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  • Jersey government agrees to sell house with pool for £790k

    Jersey government agrees to sell house with pool for £790k

    BBC A detached, two storey house with cream walls and an orange, tiled roof. To the right of the image is a separate garage with a blue door. In front of the garage is a tarmac driveway. An estate agent's sign is visible to the left of the image.BBC

    The property has five bedrooms and two bathrooms, according to estate agents Gaudin & Co.

    A government minister has agreed a taxpayer-owned five bedroom house with a swimming pool can be sold for £790,000, as it “represents a financial burden to the public”.

    Caroldene, on La Rue de la Hauteur, St Helier, is one of dozens of residential units in the Government of Jersey’s property portfolio, which was found in 2021 to have a total market value of more than £1bn.

    The house had been placed back on the market for £850,000 after a previous offer of £800,000 fell through, said Minister for Infrastructure, Andy Jehan.

    It was described by estate agents Gaudin & Co as a “substantial five-bedroom detached residence” with two bathrooms, a sunroom, and a double garage.

    ‘Investment required’

    In a ministerial decision, Jehan said the previous offer had been withdrawn by the prospective purchasers in November 2025.

    “Following that withdrawal, the agent re-marketed the property,” he said.

    “The property was re-listed for sale at £850,000, and a new offer of £790,000 has since been received.

    “Given the property’s current condition and the level of investment required to restore it to a habitable standard, this offer is considered to be reasonable.”

    Constable Andy Jehan, a man with short grey hair. He is clean shaven, and wearing a navy blue blazer over a sky blue shirt with white buttons. His top button is unbuttoned. He has a badge on his left lapel. Behind him, out of focus, is a road and green fields.

    Constable Andy Jehan said the government and the purchasers would each be responsible for their own costs.

    Government documents confirmed the States approved the purchase of the building in 1991 for £225,000, “in order that part of the garden might be used to provide improved access to the States Loan development at Le Jardin de la Hauteur”.

    They added “the Housing Committee had no use for the accommodation and it was agreed that the property should be handed over to the Defence Committee for use by the Territorial Army” as housing.

    Jersey’s quarterly house price index figures do not list the average sale prices of five bedroom homes.

    However, the latest report said that the average price of a four bedroom house sold in quarter three 2025 was £1,280,000.

    In signing the ministerial decision, Jehan authorised the Attorney General, the Greffier of the States and the director of Jersey Property Holdings to pass and conclude “any contract which is required” on behalf of the public in relation to the sale of the property.

    “Each party will be responsible for their own costs,” the document added.

    Ministers agreed in July 2025 to dispose of the property, as they considered that it “represents a financial burden to the public”.

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  • BBC Radio Solent launches campaign to collect hygiene products

    BBC Radio Solent launches campaign to collect hygiene products

    Helen Head and Patrick HughesSouth of England

    BBC A close-up shot of donated cleaning items in a crate, showing shampoos and shower gels stacked neatly with some extra lying on top. BBC

    BBC Radio Solent’s Soapbox Appeal will collect donations at over 50 drop-off points across Hampshire, Dorset and the Isle of Wight

    A BBC campaign aims to help charities and community groups by organising drop-off points for toiletries and hygiene items to be donated to people who need extra support.

    The BBC Radio Solent Soapbox Appeal will collect donations at over 50 drop-off points in Hampshire, Dorset and the Isle of Wight across January.

    They will then be sent to charities and communities groups who will help distribute them.

    The manager of a food bank charity in Bournemouth, which also provides toiletry parcels, said that those suffering from food poverty can struggle to afford to buy their own hygiene essentials.

    Mary is wearing a Christmas-themed jumper and standing in a warehouse. Behind her many crates filled with donated goods can be seen stacked on shelves, as well as empty cardboard boxes which await being filled.

    Mary Duncan, operations manager at a food bank charity in Bournemouth, said that the need from families has increased hugely over the last decade

    Donations can include new and unopened toiletries like shampoo and toothpaste, and other cleaning products including washing up liquid, sponges, cloths and tissues.

    Last year’s campaign saw thousands of the items donated and distributed.

    Ahead of this campaign’s launch, BBC Radio Solent visited Hope for Food, a food bank charity in Bournemouth, which distributes around 150 family food parcels every week, as well as bags of toiletries.

    Mary Duncan, the operations manager at the charity, said that since she began volunteering there in 2016, the need from families has “increased hugely”.

    “We are getting a huge number of referrals coming in,” said Ms. Duncan.

    “Things that most of us take for granted – people who are really struggling will have to find extra money to pay for those things.”

    A warehouse with crates of donated goods - 3 shelves filled with crates of shower gels, baby products, shampoos and other cleaning items are pictured.

    As well as donating food parcels, the Bournemouth-based charity also distributes hygiene items and toiletries

    The national charity the Hygiene Bank estimates there are 4.2 million adults in the UK in hygiene poverty.

    One survey carried out last year by that charity, along with product distribution charity In Kind Direct, found that 13% of children aged six to 15 in the south of England were living in food poverty.

    “The impact on children going to school when they don’t have clean clothes or clean hair…other children might ostracise them,” said Ms. Duncan

    “It is very important for your own self-worth that you can keep yourself clean and you can keep your home clean.”

    For a list of the drop-off points across Hampshire, the Isle of Wight and Dorset, visit the BBC Radio Solent Make a Difference page here.

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  • This robot companion is a cameraman for your pet

    This robot companion is a cameraman for your pet

    For a long time, tech companies have pitched pet cameras as a way to find out what your furball is up to when you’re not home. Vex, a new robot companion launched at CES this week, takes that a step further: it follows your pet around, filming…

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  • The Right to be Forgotten

    The Right to be Forgotten

    Rehabilitation in the Digital Age

    A new (December 2025) briefing from Unlock, the charity which supports and advocates for people with criminal records to be able to move on positively in their lives, examines how the digital age has…

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  • Devon clog dancers appeal in bid to keep tradition alive

    Devon clog dancers appeal in bid to keep tradition alive

    Plymouth Clog was originally called Plymouth Maids but changed its name in an attempt to encourage more men to join.

    The group said it was also looking for musicians who play traditional folk instruments to join them.

    Tammi Boyd, 35, is one of the…

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  • PM expresses grief over death of Chancellor of Jamia Ashrafia Lahore – RADIO PAKISTAN

    1. PM expresses grief over death of Chancellor of Jamia Ashrafia Lahore  RADIO PAKISTAN
    2. Jamia Ashrafia chief Maulana Fazlur Rahim Ashrafi passes away  The Nation (Pakistan )
    3. Jamia Ashrafia founder Maulana Ashrafi passes away  Samaa TV
    4. Railways minister…

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  • CEO of AI Startup Says Artificial Data Won’t Take Over for Decades

    CEO of AI Startup Says Artificial Data Won’t Take Over for Decades

    Artificial intelligence won’t be training AI anytime soon, says the CEO of a data labeling startup.

    On an episode of the “20VC” podcast released last week, Matt Fitzpatrick, the CEO of Invisible Technologies, said…

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  • 1 killed, 8 injured in bus attack in NW Pakistan-Xinhua

    1 killed, 8 injured in bus attack in NW Pakistan-Xinhua

    Locals gather near a bus wreckage after an improvised explosive device (IED) attack in Lakki Marwat district, northwest Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, Jan. 5, 2026. One person was killed and eight others were injured in an IED blast…

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  • Lancashire drivers warned ahead of new traffic camera switch-on

    Lancashire drivers warned ahead of new traffic camera switch-on

    A council has warned drivers against breaking the law as it prepares to switch on a set of new traffic cameras.

    Lancashire County Council’s automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) devices are to be operational in four locations across Preston, Lancaster and Accrington “early in 2026”.

    Once live, drivers who ignore road regulations – such as turning bans and no-entry areas – will be issued a £70 penalty charge notice, reduced to £35 if paid within 21 days.

    The council had been given the go-ahead to install the cameras three years ago, but it was revealed in December 2024 that they had not yet been switched on. The authority has clarified the delays were due to ensuring the cameras were “value for money”.

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  • Anxiety: Some days I could not leave the house, says musician

    Anxiety: Some days I could not leave the house, says musician

    Glenn – who performs under the stage name Rosborough – hopes others who are suffering in silence – like he did for years – will seek help, too.

    Even though he has lived with the condition most of his life, things came to a head in recent times.

    “I…

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