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26‑Year‑Old Fatally Shot in Anguilla, Marking 3rd Homicide of 2026.

26 year old alleged victim. Reports reaching All Angles UK from our correspondents in Anguilla confirm that the Royal Anguilla Police Force (RAPF) is investigating the island’s third homicide of the year, following a fatal shooting in the South Hill area during the early hours of Saturday, 14 February 2026.  LIVE RADIO LISTEN NOW Police say that at approximately 2:20 a.m., officers responded to reports of multiple gunshots in the Back Street area, where they discovered a 26‑year‑old male lying unresponsive outside an apartment complex with multiple gunshot wounds. He was pronounced dead at the scene by medical personnel. The victim has not yet been publicly named. AD: SHOP WITH AVON This killing marks Anguilla’s second unsolved homicide of the year and adds to the 11 cases that remained unresolved at the end of last year. The area has been cordoned off as investigators process the scene and pursue several lines of inquiry. Police have not announced any arrests or identified suspec...

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When Hackers Hit the Brakes: Jaguar Land Rover Brought to a Standstil after Cyber Attack


Jaguar Land Rover has been forced to grind production to a halt after a cyber-attack crippled its IT systems, leaving factory floors eerily quiet across the UK and beyond. The disruption could not have come at a worse moment, coinciding with the release of new number plates and a busy sales period.



Cybersecurity analyst Sarah Greenwood told The Times, “This is not just about cars; it’s about how dependent our entire industrial infrastructure has become on digital threads. One cut, and the whole fabric unravels.” For a brand synonymous with precision engineering, the sudden paralysis is both shocking and symbolic of modern vulnerabilities.



Investigations are still ongoing, but reports point towards a sophisticated hacker group, potentially linked to previous high-profile ransomware incidents. JLR has said there is no evidence customer data has been compromised, though dealerships and service centres are struggling, with more than a million vehicles in Britain now awaiting parts or repairs.


Professor Alan Marshall, a cybersecurity expert at the University of Liverpool, observed, “Shutting down production was the lesser of two evils. In cyber warfare, sometimes you must choose disruption today to avoid catastrophe tomorrow.” It is a sobering reminder that even giants of the automotive world are not immune to unseen attackers lurking in the digital shadows.

The company is working with the National Cyber Security Centre to restore operations, but recovery could take weeks rather than days. In the meantime, thousands of workers, dealers, and drivers are caught in limbo, watching the drama unfold. 

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JLR insists it is acting with urgency, yet many are asking whether this will be the incident that forces the entire industry to rethink how it protects itself. As Greenwood put it, “This won’t be the last cyber-attack on carmakers — the question is whether we’ve learned enough from it.” What do you think: is this simply an unfortunate blip, or the beginning of a far larger problem for the automotive world?

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