Just Stop Oil activists have refused to rule out targeting Sunday’s London Marathon, following their disruption of the World Snooker Championships earlier this week.
Some 50,000 demonstrators are expected to gather around Westminster from today until Monday to demand an end to fossil fuels, according to Extinction Rebellion, which is organising the event.
It is bringing together more than 200 environmental, civil society and union groups for what it says will be one of its biggest protests, including Greenpeace, Public and Commercial Services Union, Friends of the Earth and US non-profit Avaaz.
They hope to force the government to stop handing out new fossil fuel licences – a demand the government has rejected.
Burning fossil fuels is the primary cause of climate change and the associated emissions continue to rise globally in spite of climate agreements, although they are expected to peak around 2025.
Extinction Rebellion has asked its members to help guard the London Marathon from disruption, having in January pledged to stop targeting protests towards the public, which previously involved actions like gluing themselves to a train.
But it said it cannot prevent other groups in the joint protest from doing so.
“We never rule out anything,” said spokesperson and protester James Skeet.
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He told Sky News: “Just Stop Oil will do whatever is non-violently necessary to draw attention to the crisis, so we wouldn’t necessarily rule anything out within that framework.”
But he said the nature of their protests, which usually require an element of surprise, and are in a “grey area” of legality, means they will almost always refuse to say one way or another.
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9:15
World Snooker Championship disrupted
Just Stop Oil said they had met with London Marathon representatives on Wednesday and asked them to “issue a statement in support of our demand to end new oil and gas”.
In a statement they said: “The two parties have agreed to continue to discuss arrangements for the London Marathon, the climate crisis and the need to end new oil and gas.”
This weekend’s event, known as “The Big One”, is organised around a different theme each day.
Friday will see “people’s pickets” outside government departments from 7am until 6pm, to highlight the UK government is “failing” to meet its climate targets.
Although the UK has ambitious climate targets and its emissions are falling, its plans are still insufficient, according to analysts at Climate Action Tracker. Its latest plan, Powering Up Britain, was met with criticism.
Saturday coincides with the global environmental awareness day Earth Day, and will focus on nature and biodiversity. Naturalist and broadcaster Chris Packham and Delia Mattis of Black Lives Matter are due to speak.
Sunday’s protest takes place at the same time as the London Marathon and is themed “Running Out of Time”, to support “causes amplified by the climate crisis”.
An Extinction Rebellion spokesperson said: “It’s our intention to facilitate the marathon to take place smoothly.”
They added: “Everyone is committed not to disrupt the race, and our stewards who are responsible for the whole group will facilitate that.”
The “peoples pickets” will return on Monday, aimed at MPs. A march to “end fossil fuels” will go from Parliament Square to Jubilee Gardens.
Monday also brings the deadline by which the campaigners want the government to respond to two demands, issued this week. If not, they have threatened to escalate their campaigns “in new and inventive ways”.
They want ministers to end new fossil fuel licensing and to create “emergency citizens’ assemblies” to give people a say on solutions to “the most urgent issues of our time”.
The government has said demands “issued in this way” will “not be tolerated”.
“These protestors fail to recognise our world-leading efforts towards achieving net zero, including cutting our emissions by 48%,” a spokesperson for the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero said earlier this week.
Watch the Daily Climate Show at 3.30pm Monday to Friday, and The Climate Show with Tom Heap on Saturday and Sunday at 3.30pm and 7.30pm.
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Prince William has fought back tears as he was reunited with a woman who lost her husband to suicide after the death of her young son.
William became visibly emotional while talking to Rhian Mannings during a short film released to mark World Mental Health Day and to launch a £1m project aimed at preventing suicide.
It was always going to be a difficult conversation because of Rhian’s heartbreaking experiences, but both wanted to record the video to highlight the taboo that still exists around suicide.
In 2012, Rhian’s one-year-old son George died suddenly from a hidden illness. Just five days later, her husband Paul died by suicide.
In a deeply moving discussion, William asks Rhian what she would say to Paul now if she could, with her replying: “There’s only one thing I would ever say to him if I had time with him, and that would be, ‘Why didn’t you speak to me?’ I think… I ask myself that every single day.
“He was absolutely devastated, he did keep blaming himself that weekend.
“But I would just like to sit him down like this and just say, ‘Why didn’t you come to me?’ Because he’s missed out on just so much joy, and we would have been okay. And I think that’s what the hardest thing is, we would have been okay.”
Image: Prince William speaks to Rhian Mannings. Pic: PA/Kensington Palace
But she then stops and says to William, “Are you okay?” as you see him on camera looking visibly upset, and he simply replies: “I’m sorry. It’s just, it’s hard to ask these questions.”
Filmed in Rhian’s home in Cardiff, they also talk about the harmful taboo that still exists around suicide.
William says: “Unfortunately, there’s still a lot of stigma around suicide. Did you feel that at the time?”
Responding, Rhian says: “I was quite surprised by it, I’d never been touched by suicide, it was something that happened in the news. Nobody would talk about it or actually say what happened. And I found that really confusing at the time”.
The film marks the launch of the Royal Foundation’s Suicide Prevention Network, backed by more than 20 organisations and funding of over £1 million from the Foundation. It aims to transform suicide prevention across the UK.
Rhian’s charity, 2Wish, forms part of the new network. She set up the charity to make sure others who lost a child suddenly would receive the bereavement support they need and deserve.
Anyone feeling emotionally distressed or suicidal can call Samaritans for help on 116 123 or email jo@samaritans.org in the UK. In the US, call the Samaritans branch in your area or 1 (800) 273-TALK
Madeleine McCann’s sister has said her family’s alleged stalker sent “creepy” messages about “flashbacks” and edited images to try to show a family resemblance.
Amelie McCann told a court that Julia Wandelt was “desperate” to convince her she was missing Madeleine and had claimed her memories included playing ‘ring-a-ring-a-roses’ as a child.
The court heard Wandelt allegedly sent the 20-year-old numerous social media messages and letters. The first, in January 2024, allegedly read: “I know so many things. I don’t know if this is the real account for Amelie McCann but I can tell you my memories.”
Ms McCann told Leicester Crown Court it was “quite disturbing that she’s coming up with these supposed memories,” as she was clearly not her sister.
“It makes me feel quite uncomfortable because it is quite creepy she is giving those details and trying to play with my emotions,” she said.
Madeleine McCann disappeared in Praia da Luz, Portugal in May 2007. She has never been found.
Wandelt, 24, from Lubin in Poland, denies subsequently stalking the family.
Image: Julia Wandelt (left) and Karen Spragg at Leicester Crown
Pic: Elizabeth Cook/PA
However, Madeleine‘s sister told the trial Wandelt had sent “persistent” messages urging her and her mother to take a DNA test, as well as images that were “clearly altered or edited”.
In one instance, she allegedly printed pictures of herself and Amelie McCann and sent them to the family’s home address.
A separate online message is said to have shown an image of her and Wandelt side-by-side.
“She’d clearly edited the pictures to make me look more like her, which was disturbing,” Ms McCann told the court. “I didn’t look like that and I knew it had been changed.”
“She is Polish and has Polish family who are her parents. It didn’t make any sense to me,” she added.
She told the court she was scared by a message from Wandelt, which allegedly stated she would “do whatever to prove my identity” as Madeleine.
“It shows you the lengths she would go to, to try and get heard, which is a bit scary because you don’t know what she would do next,” said Ms McCann.
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Kate and Gerry McCann give evidence in court
She said she had blocked Wandelt on multiple social media sites, but that her alleged actions were hardest for her mother, Kate.
“It definitely took a toll on her and her wellbeing because all the time her phone would be going off and it would be Julia,” she said.
Following the alleged December visit by Wandelt and her co-defendant 61-year-old Cardiff woman Karen Spragg – who also denies stalking – Ms McCann said she returned home from university and her parents had strengthened security.
Image: Co-defendant Karen Spragg. Pic: PA
They told her there was “an alarm we could press and alert the police,” the court heard.
‘Upsetting and disrespectful’
Amelie’s twin, Sean McCann, also gave evidence via a written statement in which he said Wandelt had caused a “great deal of stress”.
He said her claim to be his sister was “upsetting” and “deeply disturbing” – but that he felt “guilty” for feeling that way as he believes she might be suffering with a mental health condition.
However, he added: “If she is fully aware she is not Madeleine, yet makes these claims she is, that will be very upsetting for me.”
Sean McCann, 20, told the court he had also received Instagram messages from Wandelt but immediately blocked her.
A friend of the McCanns, Ellie McQueen, was the final witness on Thursday morning and said Wandelt had sent her “relentless” messages online.
She told jurors the first was on Facebook in June 2024 from the profile “Julia Julia”.
Ms McQueen said Wandelt asked for help to contact the McCanns: “She seemed to know my mum was very close with Kate,” she told the court.
“She was trying to send me DNA evidence to say she is Maddie,” she told the court, adding that Wandelt seemed “upset and aggravated”.
One message allegedly sent by the defendant asks why Kate and Gerry McCann did not turn up to a vigil for Madeleine in their village, which she attended.
In other messages, Wandelt allegedly said she “remembered” a life with Kate and Gerry McCann and even claimed to have the same “spot in my right eye” and “lots of the same moles” as Madeleine.
Messaging platform Discord has said the official ID photos of around 70,000 users have been stolen by hackers.
The app, which is popular with gamers and teenagers, said the hackers targeted a firm responsible for verifying the ages of its users. Discord said its own platform was not breached.
The stolen data could include personal information, partial credit card numbers and messages with Discord’s customer service agents, the firm said.
No full credit card details, passwords or messages and activity beyond conversations with Discord customer support were leaked, it added.
Discord said it had revoked the third-party service’s access and was continuing to investigate. It said all affected users have been contacted.
“Looking ahead, we recommend impacted users stay alert when receiving messages or other communication that may seem suspicious,” it said.
Until recently, a hack like this could not have happened, because companies had no need to process and collect proofs of age.
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Now, so many governments are following the UK and introducing age verification for unsuitable or pornographic content that a company like Discord has to roll out age checks for a decent portion of its 200 million active users.
It’s a bit like the way that shops have to check your age if you’re buying alcohol – only because it’s online, it comes with a lot of additional complications.
Image: Pic: Shutterstock
A shop, for instance, won’t keep a copy of your passport once they’ve checked your age.
And it definitely won’t keep it in a massive (yet strangely light) safe along with thousands of other passport photocopies, stored right by its front door, ready to be taken.
It’s worth noting that the age verification system used by Discord wasn’t hacked itself. That system asked people to take a photo of themselves, then used software to estimate their age. Once the check was complete, the image was immediately deleted.
The problem came with the appeals part of the process, which was supplied to Discord by an as-yet-unnamed third party.
If someone thought that the age verification system had wrongly barred them from Discord they could send in a picture of their ID to prove their age. This collection of images was hacked. As a result, Discord says, more than 70,000 IDs are now in the possession of hackers.
(The hackers themselves claim that the number is much bigger – 2,185,151 photos. Discord says this is wrong and the hackers are simply trying to extort money. It’s a messy situation.)
There are ways to make age verification safer. Companies could stop storing photo ID, for instance (although then it would be impossible to know for sure if their checks were correct).
And advocates of ID cards will point out that a proper government ID could avoid the need to send pictures of your passport simply to prove your age. You’d use your digital ID instead, which would stay safely on your device.
But the best way to stop data being hacked is not to collect it in the first place.
We’re at the start of a defining test – can governments actually police the internet? Or will the measures that are supposed to make us safer actually end up making us less secure?