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A woman woke from a nap to find a 3ft-long snake trying to enter her home through her bedroom window.

The startled woman ran out of the bedroom, shutting the door behind her, and called the RSPCA.

“It’s not every day you get woken up by a snake trying to get into your bedroom through a window – the woman was terribly shocked”, said RSPCA officer Enola Evans, who was tasked with removing the reptile.

When she went to find the snake, there was initially no sign of it.

The resident at the Hereford Walk property gave the RSPCA officer permission to search the bedroom in case the snake had made its way inside and hidden somewhere warm.

But again, after a thorough search of possible hiding places, the creature was “nowhere to be found”.

“As the window had been open for so long, it was getting quite chilly in there, so I decided to shut it. That’s when I spotted something moving,” continued Ms Evans.

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“It was the snake, coiled around the window’s rim. He had been very well-hidden, so I was really pleased to find him.”

The incident happened on 8 October and the reptile was found to be a corn snake, a non-venomous breed that is sometimes kept as a pet.

The snake was moved into a carrier and taken to a facility to be cared for until he could be reunited with his owner or put up for adoption.

“Snakes are excellent escape artists and will take the opportunity of a gap in an enclosure door, or a loose-fitting lid to make a break for it”, said RSPCA scientific officer Evie Button.

The RSPCA received 1,219 reports about pet snakes in need of help, including many strays, last year.

A high number of calls came in during the summer months as snakes become more active during hot weather.

Snake owners have been urged to be vigilant, invest in an enclosure suitable for the species and ensure it is kept secure – and locked if necessary – when unattended.

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‘It was a storm… now it’s a hurricane’: Has the cost of living crisis been forgotten?

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'It was a storm... now it's a hurricane': Has the cost of living crisis been forgotten?

With £99 a month to live off Aida has turned to a food bank.

“It’s very difficult. Extremely difficult. But I have to live,” says Aida Mascarenhas. The 75-year-old tells us £99 is all she has left after paying her bills. Aida’s accommodation is provided by the local authority.

“Ninety-nine pounds in a month – even for bedding, pillows or something. So many things for a house.”

At the food bank, Aida is called forward to collect handouts to get her through the week.

Aida Mascarenhas food bank user
Screengrabs from Lisa Holland VT on the cost of living filmed at Marks Gate Community Hub in Romford in Essex. FTV RUSH COST OF LIVING ROMFORD PT1/PT2 HOLLAND 070425
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Aida Mascarenhas uses food banks, saying she has just £99 left every month after bills

Screengrabs from Lisa Holland VT on the cost of living filmed at Marks Gate Community Hub in Romford in Essex. FTV RUSH COST OF LIVING ROMFORD PT1/PT2 HOLLAND 070425
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Organisers are able to offer the basics like potatoes, pasta and spices

It’s three years since we last visited this food bank at the Marks Gate Community Hub in Romford, Essex, when the cost of living crisis was being described as the worst in a generation.

After three grinding years of making ends meet, the food bank organiser – and her clients – tell us things aren’t improving. In fact, they feel things have got even worse.

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“Overall the cost of living crisis has gone up considerably since three years ago. It’s worse,” says Asma Haq, founder of the Marks Gate Relief Project.

“For charities like us it was a storm anyway and now it’s a hurricane. We are busy non-stop.”

Asma Haq, Founder of the Marks Gate Relief Project.
Screengrabs from Lisa Holland VT on the cost of living filmed at Marks Gate Community Hub in Romford in Essex. FTV RUSH COST OF LIVING ROMFORD PT1/PT2 HOLLAND 070425
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Asma Haq, founder of the Marks Gate Relief Project, thinks the cost of living crisis has worsened ‘considerably’


Asma is running around calling people forward – offering them basics like potatoes, pasta and spices.

She tells us some always come early, anxious the supplies will run out.

Next in line at the food bank is a woman dragging a large suitcase – pulling the zip back to shove in a large bottle of cooking oil and anything else the food bank will give her.

Screengrabs from Lisa Holland VT on the cost of living filmed at Marks Gate Community Hub in Romford in Essex. FTV RUSH COST OF LIVING ROMFORD PT1/PT2 HOLLAND 070425
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This woman at the food bank is looking for basic groceries to keep her going

Asma describes almost all the people who come to the hub as non-white British, first-generation migrants.

She says most have broken or no English with little to no computer skills and want help to access a changing benefits system.

“It’s also about so many other barriers they face. A lot aren’t tech-savvy. They used to get a lot of council tax support which has been reduced considerably.

We’ve had people literally put their phones in our faces and say ‘do it for us’.”

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The threads of why people say they’re struggling weave through all communities. Across the road from the community centre we talk to people who again and again tell us they feel the cost of living has been forgotten about.

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Fears over benefit cuts and rising costs

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One woman tells us: “I don’t know how people are going to live. They keep putting it up and up and up. It’s everything. You’re worrying about the gas bill, the electric bill, the council bill.

“And I know people that’s desperate and they cannot pay their bills and they’re worried about ending up in court.”

Vox unnamed woman
Screengrabs from Lisa Holland VT on the cost of living filmed at Marks Gate Community Hub in Romford in Essex. FTV RUSH COST OF LIVING ROMFORD PT1/PT2 HOLLAND 070425
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The cost of living crisis is being felt by this woman in Romford: ‘You’re worrying about the gas bill, the electric bill, the council bill’

Continuing to retrace our steps from three years ago, we head back to Barking in east London and revisit a launderette where we meet a familiar face – Myriam Sinon who has worked in the business for the last 10 years.

I ask her if she imagined we would be standing here three years after we last met and things wouldn’t have improved.

“I didn’t expect that it would be worse,” she says.

Myriam Sinon who works in a launderette 
Screengrabs from Lisa Holland VT on the cost of living filmed at a laundrette in Barking. FTV RUSH COST OF LIVING BARKING HOLLAND 080425
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Despite rising energy prices, this launderette in Barking has chosen not to increase prices

Myriam Sinon who works in a launderette 
Screengrabs from Lisa Holland VT on the cost of living filmed at a laundrette in Barking. FTV RUSH COST OF LIVING BARKING HOLLAND 080425
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Myriam Sinon, who works at the launderette, says customers are finding ways to share the cost of cleaning clothes

Myriam says electricity prices have quadrupled in the past three years – but the launderette has not increased prices, fearing it would drive customers away.

Everyone needs to wash things and she says people are finding ways to share the cost – gathering up washing from people they know to create a maximum load for the machines.

People are hoping to see an end in sight. But Myriam has a stark prediction if things don’t improve.

“There will be crime every time,” she says. “When people don’t get enough money they start stealing. They might kill you for a watch or phone.”

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Starmer says government will fund further local grooming gangs inquiries if ‘needed’

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Starmer says government will fund further local grooming gangs inquiries if 'needed'

The government will fund any further local inquiries into the grooming gangs scandal that are deemed necessary, Sir Keir Starmer has said.

However, the prime minister said it is his “strong belief” that the focus must be on implementing recommendations from the Alexis Jay national review before more investigations go ahead.

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It follows a row over whether Labour is still committed to the five local inquiries it promised in January, after safeguarding minister Jess Phillips failed to provide an update on them in a statement to parliament hours before it closed for recess on Tuesday.

Pic: PA
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Sir Keir Starmer joins police officers on patrol in Cambridgeshire. Pic: PA

Instead, Ms Phillips told MPs that local authorities will be able to access a £5m fund to support locally-led work on grooming gangs.

On Thursday morning, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper insisted the “victim-centred, locally-led inquiries” will still go ahead, while a Home Office source told Sky News more could take place in addition to the five.

Speaking to Sky News’ Rob Powell later on Thursday, Sir Keir confirmed that there could be more inquiries than those five but said the government must also “get on and implement the recommendations we’ve already got”.

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The prime minister said: “Of course, if there’s further local inquiries that are needed then we will put some funding behind that, and they should happen.

“But I don’t think that simply saying we need more inquiries when we haven’t even acted on the ones that we’ve had is necessarily the only way forward.”

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Yvette Cooper speaks to Sky News

Ms Phillips’s earlier comments led to accusations that the government was diluting the importance of the local inquiries by giving councils choice over how to use the funds.

Sky News understands she was due to host a briefing with MPs this afternoon at 5pm – the second she had held in 24 hours – in an attempt to calm concern amongst her colleagues.

Review recommendations ‘sat on a shelf’

Sir Keir insisted he is not watering down his commitment for the five local enquiries, but said the Jay recommendations were “sitting on a shelf under the last government” and he is “equally committed” to them.

He added: “At the most important level, if there is evidence of grooming that is coming to light now, we need a criminal investigation. I want the police investigation because I want perpetrators in the dock and I want justice delivered.”

In October 2022, Professor Alexis Jay finished a seven-year national inquiry into the many ways children in England and Wales had been sexually abused, including grooming gangs.

Girls as young as 11 were groomed and raped across a number of towns and cities in England over a decade ago.

Prof Jay made 20 recommendations which haven’t been implemented yet, with Sir Keir saying on Thursday he will bring 17 of them forward.

However, the Tories and Reform UK want the government to fund a new national inquiry specifically into grooming gangs, demands for which first started last year after interventions by tech billionaire Elon Musk on his social media platform X.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk wears a 'Trump Was Right About Everything!' hat while attending a cabinet meeting at the White House, in Washington, D.C., U.S., March 24, 2025. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
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Elon Musk has been critical of Labour’s response to grooming gangs and has called for a national inquiry. Pic: Reuters

‘Fuelling confusion’

Reform leader Nigel Farage said the statement made by Ms Phillips “was one of the most cowardly things I have ever seen” as he repeated calls for a fresh inquiry.

Robert Jenrick, the shadow justice secretary, also told Sky News that ministers were “fuelling confusion” and that the “mess.. could have been avoided if the government backed a full national inquiry – not this piecemeal alternative”.

Tory leader Kemi Badenoch said the government needed to look at “state failings” and she would try and force a fresh vote on holding another national inquiry, which MPs voted down in January.

‘Political mess’

As well as facing criticism from the Opposition, there are signs of a backlash within Labour over how the issue has been handled.

Labour MPs angry with government decision grooming gangs


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Mhari Aurora

Political correspondent

@MhariAurora

With about an hour until the House of Commons rose for Easter recess, the government announced it was taking a more “flexible” approach to the local grooming gang inquiries.

Safeguarding minister Jess Philips argued this was based on experience from certain affected areas, and that the government is funding new police investigations to re-open historic cases.

Speaking on Times Radio, former chair of the Equality and Human Rights Commission Sir Trevor Phillips called the move “utterly shameful” and claimed it was a political decision.

One Labour MP told Sky News: “Some people are very angry. I despair. I don’t disagree with many of our decisions but we just play to Reform – someone somewhere needs sacking.”

The government has insisted party political misinformation was fanning the flames of frustration in Labour.

The government also said it was not watering down the inquiries and was actually increasing the action being taken.

But while many Labour MPs have one eye on Reform in the rearview mirror, any accusations of being soft on grooming gangs only provides political ammunition to their adversaries.

One Labour MP told Sky News the issue had turned into a “political mess” and that they were being called “grooming sympathisers”.

On the update from Ms Phillips on Tuesday, they said it might have been the “right thing to do” but that it was “horrible politically”.

“We are all getting so much abuse. It’s just political naivety in the extreme.”

Read more:
Grooming gangs: What we know from the data
Fewer criminals set to be jailed amid overcrowding

‘We will leave no stone unturned’

Ms Phillips later defended her decision, saying there was “far too much party political misinformation about the action that is being taken when everyone should be trying to support victims and survivors”.

“We are funding new police investigations to re-open historical cases, providing national support for locally led inquiries and action, and Louise Casey… is currently reviewing the nature, scale and ethnicity of grooming gangs offending across the country,” she said.

“We will not hesitate to go further, unlike the previous government, who showed no interest in this issue over 14 years and did nothing to progress the recommendations from the seven-year national inquiry when they had the chance.

“We will leave no stone unturned in pursuit of justice for victims and will be unrelenting in our crackdown on sick predators and perpetrators who prey on vulnerable children.”

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Prince Harry visits war victims in Ukraine

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Prince Harry visits war victims in Ukraine

Prince Harry has visited war victims in Ukraine as part of his work with wounded veterans, a spokesperson has said.

The Duke of Sussex was in central London this week for a Court of Appeal hearing over his security arrangements in the UK.

The visit on Thursday to Lviv in western Ukraine, which has frequently been targeted with Russian missiles, was not announced until after he was out of the country.

Prince Harry visits Superhumans Center in Lviv. Pic: Superhumans Center
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Prince Harry visits Superhumans Center in Lviv. Pic: Superhumans Center

Harry, who served 10 years in the British Army, visited the Superhumans Center, an orthopaedic clinic in Lviv that treats and rehabilitates wounded military personnel and civilians.

The prince, 40, was accompanied by a contingent from his Invictus Games Foundation, including four veterans who have been through similar rehabilitation experiences.

Prince Harry visits Superhumans Center in Lviv, Pic: Superhumans Center
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Harry at the rehabilitation centre in Lviv on Thursday. Pic: Superhumans Center

A spokesperson for the Duke of Sussex said Harry had been invited by the centre’s CEO, Olga Rudneva, a year ago, and at the Invictus Games Vancouver Whistler 2025, which took place in February.

Harry travelled to the centre, which offers prosthetics, reconstructive surgery and psychological help free of charge, to see first-hand the support they provide at an active time of war.

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Prince Harry visits Superhumans Center in Lviv, Pic: Superhumans Center
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Prince Harry made an unannounced visit to Ukraine. Pic: Superhumans Center

The duke, who served two tours in Afghanistan, met patients and medical professionals while touring the centre, the spokesperson said.

During his trip to Ukraine, he also met members of the Ukrainian Invictus community, as well as Ukraine’s minister of veterans affairs, Natalia Kalmykova.

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The Duke of Sussex arrives at the Royal Courts of Justice.
Pic: PA
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The Duke of Sussex was in London earlier this week.
Pic: PA

Helping wounded soldiers has been one of Harry’s most prominent causes, as he founded the Invictus Games in 2014 to offer wounded veterans the challenge of competing in sports events similar to the Paralympics.

Harry is the second member of the royal family to visit Ukraine since Russia launched a full-scale invasion of its smaller neighbour in February 2022.

His aunt, Sophie, the Duchess of Edinburgh, made an unannounced visit to Ukraine’s capital of Kyiv last year.

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