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Prince William and Kate Middleton shared a new portrait of Princess Charlotte on Saturday for her 11th birthday along with a video that showed her playing on a recent beach holiday.
The posts come as the royals remain in the political spotlight, just two days after King Charles concluded his successful four-day U.S. state visit with President Donald Trump.
The Prince and Princess of Wales second-born wears a casual black-and-red long-sleeved top and jeans with her hair down as she stands among daisies in a garden in Cornwall.
The snapshot was taken by Matt Porteous, a go-to photographer for the Wales family, who also shot the photo William and Kate shared for Prince Louis’ eighth birthday just a week ago.
A video montage in a separate post showed the princess playing with her dogs, Otto and Orla, throwing a ball on the beach and writing in seashells on the sand during a recent seaside family vacation in Cornwall.”
Princess Charlotte with her parents, Kate Middleton and Prince William, and her brothers, Princes George and Louis, in 2025.(Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images)
“Thank you for the lovely birthday messages for Princess Charlotte, 11 today!” the royals captioned the video.
Otto, Orla’s son, also got his own royal birthday wish on Friday, with a windswept photo and a caption to read: “Welcome to the family, Otto! 1 today.”
“It’s William’s Duchy, yes. But more than that, they all love Cornwall, and it paints a picture of ‘We holiday where you holiday.’ Everyone enjoys a joyful relatable image,” she explained.
Princess Charlotte walking with her mom, Kate Middleton, on Easter last month.(Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images)
Charles left the U.S. for an official visit to Bermuda, which is part of the British Commonwealth, on Thursday, after a four-day visit in which he had a bilateral meeting with Trump and a state dinner at the White House, addressed Congress, attended a 9/11 wreath-laying ceremony in New York City, and went to Virginia for 250th anniversary celebrations.
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Ukrainian forces also strike two shadow fleet tankers near port of Novorossiysk, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says.
Published On 3 May 20263 May 2026
Ukrainian forces have launched a drone attack on the Russian Baltic Sea port of Primorsk, the governor says, as Kyiv and Moscow accuse each other of killing civilians in overnight air raids.
There was no oil spill caused by Sunday’s attack on Primorsk, a major oil-exporting outlet, but it caused a fire in the town that was extinguished, Leningrad Governor Alexander Drozdenko said. More than 60 drones were downed overnight over the northwestern region, he added.
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Primorsk, one of Russia’s largest export gateways, has the capacity to handle one million barrels per day of oil.
It has been hit multiple times in recent months as Ukraine has stepped up attacks on Russian energy infrastructure and other targets and United States-brokered talks to end the Ukraine war have stalled.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said his country’s forces also struck two shadow fleet tankers in waters at the entrance to the Russian Black Sea port of Novorossiysk.
“These tankers had been actively used to transport oil – not anymore,” Zelenskyy said on Telegram. “Ukraine’s long-range capabilities will continue to be developed comprehensively – at sea, in the air, and on land.”
The two neighbours have been launching hundreds of explosive-packed drones at each other on a near-daily basis throughout the four-year war.
Other Russian regions also reported drone attacks on Saturday and Sunday. Moscow Governor Andrei Vorobyov said on Saturday evening that a 77-year-old man died in a village in a drone strike.
Sergei Sobyanin, the mayor of Moscow, said four drones were downed on their way to the Russian capital.
Vasily Anokhin, the governor of the western region of Smolensk, said three people, including a child, were injured on Sunday in a drone attack on an apartment block.
Attacks in Ukraine
Russian drone strikes on Ukraine killed at least three people across the country, local officials said on Sunday.
Attacks on southern Ukraine’s Odesa region, home to key export terminals, killed two people, including a truck driver at a port, Governor Oleh Kiper said on social media.
“Enemy drones hit three residential buildings, and two more were damaged. … Facilities and equipment for the port infrastructure were also damaged,” he said.
Elsewhere, Russian strikes on the front-line region of Kherson in southern Ukraine also killed one person, officials said.
Russia fired 268 drones and one ballistic missile in the overnight attacks, Ukraine’s air force said.
In eastern Ukraine, Russian troops were inching towards the city of Kostiantynivka in the Donetsk region, Ukraine’s top army official said on Saturday.
A court filing by prosecutors in the case against Cole Allen, accused of attempting to assassinate President Donald Trump, provided a glimpse into the 31-year-old’s mind in the days leading up to last weekend’s attack at the White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner in Washington, D.C.
According to the filing, Allen boarded an Amtrak train on April 21 after purchasing a one-way ticket from Los Angeles to the nation’s capital, stopping in only Chicago to change trains. While he rode, prosecutors say he “kept a running note on his phone of his observations and thoughts during his cross-country train journey.”
But those notes had nothing to do with Allen’s alleged plan to commit the ultimate crime. Rather, his musings along the way, in tandem with what he wrote in a later manifesto, paint a picture of an unfocused person whose thoughts were “scattered,” as one former FBI behavioral analyst said, despite the gravity of the situation.
Law enforcement officers detain Cole Allen following an alleged shooting at the White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner in Washington, D.C., on April 25, 2026.(@realDonaldTrump via Truth Social)
While he traveled through the U.S. southwest on the first leg of his trip, Allen made a note: “[t]he southwest desert in spring Distant wind turbines looming like snowy mountains across the hazy NM desert.”
Of Chicago, where he would switch trains and board a second train to his final destination, Allen wrote that, “Chicago is cool; kinda like an Iowa small town was scaled up to LA size.” Of the sliver of southwestern Pennsylvania through which he would pass, he wrote that the “woods are awesome (look like vast fairy lands filled with tiny trickling creeks in spring apparently.”
The train route taken by Cole Allen from Los Angeles to Washington, D.C., with a stop in Chicago where he switched trains. Allen’s three-day journey began on April 21, 2026, and he took notes along the way.(Fox News Digital)
Allen arrived in Washington, D.C. early in the afternoon on Friday, April 24. He spent about 30 hours in the city before initiating his alleged attack.
Surveillance video from the Washington Hilton hotel, also released by the Department of Justice, showed Allen apparently pacing through hallways, once entering the hotel’s fitness center and taking a look around before hastily exiting.
Minutes before the attack, a pre-scheduled email from Allen was sent to his family and friends, explaining his actions, according to authorities.
He allegedly acknowledged that his mission would likely severely harm him at the least, but never stated that he was willing to die for his cause. His motivations were political, and he painted himself as a savior of the oppressed. He apologized profusely to family, friends and everyone he had come in contact with on his cross-country trek. He noted that there were certain people he hoped wouldn’t be caught in the crossfire, and described himself as “friendly.”
Surveillance video released by the Justice Department appears to show suspect Cole Allen rushing a security checkpoint at the Washington Hilton with a weapon in hand during the White House Correspondents’ Dinner shooting.(Department of Justice)
Jonny Grusing served as a special agent in the FBI’s Denver Field Office for 25 years. For 13 of those years, he was the Behavioral Analysis Unit coordinator for the division.
“His flippancy of what he was talking about in the train or writing about, coincides with what he writes in his manifesto as, ‘hello everybody, so I may have given a lot of people a surprise today,'” said Grusing. “I mean, that’s not someone who’s singularly focused on a grievance.”
“I would say he was conflicted. He’s apologizing to everyone, even people that he rode along the [train] with, which he’s not harming them in any way,” said Grusing. “But he’s apologizing to the people at work, he’s apologizing to his family and he’s apologizing to the people he might have to do violence to. Whether that’s him trying to convince whoever reads this, that he’s a not a bad person or that he’s conflicted … that’s not someone to me who seems single-minded that he’s going to be successful in his mission.”
A photo of Cole Allen in a graduation gown and cap from 2025.(Cole Allen/LinkedIn)
Grusing said Allen seemed “scattered,” and described him as a narcissist.
“The profiling unit taught us about dangerous human characteristics and the two I think that would apply to Mr. Allen are narcissism and psychopathy,” he said. “I think he’s become more narcissistic just from his writings, in saying that, ‘this is on me,’ ‘this is my problem,’ [and] ‘I have to act.'”
“And then even him trying to manage other people’s perception of him, like the people that rode on the train with him and helped him with his luggage, they weren’t affected by this at all,” said Grusing. “But yet he feels like he’s impacting all of society by doing what he’s doing, which again, that’s what makes me think, when he makes these little statements and apologies to everyone, he’s saying, ‘I’m going to become a national name by doing this. Look at me.'”
“So he’s putting himself as this martyr, as this patriot, as the only one who can really fix this thing that’s broken, and that’s very dangerous.”
Fox News Digital reached out to Allen’s attorney.
Peter D’Abrosca is a reporter at Fox News Digital covering crime and campus extremism in higher education.
Follow Peter on X at @pmd_reports. Send story tips to peter.dabrosca@fox.com.
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Two foreign activists from a Gaza-bound flotilla who were brought to Israel for interrogation have appeared before an Israeli court, a rights group defending them has said.
The flotilla of more than 50 vessels had set sail from France, Spain and Italy with the aim of breaking an Israeli blockade of Gaza and bringing supplies to the devastated Palestinian territory.
They were intercepted by Israeli forces in international waters off Greece early on Thursday, with Israel saying it had removed 175 activists – two of whom were taken to Israel for questioning.
Saif Abu Keshek, a Spanish national, and Thiago Ávila, from Brazil, appeared in court in Ashkelon on Sunday.
“The state asked to extend their detention by four days,” Miriam Azem, the international advocacy coordinator at the rights group Adalah, told AFP.
Thiago Ávila, who along with Saif Abu Keshek was taken to Israel for interrogation after their flotilla was intercepted near Greece. Photograph: Amir Cohen/Reuters
On Saturday, Adalah said its lawyers had met the two detained activists at Shikma prison in Ashkelon.
Ávila told the lawyers he had been “subjected to extreme brutality” when the vessels were seized, adding that he was “dragged face-down across the floor and beaten so severely that he passed out twice”.
Since arriving in Israel, he said he had been “kept in isolation and blindfolded”, according to Adalah.
Abu Keshek was “hand-tied and blindfolded … and forced to lie face-down on the floor from the moment of his seizure” until reaching Israel, the group said.
Israel’s foreign ministry said the two activists were affiliated with an organisation that was subject to US Treasury sanctions.
That group – the Popular Conference for Palestinians Abroad (PCPA) – has been accused by Washington of “clandestinely acting on behalf of” the Palestinian militant group Hamas.
Israel’s foreign ministry said Abu Keshek was a leading member of the PCPA, and that Ávila was also linked to the organisation and “suspected of illegal activity”.
Spain has condemned the detention of Abu Keshek and rejected the Israeli accusation against him.
Organisers of the flotilla said the Israeli interception took place more than 620 miles (1,000km) from Gaza, and that their equipment was smashed, leaving them facing a “calculated death trap at sea”.
Dozens of the intercepted activists disembarked on Friday at the Greek island of Crete, according to an AFP journalist.
The Global Sumud Flotilla’s first Mediterranean voyage to Gaza in the summer and autumn of 2025 drew worldwide attention. Israeli forces intercepted the boats off the coasts of Egypt and Gaza in early October 2025. Crew members, including Swedish activist Greta Thunberg, were arrested and expelled by Israeli forces.
But a joint investigation by the Guardian and Democracy for Sale, an investigative website, has established that more than an eighth of the agency’s £400m in research and development funding over the past two years has gone to 14 US tech companies and venture capital groups, in some cases, with no clear return for the UK or Aria.
One of these companies, Rain Neuromorphics, is also backed by the OpenAI chief executive, Sam Altman, and was reported to be near collapse last year, shortly after winning Aria money. It did not respond to a request for comment; two of its founders appear to have left the company. The Guardian understands it is still delivering a project for Aria.
Cecilia Rikap, an economics professor at University College London, said: “Disguised as promoting moonshot projects, the government is using taxpayer money to further expand the power of the US tech ecosystem.
“This is not a surprise coming from a government that has agreed to be not only Trump’s, but also big tech’s, footman.”
Chi Onwurah, the chair of the Commons science and technology committee, said: “These reports on Aria’s spending underline the need for stronger scrutiny of the organisation, something its chair acknowledged when he appeared in front of my committee in 2025.
“The Aria Act requires the organisation to benefit the UK by driving economic growth, supporting scientific innovation or improving quality of life. It’s unclear how funding US-based venture capital and tech firms meets these aims, or aligns with the government’s commitment to regional innovation.”
In response to a query from the Guardian, Aria said its “mission is to unlock breakthroughs that benefit the UK, which means funding the best ideas across universities, startups and private companies. Over 80% of our funding goes to UK-based teams — and where we fund international organisations, it is to transfer scientific capabilities to the UK, with contractual protections ensuring the benefits flow back here.”
Transparency disclosures show it has spent a total of £23m on nine US tech firms. It gave an additional £6m to another US company, Normal Computing, which established itself in the UK only weeks before receiving the grant.
And it has given £29.4m to three US venture capital groups, including Pillar VC, tasked with developing a “diverse range of bespoke activities” to identify and support early-stage UK tech talent.
These companies include the CIC Venture Cafe Global Institute, a US business that hosts events for entrepreneurs and has received £5.4m to run “venture cafes” across the UK; and the US firm Fifty Years, which will run a 14-week course that teaches scientists how to start companies. It will earn £7m to run the course six times for 50 students.
Pillar VC incorporated in the UK one day before Aria gave it a£10.9m contract. One other US group, Renaissance Philanthropy, backed by former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, also incorporated in the UK shortly before receiving £13.3m from Aria.
“Renaissance Philanthropy is excited to be working with several governments on building their R&D ecosystems including the UK, Germany, Japan, and the US,” it said.
“We have been progressing several UK-based, UK-focused programmes in addition to the Activation Partnership with Aria.”
In response to a query from the Guardian, Normal Computing said building a UK presence was a “contractual condition” for the funding, and highlighted its contributions to the economy: “Normal has reinvested approximately 150% of the award value back into the UK through salaries, operations and continued growth,” it said.
Fifty Years said: “We thought UK scientists would benefit from our 5050 programme to help them start companies, but as a small 12-person team, we wouldn’t have been able to bring it to the UK without Aria’s partnership,” adding that it had funded two companies that have come out of its UK programme.
CIC said: “We established a UK entity in order to operate efficiently within the country and pay all applicable local taxes,” adding that the primary beneficiaries of its work are the “UK innovation ecosystem and UK taxpayers”.
Pillar did not respond to a request for comment.
When Aria was set up, it was controversially exempt from freedom of information laws, and, for the first years of its operation, it published no details about its grantees. Set up to be free from “red tape”, it remains unclear if Aria has strict guidelines on how much of its funding can go to non-UK businesses.
A recent report by the environmental group ETC described Aria as “bringing Silicon Valley’s free-market fundamentalism and its ‘move fast and break things’ ethos to disrupt the buttoned-up British science establishment”.
A number of the US companies Aria has funded appear to be early-stage ventures. Several of these, such as MorphoAI and Sangtera, already have powerful US backers including the incubator Y Combinator and theNational Science Foundation, a federal agency.
Were they to achieve a breakthrough, it is unclear how, or if, that advance would directly benefit the UK. ARIA insisted that it has “contractual protections” ensuring benefits flow back to Britain, but it is not clear how this works in practice.
The agency’s “standard approach” is not to take shares or intellectual property rights in the companies that it funds, according to its website. The Guardian understands ARIA requires a royalty fee to be paid to the UK on any IP commercialised outside the UK.
In response to a query from the Guardian, MorphoAI said: “The Aria grant has created incredible opportunity for MorphoAI, allowing us to grow into the UK. Over 50% of our employees are now based in the UK, with the majority of our operations running from our London office, the fastest growing part of the business.”
Sangtera did not respond to a request for comment.
Onwurah said Aria’s choice to fund US tech companies potentially came at the cost of funding untapped potential in the UK. “Aria allocates only a small share of its funding outside London and the south-east – the West Midlands, for example, receives just 0.8%. It’s disappointing to see reports of Aria’s substantial investment overseas whilst such stark regional imbalances persist at home,” she said.
Rikap said US tech companies “are intellectual monopolies that present themselves as contributing to public knowledge, all the while finding ways to monetise it”.
“Data and knowledge are co-produced with universities and local companies but always following the priorities of big tech, so that whatever new research is developed, it remains within the platforms and ecosystems that they control.”
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UK airlines will be able to cancel or consolidate flights this summer under new plans to conserve jet fuel as the war in the Middle East continues to disrupt supplies.
The measures are being taken to avoid major disruption as Britons jet off on their summer holidays. Airlines are looking carefully at their timetables to see which flights can be cancelled in advance and cause the least delays.
New legislation would allow for actions such as consolidating schedules on routes where there are multiple flights to the same place on the same day, which could be put in place to stop last-minute cancellations, the government announced on Sunday.
The changes will allow airlines to give back a limited proportion of their allocated takeoff and landing slots without losing the right to operate them the following season. Usually, cancelling these puts airlines at risk of losing the slots, meaning sometimes they run half-empty planes in order to keep the right to use them.
Airlines will be cancelling flights well in advance if there is a jet fuel shortage, meaning passengers can be moved on to similar services much earlier.
If flights have not sold a significant proportion of tickets, these may also be cancelled in order to prevent wasting fuel from running near-empty planes, say ministers. Under the plans, flights will have to be cancelled at least two weeks in advance.
Rob Bishton, the chief executive of the UK Civil Aviation Authority, said: “Relaxing the rules around slots at airports will allow airlines more flexibility and so we expect them to give passengers as much notice as possible of cancellations during this period.”
The plans were hatched at a meeting last Thursday between the transport secretary, Heidi Alexander, and representatives from Heathrow and Gatwick airports, British Airways, Virgin Atlantic and easyJet.
The strait of Hormuz, a key artery for oil and gas, has been closed in effect since the beginning of March, causing an energy crisis in many countries and leading European states to fear jet fuel shortages. According to some calculations, there are just a few weeks of jet fuel supplies left in Europe. The UK is exposed to this as it imports about 65% of the jet fuel it uses, much of which comes from the Middle East.
Alexander said: “There are no immediate supply issues, but we’re preparing now to give families long-term certainty and avoid unnecessary disruption at the departure gate this summer.
“This legislation will give airlines the tools to adjust flights in good time if they need to, which helps protect passengers and businesses. We will do everything we can to insulate our country from the impact of the situation in the Middle East.”