Cllr Martin Smith said its small country lanes are some of the "most dangerous roads" and that a 20mph limit was about "making people feel safer".
He said it was important that police and prosecutors were able to do their jobs "without any political interference".Mark Webster, the chief constable of Cleveland Police, told Today people should be "very careful" about "naming individual premises or saying what we’re doing individually in forces".
"You will see an awful lot of resource today and over the following days to make sure we can manage responses to all of the intelligence that comes in," he said.He urged people to focus on official communications online, and not to "react to things on social media from sources you can’t verify".Ciaran O’Connor, analyst at online extremism think thinktank, ISD, told the BBC that Telegram had taken "a hands-off approach to tackling disinformation and all shapes of extremism" on its platform.
"We’ve seen lists of refugee accommodation and immigration services addresses being shared, and an invitation to ‘protest’ on Wednesday evening," he said."We’ve seen the celebration of violence that has happened so far, and the widespread dissemination of false, misleading and inflammatory claims about Muslims, migrants and the stabbing.
"This captures the essence of the largely unmoderated space on Telegram.”
Bristol was the scene of two big music events this weekend, with Massive AttackSame-day mental health support without the need for a referral is the aim of a new strategy after calls to an urgent hotline doubled in a year.
which launched in late 2022 gets an average of 6,000 calls each month, while the overall number of calls almost doubled between 2023 and 2024.The Welsh government's 10-year plan will focus on early intervention without delay and more social prescribing which connects people to community based activities.
Minister for Health and Wellbeing Sarah Murphy said the Welsh government was working to address factors that affect wellbeing.Analysis from health think tank the Bevan Commission found the number of people with mental health issues could increase by a third over the next 20 years.