Absentees, will include Princess Eugenie, Prince Andrew, Prince Harry, and Meghan Markle. However, Prince Louis, Prince William, Prince George, Princess Charlotte, the Duches sof Cambridge, the Duchess of Cornwall, Vice Admiral Timothy Laurence, Prince Charles, Prince Edward and Princess Anne have secured a spot alongside the Queen. Left to right: Zenouska Mowatt, Lady Gabriella Windsor, Thomas Kingston, Lord Frederick Windsor, Sophie Winkleman, Princess Michael of Kent, Prince Michael of Kent, Lord Nicholas Windsor and Louis Windsor will not appear. As a result, around 20 members of Her Majesty's family will not get the chance to appear. The Queen has announced that only working royals will appear on the Buckingham Palace balcony, exlcuding Prince Harry, Meghan Markle and Prince Andrew. They even managed to end Tory rule in West Oxfordshire, which includes David Cameron's old true-blue seat of Witney, where he had a majority of over 25,000. The Liberal Democrats were a bigger threat to the Tories in their prosperous Blue Wall southern shires. But Labour struggled to make significant gains elsewhere in England. London was a bloodbath, with the loss of their three flagship borough councils to Labour - Wandsworth (Margaret Thatcher's favourite council), Barnet and Westminster, which has been Tory since it was created in 1964, when the Beatles and Rolling Stones dominated what was then called the hit parade. Not that the elections offered much comfort to the Tories. Even if it's a tad too gloomy - and I doubt it is - the prospect of an economy in decline is a far bigger danger to the Johnson Government's hopes of re-election than the local election results. (Left: Anna with her baby son, and mother Larisa, in the bunker bottom right: at a processing area in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine inset: with her husband Kirill on their wedding day a year ago.)ĪNDREW NEIL: As much of the country trudged to the polls in Thursday's local elections, the Bank of England released its latest forecast for the British economy. Her plight was made all the more traumatic by the need to care for her six-month-old son Svyatoslav. 'I would sometimes pretend that I wasn't hungry and take even less food, so I could give some more to my father and my mother,' Anna told me yesterday at the hotel she is staying at in the town of Zaporizhzhia - 140 miles from the hellhole she lived in for eight long weeks. Shortages became so acute that some of the women started to lose their teeth and quarrels broke out over who should get what. As the days passed and their predicament got even more serious, she and her mother Larisa both lost 20lb in weight. Anna Zaitseva, 24, who had taken refuge there with her family, took to eating just once a day. With the complex under daily bombardment by the Russian army, the once regular supplies of porridge, soup and pasta had become more and more infrequent. Pictured: Arthu and father Jens.īy Day 25, the 70 people who had holed up in the nuclear bunker deep beneath the Azovstal steelworks (top right) on the outskirts of Mariupol were getting desperate. A third shows him on his back, next to a pool of blood, as a female officer pumps his chest. A second clip shows him on the floor, groaning and writhing in pain while being restrained and handcuffed by uniformed officers. A dash-cam recording shows the moment Arthur was struck as he ran across the road. For his family, the footage makes devastating viewing. His dying moments were captured on the mobile phone cameras of at least three bystanders and have since gone viral on social media - along with the claims of other eye witnesses who allege that the car driven by Sussex Police deliberately swerved towards Arthur and 'mowed him down'. 'A police officer asked if I had a son called Arthur and then she said that he had been in an incident involving a police car and that he was dead.' Professor Holscher's son Arthur is the 27-year-old who died in Peacehaven, East Sussex, last Saturday night after being struck by an unmarked police BMW. 'It was 4.15am,' father Jens says, checking the exact time on the call list on his mobile phone. The father of a young man killed after he was hit by an unmarked cop car has demanded justice and heartbreakingly asked: 'Why did the police kill my boy?' Arthur Holscher, 27, died last weekend.