Archive November 5, 2025

Pakistan welcomes Indian Sikh pilgrims in first crossing since May conflict

The first major crossing between Pakistan’s nuclear-armed neighbors since their deadly conflict in May has been completed with Pakistan’s welcome of Sikh pilgrims from India.

The decision, which was in line with efforts to promote “interreligious and intercultural harmony and understanding,” was announced by Pakistan’s high commission in New Delhi last week, coincided with the granting of visas to more than 2,100 pilgrims to attend a 10-day festival marking the 556 years since the birth of Guru Nanak, the founder of the Sikh faith.

More than 70 people were killed in the worst fighting between Islamabad and New Delhi since 1999 in May. Following the violence, traffic was restricted to general traffic at the Wagah-Attari border, which is the only active land crossing between the two nations.

The pilgrims will visit other sacred sites in Pakistan, including Kartarpur, where the guru is buried, on Wednesday. They will gather at Nankana Sahib, where Guru Nanak was born west of Lahore.

Since the conflict, the visa-free Kartarpur Corridor, which was inaugurated in 2019, has been closed to Indian Sikhs.

After New Delhi claimed Islamabad was supporting a deadly attack on tourists in Indian-administered Kashmir, Pakistan refuted all these claims, the conflict broke out in May.

In Punjab, a region that includes parts of modern-day India and Pakistan, was founded in the 15th century as a monotheistic religion. Some of the Sikhs’ most revered places of worship are in Pakistan, despite the partition of India’s majority.

Argos, Curry’s and Morphy Richards launch Black Friday sales up to 50% off in the Oodie sale – LIVE

Black Friday sales are live across a host of big brands like Morphy Richards and Oodie, as well as high street and online retailers.

Wednesday’s Live Blog will bring you details of those sales plus what to expect from the likes of Ninja, Curry’s and Dunelm, as well as huge savings to be had on new tech and a host of gigs and shows.

Our shopping experts have been picking their favourites and scouring the internet for the best deals such as the Amazon Fire 7 Kids tablet is on sale for £59.99 as well as the Liz Earle beauty advent calendar that offers savings on skincare products of over £120.

For shoppers looking to save even more, setting up a free TopCashback account here will give a further £15 sign-up bonus on some sites, which can effectively bring the overall price of a purchase down.

Check the on TopCashback to see which retailers are covered. With this savvy saving, shoppers can effectively reduce the price of items, like this Checked Hooded Duffle Coat With Wool which is £63 at M&S after cashback.

When is Black Friday 2025?

Black Friday officially falls on 28 November 2025. Traditionally, Black Friday was a high street sales event following Thanksgiving, which falls on the Thursday.

Now, Black Friday is a seasonal sales event, both online and offline, with most retailers slashing prices for a couple of weeks. Shoppers can expect big discounts through much of November, including Cyber Monday on 1 December.

Let’s take a look at what’s on offer for Wednesday, and if you have something specific you are looking for, or have a great recommendation of your own, let us know in the comments or email tom.canning@reachplc.com

That Oodie Black Friday sale

The Oodie Black Friday sale is a fun place to start and as you’ll be aware I’m regularly writing about ways to keep warm while working from home.

The oversized wearable blanket firm has has officially launched its Black Friday sale with savings of up to 50% across the cosy brand’s most popular styles.

Otter Sleep Tee, now £35, was £55 (Oodie)

Until 11pm on November 27, shoppers can grab everything from the best-selling wearable blankets to winter ready puffers for less on the site.

Some of our favourites include the Purple Oodie Original, now £32.50, down from £65, which is available in S/M and ‘One Size Fits Most’. The brand’s Hello Kitty Bow Sherpa Dressing Gown is down to £44.50 from £89.

Black Friday sales: Ninja, Morphy Richards, Argos and what we know so far

Here I’ll keep an eye on retailers and when their sales are expected to go live.

Morphy Richards Black Friday sale is live.

Dunelm’s Black Friday event isn’t yet live, but the retailer does have free home delivery on orders over £60.

Ninja’s sale isn’t yet live, but brand has launched its Black Friday 2025 page on its website, with the option for shoppers to sign up to a newsletter for updates. In 2024 Ninja launched its Black Friday sales around Friday, November 29, although email subscribers were granted access to deals earlier.

LookFantastic has launched its Black Friday reductions, with 20% off almost everything.

Argos has already launched some early offers. The retailer has a sale page that’s up and running, where customers can browse the early deals and find out information about when items can be delivered and what qualifies for free delivery.

Good morning and welcome back

Hello and welcome to Wednesday on the Live Blog, I should come up with a cool name for it. Bloggy McBlogface or something.

Maybe not. Hopefully you are well rested though for another day of deals and bargain hunting. If you have something specific you are looking for, or have a great recommendation of your own, let me know in the comments or email tom.canning@reachplc.com

Government shutdown becomes longest in US history as impact felt nationwide

Williams, 45, given wildcard for Auckland Classic

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Venus Williams has been awarded a wildcard for the Auckland Classic in January.

The 45-year-old, who has won seven Grand Slam singles titles, made her comeback in July after 16 months without competing.

She defeated fellow American Peyton Stearns, then ranked 35th in the world, on her return at the Washington Open to become the second-oldest woman to win a WTA Tour-level singles match.

A month later, she was given a wildcard into the main draw of the US Open and impressed in her three-set loss to Czech 11th seed Karolina Muchova in the first round.

Nicolas Lamperin, tournament director of the Auckland Classic, said: “Venus has had a profound influence on the evolution of women’s tennis and has inspired the next generation with her unshakeable passion for the sport.

“All sports fans should take this opportunity to watch one of the sport’s all-time greats in action.”

Williams is set to play at the Auckland Classic, a tournament she won in 2015, for the first time since 2023.

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Iran releases two French nationals imprisoned for three years

According to French President Emmanuel Macron, Iran has released two French nationals who have been held indefinitely for more than three years on spying-related charges, though it’s not yet known when they will be allowed to return home.

The last French citizens to be officially detained in Iran, Cecile Kohler, 41, and her partner Jacques Paris, 72, were on their way to the French embassy, Macron said in “immense relief” on X on Wednesday.

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He praised this “first step” and claimed negotiations were aimed at bringing them back to France as quickly as possible.

While on an Iran trip in May 2022, the pair were detained. While their families claim that the trip was solely touristic in nature, France had condemned their detention as “unjustified and unfounded.”

Although Paris is retired, both teachers are among a number of Europeans who were entangled in what activists and some Western governments, including France, claim was a deliberate attempt by Iran to take advantage of the West’s concessions.

According to Esmaeil Baghaei, a spokesman for the Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the judge who oversees the case has set them on “conditional release” on bail and says they will remain under surveillance until the next stage of the judicial proceedings.

Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot confirmed to France 2 TV that the Iranian ambassador was in “good health,” but he would not provide specifics about their departure date.

Their 1, 277-day arbitrary detention was ended with the release, according to a statement from their Paris-based legal team to the AFP news agency.

In response to the US-Israel 12-day war against Iran and the reimposition of UN sanctions in the standoff over the Iranian nuclear program, which Tehran claims is purely for civilian purposes, Tehran is dealing with a sensitive subject at this time.

Some Iranians are concerned that Israel will use the sanctions, which are already putting the country under further economic strain, as an excuse to attack once more, as it used the UN’s resolution from June as a pretext for a war that was supported by Israeli officials and the general public.

After a closed-door trial last month, the French pair’s sentences on suspicion of spying for France and Israel totaled 17 years for Paris and 20 for Kohler.

After being moved from Evin following an Israeli attack on the prison in the June War, concern grew over their health.

In what activists called a “forced confession,” a practice that detainees in Iran frequently engage in, which rights groups claim is equivalent to torture, Kohler was shown on Iranian television in October 2022.

Even though “all we know for now is that they are out of prison,” her parents, Pascal and Mireille, told AFP in a statement that they were “immense relief” that the pair were now in a “little corner of France.”

The International Court of Justice (ICJ) was saisied by France, alleging that their detention was a result of a policy that “targets French nationals traveling in or visiting Iran.”

However, the ICJ abruptly dropped the case at France’s request in September, sparking rumors that closed-door negotiations were taking place between the two nations to secure their release.

According to Iran, the duo could be freed as part of a swap agreement with France, which would also result in the release of Iranian Mahdieh Esfandiari.

Esfandiari was detained in France in February on suspicion of spreading “terrorism” through social media, according to French authorities.

She was set to go on trial in Paris starting January 13; Tehran applauded Tehran’s decision to release her on bail last month.

When France 2 questioned whether there had been a deal with Tehran, Barrot declined to comment.

Swedish-Iranian academic Ahmadreza Djalali, who was sentenced to death in 2017 on espionage charges, is one of the Europeans whose families vehemently disagrees.