- Trump requests $152 million to fund Alcatraz prison restoration project
- Spain and four EU countries advocate for windfall tax on energy firms.
- Russia escalates aerial attacks on Ukraine, damaging civilian areas.
- Britain’s ‘priciest cycle lane’ costs taxpayers £4,000 for each metre | News UK
- Youth involvement in terrorism grows significantly across Europe and North America
- Hungary uses EU veto power to extract concessions on unrelated issues
- London Stansted Airport has highest parking fees in Europe at €66
- Flora 1 departs Russian oil port Primorsk en route to Brazil
UK News
UK MORNING BRIEFING
This morning, locals in Willenhall express discontent over a new cycle lane costing over £5 million. Business owners report significant disruption affecting trade due to ongoing construction along New Road and Bilston Street.
UK MORNING BRIEFING
Today, changes to self-assessment tax returns will be introduced from April 6, requiring 800,000 sole traders to file quarterly. A new pop song has been released to help explain these updates effectively.
UK MORNING BRIEFING
This morning, a nursery worker from the UK faces sentencing for gross negligence manslaughter following the death of a 14-month-old boy who suffocated during a nap. Charges were also placed on the nursery’s owner for health and safety violations.
Here are some of the huge global events happening this week – it’s all sports! From the world-famous Wimbledon to the Women’s European Championship, there’s plenty of great sporting action starting this week. Away from sport, there are business and cultural events taking place too – here’s your global events guide for Week 27.
The summer is here, and the UK is bursting with sports action. Wimbledon kicks off this week and the Women’s Euros is in action with both England and Wales featuring in the tournament (and in the same ‘group of death’).
The UK’s second heatwave of the year is set to peak this Monday with temperatures hitting over 34C. The heatwave is affecting much of the country, with major events such as Glastonbury and Wimbledon issuing warnings that could see people being forced to leave early.
The headlines continue to cover the controversy at Glastonbury after punk duo Bob Vylan’s chants of “death, death to the IDF” during the duo’s performance. The performance, along with Irish band Kneecap, will not be available to stream online.
Wimbledon kicks off today, with the headlines reporting on the record number of British tennis players in the world-famous tournament.
There is some continued coverage of the prime minister’s U-turn on the benefits row. The PM backed down from his harsh welfare reforms, making some huge concessions to appease the Labour backbenchers who were mounting a rebellion.
A new report from disability charity Scope has revealed that the additional cost of living with a disability in the UK has surged by almost 12% since 2020.
During their Glastonbury 2025 performance on the West Holts stage, punk-rap duo Bob Vylan led the crowd in chanting “Death to the IDF”, referring to the Israeli Defence Forces, while calling for Palestinian solidarity.
Monday’s newspaper headlines are dominated by the controversial Glastonbury performance from punk duo Bob Vylan, who chanted “death, death to the IDF.” Several headlines criticised the BBC for not pulling the performance off live TV, whilst other headlines looked at the reaction to the chant, including the prime minister’s condemnation of the performance.
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