
EuroMillions record-breaking £210m jackpot won by lucky lottery ticket holder
The latest National Lottery EuroMillions jackpot was set to be the highest in UK history if someone was able to name all five numbers and the two lucky stars. The jackpot reached its cap of 250 million Euros – an estimated £210 million - for this latest draw.
The winning numbers were 24, 31, 34, 41 and 43, while the lucky stars were 06 and 08.
The EuroMillions website listed one jackpot winner around an hour after the numbers were revealed.
Seven people won the second prize, with five matching numbers and one star. The estimated prize for this is £130,554.30
Seven people also matched five numbers, netting £13,561.20.
A total of 78 people matched four numbers and two stars, with a prize of £844.70.
There were 1,622,924 people who matched two numbers, winning a grand total of £2.50.
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The Sun
5 minutes ago
- The Sun
Rat season is about to begin – keep them away from your house & garden with £3.99 item you just need to sprinkle
A PEST control expert has revealed a simple way to keep rodents away from homes and gardens – and all it takes is a quick shake and sprinkle. With rat season about to begin, the advice arrives just in time. 4 4 The easy – and humane – method is unveiled in a social media post just weeks before cool weather arrives in the UK. That is the end of the breeding season for rodents and signals their arrival around homes and in gardens. This is when the little blighters are at their most active as they search for food and shelter ahead of winter If hungry they will take more risks such as raiding bird tables and bins. And they don't move in at night – they often seek food during the day, particularly if other rats are congregating in the same garden or porch. But fear not, help is at hand – literally. Monster '22-INCH' rat 'as big as a cat' is found in UK home - as locals warned more could be on the loose In a video posted to his Facebook account, Ceith Griffith unveiled a simple and effective way to keep rats from the door. "It's that time of year again, guys ... mice and rats are going to try and get inside your home but I'm going to show you how to keep them out by repelling them," he said in the video, which has received more than 2,500 likes. Ceith goes on to explain how attaching a spray nozzle to a vinegar, apple vinegar or pine salt bottle can turn into the ultimate repellent. "Pine salt works the best but I know a lot of people are allergic to it," he said. "Just take the spray and point it at your porch and anywhere you don't want the rats to come near. "You can use this around your garage or even inside your garage ... and it's going to keep all the mice and rats from coming around your home, or garage or RV." 4 Facebook users rushed to the post to comment and thank Ceith for his help. One person said: "Love UR videos. I watch and write them down. Thank u." A second person said: "Definitely going to try this." A third person, however, said they were looking for advice after encountering another type of pest in their home. They posted: "Hello, how do you get a raccoon or possum out of your loft? Please help." Other ways to repel rats Rats are a nuisance and can be difficult to get rid of but by using the pickled onion hack you can deter them, but other methods can help too, one of which is planting certain plants in your garden that rats hate. One home expert shared: "Plants such as lavender, mint, marigolds, daffodils, rosemary, sage and several others can be planted in your garden to disrupt the smell of a rat. 'If a rat can't smell inside of your home then it is far less likely to try.' For best results, plant these plants along fences, around sheds, and near compost bins or generally anywhere that rodents might be tempted to settle. 4


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
At 19 I had to flee my country, afraid for my life – without even saying goodbye to my family
For three days, Mohanad had been lost at sea in an overcrowded wooden boat. Travelling across the Mediterranean from Libya to Europe, he and the other passengers had run out of food and water, were running out of fuel, and had mixed their remaining sugar with sea water to see if they could drink it. 'It was madness,' he says. Weak and exhausted, passengers began drifting in and out of consciousness. Mohanad kept waking up an Ethiopian man – who was nearer the edge of the boat – worried he might fall in. At night, there were large waves, and Mohanad slept for a while himself, but was woken by a loud splash. People began screaming the Ethiopian man's name. He had slipped over the side into the water. They turned the boat around to look for him, but he had drowned. On the morning of the third day, the sea was calmer, but no land was visible. A white object appeared on the horizon. It got bigger and bigger. When the people on the boat with Mohanad saw the letters MSF (Médecins Sans Frontières) on the side, they got up to shout and cheer. 'I cried,' Mohanad says. He urged the others to calm down, and to think of the women and children on board, as their boat almost capsized in the excitement. The larger vessel was a search and rescue ship called Geo Barents, which was operated by MSF. On board, they were given nutritional supplements and water, before being taken to a migrant centre in Bari, on the coast of southern Italy. Mohanad was overwhelmed with relief, and says it was like being born again. 'I just kept remembering, I'm not going to go back to Libya.' His hope on arriving in Europe was simple: that he would start to be 'treated as a human'. Mohanad grew up in Darfur, in Sudan. His family are Zaghawa – one of the non-Arab ethnic groups in Sudan, targeted by both government forces and armed militia. 'In my country, there's a massive amount of discrimination,' he says, describing the persecution his people have faced. The Janjaweed militia, which evolved into the Rapid Support Forces, has carried out mass killings and ethnic cleansing in his region. 'They don't just murder people, it's the way they do it,' Mohanad says – describing rape, mutilation and other UN-documented atrocities. 'Wherever you go, they ask, 'What is your tribe?' That will determine what happens to you, and how you are treated.' Four of his uncles were killed by snipers in an attack on their village when he was a child. 'I witnessed a lot of horrible stuff,' he says. His family escaped on a lorry – he still remembers seeing swollen bodies by the road, and ransacked shops. From then they were often on the move, going from city to camp. He remembers a child who got sick in one of the camps where he lived. The child's mother couldn't afford to pay for basic medicine, so the child died. He also remembers visiting a large hospital, overflowing with patients, but with only one doctor to treat them all. He decided he wanted to become a doctor. Mohanad was clever; his mother had worked as a teacher before the family was displaced, and she encouraged him to attend school wherever they were. He continued to study while he worked to help support his family – selling food, drink, sometimes clothes. When he was 18, he was accepted into a medical school in a town near the camp where they lived. 'I was so excited,' he says. Those first weeks at university were the 'best of my life'. It was a big chance for him – very few people from the camp got to study at this level. But, like others on the course, he was disappointed by the poor teaching, the lack of basic services such as water or electricity, and the focus on subjects such as Arabic studies, at the expense of community medicine, which was covered in only a few days (in other parts of Sudan, the topic was taught over a whole year). 'We said, if they don't teach us properly, we can't help people, it will put lives at risk,' he says. He was threatened by the vice-chancellor, who told him to keep quiet, or he would be 'silenced', but he kept asking for improvements, sending messages to the university, and attending demonstrations with other students. He was arrested twice for taking part in protests in 2018, and, he says, treated more harshly because of his ethnicity. After being detained, 'some people disappear, no one knows what's happened to them, but they are probably dead'. He doesn't want to go into details about the prison he was held in, but says, 'the point is, you will be worried after that'. He knew, once he got out, that he had to leave immediately. He didn't dare to even say goodbye to his family. He was 19. Now the authorities had his details, he was worried he'd be caught at one of the many checkpoints and sent back to prison. 'You have to leave in secret, you have to choose an illegal route, just in order to leave the country. I would never, ever have been allowed to fly, the government would have arrested me.' Mohanad knew a truck driver, who transported sheep, okra, tomatoes and kidney beans. He hid among the vegetables and spent three days travelling from place to place via remote roads, heading north, hiding at every checkpoint, until he made it over the border into Libya. He was unprepared for what he found there. In Libya, Mohanad was kidnapped repeatedly – he lost count of how many times. 'We migrants call it hell on earth,' he says. 'They will capture people and call their family and ask for money.' The first time this happened was not long after he entered the country. He was in the middle of nowhere, in the desert. A man offered to help him, and he said yes, without hesitation – he thought he might die out there. The man took him to a farm, and locked Mohanad up, before transferring him to a place with many others. At this point, he was told he had to pay thousands of dollars to be released. He didn't have that kind of money. So they kept him, and he worked for free, for six months, barely fed, mixing concrete and carrying materials, on a series of building sites. Sometimes other people came on site, like engineers. 'They didn't know we were victims of human traders,' he says. He tried to ask them questions, to find out where they were, but had to do this out of earshot of the gang members. After six months, he escaped by asking one of the visitors for a lift to a nearby town, pretending he wanted to get some cigarettes. He had learned enough of the local dialect to get by, and after this he sometimes managed to evade capture for a few months, but it kept on happening. Sometimes he was caught travelling between cities, sometimes he escaped by bribing the police or jumping out of a car. The kidnappers often began by promising him work. 'Then when you get in their car, they start swearing at you, they show you their pistol, or their machine gun.' He was beaten hard and saw people shot in front of him. 'It's a sequence. If you get lucky you escape, or someone you know pays for you. If not, you may get killed, punished, burned with liquid plastic on your back, or they pull out your nails.' He spent three years in Libya – most of the time trying to get out. Some Sudanese people helped him for a while, offering him food and a place to stay. He applied to the United Nations to be resettled as a refugee. 'If they sent me to another safe African country, I would have gone,' he says. But he waited, and nothing happened, and then he was kidnapped again. After a while, risking the dangerous sea crossing to Europe began to seem like his only hope of escape. 'You have no choice. In Libya you will never be safe, and you can't go home – so going over the sea becomes the least dangerous option.' Mohanad had friends who had died trying to leave Libya – shot while they were trying to escape armed gangs, or drowning at sea. More than once, he was cheated by smugglers – he paid money for a place on a boat, but when he went to meet them, they tipped off another contact, and he was captured again. 'We were just victims of their business … They'd say on the phone, 'I have 70 heads' – they don't even call you people.' It took him a year to save up for that last boat trip. 'The guy, he was OK. He put us on the sea. It was a small boat but there were a lot of people, and it couldn't take us all.' After he arrived in Italy, he was taken to a huge, overcrowded migrant centre near Bari. 'They register you, and they say 'share this room', but there are only eight beds, and 16 or 17 people.' There were people who had been waiting there for months, so a group of them decided to leave – Mohanad took a bus to a border town, where a lot of people were sleeping rough. He spoke to others who hoped things might be better over the border in France. At the border, a French official asked him where he was going, and he said, 'I have no idea.' They gave him a piece of paper saying he had to leave France within three days, and one of the officials suggested going to Paris and on to Calais – he understood that there would be food and help there. At that point, he didn't even know that Calais was on the coast. By then, Mohanad was in a group of seven or eight people, from Sudan, Syria and Chad. They moved through France, sleeping on the streets, travelling on trains without a ticket, until the guard or the police threw them off. Between trains, they wandered around all night, freezing cold, in the rain, searching for shelter. They had a few biscuits from Bari, which soon ran out. In Dijon, the rain fell all night, but they met a kind Nigerian, who gave them food in his own home. 'If I had a chance, I would thank him now, it was an amazing thing that he did for us.' 'We had no idea about claiming to be a refugee or an asylum seeker. No one advised us,' Mohanad says. Other migrants directed them to Calais, where there were charities providing food, but he was sleeping rough – locals threw glass bottles at him and he says he experienced a lot of racism. He discovered that many people there were trying to cross the Channel. 'I just wanted a warm place, a safe place,' he says. French police confiscated any tents they had. Mohanad tried to help some younger Sudanese teenagers, but one of them was killed boarding a truck, and another was badly wounded in an attack. In September 2021, Mohanad crossed to the UK, hidden in a vehicle. He climbed inside, in the early morning – he couldn't see out, but knew when they started driving again that they'd reached England. They stopped in the late afternoon, when the driver began to unload his boxes at a factory near Birmingham. Mohanad jumped out and ran away, because he was worried the driver would be angry. 'The driver was very surprised.' It was a sunny day, and everything looked different – he noticed that people seemed friendlier than in France. He asked a couple of passersby for help, until a woman pushing a buggy showed him the way to the nearest police station. 'I said to them 'Hello, is this a police station?'' he says. 'They said, 'Are you alright? What's the problem, where did you come from?' I said I come from Sudan. I came by lorry.' The absurdity of it makes him smile. 'They were surprised. How did you come from Sudan, and end up in Birmingham?' He says the police were kind and offered him food. At first, he knew nothing about the system here, but after a month, when he was told about the option to claim asylum, Mohanad did so. He spent 15 months in asylum accommodation in Yorkshire, first in hotels and then in a shared house, waiting for a decision. At first, just having somewhere safe to stay and a bed to sleep in was a huge relief, but the uncertainty and not being able to work was unsettling. 'You have nothing to do,' he says. He had flashbacks, and was diagnosed with PTSD. Things improved when he started volunteering with the Refugee Council on a healthcare project, where he was trained to give advice and support to other refugees. This gave him a chance to speak to people, a bit of experience in how the NHS works, and also a sense of purpose. He says he's experienced less racism in the UK than in France or elsewhere. But he never felt fully part of the community until he was granted asylum, and was accepted as a refugee. 'When I got my papers, it was the same feeling as being rescued at sea. I thought, 'Yes, I can live.'' Mohanad found a room, and last year, thanks partly to his experience with the Refugee Council, he enrolled on an access to medicine course. He passed the science elements with a distinction, but struggled to reach the required level in English. For now, he's looking for work as a security guard or in a warehouse, but he still hopes to keep studying medicine, and has also applied to volunteer at a local hospital. Since he left Sudan, the war has spread, and he is worried about his family. 'I know war, it's not something new to me. But to see the whole of Sudan in that pain, you can't describe it. The same militia are killing and murdering and raping people. They took control of my whole region, except for one city. To see the same thing, ethnic killings, genocide …' He says he'd like the world to pay more attention to Sudan. Sudanese refugees who do make it to safety here, against the odds, face hostile policies. 'Now there's a plan to refuse citizenship to refugees,' Mohanad says. 'If I spend my whole life here, I will remain a refugee, a second class or even third class citizen. It feels as if they can just deport me. I started worrying again,' he says. 'They say we have to come here legally – so why don't you provide safe routes?' He says it would be better if there were a realistic way to apply for refugee status before travelling to the UK. There are no schemes to help people from Sudan, he points out, and getting an aeroplane, let alone securing a visa, is impossible for most. He didn't set out to come to the UK, he says – he wanted to stay in Sudan and become a doctor – but that wasn't possible, and he left to save his life. Making this journey is how he survived.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Snag the 'super powerful' $170 Shark MessMaster wet-dry vacuum for just $75 for a limited time: 'One of the best cleaning tools I've ever owned'
Daily Mail journalists select and curate the products that feature on our site. If you make a purchase via links on this page we will earn commission - learn more Life is challenging enough without having to worry about messy surroundings. The crumbs, the dirt, and the grime have a way of accumulating and leaving your space looking worse for wear. This is precisely where the Shark MessMaster Wet/Dry Portable Vacuum shines. Unlike traditional vacuums, this compact powerhouse tackles every type of mess efficiently, from the coffee spills to the tracked-in mud to the debris under the table. Shark MessMaster Wet/Dry Portable Vacuum Make easy work of any mess (wet or dry!) with the brilliant Shark vacuum that truly lives up to its name. It comes with multiple attachments to make cleaning every speck and spill a quick job. The device is even self-cleaning, taking the extra work off your plate and saving you time and patience in the long run. Enter WELCOME2025 at checkout to save an extra $15 on your order. $75 (was $169.99) Shop The device is incredibly versatile, and that's really why so many are drawn to it. The MessMaster takes a no-nonsense approach to cleaning every wet and dry mess, and you never have to worry about switching up tools to handle each one individually. It includes a toolkit that covers virtually every cleaning scenario you might encounter. The bare floor tool handles smooth surfaces efficiently, while the crevice tool reaches into those snug spots where debris has a tendency to accumulate. There's also a handy squeegee attachment, which efficiently tackles wet spills with ease. Meanwhile, the extension wand gives you the reach needed for car interiors, stairs, or high shelves. Everything works together as a complete cleaning system! Just as impressive is the MessMaster 's self-cleaning feature. The device can actually rinse its own dust bin with just a cup of water. This eliminates the need to clean the actual tools, making it a far more streamlined overall experience. Users consistently praise its surprising power, despite its relatively compact size (it comes in at about 10.5 inches long by 16.5 inches wide by 13.5 inches high, with a weight of just under 10 pounds). 'This vacuum is small but mighty,' said a shopper. 'I've used it twice and both times was amazed at how powerful it is, especially sucking up cat hair and dust bunnies from several inches away.' Another enthusiastic owner declared it 'hands down one of the best cleaning tools I've ever owned. I highly recommend it to anyone looking for a portable, powerful, versatile cleaning solution.' Shoppers praise the vacuum for its efficiency, with one dubbing it 'super powerful' for its abiity to eat up absolutely everything in its path 'Super powerful machine,' raved another. 'There are rocks, hay, stickers, and piles of dirt in our floor boards and this machine made our floor mats and carpet look fantastic.' That's exactly the kind of heavy-duty performance that sets the Shark MessMaster Wet/Dry Portable Vacuum apart from lightweight alternatives that may otherwise struggle to truly lift up every speck and soak up every bit of moisture. It's also an amazing deal right now, with savings of 47 percent off and an added $15 off on top of that. Don't forget to enter code WELCOME2025 to snag your deal!