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Musket balls and a burnt hull: evidence of real pirates of the Caribbean found in Bahamas | Bahamas
The first shipwrecks linked to the real pirates of the Caribbean in the Bahamas have been discovered by an international team co-directed by a British marine archaeologist.
Blackbeard and Calico Jack Rackham were among pirates who, between the 1690s and 1720s, turned Nassau on the island of New Providence into a hideout where they plotted their next heists on the high seas and divided up their plunder.
Now, following the first-ever official permission to dive in the closed zone of Nassau harbour, an expedition has found six wrecks, three of which can be traced to the “golden age of piracy”.
Pirates were known to destroy evidence of their crimes by setting fire to ships they had seized, having raided their lucrative cargo, cannon and fittings. The archaeologists discovered a charred wooden hull, still weighed down by a stone ballast pile.
Swivel guns, pivot-mounted cannon, were the pirates’ weapons of choice for sparking panic on enemy decks. The archaeologists found what they described as just such as an example – “a calling card of pirate attacks”, they said – along with an iron cannon and a pile of 25 lead musket balls, and a grinding stone for sharpening swords.
The finds have exceeded expectations, because the seabed had been heavily scooped out by dredging.
Dr Sean Kingsley, a British marine archaeologist and the project’s co-director, told the Guardian: “These finds are the tip of the iceberg. I was shocked at the unexpected survival of a wooden hull – ships were the key tool of pirate terror, after all. There could very well be dozens more shipwrecks in and around the harbour.”
Referring to the charred hull, he added: “To actually see and touch it really was a once-in-a lifetime moment and quite emotional.”
In 1695, Henry Avery became the most wanted criminal of his day after he pulled off the most lucrative heist in pirate history, looting gold, silver, sapphires, emeralds and diamonds worth more than £85m in today’s money.
When the archaeologists discovered the charred hull, whose timbers had been connected by wooden treenails, they wondered whether this could have been Avery’s pirate flagship, the Fancy. This one had been burned down to the waterline.
Dr Michael Pateman, the expedition’s co-director and the ambassador for history, culture and museology in the Bahamas, said: “Burning ships to the waterline was an infamous tactic to hide felony from authorities. The Nassau hull shows all the signs of pirate mischief.”
He added: “The ship was heavily armed, especially with swivel guns … Slotted on to deck rails, these anti-personnel weapons raked devastating fire on enemy crews.”
The discoveries are all the more exciting because, while a handful of pirate wrecks have been found between Mauritius and North Carolina, not one had previously been discovered in Nassau, “the home port of the pirates of the Caribbean in the Bahamas”, Kingsley said.
Referring to the $4.5bn Pirates of the Caribbean film franchise, he said: “Thanks to Hollywood, everyone loves the legend. But, beyond the fantasy, nobody knows how the sea dogs really lived … and what happened to the vehicles of their mayhem, wooden ships.”
Kingsley has explored more than 350 shipwrecks in the past 30 years and is the founding editor of Wreckwatch, the world’s only magazine dedicated to the sunken past.
The latest discoveries were made by an international team of archaeologists and film-makers, the New Providence Pirates Expedition – which is dedicated to science, education, entertainment and tourism in the Bahamas – and Wreckwatch TV.
The explorer and project film-maker Chris Atkins spoke of the dangers of this expedition: “Tides flush dangerous currents through its waters twice a day. It’s home to notorious packs of sharks. This was a risky expedition with high chances of finding nothing.”
The waters also have one of the world’s largest concentrations of sharks. “But we didn’t bother each other underwater,” Kingsley said. “We were conscious of respecting their realm.”
The team also discovered rigging, glass bottles and bricks from a ship’s cooking galley still preserved, along with 143 clay tobacco pipes, some of which were sticking out of the sand next to fragments of wooden shipping crates.
The pipes had been decorated with a unicorn, horse, crown and the royal crest of England, suggesting they were made in London around the 1740s.
Kingsley said: “No others have been found in a wrecked cargo. The ship was likely English and sailed for Nassau just after the pirate menace had been crushed. The survival of the wreck, heavily smashed by coastal development, is a miracle. The trader’s cargo of wine in glass bottles and fancy smoking pipes sheds rare light on Nassau becoming a normal port of trade, bouncing back from the pirate anarchy.”
Between dives, the team pored over 300-year-old documents and old maps. They also explored caves where pirates allegedly hid treasure in Nassau. The pirates had taken everything with them, it seems.
The expedition is covered in the first episode of a mini-series, Mystery of the Pirate King’s Treasure, launched this week, as well as the next issue of Wreckwatch magazine.
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Henry Nowak arrest footage raises 'serious questions for police', PM says
Sir Keir Starmer says the question of “how accusations of racism informed decision making” must be addressed, as protesters clash with police in Southampton.
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Starmer urges calm as far right seeks to exploit Henry Nowak murder | Southampton
Politicians and community leaders have called for calm amid fears that the populist right is using the murder of Henry Nowak by a Sikh man to whip up racist resentment against minority ethnic Britons.
After Nigel Farage called for the public to respond with “pure, cold rage”, Keir Starmer condemned the Reform UK leader, saying Nowak’s family had explicitly asked that the case not be used to target particular communities.
Starmer said in a TV interview at Downing Street: “Nigel Farage is completely wrong to use this to try and create division. He would be wrong in any circumstances, but when Henry’s family are saying, ‘Please don’t do that, it’s our son’, then really, as politicians, as human beings, we should start where they start.”
Nowak, an 18-year-old university student, was fatally stabbed by Vickrum Digwa, 23, who used a Sikh dagger, in Southampton in December 2025.
Digwa falsely claimed he had been racially abused and attacked by Nowak. Body camera footage released by Hampshire police showed Nowak being handcuffed despite repeatedly telling police officers that he had been stabbed. At one point an officer tells him: “I don’t think you have, mate.”
The treatment of Nowak by police has been highlighted repeatedly during Digwa’s trial by US hard-right commentators, including Elon Musk, who have argued it shows “two-tier” policing in which accusations of racism are prioritised.
In what he described as an “emergency address” sent out via social media on Tuesday morning, Farage repeated this argument, warning that what he termed as an excessive focus on racial equality could lead to “the destruction of society”.
He said: “Enough of anti-white prejudice. A promotion of the idea that white lives matter just as much as black lives.” The phrase “white lives matter” originally emerged among US white nationalists as a riposte to the Black Lives Matter movement.
On Tuesday evening, a crowd of hundreds of people gathered outside Southampton police station after the far-right activist Tommy Robinson called on people to gather for a “Justice for Henry Nowak” protest.
Some chanted: “Racist police, off our streets” and “Shame on you”. They held up union flags and home-made signs including: “Henry’s blood is on your hands”, “Save our kids” and “Prison 4 police on scene”.
Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, accused Hampshire police of institutional racism and called for Digwa’s family to be forced out of Southampton. He said: “If Henry wasn’t white, he wouldn’t have been handcuffed. Henry could be your son.” Responding to the resignation of one of the police officers involved in the arrest, he said: “We want him in prison”.
Nick Tenconi, the leader of the UK Independence Party, led a prayer at the demonstration for Nowak as members of the crowd chanted: “Henry, Henry”. Tenconi said: “The arresting officers believed persecuting him [Nowak] was more important than saving him because he was white.” He added: “I am here to fight for an end to woke policing.”
Starmer said he found the bodycam footage of Nowak’s last moments “harrowing”, saying: “There are clearly serious questions that need to be addressed, not least, how accusations of racism inform the decision making in this case.”
The Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC), the watchdog for police forces in England and Wales, is looking into the case, with Shabana Mahmood, the home secretary, telling the Commons that she expected to see its report within three months.
Starmer said the IOPC must examine whether racial sensitivities played a part in the case, saying: “It is impossible to watch that footage and not appreciate that those questions absolutely have to be answered.”
An image of Henry Nowak’s handcuffed hand as he lay dying, taken from the bodycam footage, has been shared widely as a meme on social media, often by hard-right and far-right accounts, including many in the US.
In a joint statement, Sikh groups condemned what they called “a moment of madness” by one individual, saying that the wider Sikh community had since faced considerable abuse and hate.
Amandeep Singh, from the Sikh charity Basics of Sikhi, said many people had faced abuse: “At least 15 people have been accosted on the streets by collectives of white individuals surrounding Sikhs and asking, ‘Have you got a kirpan [the Sikh ceremonial dagger]?’, trying to stir up racial tensions.”
After recent incidents in which older Sikhs have had their turbans knocked off in racist assaults, many are fearful that the same might happen again, he said.
Andy Burnham called today for a potential change in police policy, while also warning against attempts to inflame tensions.
“There needs to be firstly a proper IOPC investigation, and coming from that, there would appear to me to be serious issues that will maybe need to be reflected in changing in policing practice,” the Greater Manchester mayor told the Guardian as he campaigned in the Makerfield byelection.
“But what I would say is I think the words of the family also need to be at the forefront of every politician’s mind in calling for there not to be an attempt to create further division.”
Answering questions in the Commons about the case, Mahmood told MPs that it was not “a moment to pit white Britons against non-white Britons”. She added that one police officer had been misidentified as being involved in the case, having to move out of his home after receiving death threats.
The Hampshire Police Federation, which represents rank-and-file officers in the force, condemned what it called attempts at “mob or vigilante justice”, including the publication of personal details of officers with no link to the case.
Also speaking in the Commons, Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi, the Labour MP for Slough, accused Farage and others of trying to “politicise people’s pain”. Saying he was deeply saddened at Nowak’s murder, he went on: “What’s very galling is that the likes of Reform, Restore, and the far right decided to politicise people’s pain, attacking the Sikh community for wearing the kirpan and wanting it banned.”
Although the murder weapon was described as a “large Sikh dagger” by the judge, academics have pointed out that the 21cm knife should not be confused with a kirpan, a small, symbolic knife, which was also worn by Digwa and many observant Sikhs.
Kemi Badenoch also condemned Farage’s address. “What Nigel Farage is doing is reinforcing the difference. We need to find what we have in common,” she said.
“Enough of this nonsense where we keep separating everybody and splitting people into different groups. We are descending into tribalism.”
The Guardian understands that the IOPC has found no indication of any disciplinary or criminal offence by the officers involved after six months of inquiries, after it was referred to the watchdog in December. Hampshire police said of four officers involved, three remained on full duties and one has resigned.
In remarks at Digwa’s sentencing on Monday, trial judge William Mousley imposed a term of life imprisonment with a minimum of 21 years. Today the attorney general’s office said it was considering whether Digwa’s sentence should be reviewed as too lenient, saying it had received “multiple requests” for this to happen.
Speaking outside the court, Nowak’s father, Mark Nowak, condemned what he called the “inhumane and degrading” treatment of his son by police, but added: “We do not want his death to be used to create further division, hatred or tension. We want his story to help make our streets safer for everyone.”
The incident has already led police chiefs to review part of their anti-racism commitments, after shadow home secretary Chris Philp claimed language in the preamble to the NPCC’s Race Action Plan could lead to bias.
The line in question says the organisation’s commitment to racial equality “does not mean treating everyone ‘the same’ or being ‘colour blind’ (racial equality).” A source close to the home secretary said the wording was “clumsy”.
Chief constable Gavin Stephens, chair of the National Police Chiefs’ Council, said: “We are listening to legitimate concerns about how some of these commitments are worded or phrased, and where needed we can and will make changes, but this should not detract from the intent, which is to improve the quality of policing.”
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Key moments of police bodycam footage
An 18-year-old Southampton student, Henry Nowak, was handcuffed after being stabbed by Vickrum Digwa, 23, who lied to police at the scene, claiming he had been the victim of a racist attack.
Digwa has been jailed for life with a minimum 21-year term.
Nowak’s parents said they hold Digwa solely responsible for the murder of their son, but the way he was treated by police was inhumane and degrading. Hampshire police has apologised to Henry’s family and the case has now been referred to the Independent Office for Police Conduct.
BBC Verify has analysed bodycam footage that was released by the police, with the permission of Nowak’s family, and looked at the key moments before Henry Nowak’s death. Merlyn Thomas reports.
Additional reporting by Emma Pengelly. Produced by Tom Joyner. Graphics by Sally Nicholls.
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