lundi 18 mai 2026

France’s shameful school abuse scandal

Britain’s income tax timebomb | The mistakes midlifers make that lead to heart disease
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Monday, 18 May 2026

Issue No. 449

timer trk_px

Good morning.

Our top story today is shocking, but important. Across France, hundreds of allegations of abuse have been made against “animateurs périscolaires” – extracurricular activity leaders who look after children between lessons. Henry Samuel, our Paris Correspondent, speaks to the parents of alleged victims, who say their sons and daughters were “changed completely” by the incidents.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Telegraph readers can now enjoy a year’s access for just £1.99 per month. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Britain’s income tax timebomb

Olympian Pete Reed: ‘I gave my wife an out after I was told I’d never walk again’

Plus, the mistakes midlifers make that lead to heart disease

Ends soon: A year for £1.99 a month

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The French nursery staff sexually abusing children and staying on payroll

A father with his daughter

A father with his daughter, three, who told him a man at her nursery used to kiss her on the mouth

Henry Samuel

Henry Samuel

Paris Correspondent

 

France is in the grip of a child abuse scandal that has shaken the republic to its core and is still unfolding.

The victims are toddlers and primary school children, some as young as three. The alleged abusers are not teachers but the casual, poorly paid workers hired by Paris town hall to look after children before, between and after classes. Since January, 78 have been suspended, 31 on suspicion of sexual violence, in the French capital alone.

I have spoken to seven parents whose children were allegedly abused at different schools across the capital. What they told me is, at times, almost unbearable to read. A five-year-old who told his mother twice: “Mum, I want to die.” A three-year-old who showed her mother exactly what had been done to her. Children threatened with a gun if they spoke.

The scandal has now forced Paris’s new mayor, Emmanuel Grégoire – who revealed during his election campaign that he himself had been abused as a child – to travel to one of the worst-affected schools and admit, for the first time, that the municipality is “unequivocally at fault”.

Two trials, 600 reports nationwide and, parents say, this is just the beginning.

This article is available only to subscribers.
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Musk’s $1tn deal to build a colony on Mars

SpaceX says it will begin exploratory missions to Mars in 2030

Matthew Field

Matthew Field

Senior Technology Reporter

 

On a sprawling launch site in Texas, final preparations are under way to ready SpaceX’s Starship rocket for its 12th test flight which is due to lift off tomorrow.

Meanwhile, Wall Street is bracing for what could become the biggest stock market float in history. Elon Musk’s space company is reportedly seeking a valuation of up to $2tn, and dangling the prospect of a $1tn payday for its founder if he can deliver on ambitions ranging from Mars colonisation to orbiting AI data centres.

Investors are enthralled, but critics warn the deal risks becoming the ultimate cult of personality trade.
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Opinion

Stephen Pollard Headshot

Stephen Pollard

For the sake of Britain, Burnham must lose in Makerfield

The last thing Britons need is a new PM ready to saddle the country with higher taxes, more debt and worse growth

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

David Blair

Iran’s regime is confident of victory. It may be overplaying its hand

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<span style="color:#DE0000;">William Sitwell</span> Headshot

William Sitwell

I used to swim in our rivers – now it might kill me

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Headlines

Your sport briefing

Your essential reads

The mothers of Manchester Arena bombing victim Martyn Hett and Jake Marlowe, killed by Hamas on Oct 7, say their pain will never end

‘Our sons were murdered by terrorists. This is what unites us’

Harrowing. Heartbreaking. Humbling. My interview with two mothers whose sons were murdered by terrorists was a conversation I will never forget, writes Judith Woods. Their raw grief was never far from the surface, their loneliness palpable. Lisa Marlowe’s son Jake was shot nine times by Hamas at the Nova Festival massacre on Oct 7, 2023. Figen Murray’s son Martyn was blown up by a suicide bomber at an Ariana Grande concert at Manchester Arena on May 22, 2017. After we had been speaking for 40 minutes, the women suggested a break because it was so distressing – for me. I salute their courage, while hoping mine is never tested in the same way.

For subscribers only

 

Britain’s income tax timebomb

Could AI wipe out the tax base that keeps Britain afloat? Economists and tech insiders are increasingly warning that widespread job losses driven by artificial intelligence could leave a vast hole in the public finances, with income tax and National Insurance revenues under threat. As ministers focus on growth, some experts fear Whitehall is sleepwalking into a fiscal crisis. If machines replace high-earning professionals first, the consequences for Rachel Reeves’s sums could be severe – and arrive far sooner than expected. Eir Nolsøe, our Economics Correspondent, reports.

Continue reading

 

Pete Reed talks about fatherhood, the healing power of the outdoors and a new career in public speaking

Olympian Pete Reed: ‘I gave my wife an out after I was told I’d never walk again’

After suffering a devastating spinal stroke, Pete Reed, the three-time Olympic rowing gold medallist, gave his now-wife Jeannie Reed, an “out”. He tells The Telegraph in his first major interview, “I loved her but I knew it was going to be a difficult life.” Now, the pair have a toddler son, Fred, and Reed, who says that “wheelchairs are good fun”, is embarking on a new career as a TV presenter.

Continue reading

 

Barbara Pym at home in Oxfordshire in 1979, the year before she died

Why we get Barbara Pym all wrong

We all think we know the novels of Barbara Pym. Tea parties, mousy ladies in house coats and eligible young vicars suggest a genteel version of England. Yet the marvellous Pym, whose own life was far more exotic than her spinster status suggests, created a perfect set of novels that were surprisingly spiky. As a stage version of Quartet in Autumn opens in London, Susie Mesure champions this most English of novelists, and tells you which books to read.

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Seize the day

‘I’m a cardiologist. These are the mistakes midlifers make that lead to heart disease’

Dr Francesco Lo Monaco explains how ‘fat-free’ foods and even the wrong mouthwash can quietly damage your health

“Heart disease isn’t a genetic fate for most people,” asserts Dr Francesco Lo Monaco, a Harley Street cardiologist. “Rather, it is the result of thousands of small daily choices, made consistently over decades.” From an irregular sleep schedule to choosing the wrong mouthwash, he reveals the key mistakes many of his midlife patients make, and what to do instead for a strong and healthy heart.

Continue reading

Here is one more article that I hope you will find useful this morning:

  • It’s a brave soul who would play pot luck with Netflix’s film selection. Thankfully, our Culture team have selected the 30 best.
 

CAPTION COMPETITION WITH...

Matt Cartoon
Matt Pritchett

Matt Pritchett

Cartoonist

 

Hello! This week, we have a narrowboat for you to either name or caption. Submit your entry here. Below is this week’s winner, sent in by Garry Walton, who amused us with his caption for the polling station. Congratulations, Garry!

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

Matt Cartoon
 

Your say

Dripping delicacies

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...
Carnivores rejoice: beef dripping is making a comeback. Long championed by those who know a thing or two about decent chips, dripping is now the ingredient du jour for many Michelin-starred chefs.


 

As soon as the news broke, we were inundated with responses from readers raised on the fat of the land. “As a true baby boomer, I was brought up on beef dripping on toast for breakfast,” recalled Rob Dorrell. “I also had dripping sandwiches for my school lunch, with loads of salt. Delicious.”


 

For a long time, dripping was a class signifier. “The letter on ‘dripping delicacies’ took me right back to my childhood in the 1960s in a Nottinghamshire mining town,” wrote Ingrid Victor. “My mother, who was socially aspirational, was mortified to see on a display board at my primary school that I had declared my favourite meal was a dripping sandwich. She never forgave me for the humiliation.”


 

I particularly enjoyed this piece of social history from Mary Atkinson: “On the day of the funeral of Winston Churchill (Jan 30, 1965) my mother was ill in bed and a television was installed for her to see this historic event. My father who was looking after her promised her a treat on the day. She was presented with bread and beef dripping with the wonderful dark jelly. She lived to 93.”


 

Many, like Barry Howells, saw the beginning of a wider, and welcome, trend: “Let’s hear it for the return of suet too, in pastry and dumplings and the proper partner to steak and kidney when steamed. I’m always amazed that folk who enthuse over traditional dishes in rural areas of our European neighbours usually sneer at our own using the same basics.”

Will you be dipping into the dripping? Send us your favourite recipes 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.

 

On this day

1804 | Napoleon Bonaparte is proclaimed Emperor of France

1969 | Apollo 10 launches as a dress rehearsal for the moon landing and transmits the first colour pictures of Earth from space (see how we covered the story in the paper below)

1980 | Eruption of Mount St Helens in Washington state triggers the largest landslide in history, killing 57 people

2025 | The papal inauguration of Pope Leo is held in St. Peter’s Square

Birthdays: Danny Mills (49), Tina Fey (56), Miriam Margolyes (85)

Telegraph front page

Plus, in the news today, Gandalf the goose was stolen from a village pond in Kent. The animal was separated from its companion, named Ryan Gosling, with locals concerned the bird will die of heartbreak. One publican offered a reward for information – of how much?

Beloved goose duo Gandalf and Ryan, pictured in happier times

1. £80
2. £220
3. £400
4. £50

 

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 PARTAKING. 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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dimanche 17 mai 2026

‘Our daughter was murdered by a stalker’

What it’s really like to be a concierge to the 0.01 per cent | ‘I lived through the Blitz. Aged 99, I still struggle with PTSD’
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Sunday, 17 May 2026

Issue No. 441

Good morning.

Alice Ruggles had become increasingly withdrawn, ground down by her former boyfriend’s late-night calls, constant texts, threats to kill himself and the suspicion that he had taken control of her Facebook account. When he made a strange promise not to kill her, the 24-year-old became really afraid. The police were alerted, but they did nothing. Days later, Alice was murdered. Steve Boggan has spoken to her parents to discover the full, horrific story. When you've read it, you are bound to agree with them that the law around stalking must change.

Elsewhere, we bring you the latest from the Labour leadership power struggle and the Unite the Kingdom march in London, in which 50,000 protesters demonstrated against Sir Keir Starmer.

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph Editor

P.S. Telegraph readers can now enjoy a year’s access for just £1.99 per month. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

What it’s really like to be a concierge to the 0.01 per cent

‘I lived through the Blitz. Aged 99, I still struggle with PTSD’

Plus, the best new TV shows of the year so far

Ends soon: A year for £1.99 a month

Save on an All Access Subscription with your email-exclusive offer

 

‘Our daughter was murdered by a stalker. This is why the law needs to change’

Clive Ruggles and his wife, Sue Hills, whose daughter Alice was stalked and murdered by her ex-boyfriend

Steve Boggan

 

When 24-year-old Alice Ruggles was stalked by a former boyfriend, she and her parents, Sue and Clive, thought the police would stop him. They didn’t. Constant messaging from her ex had escalated into threats and controlling behaviour. Sue described how their relationship seemed to progress “so fast”, adding: “I now know that’s a red flag.”

When I spoke to Alice’s parents at their home in Leicestershire last week, writes Steve Boggan, it was hard to listen to the story of what happened to their daughter. Ten years after Alice’s death, recounting what happened next doesn’t get any easier. Trimaan Dhillon violently murdered her days after she was “palmed off” by the system that was supposed to protect her.

Alice Ruggles

Alice Ruggles was killed by her ex-boyfriend in the bathroom of her home in October 2016

Alice had alerted the police to his behaviour, but no action was taken. Part of the issue is the complex way stalking is defined – this is the point that campaigners are trying to highlight.

Alice

‘Alice loved life,’ says her mother. ‘We hadn’t realised how much she held our family together’

When the first legislation was introduced in 1997, it was supposed to put an end to the terrifying crime. However, victims – the majority of whom are female – are still being failed, murdered and driven to suicide. Sue Hills and Clive Ruggles say the law must now be changed, and vigorously applied, to address an offence that affects 1.5 million adults annually.
Continue reading

 

Opinion

Nicole Lampert Headshot

Nicole Lampert

Why doesn’t Starmer make a video warning about far-Left hate marches?

How dare our leaders fixate on the threat from the far-Right descending on London but overlook the anti-Semitism connected to Nakba 78

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Sophia Money-Coutts</span> Headshot

Sophia Money-Coutts

The posh are heading to Reform – and dinner parties have become a minefield

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Daniel Hannan</span> Headshot

Daniel Hannan

Dear new PM... You can save Labour from oblivion (but you won’t like how)

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Weekend reads

Amelia Hutchinson, owner of Discreet Recruitment, works for two of the top 10 richest families in the world

What it’s really like to be a concierge to the 0.01 per cent

What does an assistant to the ultra-rich actually do? LA Robinson takes you inside London’s world of discreet wealth, where she meets a 30-year-old concierge arranging everything from Montessori-trained nannies to private jets for pampered dogs. Amelia Hutchinson’s clients include royalty, tech millionaires and some of the world’s richest families, though she insists “real wealth whispers”.

Continue reading

 

Millie Matthews, 99, is part of a generation who rarely spoke about the terrors of growing up during the Second World War

‘I lived through the Blitz. Aged 99, I still struggle with PTSD’

I happened across both Millie Matthews, and the wartime incident in which she nearly died, while researching my book about the Blitz, writes John Nichol. I was trying to find out what my own late mother might have experienced during the bombing in the North East when a local researcher pointed me towards Millie. Like so many of the generation who endured the war’s privations, Millie, now 99, never dwelled on her experiences, yet she suffered lasting effects we now recognise as a response to trauma. As a former RAF Tornado navigator myself, listening to Millie’s long-buried memories was a haunting reminder of my own experiences of bombings.

Continue reading

 

Paul Simon in London in 1965

The trip to England that saved Paul Simon from oblivion

In 1964, Paul Simon was a struggling troubadour from New Jersey whose first album had flopped at home. However, in the folk clubs of Brentwood, Barking and Stevenage he was hailed as a genius. As the 84-year-old plays what may be his last shows in Britain, Ian Winwood remembers his first.

Continue reading

 

Your Sunday

The best new TV shows of the year so far

Lucy Punch as Amanda in Amandaland

Amandaland skewers the subtle class codes, status dressing and social hierarchies of the modern school run

Time to look at the best of British television so far this year. Our critic, Michael Hogan, finds there’s plenty to choose from, including returning favourites such as Rivals (“as rollickingly fun as ever”) and Amandaland (“a scalpel-sharp satire of school-gates politics”) and new arrivals such as the BBC’s Waiting for the Out (“gripping and moving”) and HBO Max’s The Pitt (“begging to be binged”).

Continue reading

 

Devil’s Advocate

Gin and tonic may be Britain’s favourite drink – but it will never be mine

Every week, one of our writers takes an unfashionable position, either defending a subject that’s been unfairly maligned or criticising something that most people love.

Londoners cartoon
Evgenia Siokos

Evgenia Siokos

 

Summer leers around the corner: trifles and housewives quiver in the larder, Quavers crackle, and bloodshot, booze-thirsty eyes roll back in their sockets in anticipation of their six o’clock fix. Britain’s tipple of choice? The gin and tonic.

It’s one of the nation’s favourite cocktails; besides tea, it’s probably the beverage for which we’re best known. The G&T proper was first invented in the colonies, where the quinine in the tonic served as an anti-malarial compound. While the Empire has long since died a shrivelling death, gin and tonic culture now reigns supreme. Gin has replaced sherry at lunchtime parties in Guildford, lingers in lukewarm tins on GWR services and is a mainstay among Wellie-wearing, padel-playing millennials.

The modern G&T is a Trojan horse, a mixological sleight of hand served up in a vast goblet, choking with ice, festooned with bushlets of rosemary and half a grapefruit, and diluted with any number of tonics ranging from the utilitarian (90p for a litre in Tesco) to the preposterous (peppercorn, “Mediterranean”, or, God forbid, more grapefruit).

Alas, these maladroit attempts to mask the rasp of juniper invariably result in a sickly concoction prone to premature dilution – and before you know it, the insidious gin has cut through all the watered-down theatre and ploughed into your bloodstream with the subtlety of a locomotive. When looked in the mouth, this gift horse is merely one of the more successful lies sold to the middle classes by Big Booze.

Our forbears, at least, knew better. Gin’s legacy in this green and pleasant land is rooted, correctly, in excess and social decay. Mother’s ruin. Maudlin-making. Sin-inducing. The “gin craze” of 18th-century England was a public-health disaster – the drink became synonymous with neglect, vice and desperation. (The late medieval Benedictines responsible for the propagation of jenever, gin’s predecessor, ought to have their credentials reviewed post-mortem; a clear black mark against these otherwise most reverend Black Monks.)

Do not be led astray by the botanical evangelists. In my experience, while tequila brings on hip-swinging glee, and a couple of pints lead to mischief, gin only ever leads to tedious ruin. Tears, moping, laments about ex-boyfriends or dead pets – or, if it’s been a big one, scenes akin to Hogarth’s Gin Lane.

My blind aunt once had a fateful incident with a bottle of what she calls “b------d up gin” (i.e. a botanical variety). She ended up being lapped back to consciousness by her seven concerned, and bloodthirsty, Pomeranians.

Gin can’t even defend its own integrity. You would never have it neat, as you would a good reposado or even, in exceptional circumstances, vodka; I recommend Black Cow or Tito’s. From the hobgoblin-green shape of Gordon’s – loved by Queen Elizabeth, the late Queen Mother; hated by teenagers left hanging over the porcelain – to its other wily guises – sloe gin, pink gin, dry gin, craft gin – all gin is beyond salvation.

To be clear, there’s nothing worse than a gin martini. What sacrilege. I’m surprised that Ernst Stavro Blofeld didn’t weaponise the gin-laden Vesper against 007: “No, Mr. Bond, I expect you to die… poisoned by this cursed cocktail.” It’s like trying to make Savlon sexy. Enough. Give me a dirty vodka martini, with three buttery olives, any day of the week.

Do you agree with Evgenia? Send your replies 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.

 

One great life

Claudine Longet, singer and actress who shot her lover

Claudine Longet during her trial in 1971

Claudine Longet, who has died aged 84, was a French-born actress and chanteuse who enjoyed some success in the US before her career was sensationally derailed when she shot and killed her lover, the ski champion and American hero “Spider” Sabich, writes Andrew M Brown, obituaries editor.

Until then, she had been best known for her appearances on her then husband Andy Williams’s weekly TV show. He was the legendary crooner behind hits such as Can’t Take My Eyes Off You and she radiated glamour and wholesomeness.

Yet it all unravelled for her in 1976, when she shot Sabich in their chalet in the hedonistic resort of Aspen, Colorado. In Britain even the Daily Mirror weighed in, declaring Aspen to be “the modern Sodom and Gomorrah”.

Dunn, centre, with his Halifax crew

Claudine Longet with Andy Williams on their wedding day in 1961

The singer admitted that she was holding the gun when it killed Sabich from close range, but insisted that it went off accidentally while she was asking him for a lesson on the safety catch.

To complicate matters, the trial revealed oversights by the local justice department. In the end, the jury accepted her version of events and she was sentenced to only 30 days in jail.

After divorcing Andy Williams she ended up marrying one of her defence lawyers.

Read the full obituary here.

 

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 LIBRARIAN. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 

Thank you for reading.

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph Editor

P.S. Please share your thoughts on the newsletter here.

Ends soon: A year for £1.99 a month

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