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The National
17 minutes ago
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Ofcom blocks BBC plans for Radio 2 and Radio 5 extensions
In a ruling published on Wednesday, the watchdog said that a BBC Radio 2 extension – which would have broadcast music and archive content from the 50s, 60s and 70s – and plans to extend the broadcasting hours of Radio 5 Sports Extra could not proceed. However, it further allowed plans for new DAB+ stations Radio 1 Dance, Radio 1 Anthems, and Radio 3 Unwind to go ahead. The watchdog is required to consider the effects of 'material' changes to the BBC's TV, radio and online public services on commercial competition. READ MORE: 111 BBC journalists demand change at top as Israel-Palestine reporting 'crippled' Ofcom's judgment said: 'Radio 1 Dance, Radio 1 Anthems, and Radio 3 Unwind can proceed. We found these stations would have a limited impact on fair and effective competition, which would be justified by the public value of the proposals. 'The BBC Radio 2 extension, which would broadcast music and archive content from the 50s, 60s and 70s, cannot go ahead. Although the proposal could provide some public value, this would not be enough to justify the significant impact on fair and effective competition, which includes the potential to reduce investment incentives for commercial radio operators. 'The BBC's plans to extend the broadcasting hours of Radio 5 Sports Extra may not proceed. While it could offer some public value, for example by broadening the amount of sport on linear radio, this wouldn't be sufficient to justify the significant impact it would have on fair and effective competition, in particular on the talkSPORT network.' The National Union of Journalists (NUJ) welcomed the decisions. Paul Siegert, NUJ national broadcasting organiser, said: "We welcome this decision by Ofcom. While a Radio 2 spin-off might have benefited audiences in terms of archive music performances, the BBC already has a network of 39 local radio stations which are perfectly placed to serve an older demographic. 'This would be an ideal time for the corporation to think again about how best to spend money from the licence fee, and perhaps channel the investment that had been earmarked for Radio 2 back into restoring some of the local programming already lost around the country."


Telegraph
17 minutes ago
- Telegraph
The youngest victims of the 12-day war
Rayan Qasemian was too small for the oxygen mask used by doctors in Tehran to try and save his life. His entire body was wrapped in brown bandages and wires attached to his tiny head. Machines beeped and buzzed all around him as oxygen flowed. Just hours earlier, an Israeli missile struck his apartment building, killing his mother and father. His older brother was injured and also died in hospital. In a video broadcast by Iranian media, the boys' grandfather was seen walking through the rubble, speaking to reporters. Holding up a photo of Rayan on his phone, he said: 'We were on the third floor when they hit the sixth. I rushed Rayan Qasemian to the hospital and took this picture.' It would be the last picture of Rayan alive. At just two months old, he became the youngest victim of Iran and Israel's 12-day war. The true scale of Iran's death toll is only just coming to light as the country has blocked access to most of the internet and any information available is heavily censored. But it is believed that Rayan was one of 38 children killed. At his funeral on June 26, a small coffin draped in the Iranian flag was carried by mourners attending the service. A photograph from the cemetery showed that he was buried in the same grave as his mother Zohreh. 'She was a doctor,' Rayan's grandfather said of his mother. 'She spoke to her nurses before the strikes and told them not to wait for her.' The family's story has been widely shared by Iranian media, but foreign journalists are not allowed into the country to tell such painful stories – or verify the numbers. Iran has claimed that 935 people were 'martyred' in Israeli airstrikes that targeted Tehran's nuclear facilities, military sites and air defences. But the missiles also killed civilians: bank clerks, social workers visiting prisoners and a mother who had brought her five-year-old son to work because nursery was closed. Other victims included Taha Behruzi and Alisan Jabbari, both seven, from Tabriz, who were ready for their first day of school with packed bags and notebooks. Instead, they were killed by shrapnel from a downed Israeli drone as they played outside their homes. Alisan's mother said: 'My seven-year-old was playing – unaware of the enemy's dirty world – when the attack began. 'He was hit in the head. I bent down to hug him and at that moment, I was wounded too. I took the child to the courtyard... We both rolled in blood and he died in my arms.' In Isfahan, 13-year-old Fatemeh Sharifi was killed alongside her younger brother Mojtaba and their parents. Ehsan Qasemi, a 16-year-old from Qom's Salarieh district, was killed in his home. Amir Ali Chatr-Anbarin, a student in year eight at Shahid Ali Akbar School in central Lahijan, was visiting relatives in northern Astaneh-ye Ashrafiyeh when he too was killed in a strike. His parents, safe at home in Lahijan, were told by a phone call that their son would never return from his overnight stay. In Tehran, year four student Servin Hamidian, from Shahid Beheshti Elementary School, died with his mother when Israeli bombs fell on the capital. Ali, four, Fatemeh, 10, and Reyhaneh, 14, were killed alongside their mother and grandparents as Israeli forces struck their home to target their father Mostafa Sadati-Armaki, a nuclear scientist. All seven members of the Sadati-Armaki family were killed. A funeral banner in a local mosque showed nine photos of the family, with the additional two being relatives killed when Saddam Hussein attacked Iran in the 1980s. Asghar Jahangir, Iran's judiciary spokesman, placed the death toll at 935 people, including 132 women. The scale of civilian casualties has drawn sharp criticism from Iranian officials, who have argued that Israel's actions constituted war crimes. Esmaeil Baghaei, the foreign ministry spokesman, said the country would transfer evidence to international organisations, demanding accountability for what he called acts of aggression against innocent civilians. While the Islamic Republic has described them as martyrs and state media has broadcast solemn ceremonies honouring the dead, many ordinary Iranians have directed their anger not at foreign enemies, but at the man who has ruled their nation for nearly four decades. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran's supreme leader, faced a crisis of legitimacy even before missiles rained down on Iranian soil. The very people he claimed to be protecting have increasingly blamed him for the devastation that has befallen their homeland. Analysts have said the grievances are multifaceted but centred on what many Iranians see as Khamenei's fundamental miscalculations. Firstly, his commitment to the destruction of Israel is an ideological position that most Iranians do not share, surveys have suggested. Secondly, his pursuit of nuclear weapons capability, which he believed would render his regime untouchable, has instead brought crushing international sanctions. The economic toll has been devastating. Iran, which was once among the world's major oil exporters, has been reduced to a shadow of its former prosperity. The Iranian rial has collapsed, inflation has soared and millions of people have struggled to afford basic necessities. Young people, who make up the majority of Iran's population, have seen their futures constrained by an economy crippled under decades of confrontation with the West. Reza, a resident of central Isfahan, which was hit hard in the strikes as it is home to one of the country's main nuclear sites, said the Israeli attacks have shifted public sentiment. While many blamed the regime for bringing war to their doorsteps, he said there was a new-found unity among Iranians in the face of foreign threats. He told The Telegraph: 'Many people who once supported the regime are now blaming it for dragging us into this war. We used to watch conflicts unfold across the Middle East on TV and thank God we lived in a safe country. 'But believe me, I haven't slept in two weeks. Every time I doze off, a loud bang jolts me awake. We didn't ask for this – this wasn't the people's war. It was the regime that pushed us into it. 'They talk about a ceasefire but that's meaningless. That taboo has been broken. Now Israel can strike whenever it wants.' But Reza said the attacks revealed something that made him proud. 'People who disagreed with the regime and its supporters stood together against the foreign enemy,' he said. 'Defending Iran matters more to me than defending or supporting the Islamic Republic. I won't give up even one wajab [about a foot] of Iranian soil.' Across the country, communities have mobilised to support one another. In towns and villages, residents have opened their homes to those displaced by airstrikes. Shopkeepers have lowered prices on essential goods and neighbours have gone door to door offering help to those in need.


Sky News
44 minutes ago
- Sky News
What next in Gaza, will Russia launch new attack and lessons from Iran: Michael Clarke Q&A
We're live - watch at the top of the page Michael Clarke is here and ready to start answering your questions. Lots of you have been in touch, and we will aim to get through as many of your questions as we can, with presenter Kamali Melbourne putting them to him. You can watch along in the live stream at the top of this page. You can also still submit your questions using the form above - we'll try to put as many as we can to Clarke. You can still submit your questions There's still time to ask Michael Clarke a question before his latest Q&A at 1pm today. Just put it in the box at the top of this page. We'll be back with answers to your questions at 1pm on Wednesday Thanks for all your questions so far - you still have time to get in touch, using the form at the top of the page. We'll be back at 1pm on Wednesday, when presenter Kamali Melbourne will put your questions to our expert Michael Clarke. Do you have a question for our military expert? Our military analyst Michael Clarke will be back later this week to answer your questions. He regularly answers your Ukraine war questions but there have been lots of other stories recently you might want to pick his brains on - from the UK increasing defence spending, to Donald Trump dominating a NATO summit, and the short but concerning Israel-Iran conflict. Use the form at the top of this page to get in touch and submit your question.