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  • 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.

  • 𝐍𝐄𝐖 𝐘𝐄𝐀𝐑’𝐒 𝐍𝐈𝐆𝐇𝐓 𝐓𝐔𝐑𝐍𝐄𝐃 𝐈𝐍𝐓𝐎 𝐀 𝐍𝐈𝐆𝐇𝐓𝐌𝐀𝐑𝐄  After rejecting a kiss from her abusive ex, she says her life was destroyed in seconds — leaving her paralysed DD

    𝐍𝐄𝐖 𝐘𝐄𝐀𝐑’𝐒 𝐍𝐈𝐆𝐇𝐓 𝐓𝐔𝐑𝐍𝐄𝐃 𝐈𝐍𝐓𝐎 𝐀 𝐍𝐈𝐆𝐇𝐓𝐌𝐀𝐑𝐄  After rejecting a kiss from her abusive ex, she says her life was destroyed in seconds — leaving her paralysed DD

    𝐍𝐄𝐖 𝐘𝐄𝐀𝐑’𝐒 𝐍𝐈𝐆𝐇𝐓 𝐓𝐔𝐑𝐍𝐄𝐃 𝐈𝐍𝐓𝐎 𝐀 𝐍𝐈𝐆𝐇𝐓𝐌𝐀𝐑𝐄 After rejecting a kiss from her abusive ex, she says her life was destroyed in seconds — leaving her paralysed


    Janine recovering in hospital after being pushed over a banister by Barry Shankly (Picture: Janine Kazmi/SWNS)
    A woman was left paralysed after her ex pushed her over a bannister and broke her spine because she refused to give him a ‘New Year’s kiss’.

    Barry Shankly, 45, attacked Janine Kazmi, 38, two months after Janine ended the relationship due to his abuse.

    She had relunctantly remained friends with him as it was ‘easier than dealing with him unhappy’ and agreed to celebrate New Year’s Eve together.

    But as they were about to leave his house in Dalmornock, Scotland, he tried to kiss her.

    When she rebutted him Shankly became ‘enraged’ and shoved her over the bannister.

    Janine woke-up with two fractured vertebrae and when she initially couldn’t remember what happened, Shankly told her she had accidently fallen.

    But she soon regained her memory of the incident, and told police not only what had happened that night but of the months of ‘controlling and violent behaviour’ she’d endured while they were together.

    Shankly was found guilty of engaging in a course of conduct which was abusive of his partner or ex-partner at Glasgow High Court in July 2024 and sentenced to 14 years in prison.


    Barry Shankly was jailed for 14 years (Picture: Janine Kazmi/SWNS)
    Janine is now hoping to help other survivors of domestic abuse by encouraging people to ‘speak out’.

    Speaking about the impact of the attack,the peer support worker, said: ‘I’ll never walk again and I’m not able to have kids due to my injury.

    ‘Not only did he take away my life, but he stopped another one happening.

    ‘I never imaged my life this way, but you’ve got to put in the work – mentally and physically.’

    Janine met Shankly on a dating site October 2016, while she was living and working in Thailand.

    The pair began a long-distance relationship, before Shankly invited her to move into his flat in Glasgow, Scotland, in September 2019.

    Janine said she began experiencing increasing “controlling” behaviour from Shankly after the move.

    ‘He checked my phone and locked me in the flat. I wasn’t allowed friends – he isolated me from everyone,’ she recalled.

    Things escalated during a trip to Lisbon, Portugal, in January 2020, when Shankly ‘stamped on her mobile’ and ‘pushed’ her over – causing her to fall and hit her head.


    Janine is now paralysed and in a wheelchair (Picture: James Linsell Clark/SWNS)
    ‘It was meant to be a happy time, but I was pushed, pulled, threatened,’ she said.

    ‘He promised it wouldn’t happen again, and I fell for his lies.’

    In October 2020 Janine decided to end things and it was on December 31 that year, Shankly attempted to kiss her.

    ‘I told him our relationship wasn’t like that anymore and he pushed me,’ she said.

    ‘On impact apparently, I was coherent – it must have been the shock and adrenaline.

    ‘But I lost consciousness and woke-up in hospital with no memory of the fall.’

    Janine was admitted to Glasgow Royal Infirmary and underwent surgery on her spine on January 6, 2021.

    She was later told be doctors she had fractured her spine between the 23rd and 25th vertebrae and would be left paraplegic.

    ‘I was on my own when I got the news. I was devastated. My life changed in an instant.’


    Janine and Shankly when they were together (Picture: Janine Kazmi/SWNS)
    Shankly visited Janine in hospital and ‘fed’ her ‘lies’ about the fall.

    ‘He said I was sat on the banninster on the phone when I fell off.

    ‘But my memory started coming back and I knew there was no phone call.

    ‘He was telling people different things and it didn’t add up.’

    Janine was eventually transferred to The London Spinal Cord Injury Centre, Stanmore, London, for rehabilitation and eventually moved to Southend.

    Shankly was arrested and pleaded not guilty. The case went to High Court, Glasgow, in July 2024 and Janine joined via video link to give her evidence, before he was found guilty and jailed.

    Janine went on to spend two years living in temporary housing between 2021-2023 that was ‘inaccessible’ while waiting for a permanent property

    She eventually got her own council property in Southend, Essex, but claims it took a further two years for adjustments to be made.

    She said: ‘I had to pursue them to get it sorted. I didn’t have a suitable bathroom or kitchen for years.


    Janine, pictured after the accident, hopes her story will encourage other domestic violence victims to speak out (Picture: Janine Kazmi/SWNS)
    ‘It was so degrading – he’s in prison but at least he had access to a toilet.’

    Encouring other domestic violence survivors to speak out, she said: ‘If anyone asks me about my disability, I tell them what happened.

    ‘I’m not ashamed – it’s important to spread awareness. Suicide rates in people with spinal injuries is high.

    ‘If you don’t see improvements in the first five years, it’s unlikely you ever will.

    ‘That’s too hard for some people to get their head around. It’s bloody hard, but there is life after a spinal injury.’

    Cllr Anne Jones, cabinet member for housing and communities, at Southend on Sea City Council, said the council was ‘committed to supporting residents with disabilities and ensuring they have access to housing that meets their needs’.

    She added, however, that for privacy reasons she can’t comment on individual cases.

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  • “MY WHOLE WORLD IS GONE”  A police officer who lost his family in the Boxing Day fire has paid a devastating tribute to the loved ones taken from him DD

    “MY WHOLE WORLD IS GONE”  A police officer who lost his family in the Boxing Day fire has paid a devastating tribute to the loved ones taken from him DD

    “MY WHOLE WORLD IS GONE” A police officer who lost his family in the Boxing Day fire has paid a devastating tribute to the loved ones taken from him


    Tom Shearman with his wife F,ionnghuala, who was killed in the fire
    The dad who lost his wife, two children and dog in a Boxing Day house fire has paid tribute to his family after ‘its very core was ripped from it in the most violent way’.

    Tom Shearman has revealed his ‘anguish and trauma’ after losing his wife Fionnghuala, known to friends as Nu, daughter Eve, seven, and son, Ohner, four, after they were trapped in the burning house in Briscombe.

    He said: ‘I have stared at my keypad for what seems like an eternity waiting for the words to appear. I have no way to thank any of you for the unbelievable out of this world generosity that you have shown to me in the darkest of hours.

    ‘My life, the lives of my loved ones, my friends and the whole community changed on Boxing Day. Most importantly, and tragically, three of the greatest humans to ever grace our presence were taken from not just me, but all of us.

    ‘I cannot begin to describe the anguish and trauma of the events of Boxing Day 2025. My family had its very core, its very essence, ripped from it in the most violent way.


    Tom Shearman has revealed his ‘anguish and trauma’ after losing his wife Fionnghuala, known to friends as Nu, daughter Eve, seven, and son, Ohner, four


    The scene of the tragic house fire on Brimscombe Hill in Stroud, Gloucestershire (Picture: Emma Trimble/SWNS)
    ‘While nothing can ever undo what has happened, nor can it ever make sense of the suffering, I am genuinely humbled beyond comprehension at what this page has and is doing.

    ‘My family and friends have rallied around and provided me with more than the bare essentials. I have a roof (and many offers) over my head, clothes on my back, food – most importantly company and compassion. I will heal.

    ‘I have already started the ball rolling on a plan that came to me just as I was falling past the precipice of the abyss. I WILL make sure my unbelievably talented, empathetic, compassionate and beautiful wife’s legacy of craft, design and making lives on.


    Fionnghuala Shearman with her two children
    ‘As will I ensure that my bright spark Eve’s legacy of enjoyment from books and writing be carried on. Along with my incredible son’s sheer compassion and desire to help people.

    ‘I thank each and every one of you for your donations. I shall forever be in your debt and you will now forever be in my thoughts and prayers, hopefully I can repay in some way.

    ‘Please all take every opportunity to hug your loved ones, tell them you love them. Because, as Paulo Coelho said, one day you will wake up and there won’t be any more time to do the things you want. Do it now.

    ‘My heartfelt thanks to the emergency services whom tried everything to save my wonderful family. I hope they are all being looked after by their colleagues and friends. Boxing day was horrific for all involved.

    ‘Now go light up the darkest corners and the black sky. In memory of Nu. Eve. Ohner. Hutch.’

    The fire caused the roof of the mid-terrace Cotswold stone cottage to fall in, while the ceilings and stairs have also collapsed.

    It is understood to have started on the ground floor and at this time is not being treated as suspicious.

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  • “STRICTLY IS DAMAGED”  Former BBC boss drops a bombshell warning — saying the show may need to STOP if it wants to survive. Behind the glitter, the reputation is cracking… and insiders are worried it’s already too late. DD

    “STRICTLY IS DAMAGED”  Former BBC boss drops a bombshell warning — saying the show may need to STOP if it wants to survive. Behind the glitter, the reputation is cracking… and insiders are worried it’s already too late. DD

    “STRICTLY IS DAMAGED” Former BBC boss drops a bombshell warning — saying the show may need to STOP if it wants to survive. Behind the glitter, the reputation is cracking… and insiders are worried it’s already too late.


    Strictly Come Dancing has had a turbulent few years – should it take a break in 2026? (Picture: PA)
    A former BBC Head of Communications has recommended Strictly Come Dancing take a break in 2026 to save its reputation.

    Sam Hodges, who was a coms chief at the BBC from 2011 to 2015, has taken to social media 20 years after he helped launch the ballroom dancing show to give his verdict on the show’s future following a turbulent few years.

    The BBC flagship series has been at the centre of a number of controversies, with multiple bullying claims, drug use accusations, and two arrests on suspicion of rape shrouding the show.

    Now with the shock departure of long-running co-hosts Tess Daly and Claudia Winkleman, Hodges recommends the show take a leaf out of Glastonbury Festival’s book, as he calls for a fallow year in 2026 to reset and refresh the series.

    Taking to LinkedIn, he wrote: ‘It’s 20+ years since I launched Strictly Come Dancing as an Assistant Publicist at the BBC. A non-priority new show with the working title Pro-Celebrity Come Dancing. No one knew the hit it would become.


    Claudia Winkleman and Tess Daly shocked fans by announcing their departure earlier this year (Picture: Karwai Tang/WireImage)
    ‘For the first time though, I think it’s time to take a leaf out of Glastonbury’s book and consider a fallow year for 2026.

    ‘This series has clearly been tough on a whole host of fronts, but reputationally its biggest boost might well come from helping people realise what they’d miss, rather than chasing salvation by rushing into immediate contract talks with new producers, presenters, and cast.

    ‘Things rarely finish on a high in TV – more often an exhausted final series or a controversy that brings things to a sudden or crashing end.

    ‘Glastonbury’s fallow years increase demand for tickets rather than opening the door to competitors – they allow new energy to return to both the line-up and the land.

    ‘To save the show’s reputation, 2026 might be the year for the BBC and Strictly to do the same.’

    However, not everyone agreed with Hodges’ views, as another communications expert commented: ‘I’m not sure I agree, but I do understand the sentiment.

    ‘I’ve only really come to Strictly in the last few years, and for me it’s simply been a lovely thing to watch. Warm, familiar TV and a chance to properly switch off once a week.’


    Meanwhile, the BBC are reportedly eyeing up La Voix for a presenting role in the show (Picture: BBC)
    It was previously reported that bosses were said to be considering pausing the show in the wake of a star’s arrest on suspicion of raping a woman after a BBC event.

    The man, who cannot be named, was arrested in October. The victim was not a contestant or dancer on the BBC show, but the two met because of the man’s involvement in the programme.

    In November, a source insisted to the Daily Mail that the show will go ahead in 2026, claiming: ‘It’s already been commissioned for 2026. And after that, there is no way it is going anywhere.’

    They added that viewers could be inclined to cancel their TV licence if the show were to be axed.

    ‘If you take that away there is a huge risk they will stop paying for their licence, and that would be an absolute catastrophe,’ the source said.

    Meanwhile, sources recently claimed to Daily Mail that producers are eyeing up drag performer La Voix for a role in the show.

    Speaking to the Daily Mail, the source said: ‘Producers think she [La Voix] is the next Dame Edna Everage and are determined to find her a role on Strictly, whether that be on the main show or It Takes Two [the Strictly spin-off show].’

    Presenting duo Claudia and Tess revealed their exit with a video on the latter’s Instagram, where they addressed ‘rumblings’ about them leaving.

    ‘We want you to hear this from us,’ said Celebrity Traitors host Claudia.

    ‘After 21 wonderfully joyful years on Strictly, we have decided that the time is right to step aside and pass over the baton,’ Tess added.

    Rumours are circulating over who their replacements could be, with names such as Radio 2 star Zoe Ball, Bradley Walsh, Alex Jones, Alan Carr, Amanda Holden, Holly Willoughby, Rylan Clark, and Alison Hammond all being floated around as contenders to take up the sought after slot.

  • From Loneliness to Love: The Untold Emotional Journey That Shaped Hamza Yassin DD

    From Loneliness to Love: The Untold Emotional Journey That Shaped Hamza Yassin DD

    From Loneliness to Love: The Untold Emotional Journey That Shaped Hamza Yassin

    Hamza Yassin has long been admired for his calm presence, gentle wisdom and deep connection to the natural world. But in a rare and honest new interview, the much-loved wildlife presenter has revealed a more personal side — opening up about love, loneliness and what he hopes for the future.

    Speaking candidly, Hamza admitted that he is currently single and has been for some time. Having lived alone since his university days, he says he has grown comfortable with solitude and independence. Yet behind that quiet contentment lies a simple, human longing.

    “I’ve learned how to be happy on my own,” he explained, “but I would love to share my life with someone one day.”

    It’s a confession that struck a chord with fans — a reminder that even those who seem most at peace can still hope for connection. Hamza made it clear that he isn’t searching desperately, but remains open to love when the time feels right.

    Finding Healing Beyond Romance

    While his personal life remains private, Hamza’s public work continues to reflect what brings him peace: nature

    Alongside his television projects, Hamza is now working closely with the National Trust and other conservation organisations, encouraging people to reconnect with the natural world — particularly during the quieter, darker months of autumn and winter.

    The campaign focuses on the idea of seasonal “wild connection”, showing how small moments outdoors — a frosty morning walk, birdsong in bare trees, or the stillness of winter landscapes — can offer comfort, grounding and improved mental wellbeing.

    Hamza has spoken passionately about how nature supported him through difficult periods of his own life, helping him slow down, reflect and find balance.

    “Nature doesn’t rush you,” he has said. “It meets you where you are.”

    A Gentle Voice for a Noisy World

    For many, Hamza Yassin represents something rare in modern television: softness, sincerity and emotional honesty. Whether he’s talking about wildlife, mental health, or the hope of finding love, his words resonate because they are unforced — and real.

    As he continues to inspire viewers to look up, step outside and reconnect with the world around them, Hamza’s story feels quietly powerful.

    Not a headline-grabbing romance.
    Not a dramatic confession.
    Just a man, honest about who he is — and hopeful about what might still be ahead.

  • “PEOPLE SAID WE’D NEVER LAST…” Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen has fired back at critics tearing into his very unconventional living arrangement — then dropped the shock truth behind his 40-year marriage to Jackie Llewelyn-Bowen DD

    “PEOPLE SAID WE’D NEVER LAST…” Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen has fired back at critics tearing into his very unconventional living arrangement — then dropped the shock truth behind his 40-year marriage to Jackie Llewelyn-Bowen DD

    “PEOPLE SAID WE’D NEVER LAST…” Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen has fired back at critics tearing into his very unconventional living arrangement — then dropped the shock truth behind his 40-year marriage to Jackie Llewelyn-Bowen

    Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen has hit back at critics who think his unconventional living situation is ‘strange’.

    The interior designer, 60, lives with his wife Jackie, their two grown-up daughters, Hermione, 26, and Cecile, 29, and their husbands Dan and Drew – as well as their four grandchildren, Albion, 8, Demelza, 3, Romily, 1, and Eleanora, 18 months.

    Laurence set tongues wagging when he first announced the unusual arrangement that the family would be living all under one roof at his six bedroom Cotswolds manor house.

    In an exclusive interview with Daily Mail, Laurence delighted in speaking about his tight family unit and hit back at haters who disagree with the idea.

    He said: ‘I still think a lot of people think it is a bit strange. But actually, it is a very kind of straightforward and instinctive way of a family being together.

    ‘It’s a very, very odd idea that came out of the 20th century, this idea of of children leaving the home. Actually, traditionally, you stayed if you all worked on the farm together or you worked in the shop together, so in a funny sort of way, we’re just kind of reviving that, but it made great sense for us.

    Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen has hit back at critics who think his unconventional living situation is ‘strange’ (pictured with his wife Jackie)

    Laurence set tongues wagging when he first announced the unusual arrangement that the family would be living all under one roof at his six bedroom Cotswolds manor house

    ‘You know, we live in a big house. It was very much just me and Jackie. Why do we not then bring the children and their children in with us?’

    Speaking about how the family deal with being in each other’s company every day, Laurence added: ‘There are moments where you’ve got to work quite hard.

    ‘But I think that happens in any family, but we confront it and get on with them.’

    Amid the madness of his busy household, Laurence still manages to keep the spark alive with his wife Jackie.

    The smitten couple, who have been together for over four decades, celebrated 35 years of marriage this year.

    He said: ‘In January, we will basically have been together for 41 years. So, I mean, that is that’s a big chunk of lifetime.

    ‘We were very good at making a commitment and in those 41 years, there have been moments where we’ve had to work very hard to make sure that we were still getting on, that we weren’t still sparkling off each other.

    ‘And I think that’s something that some people are quite quick to give in about.’

    Laurence lives with Jackie, their two grown-up daughters, Hermione, 26, and Cecile, 29, and their husbands Dan and Drew – as well as their four grandchildren

    The six bedroom property is having to be adapted to cater for the 10 of them

    Laurence also has dogs and cats who reside at the countryside home

    The sprawling property has impressive gardens

    Laurence is gearing up for another exciting release of his property series, House Of The Year alongside judges Jane Larmour, James Fairley and Patricia McGinnis

    The designer continued: ‘You do have to find positives. It’s not a Disney movie. You do wake up in the morning and you do feel grumpy. You do kind of have moments where things p*** you off.

    ‘I’m quite a tolerant person. That’s cool. That works really well. I’m quite laid back. There are times when Jackie is very energised, but, I mean, after 41 years together, you know the ins and the outs. You know the kind of warning signs.’

    Laurence is gearing up for another exciting release of his property series, House Of The Year alongside judges Jane Larmour, James Fairley and Patricia McGinnis.

    House Of The Year returns to BBC iPlayer and BBC One Northern Ireland with the first five episodes available to watch from Monday 5 January.

    In each episode, three new homes will compete for one of five places in the grand final where they could be crowned – House Of The Year.

    The grand final will broadcast February 9.

    Laurence said: ‘I am very proud of House Of The Year and was involved in the first iteration back in 2010 and it was, and still is, a brilliant way of showcasing a kind of aspirational vision of the housing landscape in Northern Ireland.

    ‘What I love about coming back to it now, is the fact there is such an immense ramp up in terms of individuality, personality and creativity. I think people no longer feel they must do things in a “grown-up” way.

    ‘People are letting their “freak flag” fly and are doing things their own way!’

  • TV STUDIO DETONATES AS CONOR McGREGOR GOES NUCLEAR ON STARMER AND THROWS HIS FULL WEIGHT BEHIND TOMMY ROBINSON  DD

    TV STUDIO DETONATES AS CONOR McGREGOR GOES NUCLEAR ON STARMER AND THROWS HIS FULL WEIGHT BEHIND TOMMY ROBINSON  DD

    TV STUDIO DETONATES AS CONOR McGREGOR GOES NUCLEAR ON STARMER AND THROWS HIS FULL WEIGHT BEHIND TOMMY ROBINSON

    In a riveting and unrelenting television appearance, Conor McGregor unleashed a fierce critique of UK Labour leader Keir Starmer while mounting a powerful defense of controversial figure Tommy Robinson, igniting a firestorm across Britain’s political landscape. The MMA superstar’s outspoken stance on free speech has thrust a deeply divisive issue onto the national stage with unprecedented intensity.

    McGregor’s comments, delivered with his trademark raw energy, challenged the UK government’s handling of Robinson’s case, exposing what he described as a disturbing pattern of political censorship and punitive overreach. Robinson’s imprisonment, following a contempt of court conviction linked to breaching an injunction, has drawn sharp criticism for the severity of the sentence and his conditions in custody, including prolonged solitary confinement.

    The fighter’s visceral condemnation directly targeted Starmer, leaving the politician visibly scrambling to justify the government’s approach during the live broadcast. McGregor’s central argument championed a fundamental democratic principle: those exposing uncomfortable truths deserve praise, not punishment. His assertion that “light is the best disinfectant” struck at the heart of Britain’s free speech debate, challenging the selective enforcement of gag orders and the silencing of dissenting voices.

    Robinson, known for his polarizing views and part Irish heritage, has become a symbol for McGregor’s broader critique of Britain’s justice system and political establishment. The 18-month sentence he now serves for contempt has been widely scrutinized, with many questioning whether his treatment represents political retribution rather than fair judicial process.

    McGregor didn’t mince words describing the potential human cost: fear of mental breakdown, death in jail, and a chilling message to future generations about the dangers of speaking out. His vivid portrayal of Robinson’s ordeal served as a rallying cry for transparency and accountability, demanding that political authorities end what he called the suppression of inconvenient facts.

    The sports star’s intervention resonates wildly because it breaks from celebrity shallow endorsements, stemming instead from his real-world experiences as a business owner aware of governance’s tangible consequences. By raising issues from immigration to crime, McGregor underscores his investment in societal outcomes beyond the octagon, giving his words an uncommon weight in political discourse.

    This confrontation elevates Robinson’s case into a broader, uncomfortable national reckoning. It questions whether Britain can still claim to be a democracy that upholds justice visibly and fairly, especially when political affiliations seem to influence who faces the harshest penalties for speech transgressions. The notion that Robinson’s confinement is disproportionate compared to others convicted of similar procedural violations fuels accusations of targeted suppression.

    Across the UK media and political sphere, Robinson has often been pigeonholed as an extremist, an oversimplification that McGregor’s rebuke challenges outright. The inconsistencies in enforcement reveal cracks in the facade of impartial justice, forcing citizens to confront the troubling reality of ideological selective punishment.

    McGregor’s position as a cultural and economic powerhouse in Ireland further intensifies his influence. Unlike many commentators, his criticisms come attached to substantial social and economic clout, making it difficult for politicians to dismiss him as a frivolous or disconnected celebrity. His direct challenge to Starmer symbolizes a broader distrust of political elites perceived as evasive and disconnected from public concerns.

    The live  TV exchange exposed stark contrasts: polished political rhetoric versus McGregor’s unfiltered transparency. Where establishment figures offered guarded explanations, McGregor’s blunt questions echoed a growing public skepticism towards official narratives that conceal rather than reveal. His defiant demand to shed light on “horrific crimes” they’d rather ignore struck a nerve nationwide.

    This confrontation is not simply about Tommy Robinson. It reflects a fundamental crisis over who controls information, who decides which stories are told, and which opinions must be censored or punished. The issue transcends a single legal case, rippling into the core of Britain’s democratic identity and its commitment to free expression.

    McGregor’s testimony has sparked an urgent debate on the balance between protecting court processes and preserving free speech rights. His urgent call for transparency challenges the government to justify the harsh punishments meted out for what some see as procedural missteps dressed as criminal contempt.

    The British public now faces a critical choice echoed by McGregor’s fervent words: uphold the messy, sometimes uncomfortable reality of free speech or retreat into a conformist society where dissent is stifled and punished. As Robinson endures his sentence, the narrative is shifting from a legal matter into a high-stakes cultural battle over the future of free expression in the UK.

    Starmer’s uneasy responses reveal political discomfort when confronted with blunt truths outside of controlled media environments. McGregor’s unapologetic tone and refusal to back down underscore a growing impatience with political doublespeak and censorship by bureaucratic decree.

    In the wake of these explosive remarks, increased scrutiny on how Britain prosecutes speech-related offenses is inevitable. The question lingers: does the severity of Robinson’s punishment signify a dangerous precedent where political dissent is criminalized rather than debated?

    This breaking story demands urgent attention. McGregor’s direct challenge to a major political figure and the defense of a contentious prisoner have transformed a complex legal case into a flashpoint for the ongoing struggle over truth, justice, and free speech in modern Britain. The ramifications will echo far beyond the courtroom and the octagon, pressing the nation to reckon with its values and the price of silence.

  •  “I WAKE UP GRIEVING WHILE SHE IS STILL BESIDE ME…”  Martin Frizell has shared a shattering update on wife Fiona Phillips — laying bare the brutal reality of early-onset Alzheimer’s DD

     “I WAKE UP GRIEVING WHILE SHE IS STILL BESIDE ME…”  Martin Frizell has shared a shattering update on wife Fiona Phillips — laying bare the brutal reality of early-onset Alzheimer’s DD

    “I WAKE UP GRIEVING WHILE SHE IS STILL BESIDE ME…” Martin Frizell has shared a shattering update on wife Fiona Phillips — laying bare the brutal reality of early-onset Alzheimer’s

    Martin Frizell has offered a deeply moving update on the health of his wife, beloved broadcaster Fiona Phillips, revealing that the realities of her dementia diagnosis have left the couple navigating days that are “no longer good or bad — only bad or wretched.”

    Speaking candidly on Newsnight during an interview with Victoria Derbyshire, the former This Morning editor described how Fiona’s condition has continued to worsen, particularly her short-term memory, which now fades almost instantly.

    “Good days and bad days are gone”

    Frizell admitted that the language he once used to track Fiona’s progress no longer applies.

    “I used to say we had good days and bad days,” he reflected. “Now I say bad days or wretched days. That’s where we are.”

    The comment captured the painful emotional toll the couple has experienced since Fiona — a widely respected journalist and TV host — was diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer’s in 2022 at the age of 61.

    In new excerpts from their joint memoir, Fiona Phillips and husband Martin Frizell get candid about her Alzheimer’s diagnosis (Picture: Leon Neal/Getty Images)

    72 repeated questions in 35 minutes

    Frizell recounted one particularly stark moment: a short taxi ride to a medical appointment that revealed the extent of Fiona’s memory loss.

    In the span of just 35 minutes, Fiona asked him 72 times where they were going.

    “It’s most days now,” he said quietly. “Her short-term memory is shot. Completely gone.”

    He explained that Fiona often becomes confused or anxious when trying to process simple information, describing a version of his wife who is still loving, warm and present, but increasingly disconnected from reality as moments slip away faster than he can reassure her.

    A couple trying to adapt — and grieving in real time

    Fiona Phillips has been open in the past about her fear of dementia, which runs in her family. Both her mother and father died after battles with Alzheimer’s, and she once admitted that she worried she might follow the same path. That fear became reality in 2022 when doctors confirmed her diagnosis.

    Frizell said the couple now live in a world measured minute-by-minute — one where Fiona’s vibrant career, sharp wit and tireless work ethic feel agonisingly distant.

    “She was someone who thrived on work. Someone who never stopped,” he said. “To see her now, confused, frightened, asking the same question again and again… it’s heartbreaking.”

    A reminder of a national crisis

    Beyond his personal grief, Frizell used the interview to highlight the challenges families across the UK face in accessing support for dementia patients — calling the system “overwhelmed, underfunded, and nowhere near prepared.”

    He stressed that hundreds of thousands of families are quietly fighting the same battle, often without adequate resources.

    Fiona is “still here” — but changed forever

    Despite the grim outlook, Frizell emphasised that Fiona’s personality still shines through in moments of clarity: her humour, her warmth, and flashes of the journalist Britain came to love.

    “She’s still with us. She’s still Fiona,” he said. “But the Fiona who could hold a conversation, remember details, organise a day… she slips away a little more each week.”

    As the interview closed, Frizell’s voice wavered — a man grieving the loss of the woman he loves while she is still physically beside him.

  • PALACE WAR ERUPTS  Meghan Markle has reportedly dropped a bombshell letter to King Charles — complaining about royal rules and reigniting fresh chaos inside the Palace. DD

    PALACE WAR ERUPTS  Meghan Markle has reportedly dropped a bombshell letter to King Charles — complaining about royal rules and reigniting fresh chaos inside the Palace. DD

    PALACE WAR ERUPTS Meghan Markle has reportedly dropped a bombshell letter to King Charles — complaining about royal rules and reigniting fresh chaos inside the Palace.

    Meghan Markle reportedly wanted answers from King Charles.

    Meghan reportedly sent a letter to King Charles (Image: GETTY)

    Meghan Markle reportedly tried to make private contact with King Charles to ask about why she was prohibited from doing certain things when she was a working royal. Since making the decision to step away from her official role in 2020, Meghan has been criticised for publicly voicing her thoughts on her time as a member of the Firm.

    It has been reported that Meghan did try and resolve the challenges she was experiencing behind closed doors, with her having written a letter to her father-in-law. In the message, Meghan is said to have complained about “different rules” that she had to follow while carrying out her royal duties, compared to other members of the Royal Family.

    Speaking in a previous video uploaded to his YouTube channel, veteran royal-watcher Neil Sean claimed that Meghan “wanted answers” from the King.

    Meghan wrote to her father-in-law (Image: Getty)

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    Mr Sean said: “Meghan Markle wants some answers from His Majesty the King. She tried to set up a meeting with him, she sent him a letter and wanted a one-to-one to explain exactly the problems she’s encountered ever since becoming a member of the British monarchy.”

    He added that Meghan felt that she was treated differently from other extended family members, such as Sarah Ferguson.

    Mr Sean added: “The thing that really riles Meghan is that Fergie pops up on things like the ITV daytime show This Morning, Loose Women and billing herself as the Duchess of York, selling books and possibly doing adverts all under the Royal Family.

    “Meghan and Harry seemingly don’t understand why it’s a different rule for her.”

    Meghan and Harry now reside in California with their children (Image: Instagram/meghan)Five years after stepping down from royal life, Meghan and Harry now reside in California with their children, Prince Archie, six, and Princess Lilibet, four.

    The couple have just spent their seventh Christmas away from the royals, their sixth in the US.