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  • WeekDay AM: 10 Things you need to know this morning
    A deportation, Sudan split, and how global warming is raising tensions worldwide

     
    today’s crime story

    Wrongly freed sex offender to be deported

    What happened
    A convicted sex offender who was mistakenly released from HMP Chelmsford has been recaptured and is set to be expelled from the country within days, according to Justice Secretary David Lammy. Hadush Kebatu (pictured above), who assaulted a teenage girl and a woman in Epping, was found in Finsbury Park, north London, yesterday morning following a two-day search. Police said he was detained without resistance after a member of the public recognised him at a bus stop. A prison officer has been suspended over the release error, which has prompted renewed scrutiny of the UK’s overstretched penal system.

    Who said what
    Lammy said Kebatu’s victims had been contacted and promised “a full independent inquiry” into the mistake, to be outlined in Parliament today. Keir Starmer said an investigation was already under way, insisting: “We must make sure that this doesn’t happen again.”

    “Urgent answers are needed” on Kebatu’s release, said The Telegraph’s editorial board. “Retaking control of the jails should be a first priority for the Government.” HMP Chelmsford’s decision to let him go has “thrown serious questions into the effectiveness of the UK’s immigration system”, said Sky News. The father of the schoolgirl sexually assaulted by Kebatu told the broadcaster his family feels “massively let down and infuriated” by the migrant’s accidental release.

    What next?
    Kebatu is being held in a London prison pending his deportation. Lammy has ordered greater checks across England and Wales after figures revealed that mistaken prisoner releases had more than doubled over the past year. An independent inquiry will determine how the Kebatu error occurred and who is accountable.

     
     
    today’s international story

    RSF claims Sudan’s last Darfur stronghold

    What happened
    Sudan’s paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) say they have seized control of el-Fasher, the final army-held city in Darfur, in what could mark a major shift in the civil war. The RSF announced on social media that it had taken the city “from the grip of mercenaries and militias allied with the terrorist army”. Videos verified by the BBC show RSF fighters inside the army’s 6th Division headquarters.

    Who said what
    Local pro-army militia the Popular Resistance dismissed the RSF’s claims as “media disinformation”, but the group has been steadily advancing on the city for weeks.

    After 18 months under siege, el-Fasher “has become a famine-stricken, bomb-blasted city on the brink of extinction”, said news site NPR. The loss of the city “would be a huge blow” to the Sudanese army, said the BBC, “as el-Fasher is its last remaining foothold in the Darfur region” and losing control of it “reinforces a de facto split in the nation”.

    What next?
    The loss leaves the Sudanese army largely confined to the country’s north and east as fighting continues to drive famine, disease and mass displacement of the population across Sudan.

     
     
    Today’s art story

    Two held over €88m Louvre jewel heist

    What happened
    French police have arrested two men suspected of helping to steal royal jewels worth €88m (£77 million) from the Louvre Museum a week after one of France’s most audacious robberies in decades. One suspect was detained at Charles de Gaulle Airport as he prepared to board a flight to Algeria, while the other was caught near Paris in Seine-Saint-Denis, reportedly en route to Mali. The pair, both aged in their 30s and known to police for robbery, were identified through forensic evidence left at the scene, including gloves, power tools and a motorbike helmet.

    Who said what
    Paris prosecutor Laure Beccuau confirmed the arrests, but criticised premature media leaks that could “jeopardise the work of more than 100 investigators”.

    The investigation into the “spectacular theft” at the Louvre has “taken a decisive turn”, said Le Monde. With it, there is hope of recovering the crown jewels that were stolen, which are most likely “still intact” and “still in France”, art crime detective Arthur Brand told France 24.

    What next?
    The suspects can be held for up to 96 hours before being charged. Investigators are still searching for two other men and the missing jewels.

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    We have covered the arrests of two suspects over the Louvre jewel theft above, but a lighter side of the story has also emerged. A Paris-based AP photographer captured a stylish passer-by during the museum lockdown, with the image then going viral. The man’s fedora and film-noir poise ignited online claims that he was a suave detective on the case. Photographer Thibault Camus insists that he was just a bystander, but the Paris prosecutor’s office responded to a question from AP with a wink: “We’d rather keep the mystery alive ;).”

     
     
    under the radar

    How global warming is raising tensions worldwide

    Climate change doesn’t just pose an existential threat to our planet; it’s also ratcheting up security risks. With increasing food insecurity, resource scarcity and unstable borders, global warming could lead to a rise in political tensions around the world.

    An unpredictable climate “leads to heightened risks of interpersonal and intergroup violence”, according to the World Economic Forum. A one-degree Celsius uptick in temperature can “increase interpersonal violence by approximately 2%, while intergroup conflict risk” can increase by “2.5% to 5%”.

    This is largely attributed to resource loss. With a two-degree change, “not only will there be continual extreme weather events, but the average climate will have changed so that crops now grown can no longer survive; water shortages will become widespread; and food will be in short supply”, said Kevin Trenberth, a climate scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research, on Newsroom.

    As a result we will see climate refugees deepen “regional conflicts that could explode to encompass many countries”, added Trenberth. Climate change “takes things that we were already worried about, like extremism or terrorism, and exacerbates the scale or nature of those threats,” Scott Moore, a practice professor of political science at the University of Pennsylvania, told Time magazine. “If you have these intensified climate change impacts, they place stress on things like food systems and worsen already existing tensions within countries.”

     
     
    on this day

    27 October 1986

    The British government deregulated financial markets in a “Big Bang” move, enhancing London’s status as a financial capital while increasing income inequality. In July Chancellor Rachel Reeves promised to bring about her own “Big Bang” with the “most wide-ranging package of reforms to financial services regulation in over a decade”.

     
     
    Today’s newspapers

    ‘Emergency injection’

    NHS bosses want an “emergency injection” of £3bn to cover unexpected costs, says The Guardian, and they’ve warned ministers that without it hospitals will “start rationing care”. The Independent shares a “special dispatch” from “the frontline” in Ukraine with “Zelenskyy’s killer drone unit”. Its reporter watches “Team Grey” use typhoon drones take part in a “deadly nighttime attack”. “Billions” have been “wasted” on hotels for migrants, says the Daily Mail, after a “bombshell” report by MPs described the Home Office’s handling of the immigration system as a “manifest failure”.

    See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    tall tale

    Pigs might fly

    A porker called Norbert has won the much-discussed record for the fastest 10 metres on a skateboard by a pig. The skating swine, from Buffalo Grove, Illinois, pulled off the feat in 11.32 seconds. His owner Vincent Baran used some unsalted peanuts to train Norbert to take to the board. Before long he was “pushing himself down the street”, said Baran, and now he “looks like a natural”. This has earned Norbert the nickname “Tony Pork”, in honour of the legendary American skateboarder Tony Hawk.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Arion McNicoll, Jamie Timson, Ross Couzens and Chas Newkey-Burden.

    Image credits, from top: Essex Police handout; Ashraf Shazly / AFP / Getty Images; Kiran Ridley / Getty Images; Anton Petrus / Getty Images.

    Morning Report and Evening Review were named Newsletter of the Year at the Publisher Newsletter Awards 2025
     

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