaches ask a great deal of themselves.

    Luther Burrell supports Farrell's decision to miss the Six Nations to prioritise his own mental well-being as well as that of his family

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    Luther Burrell supports Farrell’s decision to miss the Six Nations to prioritise his own mental well-being as well as that of his family

    Luther Burrell supports Farrell’s decision to miss the Six Nations to prioritise his own mental well-being as well as that of his family

    “They put themselves into situations that are, while an utter privilege and filled with joy at times, can also leave you wondering how you will get out of bed some days. This is not a burden they carry alone. Their families face the same trials and pressures.

    “I hope Farrell sets the tone and inspires new thinking in this area. Why is taking a sabbatical not more common?

    “No doubt they [the Rugby Football Union] will blame others – especially the media – and create another nameless committee to investigate and put forward their thoughts with zero accountability. Farrell will probably be left to work it out for himself. That is so wrong.

    “The RFU and other international sides should look at Farrell’s situation with real concern but as an opportunity to better support players. The world’s best businesses build sabbaticals into their HR processes as paid leave. Why not rugby?”

    Carlisle: I applaud Farrell for stepping away to focus on mental health

    Former Burnley and Leeds defender Clarke Carlisle has praised England rugby union captain Owen Farrell, for taking time away to prioritise his mental health.

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    Former Burnley and Leeds defender Clarke Carlisle has praised England rugby union captain Owen Farrell, for taking time away to prioritise his mental health.

    Former Burnley and Leeds defender Clarke Carlisle has praised England rugby union captain Owen Farrell, for taking time away to prioritise his mental health.

    Former Burnley and Leeds defender Clarke Carlisle has praised Farrell for taking time away to prioritise his mental health.

    “There are so many thoughts and considerations that go around that decision but I’m absolutely delighted that Owen, his family and all the people around him have decided to put the man and his wellbeing first over any work duties,” Carlisle said to Sky Sports.

    “I massively applaud him and I really would advocate other people who are experiencing tough mental health to take action early but there is an important point to be made, and an important distinction.

    “There’s often a fear, especially with guys who are my generation or older, that the perception that people are going to judge you for taking care of your wellbeing.

    “When we see a case like Farrell and think if I take a step back, the world has to know, it doesn’t have to be like that. You don’t have to be like myself or Farrell, you don’t have to tell the world that you’re addressing your wellbeing status but it is imperative that you tell someone and the right someone and the right time.”

    Carlisle added: “We’ve gotten to a point now in our society where we understand that we all live on this spectrum of mental health and being able to have that foresight to intervene when you are getting to a 3/10 instead of making yourself get to 1/10 and then have to provide for disaster recovery, it doesn’t happen anymore.

    “Those perceptions of your professional identity, we’re now able to separate them from actually supporting the human being. This is a fantastic example of that.”

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  • Brit footballer who was ‘heartbeat’ of club dies on trip to Amsterdam

    Brit footballer who was ‘heartbeat’ of club dies on trip to Amsterdam

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    A BRITISH footballer has been hailed as a “massive asset on the pitch” in emotional tributes after he died on a trip to Amsterdam.

    Charlie Batcup, 30, from Swansea, played for Pontlliw FC and was described by friends as the “heartbeat” of the club.

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    Charlie Batcup, 30, died while on a trip to AmsterdamCredit: Facebook

    The Welsh footballer was a lifelong player at the club, who following his death said he had enriched the lives of all their players and club members.

    Charlie died while he was travelling in the Netherlands, and the Foreign Office said they were supporting the family of a British man.

    Pontlliw FC paid tribute to their player on Sunday and said: “Pontlliw FC is heartbroken and devastated to announce that our player, club man and dear friend Charlie Batcup has tragically passed away.

    “Charlie was a huge part of the club in a way that words cannot describe and his passing has left a huge void in our club which we will never be able to replace”.

    They added that he was a “massive asset on the pitch” and in every team he played in.

    “Off the field he was the heartbeat of our club community and personified our ethos of camaraderie, inclusivity, and cohesion,” they said.

    “We are struggling to imagine an away day, social event, or even a Saturday afternoon without Charlie’s presence and he will always be in our thoughts now and forever.

    Also taking to social media to share a heartfelt tribute to the late football player, was Charlie’s brother, Josh Batcup.

    On Facebook, Josh shared a series of photos from when the pair were young boys, to them as adults watching a game of football.

    He wrote: “I can’t quite believe I’m writing this but my Brother Charlie has tragically passed away.

    “You were the heartbeat of Pontlliw Football club and village. There will be an emptiness in many people’s lives now you’re gone”.

    He went on to describe his brother as “simply an amazing person”, “so well loved by everyone”, and “kind”.

    “You are my only brother and the thought of you not being around anymore is unbearable,” Josh added.

    “Life as I’ve always known it will never again be the same without you in it and not a day will go by when I won’t think about you.

    “I love you so so much Charl, I just wish I could tell you this in person one more time.

    “Rest in peace little bro, I will miss you immensely for the rest of my life”.

    An Foreign Office spokesman said: “We are supporting the family of a British man who has died in the Netherlands and are in contact with the local authorities.”

    The Welsh football player from Swansea was a member of Pontlliw FC

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    The Welsh football player from Swansea was a member of Pontlliw FCCredit: Facebook

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    Taryn Kaur Pedler

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  • King Charles to attend COP28

    King Charles to attend COP28

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    King Charles III will attend the COP28 climate summit in Dubai next month, Buckingham Palace confirmed.

    The King — a longstanding advocate of bolder action to combat climate change — will deliver the opening address at the World Climate Action Summit, the gathering of global leaders which will open the two-week annual conference.

    It will be the first time he has attended a COP summit as King. Having played a major diplomatic role as Prince of Wales at the U.K.-hosted COP26 in 2021, there was confusion last year as to whether he would attend the COP27 summit in Egypt. Downing Street eventually confirmed that he would not go as it was not the “right occasion.”

    This year, the King will attend “at the invitation” of UAE President Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan and “at the request” of the U.K. government, Buckingham Palace said.

    He will speak at the summit on Friday 1 December and will “take the opportunity to have meetings with regional leaders” ahead of the event, according to a statement from the palace.

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    Charlie Cooper

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  • Kate Middleton and Prince William Mark Beginning of U.K. Black History Month with Visit to Wales

    Kate Middleton and Prince William Mark Beginning of U.K. Black History Month with Visit to Wales

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    The Prince and Princess of Wales marked the United Kingdom’s observance of Black History Month with a visit to their home territory.

    Princess Kate and Prince William trekked to Cardiff Tuesday for an event commemorating Black History Month, celebrated in October in the UK, as well as the 75th anniversary of the arrival of the HMT Empire Windrush to London. The Empire Windrush was a liner carrying around 1,000 mostly West Indian passengers from Jamaica to London, with nearly 800 aboard listing their last place of residence as a Caribbean locale, and about 700 of those saying they planned to make a home in England. Immigrants from this period are often referred to as the “Windrush generation.”

    The Waleses met with members of groups supporting diversity and growth in Wales, including representatives of the Windrush Cymru Elders, Black History Cymru 365, and the Ethnic Minority Youth Forum. Continuing in the theme of Princess Kate’s work with children, the royals also met with elementary school-aged kids. An 11-year-old named Gracie said that she and Kate had talked about what she learned in school, including lessons about Windrush, and how much she loved math.

    “I said I like maths and like our teachers teaching us,” she told People. “And she said I could teach [Prince] George some maths!”

    Another student, 8-year-old Lilly, told the outlet that after shaking hands with the royal couple, she had no immediate plans to suds away any royal traces that may be lingering.

    “I’m not going to wash my hands now,” she said. “This one was Prince William and this one was Kate,” she said.

    The UK marks “Windrush Day” annually on June 22, and Prince William will reportedly also appear in a documentary about the Windrush Generation in Britain later this month.

    The monarchy’s legacy with immigrants, former colonies, and the Black community at large is complicated: Last year, when the Waleses toured the Caribbean, they were met with protests, and Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness informed them that the country intended to become a republic and remove Queen Elizabeth (before she died) as head of state.

    At a 2022 Windrush Day event unveiling a new monument in Britain, William reflected on the controversial trip: “Our trip was an opportunity to reflect and we learned so much,” he said. “Not just about the different issues that matter most to the people of the region, but also about how the past weighs heavily on the present.”


    Listen to Vanity Fair’s DYNASTY podcast now.

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    Kase Wickman

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  • JPMorgan’s UK digital bank blocks customers from buying crypto

    JPMorgan’s UK digital bank blocks customers from buying crypto

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    Signage outside a Chase bank branch in San Francisco, California, on Monday, July 12, 2021.

    David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Chase UK, the British challenger bank brand of JPMorgan, has blocked customers in the U.K. from purchasing crypto assets.

    The company said in a statement Tuesday that, starting Oct. 16, Chase UK customers would “no longer be able to make crypto transactions via debit card or by outgoing bank transfer.”

    “Customers will receive a declined transaction notification if they do attempt to make a crypto-related transaction,” the bank said in an email to clients.

    “This has been done to protect our customers and keep their money safe.”

    The company said it was taking the step because “fraudsters are increasingly using crypto assets to steal large sums of money from people.”

    Chase UK cited data from Action Fraud, Britain’s fraud reporting agency, that showed U.K consumer losses to crypto fraud increased by over 40% in the last year, surpassing £300 million for the first time.

    Crypto scams accounted for more than 40% of all reported crimes in England and Wales last year, according to the Office for National Statistics, Chase UK said in the customer email.

    Chase UK is the latest bank in the country to take steps to limit the ability of their customers to purchase cryptocurrencies.

    NatWest imposed limits on its customers which meant they could only send a maximum of £1,000 per day and £5,000 over a 30-day period to crypto exchanges, in an effort to tackle the rise in fraud attempts involving crypto.

    HSBC and Nationwide have announced similar restrictions on crypto-linked purchases.

    “We’re committed to helping keep our customers’ money safe and secure,” a Chase spokesperson told CNBC via email Tuesday.

    “We’ve seen an increase in the number of crypto scams targeting U.K. consumers, so we have taken the decision to prevent the purchase of crypto assets on a Chase debit card or by transferring money to a crypto site from a Chase account.” 

    WATCH: Crypto enthusiasts want to reshape the internet with ‘Web3.’ Here’s what that means

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  • Ryan Reynolds has transformed Wrexham. Who will save Britain’s other struggling towns?

    Ryan Reynolds has transformed Wrexham. Who will save Britain’s other struggling towns?

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    Press play to listen to this article

    Voiced by artificial intelligence.

    WREXHAM, Wales — Sitting in the Royal Oak, a narrow but implausibly long pub in Wrexham’s town center, Gary Tipping is reflecting on the rollercoaster fortunes of his favorite football team.

    Wrexham Association Football Club (A.F.C.) — a lower-league team barely recognizable since it was bought up by Hollywood stars Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney in 2021 — has just lost its opening game of the season. But little can dampen the enthusiasm of Tipping or his fellow fans.

    “What they’ve done for this town, it’s beyond what I could have ever dreamed of,” he says.

    “People want to see the town and breathe in the atmosphere here,” adds his 21-year-old son Sam, who’s been going to the football with Gary since he was 5 years old. “There’s a hype around the place.”

    “Hype” was not a word formerly associated with Wrexham. The third-oldest professional football club in the world, it had fallen on hard times and was struggling to stay afloat in the 2010s. But everything changed when Reynolds and McElhenney arrived, in search of a project and with movie-star money to spend.

    Wrexham’s fortunes were transformed by new players and a new manager, financed by American dollars. The fans flooded back. A Netflix documentary series charting their progress, “Welcome to Wrexham,” was a smash hit on both sides of the Atlantic. In May, the rejuvenated team was promoted back into the professional football league after a 15-year absence.

    The town, too, feels like a different place.

    Strolling through a lively Wrexham high street on a Saturday night, local call center worker Christopher Lamb points out a raft of new bars that have opened over the past two years.

    “The town was going downhill for quite a while since 2010. But it’s changed a lot. Now you get a lot of American tourists here — though they don’t always go to the places that need the money,” Lamb says. 

    But not every ailing football club — nor every ailing town — finds a superhero.

    Football in the English leagues — where Wrexham play, despite the town’s north Wales location — is a wildly unequal game. The hundreds of millions of pounds powering top-level Premier League clubs contrast sharply with the tiny budgets of lower-league teams, most of whom struggle just to stay afloat.

    Wrexham faced the same endless financial battles before its unlikely takeover, with financial distress leaving the team at its lowest sporting ebb. Other clubs under constant threat of extinction look on in envy, and with a lingering sense of injustice.

    Wrexham’s fortunes were transformed by new players and a new manager, financed by American dollars | Malcolm Couzens/Getty Images

    Knights in shining armor?

    “You’ve got wonderful things like Wrexham — that’s a dream isn’t it?” says Jenny Chapman, formerly the MP for the northeast town of Darlington, and now a Labour member of the House of Lords. “We were hoping for that knight in shining armor.” 

    First elected to parliament in 2010, Chapman was thrust straight into a local nightmare: the imminent collapse of her town’s beloved football club.

    Darlington F.C. had been placed into emergency financial proceedings multiple times through the 2000s, having gambled unwisely on an outsized new stadium on the outskirts of the town. That purchase had been covered in part by a £4 million loan taken out by the club’s former owner, George Reynolds — who arrived with ambitions of taking the club to the Premier League, but ended up in prison for tax avoidance.

    “It was a very difficult period and it was overwhelming,” Chapman recalls.

    “I’m not a football fan at all, never pretended to be. But I felt very strongly that Darlington was a club with a real heritage to it and it was an important part of the community that needed to be supported and should survive,” she adds.

    As the club desperately looked for a buyer to save it from liquidation, Chapman spent hours each day on the phone with the club’s administrator, and tried to vet and cajole prospective buyers. 

    It was to no avail. Darlington was eventually expelled from the Football Association in 2012. A phoenix club — owned by fans — was formed in its place, and is currently attempting to rise from the very bottom of the English football pyramid.

    “There definitely wasn’t any support from Westminster,” Chapman recalls.

    But a decade on, there are signs Westminster is starting to pay attention. A similar collapse in 2019 at Bury F.C. — another lower-league cub in the north of England — grabbed headlines far beyond the Greater Manchester area, and happened just as the politics around football were starting to shift.

    The constituencies containing Wrexham, Bury and Darlington all flipped from Labour to the Conservatives in 2019. All could be characterized as the kind of “Red Wall” seats that the Tories had promised under Boris Johnson to “level up” and regenerate after years of post-industrial decline.

    Football is of particular importance in these seats. Research by the center-right Onward think tank earlier this year showed that people in the north of England “are more likely to view their local football team as one of the main sources of pride in the local area.”

    “You’ve got to think about the institutions that are fundamental and core to these places,” says Tory MP John Stevenson, chair of the Northern Research Group, a backbench Conservative caucus focused on supporting northern England.

    Bury F.C. was expelled from the English Football League in 2019, after failing in its bid to find a buyer | WPA pool photo by Danny Lawson/Getty Images

    “I always come up with two: one is universities and the second one is football clubs. As a social enterprise, an economic enterprise and a sporting one, football clubs are very much at the forefront of their communities.” 

    Dead and Bury’d

    Bury was expelled from the English Football League in 2019, after the cash-strapped club failed in its bid to find a buyer. Onward’s research shows that northern clubs — like Bury and Darlington — have been particularly exposed to financial stress, often by unscrupulous owners who stretched them far beyond their means.

    In response to Bury’s expulsion, Conservative MP and former Sports Minister Tracey Crouch was commissioned by Johnson’s government to carry out a fan-led review into the governance of English football clubs. The review, published in November 2021, recommended a new, independent regulator for English football and the introduction of tests to better police club ownership.

    The government accepted Crouch’s call to establish a regulator in a white paper — a draft legislative document — responding to her review. But there’s no sign yet of any legislation to formally enact her recommendations, prompting angry claims of foot-dragging.

    “The fan-led review went a long way … but it seems incredibly slow. It’s taken two years just for a white paper to come forward,” says Christian Wakeford, the MP for Bury North — who switched from the Conservatives to Labour last year.

    “There are so many clubs that are on that threshold of not existing anymore — we don’t want anymore Burys. It’s not fair for the fans and it’s not fair for a town,” he adds.

    Tory MP and NRG Chair Stevenson adds: “I’m of the belief that governments of all persuasions neglected [and] ignored northern communities. It’s not just about economies, it’s also about communities. And football clubs are very much part of that.”

    A government official pointed POLITICO to a speech made by Sports Minister Stuart Andrew in June to the English Football League’s annual conference, in which he acknowledged that there are “a number of clubs across the EFL that are in real distress today.” Andrew said the government intends to publish its response to a consultation on the white paper “in the coming weeks.”

    While some MPs eagerly await the government’s next move, not everyone is convinced it’s the state’s place to try to save clubs from the vagaries of the market — particularly given that the country’s top flight appears to be in rude health.

    Tory peer and West Ham United Vice Chairman Karren Brady said last year that “much of [the fan-led review] should be welcomed like a giant hole in Wembley’s pitch.”

    “It is messing with an industry which works better than most, and it’s hard to see what football has in common with banks or other financial institutions who also have regulators,” she wrote in the Sun newspaper. “We have to remember the Premier League is the envy of world sport, so why break it because Bury went bust?”

    This is Wrexham

    Back in Wrexham, the signs of what forward-thinking — and extremely wealthy — owners can do are on full display. It’s little surprise that MPs keen for their own local success story are eyeing the club with envy.

    Wrexham may have lost its opening game of the season, but little can dampen the enthusiasm of its fans | Malcolm Couzens/Getty Images

    “All of a sudden, everyone knows who Wrexham is — it’s had a massive effect,” says Geraint Andrews, a local engineer standing outside another thriving town center bar.

    Indeed, the whole town center is awash with Wrexham A.F.C. replica shirts and memorabilia dedicated to the club and the “This Is Wrexham” documentary series. A Wrexham A.F.C. mural adorns the glass of the town’s branch of McDonald’s. U.S. flags held by tourists or fans who have taken the Hollywood stars to heart are only narrowly outnumbered by Welsh national flags. 

    Since the takeover in 2021, the town of Wrexham has even been officially upgraded to a city. Amid the takeover buzz, it was also shortlisted for the U.K. City of Culture title last year.

    For fans of other small-town clubs, like Bury and Darlington — not to mention the currently struggling Derby County — just some stability would do.

    “Not everybody can win the league,” Stevenson of the Northern Research Group notes.

    “But through the good times and the difficult times, you want clubs to have financial stability and good management. That’s what we’re asking for.”

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    Andrew McDonald

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