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Starmer’s ad hoc alliance could still struggle to materialise

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UK Prime MinisterSir Keir Starmer says a “huge amount” has happened since his “coalition of the willing” idea first surfaced at his Lancaster House summit a fortnight ago.

He is not wrong: US-Ukrainian relations have been on a rollercoaster since then, culminating in the meeting in Riyadh earlier this week, where the two sides agreed on a 30-day ceasefire.

But Sir Keir’s coalition is a big, still somewhat nebulous undertaking, and there is clearly a great deal of work to be done before this ad hoc alliance is ready to take on something as complex – and potentially perilous – as keeping the peace in Ukraine.

Sir Keir says the coalition is now bigger and that “new commitments” are on the table, though he did not spell these out.

Participants of Saturday morning’s virtual summit, he said, had agreed to keep military aid flowing to Ukraine and tighten restrictions on the Russian economy, to weaken Russian PresidentVladimir Putin’s war machine.

Planning, he said, would now move to an “operational phase”, with military chiefs due to meet in the UK next Thursday.

“Overall, we are successfully gathering political and military momentum,” he said.

It is likely that we will see a rolling set of political, diplomatic and military gatherings as the plan slowly takes shape.

It is far from plain sailing.

Asked about vital US military support for any European-led operation – what’s being called a “backstop” – the prime minister was clear: the US position had not changed.

European national security advisors including Jonathan Powell – one of those credited with convincing Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky to accept the US ceasefire proposal – were in Washington on Friday.

Unless US PresidentDonald Trump’s position on the backstop changes, Sir Keir’s coalition of the willing could struggle to get off the ground.

For Zelensky, the military clock is ticking, especially in Kursk, where his troops have been occupying a shrinking sliver of Russian territory since August 2024.

Ukraine vehemently denies reports that its forces are surrounded in Kursk – a theory promoted by Trump on Friday – but they are clearly under enormous pressure and are losing ground.

When I was in Kyiv towards the end of last year, Ukrainian troops told us they were holding onto territory in Kursk as a bargaining chip to be played in future negotiations.

But as those negotiations approach, it is a chip thatPutin seems determined to remove from the table first.

That may go some way towards explaining his “yes, but” approach to the idea of a 30-day ceasefire.

Taken From BBC News

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/clyzgr5xgv6o

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‘I looked at my hand and it was covered in blood’

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Passengers have described blood-covered seats and attempting to protect themselves with a bottle after a mass stabbing on a LNER train left 11 people injured and needing hospital treatment. Two remain in a life-threatening condition.

Police met the Doncaster-London King’s Cross train as it made an unscheduled stop at Huntingdon in Cambridgeshire shortly before 20:00 GMT.

Hiding in buffet car

Alistair Day, who was travelling back to Hertford having watched Nottingham Forest, was on the train when the attack happened – having narrowly missed his original connecting service.

He joined others and hid in the train’s buffet carriage as a fellow passenger confronted a man with a knife.

“I was just by the buffet car. It was odd. I was at the end of the carriage. All these kids were running up and I thought it was like a prank – Halloween or students,” he said.

“Then they’re getting louder and louder any sorts of people with blood on them [appeared] and I thought, ‘Oh, bloody hell, this is not good.’

“I saw a guy flailing out – a fracas with arms going everywhere. I didn’t see him that well because there were people in front of him.

“My initial thought was I’m going to sit there and try and do something but I changed my mind.

“We all jumped up and everyone kept running but I was next to the buffet car and the guys in the carriage were trying to close up the shutters and everything.

“So I said, no, you’ve got to let us in here. So I jumped in there – there were about 12 of us in there.

“I was the first one in, so I was in the corner. A young woman who I spoke to afterwards was by the window and the guy was at the window with his knife trying to get in. Obviously we’d locked it by then.”

Joe, who was also travelling back from the Nottingham Forest v Manchester United match, said the scenes were “like something out of a movie”.

The 24-year-old, from Peckham in south-east London, said: “I was texting my friends about my plans for that night and then people came rushing through from the carriage, running through, saying, ‘You need to run, you need to run’.

“At first it didn’t really register what was going on.

“And then quickly, I just dropped my stuff and I started running along with them.

“And then I looked back, and I could see this guy – he was quite a tall, black male, and he had a bloodied knife.

“You just looked around and there was blood just everywhere.”

‘What if we run out of carriages?’

Joe continued: “We kept moving through the train. We could see him behind us coming through.

“The scariest thing was that I knew that because the stops at this stage of the journey are just Stevenage and King’s Cross there’s quite a lot of big distances between stops.

“So we had no idea how long we were going to be on the train for.

“The thing that was in my mind was we’re running through this train now but what if we run out of carriages to run through? What if we reach the end of the train? What happens there?

“It all happened very quickly. I was just in a fight or flight mode really.”

‘Panic’

Steve was on the King’s Cross-bound train with his two children. The family were at the opposite end of the train to where the attack unfolded, but reflected on a “nightmare scenario”.

Speaking to BBC Radio 4, he said: “We got on it [the train] about 19:10. We had just departed Peterborough, and then kind of an alarm went off, a kind of a soft alarm went off, which I heard before on the train.

“It said that, you know, an activation alarm has been activated in coach J.

“I didn’t know what it was, but then we suddenly started seeing people massing at the end of the carriage by the door… I wasn’t really sure what was going on.

“And then people started to get panicky.

“Someone said, there’s been a stabbing. And then people started to move quite quickly down towards our carriage.”

. A graphic showing the layout of carriages in a line, with text pointing out where the eyewitnesses Olly Foster, Alistair Day and "Steve" say they were. There are nine carriages in total, including the two at each end where the drivers sit. The carriages are labelled M, L, K, J, H, G, C, B, A. Carriage J is highlighted in red, and has a line to it saying "Reported site of attack".

He continued: “A woman came over the tannoy and said, ‘we are aware there is an incident. Just keep yourself safe’, which was scary to hear, because you didn’t know what was going on.

“Then we pulled into a station. I think everybody assumed it was Stevenage, because that was the next scheduled stop.

“Everyone just started to kind of run and then pile off the train, and then everyone just, there’s a bit of a panic, and everyone ran through the station forecourt.

“We ran out into the car park and ran up a hill and kind of out on to the road, and then we bumped into two or three young girls.

“We ran to someone’s house, and we hammered on all the doors and pressed the buzzers, and we got in, and some very kind, early-elderly couple looked after us until it was safe to leave.

“The kids are very shaken up by it, but dealing with it very well.”

Whiskey bottle

Joe Giddens/PA The head and shoulder of a police forensics officer is visible through a train carriage window. Their white hood is over their head, and they have a white mask over their nose and mouth.

Olly Foster, a passenger on the train, told the BBC he initially heard people shouting “run, run, there’s a guy literally stabbing everyone”, and believed it might have been a Halloween related prank.

He said within minutes, people started pushing through the carriage, and he noticed his hand was “covered in blood” as there was “blood all over the chair” he had leaned on.

An older man “blocked” the attacker from stabbing a younger girl, leaving him with a gash on his head and neck, Mr Foster said.

Passengers around him used jackets to try to staunch the bleeding.

He added that the only thing people in his carriage could use against the attacker was a bottle of whiskey, leaving them “staring down the carriage” and “praying” that he would not enter the carriage.

Although it lasted 10-15 minutes in total, Mr Foster says the incident “felt like forever”.

Describing the scene when he got off the train, he said: “There were three people bleeding severely. One guy was holding his stomach and there’s blood coming from his stomach and going down his leg.

“He was going ‘help, help, I’ve been stabbed’.”

The train’s only other scheduled stop before King’s Cross was due to be at Stevenage.

Wren Chambers, who was due to get off in the Hertfordshire town, said they first became aware something was wrong when a man bolted down the carriage with a bloody arm, saying “they’ve got a knife, run”.

Wren said they and a friend ran to the front of the train and saw a man who had collapsed on the floor.

Wren said they felt “stressed and pretty scared” once they knew what was happening, but they were eventually able to get off the train unharmed.

“There was quite a lot of blood on the train, there was some on my bag, some on my jeans,” she told BBC Radio 5 Live.

“As soon as the train stopped and people got off most of them ran outside trying to get away from it, because we knew the attacker was still inside on the train.”

London Underground worker Dean McFarlane told the BBC that he saw the train pull into Huntingdon railway station at 20:00 with a passenger bleeding.

He said that on arrival, he saw multiple people running down the platform bleeding, with one man in a white shirt “completely covered in blood”.

He said he grabbed people and told them to leave the station, and tried to assist passengers who he believed were having panic attacks.

PA Media Police tape over an area with police equipment behind it
Ten people have been taken to hospital and nine have life-threatening injuries

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King to strip Andrew of his final military title, minister says

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The government is “working to remove” Andrew Mountbatten Windsor’s last honorary military title at the King’s request, the defence secretary has said.

John Healey said King Charles had “indicated that’s what he wishes”.

Andrew, who was stripped of his title as a prince on Thursday, retained his rank as a Vice Admiral in the Royal Navy after giving up his other military positions in 2022.

Healey told the BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg: “This is a move that’s right, it’s a move the King has indicated we should take and we’re working on that at the moment.”

Andrew spent decades in public life as a war hero and prince, but has since suffered a major fall from grace.

The King’s younger brother had a 22-year career in the Royal Navy, and served as a helicopter pilot during the Falklands War.

He also commanded the mine countermeasures vessel HMS Cottesmore.

This week, he lost his last remaining royal titles and privileges following months of pressure over his ties to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Andrew has always denied wrongdoing.

PA Media Andrew Mountbatten Windsor wearing a full military uniform marching alongside other Royal Navy personnel
Andrew served in the Royal Navy for 22 years

Speaking on Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg, royal author and journalist Valentine Low said this latest move, to lose his final military title, will be a “blow” to Andrew.

“Royals, and particularly Andrew, are very proud and determined to hang onto military titles,” he said.

“It seems the King is intent on taking absolutely everything away from his brother. It’s a flinty eyed ruthlessness he’s displaying.”

Andrew had already returned his other military titles and royal patronages in 2022, and stopped using the title His Royal Highness in an official capacity, after he was accused of sexual abuse in a civil case in the US.

He later settled the case brought against him by Virginia Giuffre, a victim of sex trafficking and abuse by Jeffrey Epstein, who alleged Andrew sexually abused her when she was a teenager – something Andrew has consistently denied.

Military titles that Andrew lost at the time included colonel of the Grenadier Guards – one of the most senior infantry regiments in the British army.

He also lost several overseas honorary roles, including colonel-in-chief of The Royal Highland Fusiliers Of Canada, and colonel-in-chief of the Royal New Zealand Army Logistic Regiment.

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Ambassador Mumtaz Zahra Baloch presents credentials as Ambassador to the Principality of Monaco

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Paris ( Imran Y. CHOUDHRY):- Ambassador of Pakistan to France, Madam Mumtaz Zahra Baloch, has presented her credentials as Ambassador of Pakistan to the Principality of Monaco. The presentation of credentials ceremony was held on 7th October 2025 at the Royal Palace in Monaco.

On arrival at the Royal Palace, Ambassador Madam Baloch reviewed the Compagnie des Carabiniers of the Prince de Monaco before she was escorted to the Salon des Glaces for the formal presentation of her credentials to His Serene Highness, Prince Albert II, Sovereign Prince of Monaco.

After presentation of her letters of credence, Ambassador Baloch presented the warmest greetings of the President and Prime Minister of Pakistan to His Highness Prince Albert.

She conveyed Pakistan’s earnest desire to further promote bilateral dialogue and exchanges with the Principality of Monaco.

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