Oasis have reunited for a series of massive gigs and the band’s photographer Kevin Cummins reckons the end of the tour is not the end for the iconic band
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Oasis could release new album as Noel and Liam ‘forget why they are arguing’(Image: AFP via Getty Images)
A fresh Oasis album is definitely maybe on the horizon following Noel and Liam Gallagher’s blockbuster reunion shows. The band’s photographer Kevin Cummins has disclosed that Noel has been penning tracks whilst on tour and Liam has dialled back his “frontman ego”.
He said: “I don’t see why they couldn’t get in the studio and record a new album. Noel is writing songs all the time, and Liam’s voice is well suited to what Noel writes. Liam’s voice is better than it was. It’s got more maturity, more depth to it. Noel is a great guitarist, and sometimes he’s just looking at Liam thinking ‘He’s fantastic’.
“He kind of forgets that he’s on stage with him. Liam’s matured a lot. He’s quite self-deprecating. There’s a lot of fondness on stage between them,” he added.
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A fresh Oasis album is definitely maybe on the horizon following Noel and Liam Gallagher’s blockbuster reunion shows(Image: undefined via Getty Images)
He also revealed there had been no sign of the “resentment” between the siblings on tour that led to a backstage row in Paris in 2009.
And he believes the conclusion of the tour in November was “not the end” for the group. The 72-year-old added: “Next year there’s a documentary about them getting back together. So while that’s showing and people have still got the bug of Oasis in them they could be in the studio.”
Should his forecasts prove accurate, it would mark the first Oasis studio album for 17 years. The snapper is championing his book Oasis: The Masterplan, showcasing his photographs of the band he has captured since the early 90s.
It comes as the Gallagher brothers are set for another reunion after their epic tour – at the comeback fight of boxing hero Ricky Hatton.
The ‘Hitman’ takes to the ring again against ‘Arabian Warrior’ Eisa Al Dah, 46, in December, 13 years after his last professional bout. Noel and Liam Gallagher are being lined up for a repeat of their appearance at Hatton’s 2008 fight in Las Vegas.
Ricky is boxing later this year(Image: PA)
The duo famously carried his world title belts into the ring before Hatton defeated Italian-American Paulie Malignaggi. The former light welterweight and welterweight world champion could yet have the rock duo by his side again.
“They are friends and he still sees Noel at Man City games,” said a source. “They would like to go and Oasis will have finished their tour by then. So it all depends on whether they do any more gigs.” The last date of the Oasis ’25 world tour is November 23 in Sao Paulo, Brazil.
The brothers accompanied their hero into the ring in Vegas 17 years ago. Hatton recalled: “You could see they were both a bit nervous, obviously they had never walked a fighter out before. They asked, ‘What do I do, Rick, what do we do?’. I said, ‘Get in the ring and hold it up and put it in Malignaggi’s face’.
“So Noel got in, I got in, then Liam. Liam then came straight past me, right past Noel, and went straight to Malignaggi and said something like: ‘What do you think about that d***head?’, shoving the belt in his face.
“I thought, ‘That’s not quite what I meant, Liam’.” Hatton’s comeback bout will be held over eight three-minute rounds.
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United States President Donald Trump is pushing for a ceasefire deal in Gaza after issuing a “last warning” to the Palestinian group Hamas.
Trump provided few details, but he insinuated that the already catastrophic war on Gaza – in which Israel has already killed more than 64,500 Palestinians and a famine has been declared – could get even worse if Hamas did not submit to the terms of his new proposal.
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Negotiators from the US, Qatar, and Egypt have been working on a ceasefire deal for months, but Israeli officials have repeatedly rejected or failed to respond to efforts to bring an end to their military operations.
Most recently, Hamas accepted a ceasefire proposal crafted months ago by Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, which would have resulted in the partial release of captives held in Gaza.
However, Israel and the US backed out after Netanyahu changed his tune and insisted on a full release of captives – as well as the full surrender of Hamas. Trump is now claiming that his new proposal could lead to a different and more positive outcome.
“We’re working on a solution that may be very good … You’ll be hearing about it pretty soon. We’re trying to get it ended, get the hostages back,” the US president told reporters in Washington, DC on Sunday evening, referring to the Israeli captives still in Gaza.
Here’s all you need to know about Trump’s latest plan and if it will stop Israel’s genocidal war in Gaza.
What is the plan?
Little information has been disclosed about the deal. However, Israeli media outlets say that the proposal is similar to one previously proposed by US Special Envoy Steve Witkoff, but with a few crucial differences.
Witkoff had previously proposed a deal where half of the living Israeli captives would be released, which would then lead to a 60-day ceasefire, and negotiations for a permanent end to the war. This was agreed to by Israel, but then, once Hamas had also indicated its agreement, Netanyahu insisted on the release of all the captives, reportedly telling the Israeli cabinet that “a partial deal is not relevant”, and that “Hamas must be destroyed”.
The current proposal being pushed by Trump appears to call for a release of all Israeli captives from the get-go, in exchange for an unspecified number of Palestinian captives in Israeli prisons, and then only negotiations – but no permanent end to the war.
“[The new proposal] is basically a variation of the Witkoff plan – a hostages-for-prisoners swap, after which negotiations will commence to end the war,” according to an analysis in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz.
The crucial difference is that the release of all the captives would not come in exchange for an immediate end to the war, leaving Israel with little incentive to not continue attacking Gaza with even more intensity in pursuit of its stated goal to completely destroy Hamas. That goal is difficult to quantify, and many Palestinians see it as useful cover for the complete destruction of Gaza.
How has Hamas responded?
Hamas confirmed it had received a US proposal. The group put out a statement saying it welcomed “any initiative that helps in the efforts to stop the aggression against our people”.
Hamas has repeatedly stuck to its own position: that the remaining Israeli captives held in Gaza be released in exchange for guarantees that Israel would stop its attacks and withdraw from Gaza.
“We affirm our immediate readiness to sit at the negotiation table to discuss the release of all prisoners in exchange for a clear declaration to end the war, the full withdrawal from Gaza, and the formation of a committee to manage Gaza from Palestinian independents, who will immediately begin their work,” a Hamas statement obtained by the news outlet Drop Site News is reported to have said.
Writing on Telegram, senior Hamas official Basem Naim said: “It is clear that the primary goal is to reach the refusal of the offer and not reach an agreement that leads to the end of the war.”
A Palestinian man carries a wounded child after an Israeli air strike on a house in Gaza City, September 7, 2025 [Khamis Al-Rifi/Reuters]
What is Israel’s position?
Israel has accepted the proposal, according to a press conference that Israel’s Foreign Minister Gideon Saar gave on Monday. He said that Israel was ready to end the war in exchange for all the captives and for Hamas laying down its weapons.
Hamas has previously said that it would surrender its weapons only if Israel withdraws from Gaza and agrees to a Palestinian state made up of the occupied West Bank and Gaza, with occupied East Jerusalem as its capital.
Despite Israel’s backing for Trump’s proposal, some analysts believe Israel will later try to spin the proposal and claim that they accepted it while Hamas were the ones to refuse. This has precedence.
Hamas has previously accepted ceasefire proposals, only for Netanyahu to add conditions he knows will not be amenable to the group – or to Palestinians – as a tactic to continue the war.
In the meantime, Israeli officials are continuing to threaten Gaza.
Israel’s Defence Minister Israel Katz warned on Monday that a “powerful hurricane” will hit the territory and destroy Hamas targets, as Israel destroys civilian high-rise buildings across the Gaza Strip.
Also on Monday, Netanyahu threatened Gaza City residents, telling them to “get out of there”, and that a ground operation was about to begin in the city.
Will the proposal work?
Trump is confident it will.
“I think we’re going to get them all,” he said of the return of the Israeli captives. Trump had previously predicted on August 25 that the war would come to a “conclusive ending” within three weeks.
But it is unclear why this time will be any different from when Trump made past promises to end the war. Analysts largely believe Trump’s latest proposal will meet similar fates as past ones, largely due to Netanyahu’s reticence to end the war.
“It won’t lead to anything because Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has no desire or interest to end the war,” Chaim Levinson wrote in an analysis for Haaretz. “Rather, he wants to claim that Hamas is being recalcitrant so he can keep it going for many months.”
The US under Trump has also shown little appetite to rein in Netanyahu. Back in May, Witkoff told Qatari and Egyptian mediators that the US will not “force Israel to end the Gaza war”.
Can Trump be trusted?
Trump is saying that if Hamas gives up all the remaining captives, the US will make sure negotiations progress. However, Trump made a similar promise when his team helped outgoing US President Joe Biden ink a ceasefire deal that came into effect on January 19.
Netanyahu unilaterally violated the ceasefire to continue the war two months later.
Critics are sceptical that Netanyahu will stick to any future ceasefire agreement unless the US reins him in and holds Israel accountable.
“There is very good reason not to trust either Netanyahu or Trump at this moment on forcing Israel to stick to its word,” said Omar Rahman, an expert on Israel-Palestine with the Middle East Council on Global Affairs, a think tank in Doha, Qatar.
“That is especially true in light of their public plans to ethnically cleanse Gaza and turn it into an American real estate development,” he told Al Jazeera.
Trump previously proposed that Gaza’s population be forced out and that a “Gaza Riviera” be built on the ruins of the territory, an idea widely condemned as ethnic cleansing. The US president has largely dropped mention of the proposal, although he and his administration have occasionally returned to the idea.
What happens next?
Israel’s genocide in Gaza does not look like it will end in the foreseeable future.
Prince Harry, the Duke of Sussex, has already set tongues wagging during his bombshell four-day trip to the UK, and is set to make a startlingly generous gesture
Prince Harry’s four-day trip to the UK has already caused quite the stir, and it appears he set to make a major announcement while here.
The Duke of Sussex landed on British soil this morning, having flown over from California solo, without his wife, Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex, or their two young children, Prince Archie, six, and Princess Lilibet, four.
Montecito-based Harry, 40, rarely journeys across the Atlantic to the country of his birth, with tensions still very much fraught between the Sussexes and the rest of the British Royal Family. On this occasion, however, Harry was in London on a purpose very close to his heart, the WellChild Awards.
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Generous Harry has just amde a very significant gesture(Image: POOL/AFP via Getty Images)
Harry, who is a Wellchild patron, attended the very special event this evening, which celebrates the achievements and resilience of seriously ill youngsters and their families. And this isn’t the only good deed he’ll be getting up to during his flying visit on this side of the pond.
Over the course of just four days, the Duke will partake in various charity-focused duties, including an informal meet with Children in Need. And it’s understood the generous prince has given a eye-popping donation to the charity, which supports disadvantaged children across the UK.
Earlier today, after arriving in the UK, Harry prioritised visiting his grandmother’s grave in Windsor, where he was seen paying his respects privately inside St George’s Chapel, where he laid a wreath and some flowers.
The Duke made sure to visit his grandmother’s grave on the third anniversary of her death(Image: GC Images)
It’s been rumoured that this brief trip could well see Harry reunite with his father, King Charles, with a long-awaited meeting understood to be a possibility.
A source told the Daily Mail: “A meeting with Charles is not off the table, but the only people who would know about it are Clive Alderton [the King’s private secretary] and Charles and Harry. If anything is planned, then he is keeping this extremely close to his chest. It certainly is part of his intention to see his father. If it’s on Wednesday, then he would make it work.”
However, it’s understood to be a different story entirely when it comes to Harry’s relationship with his brother Prince William, with the pair understood not to be on speaking terms.
Although Harry and William were in closse proximity to each other, it’s believed their paths haven’t crossed(Image: Ryan Jenkinson / Kensington Palace)
This is despite the siblings having been in close proximity today. Indeed, Harry was just a few short miles away from his brother while visiting the late Queen’s grave.
While Harry was laying his flowers, Prince William and his wife Kate, the Princess of Wales, were just on the other side of Windsor Great Park, where they were meeting with WI members as part of a sweet tribute to the beloved grandmother and monarch.
Do you have a story to share? Email me at julia.banim@reachplc.com
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Anonymous street artist Banksy has unveiled a new mural on London’s High Court, depicting a judge striking a protester with a gavel, in what appears to be a commentary on the mass arrests of demonstrators backing the banned campaign group Palestine Action.
The anonymous artist shared images of the work on Instagram on Monday. The stencilled piece shows a bewigged judge bringing down a gavel on a protester sprawled on the ground, clutching a blood-stained placard.
The mural was painted days after nearly 900 people were detained during a protest in London opposing the government’s proscription of Palestine Action.
The artwork has since been fully covered up by British police, after attracting curious bystanders.
In July, Britain designated the activist network a “terrorist organisation” after its members stormed a Royal Air Force base and damaged military aircraft. Supporting or belonging to the group now carries criminal penalties.
Security guards stand beside a metal barrier covering up an artwork by street artist Banksy, depicting a judge using a gavel to beat a protester using a placard as protection, on an exterior wall of the Royal Courts of Justice in London, on September 8, 2025 [Carlos Jasso/AFP]
But rights groups and campaigners have accused the British government of criminalising pro-Palestinian activism, saying the ban threatens the right to peaceful protest.
Lawyers and civil liberties advocates argue that proscribing Palestine Action sets a dangerous precedent for restricting activism on foreign policy issues, with Amnesty International calling the decision by the Labour government “a disturbing legal overreach”.
Banksy has long used his work to highlight Palestinian struggles under Israeli occupation. His murals in the occupied West Bank include ones that depict a girl conducting a body search on an Israeli soldier, a dove wearing a flak jacket, and a masked protester hurling a bouquet.
A man looks at British street artist Banksy’s mural ‘The Bethlehem Wall’ during a preview of the exhibition ‘The world of Banksy, the immersive experience’ at the Milano Centrale main railway station in Milan, Italy on December 2, 2021 [Miguel Medina/AFP]
In 2017, he opened the “Walled Off Hotel” in Bethlehem, designed to offer what he called “the worst view in the world,” a direct reference to Israel’s separation barrier known as the apartheid wall, which stands in front of the hotel.
The wall that stretches for more than 700km (435 miles) on Palestinian land inside the occupied West Bank was termed illegal by the International Court of Justice in 2004.
British artist Banksy’s Walled-Off Hotel facing Israel’s ‘apartheid wall’ in the occupied West Bank town of Bethlehem [Ahmad Gharabli/AFP]
One of his most famous West Bank works, a rat armed with a slingshot, was painted near Bethlehem in 2007. The artwork was later removed by Israeli art dealers and displayed in a Tel Aviv art gallery in 2022.
The move was condemned by Jeries Qumsieh, a spokesperson for the Palestinian Ministry of Tourism, who told The Guardian at the time: “This is theft of the property of the Palestinian people.”
“These were paintings by an international artist for Bethlehem, for Palestine, and for visitors to Bethlehem and Palestine. So transferring them, manipulating them and stealing them is definitely an illegal act,” Qumsieh had said.
The latest London mural has already been cordoned off with protective barriers, underscoring both the value of Banksy’s art and the controversy it generates. While the artist rarely explains his creations, his consistent focus on Palestine ensures this new work will be seen as a sharp critique of Britain’s clampdown on pro-Palestine activism.
For many of his supporters, the High Court mural is not just about Palestine Action but also a broader reflection on how state power and the judiciary are wielded against movements challenging Britain’s political establishment.
A Palestinian woman stands with a child in an alley next to a reproduction of a mural by British street artist Banksy, originally painted on the wall of the West Bank in Bethlehem, at the Arroub refugee camp, north of the West Bank town of Hebron on February 11, 2016 [Hazem Bader/AFP]
Katsina State Governor, Malam Dikko Radda, on Monday launched a €5.1 million European Union-funded Conflict Prevention, Crisis Response, and Resilience project to strengthen peace and stability in the state.
The 18-month project, which covers eight local government areas in Katsina and two in Zamfara State, builds on a previous initiative that benefited over 95,000 people.
Radda described the project as a new era of hope, partnership, and collective action designed to empower communities, particularly women, youth, and vulnerable groups.
Radda
According to him, the project would help communities transition from trauma to recovery, fear to safety, and despair to hope.
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The governor also inaugurated the Katsina State CPCRR Project Steering Committee to coordinate, monitor, and ensure transparency in all project activities.
The project focuses on three core areas, namely peacebuilding and conflict mitigation, livelihood support and economic recovery, and governance, as well as institutional strengthening.
Speaking at the event, the EU Ambassador to Nigeria and ECOWAS, Grantier Migrot, reiterated the Union’s commitment to the state.
“This project builds on our previous successes in poverty alleviation, education, renewable energy, and environmental sustainability,” Migrot stated.
The ambassador emphasised the EU’s focus on dialogue, education, and empowerment, particularly for women, youth, and persons with disabilities.
The project targets internally displaced persons, host communities, and other vulnerable groups through vocational training, climate-smart agriculture, and improved market access.
New activities include establishing community peace structures, strengthening early warning systems, conducting media campaigns for peace, and implementing 20 quick-impact projects.
The project targets internally displaced persons, host communities, and other vulnerable groups.
Mustapha Shehu, Executive Secretary of Development and Partners in Katsina State, said the project would ensure that at least 60 percent of beneficiaries are youth.