In a post on Facebook, police said a group of individuals were found standing and taking photographs at a red and white safety fence for an extended period of time.
According to a social media post from his owner, Howard had broken some boards of a barn, getting himself wedged between the wall and a beam.The fire service said: "He was able to be freed after an hour with only superficial injuries that will soon heal. No more playing hide and seek Howard!"
His owner at Chrishall Grange said: "Amazingly apart from a few grazes and being a bit sore he seems to have walked away from it all OK."She added that Howard was happily eating his dinner an hour later.Britons are being warned "to book through reputable vendors only" when planning trips on Egyptian liveaboard dive boats in the Red Sea, due to safety concerns.
Sixteen incidents involving liveaboard vessels operating in the area have occurred in the last five years, UK investigators said, with a number resulting in deaths.A Marine Accident Investigation Branch (MAIB) report published on Thursday found boats were "poorly constructed" and essential lifesaving equipment was "defective, out-of-date for service and, in some cases, missing".
, an Egyptian dive boat that sank in the Red Sea last November.
Up to 11 people died or are still missing, including two Britons, Jenny Cawson and Tarig Sinada from Devon.Mr Kleinhaus has come under scrutiny for antisemitic posts on social media, which have since been deleted.
Discussing one of these, he says he copied and pasted someone else's thoughts, and that he was being administered morphine as part of medical treatment at the time - though he admits this was not an excuse.The 2023 post was made in a moment of anger, he adds, after he saw a video - not verified by the BBC - which purported to show some Jews spitting at Christians in Israel.
Mr Kleinhaus insists the comments were specific to one moment, and not a wider comment about Jewish people. "Even now, if I see any person going against my religion, I will speak up against it," he said.The US government is facing questions about the vetting process for those being resettled. The UN's refugee agency told the BBC it was not involved in the screening process for the Afrikaners as it normally would be for refugees heading to the US.