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May 10
More than 200,000 migrants have crossed Channel in small boats since 2018

Sky News understands the milestone was reached on Friday when the new arrivals brought the total number to 200,013, the latest data published on Saturday shows. The Home Office, which started recording the number of small boat arrivals in 2018, said 70 people crossed the English Channel on Friday, bringing the total number this year to 7,380. In total, about 41,000 people were detected crossing the English Channel in small boats in 2025, a 13% increase on 2024. This was fewer than in 2022, when a record 46,000 migrants arrived via this route. The average number of people per small boat has increased each year, from seven people per boat in 2018 to 62 people per boat in 2025. The crossing is treacherous, with a total of 162 people dying in the Channel between 2018 and 2025. In 2025, there were 24 confirmed deaths related to Channel crossings, down from 73 the year before. Just last week, a 16-year-old girl and a woman died while trying to cross the English Channel from France in a small boat carrying around 82 people. Despite the recent deaths, channel crossings have been tracking lower so far in 2026 compared with last year, when arrivals were 36% lower and 16% lower in 2024, at the same point in the year. Read more from Sky News:Another Briton with suspected case of hantavirusLabour Party on course to suffer one of its worst-ever electoral defeats Successive governments have attempted to work with France to disrupt crossings, and sought to revise the rules for claiming asylum in the UK to deter people from making the dangerous journey. In April, Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood signed a three-year agreement with France to pay £662m to support beach patrols as part of efforts to drive down crossings. She has also sought to overhaul the asylum system to deter crossings and deport people without the right to remain in the UK more easily. Just over a third of the total, 72,094, have arrived since Labour won power in July 2024. The remaining 127,919 arrivals made the journey under Conservative governments that spanned four Tory prime ministers including Theresa May, Boris Johnson, Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak.

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May 8
King sends 'warmest congratulations' to Sir David Attenborough on his 100th birthday

The monarch said in a birthday card message how the pair have known each other for more than 60 years, having first met in 1958, and their "paths have crossed many times since". He was shown writing the card in a clip at the conservationist's birthday concert at the Royal Albert Hall in London. The 77-year-old royal said Sir David has revealed "the beauty and wonders of nature to audiences around the world in new and marvellous ways". He added that the broadcaster has shared the King's "determination to highlight the urgent need to protect and preserve" Earth for future generations. See pictures from Sir David's life The King said he and the Queen were "delighted" to learn he will be celebrating the milestone and on behalf of the whole country wished him a very happy birthday. Animals could then be seen delivering the letter across land, sea and air, before Sir David could be seen holding his royal birthday card aloft in the venue. The card's journey was initially thwarted by a fallen tree - only to be saved by the creatures, including an eagle, a fox, a red squirrel and an otter that travel across the UK to ensure that the wildlife presenter receives his royal dispatch. The Prince of Wales spoke of his "profound" friendship with Sir David, adding that his children have grown up with the broadcaster's "incredible storytelling" and that he has been a "guiding light" in efforts to protect the natural world. He said in his speech: "David, for decades, your voice has been a constant in our lives, guiding us through rainforests and oceans, over mountains and into the very fabric of life." The audience in the Royal Albert Hall all sang happy birthday at the conclusion of the event. The King and Queen also shared a carousel of photographs of Sir David on the official Royal Family Instagram account. The caption read: "Wishing Sir David Attenborough a very happy 100th birthday. Enjoy your special celebration this evening!" Read more from Sky News:'Never-before-seen' files on UFOs released by PentagonNew pictures of record European cocaine haul Sir David Beckham also marked Sir David's big day with a post on his Instagram account captioned: "Happy 100th Birthday to our National Treasure." Meanwhile, fellow environmentalist and Hollywood star Leonardo DiCaprio called Sir David "one of the most enduring champions of our shared planet" in an Instagram post. The Royal Albert Hall celebration was just one of many events to mark the broadcaster's birthday, including a takeover of the Piccadilly Lights in central London, displaying a birthday message for Sir David. The naturalist said he has been "completely overwhelmed" by goodwill messages and thanked well wishers "most sincerely".

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No Writer
May 10
More than 200,000 migrants have crossed Channel in small boats since 2018

Sky News understands the milestone was reached on Friday when the new arrivals brought the total number to 200,013, the latest data published on Saturday shows. The Home Office, which started recording the number of small boat arrivals in 2018, said 70 people crossed the English Channel on Friday, bringing the total number this year to 7,380. In total, about 41,000 people were detected crossing the English Channel in small boats in 2025, a 13% increase on 2024. This was fewer than in 2022, when a record 46,000 migrants arrived via this route. The average number of people per small boat has increased each year, from seven people per boat in 2018 to 62 people per boat in 2025. The crossing is treacherous, with a total of 162 people dying in the Channel between 2018 and 2025. In 2025, there were 24 confirmed deaths related to Channel crossings, down from 73 the year before. Just last week, a 16-year-old girl and a woman died while trying to cross the English Channel from France in a small boat carrying around 82 people. Despite the recent deaths, channel crossings have been tracking lower so far in 2026 compared with last year, when arrivals were 36% lower and 16% lower in 2024, at the same point in the year. Read more from Sky News:Another Briton with suspected case of hantavirusLabour Party on course to suffer one of its worst-ever electoral defeats Successive governments have attempted to work with France to disrupt crossings, and sought to revise the rules for claiming asylum in the UK to deter people from making the dangerous journey. In April, Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood signed a three-year agreement with France to pay £662m to support beach patrols as part of efforts to drive down crossings. She has also sought to overhaul the asylum system to deter crossings and deport people without the right to remain in the UK more easily. Just over a third of the total, 72,094, have arrived since Labour won power in July 2024. The remaining 127,919 arrivals made the journey under Conservative governments that spanned four Tory prime ministers including Theresa May, Boris Johnson, Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak.

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May 10
Daniel Dubois beats Fabio Wardley to become WBO heavyweight champion in 11-round epic

Defending champion Wardley started the fight at pace with two knockdowns in the first three rounds - including his first in the opening 10 seconds of the bout - but Dubois' power was too much for Wardley as his dangerous right hook caused serious damage to his blood-covered opponent. Dubois came close to a stoppage victory in the sixth round, leaving Wardley reeling on the ropes, but he sealed the deal in the 11th when a flurry of late punches forced referee Howard Foster to wave off the bout. Fabio Wardley vs Daniel Dubois - as it happened Get Sky Sports or stream with no contract on NOWDownload the Sky Sports app for expert analysis, best video & more "It was a war," Dubois said afterwards. "We came through the sticky moments. Thank you Fabio for that, thank you. "What a great fight, what a great battle, man." He continued: "We move on now. I want to grow from this fight, improve and go on and reign as champion again." He finished by roaring: "Are you not entertained? What a fight, what a warrior, thank you!" Promoter Frank Warren confirmed afterwards there was a rematch clause in the fight contract. "These two guys showed such heart. Great heart. Chins. It was an amazing fight," Warren said. "Absorbing. It had everything, exciting. The best heavyweight fight I've ever put on." Wardley vs Dubois: How it happened Dubois entered the fight hoping to bounce back from a second stoppage defeat to triple world title holder Oleksandr Usyk, but his night got off to an all-too-familiar start when the boxer was reportedly stuck in traffic on the way to the venue - echoing his notorious late arrival before his loss to the Ukrainian due to a pre-fight party. Wardley, however, couldn't have begun his night any faster as the defending champion knocked Dubois down with a huge right hook less than 10 seconds into the opening round. Dubois, visibly agitated, got back into the fight, rushing towards Wardley in a clinch and subsequently landing two mammoth right hands to swing momentum in his favour. The Londoner continued his recovery with a strong second round, landing a big arching right against Wardley on the ropes, but his opponent struck back with an extraordinary second knockdown in the third, leaving Dubois reeling on one knee and needing eight seconds to get up. Miraculously, a fatigued Dubois battled back, landing a ferocious one-two before a clubbing right hook left Wardley on the back foot in round four. The Ipswich Town superfan has never been knocked down in his 20-fight, but even he looked unlikely to stay on his feet for long as Dubois landed numerous hooks and jabs to the head. Wardley continued to flail, missing with his trademark right hand, and Dubois capitalised with a brilliant left jab to the face. He came close to a stoppage victory in the sixth when he landed a flurry of blows to his opponent, who was somehow still standing despite visible blood and serious damage. But the defending champion demonstrated the resilience which has taken him from 'white collar' boxing to the top of the professional world when he landed a left jab to the face, leaving Dubois looking vulnerable for the first time in multiple rounds. Still in the ascendancy, Dubois continued to land blow after blow but Wardley, with legs unsteady, would not buckle. He had a huge gash on his nose inspected, but the cut was not enough to stop the boxer from entering the ninth round. The Londoner landed yet another brutal sweeping right hook to Wardley, who wobbled once again but stood tall and replied with an uppercut of his own. Another inspection from the referee and his corner preceded the 10th round, yet Wardley would still not give in of his own accord. The resilient boxer could only stand so much, though, and Dubois' flurry of shots at the start of the 11th were deemed the final blows by referee Howard Foster, who called off the fight and ended Wardley's reign as WBO title holder. A titanic contest Sky Sports' John Dennen writes… That was a contest of unadulterated savagery. When Daniel Dubois was dropped to the seat of his shorts after only seconds of the fight and a couple of right hands from Fabio Wardley, it looked like he would unravel. Questions that had haunted him after his losses to Oleksandr Usyk and as far back as his first career defeat to Joe Joyce were suddenly set to be asked all over again. If that visit to the canvas could be attributed to a flash knockdown, in the third round, when he sank to his knee after another heavy blow, old doubts voiced about his temperament then returned with vengeance. But he rose, he regrouped and in doing so, without words, he found his reply. He answered Wardley, he fired back, at first wildly, then with precision and always with brutal power. Having shown his fortitude, he began to dissect Wardley when he uncorked hard, firm, quick jabs, that damaged the champion. Then the power of his heavy right hand took full effect. In those early rounds Wardley had shown his physical qualities, his own explosive power and his instinct for an opening, despite the unorthodox background of his own journey from 'white collar' boxer to professional world champion. But as Dubois began to dismantle him, Wardley had to rely on the grit that has been the hallmark of so many of his top-level performances. He took so many, too many, of Dubois' awesome power punches and yet doggedly refused to go down. Wardley had shown, against Frazer Clarke, against Justis Huni and against Joseph Parker, that he is at his most dangerous when hurt. But that quality, that's won him so many admirers, kept him in this fight too long. Round after round he was getting pummelled and the swollen eye and his cut and damaged nose where visible proof of that. After the break to end the ninth round, his legs were still quivering and unsteady beneath him. Yet he was allowed to go on. He had to endure another round of punishment and a furious salvo from Dubois at the start of the 11th before finally the fight was ended. There can be no doubt about Wardley's toughness and determination. And if Dubois had any doubts about himself going into this one, he found his own answers too.

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No Writer
May 10
At least 15 injured after boat explosion in Florida

A charter boat exploded in Biscayne Bay, near Miami Beach, on Saturday, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission said. More than two dozen rescue units responded to the incident at about 12.50pm local time and "encountered multiple patients requiring medical attention", Miami-Dade Fire Rescue added. The agency said it transported 11 people to local hospitals but did not provide details about their condition. But other US outlets - including Sky News' US partner NBC News - have reported that 15 were injured. Officials ⁠have not revealed the cause for the ​incident, but one person who was on the vessel ⁠told the Miami ⁠Herald they blamed it on a gas ​leak. Local business owner Patrick Lee, who witnessed the explosion, told NBC News he saw "three people flying off of the boat and a puff of smoke". "It was pretty obvious what it was," he said. He added: "I saw 12 stretchers leave with people very badly burnt". The explosion occurred in the ⁠vicinity of Haulover Sandbar, a shallow boating area and popular tourist ‌destination, known for its lively parties. The state's Conservation Commission said an investigation had been launched. The US Coast Guard was among the emergency crews that responded.

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May 8
White House calls Mark Hamill 'sick individual' for Trump grave post

The White House's Rapid Response account on X called Hamill "one sick individual" for the Bluesky post, which featured an AI-generated image showing the US president lying with his eyes closed, surrounded by daisies. The image was captioned "If Only" and had a gravestone that read: "Donald J. Trump 1946-2024." Mr Hamill, famous for starring as Luke Skywalker in the Star Wars films and an outspoken critic of the Republican president, had posted the image on his official account. He wrote: "He should live long enough to witness his inevitable devastating loss in the midterms, be held accountable for his unprecedented corruption, impeached, convicted & humiliated for his countless crimes. "Long enough to realise he'll be disgraced in the history books, forevermore." In response, the White House's Rapid Response account posted: "This kind of rhetoric is exactly what has inspired three assassination attempts in two years against our President." Mr Hamill then deleted the post and apologised, adding in a separate message: "Actually, I was wishing him the opposite of dead, but apologise if you found the image inappropriate." It comes after a man was charged with the attempted assassination of Mr Trump in a shooting at the White House Correspondents' Association dinner in Washington DC last month. In the days after the shooting, the president, Melania Trump and other US officials demanded TV comedian Jimmy Kimmel be fired from his ABC show. He joked that the first lady had a "glow like an expectant widow" in a sketch parodying the dinner before the event took place. Despite being filmed before the shooting, Mrs Trump said Kimmel's "hateful and violent rhetoric" intends to divide the US, and added: "It is time for ABC to take a stand. "How many times will ABC's leadership enable Kimmel's atrocious behaviour at the expense of our community?" Kimmel responded to criticism of his joke by saying it was merely a reference to the couple's age difference, before saying on air: "I agree that hateful and violent rhetoric is something ⁠we should reject. "I do, and I think a great place to start to dial that back would be to have a conversation with your husband about it." Read more from Sky News:Teen spared jail after £100,000 shoplifting spreeSuperdry co-founder jailed for raping womanPurported suicide note left by Epstein released The Federal Communications Commission has since opened an early licence review of Disney's eight ABC television stations. The FCC's chairman Brendan Carr has denied the review was because of pressure from the White House.

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May 10
Keir Starmer must make changes in wake of crushing election defeat, ex-deputy leader warns

It comes after Labour suffered huge losses in the elections across England, Scotland and Wales. The party have so far lost more than 1,300 councillors across England - resulting in the loss of control of 37 local authorities - as well as the Senedd in Wales for the first time since its inception in 1999, and struggled in Scotland. Worrying too was that they faced attacks from either side of the political spectrum - with Reform UK and the Greens big winners. Politics latest: Reform surge as Labour suffer disastrous losses Speaking on the Electoral Dysfunction podcast, Baroness Harman said: "There needs to be a consensus built and led by Keir Starmer about what the government is going to do differently, because more of the same is not acceptable. "The country is entitled to a government that actually delivers on its manifesto, but more than that, they're entitled to a government and a prime minister who gives them a sense of direction of where the country's going and hope for the future. "So it's not just about delivering the nuts and bolts, it's about a narrative, it's about telling the story where people can all feel the country's getting better." Read more from Sky News:Burnham allies demand Starmer set departure dateElections: Analysis in maps and charts There had been much talk in the lead up to the elections about Sir Keir possibly facing a leadership challenge if Labour performed poorly at the elections - with Angela Rayner, Wes Streeting, and Andy Burnham all thought to be frontrunners should one be triggered. However, despite the size of Labour's defeat becoming apparent on Saturday, a leadership challenge has yet to materialise. Sir Keir appeared defiant when he reflected on Labour's "very tough" results, insisting: "I'm not going to walk away from those challenges and plunge the country into chaos." 👉 Click here to listen to Electoral Dysfunction on your podcast app 👈 Baroness Harman said: "[He is] clearly determined to fulfil his responsibility, having been elected less than two years ago, to actually deliver the changes that he promised the country from his position of being prime minister. "And although there has been endless talk about challenges, none of us three on this podcast did think that it would materialise. "But that doesn't mean that there isn't a lot of concern, and it doesn't also mean that it doesn't have a very undermining effect on the government and very distracting. "I think that bearing in mind there clearly isn't going to be a challenge. A lot of people were saying 'well, we're not going to push him out now, but he'll have to be gone after the May election'. "Well, we're after the May election and there's no sign of a challenge." Baroness Harman said Labour MPs had a "choice" and the "choice surely that they should make is to be part of and help the government do better and deliver the change that they promised". She added: "But more than that, really listen and learn the lessons. But I think really that they need to move on from that to really a practical discussion of learning the lessons and a debate about the way forward."

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May 10
PGA Tour: England's Alex Fitzpatrick leads Truist Championship as Rory McIlroy's title hopes fade at Quail Hollow

Fitzpatrick mixed eight birdies with a lone bogey to post a sensational seven-under 64 at the Quail Hollow Club, lifting him to 14 under and a shot clear of Norway's Kristoffer Reitan. Cameron Young fired a round-of-the-day 63 to jump to third and within two of the lead, with Nicolai Hojgaard four back in a share of fourth place alongside halfway leader Sungjae Im. Truist Championship: Latest leaderboard [external]When are the majors? Key dates in 2026Get Sky Sports or stream golf with no contract JJ Spaun and Justin Thomas both sit five behind on nine under, while Tommy Fleetwood - playing alongside Im in the final group and one back at the halfway stage - is also in the group tied-sixth after a one-under 70. McIlroy, a four-time winner of the event, was four strokes off the halfway lead but stumbled down the leaderboard - and out of contention - after a third-round 75. The back-to-back Masters champion birdied the par-four first but dropped shots on both par-threes on the front nine, then lost further ground after four consecutive bogeys on his back nine. McIlroy had to settle for birdie at the par-five 15th after missing his eagle attempt from 10 feet, with the world No 2 closing with three straight pars to head into the final day on one under. Who will win the Truist Championship? Watch the final round live on Sunday from 12.30pm on Sky Sports+ and 5pm on Sky Sports Golf. Not got Sky? Get Sky Sports or stream with no contract.

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