“Hundreds” of train passengers were left queuing for cabs to Scotland and a school had to source its own coach after rail cancellations on Monday night.
Stand-up comedian James Nokise was among the passengers ordered off the Avanti West Coast train at Preston station in Lancashire.
With many passengers still upwards of 180 miles from their destinations of Glasgow and Edinburgh, the train company arranged taxis to drive them through the night.
But staff from a Glasgow school had to order their own coach to take 50 pupils home as they were too young to travel in taxis without an adult.
Nokise told Sky News he was expecting they might be put on buses but “in my wildest imagination I didn’t think they would put us in black cabs and send us to another country”.
“It just seemed crazy,” he said.
Giving live updates on X, formerly known as Twitter, Nokise said passengers were initially told they could get on another train to Glasgow – but it turned out to be full and so left without them. The next train was also cancelled.
He wrote: “It turned out there were no more trains ‘North’ after that and, excitingly, no forthcoming information.
“Some people stood staring at the screens. Some people queued to ask the one ticket booth worker the same question everyone else was. No one knew anything.”
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He said the lack of information was the most frustrating thing, and he picked up more details from fellow passengers than the train company.
‘If that sounds ridiculous, it was’
Around 9.20pm, they were told other transport had been arranged.
“Bus? An extra train? Horses? No. Taxis. For hundreds of people. To a city 3 and 1/2 hours away,” Nokise said.
Nokise was travelling to Edinburgh while other passengers were bound for Carlisle, Glasgow and Dundee.
“All of us queued to be taken away 3-7 people at a time. And if that sounds slow and ridiculous, it was.”
He told Sky News there were “old people, people with babies, people with disabilities” – and all had to wait outside in the cold.
Nokise got a black cab from Preston to Edinburgh with three other men, arriving five hours late – after a journey that involved a near-miss with a minivan, unreliable GPS and a “real motion-sickness nightmare of a road”.
School pupils ‘effectively stuck’
Staff from Greenfaulds High School found their own coach after being told they were “effectively stuck” at Preston station with no way to get their pupils home from a trip to London.
In a message to Avanti on X, the school wrote: “We have been able to resource, on our own, a coach to take us home.
“If we had not, we would have 50 young children abandoned on the streets of Preston once the station closes.
“Apologies from your wonderful staff here are kind but not enough. Very poor.”
However they praised a local takeaway who delivered 60 portions of chips to the station “for a fraction of the real cost”.
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After arriving at Preston at 6.30pm, they finally made it to Greenfaulds station at around 2.30am. Sky News contacted the school for comment but was told staff on the trip were off for the day after their late arrival.
An Avanti West Coast spokesperson said the cancellations were due to the West Coast Main Line being closed for more than three hours because of a track defect.
“Whilst alternative transport and overnight accommodation was sourced for most of those impacted we fully understand the frustrations of those customers whose journeys were affected, and we are extremely sorry for this.”
“Anyone who was affected by last night’s disruption will be entitled to compensation and are urged to get in contact through our normal channels to process their claim.”
Manchester Arena bomb plotter Hashem Abedi has been charged with three counts of attempted murder.
It comes after four prison officers were injured in an attack at the maximum security prison HMP Frankland in Co Durham on 12 April.
Abedi has also been charged with one count of assault occasioning actual bodily harm and one count of unauthorised possession of a knife or offensive weapon.
Counter Terrorism Policing North East has said it carried out a “thorough investigation” of the incident with Durham Constabulary and HMP Frankland.
He remains in prison and is due to appear at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on 18 September.
Three prison officers were taken to hospital with serious injuries following the incident.
Marnie’s first serious relationship came when she was 16-years-old.
Warning: This article contains references to strangulation, coercive control and domestic abuse.
She was naturally excited when a former friend became her first boyfriend.
But after a whirlwind few months, everything changed with a slow, determined peeling away of her personality.
“There was isolation, then it was the phone checking,” says Marnie.
As a survivor of abuse, we are not using her real name.
“When I would go out with my friends or do something, I’d get constant phone calls and messages,” she says.
“I wouldn’t be left alone to sort of enjoy my time with my friends. Sometimes he might turn up there, because I just wasn’t trusted to just go and even do something minor like get my nails done.”
Image: The internet is said to be helping to fuel a rise in domestic abuse among teens. Pic: iStock
He eventually stopped her from seeing friends, shouted at her unnecessarily, and accused her of looking at other men when they would go out.
If she ever had any alone time, he would bombard her with calls and texts; she wasn’t allowed to do anything without him knowing where she was.
He monitored her phone constantly.
“Sometimes I didn’t even know someone had messaged me.
“My mum maybe messaged to ask me where I was. He would delete the message and put my phone away, so then I wouldn’t even have a clue my mum had tried to reach me.”
The toll of what Marnie experienced was only realised 10 years later when she sought help for frequent panic attacks.
She struggled to comprehend the damage her abuser had inflicted when she was diagnosed with PTSD.
This is what psychological abuse and coercive control looks like.
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2:56
‘His hands were on my throat – he didn’t stop’
Young women and girls in the UK are increasingly falling victim, with incidents of domestic abuse spiralling among under-25s.
Exclusive data shared with Sky News, gathered by domestic abuse charity Refuge, reveals a disturbing rise in incidents between April 2024 and March 2025.
Psychological abuse was the most commonly reported form of harm, affecting 73% of young women and girls.
Of those experiencing this form of manipulation, 49% said their perpetrator had threatened to harm them and a further 35% said their abuser had threatened to kill them.
Among the 62% of 16-25 year olds surveyed who had reported suffering from physical violence, half of them said they had been strangled or suffocated.
Earlier this year, Sky News reported that school children were asking for advice on strangulation, but Kate Lexen, director of services at charity Tender, says children as young as nine are asking about violent pornography and displaying misogynistic behaviour.
Image: Kate Lexen, director of services at charity Tender
“What we’re doing is preventing what those misogynistic behaviours can then escalate onto,” Ms Lexen says.
Tender has been running workshops and lessons on healthy relationships in primary and secondary schools and colleges for over 20 years.
Children as young as nine ‘talking about strangulation’
Speaking to Sky News, Ms Lexen says new topics are being brought up in sessions, which practitioners and teachers are adapting to.
“We’re finding those Year 5 and Year 6 students, so ages 9, 10 and 11, are talking about strangulation, they’re talking about attitudes that they’ve read online and starting to bring in some of those attitudes from some of those misogynistic influencers.
“There are ways that they’re talking about and to their female teachers.
“We’re finding that from talking to teachers as well that they are really struggling to work out how to broach these topics with the students that they are working with and how to make that a really safe space and open space to have those conversations in an age-appropriate way, which can be very challenging.”
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4:58
Hidden domestic abuse deaths
Charities like Tender exist to prevent domestic abuse and sexual violence.
Ms Lexen says without tackling misogynistic behaviours “early on with effective prevention education” then the repercussions, as the data for under 25s proves, will be “astronomical”.
At Refuge, it is already evident. Elaha Walizadeh, senior programme manager for children and young people, says the charity has seen a rise in referrals since last year.
Image: Elaha Walizadeh, senior programme manager for children and young people at Refuge
“We have also seen the dynamics of abuse changing,” she adds. “So with psychological abuse being reported, we’ve seen a rise in that and non-fatal strangulation cases, we’ve seen a rise in as well.
“Our frontline workers are telling us that the young people are telling them usually abuse starts from smaller signs. So things like coercive control, where the perpetrators are stopping them from seeing friends and family. It then builds.”
Misogyny to violent behaviour might seem like a leap.
But experts and survivors are testament to the fact that it is happening.