York and Toulouse complete 14-team Super League as London Broncos miss out

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York Knights and Toulouse Olympique have won the three-way battle to snare the final two places in next season’s expanded Super League, with the newly invigorated London Broncos missing the cut.As Championship Grand Final winners, Toulouse occupied 13th place in the list of club gradings announced on Thursday, while York, as regular season winners, were rewarded for securing 14th.Nonetheless, with on-field performance only one criterion in the decision, made by a panel chaired by the Rugby Football League nonexecutive director Lord Caine, the Broncos will be disappointed to have lost out.The 14-team lineup is now complete, with the former champions Bradford having already secured a return to the Super League for the first time in more than a decade in 2026 when it was announced they had jumped to 10th place in the IMG club gradings announced on Thursday.Bradford replace Salford in next season’s top flight, with the top 12 clubs in the gradings automatically guaranteed Super League status.

Bradford finished in a lowly 16th place in last year’s gradings but significant stadium improvements enabled them to improve by more than two points to 14.81, enough to lift them above the existing Super League clubs Castleford and Huddersfield, who ranked in 11th and 12th places respectively.Salford, beset by a continuing financial crisis that left them unable to fulfil a fixture against Wakefield in August, plunged to 15th place and, with the club having failed to apply for consideration for one of the two prospective expansion places, their 17-year Super League stay is over.
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Virginia Giuffre’s story of abuse exposes impunity of powerful men, UK experts say

Virginia Giuffre’s latest revelations are a “mirror held up to a system” that still enables powerful men to groom, abuse and exploit women with impunity, women’s rights campaigners have said.Excerpts from Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice, which were released ahead of the book’s publication next week, lay bare how Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell took advantage of their position of power to manipulate and groom Giuffre.In the posthumously published text, Giuffre warns that more women will suffer similar experiences if people continue to believe that Epstein was “an anomaly, an outlier”.She wrote: “The way he viewed women and girls – as playthings to be used and discarded – is not uncommon among certain powerful men who believe they are above the law. And many of those men are still going about their daily lives, enjoying the benefits of their power

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Brace for early flu season in England and get vaccinated, say experts

The flu season could be coming early this year, public health experts in England have said, adding that those who are eligible for a free vaccination should take up their offer.According to the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA), an increase in flu levels in England is being driven by cases among younger adults and schoolchildren.It comes as Japan’s health authorities declared an influenza epidemic, with a higher than usual number of infections for the time of year.A report by the UKHSA suggests that while flu levels are rising in England, they remain within baseline – or typical – seasonal ranges. But it added that the levels were similar to those seen when the flu season came early in 2022-23

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UK woman who travelled with husband to assisted dying clinic will not face charges

A woman who accompanied her husband to an assisted dying clinic in Switzerland has been told she will not face charges.Louise Shackleton, 59, handed herself in to police on her return from a Dignitas clinic after the death of her husband, Anthony, last December. North Yorkshire police said this week that although the Crown Prosecution Service concluded there was evidence of assisted suicide, it was not in the public interest to prosecute her.In England and Wales, “assisting a suicide” is a crime with a maximum sentence of 14 years. A similar law is in place in Northern Ireland

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Experts urge UK to ban cigarette filters to protect health and environment

Cigarette filters do not work and are a major source of plastic pollution that should be banned by the UK government, experts have said.In an editorial in Addiction, the journal for the Society for the Study of Addiction, researchers argue that ministers should use a forthcoming tobacco and vapes bill to “ban filters in the interests of public health and the environment”.“Cigarette filters were designed to give the false impression of safety,” said Dr Katherine East, associate professor in public health at Brighton and Sussex Medical School, who is lead author on the editorial.“In reality, they do not reduce toxicant exposure and may even increase harm, because they lead people to inhale deeper and for longer and can embed harmful fibres and microplastics in the lungs. They are also a major contributor to the global plastic waste crisis

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‘Gruesome videos’: social media pushes distressing news to children, experts say

More than half of children who get news from social media are left worried and upset after seeing content that involves war, violence and death, according to new research that found social media companies are “pushing” distressing news to children who are not seeking it.Videos of the murder of Charlie Kirk, the Liverpool parade car-ramming attack, scenes from wars, shootings, stabbings and car crashes have recently been pushed into children’s feeds, research by Internet Matters, an online safety organisation, has found. As a result, 39% of those who saw distressing content described themselves as very or extremely upset and worried by it.More than two-thirds of children are getting news from social media apps including TikTok and Instagram, but 40% do not follow news-focused accounts and are instead coming across stories through recommendation algorithms. Nearly two-thirds (61%) of those who get news from social media have seen a worrying or upsetting story in the past month

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English councils to remain poorer than in 2010 despite funding rise, says report

Councils in England will still be poorer by the end of this parliament than they were in 2010 despite Labour’s funding increases, according to analysis by the Institute for Government (IfG).Funding cuts from 2010 to 2019 were so severe that they left gaps that could not be filled even by five years of above-inflation increases, leaving local authorities increasingly reliant on emergency funding and capable of providing only legally mandated services, the report shows.The government increased local authority funding by more than 4% in real terms this year, and has promised an increase of more than 1% above inflation each year for the next three years. However, the IfG report suggests the damage done by years of cuts is so severe that many people will not notice any difference to their local services.Stuart Hoddinott, the author of the report, said: “Most public services struggled when spending was cut during the early 2010s, but few as much as local government