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Pregnant British Teen Accused of Drug Smuggling Released After Guilty Verdict

Bella May Culley, 19-year-old, who was arrested upon arrival at the Tbilisi Airport in May and accused of attempting to smuggle marijuana and hashish into the country, center, walks with her lawyer Malkhaz Salakaia, left, and her mother Lyanne Kennedy after she was released from prison near the court building, in Tbilisi, Georgia, on Monday, Nov. 3, 2025. (AP Photo/Zurab Tsertsvadze)

TBILISI, Georgia (AP) — British teenager Bella May Culley, who was arrested in Georgia on drug smuggling charges earlier this year, was released from prison Monday as part of a plea deal.

Culley, 19, who is pregnant, was arrested in May at Tbilisi Airport and accused of attempting to smuggle 12 kilograms (26.5 pounds) of marijuana and 2 kilograms (4.4 pounds) of hashish into the country.

She was found guilty by a Georgian court on Monday and sentenced to five months and 25 days in prison, the total time she had already spent in custody. Her family also paid a 500,000 lari (about $184,000) fine as part of a plea deal.

Culley and her mother, Lyanne Kennedy, both cried as the verdict was read.

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Lyanne Kennedy, background left, the mother of 19-year-old Bella May Culley who was arrested upon arrival at the Tbilisi Airport in May and accused of attempting to smuggle marijuana and hashish into the country, stands at an entrance as she arrives to attend the court session in Tbilisi, Georgia, Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Zurab Tsertsvadze)

Georgian prosecutors were considering a two-year sentence, but “decided to consider the time she has already served,” case prosecutor Vakhtang Tsalughelashvili told The Associated Press.

The teenager was informed of the decision shortly before the court session began. Her mother told the AP she had believed that she would only see her daughter in person again when her grandchild was born. “It was totally unexpected,” she said.

Culley’s lawyer, Malkhaz Salakhaia, said that the teenager would be given her passport and would free to leave the country. While in court, she thanked everyone present for finalizing Culley’s plea deal.

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Lyanne Kennedy, the mother of 19-year-old Bella May Culley who was arrested upon arrival at the Tbilisi Airport in May and accused of attempting to smuggle marijuana and hashish into the country, arrives to attend the court session in Tbilisi, Georgia, on Monday, Nov. 3, 2025. (AP Photo/Zurab Tsertsvadze)

Culley initially faced a maximum penalty of up to 15 years or life in prison.

In Georgia, a 3.7-million nation in the South Caucasus, the law allows for financial plea agreements that can be reached to reduce or eliminate a prison sentence in certain cases. Such plea agreements are often reached in drug-related cases.

Culley, who is from Teesside, in northeast England, was reported missing in Thailand prior to her arrest at the Tbilisi airport on May 10. The teenager pleaded not guilty to the charges after her arrest, saying she was tortured in Thailand and forced to carry the drugs.

Salakhaia has told reporters that she showed visible physical signs of torture upon her arrival in Georgia.

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Related article:

Thailand Vows To Tighten Control on Cannabis After Smuggling Cases Involving Tourists Soar

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Bangkok’s Tawandang German Brewery Turns 27, Evolves into Lifestyle Destination

Building on its legacy of success, the iconic venue strengthens its position with distinctive beer, food, and entertainment offerings—targeting over 1 billion baht in revenue by 2025.

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Tawandang German Brewery, Thailand’s first microbrewery and one of Bangkok’s most iconic food, beverage, and entertainment destinations, reaffirms its standing as the top choice for both locals and international visitors. Now entering its 27th year with a strong and enduring presence, the brewery continues to build on its success through four core pillars—beer, food, entertainment, and service. These pillars have been central to its sustained leadership in the food and beverage industry, contributing significantly to Thailand’s economy and tourism for more than two decades. Today, it remains one of the key businesses supporting the robust growth of Thailand’s gastronomy tourism.

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The new decade marks an ambitious new chapter for Tawandang German Brewery, as the brewery sets its sights on becoming a leading entertainment lifestyle destination—captivating both Thai and international visitors. Backed by its strong foundation, Tawandang German Brewery projects its revenue to reach 1 billion baht this year.

Amidst the fierce competition in the restaurant industry, where businesses are all turning to offer “unique experiences” to secure customer loyalty, Tawandang German Brewery continues to stand out as Bangkok’s undisputed leader in the integrated restaurant and lifestyle segment, with few rivals matching its scale.

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Nine Chinese Arrested in Trat Linked to Myanmar Scam Hub

Thai police arrest nine Chinese nationals at a beachfront resort in Trat province on Nov. 3, 2025, seizing dozens of mobile phones believed to be linked to online scams.

TRAT — Police in Trat province have arrested nine Chinese nationals who allegedly fled a scam compound KK Park in Myanmar and were preparing to cross into Cambodia by boat, authorities said Monday.

Pol. Lt. Col. Phichit Phuensan, chief of Mai Root Police Station, ordered a patrol to investigate reports of suspicious foreigners staying at a beachfront resort in Ban Chuen Beach, Khlong Yai district, around 8 a.m. Monday.

Officers found nine Chinese men inside a two-bedroom resort unit without any identification or passports. They also seized 48 mobile phones, which police said contained gambling and money-laundering apps as well as deleted data believed to be linked to online scams.

The group was taken to Mai Root Police Station for questioning. Because none spoke English, police sought help from interpreters with the Trat Provincial Police Investigation Division and the Immigration Bureau.

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Nine Chinese nationals are detained at Mai Root Police Station in Trat province on Nov. 3, 2025, after being arrested at a resort with dozens of mobile phones linked to online scams.

One man, identified as Xiao Chen, 26, from Yunnan province, reportedly told investigators he had been “sent here” but did not know his location or who was coming to pick him up.

Authorities believe the group escaped from KK Park, a notorious cybercrime hub in Myawaddy, Myanmar, and entered Thailand illegally with help from local facilitators. Trat province shares a border with Cambodia, and police said the men likely planned to cross into Cambodia when arrested.

Police said the investigation began after the resort caretaker, identified only as Somjai, reported a booking made by a group of Thai nationals who arrived earlier in a black Toyota Fortuner and a van with Bangkok license plates. The Thais had reserved multiple rooms, claiming other guests would arrive later in the day.

Somjai told reporters she initially refused to host foreign guests, but heavy rain obscured her view when the Chinese group arrived. The Thai men who made the booking left no ID cards, only advance payment for rooms and meals.

The nine men remain in custody pending further investigation and possible immigration charges.

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Israeli Man Wanted for Robbery Arrested at Samui Airport

Thai officers escort an Israeli fugitive at Samui International Airport, Surat Thani province, on Nov. 2, 2025.

KOH SAMUI — Thai immigration authorities have arrested an Israeli fugitive on Koh Samui who is wanted in his home country for armed robbery and burglary, officials said Monday.

The suspect, identified as Osher Farhi, 22, was detained after a joint operation between Surat Thani Immigration Police and local investigators, following a formal request from the Israeli Embassy in Bangkok.

Israeli authorities notified Thai officials that Farhi and two accomplices allegedly used firearms to threaten victims and break into a home in Israel before stealing valuables and fleeing the country.

Investigators later traced a stolen laptop believed to belong to one of the victims to Koh Samui, leading police to the island. Authorities also found that Farhi had a prior criminal record involving drug trafficking and violent offenses.

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Thai officers escort an Israeli fugitive at Samui International Airport, Surat Thani province, on Nov. 2, 2025

Immigration police located his registration at a hotel in Chaweng Beach, but he was not found there. Further checks revealed that Farhi had booked a flight to leave Thailand through Samui International Airport on November 2.

Officers set up surveillance at the airport and arrested him as he arrived by taxi. His visa was immediately revoked under the Immigration Act, and he was taken into custody.

Farhi is being held at Bo Phut Police Station pending coordination with the Israeli Embassy for his deportation to face prosecution in Israel.

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Thailand Urges Eco-Friendly Loy Krathong Practices

most krathong vendors emphasize the use of natural and easily biodegradable materials following the popular trend, on November 4, 2025. (MATICHON Photo/Surin Muksri)

BANGKOK — Thailand’s Pollution Control Department is pushing for greener celebrations of Loy Krathong, the traditional festival of floating lanterns, as concerns mount over waste choking the nation’s waterways.

The festival, which falls on November 5 this year, generates massive amounts of waste annually, much of it non-biodegradable styrofoam and plastic decorations that fragment into microplastics in aquatic ecosystems, said PCD Director-General Surin Vorakitpornkul on Sunday.

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Thailand’s Pollution Control Department recommends traditional materials like banana leaves, lotus flowers, or ice krathongs that dissolve naturally.

Three-Pronged Approach

The department is promoting three alternatives to reduce the festival’s environmental footprint:

  • Families should share a single krathong or choose smaller floats with minimal decorations.
  • The PCD also recommends traditional materials like banana leaves, lotus flowers, or ice krathongs that dissolve naturally.
  • For those wanting zero waste, virtual platforms now allow online krathong floating.

Bread Krathongs Raise Concerns

Vorakitpornkul warned against the trendy bread-based krathongs, noting their high organic content can cause water to spoil when released in large numbers into ponds or enclosed bodies of water.

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Thailand’s Pollution Control Department warns bread-based krathongs can spoil water quality in ponds and enclosed waterways when released in large quantities, despite being biodegradable.

“They become food waste in the water instead,” he said, urging people to use only designated floating areas at temples and public parks where cleanup crews can properly collect and dispose of materials.

The PCD is also asking festival-goers and tourists to separate food waste and single-use plastics at venues, and to bring reusable bags and water bottles to cut plastic consumption during the celebrations.

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Thailand Welcomes Miss Universe 2025, Including Cambodia

Miss Universe 2025 contestants check in at the Chatrium Riverside Hotel in Bangkok on Nov. 2, 2025.

BANGKOKThailand welcomed more than 100 contestants Sunday as the 74th Miss Universe pageant began in Bangkok — including Cambodia’s entry, whose participation has stirred debate amid tensions between the two countries.

Held under the theme “The Grand Universe: The Power of Love, The Power of Thailand,” the event marks the fourth time Thailand has hosted the global competition. Activities will run through Nov. 21 across Bangkok, Phuket, and Pattaya, promoting Thailand’s tourism and culture.

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Miss Universe Thailand host Nawat Itsaragrisil welcomes Cambodian contestant Thai Neary Socheata, as she arrives in Bangkok for the Miss Universe 2025 pageant on Nov. 2, 2025.

The Cambodian contestant, Thai Neary Socheata, or Fiyata, arrived in Bangkok despite her national license holder ELEVENTO9 Company announcing Cambodia’s withdrawal a day earlier, citing “unresolved situations between Cambodia and Thailand.”

Fiyata’s independent decision to join the competition sparked online debate in both countries. She was greeted warmly by Cambodian fans at Suvarnabhumi Airport and later posted on social media, writing, “I’ve arrived safely in Thailand. Thank you for the warm welcome, kindness, and support from everyone. Your love truly means so much to me.”

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Miss Universe Argentina 2025 contestant checks in at the Chatrium Riverside Hotel in Bangkok on Nov. 2, 2025.

Organizers Nawat Itsaragrisil, president of Miss Universe Thailand host company Miss Grand International PCL, and reigning Miss Universe Victoria Kjær Thelvik of Denmark welcomed 103 contestants — including Thailand’s own Pavina Singh, Miss Universe Thailand 2025 — at the Chatrium Riverside Hotel in Bangkok.

Events will take place from Nov. 2–21 across three main cities — Bangkok, Phuket, and Pattaya — highlighting Thailand’s tourism and cultural appeal. The final coronation will be held on Nov. 21 at Impact Muang Thong Thani.

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Miss Universe Thailand host Nawat Itsaragrisil welcomes Pavina Singh, Miss Universe Thailand 2025 (left), as she reports for the Miss Universe 2025 pageant at the Chatrium Riverside Hotel in Bangkok on Nov. 2, 2025.

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Bangkok Thai Police Bust Chinese Suspect in Crypto-for-Cash Scheme

Police arrest Chinese national Zhen Zhang at a shopping mall in Bangkok’s Huai Khwang district on Nov. 1, 2025, for allegedly laundering money through illegal cryptocurrency exchanges linked to call center scams.

BANGKOKThai police have arrested a Chinese man suspected of laundering money through illegal cryptocurrency exchanges in Bangkok’s Huai Khwang district, authorities announced Sunday.

Police identified the suspect as Zhen Zhang, a Chinese national wanted under a Criminal Court warrant issued on October 31. He was arrested around 4:10 p.m. Saturday in the parking area of a shopping mall on Rama IX Road.

According to Metropolitan Police Bureau Commissioner Pol. Lt. Gen. Siam Boonsom, investigators from Metropolitan Division 2 and Sutthisan Police Station found that Zhang had entered Thailand on a student visa reportedly obtained in Singapore. He told officers he resided on Nimmanhaemin Soi 9 in Chiang Mai.

Zhang allegedly admitted to exchanging cryptocurrencies for Thai clients, saying he later learned the funds were linked to a call center scam network. He claimed that a compatriot named Li Yong held large amounts of digital currency and coordinated transactions through the Telegram messaging app.

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Thai police detain Chinese suspect Zhen Zhang in a mall parking area on Rama IX Road, Bangkok, on Nov. 1, 2025, on charges of money laundering and operating an unlicensed crypto exchange.

Each time Thai clients wanted to exchange crypto, Li would connect them with Zhang, who facilitated the trades either in cash or through bank transfers. When paid by transfer, Zhang said he forwarded the funds to Li, who then sent crypto tokens to the wallets specified by Thai clients.

Zhang acknowledged receiving a commission but refused to disclose the amount.

Police said a search of his phone revealed money transfer slips showing a 46,000-baht transaction to Li Yong. Investigators also found crypto transaction records linking Zhang to digital wallets associated with illegal exchange operations.

Officers seized Zhang’s Toyota Alphard van after discovering that its registration did not match his ownership records. Police suspect the vehicle may have been acquired through or used in money laundering activities.

Zhang was handed over to Sutthisan police investigators to face charges of money laundering conspiracy, operating an unlicensed digital asset business, and working in Thailand without a permit.

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Indian Air Force to Evacuate Workers Fleeing KK Park Attacks

Smoke billows after an explosion at KK Park online scam center in Myawaddy township, Karen State, Myanmar, November 2, 2025.

MAE SOT, TAKIndia is dispatching large military transport aircraft to evacuate its nationals from Mae Sot, Thailand, following nine consecutive days of heavy bombing at KK Park in Myanmar that has forced nearly 1,600 foreign workers to flee across the border.

According to Thai official sources, the Indian Air Force will conduct three evacuation flights on November 6 and 10 from Mae Sot International Airport to repatriate Indian citizens. Thai authorities have completed screening and processing procedures in preparation for the evacuation.

As of the latest count, 1,597 people have fled into Mae Sot district in Tak province—1,332 men and 265 women from 28 nationalities. Indians comprise the largest group with 465 people, followed by Filipinos (220), Chinese (185), Vietnamese (151), and Ethiopians (130).

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Foreign nationals fleeing the KK Park crackdown in Karen State, Myanmar, wait for screening by Thai authorities at the Special Operations Center at Mae Sot Permanent Border Checkpoint No. 2, Tak Province, on November 2, 2025.

The mass exodus comes as Myanmar military forces and the Karen Border Guard Force (BGF) continue large-scale bombing operations at KK Park, which began on November 2. The forces have been detonating powerful explosives up to four times daily, with blasts occurring during both daytime and nighttime hours, destroying multiple buildings and facilities.

Shrapnel from the explosions has regularly crossed the border, landing in Mae Ku Tha Sung village in Mae Sot district, endangering Thai residents.

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White smoke billows after an explosion at KK Park online scam center in Myawaddy township, Karen State, Myanmar, Saturday, Oct. 25, 2025. (AP Photo/Sarot Meksophawannakul)

According to AP report, Myanmar has become notorious for hosting cyberscam operations that recruit workers from other countries under false pretenses, promising legitimate employment before holding them captive and forcing them to carry out criminal activities.

Cambodia is another major hub for such operations. International attention intensified on October 14 when the United States and United Kingdom enacted sanctions against organizers of a major Cambodian cyberscam gang, whose alleged ringleader was indicted by a U.S. federal court in New York.

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The Other Vietnam and the Suppression of Press Freedom

BBC Vietnamese-language service

​I magine having a very stable and decent job in a foreign land for many years, then one day being told by your Embassy that you need to return to your home country to renew your passport. Just as your new passport was issued, your government refuses to let you have it and even confiscated  your ID card. You’re unable to return to work as you can’t leave your country, and instead you’re subjected to multiple interrogations by security officials lasting many hours at a time. While you are not imprisoned, security officers follow you everywhere you go. Your Facebook page is now deactivated, and they ‘guard’ your parents’ home.

​What was the ‘crime’? Working for the BBC Vietnamese-language service in Bangkok, writing and broadcasting critically about Vietnam’s state of politics and human rights – and being a Vietnamese citizen.

It’s been months now, according to the BBC statement earlier this week that their unnamed female Vietnamese reporter was unable to return to work in Bangkok.

​In a bizarre turn of events, the BBC would not reveal her name.

​The BBC, normally known for its detailed coverage, issued the following short statement this week.

​BBC statement on journalist in Vietnam

Published: 28 October 2025

“One of our journalists has been unable to leave Vietnam for several months as the authorities have withheld their ID card and their renewed passport. During this time our journalist was subject to multiple days of questioning by the authorities. The BBC journalist was in Vietnam for a routine passport renewal and to visit family.

​“We are deeply concerned about our journalist’s wellbeing and urge the authorities to allow them to leave immediately, providing them with their renewed passport so they can return to work.”

​A Vietnamese friend of hers told me this week he has “no idea about why and how they had decided not to reveal her name.”

​My BBC source, speaking under a condition of anonymity, told me a few days ago that the decision to not reveal her name was for the journalist’s own safety, with no further elaboration.

​One possible logical explanation is that, as a Vietnamese national, she is at the mercy of her own government in Vietnam. She may feel that if she is publicly identified, it could backfire and push the repressive Vietnamese authorities into a corner, and she would face more severe backlash. Or perhaps her parents would face immense social pressures from neighbours.

​So basically this Vietnamese journalist is in a twilight zone as I write these words – not under house arrest but being monitored and unable to leave Vietnam. She is ‘free’ and not free at the same time.

​Basically, she’s still tactically leaving room for the Vietnamese authorities to save face by just letting her go as British press such as The Independent reported on Wednesday, October 29, 2025, that British Prime Minister Keir Starmer is being urged to raise the issue when Mr To Lam, Vietnamese Communist Party Secretary-General, visits London.

​Veteran Bangkok-based human rights defender Phil Robertson told me this week in an interview for Khaosod English that the journalist has been asked to formally acknowledge her participation in the writing of 18 articles on the BBC Vietnamese-language service.

​“At the end, the MPS [Ministry of Public Security] officials compelled her to sign 18 of her past articles, formally acknowledging her involvement in writing them — which is precisely what officials preparing a possible criminal charge would do,” Robertson told me.

​Robertson added that: “There’s no doubt that they are using her as a hostage to intimidate the other reporters at the Bangkok-based BBC Vietnamese service, which reports daily in Vietnamese language about what is happening in the country. This is particularly important to the ruling Communist Party which is preparing for its major national Congress in Hanoi in January 2026.”

​Let us call a spade a spade. In a country with very limited press freedom like Vietnam, the Vietnamese authorities must either perceive her as a spreader of ‘disinformation’ about Vietnam, or a spy, or both – thus a traitor.

Even in Thailand, some ultra-conservative hold such views towards Thai NGOs, or Thai NGOs funded by foreign NGOs or governments, as well as some Thai journalists working for foreign news agencies, perceiving them as their enemies, a traitor even.

​The fact that this journalist is particularly known for her support of press freedom and freedom of expression only makes it worse.

According to the Paris-based Reporters Without Borders (RSF), Vietnam ranks 173rd out of 180 countries in the 2025 World Press Freedom Index – one of the worst countries for press freedom in the world and it’s among the world’s top jailers of journalists. (Thailand is ranked at Number 85 out of 180 countries, although as a responder to RSF’s annual survey on Thailand, I think Thailand is overrated, but that’s for another story)

​“Vietnam’s traditional media are closely controlled by the single party. Independent reporters and bloggers are often jailed, making Vietnam one of the world’s biggest prisons for journalists,” RSF stated, adding that at present, 28 journalists are incarcerated. “Independent bloggers and journalists are the only sources of freely reported news and information in a country where all the media follow orders from the Communist Party, in power since 1954 in the North and since 1975 in the South. With 86.4 million users – the seventh highest number in the world – Facebook is Vietnam’s most popular online platform and serves as a major tool for circulating news and information.”

​While the BBC earlier this week issued a statement calling for the Vietnamese authorities to allow the journalist to return to Thailand to work, I think any expectations must also be tamed by the ugly realities.

​Back in 2017, three years after the European Union (EU) downgraded its relationship with Thailand due to the May 2014 military coup which was led by Gen Prayut Chan-o-cha, it had decided to pursue gradual political re-engagement. I recalled that while attending a diplomatic function at the Sukhothai Hotel in Bangkok in December that year, a diplomat from one of the Northern European Embassies told me that the EU has decided that it made no sense to continue limiting the ties with the Thai military junta as the human rights situation is much more repressive in Vietnam and yet the EU maintains a normal relationship with Hanoi.

​Back to the issue of the unidentified Vietnamese journalist, since she works for the BBC, which is one of the most influential global media organisations and a British public broadcaster, her case will be a test of will of not just the BBC but the British government itself.

​I can only wish her ample fortitude.

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UK Police Say 10 People Hospitalized After Train Stabbing Attack

Emergency personnel inspect a train at the Huntingdon, England, train station in Cambridgeshire after people were stabbed Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025. (Chris Radburn/PA via AP)

LONDON (AP) — British police said 10 people have been hospitalized, nine with life-threatening injuries, following a mass stabbing attack on a London-bound train Saturday evening, and that counter-terrorism police are supporting the investigation.

In a statement early Sunday, British Transport Police, which took the lead in the response given it is responsible for security matters on the trains, said two individuals have been arrested in connection with the stabbings.

“Ten people have been taken to hospital with nine believed to have suffered life-threatening injuries,” the statement said. “This has been declared a major incident and Counter Terrorism Policing are supporting our investigation whilst we work to establish the full circumstances and motivation for this incident.”

The police force also said that “Plato,” the national code word used by police and emergency services when responding to what could be a “marauding terror attack,” was initiated. That declaration was later rescinded but no motive for the attack was disclosed.

“We’re conducting urgent enquiries to establish what has happened, and it could take some time before we are in a position to confirm anything further,” Chief Superintendent Chris Casey said. “At this early stage it would not be appropriate to speculate on the causes of the incident.”

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Emergency personnel inspect a train at the Huntingdon, England, train station in Cambridgeshire after people were stabbed Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025. (Chris Radburn/PA via AP)

The attack took place as the Doncaster to London King’s Cross train headed south toward Huntingdon, a market town a few miles northwest of the university city of Cambridge.

Emergency services, including armed police and air ambulances, responded quickly as the train drew into Huntingdon. The attack appears to have been contained swiftly after the train arrived at the station, and police officers wearing forensic suits, with a police dog, could be seen on the platform.

Cambridgeshire Constabulary, the local police force, said armed police attended the incident after officers were called to the scene at Huntingdon station at 7:39 p.m. on Saturday. It added that the two people were arrested at the station, which is around 75 miles (120 kilometers) north of London.

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said his “thoughts are with all those affected” after the “appalling incident.”

Paul Bristow, the mayor of Cambridgeshire and Peterborough, said he had heard of “horrendous scenes” on the train.

London North Eastern Railway, or LNER, which operates the East Coast Mainline services in the U.K., confirmed the incident had happened on one of its trains and urged passengers not to travel because of “major disruption.”

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