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Former Premier League defender Sol Bamba dies aged 39 | UK News

Former Premier League defender Sol Bamba has died at the age of 39 after falling ill before a match in Turkey.

Bamba, who used to play for Cardiff City and captained Leeds United, was the technical director at Turkish side Adanspor.

A club statement read: “Our technical director Souleymane Bamba, who fell ill before the match against Manisa Football Club yesterday, was taken to Manisa Celal Bayar University Hospital and unfortunately lost his battle for life there.

“Our condolences to his family and our community.”

Bamba was diagnosed with Non-Hodgkin lymphoma in 2021 while at Cardiff, but was declared cancer-free after a course of chemotherapy and returned to play again for the Bluebirds and Middlesbrough.

His career also took in the likes of Leicester, Hibernian and Dunfermline, in addition to 46 international appearances for the Ivory Coast.

Sol Bamba with an award for PFA Championship Team of the Year in 2018, while he was with Cardiff City. Pic: PA
Image:
Sol Bamba with an award for PFA Championship Team of the Year in 2018, while he was with Cardiff City. Pic: PA

Cardiff City, where Bamba won promotion to the Premier League in his first season, described him as a “club legend”.

“As a player and coach, Sol’s impact on our football club was immeasurable,” they said in a statement.

“He was a hero to all of us, a leader in every dressing room and a true gentleman. Our thoughts are with his friends, family and everyone lucky enough to know and love Sol.”

Leeds United said they are “devastated” by the news.

“Our thoughts and condolences are with his family and friends at this tragic time,” a statement read.

“Rest in peace, Sol, you will be forever in our hearts.”

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Bamba finished his career with Middlesbrough, where he played for one season.

The club said their thoughts are “with Sol’s family and friends at this time”.

Mother and chef die days after Notting Hill Carnival attacks | UK News

Two people have died after being attacked in separate incidents during Notting Hill Carnival over the bank holiday weekend.

Cher Maximen, 32, was at the event last Sunday with her child when she was stabbed. She died on Saturday morning.

Police said officers gave emergency treatment to Ms Maximen until paramedics arrived. She was then taken to hospital in a critical condition.

Cher Maximen
Image:
Ms Maximen. Pic: Metropolitan Police

“Cher was at carnival with her young child,” Detective Chief Inspector Alex Gammampila, of the Met’s Homicide Command, said.

“We have been in close contact with our local authority partners and Cher’s family since soon after this incident to make sure the child is safe and looked after.”

Mussie Imnetu, who was visiting the UK on business, was attacked in a separate incident.

Mussie Imnetu. Pic: Metropolitan Police
Image:
The top chef had an eight-year-old son. Pic: Metropolitan Police

The 41-year-old chef, a Swedish national who lived and worked in Dubai, was found unconscious with a head injury in Queensway, on Monday evening.

Mr Imnetu, who previously worked under celebrity chefs Gordon Ramsay and Marcus Wareing, leaves behind an eight-year-old son.

“He was a keen footballer and famously counted on his now eight-year-old son to taste test his culinary masterpieces,” said his employer, The Arts Club.

“Known for his passion, calm demeanour and kindness, Mussie truly embodied the club’s essence,” a statement said. “His legacy will live on through the passion and excellence he instilled in those around him.”

Mr Imnetu worked as the private members’ club’s head chef at The Brasserie Dubai, which opened in 2020, after joining The Arts Club London in 2011.

Marie-Claire Accordino, an influencer from Dubai, has also paid tribute.

She said: “I knew Mussie as a patron of The Arts Club in Dubai, he was a very well-liked and respected individual. He was a kind man, he will be missed by his fellow staff and the patrons, we are devastated to hear this news.”

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan said the deaths were “heart-breaking” and called the violence “shocking, completely unacceptable and a betrayal of the values that [Notting Hill] Carnival was founded to celebrate”.

Read more:
Five more stabbings on closing day of Notting Hill Carnival

Thousands of officers at Notting Hill Carnival

Shakiel Thibou, 20, was arrested on Tuesday and charged with the attempted murder of Ms Maximen. He has been remanded in custody.

Omar Wilson, 31, has been charged with causing Mr Imnetu grievous bodily harm with intent and remanded in custody.

Detective Chief Inspector Brian Howie said: “Mussie’s family, friends and colleagues in London, Dubai, Sweden and Eritrea are inconsolable after receiving the worst news imaginable.”

Pic: Metropolitan Police
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Mr Imnetu seen leaving The Arts Club in Mayfair after 1pm on Monday. Pic: Met Police

Police said they are keen to talk to anyone who can help piece together Mr Imnetu’s movements between 1pm, when he left The Arts Club in Dover Street, Mayfair, and when he arrived at Dr Power restaurant, in Queensway, west London, at about 10.30pm.

He was wearing a blue T-shirt and black jeans and is said to have bought a white baseball cap before arriving alone at the restaurant.

“If you visited the restaurant between 10pm and 11.30pm on Monday night or were in the area and saw something, regardless of the reason you were there, please do get in touch,” DCI Howie said.

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Notting Hill Carnival’s organisers said they were “shocked by these tragic deaths”.

“We stand together against all violence and condemn these acts, which are against all carnival values and the millions of people who come in celebration of them,” they said.

Pensioner arrested on suspicion of murder in Cheltenham | UK News

A pensioner has been arrested on suspicion of murder following the death of a woman, police have said.

Emergency services were called after reports of a woman who had been seriously injured at a property on Fairfield Road in Cheltenham at around 3.30am on Saturday.

Gloucestershire Police said a 66-year-old woman was declared dead at the scene.

A 77-year-old man from Cheltenham has been arrested and remains in police custody while inquiries continue.

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A police spokesman said: “There is currently a scene guard in place at a property while police remain at the address.

“Officers from the major crime investigation team are in the early stages of an investigation and are appealing for anyone who has any information to come forward.”

Ozempic: Weight-loss drug could slow down ageing and offer benefits ‘far beyond’ previously thought | UK News

A weight-loss injection could slow ageing and offer benefits far beyond what was imagined, researchers have suggested.

Semaglutide, which is available under brand names Wegovy and Ozempic, cuts the risk of death in overweight people with cardiovascular disease, according to several studies.

While Wegovy is available through the NHS for weight loss if certain criteria are met, Ozempic is currently only prescribed for type 2 diabetes – though both contain semaglitude.

Published in JACC, the flagship journal of the American College of Cardiology, the research shows semaglutide could have “far-reaching benefits beyond what we initially imagined”.

That’s according to Professor Harlan M Krumholz from the Yale School of Medicine, who is quoted in multiple reports as saying: “Is it a fountain of youth?”

“I would say if you’re improving someone’s cardiometabolic health substantially, then you are putting them in a position to live longer and better,” he said.

“It’s not just avoiding heart attacks. These are health promoters. It wouldn’t surprise me that improving people’s health this way actually slows down the ageing process.”

Researchers found participants who took semaglutide died at a lower rate from all causes, as well from cardiovascular causes and COVID-19.

The drug was also found to improve heart failure symptoms.

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Participants – all 17,604 of them – were aged 45 or older, overweight, had established cardiovascular disease but not diabetes and were tracked for more than three years.

A total of 833 participants died during the study, with 58% of the deaths related to cardiovascular causes and 42% from others.

Infection was the most common cause of death beyond cardiovascular, but it occurred at a lower rate in the group taking semaglutide than in those taking a placebo.

Wegovy, which is administered through an injection, is available on the NHS, but only through specialist weight management services.

Read more:
Ozempic to Wegovy – what are the weight loss injections?
Stephen Fry says Ozempic made him vomit five times a day

Patients with a BMI over 30, or more than 27 with one weight-related comorbidity, can access the drug.

Semaglutide works by mimicking the hormone GLP-1 (glucagon-like peptide one) to manage hunger and slow down digestion.

It is also the active ingredient in Ozempic, which was the first of the weight loss jabs to blow up on TikTok.

The studies were presented at the European Society of Cardiology Conference 2024 in London.

Oasis issue warning after pre-sale tickets relisted for thousands of pounds | Ents & Arts News

Oasis have issued a warning against people reselling tickets for their reunion tour at higher prices.

The band wrote on X: “We have noticed people attempting to sell tickets on the secondary market since the start of the pre-sale. Please note, tickets can ONLY be resold, at face value, via @Ticketmaster and @Twickets.”

It added that tickets sold in breach of terms and conditions will be cancelled by the promoters.

It comes after fans were left fuming as tickets, bought by those who received early access codes in a pre-sale ballot, were being resold for more than £6,000.

A limited amount of people were able to take a shot at securing a coveted ticket between 7pm and 10pm on Friday evening, with tickets sold on a “first come, first served basis”.

But shortly after going on sale, floor standing tickets ranged from around £807-£3,615 on StubHub while seats in some lower level sections reached a whopping £6,347.

Resale website Viagogo also advertised tickets for more than £2,000.

Oasis tickets on sale for more than £6,000 on Stubhub
Image:
Oasis tickets on sale for more than £6,000 on StubHub

Tickets on Viagogo
Image:
Similar pricey resale tickets on Viagogo

One fan wrote on X: “Liam Gallagher, Noel Gallagher, Oasis this is just wrong. So many of us are desperate to see you guys.”

Another added: “The fact that Oasis tickets are already being resold at insane prices is making me feel sick. What chance do actual fans have?”

Sky News have contacted StubHub and Viagogo for comment.

How much are Oasis tickets?

Prices for a seat to watch the band at London’s Wembley Stadium begin at £74.25, with the most expensive ticket a £506.25 pre-show party, exhibition and seated package.

The cheapest seats are Cardiff’s Principality Stadium shows, which will set you back £73, and Edinburgh’s Murrayfield Stadium at £74, according to Manchester-based promoter SJM Concerts, which runs the website Gigs And Tours.

Standing tickets at Wembley will cost fans £151.25, with the same tickets in Cardiff and Edinburgh slightly cheaper at £150 and £151 respectively.

In the band’s home city of Manchester, tickets start from £148.50, with only standing available alongside a number of hospitality and luxury

Before the announcement for the UK shows, Irish promoter MCD said on its website that the price of both of the two Croke Park gigs in Dublin will start at 86.50 euros (£72.75) without booking fees.

Oasis sent fans into a frenzy after confirming the band’s reunion on Tuesday morning, following weeks of speculation.

The comeback comes 15 years after Noel famously quit.

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The band is set to play five nights at London’s Wembley Stadium, five at Heaton Park in their home city of Manchester, plus three in Scotland, two in Ireland and two in Wales.

The remainder of tickets for the 15-date tour go on general sale at 9am on Saturday while the sale for their two Dublin gigs will launch at 8am.

New Labour MP writes to government suggesting changes to winter fuel payment cut | Politics News

A new Labour MP has written to the government calling for a rethink on the means testing of the winter fuel payment, Sky News has learnt.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves announced last month that the universal payment to pensioners, worth between £100 and £300, would be restricted to just those who receive pension credit in a bid to save more than £1bn.

Concerns have been raised, however, that pensioners falling just outside the credit threshold could be left vulnerable.

Jessica Asato, who was only elected in July this year as the Labour MP for Lowestoft, has written to Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall calling for changes to the policy.

Speaking on the Sky News Daily podcast, Sky News’ deputy political editor Sam Coates said: “We at Sky know that at least one Labour MP, Jessica Asato, has written to Liz Kendall to talk about how nervous they are about this policy.”

He said this was to “suggest bluntly that they change it”.

“I think what Jess Asato wants to do is to widen the number of people that can claim it.

“She accepts that… it’s going to be taken away from some.

“But her concern is the kind of the people who just miss out – they aren’t exactly rich, but they don’t qualify for Pension Credit.

“And therefore that’s a big drop in their income at a point where, of course, the energy price cap is going to rise, so energy bills are going to rise this autumn.

“And so that is one of the reasons for particular concern.

“So she wants it to be given to people who apply for council tax reductions because they’re on a lower income, which would widen the number of people who qualify for it.”

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Energy cap: ‘It depresses me’

As political correspondent and Sky News Daily host Liz Bates pointed out, it is notable that a Labour MP is raising her displeasure so early in their parliamentary career.

It shows the government could have trouble with its parliamentary party when the House of Commons returns next week.

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243-question form to get winter payment

Are you still eligible for the payment?
Analysis: Reeves under attack on two fronts

Ms Asato’s concerns are shared by Caroline Flint, who was a Labour MP between 1997 and 2019, and a minister in the New Labour years.

Ms Flint is now chair of the Fuel Poverty Committee.

Writing to Miatta Fahnbulleh, the minister for energy consumers, Ms Flint said: “We hope the department will examine whether there is a significant group of pensioners on low and fixed incomes outside the threshold chosen by the chancellor who may suffer genuine hardship. “Particularly, we would ask the government to consider the impact on those pensioner households with annual incomes above the Pension Credit threshold up to £18,200.

“There are also up to 880,000 households who currently do not claim Pension Credit and previous campaigns have not been successful in significantly boosting take up.”

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Ms Flint added that the biggest impact could be largest on women in single-occupancy homes.

Ms Asato said: “I did write last week, and I’m incredibly disappointed it’s been leaked as it was a private letter. Since then I have been reassured.

“The scale of the Tory inheritance is shocking and I – like many others – am furious with the Tories for forcing us into these tough decisions so early in the parliament.

“I have been reassured by the fact we are continuing to protect the triple lock which saw the state pension rise by over £800 last year and an above inflation pension increase will be announced at the budget – which obviously takes into account the cost of energy.

“I am confident this is the right course of action and recognise it is part of a package of tough decisions to come to provide economic stability, so we can all deliver for our constituents as Labour MPs.”

The Department for Work and Pensions have been approached for comment.

SNP Westminster leader Stephen Flynn says smoking ban plan ‘is a smokescreen to deflect from Labour’s austerity doom and gloom’ | UK News

The SNP’s Westminster leader has described Sir Keir Starmer’s plan to ban smoking in beer gardens and other outdoor venues as a “smokescreen” to deflect from the UK government’s austerity “doom and gloom”.

Mr Flynn noted smoking causes around 9,000 deaths per year in Scotland, putting “significant pressure” on the NHS.

Although agreeing that would make a “fair and reasonable starting point” for any discussion in relation to smoking bans, the MP for Aberdeen South claimed the proposed move by the UK government was an “attempt to deflect”.

He told Sky News Breakfast: “Because they know that the public are very much focused on the fact that the first 100 days or so in office of this Labour Party appears to be doom and gloom, that things are going to get worse.

“And they don’t want people talking about austerity, so what they are doing is suggesting that people in some way shouldn’t be able to smoke outside.

“It appears to be using a hammer to crack a nut when it comes to some of the challenges which face the NHS, and which face those individuals who do indeed smoke.

“But ultimately, this is a smokescreen from the bigger issues of the day, which is the austerity agenda that the Labour Party are pushing.”

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Would an outdoor smoking ban work?

Speaking to Sky News on Thursday, First Minister John Swinney said he was “unnerved” by the prime minister’s speech on Tuesday, saying he interprets it as a “continuation of the austerity agenda of the Conservatives”.

Mr Flynn believes there will be “less money to do the things that we want to do”, but elected members and the party must come together to “take a message of optimism that things can and will get better to the public”.

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Scottish National Party Leader John Swinney with SNP Westminster leader Stephen Flynn (left) during the SNP General Election Campaign launch with SNP Westminster candidates and activists at the Radisson Blu Hotel in Glasgow. Picture date: Sunday June 2, 2024.
Image:
Mr Flynn with SNP leader and First Minister John Swinney back in June. Pic: PA

Mr Flynn was speaking ahead of the SNP conference, which is taking place in Edinburgh between Friday and Sunday.

The conference is Mr Swinney’s first as party leader in almost two decades and comes after the SNP lost dozens of MPs in July’s general election, falling to just nine seats.

The party’s drubbing at the polls followed months of internal turmoil and an ongoing police investigation into the SNP’s funding and finances.

Read more:
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How would an outdoor smoking ban work?

Mr Flynn accepted it’s been a “challenging time” for his party.

He said: “That’s why it’s so important that today we come together, we reflect upon where we’ve been, how we’ve managed to get ourselves into this situation, but more importantly, to discuss how we refocus, reprioritise, and re-engage with the people of Scotland to renew the trust that we’ve lost.

“And ultimately, towards 2026, what their priorities are and deliver an SNP victory.

“Now, that’s going to require some frank and honest debate. But I think that’s a positive thing, I think it’s perhaps overdue.”

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Mr Flynn would not get drawn on committing to a timeline for delivering a second Scottish independence referendum.

Instead, he said his party must focus on improving people’s lives and aligning that with “some hope and optimism”.

Speaking about Indyref2, Mr Flynn said: “I don’t think it’s fair or reasonable for me to put a timescale upon that, because it’s for the public to determine what they want and when they want it.”

Harriet Harman joins Electoral Dysfunction podcast | Politics News

Labour heavyweight Harriet Harman is joining Sky News’ Electoral Dysfunction podcast as a permanent member of the team.

The former acting leader of the party and mother of the House will now sit alongside Sky News’ political editor Beth Rigby and Conservative peer Ruth Davidson as the three women bring the news – and their views – to the public every week.

In her first appearance as a host, Ms Harman told today’s podcast she was “absolutely thrilled” and “really excited” to become a regular fixture, adding: “I was so excited when Electoral Dysfunction started up, and I’ve been so pleased to see it go from strength to strength.

“So to find myself actually joining it, I feel I’m on the threshold of something absolutely amazing.”

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Ms Harman became a Labour MP in 1982, having long campaigned for increasing the representation of women in the party – and the Commons.

She became a shadow minister two years later, and when Labour came to power in 1997, she held a raft of roles – including becoming the first-ever minister for women.

She stood down at this summer’s election, but will be joining the Lords as a Labour peer when parliament returns next week.

Pic: PA. File photo dated 07/05/97 of the first meeting of the Cabinet Sub-Committee EA (WW) (Welfare to Work), at the Cabinet office in London, (left to right) Paymaster General, Geoffrey Robinson, Minister of State Home Office, Alun Michael, Minister for Environment, Michael Meacher, Minister of State DSS, Frank Field, Scottish Secretary, Donald Dewar, Northern Ireland Secretary, Marjorie Mowlam, Minister without Portfolio, Peter Mandelson, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State, Welsh Office
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Harriet Harman served in Tony Blair’s first government in 1997 as the first minister for women. Pic: PA

Sharing her insight into a tough week for Sir Keir Starmer – who warned of a “painful” budget to come in October due to the £22bn “black hole” in public finances – Ms Harman said she was going to “cut him some slack”.

She compared the current prime minister to one of his predecessors, telling the podcast: “I remember when Gordon Brown… was chancellor, he used to talk about prudence with a purpose – basically you’d be terribly prudent with the public finances, but here’s the purpose.

“And what Keir Starmer is doing is more of the prudence at the moment, rather than the purpose, because I think he’s trying to make sure that people don’t become over-optimistic about the speed of change that they’ll see in their actual lives.”

Ms Harman said she thought her party leader was “paranoid” about failing to deliver as a government, as that would “build resentment” among voters, and any “overpromising” from his side would just make things worse.

“So [in his speech this week] he was talking about the foundations of society being undermined, as well as the foundations of our economy. And I think he is very averse to the idea of overpromising.”

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PM: Budget will be ‘painful’

However, she was surprised at how “sanguine” newly elected MPs were about his position.

“I was wondering whether or not our new team of MPs, many of whom were elected for the first time in July, whether or not they were getting overanxious,” said Ms Harman.

“[But] they are like, ‘well, this is what we said on the doorstep – we said things were going to be hard and it would take a while, and we’re going to take just tough decisions to bring about stability’.

“So, they seem to think this is what they were expecting, and [what] their constituents were expecting.”

“Certainly it’s… on the other end of the spectrum from ‘razzmatazz’. But, you know, perhaps he’s got it right. Let’s see.”

Don’t forget, you can see Electoral Dysfunction live when it goes out on tour in September.

You can get your tickets by clicking here and the dates for the shows are below:

London – Thursday 12th, Bloomsbury Theatre
Salford – Monday 16th, Lowry Quays
Liverpool – Sunday 22nd, St George’s Hall
Glasgow – Thursday 26th, The Glee Club

Dagenham fire: Video shows residents of burning tower block ‘trapped behind locked gate’ | UK News

Video given to Sky News shows terrified residents at a tower block on fire in east London appearing to have their escape blocked by a locked gate.

More than 80 people were evacuated and two taken to hospital after the fire broke out in the building in Dagenham in the early hours of Monday morning.

A mother-of-two told Sky News earlier this week the escape was shut – and footage from within the building shows a fire burning as someone shouts “open the f*****g gate”.

“They were fully aware of the fire safety issues: how the building’s fire alarm system failed to go off, denying us the critical warning we needed,” a spokesperson for the residents said.

“The fire escape route which should have been our lifeline was padlocked shut… the multiple layers of management from landlords to agencies utterly failed to protect us.”

One person could be heard shouting 'open the gate'
Image:
One person could be heard shouting ‘open the gate’

The fire seen from evacuated residents outside
Image:
The fire seen by evacuated residents from outside

Residents claim they had raised concerns about fire safety measures in place and say the process of removing the cladding from their building had been delayed.

Fire crews on the scene saw “burning cladding falling from the building”, according to the Fire Brigades Union general secretary Matt Wrack.

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More than 100 people, including children, have been evacuated after a fire erupted in a tower block building in Dagenham, east London.
Image:
Firefighters on the scene

It comes as the London Fire Brigade acknowledged there are known issues around London, with more than 1,000 buildings needing urgent remedial work.

‘Dog saved my life’

Some residents believe they’re lucky to be alive.

Jlek
Image:
Jlek said the dog woke him up – not the alarm

“The dog saved my life. It started barking. No alarm in this building. Nothing. If the dog hadn’t started barking I’d be dying,” one resident called Jlek told Sky News.

Dagenham Council said they will continue to support residents and have provided emergency housing.

Read more:
Bride whose dress was destroyed in fire gets replacement
Tower block was in the middle of having cladding replaced

“We will continue to press Block Management UK Ltd to meet their obligations to residents. We will also look to recover costs from responsible parties,” a spokesperson added.

Block Management, which manages the building, has not responded to a request for comment.

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