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The defence ministry said military police had been sent to Eastern Ghouta on the edge of the capital Damascus, and to an area in the south-west. It is the first time foreign personnel have been despatched to help implement the "safe zones" agreed with Turkey and Iran earlier this year. Rebel groups have not publicly signed up to the de-escalation agreement. A Russian defence ministry spokesman, Lt Gen Sergei Rudskoi, said a contingent had set up two checkpoints and 10 observation posts on front lines between Syrian forces and rebels in the two areas. He said Israel, which borders Syria's south-west, had been informed in advance. Israel is reported to have opposed the idea of Russia policing the zones, fearing it would be used as cover by Hezbollah militants and other Iranian-backed militia to move closer to Israel's front line. A plan for four de-escalation zones was agreed between Russia and Iran, both of whom strongly support Syria, and Turkey, which backs the rebels, at talks in the Kazakh capital, Astana, in May. The plan excludes attacks on militants from so-called Islamic State (IS). Lt Gen Rudskoi said military police had been sent to checkpoints and monitoring posts in Eastern Ghouta, in parts of which the Syrian military declared a halt to fighting on Saturday following talks in Egypt between Russia and "moderate" rebel groups. However, the UK-based monitoring group, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said Syrian aircraft have carried out air strikes there since then. Syria's war has claimed more than 330,000 lives since it erupted in 2011, with millions more displaced.
Russia says it has deployed forces to monitor so-called de-escalation zones in southern Syria.
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The British team were at their strongest at the beginning of the 20th Century and shone again in the early 1930s. Since 1981, however, when Davis Cup organisers created a 16-nation World Group, with less successful nations split into regional Zone Groups, the GB record has been unremarkable. They have experienced promotion, relegation and, occasionally, humiliation. There was a 5-0 hammering by Slovakia in the third tier in 1995 and a 4-1 loss to Zimbabwe in London two years later after 1996 wins over Slovenia, Ghana and Egypt. But a particular low point came five years ago when James Ward, Dan Evans, Colin Fleming and Ken Skupski were humbled 3-2 by Lithuania in Vilnius in Europe/Africa Zone Group II. Ward, 23, was ranked 250th in the world, while Evans, four years younger, was 252nd as Britain sought their first Davis Cup win since September 2007. Ward won one and lost one singles rubber, while Evans was defeated in both of his. BBC tennis commentator Jonathan Overend recalled covering Britain's matches around some of the world's less salubrious tennis venues in recent years. "It's a tale of obstructed views," he said. "That match in Vilnius was played, basically, in a sports hall within a leisure centre. "You went in as though you were going to the gym. There were no TV cameras at all. "As catastrophic a result as it was for John Lloyd and his British team, Lithuania played well that weekend." Lloyd had to make do without Andy Murray, who had pulled out two months earlier to focus on his individual career. Murray said at the time: "I don't think it's a case of me abandoning Great Britain. I've played a lot of matches for them. "You've got to do what is right for your tennis. That period of the year just before Indian Wells and Miami is very important for me." Lloyd, reflecting on the match recently on BBC Radio 5 live, said: "You have to look at the rankings we had with our players. "Jamie Baker [world number 288] slipped on the Tuesday and was out of the match. I stuck Dan Evans in at the deep end. He froze a little bit, which was understandable. "We have come a long way but the simple fact is that if Andy had played a few of those matches, particularly at the end, we wouldn't have been in that position." Since then, Britain have won 11 out of 13 matches as Ward, Fleming, Skupski, Jamie Baker and Andy and Jamie Murray helped them gain promotion into Europe/Africa Zone Group I with 2011 wins over Tunisia, Luxembourg and Hungary. Andy Murray, Fleming and Evans secured a place in the World Group with a 4-1 play-off win over Croatia in September 2013, and they beat the USA before losing to Italy in 2014. The man in charge of the recovery since Vilnius is the team captain, Leon Smith, who was Andy Murray's coach for part of his teenage years. He first joined the Lawn Tennis Association to coach the talented under-16s. Aged just 34, the Scot took over in 2010 when Lloyd resigned after that defeat by Lithuania and was in post when the team beat Turkey in Eastbourne to avoid slipping into the bottom tier of the Davis Cup. Britain's players look to have the edge over their opponents. Andy Murray is ranked second in the world's men's singles, while his Belgian counterpart David Goffin is 16th. Jamie Murray is seventh in the world's men's doubles rankings and Dominic Inglot 23rd. Belgium's Steve Darcis, 84th in men's singles, is the only Belgium team member other than Goffin to have a singles or doubles ranking in the top 100. Great Britain Captain - Leon Smith. Players - Andy Murray (age 28), Kyle Edmund (age 20), Jamie Murray (age 29), Dominic Inglot (age 29), James Ward (age 28). (Ward or Edmund will be selected as GB's second singles player before Thursday's draw. Belgium Captain - Johan van Herck. Players - David Goffin (age 24), Steve Darcis (age 31), Ruben Bemelmans (age 27), Kimmer Coppejans (age 21). Great Britain have played Belgium 11 times in the Davis Cup and have won on seven occasions. On clay, the surface for this year's final, the record is 4-2 in Britain's favour. The nations last met in Glasgow in 2012 when Belgium won 4-1 on the hard courts at Braehead Arena. BBC television coverage begins on Friday from 12:15-13:00 GMY on BBC One and 13:00-18:00 on BBC Two. Full coverage details.
Belgium stand between Great Britain and their first Davis Cup title since 1936.
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The tennis coach is one of three honorary graduates at the university's winter graduation ceremonies. Murray, who is the mother of tennis champions Andy and Jamie, will receive an Honorary Doctorate of Education. She stepped down in March as Great Britain's Fed Cup captain after five years in the role. Author and journalist Matthew Syed, and video games composer and musician Rob Hubbard will also receive honorary degrees at a ceremony in Dundee's Caird Hall on 25 November. University principal Prof Nigel Seaton said: "I am delighted that Abertay University is conferring honorary degrees on these inspirational leaders. "In doing so, we celebrate their contribution to our national life, and we are proud to hold them as examples to the Abertay graduates with whom they will share the stage."
Judy Murray is to receive an honorary degree from Abertay University in Dundee for her "outstanding contribution to British sport".
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One of them was wearing an Islamic State (IS) T-shirt, Marseilles prosecutor Brice Robin told Reuters. Police said the teacher's life was not in danger. A hunt is under way for the attackers. It comes as France is in a state of emergency after attacks in Paris on Friday killed 129 people. IS has said it was behind the Paris attacks. Police said the attack on the teacher, who is Jewish, happened at about 20:00 local time (19:00 GMT). Mr Robin said three people on two scooters had approached the history teacher in a street and then "insulted, threatened and stabbed their victim in the arm and leg". "They were interrupted by the arrival of a car and fled," he said. One of the men showed a picture on his mobile telephone of the Islamist militant Mohamed Merah, Mr Robin added. Merah killed seven people in attacks in south-western France in 2012, before being shot dead by police. His victims included three children and a teacher at a Jewish school.
A teacher at a Jewish school in the southern French city of Marseille has been stabbed by three people who shouted anti-Semitic insults at him.
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Two bodies were recovered from the ruins of the Rigopiano hotel, in the central Abruzzo region, where rescuers battled the elements to reach the site. Searchers said they had not given up hope of finding survivors despite finding no signs of life. The avalanche struck on Wednesday after multiple earthquakes in the region. Two people who were outside the hotel at the time of the avalanche survived. The earthquakes, four of which were stronger than magnitude 5, terrified residents of rural areas already struggling with heavy snowfall. Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni called for national unity, saying Italy was caught in an "unprecedented vice of frost and earthquakes". European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker said the rest of the EU stood ready to help because "an earthquake in Italy is an earthquake in Europe". Teams had to ski and shovel their way towards the site of the avalanche, only reaching the hotel at 04:30 (03:30 GMT) on Thursday. Snow blocking an approach road held up a vast column of emergency vehicles. "The upper part of the hotel it's not there anymore - it's full of snow inside the different rooms," said Dr Gianluca Fachetti, who was with the rescue teams. "But there are several floors and we think most part of the people are on the first floor not the second or third, and it's very difficult but anyway we hope there could be someone still alive." "There is always hope, if there were no hope the rescuers wouldn't give everything they've got," Fabrizio Curcio, head of Italy's civil protection department, was quoted as saying by Reuters news agency. His teams, he said, would "continue to do everything possible during the night". Paying tribute to the dedication of the rescuers, Prime Minister Gentiloni added: "I want to say that we are all holding our breath after what happened last night with the avalanche." It appears the guests had gathered on the ground floor of the four-star spa hotel, close to the Gran Sasso mountain, to await evacuation following the earthquakes. Twenty-two guests and seven staff members were registered as being at the hotel, among them children, but rescuers say the actual number could be 35. The avalanche struck some time between 16:30 and 17:40, based on messages and calls sent by people at the hotel. It partially brought down the roof and, according to some reports, shifted the building 10m (11 yards) off its foundations. A guest who was outside the building at the time raised the alarm with his phone. Giampiero Parete, whose wife and two children are missing, said he had gone to get something from his car: "I was covered by the snow but I managed to get out. The car was not submerged and I waited for the rescuers to arrive." Mr Parete, who was taken to hospital with a fellow survivor, continued to make phone calls but it reportedly took until 20:00 before his pleas were acted on by the authorities. A list of 23 names given by La Stampa newspaper suggests that most are Italians but they include a Swiss national and a Romanian. Three are children aged six, seven and nine, and the oldest person on the list is a man of 60. Seven of the missing are from the neighbouring region of Marche. A couple from Marche who are not recorded in La Stampa's list, Marco Vagnarelli and Paola Tomassini, were last heard from at 16:30 on Wednesday, when Marco contacted his brother Fulvio on WhatsApp, Ansa reports. The avalanche had still not started at that point. Marco had told his brother that their departure from the area was being delayed by the bad weather. By Jonathan Amos, BBC science correspondent The Apennines region saw three magnitude-6 tremors between August and October. A succession of quakes like this is often how the geology works. The big picture is reasonably well understood. Wider tectonic forces in the Earth's crust have led to the Apennines being pulled apart at a rate of roughly 3mm per year - about a 10th of the speed at which your fingernails grow. But this stress is then spread across a multitude of different faults that cut through the mountains. And this network is fiendishly complicated. It does now look as though August's event broke two neighbouring faults, starting on one known as the Laga and then jumping across to one called the Vettore. Then came October with a swathe of quakes that broke the rest of the Vetorre. But the stress, according to the seismologists, wasn't just sent north, it was loaded south as well - south of August's event. And it's in this zone that we have now seen a series of quakes in recent days. About a dozen magnitude fours and fives. Read more from Jonathan
The search for survivors of an avalanche at a mountain hotel in Italy has gone into the night, with up to 35 people buried under rubble and snow.
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The US Powerball lottery has grown to $1.5bn (£1.04bn) ahead of Wednesday night's draw. Extra staff have been brought in at many shops, as customers hope to defy the odds of 292.2 million to one. The last draw on 9 January was the 19th without a grand prize winner, which requires all six numbers to match. The winner - assuming no split in the prize - stands to take home the jackpot in annual payments over 29 years. He or she could also choose to one smaller payout of $930m. The government would share in the big prize, however, levying a 39.6% federal income tax on the winner, plus any taxes that the winner's home state may impose. After paying tax, however, the winner would still be wealthier than Beyonce and Lionel Messi, according to Agence France Presse. Is this really the biggest? The current $1.5bn jackpot is a whopping $600m more than previous record holder. A March 2012 drawing of the US lottery Mega Millions had a $656m prize shared by three winners. In Europe, the largest lottery prizes have been lower than in the US but the jackpots are given as a lump sum rather than as an annuity and most countries do not tax the winnings. The biggest European prize was won in July 2011 by a ticketholder in the UK. That person took home a lump sum of $260m (£161.7m). Where do Powerball profits go? Back to the participating states. For example, New Jersey has sold more than $50m in tickets during this current jackpot craze and lottery officials said about $20m of that would return to the state. More than 15 states use the profits to fund education. However, schools aren't expecting a huge windfall. California officials estimate the lottery money accounts for about 1% of the state's education budget. In Wisconsin, the profits go towards lowering property taxes. How did the jackpot get so big? No one has won the draw since 4 November. The prize is based on ticket sales so high jackpots usually create a snowball effect until a winning combination is picked. A new format introduced in October makes these massive jackpots more likely, meaning more records could be broken in future. The states that don't play Powerball The world's (other) largest lotteries Across the country, shops selling tickets have faced a frenzy of customers and the rush has forced managers to boost staffing to reduce queues. Shopkeepers are hoping for a boost in other sales from the lottery mania, with people opting for a snack or drink while waiting for their lucky numbers. Six of the 50 US states do not participate in the lottery, forcing some of their residents to drive hours to buy tickets. Alabama, Mississippi and Utah cite religious reasons, while Alaska has said it would not be economical in such a sparsely populated state. In Hawaii, proposed legislation to start it fails consistently and in Nevada the lottery is rejected because the state's world famous casinos prefer not to have competition. Nevertheless, residents in these states are itching for tickets. The Multi-State Lottery Association, which manages Powerball, has said some of the largest ticket sales come from border cities. Reports say that residents of Nevada are driving across the desert to California where they have been queuing for hours for a chance to win - a testament to the jackpot's powers of temptation over people who are four times more likely to be killed by an asteroid impact this year.
Thousands are queuing up outside shops across the US to buy a chance to win the world's biggest lottery prize.
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Officers were called to the Floating Harbour at about midday after reports a man's body was found under the bridge in Oxford Street. Deakon Wilkins, 24, from Weston-super-Mare in Somerset, vanished after leaving Motion nightclub in the early hours of 14 January. Formal identification has not yet taken place, but his family has been advised. In a Facebook post, Deakon's father Andy wrote: "Just to let people know the police have found my son Deakon's body today. "I would just like to thank everyone who helped in the search for our boy, we are so so grateful for all your thoughts and help. "At the moment we want our privacy to be with our family and remembering Deakon [in] happy and good times, but once again I would like to thank you all for your help and wishes of hope." The British Retail Consortium (BRC) analysed 10 billion retail payments in 2012 - 60% of all UK retail sales. Cash accounted for about 54% of all transactions, but non-cash, non-card payments rose from less than 2% to 5% of the total. Debit cards also remained popular, the figures showed. Use of cash in terms of the number of transactions and money spent in shops was down on the previous year. This was the first time in the survey's 13-year history that both measures recorded a fall. Alternative means of payment, such as online payments and money-off coupons, grew, although these remained a fraction of the total. "These methods will be the 'ones to watch' in the future, and retailers are investing heavily to make sure their customers have choice and convenience in ways to pay, whether in-store, at home or on the move," said Helen Dickinson, director general of the BRC. Debit cards accounted for 30% of transactions, while credit cards or charge cards were used in nearly 11% of cases. The BRC repeated its concern that credit card transactions cost retailers significantly more to process than cash. Emergency services were called to reports of a boy in difficulty in a dock near Mermaid Quay at 13:45 BST. He was taken to the University Hospital of Wales, Cardiff but his injuries are not known. South Wales Police and Cardiff council warned about the dangers of swimming in the water. On Friday, Insp Tony Williams, of South Wales Police, said people were putting their lives at risk by venturing in at Cardiff Bay. "The docks are deep, but those who jump in have no idea what may be lurking beneath the surface," he said. "They have little concept of just how cold the water can be and once they are in, they are surrounded by high, sheer walls with limited means of escape. "Our message to youngsters is simple: 'If you want to go for a swim, then go to the swimming baths where the environment is organised and safe. And keep out of the docks.'" Cardiff council said swimming was strictly prohibited in the area due to the "severe dangers including submerged objects, water temperature and high speed boats". A spokeswoman said the harbour authority regularly issued warnings of the risks, which include underwater currents, uneven riverbeds and "the height of the fall or jump if tombstoning".
Police searching for a man who disappeared on a night out in Bristol have found a body. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Cash is still the most popular form of payment in UK shops but the popularity of vouchers and coupons is on the rise, research has suggested. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A teenager remains in a critical condition in hospital after being pulled from the water in Cardiff Bay on Friday.
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The body of the 48-year-old, who is thought to have been from Northern Ireland, was discovered in a flat in the Amepolkipoi area of Athens. Her remains had been there for 20 days. The case is now in the hands of the Greek prosecutor. The Irish Department of Foreign Affairs said: "We are aware of the case and the department is providing consular assistance to the woman's family." The dead woman, who has not been named by Greek police, is believed to have lived in Athens for a number of years.
The boyfriend of an Irish woman has been arrested after she died in Greece.
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Cancer Research UK has promised £8m to its Edinburgh centre where researchers are focusing on brain tumours. Another £8m will go to its Glasgow centre which is a world leader in pancreatic cancer research. Much of the funding will go towards training the next generation of researchers, including 30 PhD students across both cities The Cancer Research UK Edinburgh Centre is a partnership between the charity, the University of Edinburgh and NHS Lothian. Prof Margaret Frame, science director at the Edinburgh centre, said: "From research into how brain tumours develop and grow, to identifying genetic and environmental markers that could help diagnose bowel cancer sooner, Edinburgh is home to world-class cancer research. "This award represents a critical investment in the research infrastructure at Edinburgh, equipping us with the key laboratory and clinical tools needed to advance the understanding and treatment of cancer for the benefit of people in Scotland and beyond." The Cancer Research UK Glasgow Centre is a partnership between the charity, the Cancer Research UK Beatson Institute, NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde, and the Universities of Glasgow and Strathclyde. Prof Owen Sansom, interim director at the Beatson Institute, said: "This investment is fantastic news for cancer research in Glasgow. "The city is home to a thriving community of world-class cancer scientists and doctors, who are working to reduce the devastating impact of this disease, not only locally, but around the world. "This award means we will be able to further develop our work in translational research - getting cutting-edge discoveries from the laboratory to patients and learning as much as possible from patients to initiate new research." The grants are part of £190m committed to 13 Cancer Research UK centres over the next five years.
A cancer charity is giving £16m to help Scottish scientists develop new treatments for the disease.
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Dutch specialists will join colleagues from the UK to try and establish who started the fires in areas of special scientific interest in May. They will concentrate on fires at Slieve Beagh near Clogher, Mullaghcarn near Gortin and Moninea Bog, Teemore. They were among 983 gorse fires in Northern Ireland in May. More than 90% of them were started deliberately. Operation Wildfire has been set up to investigate them. The area of Slieve Beagh, which was badly damaged, is a key habitat for the hen harrier, a protected bird of prey. As well as the team from the Netherlands, there will be specialists from the European Forest Risk Facility and representatives from South Wales Fire and Rescue Service. The Northern Ireland Environment Agency (NIEA) has responsibility for managing wildfires. Spokesman Colm McDaid welcomed the international collaboration. He said he hoped it could lead to court cases and convictions and would deter "serial arsonists". Controlled burning of vegetation is allowed, but it can only be carried out between 15 April and 31 August. In addition, landowners with ground in areas of special scientific interest need permission from the NIEA for burning at any time of the year. Const Darryl Johnston said "Wildfires are illegal and the deliberate setting of wildfires is a criminal offence. "We hope to use the Operation Wildfire investigations to determine the cause and origin of a number of the recent fires with the ultimate aim of serving in court cases and deterring arsonists. "If members of the public have information about anyone who has started wildfires, please let the PSNI know so that we can pursue them through the courts. "Not only do these fires cause widespread damage to our precious countryside, but they can also put lives at risk." Between 2005 and 2010, £35m was spent on fighting wildfires in Northern Ireland. Speaking in May, NIFRS Group Commander Brian Stanfield said gorse fires were "resource intensive". "There's a high risk, the countryside is like a tinder box and our resources will be stretched if people continue at this rate to light fires," he warned. He said people were unaware of the personal risks when they committed such acts. "When the ground is that dry and there's a change in wind direction, the fire will move faster than the person can run and it's only a matter of time until someone is seriously injured or killed at one of these fires," he added.
International experts are helping to try and find out who started wildfires in Northern Ireland which devastated key protected areas earlier this year.
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Many experienced medical staff have been critical of the treatment of whistleblowers at ARI. A letter to the minister claimed there was evidence of NHS Grampian targeting other staff. The health board said it would not discuss matters involving individual members of staff. Ms Robinson said: "The process in this case is underway and needs to be allowed to conclude without interference. It would be completely inappropriate for myself or any politician to become involved. "Finally, you note there have been significant changes within the senior leadership at NHS Grampian and I welcome your view on the substance, experience and integrity of the Board's new Chairman and Chief Executive. "I can assure you that I am satisfied the Senior Leadership of the Board has demonstrated these values in the management of the matters you raise." A Healthcare Improvement Scotland (HIS) review released in December warned that patient care at Aberdeen Royal Infirmary faced a "serious impact" if problems were not "urgently addressed". It identified concerns about leadership and culture which were impacting on the quality of care, and made 13 recommendations for improvements The review was one of three critical reports into health care in the north east of Scotland published on the same day. A whistleblower subsequently told BBC Scotland that staff at Aberdeen Royal were being "stretched almost to breaking point". NHS Grampian's refusal to publish in full a report In March into general surgery at Aberdeen Royal Infirmary was branded a "failure of transparency" by MSP Lewis Macdonald. BBC Scotland was given a heavily redacted version following a Freedom of Information request. A statement issued by NHS Grampian said: "NHS Grampian does not comment on specific circumstances surrounding the employment status of any member of staff. Our processes are full and robust and any decision about an individual's employment would never be taken lightly and only reached after a thorough analysis of the circumstances in each individual case. It added: "Using locum doctors ensures that we can continue to provide a service to our patients and their use is driven by clinical imperative rather than by cost." Halima Aden, 19, donned the traditional Islamic dress and full-body "burkini" during the event's swimsuit segment. Ms Aden, who was born in Kenya and moved as a child to St Cloud, Minnesota, was one of the top 15 contestants in the two-day pageant. She said she hopes her participation inspires other Muslim women to be confident about their identity. "A lot of people will look at you and will fail to see your beauty because you're covered up and they're not used to it, so growing up I just had to work on my people skills and give people a chance to really know me besides the clothing," Ms Aden told local television station KARE. The St Cloud resident said she was overwhelmed to be in the top 15 contestants and has received an outpouring of support from women around the world. "This is a big win for us, you know. I'm the first to do this and I'm hoping to see more Muslim women wearing burkinis and being celebrated," she said. "I'm just challenging you to be outgoing and just do your best in everything that you do." Minnesota is home to the largest concentration of Somali immigrants in the US. Denise Wallace, executive co-director of the Miss Minnesota USA pageant, praised Ms Aden for her decision to wear the traditional dress. "I think for Halima standing on the stage this weekend she is showing other women that they too can do that and that it's possible for them," she said. The winner of the pageant was Minneapolis resident Meredith Gould, who will go on to compete in the Miss USA pageant next year.
Health Secretary Shona Robison has rejected a new call for a judicial inquiry into the suspension of two surgeons at Aberdeen Royal Infirmary. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A Somali-American has become the first to compete in the Miss Minnesota USA pageant wearing a hijab and burkini.
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Anthony Barry scored from the penalty spot after Paul Rutherford's cross struck the arm of Kristian Green. Izale McLeod's free-kick hit the bar during a first half in which Wrexham looked comfortable and Solihull offered little. Solihull were reduced to 10 men in the second half when Jack Byrne was sent-off. Wrexham remain 10th following their first away win under Dean Keates while Solihull are 14th. Wrexham manager Dean Keates told BBC Radio Wales: "I'm happy with the result and happy with the clean sheet. "I thought in the first half we controlled the game and was happy with the performance but we were under too much pressure in the second half. "When they went down to 10 men we didn't make the extra man count." Match ends, Solihull Moors 0, Wrexham 1. Second Half ends, Solihull Moors 0, Wrexham 1. Substitution, Wrexham. Leo Smith replaces Antony Barry. Martin Riley (Wrexham) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Substitution, Wrexham. Jordan White replaces Izale McLeod. Substitution, Wrexham. Rob Evans replaces Paul Rutherford. Antony Barry (Wrexham) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Jack Byrne (Solihull Moors) is shown the red card. Substitution, Solihull Moors. Simeon Maye replaces Nortei Nortey. Substitution, Solihull Moors. Oladapo Afolayan replaces Harry White. Substitution, Solihull Moors. Omari Sterling-James replaces Regan Charles-Cook. Second Half begins Solihull Moors 0, Wrexham 1. First Half ends, Solihull Moors 0, Wrexham 1. Goal! Solihull Moors 0, Wrexham 1. Antony Barry (Wrexham) converts the penalty with a. First Half begins. Lineups are announced and players are warming up.
Wrexham returned to winning ways in the National League to complete the double over Solihull Moors.
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Gloucestershire Police said a murder investigation has been launched after the man's body was found at an address on Walkley Hill on Friday. A spokesman said it was "now clear" the man died of stab wounds. A 47-year-old man from Stroud was arrested in Southsea, Hampshire on Sunday. The coroner has been informed and a post-mortem examination has been completed, the spokesman added. Three Staffordshire bull terriers are thought to have eaten antifreeze laced meat between 7 and 14 April in Springburn, Glasgow. The dogs, called Diesel, Crystal and Buddha, were in the garden of their owner's house at the time. An online fundraising page has been set up to help pay the vet bills. A web post from the family said: "Diesel, Crystal and little Buddha have been fed chicken laced with anti-freeze which has sadly ended their lives. "Buddha passed away last week and Diesel fought for two days but sadly passed away. "Today Crystal's blood results confirmed she also has poison in her system and there's nothing we can do. She's been brought home for our family to say goodbye. "Karen and the kids are devastated. Our hearts are broke. Your paw prints have left a mark on all our hearts little ones. " A commenter called Karen Welsh, thought to be the distraught owner, wrote: " I can't thank you all enough for your kindness and support, you're forever in our hearts." A spokeswoman for Police Scotland said: ""We can confirm that we have received a report of dogs being poisoned by antifreeze between 7 and 14 April 2016, and inquiries are ongoing into this matter. She added: "We have been informed that two dogs have died as a result of this."
An 82-year-old man has been found stabbed to death in Stroud. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Police have launched an investigation following reports a family's pet dogs were killed by being fed poisoned chicken.
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Brains naturally lose white matter - the part of the brain that transmits information - as people age. But a Cambridge University team found that loss was exacerbated with extra weight - so an overweight 50-year-old had a lean 60-year-old's brain. Researchers said it shows we need to know relatively more about how extra weight affects the brain. The team, from the Cambridge Centre for Ageing and Neuroscience, looked at the brains of 473 people aged between 20 and 87, dividing them into lean and overweight categories. Their findings, published in the journal Neurobiology of Aging, found significant differences in the volume of white matter in the brains of overweight people compared with leaner individuals. Those in the overweight group had much less white matter than their thinner counterparts. The difference was only evident from middle-age onwards, suggesting that our brains may be particularly vulnerable during this period of ageing. However there was no difference in how the groups fared in tests of knowledge and understanding, so the researchers say more work is needed to follow people and see who develops conditions such as dementia. Dr Lisa Ronan, from the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Cambridge, who led the study, said it was not clear if obesity affected the brain, or vice versa. She told the BBC: "Obesity is so complex. We know an awful lot about what it does to the body. "But what it does to the brain and how it interacts with obesity - we're at the beginning of understanding that." Prof Sadal Farooqi, from the Wellcome Trust Medical Research Council Institute of Metabolic Science at Cambridge University, who also worked on the study, said the work suggested the middle-aged brain could be particularly vulnerable. "It will also be important to find out whether these changes could be reversible with weight loss, which may well be the case. "This must be a starting point for us to explore in more depth the effects of weight, diet and exercise on the brain and memory."
The brains of overweight people look "10 years older" than those of leaner peers, a study has found.
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Last week, Leicester fan Kevin Friend's removal from taking charge of title rivals Tottenham's game at Stoke had already sparked debate. Instead he will be in the middle of Manchester City's trip to Newcastle on Tuesday night. But how does a referee's home town, or who they support, affect which games they are actually allowed to officiate? Yes. And referees will not get appointed to the clubs they support. "At the beginning of every season the referees' background information is audited," said Keith Hackett, the former head of Professional Game Match Officials Limited (PGMOL), the organisation that makes refereeing appointments for Premier League games. "They complete a form that includes who they support, the history of if they've played the game and with the addresses where they are residing. "That gives you a picture that comes into use when you're appointing. It's about ensuring, for example, you wouldn't appoint a Sheffield-based ref for a Sheffield team." Media playback is not supported on this device BBC Sport has not seen an official record of referee's allegiances, one of several factors considered when officials are selected for matches. Former Premier League referee Mark Halsey added: "I was never able to referee Bolton because I lived there. If you lived in Leeds, you weren't going to referee Leeds United. " PGMOL says the process behind referee selection is all about avoiding "unnecessary extra external pressure and scrutiny on referees" in what is an "already a high pressure and demanding job". It also says that where a referee lives is not a factor when referee appointments are considered. Halsey, a QPR fan, said he refereed his own team twice, before rules over announcing your allegiance came in. "I lived 35 miles away from Loftus Road," he said. "I refereed one win and one loss and I thought 'I can't do this again'. I never told them initially because it was back in the 1990s and things like that were only just starting to happen. "I had to declare it because I felt like celebrating when they won. But once you've crossed the white line you're the ref and you always remained professional." Both Hackett and Halsey argue there are inconsistencies. Halsey has questioned why Friend was removed from refereeing a game involving Leicester's title rivals, while Michael Oliver, a Newcastle fan, was allowed to officiate in a game involving the Magpies' fellow relegation candidates Norwich City, when they lost to Crystal Palace last week. "I just think they're making a rod for their own back," said Halsey. And Hackett has pointed towards inconsistencies around refereeing appointments when it comes to geography. Mike Dean, a Tranmere fan, was removed from refereeing the 2006 FA Cup final between Liverpool and West Ham because he lived in Wirral, which is part of Merseyside. Up until that point he had officiated one Liverpool game and two Everton games, but has not overseen either side since, despite moving to north Wales. Meanwhile, Anthony Taylor, an Altrincham fan who lives in the Greater Manchester borough of Trafford, is allowed to officiate matches involving Manchester City and Manchester United. "If you're an Everton fan coming up to the FA Cup semi-final against Manchester United and you look at where Anthony Taylor lives, you suddenly go 'wow'," said Hackett. The PGMOL says it makes appointments on a "case by case basis". Halsey and Hackett said they were not questioning the integrity of any referee, but questioned the consistency of the appointment process. Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger criticised the decision to remove Friend from Tottenham's game against Stoke, after pressure from Spurs fans on social media. "If you go that way, it becomes a nightmare every week to choose a referee for every single game. A dangerous precedent," he said. "The solution is you don't look where they come from, who they support, and you put the best referees into the games." Speaking before Monday's 4-0 defeat by Spurs, Potters boss Mark Hughes added: "Maybe the professional body that is in charge of referees thinks if any decision did go our way or against Tottenham, or vice-versa, then questions would be asked and they don't want to be put in that situation. "My take on it is that the integrity of the referees should stop that happening or anybody having any doubts about that anyway, but it is what it is." Have you added the new Top Story alerts in the BBC Sport app? Simply head to the menu in the app - and don't forget you can also add score alerts your football team and more.
The fallout over referee Jon Moss' performance in Leicester's 2-2 draw against West Ham took attention away from another officiating talking point.
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The Electoral Commission said Royal Mail was told not to fold leaflets with its material but there were instances where this had been breached. Caerphilly MP Wayne David said it had happened "in large parts of Wales". Royal Mail said it was not its policy to fold leaflets together. A spokesman said: "It appears that in a small number of cases some leaflets may have been folded together with other mail simply for ease of posting through letter boxes. This is not our policy. "All staff have again been reminded that this is not our policy. We apologise for any inconvenience caused and have already spoken to the Electoral Commission." Mr David raised the issue in parliament, saying: "In large parts of Wales this leaflet has been distributed by post inside a very, very good leaflet from the Electoral Commission which explains the voting system for Welsh assembly and the PCC elections. "We are trying to get to the root to how this happened but if in fact it's the Royal Mail that is responsible for this, will he [the speaker] join me in condemning them?" An Electoral Commission spokeswoman said it was a politically neutral organisation and did not support any referendum campaigning organisation. "We have raised these concerns with Royal Mail," she said.
Royal Mail has been criticised after Brexit leaflets, campaigning for an EU exit in June's referendum, were folded with voting guides and posted to Welsh households.
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Goals from Shaun Harrad and a brace from Gerry McDonagh proved enough for the home side. Darren Carter had pulled one back for the visitors on 68 minutes, but despite pressure Rovers could not find another. Early on Carter had seen his penalty saved by impressive Wrexham goalkeeper Luke Coddington. Wrexham manager Dean Keates told BBC Radio Wales: "It's been long overdue. They were outstanding first-half, magnificent. In the second-half we were put under a lot of pressure, but they were brave. "They did everything we asked of them and I am very proud of the lads." Match ends, Wrexham 3, Forest Green Rovers 1. Second Half ends, Wrexham 3, Forest Green Rovers 1. Goal! Wrexham 3, Forest Green Rovers 1. Gerry McDonagh (Wrexham). Rob Evans (Wrexham) is shown the yellow card. Substitution, Wrexham. Leo Smith replaces Paul Rutherford. Drissa Traoré (Forest Green Rovers) is shown the yellow card. Gerry McDonagh (Wrexham) is shown the yellow card. Substitution, Forest Green Rovers. Fabien Robert replaces Christian Doidge. Goal! Wrexham 2, Forest Green Rovers 1. Darren Carter (Forest Green Rovers). Substitution, Wrexham. Callum Powell replaces Shaun Harrad. Substitution, Forest Green Rovers. Emmanuel Monthe replaces Daniel Wishart. Second Half begins Wrexham 2, Forest Green Rovers 0. First Half ends, Wrexham 2, Forest Green Rovers 0. Goal! Wrexham 2, Forest Green Rovers 0. Gerry McDonagh (Wrexham). Goal! Wrexham 1, Forest Green Rovers 0. Shaun Harrad (Wrexham). Penalty missed! Bad penalty by (Forest Green Rovers). should be disappointed. First Half begins. Lineups are announced and players are warming up.
National League leaders Forest Green Rovers lost out as Wrexham boss Dean Keates earned his first win since taking charge last month.
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Mourners at Galway Cathedral were told that that the Irishman had been reunited with son Darren, who died in a road accident in 1998, aged 17. O'Connor died suddenly, aged 67, on 6 January while on holiday in Tenerife. "He prayed to him and for him and was convinced that Darren came to his assistance more than once," said Father Michael Kelly, who led the service. "He spoke openly and confidently of his conviction that he would meet Darren again - not quite so soon, I imagine." Fellow Irish golfer Eamonn Darcy and John Mulholland, former mayor of Galway and a close friend of O'Connor, gave personal reflections on his life ahead of the Mass. Media playback is not supported on this device Among the gifts presented were the Ryder Cup Trophy marking O'Connor's triumph at the Belfry in 1989 when he hit one of the most famous shots in golf history. He fired a stunning two iron from more than 230 yards to within four feet of the hole to earn an unexpected singles victory over Fred Couples which helped Europe retain the trophy. Irish President Michael D Higgins and former European Ryder Cup captains Paul McGinley and Sam Torrance were among the thousands of mourners who attended Tuesday's funeral. "It's a sad day for Ireland," McGinley said. "He was a character, much loved, and I'll miss the fun." In his homily Father Kelly recalled the glowing tributes since O'Connor Jnr's death and said it sounded like a cause for canonisation. He said: "Tributes to the golfer - one of our greatest - to the family man, who showed enormous pride in his family and never failed to acknowledge them when celebrating his achievements. "Tributes to a friend - and everybody felt they were one of them. "There were tributes to the fundraiser, who had raised huge amounts for worthy charities down through the years - from missionaries in Africa to the Galway Hospice Foundation last July. "He was a proud Galway man, an Irishman and a European. His leaving has left our world a poorer place. He was one in a million." O'Connor Jnr is survived by his wife Ann, son Nigel and daughter Ann.
Irish golfer Christy O'Connor Jnr was described as a "great human being" at his funeral in Galway on Tuesday.
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The £2.3m programme spearheaded by Mayor George Ferguson is nearly half complete, with 20mph zones operating in areas such as Clifton and Redland. But Tory councillor Lesley Alexander wants the rollout stopped for a scientific assessment of their effect and impact on road safety. Mayor Ferguson said the scheme's efficiency was already under review. He said regular traffic counts, speed counts and household interviews were being undertaken, and local support for the zones was "clear". Ms Alexander said the road safety case for the zones was not "conclusively confirmed" by either of the two pilot trials conducted in Bedminster and east Bristol. She said with recent reports suggesting these speed limits were "actually making roads more dangerous", she was calling on the mayor to "urgently stop and assess the efficacy of the controversial speed zones". She said a "more targeted approach" should be taken, with speed limits "only installed in places of obvious sensitivity or where there is local demand". Campaign group Alliance of British Drivers has called for the government to halt the rollout of 20mph zones following increases in 20mph accidents. However, Mayor Ferguson said the reduced speed limits introduced in Bristol were "undeniably helping to make streets safer and improve quality of life for local communities". Areas including Eastville, Frome Vale, Hillfields, St George and Fishponds are expected to adopt the zones before the end of the year. In January, many roads in the centre of Bristol and in Clifton, Cotham, Bishopston and Redland had the speed limit reduced from 30mph to 20mph. The city-wide roll-out is due to be completed by March next year.
The rollout of 20mph traffic zones across Bristol should be halted, according to Conservative councillors.
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The 20,000 sq ft BHS store closed its doors last summer after the company collapsed. Work by Aldi to turn the current unit into an "operational space" is due to start shortly. The new store is expected to open later this year but a specific date has yet to be fixed. Cameron Toll Shopping Centre manager Jim Riddell said: "Letting the former BHS unit so soon after it closed in August 2016 is extremely positive for the centre and for the other retailers who operate here. "Aldi will bring many more shoppers into the centre which is already home to well-known brands including The Entertainer, Game, New Look and Costa Coffee." Earlier this week, councillors in Edinburgh approved plans to turn the former flagship BHS store on Princes Street into a hotel and restaurant.
A former BHS store at Cameron Toll Shopping Centre in Edinburgh is being taken over by Aldi, creating up to 35 new jobs.
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There will be around 1,500 job cuts at the company's operations in Canada. The firm said 280 workers in Belfast will be affected but that it hopes to save 60 of those jobs by moving people to other programmes and projects. It added that the majority of those affected will be temporary or contract workers. The firm said it hopes to avoid compulsory redundancies within its permanent workforce. The job cuts relate to the Global 5000 and 6000 business jets. Demand for the jets has fallen in markets like Russia and China. Eric Martel, president of Bombardier Business Aircraft, said: "We have seen an industry-wide softness in demand recently in certain international markets and are taking steps to adjust our production accordingly. "We fully understand the impact this will have on our affected employees and their families and we will do everything possible to support them." This is the latest in series of job cuts at Bombardier's Belfast operations - 130 job losses were announced in February on top of almost 400 in 2014. Bombardier has had a difficult few years with the development of its C Series plane badly delayed and a business jet project suspended. The Canadian firm recently appointed a new chief executive in an attempt to find a way out of the current problems. The aerospace company is one of Northern Ireland's biggest employers. About 5,000 permanent employees and about 1,000 temporary and contract staff work at its Belfast base. Speaking on LCI television, government spokesman Christophe Castaner said he could not confirm or deny that 3 July had already been chosen as the date. The National Assembly and the Senate normally meet in Paris. The last two occasions on which they gathered at Versailles were at times of national crisis. In 2009, the then President, Nicolas Sarkozy, addressed a congress at the height of the global financial and banking crisis, while in November 2015, Francois Hollande convened a session after the attacks by Islamic State militants on Paris. Mr Macron's centrist party, La République en Marche (LREM), won an overall majority in the National Assembly at elections this month. He has promised sweeping reforms planned to revive France's economy, from simplifying labour laws to lowering unemployment and cutting corporation tax from 33% to 25%. He chose Versailles, the sumptuous former palace of France's kings, to host Russian President Vladimir Putin on a visit last month. Captain David Warner hit 69 off 38 balls and Ben Cutting a brutal unbeaten 39 off 15 in Hyderabad's 208-7, while England's Chris Jordan took 3-45. Chris Gayle (74 off 38) and Virat Kohli (54 off 35) added 114 for the first wicket in reply, before Cutting (2-35) removed Gayle. With 18 runs needed off the final over, Bhuvneshwar Kumar conceded only nine. Bangalore, who hit 13 sixes in their innings, also lost the 2009 and 2011 finals. England one-day captain Eoin Morgan, who is part of the Sunrisers squad, did not play in the final in Bangalore.
The aerospace firm Bombardier is to cut at least 220 jobs from its Northern Ireland operation due to a fall in demand for its business jets. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The new French President, Emmanuel Macron, is considering convening a joint session of parliament in the palace of Versailles, a spokesman said. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Sunrisers Hyderabad beat Royal Challengers Bangalore by eight runs to win the Indian Premier League final.
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Ella McCain, from Cholmondeley in Cheshire, was riding in her debut race on Friday night at Carlisle racecourse. The 16-year-old won a seven-furlong flat race on 7-1 shot Dark Confidant. "It was brilliant. It doesn't get much better than this, winning your first race. I've just done my GCSEs and this was far more enjoyable," she said. Her dad Donald McCain Jr, who trained 2011 National winner Ballabriggs, saw his other daughter Abbie ride her first winner earlier this month at Wolverhampton. He said: "Both Ella and Abbie have been pony racing for a number of years. They have plenty of experience under their belts and they were always going to get races when they turned 16. "Success and winning the big races is something we strive for and this [Ella's win] is just hugely satisfying," he added. Both are aiming to race on 'Amazing Monday' at Carlisle on 7 August - the UK's only all-female jockey card of races. Victory there, then in the Betfred Ladies' Trophy Handicap Stakes at Haydock Park five days later, can lead to a £20,000 Jockey Club development award for young female jockeys. 'Ginger' McCain, who died in 2011, trained Red Rum to three National wins in the 1970s and Amberleigh House to victory in the 2004 National. Captain McShane and USA international Williams had to be separated by team-mates in the 83rd minute of the game. The incident was not seen by match official, but was caught on video. Both players have until Friday to respond. Reading manager Brian McDermott has spoken to both players since the incident and taken disciplinary action. Media playback is not supported on this device The Royals lost the game 2-1 to a late Adam Forshaw goal moments after Matej Vydra had missed a chance to win it for the visitors. Speaking before the charges were confirmed, McDermott said his side must move on from the incident. "Football is a high-octane game," he told BBC Radio Berkshire. "We all want to win and it's one of those things. "It's a volatile situation when you lose in the last minute. We've had a chance to win the game and we don't take it. Media playback is not supported on this device McDermott, who returned to Reading for a second spell as manager in December, refused to say he was "disappointed" in his players' actions. "These things happen, we're all human beings," he said. "This is what life is about, there's a lot worse things going on. "The boys will apologise. We know it's not right, but this is a sport where we're trying to get to that league above. "It's happened and we have to deal with it the best way we can."
The granddaughter of Donald 'Ginger' McCain, who trained Red Rum to three Grand National victories, has ridden her first winner days after her GCSEs. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Reading players Paul McShane and Danny Williams have been charged with violent conduct by the FA following an on-pitch row in their defeat at Middlesbrough.
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The UK government says its extension of electrification of the network to Swansea and the valleys will bring faster journeys and promote jobs. The Welsh secretary said the direct investment is worth £350 million. Ministers say it will help people get to work, and bring cleaner travel. Work on electrification is expected to start sometime between 2014 and 2019, but the industry will determine the exact timetable "in due course", said the Department of Transport. The UK government agreed last year to electrify the line as far west as Cardiff, and had faced heavy lobbying to extend the investment to Swansea. The Department of Transport said Monday's announcement followed "detailed discussions" with the Wales Office and the Welsh government. Transport Secretary Justine Greening MP said: "This will give two-thirds of the Welsh population access to new fleets of electric trains helping to generate Welsh jobs and growth by slashing journey times and boosting passenger and freight capacity." The south Wales valleys and commuter lines to be electrified will include Ebbw Vale, Maesteg and the Vale of Glamorgan. The investment will also fund smaller schemes improving access at stations, the freight network and passenger journey times. Mrs Gillan welcomed the decision as "the most significant infrastructure announcement for Wales for decades." She said: "It will see over £350 million directly invested into the Welsh railway infrastructure, and arrives on the back of the £1 billion investment into the electrification of the Great Western Mainline from London to Cardiff, and the £500 million investment into the western link to Heathrow. "In total, Wales is set to benefit directly and indirectly from almost £2 billion from the UK government programme to modernise the rail network, and is the most significant infrastructure announcement for Wales for decades." First Minister Carwyn Jones said he was "delighted" at the move which he said would strengthen the east-west economic corridor and enhance Swansea's role as an economic hub. "Investing in our transport infrastructure is vital as we look to improve the economic competitiveness of Wales," said Mr Jones. Welsh Transport Minister Carl Sargeant said the move would boost the mobility of valleys-based communities, and widen the employment catchment area for businesses looking to invest in the region. "An electrified rail network is more economical to operate and maintain which will deliver value for money to the taxpayer," said Mr Sargeant. "Passengers will travel in a more environmentally sustainable way and experience a quieter, faster journey with savings of up to 20% on existing timetables." What it means for people and businesses: Greener more cost efficient railway that is better for both passengers and freight. Increased capacity giving people more reliable and more comfortable journeys Improved journey times, bringing stations closer together, helping people to meet friends and family and business to engage clients more efficiently Enhanced freight transport by rail, freeing up vital capacity on our roads. What it means for the country: Faster journey times, improving business productivity and opening up new markets for companies Improved access to major international gateways Meet projected rises in demand for travel into and between our major cities and economic centres Support growth in rail freight, particularly container flows to and from our major ports. Source: Wales Office Mark Langman, Network Rail's route managing director for Wales, said the electrification of the Valley lines network would help unlock the economic potential of the region. "This is a strong vote of confidence in the railway, and in our ability to deliver sustainable economic growth through development of, and investment in, the network," he said. Mark Barry, a business consultant who wrote the South Wales metro report making the case for improved connectivity to help the economy, told BBC Radio Wales that Monday's announcement would provide a huge foundation for a radical change in Wales' economic performance. "It's probably the most significant investment in Welsh rail since the Severn tunnel was opened," said Mr Barry. The tunnel was built in the late 19th Century, and completed in the mid-1880s. Extending the electrification of the main rail line will cut some 20 minutes from the three-hour journey between Paddington and Swansea. As well as cutting journey times, the decision to electrify the main line to Swansea means newer, longer trains will be able to run on the line, powered by overhead cables. The new trains will have nine carriages instead of the current eight, allowing more passengers to be carried on the line. The Department of Transport announcement for south Wales involves overhead electrification of the following lines: The decision comes after a week after the go-ahead was given to a £500m rail link to Heathrow. From 2021 passengers from south Wales, the west of England and the Thames Valley on the Great Western main line will no longer need to travel to the airport via Paddington.
Planned rail electrification has been hailed as the biggest investment in trains in Wales for more than a century and a major boost for passengers and business.
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The hosts had the better first-half chances and moved into the lead when Rob Kiernan headed in James Tavernier's free-kick. Hearts had earlier netted through Don Cowie, but the midfielder was flagged offside. A long throw-in by Lee Wallace found its way to Barrie McKay to poke home Rangers' second. Mark Warburton's side now lead Hearts by five points and go four clear of Aberdeen, who have a game in hand. Celtic, with three games in hand, lead the division by eight points. Hearts had beaten Rangers 2-0 in Robbie Neilson's last match in charge on 30 November, with Jon Daly in interim charge for last weekend's 2-2 draw with Ross County. Warburton's men had recovered from their loss at Tynecastle by beating Aberdeen to reclaim second place and Rangers were determined to hold on to it with several openings before Kiernan scored. Wallace was wide with one effort and saw another saved and Kenny Miller lobbed wide from a promising position. Media playback is not supported on this device However, the home fans would see their team in front by half-time, Kiernan powerfully nodding home Tavernier's free-kick. It was the defender's first goal since joining Rangers in June 2015. Rangers continued where they left off in the second half and took advantage of sloppy defending by Igor Rossi and Facyal Rherras when Wallace's throw was not cut out and McKay applied the finish - his first goal since netting in the League Cup in July. Joe Garner and Miller's replacement Martyn Waghorn had further efforts as the home side finished strongly, with one of Waghorn's shots requiring a fine block by Jack Hamilton. Hearts' best spell had come in the first half and Cowie celebrated after finishing on the rebound following a Callum Paterson shot that was saved by Wes Foderingham. However, the visitors and their new head coach, who joined after spells on the coaching staff at Rio Ave, Valencia and Newcastle, would be left frustrated by the linesman's raised flag. Hearts' Jamie Walker fired wide but was later booked for simulation in what proved to be a disappointing debut for 30-year-old Cathro. Match ends, Rangers 2, Heart of Midlothian 0. Second Half ends, Rangers 2, Heart of Midlothian 0. Foul by Liam Burt (Rangers). Liam Smith (Heart of Midlothian) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Substitution, Rangers. Liam Burt replaces Barrie McKay. Attempt blocked. Conor Sammon (Heart of Midlothian) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Attempt blocked. Jason Holt (Rangers) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Attempt missed. Martyn Waghorn (Rangers) left footed shot from the right side of the box is close, but misses to the right. Substitution, Rangers. Joseph Dodoo replaces Joe Garner. Joe Garner (Rangers) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by John Souttar (Heart of Midlothian). Attempt missed. Callum Paterson (Heart of Midlothian) right footed shot from outside the box is high and wide to the left. Substitution, Heart of Midlothian. Liam Smith replaces Don Cowie. Attempt missed. Bjorn Johnsen (Heart of Midlothian) right footed shot from outside the box is just a bit too high. Corner, Rangers. Conceded by Faycal Rherras. Jason Holt (Rangers) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Don Cowie (Heart of Midlothian). Attempt saved. Martyn Waghorn (Rangers) left footed shot from the right side of the six yard box is saved in the bottom right corner. Attempt missed. Tony Watt (Heart of Midlothian) right footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses to the right. Attempt blocked. Tony Watt (Heart of Midlothian) left footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Attempt missed. Martyn Waghorn (Rangers) left footed shot from the centre of the box is too high. Attempt saved. Martyn Waghorn (Rangers) left footed shot from the centre of the box is saved in the bottom left corner. Substitution, Heart of Midlothian. Conor Sammon replaces Robbie Muirhead. Callum Paterson (Heart of Midlothian) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Barrie McKay (Rangers) wins a free kick on the left wing. Foul by Callum Paterson (Heart of Midlothian). Attempt saved. Tony Watt (Heart of Midlothian) right footed shot from a difficult angle and long range on the left is saved in the bottom left corner. Attempt missed. Joe Garner (Rangers) right footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses to the right. Attempt missed. Martyn Waghorn (Rangers) left footed shot from outside the box is high and wide to the left. Foul by Joe Garner (Rangers). John Souttar (Heart of Midlothian) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Jason Holt (Rangers). Arnaud Djoum (Heart of Midlothian) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Substitution, Rangers. Martyn Waghorn replaces Kenny Miller. Attempt missed. Arnaud Djoum (Heart of Midlothian) right footed shot from outside the box is just a bit too high from a direct free kick. Foul by James Tavernier (Rangers). Tony Watt (Heart of Midlothian) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Joe Garner (Rangers) wins a free kick on the left wing. Foul by Callum Paterson (Heart of Midlothian). Attempt missed. Kenny Miller (Rangers) right footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses to the left.
Rangers consolidated second place in the Premiership as Ian Cathro lost his first match as Hearts head coach.
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In 1991 Brighton Pride began with four days of protest, film, live music and a picnic in Preston Park. Dani Ahrens, one of the organisers of the event in 1991, said: "We had been organising an annual march (since 1988) to protest at the passage of Section 28 into law. "By 1991, we felt that our resistance to this law, and its effects, had built a community that was strong, angry, and full of creativity." The BrightonPride25 exhibition tells the story of the event's history with photographs and film footage. Alf Le Flohic said: "BrightonPride25 will highlight the dedicated politicos, performers and party-goers who have made Brighton Pride the unique celebration of love and liberation that it is today." Kate Wildblood said, "From those early days of Queer On The Pier and days out on The Level, to the park life of Preston Park and campaigning for the Freedom To Live, Brighton Pride has a history worth knowing and a history we should all be proud of." Also on display at the Jubilee Library is an exhibition entitled "#Outcome". Portraits by Tom Dingley include people well known in the LGBT community - each holding a photograph taken in their childhood. Mr Dingley said: "[It gives] a sense of journey into adulthood, leading successful happy lives as out adults." BrightonPride25 is open at the Jubilee Library until 2 August. #Outcome is at the library until 9 August. Brighton Pride takes place on 1 and 2 August with a parade through the city ending at Preston Park. The city's second Trans Pride festival takes place from 25 to 27 July and includes a solidarity march and dance party on Saturday and picnic on the beach on Sunday.
Two exhibitions have opened in Brighton's Jubilee Library to mark the city's 25th Pride event in its current form.
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The 34-year-old Wallace is in his 18th season, and was captain of the county from 2012 to 2014. "It's fantastic, I've always wanted to play for Glamorgan since my childhood so having the opportunity to do it a bit longer is great," he said. Wallace played 230 consecutive Championship games before missing the final match of last season with injury. Wallace is also chairman of the Professional Cricketers' Association and is looking forward to playing into at least his 19th season with the county. "You're a long time retired, I'm still enjoying the game, and I've still got a lot of things I want to achieve personally and collectively with Glamorgan - so I'm very keen and ambitious." Wallace made his debut in 1999, and was quickly part of the team which won the One-Day League in 2002 and 2004, having taking the second division title in 2001. "I was lucky to come into a really strong Glamorgan side and to win some trophies early on in my career," he added. "Looking back, I probably took it for granted a bit. We've had a few ups and downs since then, but I think we're getting towards the sort of side that could be in a position to achieve those things again. "There are certainly guys I'm playing with at the moment that deserve some medals in their cabinet, so hopefully in the next few years while I'm still around we can get that done." At the start of the 2016 season Wallace had 10,490 first-class runs to his name, at a batting average of 28, with 709 dismissals in four-day games.
Glamorgan wicketkeeper Mark Wallace has signed a one-year contract extension until the end of next season.
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Green Party councillor Gus Hoyt stood down on Monday after it was revealed he used a four-letter expletive in an exchange over a city farm project. Mr Ferguson said it was a private exchange between two people who knew each other well. Mr Hoyt will be replaced by Daniella Radice in the council's cabinet. He had used the swearword in a private Twitter message to Steve Glover who was lobbying for more land to expand the Severn Project city farm scheme. Mr Glover then posted the message publicly on his own Twitter account. In his statement, Mr Ferguson, an independent, thanked Mr Hoyt for his dedication and hard work. "I know the Severn Project has referenced my support for their good work, but I should be clear that it has been to a large extent as a result of Gus championing their cause," he said. "I also know that Gus has been mercilessly taunted on Twitter over several issues in recent months. "I think anyone would appreciate the frustration which led to his response and that this was a private exchange between two people who knew each other well." By lifting its nine-month-old declaration, the UN's health agency is acknowledging that Zika is here to stay. The infection has been linked to severe birth defects in almost 30 countries. These include microcephaly, where babies are born with abnormally small heads and restricted brain development. The WHO says more than 2,100 cases of nervous-system malformations have been reported in Brazil alone. Although the virus is mostly spread by mosquitoes, it can also be sexually transmitted. Few people die from Zika and only one in five people infected is thought to develop symptoms. These can include fever, a rash and joint pain. Dr David Heymann, the head of a WHO emergency committee on the virus, said it still posed a "significant and enduring" threat. The WHO will now shift to a longer-term approach against the infection, which has spread across Latin America, the Caribbean and beyond. Mosquito army released in Zika fight Zika therapy 'works in the womb' Microcephaly: 'It's not the end of the world' It was first identified in monkeys in Uganda in 1947. The first human case was detected in Nigeria in 1954 and there have been further outbreaks in Africa, South East Asia and the Pacific Islands. Most were small and Zika has not previously been considered a major threat to human health. But in May 2015 it was reported in Brazil and has since spread rapidly. "Its current explosive pandemic re-emergence is, therefore, truly remarkable," the US National Institutes of Health said. Zika outbreak: What you need to know The Northern Irishman, 31, was competing in the Baloise Belgium Tour event for his Irish professional team Aqua Blue Sport. Former world track champion Irvine came out of retirement last October to sign for the team. A team tweet said Irvine had sustained a "minor hairline fracture". Irvine's team-mates include fellow Irishmen Matt Brammeier and Conor Dunne. The County Down man retired from the sport after failing to qualify for the Rio Olympics before reversing the decision nine months later. Aqua Blue Sport's goal is to eventually participate at a World Tour level and compete in the Tour de France, but their events this season include the Milan-San Remo classic, Amstel Gold and the Tour of Britain. Newtownards man Irvine became the first Irish cyclist to win a world track title in 117 years with victory in the scratch race in Belarus in 2013. Irvine also won silver in the points race at the 2013 World Championships and a European bronze medal He finished 2013 as number one scratch rider in the 2013 UCI world rankings and claimed a scratch silver medal in the 2014 Track Cycling World Championships. His achievements in 2013 led to him being named as the BBC Northern Ireland Sports Personality of the Year.
An assistant mayor who quit his post for swearing on Twitter was "mercilessly taunted", Bristol mayor George Ferguson has said. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The mosquito-borne Zika virus will no longer be treated as an international medical emergency, the World Health Organization (WHO) has declared. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Martyn Irvine will be out of action for about five or six weeks after suffering a hip fracture in a crash in Belgium on Wednesday.
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The figure was released following a Freedom of Information request by the Scottish Liberal Democrats. It includes the cost of upkeep for buildings and maintaining the force's mechanical and electrical systems. Police Scotland responded by saying it was developing an estate investment programme. Last October, the Scottish Police Federation raised concerns about the "crumbling police estate". The Association of the Scottish Police Superintendents later said that the force was facing "significant budget challenges" and that many stations were in a "shocking state of disrepair". Police Scotland has been reviewing buildings in a number of locations which could be closed as part of a wide-ranging estate review. In November, the force said it needed "modern, flexible buildings which are fit for the future". In releasing the maintenance figures, Scottish Lib Dem justice spokesman Liam McArthur said: "We've seen reports of police cars held together with duct tape, leaking interview rooms and officers searching charity shops for gear. "Now this Freedom of Information request reveals that, over the next 10 years, the cost of routine maintenance of the police estate will be more than a quarter of a billion pounds. "That is a huge bill and it is what is required just to keep up, replacing outdated electrical equipment and buildings. "It won't even begin to cover the new investment that is required to ensure officers and staff have the 21st century resources they need." In its response, Police Scotland said the estimated spending on maintenance included replacing "components and systems assessed against the anticipated lifecycle" that may be required over the next 10 years. Police Scotland Deputy Chief Constable Iain Livingstone said: "The Police Scotland estate was inherited from the legacy arrangements of eight forces and the Scottish Police Services Authority. "Much of the estate had not been maintained or upgraded to an adequate standard. In addition, a number of the buildings are no longer suitable for the demands or needs of local communities." Mr Livingstone said the total was the amount the force would have to pay "if we were simply to maintain our current estate". He added: "However, that is not our intention, and through the Policing 2026 Strategy, which was approved by the SPA and placed before the Scottish Parliament this week, we laid out ambitious plans to build the police service Scotland needs for the future. "These plans detail our intention to ensure Police Scotland becomes financially and operationally sustainable within three years. "As part of these plans, Police Scotland is now developing an estate investment programme to ensure we have buildings which are fit for purpose across the wide range of communities we serve. "The actual amount Police Scotland will spend on estates over the next 10 years will be calculated and refined as this investment programme is developed to ensure we continue to deliver a quality service to local communities." Mr McArthur blamed the size of the maintenance bill on the "botched centralisation" of the force by the Scottish government in 2013. But the government responded by saying it was "committed to protecting the £1bn police resource budget in real terms in every year of this parliament, a boost of £100m by 2021". A spokeswoman added: "We have also increased the capital budget in real terms in 2017-18 and provided a further £61m to support the delivery of Policing 2026, the 10-year strategy to ensure Police Scotland is equipped to tackle new and emerging threats. "We will continue to press UK ministers over the glaring disparity on VAT which sees Police Scotland, unlike all other UK territorial police forces, unable to recover VAT."
Police Scotland has pledged to ensure its buildings are "fit for purpose" after it emerged it faces a maintenance bill of £263m over the next decade.
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The head coach has steered the Scots to their first major finals in the Netherlands this summer. And the Swede thinks Scotland's traditions and passions make fertile ground for the game to flourish. "The advantage you have in Scotland is that you are football daft," Signeul told BBC Scotland. "If I look at other countries, they maybe have a sporting tradition - across a number of different sports - but in Scotland football is massive. "I have always thought that this country has the chance to go on to become one of the very best in Europe because of that tradition. "People go and watch; they listen on their radios; they are very technically aware of how the game is played and so you have a real understanding because women's football is a real tactical sport." The Scots are ranked 21st by world governing body Fifa, with 11 European rivals ahead of them. There is no professional domestic league, but Signeul, who is stepping down to take over Finland after the tournament, thinks there is huge potential. Signeul came to Scotland in 2005 after managing the Swedish international youth squads but says the different cultures should work in Scotland's favour. "People in Scotland don't go and have a coffee with their friends on a Friday night - they go and play fives," said the 55-year-old, whose squad are being funded to go full-time ahead of the Euro finals through a package agreed between the Scottish Football Partnership, Sport Scotland and energy firm SSE. "That wouldn't happen in Sweden, for example." Now she thinks media attention from Euro 2017 should be harnessed to grow the game. "If you get the interest then the resources and sponsorship could follow - you just need the wheel to start spinning," she added. "Fifteen years ago, France had hardly any football players and now they are one of the best in the world with a professional league. "To get things started, when we are at the Euros, we just need to make Scotland proud." In their final competitive games before the tournament, Scotland begin their Cyprus Cup campaign on Wednesday against New Zealand, with Austria and the Republic of Korea also in their group. At Euro 2017, Scotland open against England, with Spain and Portugal in their section. Signuel is reluctant to discuss her departure. "I think, in the end, I will be nostalgic," she said. "Maybe that's why I can't really think about it or talk about it. "It's been 12 fantastic years, but for now, I just want to focus on this and then in August I can cry."
Anna Signeul firmly believes Scotland can become one of the best women's football nations in Europe and hopes Euro 2017 is where it all begins.
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Mr Corbyn met staff at Harris Tweed Hebrides and is to address a town hall rally in Stornoway to highlight his party's policies for rural areas. He is to tour a series of marginal seats in Scotland over the next five days, attending speeches and rallies. The Tories say his policies lack credibility, while the SNP were critical of his position on Brexit. Labour gained six seats north of the border in June's snap election, having lost 40 in the previous poll in 2015. However, they were less than 100 votes behind the SNP in two Glasgow seats, and less than 1,000 votes behind in six Scottish seats in total. With the election result stripping Theresa May's Conservatives of their majority in government, Mr Corbyn has pledged to remain on an election footing. His party has identified up to 18 Scottish seats as potential targets. The Labour leader is using his visit to the Western Isles to highlight Labour plans to "rural-proof" policies in government, so that all laws are assessed on their impact on rural communities. Mr Corbyn said: "Rural communities have been taken for granted for too long. There has been chronic underinvestment in transport, broadband and public services, with rural infrastructure and industry neglected. "Labour will invest in transport, broadband, public services, housing and environmental and coastal protections - vital for the economy and the rural way of life." He pledged to visit Scotland "roughly once a month" to campaign, and called on the Scottish government to use "every power they've got" to combat austerity from the Westminster administration. The SNP has a lead of just over 1,000 votes in the local constituency of Na'h-Eileanan an Iar, where Angus MacNeil held his seat in June's election by a majority of 6.8%, over a Labour challenger. A spokesman for the party said Mr Corbyn's "backing for the Tories' extreme Brexit, outside the single market and customs union, is set to hit our rural communities hardest". He added: "Rural areas benefit massively from our membership of the EU, having access to funding, tariff-free trade and a highly-skilled labour market. "Sadly, rather than wanting to protect these benefits for rural communities, Labour are pledging to deliver an extreme Brexit. Jeremy Corbyn and Labour simply cannot be trusted to deliver for rural Scotland." The Scottish Conservatives, meanwhile, said it wasn't long ago that Scottish Labour "dreaded the thought of Jeremy Corbyn coming north". MSP Miles Briggs added: "Had he won the general election, Corbyn would have sold Scotland out in a heartbeat, and that ambivalence to Scotland's place in the UK hasn't changed."
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has begun a tour of Scottish constituencies with a visit to the Western Isles.
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Mary Grams, 84, was devastated when she lost the ring while weeding on the family farm in Alberta in 2004. But she had kept the ring's loss a secret from all but her son for more than a decade. On Monday, her daughter-in-law discovered the secret - and the ring - when she pulled up a lumpy carrot. The carrot had grown straight through the ring, enabling it to be plucked out after many years hiding in the soil. She had decided not to tell her husband when she lost it, out of embarrassment, but she told her son. She went out and bought a slightly cheaper replacement ring, and carried on as if nothing had happened. "Maybe I did the wrong thing, but you get so worked up," she said. No one was the wiser, until this week when her daughter-in-law Colleen Daley decided she wanted some carrots for supper. Ms Daley, who now lives on the farm where Mrs Grams used to live, went to harvest vegetables in the garden. Lo and behold, she spotted the ring while washing a rather lumpy carrot. Her son instantly knew who the ring must belong to, and called his mother. Looking back, Mrs Grams said she wishes she had told her husband, who died five years ago. He was a joker, she said, and probably would have found this whole situation pretty funny. Now that she has it back, she said she will be more careful. "If I am going outside or anything I am going to put it in a safe space. That is what I should have done," she said. This is not the first time someone has found a diamond ring on a carrot. In 2011, a Swedish woman found her wedding ring 16 years after she lost it. Hopper has made 112 appearances for Harlequins since joining the club from Championship side Cornish Pirates. The 32-year-old has played in 12 games this season, scoring his only try in a win over Bristol Rugby in February. "I leave with a heavy heart and a head full of great memories," he told the club website. "The chance to continue my career and make a change was something I could not pass up at this stage and I look forward to what the future holds." Susan Whiting, 20, was found wrapped in a shower curtain at Steven Beards' home in Bloxwich, Walsall, Leicester Crown Court heard. He had denied the charges, claiming that he was sleeping in the woods on the night of the murder. Jurors are still considering a verdict on his wife, Julie Beards, who is also accused of murder. More on this and other Birmingham stories Miss Whiting, who had learning difficulties, went missing in August after spending a night at the Beards' home. She was found the following day having been drugged, raped and hit on the head at least three times, jurors heard. Mr Beards, who denied rape, told the court he had "no idea" why evidence of his sperm had been found at the crime scene. He said he intended on being a sperm donor and had a sample in the bathroom. Llinos Medi Huws was understood to be the only candidate left after independent Ken Hughes withdrew. Some independents were criticised for supporting a Plaid-led administration rather than an independent leader. Mr Hughes said he was disappointed independent councillors had not united to form an administration. On 4 May, Plaid gained two seats, overtaking the independents to become the largest group on the island's authority, with 14 seats, leaving no party in overall control. Labour councillor John Arwel Roberts said he was "very disappointed" some Independents had decided to support Plaid. The new council leader will be formally elected at a meeting on 23 May.
A Canadian woman got an extra carrot with her diamond ring when it was found in her vegetable patch 13 years after she lost it. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Harlequins centre Matt Hopper will leave the Premiership club at the end of the season to join French second-tier side Oyonnax. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A man has been found guilty of raping and murdering his wife's friend, whose body was found hidden under his bed. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Plaid Cymru is expected to lead Anglesey council, after nominations for the post of leader closed with only one nomination.
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Patricia Wilson, 58, formerly of Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire, vanished from her home in August 2012. Her body has never been found. Jean-Louis Cayrou, 54, of La Salvetat-Peyrales, told a court in Rodez near Toulouse that the case was "lies". The court heard the pair had an affair after her partner returned to Britain. Mrs Wilson had been living in a hamlet called Les Landes Basses near the village of Vabre-Tizac. She moved to the area with her partner Donald Marcus in 2008. Judge Regis Cayrol said the missing woman began an affair with the defendant in 2012 - about six months after Mr Marcus left to receive treatment for multiple sclerosis. The court heard that the relationship between Mr Cayrou and Mrs Wilson had deteriorated by mid-July 2012 and that she confided in friends that they had had an argument when she tried to end it. It was alleged by her friends that Mr Cayrou entered her house on 25 July, cut the electricity, attempted to suffocate her while she was sleeping and said: "I am doing this to show that you need a man in the house." Mrs Wilson returned to England between 8 and 17 August and the judge told the court the defendant was said to have bombarded her with calls. For more Hertfordshire stories, visit the BBC Local Live page Upon her return to France, friends became concerned about her lack of contact, let themselves into her house on 22 August and found traces of blood, the court heard. French police found blood and DNA in the boot of the defendant's car, on a head torch and a strap, the court heard. Mr Cayrou, who lived in a caravan, protested as the judge read out the charge of premeditated murder, saying they were "lies". The hearing continues. It follows two similar incidents in recent days on the same street, Mountcollyer Avenue in Tiger's Bay. A man who lives in the house said: "I noticed my window was broken so I went outside and saw two guys walking towards North Queen Street. "They were quite relaxed and without any embarrassment - they were wearing hoodies so I couldn't see their faces." Police have said "initial investigations indicate that the crime is hate motivated". "Hate crime is unacceptable and I appeal to anyone with any information relating to this particular hate crime, please contact York Road police on the non-emergency number 101," a police spokesman added. On Monday night, a group of men attacked two houses and threatened residents at the street in what police described as a racially motivated hate crime. Windows in two of the houses were smashed with bricks and one man was reported to have been carrying a pick axe. They are among a collection of almost 1,000 robots amassed over 40 years by a couple from the North East. The Out of This World auction takes place at toy sale specialist Vectis in Thornaby, Teesside and is expected to raise more than £40,000. Auctioneer Andy Reed said it was the largest single collection of robots the auction house had sold.
A gardener has denied the premeditated murder of a British woman, said to be his lover, who vanished in the south of France four years ago. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A window of a Polish man's house in north Belfast has been smashed in what police say is a suspected hate crime. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Batman, Flash Gordon and a 1930s-built Japanese robot are expected to draw classic toy collectors to a sale.
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Gross mortgage lending for the first quarter of this year was down 12% from the previous three months at £44.9bn, the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML) said. This marked a 3% decrease on the same period in 2014. But the CML said that lending in March was much higher than February. Total lending through home loans reached £16.5bn in March, some 21% higher than February and 7% higher than March last year. "The underlying lending picture is stabilising," said Bob Pannell, chief economist of the CML. "Sentiment and activity are showing early signs of improvement, and should be further supported by the effects of stamp duty reform. We expect to see lending strengthen over the next few months, albeit from a relatively sluggish start in 2015." Lenders have been cutting their mortgage rates in recent weeks, with little prospect of the Bank of England's base rate rising during the rest of the year. The National Association of Estate Agents (NAEA) said that stricter affordability checks were slowing down the process of home buying. The changes, which came into force a year ago, require lenders to study mortgage applicants' incomings and outgoings, and test whether buyers can cover repayments if interest rates were to rise. "A drop in the number of buyers is the direct result of a slow-down in acceptance of mortgages, with it now taking an average of 50 days to receive a mortgage offer," said Mark Hayward, managing director of the NAEA. "This increases the risk that sales won't go through and puts unnecessary pressure on any chain transactions." There are an estimated 11.1 million residential mortgages in the UK, with loans worth over £1.3 trillion
Mortgage lending suffered a "sluggish start" to the year but lending has picked up in recent weeks, according to a trade body.
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Taking place over Saturday and Sunday, it will challenge entrants cross 118 miles (190km) in sections involving to running, cycling and kayaking. It includes stages on Benbecula, North Uist and South Uist. The Heb is a revamped version of The Hebridean Challenge, a multi-sports, multi-day race last held in 2009.
More than 120 endurance athletes and volunteer staff are heading for the Western Isles for new race event, The Heb.
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The Swiss, 34, who pulled out of last week's Madrid Open with a back injury, is seeking a first Rome title, having lost last year's final. Defending champion Djokovic, 28, also reached the third round with a 7-5 7-5 win over France's Stephane Robert. "I was expecting to lose in straight sets," said Federer, who decided to play only after completing the warm-up. World number two Federer, who received a bye in the first round, said he has no chance of winning the tournament - "I'm so far off that it won't happen" - and is not sure he will be fit to face Dominic Thiem in the next round. "I don't know how I'm going to feel tomorrow," he said. "I hope so, but I'm literally going practice after practice." Serb Djokovic, the world number one and top seed, was given a stiff test by qualifier Robert, coming back from a break down in the second set. Spanish fifth seed Rafael Nadal, 29, beat Germany's Philipp Kohlschreiber to set up a third-round meeting with Australian Nick Kyrgios. Angelique Kerber, Victoria Azarenka and Simona Halep were knocked out in the second round at the Foro Italico complex. German second seed Kerber, the Australian Open champion, was beaten 6-1 5-7 7-5 by Canada's Eugenie Bouchard, while Belarusian fourth seed Azarenka lost 6-3 6-2 to Romania's Irina-Camelia Begu. Azarenka, who also pulled out of the Madrid Open with a back injury, said: "It's not good right now. We'll see what happens. I don't know what to tell you. "I thought I was OK and was ready to play and came back, so I'm just disappointed." Romanian sixth seed Halep, the Madrid Open champion, was beaten 6-3 4-6 6-3 by Australia's Daria Gavrilova. Coming soon: We're launching a new BBC Sport newsletter ahead of the Euros and Olympics, bringing all the best stories, features and video right to your inbox. You can sign up here.
Roger Federer returned to action with a 6-3 7-5 win over promising German Alexander Zverev in the Italian Open.
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Executive pay has escalated far faster than average pay. In 2000, bosses of top companies earned 47 times more. IDS said a director now typically earns £2.43m a year. Official figures put the average annual salary at £27,000. This year bosses' pay rose by more than a fifth, IDS said. IDS said the rise was driven by a 44% rise in share awards, which were given as long-term incentives. Bonuses were also up, by 12%, although basic salaries were £822,300, up by a far more muted 2.5%. That, though, is still some three times the size of average wage rises. The latest official figures show that, excluding bonuses, average earnings in the May to July period rose by 0.7% from a year earlier; including bonuses, they rose by 0.6%. The IDS report shows that the long-term impact of years of high earnings growth has widened the pay differential between FTSE 100 chief executives and the rest of the workforce. It found that between 2000 and 2014 the median total earnings for FTSE 100 bosses rose by 278%, while the corresponding rise in total earnings for full-time employees was 48%. Steve Tatton, editor of the IDS report, said: "The pattern of pay growth highlights the complex make-up of directors' remuneration. "Salary rises may be modest but this can be more than made up for by the receipt of incentive payments. When such incentives pay out, they can pay out substantial sums, giving a significant boost to directors' earnings." The best paid chief executives were in media, marketing and telecoms, while the lowest were in retail and distribution.
Directors of the top 100 listed UK companies now earn 120 times the average sum earned by their employees, according to a report by Incomes Data Services (IDS).
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Trials of the Thermolicer device are under way in Shetland. It works by bathing fish briefly in lukewarm water, capitalising on the parasite's low tolerance for sudden changes in temperature. No chemicals are used and the fish are unharmed in the process, according to SSF. The Thermolicer, which is made by Norwegian firm Steinsvik, is fitted on a boat or a barge. Each machine can treat up to 80 tons of fish per hour. The sea louse is a naturally-occurring parasite that is responsible for significant losses to wild and farmed fish stocks. It can latch on to salmon, eat their skin and blood, and cause infections. SSF said it would share its experiences of using the Thermolicer with other salmon farmers in Scotland. Ralph Bickerdike, head of fish health for SSF, said: "Sea lice is a challenge for all fish farmers in most salmon-producing areas. "At Scottish Sea Farms we intend being part of the solution to this challenge. "Our work with SAIC (Scottish Aquaculture Innovation Centre) and other industry partners in this area has already reaped huge benefits through our work with wrasse and lumpfish - varieties of cleaner fish. "The Thermolicer is the latest step in developing alternative tools to maintain a sustainable solution to fish health management." SAIC chief executive Heather Jones said: "We are delighted to see this level of innovation and collaboration happening in Scotland. "The industry is tackling the biological issues it faces with energy and initiative, and with a strong commitment to sustainable practices." Media playback is unsupported on your device 19 September 2015 Last updated at 00:00 BST More than 250 arts and entertainment events took place, including art installations, dance, drama and music performances and family activities. Other towns and cities across Northern Ireland also put on Culture Night events. BBC News NI's arts correspondent Robbie Meredith reports. Osinachi Ebere had a penalty saved and headed the rebound against the bar and after the break Udochukwu Anumudu also struck a shot against the bar. On 56 minutes Victor Osimhen scored his 10th goal of the finals - a new record. Three minutes later Funsho Bamgboye added a second and ensured Nigeria became only the second country to defend the title. Nigeria coach Emmanuel Amuneke told Fifa.com: "We have worked very hard for this success and we hope to continue. "The players will go home now but their journey is not over yet. I have football in my blood, as a player and as a coach. This is what I want to pass to my players."
Salmon producer Scottish Sea Farms (SSF) has invested more than £4m in new equipment that uses a chemical-free approach to controlling sea lice. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Tens of thousands of people have packed into Belfast's Cathedral Quarter for the city's annual Culture Night. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Nigeria retained the Under-17 World Cup on Sunday by beating Mali 2-0 in an all-African final in Chile.
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20 June 2016 Last updated at 17:15 BST The decision could affect many areas of everyday life, such as farming - as Baa-rry the sheep and Moo-reen the cow explain. There's an agreement called the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) between the EU and farmers. It makes sure there's a stable amount of food and it pays farmers money, known as subsidies. The European Union spends around £42 billion on agriculture a year, with £3.2 billion of this coming from the UK. People who want the UK to leave the EU think this is too much, and the money saved by leaving could be spread around other areas. Those who want to stay are worried that farmers might lose out on the cash if we left. Police say the gunman killed his wife and another woman, before randomly shooting at other customers at the cafe. Three children were among those injured in the attack near the city of Zrenjanin, the interior ministry said. The gunman was arrested and police are investigating his motive, which is believed to be jealousy. Witnesses told Serbia's state TV that the attacker came to the Makijato cafe and saw his wife there with a group of friends, the AP news agency reports. He apparently went home and came back with a gun. "He just pulled out a gun and started shooting, first into the air," one of the witnesses, Svetozar Manojlovic, said. "It sounded like firecrackers at first," he said. "Then the guy next to me fell down and others started falling down. It was total chaos." Serbia's Interior Minister, Nebojsa Stefanovic, said the cafe guests eventually managed to grab the weapon from the man's hands. Mr Stefanovic said the automatic weapon was illegal, and he appealed to people to hand over any illegal weapons, which proliferated after the war in the Balkans in the 1990s. Accounts for the year ending June 2015 show an increase in turnover of £1.6 million, up 18.4% on the previous year. The FAW said the increase in turnover was due to Uefa's centralised sale of Television rights for qualifying matches. The company made a post-tax profit of £20,000 compared to a loss of £29,000 for the previous year. The FAW said the small profit was due to the governing body's strategy of using revenue to help fund all domestic and international football in Wales. Wales have qualified for this summer's Euro 2016 finals in France, their first appearance at a major tournament since the 1958 World Cup.
This week adults across the country will vote on whether the UK should stay in or leave the European Union. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Five people have been shot dead and at least 20 injured in a cafe in north-eastern Serbia. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The Football Association of Wales (FAW) increased its turnover and made a profit in the last financial year.
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Day-four of the discussions included plans for the new institutions to help address the concerns of victims and survivors. These were proposed as part of the Stormont House Agreement. Ms Villiers said the talks would resume on Monday to "discuss the impact of continued paramilitary activity". "We have had a series of detailed and focused meetings around legacy issues and the proposals for new institutions to deal with the past that the government published yesterday," she said. "These discussions covered a number of important issues that will help to shape the legislation we present to parliament next month." The Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) has expressed concern over some aspects of the legacy proposals. UUP MP Tom Elliott said: "Through the information retrieval process obviously perpetrators can give information to that commission which can be passed on to victims' families. "That evidence then cannot be used within any other judicial process that has been given to that information retrieval commission. "The problem there is that if the perpetrator or someone on their behalf then makes that public then obviously it can't be used in a legal process or in a challenge to them through a different system, in other words through the Historical Investigations Unit." Legacy issues agreed under the Stormont House Agreement The UUP is also concerned that the public have not been consulted on the legacy issues and the discrepancy over the disclosure of information between the authorities in the UK and the Republic of Ireland. Mr Elliott said that under the proposals, the British government would give full disclosure of any information it holds, while the Irish government have committed to provide disclosure of information, without using the word full. The round-table talks between Northern Ireland's political parties are aimed at finding a resolution to the crisis at Stormont. The political row was triggered by a police assessment that IRA members were involved in the murder of former IRA man Kevin McGuigan Sr last month. Police said the IRA still existed, but added that it was not engaged in terrorism. Three Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) ministers subsequently resigned from Northern Ireland's ruling executive, and Peter Robinson, the party's leader, stepped aside as first minister. The DUP and the Ulster Unionists agreed last week to join the round-table talks when the government ordered a review of paramilitary groups in Northern Ireland. On Tuesday, the government announced the names of the panel members who will oversee the independent assessment.
Northern Ireland Secretary Theresa Villiers has said the round-table talks at Stormont this week have been "useful and intensive".
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The French capital region and 30 other departments have been on maximum pollution alert for several days. Landmark buildings like the Eiffel Tower were barely visible after a white fog settled over Paris. The capital's air quality has been one of the worst on record, French environmental agencies say. A lack of wind, combined with cold nights followed by unseasonably warm days, has contributed to the worsening conditions. The smog has also affected neighbouring Belgium, where officials have reduced the maximum speed limit allowed on main roads. The southern Wallonia region said it had also decided to make buses, trains and underground trains free until the pollution emergency was over. Experts say levels of smog recorded in Paris this week have been similar to those of Beijing in China, one of the world's most polluted cities. As part of the emergency measures, commuters in Paris and neighbouring areas will not have to pay for public transport between Friday and Sunday. Bike sharing services are also free, as are one-hour sessions for electric car shares, the Associated Press news agency reports. French authorities appealed to drivers to leave their cars at home. "I am asking all residents in Paris and neighbouring areas to favour the use of public transport," said Jean-Paul Huchon, the head of the the capital's transport authority. He also warned that current pollution levels represented "significant risks" to people's health. The elderly, children, asthmatics and people with heart problems have been advised to stay indoors to avoid potential breathing problems. Environment minister Philippe Martin said air quality had now become "an emergency and priority for the government". The country's northern and eastern regions have been particularly hit by toxic pollutants. Several other French cities, including Reims, Rouen and Caen, announced they would follow Paris's example and make their public transport free over the weekend.
Authorities in Paris have taken the rare step of making public transport free for three days to reduce severe smog caused by unusually warm weather.
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Mob attacks and serious assaults on staff, some involving gangs of boys attacking a single young person, happened at Cookham Wood in Rochester. HM Inspectorate of Prisons said assaults on staff had risen by nearly a third since the last inspection. Overall, inspectors found the facility was well-led and working effectively. Chief Inspector of Prisons Peter Clarke said the institution was continuing to improve, with "difficulties, risks and weaknesses" being attended to in "effective and often creative and innovative ways". "The prison was led with confidence; the management team seemed cohesive and attentive and an evident strength was the quite impressive culture that was developing among the staff as they grew in both experience and confidence," he said. Michael Spurr, chief executive of the National Offender Management Service, added: "There remains more to do, particularly on safety, but work is under way to address this, including the introduction of a new behaviour management strategy and a new unit dedicated to supporting the most challenging offenders." He praised the professionalism and commitment of staff, and said "the strong foundations now in place" would allow the prison to drive further improvements over the coming months.
More than 100 violent incidents were recorded at a young offenders' institution in Kent in the six months before a visit by inspectors.
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Media playback is unsupported on your device 30 July 2015 Last updated at 12:40 BST On Thursday experts say amateur star-gazers have the best chance in years of seeing them in all their glory. The powerful rays can interfere with airline navigation systems, satellites and even NASA space crews - so they all had to be on high alert. But if you're wondering what causes the night sky to glow, check out Leah's report to find out more... Sources said he was accused of hitting the producer in an incident last week, and the remaining three episodes of the current series might not be broadcast. The BBC confirmed one episode - due for broadcast on Sunday - would not be shown, but gave few further details. Clarkson, 54, has not commented, but has been joking on social media about films that could replace Sunday's show. He was given what he called his "final warning" last May after claims he used a racist word during filming. At the time, he said the BBC had told him he would be sacked if he made "one more offensive remark, anywhere, at any time". In a statement earlier, the BBC said: "Following a fracas with a BBC producer, Jeremy Clarkson has been suspended pending an investigation. "No-one else has been suspended. "Top Gear will not be broadcast this Sunday. "The BBC will be making no further comment at this time." BBC News special correspondent Lucy Manning said sources had confirmed reports Clarkson was suspended for "allegedly hitting a producer". "The incident is believed to have happened last week, but was reported to the BBC on Monday and dealt with on Tuesday," she added. "The next two episodes of Top Gear will not be broadcast and it's understood that a third programme, the final of the series, is unlikely to be transmitted." Clarkson's representatives have yet to reply to requests for a comment. In an exchange on Twitter, Clarkson and co-hosts Richard Hammond and James May have been suggesting films that could be aired in place of the Sunday's Top Gear episode. Later - in an apparent reference to Ed Miliband - Clarkson tweeted: "Sorry Ed. It seems I knocked your 'I'm a human' piece down the news agenda." Justine Miliband, the Labour leader's wife, has given an interview to the BBC saying she expects personal attacks on her husband to be "really vicious" as May's election approaches. This weekend's episode of Top Gear was set to feature Clarkson - who has fronted the show since 2002 - and his fellow presenters at a classic track day. Former footballer and pundit Gary Lineker was also to appear as the "star in a reasonably priced car". Lineker has tweeted: "I don't think I'm ever meant to appear on Top Gear!" Former Top Gear presenter Chris Goffey told BBC Radio 5 live that, while discussions on the programme sometimes became heated when he worked on the show, it "must have been something fairly serious behind the scenes to warrant his immediate suspension". "I can't think what the hell's gone on, but there you go. When you've got a very strong character who likes things his own way, if somebody stands up to him, there's going to be a row." Clarkson has courted controversy on several occasions during his time hosting Top Gear. The show's executive producer, Andy Wilman, described last year as an "annus horribilis" for the programme. It followed an incident in Argentina where the presenters and crew were forced to flee the country after trouble erupted over a number plate reading H982 FKL - which some suggested referred to the Falklands conflict of 1982. Last year the show was also censured by Ofcom for breaching broadcasting rules after Clarkson used a derogatory word for Asian people during its Burma special programme. Barcelona captain Andres Iniesta told Spanish media after the 0-0 draw that the 23-year-old Brazilian was subjected to abuse from a supporter. Neymar is reported to have told TV station La Sexta: "I did not hear anything. "It is difficult for things to bother me, I just play football." Espanyol president Joan Collet said: "I was there, just like 30,000 people and nothing happened. "The whole thing blows up for one shout, but there was nothing generalised, it's a lie."
The Northern Lights are seen on Earth as spectacular splashes of colour in the night sky. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Top Gear host Jeremy Clarkson has been suspended by the BBC after what it called a "fracas" with a producer. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Barcelona forward Neymar said he was not aware of the racist chanting allegedly aimed at him during Saturday's derby at Espanyol.
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Susan Lillian Townsend was born in Leicester in 1946, the city where she set her most famous work, The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole, aged 13 3/4. The story of the pimply, pretentious teenager who painted his room black and obsessed about a girl called Pandora sold two million copies when it was released at the end of 1982. Adored by fellow teenagers and adults alike, the book was followed by The Growing Pains of Adrian Mole in 1984 - making Townsend the best-selling novelist of the 1980s. Townsend said she grew up "comic-poor - what the Americans now call trailer-trash", as the eldest of three daughters. But there were always books in their home and, after discovering children's classics, she was soon reading one a day. "I do think that books, good books, free you," she told writer Alan Clark, a friend and former creative writing student who interviewed her for Mediterranean Life magazine. "They make you feel a citizen of the world and things like class, sex and age don't matter. They're the greatest leveller." After leaving school, she worked as a petrol pump attendant, shop assistant and factory hand, before training as a community worker. She married at 18 but hid her writing from her first husband, inside sofa cushions and under the stairs. He left her and she was soon juggling three jobs, writing at night while her three children were asleep. "I became an insomniac, really, hardly slept at all, didn't even try to," she told The Guardian in 2009. "And it's carried on. I hate to say I only need as much sleep as Mrs Thatcher, but I can cope really well on five hours." It was not until she confessed all to her partner Colin Broadway - who she later married and had another child with - that she was encouraged to join a local writers' group at the Phoenix Theatre in Leicester, winning an award for her first play. The Adrian Mole series first started life as a play on BBC Radio 4 - first broadcast with the title The Diary of Nigel Mole, Aged 13 1/4. A publisher heard it and offered her a contract to turn it into a book. A name change and another seven instalments followed along with TV and theatre adaptations. Townsend often said she identified with Adrian but she was amazed by the book's success, both in the UK and abroad. "Now I realise that Adrian is simply a type of person who exists everywhere, regardless of nationality," she told Clark. "Shy, thoughtful, oversensitive, repressed. In a hut in the Gambia at this moment, there's an Adrian Mole getting on people's tits." She never allowed any of the books to carry an illustration of Mole though, as she wanted people to be able to visualise the character for themselves. Townsend had a heart attack when she was just 40 and was registered blind in 2001, after a 15-year battle with diabetes. She would lie on a sofa, dictating her final books to her writer son Sean, who - in 2009, donated one of his kidneys to his mother. "It makes me sound like Barbara Cartland. But I'm never as well groomed as she was," she joked in a Big Issue interview in March 2012. During a BBC interview later that month, at the new Mansfield Library where she was speaking to a visually-impaired reading group, Townsend said of losing her sight: "You can't underestimate what a devastating blow it is." She added: "People would say, 'You're so good about it.' But inside... to me not being able to read, I still haven't come to terms with it yet." She also had neuropathic arthropathy - Charcot's joint - which weakened the bones in her legs and feet and meant she had to use a wheelchair. Before she lost her sight completely, Townsend would carry a large magnifying glass, which Stephen Mangan - who played Adrian in the BBC adaptation of The Cappuccino Years - remembers being trained on him. "When I auditioned to play Adrian, I remember she told me that he couldn't be too good looking," he said. "She pulled out a magnifying glass, came up right to my face - because her sight was just in the last stages of going, scanned me all over and said that I was indeed 'not good-looking enough to play the part'. "She was very funny, there was a lot of laughter whenever you met Sue," added Mangan. The Cappuccino Years was a satire on New Labour, with Pandora now an MP and Adrian a chef in London. Townsend was a passionate socialist and politics also influenced Adrian Mole's teenage years, under Thatcher's government. The eighth Mole instalment, Adrian Mole: The Prostrate Years, was published in 2009. However, Townsend suffered a stroke over Christmas 2012 and, at the Oxford Literary Festival a few months later, revealed she had to push back the release date of the ninth book as a result. "It was on the way until the stroke interrupted me," she said. Her other best-selling novels include The Queen and I - about the Royal Family being forced to move to a council estate after a revolution - and 2012's The Woman Who Went to Bed for a Year, about a middle aged mum who refuses to get up from bed. "Oh I'd love to [do that]," Townsend told The Big Issue. "A month would be great. Just getting up now and again, you know, to take showers and stuff. I wouldn't get bored, I'd listen to the radio." Townsend also published a more serious novel, Ghost Children, about the life-long effects of having an abortion, based on her own experiences - and often talked about writing "a masterpiece". "I wanted to be Dostoevsky but my way of coping with the world has always been humour," she told Clark. "In the playground I always made people laugh, I used to charge them three pence for an impression of a teacher. It kept me in toffees." Writers and comedians including JK Rowling, David Walliams, Matt Lucas and Caitlin Moran were all quick to pay tribute to that humour on Twitter. Having left school at 15, Townsend was awarded an honorary Masters of Arts from Leicester University and, in 2008, was made a Distinguished Honorary Fellow of the university. She was also an Honorary Doctor of Letters at Loughborough University and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. "I hate it when people call me a 'national treasure'," she told The Guardian in 2010, while promoting The Prostrate Years. "It takes away your bite and makes you feel like a harmless old golden Labrador." In 2009, Townsend was given the Honorary Freedom of Leicester. She was surrounded by her family when she died at her home in the city on 10 April, following a short illness.
Sue Townsend failed her 11 plus, left school at 15 and wrote in secret, but she went on to become one of the UK's best-selling and beloved authors.
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Exhibitions will be held across the Kent boroughs of Dartford and Gravesham at 10 locations in April and May. London Paramount said this fourth round of consultation would help the project team to hear the views of the public before plans went to the government. More than 50 companies on the Swanscombe Peninsula have said they fear compulsory purchase orders (CPO). The developers have said the entertainment resort will bring up to 27,000 jobs to the area and more than 50 rides and attractions based on film and TV programmes. Key features include a water park, a creative commercial hub, up to 5,000 hotel rooms, improvements to transport infrastructure, an events space, service buildings and staff training facilities. Exhibitions to be held from 29 April to 14 May will include an emerging masterplan, a range of proposed transport options, and a scaled model of the resort. Plans will be submitted to the government later this year. Inside Out won the Oscar for best animated film beating Anomalisa, Boy and the World, Shaun the Sheep Movie and When Marnie Was There. British actor Mark Rylance won the best supporting actor Oscar for his role in Bridge of Spies, with fellow Briton Sam Smith winning best original song. Spotlight took home the best picture Oscar with Mad Max: Fury Road picking up the most awards of the night, with six prizes. This year's Oscars ceremony had been criticised by some Hollywood actors protesting about the lack of diversity among this year's nominees, as all 20 nominees in the best acting or supporting acting categories are white. The man, in his fifties, was found by members of the public in West Hendford near the town centre at 03:00 GMT. Police said his next of kin have been informed. He was captured on CCTV going into the alleyway between Tesco car park and the Manor Hotel at 02:00 GMT, but police want to trace his movements afterwards. Det Con Dan King said: "He's described as white, of proportionate build, with dark hair. "He was wearing a black padded jacket over a grey woollen jumper and had a distinctive Manchester City football scarf on with black and white writing on it. "We also believe the man's black leather wallet may be missing so if anyone finds a wallet matching this description, please call us." Det Con King said the man was known to have visited the Westminster pub in Westminster Street, the Liberal Club, now known as the 94 club, in Middle Street, and then the Labour Club on Central Road. Ed Miliband will make his plan public in a major speech on Friday which will argue that what the party calls a "living standards crisis" can only be addressed by making long term structural changes to the British economy. Labour see this as a follow up to their proposal for an energy price freeze. Party officials will not confirm the details of their banking package although one source told me they had been discussing the possibility of a cap on the market share which any retail bank can have drawing on a similar scheme in the United States. In a separate development, the party will tomorrow call on Chancellor George Osborne to block Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) from paying staff bonuses worth twice their salaries. The Financial Times reports that RBS intends to ask its shareholders - in effect the British government - to approve bonuses set at twice the normal level permitted by a new EU law which limits bonuses to the same amount as annual salary in the previous year. The paper reports all major European banks are expected to follow suit. The shadow chief secretary, Chris Leslie, has tabled a Commons motion on Wednesday saying the government "as a majority shareholder should not approve any request to increase the cap". He says that "at a time when families face a cost-of-living crisis, it cannot be right for George Osborne to approve a doubling of the bank bonus cap". The chancellor is likely to call on RBS to exercise restraint as he has in the past. The government has passed new laws to force regulators to produce greater competition in banking, acting on recommendations of the Parliamentary Commission on Banking Standards and the Vickers Commission. Labour will use their proposals to claim that the prime minister "stands up for the wrong people" whilst they challenge the big five banks just as they challenged the big six energy companies NOTE In a speech in July 2012, Ed Miliband said the banking industry had become "economically damaging and socially destructive" and set out his aim of increasing banking competition and forcing the "big five" banks to sell branches. He is expected to unveil the detail of this on Friday.
The developers behind a planned £2bn Paramount theme park are holding a series of consultation events. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The biggest film awards in the world, the Oscars, produced some big British winners and top prizes for kids films too in Los Angeles, USA, on Sunday night. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A man is in a "life-threatening condition" in hospital after being found with head injuries in an alleyway in Yeovil, police have said. [NEXT_CONCEPT] I understand the Labour leader is preparing to unveil proposals designed to increase competition between banks by forcing the so-called "big five" - HSBC, Barclays, Royal Bank of Scotland, Santander and Lloyds - to sell more of their branches and promote the growth of new banks capable of challenging them.
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League One side Albion Rovers drew 0-0 with Greenock Morton in the other group game, but the Championship side took the bonus point after penalties. Killie goalkeeper Jamie MacDonald saved a penalty from Scott Linton before summer signing Souleymane Coulibaly put the Premiership side ahead. Will Boyle added the second before Jamie Watson pulled a goal back. Boyle, the defender on loan from Huddersfield Town, had an eventful debut in Cumbernauld, conceding the penalty with a hand ball before extending Killie's lead. It means Kilmarnock lead Morton by a point after the opening group games. The Greenock side took the bonus point in Coatbridge, introduced for the first time this season, with a 5-3 win on penalties. Clyde manager Barry Ferguson: "We should have won the game. I thought we were the better team. "After we missed the penalty, we felt a bit sorry for ourselves, but I thought overall we were the better team." Kilmarnock manager Lee Clark: "We're happy we've won the game and there were some good individual performances, but we're quite disappointed with our overall performance. "We know there is lots to build on. We have to be better without the ball." "One or two of the new players have hit the ground quicker than others. They just have to dig in and get it right." The Baggies have offered Manchester United about £15m for midfielder Morgan Schneiderlin, who has played just 11 Premier League minutes this season. Pulis said some players "prefer the protection" of a bigger club rather than moving to a team where they "have to work and play and earn their money". West Brom have also been linked with Leicester City's Jeffrey Schlupp. The 24-year-old left-sided defender or winger has made only four league appearances for the champions this season. Media playback is not supported on this device The Baggies are eighth in the table and face competition from Everton for 27-year-old France international Schneiderlin, who United boss Jose Mourinho says can leave Old Trafford if the club's board is happy with the fee. "The big picture is we're trying to get players into this club who will progress us over a period of time, not just in this moment," added Pulis, whose side visit fourth-placed Arsenal on 26 December (15:00 GMT kick-off). "It's not just time and money, it's getting the players to come to the club." In a BBC interview, he said the migration crisis was putting the entire EU project at risk, not only the EU's passport-free Schengen zone. He said the EU must urgently expand reception centres for migrants in Greece and other countries on the EU's external borders. Failure to do so could lead EU states to reimpose more border controls inside Schengen, he warned. That would seriously undermine freedom of movement, one of the EU's greatest achievements, he said. Most of the estimated 1.1 million migrants who reached the EU last year - a record influx - fled the fighting in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan. Mr Valls described the German Chancellor, Angela Merkel, as "courageous" for her open door policy on migrants, but stressed that Europe as a whole could not welcome all refugees.
Kilmarnock edged out League Two outfit Clyde 2-1 to go top of Scottish League Cup Group H. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Players struggling for first-team football at "bigger clubs" should move on, says West Brom manager Tony Pulis. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The French Prime Minister, Manuel Valls, has warned that European society could be totally destabilised if the EU lets in every refugee who arrives.
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In a statement, CD Projekt said the attackers were in possession of early design documents for its upcoming Cyberpunk 2077 game. Unless the Polish company pays up, it risks files being made public. The size of the ransom demand is not known. The game-maker said it would not be "giving in to the demands" of the gang. It added that the documents that had been taken were old and "largely unrepresentative" of the current state of the game. It is not clear how the gang demanding the ransom got hold of the documents. CD Projekt has not given any more details about the theft beyond the statement it put on its official Twitter account. Best known for the Witcher series of video games, CD Project said it had told the police about the ransom demand. The studio first announced that it was working on a cyberpunk-themed game in 2012. No definite release date for of Cyberpunk 2077 has yet been given, but the game is expected to be launched before 2021. Computer security expert Graham Cluley said CD Projekt should be "applauded" for its refusal to pay the ransom. "Paying extortionists always runs the risk of encouraging blackmailers to strike again, putting not just your own company but others at further risk," he said. Mr Cluley said the attack was just the latest in a series that had held intellectual property to ransom. Last month, a group called the Dark Overlord sought to blackmail Netflix over unaired episodes of a popular TV series. BBC Wales understands ministers want a structure modelled on pre-1996 arrangements, when Wales had eight county councils. It is understood Public Services Minister Leighton Andrews will set out the case for eight councils. Mr Andrews is also expected to leave open the option of a nine-council map. But with elections to the assembly next May, and opposition parties sceptical of the Welsh government's plans, a question mark hangs over whether the reforms will be enacted. The eight-council model would see the return of historic counties such as Dyfed - re-merging Carmarthenshire, Pembrokeshire and Ceredigion - and West Glamorgan, joining Swansea once more with Neath Port Talbot. A Plaid Cymru spokesman said: "As expected, the Welsh government is focusing solely on a simplistic rearrangement of boundaries. "Plaid Cymru believes that such an approach will not improve the delivery of public services and runs the risk of destabilising and demotivating local government at this crucial time." The plans have already proved controversial, with Labour leaders of local authorities calling for the idea to be put to one side until after next year's election. The announcement comes 18 months after an independent cross-party commission suggested cutting the number of councils to either 10, 11 or 12. The Welsh government offered councils the chance to merge voluntarily, but three sets of proposed mergers were rejected by Mr Andrews in January. Welsh Conservative shadow minster for local government, Janet Finch-Saunders, described the process as "a shambles from start to finish". She added: "Councils should not be forced to merge. It won't work and it's a one-way ticket to disaster. "This lame excuse for reform will see us jump back in time to a structure long confined to the history books. All this does is serve their own narrow political self-interest." * There could be further consultation on merging Conwy and Denbighshire to create an additional council in north Wales. THE CHANGING FACE OF WALES
Extortionists have demanded a ransom from game developer CD Projekt Red for the safe return of files for the studio's next game. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Plans to cut the number of Welsh councils from 22 to single figures will be published on Wednesday.
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Savita Halappanavar was 31 when she died at University Hospital in Galway in October 2012. Her husband Praveen had issued High Court proceedings against the HSE for negligence over her death. The deal is thought to have significant financial implications for the HSE. But details of the agreement have not been made public. Proceedings were due to begin at the High Court on Friday, but the Irish state broadcaster RTÉ has reported that the agreement was reached within the past few days. Mrs Halappanavar had asked for a termination after being told she was having a miscarriage, but staff refused. Days later, she died from infection. The jury at the inquest into her death returned a verdict of medical misadventure. Two subsequent reports into the circumstances of her death and the care she received at the hospital found several failings. A report by the Health Information and Quality Authority found a failure to provide the most basic elements of care. The 257-page report found that there were many missed opportunities, which, if acted on, might have changed the outcome for Mrs Halappanavar. Praveen Halappanavar now lives in the US, having moved there in recent years for work.
The Republic of Ireland's Health Service Executive (HSE) is understood to have made an out-of-court settlement with the husband of a woman who died in hospital after a miscarriage.
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The empty Glen O'Dee, built in Banchory in 1900, was hit by the fire late on Thursday. More than 60 firefighters tackled the blaze. Police Scotland said the boys would be reported to the Youth Justice Management Unit. Glen O'Dee featured in the Somerset Maugham book Creature of Circumstance. Det Sgt George Nixon said: "While no one was injured a significant amount of damage has been caused and the consequences could have been far greater. "We would like to thank members of the Banchory community for their support and assistance throughout this enquiry." Glen O' Dee was built in 1900 as a sanatorium for patients suffering from tuberculosis. The building was requisitioned by the Army during World War Two, and used as a billet for troops undergoing their training. It was later converted into a hotel, then a home for the elderly before closing in 1998. It later featured on the BBC's Restoration programme as locals campaigned to have it restored. However the campaign proved ultimately unsuccessful.
Two 13-year-old boys have been charged after a historic hospital which featured on the BBC's Restoration programme was destroyed in a blaze.
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John Longworth, director general of the British Chambers of Commerce (BCC), warns that "tawdry political tactics" could deflect from important issues facing the UK economy. Such a focus, he wrote in a letter to Westminster leaders, had "been sorely lacking in political discourse". The BCC represents thousands of firms. "For many businesses, both small and large, one of the greatest sources of challenge and uncertainty in 2015 isn't the state of global markets, but home-grown politics," Mr Longworth cautioned. He further decried politicians who "race between television studios and events to undercut their rivals' policy pronouncements, to proclaim themselves most 'in touch' with the needs of the people". "You must focus on the causes, not the symptoms, of the challenges that face our United Kingdom," he said. The UK's public spending, and wider economic matters affecting the country, will be among the most hotly contested issues in the run-up to the next general-election, scheduled for May 2015. In his letter - addressed to PM David Cameron, deputy PM and Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg, and Labour leader Ed Miliband, as well as other party leaders - Mr Longworth outlined some of the policies on the BCC's wish list. He said the organisation wanted those in power to support UK companies that are "brave enough to sell products and services across the world," as well as help with training opportunities and new jobs for both the young and old. The BCC also called for greater devolution across the UK, with more decisions made locally, and an end to what it termed "crushing input taxes". "Maintaining corporation tax at 20% would be a sound beginning," Mr Longworth added.
The head of a major UK business group has called on politicians to rise above "point-scoring" in their general election campaigns next year.
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Media playback is unsupported on your device 11 November 2014 Last updated at 07:10 GMT 888,246 poppies have been planted by people at the Tower since July this year, including politicians and members of the Royal family. The exhibition was created by artist Paul Cummins and was created as part of the build up to Armistice day, to help remember those who fought in World War One. Each ceramic poppy represents the life of a British or colonial soldier who died fighting in the Great War. Martin went to visit the exhibition and find out why it has been so popular. Marc Williamson was 21 when he was stabbed to death in August 2011. This morning, his mother, Barbara, father, Cecil, and brother, Robert David, were in their home in Richhill when arsonists set fire to the car outside. The blaze spread to a nearby oil tank, which exploded. The fire destroyed the house but the family managed to escape. Robert David was awake early for work and raised the alarm. Mrs Williamson said: "Mark's dead five years in August coming up and if Robert David hadn't been up I'd have lost another son. "Maybe we'd have all been away, but I'd definitely have lost another son." Mrs Williamson says she believes she knows who started the fire. "It's a long story," she said, "but they got the wrong car, I'm sure they meant to burn out my car." The car was pushed up against the end-terrace house in Elm Park and set alight at around 05:30 BST on Wednesday. A number of neighbours had to be evacuated while the fire was brought under control. Mrs Williamson says the family are now homeless. "We've lost everything", she said. Police said they were working to establish a motive and appealed for anyone with information to contact them. Thousands of people turned out to Pride Cymru in Cardiff on Saturday, to march through the city before making their way to Cooper's Field for events. The city council said there were "challenges" over the date next year, as the field would be used as a Champions League final fan zone. Pride Cymru chairwoman Lu Thomas said she was "disappointed". Speaking to BBC Radio Cymru's Taro'r Post programme, she said council officers told her no events would take place at Cooper's Field this time next year because of re-turfing work after the hosting of the fan zone. Ms Thomas said there was nowhere else suitable in the city and organisers did not want to take the national event away from the capital. She said: "It is inconceivable that the capital city of Wales may not have a Pride event in 2017. "However, we believe that a solution to the current situation can be resolved." In response, a council spokesman said: "The council has not cancelled the 2017 event, but there are challenges with some of the dates in next year's diary. "The council events team are currently assessing all alternative possibilities and will continue to work closely with the organisers and continue to support the event." Saturday's parade was the fifth through the city's streets - a spectacle that attracted 1,000 people last year. South Wales Police officers joined the parade and showed support for the LGBT community with a new Pride car. It will tour the area, promoting the importance of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender communities and raising awareness of hate crime. The force's LGBT network chairman, Scot Anderson, said the move was partly influenced by a shooting in a USA gay nightclub where 49 people died. "Since the tragic events in Orlando, the LGBT community has been shocked to its core," he said. "Officers and staff have a clear message, we stand together, to protect and keep you safe." The 19-year-old left-back, who came through the Lincoln City academy, made three league appearances for Bolton and is Rovers boss Darren Ferguson's eighth signing since their relegation. Meanwhile, midfielder Richard Chaplow has left the Keepmoat Stadium. The 31-year-old, who joined Rovers in July 2015, played 30 games last season scoring two goals. Find all the latest football transfers on our dedicated page.
Nearly four million people are expected to have visited the Tower of London poppy art exhibition by 12 November. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The family of a County Armagh man, who was murdered almost five years ago, have escaped injury in an arson attack on their home. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Doubts have been cast over whether one of Wales' biggest celebrations of equality will take place in 2017. [NEXT_CONCEPT] League Two Doncaster Rovers have signed teenage defender Tyler Garrett from Bolton Wanderers on a three-year deal.
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The 30-year-old, who signed on a free transfer in July 2015 after his contract expired at Barcelona, has made 46 appearances for Stoke and scored three goals. He returned from an eight-month lay-off in December after a serious knee ligament injury. "From the first day I came to the club I felt at home," he said. "The injury is all in the past now. I think I've showed that I'm back in business and I'm just look forward now, working hard every day and trying to make the best of everything." The move will end his run of 23 years on breakfast TV in total - he joined Sky in 2005 after 12 years on GMTV. He said he had to "step away from the daily studio commitment for a while" to produce and present more documentaries. "To those who have worked or woken up with me on Sky News over the years - thank you. I hope you appreciated that I tried to do it differently," he said. Holmes fronts Sunrise from Monday to Thursday and hosts ITV's This Morning with wife Ruth Langsford on Fridays. He also fronts It's Not Me, It's You and How The Other Half Lives on Channel 5. "Going forward, I will now produce and present a number of documentary projects which I have been stalling for some time, as well as continuing my work with ITV and Channel 5," he wrote on Facebook. "There is so much going on and I realised it was now or never." He will host his last edition of Sunrise on 13 October. His replacement has not been announced. Head of Sky News John Ryley called Holmes "a true pro". "There are very few presenters who can challenge their interviewee with acute questions combined with infectious charm - Eamonn does that," Mr Ryley said. Holmes took 10 weeks off following a double hip replacement earlier this year. In May, he apologised after appearing to link an attack on Manchester United's team bus with the Hillsborough disaster. Follow us on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, on Instagram, or if you have a story suggestion email [email protected].
Stoke winger Ibrahim Afellay has signed a new contract committing him to the club until the end of 2018-19. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Eamonn Holmes is to step down as anchor of Sky News's Sunrise after 11 years presenting the breakfast show.
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After a rain delay, Shiv Thakor top-scored with 60 as Derbyshire reached 209-8 from their allotted 36 overs. Set a revised 218 from 36 overs on the Duckworth-Lewis method, Tom Kohler-Cadmore (63) and Daryl Mitchell (67) helped the visitors to a strong start. Ed Barnard and Ross Whiteley then got them home with 24 balls to spare to secure a sixth win from eight matches. Derbyshire, who could not qualify for the knockout stages following Sunday's defeat by Leicestershire, were put into bat and reached 34-1 after 10.3 overs before rain struck. After play resumed at 17:00 BST with the game reduced to 36 overs per side, Barnard (3-37) and captain Joe Leach (2-43) helped Worcestershire take regular wickets to restrict the home side to 5.8 runs per over. Australia spinner Nathan Lyon took 1-31 on his Worcestershire debut, after arriving as cover for compatriot John Hastings, who is now part of Australia's Champions Trophy squad for the next month. Openers Kohler-Cadmore and Mitchell then broke the back of the chase with an opening stand of 90, before contributions from Tom Fell (24) and Brett D'Oliveira (18) helped them on their way, despite Hardus Viljoen's taking 3-55 with the ball. Derbyshire fast bowler Hardus Viljoen told BBC Radio Derby: "We are a young team. We've shown in patches in this competition that we can play good cricket but we are also still learning. "You need to strike up front early on but the guy who scored 63 came in and played a knock out of his socks. "That is going to happen. You can't take any credit away from him. He played well." Worcestershire director of cricket Steve Rhodes told BBC Hereford & Worcester: "I'm delighted for the players and the staff who put in the work and time to try and get that home semi-final. "It's going to be a nice pay-day for the club and I'm very proud of what the team have done in finishing top of the group, "We're a small club and we like to play our young academy players. We don't venture off too much with the non-English players and it's a nice feeling to finish top."
Worcestershire secured top spot in the One-Day Cup North Group and a home semi-final with a win over Derbyshire.
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More than 100 pianos went under the hammer as the Edinburgh Piano Company held its closing down sale. The firm supplied pianos for famous musicians including Frank Sinatra, Van Morrison and Luciano Pavarotti over more than 30 years in business. Retiring business owner James Cameron saw his stock sold off for prices ranging from £104 to £48,880. The highest priced item was a Bösendorfer grand piano from Vienna, dubbed the "Rolls Royce" of the instrument. Bidders, including Franz Ferdinand frontman Alex Kapranos, packed the firm's showroom in Joppa, Edinburgh, while bids were called in from across the world, with buyers in China and America taking part. In total, the sale of 116 pianos by specialist company Piano Auctions Ltd netted £373,250. Mr Cameron, 73, said he was "absolutely delighted" with the sale. He said: "There were more people in the sale room than I have ever had in the history of the business. "I'm sad that it is our final day of trading but I'm pleased that we've gone out on a high note. "It's been an enjoyable business but I'm sure all those pianos have gone to good homes." Mr Cameron started the business in the early 1980s while studying musical instrument technology in the city. His instruments went on tours with Jamie Cullum, Van Morrison, Evelyn Glennie and Tony Bennett, and he provided pianos for a Frank Sinatra concert at Ibrox Stadium in 1990 and another by Pavarotti at the SECC. He now plans to set up a musical centre in his home near Biggar and host jazz nights.
One of Scotland's largest collections of pianos has sold at auction for almost £375,000.
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After electing to bat, Durham stalled when Tom Bailey took two of his four wickets to reduce the hosts to 46-2. But Borthwick made his best score in two summers (134), sharing a stand of 88 with Jack Burnham (43). Paul Collingwood then made an unbeaten 85 to help Durham close on 341-6. Just 11 days short of his 40th birthday, the former England international batted more than three hours, putting on 134 for the fifth wicket with Borthwick, who holed out at long-on off spinner Simon Kerrigan. Bailey, who was only in as replacement following Jimmy Anderson's return to Test duty this week, induced edged catches from both openers in an impressive eight-over opening spell. He then picked up his fourth wicket late in the day, when Ryan Pringle gloved an attempted hook to slip, giving Liam Livingstone his third catch. Durham century-maker Scott Borthwick: "It's a decent pitch and I felt in pretty good nick from the start. I didn't score many in the first two games, but I didn't feel in bad form. "A few low scores play on your mind, so it's good to put them behind me. I got out three times in the 90s last year so I was a bit nervous approaching my hundred. "Once I got there I was determined to go on and I was disappointed with the way I got out." Lancashire's Tom Bailey: "It is tough to step into Jimmy Anderson's shoes and I'm happy with four wickets, although I'd rather see the side win. "Our aspirations are to win the Championship and to have a chance of winning this game we will have to come back strongly in the morning. "There was a bit of swing early on, but the pitch isn't offering much." The women were killed as people rushed onto a jetty as they returned from the two-day harvest festival in Gangasagar, West Bengal, a state minister said. Another 10 people were injured, and rescue workers were searching the water for others who may have fallen in. The disaster came less than a day after a boat overturned hundreds of miles upstream, leaving at least 24 dead. That accident happened on Saturday evening as people were ferrying back after watching kite-flying celebrations to mark the festival near Patna, Bihar state's capital. Twelve people managed to swim to shore, and eight were hospitalised after being rescued, Bihar state's disaster management minister Chandrashekhar told Reuters news agency. The boat was only meant to be carrying 30 people. Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressed his grief for the victims of both incidents on Twitter, promising the families of the deceased 200,000 rupees ($2,935/£2,440) each. It is estimated some 1.5 million people had gathered in Gangasagar, where the Ganges river flows into the sea, for the Hindu harvest festival of Makar Sankranti.
Durham's Scott Borthwick more than doubled his County Championship run haul for the season to help his side into a good position against in-form Lancashire at Chester-le-Street. [NEXT_CONCEPT] At least six women have died after getting caught in a stampede at a Hindu festival on the River Ganges.
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Most of the people who died were working on farms during torrential rains on Tuesday, reports said. Lightning strikes are common in India during heavy monsoon rains. Fifty-six people died in Bihar while 37 people were killed across Uttar Pradesh, Jharkand and Madhya Pradesh. "Many of the victims are children and women," Anirudh Kumar, a senior official at Bihar's disaster management agency, told AFP news agency. One man taken to hospital in Rohtas said: "When it was raining, we immediately took shelter. It [lightning] hit us there, and then we fell unconscious. "We could not understand what had happened. Then in the middle, when I regained consciousness, I realised that I had been hit by something." Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said he was "deeply anguished" by the loss of life. At least 2,000 people have died in lightning strikes in India every year since 2005, according to the National Crime Records Bureau. India receives 80% of its annual rainfall during the monsoon season, which runs between June and September. Source: Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents Climate change 'will make lightning strike more' How do you recover from being struck by lightning?
At least 93 people have been killed and more than 20 injured by lightning strikes in the Indian states of Bihar, Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh, officials say.
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Both sides began the match in the top two, and Boro came close in the first half when Albert Adomah hit the bar. League leaders Boro took the lead when Jordan Rhodes finished from six yards. The Clarets looked like they would drop out of the Championship automatic promotion spots with Brighton winning, until defender Keane forced home a corner to maintain their top-two place. Keane's dramatic intervention stretched Sean Dyche's side's unbeaten league run to 20 games, a streak that goes all the way back to Boxing Day, and ended Boro's six-match winning run. Aitor Karanka's side would have gone four points clear at the top of the table had they held on for victory, after Rhodes had turned home Daniel Ayala's knockdown of Stewart Downing's free-kick midway through the second half. Boro, whose gap at the top remains at two points, had come the closest to opening to scoring in the first half when Albert Adomah smashed against the crossbar. The Clarets regularly threatened following Rhodes' goal, with Boro defender Ritchie De Laet having to be on hand to clear George Boyd's strike off the line. Matt Taylor's free-kick then deflected just wide for the hosts before, two minutes into injury time, his corner caused chaos in the Boro area and was tucked away by Keane. The Clarets would have dropped a point behind Brighton had they been defeated, with the Seagulls thrashing QPR 4-0, but they remain in the top two on goal difference. Burnley manager Sean Dyche: "I'm really pleased with the whole group tonight, for the mentality. That's an important game, you go 1-0 down, that can defuel you. Not for us. We just kept on and on; eventually they cracked. "[Middlesbrough] are a very good team; they've spent wisely. They've spent it really well, I think that was actually a compliment. "I've got total respect for every manager. I mean it sincerely. We're all trying to do the job, to be successful." Middlesbrough head coach Aitor Karanka: "We had our chances to score the second and the third and with George Friend and Gaston Ramirez's injuries I had to make substitutions. The game was under control for us. "If you look at the games where we scored against Reading and Bolton, we try to always play football. It's my decision, my style and I am really proud of all of them. When we lose, we lose with our style; when we win, we win with our style. "I don't know if we are going to get promotion but I'm really proud of all of them. As a coach, you can't be prouder than I am now." Match ends, Burnley 1, Middlesbrough 1. Second Half ends, Burnley 1, Middlesbrough 1. Hand ball by Sam Vokes (Burnley). Foul by Ashley Barnes (Burnley). Ben Gibson (Middlesbrough) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Substitution, Middlesbrough. Tomas Kalas replaces Stewart Downing. Goal! Burnley 1, Middlesbrough 1. Michael Keane (Burnley) left footed shot from very close range to the bottom right corner. Assisted by Stephen Ward following a corner. Corner, Burnley. Conceded by Ben Gibson. Attempt blocked. Ashley Barnes (Burnley) left footed shot from the centre of the box is blocked. Assisted by Sam Vokes. Attempt missed. Matthew Taylor (Burnley) left footed shot from outside the box is high and wide to the left from a direct free kick. Ashley Barnes (Burnley) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Ben Gibson (Middlesbrough). Attempt missed. Dean Marney (Burnley) right footed shot from outside the box is too high. Assisted by Ben Mee with a headed pass following a corner. Corner, Burnley. Conceded by Grant Leadbitter. Attempt blocked. Matthew Taylor (Burnley) left footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Sam Vokes (Burnley) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Ben Gibson (Middlesbrough). Substitution, Burnley. Matthew Taylor replaces George Boyd. Joey Barton (Burnley) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Adam Forshaw (Middlesbrough). Hand ball by Dean Marney (Burnley). Substitution, Burnley. Ashley Barnes replaces Andre Gray. Corner, Burnley. Conceded by Dimitrios Konstantopoulos. Attempt missed. George Boyd (Burnley) left footed shot from the centre of the box is close, but misses to the right following a set piece situation. Matthew Lowton (Burnley) wins a free kick on the right wing. Foul by Adam Forshaw (Middlesbrough). Attempt missed. Sam Vokes (Burnley) header from the centre of the box is high and wide to the right. Assisted by Matthew Lowton. Attempt blocked. Andre Gray (Burnley) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Substitution, Middlesbrough. Adam Forshaw replaces Gastón Ramírez because of an injury. Substitution, Burnley. Lloyd Dyer replaces Scott Arfield. Delay over. They are ready to continue. Delay in match Gastón Ramírez (Middlesbrough) because of an injury. Foul by Ben Mee (Burnley). Jordan Rhodes (Middlesbrough) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Goal! Burnley 0, Middlesbrough 1. Jordan Rhodes (Middlesbrough) right footed shot from the centre of the box to the bottom right corner. Assisted by Daniel Ayala with a headed pass following a set piece situation. Foul by Ben Mee (Burnley). Jordan Rhodes (Middlesbrough) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Stephen Ward (Burnley). Gastón Ramírez (Middlesbrough) wins a free kick on the right wing. Attempt missed. Joey Barton (Burnley) header from the centre of the box is too high. Assisted by Matthew Lowton with a cross following a corner.
Michael Keane's injury-time equaliser salvaged Burnley a point against fellow promotion hopefuls Middlesbrough.
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"I've never met a man who's been less impressed by becoming heavyweight champion of the world," said Hearn, after seeing Anthony Joshua dismantle Charles Martin in two rounds and take possession of the IBF title. Promoter Hearn seemed almost put out - 20,000 screaming fans at London's O2 Arena, a reported £1m purse with a promise of many millions more to come and an opponent who turned up in fancy dress. What more did the British fighter want? He even seemed irritated that his new belt kept falling over. "He's not used to those yet," said Hearn. On the evidence of Saturday's fight, he soon will be. "I just don't want to make a big deal out of it," said the 26-year-old Londoner, having just won a world heavyweight title in only his 16th professional fight. "I knew what I was here to do. I knew I wasn't losing. I spoke to someone on the phone the other day and said: 'Is it bad that I'm thinking about my post-fight speech already?' "So what do you expect? When I retire on top I'll be happy." History suggests Joshua is adopting the right stance. When American legend Mike Tyson beat Trevor Berbick in 1986 to secure his first world heavyweight title, fame and adulation had already spoiled him. By Tyson's own admission, he was riddled with gonorrhoea that night. No wonder he looked so angry. Joshua disposed of Martin 63 seconds faster than Tyson disposed of Berbick. Joshua won a world title 12 fights faster than Tyson. Fingers crossed Joshua's career takes far longer to unravel - and that he's not spotted driving around with a tiger in his passenger seat any time soon. "When was the last time in heavyweight boxing we had a role model young children want to be like?" said Hearn. "At Monday's public workout, he stayed for an hour and a half to sign autographs. He did another hour after the weigh-in and another hour after the fight. That's how he feels fans should be treated. "If your son said, 'I want to be like Anthony Joshua', you'd be pleased with that. If he said, 'I want to be like Tyson Fury', what would you say?" The laughter from the press pack told Hearn everything he needed to know. But Hearn isn't stupid. He wants Fury to carry on being naughtier than ever so that, when the time comes, he can promote the fight as good versus bad, sensible versus daft - however you want to frame it. Media playback is not supported on this device And anyway, Joshua isn't as nice as all that. For one, he's got a right hand that could fell an American fridge-freezer, never mind Charles Martin. And he knows full well that the British public wants a little bit more than a megawatt smile, some humble patter and the odd appearance on a panel show. When Hearn was informed of Fury's assessment of Joshua's latest victory - Manchester's WBA and WBO champion called his rival "slow and ponderous" - the promoter, as promoters do, sounded indignant. But Joshua - who has plenty of the street about him, don't worry about that - gently steamed. "Why should I lower myself to Tyson Fury's level? He should act like a champion, but he acts like a kid. You see what an eight-pack and some muscles can do, knock out a champion in two rounds. Maybe he should take some tips. "I'm here to knock people out. That's what people want to see. People come to see blood and I've got no problem drawing blood for people. I enjoy it." Suddenly, the heavyweight division, for so long so lukewarm, is beginning to bubble again: Joshua clattering through the ranks like a bowling ball through skittles; Fury with his ring cunning and air of malevolent mischief, affected or not; David Haye on the comeback trail; WBC champion Deontay Wilder, 'The Trap from Tuscaloosa' who can also hit a bit, holding up the American end. "I'm not saying Fury or Haye are next, but they're certainly on the radar," said Hearn. "We're not going to wait two or three years to fight them. The pressure will be on us [from the British public] after a voluntary defence or two. "And it's about time we cracked the American market. The big money is in the UK nowadays but we'd like some more money from our friends in America. The plan is to turn AJ into a pay-per-view fighter over there. Showtime and HBO both texted me within two seconds of Joshua's fight, saying: 'Let's talk.'" Hearn also confirmed that the first battle between Joshua and Fury could take place at opposite ends of the country. Hearn said he had Wembley Stadium booked for Joshua's next fight on 9 July before Fury announced his rematch with Wladimir Klitschko would take place on the same date in Manchester. Both men fighting different opponents on the same night seems like madness. But madness is Fury's stock in trade, while Hearn appears to revel in it. "Sky turned down the Fury-Klitschko fight [which will be on subscription boxing channel BoxNation] because they didn't want to make a decision until Joshua had fought. They see AJ as the future," said Hearn. "Sky are keen to go head to head with Fury-Klitschko. Fury did well beating Klitschko but it was an awful fight. When you see AJ fight, you get value for money." Who knows how that little bit of nonsense will be solved. Sky might see Joshua as the future, but fighting a relative unknown when Fury is fighting a legend on the same night seems foolhardy, however bad the first fight between Fury and Klitschko was. And with New Zealand prospect Joseph Parker fighting Carlos Takam in May, Bulgaria's Kubrat Pulev fighting Britain's Dereck Chisora in the same month and Cuba's Luis Ortiz fighting Alexander Ustinov this summer, there aren't many decent names available. But rest assured, Joshua is up for pretty much anyone. He'd fight King Kong, if only the British Boxing Board of Control would grant him a licence. "Me, Fury, Haye, Wilder, we have to fight, it's bound to happen. We can't go through this whole era dodging each other. That would be silly." Far sillier things have happened in boxing, but Joshua at least sounds like he means it. And even if Joshua doesn't seem too excited about the ride ahead, you will be. A few years ago, I asked Nigel Benn whether he thought Chris Eubank Jr would struggle to bear the burden of his famous name. "It's very worrying because he has a lot to live up to," said Benn, a former two-weight world champion who fought two classic matches against Chris Eubank Sr in the 1990s. "Chris Sr was a great fighter, so he's going to have so much pressure on him. If he jumps into the ring like his dad and has the same music, then he better perform like his dad." So it was intriguing to see Benn's son, Conor, make his professional debut on Saturday. Decked out all in black like his dad. Boxing out of the same wide crouch as his dad. Exhibiting the same jerky head movement as his dad. Scrapping like his dad. Anything the Eubanks can do...
Eddie Hearn sounded like a dad who had organised the world's best birthday party, only for his son to declare afterwards: "Yeah, it was all right I s'pose…"
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The 25-year-old has not played since sustaining the injury in a 3-0 victory over Leicester in January. The Dutch international subsequently underwent surgery and was expected to be out for up to three months. However, the club have now said Van Dijk will not be "risked unnecessarily" despite his recovery progressing well. Striker Charlie Austin could return from a long-term shoulder injury in three weeks, according to boss Claude Puel. Saints are currently 10th in the Premier League, with 11 games remaining this season.
Southampton centre back Virgil van Dijk is unlikely to play again this season as he recovers from a damaged ligament in his foot.
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The 43-year-old Londoner said he was "totally speechless" and "bowled over" to beat nine other acts in the final. Two other British acts, Stevie Starr - the Professional Regurgitator - and magician John van der Put, who performs as Piff the Magic Dragon, also made it through to the final 10. Zerdin wins $1m (£645,000) and the chance to headline his own Las Vegas show. Speaking after his win, he said: "I never thought it would be like this. I just thought I'd nip over to America, have a go at this talent show, and if it didn't work out then I could come home back to the UK and no one would be any the wiser. "But the one thing I forgot about was social media. Everything filters back and everyone knows everything now." Stammering comedian Drew Lynch was the runner-up, while Starr finished fourth. Zerdin was the early favourite to win the talent show following his performances in the initial rounds. After his performance in the final on Tuesday, judge Howard Stern praised the ventriloquist, saying: "There's a reason Paul breezed through every single time he came on, because he is a master at what he does. "He's taking the art of ventriloquism to new heights." Fellow judge and former Spice Girl Mel B added: "You're a well polished act, you're flawless." Zerdin is already a successful, established performer in the UK, having appeared at the Royal Variety Performance three times since 1997. He is also no stranger to talent shows, having won ITV's The Big, Big, Talent Show - hosted by Jonathan Ross - in 1996. He appeared on a number of BBC children's programmes in the late '90s and taught Nigel Havers the art of ventriloquism on ITV's recent Get Your Act Together. Zerdin is the second ventriloquist to win America's Got Talent after Terry Fator in 2007 - who went on to have his own Las Vegas residency at The Mirage hotel worth a reported $100m (£64.5m) over five years. In 2013 he celebrated his 1000th show at the venue, where he continues to perform.
British ventriloquist Paul Zerdin has expressed his shock at winning this year's America's Got Talent.
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Michelle Mellotte, 61, took the money from Michael McGrory in February 2010, saying it would be repaid that summer. But it was only returned after police began an investigation the next year. The former doctor in Ederney now faces being struck off the medical register. The judge told her there was little the courts could do to punish her more than the public humiliation of exposing the "significant breach of trust". She admitted fraud by abuse of her role. The judge told her the offence warranted a 12 month custodial sentence, but it would be suspended for two years given the exceptional circumstances of the case. The court, sitting in Downpatrick, was told that the victim, Michael McGrory, was suffering from Alzheimer's and the GP was aware of his deteriorating mental and physical health when she asked him for the loan. She went to his home to "ask him for a favour" to help her out of her financial difficulties and he agreed to sign a cheque for £10,000 in the presence of his home help with an endorsement that it would be paid back in the summer of 2010. The home help confronted the GP a year later when the money was not repaid, but she told her "not to worry about it". The money was returned to Mr McGrory, who died in 2012, after the police began to investigate the doctor's conduct. The judge said the GP was not motivated by greed and the money was not spent on a lavish lifestyle, but was rather a result of her financial mismanagement. He said he had received many testimonials and it was clear Dr Mellotte was dedicated to her patients, and had cared for many people in a compassionate and selfless way. He said she not only looked after their medical needs but also helped their housing and financial needs, giving people money who were in arrears for rent, and regularly buying groceries for patients. The judge said the GP did not see anything wrong with this approach, which he described as not only "unorthodox but inappropriate". He said she was dedicated to her patients but was less interested in the financial aspects of her practice, and described her practical financial management as "inept". The court was told that the doctor suffered from a history of depressive illness and was in significant financial difficulty and pressure from her bank at the time. The judge said the offence did not start out as one of dishonesty and the money was used to repay other individuals, including another patient she owed money to. He said that Dr Mellotte had cared for many people in a compassionate and selfless way for four decades but her career had come to an end in a "publicly inauspicious way". He said this was a "significant punishment in its own right" and that it was right that the significant breach of trust in the doctor-patient relationship had been publicly exposed in this way.
A Fermanagh GP who dishonestly exploited and took advantage of a vulnerable elderly patient when she failed to repay a £10,000 loan has been given a suspended prison sentence.
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There were walk-outs and boos at its screening earlier but it has still earned some glowing reviews. Gosling plays a drug smuggler in Bangkok who is compelled by his mother to avenge his brother's death. Peter Bradshaw from The Guardian gave the film five stars but said it might "have people running for the exits." The film reunites Gosling with director Nicolas Winding Refn, who won the best director prize at Cannes for their 2011 collaboration Drive. Bradshaw praised Refn's "bizarre infernal creation". "An entire created world of fear, really is gripping. Every scene, every frame, is executed with pure formal brilliance," he wrote. Speaking to reporters at Cannes, Refn said he felt powerless to resist a compulsion to depict violence on screen. "Art is an act of violence," he said on Wednesday. "Art is about speaking to our subconscious and our needs at different levels." Gosling did not attend Cannes this year, being currently in Detroit directing his first movie How to Catch a Monster. Cannes director Thierry Fremaux read a letter from the Canadian actor at the film's press conference apologising for his absence. "Can't believe I'm not In Cannes," Gosling wrote. "I was hoping to come but I'm on week three shooting my film in Detroit. Miss you all. "Nicolas, my friend, we really are the same persons in different dimensions. I'm sending you good vibrations.'' Kristin Scott Thomas is cast against type in the film as Gosling's garishly dressed American mother. "Watching her in Only God Forgives is like waking up to discover your much-loved pet cat has morphed overnight into a saltwater crocodile," wrote the Daily Telegraph's Robbie Collin. "Kristin Scott Thomas easily upstages Ryan Gosling's near-catatonic turn," wrote Variety's reviewer. Scott Thomas admitted to reporters that the film was "really not my thing," admitting she did not enjoy watching films "where this kind of violence happens". But she said she took the role to be able to work with Winding Refn and play a "wild, savage person". The film, out in the UK on 2 August, is one of 20 in the race for the festival's Palme d'Or prize.
Ryan Gosling's new film Only God Forgives has divided critics at the Cannes Film Festival with its extreme violence.
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The BMA is the professional association and trade union for doctors. At the moment, there are a number of cross-border health services like the cancer centre in Londonderry. All-island care has been expanded in areas such as children's cardiac services. There's also long-standing co-operation between the emergency services when responding to major emergencies and public health risks. The BMA's Northern Ireland council chair, Dr John Woods, said it's vital this work continues. "Northern Ireland is too small a health economy to efficiently provide some smaller specialist services - the Republic of Ireland is our natural partner for many of these, allowing both countries to provide benefits to patients on both sides of the border," he said. "Such projects mean that on a day-to-day basis doctors across Northern Ireland and the Republic will be in contact, getting professional advice, sharing knowledge and collaborating on patient care." "Any border restrictions imposed after Brexit would risk reversing this progress and would damage patient care." The BMA has said it wants mutual recognition of qualifications to continue, as well as the existing ability of doctors to move freely between the jurisdictions. Dr Peter Maguire, a consultant anaesthetist who lives and works in Newry but also works regularly in Monaghan, said in the event of a hard Brexit, he will have "no choice" but to move south of the border. "It's not just cross-border movement that will be an issue for patients - 54% of the exports from Ireland are pharmaceuticals and huge amounts of medical equipment are made and come from Ireland," he said. "What will happen if there are tariffs? What will happen to the cost of drugs with the change in the euro?" Another organisation which has concerns about what could happen after Brexit is Cooperation and Working Together (CAWT). It's a partnership between the health services in Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. Chief officer Bernie McCrory crosses the border 10 times on her daily commute to work. "We've been guaranteed that EU funding for any project that has been approved before the day of Brexit will be underwritten by the exchequers in both jurisdictions for the duration of the project, so we're not concerned about the current state of projects which will sustain until 2021," she said. "What happens beyond that is a matter of discussion." However, she added that cross-border health care isn't fully dependent on EU funding and is convinced that the British and Irish governments will continue their commitment to the radiotherapy unit in Altnagelvin. "There are lots of service models, if you take for example the Norwegian model where Norway is not in the EU it nonetheless benefits from EU funding because of its adjacency to other EU countries. "There may be innovative ways to deliver projects which are not the same as we currently use." Operation Equinox is investigating claims of sexual, physical and emotional abuse between the 1940s and 1990s. In a letter to victims Nottinghamshire Police confirmed 530 of 636 reported crimes were on council property. Officers also said 485 alleged offences were committed by council staff and of 432 suspects, 283 had been identified. More on this story and other news in Nottinghamshire So far, police have had 290 people report crimes. Operation Equinox combined two police inquiries. Operation Daybreak, sent up in 2011, was focussed on the Beechwood children's home in Nottingham, while Operation Xeres has been looking at residential homes in the county. The letter emphasises the progress already made, with former social worker Andris Logins jailed for 20 years. Two other men have been jailed for historical attacks not connected to children's homes and three more trials are due to begin in early 2017. Nottinghamshire Police has not commented directly as the information is part of an ongoing enquiry.
Members of the British Medical Association in Northern Ireland say patient care on both sides of the border will be at risk if a hard border is imposed after Britain leaves the EU. [NEXT_CONCEPT] An inquiry into historical abuse in Nottinghamshire has recorded more than 500 offences on council property.
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Viktor Krasnov was reported to police by two young men who objected to his language in the dispute, on the Russian social network VKontakte in 2014. He was charged in Stavropol for having "insulted the feelings of worshippers". Such "insults" were outlawed in 2013 after the Pussy Riot case, in which two punk performers were jailed. There was international condemnation in 2012 when Nadezhda Tolokonnikova and Maria Alyokhina of Pussy Riot were sent to labour camps for having performed a crude protest song in Moscow's main cathedral. VKontakte is a Facebook-style networking site popular among Russians. In the exchange Mr Krasnov also dismissed the Bible as a "collection of Jewish fairy tales". Linguistic experts supported the plaintiffs' allegation that Mr Krasnov's remarks were "insulting to worshippers". The relevant Russian law provides several alternatives to a one-year prison term in such cases, including a fine of up to 300,000 roubles (£2,900; $4,083) or up to 240 hours' forced labour.
A man on trial in southern Russia faces a possible one-year prison sentence for having written "there is no God" during an internet exchange.
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A mix-up in qualification rules meant London 2012 champion Cheban initially missed out on a place in Thursday's final before being reinstated in place of Czech paddler Martin Fuksa. The 30-year-old went on to claim gold, finishing in 39.279 seconds. Valentin Demyanenko of Azerbaijan won the silver with Brazil's Isaquias Queiroz dos Santos securing bronze. Dos Santos, 22, became his country's first canoe sprint world champion in 2013 and has a remarkable back story. At the age of three, he suffered significant burns to his body after a pot of boiling water fell on him. Two years later, he was kidnapped and offered for adoption before his mother managed to get him back, and at the age 10 he fell out of a tree after trying to catch a snake and lost a kidney. Also on a busy day of canoeing in Rio: Subscribe to the BBC Sport newsletter to get our pick of news, features and video sent to your inbox. He will appear in court in Belfast on Wednesday. The victim, Hazem Ahmed Ghreir, was stabbed in Downshire Place, off Great Victoria Street, on Sunday evening. He was in his 30s, and originally from Syria. The murder is not being treated as a hate crime. James Harris Jackson, 28, is said to have taken a bus from Baltimore to New York with the intention of targeting black men. When he came across Timothy Caughman, 66, he allegedly stabbed him in the chest and back. Mr Caughman was pronounced dead in hospital. His alleged assailant walked into a Times Square police station about 24 hours later and was arrested on suspicion of murder. He is said to have told officers that he had harboured feelings of hatred towards black men for at least 10 years. The ex-serviceman is believed to have travelled to New York on 17 March, and booked himself into a Manhattan hotel. Assistant Chief of Police William Aubry said he had walked the streets in a long coat, which hid the 26in (66cm) sword, and came across Mr Caughman while the victim was collecting bottles for recycling from rubbish bins. "The reason he picked New York is because it's the media capital of the world and he wanted to make a statement," Mr Aubry said. Investigators said they believed the suspect was considering other attacks, but surrendered after noticing his photo in media reports. He had been captured on CCTV footage near the crime scene. Mr Caughman's Twitter profile describes him as a "can and bottle recycler" and autograph collector. His posts show his interest in music and films. James Harris Jackson served in the US Army from March 2009 to August 2012 and worked as a military intelligence analyst, the army said. He was deployed in Afghanistan from December 2010 to November 2011. New York Mayor Bill de Blasio condemned the attack in a statement. "We are a safe city because we are inclusive. We are a nation of unrivalled strength because we are diverse," he said. "No act of violence can undermine who we are." The club's bid to host 27 matches at the stadium's full 90,000 capacity was approved by a majority of five to one. Local residents were given a chance to air their views at the meeting, which lasted three hours and 32 minutes. Spurs now have until 31 March to activate their option to play at the national stadium. The club, however, are likely to use all their available time to decide, as they assess whether their new stadium next to White Hart Lane will be completed in time for the start of the 2018-19 season. Tottenham could yet stay at their current ground next season and aim to play home games at Wembley in 2018-19, before moving into the new stadium for the 2019-20 campaign.
Iurii Cheban of Ukraine retained his men's 200m canoe sprint title in Rio and set a new Olympic record. [NEXT_CONCEPT] An 18-year-old who was arrested in connection with a fatal stabbing in Belfast city centre has been charged with murder. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A white US Army veteran with a hatred for black people travelled to New York City and confronted a black man before killing him with a sword, police say. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Tottenham moved a step closer to playing home games at Wembley next season after Brent Council approved their planning application.
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Two stadiums - in Porto Alegre and Sao Paulo - are still not finished, with the tournament due to start on 12 June. Valcke insisted there is "no way" that fixtures will be postponed. "If you want me to summarise, we are not ready," said the Frenchman. "We have two stadiums where there is still work to do." Preparations for the World Cup have been beset by problems. A construction worker fell to his death last week at Sao Paulo's Arena Corinthians, which is due to host the opening match between Brazil and Croatia. That took the number of fatalities at the site to three after two people died in November following a partial collapse of the stadium. A total of eight men have already died working on World Cup stadiums. Porto Alegre's local mayor had said the city may drop out if additional funding was not found to build facilities for media, sponsors and fans. The city's Beira Rio stadium is due to host five matches during the tournament. But Valcke, who visited Brazil last week, insisted finance was available. "Maybe there will be things which will not be totally ready at the beginning of the World Cup, but the most important thing for the 32 teams is the training camp and fields," he added. "All of this will be there to ensure you have football."
Brazil may not be "totally ready" for the start of the 2014 World Cup because of building delays, admits Fifa secretary general Jerome Valcke.
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RPSB NI said that voting to leave would lead to uncertainty over the protection of important sites. The charity also claimed that EU agreements had been key to protecting birds and habitats. The comments were made as part of a written submission to a parliamentary inquiry. The Northern Ireland Affairs Committee at Westminster are conducting an inquiry into the impact of the EU referendum in Northern Ireland. As part of their submission, RSPB NI said if the UK voted to leave, EU protections for species and habitats would "no longer mandatorily apply". The charity claimed the EU had had a "positive impact" in other areas such as air and water quality and renewable energy targets. It said international agreements on nature conservation and robust enforcement, were key to protecting birds and habitats. Although RSPB NI said they have issues with certain aspects of the Common Agricultural Policy, the potential loss of agri-environment schemes within it - which pay farmers to conserve wildlife - would be "a concern". The charity also questioned whether a Brexit would affect cross border habitat improvement schemes which attract EU funding. The Conservative MPs, who represent Sussex, Surrey and Kent constituencies, said the scheme for the airport near Crawley would be "a disaster" for communities and the environment. They said there was "serious local concern" at the plan. Gatwick said it had sought to engage with communities and politicians and would continue to do so. Reigate MP Crispin Blunt, one of the members of the newly-formed Gatwick Coordination Group, said: "If Gatwick expands in the way that's planned, it will need many tens of thousands of new people working there, and they are all going to need somewhere to live. "The airport at the moment are providing a preposterous suggestion that these people are largely going to come from existing communities in Croydon and Brighton. Well I'm afraid that's just simply not the case." Mr Blunt also said no new railway line had been proposed. He said the London to Brighton commuter line was already "the busiest commuter line in the country" and at capacity. The other four MPs behind the campaign are Sir Paul Beresford, who represents Mole Valley, Mid Sussex MP Sir Nicholas Soames, Sir John Stanley, who represents Tonbridge and Malling in Kent, and Charles Hendry, MP for Wealden. Crawley Conservative MP Henry Smith, whose constituency includes the airport, said he was invited to join the group but declined to endorse the press release. He said: "Whilst I think Gatwick needs to make a stronger case on how it would invest in upgrading Crawley's infrastructure if the airport were to expand, I think it premature to rule out an additional runway until the Davies Commission investigating aviation capacity has reported next year." Gatwick has submitted three plans for a new runway to the Airports Commission. Airport bosses have set out improved public transport plans including new train platforms, new rolling stock and improvements to junction nine on the M23, and have suggested 120,000 jobs would be created by the building of a second runway. A statement issued by the airport said: "We believe an expanded airport at Gatwick is in both the local and national interest and look forward to working with all our stakeholders to demonstrate that." East Sussex and West Sussex county councils have backed Gatwick expansion because of job creation, the economic boost and as a solution to providing UK aviation capacity. Surrey County Council opposed the plans over concerns about the impact on the environment.
A leading wildlife charity in Northern Ireland has said leaving the EU would have significant implications on its work. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Five MPs have begun a campaign against the building of a second runway at Gatwick Airport.
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Details of "repeat victims", who have repeatedly been taken in by scams, are found and then shared by scammers. Some of those on the list, which covers England, Scotland and Wales, get 60 pieces of mail a day. People whose names and addresses have been discovered will be contacted by their local authority. The database of 160,000 people to be contacted has been put together by trading standards teams from a number of sources, including seized lists, names uncovered in the course of investigations and names picked up from actual pieces of mail seized. Louise Baxter, head of the National Trading Standards scams team said: "Data lists are under-regulated and people don't realise the implications when they tick a consent box on a form". She said she was "shocked" to find out how scammers use the information they gather. "There are companies that test people's susceptibility and then generate lead lists. "You can buy details as specific as people who are 80, disabled, live alone, respond to communication and play the Lottery," she said. Essex Trading Standards is alerting 2,700 people whose names and addresses are on the list. The organisation was also given about 200 completed forms with cheques, cash, postal orders, stamps and credit card details - including security codes. A spokeswoman said: "The money was attached to prize draw applications and orders for confectionery special offers. "The forms were found in a PO Box used by known scammers." Anyone who is concerned about a possible scam or is worried about a friend or relative can call the Citizens Advice Consumer Helpline on 03454 04 05 06.
More than 160,000 people whose names appear on a "suckers list" are to be contacted about how to avoid becoming the victim of a scam.
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Patrick Maloney, 43, died after he was hit by a vehicle at Toddbury Farm, near Leighton Buzzard, on 2 August. Thomas McCarthy, 24, who lives at the same site, will now face a charge of assault, prosecutors told Luton Crown Court. His brother, Christopher McCarthy, 21, has been charged with Mr Maloney's murder and was remanded in custody. They are both due to return to Luton Crown Court on 16 September. A 42-year-old woman who was arrested has been bailed. A post-mortem examination found Mr Maloney died as a result of "multiple crushing injuries consistent with being involved in a collision with a vehicle".
A man accused of murder at a traveller's site has had the charge against him dropped.
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Liam Enver-Marum made it two goals in as many games for The Stones in the 11th minute, despite the hosts making a strong start. The visitors' hopes of hanging on were dealt a blow just before the break when Jack Evans saw red after bundling Reece Thompson over just outside the box. But Alex Flisher eased fears of a collapse with a smart finish four minutes after the interval and Jay Saunders' side held firm to see out the win. North Ferriby have now lost four on the bounce. Report supplied by the Press Association. Match ends, North Ferriby United 0, Maidstone United 2. Second Half ends, North Ferriby United 0, Maidstone United 2. Ryan Fallowfield (North Ferriby United) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Nathan Mavila (Maidstone United) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Ben Middleton (North Ferriby United) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Substitution, Maidstone United. Nathan Mavila replaces Jack Paxman. Substitution, North Ferriby United. Ryan Fallowfield replaces Connor Oliver. Substitution, Maidstone United. James Rogers replaces Liam Enver-Marum. Substitution, North Ferriby United. Ryan Kendall replaces Vinny Mukendi. Goal! North Ferriby United 0, Maidstone United 2. Alex Flisher (Maidstone United). Substitution, Maidstone United. Reece Hall-Johnson replaces Tom Murphy. Second Half begins North Ferriby United 0, Maidstone United 1. First Half ends, North Ferriby United 0, Maidstone United 1. Jack Evans (Maidstone United) is shown the red card. Alex Flisher (Maidstone United) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Goal! North Ferriby United 0, Maidstone United 1. Liam Enver-Marum (Maidstone United). First Half begins. Lineups are announced and players are warming up. The school of basking sharks - the second largest fish in the world - were filmed by County Cork photographer James McCarthy using drone technology. The sharks were spotted close to the beach at Caliso Bay on 12 May. James said he had no idea the sharks would be there and that the footage was the result of "unbelievable timing". "I had just upgraded to a new drone. I went down to the beach to test it and just as I pulled up onto the beach you could see all the fins - they were just off the shoreline," James said. "So straight away I put the drone up. I think there was 12 of them [sharks] there altogether." He said since the footage, which was taken last week, was posted on his Facebook page he's had a media inquiry every day asking to use it. "The drone gives you a perspective that you can't see from the ground, regardless of what you're shooting," he said. James was also quickly contacted by the Isle of Man-based Manx Basking Shark Watch. The group's Jackie Hall said that she believed one of the sharks had been tagged by them off the Isle of Man a number of years ago - an eight-metre-long (26ft) fish they named Flowrider. "They said the Irish coast is probably the best place to see them, but it's rare to see them them that close to the surface and that close to the beach as well," he said. "So it was definitely a case of being in the right place at the right time." The whale shark is the only fish larger than the basking shark. They can grow to 11m in length (36ft) and weigh up to seven tonnes. They have no teeth and feed on microscopic plankton by opening wide their huge mouths. Despite their size they are considered harmless to humans. In 2011, crowds gathered to see a 14ft long basking shark which swam round Portrush harbour for several hours.
Ten-man Maidstone held on to beat North Ferriby at the Eon Visual Media Stadium. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Among those enjoying the recent spell of spring sunshine over Ireland was a group of sharks pictured off the coast of County Waterford.
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The UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported that troops were now only 2km (1.2 miles) south of the Unesco World Heritage-listed ruins. IS militants seized the site and the adjoining modern town in May. They subsequently destroyed two 2,000-year-old temples, an arch and funerary towers, drawing global outrage. IS, which has also demolished several world-renowned pre-Islamic sites in neighbouring Iraq, believes that such structures are idolatrous. The UN cultural agency, Unesco, has condemned the destruction as a war crime. The Syrian Observatory, which relies on a network of sources on the ground in Syria, told the AFP news agency that government forces were on Wednesday only 2km from Palmyra's southern outskirts and 5km from its western edge. The governor of Homs province, Talal Barazi, confirmed the advance and said troops were now stationed on several hills overlooking the Greco-Roman ruins. "There is continuous progress by the army from all directions," he was quoted as saying by the Associated Press. Palmyra: Blowing ruins to rubble Why IS destroys ancient sites Mr Barazi added that he expected "positive results" over the next few days. Syrian government forces launched an offensive to retake Palmyra at the start of the month, backed by heavy Russian air strikes. Last week, the Russian military said its aircraft were flying up to 25 sorties a day over Palmyra to help liberate what President Vladimir Putin has described as a "pearl of world civilisation". Palmyra is also situated in a strategically important area on the road between the capital, Damascus, and the contested eastern city of Deir al-Zour. Stephen Griffiths, 40, is accused of murdering prostitutes Suzanne Blamires, Shelley Armitage, and Susan Rushworth. Mature student Mr Griffiths, of Thornton Road, Bradford, was remanded in custody by magistrates and later by a judge at the city's crown court. Recent events have been described in some of the tabloid press as the "crossbow cannibal killings". When asked to confirm his name by magistrates, Mr Griffiths told the court he was "the crossbow cannibal". Asked for his address, he replied: "Erm... here I guess." Relatives of some of the victims were in court for the magistrates' court hearing. Some wiped away tears at the start of the proceedings. After appearing before magistrates, Mr Griffiths was then taken to Bradford Crown Court. During this appearance, which lasted only 10 minutes, Mr Griffiths - flanked by security officers - spoke only to confirm his name. He will next appear at the crown court via video link on 7 June. Stephen Griffiths was arrested in Bradford on Monday City searched for missing women He is accused of murdering Ms Blamires, 36, between 20 May and 25 May; murdering Ms Rushworth, 43, between 22 June, 2009, and 25 May this year, and murdering Ms Armitage, 31, between 25 April and 25 May this year. Police said body parts found in the River Aire on Tuesday were from Ms Blamires, who had lived in Barkston Walk, Allerton, and was last seen on 21 May. Ms Armitage, also from Allerton, has been missing since 26 April and Ms Rushworth, from the Manningham area of the city, disappeared on 22 June last year. Mr Griffiths is reported to be a psychology graduate undertaking postgraduate research in criminology at Bradford University. He was arrested on Monday at his third-floor flat, which is on the edge of the city's red light district and a short distance from Bradford city centre.
Syrian government forces are reported to have reached the outskirts of the ancient city of Palmyra, after driving back Islamic State (IS) militants. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A man charged with the murders of three Bradford women has referred to himself as the "crossbow cannibal" in court.
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The latest scanning techniques were used to uncover a network of buildings at the 11th Century Old Sarum near Salisbury, Wiltshire. The results include a series of large structures, possibly defences, with open areas of ground behind possibly for mustering resources or people. Old Sarum was the original site of Salisbury, which is two miles away. Source: English Heritage It was originally an Iron Age fort, established around 400 BC, and occupied by the Romans after the conquest of Britain in AD 43. This latest survey of the site was carried out by the University of Southampton and concentrated on the inner and outer baileys of what would have been the fort. Other structures plotted on the plan include residential areas and industrial features such as kilns or furnaces. The university's director of archaeological prospection services, Kristian Strutt, said: "Archaeologists and historians have known for centuries that there was a medieval city at Old Sarum, but until now there has been no proper plan of the site. "Our survey shows where individual buildings are located and from this we can piece together a detailed picture of the urban plan within the city walls." He said the reinforcing of the entire outer bailey during the Middle Ages represented a "substantial urban centre" and more non-intrusive work was needed to build on this knowledge. The techniques used to survey the land included magnetometry, earth resistance, ground penetrating radar and electric resistivity tomography, which uses electrodes to probe underground. These new approaches are "exciting and innovative", according to Neil Holbrook from Cotswold Archaeology, and "could be applied pretty much anywhere". "The survey adds a whole new dimension to our understanding of a site which we thought we knew. In fact, there is so much more to be found out," he added. "The plan shows for the first time just how much other activity there was around the castle and cathedral which have long been known. It sets those monuments within the context of a bustling, vibrant town established shortly after the Norman conquest."
A detailed plan of a medieval city has been produced by experts without any digging at the site.
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The daughter of a 52-year-old Dumfries woman raised safety fears about her mother with police in February 2016. However, an issue between mapping and command and control systems meant officers went to the wrong address. It took more than four-and-a-half hours to realise the error and the woman was then found dead at the correct address. Police Investigations and Review Commissioner (PIRC) Kate Frame identified a series of failings but concluded the woman had probably already died before officers were contacted. Her report found the woman's daughter had phoned the police area control room (ACR) at Govan shortly after 22:00 on Friday 19 February concerned for her mother's safety. A full description and address were passed on but as a result of a known issue between the Gazetteer mapping system and the command and control systems used by Police Scotland, officers were sent to the wrong house. They were given the name of the woman in question but no details of her age, physical description or the fact she was a vulnerable person. As a result, at about 22:35 they roused an 84-year-old woman at the wrong address, failing to notice her name was different from the person they were looking for. The increasingly worried family of the 52-year-old were told officers had spoken to her and she was safe and well. However, she was found dead at around 02:40 the following day after officers finally forced entry to the right house more than four-and-a-half hours later. The PIRC found she was suspected to have died of an accidental overdose of prescribed medication and the time of death was likely to have been before the initial contact with police. However the report raised concerns about the mapping system and "failings in the actions of both area control room staff and the attending officers". It recommended that Police Scotland take steps to address the mapping issue, ensure control room staff pass on "all relevant available information" to front-line officers and clarify responsibilities for updating people who report incidents. Ms Frame said it was "deeply troubling" that the systems issues had not been resolved and "disappointing" the officers had failed to realise the names had not matched up. She added: "Whilst I recognise from the medical evidence obtained in this particular case that it is likely the 52-year-old woman was dead by the time the alarm was raised, it does not diminish the particular failures identified or the additional distress caused to the woman's family." In a statement, the woman's family said: "The past 18 months have placed an incredible strain on our family as we have tried to come to terms with the loss of a loving mother and understand the tragic circumstances behind her death. "We are aware of the PIRC report and are pleased to note that a number of recommendations have been made. "None of this will bring our mother back but we hope that going forward Police Scotland will look carefully at these recommendations and that valuable lessons have been learned." Assistant Chief Constable Nelson Telfer said Police Scotland's thoughts were with the family. "We are sorry for the distress and upset caused by our initial response to the incident," he said. "We acknowledge and accept the recommendations made by the commissioner in her report and took steps last year to address the issues she has now identified." He said that since the incident "significant work" had been undertaken to ensure that address information was presented correctly. "ACR and service centre staff undertake regular training to assist our response to incidents involving risk and vulnerability," he added. "This is ongoing for all staff. "We accept we did not get it right in this case and will continue to work to provide excellent front line policing across Scotland."
An independent investigation has found police responding to concerns for a vulnerable woman who was later found dead were sent to the wrong house.
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Media playback is unsupported on your device 28 December 2014 Last updated at 18:36 GMT Construction work has begun to transform a derelict health centre at the entrance to the castle into a state-of-the-art visitor centre. It is hoped that the £3m redevelopment project will help to tell the story of the county's history and heritage. BBC Newsline's Julian Fowler reports. The 21-year-old, who was the reserve driver for Mercedes in 2015, takes the first of two vacant Manor seats. Wehrlein won the DTM German Touring Car Championship in 2015 and has experience of driving F1 cars in testing. "Pascal is a sharp driver with a very promising future," said Manor boss Stephen Fitzpatrick. "We've chosen a driver with the talent and hunger to match our ambitions." Wehrlein, who has a deal with Manor for the entire season, said: "Manor Racing is a great place for me to start my F1 racing career. I'm very pleased to be here. "It's a small and totally focused team and I soon hope to know everyone. "Though it's my first F1 season my aim is to help Stephen and the guys achieve their goals. It will be a tough challenge but I think we should be able to challenge for points along the way. It's going to be good fun." Wehrlein also thanked Mercedes F1 boss Toto Wolff, who helped engineer the move as part of Manor's new engine partnership with Mercedes. Alexander Rossi and Will Stevens, who drove for Manor in 2015, and Indonesian rookie Rio Haryanto are all in the frame to partner Wehrlein. Wehrlein's opportunity for increased experience in F1 comes amidst uncertainty over the future of Mercedes driver Nico Rosberg, whose contract expires this year. Wolff has said he will make no decision on Rosberg's future until he has seen the first part of the 2016 season. If Rosberg continues his current high level of performance and the relationship between the German and three-time world champion Lewis Hamilton remains manageable, Mercedes are likely to retain Rosberg, at least for one more year. But giving Wehrlein some experience increases their options. They are also keeping an eye on Daniel Ricciardo and Max Verstappen, both of whom are under contract to Red Bull beyond the end of 2016. Verstappen's deal runs until the end of 2017, while Ricciardo's lasts for a year longer. They have struggled at the back of the grid since entering F1 in 2010 but have undergone a major restructure in an attempt to improve. Team founder John Booth and president Graeme Lowdon left at the end of last season after agreeing future plans with Fitzpatrick, who saved the team from oblivion by buying it in early 2015. Fitzpatrick has recruited experienced former McLaren sporting director Dave Ryan as racing director to run the team. He has also brought in leading technicians Pat Fry and Nikolas Tombazis, design engineers sacked by Ferrari at the end of their winless 2014 season. Sung, the world number 202, carded a one-under-par 71 to end the third round at 17 under. Fowler started the day seven shots behind Sung, but his five-under-par 67 brought him back into contention. Englishmen Justin Rose and Andy Sullivan both finished on five under, 12 shots off the lead. Fowler and Sullivan carded the joint-second lowest scores of the day with their five-under rounds, this was despite the American dropping three shots in the final two holes. Sung has missed the cut in five of his nine PGA Tour events in 2017, but a win in Houston would see him claim his first PGA Tour victory and also secure him a place in next week's Masters at Augusta.
A 1960s "eyesore" building close to Enniskillen Castle in County Fermanagh is being demolished to make way for a new tourist attraction. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Germany's Pascal Wehrlein is to drive for the Manor team in 2016. [NEXT_CONCEPT] South Korea's Sung Kang holds a three-shot lead over America's Rickie Fowler going into the final round of the Houston Open.
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Jordan Cunliffe was 16 when he was jailed in 2008 for the murder of Garry Newlove. Mr Newlove, 47, suffered head injuries in the attack by three teenagers and died in hospital two days later. Cunliffe had applied to have his 12-year minimum term cut but it was rejected at the High Court in London. He was found guilty of murder by a jury at Chester Crown Court in January 2008. Mr Justice Mitting told the High Court he did not recommend a reduction in the tariff, which is the minimum term to be served before Cunliffe is eligible to apply for parole. Mr Newlove had left his Warrington house to confront youths that had vandalised his wife's car. During the short confrontation he was kicked "like a football", the trial of his killers heard. Cunliffe, Adam Swellings and Stephen Sorton were jointly convicted of his murder in 2008. The three were found guilty under a legal doctrine known as joint enterprise, which allows members of a group to be prosecuted for murder when it cannot be proved which individual inflicted the fatal blow. Janet Cunliffe said of her son's failed appeal: "Today was about a tariff reduction but, at the end of the day, we are not interested in a tariff reduction. "I'm interested in having his conviction quashed and getting him home as an innocent man."
A man who kicked to death a father-of-three outside his Warrington home in 2007 has lost a bid to have his sentence reduced.
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The 30-year-old announced in April that he was leaving Premiership side Bath, having signed in 2012 from Scarlets. "I'm really excited about the challenge of playing for the Rebels," Day said. Day currently plays for Toyota Verblitz and will join his new side at the end of the Japanese Top League season, which concludes in January. "Playing in the Pro12 and Premiership I would always watch Super Rugby and enjoyed the attacking style," he said. "I think it's the most exciting competition in the world. "Super Rugby has some of the best and most skilful players in the world and I want to test myself in that arena." Fellow forward Gareth Delve - the first Welshman to play Super Rugby - had a three-year stay at Melbourne Rebels between 2010 and 2013.
Wales second-row Dominic Day will play in the Super Rugby competition in 2017 after signing a one-year deal with Australian side Melbourne Rebels.
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9 June 2014 Last updated at 13:29 BST Storm the Russian Steppe eagle swooped through an open door of Wendy Morrell's Poole home while she was watching the French Open final. She described the 15in (40cm) tall bird as "stunning to look at, but quite scary". Wessex Bird of Prey Rescue later collected the bird, which was being trained to scare seagulls away from a landfill site in Corfe Mullen. He had broken away from the perch where he was tethered after being scared off by a lorry.
A woman said she was "quite shocked" when an eagle flew into her living room while she was watching TV.
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Jacob Murphy fired in a 25-yard shot, his first goal for the club, to set the Canaries on their way on 12 minutes. Further goals from Wes Hoolahan and Cameron Jerome then put Alex Neil's men three up inside 25 minutes. Steven Naismith added a fourth before Rovers half-time substitute Anthony Stokes headed a debut Ewood Park goal. Norwich failed to score in five of their last six games in the Premier League - but Alex Neil's side wasted no time in putting that right as they enjoyed their first opening-day victory in 14 years. In new Blackburn boss Coyle's first game in charge since succeeding former Norwich manager Paul Lambert, his outclassed side were fighting a massive uphill battle before the new season was even half an hour old. After scoring 10 times last season on loan at Coventry, 21-year-old Murphy netted just 12 minutes into his Canaries debut when he wriggled clear from Adam Henley and was allowed to turn before blasting home a fabulous strike from well outside the box. Five minutes later, Hoolahan's left-foot shot found the bottom left corner before Jerome found the net for number three. And, on 57 minutes, Naismith's left-foot shot found the bottom right corner. Stokes' late consolation could not prevent Norwich's third win at Blackburn in 19 visits, and their second in a row, having won 2-1 on their last trip to Ewood in February 2015. Blackburn Rovers manager Owen Coyle: "I don't think it's one that we wanted, envisaged or anticipated. We started the first 10 minutes very well, on the front foot, and for all intents and purposes, we looked fine. "Then the lad scores a wonder goal. I'm not sure he'll score too many goals as good as that in his career, but that's the quality Norwich City have. "They've been clinical and ruthless and punished us for every mistake we've made. Having said that, it's important that in those areas where the Hoolahans and Naismiths are popping the ball off, that we get pressure on the ball and get that tackle in. "With all due respect, with the first three goals and even the fourth one, we allowed them time to play and, when good players pass and move at pace, it causes anybody problems." Norwich City boss Alex Neil: "Jacob Murphy earned his start. I played him against Hannover last week. I took him off because I had to solidify the middle of the pitch. "I spoke to him throughout the week and said 'I'm not now fixing Hannover, I'm preparing to beat Blackburn.' He's responded. It's a fantastic strike. "He's got the pace to terrify defenders, as he showed with his goal. He's got something in his locker where he can win a game with his quality. "We wanted to play in a manner which people are going to sit up and take notice of us and know that we mean business this season, and we did all that, which was really pleasing." Match ends, Blackburn Rovers 1, Norwich City 4. Second Half ends, Blackburn Rovers 1, Norwich City 4. Attempt missed. Timm Klose (Norwich City) header from the centre of the box misses to the left. Assisted by Alex Pritchard with a cross following a corner. Corner, Norwich City. Conceded by Gordon Greer. Corner, Norwich City. Conceded by Gordon Greer. Attempt blocked. Cameron Jerome (Norwich City) right footed shot from a difficult angle on the right is blocked. Assisted by Steven Naismith. Offside, Blackburn Rovers. Adam Henley tries a through ball, but Danny Graham is caught offside. Offside, Blackburn Rovers. Danny Graham tries a through ball, but Liam Feeney is caught offside. Foul by Ivo Pinto (Norwich City). Ben Marshall (Blackburn Rovers) wins a free kick on the left wing. Corner, Blackburn Rovers. Conceded by John Ruddy. Foul by Ivo Pinto (Norwich City). Adam Henley (Blackburn Rovers) wins a free kick on the left wing. Foul by Cameron Jerome (Norwich City). Shane Duffy (Blackburn Rovers) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Attempt missed. Darragh Lenihan (Blackburn Rovers) header from the centre of the box is too high. Assisted by Liam Feeney with a cross following a corner. Corner, Blackburn Rovers. Conceded by Cameron Jerome. Corner, Blackburn Rovers. Conceded by Cameron Jerome. Corner, Blackburn Rovers. Conceded by Alexander Tettey. Foul by Alex Pritchard (Norwich City). Anthony Stokes (Blackburn Rovers) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Corner, Blackburn Rovers. Conceded by Alex Pritchard. Attempt saved. Anthony Stokes (Blackburn Rovers) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom right corner. Youssouf Mulumbu (Norwich City) is shown the yellow card for hand ball. Hand ball by Youssouf Mulumbu (Norwich City). Substitution, Norwich City. Alex Pritchard replaces Wes Hoolahan. Attempt missed. Jacob Murphy (Norwich City) right footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses to the right from a direct free kick. Substitution, Norwich City. Youssouf Mulumbu replaces Jonny Howson. Gordon Greer (Blackburn Rovers) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Jacob Murphy (Norwich City) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Gordon Greer (Blackburn Rovers). Steven Naismith (Norwich City) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Shane Duffy (Blackburn Rovers). Foul by Jonny Howson (Norwich City). Darragh Lenihan (Blackburn Rovers) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Delay over. They are ready to continue. Delay in match Adam Henley (Blackburn Rovers) because of an injury. Cameron Jerome (Norwich City) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Foul by Cameron Jerome (Norwich City). Darragh Lenihan (Blackburn Rovers) wins a free kick on the left wing.
Norwich City made a great start to life back in the Championship following relegation as they battered Owen Coyle's Blackburn Rovers at Ewood Park.
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Jones, 29, collapsed during a League One game at London Skolars on Sunday and was later pronounced dead in hospital. The Rugby Football League said the problem was not revealed when Jones underwent an ECG scan in late 2014. His wife Lizzie will attend the Cougars' home match on Sunday. Jones won 12 Wales caps and scored over 1,000 points in 150 games over two spells with the West Yorkshire club. "Whilst the findings of the post-mortem do provide an explanation for why he died, they allow for little comfort for Danny's family or all those who knew him," said Gary Fawcett, Keighley Cougars chief executive. Jones was father to five-month-old twins Bobby and Phoebe, and a fund set up for Jones' family has already raised £77,000. "His tragically premature death is still very painful for everyone, not least because his heart condition could not even be detected by the ECG," Fawcett added. "All we can do now is mourn his passing, celebrate his life and do everything we can for Lizzie, their children and their wider family."
Keighley Cougars and Wales rugby league player Danny Jones died from a cardiac arrest triggered by hereditary heart disease, a post-mortem has revealed.
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Jeff Sessions said the suspects were accused of divulging classified material or concealed contacts with foreign intelligence officers. America's top prosecutor said the administration has tripled the number of active leak probes since January. President Donald Trump has criticised Mr Sessions as "very weak" on leaks. At Friday's news conference, the attorney general said no government could be effective when its leaders could not talk freely in confidence with foreign leaders. "I strongly agree with the president and condemn in the strongest terms the staggering number of leaks undermining the ability of our government to protect this country," he told reporters. He said there had been a "dramatic" increase in recent months of unauthorised disclosures to the media and even foreign adversaries. The attorney general also said he wanted to review policies on media subpoenas - compelling journalists to reveal sources - to balance the role of the press with protecting national security. The move is likely to send a chill through US newsrooms that have been breaking almost daily scoops, which have embarrassed the White House. Jeff Sessions spoke about the Justice Department's efforts to crack down on national security leaks before television cameras and reporters, but his intended audience was almost certainly the man in the Oval Office. Last week the president lambasted his attorney general for not doing enough to stifle a torrent of leaks over the past six months. On Friday morning Mr Sessions essentially replied: "See? I am doing something!" What's more, the attorney general served his anti-leak entree with a generous helping of media-bashing, warning that while he respected freedom of the press, he was reviewing when prosecutors could force journalists to reveal their sources - or face criminal sanction. That's a dish specially crafted for the president's tastes. Earlier this week, newly minted chief of staff John Kelly reportedly called Mr Sessions and told him that, despite the president's recent swipes, his job was safe. Perhaps Friday's event is part of a larger effort at fence-mending between the commander-in-chief and his former political confidant. The attorney general will have to deliver results, however. If he can't stop the leaks, it is doubtful the president will be satisfied. And if there's one truth in Washington, it's that the leaks never really stop. Follow @awzurcher †Margaret Gretton, 47, was banned following a professional conduct panel hearing at the National College for Teaching and Leadership. It ruled the former Burton Joyce Primary School head bullied staff and discriminated against disabled pupils. She was sacked by the county council at the beginning of 2014. Ms Gretton denied the accusations but did not appear at the panel hearing. The panel said Ms Gretton had "mocked" a male Asian job applicant and made "insulting, derogatory and racist" remarks to members of staff. It also reported Ms Gretton used terms such as "cuckoo" and "road kill" when referring to special needs pupils. She was found to have "intimidated and undermined" staff and "seriously abused her position of trust and power within the school". A charge that she had failed to stop pupils from watching "inappropriate" television shows on a school trip was not upheld. She was suspended from her role in 2012, prompting a suspension of the school's application for academy status. Nottinghamshire County Council took over the school the following year after it was placed in special measures by Ofsted. The ban, imposed by the Secretary of State for Education, means Ms Gretton is "prohibited from teaching indefinitely" in any school, sixth form college, youth accommodation or children's home in England.
The US attorney general has said four people have been charged over leaks as the Trump administration launched a crackdown on embarrassing disclosures. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The head teacher of a Nottinghamshire village primary school has been banned from teaching for life over "racist and discriminatory" behaviour.
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Head of legal services Samantha Gainard had been suspended while the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) investigated. The watchdog found no case to answer for misconduct. The force said Ms Gainard's resignation was effective from Friday. Chief Constable Mark Collins said: "Although I am saddened to lose a member of the leadership team, I understand her decision to seek fresh and new challenges and I wish her all the very best as she moves forward." Ms Gainard had worked at the organisation since 2002. An IPCC spokesman said: "Our independent investigation into the allegations was completed some months ago and we found no case to answer for misconduct." Connecting Devon and Somerset says radio signals will be used to deliver broadband across the hilly, wooded terrains common to both national parks. Airband has previously delivered wireless broadband in the Welsh hills, which have a similar landscape. The partnership has said this technology would help bring a £750m economic boost to the region. Both the Exmoor and Dartmoor park authorities have welcomed the announcement. Chief executive of Dartmoor National Park, Peter Harper, said the technology "worked with the unique nature of Dartmoor". Wireless broadband works by using a radio signal in place of fibre optic cables. The radio signal is then passed using a network of masts, with a small transmitter attached to the final building. A cable is then used to take the connection into the building so the user can connect to the internet via fibre or ADSL. All homes and businesses in Exmoor and Dartmoor are due to get wireless broadband by the end of 2016. Airband's managing director Redmond Peel said: "We have to set up a number of stations in order to establish line of sight to the properties in order to reach them, so some quite detailed surveys have been done. "We've been working with the council and the planning departments to make sure the impact is very low visually." The national parks' broadband delivery is a contract separate to the wider roll-out of broadband to rural areas in Devon and Somerset. Phase One of the wider roll-out is being delivered by BT. But the partner for the second phase is still being decided by Connecting Devon and Somerset, which recently announced it would not use BT. The case was brought by an 18-year-old Muslim pupil at a Berlin school after he was told by his head teacher that prayer was not allowed on the school grounds. The teenager and several other pupils kneeled in a hallway during a break to pray. The court found that the school could ban prayer if the act caused conflict. The decision brings to an end a four-year legal battle by the pupil, Yunus Mitschele. He is a student at a grammar school in the mixed area of Wedding, which had experienced clashes between groups of Muslim students over prayer rituals. The court found that the conflict that might be expected at the school if religious acts were allowed would be beyond the level that school staff could deal with. Setting aside a room specifically for prayer would be beyond the organisational capacity of the school, it said. The judges at the Federal Administrative Court, in Leipzig, stressed that the ruling did not mean that no student could pray at school. The decision should be made on a case by case basis. The German constitution guarantees freedom of religion and so a school pupil would generally be entitled to pray when at school, outside of lesson times. Judge Werner Neumann said that a school must decide if it is really necessary "to restrict religious freedom in order to keep the peace at the school".
A Dyfed-Powys Police boss has resigned after being cleared by an investigation into alleged payments made by the force to a firm of barristers where her then-husband worked. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Superfast broadband is to be delivered across Exmoor and Dartmoor by Airband, the regional project team has revealed. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Germany's top administrative court has ruled that a student does not have an automatic right to pray at school.
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Sources close to the Franco-Swiss say Grosjean has already made his mind up to switch despite the expected impending takeover of Lotus by Renault. His switch would leave a vacancy at Lotus/Renault alongside Pastor Maldonado, whose new deal was announced on Sunday. Contenders for the seat include ex-Toro Rosso driver Jean-Eric Vergne. And McLaren reserve Kevin Magnussen is also in the running. Magnussen, who raced in F1 for McLaren last season, could be drafted in again if Jenson Button decides to retire at the end of the year. Force India driver Sergio Perez has also been mentioned in connection with a switch to Renault despite the fact that the Mexican and his current team say it is only a matter of time before he is confirmed alongside team-mate Nico Hulkenberg for 2016. Renault Sport boss Cyril Abiteboul dropped a heavy hint on Sunday night after the Singapore Grand Prix that the French car giant had not been able to secure Grosjean's signature. Abiteboul told French television station Canal Plus: "It's a shame we couldn't talk about it, but we maybe were not ready in time. It's all about timing. "Romain is a great driver, he deserves a great team. There's no national bias, we wouldn't stay in Formula 1 for a particular country or region. "Renault is an international brand, especially in countries like China and in south-east Asia. But we're on a project which necessarily needs a little French touch. There are young Frenchmen pushing, so I'm not worried." It is an unusual move to leave an established team with a successful history for a start-up, but Grosjean hopes moving to Haas will give him a strong chance of taking Kimi Raikkonen's seat at Ferrari in 2017. Haas have close links with Ferrari and Raikkonen is out of contract at the end of next year. The other Haas seat is expected to be taken by former Sauber driver Esteban Gutierrez, who is Ferrari's reserve driver this year. Haas have stated that either Gutierrez or Ferrari development driver Vergne will get one of the seats, in deference to their Ferrari links. The new team are buying as many parts from Ferrari for their new car as is allowed under the regulations, doing only the chassis and aerodynamic surfaces themselves.
Lotus driver Romain Grosjean is poised to move to the new US-based Haas team next season.
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A separatist group, the Republic of South Moluccas (RMS), has asked a court to order his detention in connection with alleged human rights violations. Mr Yudhoyono said that if he had gone ahead with the three-day visit, it might have led to a "misunderstanding". Indonesian authorities crushed the RMS after it declared independence in 1950. Indonesia flashpoints: The Moluccas It was revived following the fall of President Suharto in 1998, and is currently based in the Netherlands, Indonesia's former colonial power. From 1999 until 2002, ethnic violence in the Moluccas islands left an estimated 5,000 people dead and displaced 500,000 others. A spokeswoman for a court in The Hague confirmed that the RMS had asked for an injunction to have Mr Yudhoyono arrested on arrival. The group wanted him to face prosecution for the alleged human rights violations and the physical abuse of political prisoners, she added. Mr Yudhoyono was reportedly already onboard his plane at Jakarta's airport on Tuesday when he decided to cancel the state visit. "In recent days, a group has filed a request to the court to make an issue out of human rights in Indonesia and request the court to arrest me during the state visit to the Netherlands," he told reporters afterwards. "What I cannot accept is if the president of Indonesia makes a visit to the Netherlands, after an invitation from the Netherlands, the court decides to arrest the president of Indonesia." The BBC contacted the Dutch embassy in Jakarta about the president's plans but they had no comment. At the close, the FTSE 100 index was down 8.5 points, or 0.11%, at 7,439.29. Shares in Royal Dutch Shell and rival BP closed slightly up after struggling earlier in the day as oil traded above $45 a barrel. On Wednesday, the price of Brent crude oil had fallen to $44.35 a barrel, its lowest since November, although it recovered to $45.61 on Thursday. Oil prices have been dragged lower by excess supplies on the global market, despite the efforts of the Opec producers' cartel to limit output in order to push prices higher. Pharmaceuticals firm Shire was the top riser in the FTSE 100, up 3.7%, after the European Medicines Agency validated its marketing authorisation application for Veyvondi, which treats an inherited bleeding disorder called von Willebrand disease. Outside the FTSE 100, shares in Imagination Technologies jumped 16% after the company put itself up for sale. Imagination is in dispute with its largest customer, Apple, after the US tech giant announced earlier this year that it planned to stop using Imagination's technology in its products. On the currency markets, the pound slipped 0.1% against the dollar to $1.2658 and was up 0.08% against the euro at 1.1355 euros. The race was held in terrible weather conditions, with almost a third of the yachts forced to retire. Comanche's victory came despite serious damage caused by hitting a submerged object. The two-day race is considered one of the world's toughest. It pits amateur sailors against professional crews. Skipper Ken Read said at one point he considered retiring from the race but decided to attempt running repairs on the damaged boat. "I've sailed around the world two and a half times and I thought I'd seen it all but that is one really tough body of water. "The people who have done this race something like 25 times, God bless 'em, either they're the dumbest people on earth or the hardest people on earth. "Probably a combination of the two," he told ABC News. Organisers say this year's was event was one of the toughest of recent years. The conditions forced 32 of the 108 entries to retire, with high winds shredding sails and breaking one ship's mast. Comanche co-owner Kristy Clark, the first female owner to win the race, was also a crew member. She said she felt "pure terror at one stage". The 100-foot (30-metre) yacht crossed the line 50 nautical miles ahead of its nearest competitor, Rambler. Third place was claimed by the Australian yacht Ragamuffin 100.
Indonesia's President, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, has called off a state visit to the Netherlands because of a threat that he could be arrested. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Shares in oil companies weighed on the UK stock market as crude prices remained under pressure. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A dramatic finale to Australia's Sydney to Hobart sailing race saw the American yacht Comanche mount an unlikely comeback to claim victory.
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The 24.78-carat "fancy intense pink" diamond was sold to a well-known British dealer at an auction in Geneva. Bidding at the Sotheby's auction was said to be fierce, and the sale surpassed expectations. Last sold by a New York jeweller 60 years ago, the gem has been kept in a private collection ever since. The diamond had been expected to command at least £625,000 per carat. The previous record for a jewel at auction was set by a blue 35.56 carat diamond which sold for £15.2m at auction in 2008. "This is the highest price ever bid for a jewel at auction," said David Bennett, the head of Sotheby's jewellery division, as the auction room in Geneva's luxury Beau Rivage hotel broke into applause. It was bought by top diamond trader Laurence Graff, who bid by telephone, Sotheby's said. The auction house said it sold jewels worth a total of £66m - a world record for a single sale. Five hundred lots were on sale, including jewellery that belonged to Christina Onassis and Cristina Ford - who was married to Henry Ford II, grandson of the founder of the Ford Motor Company. "I think this tells you a bit about the health of the market," Mr Bennett told reporters afterwards. He said the pink stone - which is described as having an emerald cut with gently rounded corners - had a "soft sensual feel". Pink diamonds of such a size are extremely rare. "There's only one or two other stones I've seen like this in the 35 years I've been doing this job," said Mr Bennett. "I just love it." BBC Geneva correspondent Imogen Foulkes said it was a "beautiful, rosy pink with an alluring sparkle". Edison Mulaj, 19, of New Road, Gravesend, admitted carried out the attack off Parrock Street, Gravesend in the early hours of 22 March. At Maidstone Crown Court. he also pleaded guilty to sexual assault and robbery in connection with another attack on a woman in the town on 16 February. Mulaj, who admitted two further rapes, will be sentenced in June. He also denied a charge of attempted rape in relation to the February attack. A group of black students pushed for the name change, saying the former US president was a segregationist and held racist views. The university said on Monday that Wilson's accomplishments deserved to be recognised along with his faults. Wilson led the US during World War I and is often credited with inspiring the United Nations. The decision concludes a university review of Wilson's past. "Princeton must openly and candidly recognise that Wilson, like other historical figures, leaves behind a complex legacy of both positive and negative repercussions," the university report reads. "And that the use of his name implies no endorsement of views and actions that conflict with the values and aspirations of our times." Wilson, a Democrat, served as president from 1913 to 1921, instituting many progressive reforms. However, he staunchly supported segregationist policies, particularly in federal employment. Racial segregation, which mostly took place in Southern US states, was legal policy during his presidency. Before the White House, he served as president of Princeton in New Jersey. While there, he blocked black students from attending the Ivy League university. While the public policy school will remain named for Wilson, the university pledged to increase the number of minority students enrolled in its doctoral programmes and to diversify campus symbols and art. Princeton is one of many US universities where students have recently questioned the use of names and landmarks with ties to racism or slavery. Last month amid student protests, Harvard Law School dropped its official seal, a symbol that is derived from the family crest of an 18th-century slave owner.
One of the world's rarest diamonds has sold for a record-breaking $46 million (£29m), the highest price ever paid for a jewel. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A man has admitted raping a woman during an alleyway attack in Kent. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Princeton University has rebuffed calls to remove Woodrow Wilson's name from its public policy school.
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PC Paul Sharp, from North Tyneside, was dismissed after receiving a suspended jail term by magistrates last month. The 34-year-old admitted two counts of making indecent images of children and one of possessing extreme pornography. In a statement, the force said it "completely condemned" PC Sharp's actions, which had been dealt with by its Professional Standards Department. The statement added: "Both we and the public quite rightly expect the highest standards from our police officers and staff. "When the behaviour of one of our officers falls below our high standards we investigate thoroughly and take appropriate action, which in this case led to Paul Sharp being dismissed from Northumbria Police." Media playback is not supported on this device Neilson's side were comprehensively beaten 3-0 by St Johnstone at Tynecastle, with Murray Davidson scoring twice from corners. "We just didn't get ourselves going in the game," Neilson told BBC Scotland. "We had four clean sheets in a row and we're looking good defensively but we lose two really bad goals from set plays which is disappointing." The head coach felt the performance was a rare blip in an otherwise impressive Premiership campaign thus far. Neilson brought on Sam Nicholson and Jamie Walker in the second half, in an attempt to inject some attacking incision, but Hearts created little. Darnell Fisher scored a late third as the hosts were caught on the counterattack. "We tried to change the formation and the personnel to try and give us a lift," he said. "But we just couldn't get that final pass. "We had a lot of possession but we weren't delivering the ball into the box. I just felt it was a poor performance but we haven't had many this season." Saints boss Tommy Wright said the win was the perfect tonic after missing the midweek draw with Ross County with a stomach bug. Wright feels his players are now approaching the type of form they showed earlier in the season. "We are back on track," he said. "There is a lot of criticism given out, even from our own quarters, but I tend just to look at the next game. "I know the squad of players I have got and I think know where we could be at the end of the season." The win lifts St Johnstone into fourth place in the table but Wright says there is still work to be done to secure their top-six status for the season run-in. "I think maybe Hamilton dropped out of it today [losing to Partick Thistle]," said the manager. "While 42 or 43 points normally gets you in, at the moment it doesn't, so we have to make sure in our next two games we do enough. With performances like that we should be okay."
A Northumbria Police officer has been sacked after downloading indecent images of children, the force said. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Hearts head coach Robbie Neilson said defensive errors meant his side lost their four-match unbeaten run.
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All I left behind. All I will discover, is being held at London's Oxo Tower as part of Refugee Week. More than 80 teens aged 15 to 19 from countries including Syria, Eritrea and Sudan have contributed to the project. They all separated from their families and now live in London or Kent. Each artist's work is inspired by their memories of home, journey to the UK and hopes for the future. The British Red Cross, which is supporting the young artists, said many of them came to Europe during the height of the 2015 refugee crisis. Others made their way across the Sahara and were detained in Libya before crossing the Mediterranean on their way to the UK. The exhibition is held at gallery@oxo at the Oxo Tower from 21-25 June. Follow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email [email protected]. The two were dragged out of a car by a group of men along a highway between Noida, a Delhi suburb, and Kanpur city on Friday, reports said. Three male relatives travelling with them were assaulted and tied up. The incident has caused outrage across the country and raised questions about police efficiency. Some of the victims alleged that they got no response from the official helpline number. One of the men who was attacked told the Hindustan Times newspaper that the line had been continually busy and that when they finally got through, the officer at the other end of the line had "repeatedly asked questions instead of rescuing the family". Family members also alleged that a police van had driven past the field in Bulandshahr area where the incident took place, but had not stopped. Senior police officer Sujeet Pandey told BBC Hindi on Monday that the three men, who were arrested on Sunday, were remanded in prison after they were identified by their victims. Three more men were detained today, he added. The Uttar Pradesh state government has suspended seven policemen in connection with the incident and set up a 300-member taskforce to investigate the incident. The family was also robbed of money, jewellery and their mobile phones. Scrutiny of sexual violence in India has grown since the 2012 gang rape and murder of a student on a Delhi bus. However, brutal sexual attacks against women and children continue to be reported across the country. A lack of infrastructure has hindered tourism as much of the sparsely-inhabited interior is accessible only by river. The ethnically-diverse population enjoys one of the higher standards of living in the continent, propped up by the French social security system and subsidies. Street violence in the 1990s, fuelled partly by high youth unemployment, was seen as manifestations of tension with Paris. However, voters rejected the option of increased autonomy in a 2010 referendum. France occupied the territory in the 17th century. The Dutch and Spanish also settled the area. Until the 1930s, France dispatched convicts to penal colonies there, including the notorious Devil's Island. Another former penal settlement, Kourou, is home to a European Space Agency rocket launch site, accounting for a significant slice of GDP and lending strategic value. Population 243,000 Area 83,534 sq km (32,253 sq miles) Major languages French (official), Creole Major religion Christianity Life expectancy 73 years (men), 81 years (women) Currency euro Head of state: President of France An appointed prefect represents the French government in Paris. Two elected councils - the Conseil General and the Conseil Regional - exercise power locally. The territory sends elected representatives to the French National Assembly and to the Senate. Commercial broadcasters operate alongside services provided by public broadcaster Reseau France Outre-mer (RFO).
A patchwork lifejacket and a welcome mat bearing the message "not welcome" are among the artworks created by young refugees and asylum seekers on display at a new exhibition. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Three men suspected of participating in the gang rape of a woman and her teenage daughter have been sent to jail for 14 days as investigations continue. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Dense equatorial forests, colonial towns and a major space centre are among the faces of French Guiana, a region of France on the north-east coast of South America.
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A search was held on 6 May amid reports of a man seen clinging to rocks at St David's Head, but he was not found. Dyfed-Powys Police said they believed the missing man is Bernard Hoepffner, a resident of Dieulefit. Officers have issued a photograph of him and are appealing for details about his movements. A coat, believed to belong to the man, was found containing money but there was no form of identification.
Police believe a missing man thought to have got into difficulties in the sea off Pembrokeshire is from southern France.
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More students than ever are deliberately hurting themselves according to the National Association of Headteachers (NAHT) and Association of Teachers and Lecturers (ATL). In Wales, 1,542 10 to 19-year-olds were admitted to hospital after self-harming in 2013/14. The Welsh government has been asked to comment. The number of hospital admissions for 10 to 19-year-olds rose by 36% from 1,134 in 2012/13. Caroline Kolek, a secondary school teacher and spokeswoman for the ATL said there was a lack of support in schools due to funding cuts: "My experience in schools and talking to colleagues is that we are seeing a rise in self harm, predominantly among girls but also among boys as well. Dr Max Davie, of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health (RCPCH), said the figures were "very worrying".
Welsh schools are struggling to deal with the number of students self-harming, two major teaching unions say.
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Media playback is not supported on this device Several players have complained about the courts including Andy Murray, who said they were not "in as good a condition as previous years". Temperatures reached 30C in the first week at Wimbledon, with little rain. 'I haven't seen anything in the first week that concerned me at all," Richard Lewis said. "I respect that some players have expressed concerns - but they're in the heat of battle, they're in the heat of the tournament and sometimes players have their views. "From my point of view, I haven't seen anything that has raised my eyebrows." Following his third-round win against against Fabio Fognini on Centre Court on Friday, Murray said: "The court, when I played the first match, was great. I think it's just getting a bit beaten up early. "A few of the players have said that about some of the outside courts as well. "I don't know if it's anything to do with the weather that they've had over the last few weeks and months. It's been pretty hot, pretty extreme conditions. Not much rain." Italian Fognini went further, stating the courts were "really, really bad". Defending champion Murray is back on Centre Court on Monday, when he plays Frenchman Benoit Paire in the fourth round. French 12th seed Kristina Mladenovic also complained about a "damaged" court after suffering ankle and knee injuries during her second-round loss to American Alison Riske on Thursday. Head groundsman Neil Stubley said last week that they were having to deal with "extreme heat" which they were "not used to every single Championships". He added: "There's not a doubt in our minds that the courts will be as good as they need to be for the end of the Championships." The figure is substantially more than the £130m the search engine agreed to pay in back taxes to UK authorities. However, France's AFP news agency reported that Google might be able to negotiate and may not pay the full sum. The company's chief executive, Sundar Pichai, is visiting Paris and was due to meet the France's economy minister Emmanuel Macron on Wednesday night. It is not clear if they will discuss the tax issue. Earlier this month, French Finance Minister Michel Sapin ruled out striking a deal with the US company. Google would not comment on reports of the tax demand and French officials said the matter was confidential. The tax arrangements of international companies have come under close scrutiny recently. Several have been accused of using legal methods to minimise their tax bills. In Google's case, its tax structure allows it to pay tax in Ireland, even when sales appear to relate to the UK. In January it struck a deal with UK tax authorities to pay an extra £130m in tax for the period from 2005, but that deal was heavily criticised. Earlier on Wednesday the UK Public Accounts Committee (PAC) said the £130m settlement "seems disproportionately small", compared with the size of its UK business. Europe's competition authorities have been examining whether some deals struck by big companies with national tax authorities amount to illegal state aid. Starbucks and Fiat Chrysler were told they must pay back up to €30m (£22m) in taxes after European tax breaks were ruled illegal. But the two companies disagreed with the ruling, and Starbucks said it would appeal against the decision. Further investigations into tax deals, including those covering Amazon and Apple, are continuing.
Wimbledon's chief executive says the courts at the All England Club are "as good as they've ever been" following criticism of their condition. [NEXT_CONCEPT] French authorities have demanded that Google pays €1.6bn ($1.8bn; £1.3bn) in unpaid taxes.
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The firm, Carfinance247, was investigated by the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO), after it received 912 complaints from members of the public. When challenged by the ICO, the firm claimed the messages had been sent by another company. The texts were designed to persuade people to visit the firm's website. Typical messages read: "You have been accepted for Car Finance no upfront costs or credit checks, drive away in a car within 24hrs at www.go-finance.com to stop txt stop." The website named is now defunct. "Carfinance247 Ltd tried to hide behind another company and distance themselves from the marketing practices involved," said Steve Eckersley, the ICO's head of enforcement. "Let me be clear - if your business has hired someone else to provide direct marketing then the responsibility for the campaign is yours. There is nowhere to hide. If you break the rules we will find you and fine you." Under the law, marketing messages can only be sent to consumers who have already agreed to receive them, or who have been a customer in the past, and have been given an opportunity to opt out of such messages on each occasion.
A finance firm from Manchester has been fined £30,000 after sending 65,000 spam texts in just four months.
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Evermore Energy aims to develop the 400-megawatt facility at a site on the Belfast Harbour Estate. The company has previously developed a smaller biomass-fuelled power plant at Londonderry Port. A planning application is due to be lodged later this year. Funding for the scheme is understood to be well advanced. Two of Northern Ireland's major existing power stations will have to reduce their capacity in coming years to comply with pollution rules. Some of the older generating units at Ballylumford, near Larne in County Antrim, have reached the end of their acceptable service. Similarly, Kilroot power station, near Carrickfergus, County Antrim, will face emissions constraints which reduce its capacity from 2021. Kilroot is fuelled by coal and oil while Ballylumford uses a combination of gas and oil. The new plant will use the latest Siemens gas-fired technology and will produce roughly a similar amount of power as the Coolkeeragh power station in Derry. A power station operated on the Belfast Harbour Estate from 1961 to 2002. 18 February 2016 Last updated at 15:07 GMT Chris lives in Australia and his dogs perform tricks, jumping on his shoulders and back, as he rides the waves. But he also travels around the country with them to help teach owners and rescue shelter staff how to look after their dogs better. He teaches that exercise and discipline are really important for the wellbeing of dogs. Watch Chris ride the waves with his dogs... North Wales Fire and Rescue Service said the blaze involved 500 sq m of gorse at Haulfre Gardens. They were first called to the fire in Conwy county just before 21:00 BST and have since received numerous calls from the public about the flames. It is believed to have been started deliberately. Media playback is not supported on this device Where does he rank among the greats of the sport, and what other landmarks did he achieve in 2015? BBC Sport takes a look. The 23-year-old left-back has agreed a three-year deal with the R's. Bidwell scored three goals in 211 appearances in almost five years at Griffin Park, which included two spells on loan from Everton. "Jake's a player we've been tracking for a while," Rangers manager Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink said. "This is a real statement for us in terms of attracting a really solid, dependable Championship player who had his pick of other clubs at this level." Bidwell captained the Bees last season as Dean Smith's side finished ninth in the Championship, three places above QPR. The defender becomes QPR manager Hasselbaink's third signing of the summer, following the arrivals of midfielder Ariel Borysiuk and centre-back Joel Lynch at Loftus Road. Find all the latest football transfers on our dedicated page. Market research firm GfK said its consumer confidence gauge had recovered to -7 in August, up from -12 in July. Encouraging economic data, low interest rates, falling prices, and high levels of employment have all contributed to a rise in confidence, it said. GfK's survey also indicated a sharp drop in people's propensity to save in August. GfK's Joe Staton said there had been "some recovery" in consumer confidence in August compared with July, when the firm's figures suggested confidence dropped at its sharpest rate for more than 26 years. "We're reporting some recovery in the index this month as consumers settle into the new wait-and-see reality of a post-Brexit, pre-exit UK," he said. The improvement was in keeping with recent data suggesting consumers have remained resilient after the 23 June referendum, even though there have been some indications that they are more reluctant to make big purchases than before the referendum. Last week, a YouGov survey said consumer confidence recorded its highest monthly bounce in August since February 2013, while official data found retail sales increased by 1.4% in July from the previous month. Mr Staton added that it was "remarkable" that GfK's savings survey figures - which are separate from its consumer confidence figures - had collapsed by 16 points in a month. People are "clearly determined to carry on shopping for today rather than saving for tomorrow," he said. He told the BBC: "We have seen a drop this month [in savings figures] very much in line with the change in the interest rate... from the Bank of England." The Bank cut its benchmark interest rate from 0.5% to a record low of 0.25% at the beginning of August.
An energy company is planning to build a gas-fired power station in Belfast with the capacity to produce electricity for over 400,000 homes. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A former surfing champ has taken to the waves with his pooches to use surfing to train pets, owners and rescue shelter staff. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Firefighters are dealing with a large gorse fire on the Great Orme at Llandudno. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Lewis Hamilton became only the 10th driver in Formula 1 history to win at least three world titles with victory at the United States Grand Prix on Sunday. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Championship club Queens Park Rangers have signed defender Jake Bidwell from west London rivals Brentford for an undisclosed fee. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Confidence among UK consumers improved in August, a survey has suggested, but remains below pre-Brexit vote levels.
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The Verity was carrying 3,000 tonnes of scrap metal when its engine failed four miles off Hartland Point. Padstow and Appledore RNLI lifeboat volunteers were joined by the Dutch Frigate HNLMS De Ruyter to rescue the crew. RNLI volunteers spent more than 24 hours at sea helping the cargo ship. Alan Tarby, Padstow RNLI Coxswain said: 'It was excellent team work from the RNLI lifeboats and the skipper and crew from the Dutch Warship did an amazing job in difficult conditions.'
A Dutch warship helped rescue a 300ft (91m) cargo ship drifting close to the north Devon coast in rough seas and heavy winds.
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It is alleged that companies were set up as fronts in order for the striker to pay a lower rate of tax. Officials in Brazil say the allegations against the Barcelona striker cover a seven-year period from 2006. The allegations are separate from a case heard in Spain on Tuesday. Neymar appeared in court in Madrid in connection with fraud allegations surrounding his transfer. He has consistently denied any wrongdoing. The case in Brazil relates to the time when Neymar was still in Brazil and his income came from Brazilian sources. Government prosecutors - who are recommending his prosecution on four charges of fraud - claim that companies were set up as fronts, and money that should have been taxed at the rate of a private individual was channelled into these companies and subject to a lower rate. It is very early stages. The prosecutors claims will go to a judge who will decide if there is a case to answer or not. At the moment Neymar is not formally a defendant. At the time of his transfer he was a rising star at Brazilian club Santos. Brazilian prosecutors are reported by the AFP news agency to have also framed fraud charges against Neymar's father Neymar da Silva Santos, Barcelona President Josep Maria Bartomeu and his predecessor Sandro Rosell. Barcelona said it paid €57m (£43m) for Neymar in 2013 but investigators say the fee was closer to €83m and the club concealed part of the deal. Neymar spent an hour and a half before a Spanish judge on Tuesday. Mr Santos, who arrived at court with his son on Tuesday evening, acts as his agent. The Spanish case was brought by Brazilian third-party investment fund DIS, which owned 40% of the Brazilian player's sports rights. DIS alleges it was financially harmed by the transfer when it received €6.8m of Mr Santos's €17m fee and argues it was deprived of its full share. Neymar: Better than Messi & Ronaldo?
Prosecutors in Brazil are recommending that football star Neymar be charged over four counts of fraud in relation to a tax case prior to his transfer to Barcelona in 2013.
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Conservative Stephen Crabb, Labour's Owen Smith, Kirsty Williams from the Lib Dems, Plaid Cymru's Leanne Wood, UKIP's Nathan Gill and Pippa Bartolotti of the Greens will discuss key issues. As polls indicate a tight election, it is a key chance to appeal to voters. The Wales Report Election Leaders' Debate, from Cardiff's Sherman Theatre, is live on BBC One Wales at 20:30 BST. The programme will be also be broadcast on BBC Radio Wales, where it will be followed by special phone-in, giving listeners a chance to give their instant reaction to what they have just heard.
The Welsh leaders of the main political parties will do battle later in their final TV debate before polling day.
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The previous IPL low was 58, scored by Rajasthan Royals against Bangalore in 2009. England paceman Chris Woakes was among the wickets for Kolkata, taking 3-6 in two overs, while no Bangalore batsman reached double figures. The collapse gave Kolkata victory by 82 runs. Bangalore have a star-studded batting line-up featuring the likes of Chris Gayle, AB de Villiers and India captain Virat Kohli, as well as England bowler Tymal Mills. However, they have won only two of seven games in the IPL this season and are bottom of the table. Humberside Police Federation spoke out in the same week the force was branded "inadequate" at keeping people safe and reducing crime. Chairman Paul Yeomans said the changes resulted in "substantial difficulties". He added that a sudden rather than gradual change to the "One Force" model had led to a "very difficult period". Asked about the federation's warning, Humberside's Chief Constable Justine Curran said "there are always lessons to be learned". In April, Humberside Police scrapped its geographical divisions in favour of four force-wide departments and introduced new shift patterns. An inspection by Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary carried out in June said that "due to serious difficulties in implementing the new operating model [the force] cannot be judged any higher than inadequate". It highlighted a lack of skilled staff in the force's command hub - which is tasked with risk-assessing calls from the public - weak workforce planning and increased workload among the issues. Mr Yeomans said: "We advised the force quite robustly that we had significant concerns, however, the force went live with the model and the new shift pattern and, as has been borne out in the report, there were some substantial difficulties...in delivering the quality of service to the public. "I can't completely blame the force, this is all down to the corporate spending review and the draconian cuts placed on policing. "If you change everything at once there are always bumps in the road and there are always teething problems and for us, quite quickly, some of those problems became very significant." He said it was only "through the goodwill of our members that the force were able to get through a very difficult period". However, he said there had been "significant improvements" since the inspection. Chief Constable Curran said: "I am confident the One Force model is right for us and will deliver the efficiencies and service levels we expect. "Any major change brings with it challenges and difficulties and we were prepared for this." The E! network says the show will come back in September 2015. In February, Kelly Osbourne quit following a falling out with a co-presenter. Her replacement, Kathy Griffin, then left after just seven episodes. E! said: "We look forward to taking this opportunity to refresh the show before the next awards season." The show offers humorous, often cutting, critiques of what celebrities have been seen wearing. It was originally hosted by the late comedian Joan Rivers and is executively produced by her daughter Melissa Rivers. In February, Osbourne left the show after complaining about her co-host Giuliana Rancic's criticism of Zendaya. Rancic had suggested the actor's dreadlocks smelled of marijuana. Rancic was forced to apologise after Zendaya said the remarks were "outrageously offensive". After Osbourne left, comedian Kathy Griffin came on board. But she left after just seven episodes saying she was uneasy being part of the show. Speaking to US show The View, she said she felt forced to "comment about pictures of beautiful women in perfect dresses and say kind of bad things". Despite E! saying the new season of the show would go ahead at the end of March - without Osborne or Griffin - it has now been shelved until September 2015. E! says the show would "evolve" - but that co-hosts Giuliana Rancic and Brad Goreski and executive producer Melissa Rivers will be back. Follow @BBCNewsbeat on Twitter, BBCNewsbeat on Instagram and Radio1Newsbeat on YouTube
Royal Challengers Bangalore were bowled out for 49 by Kolkata Knight Riders on Sunday - the lowest total in Indian Premier League history. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Rank and file officers say they warned Humberside Police of their "significant concerns" about a major overhaul of its operating model and shift patterns. [NEXT_CONCEPT] After losing two presenters in just two months, US show Fashion Police is taking a 'hiatus'.
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The lock, 35, was supposed to join Narbonne in France in the summer, ending a four-year stint with Leinster. He picked up a season-ending injury in a Pro12 match against the Scarlets in March, but the problem turned out to be more serious than first thought. "It's just sad because I played my last game without knowing it, that decision was taken away from me," he said. London-born McCarthy had two spells with Connacht before joining Leinster in 2013. He made his international debut in 2011 and earned 19 caps for Ireland. McCarthy said: "Unfortunately I had been ruled out for the season anyway with a back and an elbow issue, but there was also an elbow injury in training, and that injury has left the elbow in a pretty bad way. "I was massively excited to go [Narbonne]. It's a beautiful part of France to live, down by the south coast, and and I was looking forward to contributing on the field over the next two seasons. "But you have to listen to the medics, you have to back their advice."
Leinster second row Mike McCarthy has been forced to retire because of an elbow injury.
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The Welsh government won a Supreme Court battle for the right to set minimum rates, after the UK government scrapped the Agricultural Wages Board. Deputy Farming Minister Rebecca Evans said it would ensure fair wages, and combat a skills and labour shortage. But the Farmers' Union of Wales warned that affordability was an issue for many farmers as their own incomes fell. The one-off pay rise has been promised as an interim measure, before a new advisory panel is set up to decide minimum rates in the future. Grade 1 pay - the lowest rate - will be set at 2p above the current national minimum wage of £6.70 an hour and will apply to all workers over the age of 16. Ms Evans said the law also gave Grade 1 workers the right to expect training to move up to Grade 2, the rate at which most farm workers are employed. She added that setting of minimum farm wages was part of a wider drive to ensure the long-term viability of agriculture and tackle rural poverty. The Farmers' Union of Wales said there had been mixed views among its branches about an increase in minimum wage rates. It said affordability was an issue for many farmers, given the "dramatic fall" in farm incomes and profitability since the last wage bands were set in 2012, and further anticipated falls in 2015-16. NFU Cymru president Stephen James called on the Welsh government to publicise the changes, so farmers employing staff in agriculture did not "inadvertently fall foul of the law".
Around 13,000 farm workers in Wales are set to get a 6% pay rise after no increase for the last three years.
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The deadline for reaching an agreement is Tuesday. The essence of an emerging deal is to keep Iran at least one year away from being able to produce enough nuclear fuel for a single weapon. Representatives from the US, Germany, France, the UK, China and Russia are at the talks in Lausanne, Switzerland. The two sides have explored compromises in areas including the number of centrifuges used to enrich uranium that Iran could operate, and its nuclear enrichment work for medical research. Restrictions on Iran's nuclear work would last at least a decade, and include rigorous inspections, in exchange for an end to crippling sanctions, says the BBC's Barbara Plett Usher in Lausanne. Despite progress, disagreements remain on how long Iran would be subject to constraints, and on the speed of sanctions' relief, our correspondent says. At their meeting with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, the other representatives will be aiming to agree on a political framework by Tuesday night that would set the stage for technical talks. US officials said all parties have agreed to a "step by step approach" to reaching a deal, but sticking points remain. At the scene: Lyse Doucet, BBC News, Lausanne Negotiators are close, closer than ever before, in their 12-year stand-off over Iran's nuclear programme. But a deal is still not done, and no-one can say with 100% certainty if it will be. With each day that slips by before an end-of-March deadline for a framework agreement, the political temperature rises against the serene backdrop of the snow-capped Swiss Alps. As foreign ministers and officials stream in and out of meetings in the gilded Beau Rivage, snippets and statements to the persistent press play into 11th-hour brinkmanship. The last difficult details are as much about political power as they are about nuclear energy. Both Iran and world powers urge the other side to make tough decisions. All say they've come here, hoping to make a deal, to make history. Beyond this rarefied world, sceptics wait in many capitals, ready to react if, in their view, a bad deal emerges. Reaching what counts as a "good deal" for all will go right down to the wire and, possibly, beyond. The world powers, known as the P5+1 group - the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany - want to ensure that Iran cannot develop nuclear weapons. Iran denies it is aiming to build nuclear weapons and is hoping that a deal will lead to the lifting of international sanctions that are affecting its economy. German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said there had been "some progress and some setbacks in the last hours". "I can't rule out that there will be further crises in these negotiations," he told reporters in Lausanne. Potential sticking points in the nuclear talks are thought to include how long the deal will last and how much of Iran's nuclear facilities will be open to inspection. All parts of an emerging nuclear deal are interrelated. "Everything could still fall apart" before Tuesday's self-imposed deadline, a Western official told Reuters. A senior US official said negotiators were working towards something that would be called an "understanding" rather than a formal agreement, which would form the basis of a comprehensive deal, including all technical details, to be tied up by 30 June. US officials have said all parties, including Iran, had agreed "there needs to be a phased step by step reciprocal approach", so that Iran's scaling back is met with a phased lifting of sanctions. Meanwhile, Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has again warned against a deal with Iran, describing it as worse than his country had feared. On Sunday he told a cabinet meeting "this deal, as it appears to be emerging, bears out all our fears, and even more than that". He gave no details, but noting advances by Iran-backed forces in Yemen and other Arab countries, he accused Iran of trying to "conquer the Middle East" while pursuing nuclearisation.
Ministers from six world powers are expected to hold their first full session on Monday with Iran's foreign minister over its nuclear programme.
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Paisley's Forsyth, 24, is with the Scotland squad in Spain for three Tests against Russia. His Surbiton club-mate Grassick, 26, is currently recovering from a cruciate ligament injury. "It's good to see the hard work of the players over the years has paid off," said Scotland coach Derek Forsyth. "Hopefully they can push on for selection." Forsyth's GB Men's counterpart Bobby Crutchley said he was "excited about the challenge" of preparing for the 2020 Olympics. "We have a vibrant squad with a good blend of youth and experience and we're eager to get going. "We're very excited about this new group. There's been significant change and we're looking forward to developing the players." Full-time players on Great Britain hockey senior programme James Albery (Beeston)+ David Ames (Holcombe) Liam Ansell (Surbiton)+ Tom Carson (Reading) David Condon (East Grinstead) Brendan Creed (Surbiton)+ Adam Dixon (Rotterdam) Alan Forsyth (Surbiton)* Harry Gibson (Surbiton) Mark Gleghorne (Beeston) David Goodfield (Surbiton)+ Chris Grassick (Surbiton)* Chris Griffiths (East Grinstead) Michael Hoare (Wimbledon) Harry Martin (Rotterdam) Barry Middleton (Holcombe) George Pinner (Holcombe) Phil Roper (Wimbledon) Liam Sanford (Team Bath Buccaneers)+ Ian Sloan (Wimbledon) Luke Taylor (Loughborough University)+ Sam Ward (Holcombe) Henry Weir (Wimbledon) Ollie Willars (Beeston) Part-time players Jonty Griffiths (Loughborough University)+ Ed Horler (Loughborough University)+ Dan Kyriakides (Cardiff and Met)+** +New addition to the central programme *Qualifies to represent Scotland ** Qualifies to represent Wales Find out how to get into hockey with our special guide. The one vehicle collision happened on the Curragh Road just after 0630 GMT on Saturday. He was then taken to hospital. Diversions are in place between the Bann Road and Coolyvenny Road. Akhtar Javeed was killed when masked men raided his fast food and drink warehouse in Digbeth, Birmingham. He was found lying in the street. West Midlands Police believe the shooting, at Direct Source 3 Ltd on Wednesday evening, was targeted. Mr Javeed's family said he was an "honest" man who valued his family more than anything else. He was in Birmingham to run the warehouse so he could provide for his family and he was planning to move back to London soon, they said. Officers have been examining CCTV footage to try to identify the two gunmen who fled the scene. They have refused to comment on claims 56-year-old Mr Javeed, a father of four, may have followed the raiders out of the building before being shot. More on this story and others from Birmingham and Black Country Ch Supt Andy Parsons said officers were alerted by a 999 call from staff inside the business premises. It is not known what type of a firearm was used and fingertip searches and forensic testing have been taking place at the scene. The force has declined to confirm whether anything was taken during the attempted robbery. It is believed other staff were on the premises at the time of the raid. Mr Javeed worked five days a week in Birmingham before returning to his home in West Ham, east London, where he lived with his wife and family. Norman Khan, 28, a car salesman, said he saw him lying on the ground in a pool of blood. He said: "All his face was full of blood and there was blood on the floor. There were three guys standing there, I think they knew him." Mr Javeed's death is the third gun death investigated by West Midlands Police since October. There has been a spike in gun crime in the city in recent weeks with 41 arrests made this year for gun-related crime and 19 firearms have been seized. Acting Det Ch Insp Martin Slevin has appealed for witnesses or information about the suspects, saying the shooting happened at happened at a time when people may have been leaving for work.
Scots Alan Forsyth and Chris Grassick have retained their places in the Great Britain Hockey senior programme for the Tokyo Olympics in 2020. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A man is in a critical condition following a crash in Coleraine in County Londonderry. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A post-mortem examination is due to take place on a company director shot dead during an attempted robbery.
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South Wales Police said they were called to Pentreguinea Road in the St Thomas area of the city at 05:25 BST. A force spokesman said they are investigating the circumstances and no more details are available. The street has been cordoned off.
The death of a man who was found collapsed in the street is being investigated by police in Swansea.
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Specialists from the army attended the scene shortly after police were called at 10:50 GMT. Onlooker Craig Leech said he saw the military unit place an object in the back of their van and drive away. A Thames Valley Police spokesman said: "The item was examined and was revealed to be an old fire extinguisher." Read more Berkshire stories here.
A bomb disposal team was called to Newbury Racecourse after builders identified a fire extinguisher as a "suspicious package".