vendredi 3 avril 2026

M&S attacks lawless Britain

The celebrity encounters Telegraph writers will never forget | ‘Britain is safe from the worst of the Gulf energy shock’
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Friday, 3 April 2026

Issue No. 404

Good morning.

Shopkeepers are bracing for a weekend of chaos after mobs of youths stormed high street businesses in London this week, including Marks & Spencer. Thinus Keeve, its retail director, has hit out at Sir Sadiq Khan for failing to get a grip on crime. Hannah Boland, our Retail Editor, reports.

Elsewhere, our new newsletter, Cables, is your daily briefing of international news, analysis and in-depth reporting, plus a window into what people are talking about in countries around the world. You can sign up here.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Our Spring Sale is ending soon. Don’t miss your chance to enjoy a year of The Telegraph for just £25. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

The celebrity encounters Telegraph writers will never forget

The women defending the manosphere

Plus, ‘the IMF is wrong. Britain is safe from the worst of the Gulf energy shock’

Last chance: A whole year for just £25

Unlock all of our journalism for less than 50p per week, only in our Spring Sale.

 

M&S accuses Sadiq Khan of being soft on crime

Hannah Boland

Hannah Boland

Retail Editor

 

The Mayor of London can hardly be surprised. It was, after all, just a matter of time before a major high street retailer publicly demanded action after this week’s shocking scenes of youths mobbing London stores.

Social media footage showed almost 100 teenagers storming shops on Clapham High Street last weekend. On Tuesday, dozens of balaclava-clad youths were seen lighting fires in south London. Marks & Spencer, which was among those hit in the chaos, has been the first to break cover and call for action.

Writing in The Telegraph, Thinus Keeve, M&S’s retail director, demanded that Sir Sadiq Khan “prioritise effective policing”, warning that attacks were becoming “more brazen, more organised and more aggressive”.

He urged the mayor and Shabana Mahmood, the Home Secretary, to come clean on “the true scale and impact” of shoplifting and called for more transparency around crime statistics. It is now up to Khan to respond. The timing could not be more critical, with fears that high streets are at risk of more lawlessness over the bank holiday weekend.

So far, the mayor has sought to quash concerns. Last week, he said claims of London being unsafe were “lies”. However, with M&S publicly calling for the mayor to do more, and a meeting in the coming days, the ball is now in his court.

M&S says that without change, it remains powerless. “It’s a clear ask: support our police,” Keeve says. “Time is up. We need to deal with this now.” This week’s violence is only proof of that.

This exclusive reporting is only available to subscribers.
Continue reading

 

Opinion

David Frost Headshot

David Frost

This Easter, Britain is quietly awakening to full-fat supernatural Christianity

I have turned to Rome and I am not alone in wanting to be part of an ethereal reality sustained by a creator God

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Judith Woods</span> Headshot

Judith Woods

You’d have to be barking mad to think Muslims have turned the BBC against dogs

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Matthew Lynn</span> Headshot

Matthew Lynn

Reform’s housing chief was right about Grenfell bureaucracy

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Astronauts said they were ‘glued to the window’ and had ‘phenomenal’ views of the dark side of the Earth lit up by the Moon

Essential Reads

The celebrity encounters Telegraph writers will never forget

Imagine nervously attempting to parallel park in Notting Hill, only to see Jeremy Clarkson howling at your efforts. Or perhaps Tom Baker roars at you to take off your “proper strangler” of a scarf. From a failed attempt to pass loo roll to Greta Gerwig, to sharing a lift with Keanu Reeves, some celebrity run-ins are impossible to forget.

Continue reading

 

‘The IMF is wrong. Britain is safe from the worst of the Gulf energy shock’

The IMF warns that Britain is “especially exposed” to the unfolding Gulf energy disaster, citing a heavy reliance on gas-fired power. Yet this assumption relies on outdated thinking, writes Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, our World Economy Editor. Britain’s share of gas in electricity generation has plummeted. It uses just two megajoules of energy per unit of GDP – half the amount required by the US. With “over-cooked” catastrophism dominating the markets, the narrative of a uniquely vulnerable Britain ignores the true victim of this global petroleum squeeze.

Continue reading

 

Angelica Camacho, Elaine Sullivan and Ellie Nuttall have found themselves inside the manosphere

The women defending the manosphere

Behind every internet misogynist making millions from degrading women is, ironically, a woman. Take Elaine Sullivan, who worked six days a week to put her son through private school, only to watch him label women as “stupid”. Or Andrew Tate’s estranged sister, a corporate lawyer whom he dismisses as having a “low IQ”. From heartbroken parents to humiliated lovers, the human collateral of the manosphere is utterly devastating.

For subscribers only

 

Have mental health labels like ADHD and autism gone too far? Some experts think so

A government report has revealed that ADHD diagnoses have more than doubled since 2021, while autism rates among girls rose sevenfold from 2010 to 2022 – figures it said could be the result of “institutional incentives” associated with officially receiving a diagnosis for one of the conditions. Whether a diagnosis of ADHD or autism is helpful or simply reinforces “the increasing tendency to medicalise forms of distress” remains a contentious topic. Charlotte Lytton spoke to experts to find out more.

Continue reading

 

Gill Knox, 68, put up with intermittent water supply for four years in her Kent home

‘I can’t sell my home because of the South East Water chaos’

Gill Knox is desperate to move closer to her children and grandchildren. However, she can’t in good conscience sell her home due to a years-long “nightmare” with her water supply, which is interrupted and even completely shut off at peak times of the day. In protest, she has refused to pay South East Water’s bills for two years.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

I feel stronger at 53 than I did in my 30s thanks to this daily routine

Caroline Idiens enjoys a protein-rich breakfast of Greek yogurt, berries and seeds

For me, midlife isn’t about restriction or cutting things out, writes Caroline Idiens, our fitness columnist. It’s about fuelling my body to feel strong, energised and resilient. These are the daily eating habits and the supplements I swear by to feel better than ever at 53.

Continue reading

Here is another helpful article for you this morning:

  • The sleepy British countryside is beginning to wake up after winter. So, where to go now that spring is here? Our expert has selected 10 of the country’s prettiest villages for your next weekend break.
 

Reviews of the week

Trigger warning: This Romeo and Juliet is actually brilliant

Sadie Sink

Stranger Things star Sadie Sink plays Juliet in Robert Icke’s production

Theatre

Romeo and Juliet

★★★★☆

Robert Icke’s revival of Shakespeare’s most poetic, feverish tragedy has attracted sniggers for alerting audiences to its themes of grief, revenge and violence. The only thing this production needs to warn you about, however, is Sadie Sink’s performance, which almost made me cry. With Noah Jupe (of Hamnet fame) and Sink, of Stranger Things, in the title roles, Icke’s production undeniably plays to its youthful star-dusted cast. Sink is so commanding she makes this Juliet’s story much more than it is Romeo’s.
Read Claire Allfree’s full review here

Books

Ben Lerner: Transcription

★★★★★

They still make “novels of ideas” and this one is a masterpiece. Beneath its superficially simple plot, about a man visiting his elderly mentor to record an interview, Ben Lerner’s fifth book delves deep into the themes of old age, parent-children bonds and the double-edged sword of modern technology. Lerner is already, at the age of just 46, established as one of America’s leading writers. Read Transcription, and you’ll understand why.
Read Cal Revely-Calder’s full review here

Film

The Drama

★★☆☆☆

The Drama promises bombshell revelations and the wedding from hell, but serves up a cramped, feel-bad, unromantic comedy with characters we don’t care about. Before they both appear in The Odyssey and Dune: Part Three later this year, Zendaya and Robert Pattinson spar as a couple whose contentment is shredded in the run-up to their nuptials. However, any chemistry we might expect from this pair is extinguished by the story, and they’re powerless to stop the film from feeling like an implausible wind-up.
Read Tim Robey’s full review here

 

Your say

Morning brew

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...
I used to be quite particular about coffee, but these days I’m just in it for the caffeine. Small children, eh? Still, as the owner of a Moka pot gathering sticky dust by the stove, I enjoyed Tomé Morrissy-Swan’s guide to Britain’s various coffee-making tribes, from the DIY flat-white artists through to the Kenco stalwarts. I saw something of myself in the harried Nespresso drinker, downing frothy mugs of the stuff before the nursery run – even though it tastes terrible.


 

Readers have been declaring their loyalties. “Cafetière for me,” writes C Baker. “Everything else seems a bit of a fuss. An insulated one is best, and they’re the easiest possible thing to wash: they can go in the dishwasher if needed.”


 

Despite not identifying as a hipster, Rodger Webb is a member of Team AeroPress: “I find it produces a very decent cup of home brew without too much faff, plus one can take it on one’s boat.”


 

Philip Moore’s morning routine is a little more involved: “I wouldn’t go without my ‘flat white’ from a Gaggia machine, bought for me by my wife several years ago. At least, I think it’s a flat white, but it may be a mini cappuccino. Anyway, it does the trick as I mull over the misery of the world during the first half-hour of the day.”


 

Alan Hodgson, meanwhile, is quite content with instant. “My wife takes me out for coffee at various rip-off merchants, but to me their drinks taste like weak flavoured water. My friends call round regularly for their fix of coffee, but don’t realise it’s instant. It’s intense, and it’s gold, but not Nescafé. They see the coffee maker on the hob and believe it’s ground. Gullible or what?”

How do you make your coffee? Send your responses here, and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of From the Editor PM, for 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 The 1% Club, Cogs, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

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

jeudi 2 avril 2026

Trump exclusive: King would’ve backed me

The Middle Eastern schools teaching pupils to beat their wives | Pick your World Cup 2026 winner with our predictor tool
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Thursday, 2 April 2026

Issue No. 403

Good morning.

The Telegraph’s exclusive interview with Donald Trump dominated the news agenda yesterday. Connor Stringer, our Chief Washington Correspondent, brings you more details about his call with the president during which Trump said the King would have backed his war in Iran.

Elsewhere, an investigation by Poppy Wood, our Education Editor, has revealed that Britain’s top private schools based in the Middle East are teaching pupils how men should beat their wives. Also, Sarah Knapton, our Science Editor, is in Florida where she watched Nasa launch its first crewed mission to the moon in more than half a century.

Finally, our new newsletter Cables is your daily briefing of international news, analysis and in-depth reporting, plus a window into what people are talking about around the world. You can sign up here.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Our Spring Sale is ending soon. Don’t miss your chance to enjoy a year of The Telegraph for just £25. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Pick your World Cup 2026 winner with our predictor tool

‘I spent 11 weeks in circus of Prince Harry’s phone hacking trial. Here’s what I saw’

Plus, ‘my day at the Kennedy Space Center for the launch of Artemis II’

Last chance: A whole year for just £25

Unlock all of our journalism for less than 50p per week, only in our Spring Sale.

 

Trump interview: The King would have stood by me over Iran

His Majesty would have ‘taken a very different stand’ from Starmer on Iran, insists US president in exclusive interview with The Telegraph

Connor Stringer

Connor Stringer

Chief Washington Correspondent

 

Donald Trump believes the King would have stood by him over his war in Iran, the US president told me.

His allies have turned on him and global markets have crashed since he launched the first strikes on Feb 28.

With the Strait of Hormuz, a key waterway through which 20 per cent of the world’s oil travels daily, firmly choked off by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, and a war dragging into its fifth week, Trump is keen for a friend to take his side.

During our phone call, he said he thought King Charles “would have taken a very different stand” on the conflict. Different to whom, he did not clarify.

However, comments will be seen as a veiled criticism of Sir Keir Starmer, who, along with other European leaders, has angered Trump by rejecting calls to join the war.

The best time to call the president seems to be late in the evening or after a round of golf, when he’s happy. Unfortunately, with it being the middle of the working week, he wasn’t on the golf course, so I called him at around 10.30pm and he answered on the second ring, just as he did the first time I called him for an interview.

Last night, Trump urged Europe to “grab and cherish” Hormuz and “build up delayed courage”.

Addressing the nation in his first primetime live address since the first bombs rained down on Tehran, the US president said the bloc should “take the lead” in reopening the global shopping route. “Go to the Strait and just take it,” he insisted.

“We are going to finish the job and we’re going to finish it very fast, we’re getting very close,” Trump said.

“Many Americans have been concerned to see the recent rise in gasoline prices here at home,” he added, calling it a “short-term increase” caused by Tehran threatening commercial oil tankers.

There were no strong words for Nato in the address, after Trump told The Telegraph he was considering pulling the US out of the alliance. Nevertheless, Mark Rutte, Nato’s secretary-general, will fly to Washington next week for talks with the US president.
Continue reading

Go deeper with our Iran coverage:

Trump can’t find anything new to say on Iran. And time is running out

Trump tells Europe: Grab and cherish the Strait of Hormuz

Nato chief will fly to US for Trump talks

 

Britain’s top private schools in Middle East teaching wife-beating

Poppy Wood

Poppy Wood

Education Editor

 

Britain’s top private schools in the Middle East have been teaching how men should beat their wives, The Telegraph can reveal.

The United Arab Emirates (UAE) has imposed increasingly strict rules on schools in recent years, meaning all pupils must receive morality lessons drawn up by the state.

The rules, which apply to international private schools in the region, also mean Muslim students must be taught Islamic education.

Textbooks unearthed by The Telegraph reveal that, despite the quintessential Britishness they peddle, these schools have been required to teach Muslim pupils how to deal with “rebellious wives”.

“First: good counselling”, “second: refusing bed-sharing”, and “third stage: beating lightly”, says one textbook for Muslim pupils.

Mandatory morality lessons in the UAE mean pupils at leading British private schools in the region are being fed propaganda about the greatness of the ruling Emirati, including how the country “empowers women” and “ranks first in terms of peaceful co-existence”.

Image from a textbook telling pupils to respect UAE laws

The schools have kept this quiet as they expand abroad at pace to make more money. A legal loophole means British private schools can send the profit they make abroad back to the UK tax-free as Gift Aid, and Telegraph analysis shows they have funnelled almost £79m this way over the past two years.

The revelations will place the crème de la crème of British education in an awkward position, as details also trickle out of the UAE about the country’s crackdown on expats filming recent missile strikes.

Harrow School – one of the jewels in the crown of the UK private school system – is set to open two new schools in the UAE this summer.
Read the full story here

 

Opinion

Roland Oliphant Headshot

Roland Oliphant

Without the US, Nato is left naked

If Trump follows through on his threat to pull out of the alliance, the West will face its most profound crisis in 80 years

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Allister Heath</span> Headshot

Allister Heath

Starmer’s catastrophic miscalculation is turning Britain into a laughing stock

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Kate Maltby</span> Headshot

Kate Maltby

It’s a misogynistic lie that Elizabeth I was trans

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Your Essential Reads

Pick your World Cup 2026 winner with our predictor tool

The Football World Cup is fast approaching, and with all participating teams now confirmed, The Telegraph has launched its predictor tool. Do you think England can end 60 years of hurt and finally regain the World Cup? Or do you think Scotland could be a dark horse in their first appearance since 1998? Predict how you think the group stages and knockout rounds will unfold before selecting your champion.
Predict the winner here

Sign up to our Total Football newsletter for the insider track on the beautiful game’s most important stories

 

The White House’s battle to stop ‘Left-wing nutjobs’ shaping the future of AI

The Trump administration and the AI company Anthropic have been locked in a bruising public row about the technology’s limits on the battlefield. The spat is just one chapter in a wider conflict over what many believe will be the defining technology of this century. I spoke to the people on both sides of the fight for the control of AI, writes James Titcomb, Technology Editor.

Continue reading

 

Prince Harry, Sir Elton John and Liz Hurley all gave evidence

‘I spent 11 weeks in circus of Prince Harry’s phone hacking trial. Here’s what I saw’

Some 55 witnesses traipsed into the witness box at the High Court over the last 11 weeks, writes Victoria Ward, Deputy Royal Editor. Allegations ranged from death threats, burglaries, bugging, phone hacking and claims of witnesses who were too terrified of reprisals to give evidence in person. I sat through the whole saga of this astounding privacy claim against Associated Newspapers Limited, the publisher of the Daily Mail and the Mail on Sunday.

For subscribers only

 

How Reeves’s tax raid is decimating a Surrey high street

As business rate rises imposed by Rachel Reeves begin to take effect across Britain, Abigail Buchanan speaks to shop owners in Haslemere’s Wey Hill, in Surrey, one of the worst-affected areas in the country. Here, the rateable values of premises are rising by an average of 82 per cent, leading to bill increases of thousands of pounds. Small stores are a cornerstone of our society, but shop owners are warning that they will soon cease to exist.

Continue reading

 

For many, Queen Elizabeth could do no wrong, but some have begun to take a more critical view of her reign

‘It feels too early to be mean about our late Queen’

As brands peddle £110 commemorative tat ahead of Elizabeth II’s centenary, a far more uncomfortable trend is emerging, writes Sophia Money-Coutts. From royal biographer Andrew Lownie branding the late monarch “completely gaga”, to allegations over £12m in hush money for the former Duke of York, why has censuring the late Queen suddenly become acceptable?

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

These are the jobs to do in your garden this April

Our gardens are coming back to life, but there is still danger of frost, says expert Tom Brown in his explainer about garden jobs you need to do in April. Along with tips on pruning hydrangeas and dividing perennials, Tom outlines which bulbs you should be choosing and how to plant them. He will be in the comments from 3pm to respond to your questions and queries.

Continue reading

Below are a couple more helpful articles for you this morning:

  • In Britain, we have some of the world’s most beautiful landscapes for a walk. It’s one of our nation’s favourite active pastimes, so here is what makes the perfect country stroll – and 10 of Britain’s best.
  • The new tax year is nearly here, but you still have time to minimise how much you hand over to the taxman. We outline five things you can do now to shield potentially thousands from HMRC.
 

‘My day at the Kennedy Space Center for the launch of Artemis II’

We have lift off! Artemis II departs from the Kennedy Space Center

Sarah Knapton

Sarah Knapton

Science Editor

 

Covering Nasa launches from the Kennedy Space Center at Cape Canaveral is always a surreal experience.

The Launch Complex 39 press site, which sits just across the car park from the vast Vehicle Assembly Building, has been the gathering point for journalists since Apollo 8 in 1968.

The Society of Professional Journalists designated it a historic site for journalism and placed a plaque there in 1975, to commemorate the 3,493 ‘newsmen’ who turned up for the launch of Apollo 11.

The Nasa News Center

These days, numbers have dwindled somewhat, but a launch like Artemis II still attracts hundreds of journalists from all over the world.

There are reminders of past missions everywhere, and astronauts from both Nasa and the European Space Agency regularly mill about. The huge countdown clock, which features on the live news feeds of most launches, can be seen on a patch of grass overlooking the launchpad.

It is tradition for the astronauts to drive past the press site on their way to the launchpad, and in former days they would choose one journalist to bring along for the ride and drop off on the way.

Sarah Knapton

Sarah Knapton, our Science Editor, in Cape Canaveral

However, Nasa is not the only show in town, a fact that became apparent during a news conference on Saturday when the press auditorium began to shake violently and a deafening roar brought proceedings to a shuddering halt.

The speakers looked baffled for a few moments, until one of the journalists pointed out that SpaceX was launching its latest round of Starlink satellites nearby.

The Kennedy Space Center is based on Merritt Island which is a nature reserve and so the press area is often teeming with wildlife.

Endangered sea turtles in particular regularly wander on site, but bald eagle nests are also a common occurrence, and wild pigs and alligators roam freely nearby. I once had to warn a glamorous Spanish reporter, who was doing a live from a nearby lake, that a pair of eyes from beneath the water were edging increasingly close.

Add in the extremely long hours of a launch day – for the Artemis II launch I worked 18 hours straight – and it is no wonder that the whole experience starts to feel otherworldly.

However, there are few experiences like the sheer roar and rumble of a rocket taking off and viewing it from the birthplace of Apollo is a real treat. Who knows, maybe one day we will cover the first trip to Mars from the same historic spot.
Watch the moment Nasa Artemis II launches here

Plus, Nasa vows America will never give up the Moon after first launch in 53 years

 

Your say

Man’s best friend?

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...
I’d like to be a dog person, able to take it in my stride, perhaps even chuckle indulgently, when a perky spaniel comes speeding up to me. I fear it’s too late, though: years of cat ownership have conditioned me to expect a certain lordly reserve from my pets. Despite my best efforts, I still feel a twinge of awkwardness when faced with that particular brand of panting, bounding canine eagerness.

However, that’s nothing compared with Noah Gabriel Martin, who has a full-blown aversion to dogs – and is struggling on the dating scene as a result. “Potential love matches regularly specify on app profiles that they’re looking for ‘dog lovers only’,” he reveals.


 

I would describe Telegraph readers as broadly pro-dog, but many were sympathetic. “Even as a dog owner,” wrote one, “I can’t stand people who are obsessed with their pets, treating them as humans and taking them everywhere. Ours is treated well – but as a dog.”


 

Dom Franklin took a similar line: “I like some dogs and not others. I’d be happy to have one as a pet. What I don’t like is when dogs are put before humans. I once had a long train journey to meet up with an old friend. Alas, when I arrived, he left me sitting on a park bench so he could go and pet someone’s dog and talk to its owners. Twenty minutes later, he came back and managed to talk to me, but his eyes were always on the horizon in case he spied another dog.”


 

There were sterner words for Noah, however, from a reader going by the name of KA: “I find it sad when people don’t appreciate other species. Dogs are wonderful companions, more loyal and loving than most humans.”


 

Finally, I enjoyed this vignette of modern life, courtesy of Simon Watt: “Last week in Eastbourne, I was sitting at a table outside a seaside restaurant in beautiful sunny weather. Sitting at the next table was an attractive young couple, facing each other. She had a dog on her lap, which she was cuddling and kissing. He was engrossed with his mobile. How long will that relationship last?”

Should a dislike of dogs preclude a date? Send your responses here, and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of From the Editor PM, for 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 The 1% Club, Cogs, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was ACTUATION. 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.