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BBC and news agencies launch film calling on Israel to allow foreign journalists into Gaza

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The BBC and three international news agencies have released a short film calling on Israel to allow foreign journalists into Gaza.

The film, launched by the corporation with Agence France-Presse (AFP), the Associated Press (AP) and Reuters, is narrated by veteran BBC journalist David Dimbleby.

He said: “International journalists must now be allowed into Gaza to share the burden with the Palestinian reporters there so we can all bring the facts to the world.”

Foreign journalists have been banned from entering Gaza independently since Israel launched its 2023 offensive following the Hamas 7 October attacks. A small number have been taken into the Strip by Israeli troops under controlled access.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has previously said that to “allow journalists to report safely” in Gaza the military “accompanies them when in the battlefield”.

Last year Israel’s High Court of Justice ruled that restrictions on entry to Gaza were justified on security grounds.

Deborah Turness, CEO of BBC News, said: “It is almost two years since October 7th when the world witnessed Hamas’ atrocities. Since then, a war has been raging in Gaza but international journalists are not allowed in.

“We must now be let into Gaza. To work alongside local journalists, so we can all bring the facts to the world.”

The film premieres in New York on Wednesday night at an event hosted by the Committee to Protect Journalists, to coincide with the United Nations General Assembly. It features footage of historic events and atrocities captured by journalists.

They include scenes of the D-Day landings during World War Two, the Vietnam War, Ethiopia’s 1984 famine, China’s Tiananmen Square protests, the Rwandan genocide, the Syrian refugee crisis and the war in Ukraine.

“In Ukraine, journalists from around the world risk their lives every day to report the suffering of the people,” says Dimbleby in the film.

“But when it comes to Gaza the job of reporting falls solely to Palestinian journalists, who are paying a terrible cost, leaving fewer to bear witness.”

This is not the first time news organisations have called on Israeli authorities to allow journalists into the territory.

In July, BBC News, AFP, AP and Reuters issued a statement expressing “desperate concern” for journalists in Gaza experiencing dire circumstances including hunger and displacement.

In August, 27 countries including the UK backed a statement calling for Israel to allow immediate foreign media access to Gaza and condemned attacks on journalists there.

According to the UN Human Rights Office, at least 248 Palestinian journalists have been killed in Israeli attacks in Gaza.

Israel has repeatedly denied that its forces target journalists.

The Israeli military launched a campaign in Gaza in response to the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.

At least 65,419 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory’s Hamas-run health ministry. The ministry’s figures are quoted by the UN and others as the most reliable source of statistics available on casualties.

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  • 12 August 2025
Updated 24 minutes ago

Britain’s true national sport is complaining about the weather. But does the Sun really shine brighter everywhere else, or is this quite a green and pleasant land after all?

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You can find the latest forecast on the BBC Weather website.

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‘Film me all you want’ – teenage girls with no fear of police torment one High Street

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31 minutes ago

Dan JohnsonBBC News

imageBBC A man with short hair in a blue T-shirt with a palm tree on it looks at the camera without smiling. He is stood inside a phone shop.BBC

The teenager’s sense of invincibility is clear. “The police are never ever going to help you,” she says, “you can film me all you want”.

She’s refusing to leave a shop caught at the centre of a prolonged campaign of antisocial behaviour – windows smashed, items stolen, fires started, staff threatened and attacked.

Muhammad Usman, owner of the mobile phone store in Shirley, near Southampton, is filming her on his own phone – and her juvenile bravado is in full flow. “Touch me and I’ll get you done for assault,” she warns him.

“It’s getting worse, day by day,” Muhammad later tells us from behind his till. His voice cracks, clearly worn down by months of abuse – including, he says, a threat by a teenager to kill him. “I’ve never had this kind of experience in my life before. We’re feeling so helpless.”

What Muhammad and other shopkeepers have experienced over recent months captures the challenge antisocial behaviour poses to police, councils and communities at a time when the government has said tackling it is a key priority.

Three doors down, on the same High Street, Nnenna Okonkwo is also feeling under siege. “It’s ridiculous that it’s just a couple of teenagers causing this mayhem,” she says through tears.

imageA woman wearing a red hair covering and a blue T-shirt stands in a shop in front of food and drink displayed on shelves. She is looking at the camera but not smiling.

But these don’t seem to be hooded gangsters armed with weapons.

When I eventually encounter the gang, I’m faced with a 14-year-old girl in pink leggings and Crocs.

“I’m not claiming to be innocent because I’m not,” she tells us. “I’ve threatened people and I’ve hit people, I’ll admit to that.”

Her mouth is blue with bubblegum and expletives. “The second you get into one bit of trouble with the police, you fall into it too deep and you can’t get out,” she adds.

She says an injury forced her to give up sport and that behaving badly offers an alternative energy release. “I found that I get the same adrenaline boost from being in trouble with the police and being missing and stuff.”

But there’s little remorse. “I regret what I do, but I don’t say sorry,” she says to cheers from the rest of the gang.

She seems bright but deeply troubled. She admits drinking and she’s vaping while we talk. Muhammad had already told us he had experienced racist abuse – something the girl firmly denies being involved in.

One of her friends chimes in. “I know what we’re doing is wrong but we’re teenage kids, we’re going to have a bit of fun,” she tells us. “I’m sorry for most of the people we have damaged, but I have no sympathy… it’s just one way of taking my anger out.”

imageA group of teenagers, blurred, run amok in a shop as they carry out antisocial behaviour, as seen from a CCTV camera at a high angle.

Labour was elected last year promising new “respect orders” to ban similarly persistent offenders from town centres. Due to be introduced under the Crime and Policing Bill currently going through Parliament, breaching the orders would be a criminal offence with potential penalties including a two-year prison sentence, unlimited fines, or unpaid work.

That would partially replace existing civil injunction powers. But the respect orders would not apply to under-18s. An amendment aims to bring that down to 16, but would still not apply to anyone younger.

​​Ministers have also promised more neighbourhood policing. In Shirley, Muhammad’s complaint is not the number of officers, but their apparent lack of power or willingness to tackle the teenagers. “You don’t see any action against them,” he says. “You feel they are above the law.”

‘We need to be more robust’

The local beat officer, PC Tom Byrne, says he recognises the concern and that antisocial behaviour is being dealt with.

“We do need to remember we are dealing with young people,” he told BBC News in July, saying that while “there will be consequences”, these need to be appropriate when it comes to children.

imageA large cracked glass window at a shop is shown from the exterior, with the reflection of the street outside in it.

Such instincts to keep young people away from the criminal justice system are deep-rooted in policing – perhaps in the hope antisocial behaviour fizzles out. However, the problem has got worse over the long, hot summer of 2025.

Behaviour like this isn’t just happening on one High Street, and it’s not just teenagers. A few miles along the south coast in Portsmouth, Neil Gibson knows the cost of repeated antisocial behaviour. His car repair business has been hit repeatedly, he believes by the same group of young men. Security camera footage shows one hooded youth hammering a windscreen with a broom until it smashes.

Neil spends some evenings remotely checking his security cameras from home. “I did phone [the police] and say look, if you send someone now, you’ll catch them – perfect situation. I’m afraid they weren’t interested.”

Disheartened, he says he no longer reports every incident.

In nearby Fratton, a former industrial part of Portsmouth now largely residential, we see what the police are up against.

Patrolling the cemetery one evening, PC Chris Middleton attempts to stop a young man zipping down a footpath on an electric scooter – but the masked figure simply ignores the constable and speeds off.

We ask PC Middleton if he can see why some people believe the police are powerless. “Yeah, I feel it,” he says. “At times I really do feel that we need to be more robust and we need more support from the government to tackle these things.”

A short while later, a convicted shoplifter who is wanted on recall to prison walks past – he is searched and arrested.

image

It’s a similar story for councils, many of whom across the country are using community wardens to keep a grip on antisocial behaviour. Jason, a warden for Portsmouth City Council, tells us “a lot of police stuff is being downgraded to antisocial behaviour”, multiplying his workload.

Cllr Matt Boughton, chair of the Local Government Association’s safer and stronger communities committee, has a similar view – telling BBC News that councils “are increasingly having to step in when police resources are stretched…putting extra pressure on already stretched councils, pressure which is unsustainable”.

How can these issues in the communities we’ve visited – and many others like them across the country – really be solved, then?

‘I regret all of it’

Someone whose role involves working alongside the wider criminal justice system is Donna Jones, Hampshire’s police and crime commissioner (PCC). The former Conservative councillor feels the police need a change of approach to dealing with youths and their parents.

“I think the response from the police, to be absolutely honest with you, has been to take a slightly slower approach but some of these young people are committing some really horrible, nasty offences,” she tells us while visiting shopkeepers in Shirley. She says they are being plagued by “an urban street gang made up of quite a high number of young girls”.

“What we need to be doing is also putting the parents more on the record for some of this stuff too so perhaps some change in legislation that does make parents much more accountable.”

imageA woman with long blonde hair, in a pink blazer, stands in an empty town square, looking at the camera.

Authorities already possess a range of powers, including civil injunctions, community protection notices, dispersal orders and criminal behaviour orders – the original antisocial behaviour order (ASBO) was replaced in 2014. They can also fine parents and even remove social housing.

But not all of these are applicable to children, and using the ones which are, at scale, will end up criminalising more children. Such measures require time and evidence to obtain, straddling police and councils and concerning often vulnerable young people.

There have been arrests. A teenager has now been charged with 22 offences, including assault, theft, arson, criminal damage, breaching a dispersal order and racially aggravated harassment. After missing an earlier hearing the teen appeared at Southampton Youth Court last week and is due to appear again next month.

After months of persistent antisocial behaviour, the situation in Shirley has calmed down in recent weeks.

imageA police officer in uniform walks down a High Street pavement lined with shops, set against a blue sky.

Responding to the BBC, Policing Minister Sarah Jones said “for too long, people have not seen police patrolling their streets”. She said “this government has increased police patrols in high-crime areas across the country through our Safer Streets Summer Initiative”.

Pledging 3,000 more neighbourhood police on the beat by March 2026, she said “we are sending a clear message: crime will be punished”.

And on Thursday the prime minister is due to announce measures to give communities more power to “seize boarded shops” and “block gambling and vape shops on their High Street”.

Hampshire Police told us it had “endeavoured to respond to as many reports as possible” of antisocial behaviour on Shirley High Street but “had to ensure this was balanced against the increase in emergency calls” over the summer months.

Away from the mayhem, we did find some more positive news.

As the summer draws to a close and kids return to school, Jaiden, 15, recalls the hours he spent in a police cell after being arrested. From the sofa of his home in Shirley, he tells us he was causing trouble at shops “nearly every day”.

“It was fun getting people mad but then I realised after a while it wasn’t.”

His mum Kylie says she pleaded with the police to act, having felt she’d lost her son to peer pressure. “Two or three times I asked them ‘just arrest him’. They said we can’t due to his age, we’re going to just have to bring him home. There’s not much we can do.”

He reads the list of rules he and his mum have since signed in a voluntary “acceptable behaviour contract”. They include him not stealing, making threats, or using foul or abusive language and leaving shops when ordered. If he complies, he can avoid court.

Jaiden vows to never go back to that way of life. “I regret all of it,” he says.

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Loss of 520 retail units drives State commercial vacancy rate to record high

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The loss of 520 units in the retail and wholesale sector was the main driver as the rate of empty commercial properties across the State climbed to a record high of 14.6 per cent in the second quarter, new data shows.

A total of 30,800 commercial units were classified as vacant in buildings data group GeoDirectory’s latest commercial vacancy rates report. The analysis, prepared by EY, found the rate increased in 17 out of 26 counties compared with a year earlier.

All sectors witnessed a decline in the number of commercial units, with the exception of industry, which covers activities like manufacturing, water supply, and construction.

The largest proportion (46.6 per cent) of this decline was attributed to the retail and wholesale sector, which suffered a loss of 520 units, followed by the services sector which suffered a decline of 325 units.

Looking within the services sector, the accommodation and food services sector had a total of 22,061 commercial units in June. That represents a decline of 150 commercial units compared with the same period in 2024.

The highest proportion of accommodation and food service units were found in the west of the country, accounting for 23.8 per cent of all commercial units in Kerry, 20.4 per cent in Clare and 19 per cent in Donegal.

The highest commercial vacancy rates continue to be found in the west of the country with Sligo, at 20.8 per cent, recording the highest proportion.

Donegal recorded 20.3 per cent, Galway with 18.7 per cent, Leitrim with 18 per cent and Limerick at 17.9 per cent rounded off the top five counties with the highest rates.

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The starkest increase in rates was again seen in Donegal where there was a 0.9 percentage point increase, bringing about a vacancy rate of 20.3 per cent.

Meath, at 10 per cent, was the county with the lowest rate. It is followed by Wexford with 10.6 per cent, Westmeath with 12.2 per cent, Kerry at 12.2 per cent and Cork followed closely after with 12.5 per cent.

Republic’s commercial vacancy rate hits highest level on recordOpens in new window ]

The rate in Dublin was 13.9 per cent, which was a 0.6 percentage point increase compared to the previous year.

Breaking the capital’s data down by postcode, Dublin 2 was the area with highest rate at 18.4 per cent. It was followed by Dublin 8 at 17.4 per cent, Dublin 3 at 16.7 per cent and Dublin 9 at 16.5 per cent.

Meanwhile, Dublin 15 had the lowest rate at 6.8 per cent, followed by Dublin 16 at 7.7 per cent and Dublin 20 at 8.4 per cent.

Of the 80 main towns and urban areas surveyed nationally, Ballybofey, Co Donegal, registered the highest rate at 33.7 per cent.

Shannon, Co Clare, moved to second place from third previously with a vacancy rate of 30.8 per cent, followed by Boyle, Co Roscommon, at 29.8 per cent.

At the other end of the scale, the towns with the lowest vacancy rates are Carrigaline, Co Cork, at 5.1 per cent, and Greystones, Co Wicklow at 5.5 per cent.

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