
Sex offender freed from Wandsworth prison by mistake is back in custody
A convicted sex offender who was released from prison by mistake a week ago is back in custody.Brahim Kaddour-Cherif, 24, from Algeria, was accidentally freed on 29 October from Wandsworth prison in south London. He was arrested in Finsbury Park, north London, on Friday after police said they had received a call from a member of the public.The erroneous release, and that of another prisoner who was mistakenly freed, has led to mounting political pressure on David Lammy, the justice secretary, days after he introduced stringent checks for jails.Lammy had refused several times to say whether any more prisoners had been released in error in a bruising session of prime minister’s questions (PMQs) on Wednesday, having been ambushed with a string of questions

Tom Butler obituary
My friend Tom Butler, who has died of lymphoma after a short illness aged 73, was a former head of NHS mental health services in inner-city Manchester.Alongside his career in social work and mental health, Tom was a historian of social policy in the UK and author of several books, including Mental Health, Social Policy and the Law, published in 1985. As a young social worker, he pioneered the use of computer databases to improve child protection while working for Berkshire social services.He was born in Gloucester to Irish parents, Margaret (nee Bolger) and Patrick Butler, a draughtsman in the aircraft industry. Tom attended St Peter’s Roman Catholic junior school in Gloucester, where we first met

‘A job is like finding a needle in a haystack’: how Dudley became centre of UK’s youth jobs crisis
It is a rainy day in Dudley and Alex Jones and his friends are taking shelter under some trees in the car park of the college of technology. Clad in blue overalls on a mid-morning break, the students are hopeful their automotive qualifications will stand them in good stead for finding work.Here in the heart of the Black Country, however, that is not always guaranteed. “Trying to find a part-time job is like trying to find a needle in a haystack,” says the 17-year-old trainee mechanic.“They don’t care what grades you have, they just want experience,” chimes in Thomas, his course mate

Emma Barnett says she felt ‘mugged, robbed’ after perimenopause at 38
Emma Barnett has said experiencing perimenopause at the age of 38 felt as if she had been “mugged, robbed” of her identity.The broadcaster, now 40, said on her new BBC podcast, Ready to Talk with Emma Barnett, that it was the “first time in my life I haven’t really wanted to be a woman – it’s the first time I’ve thought, I’d really quite like to be a bloke”.She said perimenopause made her feel as though she had lost her identity, and that she was still waiting to “come back” to who she was before.Speaking to guest Kate Thornton, she said: “I do feel there has been a theft. I do feel there’s no emergency number to call

NHS to take over state-of-the-art hospital from private health group in ‘windfall’
An NHS trust is taking over a state-of-the-art hospital from a leading private healthcare group after it failed to attract enough paying patients to use it.Barts Health trust in London will turn Nuffield Health’s facility into a dedicated NHS breast cancer diagnosis and treatment centre when it gains control next month.The not-for-profit private health operator took a 30-year-lease on two dilapidated empty Barts trust buildings in 2022 and spent £65m refurbishing them for a hospital for heart disease and joint problems.But it has decided to shut the hospital next week less than four years into an arrangement that was intended to grow its business and generate millions of pounds in rental income for Barts Health.It is selling the lease back to the NHS trust, where senior figures are delighted that Nuffield’s setback has resulted in what one called “a windfall” and chance to expand the care it provides

Call to give UK cancer patients legal right to be treated within two months
Cancer patients should have the legal right to be treated within two months, even if that means the NHS has to pay for them to be treated privately or abroad, according to international experts.Writing in the Lancet Oncology, they say cancer patients should have the legally enforceable entitlement to be treated within 62 days of an urgent referral by a GP.This would bring the UK in line with Denmark, where cancer patients already have a statutory right to timely treatment.International research shows that every four weeks of delay in cancer treatment increases the risk of death by up to 10%. But the NHS has not met its target for 85% of cancer patients to start treatment within 62 days since December 2015

Seth Meyers on Mamdani’s win: ‘The kind of energy Democrats have been desperately seeking for years’

Garden shed of vaccine pioneer Edward Jenner added to heritage at risk register

Miss Piggy movie on way from Jennifer Lawrence, Emma Stone and Cole Escola

Colbert on Pelosi calling Trump a vile creature: ‘You know who agrees? Most Americans’

De Niro to JLaw: should celebrities be expected to speak out against Trump?

Jon Stewart on Trump’s Gatsby party: ‘The theme was apparently gross income inequality’
England 38-18 Fiji: Autumn Nations Series rugby union – as it happened
