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A farming mental health charity supported by Prince William has told Sky News it has seen a direct link between recent government policies and an increase in the number of farmers at crisis point.

It comes as a farming activist said it was William’s “duty” to speak up for farming – and criticised the Royal Family for being too quiet on the issues the community faces.

Sam and Emily Stables set up the charity We Are Farming Minds in 2020 after Sam tried to take his own life.

He speaks publicly about his experience in the hope his story encourages others to get help.

“[Farming has] one of the highest suicide rates of any industry [and] the pressures that the farming community are under are beyond immense,” he says. “It’s not a job, it’s a life, it’s a family, it’s everything.”

Recalling the day he tried to end his life, Sam says: “I can remember going to the farm, collecting the livestock.

“[There were] so many different things running through my head that morning, but one of them [was] knowing exactly what I needed to do, that life for me, the pain in my head, just needed to stop… And then I remember being in hospital.”

Sam Stables speaks publicly about his attempt to end his life
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Sam Stables speaks publicly about his attempt to end his life

In recent months, We Are Farming Minds says it has been inundated with farmers in crisis and needing help. Sam and Emily say this is directly linked to the changes in government policy, especially around inheritance tax.

The changes to inheritance tax, revealed in the budget and set to come into force in April 2026, will see death duties payable by some farmers on agricultural and business property.

The Treasury estimates the changes will raise up to £520m a year. Farmers and campaigners say they threaten the future of thousands of multi-generational family farms.

Emily says her charity has “already had 11 counselling referrals this year alone, which is busy for us”.

Emily Stables said her charity has been 'busy' with referrals this year
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Emily Stables said her charity has been ‘busy’ with referrals this year

“I think people are just feeling that… it is the straw that broke the camel’s back,” she added

“You’ve got the weather… you’ve got variance in prices all the time. You’ve got… livestock dying. Everything’s so out of your control, and then to not have the support of your government is a massive, a massive impact on everybody.”

As tenants on the Duchy estate, they have received support from their landlord, Prince William, financially, through private meetings and support for their events.

The Prince of Wales, known as the Duke of Rothesay when in Scotland, during a visit to East Scryne Farm in Carnoustie, Angus, to attend a roundtable hosted by the Farm Safety Foundation (Yellow Wellies), a charity working throughout the UK to address the attitudes and behaviours to farm safety and poor mental health in the next generation of farmers. Picture date: Thursday February 6, 2025.
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Pic: PA

“He certainly doesn’t say that he knows everything there is to know about farming,” Emily says, but adds: “It’s really great to be able to feed back to him and increase his knowledge as well about issues within the farming community.”

But what William is prepared to say on farming more widely right now really matters.

He became one of Britain’s biggest landowners when he inherited the Duchy of Cornwall, which funds the heir to the throne.

This is why his actions are significant to hundreds of tenant farmers on that land, as well as the wider farming community.

And it’s why Gareth Wyn Jones, a farmer from North Wales who has been heavily involved in the recent farming protests, is disappointed in what he’s seen.

Gareth Wyn Jones has taken part in the recent farming protests
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Gareth Wyn Jones has taken part in the recent farming protests

Gareth says the Prince of Wales and the wider Royal Family have a “duty” to do more.

Speaking about farmers who contact him on social media, he says: “When you speak to a farmer who’s lost his dad a couple of nights before, and his father took his own life the night before the budget, because he had the good inclination that this was going to happen, it’s heartbreaking. It’s absolutely heartbreaking.”

He added: “They’ve been very, very quiet, the prince and the King, to be honest with you. But I suppose if it doesn’t go into their pockets, the inheritance tax won’t bother them.

“Prince William has the Duchy of Cornwall, now he’s running that, he should be connecting to these people. He should be talking to these people.

“These people have a duty to the farming community and to the countryside community to speak up, speak up for the people that are struggling and suffering.”

More from Sky News:
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Royals’ estates ‘making millions from public bodies’

A government spokesperson told Sky News: “We understand the importance of mental health support and this government is committed to tackling the mental health crisis in our farming communities.

“That’s why we are investing billions of pounds and recruiting 8,500 mental health professionals across the NHS.

“More widely, we are going further with reforms to boost profits for farmers by backing British produce, reforming planning rules on farms to support food production, and making the supply chain work more fairly.”

I spoke to Prince William at a recent Duchy event, where he told me that since taking over the estate there have been certain things he’s wanted to change – which is why, across the estate, there is now an increased focus on mental health, homelessness and a push for the Duchy be net zero by the end of 2032.

It feels like a blueprint for his priorities as heir to the throne and a way of him showing what him, and his advisers, mean when they talk about showing “empathic leadership”.

He has publicly spoken about being an ardent supporter of the farming community, but with farmers and the government at loggerheads, it does highlight the quandary for an heir to the throne wanting to show more empathic leadership on key social issues, and the risk of overstepping the lines of political neutrality.

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.

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Man accused of driving into crowds at Liverpool victory parade faces further 24 charges

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Man accused of driving into crowds at Liverpool victory parade faces further 24 charges

A man accused of driving into crowds at Liverpool FC’s title parade faces 24 new charges.

More than 130 people, including children, were injured when Paul Doyle allegedly drove his Ford Galaxy vehicle into hordes of fans at the celebrations on 26 May.

The 53-year-old, of Croxteth, Liverpool, was originally charged with two counts of wounding with intent, two counts of causing grievous bodily harm with intent, two counts of attempted grievous bodily harm with intent, and one count of dangerous driving.

Six of the new alleged offences relate to babies, including one six-month-old and one seven-month-old, proceedings at Liverpool Crown Court heard on Thursday.

The new indictment, which was not read out in court, now has 31 counts relating to 29 victims, aged between six months and 77 years old.

Doyle now faces 18 counts of attempting to cause grievous bodily harm, nine counts of causing grievous bodily harm with intent, two counts of wounding with intent, one count of dangerous driving and one count of affray.

He appeared in court via video link from prison and was in tears.

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He did not enter any pleas during the hearing, which lasted around 20 minutes.

The case was adjourned until 4 September, when Doyle is expected to enter pleas.

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Mosquito bite warning after rise in chikungunya cases in travellers returning to UK

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Mosquito bite warning after rise in chikungunya cases in travellers returning to UK

Travellers are being warned about mosquito bites on holiday after a rise in chikungunya infections in people returning to the UK.

The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) also said the first cases of the emerging oropouche virus had been recorded.

Chikungunya typically causes sudden fever and joint pain, which can be debilitating, and lasts from a few days to weeks.

The name comes from a word in a Tanzanian language meaning “that which bends up”, owing to the joint pain associated with it.

Most people recover but in some cases the symptoms can last several months or even years.

It’s spread by mosquito bites in tropical and subtropical regions, and most of the 73 cases reported in the UK so far this year were in London and linked to travel to Sri Lanka, India, and Mauritius.

Only 27 cases were reported in the same January to June period last year.

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Chikungunya can’t spread directly from person to person – so if someone becomes ill in the UK, they can’t pass the infection on, and the mosquitos responsible aren’t present here.

Dr Philip Veal, consultant in public health at the UKHSA, said it can be a “nasty disease” and the increase in cases was “worrying”.

“It is essential to take precautions against mosquito bites when travelling,” he said.

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“Simple steps, such as using insect repellent, covering up your skin and sleeping under insecticide-treated bed nets can greatly reduce the risk.”

Chikungunya is mainly found in Asia and Africa, but cases have been reported in Europe and North America this year.

Two vaccines to guard against the infection are available in the UK from private travel clinics.

The first cases of the Oropouche virus have also been confirmed in Britain, according to the UKHSA.

It’s spread by midge and mosquito bites and the three cases are all linked to travel to Brazil.

Oropouche was first identified in Trinidad and Tobago in the 1950s and had been mainly confined to the Amazon area.

However, cases have been increasing since 2023 and have shown up in places such as the Dominican Republic, Cuba, and Peru.

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Symptoms include fever, headache, muscle and joint pain, nausea and vomiting.

Anyone who gets such symptoms after being in Central and South America or the Caribbean is advised to get urgent medical advice.

Most people recover on their own, but it can cause severe disease in the very elderly or those with a weak immune system.

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Man staying at hotel that has been focus of protests denies sexual assault charge

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Man staying at hotel that has been focus of protests denies sexual assault charge

A man staying at a hotel that has been the focus of a series of protests has denied a charge of sexual assault and faces a trial next month.

Mohammed Sharwarq, a 32-year-old Syrian national, was arrested after police were called to the Bell Hotel on the Epping High Road in Essex yesterday, police said.

Sharwarq, who is alleged to have kissed a man on the neck, indicated a plea of not guilty to a charge of sexual assault at Chelmsford Magistrates’ Court today.

He indicated guilty pleas to six further charges concerning four complainants – with two counts of common assault and four of assault by beating.

Sharwarq is alleged to have punched a man in the face, thrown an object at a man, slapped a third man in the face and attempted to punch a fourth.

Sky News understands the alleged offences took place inside the hotel between 25 July and 12 August.

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District judge Lynette Woodrow remanded Sharwarq, who was assisted in court by an Arabic interpreter, in custody until his trial on 30 September.

The arrest followed weeks of protests outside the hotel.

Neil Hudson, the Conservative MP for Epping Forest, said last month that the protests were a crisis that “risks boiling over”.

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