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Sports Apr 12, 2026

Birmingham's 2-0 Win Over Wrexham Slashes Playoff Hopes and Delays Promotion Quest

Birmingham City secured a 2-0 victory at St Andrew’s, delivering a severe setback to Wrexham’s chas…
Birmingham City defeated Wrexham 2-0 at St Andrew’s, a result that pushes the Red Dragons further from the Championship playoff places. The loss leaves Wrexham four points behind sixth‑placed Hull City with only four games remaining.After a 5-1 drubbing by Southampton, the defeat marks Wrexham’s first back‑to‑back losses since August. Manager Phil Parkinson tried to steady the mood, saying, “We’ve had a tough week, but we’re not down and out yet. People may write us off, but inside the dressing room we’re still fighting.”Goals came from Carlos Vicente, who headed in his third goal for Birmingham since joining in January, and Christoph Klarer, who added a second‑half strike to seal the win.Wrexham’s attack was virtually silent – they failed to register a single shot on target, and goalkeeper James Beadle had little to do. In contrast, Birmingham’s keeper Arthur Okonkwo made several first‑half saves, keeping the hosts in control.The victory gave Birmingham their first win in over a month and lifted them to 15th place in the league table. The hosts dominated possession, forcing early saves from Okonkwo and creating chances for Ibrahim Osman and August Priske, though those early efforts were thwarted.In the second half, a well‑timed delivery from Kai Wagner allowed Vicente to rise highest at the far post and head home. Later, a corner from Paik Seung‑ho found Klarer, who muscled past Max Cleworth and finished confidently.Substitutes Josh Windass and Nathan Broadhead were introduced by Parkinson in a bid to spark Wrexham’s attack, but the visitors could not muster any meaningful threat in the final quarter.Birmingham manager Chris Davies praised his side’s performance: “We were excellent throughout. When the opposition doesn’t have a shot on your goal and you score two – we could have scored five – that’s everything.”
#birmingham #wrexham #but
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World Economy Apr 12, 2026

GSK Reports Promising Early Results for Ovarian and Womb Cancer Drug

GSK has announced positive early results for its ovarian and womb cancer drug, Mocertatug Rezetecan…
GSK has revealed promising early results for its treatment for gynaecological cancers, Mocertatug Rezetecan (Mo-Rez), as its chief executive, Luke Miels, seeks to speed up drug development at the group.The company reported that in an early-stage trial, Mo-Rez shrank or eliminated tumours in 62% of patients with ovarian cancer where chemotherapy had failed, and in 67% of those with endometrial cancer.GSK acquired the Mo-Rez cancer treatment, an antibody-drug conjugate (ADC), from China’s Hansoh Pharma in late 2023, and has trialled it in 224 patients around the world, including the UK, over the past year. Few patients needed to stop treatment because of side-effects, the most common being nausea. It is administered every three weeks via intravenous infusion.Combined with data from a separate, intermediate trial in China, these results give GSK the confidence to go straight to late-stage trials, with five clinical studies planned globally in the next few months, including on patients in the UK.Presenting the results at the Society of Gynecologic Oncology’s annual meeting on women’s cancer in Puerto Rico, Hesham Abdullah, GSK’s global head of cancer research and development, said: “Treatment of gynaecological cancers remains a major challenge, with a pressing need for new therapies that offer improved response rates. With Mo-Rez we now have compelling evidence of a promising clinical profile.”Endometrial cancer affects 1.6 million women globally, with 417,000 new cases each year. Ovarian cancer affects 843,000 people, with 240,000 new cases annually.Abdullah described Mo-Rez as a “key asset” in the company’s growing cancer portfolio, expected to be a blockbuster drug with peak annual sales of more than £2bn, which GSK hopes will help it achieve its 2031 sales target of £40bn.
#gsk #cancer #drug
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Environment Apr 12, 2026

UK Gardens Losing Ground: RHS Finds 42% Paved Over as Conservationists Call for Wild‑Space Revival

A recent RHS audit reveals that 42% of Britain’s garden area has been concreted, sparking alarm amo…
Springtime in a typical British suburb is a chorus of birds, buzzing insects and the occasional rumble of a mini‑digger. While sparrows spar and tits clash over territory, a crew of contractors is often busy erasing hedges, bushes and trees, leaving behind a stark trench of bare earth. In one April afternoon, a once‑lush front garden was reduced to a skip full of uprooted branches and a strip of exposed soil. Despite the nation’s reputation as a garden‑loving society, the trend toward concrete is accelerating. An RHS audit published last year found that 42% of domestic garden space in the United Kingdom has been paved over, with timber fences replacing wild privet and driveways smothering mossy lawns. The loss is not merely aesthetic; it erodes habitats that support a remarkable share of the country’s wildlife. According to the Royal Horticultural Society, over 50% of Britain’s butterflies, amphibians and reptiles, and more than 40% of its bird and mammal species rely on garden habitats. The new David Attenborough series Secret Garden underscores this, describing urban gardens as “almost as diverse as a tropical rainforest.” Yet, as the series aired, another garden was being stripped to the ground, highlighting the tension between media‑driven reverence and on‑the‑ground reality. Socio‑economic factors compound the issue. One in eight households in the UK has no garden at all, and lower‑income families and ethnic minorities are disproportionately deprived of green space. Even owners of gardens often lack the time, money, or confidence to cultivate biodiverse oases, viewing gardening as a burdensome chore. Experts suggest a radical, yet simple, alternative: do nothing. Allowing dandelions, thistles, and stray grasses to flourish provides nectar for pollinators, while bare patches become nesting sites for bees and birds. Unraked leaves serve as winter shelters for insects, and dead stalks become food for aphids, which in turn feed higher‑up predators. The “negative space” of an untended garden can therefore become a hotbed of ecological activity. Conservationists argue that embracing this messiness could reverse the decline of urban biodiversity. As one commentator mused, “If Sir David Attenborough could return for a bonus episode, he might show us that a tangled, overgrown garden is not a failure but a vibrant ecosystem in its own right.” By Emma Beddington, 12 April 2026
#Royal Horticultural Society #UK gardens #wildlife refuges
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World Apr 12, 2026

US Vice President JD Vance Blames Iran’s Nuclear Stance for Collapse of Islamabad Talks

The US‑Iran negotiations in Islamabad ended without an agreement after 21 hours, with Vice Presiden…
The United States’ senior envoy, Vice President JD Vance, said the marathon talks in Islamabad collapsed because Iran would not abandon its nuclear weapons programme, a stance Tehran’s representatives dismissed as a lack of US goodwill. Vance, who departed Islamabad on Sunday after a 21‑hour session with Iranian officials, reiterated that Washington’s red lines required an "affirmative commitment" from Tehran that it would not pursue a nuclear weapon or the means to acquire one quickly. He described the stalemate as "bad news for Iran much more than it is for the United States." Iranian parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf countered that, despite offering "constructive initiatives," the US failed to win the trust of the Iranian delegation, leaving it to Washington to decide whether it can regain that confidence. Iran’s foreign ministry downplayed expectations, stating that no one anticipated a deal in a single session and emphasizing continued regional contacts, while the semi‑official Tasnim news agency blamed "excessive" US demands for the impasse. The talks took place under a 14‑day ceasefire agreed by the US, Iran and Israel, with Pakistan’s foreign minister Ishaq Dar urging both sides to honour the pause and offering to facilitate renewed dialogue. The conflict, which began on 28 February, has already claimed over 3,000 lives in Iran, more than 2,000 in Lebanon, and dozens across the Gulf region, while inflicting extensive infrastructure damage. Israeli security cabinet minister Ze’ev Elkin warned that Iran is "playing with fire," even as he left the door open for further negotiations. These were the first direct US‑Iran talks in more than a decade and could determine the fate of the fragile ceasefire and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz—a chokepoint for roughly 20 % of global energy supplies. The war has already sent international oil prices soaring. In addition to Vance, US special envoy Steve Witkoff and former President Trump’s son‑in‑law Jared Kushner met with Ghalibaf and Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi for two hours before a brief recess. The Iranian delegation arrived in black mourning attire for the late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and carried shoes and bags belonging to children killed in a school bombing near a military compound—a strike the Pentagon says is under investigation, with some reports suggesting US involvement. Pakistani security forces sealed off Islamabad, a city of over two million, underscoring Pakistan’s newly prominent mediating role after a year of diplomatic isolation. The US military announced it was "setting conditions" to clear mines and allow warships to pass through the Strait of Hormuz, a claim Iran’s state media denied. Prior to the talks, a senior Iranian source told Reuters that the US had agreed to release frozen Iranian assets held in Qatar and other banks, a statement the US later denied. Tehran’s broader demands include control over the strait, payment of war reparations, a region‑wide ceasefire—including in Lebanon—and the collection of transit fees from shipping traffic. President Trump’s minimum objectives remain the free passage of global shipping through the strait and the crippling of Iran’s nuclear enrichment capability to prevent the development of an atomic bomb.
#iran #talks #iranian
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World Economy Apr 12, 2026

UK remote‑work tribunal claims tumble 13% in 2025 as labour market tightens

In 2025 the number of UK employment tribunal cases involving remote‑working fell for the first time…
The latest analysis by HR consultancy Hamilton Nash shows that 54 employment tribunals in England, Scotland and Wales cited remote‑working issues in 2025 – a 13% decline from the previous year and the first drop since the pandemic began.This marks the end of a six‑year upward trend during which tribunal filings related to remote work surged tenfold from the pre‑COVID baseline of 2019. The number of cases peaked at 62 in 2024 but fell sharply to just six in 2025.According to the Office for National Statistics, 28% of working‑age adults in Great Britain now operate in a hybrid model, splitting time between a traditional office and another location such as home. Yet many large employers, notably financial giants Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase, have intensified return‑to‑office mandates, with some demanding five days a week on site.Employment experts attribute the unexpected dip to broader labour‑market dynamics. The UK unemployment rate rose to a near five‑year high of 5.2% in Q4 2025, while job vacancies have continued to fall, shifting bargaining power back toward employers. As Jim Moore, employee‑relations partner at Hamilton Nash, explains, “Top talent did vote with their feet for a while, but that has changed because of wider issues in the labour market and people saying: ‘I am going to stay put and keep my head down.’”Legislative changes may also be curbing tribunal filings. The amended Employment Relations Act, which introduced a right to request flexible working from day one of a new job in April 2024, appears to encourage employees to resolve disputes internally rather than through the courts.Moore warns that tribunal numbers represent “the tip of the iceberg,” noting that much workplace conflict never reaches a public hearing. Adding to employer confidence, a 2024 tribunal decision rejected a senior manager’s claim against the Financial Conduct Authority for the right to work entirely from home, a ruling that, according to Hill Dickinson partner Padma Tadi‑Booth, “may give some encouragement to employers” to tighten office‑attendance policies.Consequently, some firms are already planning to raise on‑site requirements, moving from two to three days a week or mandating a higher percentage of total working hours in the office.Nevertheless, the backlog of employment tribunals remains a significant hurdle. Over 500,000 cases were pending last year, and claimants can expect waits of up to three years for a hearing, potentially deterring future filings.
#working #employment #some
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Sports Apr 12, 2026

McIlroy Seeks 'Free' Mindset in Masters Final Round

Rory McIlroy aims to regain his form in the final round of the Masters after losing his six-stroke …
Rory McIlroy is looking to regain his form and mindset in the final round of the Masters, following a challenging third round that saw him lose his six-stroke lead. McIlroy, the defending champion, carded a one-over par 73, which allowed Cameron Young to close the gap and tie for the lead heading into the final round.McIlroy believes that a 'free' state of mind will be crucial in the final round. He reflected on his 2025 Masters victory at the same venue, hoping to draw confidence from that experience. 'I'd like to think that I'll play a little bit freer and I'll play, like I've already got a Green Jacket, which I do,' McIlroy said. 'Sometimes I maybe just have to remind myself of that.'McIlroy plans to work on his swing at Augusta National's driving range to iron out kinks that affected his game during the third round. He knows he needs to improve significantly to retain his chances of winning. 'There's a long way to go,' McIlroy added. 'This golf course has a way of, when you're not quite feeling it, you struggle.'Cameron Young, who shot an impressive 65 in the third round, is also in contention. Young is seeking to emulate McIlroy's achievement of winning the Players Championship and Masters within a short period. However, he downplayed the significance of this potential historical parallel, emphasizing that his past results do not guarantee future success.The final round pairing will feature McIlroy and Young, which McIlroy described as a 'comfortable group' for both of them. McIlroy concluded, 'I'm still tied for the best score going into tomorrow, so I can't forget that, but I do know I'm going to have to be better if I want to have a chance to win.'
#Rory McIlroy #Masters Tournament #Augusta National Golf Club
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Sports Apr 12, 2026

Barcelona stretches La Liga lead to nine points after 4‑1 Catalan derby victory

Barcelona secured a 4‑1 win over Espanyol, widening their advantage over Real Madrid to nine points…
Lamine Yamal orchestrated Barcelona’s dominant 4‑1 triumph over Espanyol, delivering a decisive assist to Ferran Torres for a late brace that pushed the Catalan giants further ahead in the La Liga race.Torres opened the scoring in the 10th minute and doubled the lead at the 25th, both times finding the net from Yamal’s precise passes. The teenage playmaker sealed the win in the 87th minute when Espanyol threatened a comeback, and Marcus Rashford added a fourth goal two minutes later after a set‑up from substitute Frenkie de Jong.Barcelona’s victory comes on the back of Real Madrid’s 1‑1 draw with Girona, allowing the Blaugrana to extend their lead over the capital side to nine points with only seven fixtures remaining.Both clubs are now focused on bouncing back from recent Champions League quarter‑final setbacks – Barcelona fell 2‑0 to Atletico Madrid, while Real Madrid were edged out 2‑1 by Bayern Munich.Torres, who entered the season with 16 league goals, had endured a goal drought since 31 January, spanning 13 matches across all competitions. His strike against Espanyol, a well‑timed header from Yamal’s corner, ended the slump and was celebrated with a tongue‑in‑cheek hand‑gesture referencing media criticism of his form.He completed his brace by deftly redirecting a low pass from Yamal past goalkeeper Marko Dmitrovic, showcasing his renewed confidence and link‑up play.Espanyol’s lone reply came from midfielder Pol Lozano, who capitalised on a loose ball in the 56th minute to make it 2‑1 before Rashford’s late goal restored Barcelona’s control.De Jong’s return after a month‑long injury layoff proved pivotal, providing the assist that set up Rashford’s strike and highlighting Barcelona’s depth as they chase a second consecutive league title.
#Barcelona #Espanyol #La Liga
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News Apr 11, 2026

Peru Conducts Presidential Vote as Decade-Long Political Instability Persists

Peru proceeds with a presidential election amid ten years of frequent government changes and social…
On April 11, 2026, Peru went to the polls to elect a new president, a vote that comes after ten years of political upheaval marked by frequent cabinet reshuffles, impeachment attempts, and widespread protests.The election is seen as a critical test for the nation’s democratic institutions, which have been strained by a succession of short‑lived administrations and deepening public distrust. Analysts warn that the outcome could either restore confidence in governance or exacerbate existing fractures.Voter turnout is expected to be high, reflecting citizens’ desire for a decisive break from the past. International observers will monitor the process closely, emphasizing the importance of a transparent and credible result for regional stability.While the final tally remains pending, the election underscores Peru’s ongoing quest for political continuity and the broader implications for Latin American democracies facing similar challenges.
#peru #holds #presidential
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Politics Apr 11, 2026

32‑Hour Orthodox Easter Ceasefire Takes Effect as Russia and Ukraine Swap 175 Prisoners

A 32‑hour ceasefire coinciding with Orthodox Easter began on Saturday, with both Moscow and Kyiv pl…
A temporary 32‑hour ceasefire between Russia and Ukraine started at 4:00 p.m. local time (13:00 GMT) on Saturday and will run until midnight on Sunday, according to the Kremlin. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy affirmed Kyiv’s commitment to honor the pause provided Moscow does the same. President Vladimir Putin ordered the ceasefire to align with Orthodox Easter celebrations, more than a week after Zelenskyy first proposed the truce. Both sides have publicly confirmed their intention to observe it. Zelenskyy posted on social media that Ukraine will “adhere to the ceasefire and respond strictly in kind. The absence of Russian strikes in the air, on land, and at sea will mean no response from our side.” The Ukrainian army added it stands ready to react immediately if the truce is breached. Hours before the truce began, Russian forces launched at least 160 drones against Ukrainian targets, killing four civilians in the east and south and wounding dozens. The southern Odesa region suffered two fatalities and damage to civilian infrastructure. In the Russian‑occupied parts of Donetsk and Kherson, Ukrainian drone attacks killed four people, according to officials installed by Moscow. Public confidence in the ceasefire remains low. Last year’s Easter pause saw numerous accusations of violations from both sides, and similar doubts persist this time. Despite the tension, the warring parties completed a reciprocal exchange of 175 prisoners of war each on Saturday. The United Arab Emirates facilitated the swap, as confirmed by the Russian Ministry of Defence. Prisoner exchanges have become one of the few tangible outcomes of the stalled U.S.-brokered peace talks, which continue to falter over territorial issues. Ukraine has reiterated its proposal to freeze the conflict along the current front lines, a suggestion Russia rejected, insisting Kyiv relinquish all territory it holds in the Donetsk region—an offer Kyiv deems unacceptable. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov noted that Russia did not discuss the Easter proposal with the United States in advance and did not signal an immediate revival of the three‑way peace negotiations. Fighting on the front has largely stalled. While Russia has achieved modest territorial gains at a high cost, Ukrainian forces have recently pushed back in the southeast, and Russian advances have slowed since late 2025, according to the Institute for the Study of War. Moscow now occupies just over 19 percent of Ukraine, most of which was seized in the early weeks of the conflict.
#Russia #Ukraine #United Arab Emirates
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