mardi 17 mars 2026

Exclusive: Audio reveals how Iran’s supreme leader cheated death

Race to stop meningitis spreading nationwide | The best and worst Easter eggs
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Tuesday, 17 March 2026

Issue No. 387

Good morning.

Iran’s new supreme leader escaped death by seconds, The Telegraph can reveal. In an exclusive audio recording, a senior IRGC official describes the strike that killed Mojtaba Khamenei’s father, wife and other family members, narrowly missing the new ayatollah as he stepped into the garden. Akhtar Makoii has the full story and extraordinary clip below.

Elsewhere, antibiotics are being handed out to thousands of students in a race to stop the spread of deadly meningitis across the country. Suzanne Moore, our columnist, knows the horror of the disease: it nearly killed her daughter.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Our Spring Sale is under way. Don’t miss out on 1 year of The Telegraph for just £25, including all the articles in this newsletter. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

She turned her childhood sexual abuse into a bestseller, but was it her story to tell?

How Britain became permanently poorer

Plus, the best and worst Easter eggs

Spring Sale: Enjoy 1 year for £25

Unlock full access to our free-thinking journalism for less than 50p per week.

 

Mojtaba Khamenei escaped death by seconds, leaked audio reveals

Akhtar Makoii

Akhtar Makoii

Foreign Reporter

 

Seconds. That’s all that saved Mojtaba Khamenei from death.

Iran’s new supreme leader had stepped into the garden of his father’s compound when a missile destroyed the building above him.

His wife was killed instantly. His brother-in-law was decapitated. His father, son and sister were killed. Mojtaba sustained a leg injury.

This is what a leaked audio clip from deep inside the regime, which has been obtained by The Telegraph, reveals.

An address to senior clerics and IRGC commanders by Mazaher Hosseini, the head of protocol for Ali Khamenei’s office, provides the first detailed account from inside the supreme leader’s compound as it came under attack.

We cross-referenced his account with his known public statements and spoke to sources inside the Islamic Republic to verify the details.

The audio is extraordinary. The official described missiles so powerful that they severed a man’s head.

The body of Mohammad Shirazi, the chief of Khamenei’s military bureau, was “blown to pieces”, and only “a few kilos of flesh” could be used to identify him.

Hosseini revealed that multiple houses within the compound were struck simultaneously, as Israel and the US tried to wipe out the Khamenei family.

Mojtaba may have survived the strike, but he has not been seen since the start of the war, or in the 18 days since he stepped into his father’s role.

His only message to his people came in the form of a written statement read aloud on state television, which has led to speculation, including from Donald Trump, that he could be more badly injured than Iran will admit.

This exclusive reporting is available to subscribers only.
Continue reading

Don’t miss Akhtar on yesterday’s episode of Iran: The Latest to hear more about this astonishing story.
Listen here

Plus, follow the latest updates on the conflict

 

‘I know the horror of meningitis. My daughter nearly died of it’

Seeing news of the outbreak in Kent brought painful memories flooding back to Suzanne Moore

Suzanne Moore

Columnist

 

I know what meningitis looks like. I know how fast septicaemia, which can be caused by the invasive bacteria, spreads from one red pinprick on the skin to purplish blotches in a matter of minutes. And, thankfully, I know it can be stopped.

When I heard that an outbreak of meningitis in Kent had claimed the lives of two young people, and left another 11 seriously ill, I was immediately taken back to the dash to the hospital many years ago with my youngest daughter. She was just a year old.

I was prepared to have a row about being seen quickly, but there was no need. I showed her to reception. The woman said: “Run.” Alarms went off. Within two minutes, four doctors were working on her. They saved my daughter’s life by putting every organ on life support.

We were not out of the woods yet. She was transferred to St Mary’s Hospital in Paddington, where we were told she could still die, lose limbs or suffer brain damage or hearing loss. At one point over the following days, I went out for coffee. When I returned, a two-year-old boy on the same ward, who also had meningococcal septicaemia, had died.

I walked into the room and his mum and dad hugged me, gave me all his toys and said: “Fight for your little girl.” It was an act of love and grace in the midst of profound grief that I will never forget.
For subscribers only

Read more on the meningitis outbreak:

Race to stop meningitis spreading nationwide

Pictured: Grammar school pupil who died in meningitis outbreak

What is meningitis, is it contagious and what are the symptoms?

 

Opinion

David Frost Headshot

David Frost

Entitled Britain needs to hear the truth, not Starmer’s half-witted bleating

As a country, it’s time to get off the couch and get to the gym, before we have an economic heart attack

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">David Blair</span> Headshot

David Blair

The oil crisis may be about to get a whole lot worse

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Ben Wallace</span> Headshot

Ben Wallace

Trump’s war is having serious consequences – for his allies

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

An investigation claims the artist known as Banksy is Robin Gunningham, seen here in an image first published in 2004

Your Essential Reads

Amy Griffin is accused of stealing traumatic events from a classmate in what is being dubbed America’s Salt Path scandal

She turned her childhood sexual abuse into a bestseller, but was it her story to tell?

When Amy Griffin was 12 years old, a teacher at her school in Texas sexually assaulted her; she blocked out the abuse until adulthood, when she reclaimed her memories with the help of MDMA-therapy. Griffin, now the wife of a billionaire, turned her trauma into a bestselling memoir, The Tell. Now, questions have started to swirl around whether it was actually her story to tell.

Continue reading

 

Xanthe Clay and Andrew Baker tried 28 Easter eggs, ranging from £7 to £160, in their quest to find the best

‘Tastes like a dusty warehouse floor’: The best and worst Easter eggs

When The Telegraph’s taste test experts, Xanthe Clay and Andrew Baker, set out to appraise this year’s clutch of Easter eggs, they hadn’t banked on cracking into a 51cm-tall whopper, nor one that cost over £20 per 100g of chocolate. Are they worth your money? Here’s our verdict.

Continue reading

 

How Britain became permanently poorer

Source: OECD

From the pandemic to the Iran war, successive global shocks have battered the UK. However, the true anchor dragging down the economy is Britain’s domestic failings. With youth unemployment hitting 16.1 per cent, the highest rate in a decade, and borrowing costs surging, Tim Wallace, our Deputy Economics Editor, exposes the toxic policy combination that permanently shattered British living standards.

Continue reading

 

To limit the amount of plastic in his life, David Cox is avoiding Tupperware and investing in a reusable coffee cup

‘I’m trying for a baby, so I tested my semen for microplastics. This is what they found’

Male fertility has a new and unlikely enemy: microplastics. Tiny particles and the various pollutants they can carry have been found to accumulate in the testes, penile tissue and semen during studies. Now planning to start a family, David Cox decided it was time to find out if his fertility was at risk and how he could reduce his exposure.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

The best books of 2026 so far

Struggling to find your next read? Look no further than our round-up of the best books of 2026 so far. From unmissable fiction by Julian Barnes to a magnificent history of the Soviet Union, there’s something for everyone here, as well as an exciting preview of the major titles to come. Whether you’re after non-fiction or fiction, new books or those soon to be released, use our filters to find your next read.

Continue reading

Happy St Patrick’s day! Here are a couple of Guinness-themed articles to help you celebrate:

 

Pride of place

Bradford

Every week, one of our writers argues that their hometown is the best in Britain – but will their case convince you? This week we’re in Bradford, which despite a bleak reputation, has much more to it than meets the eye, according to Anita Singh.

Anita Singh

Anita Singh

Arts and Entertainment Editor

 

Bill Bryson wrote in Notes From A Small Island that “Bradford’s role in life is to make every place else in the world look better in comparison”. Rude. Bradfordians don’t require other people to moan about the city, we’re quite capable of doing that ourselves.

However, let me also sing Bradford’s praises, because someone has to. Yes, the city centre is a shadow of its former glories – not just the Victorian era, when the wool trade made this one of Europe’s richest cities, or my childhood, when it still boasted a fancy department store (which went by the unimprovable name of Brown Muff’s), or my teenage years, spent happily browsing the shelves at Our Price and dancing at the indie nightclub Tumblers.

Anita pictured growing up in Bradford

The spirit of the city remains: scrappy, hardy and full of humour. I go back often, because my parents still live there, and because Bradford was chosen as the 2025 UK City of Culture. Attending the Turner Prize was a reminder of the treasures we have: the exhibition was held in the splendid Cartwright Hall, where the permanent collection boasts works by LS Lowry and William Blake; the ceremony was in my alma mater, Bradford Grammar School, one of the best in the North.

Cartwright Hall, Bradford

When you move away from the centre, Bradford is a beauty. The perfectly preserved industrial village of Saltaire, now a Unesco World Heritage site, is home to a majestic mill housing works by hometown hero David Hockney. We are surrounded by glorious countryside. The wily, windy moors of Wuthering Heights? Part of Bradford.

Alas, Margot Robbie didn’t pop into town after a day’s filming, but Dame Helen Mirren stopped off for a curry and a trip to the fabled Alhambra panto a couple of years back. “The one and only Bradford with its own magic,” she wrote of her visit, and I couldn’t put it any better.

What do you think of Bradford? Let us know here.

 

Your say

Fishy business

In Sunday’s Devil’s Advocate column, Michael Mosbacher, our Deputy Comment Editor, expressed his disdain for fish and chips. Your responses were plentiful. Here are a few of his favourites.

Michael writes...
Britain lands some of the world’s best fish and seafood – yet our national dish of fish and chips is one of the blandest piscine creations. That was my contention on Sunday. Would readers agree or think I had mean-spiritidly insulted a national culinary tradition of which we should be proud?


 

Readers were divided. Fay Goodwin is a doughty partisan for our national dish, saying: “What’s wrong with Cod or Haddock? There is nothing better than a meaty piece of cod or delicious piece of haddock in crispy batter.”


 

Sue assures us if we go far enough to the west, fish and chip nirvana can be found. She said: “Come to Cornwall and get the best fish and chips in the world, from our local award winning Peckish, you get the boat’s name who caught it and the wonderful flavoursome hake is more popular than cod or haddock!” This chippy is surely a true rarity in being able to trace its fish back to the source.


 

Others think I may have a point, though. Fish and chips are not what they once were, says Phillipe Denny: “I left the UK some 24 years ago and have always had a fond memory of fish and chips. I visited the UK last year and whilst staying at the seaside bought some. Oh my! What has happened to this once glorious dish? Soggy chips and fish that simply had no taste at nearly £15. I wish I hadn’t bought them. Now my fond memory has been tarnished forever.”

I rather suspect Mr Denny’s experience is far from unique. Fish and chips usually taste better as a nostalgic memory than at the moment of consumption.


 

However, Robert Harris must have the last word: “Totally agree Michael!! It has never ceased to amaze me that most of our superb seafood is exported. The traditional fish and chips at their worst (tasteless and soggy) represent the last traces of the overcooked offerings that used to represent UK cooking.”

What do you think? Send your responses here, and the best will feature in a future edition of From the Editor PM, to which you can sign up here.

Please confirm in your reply that you are happy to be featured and that we have your permission to use your name.

 

Puzzles

Panagram

Find as many words as you can in today’s Panagram, including the nine-letter solution. Visit Telegraph Puzzles to play a range of head-scratching games, including PlusWord, Sorted, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was BACKDATED. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 

Thank you for reading. Have a fulfilling day and I hope to see you tomorrow.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. I’d love to hear what you think of this newsletter. You can email me your feedback here.

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Telegraph Media Group Holdings Limited or its group companies - 111 Buckingham Palace Road, London SW1W 0DT. Registered in England under No 14551860.

lundi 16 mars 2026

Trump’s greatest miscalculation

Plus: Commuter towns where house prices have fallen the most | How to boost your health this spring
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Monday, 16 March 2026

Issue No. 386

Good morning.

Donald Trump’s war is entering its third week and the global economy is buckling. The true damage of the US president’s offensive will be revealed this morning as the oil markets reopen after weeks of no Western movement through the Strait of Hormuz.

In the US, Republicans are beginning to sweat ahead of the November mid-term elections as they watch fuel prices soar and Trump’s popularity plummet. Memphis Barker, our Senior Foreign Correspondent, has the full analysis on what could be Trump’s biggest miscalculation to date.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Try four months of The Telegraph for £1, including all the articles in this newsletter. If you are already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Priti Patel: ‘America is worried Britain has succumbed to a Left-wing coup’

The commuter towns where house prices have fallen the most

Plus, 15 ways to boost your energy, mood and longevity this spring

Email-exclusive offer

Get four months of free-thinking journalism for just £1. Billed as 25p per month.

 

Trump’s greatest miscalculation

Donald Trump said the US is in talks with Iran but Tehran is not ready to strike a deal to end the war

Memphis Barker

Memphis Barker

Senior Foreign Correspondent

 

As Donald Trump’s war on Iran enters its third week, the US president is still giving the impression that he is enjoying himself.

This weekend, he told US media that, after the first strikes on Kharg Island, he might hit the rocky outcrop through which Tehran exports most of its oil again “just for fun”.

However, the reality of the war is becoming graver by the hour, shown by the reopening of the oil markets this morning.

American consumers, who had little desire to start another open-ended conflict in the Middle East, already face petrol prices 25 per cent higher than before the war began.

Republicans are becoming increasingly concerned by the impact of the war, appearing on Fox News to warn of the risks to the party’s performance in November’s mid-term elections.

Despite Trump’s efforts to force the Iranian regime to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, and thus put one fifth of the global oil supply back on to the market, Tehran’s new leaders show no sign of backing down.

Overnight, Trump revealed the US is in talks with Iran but said Tehran is not ready to strike a deal to end the war.

Source: Bloomberg

Trump’s strikes on Kharg Island have not proven sufficiently intimidating. If he decides to target its economic infrastructure, rather than just military facilities, Tehran has vowed to obliterate the entire island’s ability to export oil.

The allies the US president has spent much of the past year badmouthing and bullying with tariffs have not responded to his demand for warships to help reopen the strait.

Sir Keir Starmer has so far refused to send any ships to the crucial waterway as other allies resist Trump’s request for a “team effort”. However, it has been reported that the US president will announce that a coalition of countries will escort ships through the strait.

Reports emerge by the day suggesting that Trump did not give sufficient weight to the idea that, in a war for its very survival, the regime would cut off the strait. He is said to have told his team that Tehran would capitulate before then, and that the US would be able to handle matters if Iran did close the shipping channel.

The White House press team has dismissed such reports as “garbage” and “fake news”.

This morning, Trump’s options look painful in both directions. Either he must escalate, or he must accept this is a losing battle and walk away, leaving behind a brutal regime in possession, according to his own administration, of enough highly enriched uranium to make a nuclear weapon.

Neither option, to say the least, looks like fun.
Continue reading

Go deeper with our full coverage of the Iran war:

Starmer refuses to send warships to Strait of Hormuz... and sends eight sailors instead

Trump to announce coalition to escort tankers through Strait of Hormuz

Follow the latest on the conflict as flights are suspended at Dubai airport after Iranian drone strike

Live updates: Oil prices jump after Kharg Island attack

 

Oscars 2026

One Battle After Another is a Hollywood liberal fantasy in movie form. Of course it won

Paul Thomas Anderson and the One Battle After Another cast

Paul Thomas Anderson, the director, and the One Battle After Another cast celebrate their Best Picture win

Robbie Collin

Robbie Collin

Chief Film Critic

 

Perhaps it should be no surprise that in the end, One Battle After Another, the dystopian thriller adored by liberals, won out over vampire horror Sinners at the 2026 Oscars, with counts of six and four gongs respectively.

Horror has rarely won big at awards seasons and Sinners’ tally was still impressive, with a particularly pleasing gong going to its lead Michael B Jordan, who was the outlier in the Best Actor race until the last minute, when a rush of love for his film, riding the rush of embarrassment over the Baftas n-word fiasco, secured his victory.

Michael B Jordan won Best Actor

Also to be celebrated was Paul Thomas Anderson, the director of One Battle After Another and one of the great auteurs of our time, finally getting a Best Director prize at 55 years of age. In all, it was a night where most of the right people won, save for the egregious slighting of Marty Supreme, my favourite film of last year, which walked away with not a single statuette.
Read Robbie’s piece and see the full list of winners here

Lisa Armstrong: The Oscars have finally embraced high fashion

Plus, see every look from the Oscars 2026 red carpet

For Lisa Armstrong’s exclusive take on the latest trends, sign up here for our free Fashion and Beauty Newsletter and for weekly cultural analysis, sign up here for our free Culture Newsletter.

 

Opinion

Michael Murphy Headshot

Michael Murphy

The Al Quds day rally showed a movement soaked in conspiratorial lunacy

Demonstrators recited bizarre slogans about the West as counter-protesters danced

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">James Vitali</span> Headshot

James Vitali

Rural Britain is at breaking point, and Labour just doesn’t care

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Stephen Pollard</span> Headshot

Stephen Pollard

Gail’s derangement syndrome is getting out of hand

Continue reading

 

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In other news

Your sport briefing

Your essential reads

Priti Patel: ‘America is worried Britain has succumbed to a Left-wing coup’

The Chagos dispute, Starmer’s inaction over Iran and the Government’s apparent kowtowing to Beijing have put Britain’s special relationship with the US at risk, the shadow foreign secretary tells Annbel Denham, our Senior Political Commentator. After Dame Priti Patel’s recent transatlantic trip to meet figures such as Ted Cruz, she is in no doubt that Washington is watching closely.

Continue reading

 

The Met was duped by a twisted fantasist. A decade later, the real victims are still suffering

Martin Evans, our Crime Editor, was at a press briefing held by the Metropolitan Police in 2014 at which it was announced that one man’s claims of the existence of a VIP paedophile ring, including powerful men at the very top of politics and the military, were “credible and true”. Carl Beech was, in fact, a twisted fantasist, but before the truth came out, the reputations of Lord Brittan, Harvey Proctor, Lord Bramall and others were dragged through the mud. As Beech is released from prison, Evans recounts the disastrous Operation Midland.

For subscribers only

 

The commuter towns where house prices have fallen the most

Commuter towns were once a sure-fire bet when buying property. However, a sustained weakness in the market, worsened by high interest rates, have hammered the value of homes in “premium” hotspots. Telegraph Money reveals, in this smart piece of data journalism which is available to subscribers only, the areas where prices have fallen the most, and whether now is the time for well-placed buyers to take advantage.

Continue reading

 

Mike Green and his artist wife Lisa sold their family home and live on the Rebus Stone in Shoreham-by-Sea

How a houseboat community is attracting families and downsizers to a life afloat

Forget traditional bricks and mortar. Across the River Adur and further inland from the harbour, professionals and downsizers like Mike and Lisa Green are breathing new life into decommissioned Royal Navy warships by turning them into floating homes. However, boat life is not for the faint-hearted: “Every storm hits hard so we must be prepared to dig in, whatever the weather,” says one resident.

Continue reading

 

Isabella Tree believes Labour is completely out of step with the public’s feelings about the British countryside

Isabella Tree: ‘When we started rewilding, people said we’d undone a century of farming’

Claire Allfree visits conservationist Isabella Tree at her home on Knepp Estate, West Sussex, to learn how the decision 27 years ago to restore the 300-year-old farm to its uncultivated state has led to the return of endangered species in abundance. The approach has proved divisive, but Tree gives critics such as Monty Don short shrift, stating that he has “no idea what he’s talking about”.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

15 ways to boost your energy, mood and longevity this spring

For centuries and across cultures, March has been the month to open windows, clear out dust and put our houses back in order. It’s a wise time to reset ourselves in readiness for more cheerful seasons ahead. Here are Telegraph Health’s top springtime picks of the easiest ways you can improve your energy, mood and long-term health at home.

Continue reading

Below one more article that I hope will improve your day:

  • With two windows for a short break in April, next month is perfect for a sunshine getaway. Here’s where to book.
 

Caption competition with...

Matt Cartoon
Matt Pritchett

Matt Pritchett

Cartoonist

 

Hello,

Thank you for all your brilliant submissions this week. The winner for this short but oh so sweet caption is Andy Shuttleworth. I hope you will commemorate this moment in true Lottie of Arabia fashion: with a selfie.

Above is this week’s cartoon, a country home. Send me your captions here and may the best man or woman win.

Matt Cartoon

P.S. For an inside look at what inspires my weekly cartoons, you can sign up for my personal subscriber-exclusive newsletter here.

 

Your say

Spring in your step

Every weekday, Orlando Bird, our loyal reader correspondent, shares an off-piste topic that has brought out the best of your opinions and stories.

Orlando writes...
Well, the weather may have been teasing us over the weekend, but the signs are still unmistakable: spring is advancing. There’s a freshness in the air, the cherry tree in my garden is luminous with blossom, and on Saturday I was upbraided by a friend for looking inappropriately “autumnal” (it takes a lot to part me from my heavy wool jumper).

With the longer and occasionally even warmer days comes the prospect of more ambitious walks, as opposed to the token stroll quickly abandoned for the pub. With that in mind, The Telegraph has compiled a list of the best, from Edinburgh to the Gower Peninsula.


 

Readers have offered their own suggestions. Tim Madden wrote: “The best bluebell walk in Britain is the unlikely environs of Coombe Wood, which is part of the Langdon Hills nature reserve in Essex. Hundreds of acres of public footways across fields and through woods, all the way down to the Plotlands reserve, and within 15 minutes of Laindon station. Essex’s best kept secret.”


 

Pete Barker added: “My vote goes to Skomer Island off the Pembrokeshire coast. In May, the fields are awash with bluebells, and the Atlantic Puffins are arriving for their annual breeding season.”


 

I’ve been in many noted puffin hotspots – Lundy, the Faroe Islands, the Scilly Isles – at this time of year, but am yet to see a single one. Perhaps a trip to Wales is in order.


 

John Langdale had another tip: “For a much shorter but still very beautiful walk, I recommend the ‘daffodil valley’ in the Valley Garden at Virginia Water, which helps me shake off the ‘winter blues’.”


 

Chris Hayes didn’t object to the inclusion of Seven Sisters, but did have a word of warning for walkers: “The last couple of times I’ve visited there’s been zero visibility in some places. I felt sorry for the tourists hanging around Birling Gap, where the view was obscured by low cloud.”

What’s your favourite springtime walk? Send your responses here and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of From the Editor PM, to which you can sign up here.

Please confirm in your reply that you are happy to be featured and that we have your permission to use your name.

 

Puzzles

Panagram

Find as many words as you can in today’s Panagram, including the nine-letter solution. Visit Telegraph Puzzles to play a range of head-scratching games, including PlusWord, Sorted, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was TOWELLING. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 

Please let me know what you think of this newsletter. You can email me your feedback here.

Thank you for reading. Have a fulfilling day and I hope to see you tomorrow.

Chris Evans, Editor

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