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  • Mitchell Starc closes in on James Anderson after Australia rocks England early during AUS vs ENG 2nd Ashes Test – Watch

    Mitchell Starc closes in on James Anderson after Australia rocks England early during AUS vs ENG 2nd Ashes Test – Watch

    Mitchell Starc closed in on legendary James Anderson after the Australian dismissed Ben Duckett in the first over of the second Ashes Test against England at the Gabba on Thursday. With this wicket, Starc took his 26th wicket in the first over of…

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  • Opera star Tara Erraught to make Northern Irish debut

    Opera star Tara Erraught to make Northern Irish debut

    Kristin Hoebermann Tara Erraught stands in front of a grey wall and is smiling. She is wearing a silver formal dress and silver earrings, her hair is tied upKristin Hoebermann

    Tara Erraught is regarded as one of opera’s leading lights

    It might seem strange to some that internationally acclaimed Irish opera singer Tara Erraught has not sung professionally in Northern Ireland before.

    The mezzo soprano was…

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  • Babar Azam, Wasim Akram to lead iconic PSL roadshow at Lord’s on December 7

    Babar Azam, Wasim Akram to lead iconic PSL roadshow at Lord’s on December 7


    Babar Azam and Wasim Akram together [Source: @TsMeSalman/X.com]

    The Pakistan Super League (PSL) has announced a Babar Azam and Wasim Akram-led roadshow unit for its landmark Lord’s Cricket Ground exhibition in London. 

    The event, which is set to…

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  • ‘We’re over the moon our penguin is back at his Stevenage home’

    ‘We’re over the moon our penguin is back at his Stevenage home’

    Staff at a restaurant are “over the moon” after a stolen penguin decoration was returned.

    Two men were seen on CCTV carrying Percy away from his home outside Prezzo in Stevenage on Saturday night before loading him into the back of a van and…

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  • Bristol Bears programme brings ‘sense of belonging’ to pupils

    Bristol Bears programme brings ‘sense of belonging’ to pupils

    Jules Hyamand

    Sarah Turnnidge,Bristol

    BBC Six secondary school pupils sit around two small, square tables in a classroom alongside a man in Bristol Bears kit and beanie hat. The pupils are a mixture of boys and girls and wear dark school jumpers over white shirts and ties.BBC

    The Bristol Bears Foundation is hosting daily workshops with schoolchildren

    A rugby club is working with schools to help pupils improve their communication skills and motivation.

    The Bristol Bears Foundation…

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  • HIV detection drive sees thousands tested in A&E

    HIV detection drive sees thousands tested in A&E

    Almost 200 people have been diagnosed with HIV or hepatitis since local A&E departments introduced routine screening.

    About 180 people who attended A&E have been diagnosed with blood-borne viruses (BBVs), including HIV, since the opt-out testing…

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  • Spotify Wrapped: How does it work – and who are this year’s top artists? | Ents & Arts News

    Spotify Wrapped: How does it work – and who are this year’s top artists? | Ents & Arts News

    The hotly anticipated Spotify Wrapped is revealing our top tracks, artists and albums for 2025.

    But how does the streaming service calculate personalised summaries of users’ listening habits and rank the UK’s hottest artists?

    Here’s…

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  • Nasal drops for brain cancer: A breakthrough nanomedicine approach to treating glioblastoma

    Nasal drops for brain cancer: A breakthrough nanomedicine approach to treating glioblastoma

    Brain cancer, especially glioblastoma, is characterized by its aggressive nature, with very poor survival rates. Conventional treatments hardly succeed because of the brain’s protective barriers, which easily block the path of drug delivery.

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  • Heavy periods and plant-based diets could boost risk of anaemia in young girls, study finds

    Heavy periods and plant-based diets could boost risk of anaemia in young girls, study finds

    Heavy menstrual bleeding and plant-based diets may significantly raise the risk of anaemia among teenage girls, a small new study has found.

    Adolescent girls require more iron due to hormonal changes, and they are also at greater risk of iron…

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  • Refinancing is delayed at Thames Water. If Ofwat is playing hard, it should keep going | Nils Pratley

    Refinancing is delayed at Thames Water. If Ofwat is playing hard, it should keep going | Nils Pratley

    A good 20 months have passed since the shareholders of Thames Water declared they wouldn’t be putting another penny into the “uninvestable” company and would rather take a thumping write-off of their investment.

    So surely, you’d think, we must be nearing the endgame in the attempt by the creditors – the people who lent money to Thames – to rescue the company via a debt write-down and a recapitalisation with new equity. After all, the 100-odd class A bondholders have been negotiating with Ofwat, the regulator, since June. Indeed, they started work on their proposal six months before that, in case the original preferred bidder, the US private equity group KKR, took fright at the political heat on Thames, which is what happened.

    But no, the water torture goes on. “Discussions are taking longer than expected but this is a complex situation and the current phase of the restructuring plan will likely take a number of months to conclude,” Thames said within its half-year numbers on Wednesday. In theory some version of an outline agreement or update is still possible before Christmas, but don’t hold your breath.

    What to read into the delay? One hopes it means Ofwat, even as it awaits execution or reinvention under the government’s “reset” of water regulation, is playing hard and tearing chunks out of the creditors’ proposal.

    Three areas are critical. First, the terms of the refinancing. Back in October, the creditors tried to present their updated proposed terms as a model of generosity – the write-down on the class A debt would be £4bn, or 25%, rather than the 20% previously suggested. And there would be an injection of £3.15bn in equity. On both scores, you’ll find unattached financiers who think the would-be rescuers aren’t offering nearly enough to ensure a bulletproof balance sheet to attempt a 10-year turnaround of Thames. The debt write-off may need to be bigger (at least 30%) and the creditors may have to dig deeper on equity.

    Second, the creditors need to be clearer about how, precisely, they will “reprioritise” the £20bn of spending allowed over the next five years. A perennial problem with the water industry is that the line is blurry between spending on day-to-day operations and capital spending. It all needs to be spelled out in crystal-clear terms. The poor old customers must not be forced by stealth to finance project improvements they have already paid for.

    Third, the performance conditions – the even blurrier element in the package. The creditors argue that Thames needs leniency on fines to avoid a doom loop and requires targets on spillages and leaks that it has a chance of achieving. Maybe, but Ofwat – or its successor body – will still need stiff powers to fine Thames for underperformance: the company cannot be granted a free pass on fines. And it would be an outrage if Thames’s customers could be charged more via “outcome delivery incentives”, in regulatory-speak, if their supplier outperforms lowered standards it should have met years ago.

    Ofwat’s negotiating hand is not strong because the government clearly prefers a “market-led” solution. Ministers, or some of them, are terrified of Thames ending up in special administration, AKA temporary nationalisation (even if they shouldn’t be, in this column’s view).

    But ministers and regulators alike will know there is a likelihood that US hedge funds, led by Elliott Management, would emerge as the biggest shareholders in Thames if the restructuring goes through. They are the opportunistic crew who bought into the debt at distressed prices. It won’t be cuddly UK pension funds, investing via bond-only funds, who emerge at the top of the pile in the internal shuffle between creditors.

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    The terms of any deal blessed by the regulator and government must be seen to be severe. The creditors’ October proposal, like June’s, looked too greedy. If the latest delay means Ofwat is insisting on tougher terms, so it should. Even at this late stage, do not go soft. And remember, you are free to recommend special administration.

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