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Real reason Holly Ramsay’s mum Tana has steered clear of the Peaty wedding row

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Tana Ramsay, married to TV chef Gordon, did not mention Holly and Adam Peaty’s wedding on her Instagram page last week, despite the controversy surrounding the big day

Holly Ramsay’s mum Tana has not waded into the row surrounding her daughter’s wedding — and friends say for good reason.

Tana, 51, has not been caught in the crossfire of the apparent feud between Holly and Adam Peaty, and his side of the family, which led to most of them being banned from the ceremony last week. Her husband, TV chef Gordon, even appeared to make jibes during his speech at Bath Abbey in front of around 200 guests.

But Tana hasn’t mentioned the big day on her Instagram, and hasn’t even posted a picture on there of Holly and Adam since 2023 when they became engaged. Sources say this is because the mum is known as “Tana the peacemaker” among her friends, who have praised her “kind and sweet” nature.

A friend of the Ramsays said: “Tana is the kindest, sweetest and most down-to-earth woman you could wish to meet. She loves nothing more than being a mum. Parenting is her thing and she’s done her very best to bring her children up with morals, manners and tried to teach them to do the right thing.

“Tana is the calming mother hen, the peacemaker. Falling out like this, to the extent that your mother isn’t at your own wedding, is just awful. “

READ MORE: Holly Ramsay’s savage two word dig at Adam Peaty’s family in bitter feudREAD MORE: Adam Peaty’s wedding photos show truth about his bitter fallout with his family

Holly’s three wedding dresses have finally been pictured — and these included Tana’s wedding gown, which she wore to wed Gordon nearly 30 years ago. In an interview, Holly said: “I’ve always loved the idea of bringing in mum’s dress at some point.”

And Tana, a trained Montessori teacher, is thought to have been extremely touched by this. Tana, who shares six children with the chef, is said to be extremely proud of her children, despite any controversies and showdowns.

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Another source close to the family told the Daily Mail: “She isn’t someone who likes confrontation and she has been extremely supportive of her friend Victoria Beckham during her terrible fall-out with her son Brooklyn. It has been very sad for all concerned.”

But Holly, who has split opinion on social media amid the row, took charge of the feature in Vogue magazine, in which photographs of her wedding dresses are published. In the article, the model appeared to make another pointed dig at her new husband Adam Peaty’s estranged relatives.

Real reason Holly Ramsay’s mum Tana has steered clear of the Peaty wedding row

https://i2-prod.mirror.co.uk/incoming/article36490171.ece/ALTERNATES/s615/1_F1-75-Live-Arrivals.jpg

Tana Ramsay, married to TV chef Gordon, did not mention Holly and Adam Peaty’s wedding on her Instagram page last week, despite the controversy surrounding the big day

Holly Ramsay’s mum Tana has not waded into the row surrounding her daughter’s wedding — and friends say for good reason.

Tana, 51, has not been caught in the crossfire of the apparent feud between Holly and Adam Peaty, and his side of the family, which led to most of them being banned from the ceremony last week. Her husband, TV chef Gordon, even appeared to make jibes during his speech at Bath Abbey in front of around 200 guests.

But Tana hasn’t mentioned the big day on her Instagram, and hasn’t even posted a picture on there of Holly and Adam since 2023 when they became engaged. Sources say this is because the mum is known as “Tana the peacemaker” among her friends, who have praised her “kind and sweet” nature.

A friend of the Ramsays said: “Tana is the kindest, sweetest and most down-to-earth woman you could wish to meet. She loves nothing more than being a mum. Parenting is her thing and she’s done her very best to bring her children up with morals, manners and tried to teach them to do the right thing.

“Tana is the calming mother hen, the peacemaker. Falling out like this, to the extent that your mother isn’t at your own wedding, is just awful. “

READ MORE: Holly Ramsay’s savage two word dig at Adam Peaty’s family in bitter feudREAD MORE: Adam Peaty’s wedding photos show truth about his bitter fallout with his family

Holly’s three wedding dresses have finally been pictured — and these included Tana’s wedding gown, which she wore to wed Gordon nearly 30 years ago. In an interview, Holly said: “I’ve always loved the idea of bringing in mum’s dress at some point.”

And Tana, a trained Montessori teacher, is thought to have been extremely touched by this. Tana, who shares six children with the chef, is said to be extremely proud of her children, despite any controversies and showdowns.

Article continues below

Another source close to the family told the Daily Mail: “She isn’t someone who likes confrontation and she has been extremely supportive of her friend Victoria Beckham during her terrible fall-out with her son Brooklyn. It has been very sad for all concerned.”

But Holly, who has split opinion on social media amid the row, took charge of the feature in Vogue magazine, in which photographs of her wedding dresses are published. In the article, the model appeared to make another pointed dig at her new husband Adam Peaty’s estranged relatives.

Iran urges UN to respond to Trump’s ‘reckless’ threats over protests

Iran’s United Nations ambassador Amir Saeed Iravani has written to the UN secretary-general and the president of the UN Security Council (UNSC), urging them to condemn “unlawful threats” towards Tehran from United States President Donald Trump amid ongoing protests in the country.

The letter sent on Friday came hours after Trump said the US was “locked and loaded and ready to go” if any more protesters were killed in the ongoing demonstrations in Iran over the cost of living.

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Iravani called on UN chief Antonio Guterres and members of the UNSC to “unequivocally and firmly condemn” Trump’s “reckless and provocative statements”, describing them as a “serious violation” of the UN Charter and international law.

“Any attempt to incite, encourage or legitimise internal unrest as a pretext for external pressure or military intervention is a gross violation of the sovereignty, political independence and territorial integrity of the Islamic Republic of Iran”, Iravani said in the letter, which was published in full by the IRNA state news agency.

The letter added that Iran’s government “reiterates its inherent right to defend its sovereignty” and that it will “exercise its rights in a decisive and proportionate manner”.

“The United States of America bears full responsibility for any consequences arising from these illegal threats and any subsequent escalation of tensions”, Iravani added.

IRNA reported earlier that protests continued across Iran on Friday, with people gathering in Qom, Marvdasht, Yasuj, Mashhad, and Hamedan as well as in the Tehran neighbourhoods of Tehranpars and Khak Sefid.

The protests have swept across the country after shopkeepers in Iran’s capital Tehran went on strike on Sunday over high prices and economic stagnation.

At least nine people had been killed and 44 arrested in the unrest. The deputy governor of Qom province on Friday said that another person had died after a grenade exploded in his hand, in what the governor said was an attempt to incite unrest.

In his post on Truth Social, Trump said&nbsp, that if Iran “violently kills peaceful protesters, which is their custom, the United States of America will come to their rescue”.

Ali Larijani, secretary of the Supreme National Security Council, shot back that US interference “is equivalent to chaos across the entire region and the destruction of American interests”.

Iran’s economic woes, including a collapsing currency and high inflation rates, follow years of severe drought in Tehran, a city with a population of some 10 million people, compounding multiple ongoing crises.

Iranian leaders have struck a surprisingly conciliatory tone in response, with President Masoud Pezeshkian saying the government is at “fault” for the situation and promising to find solutions. Observers have noted the response is markedly different from the harsh reaction to past protests in the country.

The United States bombed three Iranian nuclear sites in June this year during a 12-day escalation between Israel and Iran. Trump called the operation a “very successful attack.”

Trump said that if Iran advances its nuclear or ballistic weapons program, the US would “knock the hell out” of it at a press conference last week with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Israeli efforts to retaliate against Iran were prompted by the statement.

UN chief Guterres calls on Israel to reverse NGO ban in Gaza, West Bank

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has called on Israel to reverse a pending ban on 37 nongovernmental organisations (NGOs) working in Gaza and the occupied West Bank.

In a statement on Friday, Guterres called the work of the groups “indispensable to life-saving humanitarian work”, according to spokesperson Stephane Dujarric. He added that the “suspension risks undermining the fragile progress made during the ceasefire”.

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Israel banned the humanitarian groups for failing to meet new registration rules requiring aid groups working in the occupied territory to provide “detailed information on their staff members, funding and operations”. It has pledged to enforce the ban starting March 1.

Experts have denounced the requirements as arbitrary and in violation of humanitarian principles. Aid groups have said that providing personal information about their Palestinian employees to Israel could put them at risk.

The targeted groups include several country chapters of Doctors Without Borders (known by its French acronym, MSF), the Norwegian Refugee Council, and the International Rescue Committee.

To date, Israel has killed about 500 aid workers and volunteers in Gaza throughout its genocidal war. All told, at least 71, 271 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza since October 7, 2023.

In his statement, Guterres said the NGO ban “comes on top of earlier restrictions that have already delayed critical food, medical, hygiene and shelter supplies from entering Gaza”.

“This recent action will further exacerbate the humanitarian crisis facing Palestinians”, he said.

Nearly all of Gaza’s population has been displaced throughout the war, with many still living in tents and temporary shelters.

Israel had maintained severe restrictions on aid entering the enclave prior to a ceasefire going into effect in October. Under the deal, Israel was meant to provide unhindered aid access.

But humanitarian groups have said Israel has continued to prevent adequate aid flow. Ongoing restrictions include materials that could be used to provide better shelter and protection from flooding amid devastating winter storms, according to the UN.

The “deteriorating” conditions in Gaza were the subject of a warning from the foreign ministers of Qatar, Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Turkiye, Pakistan, and Indonesia earlier on Friday.

According to a statement, “Flooded camps, damaged tents, the collapse of damaged buildings, exposed to cold temperatures, combined with malnutrition, have significantly increased risks to civilian lives.”

Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,409

Here is where things stand on Saturday, January 3:

Fighting

  • Two people were killed, including a three-year-old child, and at least 31 people were wounded in a Russian ballistic missile attack on a five-storey residential building in the centre of Ukraine’s Kharkiv, the region’s governor Oleh Syniehubov wrote on Telegram.
  • Russia’s Ministry of Defence denied responsibility for the attack, claiming it was caused by the detonation of Ukrainian ammunition and was meant as a distraction from a deadly attack the day before on the village of Khorly, in a Russian-occupied part of the Kherson region.
  • The death toll from the drone strike on a hotel and cafe in Khorly rose to 28 people, the region’s Russian-installed governor, Vladimir Saldo, told Russia’s state-run TASS news agency. Saldo also said that more than 60 people were injured in the attack. Ukraine has responded to the strike by saying it does not target civilians.
  • Ukraine’s Deputy Prime Minister Oleksii Kuleba said in a post on Facebook that Ukrainian authorities have decided to evacuate more than 3, 000 children, along with their parents, from 44 front-line settlements in Ukraine’s Zaporizhia and Dnipropetrovsk regions due to Russian aggression.
  • A Ukrainian attack on the electricity grid in the Russian-occupied Zaporizhia region of Ukraine left 1, 777 households without power, Russian-installed regional governor, Yevgeniy Balitsky, wrote on Telegram.
  • Russian forces shot down 64 Ukrainian drones overnight into Friday, Russia’s Defence Ministry said, according to TASS.
  • Ukrainian monitoring site DeepState reported Russian forces seized more land in the Myrnohrad and Pokrovsk areas of Ukraine’s Donetsk region, as well as in&nbsp, Svitle in the Ternopil region.
  • The Russian army captured more than 5, 600 square kilometres (2, 160 square miles), or nearly 1 percent, of Ukrainian territory in 2025, according to an analysis of data from the Institute for the Study of War (ISW), which works with the Critical Threats Project.
  • According to the AFP news agency, the land seized by Russian forces last year was more than in the previous two years combined, but less than the 60, 000sq km (23, 166sq miles) Russia took in 2022, the first year of its all-out invasion.

Politics and diplomacy

  • Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy named Ukraine’s military intelligence chief Kyrylo Budanov as his presidential chief of staff on Friday, in the latest Ukrainian leadership shake-up.
  • Zelenskyy also nominated Mykhailo Fedorov, a drone and digitalisation specialist who has served as first deputy prime minister and minister of digital transformation, as defence minister. Fedorov, whose appointment must be approved by parliament, will replace Denys Shmyhal, a former prime minister who was being offered a new government post.
  • RecepTayyip Erdogan, the president of Turkiye, told reporters in Istanbul that he would hold a phone call with United States President Donald Trump on Monday to discuss peace efforts. Turkiye has been hosting intermittent peace talks during Russia’s war on Ukraine.
  • Erdogan also stated that Hakan Fidan, Turkiye’s foreign minister, will attend a Parisian meeting of the “coalition of the willing,” a group of countries supporting Ukraine.

Littler to face Van Veen in PDC Worlds final

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Luke Littler surged into his third successive PDC World Championship final and will face European champion Gian van Veen in what promises to be a blockbuster conclusion to the tournament.

World champion Littler came from a set down to beat 20th seed Ryan Searle in impressive style, averaging 105.35 in a 6-1 win over his fellow Englishman.

Meanwhile, Dutchman Van Veen overcame two-time champion Gary Anderson 6-3 in a semi-final for the ages that saw both players average just shy of 103.

Littler’s success meant he has still yet to taste defeat prior to a final at Alexandra Palace and extended the 18-year-old’s unbeaten record in major ranking tournament semi-finals to 11.

He became just the fourth player to reach three consecutive PDC World Championship finals, after Phil Taylor, Dennis Priestley and Anderson, and could be the fourth player to win PDC world titles in successive years.

Anderson did so most recently with back-to-back wins in 2015 and 2016.

Littler told BBC Radio 5 Live: “I’m very happy with tonight – the doubles, the finishing, the high-scoring. It could have been a bit better but I’m happy to make it three consecutive finals [at the World Championship].

    • 14 hours ago

Littler too strong for Searle

Searle made a strong start in his first semi-final appearance at the World Championship, shrugging off a 10-dart finish and 105 average from Littler to take the opening set thanks to some clinical finishing.

However, the teenager’s scoring was relentless and it proved too much for Searle to contend with.

An 11-darter levelled it up but a key moment came at two legs apiece in the third set as Searle, throwing first, hit just 15 with his first three darts to give Littler an advantage he never relinquished.

There was no let-up from Littler, who hit 10 180s in the match, as he took out 110 to win a fourth set in which he averaged the same number.

He was exemplary on the doubles – double 20, in particular – as well, with a checkout percentage of 58.8% to ensure there was no way back for Searle.

There was little repeat of the boos Littler experienced during his last-16 win over Rob Cross on Monday – on this occasion they came in jest after he missed treble 20 having hit six perfect darts to start the leg.

It was one of two near-misses for Littler in his search for a first World Championship nine-darter – and he did not even win the leg after the second of them as Searle reeled in the big fish – a 170 maximum checkout.

Van Veen battles past idol Anderson in classic semi-final

Gian van VeenGetty Images

While Littler cruised through, there was no such luck for Van Veen as he beat his idol Anderson in a remarkable match.

It began with the Scot winning the first set against the darts with a 104 average, but any thoughts that Van Veen, 23, might be overawed in his first world semi-final were quickly forgotten as he hit a 10-darter to start the second set.

A stunning average of 113.35 saw him level it at 1-1 with a 117 checkout and was a taster of what was to come in the sets that followed.

Anderson started the next with a 144 checkout but Van Veen hit back once more, hitting six perfect darts to start the deciding leg on his way to an 11-darter.

Somehow, the fifth set took the match to another level again. First, Anderson broke with a 10-darter and hit a 170 checkout to go 2-0 in legs, and a leg from making it 3-2.

Instead, Van Veen made it 4-1 after a 170 checkout of his own forced a deciding leg. He won it and averaged 111.46, while Anderson was left wondering how he had lost a set in which he averaged 117.44.

The 55-year-old’s resilience shone through, though, and with the crowd behind him, he won the next two sets to make it 4-3 and pile the pressure on his younger opponent – who had missed four darts to make it 5-2.

But while both players showed signs that the unrelenting nature of the contest was taking its toll, Van Veen held firm, got himself 5-3 up and then finished strongly with a 13-darter to clinch his place in the final.

“To be in the World Championship final is not even a dream coming true because I wasn’t able to dream about this,” Van Veen, who had not won a match at the World Championship prior to this event, told Sky Sports.

Semi-final results

Final

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  • Darts

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