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International
Nottingham Forest vs Southampton – Premier League: score en direct, nouvelles de l’équipe, mises à jour

International
Jon Rahm’s LIV Golf move ‘could be announced as soon as WEDNESDAY’ as speculation intensifies over Masters winner joining Saudi rebel circuit in $600m switch that could ‘bully PGA Tour into a corner’

- Acquiring Jon Rahm, the world’s No. 3 golfer, would be a huge win for LIV Golf
- One of PGA’s premier players joining the opposite camp would change the sport
- DailyMail.com provides all the latest international sports news
Jon Rahm may no longer be a PGA golfer by as soon as Wednesday evening, as LIV Golf is ready to offer him a $600 million deal, the Saudi Arabian golf promotion’s highest-reported contract to date.
The news of Rahm defecting from the PGA to LIV comes under a loose truce between the golf leagues, with Rahm switching first being reported by The Telegraph.
A former Ryder Cup player told The Telegraph ‘I think this will happen, and that Jason Day and Adrian Meronk [will join him].’
Another Ryder Cup alumnus told the outlet ‘I honestly know nothing and would just take everything as rumor if I were you.’
Rahm has been a prominent fixture on the PGA Tour since 2016, while Day has been with the PGA since 2006. Meronk has been a professional golfer since 2016.

Masters champion Jon Rahm could join LIV Golf this week on a record $600 million deal
Rahm taking the rouge Saudi league’s money would have ramifications that would change golf.
Any cordiality between the LIV and PGA would seemingly disappear if a player of Rahm’s quality were to jump ship.
Rahm himself being one of the best golfers in the world would change the everyday nature of both tours with a possible switch. PGA events would get easier to win with a heavy hitter in the opposite camp. LIV events would be more competitive.
The value of Rahm’s contract would be triple the next-highest reported amount for an LIV Golfer, with Phil Mickelson taking home a $200 million deal to sign with LIV Golf last June.
A few weeks ago, Mickelson came out swinging after golf writer Alan Shipnuck claimed the golfer had been telling people that Jon Rahm was headed to LIV Golf.
Shipnuck posted to social media last month that the lefty has privately been telling people that Masters champion Rahm’s defection to LIV Golf was a ‘done deal.’
However, the 53-year-old Mickelson jabbed back publicly.
‘This isn’t true and I don’t know anything,’ Mickelson responded. ‘I don’t want to know anything and I haven’t said anything. Alan is the worst liar and a pathetic human.’
Rahm and Mickelson share an agent, Steve Loy, and Shipnuck said the lefty is a ‘relentless salesman/bulls*** artist, so take that for what it’s worth’ before Mickelson responded to the report himself.
Shipnuck retorted to Mickelson’s denial a few hours later.
‘I guess Phil tweeted at me? I wouldn’t know since he’s blocked me in a classic tough-guy move,’ Shipnuck posted to X. ‘But we all know that what he says publicly and privately are *very* different.’
While a Rahm move to LIV Golf has been rumored for some time, Mail Sport reported sources close to the 29-year-old firmly dismissed the switch from the PGA Tour last month.
However, prominent players from LIV are privately optimistic that the Spaniard could be swayed by the lucrative, mega-million-dollar offered the breakaway has previously used to successfully lure some of golf’s biggest names away from the PGA Tour.
International
I’m A Celebrity elimination results: Fred Sirieix becomes the third star to leave the jungle after being accused of ‘controlling’ behaviour and ‘misogyny’ in kitchen rows

Fred Sirieix became the third campmate to be eliminated from the Australian jungle in Tuesday night’s episode of I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here!.
The First Dates star, 51, lost out to Danielle Harold in the public vote after they both came in the bottom two in the latest elimination.
It comes after Nella Rose was the second star to be eliminated on Monday, while jockey Frankie Dettori was the first to go home in the public vote.
Jamie Lynn Spears and Grace Dent both previously exited the jungle after separately quitting on medical grounds, with just seven campmates now remaining.
Fred had a drama-filled time in camp after clashing with Nigel Farage over Brexit, rowing with Josie Gibson about the cooking and being confronted by Nella in the ‘Dadgate’ row.

Fred Sirieix became the third campmate to be eliminated from the Australian jungle in Tuesday night’s episode of I’m A Celebrity … Get Me Out Of Here!

Fred has had a drama-filled time in the jungle after clashing with Nigel Farage over Brexit, rowing with Josie Gibson about the cooking and being confronted by Nella in the ‘Dadgate’ row

The First Dates star, 51, lost out to Danielle Harold in the public vote after they both came in the bottom two in the latest elimination
After the spate of drama, many viewers took to social media after Fred’s exit to admit they were pleased to see him go as they branded him as ‘bossy’.
One said: ‘Not really surprising its Fred, his really let himself down with the way his been acting recently tho it has caused tension, drama and been entertaining which has been great.’
Another wrote: ‘Hallelujah Fred has gone!!! He thought he was everything in there….bossy as f**k!!!’ while a third tweeted: ‘ SOOOOO glad Fred has gone! Can’t be arsed to hear him any longer.’
A fourth penned: ‘ Fred could of easily been Top 3… Think he ruined it with the whole dinner gate!’
Another added: ‘I had Fred down as a finalist but I think last couple of shows he didn’t do himself any favours. I still like him.’
However, some viewers also jumped to his defence as they argued there were other campmates who deserved to be eliminated rather than Fred.
One wrote: ‘Actually didn’t want Fred to go just yet. He’s just passionate,’ and a second said: ‘ Aww I’m acc sad Fred left.’
Another added: ‘Sad to see Fred leave the camp tbh. There are others who have provided a lot less to the show.’

Leaving the camp, Fred was then sweetly reunited with Fruitcake as she ran towards him and the pair shared a close embrace and a kiss

Fred looked dismayed as it was announced that he would be the latest star to leave I’m A Celebrity

Fred hugged his campmates including Marvin Humes as he quickly said his goodbyes after being announced as the latest star to leave the show
After his eviction, Fred joined Ant and Dec to look back on his time in the jungle and spoke about his struggle to let go of control in the kitchen – which saw him branded by fans as ‘controlling’ and ‘misogynistic’.
The maître d’hôtel and professional chef previously clashed with Josie as he hit out at her cooking skills while struggling to let go of his former camp chef role.
Doubling down on his views after his elimination, Fred said: ‘[Josie] doesn’t know what she does in the kitchen, she makes it up as she goes along.’
‘You really need the calories, and you’ve got to find them whenever you can. I think we missed out on quiet a few meals [by not recycling ingredients],’ he added.
When asked why he didn’t get involved as much with Sam Thompson and Nick Pickard’s cooking, he said they were a ‘dream’ and there was ‘no need’ for him to do so.
Asked how he found the tricky challenges on the show, Fred insisted he had been vigorously training for his stint in the jungle and told how he found most of it ‘easy’.
‘I found it quiet easy because I prepared myself mentally, I was really thinking… the challenges I found it quite easy actually because I was quite focused,’ he said.
‘The physical training helps you with the mental side of things, because it’s about the focus, and when you do that repeatedly, you get into that mindset and you keep going.’
When asked about his up-and-down relationship with Nigel Farage in the camp, Fred insisted their time together hadn’t swayed him on their political differences.

After his eviction, Fred joined Ant and Dec to look back on his time in the Australian jungle and spoke about his struggle to let go of control in the kitchen

The maître d’hôtel and professional chef previously clashed with Josie Gibson as he hit out at her cooking skills
![Doubling down on his views after his elimination, Fred said: '[Josie] doesn't know what she does in the kitchen, she makes it up as she goes along'](https://i0.wp.com/i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2023/12/05/22/78619981-12829701-_Josie_doesn_t_know_what_she_does_in_the_kitchen_she_makes_it_up-m-211_1701816680374.jpg?resize=634%2C392&ssl=1)
Doubling down on his views after his elimination, Fred said: ‘[Josie] doesn’t know what she does in the kitchen, she makes it up as she goes along’
He said: ‘It was great in the camp because I’m a do-er and Nigel is a do-er… but there is a side of Nigel Farage that I won’t and will never connect with.’
The pair got into a fierce debate over Brexit in a recent episode which saw Fred accuse the former UKIP leader of ‘talking b*******’, but they also bonded over the cleanliness of the camp.
Upon his exit, Fred also spoke about how he tried to just live in the moment during his time on the show, rather than dwelling on missing his fiancée Fruitcake.
He said: ‘I was really living in the moment, I did not think about home, I did not think about work… I just ploughed through.’
Leaving the camp, Fred was then sweetly reunited with Fruitcake as she ran towards him and the pair shared a close embrace, before smiling on the bridge together.
Fred’s elimination came after fans accused him of ‘controlling’ behaviour in Tuesday’s episode as Sam and Nick took the reins as camp chefs.
Fred was originally camp chef and since having to relinquish his responsibility to others, he has become increasingly irate and been branded ‘controlling’ by viewers.
It even saw him become embroiled in a ‘sexism’ row after many watching accused him of being ‘misogynistic’ towards presenter Josie, 38, while she made dinner.
The chores were decided by them as follows: camp chefs: Sam and Nick, washing up: Tony Bellew and Marvin Humes, camp water and dunny: Fred and Marvin while Nigel and Fred were on camp maintenance.
Seeing their choices Sam reacted excitedly: ‘No way!’
In the Bush Telegraph Sam later said: ‘I’ll be like the clown in the kitchen so Nick can get on and do what he needs and I’ll distract Fred.
‘But also, I’m incredibly nervous. I’m not a very good cook.’
Nigel then said in the Bush Telegraph: ‘I think that Nick is going to be on the front line of this with Sam as sous chef. What will be interesting is to watch how Fred comments on Sam’s food preparation.’
Nick in Bush Telegraph later commented: ‘I do like a bit of cooking, but after the exploits of the last couple of evenings of Fred and Josie, I’m a little bit nervous.

When asked why he didn’t get involved as much with Sam Thompson and Nick Pickard’s cooking, he said they were a ‘dream’ and there was ‘no need’ for him to do so

Fred’s elimination came after fans accused him of ‘controlling’ behaviour in Tuesday’s episode as Sam and Nick took the reins as camp chefs

Sam said: ‘I’ll be like the clown in the kitchen so Nick can get on and do what he needs and I’ll distract Fred’ as Nick added: ‘What will be interesting is to watch how Fred comments on Sam’s food preparation’

Fred was seen planting a kiss on his fiancée Fruitcake’s head as she met him on the bridge after his exit

The pair were seen grinning for the cameras as they appeared overjoyed to be reunited

Fred gave a salute as he walked the iconic bridge and exited the jungle

The fireworks went off on the bridge as he walked down following his elimination
‘Fred’s bound to start barking at us now. Hopefully he’ll give us a bit of guidance and then leave us alone.’
Fred was accused of ‘misogyny’ in recent episodes after his behaviour towards his female co-stars left fans branding him ‘unbearable’.
It comes after Nella was eliminated from the camp on Monday and held her hands to her mouth in shock and appeared totally floored by the news.
The influencer’s time in the jungle was a controversial one after her numerous rows with Nigel Farage and Fred Siriex led to 2,000 Ofcom complaints.
Despite the tensions Nella said a fond farewell to all her campmates as Tony Bellow told her: ‘You are a winner, you’ve done amazing.’
She came in the bottom two alongside Marvin Humes and viewers were left in shock on Monday as he narrowly avoided being eliminated.
Viewers at home were in disbelief that Marvin had ended up in the bottom two of the public vote, thinking that he would’ve been safe over other campmates.
One person took to Twitter to ask: ‘Someone explain why Marvin was in the bottom 2’ while another echoed: ‘WHY WAS MARVIN IN THE BOTTOM TWO??????’
A third fan wrote: ‘Get Marvin some more screen time. Can’t believe he was in the bottom two! He’s such a good guy’.
Someone else agreed, tweeting: ‘what do you mean “marvin…. it might be you”… and still not nigel??? gave two of my votes to marvin. he cant leave yet.. he needs to be in the final with sam’.

When asked about his up-and-down relationship with Nigel Farage in the camp, Fred insisted their time together hadn’t swayed him on their political differences

The pair got into a fierce debate over Brexit12820847 in a recent episode which saw Fred accuse the former UKIP leader of ‘talking b*******’

Elewhere, Fred left his fellow campmates – particularly Josie Gibson – in hysterics in Tuesday’s episode as he sang Don’t Worry, Be Happy out of tune in the Jungle Arms

It comes after Nella Rose (pictured) was the second star to be eliminated on Monday, while jockey Frankie Dettori was the first to go home in the public vote

She came in the bottom two alongside Marvin Humes and viewers were left in shock on Monday as he narrowly avoided being eliminated, thinking that he would have been safe
A fifth added: ‘Omg the stress I felt when Marvin nearly went’ while a sixth said: ‘Whoa how was it nearly Marvin?!!! No way can he leave early at all!’
A seventh person begged: ‘pls can everyone vote for Marvin I can’t deal with him going home yet pls idk how he was in the bottom two’.
While another said: ‘Nigel was safe but it might’ve been Marvin?!’ and a ninth wrote: ‘WHY HAVE YOU GOT MARVIN IN THE BOTTOM TWO??? OVER FRED??? OVER NIGEL???’
And another admitted: ‘heart actually dropped when they said it may have been marvin, that man deserves to stay to the end’.
After her exit, Nella joined hosts Ant & Dec where she was greeted with a glass of orangeade rather than the usual champagne.
Nella previously made headlines after lashing out at Fred, 51, for saying he could ‘be her father’ because of their 25-year age gap, claiming it was disrespectful because hours earlier she had told the campmates that she had lost both her parents.
Recalling the incident she said: ‘I just feel that in the middle of an argument or a disagreement, you shouldn’t bring up personal, sensitive topics, and I feel that in the middle of a disagreement, he brought up a sensitive topic.
‘I didn’t understand why he would do that to somebody that he doesn’t know [well].’

Nella’s time in the jungle has been a controversial one after her numerous rows with nemesis Nigel Farage (pictured) and Fred Siriex led to 2,000 Ofcom complaints
When Dec then asked if maybe the uproar was just a ‘misunderstanding’ Nella replied: ‘It could have been! But things are so heightened in the jungle that everything is a big thing.’
She also came to blows with former Brexit Leader Nigel Farage over the subject of immigration and racism.
After the hosts showed clips of the clashes Nella exclaimed: ‘Oh my god, you used everything. I am not usually put in situations where people don’t have opinions in the same walk of life.’
‘So when they have different mindsets, and I hear them, I’m shocked because I’m not used to hearing people think like this. So automatically, you have to say something about it because what they’ve said to me it’s kind of shocking sometimes. But it is what it is.’
International
Is this the end of traditional television? MailOnline gets hands-on with the new EE TV that puts shows from across apps including Netflix, Amazon Prime and Disney+ in one place

Ahead of its official launch today, MailOnline has tried out EE TV, the latest subscription platform that offers content under one roof.
EE TV – from the telco that’s owned by British giant BT – puts films and TV shows together in one slick interface.
That’s regardless of whether it’s the live broadcast from BBC One or Channel 4, or the latest on-demand show from Netflix, Disney+ or Amazon Prime.
Unlike Sky Glass, EE TV is not an actual television but a new subscription package that combines an app with a choice of set-top box.
It is tied to EE’s broadband service – so in effect EE TV is designed to entice people who are with a rival broadband operator, like Sky or Virgin Media.

On the homepage of the EE TV app, users are presented with the content they’ve been watching from the various apps all in one place – whether it’s BBC iPlayer, Netflix, Disney+ or Amazon Prime Video – together with shows that are being broadcasted live
The cost of EE TV depends on the package you choose – for example the sports package with four TNT Sports channels giving access to the Premier League is £18 per month.
However, the various streaming services on offer through EE TV – Netflix, Amazon Prime Video and Disney+ to name a few – are priced separately.
Sachin Joshi, head of products at EE, said the new product has been designed as a ‘new way to enjoy TV’ because it cuts out the jumping between separate apps on a smart TV.
‘EE TV blurs the lines between live linear television and on-demand,’ he told MailOnline at BT’s new global headquarters in Aldgate, London.
‘It’s putting control into the customer’s hands.’
EE TV features a full TV guide for a ‘comprehensive live TV experience’ just like regular broadcast TV.
But its homescreen boasts a scroll-down menu and numerous carousels – many of which separate available content by category, such as sports and films.
Little promo boxes for each TV show or film – similar to the layout on Netflix – include a logo of the provider in the corner (e.g. ITVx, BBC iPlayer, TNT Sports).

EE TV has a familiar scroll-down menu and numerous carousels – many of which separate available content by category, such as sports and films. Under the screen are three set-top boxes – TV Box Pro (centre), TV Box Mini (left) and Apple TV 4K (right)

Unlike Sky Glass , EE TV is not an actual television but a new subscription package that combines an app with a choice of set-top box
People who want to switch telco provider to EE can choose between multiple set-top boxes from the telco if they fancy trying EE TV.
EE’s main box is the TV Box Pro, which streams content in 4K and lets users pause and rewind TV, as well as record up to 600 hours of TV on up to four channels at the same time.
With the EE TV Box Pro, it can connect via an aerial to get the free to air channels – so if the internet stops working users can still watch live TV the old-fashioned way.
In addition, customers can opt for a smaller box, TV Box Mini, which doesn’t allow live recording but still plays content in 4K.
TV Box Mini can also be an additional device for another room at no extra cost – so for example people who have a second TV in their kitchen or study.
Thirdly, customers also have the option to access EE TV through their Apple TV 4K, Apple’s set-top box that comes with its own remote.
For users of Apple’s set-top box, EE TV appears as an app along with the likes of BBC iPlayer and Netflix, as well as apps for Apple services such as FaceTime App Store and Apple Music.

Pictured, EE’s smaller box, TV Box Mini, which doesn’t allow live recording but still plays content in 4K

The EE TV app (pictured here) launches on Apple TV 4K. Click on the EE TV app and it brings up a live TV guide

Apple TV and EE TV appear as apps along with the likes of BBC iPlayer and Netflix, as well as apps for Apple services such as FaceTime App Store and Apple Music
EE TV is a rebranded version of BT TV, but existing BT TV customers don’t need to do anything – their service is just going to be renamed.
Anyone who is a BT TV customer will notice the rebrand to EE TV from today (Wednesday) when they switch on their machine.
EE TV is part of a major rebrand effort from the BT Group, which earlier this year changed the name of BT Sports to TNT Sports.
The creation of a new brand follows last year’s acquisition of BT Sport by Warner Brothers Discovery, who also own Eurosport, in a deal worth up to £650million.
International
Revealed: The 30 towns and villages most at risk of being bankless in 2022

Bakewell, a Derbyshire market town popular with tourists, is famous for its delicious tarts and puddings.
So popular is its produce that The Old Original Bakewell Pudding Shop does a roaring trade posting its wares all over the UK.
Yet Bakewell is currently attracting nationwide attention because it is about to lose something no other town or village has in the vast Peak District National Park — a bank branch.
In late February next year, its NatWest branch will shut for good leaving Bakewell and the National Park — all 555 square miles of it — bankless.
The impending closure has annoyed everyone among the town’s eclectic mix of independent retailers, constituency MP Sarah Dines, local councillors, residents and the farming community.

More than half of the country’s bank and building society branches have shut since January 2015, leaving just short of 3,900 still open and not (yet) scheduled for closure
And bank branch staff have been left in tears over NatWest’s decision to shut up shop.
Of course, Bakewell isn’t unique. High streets up and down the country have been damaged by bank branch closures.
Yet having spent Monday in the picturesque (and freezing cold) town speaking to locals and traders — and visiting its livestock market — it begs one big question.
If the banks have concluded that Bakewell can’t support a branch, which community can outside the cities and big towns?
To put it bluntly, the big banks — internet and mobile app crazy — seem to want out of the High Street altogether.
‘It’s a crazy decision,’ says Georgie Stewart, co-owner of gift shop Stewarts of Bakewell, located just yards from the bank.
‘We’ve banked with NatWest forever and a day. Now, some bean counter in London has decided that the branch here must shut.’
She adds: ‘Although NatWest may argue otherwise, they don’t seem to care and they don’t understand what the branch means to the community — to businesses like mine which need to bank takings on a regular basis and the many residents who still prefer face-to-face banking.
‘The thought of Bakewell without a bank is an unbearable one.’
Of course, branch closures are nothing new. Money Mail and The Mail on Sunday have been reporting on this for more than 20 years — triggered in part by the decision of Barclays to shut 171 branches, all on one day — April 7 — in 2000.

Upheaval: Matt Fitz, of the Cornish Bakery in Bakewell
According to consumer group Which?, over half of the country’s bank and building society branches have shut since January 2015, leaving just short of 3,900 still open and not (yet) scheduled for closure.
Alarming? Yes. But there is worse to come. As the big banks increasingly drive customers towards mobile phone banking, the death of the bank branch outside cities and big towns is fast approaching.
Data collated by cash machine network Link indicates that, since May last year, 1,259 branches have shut — or are due to close between now and late next year. In the past month alone, more than 100 closures have been announced by Barclays, Lloyds and NatWest.
You don’t need to be an actuary to do the maths. If the current closure rate were to be maintained, most of the country could be without a nearby bank by the end of 2028.
It’s not a good outlook. There are some 300 communities that like Bakewell are currently served by just one bank branch. All the evidence suggests that most of these will suffer the same fate as the Derbyshire town and lose their last remaining branch in the coming year.
As the graphic shows, towns including Dolgellau, Gwynedd; Erskine, Renfrewshire; Glossop, Derbyshire; Portishead, Somerset; and Guisborough, North Yorkshire, are all at threat of losing their last bank.
Analysts believe communities with either Lloyds (including the bank’s other brands Halifax and Bank of Scotland) or NatWest (Ulster Bank and Royal Bank of Scotland) as the last bank in town are in danger of becoming bankless.
This is because these two groups have, until recently, been less aggressive than rivals Barclays and HSBC in shutting branches.

Campaign: Mark Wakeman, with a petition to halt the NatWest closure, outside his pet supplies shop in Bakewell
Link says more than a quarter of the 1,259 branches closed — or put on notice of closure — in the past 20 months have been last banks in town.
Although a newish agreement between the banks and organisations representing the elderly and small businesses is meant to ensure bankless communities have continued High Street access to cash, it’s not proving as effective as some would like.
Link’s data shows that only half of these bankless towns (176 out of 341) have been given — or promised — support by Cash Access UK, set up and funded by the banks to protect communities from the impact of branch closures.
This support is in the form of a banking hub, a shared branch operated by the Post Office with representatives from the major banks available to help customers. Alternatively, it may be a new cash machine or a cash deposit service (aimed at small retailers).

Even when a replacement service is agreed, it can take an age to come on stream. So while 63 hubs have been earmarked for communities hit by the loss of their last bank, only 19 are currently operational.
The delays are a result of difficulty in finding suitable premises and inadequate resources made available to Cash Access UK by the banks.
Last week, Labour promised to ‘accelerate’ the rollout of hubs if it wins the next general election — and legislate to eradicate ‘banking deserts’. It said it would help establish at least 350 hubs countrywide.
Derek French, a long-standing campaigner for shared bank branches, welcomes Labour’s announcement. He has become increasingly frustrated by the slow appearance of hubs.
He says: ‘Hubs will save the banks millions of pounds in branch costs. So they should commit far more financial resource and energy to Cash Access UK, thereby enabling it to put in place more shared branches where customers can obtain face-to-face advice.’
Access to high street banking could become a greater political issue as the election edges nearer. Research by analytics company SAS shows that 28 constituencies (out of a total 650) are already devoid of banks run by the top-seven bank and building society names — Barclays, HSBC, Lloyds, Nationwide, NatWest, Royal Bank of Scotland and Santander.
Yet if constituencies continue to lose branches at the same rate as in the past three years, it says a further ten could become bankless next year. They include the constituencies of Conservative MPs Mel Stride (Central Devon) and Laurence Robertson (Tewkesbury).
The impending closure of NatWest’s Bakewell branch has certainly annoyed Sarah Dines, Tory MP for Derbyshire Dales.
Seven days ago, armed with a petition containing hundreds of signatures opposing the bank’s closure, she raised the issue with Prime Minister Rishi Sunak in the House of Commons. She did not hold back.
‘As disturbed as I was [that] British politicians were being debanked by NatWest, you can imagine my horror that an entire town, Bakewell in Derbyshire Dales, is being debanked by NatWest.’
She added: ‘Can you share my concern please that as we are the national shareholder of NatWest, why are they ignoring my vulnerable, elderly people and also businessmen. It is a big, thriving market town.’
The PM responded by saying that the banks would be funding a new cash deposit service in the town — useful for retailers to bank takings. He also said Bakewell, like most towns, has a post office that bank customers can use.
This did not go down well with Mark Wakeman, a district and town councillor, whom I met on Monday in between negotiating the town’s icy pavements and struggling to keep my fingers and toes vaguely warm.
‘I would like Mr Sunak to visit our post office,’ he told me. ‘Pleasant though the staff are, it invariably has a queue. Indeed, if the queue exceeds five, customers are asked to wait outside. There is also no personal banking advice available which NatWest customers can get at the branch in town.’
No one I met in Bakewell was prepared to defend NatWest’s decision. Matt Fitz, of the Cornish Bakery, said he had responded to the closure announcement by going cashless — despite the promised cash deposit service.
‘I’m not queuing 45 minutes to bank cash takings at the post office,’ he told me. ‘Eighty per cent of my takings were cash based, so my business could well suffer. But NatWest has forced me down this route.’

Endangered: The death of the bank branch outside the cities and big towns is fast approaching as big banks increasingly drive customers towards mobile phone banking
At Bakewell Market, the farmers present — most selling or buying livestock — vented their spleen.
‘I’ve banked with NatWest all my working life,’ said Peter Atkin, whose farm is just off the Snake Pass — often impassable in snow.
‘I don’t have wifi where I live so, for banking, I use a branch including the one in Bakewell.
‘Sadly, banks are now all about profit and greed and nothing to do with customer service. Loyalty no longer pays. Am I angry? Yes. Will I survive? Of course. I’ll just have to find another NatWest branch.’
For the record, NatWest says that when it closes branches, it ensures no customer is left behind.
A notice in the branch window advises customers that in February, their nearest branch will be Chesterfield, 13 miles away. Alternatively they can bank online or via an app.
But how long before the Chesterfield branch shuts? Not long given the current rate of closures.
jeff.prestridge@dailymail.co.uk
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International
UK, Rwanda sign new treaty to resurrect controversial asylum plan


British interior minister James Cleverly signed a new treaty with Rwanda on Tuesday in an attempt to overcome a court decision to block the government’s controversial policy of sending asylum seekers to the East African country.
Issued on:
2 min
The Rwanda plan is at the centre of the government’s strategy to cut migration and is being watched closely by other countries considering similar policies.
The United Kingdom’s Supreme Court last month ruled that such a move would violate international human rights laws enshrined in domestic legislation.
The new treaty will include an agreement that Rwanda would not expel asylum seekers to a country where their life or freedom would be threatened – one of the court’s major concerns.
There will also be a monitoring committee to enable individuals to lodge confidential complaints directly to them and a new appeal body made up of judges from around the world.
Cleverly said there was now no “credible” reason to block the deportation flights because the treaty addressed all the issues raised by the Supreme Court and no extra money had been given to Rwanda to upgrade the deal from the existing memorandum of understanding.
“I really hope that we can now move quickly,” Cleverly told a press conference in Rwanda’s capital Kigali.
Many lawyers and charities said it was unlikely that deportation flights could start before next year’s election. The opposition Labour Party, which has a double-digit lead in the polls, plans to ditch the Rwanda policy if it wins.
Under the plan agreed last year, Britain intends to send thousands of asylum seekers who arrived on its shores without permission to Rwanda to deter migrants crossing the Channel from Europe in small boats.
In return, Rwanda has received an initial payment of 140 million pounds ($180 million) with the promise of more money to fund the accommodation and care of any deported individuals.
Pressure
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is under intense pressure to cut net migration, which hit a record 745,000 last year, with the vast majority coming through legal routes.
“Stop the boats” is one of five goals Sunak set for his government, to end the flow of asylum seekers who pay people smugglers for their Channel crossings, often in overcrowded boats that are not seaworthy.
The Supreme Court ruled against the Rwanda plan because there was a risk that deported refugees would have their claims wrongly assessed or returned to their country of origin to face persecution.
The new treaty is expected to be followed later this week by the publication of legislation declaring Rwanda a so-called safe country, designed to stop legal challenges against the planned deportation flights.
However, this is likely to trigger a new round of political and legal wrangling. The first flight was scheduled to go last summer but was cancelled at the last moment because of legal challenges.
Sarah Gogan, an immigration lawyer at Harbottle & Lewis, said Rwanda’s human rights record meant the government’s policy would be challenged.
“Rwanda is an unsafe country and this is not a quick fix,” she said. “You cannot in a matter of weeks or months reform a country and turn it into one with an impartial judiciary and administrative culture.”
Yvette Cooper, Labour’s home affairs spokeswoman, dismissed the government’s latest plans as another “gimmick”.
(Reuters)
International
Moment daredevil wakeskates along an infinity pool as he is towed by a drone… what happens next is jaw-dropping

- Watch Brian Grubb’s fearless stunt on top of Address Beach Resort, in Dubai
This is the moment a daredevil wakeskates along the world’s highest infinity pool in Dubai – before plunging off the side of the building.
American Brian Grubb was pulled along the 311ft long rooftop pool by a custom drone at the Address Beach Resort.
The video shows the three-time world wakeskate champion speeding and swerving along the water.
A ramp can be seen at the end of the pool which he then mounts and uses to launch himself off the side of the 96ft high 77-storey twin tower building in a heart stopping moment.
He can be seen hurtling towards the ground with his arms and legs flailing before he ejects his Red Bull branded parachute and safely glides to sand below.

American Brian Grubb pulled off the fearless stunt on top of the world’s highest infinity pool in Dubai

The heart-stopping footage showed the daredevil speeding along the 311ft long rooftop pool before he mounts a ramp at the end
The fearless stunt was the first-ever combined wakeskate base jump which has been dubbed as ‘WakeBase’.
Brian told The Guardian: ‘I just started ten years or so ago as a pipe dream and it has been a dream of mine to do this since then.
‘It’s been a long time coming we had to build a drone that could pull us so I had to get more proficient at base jumping.
‘And then we found this awesome location here in Dubai and we put everything together and we just pulled off the sickest thing I’ve ever done on a wakeskate for sure.’
People reacted in awe of the jaw-dropping stunt after it was posted on Red Bull’s Instagram page.
One person wrote: ‘Was not expecting that. So sick!’
While another thought it ‘was insane, the angle gave me butterflies as he went down the building’.


Brian hurtles towards the ground after launching himself off the top of the Address Beach Resort building (left) before ejecting a parachute and safely gliding to the ground below (right)

An ecstatic Brian is congratulated on the sandy beach after he completes the first ever combined wakeskate base jump
A third described it as an ‘iconic’ moment while a fourth felt like they had followed right behind him and jumped off the building themselves.
‘You’re so gnarly dude! So stoked to see you finally get this done! So sick!!!,’ another said.
Brian, who first started base jumping in 2008, added: ‘The idea of being able to put these two sports together and take them to new places was the ultimate appeal.
‘No one had ever done it before so to push my limits like this was exciting.’
International
Peru’s Constitutional Court orders release of ex-president Alberto Fujimori


Peru’s Constitutional Court ordered the release of ex-president Alberto Fujimori, 85, serving a 25-year prison sentence for crimes against humanity and corruption, according to a court document published on Tuesday.
Issued on: Modified:
A court ruling ordered the immediate release of Fujimori, who was president of Peru from 1990 to 2000 and jailed since 2009 over massacres committed by army death squads in 1991 and 1992 in which 25 people were killed in supposed anti-terrorist operations against the Marxist-leaning Shining Path guerrillas.
The former president received a presidential pardon in 2017, but pressure from the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACHR) repeatedly snarled his attempts to regain freedom.
The court ruled Fujimori’s immediate release from the detention centre where he is being held.
(FRANCE 24 with AFP & Reuters)
International
Revealed: 90% of mothers-to-be are not getting all their essential vitamins – and experts warn rise of veganism will only make problem worse

Opting for a vegetarian or vegan diet could be preventing women from getting all the nutrients they need for a healthy pregnancy, research suggests.
Most women are not consuming the essential vitamins they need and this could worsen as more people opt for plant-based diets, a study found.
It specifically looked for vitamins found in meat and dairy products, such as vitamins D, B12 and B6, folic acid and riboflavin.
Folic acid and B12 help prevent birth defects such as spina bifida, vitamin D helps to keep bones, teeth and muscles healthy, and riboflavin supports the growth of bone, muscle and nerves in babies in the womb.

Most women are not consuming the essential vitamins they need and this could worsen as more people opt for plant-based diets, a study found

Researchers said the amount of vitamins available in over-the-counter products ‘substantially reduced the prevalence of deficiency’ before and during pregnancy (Stock Image)
Researchers found that more than 90 per cent of the group had marginal or low concentrations of one or more of the vitamins, with many developing markers of B6 deficiency in late pregnancy.
Keith Godfrey, lead author of the study and professor of epidemiology at the University of Southampton, said: ‘The push to reduce our dependence on meat and dairy to achieve net-zero carbon emissions is likely to further deplete expecting mothers of vital nutrients, which could have lasting effects on unborn children.’
The cohort was divided into two; an intervention group of 870 women and a control group of 859 women.
Both groups received supplements containing 400mg folic acid, 12mg iron, 150mg calcium, 150mg iodine and 720mg beta-carotene.
However, the control group’s supplement also included 1.8mg riboflavin, 2.6 mg vitamin B6, 5.2mg vitamin B12, 10mg vitamin D and 10mg zinc, as well as myo-inositol and probiotics.
Blood samples were collected prior to conception, early pregnancy, late pregnancy and six months after their babies were born.
Researchers said the amount of vitamins available in over-the-counter products ‘substantially reduced the prevalence of deficiency’ before and during pregnancy.
They added: ‘In the setting of increasing advocacy for more diets that are likely to be less nutrient dense, the findings suggest a need to reappraise dietary recommendations for preconception and pregnancy and to consider further the role of multiple micronutrient supplements in women living in higher-income countries.’
According to NHS England, women hoping to get pregnant should take 400mg of folic acid every day from before pregnancy until they are 12 weeks pregnant to reduce the risk of problems with their baby’s development.
A daily vitamin D supplement is also recommended.
Prof Godfrey added: ‘Our study shows that almost every woman trying to conceive had insufficient levels of one or more vitamin, and this figure is only going to get worse as the world moves towards plant-based diets.
‘People think that nutrient deficiency only affects people in underdeveloped countries – but it is also affecting the majority of women living in high-income nations.’
Professor Ian Givens, director of the Institute for Food, Nutrition and Health at the University of Reading, said: ‘This study is very timely and should provide the impetus to reassess dietary provision of key nutrients before and during pregnancy.
‘In UK omnivores, dairy foods, meat and fish provide about 80 per cent of dietary vitamin B12 and meat, eggs and fish provide about 65 per cent of dietary vitamin D although dietary supply only provides about three micrograms per day, meaning that supplementary vitamin D is necessary.
‘As the authors suggest, the current trend towards diets with animal-derived foods being at least partially replaced by plant-based foods will further increase the risk of sub-optimal status of vitamin B12 and D (and other nutrients) in women of childbearing age. This needs to be considered when such dietary transition is contemplated.’
The findings have been published in PLOS Medicine.
The team was led by academics from the University of Southampton and supported by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Centre, the University of Auckland, National University of Singapore, and the Agency for Science, Research and Technology in Singapore.
International
Venezuela opposition leader Machado: ‘The Maduro regime is in its weakest position ever’


Issued on:
In an interview with FRANCE 24, Venezuela’s opposition leader Maria Corina Machado said that Sunday’s referendum in Venezuela over the status of the disputed region of Essequibo was “absolutely not” the success proclaimed by the Maduro regime. According to electoral authorities, 95 percent of voters approved of Venezuela’s claim to the large swath of neighbouring Guyana, but turnout was around 50 percent. Asked about the political situation in Venezuela, she said the Maduro regime was “in its weakest position ever” and that she expected to “face Maduro and defeat him” in the 2024 presidential elections.
Machado pointed to the low turnout in the non-binding vote on Essequibo as a “huge defeat” for Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro. She added that holding the referendum was wrongheaded, stressing that the best way to win back the disputed region was through the International Court of Justice.
However, she expressed confidence that Caracas would not launch a military operation to retake Essequibo, despite the “desperation” of the Maduro regime.
On October 30, Venezuela’s Supreme Court suspended the outcome of the opposition primary vote, which Machado had won by a huge margin.
She that said her victory in that vote opened up a “huge opportunity” to defeat Maduro. While acknowledging that there would be many obstacles to “free and fair elections” in the 2024 presidential elections, she insisted she would “face Maduro and defeat him”.
Machado stressed the need for pressure on the Maduro regime, both domestically and internationally, to ensure such an outcome. She argued that the regime has “no resources”, which is why it is so eager to negotiate, in particular with the US. “The [Maduro] regime is in its weakest position ever,” she declared.
She also denied ever calling for a foreign military intervention against Maduro, claiming she only advocated for a humanitarian intervention.
Despite her criticism of the Maduro regime, Machado said she was ready to sit down with the president and talk to him.
“That would be certainly be useful, even before the elections (…) I am certainly more than willing to do that.”
International
Aaron Rodgers hints he could still return before the end of the season as the quarterback claims the Jets aren’t ‘mathematically out’ of the playoff race yet, despite losing five in a row

Aaron Rodgers has hinted the he could still return before the end of the season, as the quarterback claims the Jets (4-8) aren’t ‘mathematically out’ of the playoff race just yet, despite losing five games in a row.
The 39-year-old, one-time Super Bowl champion, who aimed his comeback for Dec. 24 from a torn Achilles injury sustained in September, admitted to Pat McAfee that the Jets have gone through a ‘tough stretch’, but the run of games against the Texans (7-5), Commanders (4-9), Browns (7-5) and Patriots (2-10), will be ‘fascinating’. The Jets hold the longest postseason drought in U.S. sports history – 13 seasons.
‘It’ll be interesting to see how our guys respond because we’ve had adversity, we’ve seen how our guys deal with adversity,’ Rodgers added on ESPN. ‘Who’s going to finish the season as a professional? Who’s going to buy into this thing, and doing it together and putting good ball on tape and take pride in their performance?’
‘Because I’ve been on a couple of teams where down the stretch it’s been rough. My first year in the league we were 4-12 and my first year starting we lost five out of six down the stretch.’
Rodgers – a four-time NFL MVP, who’s played in the league for the last 19 seasons – then warned his teammates about the consequences of ending the season with an overall negative record, while also issuing a rallying to them.

Aaron Rodgers isn’t ruling out the Jets from making the playoffs despite the team’s 5-8 record

Rodgers previously said ‘anything is possible’ regarding his comeback as he eyes return soon
‘I believed after we were 5-5,’ said Rodgers. ‘So, I’ve seen what it looks like at times when things are going not great and it really reveals the character in those adverse moments. So it’ll be interesting to see how the guys stick together because there’ll be a lot of interesting decision moving forward.’
The Jets are not yet set on who’ll start at quarterback against the Texans (7-5). Trevor Siemian could get the nod on Sunday, with a full week working with the starters. Or maybe Zach Wilson will be back from the bench. Probably not Tim Boyle, who has struggled in his two starts against the Falcons and Dolphins, and has since been cut.
‘I’m still not there yet,’ coach Robert Saleh said on Monday, when asked if he had decided on a starter.
Rodgers said last week that ‘anything is possible’ when asked if he could potentially return this week or next.
‘Well, I’m going to piggyback on what he told you guys and that anything’s possible,’ Saleh said before chuckling. ‘But don’t hold your breath. How about that?’
In other words, no unprecedented quick return this week.

The Jets could turn to veteran quarterback Trevor Siemian for Sunday’s game vs. the Texans

The Jets have firmly denied that QB Zach Wilson doesn’t want to start for the team anymore
Wilson, who started nine games after Rodgers was hurt in the opener, is a possibility, especially given the struggles of Boyle and Siemian in New York’s 13-8 loss to Atlanta on Sunday.
The Athletic reported Wilson expressed reluctance about starting again this season, something Saleh wholeheartedly dismissed, as well as Rodgers on McAfee’s show on Tuesday.
‘Well, let’s be clear: If he was reluctant to play, guys, he wouldn’t be here,’ the coach said. ‘I actually coincidentally just got done speaking with him. He came in about a half-hour ago and we had a really good conversation.
‘The young man wants the ball. He wants to start. He believes he’s the best quarterback in the room and best quarterback for this team and the guy who gives us the best chance to win and I’ll tell you guys the same thing I told him: I appreciate it. I appreciate the fact that he wants to play. I’m just not there yet.’

The Jets’ most recent loss came on Sunday, Dec. 3, against the Atlanta Falcons in a 13-8 defeat
Saleh said the decision on who’ll start this week will include input from ‘everybody’ – presumably meaning general manager Joe Douglas, offensive coordinator Nathaniel Hackett and passing game coordinator Todd Downing, among others.
‘I want to make sure nobody is acting emotionally,’ Saleh said. ‘I want to make sure we’re making the right decision for this organization and team moving forward and making sure that the guy who’s best ready to play is on the football field.
‘We’re just trying to find a way to win a football game and whoever does that, I just want to make sure we cross our T’s, dot our I’s and make the best decision possible.’
The Jets have scored fewer than two touchdowns on offense in eight straight games. They also have just two touchdowns total on offense in their past five games.
Their third down conversion efficiency (23.1 percent) and red zone conversion rate (27 percent) are still on track to be among the worst in recent NFL history.
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