Rihanna usa moletom ‘Rhenna’ durante saída à noite

Apenas alguns dias depois de Rihanna ter ganhado as manchetes por fazer aarti e dizer ‘Shukriya’ (obrigada), ela foi vista mais uma vez por paparazzi em público. Desta vez, a famosa cantora foi vista vestindo uma de suas peças de roupa mais icônicas.

Rihanna usa seu moletom mais icônico em passeio em Paris

Rihanna foi vista em uma noite em Paris no dia 30 de abril. O momento foi digno de ser capturado porque ela usou seu icônico moletom com capuz R20 ‘Rhenna’, que tem um significado para a cantora e sua identidade. Ela combinou o moletom com um boné justo do New York Yankees, um par de óculos escuros pretos, calças justas pretas e uma bolsa enfeitada.

Significado do moletom de Rihanna

O que torna seu moletom é icônico porque tem ‘Rhenna’ desenhado nele, que é um desenho de uma garota que fez parte da vida da cantora de ‘Diamonds’. Refere-se à sua antiga foto de perfil nas redes sociais, que ela manteve em sua conta por mais de uma década. O moletom faz parte de uma campanha mais antiga que comemorou seus 20 anos na indústria musical. Ele também tinha as palavras “20 anos com você” escritas nele.Em um vídeo antigo do YouTube em seu canal de 2025, Rihanna explicou ainda mais o significado do moletom e de sua coleção. Ela citou durante o vídeo que “há 20 anos, deixei meu país, minha cultura, minha comida e família para embarcar em uma jornada que começou com o lançamento do meu primeiro corpo musical! Muitos de vocês fizeram parte da minha vida e carreira desde o início, e alguns de vocês se juntaram à aventura ao longo do caminho”, continuou ela. “Sou eternamente grato a todos vocês. Cada um de vocês desempenhou um papel essential no caminho que esta jornada me levou até agora!”Na frente de trabalho, Rihanna visitou recentemente a Índia para lançar oficialmente sua marca de beleza e maquiagem no mercado indiano.

Respostas de palavras cruzadas do NYT Mini, dicas para 1º de maio de 2026

O Mini é uma versão pequena de O jornal New York Instances‘ reverenciadas palavras cruzadas diárias. Embora as palavras cruzadas sejam uma experiência mais longa que requer conhecimento e paciência para ser concluída, o Mini tem uma vibração totalmente diferente.

Com apenas algumas pistas para responder, o quebra-cabeça diário também funciona como um teste de velocidade para muitos que o jogam.

Então, quando uma pista complicada atrapalha o fluxo de um jogador, pode ser frustrante! Se você ficar perplexo ao jogar The Mini – assim como com Wordle e Connections – nós temos o que você precisa.

VEJA TAMBÉM:

Mahjong, Sudoku, palavras cruzadas grátis e muito mais: jogue no Mashable

VEJA TAMBÉM:

Como jogar Pips, o mais novo jogo do NYT

Aqui estão as pistas e respostas para The Mini do NYT para sexta-feira, 1º de maio de 2026:

Entre

“Zip-a-___-Doo-Dah”

Usuário de boné e bata, informalmente

Compra importante que pode vir com um pagamento inicial

Doutor quem realmente entrega?

Casa da Torre Inclinada

Abaixo

Produtos de prescrição

Claro que você poderia dormir e ainda assim passar

Onde Adão e Eva estavam comendo a maçã, apropriadamente?

O maior deserto da Ásia

O pulo do coelho

Se você está procurando mais quebra-cabeças, o Mashable agora tem jogos! Confira nosso hub de jogos para Mahjong, Sudoku, palavras cruzadas grátis e muito mais.

Você também está jogando NYT Strands? Veja dicas e respostas para os Strands de hoje.

Não é o dia que você procura? Aqui está a solução para as Mini palavras cruzadas de ontem.

Tópicos
Mini palavras cruzadas para jogos

Kimi Antonelli espera que os rivais da Mercedes diminuam a diferença no GP de Miami

30 de abril de 2026; Miami Gardens, Flórida, EUA; O motorista da Mercedes, Andrea Kimi Antonelli (12), fala aos repórteres durante uma coletiva de imprensa no Autódromo Internacional de Miami. Crédito obrigatório: Sam Navarro-Imagn Photos

Kimi Antonelli ocupa o primeiro lugar na classificação do Campeonato de Pilotos de Fórmula 1, mas o jovem parece não ter ilusões de que ele e a Mercedes fugirão do pelotão.

Antonelli falou aos repórteres na quinta-feira antes do Grande Prêmio de Miami e previu uma batalha acirrada quando a borracha chegar à estrada neste domingo.

“Será um fim de semana muito interessante para nós”, disse o italiano de 19 anos. “Vamos ver como nos saímos. Com certeza (nossos rivais) vão se aproximar e talvez tenhamos que lutar um pouco mais neste fim de semana, mas faremos o nosso melhor e manteremos a cabeça baixa.

“Da minha parte, vou tentar maximizar o desempenho do carro, vou dar o meu melhor e veremos qual será o resultado.”

Antonelli venceu as duas corridas da F1 na Ásia, vencendo o Grande Prêmio da China e o Grande Prêmio do Japão depois de conquistar a pole place em ambas as vezes.

Isso aconteceu depois que o companheiro de equipe da Mercedes, George Russell, abriu a temporada conquistando o Grande Prêmio da Austrália. Antonelli e Russell estão 1-2 na classificação de pilotos, com Russell apenas nove pontos atrás.

Antonelli disse que a Mercedes foi clara com os dois pilotos sobre como eles devem se comportar enquanto lutam pelo campeonato.

“Eles disseram que podemos competir entre si, mas obviamente com respeito, sem fazer nenhuma coisa estúpida entre nós”, disse Antonelli.

“No remaining das contas… Corremos um pelo outro, queremos vencer, queremos ser os melhores, mas ao mesmo tempo queremos o melhor para a equipe também. Eu e George sabemos muito bem que podemos competir entre si, mas com respeito e sem tentar fazer coisas estúpidas.

“A equipe nos deu luz verde, porque quer dar a nós dois a mesma oportunidade. Eles disseram que podemos competir entre si, mas apenas estar limpos.”

A Ferrari é a rival mais próxima da Mercedes até agora. A Mercedes lidera a Ferrari com 135 pontos a 90 na classificação dos fabricantes, e os pilotos da Mercedes Charles Leclerc e Lewis Hamilton ocupam o terceiro e quarto lugares na classificação dos pilotos.

–Mídia em nível de campo

Galaxy E book 6 Extremely da Samsung: esta é a alternativa do MacBook Professional que você está procurando? vídeo

Galaxy E book 6 Extremely da Samsung: esta é a alternativa do MacBook Professional que você está procurando?

O principal laptop computer Galaxy E book 6 Extremely da Samsung tem a construção, o processador e a potência gráfica premium exigidos pelos profissionais criativos. Ele pode substituir um MacBook Professional?

At six, my daughter’s friends became toxic

With school offers for September now out, families across the UK will be getting ready for a new chapter. But what happens when the school you select isn’t right? One mother shares her story.

We live in a part of Bristol that has several primary schools and are fortunate enough to live between two with “outstanding” ratings so were spoiled for choice when it came to choosing which to apply for our oldest daughter. We opted for the marginally closer one, knowing how much was in the lap of the gods when it came to potential friendships.

My view was that the social aspect, and learning to rub along in a group, mattered more than the academic stuff. But that, as it turned out, was the real challenge.

Our daughter is August-born, so young for the year. Looking back, I think being younger was a disadvantage. But I also was not prepared for how tribal the playground would be and how segregated the social groups became: sharp-elbowed middle-class parents in one camp; a strong Muslim contingent; and various other groups organised around class, ethnicity and religion, all of it unspoken.

I was quite taken aback at how quickly friendship groups formed and the efficiency with which play dates were set up among the more socially ambitious parents, some of whom seemed intent on orchestrating their children’s social lives.

So when my daughter developed what seemed like a sweet friendship with two other girls I was hugely relieved. They all got on well and, together with their parents, we organised regular after-school playdates. For the first couple of years, I felt very fortunate that she had made some nice friends and was happy.

But in Year 2, things changed quite radically. A new girl joined the class and the whole dynamic of my daughter’s friendship group shifted. It was pretty brutal. My daughter’s two friends immediately gravitated towards the new girl who was very charismatic, and whose mother was quite intent on promoting the friendship.

Unfortunately, the net result – although perhaps not the explicit intention, at least at the start – was that my daughter was left more or less out in the cold.

My daughter stopped being invited on after-school play dates with her friends and they turned down any invitations from us. The parents of the other three girls seemed to agree that it was fine to exclude my daughter. No doubt they told themselves that you can’t force kids into friendships they don’t want, but from our point of view, it was awful.

She also regularly came home saying that nobody played with her at breaktime, which is painful for any parent to hear. I talked to her teacher, who would do things like talk to the class about kindness but did nothing concrete.

With no experience to draw on, I didn’t know how seriously to take it. I could see how sad my daughter was but tried to be positive and supportive. I advised her to focus on finding other friends (easier said than done) and veered between thinking it was all part of learning how to navigate friendship and thinking we needed to remove her from the situation.

Equally, I did not want to send the message that when things get tough the answer is to run away, and taking her out of the school felt like the nuclear option; I worried about the impact on her of being the new girl and having to start again.

Looking back, I wish I had listened to my instincts and seen that a new school would be far less damaging than the effects on her self-confidence. The exclusion essentially amounted to bullying; a dynamic that got steadily worse. We brought it up with the school repeatedly but a lot of the meanness was covert; invisible to the eye of a teacher managing 30-plus primary school kids.

Instead, we pinned our hopes on a new secondary school, hoping we’d be allocated a different school to the other three girls. Unfortunately, two of them ended up at the same secondary school as my daughter and the toxic dynamic followed. By now, smartphones added a new dimension; pictures and posts of hangouts, sleepovers and parties that my daughter had not been invited to were regularly sent her way. Again, we spoke to the school. Their response was, disappointingly, there was nothing much they could do.

We stuck it out for just over a year. But by the beginning of Year 8 my daughter started begging not to go to school. One good thing about my regret at not having moved her in primary school was that it helped me take decisive action. In many ways the timing could not be worse – moving to a new school in the middle of Year 8, when friendship groups are bedded in would be a challenge for any young person; particularly one who has had a tricky time. But with the prospect of school refusal on the horizon, it was a risk worth taking.

We applied for a place at a different school about half an hour away, with no kids from the primary and got one fairly quickly. The first few months were very challenging as she navigated the choppy waters of trying to fit in, and being the new girl. There were many emotional ups and downs, but luckily the emphasis on pastoral care at the new school was so much better than the previous one and the head of year took a personal interest in helping my daughter feel secure.

Now she is in Year 10, part of a nice friendship group, and is so much happier – it’s like night and day. It was a difficult decision but there is no doubt in my mind that it was the right one.

Should you move school? Advice to help you decide 

Dr Jane Gilmour is consultant clinical psychologist at Great Ormond Street Hospital and co-author of ‘The incredible teenage brain book’ and ‘How to have incredible conversations with your child’

Find out what the problem is. the key thing with friendship issues is to identify whether it is a case of not quite fitting in – or actual bullying. Understanding will change your strategy.

Focus on listening: be calm and allow them to talk. You will feel concerned, anxious and angry but it’s not about you. It’s very important that what you feel as a parent does not bleed into the situation with your child.

For younger kids, get involved: be there on a playdate so you can notice where things are going wrong, scaffold the behaviour and help them learn to develop skills. Is it a mismatch in temperament? A struggle to take turns? Do they have different interests? Structured activities that are less verbal can take the pressure off. Tennis involves turn-taking but not much chat. A bike ride is less stressful for two nine-year-olds than sitting face-to-face.

See if the issue is fixable: your first question to a school should be, “What is your bullying policy?” Suggest a so-called “whole school intervention”: research shows that a bully-prevention programme can reduce negative behaviour by 50 per cent, focusing on the “bystander effect”: there’s usually one person showing the behaviour – but everyone around enforces that. Changing the environment so being picked on or left out is not OK shifts the whole culture.

Consider other issues: if your child is struggling socially it might be that they’re not reading social cues. Social skills training can help young people learn to engage with other kids; how to learn to take turns. Unidentified learning issues can be another issue. But education issues are easier to fix than friendship.

Trust your instincts: you might be able to address the issue without changing school. And you don’t want to send a message that you flip out every time something is tough. But if a young person is not feeling safe that needs to be addressed. Sometimes a move is the best outcome.

Prioritise the wellbeing of your child: the only thing that matters is that your child is OK. Academic results matter but if your child is saying they are struggling, take it seriously.

Three ways to support your child

1. Telegraph calm: if you’ve moved mid-term you are likely to be very anxious that the move goes well. But remember you are modelling something. The message should be: it is absolutely fine; I am not worried and so you won’t be either.

2. Connect with the new school: visit with your child to look around so they know the layout. Get the names of a couple of kids and ask if there are any parent groups you can be part of.

3. If they struggle, don’t panic: Remind them of a recent challenge that took time: learning to ride a bike or to draw. Listen without shutting them down and say you’ll figure it out together.

what you need to do differently in spring to protect your skin

Sitting in her London garden last weekend, on the first sunny day she’d been free to enjoy this year, Claire luxuriated in the feeling of warmth on her skin.

On holidays abroad, she’s meticulous at applying sunscreen. But with the forecast around 21 degrees, she went without. “It was April. I didn’t think it was hot enough for it – the air still felt cool,” she says. Even when her chest started feeling hot, it didn’t register it could be burning. “After a few hours it was bright red. I had a burn line in the roll of my stomach and had to cover my chest for the rest of the weekend. I felt so silly, and realised I make this mistake every year.”

She won’t be the only one, especially as temperatures are expected to reach 24 degrees in some parts of the UK this week. The first sprinkling of spring sunshine has a dizzying effect, driving many of us to soak up the rays, with none of the caution we would exercise on holiday or in high summer. As Claire puts it: “For some reason it feels like the UK sun can’t possibly really burn you. Or maybe I subconsciously fear it could be the one day of sun in weeks, and I don’t want to miss the opportunity.”

The phenomenon is one experts recognise in the sun-starved British public, our skin particularly susceptible to burning when it’s been buried under layers all winter. As our summers get hotter due to climate change, it’s easier than ever to get caught out. “People associate sunscreen with holiday. Even the smell makes you think of lying on a beach and you don’t have that automatic association in the UK in spring. I’ve seen people looking awfully red,” says Dr Tina Tian, consultant dermatologist at Oxford’s Stratum Dermatology Clinic. So just how risky is the sun at this time of year? And what should we be doing to protect ourselves?

The UX Index, not the temperature, tells you how likely you are to burn

“It’s very common for people to think your risk of burning comes from temperature,” says Dr Sidra Khan, consultant dermatologist and spokesperson for the British Skin Foundation. In fact, it comes from UV exposure – the amount of ultraviolet radiation from the sun that reaches your skin.

“Around this time of year, the UV index starts to climb very quickly, but it doesn’t feel hot. We still have a cool breeze. There’s still a bit of cloud cover,” adds Khan. Even on a daily basis, the temperature lags behind UV levels, which peak between late morning and early afternoon, so when it feels relatively cool at 9am you could still be getting “significant” UV exposure, stresses Tian. Finding out your local UV Index, which goes from zero to over 15 in the hottest countries but in the UK rarely exceeds nine, is easy on an iPhone – simply open your weather app and scroll down. It’s also available on Google’s weather app, and Tian asks Amazon’s Alexa for hers. “If it’s three and above you need to pop on sunscreen,” says Khan.

Beware the tops of your feet and consider covering arms and legs

Khan says part of the problem in spring is that, after months of being indoors, “I don’t think our (sun protection) habits have quite kicked in.” Particularly at risk of burning, are parts of the body we accidentally miss or forget about, she says, such as “backs of ears, necks, tops of heads for people who may have less hair. Common, especially in children, is the tops of feet and toes.” Tian warns against our compulsion to strip to shorts and vests at that “first glimmer of sunshine”, increasing the risk of skin cancers such as squamous cell carcinoma, linked to long-term all-over skin exposure, which “can go to other organs, invade and metastasise, and kill you. A lot of people are not wearing long sleeves and trousers that would give more cover”.

Many skin cancer patients are over 70 and grew up when sunscreen “wasn’t a thing and people used to lather themselves with oil”, she says. Younger generations understand the damaging effects of the sun, she believes, but are still susceptible. “Last year, I remember seeing (videos) on TikTok about getting a tan mark, even on sunbeds. I think we’re getting a second peak where people are aware, but succumbing to social media pressures.”

So should we all be wearing sunscreen all day?

Not necessarily, although Tian concedes dermatologists’ views “differ”. For wellbeing and health – sunshine is instrumental in the production of Vitamin D – she suggests going without very briefly early in the morning and late in the evening. “Five minutes will do it.”

Between 10am and 5pm, she says, “you really should be covering up and wearing sunscreen”. For protection against sun-related ageing, she advises wearing sunscreen all year round – as she does. “It’s all about cumulative exposure. Even smidgeons add up.” To protect against skin cancer, she recommends it “from April to October inclusive”.

What if you’re an office worker, stuck inside – do you really need to slather it on at the start of every day? “Probably not,” says Khan. But “if you’re outdoors and exposed to sunlight, you should be reapplying every two hours. By the time your skin has developed a tan the damage has been done.”

You still have to reapply if you’ve been sitting indoors all morning

Just because you’ve been inside since you applied sunscreen in the morning doesn’t mean you don’t have to reapply at lunch if you’re going outdoors, says Tian. “People think the sun degrades your sunscreen. That’s a common misconception.” In fact, sweat, the skin’s oil production and the friction of accidentally touching your face are “all breaking down your sunscreen barrier,” she says.

“So instead of having a continuous layer you’ve got a lacy kind of protection.” For this reason she recommends a waterproof sunscreen, whether you’re planning to get wet or not. “Waterproof sunscreens last longer and maintain a continuous film.”

Look for UV protection as well as SPF rating

Another mistake people make is underestimating the importance of UVA rating when buying sunscreen, says Tian. “They look at SPF and think ‘50, I’m not going to burn.’” While UVB rays cause most sunburn, UVA rays cause “silent, deeper damage,” she says. In the UK, sunscreens have a five-star rating, with five the maximum protection against UVA rays. “You want a minimum of four star,” says Tian, who believes it more helpful to see UV rays “collectively, as a whole.

“We’ve been taught to segregate these – UVB is burning, UVA is ageing. But they both cause burning, skin cancer, ageing.” She suggests buying SPF50 to allow for failures in application – even the most meticulous are unlikely to apply it perfectly, so are “probably only getting an SPF25” and are unlikely to apply it every two hours as directed, “so in a couple of hours your sunscreen factor is probably down to 10.”

Khan recommends a minimum of SPF30. “If you’re prone to burning, go for SPF50,” she says, “but I would caveat by saying SPF30s generally are cosmetically easier to wear, so if you find an SPF30 you like and can wear throughout the day it will be far better than a poorly applied SPF50.”

You don’t need to spend a fortune

When it comes to sunscreen, Tian really doesn’t think people should be spending loads of money. Some cheaper brands “might sting a bit more and might make your shirt collars yellow” but they will still protect your skin, she says. “It really is about finding one in the middle ground.”

She recommends Boots Soltan Sensitive & Sun Allergy Protect range for her patients with sensitive skin and, although she has no problem with people wearing sunscreen for body on their face, wears the specifically designed Riemann’s P20 Urban Shield (£14.50, 50ml, Boots) on hers.

“I love the P20 range. They are the most water-resistant. And they have high UVA protection.” Khan says La Roche-Posay Anthelios UVMune range is “nice to wear” and offers good protection – its SPF50+ Face & Body Hydrating Milk, 150ml, is £19.20. Like Tian, she also recommends Altruist, developed by dermatologist and skin cancer surgeon Dr Andrew Birnie. Altruist’s 250ml SPF50 family sunspray is £12.50. “I use it on myself, but also my kids,” says Khan.

“What I love is they make sunscreen affordable. It’s a health necessity. It shouldn’t be expensive.” In fact, spending more can be counterproductive, she warns. “If you’ve got a gorgeous formulation but it’s very expensive you’re going to use it sparingly.”

British vigilantes’ new ‘Operation Overlord’ plan to stop Channel migrant boats

British vigilantes who have been banned from France after recording themselves slashing migrant boats have hatched a new plan to physically stop Channel crossings, aboard the “Cheeky Girl” power boat.

Daniel Thomas, 37, a former private schoolboy and associate of far-right activist Tommy Robinson has previously filmed himself at the French coast destroying small boats used by migrants to cross the English Channel.

He was also caught discussing a plot to send groups of British men to join his efforts in France under the banner of “Operation Overlord” but was banned from entering the country in January alongside nine others by the French interior minister who said “violent or hate-inciting actions have no place on our territory”.

Shorts – Quick stories

Despite this, Thomas has returned to social media with a new plot to swerve that restriction, by hiring a fishing boat and taking to the Channel with a small group of helpers to intercept boats in the water instead.

He was ostracised from a wider group of anti-migrant vigilantes following a public falling out earlier this year but is now attempting to revive the mission to stop small boat crossings, first revealed by The i Paper in November last year.

The real Operation Overlord – the Allies’ invasion of occupied Europe during the Second World War, beginning on D-Day, 1944 – was considered a complete success and was planned in absolute secrecy.

Thomas’s version includes a video he shared with thousands of social media followers, showing his attempt to buy a boat and urging them to “join the fight” by intimidating migrants into turning back from the English coast.

Asking for donations to secure the boat, he told his followers, “We cannot do this without her [the boat]” adding, “Every true patriot knows what’s at stake.”

The Home Office, Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) and Coastguard have all warned against a person attempting to cross the Channel without training, including to intercept boats as an untrained civilian. They said that this would be risking their lives and others and also risks criminal liability in the UK and in other legal jurisdictions.

The vessel Thomas hoped would strike fear into the heart of those making the dangerous crossing in his video shared at the start of this month was named the Cheeky Girl.

Danny Thomas https://www.instagram.com/dannythomasnew/ British vigilantes travelled to northern France. They called this ?direct action?, part of Operation Stop The Boats, aimed at disrupting Channel crossings by migrants.
The boat’s name can be seen in the video posted by Thomas. He hoped to use ‘Cheeky Girl’ to frighten migrants (Photo: Daniel Thomas/Instagram)

Thomas has said he plans to join with “ex-military [and] navy guys” to “document and take action where the British government refuse to do so” and that he and his new band of vigilantes want to “show you how easy it is to prevent some of these crossings from occurring by taking action”.

He has also said there will be “no illegal action. We won’t be approaching any of the migrants, we won’t be touching any of the migrants at sea” but that “it is about time we do something to make them start to think that we are on to them”.

Thomas failed to buy Cheeky Girl, which he was allowed to spend more than 30 minutes viewing, telling the potential sellers that he wanted to use it for a fishing trip with his child.

Instead, after making repeated pleas for donations, Thomas appears to have obtained a different, smaller boat. “Rule, Britannia!” he told his followers in an update on Tuesday, saying the new boat would bear the name “The Patriot”.

Danny Thomas https://www.instagram.com/dannythomasnew/ British vigilantes travelled to northern France. They called this ?direct action?, part of Operation Stop The Boats, aimed at disrupting Channel crossings by migrants.
An AI-slop image created to show a new boat obtained by Thomas, one which in reality was much smaller (Photo: Daniel Thomas/Instagram)

His commandeering of a boat to cross the Channel will call to mind for some a second victorious mission of World War Two – the Dunkirk evacuation codenamed Operation Dynamo. But instead of a flotilla of hundreds of civilian fishing boats and yachts joining destroyers to rescue British soldiers trapped on French beaches, Thomas appears to be in a Naval battalion of one.

There is no indication that Thomas or his supporters have yet used a boat to enter the Channel.

He has acknowledged that attempting to do so as a novice sailor is dangerous, telling his followers he was trying to “go out in this boat and get used to her movements [and gain] the ability to control her because when it comes to the English Channel… it’s one of the most dangerous stretches of sea that we have”.

Both the Maritime and Coastguard Agency and the RNLI urges people to complete formal training before operating vessels at sea, with the English Channel known for having a high-level of maritime traffic, including large container ships. Boats frequently get into difficulty in the Channel and in the English sea, with more than 9,000 RNLI lifeboats launched last year.

A Home Office spokesperson said: “We recognise the frustration surrounding small boat crossings. However, taking the law into your own hands will not resolve the issue and can put you in danger.”

They added: “The Home Secretary has signed a landmark new deal with France to boost enforcement action on beaches and put people smugglers behind bars. This builds on joint work that has seen more than 42,000 small boat crossing attempts prevented since the election.”

Thomas appearing on a live stream with anti-Islam campaigner Tommy Robinson in April (Photo: Danny Tommo/YouTube)

The Government has said its new UK-France deal to tackle illegal crossings will result in a 40 per cent increase in law enforcement and intelligence officers tasked with preventing migrants from crossing the Channel, as well as an increase in drone surveillance and helicopters monitoring the area.

Government figures indicate nearly 60,000 illegal migrants and foreign criminals have been returned or deported from the UK since the 2024 election up to the start of this year, and this paper understands the UK is monitoring efforts from migrants to cross into England from Belgium.

Anti-migrant sentiment in the UK has led to a number of protests across the country, with local residents and far-right groups taking to the street to demonstrate against asylum seeker and migrant accommodation costs and locations.