Sabtu, 16 Desember 2023

What to do about Sunak’s silly plan to curb social media for under-16s? Highlight and delete - The Guardian

Rishi Sunak’s government says a lot and does very little. And the mooted plans to consult on a crackdown on social media access for teenagers in the new year is likely another example of that. We are told to expect a consultation in January that could limit access to social media for under-16s, up to and including outright bans on access to sites like TikTok, Instagram, Snapchat and Facebook.

Keen to be seen to be tough on issues that vex the electorate, Sunak can suggest a proposal and appear noble – without ever having to follow through on it.

But let’s take the government’s announcement at face value, and assume that it really is considering raising the age limit at which children can access social networks from 13 to 16. The backdrop is the government’s increasingly tough talk on big tech companies, and the rules through which the UK is trying to rein in the tech sector’s power. That’s exemplified through the Online Safety Act, a Frankenstein’s monster of legislation that sounds good until you scratch beneath the surface. The act received royal assent in October, and includes within its provisions a requirement that platforms “enforce age limits and use age-checking measures on platforms where content harmful to children is published”.

One thing the government couldn’t get into the Online Safety Act, despite trying, was an outright ban on the use of encryption in messaging platforms and social networks. Encryption is where the contents of messages are scrambled to prevent snooping by governments or individuals. It gives politicians significant cause for concern – especially given that the government is on a drive to defend children’s safety online in the face of vociferous campaigns.

Yet the government has continued to press the idea that encryption is only used by criminals and paedophiles, rather than by, for instance, political dissidents, the displaced fleeing persecution, or victims of abuse who seek contact with the outside world. Reporting of the planned crackdown comes after the government lambasted companies like Meta, the parent company of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, for going ahead with plans to introduce encryption across its messaging services. On Times Radio this week, Damian Hinds, the UK’s schools minister, said that the encryption debate was not about privacy, but the “ability to intercept and to ultimately investigate, bring to justice people who are engaging in child abuse”.

Linking encryption so closely to the protection of children suggests the plans to raise the minimum age at which users can access social networks is a response to companies’ defiance over encrypted messages. It seems as if the government is playing hardball with tech firms, aiming to look strong with the electorate.

But the idea that groomers can do whatever they want thanks to the shroud of encryption is false. On Instagram, Meta removed more than 107,000 pieces of content to prevent child endangerment between April and September this year. Other platforms do the same, and at similar levels.

Equally misguided is the idea that it’s possible to impose a blanket ban on 14- and 15-year-olds accessing social media. It’s as if those in charge of the legislation have never met a child, never mind had any. (Collectively, cabinet ministers have at least 43 children.)

Believing that it’s possible to prevent young people accessing social networks seems delusional at best, given that there are plenty of them under 13 who are already using the sites. It’s something that Michelle Donelan (the parent of one) knows about, because three months ago she became angry with social media platforms for not keeping under-13s off their apps and websites. It’s not exactly hard to subvert age checks. We have already had a generation shaped by the internet and social media, and they did not all become victims of trafficking and abuse, nor have they been shaped into broken, browbeaten husks of humanity.

Quite apart from the fact that the broadside against teenagers appears to be little more than an attempt to attract the interest of the Daily Mail, it also ignores just how important and integral social media – and interactions online with peers – are for users now.

It can be easy to fixate on the negatives, which undoubtedly exist. Fourteen-year-old Molly Russell took her life in 2017 after viewing content related to depression, self-harm and suicide on social media. Her story, and others like hers, cannot be ignored. Yet the Molly Rose Foundation – set up in her memory – has reservations about a ban, saying: “The emphasis should firmly be on strengthening the regulator’s hand to ensure platforms are no longer awash with a set of avoidable dangers.”

And there are positives to being on social media. Today’s 14- and 15-year-olds had to navigate the transition from primary to secondary school during enforced lockdowns due to the pandemic. For them, social media was the only place they could interact for months. It provides them with important social skills, the ability to explore their identity and an opportunity to learn about the world.

To take that from them risks pushing teenagers further into the online shadows, a paradoxical result, given the government’s fixation on the supposed evils of encryption, or means that they’ll opt out altogether, and enter the online world at 16 more naive and prey to the same evil forces – but without any of the protection gained from experience.

  • Chris Stokel-Walker is the author of How AI Ate the World, to be published in May 2024

  • Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

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2023-12-16 10:59:00Z
CBMiZmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnRoZWd1YXJkaWFuLmNvbS9jb21tZW50aXNmcmVlLzIwMjMvZGVjLzE2L3Jpc2hpLXN1bmFrLXNvY2lhbC1tZWRpYS1lbmNyeXB0aW9uLXRlZW5hZ2VyLWJhbtIBZmh0dHBzOi8vYW1wLnRoZWd1YXJkaWFuLmNvbS9jb21tZW50aXNmcmVlLzIwMjMvZGVjLzE2L3Jpc2hpLXN1bmFrLXNvY2lhbC1tZWRpYS1lbmNyeXB0aW9uLXRlZW5hZ2VyLWJhbg

What to do about Sunak’s silly plan to curb social media for under-16s? Highlight and delete - The Guardian

Rishi Sunak’s government says a lot and does very little. And the mooted plans to consult on a crackdown on social media access for teenagers in the new year is likely another example of that. We are told to expect a consultation in January that could limit access to social media for under-16s, up to and including outright bans on access to sites like TikTok, Instagram, Snapchat and Facebook.

Keen to be seen to be tough on issues that vex the electorate, Sunak can suggest a proposal and appear noble – without ever having to follow through on it.

But let’s take the government’s announcement at face value, and assume that it really is considering raising the age limit at which children can access social networks from 13 to 16. The backdrop is the government’s increasingly tough talk on big tech companies, and the rules through which the UK is trying to rein in the tech sector’s power. That’s exemplified through the Online Safety Act, a Frankenstein’s monster of legislation that sounds good until you scratch beneath the surface. The act received royal assent in October, and includes within its provisions a requirement that platforms “enforce age limits and use age-checking measures on platforms where content harmful to children is published”.

One thing the government couldn’t get into the Online Safety Act, despite trying, was an outright ban on the use of encryption in messaging platforms and social networks. Encryption is where the contents of messages are scrambled to prevent snooping by governments or individuals. It gives politicians significant cause for concern – especially given that the government is on a drive to defend children’s safety online in the face of vociferous campaigns.

Yet the government has continued to press the idea that encryption is only used by criminals and paedophiles, rather than by, for instance, political dissidents, the displaced fleeing persecution, or victims of abuse who seek contact with the outside world. Reporting of the planned crackdown comes after the government lambasted companies like Meta, the parent company of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, for going ahead with plans to introduce encryption across its messaging services. On Times Radio this week, Damian Hinds, the UK’s schools minister, said that the encryption debate was not about privacy, but the “ability to intercept and to ultimately investigate, bring to justice people who are engaging in child abuse”.

Linking encryption so closely to the protection of children suggests the plans to raise the minimum age at which users can access social networks is a response to companies’ defiance over encrypted messages. It seems as if the government is playing hardball with tech firms, aiming to look strong with the electorate.

But the idea that groomers can do whatever they want thanks to the shroud of encryption is false. On Instagram, Meta removed more than 107,000 pieces of content to prevent child endangerment between April and September this year. Other platforms do the same, and at similar levels.

Equally misguided is the idea that it’s possible to impose a blanket ban on 14- and 15-year-olds accessing social media. It’s as if those in charge of the legislation have never met a child, never mind had any. (Collectively, cabinet ministers have at least 43 children.)

Believing that it’s possible to prevent young people accessing social networks seems delusional at best, given that there are plenty of them under 13 who are already using the sites. It’s something that Michelle Donelan (the parent of one) knows about, because three months ago she became angry with social media platforms for not keeping under-13s off their apps and websites. It’s not exactly hard to subvert age checks. We have already had a generation shaped by the internet and social media, and they did not all become victims of trafficking and abuse, nor have they been shaped into broken, browbeaten husks of humanity.

Quite apart from the fact that the broadside against teenagers appears to be little more than an attempt to attract the interest of the Daily Mail, it also ignores just how important and integral social media – and interactions online with peers – are for users now.

It can be easy to fixate on the negatives, which undoubtedly exist. Fourteen-year-old Molly Russell took her life in 2017 after viewing content related to depression, self-harm and suicide on social media. Her story, and others like hers, cannot be ignored. Yet the Molly Rose Foundation – set up in her memory – has reservations about a ban, saying: “The emphasis should firmly be on strengthening the regulator’s hand to ensure platforms are no longer awash with a set of avoidable dangers.”

And there are positives to being on social media. Today’s 14- and 15-year-olds had to navigate the transition from primary to secondary school during enforced lockdowns due to the pandemic. For them, social media was the only place they could interact for months. It provides them with important social skills, the ability to explore their identity and an opportunity to learn about the world.

To take that from them risks pushing teenagers further into the online shadows, a paradoxical result, given the government’s fixation on the supposed evils of encryption, or means that they’ll opt out altogether, and enter the online world at 16 more naive and prey to the same evil forces – but without any of the protection gained from experience.

  • Chris Stokel-Walker is the author of How AI Ate the World, to be published in May 2024

  • Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

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2023-12-16 08:00:00Z
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North Wales pub has licence suspended over concerns about 'excessively drunk' children using ketamine and cocaine - Sky News

A pub and nightclub has had its licence suspended for three months after police found children in an "excessively drunk state" and concerns were raised they may have taken cocaine and ketamine.

Children as young as 13 were found drunk and unconscious on the pavement outside Sunny's Bar and Bentley's nightclub in Tywyn, North Wales, according to a report by Conwy Council.

North Wales Police were called to an under-18s disco at the premises on 22 September to a report that a 13-year-old child "had been drinking, was losing consciousness, and that the child may have been spiked".

"When North Wales Police arrived, it was clarified that three children were in an excessively drunk state and that there was a belief that more children had been drinking," Inspector Kevin Smith said in a report to the council.

"There was concern that children may have also taken cocaine and ketamine."

Inspector Smith said CCTV showed around 50 children aged 12-16 attended the party and could be seen "bringing in bags and screw top bottles, the content of which may have included alcohol".

He said the children were not accompanied by their parents and when they were told to leave they then "proceeded to lie on the bench and floor outside".

CCTV was shown to sub-committee members behind closed doors.

Of the three "excessively" drunk children treated by the Welsh Ambulance Service at the scene, two were taken to hospital.

The force later received a complaint from a parent whose child had attended the party, who "alleged that a child had a knife and knuckleduster in their possession".

It said it had received several calls to the venue since spring 2023, with 16 of those "involving customers fighting, threats of and use of weapons, drunkenness, children at risk, and theft".

Read more from Sky News:
Plumber did a morning of work before taking part in World Darts Championship
Prisoner guilty after throwing boiling water over 'vulnerable' inmate and raping him

Company running venue issues apology

In addition to Conwy Council suspending the pub's licence for three months, the designated premises' supervisor was also removed.

Emma Priestley, director of EJP Entertainment, the company which runs the venue, issued an apology at the sub-committee meeting last week.

"I can't apologise enough that this has happened. Unfortunately, as I said, I didn't know it took place or was going to take place," she said.

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2023-12-16 10:37:27Z
CBMikwFodHRwczovL25ld3Muc2t5LmNvbS9zdG9yeS9ub3J0aC13YWxlcy1wdWItaGFzLWxpY2VuY2Utc3VzcGVuZGVkLW92ZXItY29uY2VybnMtYWJvdXQtZXhjZXNzaXZlbHktZHJ1bmstY2hpbGRyZW4tdXNpbmcta2V0YW1pbmUtYW5kLWNvY2FpbmUtMTMwMzE1MjPSAZcBaHR0cHM6Ly9uZXdzLnNreS5jb20vc3RvcnkvYW1wL25vcnRoLXdhbGVzLXB1Yi1oYXMtbGljZW5jZS1zdXNwZW5kZWQtb3Zlci1jb25jZXJucy1hYm91dC1leGNlc3NpdmVseS1kcnVuay1jaGlsZHJlbi11c2luZy1rZXRhbWluZS1hbmQtY29jYWluZS0xMzAzMTUyMw

Top judge says anyone who lied to phone hacking inquiry should be prosecuted - The Independent

A top judge has said anyone who lied to the phone hacking inquiry should be prosecuted for perjury after a court found there could be “no doubt" editors at Mirror Group Newspapers knew about intercepted voicemails.

Sir Alan Moses also hit out at the former Daily Mirror editor Piers Morgan, accusing him of epitomising the “shameful reaction of people who used to be editors”.

After an extraordinary High Court ruling on Friday, Hollywood actor Steve Coogan also called for a police investigation.

Prince Harry accused Mirror Group Newspapers of "vendetta journalism" after the judge in the case found that he was the victim of phone hacking and awarded him damages.

The findings accepted evidence by royal author Omid Scobie that Mr Morgan had been aware of voicemail interception over a story about Kylie Minogue.

In response Mr Morgan launched a stinging attack on the prince, accusing him of attempting to "destroy the British monarchy".

In a statement outside his home, he also said: “I've never hacked a phone or told anyone else to and nobody has provided any actual evidence to prove that I did."

The judge also ruled that "extensive" phone hacking took place at the Daily Mirror, the Sunday Mirror and the Sunday People, from 2006 to 2011.

In his judgment, Mr Justice Fancourt concluded "there can be no doubt" that editors of MGN's titles knew about voicemail interception, but did not tell the company's board or chief executive about it.

Sir Alan, a former Lord Justice of Appeal, warned: “The whole system has never held to account those in charge, the proprietors and the editors… (because they) poured money into settlement and only people like Prince Harry had the resources to pursue the case.”

He told the BBC’s Today programme: “If people lied to Sir Brian (Leveson, the chair of the official inquiry into phone hacking) then they ought to be prosecuted for perjury”.

Prince Harry

Mr Coogan also called for a police investigation. He told the same programme : “The police should investigate, they should do their job”.

He also questioned what action Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer would take. “What is Keir Starmer going to do about it? Because let’s face it he is going to be the next prime minister. Is he going to fold like a deckchair?” he said.

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2023-12-16 10:38:22Z
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Jumat, 15 Desember 2023

Alex Batty: British boy fled over mother's plan to take him to Finland, say authorities - Sky News

Alex Batty, the British boy who went missing six years ago, fled his mother because she wanted to take him to Finland, authorities have said.

Antoine Leroy, the Toulouse assistant public prosecutor, said Alex's mother was "rather unstable", according to the boy.

Alex told police he decided his nomadic lifestyle with his mother "had to stop" when she proposed taking him to Finland.

He walked for four nights in the French Pyrenees mountains - sleeping during the day - to get away from her, Mr Leroy added.

The boy had 100 euros but no phone - and took food from fields and gardens on the way.

Alex, now about 17 and a half, should be able to return to the UK tomorrow.

However, his grandmother - who's been searching for him for years - was described as "too frail" to go to France to meet him.

More on Alex Batty

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Student recalls rescuing Alex Batty

Alex told French police he had been living in "spiritual communities" with his mother, grandfather and a changing selection of about 10 other people.

He spent the first two to three years moving around Morocco, said Mr Leroy, before they went to southern France when he was about 15.

Alex first went missing after going on holiday with his mother and grandfather in 2017 when he was 11 - but was found this week by a pharmacy driver on a remote road.

Mother Melanie Batty does not have parental guardianship of Alex
Image: Mother Melanie Batty
David Batty is wanted in connection with Alex's abduction
Image: Grandfather David Batty

He told the man he needed protection, said the prosecutor, and revealed his remarkable story.

Alex, who was also carrying a skateboard and torch, helped the driver finish his overnight deliveries before they went to the police station.

The teenager is originally from Oldham and his grandmother, who's his legal guardian, had made multiple appeals to find him over the years.

Read more:
What really happened when Alex vanished?

Greater Manchester Police earlier said Alex's grandmother is "content" the teenager is her grandson.

"The young man and Alex's grandmother spoke in a video call last night," said Assistant Chief Constable Chris Sykes.

Alex's lifestyle over the last six years involved moving from place to place alongside families from different countries, said Mr Leroy

The communities he lived in grew their own food, lived off solar power, did meditation and believed in reincarnation - but the French prosecutor declined to call it a "sect".

Alex told police he was never held against his will and the prosecutor described him as "very intelligent and calm".

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2023-12-15 16:18:45Z
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Prince Harry wins victory in phone-hacking case against Daily Mirror - The Guardian

Prince Harry has landed a significant blow in his battle with the British tabloid press, after winning a substantial part of his phone-hacking case and damages against the Daily Mirror.

In a judgment that will have profound implications for the British media landscape, a high court judge has ruled that there was “extensive” phone hacking by Mirror Group Newspapers from 2006 to 2011, “even to some extent” during the Leveson inquiry into media standards.

Mr Justice Fancourt found that 15 out of 33 articles related to the Duke of Sussex which were focused on during the trial were the product of hacking from his mobile phone or unlawful information gathering.

He concluded that Harry’s phone was hacked “to a modest extent” from the end of 2003 to April 2009, which was carefully controlled by senior individuals at the Daily Mirror, Sunday Mirror and People newspapers.

Recognising the “distress” caused to Harry as a result of published articles containing information that had been illegally gathered, the judge awarded him £140,600 in damages.

Reading a statement on the Duke of Sussex’s behalf outside the high court, his lawyer David Sherborne said: “Today is a great day for truth, as well as accountability.

“The court has ruled that unlawful and criminal activities were carried out at all three Mirror group newspaper titles – the Mirror, the Sunday Mirror and the People – on a habitual and widespread basis for over more than a decade.

“This case is not just about hacking – it is about a systemic practice of unlawful and appalling behaviour, followed by cover-ups and destruction of evidence, the shocking scale of which can only be revealed through these proceedings.”

A Mirror group spokesperson said: “We welcome today’s judgment that gives the business the necessary clarity to move forward from events that took place many years ago. Where historical wrongdoing took place, we apologise unreservedly, have taken full responsibility and paid appropriate compensation.”

Over the course of a dramatic seven-week trial at the high court this year, the Duke of Sussex alleged that he had been targeted by the paper’s publisher for years, accusing it of hacking phones and other illegal behaviour to obtain scoops about his private life.

Harry became the first royal in 130 years to appear in a witness box at the trial, as he told the court that dozens of news stories – about his relationship with his former girlfriend Chelsy Davy and his family, as well as aspects of his military service and allegations of drug use – were published in the Daily Mirror, the Sunday Mirror and People between 1995 and 2011 after being obtained illegally.

The trial exposed the methods of the British tabloid newspapers, as well as the roles of the former Mirror editor Piers Morgan and the network of private investigators. Harry’s lawyers argued that senior editors and executives at Mirror Group Newspapers Ltd (MGN) knew about and rubber-stamped wrongdoings – accusations that MGN, which is owned by Reach, said were not supported by the evidence.

Harry was the most high profile of more than 100 claimants – including the singer Cheryl and the estate of George Michael – who were involved in the wider litigation. He was seeking £440,000 in damages, potentially one of the biggest ever phone-hacking settlements.

At times he appeared close to tears when giving evidence. He told the court that British newspapers had illegally targeted him all his life and then gone to “extreme lengths to cover their tracks” and described how press intrusion destroyed his relationships and left him with “bouts of depression and paranoia”.

He insisted there was “hard evidence” he was illegally targeted by the Mirror’s journalists and would feel “some injustice” if he lost the case, arguing that the fact that “phone hacking was at an industrial scale across at least three of the papers at the time” was “beyond doubt”.

Harry is known to have had his phone hacked by Rupert Murdoch’s News of the World and is bringing two separate phone-hacking cases against the publisher of the Sun and the publisher of the Daily Mail.

MGN admitted during the trial that Harry had on one occasion been the victim of unlawful information gathering, but said he should be entitled to only £500 in damages. The publisher accepted that on one occasion a journalist at the People paid £75 to a private investigator to illegally obtain information about Harry’s visit to the London VIP nightclub Chinawhite in 2004, but argued the small sum suggested the “inquiries were limited”.

Andrew Green KC, the Mirror’s barrister, said the Mirror had hacked the voicemails of many celebrities during the 2000s and paid substantial damages to them – but argued that there was no evidence that its reporters had targeted Harry’s phone and said the newspaper publisher has been caught in the crossfire of the royal’s broader battles with the British media.

Green argued many of the stories about Harry that were supposedly obtained illegally were either “trivial”, or were provided by legitimate sources such as palace spokespeople, meaning Harry had no expectation of privacy.

David Sherborne, Harry’s barrister, told the high court that key evidence – including millions of emails and burner phones – that would support Harry’s claim had been destroyed on purpose. Key witnesses such as Piers Morgan were not called to give evidence, which he said left “enormous holes – we say fatal holes – in the defendant’s case” – and asked the judge to make a negative inference about their absence.

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Gaynor Lord: Body found in search for missing Norwich mother - The Independent

Gaynor Lord search: Police say 30 people have come forward with information

Specialist divers have found a body in the search for missing Norwich mother Gaynor Lord.

After a week of searching, Norfolk Police confirmed that the body was pulled from the River Wensum by underwater search teams on Friday morning.

A Norfolk Police spokesperson said: “While the body hasn’t formally been identified, Gaynor’s family have been informed. They continue to be supported by specially trained officers.”

Police were seen marking out a specific part of the water earlier with an orange buoy earlier in the morning, around 100 metres down stream from where the focus of Thursday’s search took place.

Police divers with flippers were already preparing to enter the water further along the river, but after a phone call was received, they packed up their kit and rediverted just after 11am.

Ms Gaynor was reported missing after she failed to return home from work in Norwich city centre last Friday.

CCTV footage captured her leaving Jarrolds department store over an hour before her shift was due to end and walking in a hurry towards Wensum Park.

Her belongings, including clothing, jewellery and her mobile phone, were later found by a member of the public that evening.

1702647014

What happened to Lord Gaynor’s posessions?

Police have found a number of her belongings scattered in Wensum Park next to the river where they are conducting the main search.

Clothing, a mobile phone and glasses were found dispersed around the park 1.5 miles from her workplace in a department store. Her coat was found in the River Wensum itself.

Chief Superintendent Dave Buckley from Norfolk Police said yesterday: “We’re putting sonar equipment across the river, which is quite detailed in allowing us to try and target divers to where we think there might be objects.

“But equally, it’s very, very challenging. The river is very, very full of water with all the rain, full of lots of debris. The divers can see about one foot in front of them.

“So it’s an extraordinarily challenging environment for them to work in so it’s slow, methodical at the moment, working with equipment and it will take probably a couple of days to get to a position where we’re kind of content with what we’ve done. It may even be longer.”

Since a body has been found in the search for the missing mother.

<p>Police search teams on the River Wensum in Wensum Park, Norwich</p>

Police search teams on the River Wensum in Wensum Park, Norwich

Lydia Patrick15 December 2023 13:30
1702646042

Where was the body found?

Specialist divers have pulled a body from the river in their week-long search for missing mother Gaynor Lord.

The body was found in the River Wensum, which runs through the park Ms Lord’s belongings were found in last Friday.

According to local reports, the body was found several hundred metres south of the park.

Divers were seen diverting to a specific spot in the river marked out by an orange buoy at 11am this morning and the body was found nearby at around 12pm.

The spot is around 100 metres down stream from where the focus of Thursday’s search took place.

Athena Stavrou15 December 2023 13:14
1702644960

Family informed after police find body

While no formal identification has taken place on the body yet, police said Gaynor Lord’s family have been informed.

A body was recovered from the River Wensum by dive specialists on Friday, following a week of searching for the missing mother-of-three.

A Norfolk Police spokesperson said: “While the body hasn’t formally been identified, Gaynor’s family have been informed. They continue to be supported by specially trained officers.”

Athena Stavrou15 December 2023 12:56
1702644172

Underwater divers find body in river

Underwater divers have pulled a body from the River Wensum following a week of intense searching for Gaynor Lord.

Norfolk Police confirmed the find on Friday after divers were seen diverting to a specific spot in the river marked out by an orange buoy at 11am.

Divers were pictured pulling a a large object in black bag from the river next to where the buoy was positioned.

The force said: “Police searching for missing Norwich woman Gaynor Lord can confirm a body has been found in the River Wensum.

“While the body hasn’t formally been identified, Gaynor’s family have been informed. They continue to be supported by specially trained officers.”

Athena Stavrou15 December 2023 12:42
1702643441

Body found in search for missing mother

Norfolk Police have confirmed a body has been found in the search for Gaynor Lord on Friday morning.

The body was found in the river by underwater search teams this morning and has now been recovered from the water.

A spokesperson said: “While the body hasn’t formally been identified, Gaynor’s family have been informed. They continue to be supported by specially trained officers.”

Athena Stavrou15 December 2023 12:30
1702641955

Gaynor Lord told colleague she ‘felt off’ before disappearance

A colleague of Gaynor Lord said she told them she felt “a bit off” before she disappeared last Friday.

The mother-of-three left work at Jarrolds department store over an hour early on the day she went missing.

CCTV captured her leaving at 2:45pm before walking through Norwich city centre before she was last seen at just after 4pm.

A shop assistant told The Sun that she “shook her hands” when she saw her on either Thursday or Friday and claimed Ms Lord said: “I feel a bit funny, a bit off today.”

Another colleague told the newspaper that the 55-year-old did not tell colleagues why she left early and said she didn’t show any signs of distress.

Athena Stavrou15 December 2023 12:05
1702640245

Dive team searching specific spot of river

Police have marked out a specific spot in the River Wensum this morning as they continue their search for Gaynor Lord.

A police diving team is checking a specific part of the river and an orange buoy has been placed on the spot on Friday morning.

The buoy was positioned at around 100 metres down stream from where the main focus of Thursday’s search for Ms Lord had taken place.

Divers with flippers could be seen ready to enter the water in a park area further along the river but after a phone call was received, their kit was packed up and personnel got back in their truck and rediverted.

An Environment Agency search boat was stationed next to the buoy on Friday morning as a dive team truck arrived at the area just after 11am.

Two members of the dive team could be seen surveying the area, appearing to check if the water was safe to enter.

Athena Stavrou15 December 2023 11:37
1702638223

Pictures: Gaynor Lord’s route through Norwich before disappearance

Police have released CCTV footage of Gaynor Lord in the hours before she went missing.

The mother-of-three left work early at Jarrolds department store at 2:45pm and was last seen by CCTV at 4:01pm walking up St Augustines Street.

Police later found her belongings scattered at Wensum Park, and are now searching the river that runs through the area.

In between, Ms Lord was seen jogging up streets in Norwich and spending some time on Norwich Cathedral grounds.

Here are pictures of her final known locations before she went missing:

<p>At 2:46pm Gaynor Lord was seen leaving Jarrolds via the loading bay on Bedford Street</p>

At 2:46pm Gaynor Lord was seen leaving Jarrolds via the loading bay on Bedford Street

<p>She then walks onto London Street past the Cosy Club at 2:47pm</p>

She then walks onto London Street past the Cosy Club at 2:47pm

<p>She then made her way to Norwich Cathedral via Queens Street at 2:48pm</p>

She then made her way to Norwich Cathedral via Queens Street at 2:48pm

<p>She leaves the cathedral through this archway 34 minutes later at 3:22pm</p>

She leaves the cathedral through this archway 34 minutes later at 3:22pm

<p>She then made her way to Wensum Park, where her scattered belongings were found </p>

She then made her way to Wensum Park, where her scattered belongings were found

Athena Stavrou15 December 2023 11:03
1702636994

Search teams return to River Wensum as search continues

Norfolk Police search teams have been pictured returning to the water on Friday morning as the major search for Gaynor Lord continues into its seventh day.

Specialist underwater search teams have been deployed to scour the River Wensum, after the missing mother’s belongings were found in Wensum Park and her coat in the water on Friday.

Police are looking into multiple lines of inquiry but said they are confident that Ms Lord entered the water.

Athena Stavrou15 December 2023 10:43
1702635728

Gaynor Lord ‘seemed upbeat’ before disappearance

A friend of Gaynor Lord said that the missing mother seemed “upbeat” days before her mysterious disappearance.

Speaking to the BBC, Julie Butcher said Ms Lord seemed “fine” when they met on Tuesday last week - three days before her disappearance.

“We were talking. She was a bit busy but we were talking about Christmas and she seemed fine, no different to the usual Gaynor. She was quite upbeat and happy,” Ms Butcher said

Ms Butcher also told the BBC she spoke to her friend at 2.15pm on Friday but she had to cut the call short to speak to a client.

Ms Butcher said she returned the call but could not get through.

She then received another call form Ms Lord at 4.15pm but it “sounded like a pocket call – I could hear movement in her pocket”.

Athena Stavrou15 December 2023 10:22

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