Sir Keir's Italian love affair
World leaders gathering at the G7 next week in Canada tend to have a soft spot for Italy's Giorgia Meloni, and it seems that Sir Keir Starmer is no exception. When ministers receive gifts worth more than £140, they can choose to pay the difference or hand them over to the Exchequer.
Government documents reveal that Starmer – a devoted Gunners fan – chose not to stump up the cash to pay for a gifted replica trophy and football shirt he was given by legendary Arsenal manager Arsène Wenger. Yet he paid for a hamper costing more than £140 handed to him by Meloni in April. Truly a new rapporto speciale has begun.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer kindly offered me condolences after our beloved 18-year-old terrier Queenie died this week. 'I was sorry to hear about your dog,' he said, before I interviewed him for GB News. 'Poor old Larry is not looking so good this morning – he is 17,' the PM added, referring to Downing Street's legendary cat. Keep going Larry!
Nigel Farage has popped into the Talbot pub in Blackpool – the UK's first ever pub devoted to his party Reform UK – to have a pint of its new Pilsner lager called Remainer Tears (£2.20 a pint). Pub co-owner Pete Flynn says: 'It refreshes the parts that other beers cannot get to.' The pub has been offering a meal deal of gammon, egg and chips, with a pint of Remainer Tears, for a fiver. A true Brexit dividend!
Claire Hanna, the SDLP MP, billed the taxpayer for a visit to a jail-themed escape room in April last year, at a cost of £240. The activity centre – Belfast's Prison Island – is apparently 'like an escape room only better', offering 31 prison-themed challenges in purpose- built cells, requiring a combination of 'intellectual, technical and physical skills'. It was presumably a team building exercise but is this a solution to the prison overcrowding crisis?
Ex-Spandau Ballet lead singer Tony Hadley has revealed what he would be if he weren't a pop star. 'Orthopaedic surgeon,' he tells Devon Life magazine. 'I'm not squeamish – I even wanted to watch my own knee op. But I wasn't good enough at maths to do it.'
Actor Robert Glenister was inspired to tread the boards when he saw the great Alan Howard's starring role in a 1978 production of Coriolanus by the Royal Shakespeare Company, at London's Aldwych Theatre. 'Later on I was lucky enough to work with him twice,' he says. 'The first time was when I murdered him in an episode of Midsomer Murders. I said: 'You're one of the reasons I wanted to become an actor.' And then whacked him over the head.'
Former dancer Wayne Sleep has shed light on when he taught Princess Diana to dance to Billy Joel's Uptown Girl at the Royal Opera House in London in December 1985. 'When I first met her at the Palace she was in a pink leotard, leg warmers and jazz shoes,' he said at Crazy Coqs cabaret in Piccadilly. 'When we did the dance for Charles, I told her she would have to bow to the Royal Box and she said 'I am not bowing to him. He is my hubby.' I had to bow. As we went off stage she said 'You won't get your OBE that way'.'
Chancellor Rachel Reeves gave a copy of her Commons speech to her opposite number Mel Stride before the Spending Review this week, as is custom. Sadly for Stride, much of it was redacted, presumably for reasons of market sensitivity. Is this how to hide a fiscal black hole?
John Lydon – formerly Johnny Rotten in the punk band the Sex Pistols – says that Donald Trump is 'probably a bad man' but he is what the US needs. He told the The Michael Anthony Show podcast: 'The business of America is broke and you need a businessman in to fix it... If you lived the past four years in America, the Democrat party ran the country into the ground. Trump is a wrecking ball. You might loathe him as a human being but he shakes up the s----dom. Business as usual is not working. I said years ago that Trump is the Sex Pistols of politics.'
Peterborough, published every Friday at 7pm, is edited by Christopher Hope. You can reach him at peterborough@telegraph.co.uk
Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
32 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Ukraine repatriates bodies of 1,200 citizens in latest swap with Russia
Ukraine has recovered the bodies of 1,200 fallen citizens, including military personnel, in the latest round of repatriation efforts coordinated with Russia under agreements reached during talks in Istanbul, Ukrainian officials said on June 14. This latest repatriation follows the return of 2,412 bodies earlier on June 13 and June 11, reflecting an intensification of efforts after the June 2 Istanbul talks between the two sides. The Coordination Headquarters for Prisoners of War said the bodies, which Russian authorities claim belong to Ukrainian nationals, were returned as part of an ongoing phased exchange process. "The remains will now undergo forensic examination and identification procedures conducted by law enforcement investigators in cooperation with expert institutions under the Interior Ministry," the Coordination Headquarters said in a statement. The repatriation operation was coordinated by the Coordination Headquarters for the Treatment of Prisoners of War (POWs) alongside the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU), the Ombudsman's Office, the Armed Forces, the Interior Ministry, and other government and defense bodies. The International Committee of the Red Cross also provided assistance during the process. At the Istanbul meeting on June 2, Ukrainian and Russian delegations agreed on a new prisoner exchange but failed to secure a ceasefire agreement. The previous talks on May 16 led to the largest prisoner swap of the war in late May, when approximately 1,000 captives were exchanged on each side. Since then, exchanges have continued, focusing especially on severely wounded and ill soldiers. Ukraine has long pushed for an "all-for-all"prisoner exchange to bring home all Ukrainian captives, but Moscow has resisted such a comprehensive deal. It is not immediately clear whether Ukraine released the bodies of Russian soldiers in return during this latest exchange. During the previous swap on June 11, Moscow announced it had repatriated the bodies of 27 Russian service members. Read also: Zelensky plans to meet Trump at G7 summit — key takeaways from closed-door briefing We've been working hard to bring you independent, locally-sourced news from Ukraine. Consider supporting the Kyiv Independent.
Yahoo
32 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Zelensky plans to meet Trump at G7 summit — key takeaways from closed-door briefing
President Volodymyr Zelensky's office has confirmed plans for a high-stakes meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump at the upcoming G7 summit on June 17, according to the Kyiv Independent journalist who attended a closed-door briefing with Zelensky on June 13. "Both teams are working to ensure we meet," Zelensky said. The meeting would mark the third in-person encounter between the two leaders during Trump's second term in the White House. Their most recent meeting took place on April 26 at St. Peter's Basilica in the Vatican, where they spoke privately on the sidelines of Pope Francis' funeral. Both sides described the meeting as productive and constructive, though details remained sparse. Earlier in February, Zelensky met Trump and Vice President JD Vance in the White House when the infamous tense Oval Office exchange erupted, with Trump criticizing Kyiv's perceived lack of gratitude for U.S. support Zelensky said his priority is to discuss with Trump sanctions against Russia, peace talks, weapons purchase, and U.S.-Ukraine economic cooperation. "The United States communicates with the EU on sanctions at the level of senators and congressmen. But I want to raise this issue personally with President Trump," Zelensky said. "There are steps forward we can take — but we need the political will of the U.S. president, if he wants." He added that Ukraine has long prepared a "strong" weapons package to purchase from Washington. "Only at the presidential level can we finalize it," Zelensky said ahead of the G7 summit. Zelensky said that heavy fighting is ongoing along Ukraine's northeastern border. Russian forces have concentrated around 53,000 troops in the Sumy sector, pushing into multiple settlements such as Andriivka, Kindrativka, and Oleksiivka. According to the open-source monitoring group DeepState, Russian troops have been advancing along the border in Sumy Oblast, with the current front line lying just about 20 kilometers away from the regional capital of Sumy. According to media reports, Russia exploited a thinning of Ukraine's front-line forces, which were later replaced by newer, under-equipped formations. Zelensky said that Russia only pushed seven kilometers deep into Sumy, adding that the Russian army "has been stopped there." Zelensky added that Ukrainian forces had successfully struck Russian positions in the neighboring Russian Kursk Oblast, near Tyotkino, to stall Russian momentum and split their offensive groups. In Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, Zelensky confirmed that small Russian reconnaissance groups had briefly crossed into Ukrainian territory — likely for propaganda purposes. One six-man unit was reportedly eliminated one kilometer from the administrative border. "For them (Russia), it's an important story, to take a photo, video," Zelensky said. "That's why they are launching small working groups to do just that." Earlier, the Kremlin has claimed the operations in Dnipropetrovsk are part of an effort to create a so-called "buffer zone." Ukrainian officials have rejected these claims as disinformation. Read also: As Russian losses in Ukraine hit 1 million, Putin's war economy heads toward breaking point When speaking about the recent escalation between Israel and Iran in the Middle East, Zelensky said that the subsequent regional tension had driven up oil prices, enhancing Russia's war financing through energy exports. "This factor clearly doesn't help us," he said, adding that Ukraine will urge Washington to implement stricter price caps on Russian oil at the G7. He further revealed that U.S. weapons previously allocated to Ukraine, including 20,000 air-defense interceptors used to counter Iranian-designed Shahed drones, were redirected to support Israel ahead of its recent strikes on Iran. "That was a serious blow... We were counting on these missiles," Zelensky said. Zelensky warned that Ukraine must not become "a bargaining chip" in larger geopolitical negotiations involving the U.S., Russia, and the Middle East. Russia and Iran have deepened their cooperation since 2022, with Iran supplying weapons and technology to boost Moscow's war machine. "I was constantly afraid that we could become a bargaining chip, just one factor in the negotiations between the United States and the Russians. So, along with the situation with Iran, the situation with Ukraine was also a factor. They are really dependent on each other," he said. Join our community Support independent journalism in Ukraine. Join us in this fight. Support us Zelensky voiced concerns about a slowdown in Western diplomatic momentum, particularly around the "coalition of the willing" initiative led by France and the UK. Earlier, media reported that the "coalition of the willing," aimed at offering post-ceasefire security guarantees to Ukraine, has faced delays due to the absence of U.S. commitment. "Europe hasn't yet decided what to do if America steps back," he said. "Their energy depended on U.S. resolve. Without it, things slow down." Still, Zelensky made clear that Ukraine would not accept any ultimatums from Moscow amid the uncertainty of Western support. He described the latest Russian ceasefire proposals as capitulation. "They pretend to be ready for talks, but all they offer is an ultimatum," Zelensky said. "We won't go along with that. Not now, not ever." Zelesnky also expressed optimism that the European Union's 18th sanctions package would pass later this month and said he would personally push for closer U.S.-EU coordination at the G7. Read also: Israel-Iran war could provide economic boost Russia needs to continue fight against Ukraine Zelensky confirmed that prisoner exchanges with Russia are continuing and that another round of direct peace talks with Moscow may take place soon after. "We expect that they (prisoner swaps) can be completed on the 20th or 21st (of June)," he said. Over the week, Ukraine and Russia held a series of exchanges under an agreement reached during peace talks in Istanbul. Most recently, on June 12, Ukraine brought home another group of severely wounded and seriously ill service members. The June 12 operation followed a similar swap two days earlier, both conducted without immediate disclosure of the number of released prisoners. The June exchanges are part of a phased prisoner swap arrangement agreed during the second round of direct talks between Ukrainian and Russian delegations in Istanbul on June 2. While no political breakthroughs emerged from the discussions, both sides agreed to continue exchanging POWs and repatriating the remains of fallen soldiers. We've been working hard to bring you independent, locally-sourced news from Ukraine. Consider supporting the Kyiv Independent.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Israel can see what Europe can't: the Devil
'The cleverest ruse of the Devil,' wrote Baudelaire in 1864, 'is to persuade you he does not exist.' More than 160 years later, great swathes of Leftists, Israelophobes and Western leaders appear to have fallen under this spell when it comes to the regime in Tehran. Sir Keir Starmer delivered the usual message of pacifism on behalf of Britain. It matched that of Ursula von der Leyen and the other centrist fundamentalist European leaders, all of whom are equally addicted to the numbing opium of appeasement. Instead of seeing a resolve for victory, we were subjected to repeated demands for 'de-escalation' and 'diplomacy'. Having so loudly decried the Iranian threat in recent months, even placing it in the highest category of the new foreign influence register, the Prime Minister seemed unable to connect the synapses. By the time Israel was driven to attack, the international community had not imposed snapback sanctions on Iran. Britain even disgraced itself by refusing to help with Israel's defence. The Ayatollah could be launching nuclear bombs at all the major cities of the West in a sulphurous haze, and David Lammy would still extol the virtues of jaw-jaw. In central Tehran, there is a clock counting down to September 9, 2040, the date of Israel's destruction as prophesied by the Ayatollah. The regime has enriched uranium to a level only required for military uses. When Khamenei gives speeches, the crowd chants: 'Death to America! Death to England! Death to the hypocrites and the infidels! Death to Israel!' Until yesterday, Iran's scientists could produce 15 nukes within days. Khamenei's pet theology lusts after the apocalypse. Triggered by the obliteration of Israel, this cataclysm will supposedly herald the arrival of a mythical figure called the 'Mahdi' to lead the forces of Shia Islam to global victory. These are the convictions that drive actual Iranian foreign policy. De-escalation and diplomacy are laughable, yet this is what Israel has suffered since the Obama era. When Jerusalem was forced to act, you'd have thought the West would rally. But no. Israel was the bad guy. We have seen this movie before. When Jerusalem destroyed Saddam Hussein's nuclear programme in 1981, the world was appalled. 'A clear violation of… the norms of international conduct,' the United Nations huffed. Two decades later, the White House quietly acknowledged that the Jews had done everybody a favour. We may see a similar change of heart by 2045, but there will be much danger before then. Starmer and the Europeans don't realise how outdated they sound in this new, perilous world. As Vasily Grossman put it in Life and Fate: 'Only yesterday you were sure of yourself, strong and cheerful, a son of the time. But now another time has come – and you don't even know it.' Their era has passed. This is Israel's century. While dogs of war bark globally and instability grips America, the countries that will thrive will be those with conviction in their values and the courage and resilience to defend them. 'The world will never pity slaughtered Jews,' observed Menachem Begin. 'The world may not necessarily like the fighting Jew, but the world will have to take account of him.' With Russia and China sharpening their knives, we must not only take account of the fighting Jew but also follow his lead. Just look at Ukraine. First, however, we must accept what our grandparents learned the hard way. The Devil exists. It makes no sense to appease him. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.