Blog

  • 65 DAYS WITHOUT FOOD and a woman on remand says she is “dying in this cell”. the hunger strike at hmp new hall is now being compared to the darkest chapters of british prison history, raising urgent questions about justice, delay and duty of care.

    65 DAYS WITHOUT FOOD and a woman on remand says she is “dying in this cell”. the hunger strike at hmp new hall is now being compared to the darkest chapters of british prison history, raising urgent questions about justice, delay and duty of care.

    Hunger striker says ‘I’m dying in this cell’ after 65 days without food in prison

    The 31-year-old spent almost a week recording the answers to questions from Metro as she is having difficulty concentrating.

    ‘As each day passes I get weaker, aches worsen, headaches are frequent and concentrating is extremely difficult,’ she said.

    ‘My body shakes, I get dizzy to the point of nausea and now breathing is getting hard. I am deteriorating in this cell, I am dying.’

    LONDON, ENGLAND - DECEMBER 15: Supporters of the Palestine Action hunger strikers protest in Parliament square while waiting for the Derry delegation on December 15, 2025 in London, England. Demonstrators are gathering to greet a delegation from Derry City and Strabane District Council who are meeting with families of Palestine Action (PA) prisoners on hunger strike. Last month the council in Northern Ireland voted to pass a motion in solidarity with the group of PA prisoners who have gone on hunger strike to demand for the closure of Elbit Systems sites in the UK, the lifting of the government's proscription against Palestine Action, and the right to fair trials. (Photo by Guy Smallman/Getty Images)
    Supporters of the Palestine Action hunger strikers hold pictures showing three of the group including Heba Muraisi (Picture: Guy Smallman/Getty Images)

    ‘Denied communication’

    The protester, from Barnet, north London, is awaiting trial over her alleged role in the break-in at a research and development facility owned by Elbit Systems, a UK subsidiary of an Israeli defence firm, in Filton near Bristol.

    The lifeguard and florist was arrested in a dawn raid on November 19 last year, according to support group Prisoners for Palestine.

    Her trial is not scheduled to take place until June, by which time she will have spent close to two years in prison on remand.

    Muraisi said: ‘Prison is prison, it’s the same oppressive system under the false pretence that it is rehabilitation.

    ‘Here I’ve been heavily restricted and monitored, visitors not being approved, phone numbers being rejected including doctors, emails getting blocked, my legal team has been ignored.

    ‘On day 45 of my hunger strike I was threatened to be forcefully moved by a custodial manager in the presence of a senior officer.

    ‘I was moved away from my support system I had built, and the only friend I had made on this new wing was recently just moved.’

    Heba Muraisi Prison: HMP New Hall Prisoner number: A9275FE On remand since: Nov 19th 2024 Trial date: June 2026 Heba was arrested on November 19th 2024 in a dawn raid in the third wave of Filton arrests, on allegations of being connected to the Filton action, which saw over ?1million in damage caused to Elbit?s research centre for Israeli weapons. She was arrested violently, and stripped of her clothes and dignity which left her deeply traumatised. Initially held and interrogated under counter-terrorism powers, she was then remanded in custody for a non-terrorism related offence making her one of the Filton 24. In prison, Heba has been denied her fundamental human rights, including the right to privacy and a clean bed. Access to books and visits has been restricted, and she has been subjected to isolation and arbitrary cell searches that have violated her right to privacy and safety. Her kuffiya was forcibly removed from her by Yasmin Cooper, HMP Bronzefield?s head of security, despite Heba telling her she wears it as a hijab during prayers- meaning she is not allowed to keep it in her cell at all. In October 2025, Heba was forcibly transferred from HMP Bronzefield to HMP New Hall, hundreds of miles away from her family and support system.
    Heba Muraisi is on hunger strike at HMP New Hall in West Yorkshire as she awaits trial over her alleged role in a Palestine Action raid (Picture: Prisoners for Palestine)

    What can happen during a hunger strike?

    Ian Miller, a historian of hunger strikes in British prisons, told Metro that a hunger strike can typically play out physiologically as follows:

    Days One to Seven: decreasing heart rate, physical wasting, weight loss (as bodies eat up their fat reserves in the adipose tissue.

    Days Eight to Fourteen: Bodies begin using glycogen stores (energy located in the liver and muscles). Ammonia produced giving a distinctive smell. Weight loss slows down. Loss of heart mass causing a slow heart beat.

    Days Fifteen Onwards: Tendencies to collapse and become bedbound. Nightmares very common early on. Physical and psychological health worsens significantly. Very disturbed sleep. ‘Raving all night’, as one hunger strike termed it in the 1920s.

    Around twenty to sixty/seventy days: Patients essentially in a state of complete exhaustion, but often still conscious until around 50 days.

    Over 70 days: With zero medical intervention or food, this seems to be roughly the limit of survival. In 1920, hunger striker Terence MacSwiney lasted 74 days before he died.
    Groceries

    Mum’s prayers

    Teuta Hoxha, Kamran Ahmed and Lewie Chiaramello are also taking part in the hunger strike, while Amu Gib, Jon Cink, Umer Khalid and Qesser Zuhrah have ‘paused’ their participation.

    All eight are on remand, charged with offences relating to break-ins and criminal damage either at Elbit in August 2024 or another raid at RAF Brize Norton in Oxfordshire in June last year.

    The protesters’ demands include ‘end all censorship’ of communication and correspondence in jail, immediate bail, ‘right to a fair trial’, de-proscribing Palestine Action and shutting Elbit down.

    Muraisi, who has family in Rafah on the Gaza Strip, has previously stated that she ‘will not compromise until all demands are met’ and will ‘continue to fight and resist’ in prison.

    Palestine hunger striker 'losing ability to speak' after 56 days without food Heba Muraisi
    Heba Muraisi looks outside her prison cell at HMP New Hall as she continues her hunger strike while on remand (Picture: Prisoners for Palestine)
    She said: ‘It’s the love and solidarity from the people and my mum’s duas (personal prayer) that give me strength.
    Gift baskets
    ‘And it’s the rage from the injustice my comrades and I are facing that keeps me going. I’m well aware that things could turn at any minute, I’m terrified, I’d be stupid not to be.

    ‘As of today, I’ve been held on remand for 409 days while awaiting trial.

    ‘To make things worse I’ve been moved nearly 188 miles up north away from my family and support system.’

    Muraisi has daily calls with her mum but said: ‘When New Hall cut off my phone line for ridiculous security reasons it just causes unnecessary distress for her.’ Asked if her family supported her hunger strike, she replied: ‘I can’t say that my family support my current actions, but they understand why I’m doing it.’

    From top left: Qesser Zuhrah, Amu Gib, Heba Muraisi, Jon Cink, Teuta Hoxha, Kamran Ahmed, Lewie Chiaramello and Muhammed Umer Khalid (Picture: Prisoners for Palestine)
    From top left: Qesser Zuhrah, Amu Gib, Heba Muraisi, Jon Cink, Teuta Hoxha, Kamran Ahmed, Lewie Chiaramello and Muhammed Umer Khalid (Picture: Prisoners for Palestine)

    ‘Serious offences’

    A spokesperson for Practice Plus Group, which manages healthcare on behalf of the NHS at New Hall, said: ‘We provide compassionate, evidence-based care in prisons and manage any patients who are refusing food in accordance with all the relevant policies and protocols, and in partnership with prison teams and the wider NHS.’
    Groceries
    The government maintains that it has no records from NHS staff that prison officers have obstructed healthcare.

    Lord Timpson, minister of state for prisons, probation and reducing reoffending, said: ‘While very concerning, hunger strikes are not a new issue for our prisons.

    ‘Over the last five years, we’ve averaged over 200 a year and we have longstanding procedures in place to ensure prisoner safety.

    ‘Prison healthcare teams provide NHS care and continuously monitor the situation. HMPPS are clear that claims that hospital care is being refused are entirely misleading – they will always be taken when needed and a number of these prisoners have already been treated in hospital.

    ‘These prisoners are charged with serious offences including aggravated burglary and criminal damage.

    ‘Remand decisions are for independent judges, and lawyers can make representations to the court on behalf of their clients.

    ‘Ministers will not meet with them – we have a justice system that is based on the separation of powers, and the independent judiciary is the cornerstone of our system.

    ‘It would be entirely unconstitutional and inappropriate for ministers to intervene in ongoing legal cases.’

    Hunger striker says 'I'm dying in this cell' as she nears point of IRA leader's death in 1981
    Heba Muraisi said she is struggling to breathe and has difficulty concentrating as she approaches 66 days on hunger strike while on remand in prison (Picture: Prisoners for Palestine)
    Groceries

    A hunger striker on remand over her alleged role in a Palestine Action raid has said she is ‘deteriorating’ and struggling to breathe.

    Heba Muraisi is on day 65 without food after becoming the first member of an initial group of eight prisoners to begin the action.

    Struggling to record audio over the course of several days, she said she is ‘terrified’ but kept going by ‘love and solidarity’ as her condition worsens at HMP New Hall in Flockton, West Yorkshire.

    The hunger strike is believed to be the largest of its type in the British Isles since 1981, when 10 Irish prisoners died.

    They included IRA leader Bobby Sands, who went 66 days without food.

  • “TRIPLE THE JOY!” — MasterChef favourites Sarah Todd and her partner Declan Cleary reveal their FIRST blissful moments with their adorable twin babies, marking a heartwarming new chapter in their family life

    “TRIPLE THE JOY!” — MasterChef favourites Sarah Todd and her partner Declan Cleary reveal their FIRST blissful moments with their adorable twin babies, marking a heartwarming new chapter in their family life

    MasterChef favourites Sarah Todd and her partner Declan Cleary were spotted out and about in Melbourne on Wednesday, enjoying a walk with their newborn twins and dog Sol.

    The happy couple, who welcomed daughters Claudia and Charlotte on Christmas Eve, packed on the PDA as they were seen strolling through a park, pushing their babies in a double stroller.

    Sarah, 38, dressed for the hot weather in baggy white shorts, black belt, and a grey T-shirt.

    Letting her long, dark locks fall over her shoulders, Sarah appeared to go makeup-free for her day out and accessorised with a large silver ring, a chain necklace and a wristband.

    She completed her look with a pair of green sneakers.

    Declan, 27, also opted for a casual look for the park visit, rocking a plaid brown western retro shirt, matching corduroy shorts and sneakers.

    MasterChef favourites Sarah Todd and her partner, Declan Cleary, were spotted out and about in Melbourne on Wednesday, enjoying a walk with their newborn twins and dog Sol (Pictured)

    MasterChef favourites Sarah Todd and her partner, Declan Cleary, were spotted out and about in Melbourne on Wednesday, enjoying a walk with their newborn twins and dog Sol (Pictured)

    The happy couple, who welcomed daughters Claudia and Charlotte on Christmas Eve, packed on the PDA as they were seen strolling through a park, pushing their babies in a double stroller

    The happy couple, who welcomed daughters Claudia and Charlotte on Christmas Eve, packed on the PDA as they were seen strolling through a park, pushing their babies in a double stroller

    At one point, the happy couple paused to play a ball game with their dog

    At one point, the happy couple paused to play a ball game with their dog

    The foodie accessorised with a silver wrist band, which he paired with a neck chain.

    At one point, the happy couple paused to play a ball game with their dog, who showed plenty of curiosity around the new family members.

    The outing comes after the fan favourites, who met while filming MasterChef: Back to Win in 2024, hinted at a secret engagement.

    Declan set tongues wagging earlier this week when he shared a video to his stories of a delicious-looking meal to which he added the cheeky caption:

    ‘Ribs are ready, My 2 daughters are asleep, Happy fiancé, Happy Sol, Happy Tuesday.’

    Daily Mail has reached out to Declan for comment.

    It comes after Declan and Sarah revealed that they were living the high life before they welcomed the twins.

    The couple, who went public with their romance early in 2025 after meeting on the 17th season of MasterChef Australia, celebrated their upcoming addition with a baby shower, babymoon and, of course, lots of delicious food.

    Sol the dog showed plenty of curiosity around the new family members

    Sol the dog showed plenty of curiosity around the new family members

    The couple went public with their romance early in 2025 after meeting on the 17th season of MasterChef Australia: Back to Win in 2024

    The couple went public with their romance early in 2025 after meeting on the 17th season of MasterChef Australia: Back to Win in 2024

    After the filming of MasterChef was completed, Declan made the move from Sydney's Northern Beaches to Melbourne  to be with Sarah and her 14-year-old son

    After the filming of MasterChef was completed, Declan made the move from Sydney’s Northern Beaches to Melbourne  to be with Sarah and her 14-year-old son

     

    Read More

    Masterchef stars Sarah Todd and Declan Cleary take a huge step in their relationship after

    article image

    Speaking to Daily Mail ahead of becoming a first-time dad, Declan revealed that he and Sarah enjoyed one last holiday before the baby comes – and it was a luxurious final hoorah.

    ‘We’ve been over in Dubai and India, which I think will be the last international trip,’ he said.

    ‘So we kind of took that as a babymoon, relaxing at The Atlantis on the Palm in Dubai and just doing all those loungy, resorty, hotel holiday activities,’ he added.

    The glitzy resort is an A-lister hotspot and has seen the likes of Beyoncé , Kendall Jenner and Kylie Minogue check in for a night or two.

    However, Atlantis boasts a whopping price tag, with a standard room for two ranging from $748 to $8,965 a night.

  • “THANK YOU AND GOODBYE…” — The whole of Australia is in tears tonight after Magda Szubanski’s shocking hospital update as she revealed that…

    “THANK YOU AND GOODBYE…” — The whole of Australia is in tears tonight after Magda Szubanski’s shocking hospital update as she revealed that…

    Australia is holding its breath tonight.

    In a country that grew up laughing with her, quoting her lines, and seeing itself reflected in her fearless humor, Magda Szubanski has delivered an update so raw, so painfully honest, that it has left millions stunned — and openly weeping.

    “I thought I’d die alone.”

    It was not a line from a script.

    Not a punchline.
    Not Sharon Strzelecki.

    It was the unfiltered confession of a woman lying in a hospital bed, six months into the fight of her life.


    A Confession That Shook a Nation

    On November 30, 2025, Magda Szubanski posted a video that stopped Australia in its tracks.

    Gone was the booming laugh. Gone was the confident physicality that defined her comedy for decades. In its place was a pale, exhausted woman — bald from chemotherapy, propped up by pillows, her eyes heavy but unwavering.

    Her voice trembled as she spoke words no one expected to hear from one of the country’s strongest public figures:

    “I honestly thought I’d die alone.”

    Within hours, the video had amassed more than 2.5 million views, flooding social media with grief, love, and disbelief. It wasn’t just an update on her health — it was a confession of fear, isolation, and the quiet terror that creeps in during long hospital nights.

    And yet, it was also something else entirely.

    A reminder that even icons break.
    And that vulnerability, when shared, can move an entire nation.


    180 Days of Chemotherapy — And Counting

    Magda’s update came after 180 relentless days of intense chemotherapy, a brutal schedule that has pushed her body to its limits.

    Her diagnosis stunned fans and doctors alike.

    In May 2025, what began as a routine breast screening accidentally revealed swollen lymph nodes. Further tests delivered a devastating verdict: Stage 4 Mantle Cell Lymphoma — a rare and aggressive blood cancer affecting just 1 in 100,000 Australians.

    The disease was already advanced.

    “There’s no gentle way to fight this,” one oncologist familiar with such cases explained. “It’s aggressive treatment or nothing.”

    Magda chose to fight.


    The Day Everything Changed

    Before cancer could strip away her identity piece by piece, Magda made a decision that would come to symbolize her defiance.

    She shaved her head.

    Not in tears.
    Not in silence.
    But on her own terms.

    “It was my way of saying, ‘You don’t get to take this from me,’” she later shared.

    Soon after, she was plunged into the Nordic Protocol — a punishing combination of high-dose chemotherapy and immunotherapy. The regimen is notorious among patients for its side effects: nausea, extreme fatigue, immune suppression, and emotional collapse.

    Physically, it left her shattered.

    Emotionally, it forced her to confront something far more frightening than pain.

    Loneliness.


    “The Nights Are the Worst”

    In private conversations with close friends, Magda has reportedly described the long hospital nights as the hardest part of her journey.

    “When the machines are quiet and the ward lights dim,” one friend revealed, “that’s when the fear creeps in.”

    It was during one of those nights, she says, that the thought surfaced — uninvited and devastating:

    What if no one is here when it ends?

    That fear became the heart of her November confession.

    “I thought I’d die alone,” she said. “And that’s a terrifying thought.”


    The Love She Never Expected

    What happened next was something Magda herself never saw coming.

    Australia answered.

    Messages poured in by the tens of thousands. Letters arrived at the hospital. Flowers lined corridors. Celebrities, politicians, drag queens, schoolchildren, and strangers from across the globe reached out with a single message:

    You are not alone.

    One moment in particular broke her.

    10-year-old fan sent a photo from Book Week — dressed head to toe as Sharon Strzelecki, netball skirt and all.

    “I ugly-cried,” Magda admitted. “Not because I was sad — but because I felt seen.”


    From Sharon Strzelecki to a Symbol of Survival

    For decades, Magda Szubanski made Australia laugh by exaggerating its quirks, its flaws, and its warmth.

    Now, without intending to, she has become something else entirely.

    A symbol of resilience.

    Her co-stars Gina Riley and Jane Turner, longtime collaborators and close friends, have stood firmly by her side. International performers, including drag icons who credit Magda as a trailblazer, have publicly dedicated shows to her recovery.

    “She taught us how to be brave on stage,” one performer said. “Now she’s teaching us how to be brave in life.”


    #MagdaStrong Becomes a Movement

    What began as a hashtag quickly transformed into action.

    The #MagdaStrong campaign has raised over $250,000 for the Leukaemia Foundation, funding research, patient support services, and outreach for families facing blood cancers.

    Support groups have reported a surge in engagement — patients citing Magda’s honesty as the reason they finally felt seen.

    “When someone like her says she’s scared,” one patient shared, “it gives the rest of us permission to admit it too.”


    The Reality of Stage 4 — And the Will to Beat It

    Statistically, the odds are sobering.

    For Stage 4 Mantle Cell Lymphoma, five-year survival rates hover around 50%. Even with aggressive treatment, relapse remains a constant threat.

    Magda does not shy away from the numbers.

    But she refuses to let them define her.

    “Cancer picked the wrong funny woman to mess with,” she declared in a recent message — a line that instantly went viral.

    Doctors describe her mental resilience as “remarkable.”

    “She’s exhausted,” one source said. “But she’s determined. And that matters more than people realize.”


    Redefining Strength

    Magda’s journey has quietly reshaped how Australians talk about illness.

    Strength, she has shown, is not pretending you’re okay.

    Strength is saying you’re terrified — and still showing up.

    Bald.
    Broken-hearted.
    Alive.

    “I’m not brave because I’m not scared,” she said. “I’m brave because I’m still here.”


    A Precarious Christmas — And a Fragile Hope

    As Christmas approached, uncertainty loomed.

    Hospital corridors replaced family tables. IV poles stood where Christmas trees should have been. Yet even there, staff reported moments of laughter — the unmistakable sound of Magda being Magda.

    “She cracks jokes between treatments,” a nurse revealed. “Then she closes her eyes and rests. It’s both heartbreaking and inspiring.”

    Her recovery remains ongoing. Doctors caution that the road ahead is long and unpredictable.

    But tonight, for the first time in months, hope feels louder than fear.


    A Nation Holding Space for One of Its Own

    Australia has cried with Magda before — through comedy, through culture, through shared memory.

    Now it cries with her in a different way.

    Not as an audience.

    But as a community.

    Because when she whispered, “I thought I’d die alone,” the answer came back louder than she could have imagined:

    You won’t.


    Medicine Heals the Body — Love Heals the Soul

    As Magda Szubanski continues her fight, one truth has become undeniable.

    Chemotherapy can attack cancer.
    Doctors can save lives.
    But it is human connection that carries people through the darkest hours.

    And tonight, as hospital lights glow softly around her bed, one thing is certain:

    Magda is not alone.
    Not now.
    Not ever.

  • ANGIE’S FIGHT: Heartbreak as George Best’s First Wife Angie Is Diagnosed With Cancer — Son Calum Breaks Silence in Devastating Video

    ANGIE’S FIGHT: Heartbreak as George Best’s First Wife Angie Is Diagnosed With Cancer — Son Calum Breaks Silence in Devastating Video

    The world of showbiz was left reeling after it emerged that Angie Best — the first wife of football icon George Best — has been diagnosed with colon cancer, with the illness now spreading to her liver.

    NINTCHDBPICT001050196555

    George Best’s first wife Angie has been diagnosed with colon cancerCredit: Alamy

    Their son, TV personality Calum Best, 44, shared the tragic update in an emotional video posted on social media, revealing that his 73-year-old mum received the diagnosis just a few weeks ago.

    Struggling to hold back tears, Calum said he had spent weeks trying to find the right words, but when it comes to health and family, honesty mattered most.

    NINTCHDBPICT001050196585Their son Calum Best revealed the sad news in a heartbreaking video todayCredit: Instagram

    “A few weeks ago, my beautiful, wonderful mum was diagnosed with cancer,” he told fans. “For as long as I can remember, she has lived her life rooted in health, fitness and wellbeing. She’s always believed in caring for the body, mind and soul — but cancer doesn’t discriminate.”

    He added that the disease “doesn’t care where you’re from, how you live, or how healthy you try to be,” admitting he hasn’t cried in years but this news has taken him on an emotional rollercoaster he never expected.

    NINTCHDBPICT000004029914Angie said she is ‘ready to fight’ this diseaseCredit: PA:Press Association

    Calum revealed that Angie’s colon cancer has now spread to her liver and explained why he has launched a GoFundMe page, saying he can no longer manage the financial burden alone.

    “To move forward, we need access to specialist care and professionals who can offer the right treatment,” he said. “This is incredibly hard for me to say, but financially, I can’t carry this on my own.”

    'This Morning' TV show, London, UK - 04 Jun 2018Calum has set up a GoFundMe page to help with financial supportCredit: Rex

    He urged supporters that any donation — no matter how small — would help them access vital specialists, treatment and care, promising to keep fans updated as Angie also plans to share videos when she feels strong enough.

    TV-AM Party - George Best and Family - LondonTV-AM Party – George Best and Family – London 5 Angie and George Best divorced in 1986Credit: PA:Press Association

    Alongside Calum’s message, Angie posted her own defiant words, insisting she is “ready to fight” the disease. She admitted that consultations and research are costly, but said she believes the information she gains could one day help others, reminding followers that statistics suggest one in two people will face cancer in their lifetime.

    Messages of love quickly poured in from devastated fans, sending support, healing energy and heartfelt prayers to both mother and son.

    Angie first met George Best at a dinner party in Los Angeles in 1975 while he was signing for the LA Aztecs. Their whirlwind romance was described as “love at first sight.” They married in January 1976 and welcomed son Calum in 1981 before separating the following year and divorcing in 1986 amid George’s struggles with alcohol and domestic violence.

    Now, decades later, Calum says the family is facing its toughest battle yet — and hoping the public will stand with them through Angie’s fight for her life.

  • Pauline Quirke and the Heartbreaking “Long Goodbye” Her Family Is Living Through After Dementia Diagnosis.n

    Pauline Quirke and the Heartbreaking “Long Goodbye” Her Family Is Living Through After Dementia Diagnosis.n

    Pauline Quirke and the Long Goodbye Her Family Never Expected

    Pauline Quirke's family share update after heartbreaking dementia diagnosis

    For generations of viewers, Pauline Quirke was the face that brought warmth and honesty into British homes. She played women who felt real, characters who made us laugh, cry and feel understood. Now, away from the cameras, her own family is facing a story no script could ever prepare them for.

    In 2021 Pauline was diagnosed with dementia. At the time, her loved ones chose to keep the news private while they tried to understand what it meant for the woman they adore. When they finally spoke publicly in 2025, it was not for headlines. It was to reach out to others walking the same quiet and frightening path.

    The changes that happen in silence

    Those closest to Pauline describe dementia not as a single moment but as a slow, invisible shift. At first it takes small things. Confidence fades. Conversations lose their rhythm. Short term memory becomes unreliable. Then come the losses that feel impossible to accept. Names are forgotten. Shared jokes disappear. The deep recognition between a parent and child begins to waver.

    Meet Pauline Quirke's rarely-seen children Charlie and Emily | HELLO!

    Pauline has now stepped away from the public world that once defined her. She no longer acts and no longer makes appearances. Inside the family home, life has become about patience, care and finding strength in the smallest gestures.

    Pauline Quirke's family share update after heartbreaking dementia diagnosis

    Her loved ones say she still responds to kindness. A gentle smile. A soft look. A squeeze of the hand. Even as words slip away, those moments remain.

    When love has to speak for memory

    Her son Charlie has turned heartbreak into action by taking on a demanding charity trek for Alzheimer’s Research UK. It is not simply a fundraiser. It is a declaration that behind every statistic is a family trying to hold on to someone who is slowly changing.

    Families living with dementia often describe a moment that alters everything. It is the first time a loved one looks at you with uncertainty rather than recognition. The face is familiar. The eyes are warm. But the lifelong bond suddenly feels fragile.

    Doctors call it loss of recognition. Families call it the day their heart breaks while the person they love is still here.

    Charlie Quirke shares 'difficult' update on mum Pauline

    A goodbye that never quite arrives

    Dementia does not come with a single farewell. It stretches time and asks families to grieve again and again. Every forgotten name. Every vanished memory. Every question that once had an easy answer.

    Yet even in the sorrow, Pauline’s family has found moments of connection that exist beyond memory. A shared laugh with no context. The comfort of simply being close. They no longer measure life in milestones. They measure it in peace.

    Turning grief into meaning

    By sharing their story, Pauline’s family is helping break the silence around dementia. This is not a celebrity tale. It is the reality for millions of households across the country.

    Pauline Quirke once gave Britain characters we will never forget. Now, through the courage of those who love her most, she is offering something just as powerful. A reminder that love does not disappear when memory fades. It simply learns how to speak in a different way.

  • “WEAK GOVERNMENT, WEAKER BORDERS”: ENGLISH MEN TAKE DIRECT ACTION ON FRENCH BEACHES! Westminster is in shock! The people have decided they can’t wait any longer. Vigilantes are crossing the Channel to DESTROY the boats themselves! Using military code names like “Operation Overlord,” groups of British men are filming themselves slashing rubber dinghies and smashing engines before migrants can even set sail. They are calling on “football firms” and “lads in the pub” to join the fight, claiming it’s just like the spirit of the 1940s! “Our country is doing nothing,” they rage. Is this the start of a citizen-led border force, or dangerous anarchy? You need to see the footage of the “boat slashing” that has the Home Office terrified. CLICK TO WATCH THE VIGILANTES IN ACTION & THE CALL TO ARMS! DD

    “WEAK GOVERNMENT, WEAKER BORDERS”: ENGLISH MEN TAKE DIRECT ACTION ON FRENCH BEACHES! Westminster is in shock! The people have decided they can’t wait any longer. Vigilantes are crossing the Channel to DESTROY the boats themselves! Using military code names like “Operation Overlord,” groups of British men are filming themselves slashing rubber dinghies and smashing engines before migrants can even set sail. They are calling on “football firms” and “lads in the pub” to join the fight, claiming it’s just like the spirit of the 1940s! “Our country is doing nothing,” they rage. Is this the start of a citizen-led border force, or dangerous anarchy? You need to see the footage of the “boat slashing” that has the Home Office terrified. CLICK TO WATCH THE VIGILANTES IN ACTION & THE CALL TO ARMS! DD

    “WEAK GOVERNMENT, WEAKER BORDERS”: ENGLISH MEN TAKE DIRECT ACTION ON FRENCH BEACHES! Westminster is in shock! The people have decided they can’t wait any longer. Vigilantes are crossing the Channel to DESTROY the boats themselves! Using military code names like “Operation Overlord,” groups of British men are filming themselves slashing rubber dinghies and smashing engines before migrants can even set sail. They are calling on “football firms” and “lads in the pub” to join the fight, claiming it’s just like the spirit of the 1940s! “Our country is doing nothing,” they rage. Is this the start of a citizen-led border force, or dangerous anarchy? You need to see the footage of the “boat slashing” that has the Home Office terrified. CLICK TO WATCH THE VIGILANTES IN ACTION & THE CALL TO ARMS!

    “WEAK GOVERNMENT, WEAKER BORDERS”: ENGLISH MEN TAKE DIRECT ACTION ON FRENCH BEACHES!

     “THE PEOPLE HAVE HAD ENOUGH!” – ENGLISH MEN SLASH MIGRANT BOATS, WESTMINSTER LEFT IN SHOCK

    igilantes slash small migrant boats on French coastline

    Britons have been filming themselves travelling to beaches in France and ‘destroying’ small  boats – gaining thousands of views in the process

    Sanya Burgess is an award-winning journalist whose investigations have included revealing Deliveroo was not paying the living wage to all riders, despite the company’s pledge to do so. She has also tracked disinformation and far right hate speech in the UK during the Southport riots, conspiracy theories about the attempted shooting of Donald Trump and revealed that Elon Musk was paying some of Tommy Robinson’s legal fees. She has also worked on issues relating to Big Tech and underage gambling, as well as uncovering war crimes and human rights abuses in Iran, Myanmar and the UAE – including the ‘hostage’ tapes of the detained Dubai Princess Latifa.

    British vigilantes who spearheaded efforts to fly England flags across the country have launched a new anti-migrant protest – attempting to block illegal Channel crossings.

    Using the term “Operation Stop The Boats”, members of the group have been filming themselves slashing small  boats before they are used by migrants to cross the English Channel from France.

    Claiming to be recording from the northern French coast, one said: “Just like in the 1940s, we must take a stand, and it starts with the men of England and Britain.”

    Making an appeal to “firms” – a phrase that refers to football hooligan groups – the other man added: “Our country is doing nothing. Weak government, weaker borders.

    “They are doing nothing, so we need to make a stand, boys. Get the lads together, get your firms together, get the lads in the pub, get the lads down the bars, if you’re talking about it and you agree with what we are doing, give us a hand.”
    The Government is under pressure to act after more than 36,000 people have crossed the English Channel in small boats (Photo: raisethecolours.org.uk/Instagram)

    The Government is under pressure to tackle the issue of migration amid a record number of asylum applications, surging small  boat crossings and protests at hotels housing asylum seekers.

    On Monday, Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood set out a package of reforms to asylum policies aimed at tackling illegal migration, telling MPs the current situation is “out of control and unfair”.

    The latest videos shared by those linked to the Raise the Colours group have separately been referred to as “Operation Overlord”.

    Earlier clips showed two men saying they were taking matters of illegal migration into their own hands and filming themselves stamping on and smashing a small  boat’s engine.

    In the clips, they refer to themselves as “patriots” and make a number of claims without evidence, such as that they are stopping “rapists and murderers” from “coming to a town near you”.
    One video shared by the group (Photo: raisethecolours.org.uk/nstagram)
    The flag-raising group, who have a combined 100,000 followers on X and Instagram, also posted a plea on X for donations last week, writing that they are: “STOPPING The  Boats, whether the migrants or government like it or not!”

    Two videos from the group have recently been shared to the 1.7 million X followers of Tommy Robinson. The far-right figure and former leader of the English Defence League, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, has previously been accused of mobilising football hooligan firms in an attempt to launch anti-Muslim rallies across the country.

    Separately, French media reports that the Dunkirk Public Prosecutor’s office has opened a preliminary investigation into “aggravated violence” against migrants by suspected British far-right figures.

    One of the details being examined by the French prosecutor is the claim that in September, four men waving British and UK flags verbally and physically attacked migrants on the French coast. It is alleged that they told the migrants they were not welcome in England and proceeded to steal some of their belongings.

    The men are not the first anti-migrant figures to travel to France in a bid to take matters into their own hands.

    In September, Ukip, Nigel Farage’s former political party, posted a video to their X account showing what appeared to be sleeping migrants in France being woken by people flashing strobe lights in their faces and shouting at them.

    Nick Tenconi, Ukip’s current leader, also posted a video captioned: “In Calais hunting for illegal invaders trying to cross into Britain.”

  • “HE DIDN’T MOVE”: The 15 Seconds That Broke the Internet! DD

    “HE DIDN’T MOVE”: The 15 Seconds That Broke the Internet! DD

    “HE DIDN’T MOVE”: The 15 Seconds That Broke the Internet!

    Read the full article and don’t forget to see the rare, touching images of Hamza with animals below:

    Move over, every polished presenter who ever read a script about badgers: Britain has chosen its new natural-history heartbeat, and he’s a 6-foot-6 Sudanese-Scottish giant who learned to track lynx before he could drive, cries when otters hold hands, and once spent 42 straight nights sleeping in a hide just to film pine martens falling in love.

    Last night, BBC One dropped the first trailer for Hamza’s Wild Britain (a six-part landmark series launching spring 2026), and within four hours it became the most-watched BBC trailer in a decade. The final 15 seconds alone have been viewed 28 million times: Hamza, knee-deep in a Highland river at dawn, whispering so gently the microphone barely catches it as a mother otter teaches her pup to swim literally inches from his face. No music. Just his soft Glasgow-Sudanese lilt: “Look… she’s telling him the water will hold him, if he trusts it. Same thing my mum told me when we arrived in Scotland and I couldn’t speak a word of English.”

    Cue national meltdown.

    The numbers are insane:

    4.7 million pre-saved the series on iPlayer before a single episode aired.
    #HamzaYassin trended above the general election results.
    Children’s bookshops sold out of otter plush toys by 10 a.m. because “my kid says Hamza told them to love otters.”

    But the real story isn’t the ratings; it’s the journey.

    Hamza arrived in rural Northamptonshire from Sudan at age eight, speaking no English, clutching a bird book his father gave him “because birds don’t care what language you speak.” By twelve he was the weird kid cycling ten miles before school to photograph kingfishers. At sixteen he won Young Wildlife Photographer of the Year with a shot of a fox cub yawning that looked like it was laughing at the universe. University (Bangor, zoology) was just an excuse to live closer to puffins.

    Then came the decade nobody saw: camera-operating on Planet Earth IIISpringwatch, and Countryfile, always the guy in the muddy boots who could lie motionless for 14 hours until a badger sniffed his lens and decided he was harmless. Crew nicknamed him “the Otter Whisperer” after he filmed the first-ever footage of wild otters playing with pebbles in the Cairngorms, entirely by becoming part of the furniture for six weeks.

    His big break was accidental. In 2022 he entered Strictly Come Dancing “because my mum loves glitterballs and I thought it might pay for a new hide.” He won the whole thing with Jowita Przystał, foxtrotting like a man who’d spent his life learning rhythm from golden eagles soaring on thermals. Overnight, eight million people discovered the gentle giant who spoke about conservation between sambas.

    The BBC pounced. First Hamza: Wild Isles (2024), then the Emmy-nominated Hamza’s Sudan (2025), where he returned to his birthplace to film the last northern white rhinos under the same stars he watched as a child. Critics called it “the most emotional hour of television this decade.” Viewers just called it “life-changing.”

    Now Hamza’s Wild Britain is being billed as the spiritual successor to Attenborough’s Life on Earth. Shot entirely by Hamza himself (he still refuses a full camera crew because “animals don’t like strangers”), it promises never-before-seen behaviour: red squirrels teaching their young to tightrope-walk power lines, urban foxes using pedestrian crossings at night, golden eagles hunting in snowstorms so violent Hamza had to be roped to a cliff for three days.

  • TRUE HERO A banker has been hailed a real-life hero after rushing into the Swiss ski resort blaze and saving ten youngsters — all after receiving a desperate phone call from his daughter begging him to help. DD

    TRUE HERO A banker has been hailed a real-life hero after rushing into the Swiss ski resort blaze and saving ten youngsters — all after receiving a desperate phone call from his daughter begging him to help. DD

    TRUE HERO A banker has been hailed a real-life hero after rushing into the Swiss ski resort blaze and saving ten youngsters — all after receiving a desperate phone call from his daughter begging him to help.

    A hero banker saved ten youngsters from the Swiss ski resort inferno by forcing open an emergency door after his teenage daughter rang him pleading for help.

    Paolo Campolo, 55, raced from his home in Crans-Montana to Le Constellation bar, where he prized open a side door to allow panicked revellers to run for their lives as the building filled with roaring flames and smoke in seconds.

    At least 40 clubbers were killed and another 119 injured, 80 of them critically, when a devastating blaze ripped through the basement of the packed club as it hosted New Year’s Eve celebrations.

    Mr Campolo, a Swiss-Italian financial analyst, rushed to the scene after his distraught daughter called him to say her boyfriend and friends were trapped inside while she was waiting to enter.

    With the main entrance blocked up by people cramming to escape, he identified a door off to the side and forced it open.

    Footage posted online appears to show a man forcing open a door to the right of the main entrance and a clearly distressed young woman immediately bursting out, though it’s not clear whether this is Mr Campolo.

    Speaking from his hospital bed, where he is being treated for smoke inhalation, the heroic father recalled the harrowing scene that lay behind the door.

    He told Italian newspaper Il Messaggero: ‘There were several bodies all around. Alive but burnt. Some conscious, others not.

    Paolo Campolo, 55, rushed to Le Constellation bar after receiving a distress call from his teenage daughter

    High quality photographs show the very first moments of the Swiss Constellation Bar fire in Crans-Montana, where dozens died on New Year’s Eve

    People film the ceiling on fire at the Swiss Constellation Bar fire in Crans-Montana

    ‘They were begging for help in several languages. They were very young.’

    Read More

    BREAKING NEWS
    Swiss inferno nightclub owners say they can’t ‘sleep nor eat’ and defend safety of their ski bar

    Le Constellation was particularly popular amongst younger age groups, and many of the victims are teenagers.

    Fire crews and emergency teams were already at the club when Mr Campolo arrived from his house just 50 yards away.

    The flames had died down, but scores of people were trapped inside the building that had filled with choking smoke, and there was a crush at the singular exit point.

    Working with another man, Mr Campolo managed to pull open the other door, behind which he could see ‘hands and faces’, and several people immediately spilled out.

    He continued: ‘I didn’t think about the pain, the smoke, the danger.

    ‘I pulled kids out with my bare hands. One after the other. They were alive but injured, many of them seriously.’

    When asked what he most remembered from the traumatic night, Mr Campolo said: ‘The looks. The lucid desperation of those who know they’re dying.

    Footage posted online appeared to show a man forcing open a side door as flames rip through La Constellation

    British-educated Charlotte Niddam is among the missing after a deadly fire tore through a bar in the Swiss Alps

    The schoolgirl, believed to be 15, has not been heard from since a fire tore through a packed bar in Crans-Montana, Switzerland

    The footage, taken by French economics student Ferdinand Du Beaudiez, shows flames ripping through the Crans-Montana club as revellers continue singing, dancing and shouting – unaware they are already trapped in extreme danger

    ‘Burned people looking at you and asking you not to leave them there. It’s something that never goes away.’

    Read More

    BREAKING NEWS
    Former pupil at British school is among the missing in Swiss ski resort inferno

    His daughter would also have been inside the club when the fire took hold had she not stopped over at the house to cheers the New Year with her parents.

    Mr Campolo is recovering in a hospital bed in Sion, Switzerland, after inhaling smoke, and his daughter was unharmed, but her boyfriend is fighting for his life in a hospital in Basel.

    Among the injured are 71 Swiss nationals, 14 French and 11 Italians, along with citizens of Serbia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Luxembourg, Belgium, Portugal and Poland, according to Frédéric Gisler, police commander of the Valais region.

    The nationalities of 14 people were still unclear.

    Officials said identifying the dead and the remaining injured could take days owing to their burns.

    One confirmed to be missing after attending the club is a 15-year-old schoolgirl educated in Britain called Charlotte Niddam.

    Ms Niddam babysat for pocket money in Crans-Montana but has not been heard from since the fire.

    Police officers standing outside Le Constellation on New Year’s Day

    Footage shows the deadly flashover, when extreme heat caused everything inside the enclosed space to ignite almost at once, leaving people little chance to flee

    Candles have been laid at a makeshift memorial near the club

    The French-born teenager attended Immanuel College, a private Jewish school in Hertfordshire, and the Jewish Free School in north London.

    Read More

    The teens missing in Swiss nightclub inferno – many of them children

    She returned to France two years ago. Her mother, Marie-Sophie, lives in Zurich. Charlotte said she was available to babysit in Crans-Montana at weekends and in school holidays on the resort’s website.

    Charlotte Niddam’s schoolfriend, Mia, shared pictures of her on social media and wrote: ‘My sweet sweet special Lottie I love you more than the meaning of life. I need my best friend. I miss you.’

    Teachers at the Jewish Free School wrote to parents asking ‘for your love and prayers in support of Charlotte Niddam and her family’.

    They wrote: ‘Charlotte’s situation, along with many others, remains unknown and the family are awaiting further news.’

    Immanuel College also wrote to parents yesterday asking that they ‘come together in support of Charlotte Niddam’. The teenager was described by a former neighbour as ‘kind’ and ‘so clever’.

    Investigators said on Friday that they believe sparkling candles atop Champagne bottles was the most likely cause of the fire.

    Authorities planned to look into whether the sound-dampening material on the ceiling conformed with regulations and whether sparklers were permitted for use in the bar.

    The candles, which give off a stream of upward-shooting sparks, were the same type that is commonly available for parties, officials said.

    Mourners gather near Le Constellation

    Laetitia Brodard-Sitre showing a photo of her 16-year-old son, Arthur, who is missing after the fire

    Officials said they would also look at other safety measures on the premises, including fire extinguishers and escape routes.

    Read More

    First victim of Swiss NYE inferno is named as teenage Italian golfer

    Beatrice Pilloud, the attorney general for the Valais region, warned of possible prosecutions if any criminal liability is found.

    Meanwhile, the couple who own Le Contellation broke their silence on Friday to say they can’t ‘sleep nor eat’ as prosecutors said they may face manslaughter charges.

    The Daily Mail earlier revealed the owners of Le Constellation to be French couple Jacques Moretti, 49, and his wife Jessica, 40, who was inside the bar when the blaze broke out and suffered burns to her arm.

    Mr Moretti, who was not in the venue, has now spoken out for the first time since the blaze, telling Swiss outlet 20 Minuten: ‘We can neither sleep nor eat, we are all very unwell.’

    The bar owner also defended the safety of the nightclub after it emerged the venue was fitted with wooden furnishings and foam-style ceiling material and had only one narrow staircase for revellers trying to escape.

    Mr Moretti claimed that the club had been inspected three times in the past 10 years, adding: ‘Everything had been done according to regulation.’

    He emphasised the couple – known as powerful figures in the Swiss hospitality industry – are cooperating with authorities, adding: ‘We will do everything we can to help clarify the causes. We are doing everything in our power. Our lawyers are also involved.’

    The couple, who have a young son, opened the bar in the upmarket ski resort of Crans-Montana in December 2015 after falling in love with the area when they visited for a week’s holiday in 2011.

    Jacques Moretti, 49, and his wife Jessica, 40, (pictured) who are from the French island of Corsica, are now facing a raft of questions over how the deadly blaze spread so quickly

    A man comforts a woman as they stand near candles placed for the victims as a tribute outside Le Constellation bar

    Beatrice Pilloud, attorney general for Switzerland’s Valais region, said: ‘We assume that the fire originated from sparklers attached to champagne bottles. From there, the ceiling caught fire.

    Read More

    Waitress pictured waving sparkler while riding man’s shoulders just before inferno killed 47

    ‘We are also looking at what materials were used. The issue of emergency exits, fire extinguishers, and the bar’s occupancy is also being investigated.

    ‘Our investigation also includes the foam on the ceiling. It is still unclear whether any individuals will face criminal charges. However, it is possible that an investigation for negligent homicide will be initiated.’

    Harrowing footage emerged yesterday showing oblivious revellers continuing to party as flames spread across the bar’s ceiling.

    Partygoers lost crucial seconds during which they could have fled.

    A video filmed by French economics student Ferdinand Du Beaudiez, 19, shows teenagers singing and dancing without realising the danger they were in.

    As well as at least 47 fatalities, another 119 were injured, authorities confirmed yesterday, with some of the missing aged just 15.

    All but six of the injured have been formally identified, but the severity of the burns means many are unrecognisable.

    A photograph sent by survivors to French outlet BFMTV shows a waitress at Le Constellation sitting on the shoulders of a colleague while holding a sparkler in the air, moments before the deadly blaze ripped through the bar

    A grab of a video obtained from the X account of @Tyroneking36852 shows a fire in a bar in Crans-Montana, a ski resort in the canton of Valais, Switzerland, early on January 1, 2026

    Moments before the fire, a waitress had been seen dancing and waving a lit sparkler beneath foam soundproofing panels on the ceiling, which then caught light. Customers also appear to be holding up bottles with blazing sparklers attached to them.

    Read More

    Miracle of the inferno: Witness reveals youth trapped in Swiss blaze sat down with crucifix in hand

    Several people can be seen holding up their phones as the fire grows overhead, apparently unaware they are capturing the moments before disaster struck.

    As the horror unfolded, Ferdinand escaped – but then made the extraordinary decision to go back inside twice to save his brother and girlfriend.

    He said he found a badly burnt person on the stairs, adding: ‘Their clothes were burned, I could only make out teeth.’

    Ferdinand told the Daily Mail: ‘I saw someone order these champagne bottles and I saw the waitresses take the bottles on their shoulders with sparklers on top.

    ‘One of the sparklers set light to the roof, which was made of insulating foam. I saw the roof catch fire and I went under the bar.

    ‘I found some water in the fridge. I tried throwing the water on the fire, but… it had no effect.

    ‘I took my girlfriend’s arm and I screamed to everyone, “Get out!”. I pushed my girlfriend as hard as I could up the stairs.

    Security stands in front of the sealed off Le Constellation bar, where a devastating fire left dead and injured during the New Year’s celebrations in Crans-Montana, Swiss Alps, Switzerland, Friday morning, Jan. 2, 2026

    A signboard of Le Constellation bar, after a fire and explosion during a New Year’s Eve party where several people died and others were injured

    Read More

    EXCLUSIVE
    Moment sparkler set fire to NYE inferno bar ceiling before 47 died – as owners and UK links revealed

    ‘I fell on the ground. My first reflex was to cover my face with my arms and I closed my eyes. At this moment… someone opened the front door. This brought lots of air inside, which also fuelled the fire.

    ‘And the fire turned into a fireball. At this moment the fire took all the breathable air and I couldn’t breathe any more.

    ‘So in a last hope I took the foot of the table and grabbed myself out. I couldn’t find anyone. I went back inside. There was too much smoke and I couldn’t breathe. So I went back out. I found a friend of mine who was burned. He asked me, where is your girlfriend?

    ‘I found my girlfriend completely in shock.’

    Ferdinand said his brother was in a coma in hospital, but was expected to recover.

  • FACES OF THE MISSING: Families are begging for answers after a Swiss nightclub blaze left 47 dead — with children and teenagers still missing dd

    FACES OF THE MISSING: Families are begging for answers after a Swiss nightclub blaze left 47 dead — with children and teenagers still missing dd

    FACES OF THE MISSING: Families are begging for answers after a Swiss nightclub blaze left 47 dead — with children and teenagers still missing

    Teenagers as young as 14 are still missing following the inferno in a Swiss nightclub that left at least 47 dead and 119 injured.

    New Year’s Eve celebrations turned into a nightmare when Le Constellation bar in the ski resort town of Crans-Montana went up in flames, leaving survivors with third-degree burns.

    Distraught families face an agonising wait to find out whether loved ones died in the early hours of Thursday at the nightclub in south-west Switzerland.

    So severe were the burns suffered by the mostly young crowd of revellers in the basement bar that Swiss officials said it could take days before they name all ​those killed in the fire.

    Parents of missing youths have issued desperate pleas for news of ​their children, as foreign embassies scramble to work out if their nationals were among ​those caught up in one of the worst tragedies to befall modern Switzerland.

    Police commander Frédéric Gisler said all bar six of the 119 injured have been formally identified, but Swiss officials are yet to share the names of any victims or injured.

    Six Italians are still missing and 13 hospitalised, while eight French people are missing and another nine are among the injured.

    The first deceased victim to be named was 17-year-old Emanuele Galeppini, an Italian teenage golfer.

    Guy Parmelin, the Swiss president, described the inferno as ‘one of the worst tragedies that our country has experienced’ in that it ‘cut short many young lives’.

    Beatrice Pilloud, Valais Canton attorney general, confirmed in a press conference today that the blaze was likely caused when sparklers in champagne bottles made the ceiling catch fire.

    Swiss official Stéphane Ganzer said between 80 and 100 people are seriously injured, with some victims suffering with third-degree burns covering 15 per cent of their bodies. The severity of their injuries means many survivors are unrecognisable.

     Alice Kallergis

    Alice Kallergis, a 15-year-old Greek national, has been missing since the Swiss fire

    The brother of 15-year-old Alice Kallergis shared a plea for information about the missing Greek national on social media.

    The teenager has not been seen since the outbreak of the fire at around 1.30am local time (12.30am GMT) in the luxury ski resort town, located in the heart of the Swiss Alps.

    According to Greek state broadcaster ERT, Kallergis is a permanent resident of Switzerland.

    Her brother encouraged anyone with news of her whereabouts to contact the family immediately, saying: ‘We have no news.’

    Arthur Brodard

    Arthur Brodard, 16, has been missing since the fire

    Laetitia Brodard-Sitre holds a photograph of her missing son

    Arthur Brodard, 16, has been missing since the fire.

    His mother Laetitia said she had been searching all night for her son.

    ‘I’ve been looking for him for over 30 hours,’ she told BFMTV, after visiting every hospital she could find in search of news.

    Ms Brodard said Arthur and 10 school friends had booked a table in Le Constellation to mark the start of 2026, but only one has been found.

    She said: ‘He was looking forward to celebrating New Year’s Eve with his school friends at the resort and in this bar.

    ‘They had made plans and reserved a table in advance. Of the 11 people at that table only one has been found, and all the others are missing.

    ‘My son is alone in a hospital if he’s alive. Even if he’s in a morgue, because by now you have to be able to think clearly after more than 30 hours, I don’t know which morgue, I can’t be by his side.’

    Ms Brodard continued: ‘Today, if he’s in the hospital, I don’t know which hospital. If he’s in a morgue, I don’t know which morgue, which country, which canton. He could be in Bern, Zurich, Milan, Stuttgart, Lausanne.

    ‘He could be anywhere. I’ve been in Crans-Montana for 30 hours without any news of my child.’

    ‘We’re parents, we’re doing everything we can to get answers.’

    She insisted on defending the presence of children in the bar for New Year’s Eve celebrations.

    ‘We’re not irresponsible parents for letting our 16-year-olds go out for the New Year. All the parents knew where their children were. They were celebrating with friends.’

    Referring to the Swiss authorities, Ms Brodard said: ‘There are no words, they can’t answer our questions because they don’t know anything. The burn victims have burns covering between 45 and 60% per cent of their bodies, mostly grade three.’

    She said she had personally filed a missing person report for her son in order to gather videos and photos from the evening to catch a glimpse of him and ‘relive the evening minute by minute.’

    She said: ‘At 1.28am., my son made a video for a group with his friends. At 1.30am, the first phone rang to report the fire.’

    She added that she had been trying a dedicated victims’ telephone line set up by the Swiss authorities, but had trouble getting information.

    She said: ‘The hotline still has no more information today.’

     Alicia Gonset and Diana Gonset

    Alicia Gonset and Diana Gonset were reported missing

    Alicia Gonset, 15, and Diana Gonset, 14, were reported missing in a social media post published by their family.

    Emilie Pralong

    Missing 22-year-old Émilie Pralong

    Distraught French grandfather Pierre Pralong appealed on TV for any information about his missing granddaughter, Émilie, 22.

    Having gone to Crans-Montana that evening with two other friends, Émilie has not been heard from since.

    Her grandfather Pierre Pralong made an appeal on BFMTV on Thursday evening, January 1, ‘for witnesses to people at the La Constellation bar who might have seen Émilie.’

    In a desperate plea, he asked for information from ‘anyone who might have seen Émilie at the La Constellation bar’, saying he wanted to ‘bring good news to (his) son’.

    Mr Pralong said: ‘Give us the information. Call me, call Grandpa… We’re still hoping, we’re full of hope.’

    Describing the horror of the fire, he added: ‘She had a very serious life, and the next day, she’s gone. It’s really something very hard for a grandfather. We got along very well; there was a lot of love between us.’

    He added: ‘The resort, but also the whole country, is shaken… We always hope, we are full of hope. It helps us overcome whatever trials we face. Hope is clearly stronger than death.’

    But while clinging to the hope that his granddaughter was ‘in more or less good shape somewhere in a hospital’, Mr Pralong said he was also realistic about how she might have died.

    He said: ‘We have to be ready to accept a more difficult situation; we mustn’t dream, we have to be realistic in the face of a tragedy like this’.

    In a comment on an Instagram post appealing for information about the young woman, someone offered a description of her tattoos to help identification: ‘A glass of wine on her left triceps and a swan on her right triceps.’

    Stiven Ivanovski

    An urgent appeal for help is being made by family and friends after the disappearance of young Stiven Ivanovski in Switzerland

    An urgent appeal for information is being made by the family and friends of Stiven Ivanovski.

    The Macedonian was last seen before the fire broke out at at Le Constellation in the alpine town, approximately two hours from the Swiss capital of Bern.

    ‘He was wearing white pants and a white sweater, as seen in [the picture], possibly those sunglasses,’ a family member wrote.

    Giovanni Tamburi

    Giovanni Tamburi, the missing 16-year-old from Bologna

    Another young person reported missing is Giovanni Tamburi, whose mother Carla Masielli issued an appeal for any news about her son and asked the media to show his photo in hopes of identifying him.

    ‘We have called all the hospitals but they don’t give me any news. We don’t know if he’s among the dead. We don’t know if he’s among the missing,’ she wailed. ‘They don’t tell us anything!’

    The 16-year-old from Bologna, whose parents are separated, said goodbye to his mother after Christmas and had gone to Crans-Montana for a holiday with his father, who has a house in Switzerland.

    He had dinner with friends before deciding to go to Le Constellation in the evening. He was last seen trying to escape the flames.

    Also at the bar was Riccardo Minghetti, according to La Repubblica, a 16-year-old from Rome.

    The father of  young Italian girl, Chiara Costanzo, a 16-year-old from Milan, was also waiting desperately outside the Italian crisis unit in Crans-Montana to hear news.

    For hours, the family hoped their daughter had been admitted to a hospital, but the long-awaited call never came.

    Several Italians injured in the fire were transferred to the burns unit at the Niguarda Hospital in Milan, including 16-year-old Francesca Nota.

    Her parents found her at a hospital in Zurich, the largest city in Switzerland, in a coma, before she was transported to Italy. Her condition has been described as serious.

    Giuseppe Giola from Milan, and Manfredi Marcucci , from Rome, both 16, and Eleonora Palmieri, 29, from Cattolica, are all being treated at the Niguarda Hospital.

    The Constellation Bar in Crans Montana, where dozens died in a fire on New Year’s Eve

    A photograph has emerged showing a waitress, riding on the shoulders of a colleague, holding a sparkler in the air moments before the deadly blaze ripped through the ski bar.

    Separate footage filmed moments later shows a brave reveller trying to put out flames as they spread across the wooden ceiling of Le Constellation nightclub in south-west Switzerland.

    Witnesses say a sparkler in a champagne bottle caused the inferno in the bar in the ski resort town of Crans-Montana, where around 200 partygoers had gathered to celebrate New Year’s Eve.

    French outlet BFMTV said it had been sent the photograph of the waitress by survivors, who took the picture moments before the fire began.

    Despite the efforts of the young hero to put out the flames, the blaze would soon engulf the crowded basement, travel up the narrow wooden stairs and set off explosions so deafening that residents feared a terror attack.

    Survivors have since described harrowing scenes inside the club as people were burned, overcome by smoke, and struggled to escape amid a desperate stampede.

    So severe were the burns suffered by the mostly young crowd – many in their teens and 20s – that Swiss officials said it could take days before they name all the victims of the fire.

    A photograph sent by survivors to French outlet BFMTV shows a waitress at Le Constellation sitting on the shoulders of a colleague while holding a sparkler in the air, moments before the deadly blaze ripped through the bar

    Footage from the evening shows a brave reveller trying to put out the first flames as they spread across the wooden ceiling of the cramped basement bar in south-west Switzerland

    Despite his efforts, the blaze would soon engulf the crowded basement, travel up the narrow wooden stairs and set off explosions so deafening that residents feared a terror attack

    Read More

    EXCLUSIVE
    Moment sparkler set fire to NYE inferno bar ceiling before 47 died – as owners and UK links revealed

    Following the fire, two women told BFMTV they had been inside the nightclub when they saw a barman carrying a female server on his shoulders.

    She was holding a lit candle in a champagne bottle that set fire to the wooden ceiling, causing it to collapse, they said.

    Victoria, one of the survivors, recounted what she saw moments before the fire: ‘It was firework candles inside a champagne bottle that caused the explosion. The entire ceiling of the bar caught fire.’

    ‘All the windows were black and opaque with smoke,’ she added. She believes many of the victims suffocated.

    ‘Some people smashed windows to let in air,’ she said. ‘I’m still shaking; many were crying as they left. It was mass panic.’

    Another photo sent to BFMTV by survivors shows several partygoers carrying champagne bottles filled with sparklers, apparently moments before the blaze.

    Adrien was also at Le Constellation when the fire began. ‘We saw people smashing windows, running and screaming,’ he said. ‘Parents were racing up in their cars. It was like a horror movie.’

    A young Italian man said he is still anxiously waiting to hear from a friend who had been celebrating New Year’s Eve at the bar in Crans-Montana.

    He told Italian public broadcaster Rai News one of his friends was ‘was burned all over’ while another was taken to Zurich by helicopter.

    ‘Another friend of ours…last night we had no news, he couldn’t be found,’ he said.

    ‘My friends and I, we haven’t slept last night, we’ve barely eaten.’

    Dalia Gubbay, a woman from Milan who has visited Crans-Montana over Christmas for the past 30 years, told Corriere della Sera that her daughter-in-law ‘saw people burned, white sheets being placed over bodies’.

    Another witness, Gianni, told Swiss outlet 20 Minuten that victims suffered severe burns, with faces ‘completely disfigured’ and hair burned away.

    He said many were left blackened by the flames, with their clothes fused to their skin.

    Tim Steffens, a 19-year-old ski instructor who witnessed the blaze, spoke to the same outlet about the scenes of panic as the fire broke out.

    ‘Everyone was pushing and shoving their way out of the stairwell,’ he said. ‘It was awful. They were all burned. Their clothes were burned away. It really wasn’t a pretty sight. The screams… not pretty, not pretty.’

    Another woman told BFMTV of the difficulty in escaping the club, which had been rated just 6.5 out of 10 for safety.

    ‘The staircase leading out of the nightclub was extremely narrow,’ she said. ‘There was a huge surge in the crowd. We managed to escape just in time.’

    Another photo sent to BFMTV by survivors shows partygoers carrying champagne bottles filled with sparklers, apparently moments before the blaze

    The first victim of deadly New Year’s Eve fire that tore through a bar at an Alpine ski resort has been named as 17-year-old Italian golfer Emmanuele Galeppini (pictured)

    The teenage golfing prodigy had been pictured with golfer Rory McIlroy last year

    Security stands in front of the sealed off Le Constellation bar, where a devastating fire left dead and injured during the New Year’s celebrations in Crans-Montana, Swiss Alps, Switzerland, Friday morning, Jan. 2, 2026

    Read More

    First victim of Swiss NYE inferno is named as teenage Italian golfer

    Officials called the fire that raged through the crowded bar an ’embrasement généralisé’, a firefighting term describing how a blaze can trigger the release of combustible gases that can then ignite explosively and cause what English-speaking firefighters would call a flashover.

    Parents of missing youths issued pleas for news of their loved ones as foreign embassies scrambled to ​work out if their nationals were among those caught up in one of ​the worst tragedies to befall modern Switzerland.

    ‘The first objective is to assign names to all the bodies,’ Crans-Montana’s mayor Nicolas Feraud told a press conference on Thursday evening. This, he said, could take days.

    Mathias Reynard, head of government of the canton of Valais, said experts were using ⁠dental and DNA samples for the task.

    ‘All this work needs to be done because the information is so terrible and sensitive that nothing can ​be told to the families unless we are 100 percent sure,’ he said.

    The first victim of the deadly New Year’s Eve fire has been named as a 17-year-old Italian golf prodigy, Galeppini, who was pictured with Rory McIlroy.

    Galeppini’s death was confirmed in an Instagram post by the Italian Golf Federation, which remembered the teen as a ‘young athlete who embodied passion and authentic values’.

    ‘In this time of great sorrow, our thoughts go out to his family and all those who loved him’, the tribute added.

    Galeppini had been out partying at Le Constellation bar in Crans-Montana, when the deadly inferno broke out around an hour after midnight on New Years Eve.

    The teenager, from Genova, was among the 13 missing Italians on a list released by the country’s Foreign Ministry yesterday.

    His father had gone out to Le Constellation looking for him following reports of the fire, as his family launched an appeal to find find him.

    Appealing for help to find his son, Mr Galeppini said: ‘Around 1.30am we learned of the explosion. We went up there in front of the restaurant but we haven’t found him yet. He hasn’t answered the phone since last night.’

    Galeppini’s friends and family members suspected he had been out at the bar because they hadn’t heard from him since midnight, when his father reportedly spoke to him on the phone to wish him a happy birthday, according to reports.

    The World Amateur Golf Ranking website describes the teenager as a junior golfer who ‘loves to golf, compete and eat’.

    A signboard of Le Constellation bar, after a fire and explosion during a New Year’s Eve party where several people died and others were injured

    A grab of a video obtained on December 2, 2025 from the Police Cantonale Valaisanne shows the interior of a bar after a fire, in Crans-Montana, a ski resort in the canton of Valais, Switzerland

    Read More

    Miracle of the inferno: Witness reveals youth trapped in Swiss blaze sat down with crucifix in hand

    Authorities have warned that naming the victims or establishing a definitive death toll would take time because many of the bodies were badly burned.

    While what caused the blaze was unclear, Swiss authorities said it appeared to be an accident rather than an attack.

    Residents of Crans-Montana, which has the distinction of being not only a popular draw for skiers, but ⁠also golfers, were stunned by the inferno.

    Many knew victims and some said they were lucky not to have been there themselves.

    Hundreds of people stood in silence near the scene as they came to pay their respects to the victims on Thursday night.

    Switzerland has also ordered the national flag to be flown at half-mast for ⁠five days as a sign of mourning.

    ‘You think you’re safe here but this can happen anywhere. They were people like us,’ said Piermarco Pani, an 18-year-old who, like many others in the town, knew the bar well.

    Dozens of people left flowers or lit candles on a makeshift altar at the top of the road leading to the bar which police had cordoned off. Some cried, others quietly hugged one another.

    Behind the cordon, the bodies of some victims still lay in the bar, police said, as they pledged to work around the clock to identify ‍everyone who succumbed to the blaze.

    Kean Sarbach, 17, said ⁠he had spoken to four people who escaped from the bar, some with burns, and that they had told him the flames had spread very quickly.

    Elisa Sousa, 17, said she was meant to be there but ended up spending the evening at a family gathering instead.

    ‘And honestly, I’ll need to thank my mother a hundred times for not letting me go,’ she said at the vigil for the victims. ‘Because God knows where I’d ⁠be now.’

    Image from the scene shows emergency services scrambling to Le Constellation nightclub in the early hours of Thursday morning

    A grab of a video obtained from the X account of @Tyroneking36852 shows a fire in a bar in Crans-Montana, a ski resort in the canton of Valais, Switzerland, early on January 1, 2026

    Dramatic footage shows enormous flames rapidly spreading over the ceiling of the bar

    A man comforts a woman as they stand near candles placed for the victims as a tribute outside the Le Constellation bar

    A promotional video for Le Constellation shows waitresses passing around champagne bottles fitted with sparklers, and carrying buckets full of several bottles also with sparklers inside.

    Images of the bar’s interior show what looks like soundproofing foam fitted on the ceiling – potentially flammable material that may have ignited in the blaze.

    Valais Canton police commander Frédéric Gisler said during a news conference that work is underway to identify the victims and inform their families, adding that the community is ‘devastated’.

    Pilloud, Valais Canton attorney general, said the number of people who were in the bar is ‘unknown,’ and its maximum capacity will be part of the investigation.

    ‘For the time being, we don’t have any suspects,’ she added, when asked if anyone had been arrested over the fire.

    ‘An investigation has been opened, not against anyone, but to better understand the circumstances of this dramatic fire.’

    Axel Clavier felt like he was suffocating inside the Swiss Alpine bar where moments before he’d been ringing in the new year with friends and dozens of other revelers.

    The 16-year-old from Paris escaped the inferno by forcing a window open with a table, but one of his friends was among the 47 other partygoers who died.

    Clavier told The Associated Press that ‘two or three’ of his friends remained missing hours after the disaster.

    Crans-Montana is less than three miles from Sierre, where 28 people, including many children, were killed when a bus from Belgium crashed inside a Swiss tunnel in 2012.

    With high-altitude ski runs rising around 3,000 meters (nearly 9,850 feet) in the heart of the Valais region’s snowy peaks and pine forests, Crans-Montana is one of the top venues on the World Cup circuit.

    Swiss President Guy Parmelin, speaking on his first day in the largely ceremonial job, said many emergency staff had been ‘confronted by scenes of indescribable violence and distress’.

    ‘Switzerland is a strong country not because it is sheltered from drama, but because it knows how to face them with courage and a spirit of mutual help.’

    The injured were so numerous that the intensive care unit and operating theatre at the regional hospital quickly hit full capacity, said Reynard.

    Dr Robert Larribau, head of the Emergency Médical Communication Centre at Geneva University Hospitals, said the victims they are treating there are suffering from severe, third degree burns.

    He added that the patients are ‘very young… between 15 and 25 years old’.

    Speaking to BBC Radio 4’s The World Tonight, he said some are also suffering from ‘internal’ burns, after breathing in smoke.

    The sheer number of casualties from the inferno has created difficulties for the local hospitals in Zurich and Lausanne, he said.

    A promotional video for the club shows waitresses passing around champagne bottles fitted with sparklers

    Members of the police stand outside the “Le Constellation” bar, after a fire and explosion during a New Year’s Eve party where several people died and others were injured, according to Swiss police, in the upscale ski resort of Crans-Montana in southwestern Switzerland, January 2, 2026

    On Thursday, three of the wounded were being transported from Switzerland to a Milan hospital, the Italian civil protection agency said.

    Top-flight French football team FC Metz said one of its trainee players, 19-year-old Tahirys Dos Santos, was badly burned and has been transferred by plane to Germany for treatment.

    Speaking to Rai News, Anthony said he’d been queuing to get into the nightclub when he noticed smoke.

    Describing how he originally thought it was a special effect, he said: ‘If I had arrived five minutes later, maybe I wouldn’t be here now.’

    Jacques Moretti, 49, and his wife Jessica, 40, the owners of the Swiss nightclub, are now facing a raft of questions over how the deadly blaze spread so quickly in their basement venue and turned it into a deathtrap.

    The couple, from the French island of Corsica, opened their bar called Le Constellation in the upmarket ski resort of Crans-Montana in December 2015 after falling in love with the area when they visited for a week’s holiday in 2011.

    The bar with an upstairs terrace and a basement club, featuring DJs and live music, became one of the most popular nightspots in the town with a clientele of mainly young and affluent winter sports fans and locals.

    According to the Crans-Montana website, the bar offered an ‘elegant space’ and a ‘festive atmosphere’ with online descriptions of it being the ‘place to be’ and popular with an international crowd.

    Images show the moment before a deadly New Year’s Eve blaze a Swiss ski resort bar killed 47 people. A waitress had been seen dancing and waving a lit sparkler beneath foam soundproofing panels on the ceiling, which then caught light

    It’s understood that it is also one of few bars in the ski resort that allows revellers who are 16 and over inside rather than having to be 18.

    The basement venue was fitted with wooden furnishings and foam-style ceiling material and had only one narrow staircase for partygoers trying to escape.

    Following the fire, more than 30 victims were taken to hospitals with specialised burn units in Zurich and Lausanne, and six were taken to Geneva.

    A nearby convention centre has been transformed into a crisis unit, a few hundred metres away from the remnants of the burned nightclub.

    Le Constellation had a capacity of 300 people, plus another 40 people on its terrace, according to the Crans-Montana website.

    At a press conference in Switzerland on Friday, Reynard said the Lausanne University Hospital had ‘admitted more than 20 injured people’.

    ‘Several injured people are still fighting for their lives,’ he said, adding a nurse had told him about the silence in hospital wards.

    Of the 113 identified survivors who have been wounded, 71 are Swiss, 14 are French, and 11 are Italian, according to Gisler.

    The group also includes four Serbs, one Bosnian, one Belgian, one Luxembourger, one Pole, and one Portuguese. The origin of 14 individuals remains unclear.

    Pierre-Antoine Lengen, the chief inspector, said 30 officials have been deployed to help identify the victims, including dentists.

    ‘We are aware that the waiting is very difficult, but we cannot afford any mistakes in these procedures,’ he said, adding that DNA tests were being carried out.

  • DOUBLE TRAGEDY AT SEA AT least two people have d̵i̵e̵d̵ after desperately trying to rescue a teenage girl swept into the freezing sea — as a major search for a third person continues through the night DD

    DOUBLE TRAGEDY AT SEA AT least two people have d̵i̵e̵d̵ after desperately trying to rescue a teenage girl swept into the freezing sea — as a major search for a third person continues through the night DD

    DOUBLE TRAGEDY AT SEA AT least two people have d̵i̵e̵d̵ after desperately trying to rescue a teenage girl swept into the freezing sea — as a major search for a third person continues through the night

    Rescuers will today continue searching for a missing person off the East Yorkshire coast after two people were pulled from the water during a major search operation yesterday.

    Police confirmed a 67-year-old man and a second victim tragically lost their lives after getting into difficulty in the freezing water, near Withernsea, East Riding of Yorkshire, on Friday afternoon as an Arctic chill grips Britain.

    Rescue crews launched a dramatic rescue mission following reports of a ‘number of people in difficulty in the water’.

    Witnesses claim a teenage girl was caught by a large wave, near Pier Towers, before she was overwhelmed by the sea, sparking scenes of panic as people tried to rescue her.

    Humberside Police last night confirmed two deaths and that they were still attempting to rescue one person from the water.

    The double tragedy came just hours after a man in his 50s died after getting into difficulty at Brighton beach on New Year’s Day.

    HM Coastguard, Yorkshire Ambulance Service, Humberside Police, and Humberside Fire and Rescue all scrambled crews to Withernsea at around 3.15pm to try and rescue those in the freezing sea.

    Rescuers stood down their search for the third person at 12.30am on Saturday morning and will resume at first light.

    HM Coastguard deployed a helicopter to the scene following reports of people getting into difficulty in the water

    Eyewitnesses reported seeing flashing blue lights across the promenade

    HM Coastguard and Humberside Police were among the services called to the scene

    A spokesperson for Humberside Police said last night: ‘During the initial searches, emergency services recovered an unconscious man from the water. Despite the best efforts we can confirm a 67-year-old man died a short time later at the scene.

    ‘The circumstances around his death are not thought to be suspicious. Searches are still ongoing. Residents will continue to see an increased police presence in and around the area as the search continues.

    ‘We would ask people to please avoid the area to allow emergency services to work efficiently and safely.’

    They later added: ‘We can now confirm that earlier this evening (Friday, 2 January 2026) a second body was recovered from the sea. The circumstances are not believed to be suspicious.

    ‘Humberside Police officers along with HM Coastguard, Yorkshire Ambulance Service and Humberside Fire & Rescue, remain in the area as searches continue for one more person who entered the water this afternoon.’

    A spokesman for HM Coastguard said: ‘HM Coastguard has been searching for two missing people in the water off Withernsea this afternoon and evening (2 January).

    ‘First alerted to reports of people in difficulty in the water at around 3.10pm, assets sent to the scene included an HM Coastguard search and rescue helicopter and fixed-wing aircraft, Coastguard Rescue Teams, the RNLI and Hornsea Inshore Rescue, alongside Humberside Police, Yorkshire Ambulance Service and Humberside Fire and Rescue.

    ‘After extensive shoreline and offshore searches, the search was stood down at around half past midnight (12.30am, 3 January). Efforts will resume at first light, when coastguard rescue teams along with partner agencies will be sent to conduct additional searches of the area.’

    It comes just one day after people were not allowed to enter the sea for the annual New Year’s Day swim event due to large breaking waves, and amid a yellow weather warning for snow and ice on the Yorkshire coast.

    Snow showers are expected overnight, with the Met Office reporting a likelihood of around one to three cm of snow, with up to eight cm possible in places.

    It’s due to an Arctic chill, with the Met Office expecting daytime temperatures across the UK to struggle to breach 0C (32F) and could even fall into the minus double digits over the coming days.

    The search has been ongoing for much of the afternoon and into Friday evening.

    Resident Darrin Stevens told the BBC he had seen lots of emergency crews near the beach on Friday, adding: ‘It’s just blue lights, wall-to-wall from one side to the other’.

    Another eyewitness, Karen Higgs, claimed a teenage girl had fallen into the sea.

    Crews remain on the promenade and have urged residents to avoid the area

    The major rescue operation has pulled together all emergency services in the area

    She told The Telegraph people had attempted to pull her back to safety with a safety ring, but that she ‘never tried to catch it’.

    ‘We were all shouting at her to catch it, catch it’, she said. ‘She just didn’t. Then she was going out further. Every time she went out she came in harder.

    Paul Whitehead, the owner of Castle Cafe on the promenade, told The Telegraph the sea was so rough that the girl, who he estimated to be around 15 years old, ‘got washed away’.

    He added that four men who were on the promenade went to help, along with the girl’s parents.

    ‘The young girl had hold of the ring but was hit by a wave and couldn’t hold on and went under,’ he said.