
Hildenborough cyclist says she does not feel safe riding in Kent
IAM RoadSmart says data shows the number of reports leading to the serving of a notice of intended prosecution rose from 38% in 2021 to 54% in 2024.However, a third of people say they do not cycle because they think it is too dangerous, the charity says.According to the Department for Transport, 87 pedal cyclists were killed in Great Britain in 2023, while 3,942 were reported to be seriously injured and 10,970 slightly injured. Ms Thomas told BBC Radio Kent: "I always see arguments between cyclists and drivers online, comment sections, radio phone-ins, but other countries aren't like that, they all work together, it feels like a real conflict here."
'Cyclists are human beings'
The Highway Code, which was updated in 2022, recommends that drivers gave cyclists at least 1.5m (5ft) of space - about the width of a compact car - when overtaking at speeds of up to 30mph (48kmh).Ms Thomas says: "There's a big narrative between cyclists and drivers hating each other, which is crazy because the majority of cyclists are drivers as well."So it's not one or the other, cyclists are human beings. "I'm a mother of two young boys and I always just think, I want to be able to go home safely to my sons."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
11 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Man accused of plot to share Shapps details says he wanted to ‘expose' Russian spies
A man accused of attempting to hand over the personal details of the then defence secretary, Grant Shapps, to Russian intelligence officers has told a court he was actually trying to 'expose' the agents. Howard Phillips, 65, was charged with assisting a foreign intelligence service after passing a USB stick containing details relating to Shapps including his home address and the location of his private plane to undercover officers, who prosecutors say he believed to be Russian spies. He previously pleaded not guilty to the charge. Opening his defence at Winchester crown court, Phillips said he was not acting against the UK when he allegedly leaked Shapps's details but carrying out a secret plot to 'trap' Russian spies. Phillips, a retired insolvency worker from Harlow, Essex, told the court he was Jewish and hoped to pass information about the Russian spies to Israel, as he believed this would 'benefit' the state. He also told jurors that he first met Shapps, then his local MP in the constituency of Welwyn Hatfield, at a synagogue. Jeremy Dein, representing Phillips, asked whether he had any 'feelings about Russia' before he made contact with whom he presumed was the Russian intelligence service. In response, he said he did hold opinions – and they were 'very negative'. When asked about his view of the UK, he said: 'I love the UK … I would never do anything deliberate which would have the potential to harm this country – not ever.' Phillips told jurors he first made contact with the agents by sending a letter to the Russian embassy in March 2024. 'I simply wrote a letter portraying that I had information and that if they are interested, they should be in contact with me,' he said. Phillips said he did not have any information to share, and when asked why he made contact, he said: 'Because of events that were happening in the world, I was intending to track and expose the Russian agents.' When asked why he wanted to do this, Phillips said: 'Because they are the enemy and also, there was another side to it that was, at the time, the media portrayal of Israel was very negative. 'I was thinking to myself, if I could expose an agent, I could take that to the Israelis and facilitate benefit to the Israelis by the [UK] media having to portray that Israel had helped the UK – which goes on behind the scenes anyway.' The court heard that Phillips had met Shapps on four occasions in the past, after they met at Potters Bar synagogue in Hertfordshire. He said he had 'socialised' with Shapps in the then MP's house after an 'invitation to dinner and also to a meeting'. When asked if he was 'friends' with the politician, he said: 'I would say more acquaintances than friends.' Phillips said that in early 2024 he was living off his 'dilapidating capital', adding: 'I was pretty low about everything.' He told jurors he had also sent letters to the Iranian and Chinese embassies in March 2024. When asked why, he said: 'The same criteria. To expose and trap a foreign agent who I perceived were the enemies.' The court heard he had sent several letters in the past to various political figures, celebrities and businessmen, among others. In November 2022 he sent a letter to the actor Jennifer Aniston and the agent of Tom Cruise. Phillips also sent letters to Boris Johnson, Liz Truss, Suella Braverman and Steve Barclay, among others. The trial continues.


The Independent
15 minutes ago
- The Independent
Former Conservative MP given community order for harassing ex-wife
A former Conservative MP has been given a community order for harassing her ex-wife. Katie Wallis, 41, of Butetown, Cardiff, was the MP for Bridgend in South Wales between 2019 and 2024. On Monday, Wallis was sentenced at Cardiff Magistrates' Court for harassing her ex-wife Rebecca Wallis, who is now known as Rebecca Lovell. The former MP sent messages demanding to know about Ms Lovell's new partner and calling her a 'c***' and a 'f****** bitch', among other derogatory terms, the court heard. On 25 February, Wallis used an unknown number to demand that £350,000 be put into her bank account within 15 minutes. In a separate message, Wallis said she hoped her ex-wife and father 'never have a happy moment again'. In total, the former MP sent four messages and left one voice note. The couple split in 2020, with the divorce finalised in 2024. In a victim impact statement, which was read to the court, Ms Lovell said: 'The woman I used to be is destroyed. I will never understand what I have done to deserve the hurt I have endured.' Ms Lovell described the last six months as 'utterly devastating' and said she was living her life as an 'overstimulated adult constantly in fight or flight'. She said she feared Wallis turning up at her home, leading her to have CCTV installed. Wallis, who was wearing a black dress, looked down as the statement was read to the court. Narita Bahra KC, appearing for the defence, argued it was 'disappointing' the case had come to court, criticising South Wales Police and the Crown Prosecution Service for not dealing with the issue outside the court. Ms Bahra argued it was 'unequivocal' that Wallis had been suffering from mental health difficulties at the time of the offending, partly brought on by her transitioning. Wallis became the first openly transgender MP in the House of Commons in 2022. Ms Bahra also said Wallis was suffering from PTSD, a depressive disorder and an adjustment disorder. She said Wallis was remorseful and did not seek to excuse her actions. In Wallis's final message to Ms Lovell she asked for help, claimed she was experiencing pain in her temples and said she wanted her father to pay for someone to hold her hand. Wallis was then found by police and sectioned under the Mental Health Act before being arrested and later charged. District Judge Rhys Williams handed Wallis a 12-month community order, to be carried out over 12 days, and a fine worth £1,264. He also imposed a restraining order for 12 months to prevent Wallis from contacting Ms Lovell. Wallis, who pleaded guilty to leaving the messages at a hearing in June, initially denied the charges, but changed her plea when allegations of having driven by her ex-wife's home were removed from the charge.


Auto Blog
16 minutes ago
- Auto Blog
Koenigsegg's Sadair's Spear Sets Production Record at Goodwood
By signing up I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy . You may unsubscribe from email communication at anytime. Autoblog brings you car news; expert reviews and exciting pictures and video. Research and compare vehicles, too. For Road-Going Cars, Koenigsegg Reigns Supreme The recently concluded 2025 Goodwood Festival of Speed was full of high-profile debuts and rare vehicles on display, but the four-day affair went beyond that. The West Sussex event also hosted the Goodwood Hillclimb – a 1.17-mile stretch of road where the boldest machines went toe-to-toe in timed runs, whether highly modified or completely production-spec. Now that the dust has settled on the 32nd edition of this iconic event, one car stands above all in the production class: the Koenigsegg Sadair's Spear. Making its public debut, this track-focused evolution of the Jesko has set a new production car record in the process. Record Run: 47.14 Seconds of V8 Fury The Sadair's Spear stormed up the hill in 47.14 seconds, smashing the previous production car record held by the Czinger 21C by over 1.6 seconds. At the wheel was Koenigsegg development driver Markus Lundh, who wasted no time from the car's launch last month and unleashed everything the Spear had to give. Powering the blistering hillclimb run was the Sadair's Spear's 5.0-liter twin-turbo V8 tuned to produce 1,602 horsepower on E85 fuel, making it the most powerful internal combustion production car Koenigsegg has ever built. Beyond the raw power, the Sadair's Spear comes with a lighter chassis than the Jesko Attack and is dressed up with enhanced aerodynamics and an aggressive active rear wing for added downforce. It also wears a new set of Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 R tires for that necessary grip to keep the hypercar planted. From the carbon-fiber sculpting to the stripped-back cockpit, every detail serves performance first. Autoblog Newsletter Autoblog brings you car news; expert reviews and exciting pictures and video. Research and compare vehicles, too. Sign up or sign in with Google Facebook Microsoft Apple By signing up I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy . You may unsubscribe from email communication at anytime. Not the Fastest Overall, But Fastest Where It Counts Despite its record-setting time, the Sadair's Spear wasn't the outright fastest vehicle of the weekend. That honor goes to the electric Ford SuperTruck, which recorded a staggering 43.23-second hillclimb in the hands of Romain Dumas, making it the fourth-fastest Goodwood run ever. Also ahead on the leaderboard was Subaru's Project Midnight, which crossed the line in 45.46 seconds. However, neither of those was a road-legal production car. In that class, the Sadair's Spear reigned supreme, and by a healthy margin. Its nearest rival, the 'Ring-conquering Mustang GTD, trailed by over four seconds. The Alpine A110 R Ultime followed the pony supercar, trailing by more than a second. About the Author Jacob Oliva View Profile