News
Yellow weather warning issued around Wales

YELLOW WEATHER WARNINGS have been issued for Wales as Storm Diana and extreme winds hit the country.
The Met Office has warned of strong winds and heavy rain over Wednesday and Thursday as part of Storm Diana.
There is a Yellow Warning for wind in place on Wednesday (Nov 28) between 9am-11.59pm. A very unsettled spell of weather is expected, with strong winds, combined with widespread and in places heavy rain.
Winds are expected to increase from the far southwest early on Wednesday, spreading northeast, with areas adjacent to the Irish Sea most exposed to the south to southeasterly wind.
Wind gusts of 60 mph are expected, with a few more exposed locations seeing 70 mph gusts. The Met Office is warning of likely delays to public transport and potential short term loss of power. It is also likely that some coastal routes, sea fronts and coastal communities will be affected by spray and/or large waves.
Another Yellow Warning is in place on Thursday (Nov 29) between 3am-3pm. There is a small chance that an intense weather system could quickly travel northeast, bringing a narrow swathe of very strong winds early in the day to parts of southwest England and Wales, followed by north Wales and northern England a little later.
Should this occur, wind gusts of around 80 mph are possible, particularly along exposed coastlines. This would also bring some rough seas, large waves, and possible local coastal impacts.
There is significant uncertainty over how severe this system will be, but a wet and windy day is expected regardless. There is a small chance of delays to public transport, a slight chance of some damage to buildings, such as tiles blown from roofs and a slight chance that power cuts may occur, with the potential to affect other services, such as mobile phone coverage.
There is also the potential for injuries and danger to life as a result of large waves and beach material being thrown onto sea fronts, coastal roads and properties.
Crime
Newcastle Emlyn man admits to attempted murder of baby

A MAN from Cwm Cou, Newcastle Emlyn has pleaded guilty to the attempted murder of a baby.
Rhydian Jamieson, aged 28, appeared at Swansea Crown Court on Thursday (Apr 10), where he admitted to trying to kill the infant, who cannot be named for legal reasons.
The offence took place at an address in Y Ferwig, near Cardigan, just before 10:15pm on Wednesday, January 15.
Police responded to reports concerning the welfare of a child, and the baby was taken straight to hospital.
Jamieson was arrested at the scene and later charged.
At an earlier hearing, concerns had been raised about whether he was fit to stand trial. A provisional date had been set for September 1, but this has now been cancelled following his guilty plea.
Judge Paul Thomas KC remanded Jamieson into custody and said he would be sentenced on May 27.
Caroline Rees KC appeared for the prosecution, with John Hipkin KC defending.
News
Steel nationalisation talks ‘unfair on Wales’, says Plaid

PLAID CYMRU has accused the UK government of failing to support Welsh steel communities equally, after it emerged that nationalisation is being considered for British Steel’s Scunthorpe plant—but was ruled out for Port Talbot.
The party has renewed its call for public ownership of the Port Talbot steelworks following comments from Chancellor Rachel Reeves, who said nationalising British Steel remains an option to save jobs at its loss-making Scunthorpe site.
Plaid’s economy spokesperson, Luke Fletcher MS, said: “If it’s good enough for Scunthorpe, why wasn’t it good enough for Port Talbot?”
In September last year, Tata Steel closed its two blast furnaces at Port Talbot with the loss of 2,800 jobs. The closure followed a £500 million support deal with the UK government to help the firm transition to greener steel production—but nationalisation was not considered.
Fletcher, who represents south-west Wales, told BBC Radio Wales: “We were asking for nationalisation to be looked at until we were blue in the face. Labour promised that having governments in Cardiff and Westminster would save Welsh steel—but in the end, the deal they offered wasn’t much different to the Conservatives’.”
Back in 2016, the Conservative government said nationalisation was not an option for Port Talbot. The £500m package announced last year under Labour was broadly the same as the one proposed by the outgoing government.
Plaid’s Swansea spokesperson, Dr Gwyn Williams, said nationalisation could have allowed Wales to adopt hydrogen-based steelmaking, like Tata is doing in the Netherlands.
“Tata are using green hydrogen at their Dutch site but have refused to do the same in Wales,” he said. “Plaid believes Wales deserves world-class green technology to build a sustainable economy for future generations.”
On Thursday, Tata said it had taken a major step forward in decarbonising its operations at Port Talbot, signing contracts with Clecim and ABB Limited to deliver a new pickle line—specialist equipment used in modern steel processing.
Meanwhile, British Steel’s Chinese owner, Jingye, has said the Scunthorpe site is losing £700,000 a day. Around 2,700 people are employed there and the plant is home to the UK’s last blast furnaces.
Talks to try to secure the future of the site are expected to resume this week, with the UK government reportedly offering to buy coal to keep the furnaces running. On Wednesday, Chancellor Rachel Reeves confirmed that “all options” are being considered—including nationalisation.
Carrie Bone, UK steel editor at Kallanish Commodities, told BBC Radio Wales Breakfast that both Tata and British Steel were in similar situations—facing major losses and needing to modernise.
She noted that Tata accepted the £500m offered by government, while British Steel reportedly turned it down and asked for £1 billion.
“You can understand why the government might be hesitant to offer that much,” she said. “It’s not clear why nationalisation wasn’t considered for Tata, but there are thousands of jobs at stake—and the optics of letting the UK’s last blast furnace close are politically very difficult.”
The UK government has been approached for comment.
News
Recording the memories of Pembrokeshire’s war heroes

NEW BOOK PRESERVES FIRST-HAND ACCOUNTS OF D-DAY, BATTLE OF BRITAIN AND HIROSHIMA
THE MEMORIES of Pembrokeshire’s World War Two veterans have been recorded in a powerful new book to mark the 80th anniversary of VE Day.
Authors Hugh Morgan and GJ Lewis have spent more than 30 years interviewing Welsh veterans of the Second World War. Their work has now been brought together in a new volume titled World War Two: Voices from Wales.
The book includes previously unpublished interviews with Pembrokeshire servicemen, including Dennis Tidswell of Pembroke, Ted Owens of Pembroke Dock, Tony Bird of Freshwater East, Duncan Hilling of Saundersfoot, and Gordon Prime of Jameston.
Among the most striking accounts is that of Mr Hilling, who served with the Welch Regiment in Japan after the atomic bombings.
“In the first few days of arriving, I drove six of us into Hiroshima to see the damage there,” said Mr Hilling, now 99. “It’s indescribable, really. We went into a hospital where people were just lying on beds. A lot of them, their skin had peeled off their faces and arms. It was a hideous sight.
“Lots of them were blind – the bomb had blinded them when they heard this plane overhead and looked up, which was absolutely fatal, because they saw the bomb explode in midair right above them.”
Dennis Tidswell, who passed away in 2022 aged 99, took part in the Battle of Britain and the siege of Malta. D-Day veterans Ted Owens and Gordon Prime both died in 2023, aged 98.
Tony Bird, now 101, also took part in the Normandy landings alongside his future wife, Florence Paul, who served aboard a ship relaying vital messages to the fleet. She died in the 1980s.
“My most vivid memory of the invasion was the tremendous number of aircraft flying over as we were crossing the Channel,” Mr Bird recalled. “There were literally hundreds of aircraft going over, obviously going in to drop their troops inland, in anticipation of the invasion.”
Co-author Hugh Morgan said: “As a child growing up during the 50s and 60s, I was accustomed to living in a society of men and women who had been through the hell of WW2.
“Sadly, the veterans I knew back then are now almost all gone. But the joy and immense privilege of interviewing so many over the years has always stayed with me. Their jaw-dropping memories were so vivid and powerful.
“Our book captures the unique experiences of 50 ordinary men and women who fought and survived with enormous personal tenacity and courage to defeat the absolute tyranny of fascism.
“Reading their stories, in today’s increasingly troubling world, provides us with a clear warning from history.”
World War Two: Voices from Wales includes a foreword by Dame Siân Phillips and is published by Y Lolfa on May 8. It is priced at £12.99
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