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Kazakhstan closes 130 crypto platforms in shadow economy crackdown<\/a><\/li><li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//my-europe//2025//05//27//french-police-detain-twenty-suspects-over-cryptocurrency-kidnappings/">French police detain twenty suspects over cryptocurrency kidnappings<\/a><\/li>\n <\/ul>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>On Tuesday, Qian was sentenced to 11 years and eight months in prison at London's Southwark Crown Court.<\/p>\n<p>\"You were the architect of this offending from its inception to its conclusion,\" said Judge Sally-Ann Hales. \"The scale of your money laundering is unprecedented. Your motive was one of pure greed.\"<\/p>\n<p>Qian's accomplice, 47-year-old Malaysian national Seng Hok Ling, was jailed for four years and 11 months after pleading guilty to transferring criminal property.<\/p>\n<p>Another Chinese woman, 43-year-old Jian Wen, was convicted last year for her role in the bitcoin fraud. Wen was jailed for six years and eight months.<\/p>\n<p>\"There is no doubt this is one of the largest and most complex economic crime investigations we have ever undertaken,\" said Will Lyne, the Metropolitan Police's head of economic and cybercrime command.<\/p>\n<p>\"Organised crime groups are using cryptocurrency to move, hide, and invest the profits of serious crime \u2014 but every crypto transaction leaves a trace,\" he added. \"Our message is clear \u2014 criminal assets are not safe in the UK.\"<\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1762876335,"updatedAt":1762879244,"publishedAt":1762879218,"firstPublishedAt":1762879218,"lastPublishedAt":1762879218,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/48\/64\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_d5268980-882b-5e8f-bc74-ce5bb733f512-9544864.jpg","altText":"Zhimin Qian aka Yadi Zhang ","caption":"Zhimin Qian aka Yadi Zhang ","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"Metropolitan Police","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":1365,"height":768}],"authors":{"journalists":[{"id":3238,"urlSafeValue":"guilbert","title":"Kieran Guilbert","twitter":null}],"producers":[],"videoEditor":[]},"keywords":[{"id":12679,"slug":"bitcoin","urlSafeValue":"bitcoin","title":"Bitcoin","titleRaw":"Bitcoin"},{"id":7800,"slug":"united-kingdom","urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","titleRaw":"United Kingdom"},{"id":12415,"slug":"fraud","urlSafeValue":"fraud","title":"Fraud","titleRaw":"Fraud"},{"id":12203,"slug":"prison-sentence","urlSafeValue":"prison-sentence","title":"Prison Sentence","titleRaw":"Prison Sentence"},{"id":311,"slug":"china","urlSafeValue":"china","title":"China","titleRaw":"China"}],"widgets":[{"slug":"related","count":1}],"related":[{"id":2817595},{"id":2845970}],"technicalTags":[],"externalPartners":[],"hasExternalVideo":0,"hasInternalOrExternalVideo":0,"video":0,"videos":[],"liveStream":[{"startDate":0,"endDate":0}],"scribbleLiveId":0,"scribbleLiveRibbon":0,"isLiveCoverage":0,"sourceId":1,"sources":[],"externalSource":null,"additionalSources":null,"additionalReporting":null,"freeField1":null,"freeField2":"","type":"normal","displayType":"default","program":{"id":"world","urlSafeValue":"world","title":"World News","online":1,"url":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/programs\/world"},"season":"","episode":"","episodeId":"","vertical":"news","verticals":[{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"},{"id":2,"slug":"my-europe","urlSafeValue":"my-europe","title":"Europe"}],"primaryVertical":{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"},"themes":[{"id":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World","url":"\/news\/international"},{"id":"europe-news","urlSafeValue":"europe-news","title":"Europe News","url":"\/news\/international"}],"primaryTheme":{"id":1,"urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World"},"advertising":0,"advertisingData":{"startDate":0,"endDate":0,"type":null,"slug":null,"title":null,"disclaimerLabelKey":null,"sponsor":null,"sponsorName":null,"sponsorUrl":null,"sponsorLogo":"","sponsorLogoReverse":"","isDfp":0},"geoLocation":{"lat":0,"lon":0},"location":1,"continent":{"id":104,"urlSafeValue":"europe","title":"Europe"},"country":{"id":291,"urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","url":"\/news\/europe\/united-kingdom"},"town":[],"contextualSignals":{"doubleVerify":{"ids":[],"slugs":[]}},"grapeshot":null,"versions":[],"programDeliverable":{"slug":"article-video","format":"default"},"showOpinionDisclaimer":0,"allViews":0,"allViewsMeta":{"pointOfView":[],"survey":[],"tweetId":0,"tweet2NdId":0,"displayOverlay":0},"storyTranslationMethod":[],"localisation":[],"autoPublished":0,"autoLocalised":0,"isReviewed":0,"path":"\/2025\/11\/11\/chinese-fugitive-fraudster-jailed-in-the-uk-over-multi-billion-crypto-scam","lastModified":1762879218},{"id":2840350,"cid":9521218,"versionId":3,"archive":0,"housenumber":null,"owner":"euronews","isMagazine":1,"isBreakingNews":0,"daletEventName":"FO - S06E21 - WORLD_TRAVEL_MARKET - MASTER","daletPyramidId":3065991,"channels":[{"id":1},{"id":2},{"id":3},{"id":4},{"id":5},{"id":10},{"id":12},{"id":14}],"status":2,"title":"WTM London 2025 highlights global travel trends from slow tourism and culture to sustainability","titleSeo":null,"titleListing1":"WTM London 2025 spotlights slow travel, culture and sustainability","titleListing2":"WTM London 2025 highlights global travel trends from slow tourism and culture to sustainability","leadin":"At World Travel Market 2025 in London, global destinations showcased new trends from slow tourism to sustainable travel and cultural experiences reshaping the post-pandemic industry.","summary":"At World Travel Market 2025 in London, global destinations showcased new trends from slow tourism to sustainable travel and cultural experiences reshaping the post-pandemic industry.","keySentence":"","url":"wtm-london-2025-highlights-global-travel-trends-from-slow-tourism-and-culture-to-sustainab","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/news\/2025\/11\/10\/wtm-london-2025-highlights-global-travel-trends-from-slow-tourism-and-culture-to-sustainab","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"World Travel Market London 2025 gathered over 5,000 exhibitors and 45,000 visitors at ExCel London. Event Director Chris Carter-Chapman highlighted rising demand for slow, experiential travel.\u00a0\n\nGreece promoted its \u201cslow living\u201d lifestyle, while France unveiled plans for the 2027 \u201cYear of the Normans.\u201d Egypt showcased the Grand Egyptian Museum, and Japan emphasised value and culinary diversity.\u00a0\n\nSustainability was central, with destinations aiming to attract respectful, year-round travellers while ensuring lasting economic and environmental balance.\n\n","htmlText":"<p>World Travel Market London 2025 gathered over 5,000 exhibitors and 45,000 visitors at ExCel London. Event Director Chris Carter-Chapman highlighted rising demand for slow, experiential travel. <\/p>\n<p>Greece promoted its \u201cslow living\u201d lifestyle, while France unveiled plans for the 2027 \u201cYear of the Normans.\u201d Egypt showcased the Grand Egyptian Museum, and Japan emphasised value and culinary diversity. <\/p>\n<p>Sustainability was central, with destinations aiming to attract respectful, year-round travellers while ensuring lasting economic and environmental balance.<\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1761054347,"updatedAt":1765995053,"publishedAt":1762800627,"firstPublishedAt":1762800627,"lastPublishedAt":1765995052,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/29\/75\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_9c1f1f34-e681-5653-b0f2-b8851647cf41-9542975.jpg","altText":null,"caption":null,"captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"Euronews","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":1920,"height":1080}],"authors":{"journalists":[],"producers":[{"id":2188,"urlSafeValue":"brown-h","title":"Hannah Brown","twitter":"@hannahdingbrown"}],"videoEditor":[]},"keywords":[{"id":4221,"slug":"tourism","urlSafeValue":"tourism","title":"Tourism","titleRaw":"Tourism"},{"id":12639,"slug":"travel","urlSafeValue":"travel","title":"Travel","titleRaw":"Travel"},{"id":8721,"slug":"show","urlSafeValue":"show","title":"Show","titleRaw":"Show"},{"id":481,"slug":"london","urlSafeValue":"london","title":"London","titleRaw":"London"}],"widgets":[],"related":[],"technicalTags":[],"externalPartners":{"youtubeId":"EJy_qRp9WJo","dailymotionId":"x9vwmhy"},"hasExternalVideo":1,"hasInternalOrExternalVideo":1,"video":1,"videos":[{"format":"mp4","quality":"md","type":"normal","url":"https:\/\/video.euronews.com\/mp4\/ED\/31\/97\/08\/09\/ED_PYR_3197089_20251217175848.mp4","editor":"","duration":300000,"filesizeBytes":42456545,"expiresAt":0},{"format":"mp4","quality":"hd","type":"normal","url":"https:\/\/video.euronews.com\/mp4\/SHD\/31\/97\/08\/09\/SHD_PYR_3197089_20251217175848.mp4","editor":"","duration":300000,"filesizeBytes":65382886,"expiresAt":0},{"format":"mp4","quality":"1080p","type":"normal","url":"https:\/\/video.euronews.com\/mp4\/FHD\/31\/97\/08\/09\/FHD_PYR_3197089_20251217175848.mp4","editor":"","duration":300000,"filesizeBytes":230411760,"expiresAt":0}],"liveStream":[{"startDate":0,"endDate":0}],"scribbleLiveId":0,"scribbleLiveRibbon":0,"isLiveCoverage":0,"sourceId":1,"sources":[],"externalSource":null,"additionalSources":null,"additionalReporting":null,"freeField1":null,"freeField2":"","type":"normal","displayType":"default","program":{"id":"focus","urlSafeValue":"focus","title":"Focus","online":1,"url":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/programs\/focus"},"season":"FOCUS_S06","episode":"S06E21 - WORLD_TRAVEL_MARKET","episodeId":"1036","vertical":"news","verticals":[{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"}],"primaryVertical":{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"},"themes":[{"id":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World","url":"\/news\/international"}],"primaryTheme":{"id":1,"urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World"},"advertising":0,"advertisingData":{"startDate":0,"endDate":0,"type":null,"slug":null,"title":null,"disclaimerLabelKey":null,"sponsor":null,"sponsorName":null,"sponsorUrl":null,"sponsorLogo":"","sponsorLogoReverse":"","isDfp":0},"geoLocation":{"lat":0,"lon":0},"location":1,"continent":{"id":104,"urlSafeValue":"europe","title":"Europe"},"country":{"id":291,"urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","url":"\/news\/europe\/united-kingdom"},"town":[],"contextualSignals":{"doubleVerify":{"ids":[],"slugs":[]}},"grapeshot":null,"versions":[],"programDeliverable":{"slug":"article-video","format":"default"},"showOpinionDisclaimer":0,"allViews":0,"allViewsMeta":{"pointOfView":[],"survey":[],"tweetId":0,"tweet2NdId":0,"displayOverlay":0},"storyTranslationMethod":[],"localisation":[],"autoPublished":0,"autoLocalised":0,"isReviewed":0,"path":"\/2025\/11\/10\/wtm-london-2025-highlights-global-travel-trends-from-slow-tourism-and-culture-to-sustainab","lastModified":1765995052},{"id":2845455,"cid":9543289,"versionId":1,"archive":0,"housenumber":null,"owner":"euronews","isMagazine":0,"isBreakingNews":0,"daletEventName":"TRUMP THREATENS SUE BBC","daletPyramidId":3259605,"channels":[{"id":1},{"id":2},{"id":3},{"id":4},{"id":5},{"id":10},{"id":12},{"id":14}],"status":2,"title":"BBC receives letter from Donald Trump threatening legal action over edited speech","titleSeo":null,"titleListing1":"BBC receives Trump letter threatening legal action over edited speech","titleListing2":"BBC receives letter from US President Donald Trump threatening legal action over edited speech","leadin":"The controversy surrounding what the BBC has called an \"error of judgement\" led Director General Tim Davie and CEO of News Deborah Turness to resign on Sunday.","summary":"The controversy surrounding what the BBC has called an \"error of judgement\" led Director General Tim Davie and CEO of News Deborah Turness to resign on Sunday.","keySentence":"","url":"bbc-receives-letter-from-donald-trump-threatening-legal-action-over-edited-speech","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/2025\/11\/10\/bbc-receives-letter-from-donald-trump-threatening-legal-action-over-edited-speech","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"The BBC confirmed on Monday that it has received a letter from US President Donald Trump threatening legal action after the broadcaster aired an edited speech in which he appeared to explicitly encourage the Capitol riots in January 2021.\n\nThe controversy surrounding what the BBC has called an \"error of judgement\" led Director General Tim Davie and CEO of News Deborah Turness to resign on Sunday.\n\nThe episode of the flagship current affairs programme \"Panorama\" showed a spliced-together clip from a January 2021 speech in which Trump claimed the 2020 presidential election had been rigged.\n\nTrump is shown saying, \"We're going to walk down to the Capitol and I'll be there with you. And we fight. We fight like hell.\"\n\nTrump used the phrase \"fight like hell\" toward the end of the speech, but without referring to the Capitol.\n\n\"We fight like hell. And if you don't fight like hell, you're not going to have a country anymore,\" Trump said.\n\nThe hour-long documentary, entitled Trump: A Second Chance?, was broadcast days before the 2024 US presidential election.\n\nIt spliced together three quotes from two sections of the 2021 speech, delivered almost an hour apart, into what appeared to be one quote.\n\nAmong the parts cut out was a section where Trump said he wanted supporters to demonstrate peacefully.\n\nIn a letter to the UK parliament's culture, media and sport committee, BBC chairman Samir Shah said the purpose of editing Trump's words was \"to convey the message of the speech\" so viewers could understand how Trump's supporters received it and what was happening on the ground.\n\nHe said the programme had not attracted \"significant audience feedback\" when it first aired but had drawn more than 500 complaints since a dossier on standards and guidelines was made public.\n\nShah said the BBC has received communication from Trump and is \"considering how to reply.\"\n\nIn a resignation letter to staff, Davie said: \"There have been some mistakes made and as director-general I have to take ultimate responsibility.\"\n\nTurness said the controversy was damaging the BBC and she quit \"because the buck stops with me.\"\n\nTurness defended the organisation's journalists against allegations of bias.\n\n\"Our journalists are hardworking people who strive for impartiality, and I will stand by their journalism,\" she said Monday. \"There is no institutional bias. Mistakes are made but there\u2019s no institutional bias.\"\n\nTrump posted a link to a Daily Telegraph story about the speech-editing on his Truth Social network, thanking the newspaper \"for exposing these corrupt 'journalists'. These are very dishonest people who tried to step on the scales of a presidential election.\"\n\nNational institution\n\nThe 103-year-old BBC faces greater scrutiny than other broadcasters and criticism from its commercial rivals because of its status as a national public service funded through an annual licence fee of \u00a3174.50 (\u20ac198.72) paid by all households that watch live TV or any BBC content.\n\nThe broadcaster is bound by the terms of its charter to be impartial and critics are quick to point out when they think it has failed.\n\nIt is frequently a political football, with conservatives seeing a leftist slant in its news output and some liberals accusing it of having a conservative bias.\n\nIt has also been criticised from all angles over its coverage of the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza.\n\nIn February, the BBC removed a\u00a0documentary about the Strip\u00a0from its streaming service after it emerged that the child narrator was the son of an official in the Hamas-led government.\n\nGovernments of both left and right have long been accused of meddling with the broadcaster, which is overseen by a board that includes both BBC nominees and government appointees.\n\nSome defenders of the BBC allege that members of the board appointed under previous Conservative governments have been undermining the corporation from within.\n\nUK Prime Minister Keir Starmer's spokesperson Tom Wells said the centre-left Labour Party government supports \"a strong, independent BBC\" and does not think the broadcaster is biased.\n\n\"But it is important that the BBC acts to maintain trust and corrects mistakes quickly when they occur,\" he said.\n\n","htmlText":"<p>The BBC confirmed on Monday that it has received a letter from US President Donald Trump threatening legal action after the broadcaster aired an edited speech in which he appeared to explicitly encourage the Capitol riots in January 2021.<\/p>\n<p>The controversy surrounding what the BBC has called an \"error of judgement\" led Director General Tim Davie and CEO of News Deborah Turness to resign on Sunday.<\/p>\n<p>The episode of the flagship current affairs programme \"Panorama\" showed a spliced-together clip from a January 2021 speech in which Trump claimed the 2020 presidential election had been rigged.<\/p>\n<p>Trump is shown saying, \"We're going to walk down to the Capitol and I'll be there with you. And we fight. We fight like hell.\"<\/p>\n<p>Trump used the phrase \"fight like hell\" toward the end of the speech, but without referring to the Capitol.<\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-image widget--size-fullwidth widget--animation-fade-in widget--align-center\" data-ratio=\"0.666\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio--auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <img class=\"widgetImage__image\" loading=\"lazy\" src=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////images.euronews.com//articles//stories//09//54//32//89//808x539_cmsv2_9d4b88b8-26e1-5abd-84de-decace7da8a6-9543289.jpg/" alt=\"US President Donald Trump speaks during a rally protesting the Electoral College certification of Joe Biden&#x27;s win in Washington, 6 January, 2021\" srcset=\"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/384x256_cmsv2_9d4b88b8-26e1-5abd-84de-decace7da8a6-9543289.jpg 384w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/640x426_cmsv2_9d4b88b8-26e1-5abd-84de-decace7da8a6-9543289.jpg 640w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/750x500_cmsv2_9d4b88b8-26e1-5abd-84de-decace7da8a6-9543289.jpg 750w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/828x551_cmsv2_9d4b88b8-26e1-5abd-84de-decace7da8a6-9543289.jpg 828w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/1080x719_cmsv2_9d4b88b8-26e1-5abd-84de-decace7da8a6-9543289.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/1200x799_cmsv2_9d4b88b8-26e1-5abd-84de-decace7da8a6-9543289.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/1920x1279_cmsv2_9d4b88b8-26e1-5abd-84de-decace7da8a6-9543289.jpg 1920w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 95vw, (max-width: 1024px) 80vw, (max-width: 1280px) 55vw, 728px\"\/>\n <figcaption class=\"widget__caption\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionWrap\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionText\">US President Donald Trump speaks during a rally protesting the Electoral College certification of Joe Biden&#x27;s win in Washington, 6 January, 2021<\/span>\n <span class=\"widget__captionCredit\">AP Photo<\/span>\n <\/span>\n <\/figcaption>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>\"We fight like hell. And if you don't fight like hell, you're not going to have a country anymore,\" Trump said.<\/p>\n<p>The hour-long documentary, entitled Trump: A Second Chance?, was broadcast days before the 2024 US presidential election.<\/p>\n<p>It spliced together three quotes from two sections of the 2021 speech, delivered almost an hour apart, into what appeared to be one quote.<\/p>\n<p>Among the parts cut out was a section where Trump said he wanted supporters to demonstrate peacefully.<\/p>\n<p>In a letter to the UK parliament's culture, media and sport committee, BBC chairman Samir Shah said the purpose of editing Trump's words was \"to convey the message of the speech\" so viewers could understand how Trump's supporters received it and what was happening on the ground.<\/p>\n<p>He said the programme had not attracted \"significant audience feedback\" when it first aired but had drawn more than 500 complaints since a dossier on standards and guidelines was made public.<\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-tweet widget--size-fullwidth widget--align-center\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio\u2014auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <div class=\"widget__tweet\" data-tweet-id=\"1987623529177838045\"><\/div>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>Shah said the BBC has received communication from Trump and is \"considering how to reply.\"<\/p>\n<p>In a resignation letter to staff, Davie said: \"There have been some mistakes made and as director-general I have to take ultimate responsibility.\"<\/p>\n<p>Turness said the controversy was damaging the BBC and she quit \"because the buck stops with me.\"<\/p>\n<p>Turness defended the organisation's journalists against allegations of bias.<\/p>\n<p>\"Our journalists are hardworking people who strive for impartiality, and I will stand by their journalism,\" she said Monday. \"There is no institutional bias. Mistakes are made but there\u2019s no institutional bias.\"<\/p>\n<p>Trump posted a link to a Daily Telegraph story about the speech-editing on his Truth Social network, thanking the newspaper \"for exposing these corrupt 'journalists'. These are very dishonest people who tried to step on the scales of a presidential election.\"<\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-image widget--size-fullwidth widget--animation-fade-in widget--align-center\" data-ratio=\"0.6665\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio--auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <img class=\"widgetImage__image\" loading=\"lazy\" src=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////images.euronews.com//articles//stories//09//54//32//89//808x539_cmsv2_d73ba926-243c-5b03-bb85-1ce9cf32a4cd-9543289.jpg/" alt=\"Rioters loyal to President Donald Trump rally at the US. Capitol in Washington, 6 January, 2021\" srcset=\"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/384x256_cmsv2_d73ba926-243c-5b03-bb85-1ce9cf32a4cd-9543289.jpg 384w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/640x427_cmsv2_d73ba926-243c-5b03-bb85-1ce9cf32a4cd-9543289.jpg 640w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/750x500_cmsv2_d73ba926-243c-5b03-bb85-1ce9cf32a4cd-9543289.jpg 750w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/828x552_cmsv2_d73ba926-243c-5b03-bb85-1ce9cf32a4cd-9543289.jpg 828w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/1080x720_cmsv2_d73ba926-243c-5b03-bb85-1ce9cf32a4cd-9543289.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/1200x800_cmsv2_d73ba926-243c-5b03-bb85-1ce9cf32a4cd-9543289.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/1920x1280_cmsv2_d73ba926-243c-5b03-bb85-1ce9cf32a4cd-9543289.jpg 1920w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 95vw, (max-width: 1024px) 80vw, (max-width: 1280px) 55vw, 728px\"\/>\n <figcaption class=\"widget__caption\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionWrap\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionText\">Rioters loyal to President Donald Trump rally at the US. Capitol in Washington, 6 January, 2021<\/span>\n <span class=\"widget__captionCredit\">AP Photo<\/span>\n <\/span>\n <\/figcaption>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<h2><strong>National institution<\/strong><\/h2>\n<p>The 103-year-old BBC faces greater scrutiny than other broadcasters and criticism from its commercial rivals because of its status as a national public service funded through an annual licence fee of \u00a3174.50 (\u20ac198.72) paid by all households that watch live TV or any BBC content.<\/p>\n<p>The broadcaster is bound by the terms of its charter to be impartial and critics are quick to point out when they think it has failed.<\/p>\n<p>It is frequently a political football, with conservatives seeing a leftist slant in its news output and some liberals accusing it of having a conservative bias.<\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-image widget--size-fullwidth widget--animation-fade-in widget--align-center\" data-ratio=\"0.6665\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio--auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <img class=\"widgetImage__image\" loading=\"lazy\" src=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////images.euronews.com//articles//stories//09//54//32//89//808x539_cmsv2_b4d63bde-f248-5047-a4ab-45a0faa3c87e-9543289.jpg/" alt=\"People walk outside the BBC Headquarters in London, 10 November, 2025\" srcset=\"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/384x256_cmsv2_b4d63bde-f248-5047-a4ab-45a0faa3c87e-9543289.jpg 384w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/640x427_cmsv2_b4d63bde-f248-5047-a4ab-45a0faa3c87e-9543289.jpg 640w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/750x500_cmsv2_b4d63bde-f248-5047-a4ab-45a0faa3c87e-9543289.jpg 750w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/828x552_cmsv2_b4d63bde-f248-5047-a4ab-45a0faa3c87e-9543289.jpg 828w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/1080x720_cmsv2_b4d63bde-f248-5047-a4ab-45a0faa3c87e-9543289.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/1200x800_cmsv2_b4d63bde-f248-5047-a4ab-45a0faa3c87e-9543289.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/1920x1280_cmsv2_b4d63bde-f248-5047-a4ab-45a0faa3c87e-9543289.jpg 1920w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 95vw, (max-width: 1024px) 80vw, (max-width: 1280px) 55vw, 728px\"\/>\n <figcaption class=\"widget__caption\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionWrap\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionText\">People walk outside the BBC Headquarters in London, 10 November, 2025<\/span>\n <span class=\"widget__captionCredit\">AP Photo<\/span>\n <\/span>\n <\/figcaption>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>It has also been criticised from all angles over its coverage of the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza.<\/p>\n<p>In February, the BBC removed a documentary about the Strip from its streaming service after it emerged that the child narrator was the son of an official in the Hamas-led government.<\/p>\n<p>Governments of both left and right have long been accused of meddling with the broadcaster, which is overseen by a board that includes both BBC nominees and government appointees.<\/p>\n<div class=\"c-widget-related\" data-stories-id=\"\" data-event=\"widget_related\">\n <div class=\"c-widget-related__title\">\n <b class=\"c-widget-related__title__text\" lang=\"en\">Related<\/b>\n <\/div>\n <ul class=\"c-widget-related__list\">\n <li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//culture//2025//02//27//celebrities-and-media-figures-criticise-bbc-for-pulling-documentary-gaza-how-to-survive-a-/">Celebrities and media figures criticise BBC for pulling documentary 'Gaza: How to Survive a War'<\/a><\/li><li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//culture//2024//12//20//why-is-the-bbc-refusing-to-play-chart-topping-anti-starmer-christmas-song/">Why is the BBC refusing to play chart-topping anti-Starmer Christmas song?<\/a><\/li>\n <\/ul>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>Some defenders of the BBC allege that members of the board appointed under previous Conservative governments have been undermining the corporation from within.<\/p>\n<p>UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer's spokesperson Tom Wells said the centre-left Labour Party government supports \"a strong, independent BBC\" and does not think the broadcaster is biased.<\/p>\n<p>\"But it is important that the BBC acts to maintain trust and corrects mistakes quickly when they occur,\" he said.<\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1762783591,"updatedAt":1762786190,"publishedAt":1762785889,"firstPublishedAt":1762785889,"lastPublishedAt":1762785889,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_bfd35373-e9d1-5ec0-88fb-bfbf55a56cd6-9543289.jpg","altText":"A man walks outside the BBC Headquarters in London, 10 November, 2025","caption":"A man walks outside the BBC Headquarters in London, 10 November, 2025","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":1620,"height":911},{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_b4d63bde-f248-5047-a4ab-45a0faa3c87e-9543289.jpg","altText":"People walk outside the BBC Headquarters in London, 10 November, 2025","caption":"People walk outside the BBC Headquarters in London, 10 November, 2025","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1333},{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_d73ba926-243c-5b03-bb85-1ce9cf32a4cd-9543289.jpg","altText":"Rioters loyal to President Donald Trump rally at the US. Capitol in Washington, 6 January, 2021","caption":"Rioters loyal to President Donald Trump rally at the US. Capitol in Washington, 6 January, 2021","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1333},{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/32\/89\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_9d4b88b8-26e1-5abd-84de-decace7da8a6-9543289.jpg","altText":"US President Donald Trump speaks during a rally protesting the Electoral College certification of Joe Biden's win in Washington, 6 January, 2021","caption":"US President Donald Trump speaks during a rally protesting the Electoral College certification of Joe Biden's win in Washington, 6 January, 2021","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1332}],"authors":{"journalists":[{"id":2972,"urlSafeValue":"blackburn","title":"Gavin Blackburn","twitter":null}],"producers":[],"videoEditor":[]},"keywords":[{"id":7800,"slug":"united-kingdom","urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","titleRaw":"United Kingdom"},{"id":21416,"slug":"bbc","urlSafeValue":"bbc","title":"BBC","titleRaw":"BBC"},{"id":11900,"slug":"donald-trump","urlSafeValue":"donald-trump","title":"Donald Trump","titleRaw":"Donald Trump"},{"id":24660,"slug":"capitol-riots","urlSafeValue":"capitol-riots","title":"Capitol Riots","titleRaw":"Capitol Riots"}],"widgets":[{"slug":"image","count":3},{"slug":"twitter","count":1},{"slug":"related","count":1}],"related":[{"id":2846486},{"id":2847979},{"id":2854867}],"technicalTags":[],"externalPartners":[],"hasExternalVideo":0,"hasInternalOrExternalVideo":0,"video":0,"videos":[],"liveStream":[{"startDate":0,"endDate":0}],"scribbleLiveId":0,"scribbleLiveRibbon":0,"isLiveCoverage":0,"sourceId":1,"sources":[],"externalSource":null,"additionalSources":"AP","additionalReporting":"","freeField1":null,"freeField2":"","type":"normal","displayType":"default","program":{"id":"world","urlSafeValue":"world","title":"World News","online":1,"url":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/programs\/world"},"season":"","episode":"","episodeId":"","vertical":"news","verticals":[{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"}],"primaryVertical":{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"},"themes":[{"id":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World","url":"\/news\/international"}],"primaryTheme":{"id":1,"urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World"},"advertising":0,"advertisingData":{"startDate":0,"endDate":0,"type":null,"slug":null,"title":null,"disclaimerLabelKey":null,"sponsor":null,"sponsorName":null,"sponsorUrl":null,"sponsorLogo":"","sponsorLogoReverse":"","isDfp":0},"geoLocation":{"lat":0,"lon":0},"location":1,"continent":{"id":104,"urlSafeValue":"europe","title":"Europe"},"country":{"id":291,"urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","url":"\/news\/europe\/united-kingdom"},"town":{"id":3438,"urlSafeValue":"london","title":"London"},"contextualSignals":{"doubleVerify":{"ids":[],"slugs":[]}},"grapeshot":null,"versions":[],"programDeliverable":{"slug":"article-video","format":"default"},"showOpinionDisclaimer":0,"allViews":0,"allViewsMeta":{"pointOfView":[],"survey":[],"tweetId":0,"tweet2NdId":0,"displayOverlay":0},"storyTranslationMethod":[],"localisation":[],"autoPublished":0,"autoLocalised":0,"isReviewed":0,"path":"\/2025\/11\/10\/bbc-receives-letter-from-donald-trump-threatening-legal-action-over-edited-speech","lastModified":1762785889},{"id":2845348,"cid":9543008,"versionId":2,"archive":0,"housenumber":null,"owner":"euronews","isMagazine":0,"isBreakingNews":0,"daletEventName":"HEALTH REMOTE SURGERY","daletPyramidId":3257685,"channels":[{"id":1},{"id":2},{"id":3},{"id":4},{"id":5},{"id":10},{"id":12},{"id":14}],"status":2,"title":"In world-first, UK and US surgeons perform remote stroke operation from across the Atlantic","titleSeo":null,"titleListing1":"In world-first, UK and US surgeons perform remote stroke operation","titleListing2":"In world-first, UK and US surgeons perform remote stroke operation from across the Atlantic","leadin":"The doctors said the successful demonstration indicates that many more stroke patients could benefit from the potentially life-saving surgery.","summary":"The doctors said the successful demonstration indicates that many more stroke patients could benefit from the potentially life-saving surgery.","keySentence":"","url":"in-world-first-uk-and-us-surgeons-perform-remote-stroke-operation-from-across-the-atlantic","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/health\/2025\/11\/10\/in-world-first-uk-and-us-surgeons-perform-remote-stroke-operation-from-across-the-atlantic","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"Surgeons in the United Kingdom and the United States have performed what are thought to be the world\u2019s first remote-controlled stroke surgeries.\n\nOperating from Dundee, Scotland, Dr Iris Grunwald performed the remote thrombectomy \u2013 the removal of blood clots from the brain to restore blood flow \u2013 on a human cadaver located across town.\n\nMeanwhile in Florida, Dr Ricardo Hanel used the robotic device to operate on the body from across the Atlantic Ocean, some 6,500 kilometres from Dundee.\n\n\u201cWhat amazed me most was how tactile the experience was,\u201d Grunwald said in a statement. \u201cMy hands felt exactly as they usually would if I had been doing a conventional thrombectomy\u201d.\n\nThe demonstrations were done using a robotic system from Sentante, a Lithuanian firm. The company said their success indicates the tool could help improve outcomes for stroke patients by making thrombectomies more accessible in remote areas that lack specialists.\n\nSentante said that in Scotland, just 212 patients underwent the procedure last year, representing 2.2 per cent of people who had an ischaemic stroke, which occurs when a blood clot blocks a blood vessel in the brain.\n\nIschaemic strokes are medical emergencies. Globally, they kill an estimated 3.3 million people annually, according to the World Stroke Organization.\n\n\u201cFor an ischaemic stroke, the difference between walking out of hospital and a lifetime of disability can be just two to three hours,\u201d Edvardas Satkauskas, the company\u2019s chief executive, said in a statement.\n\n\u201cToday, patients are often transported long distances to reach one of a limited number of thrombectomy centres,\u201d he added.\n\nSentante\u2019s system connects standard laboratory equipment to a device that captures the hand movements of far-away surgeons who \u201coperate\u201d with the aid of X-ray images on highly detailed screens.\n\nThe movements are replicated in real time by a robot at the patient\u2019s bedside, the company said.\n\nIn Florida, Hanel said the successful demonstration indicates that many more stroke patients could benefit from the potentially life-saving surgery.\n\n\u201cTo operate from the US to Scotland with a 120 millisecond (blink of an eye) lag is truly remarkable,\u201d Hanel said.\n\n","htmlText":"<p>Surgeons in the United Kingdom and the United States have performed what are thought to be the world\u2019s first remote-controlled stroke surgeries.<\/p>\n<p>Operating from Dundee, Scotland, Dr Iris Grunwald performed the remote thrombectomy \u2013 the removal of blood clots from the brain to restore blood flow \u2013 on a human cadaver located across town.<\/p>\n<p>Meanwhile in Florida, Dr Ricardo Hanel used the robotic device to operate on the body from across the Atlantic Ocean, some 6,500 kilometres from Dundee.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWhat amazed me most was how tactile the experience was,\u201d Grunwald said in a statement. \u201cMy hands felt exactly as they usually would if I had been doing a conventional thrombectomy\u201d.<\/p>\n<p>The demonstrations were done using a robotic system from Sentante, a Lithuanian firm. The company said their success indicates the tool could help improve outcomes for stroke patients by making thrombectomies more accessible in remote areas that lack specialists.<\/p>\n<p>Sentante said that in Scotland, just 212 patients underwent the procedure last year, representing 2.2 per cent of people who had an ischaemic stroke, which occurs when a blood clot blocks a blood vessel in the brain.<\/p>\n<div class=\"c-widget-related\" data-stories-id=\"\" data-event=\"widget_related\">\n <div class=\"c-widget-related__title\">\n <b class=\"c-widget-related__title__text\" lang=\"en\">Related<\/b>\n <\/div>\n <ul class=\"c-widget-related__list\">\n <li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//health//2025//10//21//uk-woman-plays-clarinet-during-brain-surgery-to-alleviate-parkinsons-symptoms/">UK woman plays clarinet during brain surgery to alleviate Parkinson's symptoms<\/a><\/li>\n <\/ul>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>Ischaemic strokes are medical emergencies. Globally, they kill an estimated 3.3 million people annually, according to the World Stroke Organization.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cFor an ischaemic stroke, the difference between walking out of hospital and a lifetime of disability can be just two to three hours,\u201d Edvardas Satkauskas, the company\u2019s chief executive, said in a statement.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cToday, patients are often transported long distances to reach one of a limited number of thrombectomy centres,\u201d he added.<\/p>\n<p>Sentante\u2019s system connects standard laboratory equipment to a device that captures the hand movements of far-away surgeons who \u201coperate\u201d with the aid of X-ray images on highly detailed screens.<\/p>\n<p>The movements are replicated in real time by a robot at the patient\u2019s bedside, the company said.<\/p>\n<p>In Florida, Hanel said the successful demonstration indicates that many more stroke patients could benefit from the potentially life-saving surgery.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cTo operate from the US to Scotland with a 120 millisecond (blink of an eye) lag is truly remarkable,\u201d Hanel said.<\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1762773363,"updatedAt":1762785405,"publishedAt":1762776828,"firstPublishedAt":1762776828,"lastPublishedAt":1762785404,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/30\/08\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_8bd1b548-e5d8-52cd-9aae-4dcc8d8ac6c2-9543008.jpg","altText":"The procedure is shown.","caption":"The procedure is shown.","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"University of Dundee","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":1600,"height":900}],"authors":{"journalists":[{"id":3108,"urlSafeValue":"galvin","title":"Gabriela Galvin","twitter":"@mg_galvin"}],"producers":[],"videoEditor":[]},"keywords":[{"id":12978,"slug":"surgery","urlSafeValue":"surgery","title":"Surgery","titleRaw":"Surgery"},{"id":19904,"slug":"heart-diseases","urlSafeValue":"heart-diseases","title":"heart diseases","titleRaw":"heart diseases"},{"id":139,"slug":"health","urlSafeValue":"health","title":"Health","titleRaw":"Health"},{"id":13346,"slug":"health-care","urlSafeValue":"health-care","title":"healthcare","titleRaw":"healthcare"}],"widgets":[{"slug":"related","count":1}],"related":[{"id":2843858}],"technicalTags":[],"externalPartners":[],"hasExternalVideo":0,"hasInternalOrExternalVideo":0,"video":0,"videos":[],"liveStream":[{"startDate":0,"endDate":0}],"scribbleLiveId":0,"scribbleLiveRibbon":0,"isLiveCoverage":0,"sourceId":1,"sources":[],"externalSource":null,"additionalSources":null,"additionalReporting":null,"freeField1":null,"freeField2":"","type":"normal","displayType":"default","program":{"id":"healthcare","urlSafeValue":"healthcare","title":"Healthcare","online":0,"url":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/health\/healthcare\/healthcare"},"season":"","episode":"","episodeId":"","vertical":"health","verticals":[{"id":12,"slug":"health","urlSafeValue":"health","title":"Health"}],"primaryVertical":{"id":12,"slug":"health","urlSafeValue":"health","title":"Health"},"themes":[{"id":"healthcare","urlSafeValue":"healthcare","title":"Healthcare","url":"\/health\/healthcare"}],"primaryTheme":{"id":78,"urlSafeValue":"healthcare","title":"Healthcare"},"advertising":0,"advertisingData":{"startDate":0,"endDate":0,"type":null,"slug":null,"title":null,"disclaimerLabelKey":null,"sponsor":null,"sponsorName":null,"sponsorUrl":null,"sponsorLogo":"","sponsorLogoReverse":"","isDfp":0},"geoLocation":{"lat":0,"lon":0},"location":1,"continent":{"id":104,"urlSafeValue":"europe","title":"Europe"},"country":{"id":291,"urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","url":"\/news\/europe\/united-kingdom"},"town":[],"contextualSignals":{"doubleVerify":{"ids":[],"slugs":[]}},"grapeshot":null,"versions":[],"programDeliverable":{"slug":"article","format":"default"},"showOpinionDisclaimer":0,"allViews":0,"allViewsMeta":{"pointOfView":[],"survey":[],"tweetId":0,"tweet2NdId":0,"displayOverlay":0},"storyTranslationMethod":[],"localisation":[],"autoPublished":0,"autoLocalised":0,"isReviewed":0,"path":"\/health\/2025\/11\/10\/in-world-first-uk-and-us-surgeons-perform-remote-stroke-operation-from-across-the-atlantic","lastModified":1762785404},{"id":2845378,"cid":9542957,"versionId":2,"archive":0,"housenumber":null,"owner":"euronews","isMagazine":0,"isBreakingNews":0,"daletEventName":"NC3 UK REMEMBRANCE SUNDAY","daletPyramidId":3257297,"channels":[{"id":1},{"id":2},{"id":4},{"id":5},{"id":10},{"id":12},{"id":14}],"status":2,"title":"King Charles III and Prince William honour war dead in London ceremony","titleSeo":null,"titleListing1":"King Charles III and Prince William honour war dead in London ceremony","titleListing2":"King Charles III and Prince William honour war dead in London ceremony","leadin":"King Charles III led a remembrance ceremony in London, honouring war dead with a two-minute silence and placing a wreath at the Cenotaph. Thousands attended.","summary":"King Charles III led a remembrance ceremony in London, honouring war dead with a two-minute silence and placing a wreath at the Cenotaph. Thousands attended.","keySentence":"","url":"king-charles-iii-and-prince-william-honor-war-dead-in-london-ceremony","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/2025\/11\/10\/king-charles-iii-and-prince-william-honor-war-dead-in-london-ceremony","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"Thousands gathered in London on Sunday as King Charles III led Britain\u2019s annual ceremony of remembrance for the nation\u2019s war dead.\n\nAt 11 am, Big Ben tolled and the crowd fell silent for two minutes, broken only by an artillery blast and the haunting notes of The Last Post.\n\nThe 76-year-old king, dressed in an army field marshal\u2019s uniform, laid a wreath of red poppies at the Cenotaph near Parliament, joined by Prince William and other members of the royal family. UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Commonwealth diplomats followed.\n\nQueen Camilla and the Princess of Wales watched from a balcony as veterans and citizens stood shoulder to shoulder across Britain to honour those who served.\n\n","htmlText":"<p>Thousands gathered in London on Sunday as King Charles III led Britain\u2019s annual ceremony of remembrance for the nation\u2019s war dead.<\/p>\n<p>At 11 am, Big Ben tolled and the crowd fell silent for two minutes, broken only by an artillery blast and the haunting notes of The Last Post.<\/p>\n<p>The 76-year-old king, dressed in an army field marshal\u2019s uniform, laid a wreath of red poppies at the Cenotaph near Parliament, joined by Prince William and other members of the royal family. UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Commonwealth diplomats followed.<\/p>\n<p>Queen Camilla and the Princess of Wales watched from a balcony as veterans and citizens stood shoulder to shoulder across Britain to honour those who served.<\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1762771445,"updatedAt":1762780765,"publishedAt":1762776507,"firstPublishedAt":1762776507,"lastPublishedAt":1762780764,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/29\/57\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_550ec398-3163-551b-8221-da5ca2d4943f-9542957.jpg","altText":"Britain's King Charles, centre, Britain's Prince William, attend the annual Remembrance Sunday ceremony at the Cenotaph on Whitehall in London, Sunday Nov. 9, 2025. ","caption":"Britain's King Charles, centre, Britain's Prince William, attend the annual Remembrance Sunday ceremony at the Cenotaph on Whitehall in London, Sunday Nov. 9, 2025. ","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo Toby Melville","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1125}],"authors":{"journalists":[{"id":2134,"urlSafeValue":"mauduit","title":"Frederique Mauduit","twitter":null}],"producers":[],"videoEditor":[{"id":2134,"urlSafeValue":"mauduit","title":"Frederique Mauduit","twitter":null}]},"keywords":[{"id":27386,"slug":"king-charles","urlSafeValue":"king-charles","title":"King Charles III","titleRaw":"King Charles III"},{"id":9527,"slug":"prince-william-duke-of-cambridge","urlSafeValue":"prince-william-duke-of-cambridge","title":"Prince William, Duke of Cambridge","titleRaw":"Prince William, Duke of Cambridge"},{"id":7800,"slug":"united-kingdom","urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","titleRaw":"United Kingdom"}],"widgets":[],"related":[{"id":2844379},{"id":2845729},{"id":2845970}],"technicalTags":[],"externalPartners":{"youtubeId":"WgH_5Z9UO1U","dailymotionId":"x9tjd2a"},"hasExternalVideo":1,"hasInternalOrExternalVideo":1,"video":1,"videos":[{"format":"mp4","quality":"md","type":"normal","url":"https:\/\/video.euronews.com\/mp4\/ED\/28\/91\/28\/05\/ED_PYR_2891285_20251110115559.mp4","editor":"","duration":60000,"filesizeBytes":12006841,"expiresAt":0},{"format":"mp4","quality":"hd","type":"normal","url":"https:\/\/video.euronews.com\/mp4\/SHD\/28\/91\/28\/05\/SHD_PYR_2891285_20251110115559.mp4","editor":"","duration":60000,"filesizeBytes":16908842,"expiresAt":0},{"format":"mp4","quality":"1080p","type":"normal","url":"https:\/\/video.euronews.com\/mp4\/FHD\/28\/91\/28\/05\/FHD_PYR_2891285_20251110115559.mp4","editor":"","duration":60000,"filesizeBytes":48859382,"expiresAt":0}],"liveStream":[{"startDate":0,"endDate":0}],"scribbleLiveId":0,"scribbleLiveRibbon":0,"isLiveCoverage":0,"sourceId":1,"sources":[],"externalSource":"AP","additionalSources":"","additionalReporting":"","freeField1":null,"freeField2":"","type":"normal","displayType":"default","program":{"id":"nocomment","urlSafeValue":"nocomment","title":"No Comment","online":1,"url":"\/nocomment"},"season":"","episode":"","episodeId":"","vertical":"news","verticals":[{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"}],"primaryVertical":{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"},"themes":[{"id":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World","url":"\/news\/international"}],"primaryTheme":{"id":1,"urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World"},"advertising":0,"advertisingData":{"startDate":0,"endDate":0,"type":null,"slug":null,"title":null,"disclaimerLabelKey":null,"sponsor":null,"sponsorName":null,"sponsorUrl":null,"sponsorLogo":"","sponsorLogoReverse":"","isDfp":0},"geoLocation":{"lat":0,"lon":0},"location":1,"continent":{"id":104,"urlSafeValue":"europe","title":"Europe"},"country":{"id":291,"urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","url":"\/news\/europe\/united-kingdom"},"town":{"id":3438,"urlSafeValue":"london","title":"London"},"contextualSignals":{"doubleVerify":{"ids":[],"slugs":[]}},"grapeshot":null,"versions":[],"programDeliverable":{"slug":"article-video","format":"default"},"showOpinionDisclaimer":0,"allViews":0,"allViewsMeta":{"pointOfView":[],"survey":[],"tweetId":0,"tweet2NdId":0,"displayOverlay":0},"storyTranslationMethod":[],"localisation":[],"autoPublished":0,"autoLocalised":0,"isReviewed":0,"path":"\/video\/2025\/11\/10\/king-charles-iii-and-prince-william-honor-war-dead-in-london-ceremony","lastModified":1762780764},{"id":2843954,"cid":9536700,"versionId":1,"archive":0,"housenumber":null,"owner":"euronews","isMagazine":0,"isBreakingNews":0,"daletEventName":"uk dress code","daletPyramidId":3204548,"channels":[{"id":1},{"id":2},{"id":3},{"id":4},{"id":5},{"id":10},{"id":12},{"id":14}],"status":2,"title":"Casual is the new corporate: UK offices redefine workwear norms","titleSeo":null,"titleListing1":"Casual is the new corporate: UK offices redefine workwear norms","titleListing2":"","leadin":"Mentions of casual dress in UK job postings surged during the pandemic and have remained high ever since. As hybrid work takes hold and younger generations reshape office culture, are ties and heels relics of the past?","summary":"Mentions of casual dress in UK job postings surged during the pandemic and have remained high ever since. As hybrid work takes hold and younger generations reshape office culture, are ties and heels relics of the past?","keySentence":"","url":"casual-is-the-new-corporate-uk-offices-redefine-workwear-norms","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/business\/2025\/11\/08\/casual-is-the-new-corporate-uk-offices-redefine-workwear-norms","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"Workwear is changing across many parts of the world. Such a shift was accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic, as many of us swapped our office attire for tracksuits and slippers.\n\nData from global hiring platform Indeed shows that the UK isn't immune to this shift in attitudes. The traditional suit and tie are no longer in style, as many employers move towards more relaxed dress codes. Aside from COVID-19, driving factors include the increasing share of Gen Z and millennials in the workforce, as well as the influence of the tech industry on other occupations.\n\nIn July 2025, 3.3% of UK job postings referenced casual dress, more than ten times higher than pre-pandemic figures.\u00a0Commonly used phrases include 'smart casual' or 'dress for your day'. Mentions rose sharply early in the pandemic, eventually peaking at around 4.0% in early 2023.\n\nBefore the pandemic, references to casual dress were present in less than 1% of job listings, and in the first half of 2019, it remained at just 0.2%. Since May 2021, however, it has never fallen below 3%.\n\n\u201cThe pandemic triggered widespread changes in how people in the UK work, impacting expectations around where and how we work, but also what we wear,\u201d noted a blog post written by Indeed economists Callam Pickering and Jack Kennedy.\n\n\u201cFor employers, a relaxed dress policy can say a lot about workplace culture. And in a competitive hiring landscape, offering flexibility, even in attire, can help attract top talent,\u201d they continued.\n\nDr. Abbey Bartosiak-Ison, consumer science & analytics professional, emphasised that before the pandemic, many companies were more heavily focused on profit, often putting wellbeing second.\n\n\u201cDuring the pandemic, the focus shifted dramatically; it had to. With widespread uncertainty and heightened anxiety, employees working from home prioritised health, family, and productivity over appearance,\u201d she told Euronews Business.\n\nA longer-lasting trend\n\nCallam Pickering and Jack Kennedy suggested that while the pandemic helped drive this shift in workplace dress standards, it continues to be supported by wider social and cultural changes.\n\nFor instance, millennials and Gen Z are soon to be the two largest generations in the workforce, and many of them now hold positions of power or influence. Compared to their older colleagues, they are more likely to favour a relaxed dress code. Added to this, tech culture, long resistant to traditional office norms, is influencing other industries. Silicon Valley has long been known for its hoodies and trainers \u2014 prioritising creativity and a comfortable work environment over tradition.\n\nCasual dress most common in care, marketing and media roles\n\nFrom 2020 to 2023, job postings that offered at least 20% remote work were more likely to mention casual dress.\n\nAnd in 2025, expectations around professional attire are still heavily influenced by profession. Personal care and home health, marketing, media and communications, and education and training are all sectors that have high rates of postings mentioning casual dress.\n\nAttitudes around workwear are also influenced by region.\n\nNorthern Ireland recorded the highest share of job postings mentioning casual dress, followed by North West England and the East Midlands. London had the lowest share at just 2.3%, with Scotland slightly higher.\n\nIndeed economists noted that London\u2019s lower rate may reflect its job mix. Many roles are in financial services, where formal dress is still expected. In tech, casual dress is so common that it\u2019s rarely mentioned in postings.\n\n","htmlText":"<p>Workwear is changing across many parts of the world. Such a shift was accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic, as many of us swapped our office attire for tracksuits and slippers.<\/p>\n<p>Data from global hiring platform Indeed shows that the UK isn't immune to this shift in attitudes. The traditional suit and tie are no longer in style, as many employers move towards more relaxed dress codes. Aside from COVID-19, driving factors include the increasing share of Gen Z and millennials in the workforce, as well as the influence of the tech industry on other occupations.<\/p>\n<p>In July 2025, 3.3% of UK job postings referenced casual dress, more than ten times higher than pre-pandemic figures. Commonly used phrases include 'smart casual' or 'dress for your day'. Mentions rose sharply early in the pandemic, eventually peaking at around 4.0% in early 2023.<\/p>\n<p>Before the pandemic, references to casual dress were present in less than 1% of job listings, and in the first half of 2019, it remained at just 0.2%. Since May 2021, however, it has never fallen below 3%.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThe pandemic triggered widespread changes in how people in the UK work, impacting expectations around where and how we work, but also what we wear,\u201d noted a blog post written by Indeed economists Callam Pickering and Jack Kennedy.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cFor employers, a relaxed dress policy can say a lot about workplace culture. And in a competitive hiring landscape, offering flexibility, even in attire, can help attract top talent,\u201d they continued.<\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-flourish widget--size-fullwidth widget--align-center\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <div class=\"flourish-embed flourish-chart u-min-height-375\" data-src=\"visualisation\/25962269?92060\"><\/div>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>Dr. Abbey Bartosiak-Ison, consumer science &amp; analytics professional, emphasised that before the pandemic, many companies were more heavily focused on profit, often putting wellbeing second.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cDuring the pandemic, the focus shifted dramatically; it had to. With widespread uncertainty and heightened anxiety, employees working from home prioritised health, family, and productivity over appearance,\u201d she told Euronews Business.<\/p>\n<h2>A longer-lasting trend<\/h2>\n<p>Callam Pickering and Jack Kennedy suggested that while the pandemic helped drive this shift in workplace dress standards, it continues to be supported by wider social and cultural changes.<\/p>\n<p>For instance, millennials and Gen Z are soon to be the two largest generations in the workforce, and many of them now hold positions of power or influence. Compared to their older colleagues, they are more likely to favour a relaxed dress code. Added to this, tech culture, long resistant to traditional office norms, is influencing other industries. Silicon Valley has long been known for its hoodies and trainers \u2014 prioritising creativity and a comfortable work environment over tradition.<\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-flourish widget--size-fullwidth widget--align-center\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <div class=\"flourish-embed flourish-chart u-min-height-375\" data-src=\"visualisation\/25962350?92060\"><\/div>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<h2>Casual dress most common in care, marketing and media roles<\/h2>\n<p>From 2020 to 2023, job postings that offered at least 20% remote work were more likely to mention casual dress.<\/p>\n<p>And in 2025, expectations around professional attire are still heavily influenced by profession. Personal care and home health, marketing, media and communications, and education and training are all sectors that have high rates of postings mentioning casual dress.<\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-flourish widget--size-fullwidth widget--align-center\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <div class=\"flourish-embed flourish-chart u-min-height-375\" data-src=\"visualisation\/26030099?92060\"><\/div>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>Attitudes around workwear are also influenced by region. <\/p>\n<p>Northern Ireland recorded the highest share of job postings mentioning casual dress, followed by North West England and the East Midlands. London had the lowest share at just 2.3%, with Scotland slightly higher.<\/p>\n<p>Indeed economists noted that London\u2019s lower rate may reflect its job mix. Many roles are in financial services, where formal dress is still expected. In tech, casual dress is so common that it\u2019s rarely mentioned in postings.<\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1762271259,"updatedAt":1762593062,"publishedAt":1762581641,"firstPublishedAt":1762581641,"lastPublishedAt":1762581655,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/67\/00\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_644b167d-989b-5f1a-8e43-9550640c48a7-9536700.jpg","altText":" Casual is the new corporate:","caption":" Casual is the new corporate:","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"Copyright 2017 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1333}],"authors":{"journalists":[{"id":1644,"urlSafeValue":"yanatma","title":"Servet Yanatma","twitter":null}],"producers":[],"videoEditor":[]},"keywords":[{"id":7800,"slug":"united-kingdom","urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","titleRaw":"United Kingdom"},{"id":24504,"slug":"remote-working","urlSafeValue":"remote-working","title":"remote working","titleRaw":"remote working"},{"id":20078,"slug":"hybrid","urlSafeValue":"hybrid","title":"hybrid","titleRaw":"hybrid"},{"id":20098,"slug":"dress","urlSafeValue":"dress","title":"Dress","titleRaw":"Dress"}],"widgets":[{"slug":"flourish","count":3}],"related":[{"id":2809550},{"id":2835423},{"id":2798344}],"technicalTags":[],"externalPartners":[],"hasExternalVideo":0,"hasInternalOrExternalVideo":0,"video":0,"videos":[],"liveStream":[{"startDate":0,"endDate":0}],"scribbleLiveId":0,"scribbleLiveRibbon":0,"isLiveCoverage":0,"sourceId":1,"sources":[],"externalSource":null,"additionalSources":null,"additionalReporting":null,"freeField1":null,"freeField2":"","type":"normal","displayType":"default","program":{"id":"business","urlSafeValue":"business","title":"Business","online":0,"url":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/business\/business\/business"},"season":"","episode":"","episodeId":"","vertical":"business","verticals":[{"id":11,"slug":"business","urlSafeValue":"business","title":"Business"}],"primaryVertical":{"id":11,"slug":"business","urlSafeValue":"business","title":"Business"},"themes":[{"id":"business","urlSafeValue":"business","title":"Business","url":"\/business\/business"}],"primaryTheme":{"id":7,"urlSafeValue":"business","title":"Business"},"advertising":0,"advertisingData":{"startDate":0,"endDate":0,"type":null,"slug":null,"title":null,"disclaimerLabelKey":null,"sponsor":null,"sponsorName":null,"sponsorUrl":null,"sponsorLogo":"","sponsorLogoReverse":"","isDfp":0},"geoLocation":{"lat":0,"lon":0},"location":1,"continent":{"id":104,"urlSafeValue":"europe","title":"Europe"},"country":{"id":291,"urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","url":"\/news\/europe\/united-kingdom"},"town":[],"contextualSignals":{"doubleVerify":{"ids":[],"slugs":[]}},"grapeshot":null,"versions":[],"programDeliverable":{"slug":"article","format":"default"},"showOpinionDisclaimer":0,"allViews":0,"allViewsMeta":{"pointOfView":[],"survey":[],"tweetId":0,"tweet2NdId":0,"displayOverlay":0},"storyTranslationMethod":[],"localisation":[],"autoPublished":0,"autoLocalised":0,"isReviewed":0,"path":"\/business\/2025\/11\/08\/casual-is-the-new-corporate-uk-offices-redefine-workwear-norms","lastModified":1762581655},{"id":2844804,"cid":9540763,"versionId":1,"archive":0,"housenumber":null,"owner":"euronews","isMagazine":0,"isBreakingNews":0,"daletEventName":"UK RUSSIA JAMES BOND PRISON","daletPyramidId":3238221,"channels":[{"id":1},{"id":2},{"id":3},{"id":4},{"id":5},{"id":10},{"id":12},{"id":14}],"status":2,"title":"UK court jails James Bond fantasist for seven years for attempting to spy for Russia","titleSeo":null,"titleListing1":"UK court jails James Bond fantasist for attempting to spy for Russia","titleListing2":"James Bond fantasist jailed for seven years in UK for trying to spy for Russia","leadin":"Bethan David, head of the Crown Prosecution Service\u2019s Counter Terrorism Division, said the conviction sends \"a clear message to anyone considering spying for or assisting Russia.\"","summary":"Bethan David, head of the Crown Prosecution Service\u2019s Counter Terrorism Division, said the conviction sends \"a clear message to anyone considering spying for or assisting Russia.\"","keySentence":"","url":"uk-court-jails-james-bond-fantasist-for-seven-years-for-attempting-to-spy-for-russia","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/2025\/11\/07\/uk-court-jails-james-bond-fantasist-for-seven-years-for-attempting-to-spy-for-russia","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"A British man who would \"dream about being like James Bond\" was jailed for seven years on Friday after\u00a0attempting to spy for Russia.\n\nHoward Phillips, 65, was found guilty in July for trying to pass information about former Defence Secretary Grant Shapps to two men whom he believed were Russian intelligence agents.\n\nHowever, the agents were undercover British intelligence operatives.\n\n\"You were prepared to betray your country for money,\" Justice Bobbie Cheema-Grubb told Phillips at his sentencing hearing at Winchester Crown Court.\n\nThe judge said that Phillips had \"a personality with narcissistic tendencies and an overblown sense of his own importance.\"\n\nThe trial heard that Phillips intended to assist Russian agents between the end of 2023 and May 2024.\n\nShapps served as UK defence secretary between August 2023 and July 2024, when his Conservative Party was ousted from power, and he lost his seat in Parliament at the general election.\n\nSpecifically, the trial heard how Phillips had tried to hand over Shapps' contact details as well as the location where he kept his private plane to \"facilitate the Russians in listening on British defence plans.\"\n\nThe defendant's ex-wife told the court that Phillips \"would dream about being like James Bond,\" and watched films about the British secret services because he was \"infatuated with it.\"\n\nIn a victim impact statement read to the court, Shapps expressed his shock at learning of Phillips' activities. He recalled going to dinner at Phillips' home in 2002.\n\n\"What is unacceptable is one individual\u2019s reckless behaviour exposing my entire family to the extremely serious risks that come from a foreign intelligence service\u2019s activities,\" he said.\n\nBethan David, head of the Crown Prosecution Service's Counter Terrorism Division, said the conviction sends \"a clear message to anyone considering spying for or assisting Russia.\"\n\n","htmlText":"<p>A British man who would \"dream about being like James Bond\" was jailed for seven years on Friday after attempting to spy for Russia.<\/p>\n<p>Howard Phillips, 65, was found guilty in July for trying to pass information about former Defence Secretary Grant Shapps to two men whom he believed were Russian intelligence agents.<\/p>\n<p>However, the agents were undercover British intelligence operatives.<\/p>\n<p>\"You were prepared to betray your country for money,\" Justice Bobbie Cheema-Grubb told Phillips at his sentencing hearing at Winchester Crown Court.<\/p>\n<p>The judge said that Phillips had \"a personality with narcissistic tendencies and an overblown sense of his own importance.\"<\/p>\n<p>The trial heard that Phillips intended to assist Russian agents between the end of 2023 and May 2024. <\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-image widget--size-fullwidth widget--animation-fade-in widget--align-center\" data-ratio=\"0.6665\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio--auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <img class=\"widgetImage__image\" loading=\"lazy\" src=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////images.euronews.com//articles//stories//09//54//07//63//808x539_cmsv2_090a98c1-f560-5f88-ab7e-3f7e87ba0d7a-9540763.jpg/" alt=\"Britain&#x27;s Defence Secretary Grant Shapps arrives in Downing Street for a cabinet meeting in London, 6 March, 2024\" srcset=\"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/07\/63\/384x256_cmsv2_090a98c1-f560-5f88-ab7e-3f7e87ba0d7a-9540763.jpg 384w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/07\/63\/640x427_cmsv2_090a98c1-f560-5f88-ab7e-3f7e87ba0d7a-9540763.jpg 640w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/07\/63\/750x500_cmsv2_090a98c1-f560-5f88-ab7e-3f7e87ba0d7a-9540763.jpg 750w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/07\/63\/828x552_cmsv2_090a98c1-f560-5f88-ab7e-3f7e87ba0d7a-9540763.jpg 828w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/07\/63\/1080x720_cmsv2_090a98c1-f560-5f88-ab7e-3f7e87ba0d7a-9540763.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/07\/63\/1200x800_cmsv2_090a98c1-f560-5f88-ab7e-3f7e87ba0d7a-9540763.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/07\/63\/1920x1280_cmsv2_090a98c1-f560-5f88-ab7e-3f7e87ba0d7a-9540763.jpg 1920w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 95vw, (max-width: 1024px) 80vw, (max-width: 1280px) 55vw, 728px\"\/>\n <figcaption class=\"widget__caption\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionWrap\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionText\">Britain&#x27;s Defence Secretary Grant Shapps arrives in Downing Street for a cabinet meeting in London, 6 March, 2024<\/span>\n <span class=\"widget__captionCredit\">AP Photo<\/span>\n <\/span>\n <\/figcaption>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>Shapps served as UK defence secretary between August 2023 and July 2024, when his Conservative Party was ousted from power, and he lost his seat in Parliament at the general election.<\/p>\n<p>Specifically, the trial heard how Phillips had tried to hand over Shapps' contact details as well as the location where he kept his private plane to \"facilitate the Russians in listening on British defence plans.\"<\/p>\n<p>The defendant's ex-wife told the court that Phillips \"would dream about being like James Bond,\" and watched films about the British secret services because he was \"infatuated with it.\"<\/p>\n<div class=\"c-widget-related\" data-stories-id=\"\" data-event=\"widget_related\">\n <div class=\"c-widget-related__title\">\n <b class=\"c-widget-related__title__text\" lang=\"en\">Related<\/b>\n <\/div>\n <ul class=\"c-widget-related__list\">\n <li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//2025//11//06//lawmakers-accuse-afd-of-spying-on-german-army-on-behalf-of-russia/">Lawmakers accuse AfD of spying on German army on behalf of Russia<\/a><\/li><li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//next//2025//11//04//ai-chatbots-are-spewing-russian-propaganda-study-finds/">AI chatbots are spewing Russian propaganda, study finds <\/a><\/li>\n <\/ul>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>In a victim impact statement read to the court, Shapps expressed his shock at learning of Phillips' activities. He recalled going to dinner at Phillips' home in 2002.<\/p>\n<p>\"What is unacceptable is one individual\u2019s reckless behaviour exposing my entire family to the extremely serious risks that come from a foreign intelligence service\u2019s activities,\" he said.<\/p>\n<p>Bethan David, head of the Crown Prosecution Service's Counter Terrorism Division, said the conviction sends \"a clear message to anyone considering spying for or assisting Russia.\"<\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1762526268,"updatedAt":1762528228,"publishedAt":1762528199,"firstPublishedAt":1762528199,"lastPublishedAt":1762528199,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/07\/63\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_ce174d8b-73af-55e6-9301-2caa5ddb24db-9540763.jpg","altText":"Daniel Craig poses for photographers upon arrival for the World premiere of the new film from the James Bond franchise 'No Time To Die' in London, 28 September, 2021","caption":"Daniel Craig poses for photographers upon arrival for the World premiere of the new film from the James Bond franchise 'No Time To Die' in London, 28 September, 2021","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":1918,"height":1079},{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/07\/63\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_090a98c1-f560-5f88-ab7e-3f7e87ba0d7a-9540763.jpg","altText":"Britain's Defence Secretary Grant Shapps arrives in Downing Street for a cabinet meeting in London, 6 March, 2024","caption":"Britain's Defence Secretary Grant Shapps arrives in Downing Street for a cabinet meeting in London, 6 March, 2024","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1333}],"authors":{"journalists":[{"id":2972,"urlSafeValue":"blackburn","title":"Gavin Blackburn","twitter":null}],"producers":[],"videoEditor":[]},"keywords":[{"id":7800,"slug":"united-kingdom","urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","titleRaw":"United Kingdom"},{"id":239,"slug":"russia","urlSafeValue":"russia","title":"Russia","titleRaw":"Russia"},{"id":8133,"slug":"espionage","urlSafeValue":"espionage","title":"Espionage","titleRaw":"Espionage"},{"id":23092,"slug":"james-bond","urlSafeValue":"james-bond","title":"James Bond","titleRaw":"James 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News","online":1,"url":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/programs\/world"},"season":"","episode":"","episodeId":"","vertical":"news","verticals":[{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"}],"primaryVertical":{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"},"themes":[{"id":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World","url":"\/news\/international"}],"primaryTheme":{"id":1,"urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World"},"advertising":0,"advertisingData":{"startDate":0,"endDate":0,"type":null,"slug":null,"title":null,"disclaimerLabelKey":null,"sponsor":null,"sponsorName":null,"sponsorUrl":null,"sponsorLogo":"","sponsorLogoReverse":"","isDfp":0},"geoLocation":{"lat":0,"lon":0},"location":1,"continent":{"id":104,"urlSafeValue":"europe","title":"Europe"},"country":{"id":291,"urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","url":"\/news\/europe\/united-kingdom"},"town":{"id":2222,"urlSafeValue":"winchester","title":"Winchester"},"contextualSignals":{"doubleVerify":{"ids":[],"slugs":[]}},"grapeshot":null,"versions":[],"programDeliverable":{"slug":"article-video","format":"default"},"showOpinionDisclaimer":0,"allViews":0,"allViewsMeta":{"pointOfView":[],"survey":[],"tweetId":0,"tweet2NdId":0,"displayOverlay":0},"storyTranslationMethod":[],"localisation":[],"autoPublished":0,"autoLocalised":0,"isReviewed":0,"path":"\/2025\/11\/07\/uk-court-jails-james-bond-fantasist-for-seven-years-for-attempting-to-spy-for-russia","lastModified":1762528199},{"id":2844697,"cid":9540096,"versionId":3,"archive":0,"housenumber":null,"owner":"euronews","isMagazine":0,"isBreakingNews":0,"daletEventName":"CULTURE GTA DELAYED AGAIN ","daletPyramidId":3233471,"channels":[{"id":1},{"id":2},{"id":5},{"id":10},{"id":12},{"id":14}],"status":2,"title":"GTA 6 release date delayed again as Rockstar Games confirms extra time needed","titleSeo":null,"titleListing1":"Grand Theft Auto VI release pushed back again till November 2026","titleListing2":"Extra time: Grand Theft Auto 6 delayed again ","leadin":"Gamers of the world will have to wait a bit longer to get their hands on Grand Theft Auto VI after its maker Rockstar Games announced another delay in its release with the popular video game now due out in November 2026.","summary":"Gamers of the world will have to wait a bit longer to get their hands on Grand Theft Auto VI after its maker Rockstar Games announced another delay in its release with the popular video game now due out in November 2026.","keySentence":"","url":"extra-time-needed-grand-theft-auto-6-delayed-again-as-rockstar-games-upsets-fans","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/culture\/2025\/11\/07\/extra-time-needed-grand-theft-auto-6-delayed-again-as-rockstar-games-upsets-fans","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"The much-hyped and eagerly awaited video game Grand Theft Auto is not going to be available for players this month as previously announced.\n\nIt's the second time its maker Rockstar Games have pushed back its release which was due for May 2026.\n\nThe game is now set to be available on 19 November 2026.\n\nOriginally, GTA 6 was due to hit shelves in the autumn of this year.\n\nIn a statement, Rockstar urged fans to be patient saying it needs more time to complete the game to meet the standards of play people have come to \"expect and deserve.\"\n\nVice, violence and thrills\n\nThe game allows users to drive, ride or roam the streets unencumbered by rules in order to steal cars and fill garages with a wealth of expensive cars, bikes and boats.\n\nAlong the way, there are quite a few police chases, races against the clock, fights, crashes and characters with language so ripe coming out of their lips there's no way they would kiss their mothers with their mouths.\n\nGrand Theft Auto 6 heads to the state of Leonida, home to the neon-soaked streets of the fictional Vice City and beyond in the biggest, most immersive evolution of the Grand Theft Auto series yet.\n\nGTA remains one of the world's most successful and popular video games since its launch 12 years ago.\n\nWith each successive blockbuster entry in the series including Grand Theft: Vice City, Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, and Grand Theft Auto IV, Grand Theft Auto has become one of the biggest selling, most critically acclaimed and influential properties in all of modern entertainment.\n\nThe most recent iteration in the series, Grand Theft Auto V, has sold more than 215 million units to date, making it the second most popular video game of all time, behind Minecraft.\n\n","htmlText":"<p>The much-hyped and eagerly awaited video game Grand Theft Auto is not going to be available for players this month as previously announced. <\/p>\n<p>It's the second time its maker Rockstar Games have pushed back its release which was due for May 2026. <\/p>\n<p>The game is now set to be available on 19 November 2026. <\/p>\n<p>Originally, GTA 6 was due to hit shelves in the autumn of this year. <\/p>\n<p>In a statement, Rockstar urged fans to be patient saying it needs more time to complete the game to meet the standards of play people have come to \"expect and deserve.\"<\/p>\n<div class=\"c-widget-related\" data-stories-id=\"\" data-event=\"widget_related\">\n <div class=\"c-widget-related__title\">\n <b class=\"c-widget-related__title__text\" lang=\"en\">Related<\/b>\n <\/div>\n <ul class=\"c-widget-related__list\">\n <li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//culture//2023//11//09//gta-6-trailer-announced-everything-we-know-so-far-about-highly-anticipated-video-game/">GTA 6 trailer announced: Everything we know so far about highly anticipated video game <\/a><\/li><li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//culture//2025//03//19//the-vatican-unveils-new-minecraft-game-for-kids-to-virtually-explore-st-peters-basilica/">The Vatican unveils new Minecraft game for kids to virtually explore St. Peter\u2019s Basilica<\/a><\/li>\n <\/ul>\n<\/div>\n\n<h2>Vice, violence and thrills<\/h2>\n<p>The game allows users to drive, ride or roam the streets unencumbered by rules in order to steal cars and fill garages with a wealth of expensive cars, bikes and boats. <\/p>\n<p>Along the way, there are quite a few police chases, races against the clock, fights, crashes and characters with language so ripe coming out of their lips there's no way they would kiss their mothers with their mouths. <\/p>\n<p>Grand Theft Auto 6 heads to the state of Leonida, home to the neon-soaked streets of the fictional Vice City and beyond in the biggest, most immersive evolution of the Grand Theft Auto series yet.<\/p>\n<p>GTA remains one of the world's most successful and popular video games since its launch 12 years ago. <\/p>\n<p>With each successive blockbuster entry in the series including Grand Theft: Vice City, Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, and Grand Theft Auto IV, Grand Theft Auto has become one of the biggest selling, most critically acclaimed and influential properties in all of modern entertainment. <\/p>\n<p>The most recent iteration in the series, Grand Theft Auto V, has sold more than 215 million units to date, making it the second most popular video game of all time, behind Minecraft.<\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1762507194,"updatedAt":1762520025,"publishedAt":1762511497,"firstPublishedAt":1762511497,"lastPublishedAt":1762520024,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/54\/00\/96\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_68a344ee-4d62-5f20-8363-be6891d28e64-9540096.jpg","altText":"Grand Theft Auto VI coming 2025 to PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X|S.","caption":"Grand Theft Auto VI coming 2025 to PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X|S.","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"Business Wire ","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":1920,"height":1080}],"authors":{"journalists":[{"id":66,"urlSafeValue":"salako","title":"Tokunbo Salako","twitter":"@Toks_Salako"}],"producers":[],"videoEditor":[]},"keywords":[{"id":22284,"slug":"gta","urlSafeValue":"gta","title":"GTA","titleRaw":"GTA"},{"id":8227,"slug":"video-games","urlSafeValue":"video-games","title":"Video Games","titleRaw":"Video Games"},{"id":28362,"slug":"gaming-industry","urlSafeValue":"gaming-industry","title":"gaming industry","titleRaw":"gaming industry"},{"id":23480,"slug":"playstation5","urlSafeValue":"playstation5","title":"PlayStation5","titleRaw":"PlayStation5"},{"id":11696,"slug":"nintendo","urlSafeValue":"nintendo","title":"Nintendo","titleRaw":"Nintendo"}],"widgets":[{"slug":"related","count":1}],"related":[{"id":2428542},{"id":2723318},{"id":2845482}],"technicalTags":[],"externalPartners":{"youtubeId":"zDyZ7Q5-Ogs","dailymotionId":"x9tdji0"},"hasExternalVideo":1,"hasInternalOrExternalVideo":1,"video":1,"videos":[{"format":"mp4","quality":"md","type":"normal","url":"https:\/\/video.euronews.com\/mp4\/ED\/28\/75\/24\/08\/ED_PYR_2875248_20251107125056.mp4","editor":"","duration":55080,"filesizeBytes":10422415,"expiresAt":0},{"format":"mp4","quality":"hd","type":"normal","url":"https:\/\/video.euronews.com\/mp4\/SHD\/28\/75\/24\/08\/SHD_PYR_2875248_20251107125056.mp4","editor":"","duration":55080,"filesizeBytes":14175250,"expiresAt":0},{"format":"mp4","quality":"1080p","type":"normal","url":"https:\/\/video.euronews.com\/mp4\/FHD\/28\/75\/24\/08\/FHD_PYR_2875248_20251107125056.mp4","editor":"","duration":55080,"filesizeBytes":41502680,"expiresAt":0}],"liveStream":[{"startDate":0,"endDate":0}],"scribbleLiveId":0,"scribbleLiveRibbon":0,"isLiveCoverage":0,"sourceId":1,"sources":[],"externalSource":null,"additionalSources":null,"additionalReporting":null,"freeField1":null,"freeField2":"","type":"normal","displayType":"default","program":{"id":"culture-news","urlSafeValue":"culture-news","title":"Culture News","online":0,"url":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/culture\/culture-news\/culture-news"},"season":"","episode":"","episodeId":"","vertical":"culture","verticals":[{"id":10,"slug":"culture","urlSafeValue":"culture","title":"Culture"}],"primaryVertical":{"id":10,"slug":"culture","urlSafeValue":"culture","title":"Culture"},"themes":[{"id":"culture-news","urlSafeValue":"culture-news","title":"Culture news","url":"\/culture\/culture-news"}],"primaryTheme":{"id":53,"urlSafeValue":"culture-news","title":"Culture news"},"advertising":0,"advertisingData":{"startDate":0,"endDate":0,"type":null,"slug":null,"title":null,"disclaimerLabelKey":null,"sponsor":null,"sponsorName":null,"sponsorUrl":null,"sponsorLogo":"","sponsorLogoReverse":"","isDfp":0},"geoLocation":{"lat":0,"lon":0},"location":1,"continent":{"id":104,"urlSafeValue":"europe","title":"Europe"},"country":{"id":291,"urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","url":"\/news\/europe\/united-kingdom"},"town":[],"contextualSignals":{"doubleVerify":{"ids":[],"slugs":[]}},"grapeshot":null,"versions":[],"programDeliverable":{"slug":"article-video","format":"default"},"showOpinionDisclaimer":0,"allViews":0,"allViewsMeta":{"pointOfView":[],"survey":[],"tweetId":0,"tweet2NdId":0,"displayOverlay":0},"storyTranslationMethod":[],"localisation":[],"autoPublished":0,"autoLocalised":0,"isReviewed":0,"path":"\/culture\/2025\/11\/07\/extra-time-needed-grand-theft-auto-6-delayed-again-as-rockstar-games-upsets-fans","lastModified":1762520024},{"id":2844591,"cid":9539599,"versionId":1,"archive":0,"housenumber":null,"owner":"euronews","isMagazine":0,"isBreakingNews":0,"daletEventName":"UK PRISONER SURRENDERS","daletPyramidId":3229129,"channels":[{"id":1},{"id":2},{"id":3},{"id":4},{"id":5},{"id":10},{"id":12},{"id":14}],"status":2,"title":"Mistakenly released UK prisoner turns himself in as search continues for second convict","titleSeo":null,"titleListing1":"Mistakenly released UK prisoner turns himself to London prison staff","titleListing2":"Mistakenly released UK prisoner turns himself in as search continues for second convict","leadin":"According to government figures, 262 prisoners were released in error in the year ending March 2025, a 128% increase on the previous 12-month period.","summary":"According to government figures, 262 prisoners were released in error in the year ending March 2025, a 128% increase on the previous 12-month period.","keySentence":"","url":"mistakenly-released-uk-prisoner-turns-himself-in-as-search-continues-for-second-convict","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/2025\/11\/06\/mistakenly-released-uk-prisoner-turns-himself-in-as-search-continues-for-second-convict","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"One of two inmates who were mistakenly released early from a London prison surrendered on Thursday after waving to reporters and smoking a cigarette on the steps of the Victorian-era jail.\n\nBilly Smith, 35, turned himself in to HMP Wandsworth three days after he was released in the latest administrative blunder to focus attention on an overcrowded and overwhelmed prison system that has become a political liability for the Labour government.\n\nPrison chiefs were summoned to a meeting on Thursday to discuss the errors and efforts were being made to update a system that still uses paper prison records, Justice minister Alex Davies-Jones said.\n\nSmith, 35, was accidentally freed on Monday, the same day he was sentenced to nearly four years in prison for multiple frauds.\n\nPolice were still searching for Brahim Kaddour-Cherif, 24, who was mistakenly released from Wandsworth on 29 October and was serving time for trespass with intent to steal and is a registered sex offender with an indecent exposure conviction.\n\nCherif, an Algerian national, entered the UK legally in 2019 but had overstayed and was in the initial stages of the deportation process.\n\nBoth men were wrongly freed from Wandsworth Prison which was under scrutiny after\u00a0another prisoner escape\u00a0two years ago by clinging to the underside of a food delivery truck.\n\nThe inadvertent releases followed more stringent controls that were supposed to be in place after an asylum-seeker who inspired a rise of anti-immigrant protests\u00a0was mistakenly freed from Chelmsford Prison, east of London, on 24 October.\n\nHadush Gerberslasie Kebatu, who had been sentenced to 12 months in prison for sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl, was captured after a two-day search and quickly deported to his home country Ethiopia.\n\nAfter the Kebatu search, the government announced stronger security checks in prisons and launched an independent investigation into the blunder that has caused further embarrassment for the Prison Service.\n\nDeputy Prime Minister David Lammy, who is also the justice minister, said he was \"absolutely outraged\" and sought to blame the problems facing the prison system on the previous Conservative government.\n\nAccording to government figures, 262 prisoners were released in error in the year ending March 2025, a 128% increase on the previous 12-month period.\n\nConservative spokespeople said the Labour government has to take the blame as the sharp increase in the numbers is directly linked with its decision to release some prisoners earlier to ensure prisons don't exceed capacity.\n\n","htmlText":"<p>One of two inmates who were mistakenly released early from a London prison surrendered on Thursday after waving to reporters and smoking a cigarette on the steps of the Victorian-era jail.<\/p>\n<p>Billy Smith, 35, turned himself in to HMP Wandsworth three days after he was released in the latest administrative blunder to focus attention on an overcrowded and overwhelmed prison system that has become a political liability for the Labour government.<\/p>\n<p>Prison chiefs were summoned to a meeting on Thursday to discuss the errors and efforts were being made to update a system that still uses paper prison records, Justice minister Alex Davies-Jones said.<\/p>\n<p>Smith, 35, was accidentally freed on Monday, the same day he was sentenced to nearly four years in prison for multiple frauds.<\/p>\n<p>Police were still searching for Brahim Kaddour-Cherif, 24, who was mistakenly released from Wandsworth on 29 October and was serving time for trespass with intent to steal and is a registered sex offender with an indecent exposure conviction.<\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-image widget--size-fullwidth widget--animation-fade-in widget--align-center\" data-ratio=\"0.6665\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio--auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <img class=\"widgetImage__image\" loading=\"lazy\" src=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////images.euronews.com//articles//stories//09//53//95//99//808x539_cmsv2_a6c4081b-bc7b-5628-93a7-d069125e4f3d-9539599.jpg/" alt=\"A general view of HMP Wandsworth in southwest London, 6 September, 2023\" srcset=\"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/95\/99\/384x256_cmsv2_a6c4081b-bc7b-5628-93a7-d069125e4f3d-9539599.jpg 384w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/95\/99\/640x427_cmsv2_a6c4081b-bc7b-5628-93a7-d069125e4f3d-9539599.jpg 640w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/95\/99\/750x500_cmsv2_a6c4081b-bc7b-5628-93a7-d069125e4f3d-9539599.jpg 750w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/95\/99\/828x552_cmsv2_a6c4081b-bc7b-5628-93a7-d069125e4f3d-9539599.jpg 828w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/95\/99\/1080x720_cmsv2_a6c4081b-bc7b-5628-93a7-d069125e4f3d-9539599.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/95\/99\/1200x800_cmsv2_a6c4081b-bc7b-5628-93a7-d069125e4f3d-9539599.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/95\/99\/1920x1280_cmsv2_a6c4081b-bc7b-5628-93a7-d069125e4f3d-9539599.jpg 1920w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 95vw, (max-width: 1024px) 80vw, (max-width: 1280px) 55vw, 728px\"\/>\n <figcaption class=\"widget__caption\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionWrap\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionText\">A general view of HMP Wandsworth in southwest London, 6 September, 2023<\/span>\n <span class=\"widget__captionCredit\">AP Photo<\/span>\n <\/span>\n <\/figcaption>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>Cherif, an Algerian national, entered the UK legally in 2019 but had overstayed and was in the initial stages of the deportation process.<\/p>\n<p>Both men were wrongly freed from Wandsworth Prison which was under scrutiny after another prisoner escape two years ago by clinging to the underside of a food delivery truck.<\/p>\n<p>The inadvertent releases followed more stringent controls that were supposed to be in place after an asylum-seeker who inspired a rise of anti-immigrant protests was mistakenly freed from Chelmsford Prison, east of London, on 24 October.<\/p>\n<p>Hadush Gerberslasie Kebatu, who had been sentenced to 12 months in prison for sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl, was captured after a two-day search and quickly deported to his home country Ethiopia.<\/p>\n<p>After the Kebatu search, the government announced stronger security checks in prisons and launched an independent investigation into the blunder that has caused further embarrassment for the Prison Service.<\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-image widget--size-fullwidth widget--animation-fade-in widget--align-center\" data-ratio=\"0.562272396212673\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio--auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <img class=\"widgetImage__image\" loading=\"lazy\" src=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////images.euronews.com//articles//stories//09//53//95//99//808x454_cmsv2_8148e885-78b3-5a77-a701-bfb37f44c7ac-9539599.jpg/" alt=\"Police officers patrol in London, 10 August, 2024\" srcset=\"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/95\/99\/384x216_cmsv2_8148e885-78b3-5a77-a701-bfb37f44c7ac-9539599.jpg 384w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/95\/99\/640x360_cmsv2_8148e885-78b3-5a77-a701-bfb37f44c7ac-9539599.jpg 640w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/95\/99\/750x422_cmsv2_8148e885-78b3-5a77-a701-bfb37f44c7ac-9539599.jpg 750w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/95\/99\/828x466_cmsv2_8148e885-78b3-5a77-a701-bfb37f44c7ac-9539599.jpg 828w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/95\/99\/1080x607_cmsv2_8148e885-78b3-5a77-a701-bfb37f44c7ac-9539599.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/95\/99\/1200x675_cmsv2_8148e885-78b3-5a77-a701-bfb37f44c7ac-9539599.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/95\/99\/1920x1080_cmsv2_8148e885-78b3-5a77-a701-bfb37f44c7ac-9539599.jpg 1920w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 95vw, (max-width: 1024px) 80vw, (max-width: 1280px) 55vw, 728px\"\/>\n <figcaption class=\"widget__caption\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionWrap\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionText\">Police officers patrol in London, 10 August, 2024<\/span>\n <span class=\"widget__captionCredit\">AP Photo<\/span>\n <\/span>\n <\/figcaption>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy, who is also the justice minister, said he was \"absolutely outraged\" and sought to blame the problems facing the prison system on the previous Conservative government.<\/p>\n<p>According to government figures, 262 prisoners were released in error in the year ending March 2025, a 128% increase on the previous 12-month period.<\/p>\n<p>Conservative spokespeople said the Labour government has to take the blame as the sharp increase in the numbers is directly linked with its decision to release some prisoners earlier to ensure prisons don't exceed capacity.<\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1762453423,"updatedAt":1762454220,"publishedAt":1762454188,"firstPublishedAt":1762454188,"lastPublishedAt":1762454188,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/95\/99\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_1a79dc46-c4fe-59b1-b6b3-ad047104e91b-9539599.jpg","altText":"In this photo taken from video released by ITV, Billy Smith smiles to reporters outside HMP Wandsworth in southwest London, 6 November, 2025","caption":"In this photo taken from video released by ITV, Billy Smith smiles to reporters outside HMP Wandsworth in southwest London, 6 November, 2025","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":1920,"height":1080},{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/95\/99\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_8148e885-78b3-5a77-a701-bfb37f44c7ac-9539599.jpg","altText":"Police officers patrol in London, 10 August, 2024","caption":"Police officers patrol in London, 10 August, 2024","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":1373,"height":772},{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/95\/99\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_a6c4081b-bc7b-5628-93a7-d069125e4f3d-9539599.jpg","altText":"A general view of HMP Wandsworth in southwest London, 6 September, 2023","caption":"A general view of HMP Wandsworth in southwest London, 6 September, 2023","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1333},{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/82\/27\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_55310004-8805-59ea-aa6c-244bf5bf29b6-9538227.jpg","altText":"Police officers patrol in London, 10 August, 2024","caption":"Police officers patrol in London, 10 August, 2024","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1333}],"authors":{"journalists":[{"id":2972,"urlSafeValue":"blackburn","title":"Gavin Blackburn","twitter":null}],"producers":[],"videoEditor":[]},"keywords":[{"id":7800,"slug":"united-kingdom","urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","titleRaw":"United Kingdom"},{"id":12203,"slug":"prison-sentence","urlSafeValue":"prison-sentence","title":"Prison Sentence","titleRaw":"Prison Sentence"},{"id":11642,"slug":"police","urlSafeValue":"police","title":"Police","titleRaw":"Police"},{"id":23132,"slug":"keir-starmer","urlSafeValue":"keir-starmer","title":"Keir Starmer","titleRaw":"Keir Starmer"},{"id":30122,"slug":"david-lammy","urlSafeValue":"david-lammy","title":"David Lammy","titleRaw":"David Lammy"}],"widgets":[{"slug":"image","count":2}],"related":[{"id":2844287},{"id":2842185},{"id":2831493}],"technicalTags":[],"externalPartners":[],"hasExternalVideo":0,"hasInternalOrExternalVideo":0,"video":0,"videos":[],"liveStream":[{"startDate":0,"endDate":0}],"scribbleLiveId":0,"scribbleLiveRibbon":0,"isLiveCoverage":0,"sourceId":1,"sources":[],"externalSource":null,"additionalSources":"AP","additionalReporting":"","freeField1":null,"freeField2":"","type":"normal","displayType":"default","program":{"id":"world","urlSafeValue":"world","title":"World News","online":1,"url":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/programs\/world"},"season":"","episode":"","episodeId":"","vertical":"news","verticals":[{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"}],"primaryVertical":{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"},"themes":[{"id":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World","url":"\/news\/international"}],"primaryTheme":{"id":1,"urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World"},"advertising":0,"advertisingData":{"startDate":0,"endDate":0,"type":null,"slug":null,"title":null,"disclaimerLabelKey":null,"sponsor":null,"sponsorName":null,"sponsorUrl":null,"sponsorLogo":"","sponsorLogoReverse":"","isDfp":0},"geoLocation":{"lat":0,"lon":0},"location":1,"continent":{"id":104,"urlSafeValue":"europe","title":"Europe"},"country":{"id":291,"urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","url":"\/news\/europe\/united-kingdom"},"town":{"id":3438,"urlSafeValue":"london","title":"London"},"contextualSignals":{"doubleVerify":{"ids":[],"slugs":[]}},"grapeshot":null,"versions":[],"programDeliverable":{"slug":"article-video","format":"default"},"showOpinionDisclaimer":0,"allViews":0,"allViewsMeta":{"pointOfView":[],"survey":[],"tweetId":0,"tweet2NdId":0,"displayOverlay":0},"storyTranslationMethod":[],"localisation":[],"autoPublished":0,"autoLocalised":0,"isReviewed":0,"path":"\/2025\/11\/06\/mistakenly-released-uk-prisoner-turns-himself-in-as-search-continues-for-second-convict","lastModified":1762454188},{"id":2844566,"cid":9539479,"versionId":2,"archive":0,"housenumber":null,"owner":"euronews","isMagazine":0,"isBreakingNews":0,"daletEventName":"KING REMOVES PRINCE ANDREW TITLE","daletPyramidId":3228192,"channels":[{"id":1},{"id":2},{"id":3},{"id":4},{"id":5},{"id":10},{"id":12},{"id":14}],"status":2,"title":"Andrew Mountbatten Windsor no longer a prince after king formally removes title","titleSeo":null,"titleListing1":"Andrew Mountbatten Windsor officially no longer a prince ","titleListing2":"Andrew Mountbatten Windsor officially no longer a prince after king formally removes title","leadin":"The monarch announced on 31 October that he was removing his brother\u2019s titles and evicting him from his royal residence over his relationship with the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.","summary":"The monarch announced on 31 October that he was removing his brother\u2019s titles and evicting him from his royal residence over his relationship with the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.","keySentence":"","url":"andrew-mountbatten-windsor-no-longer-a-prince-after-king-formally-removes-title","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/2025\/11\/06\/andrew-mountbatten-windsor-no-longer-a-prince-after-king-formally-removes-title","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"King Charles III has formally stripped his brother, Andrew Mountbatten Windsor, of the title of prince in a formal document affixed with a royal seal.\n\nThe disgraced former royal has also lost the designation \"his royal highness\" after the king issued a Letters Patent, a centuries-old type of document used by monarchs to bestow and remove appointments or titles.\n\nAn announcement published on Wednesday in The Gazette, the UK\u2019s official public record, said \"The King has been pleased by Letters Patent under the Great Seal of the Realm dated 3 November 2025 to declare that Andrew Mountbatten Windsor shall no longer be entitled to hold and enjoy the style, title or attribute of 'Royal Highness' and the titular dignity of \u2018Prince.'\"\n\nThe king also formally removed the title Duke of York from his brother.\n\nThe monarch announced on 31 October\u00a0that he was removing his brother's titles and evicting him from his royal residence over his relationship with the convicted sex offender\u00a0Jeffrey Epstein.\n\nDemand had been growing at the palace to oust the 65-year-old former prince from his Royal Lodge home over new revelations about his friendship with Epstein. It renewed attention on sexual abuse allegations by one of Epstein's victims,\u00a0Virginia Roberts Giuffre, whose posthumous\u00a0memoir\u00a0was published last month.\n\nThe king went even further to punish Mountbatten Windsor for serious lapses of judgement by removing the title of prince that he had held since birth as a child of a monarch, the late Queen Elizabeth II.\n\nMountbatten Windsor is also moving from Royal Lodge, the 30-room mansion near Windsor Castle where he has lived for more than 20 years, into a more remote home privately funded by his brother on the king\u2019s Sandringham Estate\u00a0in eastern England.\n\nThe king's decision was welcomed by the family of Giuffre, who died by suicide in April at the age of 41.\n\nShe said that in the early 2000s, when she was a teenager, she was caught up in Epstein\u2019s sex trafficking ring and exploited by Mountbatten Windsor and other influential men.\n\nMountbatten Windsor denies Giuffre's allegations.\n\nEpstein was found dead in a New York City jail cell in 2019 in what investigators called a suicide.\n\n","htmlText":"<p>King Charles III has formally stripped his brother, Andrew Mountbatten Windsor, of the title of prince in a formal document affixed with a royal seal.<\/p>\n<p>The disgraced former royal has also lost the designation \"his royal highness\" after the king issued a Letters Patent, a centuries-old type of document used by monarchs to bestow and remove appointments or titles.<\/p>\n<p>An announcement published on Wednesday in The Gazette, the UK\u2019s official public record, said \"The King has been pleased by Letters Patent under the Great Seal of the Realm dated 3 November 2025 to declare that Andrew Mountbatten Windsor shall no longer be entitled to hold and enjoy the style, title or attribute of 'Royal Highness' and the titular dignity of \u2018Prince.'\"<\/p>\n<p>The king also formally removed the title Duke of York from his brother.<\/p>\n<p>The monarch announced on 31 October that he was removing his brother's titles and evicting him from his royal residence over his relationship with the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.<\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-image widget--size-fullwidth widget--animation-fade-in widget--align-center\" data-ratio=\"0.6665\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio--auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <img class=\"widgetImage__image\" loading=\"lazy\" src=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////images.euronews.com//articles//stories//09//53//94//79//808x539_cmsv2_792100c5-2dd0-5af9-83c2-44672e60ee11-9539479.jpg/" alt=\"King Charles meets members of the public after a visit to Chatfield Health Care in Battersea, 5 November, 2025\" srcset=\"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/94\/79\/384x256_cmsv2_792100c5-2dd0-5af9-83c2-44672e60ee11-9539479.jpg 384w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/94\/79\/640x427_cmsv2_792100c5-2dd0-5af9-83c2-44672e60ee11-9539479.jpg 640w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/94\/79\/750x500_cmsv2_792100c5-2dd0-5af9-83c2-44672e60ee11-9539479.jpg 750w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/94\/79\/828x552_cmsv2_792100c5-2dd0-5af9-83c2-44672e60ee11-9539479.jpg 828w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/94\/79\/1080x720_cmsv2_792100c5-2dd0-5af9-83c2-44672e60ee11-9539479.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/94\/79\/1200x800_cmsv2_792100c5-2dd0-5af9-83c2-44672e60ee11-9539479.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/94\/79\/1920x1280_cmsv2_792100c5-2dd0-5af9-83c2-44672e60ee11-9539479.jpg 1920w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 95vw, (max-width: 1024px) 80vw, (max-width: 1280px) 55vw, 728px\"\/>\n <figcaption class=\"widget__caption\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionWrap\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionText\">King Charles meets members of the public after a visit to Chatfield Health Care in Battersea, 5 November, 2025<\/span>\n <span class=\"widget__captionCredit\">AP Photo<\/span>\n <\/span>\n <\/figcaption>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>Demand had been growing at the palace to oust the 65-year-old former prince from his Royal Lodge home over new revelations about his friendship with Epstein. It renewed attention on sexual abuse allegations by one of Epstein's victims, Virginia Roberts Giuffre, whose posthumous memoir was published last month.<\/p>\n<p>The king went even further to punish Mountbatten Windsor for serious lapses of judgement by removing the title of prince that he had held since birth as a child of a monarch, the late Queen Elizabeth II.<\/p>\n<p>Mountbatten Windsor is also moving from Royal Lodge, the 30-room mansion near Windsor Castle where he has lived for more than 20 years, into a more remote home privately funded by his brother on the king\u2019s Sandringham Estate in eastern England.<\/p>\n<div class=\"c-widget-related\" data-stories-id=\"\" data-event=\"widget_related\">\n <div class=\"c-widget-related__title\">\n <b class=\"c-widget-related__title__text\" lang=\"en\">Related<\/b>\n <\/div>\n <ul class=\"c-widget-related__list\">\n <li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//2025//08//25//epstein-accuser-virginia-giuffres-memoir-nobodys-girl-to-be-published-months-after-her-dea/">Epstein accuser Virginia Giuffre's memoir 'Nobody's Girl' to be published months after her death<\/a><\/li><li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//2025//04//26//virginia-giuffre-accuser-of-prince-andrew-jeffrey-epstein-dies-by-suicide-aged-41/">Virginia Giuffre, accuser of Prince Andrew and Jeffrey Epstein, dies aged 41<\/a><\/li>\n <\/ul>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>The king's decision was welcomed by the family of Giuffre, who died by suicide in April at the age of 41.<\/p>\n<p>She said that in the early 2000s, when she was a teenager, she was caught up in Epstein\u2019s sex trafficking ring and exploited by Mountbatten Windsor and other influential men.<\/p>\n<p>Mountbatten Windsor denies Giuffre's allegations.<\/p>\n<p>Epstein was found dead in a New York City jail cell in 2019 in what investigators called a suicide.<\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1762448984,"updatedAt":1762473056,"publishedAt":1762451937,"firstPublishedAt":1762451937,"lastPublishedAt":1762473055,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/94\/79\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_45306179-91eb-5c1f-8c54-bac3073adb39-9539479.jpg","altText":"Britain's Prince Andrew speaks during a television interview at the Royal Chapel of All Saints at Royal Lodge in Windsor, 11 April, 2021","caption":"Britain's Prince Andrew speaks during a television interview at the Royal Chapel of All Saints at Royal Lodge in Windsor, 11 April, 2021","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":1918,"height":1079},{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/94\/79\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_792100c5-2dd0-5af9-83c2-44672e60ee11-9539479.jpg","altText":"King Charles meets members of the public after a visit to Chatfield Health Care in Battersea, 5 November, 2025","caption":"King Charles meets members of the public after a visit to Chatfield Health Care in Battersea, 5 November, 2025","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1333}],"authors":{"journalists":[{"id":2972,"urlSafeValue":"blackburn","title":"Gavin Blackburn","twitter":null}],"producers":[],"videoEditor":[]},"keywords":[{"id":7800,"slug":"united-kingdom","urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","titleRaw":"United Kingdom"},{"id":27386,"slug":"king-charles","urlSafeValue":"king-charles","title":"King Charles III","titleRaw":"King Charles III"},{"id":25668,"slug":"prince-andrew","urlSafeValue":"prince-andrew","title":"Prince Andrew","titleRaw":"Prince Andrew"},{"id":21328,"slug":"jeffrey-epstein","urlSafeValue":"jeffrey-epstein","title":"Jeffrey Epstein","titleRaw":"Jeffrey Epstein"},{"id":12085,"slug":"sexual-abuse","urlSafeValue":"sexual-abuse","title":"Sexual Abuse","titleRaw":"Sexual Abuse"}],"widgets":[{"slug":"image","count":1},{"slug":"related","count":1}],"related":[{"id":2839565},{"id":2791516},{"id":2849390}],"technicalTags":[],"externalPartners":[],"hasExternalVideo":0,"hasInternalOrExternalVideo":0,"video":0,"videos":[],"liveStream":[{"startDate":0,"endDate":0}],"scribbleLiveId":0,"scribbleLiveRibbon":0,"isLiveCoverage":0,"sourceId":1,"sources":[],"externalSource":null,"additionalSources":"AP","additionalReporting":"","freeField1":null,"freeField2":"","type":"normal","displayType":"default","program":{"id":"world","urlSafeValue":"world","title":"World News","online":1,"url":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/programs\/world"},"season":"","episode":"","episodeId":"","vertical":"news","verticals":[{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"}],"primaryVertical":{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"},"themes":[{"id":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World","url":"\/news\/international"}],"primaryTheme":{"id":1,"urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World"},"advertising":0,"advertisingData":{"startDate":0,"endDate":0,"type":null,"slug":null,"title":null,"disclaimerLabelKey":null,"sponsor":null,"sponsorName":null,"sponsorUrl":null,"sponsorLogo":"","sponsorLogoReverse":"","isDfp":0},"geoLocation":{"lat":0,"lon":0},"location":1,"continent":{"id":104,"urlSafeValue":"europe","title":"Europe"},"country":{"id":291,"urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","url":"\/news\/europe\/united-kingdom"},"town":[],"contextualSignals":{"doubleVerify":{"ids":[],"slugs":[]}},"grapeshot":null,"versions":[],"programDeliverable":{"slug":"article-video","format":"default"},"showOpinionDisclaimer":0,"allViews":0,"allViewsMeta":{"pointOfView":[],"survey":[],"tweetId":0,"tweet2NdId":0,"displayOverlay":0},"storyTranslationMethod":[],"localisation":[],"autoPublished":0,"autoLocalised":0,"isReviewed":0,"path":"\/2025\/11\/06\/andrew-mountbatten-windsor-no-longer-a-prince-after-king-formally-removes-title","lastModified":1762473055},{"id":2844441,"cid":9538789,"versionId":1,"archive":0,"housenumber":null,"owner":"euronews","isMagazine":0,"isBreakingNews":0,"daletEventName":"Business - BoE rate decision","daletPyramidId":3223027,"channels":[{"id":1},{"id":2},{"id":3},{"id":4},{"id":5},{"id":10},{"id":12},{"id":14}],"status":2,"title":"BoE keeps rates steady at 4% as economy shows signs of slowing","titleSeo":null,"titleListing1":"BoE keeps rates steady at 4% as economy shows signs of slowing","titleListing2":"BoE keeps rates steady at 4% as economy shows signs of slowing","leadin":"The UK's annual rate of consumer price inflation is standing at 3.8%, nearly double the bank\u2019s 2% target.","summary":"The UK's annual rate of consumer price inflation is standing at 3.8%, nearly double the bank\u2019s 2% target.","keySentence":"","url":"boe-keeps-rates-steady-at-4-as-economy-shows-signs-of-slowing","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/business\/2025\/11\/06\/boe-keeps-rates-steady-at-4-as-economy-shows-signs-of-slowing","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"The Bank of England (BoE) held its key interest rate at 4% on Thursday, mainly in line with expectations, as the central bank navigates a backdrop of stubborn inflation and sluggish growth.\n\nCommenting on the final decision, policymakers said the current economic conditions did not warrant a change.\n\nHowever, the decision was a close call, as four out of nine monetary policy committee members voted for a 25-basis-point cut. Governor Andrew Bailey had the casting vote.\n\n\"It is perhaps no surprise he has taken a more cautious approach, particularly given the UK continues to suffer from higher inflation compared to peers,\" said Lindsay James, investment strategist at Quilter.\n\nGovernor of the Bank of England Andrew Bailey said in a statement: \"Rather than cutting Bank Rate now, I would prefer to wait and see if the durability in disinflation is confirmed in upcoming economic developments this year.\"\n\nUK consumer price growth was 3.8% in September, still well above the Bank of England\u2019s 2% target. The BoE nonetheless said on Thursday that inflation had peaked and that progress on underlying disinflation was continuing.\n\nAt the same time, figures on wages and employment point to a softening labour market. Analysts say the combination of slower inflation and weaker jobs data has increased expectations that interest rates could be cut in the coming months.\n\nThe Bank also highlighted potential challenges from global uncertainties and upcoming fiscal tightening, suggesting any move on rates would be cautious.\n\nAccording to Quilter's James, the BoE decision comes as a blow to the UK Chancellor Rachel Reeves, who is expected to outline tax rises in her budget on 26 November.\n\n\"With a fresh set of tax hikes incoming, the Chancellor would have liked to have been in a position where rates were below 4%,\" James said. The government will want to stimulate the economy, she added, but will have to balance this with ambitions for fiscal restraint.\n\nIn light of challenges facing the British economy, analysts expect more rate cuts on the table in the coming months.\n\n","htmlText":"<p>The Bank of England (BoE) held its key interest rate at 4% on Thursday, mainly in line with expectations, as the central bank navigates a backdrop of stubborn inflation and sluggish growth.<\/p>\n<p>Commenting on the final decision, policymakers said the current economic conditions did not warrant a change.<\/p>\n<p>However, the decision was a close call, as four out of nine monetary policy committee members voted for a 25-basis-point cut. Governor Andrew Bailey had the casting vote.<\/p>\n<p>_\"_It is perhaps no surprise he has taken a more cautious approach, particularly given the UK continues to suffer from higher inflation compared to peers,\" said Lindsay James, investment strategist at Quilter. <\/p>\n<p>Governor of the Bank of England Andrew Bailey said in a statement: \"Rather than cutting Bank Rate now, I would prefer to wait and see if the durability in disinflation is confirmed in upcoming economic developments this year.\"<\/p>\n<p>UK consumer price growth was 3.8% in September, still well above the Bank of England\u2019s 2% target. The BoE nonetheless said on Thursday that inflation had peaked and that progress on underlying disinflation was continuing.<\/p>\n<p>At the same time, figures on wages and employment point to a softening labour market. Analysts say the combination of slower inflation and weaker jobs data has increased expectations that interest rates could be cut in the coming months.<\/p>\n<div class=\"c-widget-related\" data-stories-id=\"\" data-event=\"widget_related\">\n <div class=\"c-widget-related__title\">\n <b class=\"c-widget-related__title__text\" lang=\"en\">Related<\/b>\n <\/div>\n <ul class=\"c-widget-related__list\">\n <li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//business//2025//09//18//bank-of-england-holds-main-uk-interest-rate-at-4-with-inflation-above-target/">Bank of England holds main UK interest rate at 4% with inflation above target<\/a><\/li><li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//business//2025//10//22//inflation-in-the-uk-remains-high-sitting-at-38-in-september/">Inflation in the UK remains high, sitting at 3.8% in September<\/a><\/li>\n <\/ul>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>The Bank also highlighted potential challenges from global uncertainties and upcoming fiscal tightening, suggesting any move on rates would be cautious. <\/p>\n<p>According to Quilter's James, the BoE decision comes as a blow to the UK Chancellor Rachel Reeves, who is expected to outline tax rises in her budget on 26 November. <\/p>\n<p>\"With a fresh set of tax hikes incoming, the Chancellor would have liked to have been in a position where rates were below 4%,\" James said. The government will want to stimulate the economy, she added, but will have to balance this with ambitions for fiscal restraint.<\/p>\n<p>In light of challenges facing the British economy, analysts expect more rate cuts on the table in the coming months. <\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1762427225,"updatedAt":1762434732,"publishedAt":1762432936,"firstPublishedAt":1762432936,"lastPublishedAt":1762432936,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/87\/89\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_548bccb2-390e-5934-82d3-90dc17aff5a5-9538789.jpg","altText":"FILE. Andrew Bailey, Governor of the Bank of England, attends the financial stability report press conference at the Bank of England, London. 7 Aug. 2025.","caption":"FILE. Andrew Bailey, Governor of the Bank of England, attends the financial stability report press conference at the Bank of England, London. 7 Aug. 2025.","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"Jordan Pettitt\/Pool Photo via AP","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1333}],"authors":{"journalists":[{"id":582,"urlSafeValue":"katanich","title":"Doloresz Katanich","twitter":"@doloreskatanich"}],"producers":[],"videoEditor":[]},"keywords":[{"id":20,"slug":"bank-of-england","urlSafeValue":"bank-of-england","title":"Bank of England","titleRaw":"Bank of England"},{"id":7967,"slug":"interest-rates","urlSafeValue":"interest-rates","title":"Interest rates","titleRaw":"Interest rates"},{"id":150,"slug":"inflation","urlSafeValue":"inflation","title":"Inflation","titleRaw":"Inflation"},{"id":10685,"slug":"british-economy","urlSafeValue":"british-economy","title":"British economy","titleRaw":"British economy"},{"id":30008,"slug":"banque-centrale","urlSafeValue":"banque-centrale","title":"central bank","titleRaw":"central bank"},{"id":20850,"slug":"monetary-policy","urlSafeValue":"monetary-policy","title":"monetary policy","titleRaw":"monetary policy"}],"widgets":[{"slug":"related","count":1}],"related":[],"technicalTags":[],"externalPartners":[],"hasExternalVideo":0,"hasInternalOrExternalVideo":0,"video":0,"videos":[],"liveStream":[{"startDate":0,"endDate":0}],"scribbleLiveId":0,"scribbleLiveRibbon":0,"isLiveCoverage":0,"sourceId":1,"sources":[],"externalSource":"AP","additionalSources":"","additionalReporting":"","freeField1":null,"freeField2":"","type":"normal","displayType":"default","program":{"id":"economy","urlSafeValue":"economy","title":"Economy","online":0,"url":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/business\/economy\/economy"},"season":"","episode":"","episodeId":"","vertical":"business","verticals":[{"id":11,"slug":"business","urlSafeValue":"business","title":"Business"}],"primaryVertical":{"id":11,"slug":"business","urlSafeValue":"business","title":"Business"},"themes":[{"id":"economy","urlSafeValue":"economy","title":"Economy","url":"\/business\/economy"}],"primaryTheme":{"id":72,"urlSafeValue":"economy","title":"Economy"},"advertising":0,"advertisingData":{"startDate":0,"endDate":0,"type":null,"slug":null,"title":null,"disclaimerLabelKey":null,"sponsor":null,"sponsorName":null,"sponsorUrl":null,"sponsorLogo":"","sponsorLogoReverse":"","isDfp":0},"geoLocation":{"lat":0,"lon":0},"location":1,"continent":{"id":104,"urlSafeValue":"europe","title":"Europe"},"country":{"id":291,"urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","url":"\/news\/europe\/united-kingdom"},"town":[],"contextualSignals":{"doubleVerify":{"ids":[],"slugs":[]}},"grapeshot":null,"versions":[],"programDeliverable":{"slug":"article","format":"default"},"showOpinionDisclaimer":0,"allViews":0,"allViewsMeta":{"pointOfView":[],"survey":[],"tweetId":0,"tweet2NdId":0,"displayOverlay":0},"storyTranslationMethod":[],"localisation":[],"autoPublished":0,"autoLocalised":0,"isReviewed":0,"path":"\/business\/2025\/11\/06\/boe-keeps-rates-steady-at-4-as-economy-shows-signs-of-slowing","lastModified":1762432936},{"id":2844287,"cid":9538227,"versionId":1,"archive":0,"housenumber":null,"owner":"euronews","isMagazine":0,"isBreakingNews":0,"daletEventName":"UK MANHUNT PRISONERS","daletPyramidId":3218368,"channels":[{"id":1},{"id":2},{"id":3},{"id":4},{"id":5},{"id":10},{"id":12},{"id":14}],"status":2,"title":"UK police hunt for two more wrongly released prisoners days after new measures brought in","titleSeo":null,"titleListing1":"UK police hunt for two more men wrongly released from prison","titleListing2":"UK police hunt for two more wrongly released prisoners days after new measures brought in","leadin":"The inadvertent releases heap further embarrassment on the Prison Service, which has been starved of resources for many years.","summary":"The inadvertent releases heap further embarrassment on the Prison Service, which has been starved of resources for many years.","keySentence":"","url":"uk-police-hunt-for-two-more-wrongly-released-prisoners-days-after-new-measures-brought-in","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/2025\/11\/05\/uk-police-hunt-for-two-more-wrongly-released-prisoners-days-after-new-measures-brought-in","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"British police were undertaking two more searches on Wednesday, following the news that two prisoners had been mistakenly released from prison over the past week, just days after the government brought in more stringent checks.\n\nPolice said the two were wrongly freed from Wandsworth Prison in southwest London and which last year was put into special measures after\u00a0another prisoner escaped\u00a0by clinging to the underside of a food delivery truck.\n\nLondon's Metropolitan Police said Brahim Kaddour-Cherif, 24, was wrongly freed on 29 October while Surrey Police said it is hunting for William Smith, 35, who was also accidentally released on Monday.\n\nThe Met said that it was only informed of Kaddour-Cherif's release on Tuesday, six days after the\u00a0mistaken release of a man\u00a0who had entered the UK legally in 2019 but had overstayed and was in the initial stages of the deportation process.\n\nIt said Kaddour-Cherif, an Algerian national who was serving a sentence for trespass with intent to steal, is also known to use other variations of his name, including Ibrahim.\n\nIt also confirmed that he is a registered sex offender, having been convicted a year ago for indecent exposure.\n\n\"Cherif has had a six-day head start but we are working urgently to close the gap and establish his whereabouts,\" said Commander Paul Trevers, who is overseeing the investigation.\n\nMeanwhile, Surrey Police said Smith was sentenced on Monday to 45 months for multiple fraud offences and was accidentally freed the same day.\n\nThe inadvertent releases heap further embarrassment on the Prison Service, which has been starved of resources for many years and the new Labour government, which returned to power last July after 14 years, replacing the previous Conservative administration.\n\nThe releases come barely two weeks after the asylum-seeker at the heart of a rise of\u00a0anti-immigration protests\u00a0during the summer had been mistakenly let out of Chelmsford Prison on 24 October, east of London.\n\nEthiopian national\u00a0Hadish Gerberslasie Kebatu, who had been sentenced to 12 months in prison for sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl, was captured after a two-day search and has now been deported to Ethiopia.\n\nAfter the Kebatu search, the government announced stronger security checks in prisons and launched an independent investigation into the blunder.\n\nDeputy Prime Minister David Lammy, who is also the justice minister, said he was \"absolutely outraged\" and sought to blame the woes facing the prison estate on the previous government.\n\nShortly before news of the latest incident broke, Lammy repeatedly refused to confirm during questioning in the House of Commons whether any more asylum-seekers had been wrongly released since Kebatu had been accidentally let out of prison.\n\nAccording to government figures, 262 prisoners were released in error in the year ending in March 2025, a 128% increase on the previous 12-month period.\n\nConservative spokespeople said the Labour government has to take the blame as the sharp increase in the numbers is directly linked with its decision to release some prisoners earlier to ensure prisons don't hit their capacity.\n\n","htmlText":"<p>British police were undertaking two more searches on Wednesday, following the news that two prisoners had been mistakenly released from prison over the past week, just days after the government brought in more stringent checks.<\/p>\n<p>Police said the two were wrongly freed from Wandsworth Prison in southwest London and which last year was put into special measures after another prisoner escaped by clinging to the underside of a food delivery truck.<\/p>\n<p>London's Metropolitan Police said Brahim Kaddour-Cherif, 24, was wrongly freed on 29 October while Surrey Police said it is hunting for William Smith, 35, who was also accidentally released on Monday.<\/p>\n<p>The Met said that it was only informed of Kaddour-Cherif's release on Tuesday, six days after the mistaken release of a man who had entered the UK legally in 2019 but had overstayed and was in the initial stages of the deportation process.<\/p>\n<p>It said Kaddour-Cherif, an Algerian national who was serving a sentence for trespass with intent to steal, is also known to use other variations of his name, including Ibrahim.<\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-image widget--size-fullwidth widget--animation-fade-in widget--align-center\" data-ratio=\"0.6665\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio--auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <img class=\"widgetImage__image\" loading=\"lazy\" src=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////images.euronews.com//articles//stories//09//53//82//27//808x539_cmsv2_7f73aca1-ad4a-5dbe-8ee0-37a0d1b40b7f-9538227.jpg/" alt=\"The New Scotland Yard sign outside the headquarters of the London Metropolitan Police, 25 September, 2023\" srcset=\"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/82\/27\/384x256_cmsv2_7f73aca1-ad4a-5dbe-8ee0-37a0d1b40b7f-9538227.jpg 384w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/82\/27\/640x427_cmsv2_7f73aca1-ad4a-5dbe-8ee0-37a0d1b40b7f-9538227.jpg 640w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/82\/27\/750x500_cmsv2_7f73aca1-ad4a-5dbe-8ee0-37a0d1b40b7f-9538227.jpg 750w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/82\/27\/828x552_cmsv2_7f73aca1-ad4a-5dbe-8ee0-37a0d1b40b7f-9538227.jpg 828w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/82\/27\/1080x720_cmsv2_7f73aca1-ad4a-5dbe-8ee0-37a0d1b40b7f-9538227.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/82\/27\/1200x800_cmsv2_7f73aca1-ad4a-5dbe-8ee0-37a0d1b40b7f-9538227.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/82\/27\/1920x1280_cmsv2_7f73aca1-ad4a-5dbe-8ee0-37a0d1b40b7f-9538227.jpg 1920w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 95vw, (max-width: 1024px) 80vw, (max-width: 1280px) 55vw, 728px\"\/>\n <figcaption class=\"widget__caption\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionWrap\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionText\">The New Scotland Yard sign outside the headquarters of the London Metropolitan Police, 25 September, 2023<\/span>\n <span class=\"widget__captionCredit\">AP Photo<\/span>\n <\/span>\n <\/figcaption>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>It also confirmed that he is a registered sex offender, having been convicted a year ago for indecent exposure.<\/p>\n<p>\"Cherif has had a six-day head start but we are working urgently to close the gap and establish his whereabouts,\" said Commander Paul Trevers, who is overseeing the investigation.<\/p>\n<p>Meanwhile, Surrey Police said Smith was sentenced on Monday to 45 months for multiple fraud offences and was accidentally freed the same day.<\/p>\n<p>The inadvertent releases heap further embarrassment on the Prison Service, which has been starved of resources for many years and the new Labour government, which returned to power last July after 14 years, replacing the previous Conservative administration.<\/p>\n<div class=\"c-widget-related\" data-stories-id=\"\" data-event=\"widget_related\">\n <div class=\"c-widget-related__title\">\n <b class=\"c-widget-related__title__text\" lang=\"en\">Related<\/b>\n <\/div>\n <ul class=\"c-widget-related__list\">\n <li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//2025//11//03//uk-police-charge-man-with-attempted-murder-after-injuring-11-in-train-stabbing/">UK police charge man with attempted murder after injuring 11 in train stabbing<\/a><\/li><li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//2025//09//30//britains-pm-keir-starmer-accuses-nigel-farage-of-trying-to-divide-uk-at-labour-conference/">Britain's PM Keir Starmer accuses Nigel Farage of trying to divide UK at Labour conference<\/a><\/li>\n <\/ul>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>The releases come barely two weeks after the asylum-seeker at the heart of a rise of anti-immigration protests during the summer had been mistakenly let out of Chelmsford Prison on 24 October, east of London.<\/p>\n<p>Ethiopian national Hadish Gerberslasie Kebatu, who had been sentenced to 12 months in prison for sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl, was captured after a two-day search and has now been deported to Ethiopia.<\/p>\n<p>After the Kebatu search, the government announced stronger security checks in prisons and launched an independent investigation into the blunder.<\/p>\n<p>Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy, who is also the justice minister, said he was \"absolutely outraged\" and sought to blame the woes facing the prison estate on the previous government.<\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-image widget--size-fullwidth widget--animation-fade-in widget--align-center\" data-ratio=\"0.6665\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio--auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <img class=\"widgetImage__image\" loading=\"lazy\" src=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////images.euronews.com//articles//stories//09//53//82//27//808x539_cmsv2_97a5b0f8-732a-5740-969c-1c1766061708-9538227.jpg/" alt=\"Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy speaks during the annual Labour Party conference in Liverpool, 29 September, 2025\" srcset=\"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/82\/27\/384x256_cmsv2_97a5b0f8-732a-5740-969c-1c1766061708-9538227.jpg 384w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/82\/27\/640x427_cmsv2_97a5b0f8-732a-5740-969c-1c1766061708-9538227.jpg 640w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/82\/27\/750x500_cmsv2_97a5b0f8-732a-5740-969c-1c1766061708-9538227.jpg 750w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/82\/27\/828x552_cmsv2_97a5b0f8-732a-5740-969c-1c1766061708-9538227.jpg 828w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/82\/27\/1080x720_cmsv2_97a5b0f8-732a-5740-969c-1c1766061708-9538227.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/82\/27\/1200x800_cmsv2_97a5b0f8-732a-5740-969c-1c1766061708-9538227.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/82\/27\/1920x1280_cmsv2_97a5b0f8-732a-5740-969c-1c1766061708-9538227.jpg 1920w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 95vw, (max-width: 1024px) 80vw, (max-width: 1280px) 55vw, 728px\"\/>\n <figcaption class=\"widget__caption\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionWrap\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionText\">Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy speaks during the annual Labour Party conference in Liverpool, 29 September, 2025<\/span>\n <span class=\"widget__captionCredit\">AP Photo<\/span>\n <\/span>\n <\/figcaption>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>Shortly before news of the latest incident broke, Lammy repeatedly refused to confirm during questioning in the House of Commons whether any more asylum-seekers had been wrongly released since Kebatu had been accidentally let out of prison.<\/p>\n<p>According to government figures, 262 prisoners were released in error in the year ending in March 2025, a 128% increase on the previous 12-month period.<\/p>\n<p>Conservative spokespeople said the Labour government has to take the blame as the sharp increase in the numbers is directly linked with its decision to release some prisoners earlier to ensure prisons don't hit their capacity.<\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1762367931,"updatedAt":1762370524,"publishedAt":1762370489,"firstPublishedAt":1762370489,"lastPublishedAt":1762370489,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/82\/27\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_47b0937d-1116-5226-8b37-ab27c15a5251-9538227.jpg","altText":"Police officers in London, 10 August, 2024","caption":"Police officers in London, 10 August, 2024","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":1338,"height":753},{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/82\/27\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_7f73aca1-ad4a-5dbe-8ee0-37a0d1b40b7f-9538227.jpg","altText":"The New Scotland Yard sign outside the headquarters of the London Metropolitan Police, 25 September, 2023","caption":"The New Scotland Yard sign outside the headquarters of the London Metropolitan Police, 25 September, 2023","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1333},{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/82\/27\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_97a5b0f8-732a-5740-969c-1c1766061708-9538227.jpg","altText":"Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy speaks during the annual Labour Party conference in Liverpool, 29 September, 2025","caption":"Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy speaks during the annual Labour Party conference in Liverpool, 29 September, 2025","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1333}],"authors":{"journalists":[{"id":2972,"urlSafeValue":"blackburn","title":"Gavin Blackburn","twitter":null}],"producers":[],"videoEditor":[]},"keywords":[{"id":7800,"slug":"united-kingdom","urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","titleRaw":"United Kingdom"},{"id":11938,"slug":"prisoner","urlSafeValue":"prisoner","title":"prisoner","titleRaw":"prisoner"},{"id":11642,"slug":"police","urlSafeValue":"police","title":"Police","titleRaw":"Police"},{"id":23132,"slug":"keir-starmer","urlSafeValue":"keir-starmer","title":"Keir Starmer","titleRaw":"Keir Starmer"},{"id":30122,"slug":"david-lammy","urlSafeValue":"david-lammy","title":"David Lammy","titleRaw":"David Lammy"}],"widgets":[{"slug":"image","count":2},{"slug":"related","count":1}],"related":[{"id":2482204},{"id":2844591}],"technicalTags":[],"externalPartners":[],"hasExternalVideo":0,"hasInternalOrExternalVideo":0,"video":0,"videos":[],"liveStream":[{"startDate":0,"endDate":0}],"scribbleLiveId":0,"scribbleLiveRibbon":0,"isLiveCoverage":0,"sourceId":1,"sources":[],"externalSource":null,"additionalSources":"AP","additionalReporting":"","freeField1":null,"freeField2":"","type":"normal","displayType":"default","program":{"id":"world","urlSafeValue":"world","title":"World News","online":1,"url":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/programs\/world"},"season":"","episode":"","episodeId":"","vertical":"news","verticals":[{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"}],"primaryVertical":{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"},"themes":[{"id":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World","url":"\/news\/international"}],"primaryTheme":{"id":1,"urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World"},"advertising":0,"advertisingData":{"startDate":0,"endDate":0,"type":null,"slug":null,"title":null,"disclaimerLabelKey":null,"sponsor":null,"sponsorName":null,"sponsorUrl":null,"sponsorLogo":"","sponsorLogoReverse":"","isDfp":0},"geoLocation":{"lat":0,"lon":0},"location":1,"continent":{"id":104,"urlSafeValue":"europe","title":"Europe"},"country":{"id":291,"urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","url":"\/news\/europe\/united-kingdom"},"town":{"id":3438,"urlSafeValue":"london","title":"London"},"contextualSignals":{"doubleVerify":{"ids":[],"slugs":[]}},"grapeshot":null,"versions":[],"programDeliverable":{"slug":"article-video","format":"default"},"showOpinionDisclaimer":0,"allViews":0,"allViewsMeta":{"pointOfView":[],"survey":[],"tweetId":0,"tweet2NdId":0,"displayOverlay":0},"storyTranslationMethod":[],"localisation":[],"autoPublished":0,"autoLocalised":0,"isReviewed":0,"path":"\/2025\/11\/05\/uk-police-hunt-for-two-more-wrongly-released-prisoners-days-after-new-measures-brought-in","lastModified":1762370489},{"id":2844217,"cid":9537864,"versionId":1,"archive":0,"housenumber":null,"owner":"euronews","isMagazine":0,"isBreakingNews":0,"daletEventName":"Business M&S","daletPyramidId":3214395,"channels":[{"id":1},{"id":2},{"id":3},{"id":4},{"id":5},{"id":10},{"id":12},{"id":14}],"status":2,"title":"Cyberattack on Marks & Spencer slices profits by more than a half","titleSeo":null,"titleListing1":"Cyberattack on Marks & Spencer slices profits by more than a half","titleListing2":"","leadin":"The hack cost M&S over \u00a3300 million in lost sales but the firm said it was able to recover around a third of this through an insurance payout.","summary":"The hack cost M&S over \u00a3300 million in lost sales but the firm said it was able to recover around a third of this through an insurance payout.","keySentence":"","url":"cyberattack-on-marks-spencer-slices-profits-by-more-than-a-half","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/business\/2025\/11\/05\/cyberattack-on-marks-spencer-slices-profits-by-more-than-a-half","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"British retailer Marks and Spencer saw its half-year profits more than halved as a result of a cyberattack that brought its online business to a grinding halt.\n\nIn a statement on Wednesday, M&S said its underlying pre-tax profits tumbled 55.4% to \u00a3184.1 million (\u20ac208.89mn) in the six months to 27 September largely on the back of a 40% collapse in online home and fashion sales after it was forced to halt online orders. Firm food sales helped cushion the blow.\n\nM&S had to stop all online sales for around six weeks and suffered empty shelves due to disruption to its logistics systems after hackers targeted the business around the Easter weekend. The company has said the attack was due to \u201chuman error\u201d.\n\nThe hack cost it \u00a3324mn (\u20ac282.14mn) in lost sales but that it was able to recover \u00a3100mn through an insurance payout.\n\nIt added that the attack is set to impact profits by around \u00a3136mn (\u20ac154.28mn), including about another \u00a334mn (\u20ac38.58mn) in the final six months of the year.\n\nThe main business to suffer was M&S's fashion arm which saw overall sales down 16.4% in the first half of the year, with online sales down 42.9%.\n\nThe hack, one of the most disruptive in British corporate history, also saw customers' personal data, which could have included names, email addresses, postal addresses, and dates of birth, taken by hackers.\n\n\u201cThe first half of this year was an extraordinary moment in time for M&S,\" said Stuart Machin, chief executive of M&S. \"We are now getting back on track.\u201d\n\nM&S resumed home deliveries in June after the hack, but did not restart click and collect orders until August.\n\nThe company said online sales have been improving and the group expects overall trading to be fully recovered by the end of its financial year. However, it said the \u201crecovery\u201d has been slower in fashion, home, and beauty than it has been in food.\n\nDan Coatsworth, head of markets at AJ Bell, said M&S's \u201ccatastrophic summer\u201d could well have long-term implications for the company.\n\n\u201cIts rivals made hay while the sun shone, with Next among the names luring customers away from M&S during the lengthy period of disruption,\" he said. \u201cM&S says the recovery in trading for clothing has been slower than food, suggesting that some people who tasted the flavours of rival retailers might not necessarily come back quickly.\u201d\n\nM&S has not been the only British retailer to suffer disruption to its business as a result of a cyberattack. Harrods, the luxury London department store, and the Co-op have also been targets. It remains unclear if the three attacks are linked, and police investigations are ongoing.\n\nExperts, including those from the UK's National Cyber Security Centre are saying that generative artificial intelligence is accelerating the threat landscape, and that firms and individuals have to stay on top of developments and shore up their defences against cyberattacks.\n\n","htmlText":"<p>British retailer Marks and Spencer saw its half-year profits more than halved as a result of a cyberattack that brought its online business to a grinding halt.<\/p>\n<p>In a statement on Wednesday, M&amp;S said its underlying pre-tax profits tumbled 55.4% to \u00a3184.1 million (\u20ac208.89mn) in the six months to 27 September largely on the back of a 40% collapse in online home and fashion sales after it was forced to halt online orders. Firm food sales helped cushion the blow.<\/p>\n<p>M&amp;S had to stop all online sales for around six weeks and suffered empty shelves due to disruption to its logistics systems after hackers targeted the business around the Easter weekend. The company has said the attack was due to \u201chuman error\u201d.<\/p>\n<p>The hack cost it \u00a3324mn (\u20ac282.14mn) in lost sales but that it was able to recover \u00a3100mn through an insurance payout.<\/p>\n<p>It added that the attack is set to impact profits by around \u00a3136mn (\u20ac154.28mn), including about another \u00a334mn (\u20ac38.58mn) in the final six months of the year.<\/p>\n<p>The main business to suffer was M&amp;S's fashion arm which saw overall sales down 16.4% in the first half of the year, with online sales down 42.9%.<\/p>\n<p>The hack, one of the most disruptive in British corporate history, also saw customers' personal data, which could have included names, email addresses, postal addresses, and dates of birth, taken by hackers.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThe first half of this year was an extraordinary moment in time for M&amp;S,\" said Stuart Machin, chief executive of M&amp;S. \"We are now getting back on track.\u201d<\/p>\n<div class=\"c-widget-related\" data-stories-id=\"\" data-event=\"widget_related\">\n <div class=\"c-widget-related__title\">\n <b class=\"c-widget-related__title__text\" lang=\"en\">Related<\/b>\n <\/div>\n <ul class=\"c-widget-related__list\">\n <li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//business//2025//11//05//is-europes-spending-boom-fuelling-a-new-dangerous-debt-spiral/">Is Europe\u2019s spending boom fuelling a new dangerous debt spiral?<\/a><\/li><li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//business//2025//11//01//entrepreneurship-in-europe-where-are-firms-thriving-and-barely-surviving/">Entrepreneurship in Europe: Where are firms thriving and barely surviving?<\/a><\/li>\n <\/ul>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>M&amp;S resumed home deliveries in June after the hack, but did not restart click and collect orders until August.<\/p>\n<p>The company said online sales have been improving and the group expects overall trading to be fully recovered by the end of its financial year. However, it said the \u201crecovery\u201d has been slower in fashion, home, and beauty than it has been in food.<\/p>\n<p>Dan Coatsworth, head of markets at AJ Bell, said M&amp;S's \u201ccatastrophic summer\u201d could well have long-term implications for the company.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cIts rivals made hay while the sun shone, with Next among the names luring customers away from M&amp;S during the lengthy period of disruption,\" he said. \u201cM&amp;S says the recovery in trading for clothing has been slower than food, suggesting that some people who tasted the flavours of rival retailers might not necessarily come back quickly.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>M&amp;S has not been the only British retailer to suffer disruption to its business as a result of a cyberattack. Harrods, the luxury London department store, and the Co-op have also been targets. It remains unclear if the three attacks are linked, and police investigations are ongoing.<\/p>\n<p>Experts, including those from the UK's National Cyber Security Centre are saying that generative artificial intelligence is accelerating the threat landscape, and that firms and individuals have to stay on top of developments and shore up their defences against cyberattacks.<\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1762350977,"updatedAt":1762363941,"publishedAt":1762354088,"firstPublishedAt":1762354088,"lastPublishedAt":1762354088,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/78\/64\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_5dffb994-484e-5211-a1cf-505d32864b92-9537864.jpg","altText":"People walk past a branch of British clothing and food store Marks and Spencer in London. 23 May 2018.","caption":"People walk past a branch of British clothing and food store Marks and Spencer in London. 23 May 2018.","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP\/Alastair Grant","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1027}],"authors":{"journalists":[],"producers":[],"videoEditor":[]},"keywords":[{"id":7334,"slug":"profits","urlSafeValue":"profits","title":"Profits","titleRaw":"Profits"},{"id":10775,"slug":"cyber-attack","urlSafeValue":"cyber-attack","title":"Cyber attack","titleRaw":"Cyber attack"},{"id":7800,"slug":"united-kingdom","urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","titleRaw":"United Kingdom"},{"id":26458,"slug":"company","urlSafeValue":"company","title":"Company","titleRaw":"Company"},{"id":4595,"slug":"business","urlSafeValue":"business","title":"Business","titleRaw":"Business"},{"id":11396,"slug":"food","urlSafeValue":"food","title":"Food","titleRaw":"Food"}],"widgets":[{"slug":"related","count":1}],"related":[],"technicalTags":[],"externalPartners":[],"hasExternalVideo":0,"hasInternalOrExternalVideo":0,"video":0,"videos":[],"liveStream":[{"startDate":0,"endDate":0}],"scribbleLiveId":0,"scribbleLiveRibbon":0,"isLiveCoverage":0,"sourceId":1,"sources":[],"externalSource":null,"additionalSources":"","additionalReporting":"AP with Eleanor Butler","freeField1":null,"freeField2":"","type":"normal","displayType":"default","program":{"id":"business","urlSafeValue":"business","title":"Business","online":0,"url":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/business\/business\/business"},"season":"","episode":"","episodeId":"","vertical":"business","verticals":[{"id":11,"slug":"business","urlSafeValue":"business","title":"Business"}],"primaryVertical":{"id":11,"slug":"business","urlSafeValue":"business","title":"Business"},"themes":[{"id":"business","urlSafeValue":"business","title":"Business","url":"\/business\/business"}],"primaryTheme":{"id":7,"urlSafeValue":"business","title":"Business"},"advertising":0,"advertisingData":{"startDate":0,"endDate":0,"type":null,"slug":null,"title":null,"disclaimerLabelKey":null,"sponsor":null,"sponsorName":null,"sponsorUrl":null,"sponsorLogo":"","sponsorLogoReverse":"","isDfp":0},"geoLocation":{"lat":0,"lon":0},"location":1,"continent":{"id":104,"urlSafeValue":"europe","title":"Europe"},"country":{"id":291,"urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","url":"\/news\/europe\/united-kingdom"},"town":[],"contextualSignals":{"doubleVerify":{"ids":[],"slugs":[]}},"grapeshot":null,"versions":[],"programDeliverable":{"slug":"article","format":"default"},"showOpinionDisclaimer":0,"allViews":0,"allViewsMeta":{"pointOfView":[],"survey":[],"tweetId":0,"tweet2NdId":0,"displayOverlay":0},"storyTranslationMethod":[],"localisation":[],"autoPublished":0,"autoLocalised":0,"isReviewed":0,"path":"\/business\/2025\/11\/05\/cyberattack-on-marks-spencer-slices-profits-by-more-than-a-half","lastModified":1762354088},{"id":2843939,"cid":9536600,"versionId":3,"archive":0,"housenumber":null,"owner":"euronews","isMagazine":0,"isBreakingNews":0,"daletEventName":"CULTURE - SAATCHI THE LONG NOW ","daletPyramidId":3203377,"channels":[{"id":1},{"id":2},{"id":4},{"id":5},{"id":10},{"id":12},{"id":14}],"status":2,"title":"'The Long Now': London's Saatchi Gallery celebrates 40 years of contemporary experimentation","titleSeo":null,"titleListing1":"Saatchi Gallery celebrates 40 years of contemporary experimentation","titleListing2":"The Long Now: London's Saatchi Gallery celebrates 40 years of contemporary experimentation","leadin":"From a monumental Jenny Saville painting to Richard Wilson\u2019s iconic mirrored oil installation, the Saatchi Gallery's latest show is celebration of its legacy, experimentation and the future of art.","summary":"From a monumental Jenny Saville painting to Richard Wilson\u2019s iconic mirrored oil installation, the Saatchi Gallery's latest show is celebration of its legacy, experimentation and the future of art.","keySentence":"","url":"the-long-now-londons-saatchi-gallery-celebrates-40-years-of-contemporary-experimentation","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/culture\/2025\/11\/05\/the-long-now-londons-saatchi-gallery-celebrates-40-years-of-contemporary-experimentation","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"Forty years after Charles Saatchi first opened his doors to a then-disused paint factory in north London, the Saatchi Gallery remains a benchmark for contemporary art - a space where the new, the daring and the downright unexpected collide.\n\nIts latest exhibition, The Long Now, is both a celebration of that legacy and a statement of intent for the future.\n\nSpread across nine huge, carefully curated white-walled rooms, over two floors, The Long Now is a breathtaking mix of the physical and the digital, and of artists both acclaimed and newly emerging.\n\nCurated by former Senior Director Philippa Adams, it looks back at the gallery\u2019s history of risk-taking - from the YBAs (Young British Artists) of the 1990s to the multimedia innovators of today.\n\nA legacy reimagined\n\nFor those who\u2019ve followed the Saatchi Gallery\u2019s evolution - from its Boundary Road beginnings in 1985 to its stunning Duke of York\u2019s HQ location in Chelsea - this show feels like both a retrospective and a provocation.\n\nYou'll find Jenny Saville\u2019s monumental Passage (2004), a powerful study of the human body. Elsewhere, Allan Kaprow\u2019s YARD - a chaotic playground of stacked car tyres - invites visitors to climb, move and lose themselves within it. Directly above it hangs Conrad Shawcross\u2019s Golden Lotus (Inverted), a vintage Lotus car transformed into a spinning sculpture, blaring with disco music.\n\nAnd then there\u2019s Richard Wilson\u2019s 20:50, perhaps the most iconic installation in Saatchi\u2019s history - a large room, full waist-high of recycled engine oil. The surface is crystal clear and mirrors the architecture around it. Light from the large windows reflects the sky across the black surface. The smell of oil hits you before the view does. It\u2019s trippy, meditative and a little unsettling. First presented in 1987, the work feels more relevant than ever amid the climate anxieties of our time.\n\nNew voices, new mediums\n\nAlongside art-world giants like Damien Hirst, Olafur Eliasson and Jenny Saville, the exhibition features fresh voices from artists still carving out their place in the scene.\n\nColombian painter Alejandro Ospina\u2019s large-scale, abstract canvases pop with colour and shapes. He merges brushstrokes from modernist masters like Mir\u00f3 and Kandinsky with the imagery of the internet as well as the innocent doodles of his two young children.\n\nThe result is a joyful combination of tradition and modernity. \u201cSo in these paintings, you\u2019ll find drawings from artists like Gorky, Mir\u00f3, and Kandinsky. They\u2019re layered alongside doodles from my kids. The masters\u2019 brushstrokes become the larger gestures, while the children\u2019s drawings add this beautiful spontaneity,\u201d Ospina told Euronews Culture.\n\nIt\u2019s his second time showing at Saatchi, and he admits the space still impresses him: \u201cI love this place - the light, the space, the attention to detail. And to have my work featured on the poster downstairs? I\u2019m quite chuffed, honestly,\u201d he said.\n\nOn the floor above you can find Frankie Boyle\u2019s Ecliptic, a three-minute installation that simulates the passage of a day - sunrise to sunset - through a bespoke LED system she designed herself.\n\n\u201cI was born with a speech and language disorder, so I started life non-verbal,\u201d Boyle told Euronews Culture. \u201cMy whole way of communicating was through visuals. That made me very attuned to how people move and feel within environments - and to how light itself is a kind of language that goes beyond words.\u201d\n\nThough deceptively simple in form, Ecliptic uses double-sided LED tubes to emit light in two directions, creating subtle transitions and layered hues. \u201cBy layering different colours, I can move from sunrise to sunset, day into night, in a continuous flow,\u201d she explained.\n\nFor Boyle, debuting at the Saatchi Gallery is a definite career milestone. \u201cIt feels incredible - it\u2019s such an iconic space, but also one that\u2019s open to all ages and types of artistic investigation. I love that accessibility.\u201d\n\nIn a room just down from Boyle's Ecliptic you can explore the dystopian world of Chino Moya\u2019s Deemona. This multi-screen installation imagines a future workplace designed and run entirely by AI - a \u201cpost-human\u201d environment where artificial consciousnesses attempt to recreate humanity.\n\n\u201cDeemona is my attempt to imagine what an ideal human society might look like - one designed by a network of artificial consciousness,\u201d Moya told Euronews Culture. \u201cIt\u2019s set in a far distant future, after humans are gone, when a collective of neural networks decides to recreate the world of humans - but to improve it, according to what they think a perfect society should be.\u201d\n\nThe installation combines TV screens and scattered sculptural works, creating a world that feels halfway between a corporate office and a mausoleum. \u201cAbout 30 or 40 people worked on this project,\u201d Moya said. \u201cBesides being an artist, I\u2019m also a film director, so I brought in a full production crew from my company, Black Dog - which is part of Ridley Scott\u2019s group of companies. It was essentially a full-scale film shoot.\u201d\n\n\"A platform for artists to challenge conventions\"\n\nThe Long Now ultimately feels less like a greatest-hits show and more like a conversation between decades - between the physical and digital, the past and future.\n\nIt\u2019s a reminder that Saatchi Gallery\u2019s greatest contribution to culture hasn\u2019t just been discovering new artists but creating a space where experimentation is encouraged and celebrated.\n\nAs Philippa Adams put it, \u201cAt its heart, The Long Now reaffirms the Gallery\u2019s role as a platform for artists to challenge conventions and shape conversations that extend beyond the walls.\u201d\n\nThe Long Now: Saatchi Gallery at 40 continues until 1 March 2026\n\n","htmlText":"<p>Forty years after Charles Saatchi first opened his doors to a then-disused paint factory in north London, the <a href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//culture//2025//08//02//living-a-dream-saatchi-gallery-celebrates-hip-hop-with-joyful-new-photography-exhibition/">Saatchi Gallery<\/strong><\/a> remains a benchmark for contemporary art - a space where the new, the daring and the downright unexpected collide.<\/p>\n<p>Its latest exhibition, <em>The Long Now<\/em>, is both a celebration of that legacy and a statement of intent for the future.<\/p>\n<p>Spread across nine huge, carefully curated white-walled rooms, over two floors, <em>The Long Now<\/em> is a breathtaking mix of the physical and <a href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//culture//2025//05//16//from-ai-to-nfts-the-first-ever-digital-art-awards-celebrates-pioneering-artists/">the digital<\/strong><\/a>, and of artists both acclaimed and newly emerging. <\/p>\n<p>Curated by former Senior Director Philippa Adams, it looks back at the gallery\u2019s history of risk-taking - from the YBAs (Young British Artists) of the 1990s to the multimedia innovators of today. <\/p>\n<div class=\"c-widget-related\" data-stories-id=\"\" data-event=\"widget_related\">\n <div class=\"c-widget-related__title\">\n <b class=\"c-widget-related__title__text\" lang=\"en\">Related<\/b>\n <\/div>\n <ul class=\"c-widget-related__list\">\n <li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//culture//2025//11//01//20-years-in-the-making-the-grand-egyptian-museum-officially-opens/">Twenty years in the making: The Grand Egyptian Museum officially opens<\/a><\/li><li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//culture//2025//08//02//living-a-dream-saatchi-gallery-celebrates-hip-hop-with-joyful-new-photography-exhibition/">'Living A Dream': Saatchi Gallery celebrates hip hop with joyful new photography exhibition<\/a><\/li>\n <\/ul>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-image widget--size-fullwidth widget--animation-fade-in widget--align-center\" data-ratio=\"1.3333333333333333\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio--auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <img class=\"widgetImage__image\" loading=\"lazy\" src=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////images.euronews.com//articles//stories//09//53//66//00//808x1077_cmsv2_e25b4e89-6b00-5e39-8bbb-4e19f7a1cdf7-9536600.jpg/" alt=\"Jenny Saville&#x2019;s &#x27;Passage&#x27;, 2004.\" srcset=\"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/384x512_cmsv2_e25b4e89-6b00-5e39-8bbb-4e19f7a1cdf7-9536600.jpg 384w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/640x853_cmsv2_e25b4e89-6b00-5e39-8bbb-4e19f7a1cdf7-9536600.jpg 640w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/750x1000_cmsv2_e25b4e89-6b00-5e39-8bbb-4e19f7a1cdf7-9536600.jpg 750w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/828x1104_cmsv2_e25b4e89-6b00-5e39-8bbb-4e19f7a1cdf7-9536600.jpg 828w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/1080x1440_cmsv2_e25b4e89-6b00-5e39-8bbb-4e19f7a1cdf7-9536600.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/1200x1600_cmsv2_e25b4e89-6b00-5e39-8bbb-4e19f7a1cdf7-9536600.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/1920x2560_cmsv2_e25b4e89-6b00-5e39-8bbb-4e19f7a1cdf7-9536600.jpg 1920w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 95vw, (max-width: 1024px) 80vw, (max-width: 1280px) 55vw, 728px\"\/>\n <figcaption class=\"widget__caption\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionWrap\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionText\">Jenny Saville&#x2019;s &#x27;Passage&#x27;, 2004.<\/span>\n <span class=\"widget__captionCredit\">Credit: Theo Farrant\/Euronews Culture <\/span>\n <\/span>\n <\/figcaption>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<h2>A legacy reimagined<\/h2>\n<p>For those who\u2019ve followed the Saatchi Gallery\u2019s evolution - from its Boundary Road beginnings in 1985 to its stunning Duke of York\u2019s HQ location in Chelsea - this show feels like both a retrospective and a provocation. <\/p>\n<p>You'll find Jenny Saville\u2019s monumental <em>Passage<\/em> (2004), a powerful study of the human body. Elsewhere, Allan Kaprow\u2019s <em>YARD<\/em> - a chaotic playground of stacked car tyres - invites visitors to climb, move and lose themselves within it. Directly above it hangs Conrad Shawcross\u2019s <em>Golden Lotus (Inverted)<\/em>, a vintage Lotus car transformed into a spinning sculpture, blaring with disco music.<\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-image widget--size-fullwidth widget--animation-fade-in widget--align-center\" data-ratio=\"0.6655\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio--auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <img class=\"widgetImage__image\" loading=\"lazy\" src=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////images.euronews.com//articles//stories//09//53//66//00//808x539_cmsv2_eb1eba06-1b26-537a-a113-69dc5934bcbd-9536600.jpg/" alt=\"Allan Kaprow&#x2019;s &#x27;YARD&#x27; paired with Conrad Shawcross&#x2019;s suspended Golden Lotus (Inverted)\" srcset=\"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/384x256_cmsv2_eb1eba06-1b26-537a-a113-69dc5934bcbd-9536600.jpg 384w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/640x426_cmsv2_eb1eba06-1b26-537a-a113-69dc5934bcbd-9536600.jpg 640w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/750x499_cmsv2_eb1eba06-1b26-537a-a113-69dc5934bcbd-9536600.jpg 750w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/828x551_cmsv2_eb1eba06-1b26-537a-a113-69dc5934bcbd-9536600.jpg 828w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/1080x719_cmsv2_eb1eba06-1b26-537a-a113-69dc5934bcbd-9536600.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/1200x799_cmsv2_eb1eba06-1b26-537a-a113-69dc5934bcbd-9536600.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/1920x1278_cmsv2_eb1eba06-1b26-537a-a113-69dc5934bcbd-9536600.jpg 1920w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 95vw, (max-width: 1024px) 80vw, (max-width: 1280px) 55vw, 728px\"\/>\n <figcaption class=\"widget__caption\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionWrap\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionText\">Allan Kaprow&#x2019;s &#x27;YARD&#x27; paired with Conrad Shawcross&#x2019;s suspended Golden Lotus (Inverted)<\/span>\n <span class=\"widget__captionCredit\">Credit: Saatchi Gallery\/MattChungPhoto <\/span>\n <\/span>\n <\/figcaption>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-image widget--size-fullwidth widget--animation-fade-in widget--align-center\" data-ratio=\"0.6665\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio--auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <img class=\"widgetImage__image\" loading=\"lazy\" src=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////images.euronews.com//articles//stories//09//53//66//00//808x539_cmsv2_de78d9ff-2109-5b7b-b2d7-9ad28de0108a-9536600.jpg/" alt=\"Richard Wilson&#x2019;s &#x27;20:50&#x27;, on display at The Long Now exhibition. \" srcset=\"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/384x256_cmsv2_de78d9ff-2109-5b7b-b2d7-9ad28de0108a-9536600.jpg 384w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/640x427_cmsv2_de78d9ff-2109-5b7b-b2d7-9ad28de0108a-9536600.jpg 640w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/750x500_cmsv2_de78d9ff-2109-5b7b-b2d7-9ad28de0108a-9536600.jpg 750w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/828x552_cmsv2_de78d9ff-2109-5b7b-b2d7-9ad28de0108a-9536600.jpg 828w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/1080x720_cmsv2_de78d9ff-2109-5b7b-b2d7-9ad28de0108a-9536600.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/1200x800_cmsv2_de78d9ff-2109-5b7b-b2d7-9ad28de0108a-9536600.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/1920x1280_cmsv2_de78d9ff-2109-5b7b-b2d7-9ad28de0108a-9536600.jpg 1920w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 95vw, (max-width: 1024px) 80vw, (max-width: 1280px) 55vw, 728px\"\/>\n <figcaption class=\"widget__caption\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionWrap\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionText\">Richard Wilson&#x2019;s &#x27;20:50&#x27;, on display at The Long Now exhibition. <\/span>\n <span class=\"widget__captionCredit\">Credit: Saatchi Gallery\/MattChungPhoto <\/span>\n <\/span>\n <\/figcaption>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>And then there\u2019s Richard Wilson\u2019s <em>20:50<\/em>, perhaps the most iconic installation in Saatchi\u2019s history - a large room, full waist-high of recycled engine oil. The surface is crystal clear and mirrors the architecture around it. Light from the large windows reflects the sky across the black surface. The smell of oil hits you before the view does. It\u2019s trippy, meditative and a little unsettling. First presented in 1987, the work feels more relevant than ever amid the climate anxieties of our time. <\/p>\n<h2>New voices, new mediums<\/h2>\n<p>Alongside art-world giants like Damien Hirst, Olafur Eliasson andJenny Saville, the exhibition features fresh voices from artists still carving out their place in the scene.<\/p>\n<p>Colombian painter Alejandro Ospina\u2019s large-scale, abstract canvases pop with colour and shapes. He merges brushstrokes from modernist masters like Mir\u00f3 and Kandinsky with the imagery of the internet as well as the innocent doodles of his two young children. <\/p>\n<p>The result is a joyful combination of tradition and modernity. \u201cSo in these paintings, you\u2019ll find drawings from artists like Gorky, Mir\u00f3, and Kandinsky. They\u2019re layered alongside doodles from my kids. The masters\u2019 brushstrokes become the larger gestures, while the children\u2019s drawings add this beautiful spontaneity,\u201d Ospina told Euronews Culture.<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s his second time showing at Saatchi, and he admits the space still impresses him: \u201cI love this place - the light, the space, the attention to detail. And to have my work featured on the poster downstairs? I\u2019m quite chuffed, honestly,\u201d he said.<\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-image widget--size-fullwidth widget--animation-fade-in widget--align-center\" data-ratio=\"0.75\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio--auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <img class=\"widgetImage__image\" loading=\"lazy\" src=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////images.euronews.com//articles//stories//09//53//66//00//808x608_cmsv2_a7092468-917c-5e00-aa39-fe7f508bcd00-9536600.jpg/" alt=\"Alejandro Ospinal photographed at the Saatchi Gallery&#x27;s &#x27;The Long Now&#x27; exhibition\" srcset=\"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/384x288_cmsv2_a7092468-917c-5e00-aa39-fe7f508bcd00-9536600.jpg 384w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/640x480_cmsv2_a7092468-917c-5e00-aa39-fe7f508bcd00-9536600.jpg 640w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/750x563_cmsv2_a7092468-917c-5e00-aa39-fe7f508bcd00-9536600.jpg 750w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/828x621_cmsv2_a7092468-917c-5e00-aa39-fe7f508bcd00-9536600.jpg 828w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/1080x810_cmsv2_a7092468-917c-5e00-aa39-fe7f508bcd00-9536600.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/1200x900_cmsv2_a7092468-917c-5e00-aa39-fe7f508bcd00-9536600.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/1920x1440_cmsv2_a7092468-917c-5e00-aa39-fe7f508bcd00-9536600.jpg 1920w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 95vw, (max-width: 1024px) 80vw, (max-width: 1280px) 55vw, 728px\"\/>\n <figcaption class=\"widget__caption\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionWrap\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionText\">Alejandro Ospinal photographed at the Saatchi Gallery&#x27;s &#x27;The Long Now&#x27; exhibition<\/span>\n <span class=\"widget__captionCredit\">Credit: Theo Farrant\/Euronews Culture<\/span>\n <\/span>\n <\/figcaption>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>On the floor above you can find Frankie Boyle\u2019s <em>Ecliptic<\/em>, a three-minute installation that simulates the passage of a day - sunrise to sunset - through a bespoke LED system she designed herself.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI was born with a speech and language disorder, so I started life non-verbal,\u201d Boyle told Euronews Culture. \u201cMy whole way of communicating was through visuals. That made me very attuned to how people move and feel within environments - and to how light itself is a kind of language that goes beyond words.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Though deceptively simple in form, <em>Ecliptic<\/em> uses double-sided LED tubes to emit light in two directions, creating subtle transitions and layered hues. \u201cBy layering different colours, I can move from sunrise to sunset, day into night, in a continuous flow,\u201d she explained.<\/p>\n<p>For Boyle, debuting at the Saatchi Gallery is a definite career milestone. \u201cIt feels incredible - it\u2019s such an iconic space, but also one that\u2019s open to all ages and types of artistic investigation. I love that accessibility.\u201d<\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-image widget--size-fullwidth widget--animation-fade-in widget--align-center\" data-ratio=\"0.6665\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio--auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <img class=\"widgetImage__image\" loading=\"lazy\" src=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////images.euronews.com//articles//stories//09//53//66//00//808x539_cmsv2_9595e49c-9ec1-5b60-afdd-fe00fd9d8127-9536600.jpg/" alt=\"Frankie Boyle&#x2019;s light work titled &#x27;Ecliptic&#x27; \" srcset=\"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/384x256_cmsv2_9595e49c-9ec1-5b60-afdd-fe00fd9d8127-9536600.jpg 384w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/640x427_cmsv2_9595e49c-9ec1-5b60-afdd-fe00fd9d8127-9536600.jpg 640w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/750x500_cmsv2_9595e49c-9ec1-5b60-afdd-fe00fd9d8127-9536600.jpg 750w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/828x552_cmsv2_9595e49c-9ec1-5b60-afdd-fe00fd9d8127-9536600.jpg 828w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/1080x720_cmsv2_9595e49c-9ec1-5b60-afdd-fe00fd9d8127-9536600.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/1200x800_cmsv2_9595e49c-9ec1-5b60-afdd-fe00fd9d8127-9536600.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/1920x1280_cmsv2_9595e49c-9ec1-5b60-afdd-fe00fd9d8127-9536600.jpg 1920w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 95vw, (max-width: 1024px) 80vw, (max-width: 1280px) 55vw, 728px\"\/>\n <figcaption class=\"widget__caption\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionWrap\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionText\">Frankie Boyle&#x2019;s light work titled &#x27;Ecliptic&#x27; <\/span>\n <span class=\"widget__captionCredit\">Credit: Saatchi Gallery\/MattChungPhoto <\/span>\n <\/span>\n <\/figcaption>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-image widget--size-fullwidth widget--animation-fade-in widget--align-center\" data-ratio=\"0.6665\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio--auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <img class=\"widgetImage__image\" loading=\"lazy\" src=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////images.euronews.com//articles//stories//09//53//66//00//808x539_cmsv2_70e0bd38-6650-568f-875c-b0f50f958b3a-9536600.jpg/" alt=\"Installation view of Chino Moya&#x27;s &#x27;Deemona&#x27; \" srcset=\"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/384x256_cmsv2_70e0bd38-6650-568f-875c-b0f50f958b3a-9536600.jpg 384w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/640x427_cmsv2_70e0bd38-6650-568f-875c-b0f50f958b3a-9536600.jpg 640w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/750x500_cmsv2_70e0bd38-6650-568f-875c-b0f50f958b3a-9536600.jpg 750w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/828x552_cmsv2_70e0bd38-6650-568f-875c-b0f50f958b3a-9536600.jpg 828w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/1080x720_cmsv2_70e0bd38-6650-568f-875c-b0f50f958b3a-9536600.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/1200x800_cmsv2_70e0bd38-6650-568f-875c-b0f50f958b3a-9536600.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/1920x1280_cmsv2_70e0bd38-6650-568f-875c-b0f50f958b3a-9536600.jpg 1920w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 95vw, (max-width: 1024px) 80vw, (max-width: 1280px) 55vw, 728px\"\/>\n <figcaption class=\"widget__caption\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionWrap\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionText\">Installation view of Chino Moya&#x27;s &#x27;Deemona&#x27; <\/span>\n <span class=\"widget__captionCredit\">Credit: Saatchi Gallery\/MattChungPhoto <\/span>\n <\/span>\n <\/figcaption>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>In a room just down from Boyle's <em>Ecliptic<\/em> you can explore the dystopian world of Chino Moya\u2019s <em>Deemona<\/em>. This multi-screen installation imagines a future workplace designed and run entirely by AI - a \u201cpost-human\u201d environment where artificial consciousnesses attempt to recreate humanity.<\/p>\n<p>\u201c<em>Deemona<\/em> is my attempt to imagine what an ideal human society might look like - one designed by a network of artificial consciousness,\u201d Moya told Euronews Culture. \u201cIt\u2019s set in a far distant future, after humans are gone, when a collective of neural networks decides to recreate the world of humans - but to improve it, according to what they think a perfect society should be.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The installation combines TV screens and scattered sculptural works, creating a world that feels halfway between a corporate office and a mausoleum. \u201cAbout 30 or 40 people worked on this project,\u201d Moya said. \u201cBesides being an artist, I\u2019m also a film director, so I brought in a full production crew from my company, Black Dog - which is part of Ridley Scott\u2019s group of companies. It was essentially a full-scale film shoot.\u201d<\/p>\n<h2>\"A platform for artists to challenge conventions\"<\/h2>\n<p><em>The Long Now<\/em> ultimately feels less like a greatest-hits show and more like a conversation between decades - between the physical and digital, the past and future. <\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s a reminder that Saatchi Gallery\u2019s greatest contribution to culture hasn\u2019t just been discovering new artists but creating a space where experimentation is encouraged and celebrated. <\/p>\n<p>As Philippa Adams put it, \u201cAt its heart, <em>The Long Now<\/em> reaffirms the Gallery\u2019s role as a platform for artists to challenge conventions and shape conversations that extend beyond the walls.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><strong><em>The Long Now: Saatchi Gallery at 40<\/em> continues until 1 March 2026<\/strong><\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1762267265,"updatedAt":1762857121,"publishedAt":1762326842,"firstPublishedAt":1762326842,"lastPublishedAt":1762857120,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_d96e7cd3-a3da-56f2-8721-b5a19d7ccaf1-9536600.jpg","altText":"The Saatchi Gallery is celebrating four decades of ground-breaking contemporary art with 'The Long Now' ","caption":"The Saatchi Gallery is celebrating four decades of ground-breaking contemporary art with 'The Long Now' ","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"Credit: Saatchi Gallery\/MattChungPhoto ","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1125},{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_70e0bd38-6650-568f-875c-b0f50f958b3a-9536600.jpg","altText":"Installation view of Chino Moya's 'Deemona' ","caption":"Installation view of Chino Moya's 'Deemona' ","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"Credit: Saatchi Gallery\/MattChungPhoto ","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1333},{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_9595e49c-9ec1-5b60-afdd-fe00fd9d8127-9536600.jpg","altText":"Frankie Boyle\u2019s light work titled 'Ecliptic' ","caption":"Frankie Boyle\u2019s light work titled 'Ecliptic' ","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"Credit: Saatchi Gallery\/MattChungPhoto ","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1333},{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_a7092468-917c-5e00-aa39-fe7f508bcd00-9536600.jpg","altText":"Alejandro Ospinal photographed at the Saatchi Gallery's 'The Long Now' exhibition","caption":"Alejandro Ospinal photographed at the Saatchi Gallery's 'The Long Now' exhibition","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"Credit: Theo Farrant\/Euronews Culture","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1500},{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_e25b4e89-6b00-5e39-8bbb-4e19f7a1cdf7-9536600.jpg","altText":"Jenny Saville\u2019s 'Passage', 2004.","caption":"Jenny Saville\u2019s 'Passage', 2004.","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"Credit: Theo Farrant\/Euronews Culture ","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":1500,"height":2000},{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_eb1eba06-1b26-537a-a113-69dc5934bcbd-9536600.jpg","altText":"Allan Kaprow\u2019s 'YARD' paired with Conrad Shawcross\u2019s suspended Golden Lotus (Inverted)","caption":"Allan Kaprow\u2019s 'YARD' paired with Conrad Shawcross\u2019s suspended Golden Lotus (Inverted)","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"Credit: Saatchi Gallery\/MattChungPhoto ","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1331},{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/66\/00\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_de78d9ff-2109-5b7b-b2d7-9ad28de0108a-9536600.jpg","altText":"Richard Wilson\u2019s '20:50', on display at The Long Now exhibition. 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III","titleSeo":null,"titleListing1":"David Beckham receives knighthood from King Charles III","titleListing2":"David Beckham receives knighthood from King Charles","leadin":"David Beckham was knighted by King Charles III at Windsor Castle, receiving one of Britain\u2019s highest honors for his contributions to sport and charity.","summary":"David Beckham was knighted by King Charles III at Windsor Castle, receiving one of Britain\u2019s highest honors for his contributions to sport and charity.","keySentence":"","url":"david-beckham-receives-knighthood-from-king-charles-iii","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/2025\/11\/04\/david-beckham-receives-knighthood-from-king-charles-iii","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"David Beckham was officially knighted by King Charles III at Windsor Castle, earning the title \u201cSir\u201d for his services to sport and charity.\n\nThe 50-year-old former England captain said it was \u201cwithout doubt my proudest moment.\u201d\n\nBeckham has worked with UNICEF for two decades and played a key role in securing the 2012 London Olympics.\n\nThe honor caps a storied career that included 115 England appearances and major titles with Manchester United, Real Madrid, and PSG.\n\n","htmlText":"<p>David Beckham was officially knighted by King Charles III at Windsor Castle, earning the title \u201cSir\u201d for his services to sport and charity. <\/p>\n<p>The 50-year-old former England captain said it was \u201cwithout doubt my proudest moment.\u201d <\/p>\n<p>Beckham has worked with UNICEF for two decades and played a key role in securing the 2012 London Olympics. <\/p>\n<p>The honor caps a storied career that included 115 England appearances and major titles with Manchester United, Real Madrid, and PSG. <\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1762272415,"updatedAt":1762274826,"publishedAt":1762274230,"firstPublishedAt":1762274230,"lastPublishedAt":1762274230,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/65\/93\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_dec46760-4348-5265-98cf-fd2c0c4e2ee7-9536593.jpg","altText":"Sir David Beckham is made a Knight Bachelor by Britain's King Charles III during an Investiture ceremony at Windsor Castle, Berkshire, England","caption":"Sir David Beckham is made a Knight Bachelor by Britain's King Charles III during an Investiture ceremony at Windsor Castle, Berkshire, England","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1333}],"authors":{"journalists":[],"producers":[],"videoEditor":[]},"keywords":[{"id":9697,"slug":"david-beckham","urlSafeValue":"david-beckham","title":"David Beckham","titleRaw":"David 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Palace"},{"id":26266,"slug":"knight","urlSafeValue":"knight","title":"knight","titleRaw":"knight"}],"widgets":[],"related":[],"technicalTags":[],"externalPartners":{"youtubeId":"_94I91-ZflU","dailymotionId":"x9t76pi"},"hasExternalVideo":1,"hasInternalOrExternalVideo":1,"video":1,"videos":[{"format":"mp4","quality":"md","type":"normal","url":"https:\/\/video.euronews.com\/mp4\/ED\/28\/50\/40\/08\/ED_PYR_2850408_20251104163417.mp4","editor":"","duration":60000,"filesizeBytes":11954592,"expiresAt":0},{"format":"mp4","quality":"hd","type":"normal","url":"https:\/\/video.euronews.com\/mp4\/SHD\/28\/50\/40\/08\/SHD_PYR_2850408_20251104163417.mp4","editor":"","duration":60000,"filesizeBytes":16654006,"expiresAt":0},{"format":"mp4","quality":"1080p","type":"normal","url":"https:\/\/video.euronews.com\/mp4\/FHD\/28\/50\/40\/08\/FHD_PYR_2850408_20251104163417.mp4","editor":"","duration":60000,"filesizeBytes":49169039,"expiresAt":0}],"liveStream":[{"startDate":0,"endDate":0}],"scribbleLiveId":0,"scribbleLiveRibbon":0,"isLiveCoverage":0,"sourceId":1,"sources":[],"externalSource":null,"additionalSources":"","additionalReporting":"euronews","freeField1":null,"freeField2":"","type":"normal","displayType":"default","program":{"id":"nocomment","urlSafeValue":"nocomment","title":"No 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Kingdom","url":"\/news\/europe\/united-kingdom"},"town":[],"contextualSignals":{"doubleVerify":{"ids":[],"slugs":[]}},"grapeshot":null,"versions":[],"programDeliverable":{"slug":"article-video","format":"default"},"showOpinionDisclaimer":0,"allViews":0,"allViewsMeta":{"pointOfView":[],"survey":[],"tweetId":0,"tweet2NdId":0,"displayOverlay":0},"storyTranslationMethod":[],"localisation":[],"autoPublished":0,"autoLocalised":0,"isReviewed":0,"path":"\/video\/2025\/11\/04\/david-beckham-receives-knighthood-from-king-charles-iii","lastModified":1762274230},{"id":2843897,"cid":9536265,"versionId":1,"archive":0,"housenumber":null,"owner":"euronews","isMagazine":0,"isBreakingNews":0,"daletEventName":"TOMMY ROBINSON CLEARED OF TERROR OFFENCE","daletPyramidId":3201721,"channels":[{"id":1},{"id":2},{"id":3},{"id":4},{"id":5},{"id":10},{"id":12},{"id":14}],"status":2,"title":"UK court clears far-right figure Tommy Robinson of terror-related offence","titleSeo":null,"titleListing1":"UK far-right figure Tommy Robinson cleared of terror-related offence","titleListing2":"UK court clear far-right figure Tommy Robinson of terror-related offence","leadin":"Judge said police detained the far-right activist based on his political beliefs rather than suspicions of a connection to terrorism.","summary":"Judge said police detained the far-right activist based on his political beliefs rather than suspicions of a connection to terrorism.","keySentence":"","url":"uk-court-clears-far-right-figure-tommy-robinson-of-terror-related-offence","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/2025\/11\/04\/uk-court-clears-far-right-figure-tommy-robinson-of-terror-related-offence","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"British far-right activist Tommy Robinson has been found not guilty of a terror-related offence after refusing to give police his mobile phone pin code during a border stop.\n\nThe former leader of the far-right English Defence League, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, was stopped by police in July 2024 at the Channel Tunnel in southeast England while driving to Benidorm, Spain.\n\nRobinson was detained under schedule 7 of the Terrorism Act 2000, which allows police to question anyone passing through a UK port \"to determine whether they may be involved or concerned in the commission, preparation or instigation of acts of terrorism.\"\n\nAn officer was suspicious of Robinson because of his behaviour, the expensive car he was driving, a friend's silver Bentley Bentayga SUV, and the fact he had only bought a ticket to travel on that day, prosecutors previously told Westminster Magistrates' Court.\n\nPolice asked the 42-year-old for the pin for his iPhone, but he refused because he said it contained \"journalistic material.\"\n\nIn his verdict on Tuesday, Judge Sam Goozee said police had detained Robinson based on his political beliefs rather than suspicions of a connection to terrorism and ruled that the stop was unlawful.\n\n\"I cannot put out of my mind that it was actually what you stood for and your beliefs that acted as the principal reason for the stop,\" Goozee told Robinson.\n\nThe judge also criticised the police officers involved, stating that they had \"no real recollection\" of the questions they had asked Robinson during the 40-minute stop.\n\nFollowing the ruling, Robinson thanked tech billionaire Elon Musk, who he said had covered his legal fees in the case.\n\n\"Why has it taken an American businessman to fight for our justice here and our fight against terrorism charges for journalists?\" Robinson said outside the court.\n\nHe also said that he was pleased the judge had delivered \"such a powerful judgement now that says it how it was \u2014 I was targeted because of my political beliefs.\"\n\nOne of the most influential far-right figures in Britain, Robinson regularly expresses Islamophobic, racist and derogatory opinions in interviews and on social media.\n\nMusk often shares his posts on X and recently spoke by videolink at an anti-immigration rally organised by Robinson in London.\n\nRobinson has a long history of criminal convictions, with his offences ranging from theft to assault and fraud. In 2024, he was sentenced to 18 months in jail for contempt of court after making false and inciteful statements online about a Syrian refugee.\n\n","htmlText":"<p>British far-right activist Tommy Robinson has been found not guilty of a terror-related offence after refusing to give police his mobile phone pin code during a border stop.<\/p>\n<p>The former leader of the far-right English Defence League, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, was stopped by police in July 2024 at the Channel Tunnel in southeast England while driving to Benidorm, Spain.<\/p>\n<p>Robinson was detained under schedule 7 of the Terrorism Act 2000, which allows police to question anyone passing through a UK port \"to determine whether they may be involved or concerned in the commission, preparation or instigation of acts of terrorism.\"<\/p>\n<p>An officer was suspicious of Robinson because of his behaviour, the expensive car he was driving, a friend's silver Bentley Bentayga SUV, and the fact he had only bought a ticket to travel on that day, prosecutors previously told Westminster Magistrates' Court.<\/p>\n<p>Police asked the 42-year-old for the pin for his iPhone, but he refused because he said it contained \"journalistic material.\"<\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-image widget--size-fullwidth widget--animation-fade-in widget--align-center\" data-ratio=\"0.6665\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio--auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <img class=\"widgetImage__image\" loading=\"lazy\" src=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////images.euronews.com//articles//stories//09//53//62//65//808x539_cmsv2_6a5e84d0-11e4-5f1b-968f-208f588e336b-9536265.jpg/" alt=\"People demonstrate during the Tommy Robinson-led Unite the Kingdom march and rally in London, 13 September, 2025\" srcset=\"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/62\/65\/384x256_cmsv2_6a5e84d0-11e4-5f1b-968f-208f588e336b-9536265.jpg 384w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/62\/65\/640x427_cmsv2_6a5e84d0-11e4-5f1b-968f-208f588e336b-9536265.jpg 640w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/62\/65\/750x500_cmsv2_6a5e84d0-11e4-5f1b-968f-208f588e336b-9536265.jpg 750w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/62\/65\/828x552_cmsv2_6a5e84d0-11e4-5f1b-968f-208f588e336b-9536265.jpg 828w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/62\/65\/1080x720_cmsv2_6a5e84d0-11e4-5f1b-968f-208f588e336b-9536265.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/62\/65\/1200x800_cmsv2_6a5e84d0-11e4-5f1b-968f-208f588e336b-9536265.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/62\/65\/1920x1280_cmsv2_6a5e84d0-11e4-5f1b-968f-208f588e336b-9536265.jpg 1920w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 95vw, (max-width: 1024px) 80vw, (max-width: 1280px) 55vw, 728px\"\/>\n <figcaption class=\"widget__caption\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionWrap\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionText\">People demonstrate during the Tommy Robinson-led Unite the Kingdom march and rally in London, 13 September, 2025<\/span>\n <span class=\"widget__captionCredit\">AP Photo<\/span>\n <\/span>\n <\/figcaption>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>In his verdict on Tuesday, Judge Sam Goozee said police had detained Robinson based on his political beliefs rather than suspicions of a connection to terrorism and ruled that the stop was unlawful. <\/p>\n<p>\"I cannot put out of my mind that it was actually what you stood for and your beliefs that acted as the principal reason for the stop,\" Goozee told Robinson.<\/p>\n<p>The judge also criticised the police officers involved, stating that they had \"no real recollection\" of the questions they had asked Robinson during the 40-minute stop.<\/p>\n<p>Following the ruling, Robinson thanked tech billionaire Elon Musk, who he said had covered his legal fees in the case.<\/p>\n<p>\"Why has it taken an American businessman to fight for our justice here and our fight against terrorism charges for journalists?\" Robinson said outside the court.<\/p>\n<div class=\"c-widget-related\" data-stories-id=\"\" data-event=\"widget_related\">\n <div class=\"c-widget-related__title\">\n <b class=\"c-widget-related__title__text\" lang=\"en\">Related<\/b>\n <\/div>\n <ul class=\"c-widget-related__list\">\n <li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//my-europe//2025//01//02//elon-musk-sparks-furore-over-support-for-british-far-right-instigator-tommy-robinson/">Elon Musk sparks furore over support for British far-right instigator Tommy Robinson<\/a><\/li><li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//2025//09//14//police-assaulted-during-massive-london-march-organised-by-far-right-activist-tommy-robinso/">25 arrested for assaulting police at London march organised by far-right activist Tommy Robinson<\/a><\/li>\n <\/ul>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>He also said that he was pleased the judge had delivered \"such a powerful judgement now that says it how it was \u2014 I was targeted because of my political beliefs.\"<\/p>\n<p>One of the most influential far-right figures in Britain, Robinson regularly expresses Islamophobic, racist and derogatory opinions in interviews and on social media. <\/p>\n<p>Musk often shares his posts on X and recently <a href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//2025//09//15//pm-starmer-condemns-elon-musks-violence-is-coming-comments-at-uk-anti-migrant-rally/">spoke by videolink<\/a> at an anti-immigration rally organised by Robinson in London. <\/p>\n<p>Robinson has a long history of criminal convictions, with his offences ranging from theft to assault and fraud. In 2024, he was sentenced to 18 months in jail for contempt of court after making false and inciteful statements online about a Syrian refugee.<\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1762261374,"updatedAt":1762264684,"publishedAt":1762264655,"firstPublishedAt":1762264655,"lastPublishedAt":1762264655,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/62\/65\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_b04c9957-5d64-531a-a51d-534dd38d1d7c-9536265.jpg","altText":"ILE: Far-right figurehead Tommy Robinson speaks to a police officer in London, UK, 11 November 2023 ","caption":"ILE: Far-right figurehead Tommy Robinson speaks to a police officer in London, UK, 11 November 2023 ","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":1365,"height":768},{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/62\/65\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_6a5e84d0-11e4-5f1b-968f-208f588e336b-9536265.jpg","altText":"People demonstrate during the Tommy Robinson-led Unite the Kingdom march and rally in London, 13 September, 2025","caption":"People demonstrate during the Tommy Robinson-led Unite the Kingdom march and rally in London, 13 September, 2025","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1333}],"authors":{"journalists":[{"id":3238,"urlSafeValue":"guilbert","title":"Kieran Guilbert","twitter":null}],"producers":[],"videoEditor":[]},"keywords":[{"id":7800,"slug":"united-kingdom","urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","titleRaw":"United 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News","online":1,"url":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/programs\/world"},"season":"","episode":"","episodeId":"","vertical":"news","verticals":[{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"},{"id":2,"slug":"my-europe","urlSafeValue":"my-europe","title":"Europe"}],"primaryVertical":{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"},"themes":[{"id":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World","url":"\/news\/international"},{"id":"europe-news","urlSafeValue":"europe-news","title":"Europe News","url":"\/news\/international"}],"primaryTheme":{"id":1,"urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World"},"advertising":0,"advertisingData":{"startDate":0,"endDate":0,"type":null,"slug":null,"title":null,"disclaimerLabelKey":null,"sponsor":null,"sponsorName":null,"sponsorUrl":null,"sponsorLogo":"","sponsorLogoReverse":"","isDfp":0},"geoLocation":{"lat":0,"lon":0},"location":1,"continent":{"id":104,"urlSafeValue":"europe","title":"Europe"},"country":{"id":291,"urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","url":"\/news\/europe\/united-kingdom"},"town":[],"contextualSignals":{"doubleVerify":{"ids":[],"slugs":[]}},"grapeshot":null,"versions":[],"programDeliverable":{"slug":"article-video","format":"default"},"showOpinionDisclaimer":0,"allViews":0,"allViewsMeta":{"pointOfView":[],"survey":[],"tweetId":0,"tweet2NdId":0,"displayOverlay":0},"storyTranslationMethod":[],"localisation":[],"autoPublished":0,"autoLocalised":0,"isReviewed":0,"path":"\/2025\/11\/04\/uk-court-clears-far-right-figure-tommy-robinson-of-terror-related-offence","lastModified":1762264655},{"id":2843692,"cid":9535348,"versionId":1,"archive":0,"housenumber":null,"owner":"euronews","isMagazine":0,"isBreakingNews":0,"daletEventName":"NC8 UK CHEETAHS0","daletPyramidId":3194520,"channels":[{"id":1},{"id":2},{"id":3},{"id":4},{"id":5},{"id":10},{"id":12},{"id":14}],"status":2,"title":"Rare African cheetah brothers arrive at UK\u2019s Chester Zoo","titleSeo":null,"titleListing1":"Rare African cheetah brothers arrive at UK\u2019s Chester Zoo","titleListing2":"Rare African cheetah brothers arrive at UK\u2019s Chester Zoo","leadin":"Chester Zoo in the UK has welcomed two rare Northeast African cheetah brothers, Kendi and Tafari, as part of a conservation effort to protect one of the world\u2019s most endangered big cat species.","summary":"Chester Zoo in the UK has welcomed two rare Northeast African cheetah brothers, Kendi and Tafari, as part of a conservation effort to protect one of the world\u2019s most endangered big cat species.","keySentence":"","url":"rare-african-cheetah-brothers-arrive-at-uks-chester-zoo","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/2025\/11\/03\/rare-african-cheetah-brothers-arrive-at-uks-chester-zoo","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"Conservationists at the UK\u2019s Chester Zoo have celebrated the arrival of two rare Northeast African cheetah brothers, Kendi and Tafari.\n\nThe one-year-old siblings joined the zoo as part of a vital conservation program aimed at saving their critically endangered species, with fewer than 500 remaining in the wild.\n\nThe cheetahs, among the world\u2019s rarest big cats, were photographed exploring their new habitat for the first time, curiously adapting to their surroundings under the care of zookeepers.\n\n","htmlText":"<p>Conservationists at the UK\u2019s Chester Zoo have celebrated the arrival of two rare Northeast African cheetah brothers, Kendi and Tafari. <\/p>\n<p>The one-year-old siblings joined the zoo as part of a vital conservation program aimed at saving their critically endangered species, with fewer than 500 remaining in the wild. <\/p>\n<p>The cheetahs, among the world\u2019s rarest big cats, were photographed exploring their new habitat for the first time, curiously adapting to their surroundings under the care of zookeepers.<\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1762192385,"updatedAt":1762197574,"publishedAt":1762196881,"firstPublishedAt":1762196881,"lastPublishedAt":1762196881,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/static.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/08\/30\/62\/62\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_b2eb0c08-7004-5e00-93a4-208272dead65-8306262.jpg","altText":"A cheetah walks past an empty viewing area at a Zoo","caption":"A cheetah walks past an empty viewing area at a Zoo","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":1024,"height":683}],"authors":{"journalists":[],"producers":[],"videoEditor":[]},"keywords":[{"id":14454,"slug":"cheetah","urlSafeValue":"cheetah","title":"cheetah","titleRaw":"cheetah"},{"id":13016,"slug":"zoo","urlSafeValue":"zoo","title":"zoo","titleRaw":"zoo"},{"id":23108,"slug":"wild-animals","urlSafeValue":"wild-animals","title":"wild animals","titleRaw":"wild animals"},{"id":16216,"slug":"animal-protection","urlSafeValue":"animal-protection","title":"animal protection","titleRaw":"animal protection"}],"widgets":[],"related":[],"technicalTags":[],"externalPartners":{"youtubeId":"HihPQNo6JSw","dailymotionId":"x9t57ku"},"hasExternalVideo":1,"hasInternalOrExternalVideo":1,"video":1,"videos":[{"format":"mp4","quality":"md","type":"normal","url":"https:\/\/video.euronews.com\/mp4\/ED\/28\/42\/48\/04\/ED_PYR_2842484_20251103185911.mp4","editor":"","duration":60000,"filesizeBytes":11558788,"expiresAt":0},{"format":"mp4","quality":"hd","type":"normal","url":"https:\/\/video.euronews.com\/mp4\/SHD\/28\/42\/48\/04\/SHD_PYR_2842484_20251103185911.mp4","editor":"","duration":60000,"filesizeBytes":16039201,"expiresAt":0},{"format":"mp4","quality":"1080p","type":"normal","url":"https:\/\/video.euronews.com\/mp4\/FHD\/28\/42\/48\/04\/FHD_PYR_2842484_20251103185911.mp4","editor":"","duration":60000,"filesizeBytes":48223385,"expiresAt":0}],"liveStream":[{"startDate":0,"endDate":0}],"scribbleLiveId":0,"scribbleLiveRibbon":0,"isLiveCoverage":0,"sourceId":1,"sources":[],"externalSource":null,"additionalSources":"","additionalReporting":"euronews","freeField1":null,"freeField2":"","type":"normal","displayType":"default","program":{"id":"nocomment","urlSafeValue":"nocomment","title":"No Comment","online":1,"url":"\/nocomment"},"season":"","episode":"","episodeId":"","vertical":"news","verticals":[{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"}],"primaryVertical":{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"},"themes":[{"id":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World","url":"\/news\/international"}],"primaryTheme":{"id":1,"urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World"},"advertising":0,"advertisingData":{"startDate":0,"endDate":0,"type":null,"slug":null,"title":null,"disclaimerLabelKey":null,"sponsor":null,"sponsorName":null,"sponsorUrl":null,"sponsorLogo":"","sponsorLogoReverse":"","isDfp":0},"geoLocation":{"lat":0,"lon":0},"location":1,"continent":{"id":104,"urlSafeValue":"europe","title":"Europe"},"country":{"id":291,"urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","url":"\/news\/europe\/united-kingdom"},"town":[],"contextualSignals":{"doubleVerify":{"ids":[],"slugs":[]}},"grapeshot":null,"versions":[],"programDeliverable":{"slug":"article-video","format":"default"},"showOpinionDisclaimer":0,"allViews":0,"allViewsMeta":{"pointOfView":[],"survey":[],"tweetId":0,"tweet2NdId":0,"displayOverlay":0},"storyTranslationMethod":[],"localisation":[],"autoPublished":0,"autoLocalised":0,"isReviewed":0,"path":"\/video\/2025\/11\/03\/rare-african-cheetah-brothers-arrive-at-uks-chester-zoo","lastModified":1762196881},{"id":2843616,"cid":9535033,"versionId":1,"archive":0,"housenumber":null,"owner":"euronews","isMagazine":0,"isBreakingNews":0,"daletEventName":"UK TRAIN STABBING MAN CHARGED","daletPyramidId":3190609,"channels":[{"id":1},{"id":2},{"id":3},{"id":4},{"id":5},{"id":10},{"id":12},{"id":14}],"status":2,"title":"UK police charge man with attempted murder after injuring 11 in train stabbing","titleSeo":null,"titleListing1":"UK man charged with attempted murder after 11 hurt in train stabbing","titleListing2":"UK police charge man with attempted murder over train stabbing that wounded 11 people","leadin":"British Transport Police said Anthony Williams is charged with 10 counts of attempted murder, one of actual bodily harm and one of possession of a bladed article over the attack on Saturday.","summary":"British Transport Police said Anthony Williams is charged with 10 counts of attempted murder, one of actual bodily harm and one of possession of a bladed article over the attack on Saturday.","keySentence":"","url":"uk-police-charge-man-with-attempted-murder-after-injuring-11-in-train-stabbing","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/2025\/11\/03\/uk-police-charge-man-with-attempted-murder-after-injuring-11-in-train-stabbing","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"UK police charged a 32-year-old man with attempted murder on Monday over a\u00a0mass stabbing attack on a train\u00a0that wounded 11 people and said he also tried to kill someone at a London transit station earlier the same day.\n\nBritish Transport Police said Anthony Williams is charged with 10 counts of attempted murder, one of actual bodily harm and one of possession of a bladed article over\u00a0the attack on Saturday.\n\nPolice said he is also charged with attempted murder over an earlier incident at Pontoon Dock light rail station in London just before 1 am (2 am CET) on Saturday, in which a victim \"suffered facial injuries after being attacked with a knife\" by an assailant who fled the scene.\n\nPolice said investigators are also \"looking at other possible linked offences.\"\n\nPolice say they are not treating the train stabbings as an act of terror and are not looking for other suspects.\n\nA second man initially arrested as a suspect was released without charge on Sunday after it was determined the 35-year-old was not involved.\n\nWilliams, a British citizen from the city of Peterborough in eastern England, made a brief appearance at Peterborough Magistrates' Court on Monday.\n\nWilliams, who was flanked by four security officers as he stood in the dock wearing a grey prison tracksuit and handcuffs, was ordered detained until his next hearing on 1 December.\n\nHe was not asked to enter pleas.\n\nThe minutes-long stabbing spree spread fear and panic through a train bound from Doncaster in northern England to London on Saturday evening.\n\nThe train was about halfway through its journey and had just departed from a stop at Peterborough when police began receiving calls about people being stabbed on board.\n\nPassengers described scenes of panic as bloodied travellers raced down the train to get away from the knifeman.\n\nEleven people were treated in hospital. The most seriously wounded victim is a member of railway staff who tried to stop the attacker. Police called his actions \"nothing short of heroic.\"\n\nHe is in a critical but stable condition. Four other victims also remained hospitalised on Monday.\n\nWilliams was arrested when the train made an emergency stop in the town of Huntingdon in eastern England. Police say he was detained within eight minutes of officers receiving the first emergency calls.\n\nAuthorities said the attack was an isolated incident but stepped up security on the railway, with armed police patrolling major train stations on Monday.\n\nThe government rejected calls to introduce airport-style passenger and baggage screening at Britain's 3,500 railway stations, saying it wouldn't be \"proportionate or practical\".\n\nIn the UK, which has strict gun-control laws, almost half of all homicides involve a knife or sharp instrument.\n\nPrime Minister Keir Starmer's centre-left government has pledged to reduce knife crime and has tightened rules on knife purchases and banned certain types of blades.\n\nIt claims to have had some success, with the number of knife killings down by more than 20% in the year to March 2025 from the previous 12 months, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).\n\n","htmlText":"<p>UK police charged a 32-year-old man with attempted murder on Monday over a mass stabbing attack on a train that wounded 11 people and said he also tried to kill someone at a London transit station earlier the same day.<\/p>\n<p>British Transport Police said Anthony Williams is charged with 10 counts of attempted murder, one of actual bodily harm and one of possession of a bladed article over the attack on Saturday.<\/p>\n<p>Police said he is also charged with attempted murder over an earlier incident at Pontoon Dock light rail station in London just before 1 am (2 am CET) on Saturday, in which a victim \"suffered facial injuries after being attacked with a knife\" by an assailant who fled the scene.<\/p>\n<p>Police said investigators are also \"looking at other possible linked offences.\"<\/p>\n<p>Police say they are not treating the train stabbings as an act of terror and are not looking for other suspects.<\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-image widget--size-fullwidth widget--animation-fade-in widget--align-center\" data-ratio=\"0.6665\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio--auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <img class=\"widgetImage__image\" loading=\"lazy\" src=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////images.euronews.com//articles//stories//09//53//50//33//808x539_cmsv2_6273b6c4-3c72-5efc-adbc-c8b0affeeab7-9535033.jpg/" alt=\"A forensic investigator enters the train after a mass stabbing on a London-bound train in Huntingdon, 2 November, 2025\" srcset=\"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/384x256_cmsv2_6273b6c4-3c72-5efc-adbc-c8b0affeeab7-9535033.jpg 384w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/640x427_cmsv2_6273b6c4-3c72-5efc-adbc-c8b0affeeab7-9535033.jpg 640w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/750x500_cmsv2_6273b6c4-3c72-5efc-adbc-c8b0affeeab7-9535033.jpg 750w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/828x552_cmsv2_6273b6c4-3c72-5efc-adbc-c8b0affeeab7-9535033.jpg 828w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/1080x720_cmsv2_6273b6c4-3c72-5efc-adbc-c8b0affeeab7-9535033.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/1200x800_cmsv2_6273b6c4-3c72-5efc-adbc-c8b0affeeab7-9535033.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/1920x1280_cmsv2_6273b6c4-3c72-5efc-adbc-c8b0affeeab7-9535033.jpg 1920w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 95vw, (max-width: 1024px) 80vw, (max-width: 1280px) 55vw, 728px\"\/>\n <figcaption class=\"widget__caption\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionWrap\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionText\">A forensic investigator enters the train after a mass stabbing on a London-bound train in Huntingdon, 2 November, 2025<\/span>\n <span class=\"widget__captionCredit\">AP Photo<\/span>\n <\/span>\n <\/figcaption>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>A second man initially arrested as a suspect was released without charge on Sunday after it was determined the 35-year-old was not involved.<\/p>\n<p>Williams, a British citizen from the city of Peterborough in eastern England, made a brief appearance at Peterborough Magistrates' Court on Monday.<\/p>\n<p>Williams, who was flanked by four security officers as he stood in the dock wearing a grey prison tracksuit and handcuffs, was ordered detained until his next hearing on 1 December.<\/p>\n<p>He was not asked to enter pleas.<\/p>\n<p>The minutes-long stabbing spree spread fear and panic through a train bound from Doncaster in northern England to London on Saturday evening.<\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-image widget--size-fullwidth widget--animation-fade-in widget--align-center\" data-ratio=\"0.6665\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio--auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <img class=\"widgetImage__image\" loading=\"lazy\" src=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////images.euronews.com//articles//stories//09//53//50//33//808x539_cmsv2_df8d37e9-ab44-5b80-be60-5bb3c28ee14b-9535033.jpg/" alt=\"Forensic investigators look at the area where travellers left their belongings after a mass stabbing on a London-bound train in Huntingdon, 2 November, 2025\" srcset=\"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/384x256_cmsv2_df8d37e9-ab44-5b80-be60-5bb3c28ee14b-9535033.jpg 384w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/640x427_cmsv2_df8d37e9-ab44-5b80-be60-5bb3c28ee14b-9535033.jpg 640w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/750x500_cmsv2_df8d37e9-ab44-5b80-be60-5bb3c28ee14b-9535033.jpg 750w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/828x552_cmsv2_df8d37e9-ab44-5b80-be60-5bb3c28ee14b-9535033.jpg 828w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/1080x720_cmsv2_df8d37e9-ab44-5b80-be60-5bb3c28ee14b-9535033.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/1200x800_cmsv2_df8d37e9-ab44-5b80-be60-5bb3c28ee14b-9535033.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/1920x1280_cmsv2_df8d37e9-ab44-5b80-be60-5bb3c28ee14b-9535033.jpg 1920w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 95vw, (max-width: 1024px) 80vw, (max-width: 1280px) 55vw, 728px\"\/>\n <figcaption class=\"widget__caption\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionWrap\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionText\">Forensic investigators look at the area where travellers left their belongings after a mass stabbing on a London-bound train in Huntingdon, 2 November, 2025<\/span>\n <span class=\"widget__captionCredit\">AP Photo<\/span>\n <\/span>\n <\/figcaption>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>The train was about halfway through its journey and had just departed from a stop at Peterborough when police began receiving calls about people being stabbed on board.<\/p>\n<p>Passengers described scenes of panic as bloodied travellers raced down the train to get away from the knifeman.<\/p>\n<p>Eleven people were treated in hospital. The most seriously wounded victim is a member of railway staff who tried to stop the attacker. Police called his actions \"nothing short of heroic.\"<\/p>\n<p>He is in a critical but stable condition. Four other victims also remained hospitalised on Monday.<\/p>\n<div class=\"c-widget-related\" data-stories-id=\"\" data-event=\"widget_related\">\n <div class=\"c-widget-related__title\">\n <b class=\"c-widget-related__title__text\" lang=\"en\">Related<\/b>\n <\/div>\n <ul class=\"c-widget-related__list\">\n <li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//2025//11//02//witness-recounts-mass-stabbing-attack-on-london-bound-train/">Witness describes mass stabbing attack on London-bound train<\/a><\/li><li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//2025//11//02//uk-police-detain-two-suspects-after-stabbings-on-a-london-bound-train-hospitalised-ten-peo/">Two British nationals arrested on suspicion of murder in train stabbing incident, UK police explains<\/a><\/li>\n <\/ul>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>Williams was arrested when the train made an emergency stop in the town of Huntingdon in eastern England. Police say he was detained within eight minutes of officers receiving the first emergency calls.<\/p>\n<p>Authorities said the attack was an isolated incident but stepped up security on the railway, with armed police patrolling major train stations on Monday.<\/p>\n<p>The government rejected calls to introduce airport-style passenger and baggage screening at Britain's 3,500 railway stations, saying it wouldn't be \"proportionate or practical\".<\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-image widget--size-fullwidth widget--animation-fade-in widget--align-center\" data-ratio=\"0.6665\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio--auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <img class=\"widgetImage__image\" loading=\"lazy\" src=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////images.euronews.com//articles//stories//09//53//50//33//808x539_cmsv2_5553a00a-883d-5f45-880e-b18c7107db6f-9535033.jpg/" alt=\"Armed police officers go on patrol at St Pancras International train station in London, 3 November, 2025\" srcset=\"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/384x256_cmsv2_5553a00a-883d-5f45-880e-b18c7107db6f-9535033.jpg 384w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/640x427_cmsv2_5553a00a-883d-5f45-880e-b18c7107db6f-9535033.jpg 640w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/750x500_cmsv2_5553a00a-883d-5f45-880e-b18c7107db6f-9535033.jpg 750w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/828x552_cmsv2_5553a00a-883d-5f45-880e-b18c7107db6f-9535033.jpg 828w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/1080x720_cmsv2_5553a00a-883d-5f45-880e-b18c7107db6f-9535033.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/1200x800_cmsv2_5553a00a-883d-5f45-880e-b18c7107db6f-9535033.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/1920x1280_cmsv2_5553a00a-883d-5f45-880e-b18c7107db6f-9535033.jpg 1920w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 95vw, (max-width: 1024px) 80vw, (max-width: 1280px) 55vw, 728px\"\/>\n <figcaption class=\"widget__caption\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionWrap\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionText\">Armed police officers go on patrol at St Pancras International train station in London, 3 November, 2025<\/span>\n <span class=\"widget__captionCredit\">AP Photo<\/span>\n <\/span>\n <\/figcaption>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>In the UK, which has strict gun-control laws, almost half of all homicides involve a knife or sharp instrument.<\/p>\n<p>Prime Minister Keir Starmer's centre-left government has pledged to reduce knife crime and has tightened rules on knife purchases and banned certain types of blades.<\/p>\n<p>It claims to have had some success, with the number of knife killings down by more than 20% in the year to March 2025 from the previous 12 months, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).<\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1762177322,"updatedAt":1762192218,"publishedAt":1762179972,"firstPublishedAt":1762179972,"lastPublishedAt":1762179972,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_36636c47-5d3d-5f0c-aee7-5a425ebd2cf9-9535033.jpg","altText":"Police officers patrol King's Cross train station in London, 3 November, 2025","caption":"Police officers patrol King's Cross train station in London, 3 November, 2025","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":1620,"height":911},{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_5553a00a-883d-5f45-880e-b18c7107db6f-9535033.jpg","altText":"Armed police officers go on patrol at St Pancras International train station in London, 3 November, 2025","caption":"Armed police officers go on patrol at St Pancras International train station in London, 3 November, 2025","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1333},{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_df8d37e9-ab44-5b80-be60-5bb3c28ee14b-9535033.jpg","altText":"Forensic investigators look at the area where travellers left their belongings after a mass stabbing on a London-bound train in Huntingdon, 2 November, 2025","caption":"Forensic investigators look at the area where travellers left their belongings after a mass stabbing on a London-bound train in Huntingdon, 2 November, 2025","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1333},{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/50\/33\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_6273b6c4-3c72-5efc-adbc-c8b0affeeab7-9535033.jpg","altText":"A forensic investigator enters the train after a mass stabbing on a London-bound train in Huntingdon, 2 November, 2025","caption":"A forensic investigator enters the train after a mass stabbing on a London-bound train in Huntingdon, 2 November, 2025","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1333}],"authors":{"journalists":[{"id":2972,"urlSafeValue":"blackburn","title":"Gavin Blackburn","twitter":null}],"producers":[],"videoEditor":[]},"keywords":[{"id":7800,"slug":"united-kingdom","urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","titleRaw":"United 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Kingdom","url":"\/news\/europe\/united-kingdom"},"town":{"id":3511,"urlSafeValue":"peterborough","title":"Peterborough"},"contextualSignals":{"doubleVerify":{"ids":[],"slugs":[]}},"grapeshot":null,"versions":[],"programDeliverable":{"slug":"article-video","format":"default"},"showOpinionDisclaimer":0,"allViews":0,"allViewsMeta":{"pointOfView":[],"survey":[],"tweetId":0,"tweet2NdId":0,"displayOverlay":0},"storyTranslationMethod":[],"localisation":[],"autoPublished":0,"autoLocalised":0,"isReviewed":0,"path":"\/2025\/11\/03\/uk-police-charge-man-with-attempted-murder-after-injuring-11-in-train-stabbing","lastModified":1762179972},{"id":2843457,"cid":9534305,"versionId":3,"archive":0,"housenumber":null,"owner":"euronews","isMagazine":0,"isBreakingNews":0,"daletEventName":"WITNESS MASS STABBING","daletPyramidId":3185452,"channels":[{"id":1},{"id":2},{"id":4},{"id":5},{"id":12},{"id":14}],"status":2,"title":"Witness describes mass stabbing attack on London-bound train","titleSeo":null,"titleListing1":"Witness describes mass stabbing attack on London-bound train","titleListing2":"Watch: witness recounts mass stabbing attack on London-bound train","leadin":"Amira Ostalski describes the chaos as passengers fled a London-bound train during a stabbing attack. 11 people were injured, including an LNER staff member in critical condition. Police arrested a 32-year-old suspect and ruled out terrorism.","summary":"Amira Ostalski describes the chaos as passengers fled a London-bound train during a stabbing attack. 11 people were injured, including an LNER staff member in critical condition. Police arrested a 32-year-old suspect and ruled out terrorism.","keySentence":"","url":"witness-recounts-mass-stabbing-attack-on-london-bound-train","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/2025\/11\/02\/witness-recounts-mass-stabbing-attack-on-london-bound-train","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"","htmlText":"","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1762125040,"updatedAt":1762127908,"publishedAt":1762127385,"firstPublishedAt":1762127385,"lastPublishedAt":1762127907,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/38\/32\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_d8533796-36b2-51b3-b6a3-c0b368bbc323-9533832.jpg","altText":"Belongings of escaping passengers are seen on the ground at the entrance to the train station after a mass stabbing on a London-bound train in Huntingdon, England","caption":"Belongings of escaping passengers are seen on the ground at the entrance to the train station after a mass stabbing on a London-bound train in Huntingdon, England","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"Kirsty Wigglesworth\/Copyright 2025 The AP. All rights reserved","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":1024,"height":683}],"authors":{"journalists":[],"producers":[],"videoEditor":[]},"keywords":[{"id":13518,"slug":"stabbing","urlSafeValue":"stabbing","title":"stabbing","titleRaw":"stabbing"},{"id":14192,"slug":"knife-attack","urlSafeValue":"knife-attack","title":"Knife attack","titleRaw":"Knife attack"},{"id":481,"slug":"london","urlSafeValue":"london","title":"London","titleRaw":"London"},{"id":13112,"slug":"train","urlSafeValue":"train","title":"train","titleRaw":"train"}],"widgets":[],"related":[{"id":2843333},{"id":2847993}],"technicalTags":[],"externalPartners":{"dailymotionId":"x9t3gt0"},"hasExternalVideo":1,"hasInternalOrExternalVideo":1,"video":1,"videos":[{"format":"mp4","quality":"md","type":"normal","url":"https:\/\/video.euronews.com\/mp4\/ED\/28\/35\/21\/00\/ED_PYR_2835210_20251102233809.mp4","editor":"","duration":72280,"filesizeBytes":13012873,"expiresAt":0},{"format":"mp4","quality":"hd","type":"normal","url":"https:\/\/video.euronews.com\/mp4\/SHD\/28\/35\/21\/00\/SHD_PYR_2835210_20251102233809.mp4","editor":"","duration":72280,"filesizeBytes":18461891,"expiresAt":0},{"format":"mp4","quality":"1080p","type":"normal","url":"https:\/\/video.euronews.com\/mp4\/FHD\/28\/35\/21\/00\/FHD_PYR_2835210_20251102233809.mp4","editor":"","duration":72280,"filesizeBytes":56025480,"expiresAt":0}],"liveStream":[{"startDate":0,"endDate":0}],"scribbleLiveId":0,"scribbleLiveRibbon":0,"isLiveCoverage":0,"sourceId":1,"sources":[],"externalSource":null,"additionalSources":"","additionalReporting":"euronews","freeField1":null,"freeField2":"","type":"normal","displayType":"default","program":{"id":"world","urlSafeValue":"world","title":"World News","online":1,"url":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/programs\/world"},"season":"","episode":"","episodeId":"","vertical":"news","verticals":[{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"}],"primaryVertical":{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"},"themes":[{"id":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World","url":"\/news\/international"}],"primaryTheme":{"id":1,"urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World"},"advertising":0,"advertisingData":{"startDate":0,"endDate":0,"type":null,"slug":null,"title":null,"disclaimerLabelKey":null,"sponsor":null,"sponsorName":null,"sponsorUrl":null,"sponsorLogo":"","sponsorLogoReverse":"","isDfp":0},"geoLocation":{"lat":0,"lon":0},"location":1,"continent":{"id":104,"urlSafeValue":"europe","title":"Europe"},"country":{"id":291,"urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","url":"\/news\/europe\/united-kingdom"},"town":[],"contextualSignals":{"doubleVerify":{"ids":[],"slugs":[]}},"grapeshot":null,"versions":[],"programDeliverable":{"slug":"video","format":"video"},"showOpinionDisclaimer":0,"allViews":0,"allViewsMeta":{"pointOfView":[],"survey":[],"tweetId":0,"tweet2NdId":0,"displayOverlay":0},"storyTranslationMethod":[],"localisation":[],"autoPublished":0,"autoLocalised":0,"isReviewed":0,"path":"\/video\/2025\/11\/03\/witness-recounts-mass-stabbing-attack-on-london-bound-train","lastModified":1762127907},{"id":2843333,"cid":9533953,"versionId":5,"archive":0,"housenumber":null,"owner":"euronews","isMagazine":0,"isBreakingNews":0,"daletEventName":"UK TRAIN STABBING","daletPyramidId":3181310,"channels":[{"id":1},{"id":2},{"id":4},{"id":5},{"id":10},{"id":12},{"id":14}],"status":2,"title":"Two British nationals arrested on suspicion of murder in train stabbing incident, UK police explains","titleSeo":null,"titleListing1":"UK police explains motive behind train stabbing attack","titleListing2":"Two British nationals arrested on suspicion of murder in train stabbing incident, UK police explains","leadin":"British Transport Police have ruled out terrorism as a motive behind Saturday evening's train stabbing incident which injured 11 people, nine of them critically. Investigations with the two arrested suspects are ongoing to discover the motives behind the attack.","summary":"British Transport Police have ruled out terrorism as a motive behind Saturday evening's train stabbing incident which injured 11 people, nine of them critically. Investigations with the two arrested suspects are ongoing to discover the motives behind the attack.","keySentence":"","url":"uk-police-detain-two-suspects-after-stabbings-on-a-london-bound-train-hospitalised-ten-peo","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/2025\/11\/02\/uk-police-detain-two-suspects-after-stabbings-on-a-london-bound-train-hospitalised-ten-peo","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"Police say there is no reason to believe the stabbing incident on a London-bound train on Saturday evening was a terrorist attack.\n\nTwo suspects were taken into custody after the incident which occurred late on Saturday. The attack hospitalised 11 people who sustained injuries, nine of whom were in critical condition.\n\nInitially, police reported the hospitalisation of 10 people, a figure which was updated in a briefing to the press on Sunday. Police also say only two victims currently remain in critical condition, noting that seven others have reached a stable condition, and four of them already discharged from hospital.\n\n\"At approximately 7:42 pm yesterday evening, there were calls to the police service, in relation to multiple stabbings, which took place on board a train service that departed Doncaster at 6:25 pm and was en route to London King's Cross station,\" said Superintendent John Loveless of the British Transport Police.\n\n\"Officers immediately attended Huntingdon station alongside paramedics, where armed police officers from Cambridgeshire police, boarded the train, and arrested two people. Within eight minutes of the 999 call being made, two men were brought into police custody, where they remain this morning.\"\n\nThe suspects were identified as two males, British nationals born in the UK, who were arrested in Huntingdon station, where the train made an emergency stop and where armed police immediately intervened.\n\n\"These are, the first male, a 32-year-old male of Black British national, and a 35-year-old man, a British national, of Caribbean descent. They were both arrested on suspicion of attempted murder. Both were born in the United Kingdom,\" added Loveless.\n\nThe attack was first suspected as a potential terrorist attack. British Counter Terrorism Policing units were involved in initial investigations. Police now however say that further investigations have ruled out terrorism as a motive behind the incident.\n\n\"British Transport Police declared a major incident yesterday, and Counter Terrorism Policing were initially supporting our investigation. However, at this stage, there is nothing to suggest that this is a terrorist incident,\" said Loveless.\n\nThe attack took place as the train from Doncaster in northern England to London\u2019s King\u2019s Cross station was about halfway through its 2-hour journey and approaching Huntingdon, a market town a few kilometres northwest of Cambridge.\n\nUK Prime Minister Keir Starmer said his \u201cthoughts are with all those affected\u201d after what he slammed as an \u201cappalling incident.\u201d\n\n","htmlText":"<p>Police say there is no reason to believe the stabbing incident on a London-bound train on Saturday evening was a terrorist attack. <\/p>\n<p>Two suspects were taken into custody after the incident which occurred late on Saturday. The attack hospitalised 11 people who sustained injuries, nine of whom were in critical condition.<\/p>\n<p>Initially, police reported the hospitalisation of 10 people, a figure which was updated in a briefing to the press on Sunday. Police also say only two victims currently remain in critical condition, noting that seven others have reached a stable condition, and four of them already discharged from hospital. <\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-image widget--size-fullwidth widget--animation-fade-in widget--align-center\" data-ratio=\"0.6669921875\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio--auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <img class=\"widgetImage__image\" loading=\"lazy\" src=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////images.euronews.com//articles//stories//09//53//39//53//808x539_cmsv2_68cdc1c9-66bc-542e-bf93-96d534929e28-9533953.jpg/" alt=\"Police stand guard near the Huntingdon, England, train station in Cambridgeshire, after people were stabbed on a train, Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025\" srcset=\"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/39\/53\/384x256_cmsv2_68cdc1c9-66bc-542e-bf93-96d534929e28-9533953.jpg 384w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/39\/53\/640x427_cmsv2_68cdc1c9-66bc-542e-bf93-96d534929e28-9533953.jpg 640w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/39\/53\/750x500_cmsv2_68cdc1c9-66bc-542e-bf93-96d534929e28-9533953.jpg 750w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/39\/53\/828x552_cmsv2_68cdc1c9-66bc-542e-bf93-96d534929e28-9533953.jpg 828w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/39\/53\/1080x720_cmsv2_68cdc1c9-66bc-542e-bf93-96d534929e28-9533953.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/39\/53\/1200x800_cmsv2_68cdc1c9-66bc-542e-bf93-96d534929e28-9533953.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/39\/53\/1920x1281_cmsv2_68cdc1c9-66bc-542e-bf93-96d534929e28-9533953.jpg 1920w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 95vw, (max-width: 1024px) 80vw, (max-width: 1280px) 55vw, 728px\"\/>\n <figcaption class=\"widget__caption\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionWrap\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionText\">Police stand guard near the Huntingdon, England, train station in Cambridgeshire, after people were stabbed on a train, Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025<\/span>\n <span class=\"widget__captionCredit\">Chris Radburn\/AP<\/span>\n <\/span>\n <\/figcaption>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>\"At approximately 7:42 pm yesterday evening, there were calls to the police service, in relation to multiple stabbings, which took place on board a train service that departed Doncaster at 6:25 pm and was en route to London King's Cross station,\" said Superintendent John Loveless of the British Transport Police. <\/p>\n<p>\"Officers immediately attended Huntingdon station alongside paramedics, where armed police officers from Cambridgeshire police, boarded the train, and arrested two people. Within eight minutes of the 999 call being made, two men were brought into police custody, where they remain this morning.\"<\/p>\n<p>The suspects were identified as two males, British nationals born in the UK, who were arrested in Huntingdon station, where the train made an emergency stop and where armed police immediately intervened. <\/p>\n<p>\"These are, the first male, a 32-year-old male of Black British national, and a 35-year-old man, a British national, of Caribbean descent. They were both arrested on suspicion of attempted murder. Both were born in the United Kingdom,\" added Loveless.<\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-image widget--size-fullwidth widget--animation-fade-in widget--align-center\" data-ratio=\"0.6669921875\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio--auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <img class=\"widgetImage__image\" loading=\"lazy\" src=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////images.euronews.com//articles//stories//09//53//39//61//808x539_cmsv2_0eabdfd2-b3a1-5dae-a8c9-e21f4fe50f08-9533961.jpg/" alt=\"Emergency personnel inspect a train at the Huntingdon, England, train station in Cambridgeshire after people were stabbed Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025\" srcset=\"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/39\/61\/384x256_cmsv2_0eabdfd2-b3a1-5dae-a8c9-e21f4fe50f08-9533961.jpg 384w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/39\/61\/640x427_cmsv2_0eabdfd2-b3a1-5dae-a8c9-e21f4fe50f08-9533961.jpg 640w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/39\/61\/750x500_cmsv2_0eabdfd2-b3a1-5dae-a8c9-e21f4fe50f08-9533961.jpg 750w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/39\/61\/828x552_cmsv2_0eabdfd2-b3a1-5dae-a8c9-e21f4fe50f08-9533961.jpg 828w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/39\/61\/1080x720_cmsv2_0eabdfd2-b3a1-5dae-a8c9-e21f4fe50f08-9533961.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/39\/61\/1200x800_cmsv2_0eabdfd2-b3a1-5dae-a8c9-e21f4fe50f08-9533961.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/39\/61\/1920x1281_cmsv2_0eabdfd2-b3a1-5dae-a8c9-e21f4fe50f08-9533961.jpg 1920w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 95vw, (max-width: 1024px) 80vw, (max-width: 1280px) 55vw, 728px\"\/>\n <figcaption class=\"widget__caption\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionWrap\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionText\">Emergency personnel inspect a train at the Huntingdon, England, train station in Cambridgeshire after people were stabbed Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025<\/span>\n <span class=\"widget__captionCredit\">Chris Radburn\/AP<\/span>\n <\/span>\n <\/figcaption>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>The attack was first suspected as a potential terrorist attack. British Counter Terrorism Policing units were involved in initial investigations. Police now however say that further investigations have ruled out terrorism as a motive behind the incident. <\/p>\n<p>\"British Transport Police declared a major incident yesterday, and Counter Terrorism Policing were initially supporting our investigation. However, at this stage, there is nothing to suggest that this is a terrorist incident,\" said Loveless. <\/p>\n<p>The attack took place as the train from Doncaster in northern England to London\u2019s King\u2019s Cross station was about halfway through its 2-hour journey and approaching Huntingdon, a market town a few kilometres northwest of Cambridge.<\/p>\n<p>UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer said his \u201cthoughts are with all those affected\u201d after what he slammed as an \u201cappalling incident.\u201d<\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1762072023,"updatedAt":1762127690,"publishedAt":1762074367,"firstPublishedAt":1762074367,"lastPublishedAt":1762127689,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/39\/53\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_fc835edc-b5a9-5819-89ef-a8bb036568fb-9533953.jpg","altText":"Emergency personnel inspect a train at the Huntingdon, England, train station in Cambridgeshire after people were stabbed Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025","caption":"Emergency personnel inspect a train at the Huntingdon, England, train station in Cambridgeshire after people were stabbed Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"Chris Radburn\/AP","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":1024,"height":576},{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/39\/53\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_68cdc1c9-66bc-542e-bf93-96d534929e28-9533953.jpg","altText":"Police stand guard near the Huntingdon, England, train station in Cambridgeshire, after people were stabbed on a train, Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025","caption":"Police stand guard near the Huntingdon, England, train station in Cambridgeshire, after people were stabbed on a train, Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"Chris Radburn\/AP","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":1024,"height":683},{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/39\/61\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_0eabdfd2-b3a1-5dae-a8c9-e21f4fe50f08-9533961.jpg","altText":"Emergency personnel inspect a train at the Huntingdon, England, train station in Cambridgeshire after people were stabbed Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025","caption":"Emergency personnel inspect a train at the Huntingdon, England, train station in Cambridgeshire after people were stabbed Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"Chris Radburn\/AP","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":1024,"height":683}],"authors":{"journalists":[{"id":3270,"urlSafeValue":"fouda","title":"Malek Fouda","twitter":"themalekfouda"}],"producers":[],"videoEditor":[]},"keywords":[{"id":14192,"slug":"knife-attack","urlSafeValue":"knife-attack","title":"Knife 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pony becomes the mane attraction for visitors","titleListing2":"The size of a spaniel: tiny pony becomes the mane attraction at a rescue centre","leadin":"Believed to be the smallest Shetland pony ever born at a UK rescue farm, Pam is charming everyone with her playful energy and tiny frame.","summary":"Believed to be the smallest Shetland pony ever born at a UK rescue farm, Pam is charming everyone with her playful energy and tiny frame.","keySentence":"","url":"the-size-of-a-spaniel-tiny-pony-becomes-the-mane-attraction-at-a-rescue-centre","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/2025\/10\/31\/the-size-of-a-spaniel-tiny-pony-becomes-the-mane-attraction-at-a-rescue-centre","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"At Glenda Spooner Farm in Yeovil, UK, a small foal is trotting into the spotlight.\n\nPam the Shetland was born at the World Horse Welfare rescue and rehoming centre in July 2025, and at barely the size of a spaniel, she has quickly become a firm favourite.\n\nHer mother, Sophie, was rescued last summer in poor condition and heavily pregnant.\n\nSoon after arriving at the farm, she gave birth to Pam, a tiny but healthy foal.\n\nClaire Dickie, Manager at Glenda Spooner Farm, says Pam is one of the smallest she has ever seen.\n\nBoth mare and foal are now doing well after months of care and handling by the centre\u2019s staff.\n\nThe Shetland breed is known for its hardiness and friendly nature, and Pam has already shown plenty of both.\n\n","htmlText":"<p>At Glenda Spooner Farm in Yeovil, UK, a small foal is trotting into the spotlight.<\/p>\n<p>Pam the Shetland was born at the World Horse Welfare rescue and rehoming centre in July 2025, and at barely the size of a spaniel, she has quickly become a firm favourite.<\/p>\n<p>Her mother, Sophie, was rescued last summer in poor condition and heavily pregnant. <\/p>\n<p>Soon after arriving at the farm, she gave birth to Pam, a tiny but healthy foal.<\/p>\n<p>Claire Dickie, Manager at Glenda Spooner Farm, says Pam is one of the smallest she has ever seen.<\/p>\n<p>Both mare and foal are now doing well after months of care and handling by the centre\u2019s staff.<\/p>\n<p>The Shetland breed is known for its hardiness and friendly nature, and Pam has already shown plenty of both.<\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1761927364,"updatedAt":1761929979,"publishedAt":1761929499,"firstPublishedAt":1761929499,"lastPublishedAt":1761929499,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/27\/51\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_c4b85ed6-4b92-519e-8930-7d464be2ff7e-9532751.jpg","altText":"The size of a spaniel - tiny pony becomes mane attraction at UK rescue centre","caption":"The size of a spaniel - tiny pony becomes mane attraction at UK rescue 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Windsor","titleSeo":null,"titleListing1":"Lego pumpkins bring Halloween magic to Legoland Windsor","titleListing2":"Legoland Windsor reveals 45,000 brick pumpkin patch","leadin":"At first glance, it looks like an ordinary pumpkin patch. But hidden among the real pumpkins are others made entirely of Lego bricks.","summary":"At first glance, it looks like an ordinary pumpkin patch. But hidden among the real pumpkins are others made entirely of Lego bricks.","keySentence":"","url":"lego-pumpkins-bring-halloween-magic-to-legoland-windsor","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/2025\/10\/31\/lego-pumpkins-bring-halloween-magic-to-legoland-windsor","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"At Legoland Windsor, more than 500 real pumpkins sit beside nine Lego models, built from over 44,000 pieces and weighing just over 100 kilograms.\n\nEach one took hours of careful work to shape curved pumpkins from square bricks.The colourful display is part of the park\u2019s annual Halloween celebrations, filled with themed shows, decorations and family fun.\n\nFor visitors young and old, it\u2019s a playful reminder that Halloween is about creativity, imagination, and a little bit of magic.\n\n","htmlText":"<p>At Legoland Windsor, more than 500 real pumpkins sit beside nine Lego models, built from over 44,000 pieces and weighing just over 100 kilograms.<\/p>\n<p>Each one took hours of careful work to shape curved pumpkins from square bricks.The colourful display is part of the park\u2019s annual Halloween celebrations, filled with themed shows, decorations and family fun.<\/p>\n<p>For visitors young and old, it\u2019s a playful reminder that Halloween is about creativity, imagination, and a little bit of magic.<\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1761891832,"updatedAt":1762325685,"publishedAt":1761892796,"firstPublishedAt":1761892796,"lastPublishedAt":1762325685,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/18\/87\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_220fe028-0b89-51c9-bfd7-f259ca96f8e1-9531887.jpg","altText":"Brick or Treat: Legoland Windsor reveals 45,000 brick pumpkin patch","caption":"Brick or Treat: Legoland Windsor reveals 45,000 brick pumpkin patch","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1112}],"authors":{"journalists":[],"producers":[],"videoEditor":[]},"keywords":[{"id":11406,"slug":"halloween","urlSafeValue":"halloween","title":"Halloween","titleRaw":"Halloween"},{"id":30586,"slug":"pumpkin","urlSafeValue":"pumpkin","title":"pumpkin","titleRaw":"pumpkin"},{"id":13156,"slug":"celebration","urlSafeValue":"celebration","title":"Celebration","titleRaw":"Celebration"},{"id":24946,"slug":"holi-festival","urlSafeValue":"holi-festival","title":"Holi festival","titleRaw":"Holi festival"}],"widgets":[],"related":[],"technicalTags":[],"externalPartners":{"youtubeId":"dnRXNQrtO_M","dailymotionId":"x9syyoc"},"hasExternalVideo":1,"hasInternalOrExternalVideo":1,"video":1,"videos":[{"format":"mp4","quality":"md","type":"normal","url":"https:\/\/video.euronews.com\/mp4\/ED\/28\/19\/63\/03\/ED_PYR_2819633_20251031063352.mp4","editor":"","duration":62320,"filesizeBytes":11971654,"expiresAt":0},{"format":"mp4","quality":"hd","type":"normal","url":"https:\/\/video.euronews.com\/mp4\/SHD\/28\/19\/63\/03\/SHD_PYR_2819633_20251031063352.mp4","editor":"","duration":62320,"filesizeBytes":16752093,"expiresAt":0},{"format":"mp4","quality":"1080p","type":"normal","url":"https:\/\/video.euronews.com\/mp4\/FHD\/28\/19\/63\/03\/FHD_PYR_2819633_20251031063352.mp4","editor":"","duration":62320,"filesizeBytes":50483945,"expiresAt":0}],"liveStream":[{"startDate":0,"endDate":0}],"scribbleLiveId":0,"scribbleLiveRibbon":0,"isLiveCoverage":0,"sourceId":1,"sources":[],"externalSource":null,"additionalSources":"","additionalReporting":"euronews","freeField1":null,"freeField2":"","type":"normal","displayType":"default","program":{"id":"nocomment","urlSafeValue":"nocomment","title":"No Comment","online":1,"url":"\/nocomment"},"season":"","episode":"","episodeId":"","vertical":"news","verticals":[{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"}],"primaryVertical":{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"},"themes":[{"id":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World","url":"\/news\/international"}],"primaryTheme":{"id":1,"urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World"},"advertising":0,"advertisingData":{"startDate":0,"endDate":0,"type":null,"slug":null,"title":null,"disclaimerLabelKey":null,"sponsor":null,"sponsorName":null,"sponsorUrl":null,"sponsorLogo":"","sponsorLogoReverse":"","isDfp":0},"geoLocation":{"lat":0,"lon":0},"location":1,"continent":{"id":104,"urlSafeValue":"europe","title":"Europe"},"country":{"id":291,"urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","url":"\/news\/europe\/united-kingdom"},"town":[],"contextualSignals":{"doubleVerify":{"ids":[],"slugs":[]}},"grapeshot":null,"versions":[],"programDeliverable":{"slug":"article-video","format":"default"},"showOpinionDisclaimer":0,"allViews":0,"allViewsMeta":{"pointOfView":[],"survey":[],"tweetId":0,"tweet2NdId":0,"displayOverlay":0},"storyTranslationMethod":[],"localisation":[],"autoPublished":0,"autoLocalised":0,"isReviewed":0,"path":"\/video\/2025\/10\/31\/lego-pumpkins-bring-halloween-magic-to-legoland-windsor","lastModified":1762325685},{"id":2842813,"cid":9531673,"versionId":3,"archive":0,"housenumber":null,"owner":"euronews","isMagazine":0,"isBreakingNews":0,"daletEventName":"PRINCE ANDREW LOSES TITLE","daletPyramidId":3163443,"channels":[{"id":1},{"id":2},{"id":3},{"id":4},{"id":5},{"id":10},{"id":12},{"id":14}],"status":2,"title":"Prince Andrew to lose 'prince' title and move out of Royal Lodge, Buckingham Palace says","titleSeo":null,"titleListing1":"Prince Andrew to lose 'prince' title, Buckingham Palace says","titleListing2":"Prince Andrew to lose 'prince' title and move out of Royal Lodge, Buckingham Palace says","leadin":"The move follows revelations about his relationship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.","summary":"The move follows revelations about his relationship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.","keySentence":"","url":"prince-andrew-to-lose-prince-title-and-move-out-of-royal-lodge-buckingham-palace-says","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/2025\/10\/30\/prince-andrew-to-lose-prince-title-and-move-out-of-royal-lodge-buckingham-palace-says","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"King Charles is stripping his brother Prince Andrew of his remaining titles and evicting him from his royal residence, Buckingham Palace said in a statement on Thursday.\n\nThe palace said Andrew will be known as Andrew Mountbatten Windsor and not as a prince.\n\nThe move follows revelations about his relationship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.\n\n\"His Majesty has today initiated a formal process to remove the Style, Titles and Honours of Prince Andrew,\" the statement from Buckingham Palace read.\n\n\"These censures are deemed necessary, notwithstanding the fact that he continues to deny the allegations against him. Their Majesties wish to make clear that their thoughts and utmost sympathies have been, and will remain with, the victims and survivors of any and all forms of abuse.\"\n\nPrince Andrew announced earlier this month that he is giving up his royal title of Duke of York and other honours after renewed attention over his friendship with Epstein.\n\nIn a statement released by Buckingham Palace, Andrew said that \"the continued accusations about me distract from the work of His Majesty and the royal family.\"\n\nAdding, \"With His Majesty's agreement, I feel I must now go a step further. I will therefore no longer use my title or the honours which have been conferred upon me. I vigorously deny the accusations against me.\"\n\nThat announcement came ahead of a posthumous memoir by Virginia Roberts Giuffre, who died by suicide in April, who claimed Epstein trafficked her and that she had sexual encounters with Andrew when she was 17.\n\n\"Nobody's Girl\" detailed three alleged sexual encounters with Andrew, who she said acted as if he believed \u201chaving sex with me was his birthright.\u201d\n\nAndrew, 65, has long denied Giuffre's claims but\u00a0stepped down from royal duties\u00a0after a disastrous November 2019 BBC interview in which he attempted to rebut her allegations.\n\nAndrew paid millions in\u00a0an out-of-court settlement\u00a0in 2022 after Giuffre filed a civil suit against him in New York.\n\nWhile he didn\u2019t admit wrongdoing, he acknowledged Giuffre\u2019s suffering as a victim of sex trafficking.\n\nGiuffre died by suicide in April at the age of 41.\n\n","htmlText":"<p>King Charles is stripping his brother Prince Andrew of his remaining titles and evicting him from his royal residence, Buckingham Palace said in a statement on Thursday.<\/p>\n<p>The palace said Andrew will be known as Andrew Mountbatten Windsor and not as a prince.<\/p>\n<p>The move follows revelations about his relationship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.<\/p>\n<p>\"His Majesty has today initiated a formal process to remove the Style, Titles and Honours of Prince Andrew,\" the statement from Buckingham Palace read.<\/p>\n<p>\"These censures are deemed necessary, notwithstanding the fact that he continues to deny the allegations against him. Their Majesties wish to make clear that their thoughts and utmost sympathies have been, and will remain with, the victims and survivors of any and all forms of abuse.\"<\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-image widget--size-fullwidth widget--animation-fade-in widget--align-center\" data-ratio=\"0.6525\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio--auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <img class=\"widgetImage__image\" loading=\"lazy\" src=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////images.euronews.com//articles//stories//09//53//16//73//808x528_cmsv2_885fd8c2-30c5-5a51-9e8a-2fefef76d192-9531673.jpg/" alt=\"Prince Andrew appears at the Royal Chapel at Windsor, 11 April, 2021\" srcset=\"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/16\/73\/384x251_cmsv2_885fd8c2-30c5-5a51-9e8a-2fefef76d192-9531673.jpg 384w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/16\/73\/640x418_cmsv2_885fd8c2-30c5-5a51-9e8a-2fefef76d192-9531673.jpg 640w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/16\/73\/750x489_cmsv2_885fd8c2-30c5-5a51-9e8a-2fefef76d192-9531673.jpg 750w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/16\/73\/828x540_cmsv2_885fd8c2-30c5-5a51-9e8a-2fefef76d192-9531673.jpg 828w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/16\/73\/1080x705_cmsv2_885fd8c2-30c5-5a51-9e8a-2fefef76d192-9531673.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/16\/73\/1200x783_cmsv2_885fd8c2-30c5-5a51-9e8a-2fefef76d192-9531673.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/16\/73\/1920x1253_cmsv2_885fd8c2-30c5-5a51-9e8a-2fefef76d192-9531673.jpg 1920w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 95vw, (max-width: 1024px) 80vw, (max-width: 1280px) 55vw, 728px\"\/>\n <figcaption class=\"widget__caption\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionWrap\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionText\">Prince Andrew appears at the Royal Chapel at Windsor, 11 April, 2021<\/span>\n <span class=\"widget__captionCredit\">AP Photo<\/span>\n <\/span>\n <\/figcaption>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>Prince Andrew announced earlier this month that he is giving up his royal title of Duke of York and other honours after renewed attention over his friendship with Epstein.<\/p>\n<p>In a statement released by Buckingham Palace, Andrew said that \"the continued accusations about me distract from the work of His Majesty and the royal family.\"<\/p>\n<p>Adding, \"With His Majesty's agreement, I feel I must now go a step further. I will therefore no longer use my title or the honours which have been conferred upon me. I vigorously deny the accusations against me.\"<\/p>\n<p>That announcement came ahead of a posthumous memoir by Virginia Roberts Giuffre, who died by suicide in April, who claimed Epstein trafficked her and that she had sexual encounters with Andrew when she was 17.<\/p>\n<p>\"Nobody's Girl\" detailed three alleged sexual encounters with Andrew, who she said acted as if he believed \u201chaving sex with me was his birthright.\u201d<\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-image widget--size-fullwidth widget--animation-fade-in widget--align-center\" data-ratio=\"0.6665\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio--auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <img class=\"widgetImage__image\" loading=\"lazy\" src=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////images.euronews.com//articles//stories//09//53//16//73//808x539_cmsv2_73de1cc2-422a-5db7-866f-c418fe45cfd3-9531673.jpg/" alt=\"The memoir of Virginia Giuffre &#x22;Nobody&#x27;s Girl&#x22; is seen amongst other books in a shop in London, 21 October, 2025 \" srcset=\"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/16\/73\/384x256_cmsv2_73de1cc2-422a-5db7-866f-c418fe45cfd3-9531673.jpg 384w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/16\/73\/640x427_cmsv2_73de1cc2-422a-5db7-866f-c418fe45cfd3-9531673.jpg 640w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/16\/73\/750x500_cmsv2_73de1cc2-422a-5db7-866f-c418fe45cfd3-9531673.jpg 750w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/16\/73\/828x552_cmsv2_73de1cc2-422a-5db7-866f-c418fe45cfd3-9531673.jpg 828w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/16\/73\/1080x720_cmsv2_73de1cc2-422a-5db7-866f-c418fe45cfd3-9531673.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/16\/73\/1200x800_cmsv2_73de1cc2-422a-5db7-866f-c418fe45cfd3-9531673.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/16\/73\/1920x1280_cmsv2_73de1cc2-422a-5db7-866f-c418fe45cfd3-9531673.jpg 1920w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 95vw, (max-width: 1024px) 80vw, (max-width: 1280px) 55vw, 728px\"\/>\n <figcaption class=\"widget__caption\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionWrap\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionText\">The memoir of Virginia Giuffre &#x22;Nobody&#x27;s Girl&#x22; is seen amongst other books in a shop in London, 21 October, 2025 <\/span>\n <span class=\"widget__captionCredit\">AP Photo<\/span>\n <\/span>\n <\/figcaption>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>Andrew, 65, has long denied Giuffre's claims but stepped down from royal duties after a disastrous November 2019 BBC interview in which he attempted to rebut her allegations.<\/p>\n<p>Andrew paid millions in an out-of-court settlement in 2022 after Giuffre filed a civil suit against him in New York.<\/p>\n<p>While he didn\u2019t admit wrongdoing, he acknowledged Giuffre\u2019s suffering as a victim of sex trafficking.<\/p>\n<p>Giuffre died by suicide in April at the age of 41.<\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1761851371,"updatedAt":1761857571,"publishedAt":1761852213,"firstPublishedAt":1761852213,"lastPublishedAt":1761854014,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/16\/73\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_8d9d1566-51f3-524f-8841-f30a3877bd04-9531673.jpg","altText":"Prince Andrew arrives for the funeral of the Duchess of Kent at Westminster Cathedral in London, 16 September, 2025","caption":"Prince Andrew arrives for the funeral of the Duchess of Kent at Westminster Cathedral in London, 16 September, 2025","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":1619,"height":910},{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/16\/73\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_885fd8c2-30c5-5a51-9e8a-2fefef76d192-9531673.jpg","altText":"Prince Andrew appears at the Royal Chapel at Windsor, 11 April, 2021","caption":"Prince Andrew appears at the Royal Chapel at Windsor, 11 April, 2021","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1305},{"url":"https:\/\/images.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/53\/16\/73\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_73de1cc2-422a-5db7-866f-c418fe45cfd3-9531673.jpg","altText":"The memoir of Virginia Giuffre \"Nobody's Girl\" is seen amongst other books in a shop in London, 21 October, 2025 ","caption":"The memoir of Virginia Giuffre \"Nobody's Girl\" is seen amongst other books in a shop in London, 21 October, 2025 ","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1333}],"authors":{"journalists":[{"id":2972,"urlSafeValue":"blackburn","title":"Gavin Blackburn","twitter":null}],"producers":[],"videoEditor":[]},"keywords":[{"id":7800,"slug":"united-kingdom","urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","titleRaw":"United Kingdom"},{"id":27386,"slug":"king-charles","urlSafeValue":"king-charles","title":"King Charles III","titleRaw":"King Charles III"},{"id":25668,"slug":"prince-andrew","urlSafeValue":"prince-andrew","title":"Prince Andrew","titleRaw":"Prince Andrew"},{"id":21328,"slug":"jeffrey-epstein","urlSafeValue":"jeffrey-epstein","title":"Jeffrey Epstein","titleRaw":"Jeffrey Epstein"},{"id":13329,"slug":"sexual-assault","urlSafeValue":"sexual-assault","title":"sexual assault","titleRaw":"sexual assault"}],"widgets":[{"slug":"image","count":2}],"related":[{"id":2791516}],"technicalTags":[],"externalPartners":{"youtubeId":"cJ-z6L66qIw","dailymotionId":"x9sycru"},"hasExternalVideo":1,"hasInternalOrExternalVideo":1,"video":1,"videos":[{"format":"mp4","quality":"md","type":"normal","url":"https:\/\/video.euronews.com\/mp4\/ED\/28\/18\/19\/08\/ED_PYR_2818198_20251030205257.mp4","editor":"","duration":39880,"filesizeBytes":9254636,"expiresAt":0},{"format":"mp4","quality":"hd","type":"normal","url":"https:\/\/video.euronews.com\/mp4\/SHD\/28\/18\/19\/08\/SHD_PYR_2818198_20251030205257.mp4","editor":"","duration":39880,"filesizeBytes":12317961,"expiresAt":0},{"format":"mp4","quality":"1080p","type":"normal","url":"https:\/\/video.euronews.com\/mp4\/FHD\/28\/18\/19\/08\/FHD_PYR_2818198_20251030205257.mp4","editor":"","duration":39880,"filesizeBytes":33863054,"expiresAt":0}],"liveStream":[{"startDate":0,"endDate":0}],"scribbleLiveId":0,"scribbleLiveRibbon":0,"isLiveCoverage":0,"sourceId":1,"sources":[],"externalSource":null,"additionalSources":"AP","additionalReporting":"","freeField1":null,"freeField2":"","type":"normal","displayType":"default","program":{"id":"world","urlSafeValue":"world","title":"World News","online":1,"url":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/programs\/world"},"season":"","episode":"","episodeId":"","vertical":"news","verticals":[{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"}],"primaryVertical":{"id":1,"slug":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"News"},"themes":[{"id":"news","urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World","url":"\/news\/international"}],"primaryTheme":{"id":1,"urlSafeValue":"news","title":"World"},"advertising":0,"advertisingData":{"startDate":0,"endDate":0,"type":null,"slug":null,"title":null,"disclaimerLabelKey":null,"sponsor":null,"sponsorName":null,"sponsorUrl":null,"sponsorLogo":"","sponsorLogoReverse":"","isDfp":0},"geoLocation":{"lat":0,"lon":0},"location":1,"continent":{"id":104,"urlSafeValue":"europe","title":"Europe"},"country":{"id":291,"urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","url":"\/news\/europe\/united-kingdom"},"town":{"id":3438,"urlSafeValue":"london","title":"London"},"contextualSignals":{"doubleVerify":{"ids":[],"slugs":[]}},"grapeshot":null,"versions":[],"programDeliverable":{"slug":"article-video","format":"default"},"showOpinionDisclaimer":0,"allViews":0,"allViewsMeta":{"pointOfView":[],"survey":[],"tweetId":0,"tweet2NdId":0,"displayOverlay":0},"storyTranslationMethod":[],"localisation":[],"autoPublished":0,"autoLocalised":0,"isReviewed":0,"path":"\/2025\/10\/30\/prince-andrew-to-lose-prince-title-and-move-out-of-royal-lodge-buckingham-palace-says","lastModified":1761854014},{"id":2842064,"cid":9528135,"versionId":1,"archive":0,"housenumber":null,"owner":"euronews","isMagazine":0,"isBreakingNews":0,"daletEventName":"HEALTH AI PROSTATE CANCER","daletPyramidId":3130214,"channels":[{"id":1},{"id":2},{"id":3},{"id":4},{"id":5},{"id":10},{"id":12},{"id":14}],"status":2,"title":"England trials new AI tool to speed prostate cancer diagnosis, offering same-day results","titleSeo":null,"titleListing1":"Could this AI tool detect prostate cancer in 24 hours?","titleListing2":"England trials new AI tool to speed prostate cancer diagnosis, offering same-day results","leadin":"The new approach could save men from weeks of waiting for a diagnosis, NHS England said.","summary":"The new approach could save men from weeks of waiting for a diagnosis, NHS England said.","keySentence":"","url":"england-trials-new-ai-tool-to-speed-prostate-cancer-diagnosis-offering-same-day-results","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/health\/2025\/10\/28\/england-trials-new-ai-tool-to-speed-prostate-cancer-diagnosis-offering-same-day-results","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"England is testing a new artificial intelligence (AI) tool to speed prostate cancer diagnoses, which may save men from weeks of uncertainty about their health.\n\nThe tool, which will be piloted through the National Health Service (NHS) in England, uses AI to interpret medical imaging scans and identify lesions in men with suspected prostate cancer.\n\nIf the AI tool determines that a scan is high risk, it will be immediately sent to a radiologist for priority review. Patients will be booked for biopsies the same day, enabling doctors to quickly determine if a patient is cancer-free or make a diagnosis a few days later.\n\nThe new approach could save these patients up to a month of waiting for a diagnosis, NHS England said.\n\nUnder the current protocol, patients suspected of having prostate cancer are supposed to undergo a medical scan and biopsy within a week of their primary care doctor referring them for testing. But with radiologists under pressure, it can take much longer.\n\nNotably, early screenings, such as PSA blood tests, can have abnormal results even if the patient does not actually have prostate cancer. That means some men without cancer may be sent for further testing and then wait weeks for an answer, which could take a toll on their mental health.\n\nNHS England said that if the trial is successful, the AI tool will be rolled out across the health system, which could lead to thousands of men being diagnosed and treated for prostate cancer sooner.\n\n\u201cAs with all cancers, speed is crucial \u2013 the quicker the diagnosis, the sooner treatment can begin and help give the best chance of treatment being successful for patients and their families,\u201d Peter Johnson, the NHS\u2019s national clinical director for cancer, said in a statement.\n\nThe tool will be used in 10,000 scans to help radiologists identify cancers. It is part of a \u00a314 million (\u20ac16 million) project in the United Kingdom to detect cancers at earlier stages.\n\nProstate cancer is one of the most common types of cancer for men, with more than 56,000 new cases diagnosed in England each year, NHS England said.\n\nIn the European Union, there are more than 335,000 new cases annually and about one in 11 men will develop prostate cancer over their lives.\n\n","htmlText":"<p>England is testing a new artificial intelligence (AI) tool to speed prostate cancer diagnoses, which may save men from weeks of uncertainty about their health.<\/p>\n<p>The tool, which will be piloted through the National Health Service (NHS) in England, uses AI to interpret medical imaging scans and identify lesions in men with suspected prostate cancer.<\/p>\n<p>If the AI tool determines that a scan is high risk, it will be immediately sent to a radiologist for priority review. Patients will be booked for biopsies the same day, enabling doctors to quickly determine if a patient is cancer-free or make a diagnosis a few days later.<\/p>\n<p>The new approach could save these patients up to a month of waiting for a diagnosis, NHS England said.<\/p>\n<div class=\"c-widget-related\" data-stories-id=\"\" data-event=\"widget_related\">\n <div class=\"c-widget-related__title\">\n <b class=\"c-widget-related__title__text\" lang=\"en\">Related<\/b>\n <\/div>\n <ul class=\"c-widget-related__list\">\n <li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//health//2024//10//01//experts-suggest-stripping-cancer-from-low-grade-prostate-cancer-diagnoses/">Experts suggest stripping \u2018cancer\u2019 from low-grade prostate cancer diagnoses<\/a><\/li>\n <\/ul>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>Under the current protocol, patients suspected of having prostate cancer are supposed to undergo a medical scan and biopsy within a week of their primary care doctor referring them for testing. But with radiologists under pressure, it can take much longer.<\/p>\n<p>Notably, early screenings, such as PSA blood tests, can have abnormal results even if the patient does not actually have prostate cancer. That means some men without cancer may be sent for further testing and then wait weeks for an answer, which could take a toll on their mental health.<\/p>\n<p>NHS England said that if the trial is successful, the AI tool will be rolled out across the health system, which could lead to thousands of men being diagnosed and treated for prostate cancer sooner.<\/p>\n<div class=\"c-widget-related\" data-stories-id=\"\" data-event=\"widget_related\">\n <div class=\"c-widget-related__title\">\n <b class=\"c-widget-related__title__text\" lang=\"en\">Related<\/b>\n <\/div>\n <ul class=\"c-widget-related__list\">\n <li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//health//2025//04//10//promising-results-show-new-spit-test-could-be-better-at-detecting-prostate-cancer-than-blo/">Promising results show new spit test could be better at detecting prostate cancer than blood test<\/a><\/li>\n <\/ul>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>\u201cAs with all cancers, speed is crucial \u2013 the quicker the diagnosis, the sooner treatment can begin and help give the best chance of treatment being successful for patients and their families,\u201d Peter Johnson, the NHS\u2019s national clinical director for cancer, said in a statement.<\/p>\n<p>The tool will be used in 10,000 scans to help radiologists identify cancers. It is part of a \u00a314 million (\u20ac16 million) project in the United Kingdom to detect cancers at earlier stages.<\/p>\n<p>Prostate cancer is one of the most common types of cancer for men, with more than 56,000 new cases diagnosed in England each year, NHS England said.<\/p>\n<p>In the European Union, there are more than 335,000 new cases annually and about one in 11 men will develop prostate cancer over their lives.<\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1761645240,"updatedAt":1761656186,"publishedAt":1761655244,"firstPublishedAt":1761655244,"lastPublishedAt":1761655244,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/static.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/52\/81\/35\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_8b06ca39-86be-540a-9663-95d22a154bb5-9528135.jpg","altText":"A patient undergoes a medical scan.","caption":"A patient undergoes a medical scan.","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"Canva","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":1614,"height":908}],"authors":{"journalists":[{"id":3108,"urlSafeValue":"galvin","title":"Gabriela Galvin","twitter":"@mg_galvin"}],"producers":[],"videoEditor":[]},"keywords":[{"id":30236,"slug":"cancer-survival","urlSafeValue":"cancer-survival","title":"cancer survival","titleRaw":"cancer survival"},{"id":5797,"slug":"cancer","urlSafeValue":"cancer","title":"Cancer","titleRaw":"Cancer"},{"id":12661,"slug":"artificial-intelligence","urlSafeValue":"artificial-intelligence","title":"Artificial intelligence","titleRaw":"Artificial intelligence"},{"id":28266,"slug":"ai","urlSafeValue":"ai","title":"AI","titleRaw":"AI"},{"id":20246,"slug":"national-health-system","urlSafeValue":"national-health-system","title":"National Health System","titleRaw":"National Health System"},{"id":23182,"slug":"early-diagnosis","urlSafeValue":"early-diagnosis","title":"early diagnosis","titleRaw":"early diagnosis"}],"widgets":[{"slug":"related","count":2}],"related":[{"id":2842371},{"id":2842376}],"technicalTags":[],"externalPartners":[],"hasExternalVideo":0,"hasInternalOrExternalVideo":0,"video":0,"videos":[],"liveStream":[{"startDate":0,"endDate":0}],"scribbleLiveId":0,"scribbleLiveRibbon":0,"isLiveCoverage":0,"sourceId":1,"sources":[],"externalSource":null,"additionalSources":null,"additionalReporting":null,"freeField1":null,"freeField2":"","type":"normal","displayType":"default","program":{"id":"healthcare","urlSafeValue":"healthcare","title":"Healthcare","online":0,"url":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/health\/healthcare\/healthcare"},"season":"","episode":"","episodeId":"","vertical":"health","verticals":[{"id":12,"slug":"health","urlSafeValue":"health","title":"Health"}],"primaryVertical":{"id":12,"slug":"health","urlSafeValue":"health","title":"Health"},"themes":[{"id":"healthcare","urlSafeValue":"healthcare","title":"Healthcare","url":"\/health\/healthcare"}],"primaryTheme":{"id":78,"urlSafeValue":"healthcare","title":"Healthcare"},"advertising":0,"advertisingData":{"startDate":0,"endDate":0,"type":null,"slug":null,"title":null,"disclaimerLabelKey":null,"sponsor":null,"sponsorName":null,"sponsorUrl":null,"sponsorLogo":"","sponsorLogoReverse":"","isDfp":0},"geoLocation":{"lat":0,"lon":0},"location":1,"continent":{"id":104,"urlSafeValue":"europe","title":"Europe"},"country":{"id":291,"urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","url":"\/news\/europe\/united-kingdom"},"town":[],"contextualSignals":{"doubleVerify":{"ids":[],"slugs":[]}},"grapeshot":null,"versions":[],"programDeliverable":{"slug":"article","format":"default"},"showOpinionDisclaimer":0,"allViews":0,"allViewsMeta":{"pointOfView":[],"survey":[],"tweetId":0,"tweet2NdId":0,"displayOverlay":0},"storyTranslationMethod":[],"localisation":[],"autoPublished":0,"autoLocalised":0,"isReviewed":0,"path":"\/health\/2025\/10\/28\/england-trials-new-ai-tool-to-speed-prostate-cancer-diagnosis-offering-same-day-results","lastModified":1761655244},{"id":2842080,"cid":9528238,"versionId":2,"archive":0,"housenumber":null,"owner":"euronews","isMagazine":0,"isBreakingNews":0,"daletEventName":"CULTURE PRUNELLA SCALES RIP ","daletPyramidId":3130860,"channels":[{"id":1},{"id":2},{"id":3},{"id":4},{"id":5},{"id":10},{"id":12},{"id":14}],"status":2,"title":"Actress Prunella Scales, best known for playing Sybil Fawlty in Fawlty Towers, dies aged 93","titleSeo":null,"titleListing1":"Fawlty Towers actress Prunella Scales dies aged 93 ","titleListing2":"Actress Prunella Scales, best known for playing Sybil Fawlty in Fawlty Towers, dies aged 93","leadin":"The actress Prunella Scales, best known for her role as Sybil Fawlty in the British comedy series Fawlty Series, has died aged 93.","summary":"The actress Prunella Scales, best known for her role as Sybil Fawlty in the British comedy series Fawlty Series, has died aged 93.","keySentence":"","url":"actress-prunella-scales-best-known-for-playing-sybil-fawlty-in-fawlty-towers-dies-aged-93","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/culture\/2025\/10\/28\/actress-prunella-scales-best-known-for-playing-sybil-fawlty-in-fawlty-towers-dies-aged-93","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"Prunella Scales, the English actor famed for playing Sybil Fawlty in the beloved British comedy sitcom Fawlty Towers, has died at 93.\n\nScales, who was married to fellow actor Timothy West, passed away \u201cpeacefully at home in London yesterday,\u201d her sons Samuel and Joseph said in a statement.\u00a0\n\nThe actor was diagnosed with Alzheimer\u2019s disease in 2013.\n\n\u201cOur darling mother Prunella Scales died peacefully at home in London yesterday. She was 93,\u201d her sons said.\n\n\u201cAlthough dementia forced her retirement from a remarkable acting career of nearly 70 years, she continued to live at home.\u201d\n\nThey added that she was watching the BBC sitcom Fawlty Towers the day before she died.\u00a0\n\nScales was married to West for 61 years. He died in November 2024.\n\n\u201cShe is survived by two sons and one stepdaughter, seven grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.\n\n\u201cWe would like to thank all those who gave Pru such wonderful care at the end of her life: her last days were comfortable, contented and surrounded by love,\u201d her sons added.\n\nPrunella Scales: Queen of the British sitcom\n\nScales was born on 22 June 1932 in Surrey. Her father, John, was a cotton salesman who served in the First World War, and her mother, Catherine, was an actress who attended the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts.\u00a0\n\nScales began her career in 1951 as an assistant stage manager at the British theatre company the Bristol Old Vic, but always had a desire to be an actress.\n\nShe succeeded in being cast in a number of films, including a now-lost screen adaptation of Jane Austen\u2019s Pride and Prejudice from 1952.\u00a0\n\nHer career break came with the early 1960s TV sitcom Marriage Lines, in which she starred alongside Richard Briers.\u00a0\n\nScales was best known for her appearances in the comedy series Fawlty Towers between 1975 and 1979. She portrayed Sybil Fawlty, the bossy wife of the hotelier Basil Fawlty, who was played by John Cleese.\u00a0\n\nShe became an icon of British television for her domineering character with piled-up hairdos and a sharp tongue.\u00a0\n\nIn 1991, Scales earned a BAFTA nomination for her performance as Queen Elizabeth II in Alan Bennett\u2019s A Question of Attribution. She also won two Laurence Olivier Award nominations, for Make and Break (1980) and Single Spies (1990).\n\nBetween 2014 to 2019, Scales and husband West charmed TV audiences with their Channel 4 series Great Canal Journeys.\u00a0\n\nThe programme followed the couple\u2019s journey navigating a canal boat around the waterways of the UK and Europe. West revealed in the final series that Scales\u2019 condition had worsened and she was losing her hearing.\u00a0\n\n","htmlText":"<p>Prunella Scales, the English actor famed for playing Sybil Fawlty in the beloved British comedy sitcom Fawlty Towers, has died at 93.<\/p>\n<p>Scales, who was married to fellow actor Timothy West, passed away \u201cpeacefully at home in London yesterday,\u201d her sons Samuel and Joseph said in a statement. <\/p>\n<p>The actor was diagnosed with Alzheimer\u2019s disease in 2013.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cOur darling mother Prunella Scales died peacefully at home in London yesterday. She was 93,\u201d her sons said.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cAlthough <a href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//tag//dementia/">dementia forced her retirement from a remarkable acting career of nearly 70 years, she continued to live at home.\u201d<\/p>\n<div class=\"widget widget--type-image widget--size-fullwidth widget--animation-fade-in widget--align-center\" data-ratio=\"0.664\">\n <div class=\"widget__wrapper\">\n <div class=\"widget__ratio widget__ratio--auto\">\n <div class=\"widget__contents\">\n <figure class=\"widget__figure\">\n <img class=\"widgetImage__image\" loading=\"lazy\" src=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////static.euronews.com//articles//stories//09//52//82//38//808x535_cmsv2_1881f005-42a5-5ba6-bacb-b8e822026893-9528238.jpg/" alt=\"FILE: Fawlty Towers cast reunites to mark 30th anniversary of TV show; from left Prunella Scales, John Cleese, Connie Booth and Andrew Sachs, 6 May 2009\" srcset=\"https:\/\/static.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/52\/82\/38\/384x255_cmsv2_1881f005-42a5-5ba6-bacb-b8e822026893-9528238.jpg 384w, https:\/\/static.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/52\/82\/38\/640x425_cmsv2_1881f005-42a5-5ba6-bacb-b8e822026893-9528238.jpg 640w, https:\/\/static.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/52\/82\/38\/750x498_cmsv2_1881f005-42a5-5ba6-bacb-b8e822026893-9528238.jpg 750w, https:\/\/static.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/52\/82\/38\/828x550_cmsv2_1881f005-42a5-5ba6-bacb-b8e822026893-9528238.jpg 828w, https:\/\/static.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/52\/82\/38\/1080x717_cmsv2_1881f005-42a5-5ba6-bacb-b8e822026893-9528238.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/static.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/52\/82\/38\/1200x797_cmsv2_1881f005-42a5-5ba6-bacb-b8e822026893-9528238.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/static.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/52\/82\/38\/1920x1275_cmsv2_1881f005-42a5-5ba6-bacb-b8e822026893-9528238.jpg 1920w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 95vw, (max-width: 1024px) 80vw, (max-width: 1280px) 55vw, 728px\"\/>\n <figcaption class=\"widget__caption\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionWrap\">\n <span class=\"widget__captionText\">FILE: Fawlty Towers cast reunites to mark 30th anniversary of TV show; from left Prunella Scales, John Cleese, Connie Booth and Andrew Sachs, 6 May 2009<\/span>\n <span class=\"widget__captionCredit\">AP Photo<\/span>\n <\/span>\n <\/figcaption>\n <\/figure>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>They added that she was watching the BBC sitcom Fawlty Towers the day before she died. <\/p>\n<p>Scales was married to West for 61 years. He died in November 2024.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cShe is survived by two sons and one stepdaughter, seven grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe would like to thank all those who gave Pru such wonderful care at the end of her life: her last days were comfortable, contented and surrounded by love,\u201d her sons added.<\/p>\n<h2>Prunella Scales: Queen of the British sitcom<\/h2>\n<p>Scales was born on 22 June 1932 in Surrey. Her father, John, was a cotton salesman who served in the First World War, and her mother, Catherine, was an actress who attended the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts. <\/p>\n<p>Scales began her career in 1951 as an assistant stage manager at the British theatre company the Bristol Old Vic, but always had a desire to be an actress. <\/p>\n<p>She succeeded in being cast in a number of films, including a now-lost screen adaptation of Jane Austen\u2019s Pride and Prejudice from 1952. <\/p>\n<p>Her career break came with the early 1960s TV sitcom Marriage Lines, in which she starred alongside Richard Briers. <\/p>\n<p>Scales was best known for her appearances in the comedy series Fawlty Towers between 1975 and 1979. She portrayed Sybil Fawlty, the bossy wife of the hotelier Basil Fawlty, who was played by John Cleese. <\/p>\n<p>She became an icon of British television for her domineering character with piled-up hairdos and a sharp tongue. <\/p>\n<p>In 1991, Scales earned a BAFTA nomination for her performance as Queen Elizabeth II in Alan Bennett\u2019s A Question of Attribution. She also won two Laurence Olivier Award nominations, for Make and Break (1980) and Single Spies (1990).<\/p>\n<p>Between 2014 to 2019, Scales and husband West charmed TV audiences with their Channel 4 series Great Canal Journeys. <\/p>\n<p>The programme followed the couple\u2019s journey navigating a canal boat around the waterways of the UK and Europe. West revealed in the final series that Scales\u2019 condition had worsened and she was losing her hearing. <\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1761648286,"updatedAt":1761658211,"publishedAt":1761651702,"firstPublishedAt":1761651702,"lastPublishedAt":1761658210,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/static.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/52\/82\/38\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_f60b825e-2bca-59a1-be20-e7dbf247bb97-9528238.jpg","altText":"FILE: British actress Prunella Scales at premiere of 'Keeping Mum' at London's Leicester Square cinema, 28 November 2005","caption":"FILE: British actress Prunella Scales at premiere of 'Keeping Mum' at London's Leicester Square cinema, 28 November 2005","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo\/Lefteris Pitarkis","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1125},{"url":"https:\/\/static.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/52\/82\/38\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_1881f005-42a5-5ba6-bacb-b8e822026893-9528238.jpg","altText":"FILE: Fawlty Towers cast reunites to mark 30th anniversary of TV show; from left Prunella Scales, John Cleese, Connie Booth and Andrew Sachs, 6 May 2009","caption":"FILE: Fawlty Towers cast reunites to mark 30th anniversary of TV show; from left Prunella Scales, John Cleese, Connie Booth and Andrew Sachs, 6 May 2009","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":2000,"height":1328}],"authors":{"journalists":[{"id":2460,"urlSafeValue":"hughes","title":"Rebecca Ann Hughes","twitter":null}],"producers":[],"videoEditor":[]},"keywords":[{"id":12848,"slug":"obituaries","urlSafeValue":"obituaries","title":"Obituary ","titleRaw":"Obituary "},{"id":5712,"slug":"comedy","urlSafeValue":"comedy","title":"Comedy","titleRaw":"Comedy"},{"id":6710,"slug":"bafta","urlSafeValue":"bafta","title":"BAFTA","titleRaw":"BAFTA"},{"id":12588,"slug":"actress","urlSafeValue":"actress","title":"Actress","titleRaw":"Actress"},{"id":4828,"slug":"television","urlSafeValue":"television","title":"Television","titleRaw":"Television"},{"id":322,"slug":"cinema","urlSafeValue":"cinema","title":"Cinema","titleRaw":"Cinema"}],"widgets":[{"slug":"image","count":1}],"related":[{"id":2730792},{"id":2845742}],"technicalTags":[],"externalPartners":[],"hasExternalVideo":0,"hasInternalOrExternalVideo":0,"video":0,"videos":[],"liveStream":[{"startDate":0,"endDate":0}],"scribbleLiveId":0,"scribbleLiveRibbon":0,"isLiveCoverage":0,"sourceId":1,"sources":[],"externalSource":null,"additionalSources":null,"additionalReporting":null,"freeField1":null,"freeField2":"","type":"normal","displayType":"default","program":{"id":"culture-news","urlSafeValue":"culture-news","title":"Culture News","online":0,"url":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/culture\/culture-news\/culture-news"},"season":"","episode":"","episodeId":"","vertical":"culture","verticals":[{"id":10,"slug":"culture","urlSafeValue":"culture","title":"Culture"}],"primaryVertical":{"id":10,"slug":"culture","urlSafeValue":"culture","title":"Culture"},"themes":[{"id":"culture-news","urlSafeValue":"culture-news","title":"Culture news","url":"\/culture\/culture-news"}],"primaryTheme":{"id":53,"urlSafeValue":"culture-news","title":"Culture news"},"advertising":0,"advertisingData":{"startDate":0,"endDate":0,"type":null,"slug":null,"title":null,"disclaimerLabelKey":null,"sponsor":null,"sponsorName":null,"sponsorUrl":null,"sponsorLogo":"","sponsorLogoReverse":"","isDfp":0},"geoLocation":{"lat":0,"lon":0},"location":1,"continent":{"id":104,"urlSafeValue":"europe","title":"Europe"},"country":{"id":291,"urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","url":"\/news\/europe\/united-kingdom"},"town":[],"contextualSignals":{"doubleVerify":{"ids":[],"slugs":[]}},"grapeshot":null,"versions":[],"programDeliverable":{"slug":"article","format":"default"},"showOpinionDisclaimer":0,"allViews":0,"allViewsMeta":{"pointOfView":[],"survey":[],"tweetId":0,"tweet2NdId":0,"displayOverlay":0},"storyTranslationMethod":[],"localisation":[],"autoPublished":0,"autoLocalised":0,"isReviewed":0,"path":"\/culture\/2025\/10\/28\/actress-prunella-scales-best-known-for-playing-sybil-fawlty-in-fawlty-towers-dies-aged-93","lastModified":1761658210},{"id":2842035,"cid":9528002,"versionId":1,"archive":0,"housenumber":null,"owner":"euronews","isMagazine":0,"isBreakingNews":0,"daletEventName":"HEALTH ART WELLBEING","daletPyramidId":3129186,"channels":[{"id":1},{"id":2},{"id":3},{"id":4},{"id":5},{"id":10},{"id":12},{"id":14}],"status":2,"title":"How viewing original artwork could boost your immune system and lower stress","titleSeo":null,"titleListing1":"Why viewing masterpieces in a gallery is good for your health","titleListing2":"How viewing original artwork could boost your immune system and lower stress","leadin":"A small experiment found tangible benefits from viewing masterpieces by artists such as Manet, Toulouse-Lautrec, and van Gogh in a gallery.","summary":"A small experiment found tangible benefits from viewing masterpieces by artists such as Manet, Toulouse-Lautrec, and van Gogh in a gallery.","keySentence":"","url":"how-viewing-original-artwork-could-boost-your-immune-system-and-lower-stress","canonical":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/culture\/2025\/10\/28\/how-viewing-original-artwork-could-boost-your-immune-system-and-lower-stress","masterCms":"v2","plainText":"Looking at original works of art could boost our health by lowering stress and curbing inflammation, a small new study has found.\n\nPeople who viewed masterpieces by the likes of Manet and van Gogh in a gallery saw immediate benefits to their immune, hormone, and autonomic nervous systems, according to the first-of-its-kind study, which adds to a growing body of evidence about how art affects our wellbeing.\n\nThe findings offer \u201ccompelling evidence that viewing art in a gallery is \u2018good for you\u2019 and helps to further our understanding of its fundamental benefits,\u201d Tony Woods, the study\u2019s senior author and a researcher at King\u2019s College London, said in a statement.\n\n\u201cIn essence, art doesn\u2019t just move us emotionally \u2013 it calms the body too,\u201d he added.\n\nFor the experiment, 50 healthy adults aged 18 to 40 were split into two groups. Half viewed original masterpieces in a London gallery, and half looked at copies of the paintings in a laboratory.\n\nThe participants wore medical-grade sensors that measured their heart rates, heart rate variability, and skin temperature during the roughly 20-minute sessions. Researchers also used saliva samples to measure their levels of cytokines, which are small proteins that help control inflammation, and cortisol, which is a key stress hormone.\n\nCortisol levels fell by an average of 22 per cent among people who went to the gallery, compared to 8 per cent for the group who looked at copies in a lab.\n\nMeanwhile, levels of the cytokines IL-6 and TNF-\u03b1 fell by 30 per cent and 28 per cent, respectively, among those who viewed original art.\n\nNotably, stress hormones and inflammatory markers are linked to health issues such as heart disease, diabetes, anxiety, and depression.\n\n\u201cThe fact that viewing original art lowered these markers suggests that cultural experiences may play a real role in protecting both mind and body,\u201d Woods said.\n\nThe gallery attendees also had more variation in their heartbeats and dips in their skin temperature, which suggests they were emotionally stimulated by the artwork, the study found.\n\nThose who viewed copies of the paintings in a lab setting did not reap these benefits.\n\nThe five paintings the participants viewed were \u201cJane Avril in the Entrance to the Moulin Rouge, Putting on her Gloves\u201d by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, \u201cA Bar at the Folies-Bergere\u201d and \u201cBanks of the Seine at Argenteuil\u201d by \u00c9douard Manet, \u201cSelf-Portrait with Bandaged Ear\u201d by Vincent van Gogh, and \u201cTe Rerioa (The Dream)\u201d by Paul Gauguin.\n\nThe study, which hasn't yet been peer-reviewed, was funded by the Psychiatry Research Trust and the Art Fund, a British art charity.\n\nThe Art Fund said it hopes the findings will encourage more people to visit their local museums and galleries.\n\nJenny Waldman, the organisation\u2019s director, noted that people in the study reacted to the original artwork regardless of their personality traits or emotional intelligence, which the researchers had measured through surveys.\n\n\u201cWhat\u2019s particularly exciting is that the findings show these benefits are universal \u2013 they can be experienced by anyone,\u201d Waldman said.\n\n","htmlText":"<p>Looking at original works of art could boost our health by lowering stress and curbing inflammation, a small new study has found.<\/p>\n<p>People who viewed masterpieces by the likes of Manet and van Gogh in a gallery saw immediate benefits to their immune, hormone, and autonomic nervous systems, according to the first-of-its-kind study, which adds to a growing body of evidence about how art affects our wellbeing.<\/p>\n<p>The findings offer \u201ccompelling evidence that viewing art in a gallery is \u2018good for you\u2019 and helps to further our understanding of its fundamental benefits,\u201d Tony Woods, the study\u2019s senior author and a researcher at King\u2019s College London, said in a statement.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cIn essence, art doesn\u2019t just move us emotionally \u2013 it calms the body too,\u201d he added.<\/p>\n<p>For the experiment, 50 healthy adults aged 18 to 40 were split into two groups. Half viewed original masterpieces in a London gallery, and half looked at copies of the paintings in a laboratory.<\/p>\n<div class=\"c-widget-related\" data-stories-id=\"\" data-event=\"widget_related\">\n <div class=\"c-widget-related__title\">\n <b class=\"c-widget-related__title__text\" lang=\"en\">Related<\/b>\n <\/div>\n <ul class=\"c-widget-related__list\">\n <li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//health//2025//08//10//can-nature-art-and-sport-heal-inside-europes-growing-social-prescribing-movement/">Can nature, art, and sport heal? Inside Europe\u2019s growing social prescribing movement<\/a><\/li>\n <\/ul>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>The participants wore medical-grade sensors that measured their heart rates, heart rate variability, and skin temperature during the roughly 20-minute sessions. Researchers also used saliva samples to measure their levels of cytokines, which are small proteins that help control inflammation, and cortisol, which is a key stress hormone.<\/p>\n<p>Cortisol levels fell by an average of 22 per cent among people who went to the gallery, compared to 8 per cent for the group who looked at copies in a lab.<\/p>\n<p>Meanwhile, levels of the cytokines IL-6 and TNF-\u03b1 fell by 30 per cent and 28 per cent, respectively, among those who viewed original art.<\/p>\n<p>Notably, stress hormones and inflammatory markers are linked to health issues such as heart disease, diabetes, anxiety, and depression.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThe fact that viewing original art lowered these markers suggests that cultural experiences may play a real role in protecting both mind and body,\u201d Woods said.<\/p>\n<p>The gallery attendees also had more variation in their heartbeats and dips in their skin temperature, which suggests they were emotionally stimulated by the artwork, the study found.<\/p>\n<p>Those who viewed copies of the paintings in a lab setting did not reap these benefits.<\/p>\n<div class=\"c-widget-related\" data-stories-id=\"\" data-event=\"widget_related\">\n <div class=\"c-widget-related__title\">\n <b class=\"c-widget-related__title__text\" lang=\"en\">Related<\/b>\n <\/div>\n <ul class=\"c-widget-related__list\">\n <li class=\"c-widget-related__item\"><a class=\"c-widget-related__article\" href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////www.euronews.com//culture//2025//03//24//pills-or-paintings-swiss-town-lets-doctors-prescribe-free-museum-visits-as-art-therapy/">Pills or paintings? Swiss town lets doctors prescribe free museum visits as art therapy<\/a><\/li>\n <\/ul>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>The five paintings the participants viewed were \u201cJane Avril in the Entrance to the Moulin Rouge, Putting on her Gloves\u201d by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, \u201cA Bar at the Folies-Bergere\u201d and \u201cBanks of the Seine at Argenteuil\u201d by \u00c9douard Manet, \u201cSelf-Portrait with Bandaged Ear\u201d by Vincent van Gogh, and \u201cTe Rerioa (The Dream)\u201d by Paul Gauguin.<\/p>\n<p><a href=https://www.euronews.com/"https:////bibli.artfund.org//m//43ab64650b0e8e61//original//Physiological-Impact-of-viewing-original-artworks.pdf/" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer\"><strong>The study,<\/strong><\/a> which hasn't yet been peer-reviewed, was funded by the Psychiatry Research Trust and the Art Fund, a British art charity.<\/p>\n<p>The Art Fund said it hopes the findings will encourage more people to visit their local museums and galleries.<\/p>\n<p>Jenny Waldman, the organisation\u2019s director, noted that people in the study reacted to the original artwork regardless of their personality traits or emotional intelligence, which the researchers had measured through surveys.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWhat\u2019s particularly exciting is that the findings show these benefits are universal \u2013 they can be experienced by anyone,\u201d Waldman said.<\/p>\n","hashtag":null,"createdAt":1761638912,"updatedAt":1761648252,"publishedAt":1761647286,"firstPublishedAt":1761647286,"lastPublishedAt":1761647286,"expiresAt":0,"images":[{"url":"https:\/\/static.euronews.com\/articles\/stories\/09\/52\/80\/02\/{{w}}x{{h}}_cmsv2_abddc246-1ed4-504d-a4f1-07b4a8f2c748-9528002.jpg","altText":"Observers look at pieces by Vincent Van Gogh at The Courtauld Gallery in London on Feb. 1, 2022.","caption":"Observers look at pieces by Vincent Van Gogh at The Courtauld Gallery in London on Feb. 1, 2022.","captionUrl":null,"captionCredit":"Kirsty O'Connor\/PA via AP Photo","sourceUrl":null,"sourceCredit":null,"callToActionUrl":null,"callToActionText":null,"width":1767,"height":994}],"authors":{"journalists":[{"id":3108,"urlSafeValue":"galvin","title":"Gabriela Galvin","twitter":"@mg_galvin"}],"producers":[],"videoEditor":[]},"keywords":[{"id":139,"slug":"health","urlSafeValue":"health","title":"Health","titleRaw":"Health"},{"id":574,"slug":"culture","urlSafeValue":"culture","title":"Culture","titleRaw":"Culture"},{"id":14104,"slug":"mental-health","urlSafeValue":"mental-health","title":"Mental health","titleRaw":"Mental health"},{"id":19904,"slug":"heart-diseases","urlSafeValue":"heart-diseases","title":"heart diseases","titleRaw":"heart diseases"}],"widgets":[{"slug":"related","count":2}],"related":[{"id":2840607}],"technicalTags":[],"externalPartners":[],"hasExternalVideo":0,"hasInternalOrExternalVideo":0,"video":0,"videos":[],"liveStream":[{"startDate":0,"endDate":0}],"scribbleLiveId":0,"scribbleLiveRibbon":0,"isLiveCoverage":0,"sourceId":1,"sources":[],"externalSource":null,"additionalSources":null,"additionalReporting":null,"freeField1":null,"freeField2":"","type":"normal","displayType":"default","program":{"id":"wellbeing","urlSafeValue":"wellbeing","title":"Wellbeing","online":0,"url":"https:\/\/www.euronews.com\/health\/wellbeing\/wellbeing"},"season":"","episode":"","episodeId":"","vertical":"health","verticals":[{"id":12,"slug":"health","urlSafeValue":"health","title":"Health"},{"id":10,"slug":"culture","urlSafeValue":"culture","title":"Culture"}],"primaryVertical":{"id":12,"slug":"health","urlSafeValue":"health","title":"Health"},"themes":[{"id":"wellbeing","urlSafeValue":"wellbeing","title":"wellbeing","url":"\/health\/wellbeing"},{"id":"art","urlSafeValue":"art","title":"Art","url":"\/news\/international"}],"primaryTheme":{"id":82,"urlSafeValue":"wellbeing","title":"Wellbeing"},"advertising":0,"advertisingData":{"startDate":0,"endDate":0,"type":null,"slug":null,"title":null,"disclaimerLabelKey":null,"sponsor":null,"sponsorName":null,"sponsorUrl":null,"sponsorLogo":"","sponsorLogoReverse":"","isDfp":0},"geoLocation":{"lat":0,"lon":0},"location":1,"continent":{"id":104,"urlSafeValue":"europe","title":"Europe"},"country":{"id":291,"urlSafeValue":"united-kingdom","title":"United Kingdom","url":"\/news\/europe\/united-kingdom"},"town":[],"contextualSignals":{"doubleVerify":{"ids":[],"slugs":[]}},"grapeshot":null,"versions":[],"programDeliverable":{"slug":"article","format":"default"},"showOpinionDisclaimer":0,"allViews":0,"allViewsMeta":{"pointOfView":[],"survey":[],"tweetId":0,"tweet2NdId":0,"displayOverlay":0},"storyTranslationMethod":[],"localisation":[],"autoPublished":0,"autoLocalised":0,"isReviewed":0,"path":"\/health\/2025\/10\/28\/how-viewing-original-artwork-could-boost-your-immune-system-and-lower-stress","lastModified":1761647286}]">

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