jeudi 23 avril 2026

Hermer’s military ‘witch hunt’ revealed

Exclusive investigation exposes the Attorney General’s pursuit of British troops
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Thursday, 23 April 2026

Issue No. 424

Good morning.

Sir Keir Starmer’s bad week is about to get worse. The Telegraph Investigations team can reveal that Lord Hermer, the Attorney General, one of the Prime Minister’s closest – and remaining – Cabinet allies, pursued a “witch hunt” against innocent British servicemen. Read the exclusive and an interview with one of the troops below. It has been a complex few days in Westminster, so we’re inviting you to submit your questions to our lobby team here to be answered in a future edition.

Elsewhere, our culture desk takes a look at the real Michael Jackson. In a fact-finding mission that took one of our writers to the singer’s hometown of Gary, Indiana, a picture of a traumatised genius emerged.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Try 4 months of The Telegraph for just £1 with your email-exclusive offer. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

The London borough going Green over Gaza

‘I extracted uranium from top-secret labs. Here’s what Trump should know’

Plus, ‘the new bloke-free MasterChef is a glamorous triumph’

Email exclusive: Try 4 months for £1

Enjoy all of our award-winning coverage for just 25p per month.

 

Hermer pursued ‘witch hunt’ against troops despite warnings

Telegraph Investigations

 

L/Cpl Brian Wood is the bravest of the brave. His actions on the battlefield in Iraq in 2004 earned him a Military Cross, the medal pinned on to his chest by Elizabeth II at a ceremony in Buckingham Palace. It was the proudest moment of his life.

What he didn’t know then was that a dark cloud was gathering, one that would loom large over the heads of L/Cpl Wood and the other courageous soldiers who fought alongside him at the Battle of Danny Boy for years to come.

L/Cpl Wood said he had gone ‘through hell for years’ and Lord Hermer should resign

Because, at about the same time that L/Cpl Wood received his Military Cross, human rights lawyers were starting to get interested in claims – which proved to be wild and false – that British troops had captured Iraqis alive, taken them back to their base and executed them.

What The Telegraph can now disclose is that Lord Hermer, currently Sir Keir Starmer’s Attorney General, was a leading lawyer in what would turn out to be the most egregious “witch hunt” against British troops in modern history. The Telegraph has analysed 25,000 pages of legal documents that show Hermer’s key role working with Iraqi clients, who, despite their claims of innocence, were actually members of the Mahdi Army, an Iran-backed insurgent group trying to kill British troops in southern Iraq.

Lord Hermer, the PM’s closest Cabinet ally, pressed on with claims despite repeated warnings that his eight Iraqi clients were ‘on the make’

What the documents also show is how, time after time, warnings were raised about the credibility of his clients. The reality was that they were barefaced liars. They had claimed troops had executed Iraqi civilians back at a British army base. That just never happened, and yet the case, advised on by Hermer, rumbled on and on and on.

Hermer is a long-time friend of Starmer. Both were barristers in the same human rights chambers, and they worked together on other Iraq war claims that paved the way for the hounding of British troops. Hermer won’t go over The Telegraph’s extraordinary revelations. Not least because Starmer, bloodied and on the ropes, can’t afford to lose his closest ally in the Cabinet – but the Attorney General should resign.

This exclusive investigation is available only to subscribers.
Continue reading

‘The Queen decorated me for bravery. Then Hermer put me through hell’

 

In search of the real Michael Jackson

Chris Harvey

Chris Harvey

 

The new biopic of Michael Jackson will be an enormous hit. Projections suggest that Michael will earn $150m this weekend, despite terrible reviews. Jackson continues to fascinate, not least because his life was touched by so much strangeness and scandal. He made a lot of great music, yet may also have been a relentless sexual predator.

So who was the real Michael? With co-writer Lucy Denyer, I went in search of the story of this unique figure. Lucy visited his impoverished hometown of Gary, Indiana, and talked to the people who knew him as a boy. I read the biographies, listened endlessly to his albums and spoke to his collaborators to try to understand how he created some of the most indelible pop of the past 60 years.

The picture that emerged gave us a new sense of his genius, as well as his trauma and the ways in which it manifested.

 

Opinion

Telegraph View Headshot

Telegraph View

Lord Hermer has questions to answer

Decorated troops spent a decade facing false accusations

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Tim Stanley</span> Headshot

Tim Stanley

Starmer puts Mandelson matter to bed ... but it’s had two Red Bulls and a black coffee

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Kara Kennedy</span> Headshot

Kara Kennedy

Angry young women are driving men into the arms of cougars

Continue reading

 

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In other news

Crowds in New York state gather to watch police catch sedated cub

Your sport briefing

Your Essential Reads

Zoe Garbett has been described in some quarters as the Green Party’s ‘secret weapon’

The London borough going Green over Gaza

The last time that Hackney was run by any party other than Labour was 1970, writes Genevieve Holl-Allen, our Political Correspondent. However, a growing frustration with the party on a local and national level threatens to bring its rule to an end. I visited the borough to find out why it is projected to go Green in May, and why it could be because of a conflict 2,000 miles away.

Continue reading

 

Andrew Weber (right) transported trucks filled with uranium as part of Project Sapphire in Kazakhstan

‘I extracted uranium from top-secret labs. Here’s what Trump should know’

It’s been three decades since Andrew Weber, a former US foreign service officer, helped to ship the equivalent of 20 nuclear bombs of uranium from Kazakhstan to the US in a top-secret mission. Now, it could act as a blueprint for Donald Trump as he seeks to remove enriched uranium from Iran, Weber believes. Natasha Leake spoke to him to understand why.

Continue reading

 

Teresa, left, and as a baby with Patricia Ann, whom she grew up believing to be her mother

‘At 57, I discovered I’d been switched at birth’

When Teresa Carter’s husband, Lee, suggested taking an at-home DNA test to discover more about his family tree, he asked her if she had any questions about her own genealogy. She didn’t, but the website was running a two-for-one offer, so she agreed to join him and send off a sample. What happened next turned her world upside down.

Continue reading

 

No men, no Zionists and no Tories: Britain’s unlawful rental market exposed

An advert on SpareRoom

An advertisement on SpareRoom, a website where users can create and respond to listings looking for housemates and lodgers

Looking for a room to rent in modern Britain? Well, good luck if you are a straight man, or a Tory for that matter. For men, Zionists, and people with Right-wing or gender-critical beliefs have been blocked from housing in defiance of equality laws, The Telegraph has found. Harry Brennan, our Consumer Affairs Editor, reports.

Continue reading

 

Anna Haugh and Grace Dent immediately impress as the new MasterChef hosts, writes Anita Singh

The new bloke-free MasterChef is a glamorous triumph

MasterChef has returned to television for its first regular series minus hosts John Torode and Gregg Wallace, and, according to our TV critic Anita Singh, “it’s surprising how smoothly the show rolls along without them.” As she points out: “Never again will you spy an attractive blonde contestant at the start of an episode and think: ‘Yep, she’s a shoo-in for the next round.’”

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

Six evening style tips to take from 92-year-old Joan Collins

Dame Joan paired a polka-dot print jacket with a simple black jumper at The Cut’s Golden Globes brunch in January

Joan Collins may be 92, but she still knows how to dress for a night out. The Dynasty actress opts for statement jackets, bold brooches and metallic fabrics to bring some glamour to her looks, whether she’s hitting the red carpet or simply out for supper with Liz Hurley. Rebecca Cope details six key fashion lessons that we could all take note of.

Continue reading

Below is another helpful article for you this morning:

 

From the travel desk

This idyllic island is an unmatched paradise. So why does nobody go there?

Kiribati

Tarawa Atoll in the Gilbert Islands, the most populous archipelago in Kiribati

Mark Stratton

 

The archipelago of Kiribati may be only a series of specks in the Pacific, but for those few British tourists who make the 30-hour journey, it’s also a unique opportunity to experience the least-visited place on the planet, a paradise with a fascinating Second World War history.

Despite its great beauty, Kiribati’s geographical isolation keeps visitors away

Scattered over a million square miles of ocean (the capital, Tarawa, sits halfway between Hawaii and Australia), this collection of tiny islands was “discovered” in 1788 by Englishman Thomas Gilbert, master of a convict-carrying ship bound for Australia. It became a Crown Colony in 1892 – remaining so for close to 90 years – and was occupied by the Japanese during the Second World War, as evidenced by a well-preserved array of bunkers, gun emplacements and tank wrecks.

Today, the islands are a serene idyll of white sand, clear water and sunshine, yet are visited by fewer than 3,000 international tourists each year.
Continue reading

 

Your say

Nosy parkers

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...
Telegraph readers have been known to hold the odd opinion on matters of driving etiquette.


 

This was illustrated most recently by a letter from Tim Baker. “My father always backed his car into a parking space,” he recalled. “It was a habit he acquired during the war, when a speedy getaway could be the difference between life and death.

“As visitors to supermarkets are not faced with such a grim prospect, I am curious as to why so many do the same, given that the first thing most of them have to do on their return is transfer the contents of their trolley into the car’s boot.”


 

The question may have been posed in innocence, but the response was firm and unequivocal: a few shopping bags are no excuse for failing to do things properly.

“Some years ago”, wrote Steve Garratt, “I was sent on a ‘defensive driving’ course by my employer. The instructor was a former police driver, and he told me that 40 per cent of front and rear-end scrapes to cars were caused by people reversing out of spaces and hitting cars on either side, hitting obstacles in the bay or pulling into the path of a moving vehicle. Spending an extra minute reversing in significantly reduces the risk.”


 

Tim Burton added: “Several times, while travelling in the United States, we have witnessed fender benders caused by two cars parked in opposite ranks at the supermarket reversing out of their spaces into each other.”

Now, I was aware that parking nose-first tends to be frowned upon: my driving instructor would growl whenever he spotted another motorist doing it. Yet I’m inclined to be lenient, having suffered many a humiliation while attempting to back into a space, working myself into a clammy-palmed fluster in the glare of waiting drivers.


 

Maybe it’s not so clear-cut after all. Philip Brennan explained: “In one organisation I worked for, reverse parking on arrival was a career-shortening move, as the boss assumed that you were already thinking about going home before you had even reached your desk. At another place I worked, reverse parking was the norm, because many employees had to be ready to leave at short notice – sometimes with the blue lights flashing.”

What’s your parking policy? Send your responses here and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of this newsletter.

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

 

morning Quiz


Today is St George’s Day, so our travel team have compiled a list of 10 places that will make you proud to be English (if you are English, of course). One is Highclere Castle, perhaps most famous today for being the set for Downton Abbey, but in which county is it located?

 

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 The 1% Club, Cogs, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was NARRATING. 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.

mercredi 22 avril 2026

Something ‘toxic’ is brewing at No 10

London landlords illegally advertise ‘Muslim only’ flat rentals | Skin-tingling Michael Jackson biopic has a fatal flaw
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Wednesday, 22 April 2026

Issue No. 423

Good morning.

Yesterday was the most dramatic day in a series of catastrophic developments for Sir Keir Starmer, writes Tony Diver, our Political Editor. Sir Olly Robbins, the sacked Foreign Office chief, gave his side of the Mandelson affair and the chasm between Whitehall and No 10 grew wider. The Prime Minister has been accused of creating a “toxic culture” by his own MPs and there is mounting disquiet in the Cabinet, with Yvette Cooper and Ed Miliband publicly distancing themselves from the PM over the row. As one Labour backbencher told us: “Someone needs to put an arm around him and say, ‘it’s over’.”

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Try 4 months of The Telegraph for just £1 with your email-exclusive offer. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Inside Trump’s floundering Iran peace process

Who’s bad? This skin-tingling Michael Jackson biopic has a fatal flaw

Plus, ‘I walked every mile of the British coastline. These were the most memorable moments’

Email exclusive: Try 4 months for £1

Enjoy all of our award-winning coverage for just 25p per month.

 

Labour MPs vent fury at Starmer’s ‘toxic culture’

Tony Diver

Tony Diver

Political Editor

 

A “toxic” culture in Downing Street. Claims of a cover up, bullying and misconduct at the highest level.

One thing is for sure: it wasn’t the day to fulfil Sir Keir Starmer’s pledge to “clean up” politics.

In a bombshell committee appearance Sir Olly Robbins, the sacked Foreign Office chief, claimed that Downing Street had “pressured” him over Lord Mandelson’s security vetting, culminating in a political crisis of epic proportions.

Robbins hit back at briefings against him from No 10, accusing Starmer’s team of destroying trust in the Civil Service and, at worst, endangering national security.

The Queen speaks with Sir Keir Starmer at a British Museum event yesterday

It was the most dramatic day in a series of catastrophic developments for the Prime Minister, who is also under fire from his own backbenchers and facing disquiet in the Cabinet.

However, there is no respite. Today, he faces MPs again at PMQs, followed by more committee hearings about Mandelson and the release of further files regarding his appointment in the coming weeks.

Amid the never-ending drama, it is little wonder that MPs are starting to question how long this can go on.

One Labour backbencher described Starmer as a “dead man walking”, adding: “Someone needs to put an arm around him and say, ‘it’s over’.”
Continue reading

 

London landlords illegally advertise ‘Muslim only’ flat rentals

Camilla Tominey

Camilla Tominey

Associate Editor

 

A Telegraph investigation has uncovered a troubling trend in London’s rental market where landlords are openly advertising properties restricted to specific religious and ethnic groups.

Listings across London and the south east have been found promoting rooms for “Muslims only”, “Hindus only”, or ones targeted at particular nationalities and genders – practices that appear to breach the Equality Act 2010.

A Whatsapp message

Published on platforms such as Facebook, Gumtree and Telegram, the listings reveal a shadow market operating in plain sight, often disappearing under scrutiny but leaving behind a pattern of exclusion. Our reporter contacted landlords posing as a prospective tenant and was explicitly refused on religious grounds, showing that discrimination occurs not just in theory but in practice.

The investigation also raises serious questions about the responsibility of online platforms to police such content and protect users from unlawful practices. While some listings were removed after being flagged, many others continue to circulate.

This exclusive report shines a light on a hidden layer of Britain’s housing crisis, where access to a home appears to be shaped by identity rather than fairness.

This exclusive reporting is available only to subscribers.
Continue reading

 

Opinion

Ed Cumming Headshot

Ed Cumming

Starmer vs Robbins: The immovable process meets the irresistible procedure

This week’s battle between two knights was so Game of Drones: you win, or you fall asleep, or possibly you win when everyone else does

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Ambrose Evans-Pritchard</span> Headshot

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

Markets are in la-la land as oil shortages enter the ‘red zone’

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">George Robertson</span> Headshot

George Robertson

Britain can’t rely on America to stand up for us – we must do that ourselves

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Arlo the sloth is out of it before vets send him into the CT scanner

Your Essential Reads

Inside Trump’s floundering Iran peace process as ceasefire extended

Former officials accused Donald Trump of becoming increasingly detached from the reality of the war

We have been here before, but this time it seems worse. Donald Trump’s talk of a “deal” with Iran grows less believable by the day, writes Arthur MacMillan, our Washington Bureau Chief.

Yesterday, the TACO president blinked again by extending the ceasefire, saying Pakistan had urged him against further bombing of Iranian targets. Iran needed more time to come up with a peace proposal, he posted.

What Trump didn’t say was that Iran had already said its officials wouldn’t attend the planned talks in Islamabad. The stalemate confirms the chasm between the respective US and Iranian positions. The US president wants an unconditional surrender. Iran, its regime still in place, wants sanctions lifted and won’t countenance any of Washington’s demands.

There is no overlap or basis for an agreement. So the war continues.

For all Trump’s bravado, he has backed down again. Now in its eighth week – two more than the 4-6 week limit he initially said military operations would take – the US president is being taught an old lesson: wars in the Middle East are hard to get out of.
Read Connor Stringer’s analysis here

Plus, IDF battles against religious takeover

 

Erol Paphiti was forced to close his bar after 30 years in business when Transport for London failed to renew his lease

The family businesses wiped out by TfL’s ballooning property empire

Most people probably don’t realise that Transport for London (TfL) is one of the capital’s largest landlords with a portfolio worth more than £2bn. In 2022, it spun out its property arm and has since quietly raised rents on some of the city’s best-loved small businesses, forcing many to close completely.
Continue reading

Plus, as TfL strikes continue this morning, here is what Tube drivers don’t want you to know about their pay

 

Michael Jackson is played convincingly as an adult by Jaafar Jackson, his nephew

Who’s bad? This skin-tingling Michael Jackson biopic has a fatal flaw

Antoine Fuqua’s Michael, starring Jaafar Jackson, the singer’s nephew, tells only half a story. The music is, of course, great; the performances, astonishing. However, says Robbie Collin, it is simply not credible for a film about Michael Jackson to avoid addressing, even obliquely, the accusations, controversies and sadness that dogged his later life. Bound to be a massive hit, Michael is a part one that pretends its part two doesn’t exist.

For subscribers only

 

Siobhan Calthrop, who has had to go freelance so she can juggle looking after her mother and disabled brother, is not just worried about her loss of current earnings, but also her pension

How Britain’s care crisis is pushing middle-class families to the brink

Siobhan Calthrop had built her future around her career, but two years ago, as her mother’s health deteriorated, she was left with no choice but to give it up. She is one of millions of unpaid carers in Britain, bearing the brunt of an overstretched social care system, at the expense of her own financial security. It’s a bleak warning for squeezed middle-class households with no option but to provide care at home.

Continue reading

 
The Temptations

Otis Williams (second from right) was one of the ‘classic five’ original members of the Temptations. He still tours with a version of the band today

The Temptations’ Otis Williams: ‘Our Motown contracts were like slavery’

At 84, Otis Williams is the last surviving original member of The Temptations, one of American music’s most influential and successful groups. Ahead of a new British tour, the My Girl singer speaks to Mick Brown about the dark side of the 1960s, battling against segregation and being financially exploited by Motown’s “slavery” contracts.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

‘Most women’s running shoes are actually designed for men. I’ve found five female-specific trainers’

Many women preferred a wider toe box, narrower heel and more cushioning compared with typical trainers

Longer days, sunshine and a rush of running events (not least this Sunday’s London Marathon) have seen more of us lacing up. Research shows that many women’s trainers get the “shrink it and pink it” treatment, rather than being designed with female biomechanics and performance needs in mind. Lucy Gornall trials shoes made for female feet.

Continue reading

Below is another article I hope you’ll find helpful this morning:

 

travel diary

‘I walked every mile of the British coastline. These were 10 of the most memorable moments’

Our writer Quintin Lake walked the entire 6,835-mile coastline over the course of several years

Quintin Lake

Quintin Lake

 

I spent five years walking the entire 6,835-mile coastline of mainland Britain, with the initial aim of creating a photographic record of the country’s edge. The journey became a deeper study of Britain itself.

The British coast is never one thing for long. It shifts between the elemental and the inhabited: cliffs and estuaries, industry and erosion, places shaped by centuries of departure and arrival. Seen at this pace, Britain feels less contained and more provisional, its edges constantly being remade.

A wholesome moment of friends gathering for a birthday celebration

A wholesome moment of friends gathering for a birthday celebration

From hundreds of images, I have chosen 10 that represent perhaps the most memorable moments of this long journey. They include a convivial moment on a Sussex beach, a place of literary pilgrimage, a staggering view of the Scottish Highlands and the most perilous byway in England.
Continue reading

 

Your say

Sweet tooth

While Orlando Bird, our loyal reader correspondent, is away, Kate Moore is on hand to share an off-piste topic that has brought out the best of your opinions and stories.

Kate writes...
It’s been more than twenty years since Britain got an education on the evils of Turkey Twizzlers, courtesy of Jamie Oliver, yet we seem to be in another tangle about school dinners. In a bid to tackle rising rates of obesity, the Government is plotting fresh restrictions on battered and deep-fried food. “Giving 16-year-olds the vote while depriving them of chicken nuggets?” decried one reader. “They will all vote Reform!”

For those with a sugar habit to maintain, the news was even worse. From September 2027, it will be mandatory for school puddings to be made of 50 per cent fruit.


 

Personally, I would have welcomed the end of bone-dry sponge and cornflake tart that was so unyielding it got the better of our spoons. Others had fonder memories. “At Durham Johnston Grammar School in the 1970s, I loved rice pudding and semolina pudding, served with a dollop of red-fruit jam,” said Celia Wright.

“It is a travesty that children are to be denied memories of cornflake tart, sponge pudding with fluorescent pink or mint custard, and jam roly-poly.”


 

Even the unfashionable (and, I’ll be frank, revolting-looking) dishes had their fans. “I got called the Tapioca Kid because I loved eating the stuff, even if most kids knew it as ‘frogspawn’,” recalled Stephen Harris. “I would happily eat four portions.”


 

If you found any of that hard to get down, solace could be found in the jug that came with it. My kitchen-scourer sponge was (just) palatable if drenched in chocolate sauce. Custard is a more delicate matter, subject to the whims of both diner and cook. “My husband’s family like their custard cold, and with a skin on top, but they are Scottish and have to find their pleasures where they can,” said Ruth Sinclair. “I resort to serving hot and cold custard in two jugs.”

Which school puddings have stuck in your mind (if not your craw)? Send your responses here and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of this newsletter.

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

 

The morning quiz

flightpath


Air force cadet pilots have been reprimanded for drawing penis shapes in the sky with their flight patterns. Which European country are they from?

 

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 The 1% Club, Cogs, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was DIRECTIVE. 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.

We have sent you this email because you have either asked us to or because we think it will interest you.

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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.