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Man dies after fall at Oasis Wembley concert

A man has died after falling from a height at an Oasis concert on Saturday, the Metropolitan Police has said.

Police said officers and medics at at Wembley Stadium in London responded to reports that a man in his 40s had been injured at 22:19 BST.

The man “was found with injuries consistent with a fall” and was pronounced dead at the scene, a spokesperson for the force said.

Oasis said in a statement they were “shocked and saddened” to hear of the death of a fan.

They added: “Oasis would like to extend our sincere condolences to the family and friends of the person involved.”

The man reportedly fell from an upper tier.

Police said the stadium was busy and they “believe it is likely a number of people witnessed the incident, or may knowingly or unknowingly have caught it on mobile phone video footage”.

The Met has asked anyone who may have information to get in touch via 101.

It added that the investigation would be passed to the Health and Safety Executive in the next few days.

Oasis’s performance was scheduled to begin at 20:15 and end at 22:15, according to timings on Wembley Stadium’s website.

The band began its Oasis Live ’25 reunion tour in July. Saturday’s concert was part of seven sold-out reunion concerts at Wembley Stadium, which has a 90,000-person capacity across three tiers.

Noel and Liam Gallagher are marking the end of an almost 16-year split with their tour.

Wembley Stadium said in a statement that medics, police and the London Ambulance service attended to the injured man.

“Despite their efforts, the fan very sadly died. Our thoughts go out to his family, who have been informed and are being supported by specially trained police officers,” it said.

The stadium added that the Oasis concert on Sunday was going ahead as planned.

The band will next appear in Edinburgh for three gigs on 8, 9 and 12 August and then take their tour to Ireland, Canada, the US and Mexico before returning to Wembley on 27 and 28 September.

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Women’s Open 2025: Miyu Yamashita wins first major title at Royal Porthcawl

Yamashita assumed control of the tournament with a seven-under-par round of 65 on Friday morning and led from that moment on.

She briefly shared top spot with playing partner A Lim Kim early in her final round, but the South Korean’s birdie at the second was quickly followed by consecutive bogeys.

Hull, who propelled herself into contention with a six-under 66 on Saturday, quickly emerged as the main challenger to world number 15 Yamashita.

They both played their first nine holes in three under par, meaning Yamashita reached the turn three shots clear.

Hull refused to relent and continued to attack, closing the gap to one shot until a costly trip to a fairway bunker on the 16th.

A couple of groups further back, Yamashita stayed remarkably composed and was able to limit the damage of her rare errors – superbly saving par with a lengthy putt at the 14th.

With the knowledge that a bogey on the par-five 18th would be enough for victory, there were some nervous moments when Yamashita found the rough with her first two shots – before a safe chip onto the green set up a par that confirmed she would be the third Japanese winner of the Women’s Open.

Speaking via a translator at the trophy presentation, she said: “To win such a historic tournament in front of all these amazing fans is such an incredible feeling.

“To be part of such a moment in history is something very special,” added Yamashita – who collected a winner’s prize of $1.462m (£1.1m).

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Tensions high as new violence spirals in Syria’s Suwayda despite ceasefire | News

State media says armed groups violated the truce agreed in the predominantly Druze region.

Druze armed groups have attacked personnel from Syria’s internal security forces in the restive area of Suwayda, killing at least one government soldier and wounding others, as well as shelling several villages in the southern province, according to state-run Ekhbariya TV.

Ekhbariya’s report on Sunday quoted a security source as saying the armed groups had violated the ceasefire agreed in the predominantly Druze region, where sectarian bloodshed killed hundreds of people last month.

In response to the renewed violence, the Syrian government said in a statement that “the media and sectarian mobilisation campaigns led by the rebel gangs in the city have not ceased over the past period”.

It added: “As these gangs failed to thwart the efforts of the Syrian state and its responsibilities towards our people in Suwayda, they resorted to violating the ceasefire agreement by launching treacherous attacks against internal security forces on several fronts and shelling some villages with rockets and mortar shells, resulting in the martyrdom and injury of a number of security personnel.”

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported four deaths in the latest violence in Suwayda, noting three were government soldiers and one was a local fighter.

Violence in Suwayda erupted on July 13 between Bedouin tribal fighters and Druze factions.

Government forces were sent in to quell the fighting, but the bloodshed worsened, and Israel carried out strikes on Syrian troops, and also bombed the heart of the capital Damascus, under the pretext of protecting the Druze.

The Druze are a minority community in the region with followers in Syria, Lebanon and Israel. Suwayda province is predominantly Druze, but is also home to Bedouin tribes, and the communities have had longstanding tensions over land and other resources.

A United States-brokered truce between Israel and Syria was announced in tandem with Syria President Ahmed al-Sharaa declaring a ceasefire in Suwayda after previous failed attempts. The fighting had raged in Suwayda city and surrounding towns for nearly a week. Syria said it would investigate the clashes, setting up a committee to do so.

The Suwayda bloodshed was another blow to al-Sharaa’s fledgling government, after a wave of sectarian violence in March that killed hundreds of Alawite citizens in the coastal region.

Hundreds of Bedouin families were displaced by the fighting in Suwayda and relocated to nearby Deraa.

Israel attacks Syria again

Separately, the Israeli military said on Sunday that it conducted a raid on targets in southern Syria on Saturday.

The army said it seized weapons and questioned several suspects it said were involved in weapons trafficking in the area.

Meanwhile, the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) said on Sunday that five of its members had been killed during an attack by ISIL (ISIS) on a checkpoint in eastern Syria’s Deir Az Zor on July 31.

The SDF was the main force allied with the United States in Syria during fighting that defeated ISIL in 2019 after the group declared a caliphate across swaths of Syria and Iraq.

ISIL has been trying to stage a comeback in the Middle East, the West and Asia. Deir Az Zor city was captured by ISIL in 2014, but the Syrian army retook it in 2017.

On Saturday, Syria’s Defence Ministry said an attack carried out by the SDF in the countryside of the northern city of Manbij injured four army personnel and three civilians.

The ministry described the attack as “irresponsible and for unknown reasons”, according to Syria’s state news agency SANA.

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Norris wins Hungary F1 GP in McLaren one-two | Motorsports News

United Kingdom’s Lando Norris holds off McLaren teammate Oscar Piastri of Australia to win Hungarian Grand Prix.

Lando Norris has held off McLaren teammate Oscar Piastri to win the Hungarian Grand Prix on a one-stop strategy and slash the Australian’s Formula One lead to nine points going into the August break.

Norris completed 39 of the 70 laps on Sunday at the Hungaroring on a single set of hard tyres while Piastri stopped twice and closed a 12-second gap to just 0.6 at the finish with a nail-biting chase to the chequered flag and a near-collision.

George Russell took a distant third, 20 seconds down the road, for Mercedes and his fifth podium of the season.

“I’m dead. I’m dead. It was tough,” gasped Norris, who started in third place – with Piastri second – and then went down to fifth after being squeezed at the start.

“We weren’t really planning on the one stop, but after the first lap, it was kind of our only option to get back into things.

“I didn’t think it would get us the win. I thought it would get us maybe into second.”

Race winner Lando Norris of Great Britain driving the (4) McLaren MCL39 Mercedes takes the chequered flag during the F1 Grand Prix of Hungary
Race winner Lando Norris of Great Britain driving the #4 McLaren MCL39 Mercedes takes the chequered flag during the Grand Prix in Hungary [Clive Rose/Getty Images]

The win was Norris’s fifth of the season and third in the past four races to Piastri’s six. It was also McLaren’s seventh one-two in 14 races.

Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc was a frustrated fourth after starting on pole position but losing out with a two-stop strategy and a five-second penalty for erratic driving as Russell challenged.

Fernando Alonso finished fifth for Aston Martin ahead of Sauber’s sixth-placed Brazilian rookie Gabriel Bortoleto.

Lance Stroll was seventh for Aston Martin ahead of Racing Bulls’ Liam Lawson with Red Bull’s reigning champion, Max Verstappen, and Mercedes rookie Kimi Antonelli completing the top 10 scoring positions.

Seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton, an eight-time winner in Hungary, started in 12th place for Ferrari and finished there.

The Briton was lapped by the leaders six laps from the chequered flag.

Charles Leclerc of Ferrari leads at the start of the Formula 1 Hungarian Grand Prix
Charles Leclerc of Ferrari leads at the start of the Hungarian Grand Prix [Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto via Getty Images]

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Israel forces shoot Palestinian boy in eye at aid site amid Gaza starvation | Israel-Palestine conflict News

A Palestinian teenager, shot in the eye by Israeli forces while desperately seeking food for his family near a United States and Israeli-backed GHF site in Gaza, is unlikely to regain sight in his left eye, doctors treating him have said, as the population of the besieged and bombarded enclave suffers from forced starvation.

Fifteen-year-old Abdul Rahman Abu Jazar told Al Jazeera that Israeli soldiers kept shooting at him even after he was struck by a bullet, making him think “this was the end” and “death was near”.

Relaying the harrowing chain of events from a hospital bed with a white bandage covering one eye, Abu Jazar said he went to the site around 2am (23:00 GMT).

“It was my first time going to the distribution point,” he said. “I went there because my siblings and I had no food. We couldn’t find anything to eat.”

He says he moved forward with the crowd until he reached al-Muntazah Park in the Gaza City environs about five hours later.

“We were running when they began shooting at us. I was with three others; three of them were hit. As soon as we started running, they opened fire. Then I felt something like electricity shoot through my body. I collapsed to the ground. I felt as though I had been electrocuted … I didn’t know where I was, I just blacked out. When I woke up, I asked people ‘Where am I?’”

Others near Abu Jazar told him he had been shot in the head. “They were still firing. I got scared and started reciting prayers.”

A doctor at the hospital held a phone light near the boy’s wounded eye and asked him if he could see any light. He could not. The doctor diagnosed a perforating eye injury caused by a gunshot wound.

Abu Jazar underwent surgery and said, “I hope my eyesight will return, God willing.”

Hospitals receive bodies of more aid seekers

Gaza’s Health Ministry reported on Sunday that 119 bodies, including 15 recovered from under the rubble of destroyed buildings or other places, and 866 wounded Palestinians have arrived at the enclave’s hospitals over the past 24-hour reporting period.

At least 65 Palestinians were killed while seeking aid, and 511 more were wounded.

Israeli forces have routinely fired on Palestinians trying to get food at GHF-run distribution sites in Gaza, and the United Nations reported this week that more than 1,300 aid seekers have been killed since the group began operating in May.

Palestinians leave a food distribution point.
Palestinians carry bags as they return from a food distribution point run by the US and Israeli-backed GHF group, in the central Gaza Strip on August 3, 2025 [Eyad Baba/AFP]

Gaza’s famine and malnutrition crisis has been worsening by the day, with at least 175 people, including 93 children, now confirmed dead from the man-made starvation of Israel’s punishing blockade, according to the territory’s Health Ministry.

More than 6,000 Palestinian children are being treated for malnutrition resulting from the blockade, according to the Global Nutrition Cluster, which includes the UN health and food agencies.

Al Jazeera’s Hind Khoudary, reporting from Deir el-Balah, says, “There’s a very, very small amount of trucks coming into Gaza – about maybe 80 to 100 trucks every single day – despite the fact that this “humanitarian pause” was for more aid to enter the Gaza Strip.

“Palestinians are struggling to get a bag of wheat flour. They’re struggling to find a food parcel. And this shows the fact that this pause and all the Israeli claims are not true because on the ground, Palestinians are starving, ” she added.

Khoudary noted that the entire population had been relyiant on UN agencies and other partners to distribute food.

“More Palestinians die every single day due to the forced starvation and malnutrition … Since the blockade started, those distribution points have not been operating, and now nothing’s back to normal. Palestinians are still struggling, and not only that, they’re being killed now for the fact that they’re approaching trucks, the GHF, because they want to eat,” she said.

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Car finance mis-selling payout scheme could cost billions

A compensation scheme for drivers over the mis-selling of car loans could cost as much as £18bn, the financial regulator has said.

The Supreme Court ruled on Friday that hidden commissions from lenders to dealers on car loans were not unlawful, meaning millions of motorists will not be able to claim.

However, the judgement left open the possibility of compensation claims for particularly large commissions which the Supreme Court said were unfair.

Following the ruling, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has said it will consult on running a payout scheme – estimated to cost between £9bn and £18bn.

It said that “most individuals will probably receive less than £950 in compensation”, with the first payouts expected next year if the scheme goes ahead.

Those who have already complained do not need to do anything, the FCA said, advising those who have yet to complain to contact their car loan provider rather than using a claims management company.

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Storm Floris amber weather warning issued ahead of strong winds hitting UK

Elizabeth Rizzini

Lead Weather Presenter

PA Media Large wave crashing against a lighthousePA Media

Weather warnings have been upgraded to amber for most of Scotland as Storm Floris bears down on the UK.

The warning lasts from 10:00 BST on Monday through to 22:00 and warns of danger to life as damage to buildings and trees due to storm conditions is expected.

There is also a yellow warning across northern England, north Wales and Northern Ireland from 06:00 BST on Monday through to midnight.

Storm Floris is the sixth named storm of the 2024/25 season, and the first since January.

The storm is yet to develop but there will be a rapid drop in pressure as the system nears British shores on Sunday night.

It is expected to bring “unusually strong” west or north-westerly winds to much of Scotland.

The amber warning covers a wide area as far south as the country’s central belt – including Glasgow and Edinburgh and also the Highlands.

Gusts of 50 to 70mph are expected, even inland. Exposed coasts, hills and bridges could see gusts of 80 to 90mph, while some models have even suggested 100mph gusts which were last seen during Storm Éowyn in January.

The worst of the winds will be in the western coastal areas of the warning zone between late morning and early afternoon.

As the storm spirals away by late afternoon and early evening the strongest winds will move further eastwards to coastal areas of Aberdeenshire.

Trees are in full leaf at this time of year and are more likely to be toppled with branches broken off than during winter when the wind can whistle through them unimpeded.

Power disruption is also possible while heavy rain and flooding could be an additional hazard.

Weather graphic showing the areas covered by the yellow and amber warnings

The area affected by the yellow warning includes Yorkshire and Humber, north Wales, North West England, North East England, Northern Ireland and all of Scotland including Orkney and the Shetland Islands.

Many inland areas are likely to see gusts of 40 to 50mph with 60 to 70mph possible along exposed coasts and high ground.

Scottish Transport Secretary Fiona Hyslop said a meeting had been held on Friday to ensure Scotland was ready for the storm.

“Given the unusual timing, and the fact some people will be on holiday, travelling or perhaps unaware, we are trying to raise even more awareness than usual of this potentially disruptive storm.”

She added: “This is a slightly unusual situation for August, however the message is the same as winter – plan ahead, check your journey in advance, allow extra time and don’t take any unnecessary risks.”

National Rail has warned that speed restrictions are likely and warned journey delays and cancellations are possible.

Strong winds can also bring down trees that block tracks and damage power lines.

Scottish ferry operator CalMac has issued a series of cancellation warnings ahead of the storm.

In a post on X it said: “Disruption to sailings is expected across our network on Monday, August 4 due to forecasted strong winds across parts of Scotland’s west coast.”

Meanwhile, motorists are urged to slow down in poor weather and avoid exposed Highland and coastal routes.

Rod Dennis, from breakdown service RAC, said: “It’s the height of the holiday season, so those towing trailers and caravans, as well as those with roof and tent boxes, must ensure their loads are properly secured.”

Named storms in August are not that rare.

Last year, Storm Lilian struck the UK on 23 August just before the bank holiday weekend, closing stages at the Leeds Festival and cancelling Heathrow flights.

In 2023, Storm Antoni brought wet and very windy weather to south Wales and south-west England affecting events such as Brighton and Plymouth Pride. Less than two weeks later Storm Betty brought further disruption.

In 2020 there were also two August storms – Ellen and Francis – that the Met Office describes as “two of the most notable August storms in the last 50 years”.

These two storms brought wind gusts of 79mph and 81mph respectively with transport disruption, coastal flooding and power cuts.

The storm follows the UK’s fifth warmest July on record, according to provisional figures from the Met Office.

All four UK nations recorded one of their 10 warmest Julys, and July was the sixth consecutive month of above-average mean temperatures for the UK, the Met Office said.

The first day of the month brought the highest temperature of the year so far, with 35.8C in Faversham, Kent.

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Aid group says worker killed by Israeli military in attack on Gaza HQ

Palestine Red Crescent Society A badly damaged wall of an office, debris is scattered inside it and dust covers a bank of witting room chairs  Palestine Red Crescent Society

The Palestine Red Crescent Society shared pictures showing heavy damage to its headquarters

The Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) has accused Israeli forces of attacking its headquarters in Gaza, killing one worker and injuring three others.

The humanitarian organisation said the attack “sparked a fire in the building” in the early hours of Sunday morning.

Describing the overnight attack on the facility in the southern city of Khan Younis as “deliberate”, the Red Crescent said its HQ’s location is “well known” to the Israeli military and is “clearly marked with the protective red emblem”.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said it had “no knowledge about neither artillery nor any air strikes” when asked by the BBC about the accusation.

A video shared by the Red Crescent on social media showed parts of the building on fire and filled with clouds of smoke, while aftermath pictures showed heavy damage to the building and several large bloodstains.

In a statement, the aid agency named the killed worker as Omar Isleem and said it was “heartbroken” over his death. It said two other workers were injured, as well as a civilian who was trying to put out the fire.

“This was not a mistake,” the Red Crescent added. “We renew our call for accountability and for the protection of all humanitarian and medical personnel.”

The incident comes as warnings about the humanitarian situation in Gaza grow. Latest figures from the United Nations indicate that at least 1,373 Palestinians have been killed seeking food since late May.

The majority have been killed by the Israeli military near Israeli and US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) distribution sites, the UN says. The GHF denies the UN’s figure of at least 859 killed in the vicinity of its sites.

Israel has accused Hamas of instigating chaos near the aid centres and says its forces do not intentionally open fire on civilians.

Meanwhile, Egyptian state media has reported that two lorries containing much-needed fuel are waiting to enter Gaza.

Medics have been warning of shortages in vital medical facilities for weeks, after Israel began a months-long blockade of all aid and goods into Gaza.

This has since been partially lifted, but humanitarian agencies have said more aid must be allowed to enter to Gaza to prevent famine and malnutrition worsening.

The Hamas-run health ministry said 175 people, including 93 children, have died from malnutrition.

Israel denies it is deliberately blocking aid flowing into Gaza and accuses the UN and other aid agencies of failing to deliver it.

The IDF launched a campaign in Gaza in response to the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.

More than 60,000 people have since been killed in Gaza, according to the health ministry.

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Is Mohammad Bin Salman a Zionist?  – Middle East Monitor

Last week, a prominent Saudi Sheikh, Mohammed Al-Issa, visited the Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland to commemorate the 75th anniversary of its liberation, which signalled the end of the Nazi Holocaust. Although dozens of Muslim scholars have visited the site, where about one million Jews were killed during World War Two, according to the Auschwitz Memorial Centre’s press office, Al-Issa is the most senior Muslim religious leader to do so.

Visiting Auschwitz is not a problem for a Muslim; Islam orders Muslims to reject unjustified killing of any human being, no matter what their faith is. Al-Issa is a senior ally of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman (MBS), who apparently cares little for the sanctity of human life, though, and the visit to Auschwitz has very definite political connotations beyond any Islamic context.

By sending Al-Issa to the camp, Bin Salman wanted to show his support for Israel, which exploits the Holocaust for geopolitical colonial purposes. “The Israeli government decided that it alone was permitted to mark the 75th anniversary of the Allied liberation of Auschwitz [in modern day Poland] in 1945,” wrote journalist Richard Silverstein recently when he commented on the gathering of world leaders in Jerusalem for Benjamin Netanyahu’s Holocaust event.

READ: Next up, a Saudi embassy in Jerusalem 

Bin Salman uses Al Issa for such purposes, as if to demonstrate his own Zionist credentials. For example, the head of the Makkah-based Muslim World League is leading rapprochement efforts with Evangelical Christians who are, in the US at least, firm Zionists in their backing for the state of Israel. Al-Issa has called for a Muslim-Christian-Jewish interfaith delegation to travel to Jerusalem in what would, in effect, be a Zionist troika.

Zionism is not a religion, and there are many non-Jewish Zionists who desire or support the establishment of a Jewish state in occupied Palestine. The definition of Zionism does not mention the religion of its supporters, and Israeli writer Sheri Oz, is just one author who insists that non-Jews can be Zionists.

Mohammad Bin Salman and Netanyahu - Cartoon [Tasnimnews.com/Wikipedia]

Mohammad Bin Salman and Netanyahu – Cartoon [Tasnimnews.com/Wikipedia]

We should not be shocked, therefore, to see a Zionist Muslim leader in these trying times. It is reasonable to say that Bin Salman’s grandfather and father were Zionists, as close friends of Zionist leaders. Logic suggests that Bin Salman comes from a Zionist dynasty.

This has been evident from his close relationship with Zionists and positive approaches to the Israeli occupation and establishment of a Jewish state in Palestine, calling it “[the Jews’] ancestral homeland”. This means that he has no issue with the ethnic cleansing of almost 800,000 Palestinians in 1948, during which thousands were killed and their homes demolished in order to establish the Zionist state of Israel.

“The ‘Jewish state’ claim is how Zionism has tried to mask its intrinsic Apartheid, under the veil of a supposed ‘self-determination of the Jewish people’,” wrote Israeli blogger Jonathan Ofir in Mondoweiss in 2018, “and for the Palestinians it has meant their dispossession.”

As the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia, Crown Prince Bin Salman has imprisoned dozens of Palestinians, including representatives of Hamas. In doing so he is serving Israel’s interests. Moreover, he has blamed the Palestinians for not making peace with the occupation state. Bin Salman “excoriated the Palestinians for missing key opportunities,” wrote Danial Benjamin in Moment magazine. He pointed out that the prince’s father, King Salman, has played the role of counterweight by saying that Saudi Arabia “permanently stands by Palestine and its people’s right to an independent state with occupied East Jerusalem as its capital.”

UN expert: Saudi crown prince behind hack on Amazon CEO 

Israeli journalist Barak Ravid of Israel’s Channel 13 News reported Bin Salman as saying: “In the last several decades the Palestinian leadership has missed one opportunity after the other and rejected all the peace proposals it was given. It is about time the Palestinians take the proposals and agree to come to the negotiations table or shut up and stop complaining.” This is reminiscent of the words of the late Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban, one of the Zionist founders of Israel, that the Palestinians “never miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity.”

Bin Salman’s Zionism is also very clear in his bold support for US President Donald Trump’s deal of the century, which achieves Zionist goals in Palestine at the expense of Palestinian rights. He participated in the Bahrain conference, the forum where the economic side of the US deal was announced, where he gave “cover to several other Arab countries to attend the event and infuriated the Palestinians.”

U.S. President Donald Trump looks over at Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia Mohammad bin Salman al-Saud as they line up for the family photo during the opening day of Argentina G20 Leaders' Summit 2018 at Costa Salguero on 30 November 2018 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. [Daniel Jayo/Getty Images]

US President Donald Trump looks over at Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia Mohammad bin Salman al-Saud as they line up for the family photo during the opening day of Argentina G20 Leaders’ Summit 2018 at Costa Salguero on 30 November 2018 in Buenos Aires, Argentina [Daniel Jayo/Getty Images]

While discussing the issue of the current Saudi support for Israeli policies and practices in Palestine with a credible Palestinian official last week, he told me that the Palestinians had contacted the Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro to ask him not to relocate his country’s embassy to Jerusalem. “The Saudis have been putting pressure on us in order to relocate our embassy to Jerusalem,” replied the Brazilian leader. What more evidence of Mohammad Bin Salman’s Zionism do we need?

The founder of Friends of Zion Museum is American Evangelical Christian Mike Evans. He said, after visiting a number of the Gulf States, that, “The leaders [there] are more pro-Israel than a lot of Jews.” This was a specific reference to Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince, and his counterpart in the UAE, Mohammed Bin Zayed.

“All versions of Zionism lead to the same reactionary end of unbridled expansionism and continued settler colonial genocide of [the] Palestinian people,” Israeli-American writer and photographer Yoav Litvin wrote for Al Jazeera. We may well see an Israeli Embassy opened in Riyadh in the near future, and a Saudi Embassy in Tel Aviv or, more likely, Jerusalem. Is Mohammad Bin Salman a Zionist? There’s no doubt about it.

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Monitor.

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China and Russia begin joint military drills in Sea of Japan | Military News

Joint Sea-2025 exercises begin in waters near Russian port of Vladivostok and will last for three days, China’s Defence Ministry says.

China and Russia have begun joint naval drills in the Sea of Japan as they seek to reinforce their partnership and counterbalance what they see as a United States-led global order.

The Chinese and Russian governments have deepened their ties in recent years, with China providing an economic lifeline to Russia in the face of Western sanctions over Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

The Joint Sea-2025 exercises began in waters near the Russian port of Vladivostok and will last for three days, China’s Ministry of National Defence said in a statement on Sunday.

The two sides will hold “submarine rescue, joint anti-submarine, air defence and anti-missile operations, and maritime combat”.

Four Chinese vessels, including guided-missile destroyers Shaoxing and Urumqi, are participating in the exercises, alongside Russian ships, the ministry said.

After the drills, the two countries will conduct naval patrols in “relevant waters of the Pacific”.

Putin Xi
Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, shakes hands with Chinese President Xi Jinping [File: Kenzaburo Fukuhara/Handout via Getty Images]

China and Russia have carried out annual drills for several years, with the “Joint Sea” exercises beginning in 2012.

Last year’s drills were held along China’s southern coast.

With this year’s drills in the Sea of Japan, in its annual report last month, Japan’s Ministry of Defence warned that China’s growing military cooperation with Russia poses serious security concerns.

“The exercise is defensive in nature and is not directed against other countries,” the Russian Navy Pacific Fleet said earlier this week, according to a report by the US Naval Institute’s online news and analysis portal.

On Friday, the Chinese Defence Ministry said this year’s exercises were aimed at “further deepening the comprehensive strategic partnership” of the two countries.

China has never denounced Russia’s more than three-year war nor called for it to withdraw its troops, and many of Ukraine’s allies, including the US, believe that Beijing has provided support to Moscow.

European leaders asked China last month to use its influence to pressure Russia to end the war, now in its fourth year, but there was no sign that Beijing would do so.

China, however, insists it is a neutral party, regularly calling for an end to the fighting while also accusing Western countries of prolonging the conflict by arming Ukraine.

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Four workers die after falling into a manhole in Japan | News

Officials say the workers were conducting an emergency inspection of sewage pipes when the accident took place.

Four workers have died in Japan after falling into a manhole near Tokyo as they inspected sewage pipes, according to public broadcaster NHK, quoting police.

NHK reported on Sunday that the incident in the city of Gyoda in Saitama Prefecture, north of the Japanese capital, happened on Saturday, as the four men, all in their 50s, and other co-workers were inspecting a sewage pipe.

City officials say the workers were conducting an emergency inspection of sewage pipes that the central government had ordered municipalities to carry out, after a huge road cave-in in January.

Police were quoted by NHK as saying that during the inspection, one of the workers fell down the manhole, followed by three of his co-workers who were trying to save him.

According to police, the manhole is 60cm (24in) in diameter and more than 10 metres (33ft) in depth.

The fire department from the area also confirmed the incident to the AFP news agency.

Video clips published by NHK showed several emergency and rescue personnel near the manhole.

The department said rescuers detected hydrogen sulfide – a gas toxic in high concentrations – coming out of the manhole.

But city officials refused to be drawn on the cause of the initial fall.

“Detailed circumstances leading up to the accident are still unknown, so it’s too early for us to say anything about our responsibility,” a Gyoda city official told AFP, on condition of anonymity.

The four workers were retrieved and taken to hospital, where they were pronounced dead, according to local media reports.

About 10 workers were at the scene of the inspection, ordered to clean the pipes of wastewater and sludge if necessary.

In May, Japanese rescuers recovered the body of a dead 74-year-old truck driver months after he was swallowed by a road collapse in Saitama prefecture.

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TikTok Labubu trend exploited by criminals with dangerous fakes

Will Fyfe & Angharad Thomas

BBC News

Born a monster, the elf-like creature from Chinese toy maker Pop Mart is now a viral purchase

At an anonymous industrial estate on the outskirts of London, a queue of police vans and empty lorries block the usual flow of lunchtime traffic.

They are here to seize fake Labubu dolls. Thousands of them.

After weeks of work, intelligence that started at a corner shop in south Wales has led Trading Standards officers to a labyrinth of rooms hidden above this retail outlet.

Inside, they estimate millions of pounds worth of fake products are piled up, floor to ceiling, but what interests them most are the fluffy, mischievous-looking dolls at the centre of a global TikTok craze.

According to Forbes, the popularity of Labubu dolls helped parent company Pop Mart more than double its total revenue to £1.33bn ($1.81bn) last year.

They are wanted by children and adults alike, with some telling us they queued for hours or travelled across the country just to secure an authentic one.

However, messages seen by BBC News also suggest scalpers may be buying hundreds of genuine products at a time to resell them at a profit, with authorities reporting a “flood” of counterfeits entering the market.

Border Force has seized hundreds of thousands from UK ports in the past few months, meanwhile officers at the London industrial estate believe the dolls grinning up at them from the crates hide a darker secret.

“The head comes off. The feet will pull off,” explained Rhys Harries from Trading Standards, as one literally falls apart in his hands.

A boy in a yellow sports t-shirt holds up four Labubu dolls. The furry gremlin-like dolls have big glossy eyes and toothy grins. You can't see Harri's head but his chest and the focus is on the dolls. There is a a brown one on the far left, another brown one with black Prada dungarees on, a pink one next to that and then a white one holding a Coca Cola can on the far right.

Six-year-old Harri’s mum says the fakes she bought him began to fall apart within hours

Mr Harries first saw dolls like this after raiding a corner shop almost 200 miles away in Swansea, before tracing them back here.

“I’ve found them in the bags where their eyes are coming off, their hands will come off.”

Mr Harries’ team use a plastic tube, shaped like a child’s throat, to measure how dangerous objects are – if it fits, it is a choking hazard.

“These [parts] will all get stuck and then potentially cause choking,” he said.

A police van parked on an industrial estate with empty cardboard boxes, once containing fake Labubu dolls, piled up in the foreground.

Officers say thousands of fake Labubu dolls seized from a London industrial estate were destined for customers across the UK

Mum-of-one Jade said she “100%” agreed the fakes were a choking hazard after some fell apart shortly after giving them to her son.

The 34-year-old from Caerphilly knew she had bought fakes – sometimes nicknamed Lafufus – for her son Harri’s sixth birthday as she could not justify the cost of the authentic dolls.

But she felt “obliged to get him one” after all his friends got their own and found knock-offs for just over £10, compared to some genuine ones costing £80.

However, just a few hours into Harri’s birthday, Jade said the keyring came off, followed by part of one of the feet a few days later.

When Harri was swinging his new toy the hook came off the keyring, only for Jade to spot it in his mouth.

She said “luckily” her son was old enough to tell her about his toy falling apart, but she warned things could be different for younger children.

Swansea Trading Standards A white fluffy Labubu doll with empty eye sockets. It's large pink eyes sit next to it on the table. Swansea Trading Standards

Officers say a number of fakes seized had eyes that had not been glued in

According to the Intellectual Property Office, the rush by criminals to get fakes to market often results in dangerous materials being used.

“Counterfeiting is the second largest source of criminal income worldwide, second only to drug trafficking,” said Kate Caffery, deputy director of intelligence and law enforcement.

“It’s in the interests of these criminal organisations to respond quickly to trends to maximise it, to get on the back of it and make the most money that they possibly can.

“So that’s why we see it happening so quickly and a complete disregard for safety concerns.”

Intellectual Property Office Kate, a smartly dressed woman wearing a beige suit, with long brown hair, smiles at the camera. It is a head and shoulders shot of her. Intellectual Property Office

Kate Caffery, from the Intellectual Property Office, says counterfeiting is the second highest earner for criminal networks, outside drug trafficking

Ms Caffery dismissed claims these fakes were made in the same factories or using the same materials as the real thing as “absolutely not true”, adding that they “could be made from anything”.

These range from the inferior to the dangerous, including toxic plastics, chemicals, and small parts that aren’t properly attached “that can then pose a chocking hazard”.

Although fake Labubus are still relatively new to the market, investigators know from previous cases involving counterfeit toys that they can be made with banned chemicals, including some linked to cancers.

Authorities say most counterfeit products, including Labubus, can be traced to China, Hong Kong or Turkey and people are being warned to look out for “too good to be true” pricing or packaging that feels cheap and flimsy.

Meg, a young woman with long dark hair grins as the camera while holding six colourful Labubu dolls in different pastel colours. There are teddy bears behind her and a shelf of other colourful soft toys, which are slightly blurred in focus.

Meg Goldberger bought her Labubus from a reseller who had been ordering hundreds at a time from Pop Mart

TikToker Meg Goldberger, 27, is no stranger to collecting in a market filled with fakes.

She has about 250 Jellycat plush toys, alongside her new collection of 12 Labubu dolls.

“The more people talked about it and the harder they became to get, the more I needed them. That’s why I now have 12,” she said.

However, pretty early into her search, Ms Goldberger said she realised the odds were stacked against her in her hunt for the real thing.

Screenshot of messages exchanged between Meg and a reseller. The reseller claims they have order 400 Labubus in a recent restock.

Meg exchanged messages with a reseller who claimed they had been able to order hundreds of genuine Labubu dolls direct from Pop Mart

She said she spent about 12 hours over several days waiting for Pop Mart store’s TikTok live video, where Labubus are released for sale at a set time, just like gig tickets.

“It used to be they sold out within like a minute. It’s now like literally two seconds. You can’t get your hands on them,” she said.

Instead, she opted to find someone reselling them online, but also discovered why they may have been selling out so fast.

When she asked an eBay reseller for proof the Big Into Energy Labubu series she was interested in was genuine, Ms Goldberger was sent “a screenshot of what could have been like almost 200 orders of Labubus”.

“These people will sit at home and somehow robots hack the websites and bulk buy them, which is why they go so quickly. Then they’ll resell them.”

An image of a fury purple Labubu doll with arrows pointing out areas to spot a fake. They include looking out for poor quality fur, loose plastic, cheap packaging and spelling mistakes on labels.

How to spot a fake Labubu

Mr Harries said a selection of fake Labubus would be taken from London back to Swansea for use as evidence.

The rest will be stored as evidence at a secret location before being either recycled or destroyed.

“These were going everywhere,” he said.

“There were invoice books with them and they were going all across the UK. It’s a national issue.”

Pop Mart has been asked to comment.

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Ukraine and Russia strikes hit homes and oil depot near Black Sea

DSNS Ukraine An emergency responder stands amid debris from a strike in Ukraine, lit up by a fire in the distance.DSNS Ukraine

Homes were hit in a Russian missile strike on Mykolaiv (pic: State Emergency Service of Ukraine)

A Russian missile strike has destroyed homes and civilian infrastructure in Ukraine’s southern city of Mykolaiv, local officials say.

At least three civilians were reported injured in the city near the Black Sea, which has been repeatedly shelled by Russian forces. Ukraine’s State Emergency Service posted photos of firefighters at the scene after the missile strike.

Early on Sunday a massive oil depot fire was raging near Russia’s Black Sea resort of Sochi – blamed by the Russian authorities on a Ukrainian drone attack. Sochi’s airport in the same area – Adler district – suspended flights.

Krasnodar Region Governor Veniamin Kondratyev said on Telegram that drone debris had hit a fuel tank, and 127 firefighters were tackling the blaze.

The drone attack was one of several launched by Ukraine over the weekend, targeting installations in the southern Russian cities of Ryazan, Penza and Voronezh. The governor of Voronezh said four people were injured in one drone strike.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky called for stronger international sanctions on Russia this week after a deadly attack on Kyiv on Thursday killed at least 31 people.

More than 300 drones and eight cruise missiles were launched in the assault, Ukrainian officials said, making the attack one of the deadliest on the capital since Russia launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022.

Watch: Explosion rocks Russian oil facility in Novokuybyshevsk, Russia, on Saturday

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‘Britain’s real immigration crisis’ and ‘Carry on, doctor!’

BBC "Britain's real immigration crisis and the solution" reads the headline on the front page of The Observer.BBC

The Observer’s front page is taken up with a stamped and faded image of the Royal Crest, headlined “Britain’s real immigration crisis and the solution”. The story promises to detail “Labour’s push for digital ID for all”. Also on the front page, “Reform UK councillors seek looser visa rules” and “the fear that haunts Jersey’s migrant workers”.

"Carry on doctor!" reads the headline on the front page of The Mail on Sunday.

The Mail on Sunday continues with its lead story from Saturday – a new biography of Prince Andrew, whom it refers to as “Epstein’s useful idiot”. Also on its front page, two thirds of resident doctors “defy strike calls” in a “huge blow to militant unions’ bid to wreak hospital havoc”. “Carry on, Doctor!” says The Mail.

"Ghislaine quizzed on three Brits linked to Epstein" reads the headline on the front page of the Daily Mirror.

Ghislaine Maxwell, the convicted associate of sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, has been “quizzed on three Brits” linked to the deceased paedophile financier, according to the Daily Mirror. US lawyers are focussed on “other pals apart from Prince Andrew”, it adds.

"Gaza children to be flown in for NHS treatment" reads the headline on the front page of the Sunday Times.

“Gaza children to be flown in for NHS treatment” reads the headline of The Sunday Times. The government will let up to 300 of the seriously ill youths receive free medical care, it reports. Also on the front page, MP Chris Bryant tells The Times he was sexually abused by former National Youth Theatre head Michael Croft, and the summer camp host who gave children “sedative sweets” has been remanded. Businesses have pulled adverts over a Channel 4 documentary that children’s commissioner says “risks glamourising degrading sex.”

"Strictly cocaine probe" reads the headline on the front page of The Sun.

A “Strictly cocaine probe” is The Sun’s lead story, as the tabloid says the BBC’s law firm is leading an inquiry into “two stars” adding “it is said their drug use was “well known’.” The BBC told the paper, “We have clear protocols and policies in place for dealing with any serious complaint raised with us.” In other front page news, the prime minister has promised there will be “gongs for lionesses”.

"Badenoch: Labour has not learnt from Truss 'mistakes'," reads the headline on the front page of The Sunday Telegraph.

An interview with Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch leads the Sunday Telegraph. In it she says “Labour has not learnt from Truss ‘mistakes’.” She accuses the government of bringing the country “closer to a debt spiral”. The Telegraph also reports that a senior civil servant “tried to gag” former immigration minister Robert Jenrick for saying terror suspects had arrived on small boats – in a piece written for The Telegraph after his tenure. The now Shadow Secretary of State was told the information “should not have been made public” and the Home Office neither confirmed nor denied his claims, the paper writes.

Hundreds of seriously ill children will be evacuated from Gaza and brought to the UK to be treated by the NHS, according to the Sunday Times. The paper says details of the plans, which are being worked on by the Foreign, Home and Health Secretaries, will be announced within weeks. It quotes a Whitehall source as saying that up to 300 children will be helped and the paper says each child will be accompanied by a parent or guardian and siblings if necessary.

Immigration is The Observer‘s lead, with the paper’s political editor reporting that the Prime Minister is seriously considering a universal digital ID system to tackle illegal arrivals, and improve the delivery of public services. One senior minister tells the paper that it has become clear that “technology” is underpinning everything.

The Sunday Telegraph leads with a warning from the Conservative leader, Kemi Badenoch, that Sir Keir Starmer and the Chancellor Rachel Reeves have not “learned the lessons” of Liz Truss’s mini-budget, during her brief stint as Prime Minister in 2022. Writing in the paper, Badenoch accuses the government of making “even bigger mistakes” than Truss and of taking Britain’s finances “to the brink”.

Concerns that Hamas sympathisers may pose the same threat in the UK as Isis and al-Qaeda jihadists are highlighted on the front page of the Sunday Express. It says the Prime Minister has been warned that the war in Gaza could inspire more extremists to commit atrocities and that the group’s leaders could radicalise Westerners who may be “sympathetic” to the Palestinian cause.

Ghislaine Maxwell, the convicted ex-girlfriend of Jeffrey Epstein, has been questioned about “three Brits” linked to the late sex offender, according to The Sunday Mirror. The paper says US lawyers are focussed on “other pals apart from Prince Andrew”, who has always strongly denied any wrongdoing.

The Mail on Sunday says two-thirds of resident doctors ignored their union’s recent five-day strike, and carried on working. The paper says the drop in numbers in support of the walkout is a “huge blow” to what it calls the British Medical Association’s bid to “wreak hospital havoc”.

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US Senate confirms former Fox News host Pirro as DC top prosecutor | Donald Trump News

Former Fox News host Pirro secures Senate confirmation with 50-45 vote, becoming US attorney general for the nation’s capital.

The United States Senate has confirmed former Fox News television personality Jeanine Pirro as the top federal prosecutor in the nation’s capital, Washington, DC, filling the post after President Donald Trump withdrew his controversial first pick, conservative activist Edward Martin Jr.

Pirro, a former county prosecutor and elected judge, was confirmed on Saturday, with a vote of 50-45. Before becoming the acting US attorney for the District of Columbia in May, she co-hosted the Fox News show The Five on weekday evenings, where she frequently interviewed Trump.

Trump yanked Martin’s nomination after a key Republican senator said he could not support him due to Martin’s outspoken support for rioters who stormed the US Capitol on January 6, 2021. Martin now serves as the Justice Department’s pardon attorney.

Other hires from cable news include Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, who co-hosted Fox & Friends Weekend, and Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy, a former reality TV show competitor and Fox Business co-host.

FILE - Jeanine Pirro arrives at Fox Nation's Patriot Awards, Nov. 16, 2023, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/George Walker IV, File)
Jeanine Pirro arrives at Fox Nation’s Patriot Awards, November 16, 2023, in Nashville, Tennessee [George Walker IV/AP Photo]

Pirro briefly entered politics in ill-fated attempts to run for the US Senate and for the New York attorney general, losing the latter race to Democrat Andrew Cuomo.

She began earning wider public exposure by hosting a weekday television show, Judge Jeanine Pirro, from 2008 to 2011. In 2011, she joined Fox News Channel to host Justice with Judge Jeanine, which ran for 11 years, and today, she is a co-host of the network’s show, The Five.

Pirro has also authored several books, including Liars, Leakers, and Liberals: The Case Against the Anti-Trump Conspiracy, which was published in 2018. The Washington Post described the book as “sycophantic” in its support for Trump.

After promoting unfounded conspiracy theories alleging election fraud in 2020, Pirro was named a defendant in a defamation lawsuit filed by Dominion Voting Systems, which said that Fox had broadcast false statements about the company.

Fox News settled the case for nearly $800m.

Last month, Republican members of the Senate Judiciary Committee voted unanimously to send Pirro’s nomination to the Senate floor after Democrats walked out to protest Emil Bove’s nomination to become a federal appeals court judge.

Pirro, a 1975 graduate of Albany Law School, has significantly more courtroom experience than Martin, who had never served as a prosecutor or tried a case before taking office in January. She was elected as a judge in New York’s Westchester County Court in 1990, before serving three terms as the county’s elected district attorney.

In the final minutes of his first term as president, Trump issued a pardon to Pirro’s ex-husband, Albert Pirro, who was convicted in 2000 on conspiracy and tax evasion charges.

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Ukraine officials held in military drone corruption probe

A Ukrainian MP and other officials have been arrested after the country’s anti-corruption agencies uncovered what they call a large-scale bribery scheme in the purchase of drones and electronic warfare systems.

In a statement on X, President Volodymyr Zelensky said a Ukrainian MP, heads of district and city administrations and several National Guard service members had been exposed for their involvement, which involved state contracts with suppliers being signed at prices inflated by up to 30%.

Zelensky wrote that there can be “zero tolerance” for corruption in Ukraine, and thanked the agencies for their work.

The independence of Ukraine’s anti-corruption agencies was restored on Thursday, following nationwide protests.

Zelensky’s government faced an extensive backlash after introducing a bill that would strip the National Anti-Corruption Bureau and Specialised Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s Office, known as Nabu and Sap respectively, of their independence.

The president claimed the agencies needed to be “cleared of Russian influence”, and sought to give the general prosecutor the authority to decide who should be prosecuted in high-level corruption cases.

Many saw the move as a step backwards for corruption in Ukraine, resulting in the largest anti-government demonstrations since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of the country in 2022.

Zelensky acknowledged public anger and submitted a new bill restoring the agencies’ former independence, which was voted through by parliament just nine days after the original bill had been passed.

The head of the Ukrainian Defence Ministry’s Main Intelligence Directorate (HUR), Kyrylo Budanov, thanked Zelensky for “hearing the public’s call” regarding the powers of anti-corruption agencies and “not making a mistake”.

The move was also praised by EU allies, who had voiced concerns over the implications of the original bill.

The fight against corruption is significant in Ukraine’s bid to join the EU. The creation of Nabu and Sap was a requirement set by the European Commission and International Monetary Fund in 2014, in order to move towards a relaxation of visa restrictions.

As a result, Kyiv was granted EU candidate status in 2022, bringing the nation another step towards closer ties with the West.

Since their establishment, Nabu and Sap have been involved in far-reaching investigations into the misappropriation of millions of dollars’ worth of assets and bribes across various ministries and sectors.

A joint investigation in 2023 resulted in the arrest of the head of Ukraine’s Supreme Court, Vsevolod Kniaziev, in connection with a $3m (£2.4m; €2.9m) bribe.

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BBC reportedly launches probe into Strictly ‘drug use’

The BBC has launched an investigation into alleged drug use by two Strictly Come Dancing stars, it has been reported.

The Sun on Sunday claimed that the cocaine use by the stars – who have not been named – was widely talked about on the show.

It added that the corporation had hired law firm Pinsent Masons to lead the probe.

The BBC said it had “clear protocols and policies in place” for dealing with any serious complaints raised with it.

According to the newspaper, the claims of alleged drug use were made in a legal submission to the BBC in March by law firm Russells on behalf of a former celebrity contestant.

The Sun claims others had also reported allegations of drug taking on the show to the BBC.

In a statement on Saturday night, a BBC spokesperson added: “We would always encourage people to speak to us if they have concerns.

“It would not be appropriate for us to comment further.”

It is understood that it is not unusual for the corporation to appoint external law firms to help it deliver BBC-led investigations. In these cases, they would report back to an internal team.

Strictly, which has been airing since 2004, has faced multiple controversies over the past year relating to the behaviour of some of its professional dancers and celebrity guests.

Professional dancers Giovanni Pernice and Graziano Di Prima left the show last year following allegations about their behaviour towards their dance partners.

The BBC announced new welfare measures for Strictly last July. These include having chaperones in all rehearsal rooms, adding two new welfare producers and providing additional training for the professional dancers, production team and crew.

In January, Welsh opera singer Wynne Evans, who had been a celebrity dancer in last year’s series, made what he described as an “inappropriate and unacceptable” comment during the Strictly live tour launch.

He took time off from his BBC Radio Wales daytime show after the incident, and the BBC said in May that he will not be returning to it.

EastEnders star Jamie Borthwick was suspended by the BBC last month after The Sun reported that he used a slur against people with disabilities while backstage during Strictly rehearsals in November. Borthwick apologised and the BBC said his language was “entirely unacceptable”.

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