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The King is set to return to a full overseas tour schedule next year.

Buckingham Palace has announced that it is planning a full overseas tour schedule for the King next year, despite his ongoing cancer treatment.

Speaking at the conclusion of the King and Queen’s nine-day visit to Australia and Samoa, a senior palace official said: “We’re now working on a pretty normal-looking full overseas tour programme for next year.

“Which is a high for us to end on, to know that we can be thinking in those terms, subject to sign-off by doctors.”

The trip, which was the King’s first visit of this size and scope since his cancer diagnosis earlier this year, had originally included a visit to New Zealand, but this was ruled out on the advice of his doctors.

The palace official added: “I think it’s great testament to the King’s devotion to service and duty that he was prepared to come this far and he was incredibly happy and very, very determined to do so.”

The schedule, which involved the King and Queen undertake up to 10 engagements a day, had been tailored specifically to accommodate periods of rest and included only one evening event.

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The King is said to have “genuinely loved” his time in Australia and Samoa and has “thrived” on the programme.

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King Charles and Queen Camilla with members of a cricket team during a visit to the Samoan Cultural Village in Apia.
Pic: PA
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The King and Queen with members of a cricket team during a visit to the Samoan Cultural Village in Apia.
Pic: PA

The senior palace official added: “It’s lifted his spirits, his mood and his recovery. In that sense, the tour – despite its demands – has been the perfect tonic.”

And yet the King’s mortality was never far from centre stage, with even the monarch himself referencing it on a few occasions.

Closing his speech during the opening ceremony of the Commonwealth heads of government meeting (Chogm), he said: “For my part, I can assure you today that for however many years God grants me, I will join you and the people of the Commonwealth on every step of this journey. Let us learn from the lessons of the past. Let us be proud of who we are today.”

And speaking again at the traditional farewell ceremony in the village of Siumu on the last day of the tour, he said: “I shall always remain devoted to this part of the world and hope that I survive long enough to come back again and see you.”

But for the palace, this is a positive reflection of how the King is “dealing” with his cancer diagnosis.

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given pig carcass in Samoa

The palace official said the King was “a great believer in mind, body and soul,” adding that this combination, mixed with a doctor being with him to make sure he is properly looked after, “makes for a very successful visit in these circumstances”.

And his endurance is bolstered by the support of the Queen.

The palace official added: “The King gets great strength from the Queen being there, not least because when she keeps it real.”

It is understood that the King will recommence his cancer treatment on his return to the UK, having paused it whilst abroad.

In addition to the public-facing engagements, the King’s constitutional duty has continued behind the scenes during the tour with the red state boxes of government being flown in from London.

And yet the trip wasn’t without its challenges; there was the confrontational moment in Canberra when Lidia Thorpe stormed towards the stage shouting: “You are not my King, this is not your land.”

Pic: Reuters
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Australian senator Lidia Thorpe shouts towards the King. Pic: Reuters

But the King remained “unruffled”.

The palace official said: “He’s been around a long time. As always, [he] kept calm, carried on.”

He believes “free speech is the cornerstone of democracy, and so everyone is entitled to their views,” the official added.

And when the Caribbean countries of the Commonwealth raised the issue of reparations at Chogm, he characteristically did not “duck” the issues, according to the palace official.

“It’s very easy to run away from some of these issues. But the King isn’t one for doing that.”

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Lindsay Rimer: Sisters of murdered teenage girl still fighting for justice 30 years on

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Lindsay Rimer: Sisters of murdered teenage girl still fighting for justice 30 years on

Police have made a direct appeal to those involved in the murder of a teenager to finally bring her family closure, exactly 30 years after she disappeared.

Lindsay Rimer, 13, went out to buy a box of Corn Flakes late in the evening on 7 November 1994 and never returned home. Her body was found in a canal close to her home six months later.

Lindsay’s family have also marked this year’s anniversary with a renewed appeal for information from the public, particularly in the town of Hebden Bridge in West Yorkshire where Lindsay lived and died.

“This person should be in prison, not us because that’s where we feel we’ve been for the last 30 years,” her sister Kate Rimer told Sky News.

Juliet Rimer was just one when her sister was killed but has recently been reading letters and diaries to gain a better understanding of a life cut short.

“It’s just, it’s a bit of a horror film that we have to do this,” she said. “The fact that I had a sister that I never knew who was murdered, I just can’t wrap my head around that. It’s had a massive impact on me.”

Lindsay months before her death
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Lindsay months before her death

Kate, who played the part of her sister in a police reconstruction a year after her disappearance, says the family believes someone has information that could lead to her killer’s arrest.

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“It’s usually been my mum who does this but the emotional toll it’s taken on my parents means that they just can’t do this anymore.

“It’s incredibly emotional, it opens everything up, and it reflects back over 30 years ago and everything that we lived through then. And just the horror of a loved family member, a child being murdered, is a really bizarre situation. You live your normal life around that and then we’re opening up again to bring murder and death back into our family.”

In the years since Lindsay’s disappearance, police have spoken to more than 5,000 people and examined 1,200 vehicles. Two men were arrested and later released.

A new sighting of Lindsay after she left the convenience shop on the night she disappeared has been confirmed and police believe those in the community have vital information.

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Juliet, left, and Kate Rimer speak to Sky News this month
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Juliet, left, and Kate Rimer speak to Sky News this month

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Detective Chief Inspector James Entwistle of West Yorkshire Police made a direct appeal to those who were involved in killing and disposing of her body.

“Has this been on your conscience for thirty years?” he said.

“It’s perfectly possible there’s more than one person involved, its perfectly possible there’s a vehicle involved. Maybe you didn’t murder Lindsay but you know exactly who did because you were there and that’s sat on your conscience for 30 years.

“Now is the time to come and talk to us, now is the time to draw a line under this and bring that closure for Lindsay’s family.”

New posters featuring Lindsay’s picture have gone up around Hebden Bridge as part of the appeal for information and an increased police presence will be in the town.

Juliet said: “It has been 30 years but Lindsey didn’t deserve this and we owe it to her as her family to keep doing this.”

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Lucy Letby offered ‘tips’ on how to get away with murder, inquiry told

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Lucy Letby offered 'tips' on how to get away with murder, inquiry told

Lucy Letby suggested she could give “tips” to a colleague on how to get away with murder, a public inquiry has heard.

The child serial killer exchanged WhatsApp messages in 2017 with union rep Hayley Griffiths about the US legal drama How To Get Away With Murder.

The discussion took place a year after the neonatal nurse was moved to clerical duties at the Countess of Chester Hospital following concerns she may have been deliberately harming babies.

In a message to Letby, Ms Griffiths wrote: “I’m currently watching a programme called how to get away with murder. I’m learning some good tips.”

Letby replied: “I could have given you some tips x”

Ms Griffiths said: “I need someone to practice on to see if I can get away with it.”

Letby wrote: “I can think of two people you could practice on and will help you cover it up x”

Ms Griffiths replied: “Deal. I will get thinking of a plan. Get the cruise booked as our getaway.”

The pair were working in the hospital’s risk and patient safety department a year before Letby was arrested on suspicion of multiple murders by Cheshire Police.

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How the police caught Lucy Letby

Ms Griffiths said she was aware of the concerns of foul play and the connection to Letby by September 2016.

Shahram Sharghy, representing some of the families of Letby’s victims, asked: “Given the severity of the allegations that were made, and would you agree they are possibly the most serious allegations that anybody could make against a healthcare professional, were you making light of those allegations when you were referring to potentially committing a crime?”

Ms Griffiths answered: “No.”

Mr Sharghy asked: “Can you even begin to imagine and put yourself in the position of the families of the babies who were harmed when they see those messages?”

Ms Griffiths said: “I know… I am so remorseful. As soon as I saw them myself I was upset and I can’t begin to imagine… I can only apologise and say I have learned. I can’t go back in time but I have reflected absolutely on it.”

Read more from the inquiry:
‘Cold’ Lucy Letby failed final year student nurse placement
‘Breathing tubes dislodged’ during Letby shifts
Nurses who worked with Letby ‘were thinking the unthinkable’

Earlier, Ms Griffiths told counsel to the inquiry Rachel Langdale KC: “It was nothing more than a conversation. However, I truly and deeply regret having started that conservation… this is completely unprofessional, poor judgement on my behalf and completely insensitive. And for that, I can only apologise from the bottom of my heart.”

Letby, 34, from Hereford, is currently serving 15 whole-life orders.

She was convicted at Manchester Crown Court of murdering seven infants and attempting to murder six others between June 2015 and June 2016.

The Thirlwall Inquiry into the events surrounding her crimes is expected to sit until early 2015. The findings are expected by late autumn that year.

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Newcastle: Three men arrested in connection with deadly house explosion and on suspicion of cannabis production

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Newcastle: Three men arrested in connection with deadly house explosion and on suspicion of cannabis production

Three men have been arrested in connection with a deadly house explosion in Newcastle.

Seven-year-old Archie York and Jason Laws, who was in his 30s, were killed following the blast in Violet Close, in the Benwell and Elswick area of the city in October.

Police said at the time that six others were taken to hospital “with varying injuries” after the blast and subsequent fire.

Three men – two in their 30s and one in his 50s – have been arrested on suspicion of two counts of manslaughter, and the production of a Class B drug, namely cannabis, Northumbria Police said.

They all remain in police custody.

Detective Chief Inspector Katie Smith said: “This has been a truly tragic incident which resulted in the loss of two lives.

“As a result of our ongoing enquiries, three men have today been arrested in connection with the explosion.

“Our investigation will remain ongoing as we seek to provide answers to what has happened.

“We would continue to ask people to avoid speculation surrounding this incident both online and in the community.”

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From October: Deadly blast destroys Newcastle house

The blast tore through a row of six properties divided into two flats each.

Drone footage showed how six flats in the middle of the building appeared to have been completely destroyed by the explosion and fire, while piles of debris could be seen in the street outside.

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Superintendent Darren Adams, from Northumbria Police, said on the day of the fire: “As a result of the incident in the early hours of this morning, a seven-year-old boy has sadly passed away.

“Despite the efforts of the emergency services, he tragically died at the scene.

“This is a truly devastating outcome.”

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