Meghan Markle’s trip to Paris Fashion Week heralded as ‘first positive PR in years’

Insiders say Meghan Markle is preparing for “yet another relaunch” in the world of business – in either the fashion or cosmetic industry – despite challenges with her film and television projects

Meghan Markle’s trip to Paris – her first visit to Europe in two years – has been today celebrated as her “first positive PR” in some time.

The tag comes despite uproar around Meghan, 44, using the same route Diana, Princess of Wales was driven moments before her tragic crash in August 1997. The Duchess of Sussex was seen in footage with her feet up on the chair in the car, just moments from the infamous Pont d’Alma tunnel.

It was also claimed Meghan flouted a “blanket ban” Harry had imposed on Paris due to the association with his mum. However, the Duchess told critics she went to Paris Fashion Week because of her huge admiration for Pierpaolo Piccioli, one of the industry’s new kings. Insiders now believe Meghan will exploit contacts in this industry to develop her career in couture, following short-lived ventures in other fields.

An industry expert has said: “Paris was a ‘moment’ for her. It’s the first positive PR she’s had in years. Fashion is where she will aim her focus now.”

READ MORE: Kate Middleton shares candid loved-up moment with Prince William that melts heartsREAD MORE: Meghan Markle shares cryptic message on the future of Netflix programme

But Meghan, a mother of two, had to ask Balenciaga for an invite to Paris Fashion Week, which ran from Monday September 29 to Tuesday October 7 this year. The former actress has admired the “craftsmanship and modern elegance” of Mr Piccioli, 58, for several years and he became Creative Director of Balenciaga in May.

Since Paris Fashion Week, the Duchess of Sussex has made further high-profile appearances – again solo without Prince Harry – including at a ceremony in Washington DC, where she lectured as a “high-profile business founder”. This is despite a challenging 2025, during which her and Harry’s Netflix contract was not renewed and she appeared to close down an online marketplace.

READ MORE: Prince William’s thinly veiled swipe at Harry as he jokes about ‘mixed bag’ family

Referring to the flurry of engagements recently, one leading PR guru with clients in the US and UK told the Daily Mail: “It’s Meghan 3.0. She’s on manoeuvres and looking for yet another relaunch.”

Article continues below

They also alluded to a clip Meghan posted online, which gives fans a behind-the-scenes look at her whirlwind trip to New York City – again squeezed into the series of functions in October. The footage features racks of designer clothes and shoes, and a cameo from a surprise A-lister during the trip – this time completed with her 41-year-old husband Harry.

Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,329

Here is how things stand on Wednesday, October 15, 2025:

Fighting

  • Russian forces launched powerful glide bombs and drones against Ukraine’s second-largest city, Kharkiv, in overnight attacks, hitting the city’s main hospital, wounding seven people, and forcing the evacuation of 50 patients, Governor Oleh Syniehubov said.
  • Russia’s Ministry of Defence said that its forces have taken control of the village of Balahan in the Donetsk region in eastern Ukraine.
  • A convoy of United Nations vehicles carrying aid supplies came under fire from Russian forces near the town of Bilozerka in the Kherson region, the UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said, describing the attack as “utterly unacceptable”. There were no injuries in the attack on four UN trucks, two of which were set on fire by remote-controlled drones.
  • Local authorities have ordered the evacuation of families from dozens of villages near the all-but-destroyed northeastern Ukrainian city of Kupiansk, citing the “worsening security situation”.
  • Oleh Syniehubov, governor of Ukraine’s northeastern Kharkiv region, said that a total of 409 families with 601 children were told to leave 27 localities. Another official in the affected area later told public broadcaster Suspilne that the list of localities to be evacuated by families had been expanded to 40.
  • Russia will be able to deploy about 2 million military reservists to fight in Ukraine if needed under amendments to a law likely to be backed by the Russian parliament, according to reports.
  • Power outages were reported in the Ukrainian capital and other regions late on Tuesday due to a network overload and the aftermath of Russian attacks, the Kyiv City State Administration said. Power was cut in three central Kyiv districts on the west bank of the Dnipro River running through the city. Ukrenergo, which operates Ukraine’s high-voltage lines, said that lingering problems from Russian attacks on the country’s energy system had triggered outages in regions across northern, central and southeastern Ukraine.
  • Work is to begin this week to restore external power links to the Russian-held Zaporizhzhia nuclear power station, which has been running on emergency diesel generators for three weeks. Mikhail Ulyanov, Russia’s permanent representative to international organisation based in Vienna, told the Russian state news agency RIA that it was “vital to agree on a local ceasefire in areas where the repair work is to be carried out”.

Military aid

  • NATO defence ministers will meet on Wednesday to try to drum up more military support for Ukraine amid a sharp drop in deliveries of weapons and ammunition to the war-ravaged country in recent months.
  • European military aid to Ukraine declined sharply this summer, despite a recent NATO initiative in which member countries bought US weapons and transferred them to Kyiv, the Kiel Institute for the World Economy said.
  • The United Kingdom has delivered more than 85,000 military drones to Ukraine over the last six months, Secretary of State for Defence John Healey has said, according to the Press Association.
  • German Federal Minister of Finance Lars Klingbeil said his country would continue to “financially secure Ukraine’s defence capabilities for the next few years”, while also working with the US to “massively increase pressure on [Russian President Vladimir] Putin to end his brutal war of aggression”.

Politics and diplomacy

  • Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has stripped the mayor of the port city of Odesa, Gennadiy Trukhanov, of his Ukrainian citizenship after it was discovered he held Russian citizenship. Trukhanov could now face deportation. Trukhanov denied the claim, saying, “I am a citizen of Ukraine”, and said he would challenge the decision in Ukraine’s Supreme Court and, if necessary, the European Court of Human Rights.
  • Zelenskyy said he would appoint a military administration to govern Odesa, citing unresolved security concerns. Ukraine prohibits dual citizenship with Russia, and Trukhanov has long faced allegations of holding both.
  • A Kyiv government source told the AFP news agency that Ukrainian ballet dancer Sergei Polunin had also been stripped of citizenship. Polunin has been a vocal supporter of the Russian president. Pro-Kremlin politician Oleg Tsaryov, who survived an assassination attempt in 2023, was also among those who had their Ukrainian citizenship revoked, according to AFP.
  • United States President Donald Trump said he was “very disappointed” with Russian leader Putin in advance of a planned visit by Zelenskyy to Washington, DC, later this week. “I don’t know why he continues with this war,” Trump said of Putin.
  • Zelenskyy is set to meet Trump in Washington, DC, on Friday, where the two will discuss Ukraine’s air defence and long-range strike capabilities.
  • Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko said she was focusing on Russian attacks on her country’s energy grid in talks this week with US officials.
  • Svyrydenko described the priorities of her visit to Washington, DC, as “energy, sanctions and the development of cooperation with the USA in new ways that can strengthen both our countries”.
  • Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) said it had opened a criminal case against exiled Russian businessman Mikhail Khodorkovsky and other prominent Kremlin critics, accusing them of plotting to violently seize power. The FSB said it was investigating all 22 members of the Russian Antiwar Committee – a group of Russian politicians, businesspeople, journalists, lawyers, artists and academics all based outside the country, who oppose Russia’s war on Ukraine.

Regional security

  • Polish Minister of Foreign Affairs Radoslaw Sikorski warned that Europe must be prepared for Russia to strike deep into the region, calling it “irresponsible” not to build defences such as a “drone wall” on its eastern flank.
  • German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul has accused China of undermining the international rules-based order through its increasingly aggressive policies in Asia and its support for Russia.
  • Wadephul also criticised Russia, saying Moscow is testing NATO’s resolve, violating European Union and NATO airspace, spying on Germany’s critical infrastructure and seeking to influence public discourse with propaganda and disinformation.
  • Trump threatened trade penalties, including tariffs, against Spain, saying he was unhappy with its refusal to raise defence spending to 5 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) and calling the move disrespectful to NATO.
  • Pro-Russian hackers brought down the German government’s public procurement portal, the Sddeutsche Zeitung (SZ) newspaper reported on Tuesday. The cyberattack rendered this important interface between the state and businesses inaccessible for almost a week, the report said.
  • Sweden will set up its first emergency grain stocks in the north of the country, a region that risks being isolated in a conflict, the government said. In its 2026 budget, Stockholm plans to invest 575 million kronor ($60m) to set up the grain reserves. Sweden revived its “total defence” strategy in 2015 following Russia’s annexation of Crimea, and more measures were introduced after Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

Trade

  • Russia’s war in Ukraine is bad for US businesses, which have heavily invested in Europe and whose profits are affected by the uncertainty that Moscow’s aggression creates, European Economic Commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis said. Dombrovskis said that in 2023, US-owned assets in Europe were worth an estimated $19.2 trillion, or roughly 64 percent of all US corporate foreign assets globally.

Katie Price starting Harvey on CBD gummies as he became ‘nice and chilled’ on them

Harvey Price, who is autistic and has Prader-Willi syndrome, accidentally took two of mum Katie Price’s CBD gummies and they reportedly made him “nice and chilled”

Katie Price has told how she has decided to give her son Harvey CBD gummies – after he accidentally took two and became “nice and chilled”.

The media personality, 47, explained she was pleasantly surprised about the effect the gummies had on her son, who is autistic, has Prader-Willi syndrome and vision-impairing Septo-optic dysplasia. Katie insisted she hadn’t tried anything with Harvey that hadn’t been medically prescribed, but he’d been “nice and chilled” after taking the CBD and that it had “taken the edge off” his anxiety.

The mum made the disclosure in a video she posted on Instagram, in which she talks to friend Serena Stregapede. The clip promotes Olympic boxer Anthony Fowler’s company, Supreme CBD, which manufactures various products including the gummies in question.

Katie tells Serena, who is Anthony’s girlfriend: “Because Harvey, he’s got ADHD, behaviour problems all of that. He took a couple. And I’m like Harv! But then I thought, you know what? Just see what it does to him, because he’s got all his medical problems. And he was just nice and chilled.

“When I say chilled, normally he gets a bit of anxiety, especially if I’m taking him out somewhere, then he starts talking, talking more. And I thought why not give him two?”

READ MORE: Frail Katie Price showcases surgically enhanced figure after weight loss concernREAD MORE: Katie Price’s boyfriend JJ Slater spotted spending quality boys time with Harvey

Only around 2,000 people in the UK have Prader-Willi syndrome, a genetic disorder which causes a wide range of physical symptoms, learning difficulties and behavioural challenges. Little research has been carried out into it, and so management typically involves addressing the symptoms and associated difficulties.

Recalling Harvey’s accidental use of the CBD, Katie, from Brighton, East Sussex, continued: “Because he saw them in the jar, when I went ‘No, you can’t have them, they’re mummy’s’ and he’s like, ‘No I want one!’ So I said you can have two and he took the green ones because he loves green.

‘And I said, ‘Do you like them?’ and he said, ‘Yeah, can I have more?’ and I went, ‘No, we’ll have two later when you come back.’… And then yeah, it calmed him down as well.So he’s on all the proper medicationsfor behaviour and stuff and I gave him two of them because he’s like 28 stone, so I thought it’s be all right to have two. And it just chilled him.

“I’ve never ever gone out the box of tryinganything else than what he’s been prescribed and because I know it’s not a drug, I just gave him two green ones and it just slightly took the edge off for him. So I was really surprised.”

There is no published research that CBD helps manage difficulties associated with disorders like Prader-Willi syndrome. Supreme CBD products can be bought over the counter at shops, pharmacies and online, amd so Katie now intends to give her son the gummies regularly.

But the NHS says there is no guarantee that even such products sold in health stores will be of “good quality”. Moreover, the oil can affect how other medicines work, meaning a specialist should always be consulted about using it in conjunction with other treatments, while doctors should monitor users regularly because it can affect the liver.

Yet, captioning the video on her social media, Katie insisted: “I would only ever recommend stuff that works to you all and I would only ever give Harv the gummies after trying them myself and seeing how much of a difference they have made for me.”

Article continues below

FIFA World Cup 2026: The best pictures from the latest qualified teams

Al Jazeera Sport takes a look at some of the best photos from the nations that confirmed their qualification on Wednesday for the FIFA World Cup 2026.

Qatar’s defender Assim Madibo, left, drops to the floor to celebrate with Qatar’s Spanish coach Julian Lopetegui after the FIFA World Cup 2026 Asian qualifier football match against the UAE [Karim Jaafar/AFP]
Qatar's players celebrate after the FIFA World Cup 2026 Asian qualifier football match between Qatar and the UAE at Jassim Bin Hamad Stadium
Qatar’s players celebrate at the full-time whistle against UAE as they reached a World Cup final for the first time through the qualification route [Karim Jaafar/AFP]
Qatar's players celebrate after the FIFA World Cup 2026 Asian qualifier football match between Qatar and the UAE at Jassim Bin Hamad Stadium
Qatar’s players celebrate their achievement with fans at Jassim bin Hamad Stadium in Doha [Karim Jaafar/AFP]
South Africa fans celebrate after qualifying for the FIFA World Cup
South Africa fans celebrate after qualifying for the FIFA World Cup following their victory against Rwanda [Esa Alexander/Reuters]
South Africa fans celebrate after qualifying for the FIFA World Cup
A South Africa fan holds a scarf with his national’s football team’s nickname, Bafana Bafana, on it [Esa Alexander/Reuters]
South Africa fans celebrate after qualifying for the FIFA World Cup
Another South Africa fan made sure she dressed for a party as the team secured qualification for the 2026 finals [Esa Alexander/Reuters]
South Africa fans celebrate after qualifying for the FIFA World Cup
South Africa’s Evidence Makgopa celebrates scoring their third goal against Rwanda with teammates, a strike that was enough to put one foot in the finals for Bafana Bafana [Esa Alexander/Reuters]
Harry Kane of England looks towards the fans after the team's victory in the FIFA World Cup 2026 qualifier match between Latvia and England at Daugava Stadium
England captain Harry Kane looks towards the fans after the team’s victory in the FIFA World Cup 2026 qualifier match in Latvia clinched their place at the 2026 finals [Carl Recine/Getty Images]
 Ivory Coast celebrate qualifying for the World Cup
Ivory Coast celebrate qualifying for the World Cup following their win against Kenya at Alassane Ouattara Stadium, Abidjan, Ivory Coast [Luc Gnago/Reuters]
Ivory Coast fans during the match that saw them qualify for the 2026 World Cup
A sea of orange will descend on the 2026 finals when Ivory Coast fans travel to support their team [Luc Gnago/Reuters]
Minister of Sports of Saudi Arabia, Abdulaziz bin Turki Al-Faisal celebrates after qualifying for the FIFA World Cup
Saudi Arabia’s sport minister, Abdulaziz bin Turki Al-Faisal, celebrates after Saudi Arabia qualified for the FIFA World Cup following their victory against Iraq [Reuters]
audi Arabia players celebrate after qualifying for the FIFA World Cup following their win against Iraq
Saudi Arabia players celebrate after qualifying for the FIFA World Cup at King Abdullah Sport City, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia [Reuters]
Senegal's Sadio Mane, Left, celebrates with teammates after scoring his side's first goal during a World Cup Group B qualifying soccer match between Senegal and Mauritania
Senegal’s Sadio Mane, left, celebrates with teammates after scoring his side’s first goal during their World Cup group B qualifying win against Mauritania [Misper Apawu/AP]
Senegal's supporters cheer ahead of a World Cup Group B qualifying soccer match between Senegal and Mauritania
Senegal’s supporters cheer during the World Cup group B qualifying match against Mauritania at the Stade Abdoulaye Wade in Dakar, Senegal [Misper Apawu/AP]
Senegal supporter cheers ahead of a World Cup Group B qualifying soccer match between Senegal and Mauritania
A Senegal supporter supplies another example of the sights that will be on display at next year’s FIFA World Cup [Misper Apawu/AP]

Kano To Host 11th World Nutritious Food Fair

The Kano State Government has announced that preparations are in top gear to host the 11th edition of the World Nutritious Food Fair, an annual event that brings together key players in Nigeria’s nutrition and food security sectors.

The Commissioner for Budget and Planning, Musa Shanono, disclosed this during a press briefing in Kano on Monday. He revealed that the fair will attract over 100 commercial exhibitors and more than 2,000 participants, including government officials, policymakers, researchers, and private sector stakeholders.

“This event serves as a strategic platform for collective engagement, learning, and networking among stakeholders in Nigeria’s nutritious food sector,” Shanono said. “We are proud that Kano has been chosen once again as the host, as it reflects our government’s ongoing commitment to addressing food and nutrition security.”

According to the Commissioner, the Nutritious Food Fair is not just an exhibition but a vital opportunity to tackle pressing challenges in the sector, such as malnutrition, food processing inefficiencies, and policy gaps.

“The fair brings together a wide range of actors—from farmers and food processors to academics and development partners—to showcase innovations, share knowledge, and discuss emerging issues that affect nutrition in Nigeria,” he added.

Shanono emphasized that the event aligns with the state’s broader development agenda, particularly its focus on improving public health outcomes through better nutrition.

“We are expecting groundbreaking conversations and collaborations that can lead to scalable solutions, particularly in addressing the burden of malnutrition, which continues to affect millions across the country,” he said.

The Commissioner also urged local businesses and agricultural entrepreneurs in the state to take advantage of the opportunity to network and learn from national and international participants.