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Reading agree terms with buyer over sale

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Reading have agreed terms with a buyer over the sale of the club and the English Football League has extended the deadline to complete a deal to 5 May.

This is the second time the EFL has given the Royals more time to complete a sale since owner Dai Yongge was disqualified under its Owners’ and Directors’ Test.

The first extension ran until 22 April, and the club have now been given another 13 days to complete a deal.

Reading re-entered talks with a buyer in early April, who they said they were in “advanced dialogue” with.

The club have now confirmed “further progress” has been made towards the sale, including the Select Car Leasing Stadium and Bearwood Park training facility.

“The terms of the deal have been agreed between the club’s current owner Mr Dai [Yongge] and the buyer, whose identity must remain confidential at this stage. Both parties will now work to complete the necessary steps to complete the takeover,” the club said.

“The buying party will be supporting the club’s immediate financial obligations until the transaction is complete, and as such, day-to-day running of the club will be unaffected. “

The EFL confirmed the second extension had been given for Yongge to “divest his interests” in the club.

If he fails to do so within the agreed time frame, the EFL has to power to stop Reading from playing matches.

“Earlier today, the EFL board granted a further extension until Monday 5 May for Mr Dai Yongge to divest his interests in Reading FC,” the EFL said.

“Since our last update on 3 April, further progress has been made in respect of the proposed sale of the club.

“As a result, the board deemed it appropriate to agree to the club’s request to allow more time for matters to be concluded in accordance with EFL regulations. “

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Amanda Holden addresses change with husband Chris after ‘taking notes’ from expert

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Amanda Holden shared how her new co-star, relationship expert Paul C Brunson, helped with her own love life during filming for their new Netflix show, Cheat: Unfinished Business

Amanda Holden with husband Chris Hughes(Image: INSTAGRAM/AMANDAHOLDEN)

Amanda Holden said her new gig as the host of a dating show offered unexpected benefits to her own marriage.

While working on Cheat: Unfinished Business, alongside love guru Paul C Brunson, the 54-year-old presenter confessed to making notes and putting them into practice with her husband Chris Hughes.

The Britain’s Got Talent judge told Closer Magazine: “He gives out amazing advice that I literally made notes on throughout filming.

“I was really nice to my husband Chris across the summer when we were making the show! “

Not long ago, Amanda revealed that despite being happily married, she and Chris had been leading “separate lives” due to their hectic work schedules.

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She told Heart Radio listeners: “I’ve been married for over 20 years. Well, I met him in 2003, I can’t work it out.

“Anyway, a long time, and our lives have been very separate for a long time because we’re both very busy. Obviously, we’re very happily married, but we do lots of things separately.

“I love my Peloton and running, he goes and plays squash. He’s got a massive career as well.

Amanda Holden and husband Chris Hughes attend Battersea Dogs & Cats Home's
Amanda Holden ‘made notes’ during filming for her new dating show(Image: David M. Benett/Getty Images)

“We’re always separate, you know. ” According to an insider, Amanda and her spouse have since been working on getting their busy schedules to align.

They told the magazine: “Amanda realises that something’s got to give but it’s not quite that simple. She knows she needs to prioritise her husband – who knows how she would cope without him.

“They’ve talked about trying a getaway to spend real down time together – alone. The kids are old enough to hold the fort.

“Amanda knows she needs to consider this. Until now it’s always been as a family so going on holiday alone would be alien to her.

“But it’s a great place to start, even if it’s a long weekend. “

No stranger to discussing her marriage on air, Amanda also recently joked about her husband giving her the ick.

She said: “My ick with Chris, although that does sound quite dramatic, is when Chris is dressed casually.

“My husband looks really nice when he goes out but his relaxed look, the thing I would burn without any hesitation, but I think it would pollute the air, is that he owns yellow Crocs. “

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Miley Cyrus’ mum reveals how she fixed ‘strained relationship’ with daughter Noah

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Tish Cyrus went public with her romance with the actor in November 2022, and just weeks later, Dominic Purcell popped the question, with the help of her famous daughter Miley Cyrus

Miley Cyrus’ mum shares how she fixed ‘strained relationship’ with daughter Noah(Image: Getty Images for The Recording Academy)

Miley Cyrus’ mother, Tish Cyrus, has discussed how she strengthened her reportedly strained relationship with daughter Noah Cyrus. The mother-daughter duo was said to be feuding in recent years after Tish started dating Prison Break star Dominic Purcell, who reportedly once casually dated Noah.

Tish went public with her romance with the actor in November 2022, and just weeks later, Dominic popped the question, with the help of her famous daughter Miley. Tish revealed the engagement news in 2023, and in August 2024, they tied the knot in a small ceremony in Miley‘s backyard at her home in Malibu.

Tish Cyrus and Dominic Purcell
Tish and Dominic tied the knot two years ago(Image: @tishcyrus/instagram)

It was claimed at the time that Noah wasn’t at the wedding, as she supposedly dated Dominic before Tish did. However, after over a year of rumours on their relationship, Tish and Noah shocked fans when they reunited for a TikTok this month.

And on a recent episode of Tish and Brandi Cyrus’ podcast, Sorry We’re Cyrus, Noah joined in on the fun and discussed their bond and how they grew closer.

Tish said being physically closer to her daughter helped fix their issues. “Noah moved this year. That’s been so good for us,” she explained, saying they were “able to go on our walks and we found our new favourite ice cream truck. “

Liz Hurley and Billy Ray Cyrus
Liz Hurley recently shared a photo of Billy Ray kissing her(Image: @elizabethhurley1/instagram)

Noah went on to reveal her fiancé, Pinkus, is ‘really close’ to her mum which she ‘loves so much’ as Tish didn’t get along with her past boyfriends.

Tish said: “I love him so much and honestly… he is a man. He’s so respectful and driven and sweet. Honestly I think he is perfect. He is so awesome and I could not be happier that you are with him. “

Meanwhile, it was during an interview on the Call Her Daddy podcast last year that Tish revealed she had pursued Dominic after calling time on her 28-year marriage to ex-husband Billy Ray Cyrus, and sent him a DM on Instagram.

A source claimed Noah was “seeing Dominic when Tish started pursuing him,” and the mother-of-five “was aware” of her daughter’s relationship with the actor.

The source went on to allege that Miley had security outside her home in Malibu when her mother’s wedding ceremony was taking place in an effort to keep out Noah.

The mother and daughter have not spoken about the claims. Meanwhile, Billy Ray Cyrus shocked fans when he was pictured kissing Elizabeth Hurley.

Billy sent the showbiz world into meltdown when model, Liz, shared a snap of them kissing on Instagram – tagged with a love heart – on Easter Sunday.

Famous friends and fans of the couple quickly rushed to the comments section to congratulate Liz, 59, and Billy, 63, on their romance. Unsurprisingly, Tish, 57, who divorced the country star in 2022, was not among them.

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Katy Perry told ‘inspiration doesn’t have to leave the atmosphere’ after space stunt

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Katy Perry created history on the Blue Origin space mission earlier this month but social media influencer Laura Young believes that the singer could have inspired more people in other ways

Katy Perry’s Blue Origin space flight branded ‘deflating’ amidst backlash

Katy Perry made history by taking part in the Blue Origin space flight which had an all-female crew. But influencer Laura Young believes that the flight which lasted just a matter of minutes lacked depth.

Laura, who was crowned Scotland’s Influencer of the Year has been an active campaigner on environment issues for sometime and has also spearheaded the ban on disposable vapes, which comes into place in June this year. The 27-year-old from East Renfrewshire has now spoken on the environmental impact Katy’s space flight has had and how she could have inspired her daughter, Daisy, in another way.

The flight, which consisted of Katy, Gayle King, film producer Kerianne Flynn, former NASA scientist Aisha Bowe, US journalist Lauren Sanchez, US research scientist Amanda Nguyen made history as they headed into space with an all female crew for the first time since 1963.

READ MORE: ‘I tried Whisker’s Litter-Robot 4 to see if it could end the daily cat litter nightmare for good’

Katy took a daisy into space for her young daughter, Daisy
Katy took a daisy into space for her young daughter, Daisy

Speaking exclusively to the Mirror, Laura who has been announced as the Girlguiding environment ambassador, scientist and climate activist said: “Any celebrity space flight would get backlash, but it was tough seeing this mission framed as groundbreaking when it lacked depth. And ironically, the fact it was all women made the criticism sting more, because we all hoped it would be more meaningful.”

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Reflecting on Katy’s tribute to her young daughter, which saw her take a daisy flower on the flight in Jeff Bezo’s spacecraft with her, Laura added: “I thought it was lovely that Katy brought a daisy for her daughter but Daisy might learn more about protecting the planet by joining Rainbows and earning her Eco Award. Inspiration doesn’t have to leave the atmosphere. It can start right here, in your local community. “

However, Laura who boasts 43,200 followers alone admits she wanted to be inspired by the mission but was left feeling “deflated”. She said: “It looked more like a glossy PR moment than a genuine push for progress in science or space exploration. ” She went on to said that the flight had “zero scientific significance,” adding: “Nor has the importance of space science been highlighted throughout the media splash from the celebrity passengers. “

Girlguiding environment ambassador, scientist and climate activist, Laura Young said she was 'deflated' by the flight
Girlguiding environment ambassador, scientist and climate activist, Laura Young said she was ‘deflated’ by the flight(Image: © Julie Broadfoot)

The flight has also sparked backlash from environmentalists after a 2022 World Inequality Report stated that a single space flight of several minutes emits more carbon emissions than one billion humans would in their lifetime. On the Blue Origin New Shepard website, they claim that the system of the “reusable” space craft had been designed to “decrease the cost of access to space and reduce waste. “

They add that the BE-3PM engine is fuelled by highly efficient liquid oxygen and hydrogen” and that it’s engine com-buster is “water vapour with no carbon emissions. ” Laura commented: “We’re being told to recycle, cut down on flying, and lower our carbon footprints – and then we watch celebrities rocket into space for under 11 minutes. Even if Blue Origin says it’s rocket emits just water vapour, that still has consequences for our atmosphere and climate.

“Emissions from this rocket eat away at the ozone layer, and do untold damage to our incredibly important atmosphere. The estimated environmental footprint of this trip is hard to quantify, but our best guess is that this one flight will have the same carbon footprint, if not more, as what someone will emit across their entire lifetime. “

But while commercial space travel appears to be an option for those with millions in the bank, Laura believes that the money used on such trips would be better suited to being spent on Earth. “Imagine how far it could go towards funding climate solutions or STEM education programmes that actually make a lasting impact,” she said.

Katy Perry took part in the historic space flight
Katy Perry took part in the historic space flight(Image: BLUE ORIGIN/AFP via Getty Images)

The social media star who is a keen supporter of women entering careers in STEM (science, technology, engineering and maths) adnits it was “frustrating” following the trip. “It was sold as empowering, but it didn’t really show the work or the expertise behind real progress in these fields. It felt like faux feminism – style over substance,” she said.

However, while the trip has sparked backlash, Katy and the female crew have also received praise for the historic flight. Theresa Payton, who served as President George W. Bush’s Chief Information Officer told the Mirror: “It was fearless. It showed women, young women, girls that they belong among the stars. It definitely reminds us that we should dream bigger. Katy Perry’s words on the matter, I see she’s being panned but I have to say, as a working mum, her words hit home for me and every other working mother who’s juggling their career and family.

“So it was really great to see. I get it, some people feel like it was more of a billionaire’s joy ride, is what I think somebody wrote but I love this opportunity to talk about this. This wasn’t just a flight, it was really a launch pad for ambition. We have no idea how many young women and girls will walk away inspired. Maybe they’ll card the next Mars Rover or maybe they will create the next design, eco-friendly rocket. Maybe they’ll be inspired to be an astronaut but that’s the ripple effect that I think we could have from something like this. “

Girlguiding, the UK’s largest youth organisation dedicated to girls, has launched their Eco award for girls aged 4-18 to mark the first anniversary of their environmental sustainability strategy, which pledges to halve its carbon emissions by 2040 and is funded by The Leslie Sell Charitable Trust.

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Trump’s campaign to turn dissent into a deportable offence harms democracy

On April 11, an immigration judge in Louisiana ruled that Mahmoud Khalil, a former Columbia University graduate student and lawful United States permanent resident, can be deported. Not for committing a crime. Not for violating immigration rules. But for his political speech – specifically for helping organise a peaceful Gaza solidarity encampment at his university.

The government’s case against Khalil is hinged on Section 237(a)(4)(C)(i) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, a Cold War-era provision that permits the deportation of any noncitizen whose presence is deemed a potential threat to US foreign policy. The evidence the government submitted against him was a two-page memo from Secretary of State Marco Rubio, asserting – without proof – that Khalil’s “beliefs and associations” could “adversely affect U. S. foreign policy interests”. Ironically, the document itself admitted that Khalil’s actions were “otherwise lawful”.

And yet, it was enough. The mere invocation of “foreign policy” or “national security” now operates like a legal incantation, overriding First Amendment protections, due process and even common sense.

Khalil’s case is not an outlier. It is the leading edge of a broader strategy to silence dissent in the US – particularly dissent critical of Israeli policies or sympathetic to Palestinian rights – using various legal tools. This use and abuse of the US legal system sets a dangerous precedent that in the long run will harm American democracy.

Dozens of international students and scholars – many from Muslim-majority countries or racialised communities – have also been subjected to surveillance, detention and deportation, often without any allegations of criminal wrongdoing.

Among them is Badar Khan Suri, a visiting academic at Georgetown University and Indian citizen who was arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) at his home in Virginia and later transferred to Texas. He remains in detention, facing removal based on his family ties. The father of his American wife used to work as an adviser to the Gaza government.

Another example is Rumeysa Ozturk, a Turkish Fulbright scholar and doctoral student at Tufts University who was detained after co-authoring a newspaper opinion piece related to the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement. A US immigration judge has since denied her release, labelling her a “flight risk and a danger to the community”.

Another recent case is that of Mohsen Mahdawi, a Palestinian green card holder and Columbia student protest leader who was arrested by ICE agents when he went for his US citizenship interview. He now faces deportation to the occupied West Bank, which he said would be “a death sentence”, given that he has lost family and friends to Israeli military violence.

Then there’s Momodou Taal, a British-Gambian PhD candidate at Cornell University who filed a lawsuit against President Donald Trump’s administration, arguing that executive orders targeting pro-Palestinian activists violated his First and Fifth Amendment rights. Despite suing preemptively and being legally represented, Taal’s efforts were ultimately undermined by jurisdictional manoeuvring and executive pressure. His emergency injunction was denied by a federal judge on March 27, and days later, he self-deported, saying he no longer trusted the courts to protect him even with a favourable ruling.

There is also Yunseo Chung, a South Korean-born Columbia student and US permanent resident who narrowly avoided deportation thanks to a preemptive federal court injunction. Alireza Doroudi, an Iranian engineering PhD student at the University of Alabama, was quietly detained with no explanation. Ranjani Srinivasan, an Indian student at Columbia, fled to Canada after ICE agents visited her apartment. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) later released footage of her departure, labelling her a “terrorist sympathiser”.

In this campaign of political persecution, the Trump administration has largely relied on immigration courts, which are not part of the independent federal judiciary under Article III of the US Constitution.

They are administrative tribunals housed within the executive branch, specifically, the Department of Justice. Their judges are appointed by the attorney general, lack tenure and are subject to political oversight. The procedural protections available in Article III courts – such as full evidentiary hearings, impartial review and constitutional due process – are substantially weakened in immigration courts.

While federal courts may scrutinise whether an arrest or deportation violates constitutional protections – like the First Amendment or equal protection – immigration judges are often empowered to rule based on vague assertions of “foreign policy concerns” or “national security interests” with little to no requirement for concrete evidence. This dual-track legal system allows the government to bypass the constitution while maintaining the appearance of legality.

There have been numerous calls to reform this system from legal scholars, human rights organisations and even former immigration judges. Proposals have included moving immigration courts out of the Department of Justice and into an independent Article I court structure to ensure judicial impartiality.

However, these reforms have consistently failed, largely due to congressional inaction as well as political resistance from successive administrations that have benefitted from the system’s malleability. The executive branch has long viewed immigration courts as a tool of policy enforcement rather than neutral adjudication.

While this crackdown has so far focused on noncitizens with legal status, it could soon extend to naturalised Americans. US law allows the revocation of citizenship in cases of fraud, membership in terrorist organisations and other crimes. In his first term, Trump created a dedicated “Denaturalization Section” within the Department of Justice to pursue citizenship revocations. About 700,000 immigrant files were investigated with the aim of bringing 1,600 cases to court.

Trump has now signalled that he intends to pick up his denaturalisation drive where he left off. If he deploys this legal tool against critical voices, this would mean that even citizenship may no longer offer protection if one’s political views fall out of favour with the government.

As the Department of Justice, DHS and ICE have worked together on the campaign against dissent, they have received public support from nonprofit organisations. Groups like Betar and Canary Mission have taken public credit for identifying international students involved in pro-Palestinian activism and urging their deportation.

Betar claims to have compiled a list of foreigners it labelled as “jihadis” and submitted it to the Trump administration. Canary Mission, meanwhile, launched a project called “Uncovering Foreign Nationals”, which publishes the names and photos of international students it accuses of anti-Semitism or anti-Israel activism – effectively creating a blacklist.

While there is no official confirmation that DHS or ICE have acted directly on these materials, the close timing between these campaigns and government enforcement has raised serious concerns that these politically motivated private groups are shaping federal immigration enforcement without transparency or accountability.

The US portrays itself as a beacon of liberty, a nation governed by the rule of law, where freedom of speech is sacred. But Khalil’s case – and the others like it – paint a starkly different picture. If your residency, citizenship, education or even physical freedom can be revoked for peacefully expressing political views, then speech is no longer a right. It is a conditional privilege.

This is more than a legal overreach. It is a moral crisis for American democracy. When free speech becomes contingent on political loyalty and when private blacklists shape federal enforcement, the foundational values of liberty, pluralism and equality before the law are being dismantled.

What American democracy urgently needs is congressional action to establish judicial independence in immigration courts, stronger First Amendment protections for noncitizens and full transparency around the government’s reliance on private ideological actors. Anything less risks enshrining a two-tiered system of rights and, ultimately, a country where dissent itself is deportable.

This is not just a test of immigration policy. It is a test of democracy – and of the very soul of the nation itself.