Former cricket umpire Dickie Bird has described saying “goodbye” to Sir Michael Parkinson the day before he died – with the friends having an unspoken feeling it would be their final chat.
“I was completely shocked because I only spoke to him yesterday. We had a long chat yesterday,” he told Sky News.
“I know he hasn’t been well, he hasn’t been well at all, and his voice yesterday – it didn’t sound as if it was strong. It was a weak voice. I knew then there was something wrong with him.”
The 90-year-old broke down as he remembered his parting conversation with the TV presenter.
“We cracked a few jokes together, we had a few tears in our eyes, and we said goodbye – goodbye to each other at the end of the phone call – as if we had this feeling we wouldn’t see…
“I had this feeling we wouldn’t see each other again and we said goodbye, and that was it.”
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1:50
A look back at Sir Michael Parkinson’s career
Sir Michael died aged 88 after a career that made him one of Britain’s best-loved TV personalities, with his interview style and warmth attracting the world’s biggest names.
His show first ran from 1971 to 1982, before relaunching in 1998 until he retired in 2007.
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Dickie Bird told Sky News he was a “very, very special friend” and they had known each other since they were teenagers in Barnsley.
They were both sons of coal miners and played on the same cricket team in their youth – with Bird saying ‘Parky’ kept future England cricketer Sir Geoffrey Boycott out the team.
Image: The star travelled to Bird’s birthday in April despite being unwell
“I was so sad when I heard the news this morning – I slumped in my chair and shed a few tears,” said the 90-year-old.
He recalled how they would regularly chat on the phone and that Sir Michael travelled from Berkshire to say a few words at this birthday in April – despite being unwell.
Bird said he told him “he would have walked” to get there such was their friendship.
‘He made it effortless’
Comedian Rory Bremner told Sky News that Sir Michael was “the greatest interviewer there’s been” and remembered fondly the “twinkle in his eye”.
He said his success was based around being “genuine and authentic” and rooted in his Yorkshire upbringing.
“He made it effortless, but it wasn’t effortless at all,” said Bremner.
“It was a lot of work. It was the instincts of a journalist, the warmth and wit of an intelligent and warm and funny human being. He was a lovely man.”
Image: Sir Michael Parkinson with Tom Cruise and Muhammad Ali in 1974 (below). Pic: ITV/Shutterstock
Image: Pic: BBC
Bremner said the calibre of guests Sir Michael attracted spoke for itself.
He said: “You look at those shows he had in the 70s, the people he had – Charlton Heston, Sean Connery, Michael Caine, Kenneth Williams, Bob Hope, Dirk Bogarte.”
Actors, comedians and TV stars have been lining up to pay tribute to Sir Michael in the hours since his death was announced.
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Stephen Fry described being interviewed by him as “impossibly thrilling”.
“The genius of Parky was that (unlike most people… and most of his guests, me included) he was always 100% himself,” he wrote on Instagram.
“On camera and off. ‘Authentic’ is the word I suppose.”
Comedian Eddie Izzard remembered him as the “king of the intelligent interview”, while British singer and actress Elaine Paige described him as “legendary”.
‘The ideal interviewer’
Sir David Attenborough said he was an “ideal interviewer who asked interesting and often important questions because he genuinely wanted to know the answer”.
“He also had a great sense of humour and didn’t take himself too seriously,” said the famous naturalist.
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Sir Michael Caine, who appeared on the interviewer’s final show, tweeted: “Michael Parkinson was irreplaceable, he was charming, always wanted to have a good laugh. He brought the best of everyone he met.”
The television legend grew up as an only child in a council house near Barnsley and despite being a promising cricketer he left school at 16 and went into journalism.
He worked on a local paper before moving on to jobs at The Guardian in Manchester and the Daily Express.
He got his break in TV as a producer at Granada, moving to Thames TV before landing his chat show Parkinson at the BBC.
He also had a short-lived term at TV-AM as part of the original line-up alongside the likes of Angela Rippon and David Frost.
Image: Sir Michael was knighted in 2008
Image: The chat show host was married to his wife for more than 60 years
A knighthood for his decades of work followed in 2008, with Sir Michael giving the modest reply: “I never expected to be knighted – I thought there was more chance of me turning into a Martian really.”
In 2013, he revealed he was being treated for prostate cancer but said he had no intention of stopping working.
Sir Michael was married to his wife Mary for more than 60 years and the couple had three sons.
The freed suspect in the Madeleine McCann case has spoken publicly for the first time since his release – but refused to discuss the mystery of the missing British toddler.
In an exclusive Sky News interview, he hit out after trying to confront the prosecutor who has accused him of abducting and murdering Madeleine.
Christian B, who cannot be fully identified under German privacy laws, travelled more than a hundred miles from a secret address to prosecutor Hans Christian Wolters’ office, but was stopped from going in.
The suspect said: “I want them to stop this witch-hunt against me and give me back my life.
“I’m not feeling free. I have this ankle tag and I’m followed around by police 24/7, so I’m not feeling free.”
Image: Christian B tried to speak to lawyer and prosecutor Hans Christian Wolters
Mr Wolters has stated publicly that he has evidence, which he has not revealed, to show Christian B abducted and killed Madeleine, who vanished from her bed during a Portuguese holiday in 2007.
But he said he doesn’t have enough evidence to arrest or charge him.
The suspect, who was released from a rape sentence two weeks ago, said: “The prosecutor refused to meet me, but I told his representative I wanted his help to get my life back.
“I’m being hounded by the media and it’s his fault. I want him to take responsibility.
“I was told there was nothing they could do to help. They said I had been convicted and released and I wasn’t their responsibility.”
As he spoke, the electronic tag that has monitored his movements since his release was clearly visible above his right ankle. He has also had to surrender his passport and report regularly to probation staff.
Image: Madeleine vanished during a Portuguese holiday in 2007. File pic: PA
The suspect has not been arrested, charged or even questioned by German authorities about the Madeleine case. He’s also refused to talk to Scotland Yard and Portuguese police, who are also involved in the investigation.
Asked directly if he had abducted and killed Madeleine McCann, he said: “My defence lawyers have told me to say nothing on this topic and unfortunately I have to abide by that.”
Christian B, 49, was driven from jail by his lawyer, Friedrich Fulscher, on 17 September and, since then, has lived in local authority accommodation in the town of Neumunster, north of Hamburg.
Journalists quickly tracked him down and exposed his new address, prompting anger in the community from people worried about his convictions for child sex crimes.
Image: Pic: Markus Hibbeler/Bild
Image: Christian B pictured on the day of his release earlier this month. Pic: Markus Hibbeler/Bild
Local councillor Karin Mundt, of the hard-right populist movement Heimat Neumunster (Homeland Neumunster), took to Facebook to warn locals to be vigilant, not go out alone, and make sure that their children and elderly were safe.
She also called for a public protest under the slogan ‘Christian B out of Neumunster – tougher measures against child abusers and rapists to protect all citizens!’
Germany operates draconian privacy laws, whereby even the media must get the consent of someone they photograph, or disguise their features.
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0:40
Madeleine McCann suspect released from jail
Yet the group even decided to publish photos of Christian B, arguing that the danger he presents meant he was a public person of interest, and that they had to make sure that elderly people were able to recognise him.
Two separate chat groups were set up, one dedicated to campaigning for Christian B to be booted out of Neumunster, the other to discuss alleged sightings of him.
‘Out for a steak’
Some claimed that Christian B had turned up near schools and that the police were called round, though other people said they worked at these schools, and that no police had been there.
A woman at Domino’s pizza claimed he had turned up in a false beard, yet just days later her colleague said she had seen the pictures and she was unsure that it was Christian B.
Throughout all this, a source close to Christian B’s defence claimed he had not been out at all apart from to sort out his phone, and also once for a steak.
On Wednesday, one chat even discussed gathering at the town hall in the evening, and police vans then turned up to try to prevent this.
The language of the chat became ever bolder – with people openly posting addresses they were convinced he was living at – and, at one point, all people with English-sounding surnames were ejected from the group as people suspected they were journalists.
Image: Another search near Praia De Luz, Portugal, drew a blank in June. Pic: PA
Police moved Christian B out of Neumunster, and reports say he’s since been spotted at a hotel in an unnamed town.
In a recent interview with Germany’s Stern magazine, Christian B’s main lawyer, Dr Fulscher, said: “The Braunschweig public prosecutor’s office has fuelled this media campaign of prejudgement.
“It has told the public that it is certain it has the right person. Without presenting sufficient evidence or even allowing my client to inspect the files.
“I find this highly questionable from a constitutional point of view. In my opinion, the Braunschweig public prosecutor’s office has made rehabilitation impossible.”
Prosecutor Mr Wolters told Sky News he’d been tipped off about the suspect’s visit to his office in Braunschweig, near Hanover, and refused to speak to him.
Christian B denies any involvement in Madeleine’s disappearance.
Andy Burnham would beat Sir Keir Starmer among Labour members by two to one if there were a leadership contest today, an exclusive poll for Sky News reveals.
A poll of 704 Labour members taken a week ago by YouGov found that 62% would back Mr Burnham, and 29% would back Sir Keir. Just 9% don’t know or would not vote.
Mr Burnham has claimed some Labour MPs are asking him to stand for the leadership, and has used this conference to set out his stall, though there is not an obvious route for him to return to Parliament.
If returned to the Commons, he would have to resign as Manchester Metro Mayor, with a Reform UK replacement in prime position to win the mayoralty.
The poll reveals that around a third of Labour members polled no longer think that Sir Keir is a good prime minister, and would rather he did not fight the next election. Some 33% say he is doing a bad job, compared with 63% who think he is doing a good job.
Even more – 37% – say Sir Keir should not take the party into the next election, while 53% say he should and 10% don’t know. People are more likely to say that Labour is doing a good job than Sir Keir.
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The mayor of Greater Manchester gives no comment to Sky News as he walks to a fringe meeting at the Labour conference in Liverpool.
Mr Burnham is the favourite to succeed him by a long distance – the top pick of 54% of members.
Next is Angela Rayner, the now-sacked deputy leader (10%), then Health Secretary Wes Streeting on 7%. Ex-leader, now energy secretary, Ed Miliband and foreign secretary Yvette Cooper are on 6%, and new home secretary Shabana Mahmood is on 2%.
Mr Burnham comfortably beats all in a final round of voting, according to the poll.
In the event that Mr Burnham was unable to stand, YouGov polled a number of head-to-head races. Wes Streeting beats Shabana Mahmood and Ed Miliband, but would lose to Angela Rayner and Yvette Cooper. Ms Mahmood would lose to Mr Miliband and Ms Cooper. And Ms Cooper would beat Mr Miliband.
The poll also examined attitudes to the deputy leadership contest.
The poll found 35% would back Lucy Powell and 28% would back Bridget Phillipson, while 30% do not know and 5% will not vote. Excluding ‘don’t know’, this suggests Ms Powell is ahead of Ms Phillipson with 56% to 44% – a closer margin than some other pollsters.
Broadly, members who back Ms Powell are less likely to support Sir Keir.
The poll makes tough reading for Angela Rayner – 60% said she was right to resign, against 34% who said it was the wrong decision.
A woman has pleaded guilty to money laundering offences over the UK’s biggest-ever cryptocurrency seizure of Bitcoin, currently worth more than £5bn.
Chinese national Yadi Zhang, 47, who is also known as Zhimin Qian, was arrested in April last year after spending years on the run.
She first arrived in the UK on a false St Kitts and Nevis passport in September 2017 after allegedly carrying out a £5bn investment scam in China involving 130,000 investors in fraudulent wealth schemes between 2014 and 2017.
Police first raided her £5m six-bedroom rented house near Hampstead Heath, in north London, on 31 October 2018.
Image: Zhang rented a £5m house in Hampstead. Pic: CPS
But it was another two and a half years before investigators discovered more than 61,000 Bitcoin in digital wallets – one of the biggest ever cryptocurrency seizures in the world.
The cryptocurrency was worth £1.4bn at the time but its value has now risen to more than £5bn and the fortune is at the centre of an intense battle between the UK government and Chinese investors over who gets to keep it.
Image: Bundles of cash found in a police search. Pic: CPS
The seized assets have reportedly been earmarked by Chancellor Rachel Reeves to help plug the hole in the public finances.
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Zhang was due to face trial at Southwark Crown Court but has pleaded guilty to charges of possessing criminal property and transferring criminal property on or before 23 April 2024.
She appeared in the dock wearing glasses and a beige cardigan over an animal print blouse, nodding to confirm her identity before entering her pleas with the help of a mandarin interpreter.
Judge Sally-Ann Hales remanded Zhang in custody ahead of sentencing at a later date.
Prosecutor Gillian Jones KC said she would not apply to launch confiscation proceedings because of the ongoing proceedings in the High Court.
Image: Jian Wen. Pic: CPS
Jian Wen, 43, was last year jailed for six years and eight months after being found guilty of one count of money laundering between October 2017 and January 2022 relating to 150 Bitcoin, now worth around £12.5m.
Her trial heard Wen was not involved in the alleged fraud but was said to have acted as a “front person” to help disguise the source of the money, some of which had been used to buy cryptocurrency and smuggled out of China on laptops.
Will Lyne, the Metropolitan Police’s head of economic and cybercrime command, said Zhang’s guilty pleas marked the culmination of “years of dedicated investigation”.
“This is one of the largest money laundering cases in UK history and among the highest-value cryptocurrency cases globally,” he said.
Zhang’s solicitor, Roger Sahota of Berkeley Square Solicitors, said: “By pleading guilty today, Ms Zhang hopes to bring some comfort to investors who have waited since 2017 for compensation, and to reassure them that the significant rise in cryptocurrency values means there are more than sufficient funds available to repay their losses.”