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Teenage boy charged after girl, 13, found stabbed next to road in Hessle | UK News

A teenage boy has been charged after a 13-year-old girl was found with stab wounds beside a road near Hull.

Humberside Police were called to reports of concern for safety after a girl appeared injured at the side of the road on the A63 in Hessle.

Officers attended and discovered the girl had sustained lacerations to her neck, abdomen, chest and back, and was subsequently taken to hospital to receive medical treatment.

She remains in a serious but stable condition.

A 14-year-old boy, who cannot be named for legal reasons, has been charged with attempted murder and possession of a bladed article.

He has been remanded into custody to appear at Hull Magistrates’ Court on Monday 4 November.

Six teenagers were arrested on suspicion of attempted murder in a wooded area nearby in connection with the incident.

Three teenage boys aged 15, 16 and 17, and two girls, 14 and 15, have since been released from custody on police bail.

This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly.

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Noel Gallagher surprises ‘dear friend’ Jill Furmanovsky with icon prize at Abbey Road Music Photography Awards | Ents & Arts News

Noel Gallagher has made a surprise appearance at the Abbey Road Music Photography Awards to honour “one of my best friends” Jill Furmanovsky with a special icon award.

The Oasis star described the music photographer, who has captured some of the world’s biggest stars on camera in a career spanning more than 50 years, as the “best ever”.

Furmanovsky’s subjects include everyone from Stevie Wonder, Pink Floyd, and Bob Dylan, to Blondie, Kate Bush, and Billie Eilish. She started working with Oasis in the 1990s and continued to photograph the band and Gallagher over the years.

“She’s a very, very dear friend of mine… and it’s been an honour to have been associated with her for 30 years,” Gallagher said on stage at the event at Abbey Road Studios in London. “I can only say that she is as lovely as she seems, she’s one of my best friends, and I adore her.”

Furmanovsky told the audience she was “so overwhelmed” to be honoured as a photography icon, especially as she had not been aware the star would be presenting the prize.

Liam and Noel Gallagher in San Francisco, 1995. Pic: Jill Furmanovsky
Image:
Liam and Noel Gallagher in San Francisco, 1995 – Jill Furmanovsky

‘They were on a comet, hanging on for dear life’

Speaking to Sky News earlier on, she said her body of work with Oasis is the one she is most proud of.

“I was just the right age to be working with them – I was experienced, I wasn’t intimidated,” she said.

“They were so fantastic. It was just a time when they were sort of on a comet, hanging on for dear life, and I felt like I could actually offer something in the way of my experience… they allowed me to be close to them, which was just incredible as a gift.”

Furmanovsky said her first reaction was to feel “bemused” when she heard about the Oasis reunion announcement earlier this year “as there was so much against it… and it just didn’t seem like it was going to happen”.

The big question, then: did she get a ticket?

“I couldn’t get tickets,” she laughs. “I tried to… they’ll let me in, though. They’re going to let me otherwise I’m going to go to [the Gallaghers’ mum] Peggy.”

Joking aside, Furmanovsky said she would “absolutely” be there to photograph what will be history-making shows. “I’ve got to do it, haven’t I?”

Read more:
Oasis are back – but what has happened behind the scenes?
A timeline of Britpop’s most successful band

Tom Pallant's shot of Graham Coxon's sky-high guitar over Blur's show at Wembley picked up the music moment of the year prize at the Abbey Road Music Photography Awards
Image:
Graham Coxon’s sky-high guitar over Blur’s show at Wembley Stadium picked up the music moment of the year prize for Tom Pallant. Pic: Tom Pallant

Francis Mancini's image of DJ Darren Styles won the live music prize at the Abbey Road Music Photography Awards
Image:
Francis Mancini’s image of DJ Darren Styles won the live music prize. Pic: Francis Mancini

On being named an icon and receiving the award at the legendary Abbey Road Studios, Furmanovsky said: “I really don’t have words for it. When I was a teenager, I used to stand outside with my autograph book waiting to see the Beatles…

“I once took a picture of Paul McCartney with a Kodak Instamatic; I once wrote a letter saying, ‘could I come into Abbey Road for my school magazine?’ Which of course, they said no. I finally came here in the 1970s with Pink Floyd, I was allowed in. It was holy ground to me. And since then, I’ve come many, many times. It’s like a second home. It’s an iconic place.”

As well as the icon prize, awards were handed out for live music photography, music portraiture and musical moments. Among the winners were Tom Pallant, for his picture capturing a guitar thrown high into the air over Wembley Stadium by Blur’s Graham Coxon, and Frances Mancini, for a fiery picture of DJ and producer Darren Styles.

Winners were chosen from some 22,000 images entered, with Rankin leading the judges.

Bristol: Murder investigation launched after man stabbed to death on busy road | UK News

A murder investigation has been launched after a man was stabbed to death in Bristol on Friday evening.

The victim, who has not been named, was attacked by a man at around 5.45pm on the busy Stapleton Road.

Police officers began administering first aid before paramedics arrived at the scene. He was then transported to Southmead Hospital but pronounced dead later that evening.

The victim is yet to be formally identified but police are aiming to inform all of his family members as soon as possible.

Police search teams and helicopters scoured east Bristol on Friday night to find the offender.

One man was arrested on suspicion of assisting an offender and is in custody, but arrest attempts are continuing.

“A large amount of CCTV has already been reviewed to further our understanding of what happened and those efforts are continuing today,” said Bristol Commander Superintendent Mark Runacres.

Parts of the road are still closed and police said they will maintain an “increased presence” in the area “not because we’re aware of any increased risk, but because we want to make sure you can approach us to raise any concerns”.

Read more from Sky News:
Body found in search for missing TV chaplain
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Mr Runacres urged anyone with information to contact police, adding that he was aware people were filming in the area, and would like to hear from anyone with footage relevant to their investigation.

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However, he asked that out of respect for the man’s friends and family, no insensitive footage is published on social media.

Anyone with information is asked to call 101 and quote reference number 5224248976.

Pembrokeshire campsite crash: Baby was inside tent that was struck by car which veered off the road and injured nine people | UK News

A baby was inside the tent that was struck by a car after it veered off the road and crashed into a campsite – leaving two people in a serious condition and seven others injured.

Clare Harris, who runs the Newgale campsite in Pembrokeshire, has said the baby is “okay” after the ordeal.

It is not clear if the child is one of those who required hospital treatment.

Two people are in a serious condition in hospital after a blue Ford Fiesta collided with a number of people and the tent shortly after 10.30pm on Saturday.

One person was airlifted to the University Hospital of Wales, the Welsh Ambulance Service said.

Four were taken by ambulance to Glangwilli Hospital, while one was taken to Morriston Hospital.

Ms Harris, who runs the campsite with her husband Mike, said: “The car was speeding down the hill, realised it needed to slow down and tried to brake.

“It flipped and rolled several times, and crashed into the tent.

“There was a young child, a baby, in the tent at the time, thankfully they are okay.

“It’s a tragic accident that the police are dealing with, that’s all we can say at the moment.”

The car is believed to have been travelling from the village of Roch towards St Davids when it crashed off the A487.

Dyfed Powys Police said passengers in the car were among those injured.

Police said in a statement: “The road was closed to allow investigations and reopened at around 7.45am today.

“Officers are appealing for any information regarding the vehicle, a blue Ford Fiesta, and its occupants.

“We are especially interested in any dashcam footage or doorbell footage which may have captured the vehicle being driven from Roch to the scene of the collision at Newgale.”

HM Coastguard in Broad Haven said: “The team were paged at 11.23pm last night to assist with multi-agency incident in Newgale.

“We organised a helicopter site and supported paramedics with casualty care.”

A Welsh Ambulance Service spokesperson said: “We were called yesterday at around 22:40 to reports of an incident at Newgale Campsite, Pembrokeshire.

“We sent six emergency ambulances, one duty operations manager, one Cymru high acuity response unit and our crews were supported on scene by the emergency medical and retrieval transfer service and search and rescue helicopter.

“One patient was flown to University Hospital of Wales, four patients were taken by road to Glangwilli Hospital, and one patient was taken by road to Morriston Hospital.”

Half a million trees have died next to one 21-mile stretch of road, National Highways admits | Climate News

The government agency responsible for our main roads, National Highways, has admitted that over half a million trees have died beside a single 21-mile stretch of new carriageway.

They estimate the cost of replanting at £2.9m.

Many tree experts say this is symptomatic of a focus on tree planting over tree care. Only growing trees capture carbon or improve habitat.

The upgrade of the A14 between Cambridge and Huntingdon, cost £1.5bn and was opened in 2020.

A number of mature trees were destroyed during construction and planting new ones was part of the development consent order, the permission to build.

National Highways planted 850,000 saplings but three years later, Sky News has seen an internal review that points to ‘an unusually high fatality rate’ and reveals that three-quarters of them have died.

National Highways point to poor soil and extreme heat as the main causes.

National Highways has admitted that over half a million trees have died beside a single 21-mile stretch of new carriageway of the A14 between Cambridge and Huntingdon.
Image:
Sky News visited one of the embankments studded with stakes and tree protection tubes

But these “die-off” figures were compiled before last summer’s record temperatures and it is likely more saplings will have perished in that heatwave.

National Highways, declined to do an interview with Sky News but subsequently did publish a press release admitting “an unusually high failure rate among the planted trees” and added: “Replanting is expected to begin in October with the first batch of 162,000 trees already on order from a local nursery.

“All replanting work will be subject to a five-year establishment period.”

They also told us the cost of replanting will be around £2.9m. That’s taxpayers’ money.

Their internal document suggests the replanting plan will use more mulch to hold water, better tree guards, improved topsoil, and reviewing both the type of tree planted and the sapling’s age.

National Highways told Sky News that the cost of replanting will be around £2.9million.  Their internal document suggests the replanting plan will use more mulch to hold water, better tree guards, improved topsoil, and reviewing both the type of tree planted and the sapling's age.
Image:
An internal document suggests the replanting plan by National Highways will use more mulch to hold water, better tree guards, and improved topsoil

Sky News visited one of the embankments studded with stakes and tree protection tubes.

Some had survived but the huge majority held just grass or a dead twig.

Local councillor Edna Murphy has campaigned for National Highways to come clean on the losses and put it right.

“The scale of it really hits you if you go up and down the A14, hundreds of thousands of trees, saplings planted and have just been left to die.

“It was actually the devil’s own job to get information out of National Highways. I tried the Freedom of Information (FOI) Act, I tried asking nicely. Nothing worked.”

So she is very pleased that they are now committed to replanting.

Tom Heap gets involved with replanting efforts in Cambridgeshire. For Tom Heap ClimateCast about the death of trees beside the A14 between Cambridge and Huntingdon.
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Sky News climate presenter Tom Heap meets Carol Honeybun-Kelly, a former head of tree procurement at the Woodland Trust

She said: “They’re just trying really hard now, to get some trees established, which can only be good. But we have to see if they actually do it.”

Listen to more from ClimateCast:
Hydrogen in homes: The village of ‘guinea pigs’
Who’s paying for Britain’s poo problem?

Tree experts we’ve spoken to say the low survival rate of new trees is a national problem and it stems from an obsession with planting numbers, not least at the last election when party leaders and manifestos competed over how many trees they would plant.

Sir William Worsley, is chair of the Forestry Commission and briefly enjoyed the title of the government’s tree champion.

I asked him if enough emphasis was being put on tree care, not just planting.

Click to subscribe to ClimateCast with Tom Heap wherever you get your podcasts

“I mean, the answer is no… to be blunt, I would like to see much more money put into management as well as planting.”

And he acknowledged how crucial tree growth is to our climate goals.

“Very, very important. If we don’t get survival, it’s nothing. If we get surviving trees, planting trees is the most cost-effective way to manage carbon.

“If you look at all the other forms of land use, that’s nothing compared to the benefit of trees. Therefore it’s absolutely essential.”

Across the country, planting rates are also running at less than half the 30,000 hectares per year that was pledged by the Conservatives at the last election.

So fewer saplings than hoped with troubling survival rates. Bad news for our nature and climate aims.

Scottish Water apologises after burst water main in Milngavie cut off 250,000 customers and cracked road | UK News

Around 250,000 customers in Scotland were left without water after a major pipe burst.

The pipe burst in Milngavie, East Dunbartonshire, on Tuesday afternoon and led to flooding in the area.

The force of the 36-inch mains bursting split Auchenhowie Road open, and children at the Lullaby Lane nursery had to take shelter in the nearby Rangers Training Centre.

Restoration works have been carried out but Scottish Water has warned there could be some ongoing interruptions and discolouration to normal supply.

The utilities company said around 100,000 properties were affected across East Dunbartonshire and parts of Glasgow.

Supplies for customers in Glasgow city centre and the Knightswood, Yoker, Scotstoun, Partick, Kelvinside, Tradeston and Ibrox areas of the city were also interrupted.

Fans attending Lewis Capaldi’s gig at the OVO Hydro faced long queues after the venue was forced to close some toilets due to the water shortage.

Hydro bosses said the issue was beyond their control but the “safety and comfort” of its customers took priority.

The water supply had been reconnected for most affected homes and businesses by Tuesday night.

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In an update on Wednesday morning, Scottish Water said: “We are aware that there are some isolated reports of no water from customers in and around Glasgow city centre this morning.

“This is under investigation, and we will be liaising directly with those customers that have contacted us this morning.”

Those that are experiencing discoloured water have been advised by the company that it is the natural lying sediment within the mains that has been disturbed and that it should clear by gently running the cold-water kitchen tap.

White water – caused by air in the water – will settle within the next day or two, Scottish Water added.

Glasgow Road and part of Auchenhowie Road remain closed with local diversions in place.

Scottish Water added: “We are working with our utility partners to assess the impact and damage caused, as well as to allow a safe excavation of the damaged water main for repairs to be undertaken.

“We apologise to all customers affected for the inconvenience and disruption to their service.”

Christmas travel warning as road workers to strike at same time as rail walkouts | UK News

Travellers have been told to brace for more Christmas chaos after road workers announced 12 days of strikes to coincide with rail walkouts.

Ground handlers at Heathrow have also said they will strike before Christmas in a dispute over pay.

In all, 350 workers employed by Menzies will walk out from 4am on 16 December for 72 hours.

Hundreds of thousands of workers across many sectors of the economy, including nurses, postal staff and ambulance employees, have announced strike action during the festive period.

National Highways employees, who operate and maintain roads in England, will take part in a series of staggered strikes from 16 December to 7 January, the PCS union said.

“We know our members’ action could inconvenience travellers who plan to visit their relatives over the festive period, but our members have been placed in this situation by a government that won’t listen to its own workforce,” said the union’s general secretary Mark Serwotka.

“With the serious cost of living crisis, they deserve to be paid properly for the important work they do, keeping our roads running safe and free.”

The walkouts, which risk bringing the road network to a standstill, will coincide with planned strikes by RMT members on the railways.

The rail strikes are planned on 11, 12, 13, 14, 16, 17 December and 3, 4, 6 and 7 January.

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Strikes ‘a lot on government’s plate’

Read more: Strikes every day until Christmas – which sectors and why?

Ministers have ‘a lot on their plate’

General secretary of the RMT union Mick Lynch met government ministers earlier on Friday for discussions on averting strike action in December, and told Sky News “talks are continuing over the weekend”.

“We’ll see where we go from there,” he said.

He added that the government is taking the strikes “seriously” but there is a “lot going on in society at the minute”.

“They have a got a lot on their plate,” he said.

Disruption to postal services ahead of Christmas is likely to be an issue for some as well, with Royal Mail asking customers to post their cards and gifts earlier than usual due to the ongoing strike action by its workers.

Eurostar security staff are also due to strike on 16, 18, 22 and 23 December.

Other departments, including the Home Office, are expected to announce industrial action over the course of the next few weeks.

The 10 railway bridges most often bashed by road vehicles revealed | UK News

The 10 most-bashed railway bridges in Britain have been revealed.

Network Rail said the bridges were hit by road vehicles at least 10 times in the year to the end of March.

Stonea Road bridge near Manea, Cambridgeshire, took first place, having been hit 33 times in 12 months.

It was followed by Lower Down’s Road bridge in Wimbledon, southwest London, with 18 strikes, and Harlaxton Road bridge in Grantham, Lincolnshire, with 17 strikes.

Bridges across Britain’s rail network were struck 1,833 times in 2021/22, according to Network Rail.

They cost the government-owned company nearly £12m in compensation payouts for delays.

The number of strikes rose 13% compared with the previous year, coinciding with an increase in traffic.

Network Rail is relaunching its “Wise Up, Size Up” campaign urging lorry drivers to check the height of their vehicles ahead of Black Friday and Christmas when parcel deliveries soar.

The bridge at Stuntey Road, Cambridgeshire, has been struck 12 times in the year to the end of March
Image:
The bridge at Stuntey Road, Cambridgeshire, has been struck 12 times in the year to the end of March

‘Serious safety issues’

The company’s chairman Sir Peter Hendy said: “Bridge bashers cause serious safety issues on the transport network for both road and rail users.

“Every incident can delay tens of thousands of passengers while we inspect the bridge and repair any damage – creating a huge cost from public funds.

“During this very busy time of year for deliveries, we urge operators and drivers to properly plan their routes, know the height of their vehicles and be vigilant for road signs showing the height of bridges.

“We will report those who don’t to the traffic commissioners, and they risk losing their licences and livelihoods.

“Network Rail always looks to recover the entire repair and delay costs from the driver and the operator.”

Stonea Road in Cambridgeshire is number one in Britain's 10 most-bashed railway bridges
Image:
Stonea Road in Cambridgeshire is number one in Britain’s 10 most-bashed railway bridges

Top 10 most-bashed bridges

The railway bridges struck the most in 2021/22 were:

1. Stonea Road, near Manea, Cambridgeshire – 33 strikes

2. Lower Down’s Road in Wimbledon, southwest London – 18 strikes

3. Harlaxton Road in Grantham, Lincolnshire – 17 strikes

4. Abbey Farm in Thetford, Norfolk – 15 strikes

5. Stuntney Road in Ely, Cambridgeshire – 12 strikes

6. Harefield Road bridge in West Ruislip, northwest London – 12 strikes

7. Station Road in Berkswell, West Midlands – 12 strikes

8. Station Road in Langley, Berkshire – 12 strikes

9. St John’s Street in Lichfield, Staffordshire – 11 strikes

10. Coddenham Road in Needham Market, Suffolk – 10 strikes