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No Writer
May 15
Five Italians die while exploring underwater caves in the Maldives

Italy's foreign ministry said the group had been exploring underwater ⁠caves in the Vaavu Atoll at a depth ⁠of around 50 metres (165ft) on Thursday. It gave no further details about the victims' identities or the cause of the accident, but said all five were Italian nationals and an investigation was under way. The Italian ⁠Embassy in Sri Lanka was ⁠working to contact the ​victims' families and provide ​consular assistance, the ministry added. In a statement posted on X, the University of Genoa expressed its "deepest condolences" and said the victims included a marine biology professor and her daughter. According to Italian media reports, the divers were reported missing at around 1.45pm by the crew of a diving vessel they were travelling on, when the group failed to resurface. Read more from Sky News:Trump: Xi and I agree on Iran'Most wanted' Brit arrested in Spain A large-scale search and rescue operation was launched by the Maldivian Coast Guard and the Maldives National Defense Force (MNDF). "A body has been found among the five divers who dived in Vaavu Atoll," the MNDF said in a statement to Italian news agency ANSA. "The body was found inside a cave. The other four divers are believed to be inside the same cave, which extends to a depth of approximately 60m."

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Bethany Minelle, arts and entertainment reporter
May 14
Nicki Minaj and Azealia Banks back Kemi Badenoch for PM

It's an unlikely moment of agreement between the singers, who have famously feuded in the past. Writing on X on Wednesday, Minaj wrote on X: "The UK is truly one of a kind. They will portray her in film & TV one day…just like they did with Margaret Thatcher." Trinidad and Tobago-born rapper Minaj, best known for hits including Super Freaky Girl, Anaconda and Starships, has previously described herself as Republican president Donald Trump's "number one fan". Meanwhile, Banks who has spoken of her admiration for Ms Badenoch before, wrote on X: "Sorry i made fun of you guys in Britain, i rolled over and realized its actually no longer a laughing matter and I shouldnt be making jokes. I hope you all vote conservative and Listen to Kemi Badenoch." She went on to offer her advice on British domestic security. In a later post, Banks said of Ms Badenoch: "She is a star". Last month, the 32-year-old shared a clip of Ms Badenoch speaking in the House of Commons on X, with the message: "Kemi Badenoch is f**king iconic. World leaders will respect her Professionalism alot more than goofball Nigel [Farage]." Read more from Sky News:Streeting resigns without launching leadership bidStudent stabbed to death with 'extremely large' knife Minaj and Banks both went to the same LaGuardia High School in New York, with their original beef arising in 2012 after Azealia reportedly turned down the chance to tour with Nicki to work on her album Broke With Expensive Taste. New York rapper Banks won wide acclaim for her single 212, but has since become better known for her Twitter outbursts and ongoing feuds with numerous celebrities, including Minaj, Zayn Malik and Lana Del Rey. Despite losses in the local elections, Ms Badenoch has insisted that the Conservatives "are coming back to get Britain working again". Meanwhile, the Labour Party is in turmoil, with Health Secretary Wes Streeting the latest minister to resign, and many predicting an imminent leadership challenge against Sir Keir Starmer.

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No Writer
May 15
Jess Phillips: Starmer doesn't listen

Andy Burnham, Angela Rayner, Wes Streeting – the list of potential names to challenge Keir Starmer is growing, but the leadership race is not on... yet. Jess Phillips, who resigned from the government this week, tells Beth why she's backing Wes Streeting in a future race. She says Andy Burnham needs to be careful he doesn't look entitled as he searches for a parliamentary seat and gives a devastating verdict on the prime minister, telling Beth he "finds it hard to listen" in her first interview since resigning. Plus, as one Labour MP resigns in Makerfield so Burnham can stand, can the "King of the North" win a by-election? Or is he gambling his job on a seat he can't win? And can Starmer keep a lid on it all? Got a question for the burner phone? WhatsApp 07934 200 444 or email electoraldysfunction@sky.uk. And if you didn't know, you can also watch Beth, Ruth and Harriet on YouTube.

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No Writer
May 15
Kylian Mbappe: Booed Real Madrid striker claims to be 'fourth forward' after substitute appearance on injury return

Mbappe was returning from a hamstring injury after missing the Clasico defeat on Sunday which ultimately secured the LaLiga title for arch-rivals Barcelona, and came off the bench midway through the second period for homegrown forward Gonzalo Garcia, who had started - and scored - alongside Vinicus Junior and Franco Mastantuono. Mbappe has been the subject of much anger from Real Madrid fans, and become something of a scapegoat with the club enduring a second consecutive season without silverware. Over 30m people signed a petition calling for Real to get rid of the striker, who came under fire for his decision to go on holiday to Sardinia while recovering from a hamstring injury. Got Sky? Watch the Premier League and more on the Sky Sports app📱Not got Sky? Get instant access with no contract📺How to watch EVERY remaining PL game LIVE! "I'm 100 per cent fine," Mbappe said after Thursday's match. "I didn't play because the coach [Alvaro Arbeloa] told me I'm the fourth-choice forward in the squad behind [Franco] Mastantuono, Vinícius [Júnior] and Gonzalo. I accept it and play the time I'm given. I think I played well," he told reporters after the game. "I was ready to start, it's his decision and it always has to be respected. I have no problem at all with ​Arbeloa. You have to accept the coach's philosophy and I have ​to do better to play ahead of Vini, Gonzalo and Mastantuono." Mbappe had started all of Real's previous six games, scoring three times, prior to his injury and has been out of the starting line-up on only four previous occasions when available for Arbeloa in the 26 matches since the head coach took over from Xabi Alonso in mid-January. Arbeloa was questioned over Mbappe's comments following the game and said he felt it was not possible for the forward to come straight back into the line-up following his hamstring injury, and denied his claims of being the club's fourth-choice forward - before revealing he will start Real's next game against relegation-threatened Sevilla this Sunday. He said: "I had a conversation with him before the game and I ​don't know what he could have interpreted. "For ⁠me it is very clear that a player who four days ago could not be on the bench (against Barcelona), today should not start. ⁠Especially because ​it's not a final, it's not ​a game of life or death. "I can understand that Mbappe isn't happy about not playing, but it's a decision based on the circumstances. It was the most logical and natural thing to do, the most common-sense thing. "If you want, you can show me Kylian's mixed zone [comments] and we can discuss it. Until I hear what he said, I'm not going to comment on every single sentence. As long as I'm in this position, I decide who plays and who doesn't. I don't care what their names are." Mbappe shrugged off the boos he receive from the infamously ruthless Real support. "It's life," he said. "You can't change people's minds when they're angry. I shouldn't take it personally. It's the life of a Real Madrid player, and a famous player like me. They're not happy. That's the only way to understand the whistles."

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No Writer
May 15
Sir David Beckham and the Gallagher brothers among the biggest winners in 2026 Sunday Times Rich List

The former England captain became the UK's first billionaire sportsman, with this year's list also featuring Liam and Noel Gallagher for the first time. In the top spot, on £38bn, are Sanjay and Dheeraj Hinduja and family. They were also No. 1 last year under former family head Gopi Hinduja, who died in November. They own the India-based Hinduja Group, a sprawling conglomerate that employs around 200,000 people globally. This year's biggest gainer in the list is 41-year-old Nik Storonsky, the owner of fintech company Revolut. His wealth is estimated to have rocketed from £6.97bn to £16.41bn - an average gain of nearly £26m a day - after a round of fundraising valued his business at £55.6bn. Fellow Moscow-born billionaire Alex Gerko, the mathematician who set up trading platform XTX, also jumped from £8.74bn to £16bn, and sits eighth in the list. There are also some notable fallers, such as Manchester United co-owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe, whose petrochemicals business Ineos had a tougher year and brought his fortune down nearly £2bn to £15.19bn. Inventor Sir James Dyson is said to have taken an even bigger hit. He is now worth £12bn according to the list - £8bn less than last year. New entries for 2026 include Liam and Noel Gallagher (£375m), whose coffers were supercharged by their sell-out Oasis reunion gigs, and Glastonbury organiser Emily Eavis. The festival is now owned by a family trust, and experts have suggested it could be worth £400m. David and Victoria Beckham are also believed to have doubled their wealth in the last year to make Sir David the list's first billionaire sportsman. Boxing and snooker promoters Eddie and Barry Hearn are also said to crossed the billionaire threshold, while the King is estimated to be worth £680m. There are now 157 UK billionaires, 20 less than four years ago, and the minimum entry level has dipped to £340m. The compiler of the list, Robert Watts, called it a "tale of two exoduses" as one in six families who appeared two years ago don't feature in 2026. "Many foreign billionaires who have been living in the UK have also dropped out because they have moved away," he said. "We have also seen a sharp rise in the number of British nationals now resident in Dubai, Switzerland and Monaco. As UK nationals these people remain on our Rich List - wherever they now live." Read more from Sky News:Three women recovered from seaStudent dies in meningitis outbreak The flight of many ultra-wealthy people has been blamed on government action such as the ending of non-domiciled status, which allowed people to avoid tax on income earned outside the UK. "These two exoduses pose challenges for the UK economy and its public finances," added Mr Watts. "Will more of the wealthy now set up or grow their ventures overseas and in doing so create fewer jobs here? How much tax - if any - will Rachel Reeves' Treasury be able to extract from those affluent Brits who have now left the country." The list is based on identifiable wealth, including land, property, and assets such as art and racehorses, or shares in publicly quoted companies. It excludes bank accounts, to which the paper has no access.

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No Writer
May 13
Drug counsellor jailed for two years for delivering ketamine to Matthew Perry before his death

Erik Fleming pleaded guilty in 2024 to conspiracy to distribute ketamine and distribution of the drug resulting in death or serious injury, after connecting Perry with drug dealer Jasveen Sangha. Prosecutors said Sangha was known as the "Ketamine Queen" because of her jet-setting lifestyle. She was jailed for 15 years last month. In legal documents, prosecutors said Fleming helped distribute 51 vials of ketamine to Perry in October 2023, including the dose that caused his death. Fleming, 56, told the judge, Sherilyn Peace Garnett, in a Los Angeles federal court on Wednesday: "It's truly a nightmare I can't wake up from. I'm haunted by the mistakes I made." Also ahead of sentencing, he submitted a letter to the court, describing how he too had struggled with addiction and saying he felt "overwhelmed with grief and shame" when he found out the actor had died. "I knew what I had done and understood how much pain his death would cause to the people who loved him," he wrote. "To Matt's family, I am very sorry for my inexcusable behaviour in this case. "I take full responsibility for my criminal acts. I hope my sentence provides some measure of justice and peace for everyone who loved Matt." Perry, 54, had struggled with substance addiction on and off for years before his death in the jacuzzi at his LA home on 28 October 2023 following an accidental drug overdose. A medical examiner's report found Perry died from the acute effects of surgical anaesthetic ketamine, with drowning as a secondary cause. In his letter, Fleming described becoming certified as a counsellor after speaking to addicts about his own recovery. He said he met the Friends star a few times and was aware of his issues, but that in October 2023 he was "in the midst of a relapse" himself and "desperate" for money. "I procured ketamine for Matthew Perry because I wanted the money and because I thought I was doing a favour for a friend," he wrote. "I never contemplated the worst possible outcome." Fleming gave up Sangha to investigators the same day they found him at his sister's house several months after Perry's death. Fleming's lawyer Robert Dugdale told the judge he "handed over the Ketamine Queen on a silver platter". "They didn't have a clue who she was before that day," Mr Dugdale said. His legal team argued for three months in federal prison and three years of supervised release. Fleming, who has been free on bail for around two years, was ordered to surrender to serve his term within 45 days. Read more from Sky News:Lawyer's double murder convictions overturnedPassengers banned from leaving ship Fleming was the first of five defendants to plead guilty to charges related to Perry's death, in August 2024, before arrests were announced. He is the fourth of the five to be sentenced, after Sangha and doctors Salvador Plasencia and Mark Chavez. Plasencia was jailed for two-and-a-half years for illegally supplying ketamine to Perry in the weeks before his death. Chavez was sentenced to eight months home confinement after admitting selling ketamine to Plasencia. Kenneth Iwamasa, Perry's live-in assistant, is to be sentenced in May.

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Joely Santa Cruz, Data journalist
May 15
Wes Streeting claims he hit his NHS targets - this says otherwise

That's what outgoing health secretary Wes Streeting said in his resignation letter to Sir Keir Starmer. While it's true that some targets have been met, several milestones due to be achieved by March, including on A&E and cancer treatment waiting times, have not. Waiting times The NHS constitution states that 92% of people should be treated within 18 weeks of being referred for treatment. This target hasn't been achieved in over a decade and deteriorated rapidly during the pandemic, when fewer than half of patients were treated within 18 weeks. Labour promised to get back to the 92% standard by the end of parliament but, in the meantime, set a target to reach 65% by March 2026. New figures show this was achieved at the national level, but nearly half of trusts (71 of 150) did not. "It means we are right on track to deliver the fastest reduction in waiting times in the history of the NHS," Streeting said. Performance improved from 62.6% in February to 65.3% in March to reach the target threshold. There is still some way to go to reach the full 92% target by 2029, however. Data validation exercises? The number of appointments on the waiting list fell to 7.11 million in March, a reduction of 1.5% from 7.22 million in February. This was the largest month-on-month reduction outside of the pandemic since 2008. It may have been helped in part by a surge in "validation" exercises to remove cases that should no longer be on the waiting list, even if the patient has not received NHS care. Some 17.1% of appointments removed from the waiting list were from this "unreported removal" category, the highest share of administrative removals since February 2024. Francesca Cavallaro, senior analytical manager at the Health Foundation, told Sky News that meeting the interim waiting times target was an "important milestone", given the scale of the challenge facing the NHS. "However, this is only one step on the road to recovery towards restoring the 18-week standard after more than a decade of missed targets," she said. "The levels of unreported waiting list removals in March reflect a relatively high share of total removals, though similar to levels seen before the COVID-19 pandemic. This is likely to be partly down to additional validation work being undertaken ahead of the interim targets, raising the broader question of whether the recent pace of improvement is sustainable in the months ahead." Not finished the job Other achievements name-checked by the outgoing health secretary include recruiting 2,000 GPs and an improvement in public satisfaction with the NHS, which has risen from 60% to 74.5% since Labour came into office. He said improvements were down to "investment, modernisation, and the remarkable efforts of staff", though he acknowledged there is "lots more to do". Uneven performance While the national waiting times target was met overall, another target was that every trust should have reached a minimum of 60% patients treated within 18 weeks and have improved by five percentage points from a November 2024 baseline, and this was not achieved. Sixty-eight of 150 trusts did not meet this level of improvement, including in 16 trusts where neither target was achieved. Additionally, 17 trusts are performing worse now than they were in November 2024. Search for your trust in the table below. A&E waiting time targets missed Reducing waits for emergency care has been a big priority for Streeting's NHS, but while interim targets have been met for planned hospital treatment, they have been missed in A&E. In March, 76.9% of A&E patients were treated or discharged within four hours, missing the interim target that this should be 78%. In major departments, just 63.8% of patients were seen within four hours. The long-term target is that 95% of patients should be seen within the four-hour standard. Trolley waits worsen Meanwhile, the situation with "trolley waits", the time patients spend waiting for a hospital bed after a decision to admit, has continued to deteriorate. This April was the worst April on record for long trolley waits of 12 hours or more, experienced by nearly one in 10 patients after a decision was made to admit them. 2025 was the worst year on record for trolley waits of 12 or more hours, at 554,000. That was more than the total recorded between 2011 and 2022. Cancer treatment target missed The latest figures show that 79.4% of cancer patients were diagnosed within four weeks in March - just shy of the interim target to reach 80%. The time taken for treatment has shown little improvement, however, with just 72.8% of cancer patients treated within two months of urgent referral as of March, missing the target to reach 75% by this point in time. And while this is the best performance of available data going back to 2022, it remains far from the ultimate target that 85% should be treated within a two-month time frame. The Data and Forensics team is a multi-skilled unit dedicated to providing transparent journalism from Sky News. We gather, analyse and visualise data to tell data-driven stories. We combine traditional reporting skills with advanced analysis of satellite images, social media and other open source information. Through multimedia storytelling we aim to better explain the world while also showing how our journalism is done.

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No Writer
May 15
Bruno Fernandes: Manchester United captain says he wanted Arsenal's Declan Rice to join him at Old Trafford before transfer from West Ham

Rice signed for Arsenal for a club-record £105m back in 2023 and has since been an integral part of Mikel Arteta's side as the Gunners vie for their first league title since 2004. This season, especially, with Arsenal currently closing in on the league title, Rice has been one of the league's outstanding players. But Fernandes, who has eight goals and is one behind Thierry Henry and Kevin de Bruyne's record of 20 assists in a single Premier League season, pipped Rice to the Football Writers' Association (FWA) Footballer of the Year award. Read why and how Rice and Fernandes trained together in 2023Transfer Centre LIVE! | Man Utd news & transfers🔴Man Utd fixtures & scores | FREE Man Utd PL highlights▶️Got Sky? Watch Man Utd games LIVE on your phone📱Not got Sky? Get Sky Sports or stream with no contract on NOW📺 Fernandes took 45 per cent of votes from the FWA's 900-plus membership, beating second-placed Rice by just 28 votes. "I admire him a lot," Fernandes told JoelBeyaTV in a sit-down following his FWA win, when asked about his fellow midfielder, who he trained alongside in Portugal's Algarve region during the summer of 2003. "First of all, as a person, because I've known him from the Algarve when we were training together and everything. "Obviously, I knew him already from West Ham and we all knew the qualities he had. And I've always said, I always thought that Rice was a player to play for Man United, and I was really sad when he chose to go to Arsenal. "I didn't know if there was the opportunity or the chance for him to come to Manchester United, but I always thought that he would be a perfect fit for our club. Just not for the players, but as I said before, for the person he is, for the professional. "He showed me that he is and for his personality. And I think what he's been doing this season is great." Fernandes' FWA award sparked debate among supporters about whether he was a worthier winner than Rice. Asked about their respective merits, Fernandes said: "It's a different position. It's a different style of play. He doesn't need to assist as much. He doesn't need to score as much because he demands different things from him, and the way Arsenal plays is different from the way we play. "So, we can't compare the players, but what we can say is that he's been one of the standout players from the Premier League this season. "I'm very happy that I won it, but if Declan had won this award, it was well deserved too because, as I said, I don't think [it's for] the best player or whatever in the league. "It's just like in a season where you have to choose between players, then obviously numbers carry a lot of weight in the decisions. "I think I had a brilliant season, and I could add that to my game. Obviously, for Declan, it's more difficult for him to get that because he plays a little bit deeper. And still, I think he's an amazing player. And if he had got this award, I would have messaged him and said congratulations, as I did when he got into the final of the Champions League."

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