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Grab yourself a coffee and let us break down the news in the UK this morning – it’s time for your daily dip into the headlines. From Westminster to the weather (yes, it’s raining again!) to sports and entertainment, regardless of whether you’re commuting or couch-bound – here are the stories you need to know.

Man acquitted after 38 years in prison – Weight-loss drugs breakthrough – Goodison becomes home for Everton WFC – Trump lifts sanctions on Syria 

Much of Wednesday’s headlines are dominated by the news that a man – convicted of the horrific murder of Diane Sindall in 1986, has finally been cleared and freed after new DNA evidence ruled him out

Peter Sullivan has spent nearly 40 years behind bars in what is believed to be the longest miscarriage of justice involving a living prisoner in British legal history.

A new study has highlighted the benefits of weight-loss drugs beyond tackling obesity in the UK – other benefits include halving the risk of heart attacks and strokes and appearing to protect the heart almost immediately.

Assisted dying is also dominating the UK news this morning with GPs deeply divided on the issue. It comes after the Scottish assisted dying bill passed its first vote at Holyrood. 

On the international front, Donald Trump has announced he will lift sanctions on Syria – as he embarks on a whirlwind tour of the Middle East, aimed at securing deals for the US and his private businesses. 

Man Freed After 38 Years as Murder Conviction Overturned

Man Freed After 38 Years as Murder Conviction Overturned

CliffNotes

  • Man freed after 38 years as murder conviction overturned
  • New DNA evidence emerged identifying an unknown attacker
  • Peter Sullivan is believed to be the longest-serving victim of a miscarriage of justice in UK

Man Freed After 38 Years as Murder Conviction Overturned

What Happened

Peter Sullivan, who spent nearly 40 years in prison for the 1986 murder of Diane Sindall in Birkenhead, has had his conviction quashed after new DNA evidence emerged identifying an unknown attacker.

The Court of Appeal heard that recent testing of preserved semen samples found a DNA profile not matching Mr Sullivan or anyone previously linked to the case. The Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC) referred the case back to the courts after concluding the evidence warranted a fresh look.

Mr Sullivan, now aged 68, appeared via video link from HMP Wakefield and broke down in tears as the judges confirmed his conviction would be overturned. He is believed to be the longest-serving victim of a miscarriage of justice involving a living prisoner in modern British legal history.

Ms Sindall, aged 21, was attacked while walking home from a bar shift in the early hours of 2 August 1986. She was sexually assaulted, subjected to multiple blows to the head, and her burning clothes were later found on Bidston Hill.

At the time, Mr Sullivan became a suspect after witnesses saw someone known as “Pete” fleeing the scene. He gave conflicting accounts of his movements and made what were described as “confessions” — despite having learning difficulties, no solicitor, and no appropriate adult present during questioning.

What Next

Mr Sullivan was released from HMP Wakefield shortly after the ruling, ending a decades-long ordeal. In a statement read by his solicitor, he said: “What happened to me was very wrong but does not detract from the fact that what happened was a heinous and most terrible loss of life. The truth shall set you free.”

His sister, Kim Smith, expressed sympathy for Diane Sindall’s family, saying: “No-one has won here… They’ve lost their daughter. We’ve got Peter back, and now we have to rebuild his life.”

Merseyside Police have reopened the investigation but confirmed the DNA profile does not match anyone in the national database, Diane’s fiancé at the time, or anyone in her family. Over 260 men have been tested since 2023, and detectives are working alongside the National Crime Agency to trace the unknown suspect.

Det Ch Supt Karen Jaundrill said extensive and painstaking efforts were underway to find the person responsible, describing the new DNA profile as a “vital piece of evidence”.

Media Reaction

ABC News reports despite spending four decades behind bars for a crime he did not commit, Peter Sullivan says he’s not ‘angry or bitter.’

The Independent says the pensioner spent nearly 40 years behind bars in what is thought to be the “longest-running miscarriage of justice in British history.”

Metro says Peter Sullivan was branded the “Beast of Birkenhead over the killing of Diane Sindall, 21, in a brutal sex attack” – he spent decades fighting fir his freedom.

BBC News asks why it took so long to free Peter Sullivan noting the only miscarriage of justice that took longer to be acknowledged by the criminal justice system was when Derek Bentley’s conviction for murder was overturned in 1998 – and he had been hanged in 1953, a year after he was convicted.

Trump Lifts Syria Sanctions as He Seals $142bn Arms Deal

CliffNotes

  • Trump lifts Syria sanctions
  • He sealed a $142bn arms deal with Saudi Arabia
  • He was joined by some famous faces including Elon Musk

Trump Lifts Syria Sanctions as He Seals $142bn Arms Deal

What Happened

President Donald Trump has declared the United States has “no stronger partner” than Saudi Arabia during the first stop of a whirlwind Gulf tour focused on investment and defence.

Speaking in Riyadh on Tuesday, Trump announced a $142bn (£107bn) arms deal with the kingdom — part of a broader set of economic agreements the Saudi crown prince said could ultimately reach $1tn in value.

In a surprise move, Trump also pledged to lift all US sanctions on Syria, calling it a “chance at greatness” for the war-ravaged country, which recently installed a new transitional president following the ousting of Bashar al-Assad.

Trump, who also chose Riyadh as his first overseas destination during his first term in 2017, received a lavish welcome, complete with a lavender-coloured carpet, an Arabian horse honour guard, and a perfectly matched purple tie.

At a high-profile investment forum, Trump praised the US–Saudi alliance as “more powerful than ever before” and told investors: “From the moment we started we’ve seen wealth that has poured — and is pouring — into America.”

He was joined by top business figures including Elon Musk, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, BlackRock’s Larry Fink, and Nvidia boss Jensen Huang, as he sought to position the US as the top destination for Gulf wealth and AI investment.

Mr Huang confirmed that Nvidia would sell over 18,000 of its latest AI chips to Saudi firm Humain, part of the kingdom’s push to diversify its oil-based economy through cutting-edge tech.

What Next

Trump’s dramatic pledge to lift sanctions on Syria marks a major shift in US foreign policy. Speaking in Riyadh, he hinted the move came at the request of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, joking: “Oh, what I do for the crown prince.”

The sanctions, in place for over a decade, were initially designed to isolate Assad’s regime. But with Assad now gone and a new transitional government installed, the door has opened for renewed diplomacy and reconstruction support.

Trump is expected to meet Syria’s transitional president, Ahmed al-Sharaa, during his Saudi visit — another sign of warming US–Syria ties after years of hostility.

Despite the warmth between Trump and MBS, the crown prince stood firm on one major issue: Saudi Arabia will not join the Abraham Accords — the US-brokered normalisation pact with Israel — until there is a permanent end to the war in Gaza and a clear path to Palestinian statehood.

From Saudi Arabia, Trump will head next to Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, where further investment deals are expected. The UAE has already pledged $1.4tn in US investments over the next decade.

While the tour is framed around economic development, it also marks a deeper strategic realignment in the Middle East — one that increasingly prioritises commerce, AI innovation, and regional reconstruction over past tensions.

Media Reaction

FOX News says the US president condemned ‘interventionalists’ and has pitched a ‘more hopeful future’ during his speech where he also condemned ‘neo-cons’ and ‘liberal non-profits’ for meddling in the Middle East.

The Guardian write about Donald Trump’s Middle Eastern trip saying it’s not just about diplomacy – it’s “also about the family business.” The paper says “The Trump Organization has millions in developments in Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the UAE – sites of his first state visit.”

Weight-Loss Jabs Could Usher In Golden Age of Medicine In UK

CliffNotes

  • Weight-loss jabs could usher in golden age of medicine
  • The new drugs – jabs and pills – could help those beyond obesity
  • It could help people live longer

Weight-loss jabs could usher in golden age of medicine in the UK

What Happened 

Weight-loss jabs — known as GLP-1 receptor agonists — could transform healthcare far beyond obesity treatment, according to leading doctors and a major new study.

Already available on the NHS for adults with a high BMI, these drugs reduce appetite and food cravings. But recent trials show their benefits stretch far wider, potentially ushering in what experts are calling a “golden era” of medicine.

A recent clinical trial involving 17,000 participants found that the jabs halved the risk of heart attacks and strokes and appeared to protect the heart almost immediately.

Professor John Deanfield, a cardiologist at University College London, told The Times that the drugs improve outcomes in a range of serious illnesses and could dramatically extend lifespans.

“These are not just weight-loss drugs,” he said. “They affect the biology of ageing itself. We’re seeing benefits for heart disease, liver and kidney conditions, cancer, mental health, and potentially even dementia.”

He added that “many, many millions” of people should ultimately be offered the medication — not just those who are overweight.

What Next

Currently, access to GLP-1 drugs on the NHS is limited to people with obesity, but that could soon change as evidence mounts for their broader benefits.

Professor Deanfield said that if the jabs are recognised as treatments for heart disease and other chronic illnesses, far more people could become eligible — even those with a healthy weight.

Pharmaceutical company Lilly, which produces Mounjaro (one of the new weight-loss drugs), has urged ministers to speed up access and consider the wider economic and preventative potential of the treatment.

A spokesperson warned that the slow rollout risks deepening health inequalities, especially since obesity rates are higher in more deprived communities.

They added: “The NHS’s ten-year plan is a chance to shift the focus from treatment to prevention. But access delays could hold back progress on major conditions.”

Ongoing trials are now examining whether GLP-1 drugs can help with cognitive decline, raising hopes they could play a role in delaying dementia and age-related disease more generally.

If the results continue to be positive, these medications may soon become central to how Britain tackles ageing and chronic illness, not just weight.

Media Reaction

The Times highlights the report’s conclusion that weight loss drugs could help people live longer. The paper says the research suggests drugs such as Wegovy could delay age-related illnesses and halve heart attack deaths, even in those who are not obese.

The Daily Telegraph reports most Britons could use the jabs to live longer according to a medic. The paper notes that experts hailed a “golden age” in obesity treatment thanks to drugs which have been found to halve deaths from killer diseases. Around 150 new treatments – including jabs and pills – could be available over the next 10 years to help people not deemed “overweight or obese.”

The Daily Mail says a new pill “that mimics the effects of a gastric bypass” has been touted as the latest “weight loss miracle” and research suggests it may end up being more effective than “fat jabs” in the long term.


Weight-loss drugs key to longer lift | Paper Talk UK

Weight loss drugs key to longer life? Yes! – according to a new study, weight-loss drugs can delay diseases associated with ageing such as dementia and halve the number of deaths from heart attacks. The breakthrough research suggests people in the UK could be given access to such drugs in the near future as part of the government’s aim to drive preventative medicine.

PAPERS »
DNA bombshell frees man after 38 years in prison for murder | Paper Talk UK

Many of the UK newspaper front pages are today leading with the news that Peter Sullivan has been freed after spending 38 years behind bars. New DNA evidence has led to Sullivan’s conviction being overturned – he is believed to be the longest-serving victim of a miscarriage of justice involving a living prisoner in modern British legal history.

PAPERS »
Goodison Park to become permanent home of Everton Women

Everton Women will permanently relocate to Goodison Park from the start of next season, addressing their need for a larger venue.

PAPERS »

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