Archive June 10, 2025

World Bank slashes global economic outlook as trade tensions continue

The World Bank has slashed its 2025 global growth forecast, citing trade tensions and policy uncertainty as the United States imposed wide-ranging tariffs that weigh on global economic forecasts.

On Tuesday, the bank lowered its projection for global gross domestic product (GDP) growth to 2.3 percent in its latest economic prospects report, down from the 2.7 percent that it expected in January. This is the most recent in a series of downgrades by international organisations.

In its twice-yearly Global Economic Prospects report, the bank lowered its forecasts for nearly 70 percent of all economies, including the US, China and Europe, as well as six emerging market regions, from the levels it projected just six months ago before US President Donald Trump took office.

“That’s the weakest performance in 17 years, outside of outright global recessions,” said World Bank Group chief economist Indermit Gill.

Global growth and inflation prospects for this year and next have worsened because of “high levels of policy uncertainty and this growing fragmentation of trade relations”, Gill added.

“Without a swift course correction, the harm to living standards could be deep,” he warned.

By 2027, the World Bank expects global GDP growth to average 2.5 percent in the 2020s, which would be the slowest rate in any decade since the 1960s.

The Trump effect 

The gloomier projections come as Trump imposed a 10 percent tariff on imports from almost all US trading partners in April as well as higher rates on imports of steel and aluminium. He had initially also announced radically higher rates on dozens of these economies, which he has since suspended until early July.

Trump’s on-again off-again tariff hikes have upended global trade, increased the effective US tariff rate from below 3 percent to the mid-teens, its highest level in almost a century, and triggered retaliation by China and other countries.

He also engaged in tit-for-tat escalation with China, although both countries have hit pause on their trade war and temporarily lowered these staggering duties as well. But a lasting truce remains uncertain.

While the World Bank’s growth downgrade was proportionately larger for advanced economies, the bank cautioned that less wealthy countries have tricky conditions to contend with.

Commodity prices are expected to remain suppressed in 2025 and 2026, Gill said.

This means that some 60 percent of emerging markets and developing economies – which are commodity exporters – have to deal with a “very nasty combination of lower commodity prices and more volatile commodity markets”.

GDP downturn 

By 2027, while the per capita GDP of high-income economies will be approximately where it was in pre-pandemic forecasts, corresponding levels for developing economies would be 6 percent lower.

“Except for China, it could take these economies about two decades to recoup the economic losses of the 2020s,” Gill cautioned.

Even as GDP growth expectations have been revised downwards, inflation rates have been revised up, he said, urging policymakers to contain inflation risks.

Despite trade policy challenges, however, Gill argued that “If the right policy actions are taken, this problem can be made to go away with limited long-term damage.”

He urged for the “differential in tariff and non-tariff measures with respect to the US” to be quickly reduced by other countries, starting with the Group of 20, which brings together the world’s biggest economies.

“Every country should extend the same treatment to other countries,” Gill stressed. “It’s not enough to just liberalise with respect to the US. It’s also important to liberalise with respect to the others.”

The World Bank said developing economies could lower tariffs on all trading partners and convert preferential trade deals into pacts spanning the “full range of cross-border regulatory policies” to boost GDP growth.

Generally, wealthier countries have lower tariffs than developing countries, which could be seeking to protect budding industries or have fewer sources of government revenue.

This month, the Paris-based Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development also slashed its 2025 global growth forecast from 3.1 percent to 2.9 percent, warning that Trump’s tariffs would stifle the world economy.

Iran warns against IAEA pressure, Israel attack as more US talks loom

Tehran, Iran – Iran has warned against Western-led escalation by the global nuclear watchdog and any attack by Israel amid preparations for a sixth round of talks with the United States.

Behrouz Kamalvandi, the deputy head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, said the country will have a “proportionate” response to any action against it by Western countries, as well as the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

“If we wanted to reduce our cooperation, the agency would not be able to carry out its duties. We have cooperated beyond our duties, and if the agency does not appreciate that, we will degrade cooperation to its normal levels,” Kamalvandi told Iranian state television late Monday.

His comments come as the IAEA Board of Governors is holding a five-day meeting in Vienna, with Iran’s nuclear programme once again in the spotlight as Tehran is accused of “non-compliance” with nuclear non-proliferation obligations.

Backed by the United States, the three European powers still party to Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal – France, Germany and the United Kingdom – are pushing for yet another censure resolution against Iran for insufficient cooperation. The latest resolution, however, could prove the most serious in two decades and signal a shift toward escalated confrontation.

The 2015 deal lifted United Nations sanctions in exchange for strict curbs on Iran’s nuclear programme, including a 3.67 percent limit on its enrichment of uranium. US President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew from the landmark nuclear accord in 2018 and imposed harsh sanctions.

But the European signatories to the nuclear deal could still activate a “snapback” mechanism baked into the 2015 deal that would reinstate all United Nations Security Council sanctions on Iran lifted as part of the agreement. A strongly worded IAEA resolution could pave the way for that to happen.

Iran claims ‘sabotage’ behind IAEA cases

Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi again warned this week that such a move would signal “another major strategic mistake” on the part of France, Germany and the UK.

Araghchi said the European powers appear poised to ratchet up tensions again by reviving an investigation into Iran’s developing nuclear weapons, despite Tehran’s insistence that its nuclear programme is strictly peaceful.

Iranian authorities have for long emphasised that the country could abandon the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) – designed to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons – and cut off access to IAEA inspectors if the UN sanctions are reimposed.

The IAEA scrutiny also involves traces of nuclear particles found in several undeclared Iranian sites, mainly based on intelligence from Israel – which Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu boasted were obtained as part of a major 2018 raid on a warehouse holding documents in Tehran.

Iran’s deputy nuclear chief Kamalvandi told state television this week that the country has provided evidence to the IAEA that the cases are a result of “sabotage” and that the nuclear materials were planted.

He said Iranian officials were surprised when in Turquzabad, one of the sites in question near Tehran, agency inspectors knew exactly which points to test for suspected materials.

“It is natural that whoever contaminated the site, has given the exact coordinates for the inspectors to look,” Kamalvandi said.

Israeli documents

The wrangling over Iran’s nuclear programme is likely to be affected by Tehran’s major announcement this week that a “treasure trove” of thousands of documents has been obtained from inside Israel.

The documents, which are allegedly related to Israel’s clandestine nuclear programme, will be unveiled soon, according to Iranian authorities.

No details have been published yet, but the fact that the Iranian Army, Supreme National Security Council, Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, and Ministry of Intelligence have all separately hailed the announcement shows Iran is doubling down on the significance of the documents.

Specifically, Iran says the documents could increase deterrence against long-threatened Israeli aggression against Iranian nuclear sites, and reverse the perception that Iran has been weakened amid the regional fallout of the war on Gaza that saw ally Bashar al-Assad fall in Syria and Hezbollah take heavy blows in Lebanon.

The Supreme National Security Council said the information will allow Iran to “immediately retaliate against any potential Zionist regime [Israeli] aggression on the country’s nuclear facilities by attacking its hidden nuclear sites, and to respond proportionately to any hostile acts against economic and military infrastructure”.

IAEA Director-General Rafael Grossi holds a news conference after the first day of the agency’s quarterly Board of Governors meeting at the IAEA headquarters in Vienna, Austria, June 9, 2025 [Lisa Leutner/Reuters]

IAEA chief Rafael Grossi said this week that he believes Israeli air strikes would push Iran to seek nuclear weapons.

Grossi himself has come under fire from Iran, with Iran’s nuclear head Mohammad Eslami saying that he had proven “that the IAEA is merely a tool in the hands of a few nations”.

“They issue the commands, and he obediently follows, executing their directives,” Eslami said on Tuesday.

Iranian authorities have claimed Grossi is looking to become the next secretary-general of the UN, and is therefore sacrificing the nuclear watchdog’s integrity by adopting pro-Western rhetoric to gain personal favour. Grossi says the agency is merely doing its job.

Iran-US talks

Trump said the sixth round of talks with Iran will take place on Thursday, but Iran’s Foreign Ministry said planning is under way to hold a meeting next Sunday.

After five rounds of negotiations mediated by Oman, Iran and the US have yet to see eye-to-eye on the most fundamental issue: enrichment.

Trump, who initially emphasised his only demand was that Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon, has in recent weeks shifted his rhetoric to push for zero nuclear enrichment taking place on Iranian soil.

Tehran maintains this is a non-starter since it has a legitimate right to use nuclear energy for civilian use such as power generation and making radiopharmaceuticals, but said on Monday it will offer a counterproposal to Washington soon to advance the talks.

Mossad chief David Barnea and other Israeli officials are slated to meet with Steve Witkoff, Trump’s envoy leading the talks, before the sixth round.

Steve Witkoff and Marco Rubio
US Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio have also emphasised that Iran must completely abandon uranium enrichment, even for civilian purposes [Ludovic Marin/Pool via Reuters]

Noel Edmonds’ £14million New Zealand estate where bizarre lifestyle keeps him young

The weird and wonderful world of Noel Edmonds is revealed in his new show, as the star explains how he still looks so young at 76, but not all the steps are easy to follow at home

The weird and wonderful world of Noel Edmonds is revealed in his new show(Image: ITV)

The weird and wonderful world of Noel Edmonds is revealed in his new show – including how he manages to stay looking so young thanks to a detailed regime.

Former TV host Noel is launching a career comeback next week on ITV. Noel Edmonds’ Kiwi Adventure sees him building a new life in New Zealand with his wife Liz.

And in the first episode Noel explains how he still looks so young at 76, but not all the steps you will be able to follow along at home.

Wife Liz first explains Noel is sat on a crystal bed, with beautiful quartz crystals lit above him and a sound of five to eight hertz being omitted into his headphones as he lies down.

Noel Edmonds
Noel Edmonds’ Kiwi Adventure sees him building a new life in New Zealand (Image: ITV )

Noel says: “The light bulb moment about my health, and it’s a good term to use, was when I found all this information about what we really are. All we are is body energy systems, and that body energy system touches everything around us, which is how you move into the bigger matrix, the universal energy system.

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“I find this so exciting, because this is all based on ancient spiritual wisdom.”

Listing purified water, an oxygen tank and cold showers amongst the other things which make him feel youthful, Noel said: “I suddenly realised actually there were six components that worked really well for me. The formula consists of nutrition and structured water, this is water in its purest form.

Demonstrating the next element he added: “Pulsed electromagnetism. And what is happening now is, by pulsing electromagnetism, all my little cells are going ‘Whoa now we’ve got good frequencies’. Now we can work properly.”

He also said there is “a certain way to exercise, which I do very slowly and quietly, called tranquil power, He calls it tranquil power because “everything about it is quiet and slow” but it is similar to people doing normal weight sessions in a gym.

He said: “Then something I call vibe, visualisation of body energy meditation. This takes me somewhere else, and it’s beautiful. Those things together. Then I chuck in a little bit of cold showers I normally have a warm shower in the morning and wash it off with a cold shower and a sauna and infrared proven science. Very, very good for you.

Noel Edmonds
Noel says there’s “a certain way to exercise”

“And the hyperbaric chamber – a little bit of oxygen three times a week. You don’t have to wear this, but it shoots almost pure oxygen into your body.”

Noel joked he has been “researching it for 76 years” when it comes to staying young, and he and wife Liz certainly seem happy in the documentary and living a wonderful life together.

They are in the Tasman region of the South Island in the countryside with Nelson their nearest town. The UK presenter and his wife Liz are reported to have practically bought an entire town in the Motueka Valley – in an estate valued at NZ$30m (£14.5m).

Eccentric Noel also has clocks around his New Zealand home stopped at 11.06, in tribute to his wife Liz who was his make up artist on Deal Or No Deal when they met. He makes no secret of the fact he is besotted with her.

He added: “Generally speaking, when you round here, see a clock at six minutes past 11. It’s not broken. That was the time on the sixth of October, 2006 Yep. When my earth angel arrived and introduced herself.

“Liz was sent to me. She is an earth angel, which I know some people will fall about laughing. I knew she was in the room before I turned around. I looked her and went, Oh, thank goodness, there you are, the sustenance of her energy is my lifeblood. I mean, it really is.

“You will never, ever pull us apart, because we are one. To find that in your life is a gift.

Noel Edmonds
Noel credits cold showers for making him feel youthful

“I believe it’s a gift from the cosmos. It was an unforgettable moment. So the clocks are there, the time of my life.”

In response Liz jokes: “I thought someone has got to look after him. Doing my little bit of care in the community!”

Liz also explains that the couple didn’t have a real plan when they moved to New Zealand six years ago, but they have ended up buying River Haven estate.

She says: “There was no plan whatsoever to come and buy a vineyard and do this. I don’t know. It’s just a feeling of, oh, we could work on this. We could develop this.”

The ITV series will show Noel and Liz trying to build New Zealand’s first energy garden and a fledgling business which includes a pub called The Bugger Inn and a coffee truck.

Noel tells the cameras: “When we get to the end of whatever this is, how big are your regrets? When I get to the end, I aim to have no regrets whatsoever.”

In March, rumours of the show leaked out and it drew comparisons with Jeremy Clarkson show Clarkson’s Farm, which airs on Prime Video.

Noel Edmonds
Noel aims to have ‘no regrets’

But Clarkson’s Farm is now making money and it remains to be seen if Noel can ensure his business makes a profit as he has to cope with unseasonal bad weather and “feelings of being an outsider”.

Noel is unlikely to be back to the UK to live anytime soon. Asked what he loves so much about New Zealand, he said: “I struggle to explain why I’m so excited about this Kiwi adventure. It comes down to the land – the look, the feel of it. We have a beautiful home, and in the morning, we wake up to a view of the mountains. Whether or not you can see them tells you what the weather will be like. Just a few kilometres away, there’s a beautiful beach, the Moutere River, and within an hour’s drive, you’re in serious bush – wild terrain. The scenery here is magical. Even after six years, we’ll go for a drive and still say, wow.”

He thinks his love of the outdoors and greenery could be “a reaction to being born in Ilford, in Essex, surrounded by bricks, concrete, and tarmac”. Once he has money from his TV and radio career he bought land and said he has been farming since the 80s.

Asked why he had invited the ITV cameras to New Zealand he said there were three reasons including to promote New Zealand and to support the local economy. On the third reason, he added: “To show a different side of me. I’ll admit it: there’s a bit of ego involved. People still ask, “Noel Edmonds? Didn’t he die? Is he still around?” Yes, I’m still here – and living life to the full.”

In 2018, Noel went on I’m A Celebrity and picked up a reported £600,000 fee and a feeling he could be one of the leaders of the camp for the rest of the series.

But in one of the biggest shocks in reality TV history Noel Edmonds was the first contestant to leave the show that year. Rather than try to make more TV he then headed to New Zealand soon after to begin a new life.

Noel started his broadcasting career hosting Top of the Pops in the early 70s and later went on to present nineties hit Noel’s House Party with beloved Mr Blobby and Deal Or No Deal.

Noel Edmonds’ Kiwi Adventure starts on ITV on June 20.

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Stella McCartney gets tested for killer disease with sister on same day every year

Sir Paul McCartney and his late wife Linda’s youngest daughter Stella speaks on the heartbeaking loss of her mum nearly three decades ago

Stella McCartney knows she’s had the ‘privilege of choice’(Image: stellamccartney/Instagram)

Fashion designer Stella McCartney is urging women to not ignore free NHS breast cancer checks after opening up about losing her mother to the disease in a rare interview.

The daughter of Beatles legend Sir Paul was 25-years-old when she lost her mother Linda, aged just 53, in 1998 – three years after she was diagnosed with the illness.

But in a new insight into her private life, Stella, 53, has revealed how she goes for mammogram screenings with her trusted eldest sister, Mary, 55, and says it is vital other women do the same.

Her warning comes just a week after British pop singer Jesse J, 37, shocked fans by revealing she had been diagnosed with early stage breast cancer after a period of “in and out of tests.”

The Bang Bang star, real name Jessica Cornish, is now posting regular updates to her 13.9 million Instagram followers so they can keep up to date with her progress.

Urging women to get tested, Stella said: “I love the idea of going with my sister and my best friends on International Women’s Day every year.

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(Image: Getty Images)

“I think it is a nice way to celebrate that process. Go and get your mammograms. My sister is my best friend. It is like no other.”

Stella has previously described how her mother’s death was ‘the most difficult thing I’ve ever had to encounter’, and says the feeling of loss is with her every day.

But although her mother passed away 27 years ago, Stella says the pain does not get any easier especially as she watches her own children – sons Miller, 20, Beckett, 17, and daughters Bailey, 18, and Reiley, 15, – grow up not knowing who their grandmother was.

She said: “My mum didn’t see my kids. I was just 28. It is the greatest loss, especially when you become a mother. I was so young and passing down motherhood, what a beautiful gift. It is just not you not having her and you losing her it is them not knowing her too. Like “She didn’t know you”.

PAUL McCARTNEY WITH WIFE LINDA & DAUGHTER STELLA.
PAUL McCARTNEY WITH WIFE LINDA & DAUGHTER STELLA.(Image: Daily Record)

Stella recently praised Beyonce’s mother Tina Knowles for speaking out about her own breast cancer scare.

She said: “I think it was courageous for you (Tina Knowles) to share your story and I wish more people would share it. I wish more people would have shared that what when my mother was alive, hoping that she would still be alive. So I commend you for talking about it. Everyone should get mammograms. It is all about prevention. It is so important.

“I have spent a lot of time at a breast centre in Kettering and I highlight this disparity in breast cancer mortality. I ask so many questions and some don’t know they can get free screenings.”

Today, Stella says her mother Linda continues to guide her in the way she conducts her family life with husband Alasdhair Willis and in the way she runs her business which saw her receive a CBE from King Charles in 2023 for her services to fashion.

The designer – who takes after her mother in her love of animals and refusal to eat meat and uses no leather or fur in creations for her eponymous label – says her ethos is partly inspired by her mother’s beliefs.

McCartney and Alasdhair Willis
McCartney and Alasdhair Willis. The couple have four children(Image: Getty)

Stella said: “What an influence my mum was. Obviously in my life she guides me how I conduct myself in my business and in my home.”

But despite the trappings of the McCartney name, Stella admits she is just like any other mother at home, especially when it comes to her daughters who often steal treasured items from her catwalk collections.

She said: “I have an 18-year-old daughter but she is now an age when she is stealing all my major clothes. She is like “Can I go into the archive?” and she whips out the most iconic pieces. She is like “Oh that is the 1997 runway.” And I never see it again.”

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“But my kids do get mad at me. There is that Saturday Night Live sketch where they say “I am your mother”.

“My kids always play that to me. But I said to my daughter once “The only mission I have as a mother is to pass on the thing I have learned.” My boys are different.”

Mirror’s Daily Digest – New Madeleine McCann search update to driverless taxis

In this Tuesday’s Mirror Daily Digest, we’ve pulled together the biggest stories of the day from Madeleine McCann search updates to the latest on driverless taxis

Search teams were out once again last week in hopes of finding answers to Madeleine McCann’s disappearance(Image: PA)

Welcome to the Mirror’s Daily Digest, where we’ll be pulling together all the best stories of the day from our News, Showbiz, Politics teams and more. This Tuesday, we’re featuring everything from the latest search updates on the Madeleine McCann case to driverless taxis which will be brought to the UK next year.

Our Showbiz team has covered Strictly star Oti Mabuse’s heartache as she travelled to west Africa to meet stricken mums nursing premature babies. Meanwhile, our News team has been closely following the couple who have been charged with trying to smuggle cannabis into the UK after being stopped at Heathrow Airport.

Driverless Uber taxis coming to UK in months – all you need to know

Self-driving car
Tech firms Uber and Wayve will work together to operate one of the first self-driving taxi services in London(Image: Waymo)

This morning, our Politics team reported that driverless taxi and bus services will be brought to the UK next year. The Government will bring forward self-driving commercial pilots on England’s roads to Spring 2026, transport Secretary Heidi Alexander confirmed today.

Firms will be able to pilot small scale “taxi- and bus-like” services without a driver for the first time, which could be available to members of the public to book via an app. Uber will trial robotaxis – autonomous cars – in a partnership with UK AI firm Wayve in London as soon as next spring. Ministers said the driverless car expansion could create 38,000 jobs and a £42billion industry.

A potential wider rollout is expected when the full Automated Vehicles (AV) Act becomes law from the second half of 2027. Driverless vehicles aim to reduce human error, which contributes to 88% of all road collisions. Unlike human drivers, AVs can never get distracted or tired and they won’t drink-drive or speed.

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Read the full story here.

Oti Mabuse’s baby heartache – ‘I could only touch her through glass window’

Oti Mabuse with a newborn baby
Oti visited the Kangaroo Mother Care Unit at Treichville Hospital in Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire, which supports mothers whose children are born prematurely(Image: UNICEF/Dejongh)

In other news, our Showbiz team exclusively covered Oti Mabuse’s heartache after the Strictly Come Dancing star travelled to west Africa to meet stricken mums nursing premature tots. The pro dancer, 34, returned to a neonatal unit for the first time since she endured a 16-hour labour with her daughter, who arrived two months early, weighing 3lbs, in 2023.

The baby spent the next six weeks in intensive care at University College London Hospital after she was born with an infection and Oti developed sepsis. Baby and mother recovered, but the Dancing On Ice judge has revealed her trauma after visiting a UNICEF-funded specialist clinic in Ivory Coast (Côte d’Ivoire) in Africa.

Reflecting on her own experience, Oti said: “I remember the only way I could touch my child and have skin-on-skin was through this glass window – there’s no mother who wants to experience that.”

According to UNICEF, globally in 2024 an estimated 4.8 million children died before reaching their fifth birthday, including 2.3 million newborns who died within the first 28 days of life. In Cote D’Ivoire, lack of access to specialised care is one of the reasons that prematurity is the leading cause of death for children under five.

Read the full story here.

Madeleine McCann cops find ‘clothing and bones’ as they probe samples from dig

Madeleine McCann
Search teams were out once again last week in hopes of finding answers to Madeleine McCann’s disappearance(Image: PA)

In a breaking update, our News team reported that police are investigating samples of ‘clothes and bones’ found in last week’s search for Madeleine McCann, it is claimed. On Thursday, a team of German and Portuguese investigators wrapped up a three-day search along a 120-acre stretch of land in Lagos, Portugal, in their latest attempt to find new evidence against prime suspect Christian Brueckner.

Initial reports suggested the operation – which took place 30 miles from where the three-year-old went missing in May 2007 – had failed to turn up any new leads. But now, it has been claimed that fragments of clothing and bones are to undergo testing this week after being uncovered at the scene.

During the search – the first to take place since 2023 – crews spent three days scouring scrubland and abandoned structures, including a derelict farmhouse. A source told Berlin Morning Post: “Several objects have apparently been discovered, which are now being examined in more detail by the police in the laboratory.

“As Portuguese media report, clothing debris and bones were found, among other things. The investigators have not officially commented on whether the finds could have anything to do with Madeleine’s disappearance but that is clearly their hope.”

Read the full story here.

Met Office details exact day half a month’s rain to batter UK in three hours

rain
Weather maps show a band of low pressure is set to bring heavy rain across the UK(Image: PA)

After a brief sunny spell, Brits can expect around half a typical month’s rainfall across parts of the UK this week, the Met Office has forecasted. The “intense rainfall” – of up to 40mm – is anticipated across south Wales and Southwest England and will be slow moving, lingering into Thursday.

Thunderstorms are also likely during the deluge, which the Met Office says is expected on Wednesday evening. Met Office deputy chief meteorologist, Mike Silverstone, said: “After largely benign weather early in the week, some intense, thundery showers will move in on Wednesday evening. These thunderstorms are being triggered by some warm, humid air that is moving into the UK from the south.

“The intense rainfall could see 20-40mm accumulating over just a few hours, which could cause some disruption. While there are no severe weather warnings issued at the moment, it is possible thunderstorm warnings may be issued this week.”

Read the full story here.

Brit couple found with £1m of cannabis in luggage in latest ‘drug mule’ fears

Sian Warren and Daniel McDonald
Daniel McDonald and Sian Warren were stopped at Heathrow Airport

Finally, a couple have been charged with trying to smuggle cannabis valued at £1million into the UK after being stopped at Heathrow Airport, our News team have reported. Sian Warren, 34, and Daniel McDonald, 36, were on their way back from Thailand when officers from the National Crime Agency reportedly found more than 51kg of cannabis in their luggage.

It is understood that the drug was in four cases that the pair were carrying. They appeared at Uxbridge Magistrates’ Court where they have been charged with importing Class B drugs and have been bailed under curfew ahead of a plea hearing on June 26 at Isleworth Crown Court.

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Warren and McDonald, from Salford, went to Bangkok on holiday last month and Warren’s dad Tony told The Sun that there must have been a mistake. He said: “Sian’s not brought anything back, definitely not. She had her own suitcase with clothes in it.”

Read the full story here.

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Romeo wins Dauphine stage three to take yellow jersey

Getty Images

Ivan Romeo rode solo to victory on stage three of the Criterium du Dauphine to claim the yellow leader’s jersey.

The Movistar rider made a couple of attacks before going clear of a group of 10 riders with about 6km left in the 202.8km route from Brioude.

Mathieu van der Poel led the chase group, but they had left it too late and Romeo crossed the line first in Charantonnay, near Lyon, some 14 seconds ahead of Harold Tejada, Louis Barre and Florian Lipowitz.

“I don’t believe it,” said Romeo. “It was one of the toughest days of my life so far.

“The breakaway, it was so hard to get into it, and I wasn’t feeling really good, so I waited to the last moment.

“I know in this kind of flat finish in a small break, I have good instinct, and that if they give me some seconds I can make it.

“I had this stage on my mind for a month. We’ve been doing altitude [training] at Sierra Nevada, working super hard with all the team, and they gave me this chance at the beginning of the week.”

Romeo was the under-23 time trial champion at last year’s World Championships and Tuesday’s success means he has a 17-second lead in the Dauphine’s general classification standings heading into the time trial.

Stage three results

General classification after stage three

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